The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, May 19, 1932, Page 2

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

b o o = THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, THURS Y MAY 19, |932 May 16'%21* National CottonWeek This Week Only ON WHITE COTTON SHEET BLANKETS Size 70x80 GREY DOUBLE COTTON BLANKETS 66x80 PLAIN AND FANCY BEDSPREADS TURKISH TOWELS—FANCY TOWELS —HUCK TOWELS— BARBER TOWELS—GLASS TOWELS — TURKISH AND ROLLER TOWELING BY THE YARD RESTAURANT TABLE NAPKINS — Size 22x22 At One-Fourth Off Regular Prices B. M. Behrends Co., Inc. Juneau’s Leading Department U. 8. DEPARTWENT OF AGRICULTURE. WEATHER S8UREAU The W eather LOCAL DATA (By the U. B. Weatner Bureswy Foreeast for Juneau and vielnfty, beginning at 4 p.m., May 19: Clearing and cooler tonight, Friday fair .and wermer; moderate casterly winds. Time Barometer Temp. Humidity Winad Velocity Weavner 4 pm. yesty 2982 57 28 sWw 5 Clear 4 am. today 2031 47 65 SE 18 Rain Noon today ... 2971 57 56 w 5 Cldy : @ABLE AND RADIO REPORTS | ; YESTERDAY | TODAY ; Highest 4pm. | Lowest4amm. dam. Precip. 4am. ¥ Station— temn. temp. | emp. temp. velouty 24hm ‘Weather § Barrow .16, 18 | 4 4 10 Clear i Nome 30 14 | 26 28 10 Trace Cldy .\ Bethel . 36 34 | 24 2 12 0 Clear © Fort Yukon SR e el 3 0 Clear |, Tanana SR R i T 0 0 Clear ' Fairbanks . 50 46 | 38 32 4 Trace Clear Eagls .. LG8 Tee 0 | 36 38 0 02 Cldy St. Paul . @8 ;g8 ‘| d2 @ 12 0 Cldy Duteh Harbor ... 42 38 | 36 38 4 0 Clear Kodiak .48 48 | 38 46 12 0 Pt.Cldy Cardova -804 42 @ 1 0 Clear sy 4 45 4 18 e Rain L ks il MR — o 0 Pt.Cldy $6. 52 | 48 50 4 0 Rain .56 54 | 48 50 4 06 Rain Rl e i do A 4 0 PtCldy A R I T 4 Trace Cldy S0 -g8 | G4 64 4 Trace Cldy .64 58 52 54 4 0 Cldy 'lnwest west of Queen Charlotte Sound, with light show- th ‘extreme Eastern Alaska to Oregon. The pressure is mod- in Western and Northern Alaska with clear weather over Territory. Temperatures have fallen in the central In- Store | MAN AS BISHOP OF M.E. CHURCH ATLANTIC COITY, May 19.—Dr. Junius Ralph Magee, District Sup- eriritendent - of the Seattle area, has been elected Bishop of the Methodist Episcopal Church by 'the Géneral Conference on the 117th ballot. —_————— Daily Emvire Want Ads Pay NOTIGE . TO CREDITORS In the Commissioner's Court, Ju- neau, Precinet. In Proate, Matter of Estate Sebastian Zenger, Deceased. NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that undersigned was on April 28, ‘1932 appointed exectuor of above named Sebastian Zenger, deceased. All persons having claims mlxut said estate are required to present them, with the proper vouchers, | within six months from the date of this notice to undersigned at his residence on Seward -Street between Fifth and Sixth, Juneau, Alaska. Dated at Juneau, Alaska, May 5, 1932. -ALFRED ZENGER, Executor. First publication, May 5, 1932. Last publication, May 26, 1982, m A. Traylor wes born in' in debate won laurels cabin in the backwoods coun- | for this tall, rangy lad, who soon near , Ky. October became discontented with farm life 1878. . . . Oldest of seven chil- |and worked in the village store at ..,m;mgruflmwas‘n cents a day. . So he decided . . . Melyin | to hecame a teacher, taught two sigue working | years in a rural school, working but his J- |on farm between terms. v T r ended at corn- huck- | 1896 he took to the stump in the o p , | Kentucky ‘mountains for William lJenmm Bryan, m‘ n., | At 21 Travlor went (o, Texas, | | Working hours, passed the bar at 23, became County Attornay. ... After appren- to run bank at Malone, Tex. . | | Batlinger, Tex , | Novemver 4, 1914, was blown Melvin A, frmylor' dn. & grocery - store at{expert on fa®m and cattle loans for his services, Hillsboro, he read ldw in spare|tBat his shrewdness soon was recog- | National of Chicago won him with ticeship in Hillsboro bank was sent|Three years later, at 36, he w;as Married Dorothy Arnold Yerby wd of the Livestock Exchange Na- | at 30 became President of bank in W Bank. . L BEL . Fi i R Rl R e KARLSRUHE TO 'BEIN JUNEAU ad | i Kritare (AL PEEHIARIPRECTRIAE] it fhe top or [ ILZAG[ L [0 RIAICIE ; ] a pilla 5. Air: comb, ONE PIO[P[U[LIA[TIEID e Sy 1 ; =2 cross strips | ’ e %A MIPZE TION nirpoonod e not the same SIAIY|S RIEISII IN H G HLIND 35 Soroiar Complement of 560 Offi- ; NUISHEEIAS EBER Cender ONU 1] 5. Tombs of Mo- { ,cers and Men Are PIARTHZEIL1 ZS|PIAIN . “',‘3{2““" i Aboard Warcraft [EMEFZAN|ILZZP AINIE N [E|S O|S |A 5 | (Continuea 1fum Page One) Jo1d & segslon | |IRIAITIE] 5 ! ropical tree RIA EINIDAZTIO|ID ) entertainment of the vessel's offi- AN RIAILZE GO | cers, o DIAM ‘Among the members of the city’s| authority N PIE Al Mv)’il‘slckll enfertainment comupibtee are Mgwal 0 Symbolfor L o Lol & Soking Geddard, Mayor Thomas B. Jud- :-m{,'m“““ 2 E?:f,[s;yl 4 . Oll‘;egr:tc:m;.xce J o's way | ¥ % anchis 6. Th , e on n, Allen Shattuck, Prasident of 6. Black ¥ Rlternbtive Character in the Chamber of Commerce: Mr. &. City 1n Pern- ‘8 ;\‘l:nel nele son, Mr. MacKinnon, Mr. Me- 5 Hoohie 5 Jines bin” Bride and 'Dr. G. =. Freeburger. ! = F?fl;‘fi{\g e }f 5 b, % On departing from Juneau, the 66. Tear asunder 12, F( minie end- 56 Karlsruhe will go to Sitka for a oo 23, H:’Argcn ‘ew days’ visit, and then procesd o 8o He i |to ‘Seattle, where she is due dJune 1, Pure g e 5 2. Silleworm . Enlivening ‘ 39,640 Nanteial Miles § B0 pues “'r’e'fii‘fii i3 | . The wessel's sojourn in this port |1s one of her scheduled stops on a |training oruise of 39,640 nautical | |miles, Her base is at Kiel on the | Baltic Sea. On 'her long voyage she has touched Spain, the Can- ry Islands, “Bermuda, Havana, Mexico, Pansma and Honoluly, |before coming to Alaska. The Karlsruhe began her present training cruise last November. Be- fore she reaches home again, she will have been in foreign waters more than a year. Personnel of Ship Aboard the cruiser are sixty | cadets, most of whom are between |15 and 19 years old, thirty officers of the (line, six engineers, two physicians, two paymasters, one chaplain and a large number of | non-commissioned officers, besides the crew of enlisted men. | The last similar training visit of | |a German cruiser to Juneau was| |in 1927 when the Emden was here. | The training cruises are made | annually by a vessel of the Ger- man Navy for the purpose of in- instructing cadets and crew in prac- tical seamanship, military science |and navigation. Third Built Since War l//%fll U/ l%fll l R/ AN W/ w i 1 The Karlsruhe is the third ship built by the German Navy since the World War. She was con- structed in 1925. She is of 6,000 tons burden. She is 620 feet long |and camies nine 15-centimeter guns, four 8-inch centimeter guns, and twelve 50-centimeter guns. She is the third craft of the name in the annals of the German Nayy. The first Karlsruhe was mf DOUGLAS FOR by sevesi Aliod whrshigs aiid on‘Local High School Wins | Third and Last Game by an explosion in one of her own | torpedo tubes.. The second Kar by 11 to 7 Scorz by Innings JUNEAU BEATS ruhe participated in battles in the Baltic and North Seas in World War and after the armistice was scuttled at Scarpa Flow, England. | Team ,/Capt. Wassner commanded a ppu submarine in the World War. Douglas S — Juneau High ternson won the diamond scholastic championship of team yesterday TO CELEBRATE AT WHITEHORS Internatxonal Event Is| Geastineau Channel by defeating Douglas High School on its own| {grounds 11 to 7. The contest was the third and last in the series |for the title and was the second' |vietory for the local athletes they | |having triumphed in last Mon- " days struggle in this city. Doug- Planned for sakur - {1a8. was the victor in the first day, Mfly 28 |game, which was played at Doug- —_— |1as last Saturday. The International Celebration | Wilson Started as Pitcher ai Whitehorse will be held on Sat-| The line-ups of the two teams urday, May 28, according to an-|was virtually the same yesterday nouncements, .and invitations tojas in the two previous contests. attend, preceived in Juneau. ‘Douglsa yesterday, however, start-! As ugsual, there will be sporis |eéd with Wilson as pitcher instead | headed by baseball games, flrsz‘o} Lundell. - With Wilson in the prige .of $100 and second prize box, Lundell played third. The of $50. anrangemen’ lasted only the first Danging - WIH] e the feature of |inning. . Off Wilson's delivery, Ju- the evening. |neau seored ? runs, and after the The excursion train .will leave opening inning, Lundell, who had Skagway . early Saturday morning |pitafied the two previous games, for Whitehorse. | went into hte box again, w S, Drury dis General Chairman | - Lundell did, some good hurling of the celebration and F. N. Gis-| rg- the remainder of the seven- borne ‘is Secretary. |inning game. He held Juneau to ———— (four runs, namely one in the sec- gemnny exported 36,000 metric ond inning and three in the tl tons ‘of toys and Christmas deco- \ Players Look Good rations fin 1981 with a value of All of Juneau's team looked good WMM v.,s‘..erday Lindstrom, pitcher, who Polmcal H eadlmers | i | | { ‘ { i Two large New York banks bid | but the . First| ‘As & Dbanker he became’ such an | nized. . . . In 1911 the Stockyards a ‘VicesPresidency in 1919, . . . At National Bank of East St. Lomsu'l hhe became its President. made him Vice-President. k: he was named to repremnt W States in organizing the ident of International Sememmu. » Presidential booms started tor . At 38 he became | hlm in South but he has said he is lnot @ candidate. called to Chicago as Viee- its President. | Quick Without Cutting or Salves {Juneau Drug Co. invites every Pile jstubborn the case | hur LeRoy, | ehor t base, and ‘K;\ra base and appeared to exceptional rtage. hie umpiring in yesterday's game ‘fla in the two previous games was 100 per cent the best. It was done b\ Rf)v Chard behind the plate ul E. Iverson on the bases. Wentlund, Juneau High athletic - ccach, is to be atulated in rounding his into winning form in the time allotted him. Line Up of Teams The line-up follows: F(- School co1 sq | | short Position Douglas v e Lundell e Doogan 1b, .. Gair 2b. .............. Cashen W 5. Fox Karabelnikoff 8b. Wilson Yewkesbury ... If. ......... Guerin Riendeau g Straiger Nikish rf. . Kronquist Substitutes—¥or Juneau, Han- .son; for Douglas, Niemi and Mills. ¥ W N G DAHLIAS FOR SALE A few choice named varieties al- ready growing. Cheap. Phone 108, G. E. James. —adv. No More Piles You Can End Your Awful Misery Thousands of Pile sufferers do not know that the cause of Piles is internal—bad circulation of blood in the lower bowel. That is the scientific truth about 'Piles — the real reason why salves and suppositories do not give perm- anent relief, why cutting does not remove the cause. Your itching, bleeding or pro- truding Piles will only go when you actually remove the cause— ‘and not ‘one minute before. Ex- ternal treatments can’t do this— an internal medicine should be used. HEM-ROID, the prescription ;of Dr. J. 8. Leonhardt, sold by good druggi§ts everywhere, succeeds be- cause it stimuldtes the circulation, dnves out congested blood, heals and restores the almost dead parts. ‘Dr. Leonhardt’s HEM-ROID has an almost unbelievable record . of success right in this city. So why waste time on external remedies for worry about an operation when |, sufferer to try HEM-ROID with guarantee of money-back if it does not end their Piles, no matter how —adv. Juneau Beauty S SYLVIA BRI ERG Specializing 'in Permanent and Finger Waves—Facials Telephone 384 To Make Dreams Come True The simplest way we can say why bank- ing your meney is advisable is this: The more you save, the more you have, the more money you have saved, the mere your desires and dreams can be fulfilled. save to make your It is the surest way. That is. why we say, dreams come true. Start today. First National Bank When you want to relieve Rheumatic Fever, _i Simple Neuralgia, Gout, Muscular Aches and Pains—Take ALLENRU, 85 cents and $1.50 Butler, Mauro Drug Co. Express Money Orders PHONE 134 FREE DELIVERY Your Alaska Laundry I NG TELEPHONE 15 FOR INSURANCE See H. R. SHEPARD & SON Telephone 409 B. M. Behrends Bank Bldg. e o T —— QUICK STEP— The best floor paint for wood work and for boats inside and outside. Juneau Paint Store 2nd Near Main [ THE CHAS. W. CARTER MORTUARY “The Last Service Is the Greatest Tribute” Corner 4th and Franklin Sts. Phone 136-2 Frye-Bruhn Company UNITED FOOD C(L “CASH 1S KING” Phome 33 > ALASKA LUMBER SHEETROCK SUPERIOR CEMENT RED CEDAR SHINGLES DOORS—WINDOWS—VENEER HARDWOODS JUNEAU LUMBER MILLS PHONE 358 ' ' | Quality dnd Service THE HOTEL OF ALASKAN HOTELS THE GASTINEAU ISP NI R AR T O L TR e 4 AT

Other pages from this issue: