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L. DAILY AL T November Coat Sale NOTE THESE NOW IS THE TIME TO PURCHASE YOUR COAT. UNUSUAL VALUES— WOMEN’S DRESS COATS $22.50 and $25.00, Now $15.00 39.50 and 35.00, Now 25.00 57.50, 45.00 Now GIRLS” DRESS COATS 0 Coats, 12.50 Coats, : ] Now N()“ BLUE CHINCHILLA COATS FOR GIRLS $3.95, $4.50, $4.95 WOMEN’S BLUE CHINCHILLA COATS \ $7.95 Men’s Overcoats, All Sizes, $22.50 CARDS AND CHRISTMAS DECORATIONS On Display on the Second Floor TOYS B. M. Behrends Co., Inc. Juneau’s Leading Department Store The world's gest hydro-electric plant has been erected on the Dnieper River in the Ukraine Republic of the Scviet Union under supervision of Col. Hugh L. Cooper (right). The roaring spill- way is pictured above. How the dam and its generating plant will form a scurcc of power for neigh- bering industries is chown in sketch. .| years, during which he also served (By The Asicciated Precs.) Power! To get the power neces:a The Milky Way ? dedication Col. Hugh L. | ker gigantic schemes of indu rican engineer and * ization, Soviet Russla h buil will take a prin- | Dnieprostroy, the greatesi hydro- with A. V. Win- | ‘ electric plant in the world drawing ts epergy from a dam 140 feet high, which impounds the drain- age of 170,000 square miles. The dam, soon ‘to be formally |t opcned, is Russia’s biggest con- | pred. the adminis- Calonel the Or- r his work, be so hon- uction. But the Soviel Unicn Amcrican Mcthods plans to build ther dam ::} ian materials and Russian Volgastroy that 'will have & ca- -gpor were used almost entirely in acity three times Dniep: | the construction, but American || ; and will irrigate 10,000,000 a mgtheds, supervised by American Power has been the cornerstone of Russia’s industrialization pro- ' gram. Since 1920 more than a score of large central stations and many gsmall stations have been , erected. Power plani output las year was 10,600,000,000 kilowatt- . houys, ¢wice that of 1928 and five + times the prewar output. Immense Production existing capacily Dniepro- is expected to add an average s of 2,520,000,000 angineers, and with' American ‘ma- | | shinery were back of them.; The | American plans for censtruction | were chosen after a comparative was made between them and a Buropean design. Russian labor set several rec- ords, among which was the feat of pouring 510,000 cubic meters of onercte in 1930. This is claim- 2qa, is more than ever had been poursd befcre on a single projesct. ) The dam is eliminating a series Rine, ushines, of mapids, mak2s navigable the . S48 Dave Dnieper river from the Black Sea, 1200 miles south, to some distance above Dnieprostroy. B Louisiana in 1981 ranked s the S—over iop SRASR AL A A n s . authorities hit upon the idea natural gas, says a Bureau of { Mines report. ently all paid up, Here’s one vnsln! collecting unpaid e morning cup eof while one’s resistance is still | weak, The City of Newark, N. .h attaching Ent!e reminders of over- b g milk bottles, But Mrs, leading State in the export of|'Ann Kelly {above) seems unaffected /by the notice. Her taxes are appare E, MONDAY, NOV. 28, 1932. R T e tioned on trade concessions nn_a re- | tions of the Interior and rain or si ductions in armament expendi- ure is high south of the Ale tures. " |in Western Alaska with clear wealtl 1 Intentions ¢ |ern Alaska including the Gulf. T | 3 | “The notes sent Poland and €zech- | |oslovakia contained many of the| n River. MDRE N A'rl Ns J. S. DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE, WEATHER BUREAU 0 - Hole The Weather N 0 TI FI wAk LOCAL DATA i ) By the U, 8. Weather Bureau) DEBTS AR . DUE Forecast for Junean and vieinity., beginning at 4 p.m., Nov, 28: now flurries and colder tonight and Tuesday; gentle easterly winds. i | Time Barometer Temp. Hum!dity Wind Veiocity Weather 1Ok s \ . |4 pm. yest'y -.29.45 31 8 sW 8 Cldy O“ICIHL S!OIES Are Dis-|: um. today . w20 32 72, «Ng ol Snow atched to Pol [Noon today .....2931 30 B W 3 Snow B axuj apd | CABLE AND RADIO REPORTS : Czechoslovakia i s YESTERDAY TODAY |ALSQ TOLD REVISION Highest 4pm. | Lowest 4am, dam. Precip. 4am. M AY BE DISCUSS Station temp. temp. temp. temp. veloeity 24hrs. Wéather { o o ED oW ;i -16 -18 { -18 ~-16 10 0 Clear . | Nome .. 10 10 6 12 14 04 Pt. Cldy Committee of U. §, Cham-|sene - %% 2 | 22 3¢ 8. . cldy b f C : | Fort Yuken & 0 | -24 -24 4 0 Clear N0 M ?j’f;‘:“er_ce Seeks | Tanana 2 PR Y T L R Bn(;w odificat | Fairbanks L5l 2 2 4 0o .02 cldy o8 i -2 10 -12 0 16 0 Clear | ¥ Cldy WASHINGTON, Nov. 28. — T . 40 40 107887 8k 18 18 2lmost identical notes, the Sta; Dutch Harbor 44 42 | 38 40 12 02 Clear Department Saturday told the gov- X°7 : T R 0 0 Cldy ernments of Poland and Czecho- C 28 28 18 18 4 0 Clear clovakia that the United States Juneaun 36 31 30 32 1 .0} Snow would not relieve them of pay- | Sik? R 0 15 Pt.Cldy ments on December 15 but said| K ® B | B @ 4 96 mi,n the President is prepared to rec- !’ 50 48 42 42 40 44 Rain ommend to Congress that it con- 40 :}6 | 3 40 10 0 Clear stitute an agency to examine the 66 54 48 ig 12 ,(11; Pt.ctildy whole subject of war debts, 54 52 42 p ear Simultaneously, a Commitfee of S°0 Francisco 64 64 58 58 4 02 Pt.Cldy the Chamber of Commerge of the| T LA S o United States recommeMied that | = barometric pressure is unusually low in extreme Southeast {the iAmerican Government grant a and moderately low over the remainder of the Territory ex- its war debtors modification, condi- cept the Aleutian Islands. Snow has fallen in Bering Sea and por- now in Southeast Alaska. The utian Islands and rising slowly, her in Northern and extreme East- emperatures have risen in |same wordsrand phrases that ap- peared in the notes previgusly sent gum, and emphasized anew the | President’s intention in seeking a‘ revival of the War Forelgn Debt| |Commission or a similar body. The | | positions contrasts with that of | By Women in | By HERBERT PLUMMER President-Elect Roosevelt' who fa-| wASHINGTON, Nov. 28—What- | vors handling the necessary debt | .icr clse historians of the future negotiations through the regular ... et gown as the significant diplomatic channels. JE trends to developi French Afl“q!g ¢ n the 1832 Pres- | From Paris came word that the| dential campaign | |French would wait upon Great| it'’s .a pretly safe | { Britain before answering the Unit- bet that the evo- (ed States debt note. ? lution of the ac- The British Cabinet members tivity of women |held an informal discussion Sun- n politics will day préteding a formal meeting have large men- | scheduled for today, when the debt tion. ; note will be discussed. Bl Well might the The supposition is France will| historian of the pay if England does. future record that P the year 1932| FORMER PR.INCETON : “i|marked the real| | PRESIDENT IS DEAD MRS. EDWARD GANN 3oginning of the transition from the American wo- (Continued fivin Page One) man's idea that her duty was mergly to cast her ballot to that ol engaging actively in the poli- tical game herself—even to seeking‘ public office in wholesale fashion. Exactly 101 of them were candi- dates in 31 states this year. And they were nof{ aiming low, either,' Three sought seats in the Senate,| since made his home at Hamil- ton. Dr. Patton was educated at War- wick Academy, Knox Qollege and the University of Toronto and was graduated from ?rmceton Theo- 128 seats in the House, and two | logical Seminary in 1865, In tHe|the gubernatorial chair. | came year Hé was ordainéd a Pres- | byterian minister and for six years ; filled pastorates at (New York, MAEMIG ”9""'0‘“‘ HIS.TORY! Nyack and Brooklyn. I 1871 he| ~The chronicler of women's part besame professor of thedlogy in the | the political show of 1932 will Presbyterian Theologichl Seminary |find Plenty to interest him, hnw-i at Chicago, now McCormick Sem- |CVer: aside from those who ac~\ inary, filling the chgir for ten E;’:e"y went out in quest of 9f'} fice. Not the least is the entrance| of Alice Roosevelt Longworth into | Birthdays Celebrated the picture as an active campaign- | In the latter years of his lfe|®: That speech of “Princess Al- Dr. Patton's birthday anniversar-|i%¢” @ few days before the elec- ies were made the occasion of pub- tion ro_r the Hoover cause, and her | lic celebration by the tesidents of |T8gazine article before, made some Hamilton. At these events it was |POlitcal history. his custom to make an address,| ‘A Whole chapter could be writ- uzually’ expressing his gratitude for (48 8round what happened down the interest shown in him. In Arkansas when Mrs. Hattle Car- Dr. Patton, who was the oldest |2WaY licked six men in a rough living moderator of the Presbyter- and tumble political campaign o ian General Assembly, was signal- enter the Senate as the first wo- ly. honored by that body at its|™anR ever elécted to a full six- 1997 gession when it voted to in- |[VeaT term. ! vite him to the 1038 assembly as l its special guest of honor in cele- as pastor of the Jefferson Park Presbyterian 'Church. Then there's the part played by | Dolly Gann, |t France, Great Britain and Bel- | P Oliti(}al H istory Wr itten 1932 Campaign sister of Vice-Presi- dent Curtis. Mrs. Gann rose to be one of the most sought after speakers in the campaign by her stumping for-the Republican ticket. Ruth Bryan Owen, Rep.. Mary T. Nozton, Mrs. Crarles Zabin and Taylor Ross are others who took leading parts in the cam- paizn. > - e Honeymoon Bound Mrs. Kaye Don, the former Eileen' Martin, of ‘Gréenwich, Conn!, wha recently became the bride of the famous _B{lilt' h speedboat racer, i shown as she sailed from New Yorl; to join her husband in England The speed king and his bride wil spend their honeymoop in Italy, 0 % i bration of. the fiftieth anniversary of his moderatorship. The Alliance o: Reformed Churches Throughout the World Holding the Presbyter- ian System also exténded similar honors to Dr. Patton, who was ac- tive in organizing the generalcoun- cil of that denomination in 1877, Celebrating its’ golden Jubilee with a special service at @t. Giles Ca- thedral, EGinburgh i July, 1927, it invited Dr. Pat to preach i the. sernfon. . Although enthusiasijc | about accepting .the ipviiation Ne was prevented ,from. g 50 be- cause of his ady age, ¢ i CARD OF THANKS N for the beautiful floral pieces; to the Pioneers, Auxiliary, Elks Lodge No. 420, the Masonic order, to Mr, e New: Discovery Reaches - Cause of Stomach G Dr. 1 foynd that poisons in the Mel cause gas. His simple remedy size to Store. HERE DO - YOU KEEP THIS --and other valuables? OUR insurance policies, jeweley, securities, and We wish to @xpress our since‘e C thanks to all, i0se Who so kindly :’e é;;nzl:‘.b'.:g dd‘“"f Pro= assisted us in gur bereavement, angd m the dangers of fire, loss, damage, and theft.© And adequate protection costs far Iess'than replagement, E&k Willis E. Nowell, Mrs. Jenne, g . 4 the mopatid e Mo oot ngom_ Box ‘in our strang | Cathedral Cholr for the beautiful vaults will give your ".Iulbl’e't' [ music rendered at the service the protection they should have J. MERY DAVIS, Bta it of I fe A e TREVOR M. DAVIS, (8 Y only a few cgnts 1 CEDRIC M. DAVIS, per month. If your valugbles adv. MRS. W. O. CARLSON are worth keeping- they are worth satekeepiog—so ‘sefect your Im?'toclgy.'8 e e have 3 meet your needs. the | western Interior and have fallen zlong th: middle and upper " ROLLER SKATING Mink Furs Wanted! OPEN TO BUY LARGE QUANTITIES OF MINK BOTH RANCH AND WILD HIGHEST CASH PRICES PAID N. SOBEL, Inc. 208 West 30th St., New York City Contact for Information and Shipping 'I’ixs H. J. YURMAN, Alaska Representative Triangle Building, Juneau | Quick Service | TPIONEER CAFI] | J. K. Paull and Nick Neak 114 Front §t.. NEVER CLOSES Photte 137 Once Tried, Always Patronizeé' For Expert ' Window Cleaning ~ Phone 485 GET OUR PRICE BY THE JOB— Not by the'Hour 30 Ggllon Range Boiler $9.50 Toilet , . . . $15.00 (Standard New Pattern Bowl) RICE & AHLERS (O, PLUMBING HEATING SHEET METAL “We tel} you in advance what job will cost” EVERY DAY—3 to 11 p.m., except Saturdays, Sun- ddys, holidays—1 to 5:30, 7:30 to 1. uction hour, 6:30 to 7:30. A. B. Hall. Gus Gustafson, Mgr. INSURANCE Juncau, Alaska % R Old Papers