The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, February 22, 1933, Page 2

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D e e e _THE'DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, WI:DNESDAY FEB 22 1933. TO BRIGHTEN THE HOME EW SPRING ARRIVALS IN FLOOR COVERINGS At New and Amazingly Low Prices NOW I'ME TO BUY AXMINSTER RUGS sl s v R i B $3.00 IS THE Capital Prepares for Gala Inau gural Da SPORTS EVENTS GOVERNORS' RE NIGHT FIRE WORKS SPEECH BY NEW PRESIDENT INAUGURAL INAUGURAL BALL | i 1 r3 ol Crowds attending the inauguration of Frank'in D. Rocsevclt atl the natiew’s capital March 4 will find plenty tc do despite the call for simplicity. /Zthletic games, firewerks, a variety show and other attractions arc planned in addition to the inaugural ccremceni Admiral Cary T. Grayson (right) hcads the committec in charge, and Gen. John J. ) will lcad the inangural parade. T DANCING AND By SIGRID ! WASHINGTCN, Feb. 22—Visit- to Whhm7 on for inaugura- advised to come early will fly over the c ‘Thousands will Attend the inaugural ball op- ening at 10 p. m. ns to Stage Ball Games o R R R CONGOLEUM BARGAINS CONGOLEUM GOLD SEAL RUGS | 9x12 . $8.75 Ix101% 7.7 ’ T6x9 5 6x9 1 GOLD AL. CONGOLEUM In wdes and Modern Prints | > Pex: Sguare 1 3 RCRg ..o owt JOH 1 ‘ Per Square Yard - 1.00 | SEALEX INLAID CONGOLEUM | Per Square Yard . $1.50 { RAG RUGS i 27x54 $1.50 each | WALL PAPER As low as 25 cents a belt WINDOW SHADES 36x6 36x7 In shades of Green and Tan B. M. Behrends Co., Inc. Juneau’s Leading Department Store —M Teddy, jr., Vlsned by Mother | | IBLEN HAYES Some women have time to take refreshing naps during the |but for thoze who mmst “carry without rest there is' another to achieve the same freshness The Hindus have learnsd way which is described as merging one's thoughts and ae-| tions in sphinx-like manner. Fir: the thoughts are concentrated o |the body, the arms and legs be- |ing loosened of all tension. | Mrs. Theodore Roosevelt (eenter), widow of the former President, h ber son, Theodore Roosevelt. Jr.. Governor Gemeral of the | Then all thoughts are drepped \ by \Philippines, and his wife. as she arrived at Manila recently, Mr& |pom the ming and one sits per ! 5 ne er- - incoming is expected to remain with her son until such time as the | . oeratic administratior, relieves him from his pest fectly still, awake but asleep. By| shell thus for as - v e o e |going into cne's |little as five minutes one derives ‘ 5 Kartack, well known & Anchorage Log Cabin No. 3 of beneficial - effects. e Tesident of Anchorage the Sons and Daughters of AAaska —_——————— { .m‘v.tdnlxy died February 6, at are taking steps to get a Car | Mrs. Julius Thompson, perhaps Baker's roadhouse at mg‘h:m award for little Nena McKin Lhe oldest woman in Anchorag Prior to last year Mr. ('Y Of Copper Center, the twelve | celebrated her 91st birthday Feb- | Poeri employed on‘Y:ar md‘]girl \;ho tramped 22 miles | |tuary 9. In excellent health, had i ‘ al night alone on snowshoes | | Thompson = graciously received h(t‘ M sillroad, ‘for several|through a wolf infested country many friends who called durmm to bring aid to Amos Fleury whose [lhe afternoon to congratulate her. life was in danger from bemg‘she makes her home with h°r‘ frozen in an overflow. |son Judge Arthur G. Thompson, —————— ‘Unized States Commissioner late, for, despite an u Sport lovers arriving the day be- | implicity, this yeas ! fore may witness a CI | mises to be more e dian ball game, the on which la ¢ may is bas attend the variety IS ENJOYABLE ive the day & Yy may go cut to Ft |events and a riding drill by the S | bringing hc{r:‘ ’c:').lck" cavalry troops. Inurmal L.teltamment Ib prominent n one ul £ o R Given by Odd Feliows remain through March and Rebekahs Elaborate Program to Keep Vlsttors on Go {1 e e J. 8. DEPARTMENRT OF AGRICULTURE, WEATHER BUREAU ; The Weather LOCAL DATA By the U. 8. Weather Bureau) Forecast for Juneau and vicinitv. beginning at 4 pm:, Feb. 22> Snow tonight and rain or snow Thursday; moderate southerly winds. g Time Barometer Temp. Hum‘-‘lt Wind Velocit; Weather 4 pm. yest'y 29.2 28 94 4 s 7 4 Snow l4 am. today .....2889 31 91 SE 9 Snow Ncon today ... 28.89 32 85 SE 12 Snow CABLE AND RADIO REPORTS —_— | YESTERDAY % ; | TODAY Highest 4p.m. | Whn 4am. Precl .1 p. Al.m. | station temp. temp. | temp. u'mn velocity 2¢hrs. Weacher | Barrow -8 -12 | sag ; 10 0 Clear Nome -12 -12 | =24 -20:‘ 4 0 ‘ Clear Bethel . -10 -10 } #y22 22 4 0 Clear Fort Yukon ... 2 -28 | -44 .32 [ [} Clear { | Tanana -4 -14 | 86 <38 ] 0 Clear Fairbanks e -16 | =38 -3¢ 0 [ Clear Eagle -2 -4 52 -46 o o Clear St. Paul o 24 14 8 8 14 Trace - Snow | Duteh Harbor 38 32 28 28 0 20 ¢ Clear . | Kodiak 30 28 24 28 24 04 Cldy Ccrdova 30 28 18 26 8 0 Clear | Juneau ... 28 28 3 34 9 26 Snow ! | Retchikah ... 38 38 | eminvag 4 01 Rain | { Prince- Rupert ... 38 38 | 32 34 12 48 Cldy i Edmonton 32 20 | 10 12 L 0 Clear ; | Seattle .48 .| 2 @18 12 Rain § | Portiand CEE N RS e Rain ? !San Francisco ... 62 58 | 46 46 4 0 cuay | | o 3 & | Pressure remains low over British Columbia, the Gulf of Al- ¥ ka, the Aleutians and south-central Interior of Alaska, lowest 3 28 74 inches over the middle of the Gulf. Temperature remains low L in the Interior and on the Bering Sea coast with no important } ! Lh nges. Rain and snow were recorded over the . leutians and the \ Southeast. section as far south as Portland with fair weather else- : v.here. One ship reported a fifty mile wind 500 miles south of ‘ Kodiak. ! | e e —— j | — -~ 4 [ ——r— ‘ ) ALWAYS ITS and CALIFORNIA GROCERY | L Prompt Belivery PHO 478 POBBBELTT TATAY > U (57 1157 e e L 1 UNITED FOOD CO. CASH GROCERS | We Deliver Phone 403 - / | Lttt i et . e s Fosivton [ ‘ For Expert |day for the new Preside | plenty: to fill the hours ur Old Fapers 1or sate at Empire. | Anchorage. fice. Then the group will move jnst} at high noon, to the outside ter- | jrace where Chief Justice Charles | E. Hughes will administer the oath | of office to the incoming Presi- dent, who will address the throng in a speech that is traditionally concerned with the state of the, Nation. | 10,000 in Parade | The only remaining duty of thel ¢ will be| the reviewing of the ral | Day parade, ch is to ude | 10000 individuals — m pat- riotic and fraternal u over- nors of States, thei: and 13 bands. The party | will sit in a apccnlly constructed ; stand, a reproduction of Federal Hall, New York, from which Washington took his oath of as the First Presider After that the crow corge | office will find 1 mid- hight. Fireworks are to f into the sky from Monument Park for an hour beginhing at 8 Alr- plangs, outlined with s lights; . m. {March 1, at the ade. head of the inaugural par- - SHRINE BALL TONIGHT Washington's Birthday Snrin:| Ball Feb. 22, Scottish Rite Tem: !ple. Invitational. Shriners please !'their fezes. CHAIRMAN, tadv. Ball Committee. REGISTRATION OF VOTERS Registration Book for Registra- tion of Voters, General Municipal | Election to be held Tuesday, April ta, 1933, will be opened Wednesday, 1932, and remain open until Saturday evening, April 1, 1933. American citizenship, twenty-one years of age, Territory of Alaska for one year, and the Town of Juneau, Alaska,: continuously for six months im- mediately preceding said date of election are the qualifications re- quired. H. R. SHEPARD, City Clerk. First publication, Feb. 17, 1933. Last publication, March 1, 1933. bona fide resident; 15 3t I\:. Veérnon, the Smithsonian “In- |5, some of titution, the Corcoran Art galler- mous coence es and the Lincoln Memo: am at C he ¢ program Plans are being place March 4 from 11 a. m. to Mittee headed I e approximately 4 p. m. ‘Cn T, W‘ House Fellows' Hall 100,000 Spectators Expectod OR Wilson regime t 8t 11 a. m. a closad aiding him include: s of. cards were in ¢ ing out of the Wi :;.‘iuz_kE‘eDelam ‘UA?JLleB;{dE::eHE:v play and a number spent the ov- | drive carrying President & 4 el . 3 the strains of {and President-Elect leader; Mrs. Bla ar orchestra the sister of Senator Carter —, “geiicious supper was served Boltins Ravebnd |000 spectators will be waiting on » Of Virginia; Raymond F. et fashion with a large table the race to see the Presi- Baker af"‘f’ Robert W”‘)l,l"}f: b_ol‘h at one side of the room weighted dent t; his oath -of office former girectors of the mint, HuS- goun with good things to eak. Before the climax the t “’T‘ Thompsa'rvx:' for.mer Federal was the first of a series; tral figures in the scene wi ,Trade Commissioner; and Maj.- ', parties to be given by the Senate Chamber wk Gen. Merritte W. Ireland, former the ficial and diplom AR fEDaL ot the AR ' Mrs. Lavina Kimbrough was gathered to see | E}en. J?hn J. Pershing, w_r;.o al0 cpairman for the Rebekahs and Elect Garner take hi: . helped with the plans, will ride pujgick Lowell had charge for the Odd Fellows. |STRICKEN FELON REENTERS PRISON et o SAN QUENTIN, Cal, Feb. 22— | William Henry “Big Bill” O'Con- nor, paroled San Quentin prison robber, came back to his “pals in the big house” today because the oul e world was a hard placc for a sick man. ! OConnor, former head of a group known to the police as the '“California Daylighters” because of their spectacular holdups, paroled August 13, 1931, tuberculosis, which he contracted in prison. ! But his friends outside are all roke now, he explained: “Besides, I've got more pals here in the big house than I have on the outside,” He was placed in |the prison hospital. | ! Australia’s employment condition| is better then for several years. OHIO FARMERS BLOCK SALE OF CHATTELS Sheriff Bruce Pratt (hand upraised) of Wondt “"""fl?i. near Bowling Creen after they had bfo the eale company manager who ammmd to have an axction sale was forged b 2 is shown as he calmed a crowd -of farmers on the farm to leave. - (Associated Press Pfisto)” Old Papel‘s for s of Wallace Kramp. A loan was | ill with | Phone 485 | New Wall Paper Here! | See the New 1933 Patterns. Freshen Up the Home. Full line of BENJAMIN MOORE PAINTS | JUNEAU PAINT STORE | Window Cleaning ‘ | i THE CHAS. W. CARTER MORTUARY “The Last Service 18 the Greatest Tribute” Corner 4th’ and Franklin' Sts. Phone 136-2 FRESH BAKEIL DELICACIES an HOME OF “HOME MADE BREAD* JUNEAU BAKERY (Next to: Jurleau Drug) ,.._____M Meadowbrook Butter PHONE 39 The Gastineau Our Services to You Begin and. End at the Gang Plank of Every Passenger-Carrying Boat ALASKA MEAT CO. QUALITY AND SERVICE TO YOUR LIKING Ddh;fl::;:si::o?#m — JUNEAU LUMBER MILES . PHONE 358 1 | ] ——

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