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THE JULY 18, 1932. DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE, WEATHER BUREAU ‘The Weather LOCAL DATA By the U. 8. Weather Bureau) Forecast for Juneau and vieinity, beginning at 4 p.m. July 18: SPEED BOAT RECORD HAS BEEN BEATEN iKaye Don Averages Over 120 Miles an Hour on Second Trial Today LONDON; July ‘18-—Kaye Don, British speed boat pilot, broke h: 3¢ 34 6 28 Cldy |new world's record, made earlier in 46 46 10 01 Rain |the da by averaging more than 40 48 4 .02 Cldy |120 m an hour on his second 50 50 0 Clearlr\m, eclipsing Gar Wood's Ameri- Tanana 62 40 02 Clear |can time by 10 miles. Fairbanks 60 40 Clear e e e Eagle .. 2 60 42 Clear | SPECIAL SALE TODAY St. Paul 48 44 Cldy{ Sce our windows for Special Dutch Harbor 50 40 Cldy Prices and Sale, Close outs at i ¥ ? 5 Kodiak 46 Rain . CASH BAZAAR. A seven-inning baseball gnnct e : Cordova 52 Cldy | —8 was played by the Tideflats and | Shmesk 50 Rain B PR N the Star Hills, the Tideflats win- Sitka 49 Pt.Cldy| Only 0.17 per cent of Michigan ning 9 to 2. Kefchikan 52 Cldy |cattle tested today are infected with Prizes for the races were 15 Prince Rupert 46 Pt. Cldy | tuberculosis. cents for firsts, 10 cents for sec-| Edmenton 44 Pt. Cldy | onds and 5 cents for thirds. Awards | Seattle 54 Cldy of 50 cents were made to eaca| Portlana 54 Pt. Cldy member of the baseball teams San. Franisco 52 Clear Most_important of all was = free ice cream of which ti young filks ate until they could eat mo more. | Jorgensen in General Charge M. 8. Jorgensen was gencral | chairman of the committee hav- | ing charge of the outing. H. R. VanderLeest was starter of the races, and L. W. Turnoff, ‘ii William Garster and George Simp- | kins, judges. J. L. Gray umpired the baseball ¥ 4 Cah. game. ¥ R | Ben Leaming and M. S. Sides| : o _ : | |were in charge of the ice cream | Hiy " &b i | i J. 8 ,GHILDREN HAVE Astaire;Cave1zdis!1 Marriage 600D TIME AT “Okayed” by British Rulers i ‘ Presentation at Buckingham Palace Puts Seal of Royal ELKS' FIELD DAY i Approval on American Dancer Bride of Scion o | of House of Devonshire. Foot Races, Baseball Game and Ice Cream Fea- ture Program Showers tonight and Tuesday; moderate southerly winds. Barometer Temp. Humidity Wind Veiocity Weather 30.09 52 81 S 10 Rain 30.06 50 100 s Rain 30.02 54 86 S Cldy CABLE AND RADIO REPORTS YESTERDAY | Highest 4p.m. temp. 36 46 48 62 Time 4 pm. yest'y 4 am. toda) Noon today 5 10 TODAY Little bpys gnd girls had a good time at the annual Field Day| events given for their be 2 Recreation Park Saturday after- noon by the Elks Lodge the city. There were 19 foot races | all for children not older 11 years. Nine races boys and nine for the most intere hoys and girls 3 years Seven-Inning Lowest 4a.m. 4a.m. Precip. 4am. Station temp. temp. velocity 24hrs. Weather Barrow Nome Bethel Fort Yukon of 58 52 56 60 68 64 68 58 LARGE SIZE—72x84 LANKETS Positively the best part’ wool plaid blanket 64 68 66 70 64 e S \ TUB DRESSES the | we've ever seen at this low price. Made from an ideal combination of wool and fine grade e e I'particularly decries hitching other sms” to nudism, notably vegeta- | rianism. cotton, they are soft and fluffy—with splen- did warmth and wearing qualities. 72x84 size. Handsome 3 in. binding of sateen. Weight about 31/ lbs. Colors—blue, orchid, peach, rose and green. In Print, Pique, Linene and Voile service. They had many assist- {ants. | FISHER GETS BIG TERRITORY UNDER FEDERAL ORDERS| Capt. Willilam Fisher ,of Seattle, | supervising inspector for the 11th District, of the TUnited State SBteamboat Inspection Service, will have jurisdiction over the entire Coast, Alaska and Hawaii as a result of the retirement of Capt. John K. Bulger of San Francisco, supervising inspector for the 1st| Distriet, it was learned today. Captain Fisher has been appoint- ed acting supervisor for the 1st District in addition to his duties | as supervising inspector for the | 11th District, with headquarters in Seattle. The 1st District of the|geattle up to 1918, Because of th: United States Steamboat Inspec- | ALL S T0RD @nd T/ADY CAVENDISH ArrcR WEDDING CEREMONY. ®™ With her presentation to King George and Queen Mary at the r»cent court it Buckingham Palace, the former Adele Astaire, now Lady Charles Cavendish, has been stamped as a Grade A member of the British nobil- ity in good standing and her marriage to the blue-blood son'of the Duke | and Duchess of Devonshire has received the seal of royal approval. Thus are all doubts as to the soci atus of the American dancer, vho carried off and married one of Britain’s most eligible young men under the noses of an army of England’s hopeful debs, laid to rest. For wheve the King leads who dare refuse to follow? Miss Astaire made her last stage appearance in “The Band Wagon” last March with her brother, Fred, in Chicago. She sailed for England a week later and married Lord Charles in May in the private chapel at Chatsworth House, Devonshire, seat of the bridegroom’s parents, in the presence of the Duke and Duchess. TI romance between the young British aristocrat and the stage beauty began when Lord Charles was in New York in 1929 as a clerk in the firm of J. P. Morgan and Co., preparatory to entering business in London. His father is one of the biggest landowners in England, his estate comprising 186,000 acres. Special 95¢to $2.25 B. M. BEHRENDS R e of Tuture, Built Faster and Cheaper, To Rise from Laboratory *e president of & bigwl‘:brpora-[m g0 up in 180 days and be re- tion eimerges from a meeting az’placvd in two decades, write D. H, whish a new home for his com_'Bumham, director of works, Chi- pany had been discussed. |cago Century of Progress, in Pop= “We have decided,” he announc- |Ular Mechanics Magazine, s ‘easually, “to erect a seventy- These structures will have their five story afifice building. Tt will|inception in the .laboratory rather be ready in six mionths, In twen- |than the stone quarry and thelum- ty years we will salvage the ma- i ber pile, for they will be composed terial and build another one.” aimost entirely of synthetic ina- R iterials new to the building indus- S et M dad by, They will be bulls to.dast would Be if the bullding were con- |Pust @s long as their elevators, strucked ©f the same materials|Plumbing and other mechanical and by thé same methods used |fixtures may be expected to remain in the past. However, in a few |Serviceable, and no longer.! years, or perhaps even in a few| Visitors to Chicago's Century of Progress Exposition next summer expect skyscrapers S mnvy 34 ‘vpe will see groups of buildings not | | | | | { | | N { g ) -—) ant in 1890 and four years. 1spector sixteen sion inspector insps in Seattle and a sup: two year has He LOGGERS’ SHOES a First of Army Officers to Leave Since A. R. C. Staff Disbanded | ’ B Bergmann’s The first Army officer to leave | here for a new station, following | Calked, Spring Heel the disbanding of the Alaska Road | Medium Weight Saturday, defeated Commiission, Lieut. J. R. Noyes, U.| 8. Engineér Corps, accompanied by Mrs. Noyes and their lttle son, left here on the steamer North- western this morning, enroute ta for The pressure is moderately low throughout Alaska except in the Southeast, and is lowest in Western Alaska and Yukon Territory with light showers in ndarly all portions of the. Territory followed by clearing in the Interior. The pressure is moderately high between Hawail and Southeast Alaska. Temperatures have fallen in the In- terior and have changed but little elsewhere. BEAUTY LIES” y L) R BEY u ND HELL | Hammock Reading B P 5 { Two corking light novels are just jout. Lois Montross returns wita WRITES R np E R | “Wind Before Dawn,” a book about | f, S 0% 2T o1 la huge and irrepressible professor | ] —_— land his two loves that is much - (B {more than a mere romance. Another Author Gives Idea| ™7, 50t s o )| [ha( Ou]‘ Happmess something about women and ca-| I W”’l U L |reérs. And does. But more impor S ithin Us tant is the writer's oneness witt o AT gl her fellow man, and her gift for By JOHN SELBY pressing sounds, sights and odors NEW YORK, July 18—It’s a bad|in words. sign, usually, when the jacket of| G B, Stern's new novel is called a book talks about “power.” And|Rueful Mating,” and ‘this time she 1 it calls the auther an un-|is concerned with two precocious | kncwn, as in the case of Howard |children, ! W. Roper and “Beauty Lies Behind| Her great gift is vividness, and | Hell,” results might be fatal. even when she attains it by enam- | They are not. Roper has read ling her characters like cloissonne ! John dos Passos, Ernest Heming- | figurines she never misses fire. way, Sherwood Anderson and Theo- | Tyjs time there is much fine detail dore Dreiser thoroughly. His meth- | ang flashing movement. od is a synthesis of their methods, = s gug el and of some others less obvious. | His staccato sentences pop out like | » rapid increase in shipping on Pu- newspapers. froim a press; his sbori, tion Service embraces Oregon, |got Sound and in Alaska, it bé- pithy scenes follow one another California and Hawaii. The 11th|came necessary to have a super- cinematically. [ District comprises, ~‘Washington, |vising inspector in Seattle. Nevertheless, one emerges with | FUR NEw PUST Idaho and Alaska. Executive Was Needed | — D reasonably clear impression of | Extends to mexican Linc | The volume of work was mount- | ¢ eorge Thane, and some idea of 2 OCapt. Fisheys jurisdiction will|{ing higher and higher and an exe- | CARDINALS DEFEAT the emotional experiences that re- extend from the Arctic to the Mex- |cutive with complete authority was | ISLANDERS, 12 TQ 7 tined him for his career as painter. | fcon bordér and will include Ha-{needed in order to have the busi- By a. score of 12 to 7 Such bits as the dancehall raid wail, ness of the service expeditionsly | %" oo qinals of Jn;nem land the hospital chapter compen- In view of the economy trend in | handled. $e Dou _.’" I‘mmk‘ \_’ sate for the often irritating.tap-tap | rational administration affairs,| oppe 11th District was crea Harry Brant pi‘.vh&l for the ©f the Roper style. there are soé Who expect Cabh:|and Capt. Fisher was promoied |Gardinals; Hagerup and Bloom-| i Figher will be retained in charge | rom geattle inspector to supervis | quist caught. | Abbe Dimriet Again of the United States Steamboating inspector and placed in charge. | Hayes and McCormick pitched| This time Ermest Dimnet writes Inspection Service for the entire| “cont Byger was one of the| Douglas. Fleet caught, lof “What We Live By,” using the| Coast, Alaska and Hawail fOr 50Me | mogt widely known government of- AT S G il Socratic method and arriving even- time. ; ficers connected with shipping. He | The value of forest produets sold tUaly at the idea that “our happi- Capt. Bulger, a8 supervision i joineq the United States Steam- |from farm woodlands in Tennessee Ne3S i Within us. All we meed to Spector with headquarters In San joat yncpection Service as an as- |in 1930 totaled $15,000,000. |do is to find its source and let it Men’s Water Repellant Clothing AT THE New Low Prices FRESH STOCK SABIN’S Everythng 1 Furnishings For Men lonly unusual in appearance but unique in censtruction. Through tue sale of display space these structures must pay for themselves during the 150 days the fair lasts. For this reason, Mr, Burnham continues, we have been forced to resort to new methods of building and have found some- thing to our surprise, that many of these methods and short cuts Francisco, had jurisdiction over are applicable likewise to perma-| nent structures, Planes ana surfates characterize this arehlitecture instead of classi- cal lines or a parade of plaster, ornamentation and decoration. Ins stead of expensive exberiors, we are depending on the dramatic effects of lighting and bright colors to furnish a background both new and Inspiring. e As a resuit, we are building for fQess than fourteen cents a cubi¢ foot of space. g We are usinig some bew building materials and making new uses of old ones, Mr.” Burnhath Writes, Nearly everything is factory made, Wall materials, for instance, aré pre-fabricated in shops, cut into standard shapes and sizes, and ar- rive ready to be put in place. And these sections are applied with clips and screws, instead of nails and rivets. The materials are light in weight and easy to handle. They require less steel for support and less labor to install. The framework for thwse structures 1s of light steel, bolted together to 'enable easy demolishing. The out- (ter walls of one building are com- posed entirely of asbestos-cement ‘board, hitherto used principally in small units for interior insulation. The space between outer walls and inner ones of plaster board is filled with insulating material made ¢f waste paper and emulsi- fied asphalt. Such insulation in these three-inch walls is equivalent to that provided by a seventeen- inch brick wall. e~ PRINCE GEORGE BOUND SOUTH Enroute from Skagway to Van- couver, B. C., the steamship Prince George called at Jubeau early yes- terday morning. Her visit was brief, i COUNTING and DRymiG RUI Suceessful in their four-! the of the salvage erew recovered gold at Pl Eng| ma-eml' under urm:mwin. the salvage ship is free to continue court decision on Fepreien lia, bead of the ul'.fi.. lia keep tally of the rance pany H.'vu'u& m l e » ip Artiglio one.of the many attempts o locate the PEES. ~ ere treated to an unpl . The treasure which the filing of a claim by its wo! , the paper id b, urd’ = sunk in .du Nez, t. and thre 2/ 0.3 ; Dwing POR GorD battle with the séa in efforts to reach the strongroom of the sunken liner Egypt, ant surprise on arriving with their first load of th)e: salvagers had wrested from Old Man Neptune rench fisheries company that participated in t some years ago. But the writ doesn’t apply to the Artiglio and raiging the remainder of the bullion, $5,000,000 in all, pending suit. On board the salvage vessel during the diving ope: i insurance Wl the Sorh:wa" of the ‘expédition run’ Cdtinn a Company, treasure For their employers, for ac “fiftyfifty.” It was & strangé sight to see the cr fi.n of the Counting and drying out thousands of Indian rupee notes. avey Jones’ locker. The first break into ‘h.t strongroom. t's gols tain Bec (CE - Joy of Gold Salvagers Marred by Writ First Cargo of Gold From Sunken Egypt Landed By Happy Treasure-Seekers, Only to Be Placed Under Arrest Pending Court Decision in Law Suit. | flow freely.” | The book probably will be less applauded than “The Art of Think- |ing” through no lack of sympathy | |on the part of the author, no unin- | telligibility of precept. Books on |the soul seem to be less popular | right now than books on the intel- | lect. | At the opposite pole, but equally | serious, is Jan Gay's {Naked.” Miss Gay says her experi- ence has taught her that nudism jcan do wonders therapeutically, |aesthetically and educationally even. Beattle. Lieut. Noyes has been assigned to duty with the District Engineer for the Seattle Rivers and Har- bors District. He will have charge of Alaska projects. James Truitt, engineer formeriy attached to the Juneau Rivers and Harbors distnict, and who has been transferred to the Seattle district left Sunday on the Northland for § his new assighment. ——————— Dipping the tops of fruit jarsy into paraffin will make them ab- Bhe feels that the objections cf solutely air tight, i nd Commander Quag- to the agreement salvagers and of the Artiglio, under Captain | expenses to date, Th, It ek Alwéy's start the day right on p,/ings of the morning! Sale Price $14.95 J. M. SALOUM Aeross from ‘Goldstein Building IN TRUTH A CAR FOR A NEW AGE! JAMES CARLSON " Uuneau Distributor