The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, July 21, 1932, Page 8

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i ; A e = WESTWARD TO CANADA MAKES GET PLEASURE PROPOSALS TO0 VISITORS HERE ~ GREAT BRITAIN Porpoise Is Killed in Chat-Preferences to D ominion [mports R(‘quested-~ va l'd :vlllS(‘UIn ham Strait for Har- ’ | | | To meet P Vernon and his| OTTAWA, July 21.—A definite ew, Thomas Williams, of San |offer proposing wider preferences isco, the Campbell Church |for British gool in exchange for vacht Westward put into Juneau greater Br n ferences to Can- carly this morning, having come ladian imports was made by Pre- < isurely voyage from Ket- |mier Bennett, of Canada, on the & an without passengers. Mr. jopening of the Imperial Economic Vernon and Mr. Willlams will ar- rive here on the steamship Prince |had Any such program of preferences craft (would have considerable effect on the trade with the United States. Rupert, due in port tonight have chartered the pleasure for a month’s fishing, whalir sight-seeing cruise in South: aska waters. In coming from Ketchikan, They | and Al- | Roe Dykeman of the Westward put o several sman bays anda| LECTURE BE GIVEN inlets looking for good camping HERE NEXT MONDAY places for hunting parties next gy \ fall £ > ¢ A lecture on Christian Science, o5 o = Porpoise Killed and Skinned | g o0 e Uit G be given| A young State Senator from| In Chatham Strait a Dall Por-|,ayi Monday evening at 8 o'clock |New York went to the De: m«"m“h‘lw poise was killed and its body lfted |, he geottish Rite Temple, Fourth | National Convention in Baltimore | aboard. The creature weighed 185 {1 i gero 101912 an avowell and determins long. It was skinned and the meat Kilpatrick, C.S.B., of Boston, Mas-|Could a college profe: become ’ cut from the bones. The skin and | gorncotts 1o 2 Protident? The & solon. Y sachusetts, is a passenger aboard | Presiden he young solon was| 5 ! skeleton will be packed in brine |y st 5y 0 B A ‘me- | comvinced he could | P un s dcorcn by Capt. Dykeman and sent 0,441, jast Tuesday morning. He is| S0 the youthful legislator went Harold J. Coolidge, Jr., of the Har-|zooc o, oo O Datrick on {to work for Wilson, one of tha Vessel of E)fplorer Dfi'“ o vard Museum of Comparative Z0o- | pis alcka Jeotare. tour, original_so-called Wiison Demo-| aged—Is in Port in | More Deaths Reported as , Cambridge, Mass. Mr. Cool- - Ly S/ T crats. He Franklin D. Roose- 4 who is a nephew of former | velt, now Democratic Presidential | Western Alaska Heat Wave Parha.lly President Coolidge, was in Alaska | JOHN T. SPICKETT nominee. Subsiclas . few years ago collecting speci- | mens of sea and land creatures but | Conference cart.|CHRISTIAN SCIENCE Exchange O“Cl’ here today after he been made Chairman. IS SERIOUSLY ILL ROOSEVELT— No. 4,—President Woodrow Wilson. “KEYNOTERS” In Nominee’s Life e Working in the convention, an¢ SEATTLE, July 21.—An amateu radio operator here received a me ' H later, in campaigning for Wilson A he was unable to get a Dall por-| probably his mind did not carry|S38¢ addressed to the Associated poise at that time. John T. Spickett, pioneer resi- |him to the dream that he too|Fr¢SS from another amateur at Charters Are Arranged ident of Juneau and prominent for |might aspire to the Presidency Ugashik, Alaska, saying Frank The Westward will return Mr.|years in the theatrical business, is| Woodrow Wilson, perhaps with | North, writer and explorer, put into Vernon and Mr. Williams to Prince {seriously ill in St. Ann's hospital [as little thought of the ultimate | U8aShik with his vessel badly dam- Rupert August 20, and at that port | He was moved from his rooms in |career of that young man, gave |2£ed: : ol then will embark a party who have |ine Spickett Apartments to the[the push that placed Roosevels| , NOrth left Ikatan Unimak Island chartered the craft until August 30. | hospital late yesterday. He is af- [before the public eye, from whici | Aleutians, June 10, intending to The yacht will be released at Ju-|flicted with stomach trouble. he has never disappeared, Wi-|nter the Arclc icepack. He was au August 30, and will be board- | For almost two months, Mr.|son rewarded his helper with the forced to return by a heavy storm ed here then by a hunting party |gpickett was confined to bed in |suggestion to Secretary of theNayy|, Preliminary survey indicated that has arranged to charter the |pjs apartment craft until September 30 |taken down, he has become grad- Since he was first | Josephus Daniels that Rooseve't would make Daniels a good assist- He | the vessel is so badly damaged it cannot be repaired in time for him to reach the Arctic this sea- T L B {ually worse. His age, T4 years, (ant. \tcnds to retard his recovery. Rooszevelt accordingly became As- P .o ! > . sistant Secretary of the Navy MOTHER AND SAN FRANCISCO, Cal, July 21. NOW SIGNED WASHINGTON, July dent Hoover today signed the Un- last Friday and had been critically | employment Relief Bill Summer Footwear —George 59 brother of Rolph, aged ill since then. CORRECT—COOL—COMFORTABLE years, Gov. James Rolph, Jr. | former President of the California- | Hawaiian Sugar Refining Corpora- e 21 —Presi- tion, is dead. He suffered a stroke | You'll be delighted when you see our wonderful assortment of sum- mer footwear, new styles, new pat- terns and new ombinations with plenty of cut-out effects. We have not sacrificed quality for low price for we believe cheap shoes that do not fit properly and do not wear well are expensive at any price. Wherever you go youll see the smartest dressed women wearing Star Brand Shoes—as low as $3.95 Pair In many delightful versions for day-time and evening. $3.95, $4.95, $5.95 SPORT OXFORDS Not only are they chosen for their clever designing but for their very dependable comfort features which are exclusive with Star Brand Ox- fords. Priced at $4.95 Pair SALE OF SUITS AND TOP COATS STILL CONTINUES AT $17.75 BuY €A R WHERE OU MAKES &Y, B. M. BEHRENDS CO., Inc Juneau’s Leading Department Store -~ e L R s A LOGANBERRIES FOR PIES Gallon cans, each .60 cents GARNICK’S—Phone 174 e ot S SeLa Lt e A0 SAMAAAAAAEEAREe a0 e A ARA] |gained fame in that position. |tried for the U. S. Senatorship| from New York, with Wilson's ap—f | proval, but was beaten. Nonethe- | {less, the reputation he made for| himself as Secretary was not for- | | gotten. | In 1920 he found himself Demo- ;md!l(‘ Vice Presidential candidat running with James Cox on a Wi [son platform. Wilson became ill |but his force permeated the party, | and Cox and Roosevelt carried the | Wilson doctrine to the nation. No one knows exactly what in- fluence Wilson had on his party's candidates. A story has been |told that both were called to him, listened to his pléa for interna- tional co-operation, went out through the country almost witia the zeal of fanatics to carry out the Wilson ideals. They failed in the election, but both Cox and Roosevelt often have spoken of the impression that Wil- son made on them. R DINO GRANDL AMBASSADOR ROME, July 21. — Dino Grandi, Foreign Minister, who from the Italian Cabinet y: | has been appointed Ambassador to | Great Britain. He takes his office | next month. >eoe |GIVING 10-COUNT [ TO BLINDED BOXER | AIDS IN RECOVERY MINNEAPOLIS, Minn., July 21. | —Ernie Fliegel, once a tiger among the bantamweights once more has | stayed off the count he dreads to hear. | Fliegel was moving steadily up- | ward toward ring prominence when his career was cut short by a punch | which blinded him for six months. | During those dark days, little |hope was held that the sight once | more would be restored and his old | manager, Freddie, Lucas, found ‘on- {ly one method to rally his friend | He would begin to count. { “One. Two three. |four—" It was a simple trick |but Fliegel's ring spirit would re- |spond and he would rally to regain |the hope and patience which fi- i{nally returned him his vision. But it was not of normal strength and | Fliegel turned to managing fight- |ters for his livelihood, bringing King Tut, among others, along to | prominence. | A year agd his sight failed again. {He was off to Physicians in Rich- |ester, Minn,, and at Chicago, and |again he listened to that counc | through long months in a hospital |cot. Ome eye remained sightless but the other has improved and his spirit rewarded, is get- |ting back into stride for further! | managerial activity. ! HER 85 9 7 SR | | i Sliced cold boiled ham, home- ! made potato salad, cucumbers and onions, cold slaw, hot buttered toast, iced tea, Mrs. Eli Radovich and son, born several days ago in St. Ann's Hos- pital, left the institution yesterday for home. Daily Empire Wans Ads Pay 0. K. AMERICA TUNE IN ON LUCKY STRIKE — 60 modern minutes with abe world's finest dance jorchestras, and famous Lucky Strike features, every Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday eve- ing over N. B, C. networks, Thirtycight ALEX, STILLMAN CHICAGO, Il like temperatures throughout the July 21.—Torch- subsided today upper Mississippi Basin as the nation was credited with 38 more d hs as a result of extreme summer heat, Showers swept mercifully across the northern brow from the Rock- ies to the Great Lakes but the Southern areas still gasped in an- ticipation of relief promised by to- MOrrow. ERACRL T MISSOURI VALLEY TEAMS DIVIDE ATHLETIC TITLES DE MOINES, Ia., July 21 —Sport | titles were well divided in the Mis- souri Valley Conference for the 1931-32 school year. Drake, Creighton A. and M. took and Oklahoma the three major Copr.. 1932, The American Tobaceo Co. GANGSTERIS | MAKING 600D AS SHOEMAKER Al Capone Model Prisoner in Penitentiary at Atlanta ATLANTA, Ga., July 21.—A pic- ture of penitent Al Capone, patient- ly pegging shoes and handing out righteous advice to evildoers just to “come out” of the Federal Prison here, is portrayed within peniten- tiary walls. The former serving sentence ‘ev&sllm, is quoted }rellow prisoners tha iget you nowhere, | Capone is making good as a con- vict shoemaker. He says he has| only one worry and that is the| |impression on the outside that “I| jcan’t take my medicine.” o e Chicago gangster, for income tax as telling his “rackets don't | N PLANE CRASH {Mother and Her Husband| | Escape Unhurt in An- other Accident | | CHICAGO, I, July 21.4Al\2X-1‘ ander Stillman, aged 20, scion of a | wealthy New York family, was! |slightly injured when the plane: which he was piloting crashed at| |a forced landing on the outskirts |of Gary, Indiana { The crash occurred shortly before | Stillman's mother, Mrs. Fowler Mc- | Cormick, of Chicago, and her hus-| band escaped unhurt when a plane they were in, hurrying to the boy's side, nosed over at the Lansing, ' Illinois, airport. titles—football, baseball and track' —respectively, while Washington of St. Louis won swimming and ten- is championships. Grinnell was he only “regula member of the loop not annexing a title as But- others? Do you inhale? Lucky Strike has chosen to raise this question . .. because certain to increase her reserve, British jew- elers have developed ornaments of “We've spilled the beans” in the smoker’s interest \O you inhale? “You've spilled the beans!” said the cigarette trade when first we asked this simple question—a ques- tion which long had been treated with silence that would “shame a Sphinx!” ‘Why? Wasn’t the subject vital enough to pursue? Or, was there a hidden reason for the general avoidance of the question by Radio Broadcasters’ Invasion of Political Arena Growing * * * * * * Legislation By “Kind Permission of the Copyright Owners” May Be Introduced If Ousted Ether Orators Are Vindicated By Ballot Box. i RoeerT P SHULER. DR JorN R BRINKIEY & Hengy Fiern(@ Put off the air by the Federal Redio Commission last year because of the oature of their broadcasts, two well-k orators of the ether have recently moved the sphere of their activities to the political field. They are Dr. John R. Brinkley, the license of whose station, KFKB, at Milford, was revoked by the commission, and Rev. P. Shuler, former . Dr. Brinkley's Federal permit w r action being taken with regard to his medical license by the Kansas Medical Board because o'f unethical be- havior over the The doctor, determined to seek vindication, ran for Governor of Kansas, but was beaten. Dr. Shuler, who is pastor. of the Trinity Methodist Church South, Los Angeles, prov{o‘ked nation ‘:ude dis- turbances by his cyclonic activities over the air. Cmnm,_polmc.mm and the courts of California all felt the lash of his tongue until the license of his church station, KGEF, was revoked by the Federal Radio Commission. Shuler has now filed in Califo! for both the Democratic and Republican rominations for Senator, secking the seat now occupied by Senator Sam Shortridge, Republican. It is probable that these stumpers of the air es have taken the cue of Henry Fields who recently defeated Senat. t in the lowa primaries. Fields, to broadcaster who_ wonducted his campaign from his own radi % But Mr. Fields accomplishments are not limited to speiling into a microphone. Very likely, the result would have been the same had he never seen a broad- casting studi cancelled following simil Since tobacco stores are not peor- mitted to sell cigarets after 8 p. m in England, more than 3,000 venc- With England melting all gold ler, the sixth member, joined only chromium plate. Bracelets, ear-|ing machines have been instalied in in time to compete in the track rings, etc, are being made of !his:hanways and other places in Lon- tryouts. metal. don. DO YOU INHALE? impurities concealed in even the finest, mildest tobacco leaves are removed by Luckies’ famous purifying process. Luckies created that process. Only Luckies have it! Do you inhale? Of course you do—and 0, in the smoker’s interest, Luckies have not feared to “spill the beans.” “It’s toasted” i

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