The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, July 14, 1932, Page 2

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4 A‘Imal “CLEARING OUT” price has been z\p&‘f(‘(j on eve Excellent quality and tailoring— coat in our y remaining stack. they cannot fail to interest every woman \Vh() wants a smart coat to (‘,Onll)l(?l(‘, lh(‘ $1 summer. B. M. BEHRENDS Co., Inc. Juneau’s Leading Department Store THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, THURSDAY, ULY 14, 1932. ‘F'athcr Hubbard réturned old love, Aniakehack. Rev. Galtes, who is mmeralog!st, of Santa Clara University, took specimens of material erupted from | ALASKA FINEST - SAYS flEI_EGATE‘mz::;”rm;“:m“::fm:fi;afiz ing the great etuption of 1912. to his well .as, . . But what I can prom- by the Geographic Soclety in lise is an hanedt endedvor,” he said ‘Washington. |in conclusion. At Mt. Katmab a- warm lake in | the great. crater-was discovered to| Washinglon Needs Education ‘Washington:-needs aducating,. on exist in- midwinter. . New glaciers have formed 'oh (the rims and Alaska, as badly if not. worse than bergs ‘are eonstantly 'breaking off | Alaskans need it, 'Dekecwr.e Wick- from them fo tumble into the lake ‘eriham asserted. “Dr,. Gotdon says and melt before the eyes of ob- he has.come to give us better servers. The Valley of Ten Thou- |education..' I wish with -all my sand Smokes 4s mow the valley of ‘hearc he would go back to Wash- ten smokes, due to the disappear- |ington to educate Congress, which ance pf most of .the fumaroles is ignorant about the Territory ‘that gave the. region its original and its resources,” he assured hu- name -and fame, eral government in taxes the ‘sum of $50,837,660, During the same period Federal appropriations for expenditures in Alaska, for all purposes, including building the \Alaska. Railroad, operations of var- ious kinds of vessels, courts and other administrative functions, ag- gregated :$200,117,000. Cash Side Only For a Short Time Only Shampoo and Finger Js. DEPARTMENT. OF AGRICULTURE, WEATHER BUREAU The Weather /By the U. 8. Weather Bureau) Forecast for Juneau and vieinity, beginning at 4 p.m., July 14: Rain tonight and possible showers Friday. Gentle south to M. Chisholm: was charged with ‘This, he pointed out, was. only wes.b winds, % chkersham F. ather H"b checking long .distance weather |the -gash side of the transaction. Time Barometer Temp. Humidity Wind Veiocity —Weather ks forecasts made for the Aleutlan |During the same period. Alagka| 4 p.m. yesty ....2081 61 62 w 5 Cldy bard and . Paul Go;don Islands by Father Buckley, succes- | produced and shipped to the States| 4 am. today a8 ol g Yig 7 Rain Speék at amber Lunch |sor to the late Father Ricard |in. gold and other minerals, fish | Noon today . 2994 52 94 8 5 Rain jpadre fof Wb riim.” | b, wolld | hmber; gud sotber | Tesburces, . ap. CABLE AND RADIO REPORTS Conts m famous meteorologist. . “It's 'easy | proximmately $2,500,000,000. “So that A (Copnpeee Page m‘) | enough to predict Weather for that |aecount is largely in our favor,” YESTERDAY TODAY uests included Dr. Bdward Ri country. Rain today, more rain |the Delegate added. —— S - \ind Dr. J. Fraoklin, Haas, T:h‘tumrrmw and no trouble ‘to check | . “Alaska,” he concluded, “is one Highest 4pm. | Lowest4am. 4a.m. Precip. 4am. | comans ‘who. arrived here at moon |the forecdsts With the weather,” of the greafest assets of the Unit-| _Station temp. temp. | temp. temp. velocity 24hrs. Weather today on the former'ssyacht, Rey, |n¢ told the Chamber. #d States. 4It yields more clear| Barrow $iiile 88 36 82 32 8 Trace Rain Paul Galtes, Roderick Chisholmand | Makes No Predictions profit than gny other asset it has,) Nome . 48 48 L R Clay | Edgar Levin, members of Father| np Gordon, who. s fudt begin. @R We ought all to feel proud| Bethel . .50 50 2 4 Cam 0 Pt Cdy Hubbard's party, and J:-C. Staple- | o ; on, WHO is just begln-loe 3¢ | ‘and 'so Dr. Gordon, when| Fort Yukon ... 70 64 | 54 54 6 04 Clear ning his administration of the Gov- back | Tanana . 58 58 46 50 Calm 12 Ral ton, manager of Ha Race'’s dru; you finish edueating us, go n R ! - oromankia- Al folzodle for In- o Washington and edicate them.” | Fairbanks 62 62 | 48 48 4 02 Clay . dians and Eskimos, sais had 42 Eagle - n4 4 | 50 50 4 06 Cld: L h‘?: H‘d‘:‘ H“‘z |mo. predictions to make, only & . g m:‘,,‘:n “a-ww.;?: luncheon | St. Paul 50 48 ‘ “ u 12 -08 Cldz ded 4 ey o vty ver | promise of hongst, sincere. effort |\ "uited’ o Daper-thin. pleces| Dutch Harbor - 52 52 | 42 44 4 0 Clear i n a volcanic crater was .1 am giad to be able to call my- buted through| Kodiak 56 52 46 48 OCalm 0 Rain registered in the “big.pit” at An- | if & J ite if that! of- wood and distribu g] | iakehak, - later termed by Judge o o oy atls the Prop- | 1o courtesy of Rice & Ahlers| Cordava 60 60 [ ) 4 0 Cldy Wickersham ‘the “plug to Hades,” | o, s 30 b Dl gt Company. 1t carried the explana- | Juneau R | e oA Rain > o T » " B ear nmlaht:c 0!{1‘1.19;:‘:: *;nd Levin, | saxd “I have no program to an- Prince Rupert ... 60 60 { 48 48 4 12 Cldy when o i ':*“ ©0P- | younce and mo prediction to make. Edmonton . 7% 54 56 14 0 Cldy por, 1000 degrees, was found €| what has gone on in the past you Seattle % | 54 54 12 Trace Clay e by e Thocueters Wre | cnow better 4han..1. - What, is to Portland - 68 P TR T Cldy utests bz' i) t:‘ ;:;:wome in' the future, you know as SPEC I AL San Francisco ... 62 60 | 54 54 4 Trace Cldy The pressure remains moderately low over east.ern and soumern Alaska.. A low pressure area is centered west of Ketchikan with a barometer reading of 20.78 inches. Showers have occurred during the past twenty-four hours over all of Alaska with the exeption of Nome, Dutch Harbor and Cordova. Temperature changes have been slight over all of Alaska. Wave, $1.25 Fredric’s Vita-Tonic Permanents, $7.50 live tree, one of Alaska's many resources upon which depends. trip to Alaska, and Dr, Haas, his first, were introduced to the Cham- ber. Tt its future How to Stop Offensive Dr. Rich, who is making his 20th had been expected they Mt. Shllh.ld.ln . Difficult | Mt. Shishaldin, where eruptions | morously. but with an undertone of .seriousness. For every dollar that the Fed- ‘would have charge of the program today, but arrived too late o carry out the plans made two weeks ago. Foot Odors ! Il What was believed to be a sack | ‘of fertilizer was spread by Patrick Doherty, mining man of Richard- son in the Fairbanks area, on his | garden. He had bought the subs ‘umoe at Fred Wukm sel£ the Soon after the spreadmg rain fell. The supposed fertilizer proved to be ‘céemient. and the garden was buried under concrete. Stark naked except for a cov-| ering of mosquitos, Al Welch, old- | time Alaskan, in a half-crazed condition, startled the workers in Loranger Brothers' camp on Willow Cregk near. Flat in the Iditarod distriet as he ran to them babbling | for help. He was quickly taken care of. He explained that he had start- | ed from his cabin on Donlin Creek to go to Flat. On the way he fell into Bonanza creek. He built a fire, took off all his clothes and ‘hung them near the blaze to dry. Then he went bathing in the stream. His clothes ignited and werg completely burned. The mos- quitoes were at their worst. He suffered terrible torture while run- ning the several miles to Willow Creek. One hundred and fourteen brown in 28 days .on Kodiak Island by F. E. Lewis, wealthy Californian who is cruis- ing in {Alaska waters on his yacht Stranger. He and his party obtained seven grown specimens and two liye -cubs. Mr. Lewis does not-think All-Alaska News warehousc- | T |FIRE SWEEPS CONEY (ISLANB, = he counted any bear twice. will continue his cruise to Nome | zmd Point Barrow. [ NEW YORK, Ju.ly 14.—Five of lan undetermined origin swept Two horses belonging to Werner | through Coney Island yesterday but Ohls, Anchorage dairyman, were was brought under control before |put out of commission by bullet it had time to wipe out the famed wounds in the shoulders, having |resort, the playgrounds of the city’s been made targets while grazing |4,000,000. by unknown riflemen. One 011 The number of persons injured the animals may not recover. is placed at 200 of whom 40 were | |sent to hospitals, none in a serious condition, however. Four blocks square are a 'black- | Hydraulic operations will be con- ducted on Faith Creek, a tributary of Chantanika in the Fairbanks ened mass of wreckage including district. A ditch two and half miles bath houses, apartment - buildings, long will be built to bring muerhmall concessions -and dwellings: from Hope Creek. The ground to be| The damage is estimated by the ‘hydraunckod extends a distance of Coney Island Chamber of Com- | four or five miles and an eight- |merce at $2500,000 of which about year lease has been obtained on$1,500,000 is covered. by insurance. it from the Fairbanks Exploration; Among ths sufferers .were 500 Company by Ernie Peterson,! bathers whose money and clothing Thomas McKinnop, John Peterson |burned in the bath houses. and Robert Swanson, Transportation companies took the sufferers home as rapldy as on the Baker benen claim at the POsSible. mouth of Ganes Creek .in the, s | @ g ¢ Kuskokwim district production op-;' erations are ,being conducted by | T CuF CATs were shipped: to Oordava Charles Baker, Nels. P. Anderson‘““i the. rest' Whs. delivered ‘to the and Frank Speljack. |North Star, supply ship for the ;Bureau of Indian Affairs for dis- : st ey the, Tursania. wir- Fire destrayed - Michael Nicolis| for fogion e, Dreaus var eabin at Tanana, No one was in the e structure at the time. An over- heated stove is supposed to have cm"m the mflnatrqet started the blaze. of Fairbanks' has been imade an arterial highway: ¥ehicles approach- ing it from side streets mwust stop before crosing it. The speed limit (on it is 15 miles an hour. An Indian: resident of Shage- a Fifteen cars of coal from mines on the Alaska Railroad arrived in Seward recently. A small part of | it was ‘kept for marketing there. mmmmmnmmmmmnlmmmllu|||||||||||||m|||uum|||||lmmuun. EAT MORE FI -Help luk ‘Slough :‘was:drowned dn the Yukon R-plds m Anvik, Louis Blackburn. M. 8 !estdent |of Alaska 33 years, died in the hospital at Fairbanks following: a | H the Fishermen |chumina to enter . the . hospital Frederick Zorn, aged. Alaska Pio- | neer,” was found dead in:his cabin in Anchorage. The end was due to | natypral .causes. When found, he had been dehd two days. Averaging 5 25¢ and | |SPECIAL for FRIDAY Large, Prime Red Salmon P 'y TS How, Much Would, You, Pay ’l‘o Be Rid of Rheumauc Pains In 48 Hours? i’—Would You Pay 85 Cents? Well: Here’s a chance for you to be spry once more -- to <o your work cherrfully without one lwlnle of pain. * g LE Here's a positive uun.rmuo that no rheumatism sufferer can afford w pass up~-you can be free fromn E I H £ £ ) H H to 12 Pounds‘ 30¢ Each ! IllllllflllllfllmHllllmllll!lfillmlmmfl WE DELIVER ' UNITED FOOD C0. CASH IS KIN agonizing Rheumltlm and’ xeep free from it. Get one. 85 cent bottle of Allenr\x from Butler Mauro Drug ©o. or any progressive druggist with the od & £ K ¥ torture will all be gone In “ houts or money back. And when pains are gone—keep: right on taking Allenrd 'till every e bit of harmful uric dctd is out of' PHONE ‘103 your body — Happiness comes’ with this wonderful prescription—thot- wu“ :‘ands know it—you ought to know " \ IIHIlIlIl”IIHIIIIWIII"Ill!!!"ll nnn FAMED RESORT 2 understanding that your pains mdi continued ‘ through the Spring and eral government has expended in Winter, was described as the most | Alaska since its purchase in 1867, difficult to chinb: of all mountains the Territory has -reimbursed 25 he had ascended. Cinders ~'from |per cent of it in the form of taxes slag dischargéd from vents in the paid into the national treasury, side of the: Mmountgin: offered un- |Judge Wickersham asserted. He cit- | stable . footing . for the ' explorers led a letter written him- by the | who. made the last ‘100 feet-after | Assistant Secretary of Treasury more }h.m hour of hard labor. | showing that hetween 1869 and 1 An g conquered, ' 1931, ‘Alaska had pa!d to the ”Fed- Juneau ’ Beauty the elements. j h f ‘f,i“)Z ‘H;D id 13" ' lupeuu Lumber fli\h '31" . ‘ Hagris Hardware Co. Juneau Motors elson Jew California Groeery George Brothers. onnors Moton.Co., Ine. Allen Shattuck . American Bqnty Parlor & ] ¢ 1o 8 TJ. R R A Fo e ELLe TR M That is your good I;allle—youi credit. utler Mnum'an Co. \d %%l\ne i “ng“Am RM: Flames might burn your entire property, but there is one valuable possession that a blaze cannot destroy. not de:pe‘n“den‘t on material things=—it cannot be damaged by It remains ‘unsullied unless‘you yoursélf cause a blot to fall upon it. In your everyday dealings, you can keep your Credit in_good staiding by paying your bills promptly. Your metchant ini cxt'eiidifl'g you the ’brivilege of a charge’ account does so on the condition that you will pay your account in full by the 15th of the month fo]lowmg purchase. June bills are due July 15th, tomorrow. Keep your credit record cledr by paying now. Commerdial Associatmfi ] ol oy arnick’s Gi iy Py res ey seat ' e | - ¥ - i their charge of road and, trail construc- jtion for the Interior Department. This is an asset rocery. unem-Younx Hardware Co. S»niflnry pnt ,Cu. Dr. W, W. Council Junug Bottling Works Dr. R. E. Southwell Mrs. Wm. Jarman If you want to g2t rid of hot Next week’s meeting will be furn- | weather foot odors, just rub your |ed into.“Alaska Road Commission feet with Moone's Emerald Oil at Day,” to honor the retiring mem- 'bers of that Commission, whose work here has been discontinued bedtime. Emerald Oil neutralizes offensive, |burning perspiration and overcomes by Congressional enactment, and !all unpleasant odors the second you successors who will have apply. it. And it’s so refreshing! Takes the sting right out of tired, hot feet and rests them wonderfully. Keeps feet from swelling, too, no matter how hot the day. Butler Mauro Drug Co. say they won't keep your money unless -am Emerald Oil ends your summer foot troubles. —adv. ¥ ACQUIRING the home first you’li find it easier to obtain the other things you so much desire. These pmple itgmj and prices will give you an idea of how eco- nomically. you can fill your bufldincmdam oo, 3 #t. 8 In. 3 6, 4.......'#2.35 Dage e ¢ 230 h..'uJu. "'"'“"f 175 a-a-n.nn.fln.flh 7.00 24z M m: ems ,..‘..1.98 Seuh Procmes (ne pulleysd . 175 ' Send for free m‘ “‘ o KBTS Onwu.mlsm. _1933 First Ave. So., Seétfle i SERIES 222 « THE NEW Hupmobile ms Hardware Co. ter & Pond Co. J: B. Burford & Co. u Drug..Co. Co., Ine. -and “’ll ‘I‘:":l ISI:G Stroller’s Weekly 8 Alaslm eat Co. ig H. R, Biiepard & Sons IN TRUTH A CAR FOR A NEW AGE! JAMES CARLSON Juneau Distributor %flflmmmm|ummulllmummnmnmmnl;mumwmmmmmmummmmmmmuummmmummmmmmmmn|uumnmnmmmmummnmmu

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