The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, June 7, 1933, Page 2

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QIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlIIIIIIIIIIIIlllllllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHHIIIIIIIIIIII|IIIIIIIIIlllllllllllllllfllllllllIIIIIIIIIIIIIlIII!HIIIIIIIIIIIIllllllllllIllIlIllll.IIllIIlIIlllllllll NEW! R L T B. M. Behrends Co., Inc. U Daml}y DRESSES That can be wom on so many ocras}ons throughout the Summer and vspeudlly desirable for !hcxr smart au,ramlveneas, in patterns and ('olormgs design and style. - In Two Groups Specially Priced at $7.50 and Sizes 14 to 44 et et e e et e e e et SESSSCSSIS HEOSNNE ISSSSATLHSSSEISSS S SLNS IR LN Juneaw’s Leading Department Store IllllllllflllllllllIHIIIIIIIlllIIIIIJIIIIIIIIIHI]IIIJHIIIIIIIUI 'PASSES AWAY: ILL ONE YEAR s in World Dies in Philadelphia (Continued from Page One) rint | | as varied as their H. K. CURTIS in his home city, New York ton, 'Detroit and othér places. Mr. Curtis was married twice, first on March 10, 1875, to Miss Louise Knapp of Boston. To them was born a daughter, Mary L. Cur- tis, who afterwards became Mrs. Edward Bok. The first Mrs. Curtis, by editorial supervisicn, helped to |make the Ladies Home Journal a success. ‘She died in February, 1910. 'he second ‘marriage, the following August, was to Mrs. Kate S. Pills- ibury, a second cousin of Mr. Cur- tis. $13.50 CYRUS Bo: =] 4 & Up-State Yankee Mr. Curtis was born at Portland, Me., June 18, 1850, the son of I:IflIlIIIlIIIlIlIlIlllllllllIIIlIIIlllIIIIIIIllIIIIIHIlIIIlll||Illl|l|I|||Ill‘|I|lI|IllII‘I|lllIl|llIll|lIIII|ll|||lll|llllllllll||lII|IIII|IlII||IlIl||IlIII|III|J|lI||||lII||IlI|||II|II Vancouver Boy Wms Welterwelgh,t Crown k¥ ;Hmnu’ McLarpin, the Vancouver, B. C, cl;ajk:n‘vr is shown in the above telephoto knecking down Cal,, wenerwelght champion of the werld, for a count of nine. lhrdly had he regained his fcet When the Vancouver flash knocked his opponent out lnr a cnmplete count and the uellerwel(ht crown passed from the head of the California’ boy to the brow ,of the C: The entire engacment in the ring consumed umly two minutes and tbfr‘y—seven seconds. Internaticnal Tllustrated News. time in less than a minute for o ndght wonder. Referee Georgr Blake, count of eight. Schedules of Roosevelt Mappe Avoid Conflict of Puties By HERBERT PLUMMER | Secretariat WASHINGTON, June 6.—When President Roosevelf, then President-| elect, anhounced His intention 0[' retaining the sec- s retariat at thel# % | White House dur- i ing his adminis- i tration, a great|§ many political | § observers in Washington were surprised. The secretariat came into being at the executive mansion during Mr. Hoover's term. Before that time " Presidents had had just one secretary who at-| tended to everything. The three-man group that Mr.| Hpover surrounded himself with drew some criticism to the effect that the apparent lack of definite {in contact. marchers. | d to clearly when the bonus marchers of 1933 invaded Washington. Be- fore their arrival no one seeméd to know just what Colonel Howe’s job was at the White House. He | was seldom séen. MeIntyre and Early were the ones with whom! visitors to the White House came, But it was Howe who stepped out and took charge of the honus The complaint was heard during the Hoover Administration that| one secretary didn't always know| what the President or the other secretaries were doing on routine matters. One rather prominent person, forj {example, complained after a visit to the White House that he had| been shunted from one secretary to the other and had left finally without what he wanted. DIVIDING THE WORK division of responsibility among Secrtaries Richey, Newton and Ju:,-; _ lin made for complications. ] President Roosevelt, however, ap- parently has distributed the duties of his three secretaries—Howe, Mc- Intyre and, Early—in such a man- ner_as to avpid criticism on those grounds. HOWE 1S NO. 1 ’s secretary now is Melntyre and Early are as-| secretaries. The Howe. %‘i: fact was brought out very Under the plan followed by the Roosevelt secretariat, if, for exam- ple, an individal thinks that he has a good reason to see the Presi-! dem he goes to MecIntyre. If its' concerned with the press ‘or yubhc relations in general, Early is the man to see. Howe remains in the hackground until something of outstanding im- portance comes up. Then he acts for the President. Another important factor in the Roucpv»!t setup is that his three The Fresno hoy struggled fo his feet only to strike the flocr for a second friends and have been for years. This personal equation evidently | has done much for hnrmony at| the White House since March 4 ——0’-’———— NEW TELEPHONE DIRECTORY/ Will be issued subscribers about July 1. Copy' tor advertishiig”aha| changes must be in“not hw than | June 20. 4 " JUNEAU AND l}omn.u ady. EPHONE COMPANY, | ELKS NOTICE chulnr meeting tonight, mma- tion. —ddv. bz UNITED STATES | DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR ' GENERAL LAND OFFICE District ' Land Office Anchorage, Alaska April 24, 1933. Notice is hereby given that Fran-| ces V. Redman, devisee, of E. W. Merrill, "deceased, has submitted final proof on his homestead entry' | Anchorage 07680, for a tract Of near the mess house, then four land embraced in U. S. Survey No:| 2078, situated on Jamestown Bay, 1% miles east of Sitka, containihg 15.08 acres, together with her wit- nesses Peter Kostrometinoff and {C. E. Wortman all of Sitka, Alaska, and it is how in the files of the U.’S. Land Office, and if no pro- test is filed in this office within’ the period of publication or thirty days thereafter, said final proof will be accepted and final certifi- cate issued. J. LINDLEY GREEN, Register. First publication, May 10, 1933, secretaries are all close personal Last publication, July 5, 1933, 'ms ‘riends jclimb ‘the hill and find out how us L. and Salome A. Cummins urtis. ‘His full name was Cyrus Hermann Kotzschmar Curtis, the second and third names being those {of an old German who | |organ in the church |Curtis family attended. | Young Curtis’ book education was limited to the public schools as the family was in po circum- stances. - He once d bed the state of his parents’ purse by say- “My father and mother had they could do to keep the wh2 going around without letting neighbors know there was no with ‘which to lubricate them.” So as a youngster he was in no danger of being spoiled by luxury, In fact the three poennies ‘with which ‘he began his newspaper peddiing represented an unusual accumulation of childhood capital TEACHERS GO SOUTH ON ALASKA BY WAY OF HISTORIC TOWN The second contingent of school teachers leaving Juneau to spend summer vacations in the south, sailed on the Alaska yesterday tak- ing advantage of the ship’s schad- {ule by way of Sitka, to see the famous old Russian capitol of the ‘Territory. Robert S. Raven, superintendent of the Juneau public schools, Mrs. Young Corbett, III, the Fresno, Raven and their two children, Robert, Jr., and Dickie, Miss Mary n welter- Kolasa, Miss Ann Easton, Miss The declshn wids given by ‘Pauline Reinhart, Miss Margaret Tillotson, Miss Helen Starr, and Miss Alice Palmer formed the Ju- meau sthool party. e S GEORGE DASKALOS And, in addition, each is a close SAN FRANCISCO SALESMAN personal friend of Roosevelt him- lS A-J BQARDLNG TAKES S.S. ALASKA SOUTH self. | HOUSE BEAR HUNTER| Juneau’s latest bear story has to dp with the big brownie shot by George (The Greek) Daskalos near the Alaska-Juneau boarding house Monday night, according to H. G. Davidson, Bmphre representative at the boarding fouse. George spied the bear on thel hillsitle opposite Snow Slide Gulch nor wng “after ' dinner Monday.’ Tt is 4 long distance from ‘the flime, ‘Charles A. Hawthorne, salesman from San Francisco, who has been in Juneau at the Zynda Hotel, left on the Alaska for the South. o DOG OWNERS, ATTENTION! Dog licenses are now due and payable at the City Clerk’s office. Unlicensed dogs will be impounded after June 12. Get your license today! C. J. DAVIS, Chief of Police. | meeting of | will be held Friday when the prob- | Governmefit will THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, WEDNESDAY, JUNE 7, 1933. G.H. K,GURTIS BRITISH MAY DECIDE FRIDAY | ON U. S. DEBT -Onc of Wedlthlest Publish- Cabinet May Come to Showdown Over $76,- 000,000 Installment LONDON, une 7. the A special British Cabinet {lem what to do about the American | debt payment due on June 15 may | be threshed out to a decision. Officials believe, although there is no basis for this belief, that the by Friday have some indication from Washington as to what the United States is inting on from London on Juna2 1 There is no indication, how- ever, tha’ anything will come from the American White House. Great Britain's June installment | is approximately $76,000,000. e NEW G0ODS ARE BEING UNPACKED Buyer Arrives with Latest| for Display at Juneau Sample Shoppe Emma A. Marshall, sister of Mrs.| R. E. Smith, of the Junean Sample Shoppe, arrived on the Aleutian. Mrs. Marshall makes her head- quarters in Los Angeles and is the buyer for the Juneau Sample Shoppe. unpacked preparatory to a grand summer showing of women’'s and children’s ready to wear goods. — © 0 00 0 9000 900000 . AT THE IIOTELS . ® ® 9 & 0 g 00 90 e 000 A. E, Karnes, Juneau; Eloise and Johnnie La Hoonah; Charles A , San Francisco; Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Roehm, Chichagof; W. Moran, Ju- neau; Mike Paul, Juneau; Mrs. Dorothy H. McLain, Haines; Mrs. C. J. Sullivan and children, Haines; Mrs. William C. Miller, Chilkoot Barracks; Mrs. D. B. Hilton, Chil- koot Barracks; Mr. and Mrs. J. S. Jeffrey, Seattle. Gastincau John Knaplund, Keétchikan; Mrs. Montgomery McKece, F. and 'wife, Chilkoot Barra, Yardley, Victorja; D. P. Norris, V R. H. Hausen, Chilkoot Bar- CANADIAN CUSTOM OFFICIALS HERE ON INSPECTION TOUR| After completing a survey of conditions relatigg to international | customs at Taku, G. A. Yardley, chief inspector of the Canadian Customs Service at Victeria, and G. E. Norris, of the same service, arrived in' Juneau this morning on Capt. Whliam Strong's gasboat Red Wing. Mr. Yardley and Mr. Norris, who | came north on the last trip of the Princess Nurah, have spent several days in the Taku river district. They will remain here until the Norco sails south, when they will 20 to Wrangell and proceed to make a similar survey on the [Canadian boundary line up the Stikine. ., The Irish Free State sold 1,800 in| tractors to the United States 1931 but not one in 1932. ENEAU YOUNG 1I | { Parl,on Embalmers 1861 Day Phone 12 l |‘ | and LmM New goods are now being| Filchon, | —_ J. 8. DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE, WEATHER BUREAU The Weather LOCAL DATA By the U. 8. Weather Bureau) Forecast for Junean and vicinity. beginning at 4 pm, Jume 7: Partly cloudy tonight and Thursday, gentle variable winds, 3 Time Barometer Temp. Humity Wind Velocity Weather 4 pm. yesty 29.88 42 85 s 6 Rain 4 am. today 29.86 39 92 SE 3 Rain Noon today 29.79 - 280 54 SW 5 Misting | CABLE AND RADIO REPORTS | YESTERDAY | TODAY T2 IR T Highest 4pm. | Lowest4am. 4am. Precip. 4am. Station temp. temp. | temp. temp. velocity 24hrs. Weather Barrow 20 20 14 16 4 Trace Cldy Nome 44 44 [ 3 6 0 Clear Bethel 46 44 32 32 8 Trace Clear Fort “Yukon 54 54 0 4 4 0 Cldy Tanana 62 60 40 40 4 24 cldy Fairbanks 60 58 34 3 4 0 Cldy Eagle 54 54 30 32 4 0 Clear St. Paul 3 42 42 34 34 12 Trace Cldy Dutch Harbor 46 46 | 3\ 38 8 02 Cldy Kodiak 52 48 | 40 40 0 0 Cldy | Cordova 48 46 0 42 4 06 Cldy | Juncau 43 42 39 39 3 81 Rain Sitka 48 - 38 .~ 3 50 Pt.Cldy | Ketchikan 52 50 42 42 4 2 Cldy Prince Rupert ... 50 48 36 38 4 52 Pt.Cldy Edmonton 56 56 {98 - 88 4 16 Clear Seattle 58 58 52 82 8 18 Cldy Portland 64 62 54 54 4 04 Rain San Francisco ... 62 56 52 52 4 0 Cldy The barometric pressure is siightly below normal in the Gulf of Alaska and the Interior with light showerS over most of Southern Alaska and southward to Oregon. The pressure is moderately high and rising in Bering Sea with clear weather on the Bering Sea coast and portwns of the eastern Interior. Temperatures fell last night at Nome'and in"Southeast Alaska and have risen in most other districts. HITLER IN TYPICAL POSE Chancellor Adolf Hitler is shown as he addressed 80,000 uniformed § | nazi storm froopers at Kiel recently. He condemned the “1918 trait- ors” whom he charged with having lost the war for Germany by <trikes. (Associated Press Photo) YO i Require No Attention ]« " Dry Clothes More Quickly Wash Faster have always wanted a washer which would do these things P | Eliminate Bunching and Tangling Save Money CALL AND SEE THE G E WASHER ‘ Alaska Electric Light & Power Com pany UN AU—-—?ht?ne 6 DOUGLAS—the 18 More For Your o - where 'heé shot, cross Gold éek to ‘the -filliside, bat one shot of his gun found its mark. cn Jjust to be’ sure, George, who 15 smart that way, gave it another. After walling a few minutes” tof see if the animal showed any signs of life, George called on some of with good nerve to the bear could be brought out. Fred Gaegel, one of the specta- tors' to the display of ‘sharp-shoot- ing,' volunteered to make the climb. He rolled brownie down to the creek, floated it down to the falls men packed it over to the mess SHORT'S JUNEAU’S FINEST FOOD STORE LA INSURANCE Allen Sha‘ttuck, Ine. Established 1898 Juneau, Alaska house. The-remarkable part of all this is that it occurred during a heavy rain, but during the excitement everyone seemed to forget about the weather and hove to and helpéd The ‘Greek bring in his prize. Now his friends are bhsy ask- ing him how big the bear was, what kind of a hide it had, and s0 “on and (morge Teadily assures ithem that it was of extr: ‘proporuox‘h—m fact it was & {that will go down in history. 1 ———————— ) 01d papers at The Empire, SCHLITZ BLATZ BLUE RIBBON ‘SCHMIDT’S EER Stocker’s Imperial

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