The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, October 30, 1933, Page 2

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- T BEErn— - 3 SRSl e e e e et e e e e et £ i % That tell the Fall f Dressy types . Sw Another Group of Fashions for every Street Dresses . . Gowns . . . Spor Every dress was chosen —frocks for New Wool Skirts $3.95 Sizes 26 to 32 Women’s F lannel Robes $6.00 Warm . . . comfortable, smart, too! These e all-wool robes at an unusually low . The popular stripes and plain colors . with notch collars and contrasting trims, TWO-WAY-STRETCH GIRDLES $4.50 It's the new elastic rabnc that does the trick . . . gives you that smart slendern: you so much desi You'll bc ever so pleased with it—come in and try cne on Beautiful Waverly Bedspreads For Modern Bedrcoms—Size 90 x 105 inches $2.75 $3.75 harmonize with every decorative scheme . . that lend a feeling of coziness and chvcr ny bedroom. These bedspreads are remark- in price for such.style and quality. Made ‘in colors te in ggy, bright and give cha: ably reasonable ]V t Curtam Panels Fine quality width and 2% marquisette nets . . . plain and figured. Full ards long. A real value at $1 95 Pair Auto Blanket rRobes $5.00 $12.00 All pure weol, pre-shrunk ang fast-color. Soft, warm robes of exceptional quality. Plaid effects in rich, dark colors . . ed with three-inch fringe. Fur Trimmed COAT S shion story and give you VALUE RECEIVED for every penny expénded. $19.75 Newest Fall Dresses © % ordinary features of fabric and workmanship the practical needs of club‘and business wear. WINTER HATS Replicas of Expensive Models Moderately Priced B.M. Béhrends Juueau s Leading D";:f):;f'tmént 2 Sports models aggers Smartly Styled Coats, occasion— Evening in this exceptional assemblage for its style excellence and extra- evening wear, for afternoons and Sizes 14 to 44 ' Men’s AU-W ool verCoa i Uvercoats | : { | Style, Excellent Tailoring — in brief, a Real great value. $13.50 $15.00 $18.75 Tweeds, Polos, Herring- bones fashioned into top- coats that give you that well-dressed feeling. Sturdy w o r kmanship that insures long serv- ice. Grays . Tans . Blues Black and Mixtures add iy Mens Fur Felt HATS A luxurluus ‘quality in the new Fall styles at $350 to $5.00 Finished with perfection in every- detall . ... from the tallored bow to the jaunty brim. One glance tells you that these hats are unusual values at $3.50 and $5.00. 9 | cceded Briand in tPAUt PAINLEVE KARL THEILE DIES SUDDENLY; ARRIVES HERE - HEART ATTACK/FROM WRANGELL 'One of Most Absent Mind- | ed Men in France, For- | mer Premier, Succumbs | ciates—Season’s Pack Is Good One (contmued rrom Pe.e One) Karl Theile, owner of the Dia- today greeting their many friends jin town. The Marguerite will proceed to Seattle sometime during the week. HORROR KILLING VICTIM IS JUNEAU WOMAN’S RELATIVE Aerocraven PREss (unDERWOOD) PAUL PAINLEVE ~ Briand “sacred union” Cabinet in 1916, He was transferred to the War Department when Ribot suc- 1917, J. 8. DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE, WEATHER BUREAU The Weather By the U. 8. Weather Bureau) LOCAL Forecast for Juneam and vicinity. Cloudy tonight and Tuesday; gentle northeasterly winds. Time Barometer Temp. Humidity Wind Veioclty = Weather 4 pm. yest'y 40 49 NE 12 Cldy Is Accompamed by Asso-j4 am. today ....... 32 % S 4 Pt. Cldy Noon today ... 2064 42 46 SE 8 Cldy CABLE AND EADIO EEPORTS — e . YESTERDAY | Highest 4p.m. | Lowest4am. 4am. Precip. “4am DATA beginning at 4 p.m Oct. 30: TODAY cific and off the Columbia River. Light snow has occurred over the eastern - Interior and rain over the southwestern portion of Alaska and from Ketchikan south to San Francisco during the last 24 hours. Temperatures over the Terri itory remain about the same. — e e mond K Packing Company at: gtation e Wrangell, arrived here Saturday | Barrow ...... ,‘?D' ":np tm4p t.er;p vellodclt! M’(;“ W&él}lg; evening aboard the tender Mar-|Nome 26 26 16 18 4 0 Pt. Cldy | guerite, Capt. Larry Parks, on a|Bethel 24 20 =212 4 0 Clear short business trip. He expects tofport Yukon .22 20 10 12 8 0 Cldy complete his business in time to|Tanana .. 24 24 20 20 6 0 Cldy . cail for Seattle aboard the Princess|Fairbanks 22 20 18 24 4 0 cuay * | Norah the latter part of this week:|pagle . 24 pry I 18 18 4 02 cldy 4 Mr. Theile is pleased with thelgt paul .. .3 3 | a0 3@ 14 Trace Snow ) season’s work during which 65,000 puteh Harbor ... 38 36 | 34 36 8 .02 Cldy cases “of salmon were packed at|Kodiak 4 40 | 34 384 cam .06 Rain | the Diamond K cannery. Cordova 42 40 3 32 4 0 Cldy | Accompanying Mr. Theile to Ju-| yuneau ... 43 40 | 32 32 0 Pt.Cdy neau on the Marguerite were Her- | getchikan ... 46 44 34 38 6 08 cldy bert Kittilsby, Superintendent of |prince Rupert ... 50 48 40 40 4 :03 Pt. Cldy the Diamond K Packing Company |Edmonton . . 32 24 16 22 4 0 Cldy | and R. L. Bernard, who was asso- | geattle 62 52 48 48 12 .08 Cldy | !ciated with Mr. Theile at the can-|portland .. 56 50 48 48 6 88 Clear < |* | nery during the past season. San Francisco ... 64 60 | 58 60 10 .90 cudy | Mr. Theile, formerly Secretary of A Alasks, Mr. Kittilsby, Capt. Parks A high pressure area is centered over the Northwest and the and Mr. Bernard were ‘kept busy(Territoty this morning with the barometer: low over the North Pa- TURKEYS FREE came Premier when Ribot fell from power the same year. Painleve was called upon to ad- minister the War Department at a most critical stage of the hos- talities. Russia was defaulting and be-| As, our contribution to a fes- tive Thanksgiving under the most encouraging conditions Alaska has seen in years we are giving a free turkey to eight fortunate purchasers. | Two weeks ago Associted Press cables bore news of the finding of the mutilated body of Mrs. Laura Straw in San Diego harbor. The fourth unsolved murder that has occurred in San Diego within the last two years, Mrs. Straw’s | then |of War and the people of France were, through their representatives in Parliament, demanding greater ac- tivity on the part of the army. | A combined offensive by the Army of France on the Aisne and by the | British on the Somme, planned for ‘early Spring, but put off until the | middle of April, failed to produce| | the desired results. Painleve was | | blamed for bringing the attacks to a stop. He retorted by reliev- ing General Mangin, of his com-| !mand. The controversy grow‘mg| |out of these developments contin- | |ued long afterward. The only | clear and undisputed fact in con- | nection therewith is that Painleve inaugurated the polity of “waiting for the Americans.” He | declared that the French army would undertake no more offen- sives on an important scale but | would wait until reinforced by the American Expeditionary Force. | Falls Frem Power | He fell from power a few weeks {later to return only after the vic- H.ory in 1924 of the co: Radicals, Republican Socialists and | Socialists of which he was the rec- ognized parent. = Elected President of the Chamber of Deputies in June, he showed his audacity by pronouncing a speech that was in- terpreted as notice to all adversar- ies of the new coalition that they must make room in public places for the victors. He was the can- didate of the coalition for the high- est of those places, the Presidency of the Republic, after the new majority in the OChamber had forced President Millerand to re- sign. He was defeated by Gas- ton Doumergue, President of the Senate. Painleve formed his second cab- inct in 1925 when Herriot was ov- erturned. He staggered political eircles by calling Joseph Callieux back from exile to be his Minis- ter of Finance. He again startled the country by forcing Calliaux to abandon the post and finally stumbled and fell himself on the same obstacle that had caused The downfall of the Herriof Cabinet— the capital levy. The elasticity and suppleness of Painleve as a’politician was shown when, after having thwarted Bri- and’s efforts to form his eleventh cabinet by refusing to accept a portfolio alongside Monsieur Poin- care, he then became Minister in Monsieur -Poincare’s “Save the Franc” cabinef. Pain- leye was born December 5, 1863. murder became distinguished by the police and the newspapers 'in the southern city as the “duffle bag” murder, because of the find- | ing of her body in two duffle bags} near San Diego’s main piers. The tragedy of Mrs. Straw’s kill-| ing is brought home to Juneau | with the knowledge that she is a| step-grahdmother of Mrs. C. P| Seclye, whose husband is a gov-| ernment employee. Mrs. Straw mar- ried Mrs. Seelye’s grandfather, Al- onzo Straw in 1916. He died in 1923, leaving- her considerabl> i property. An Associated Press sfory in a| newspaper from the States says| that Mrs. Straw’s story is that of an elderly eccentric—a philanthro- pist in her modest way. Wanted| for questioning in connection with | the murder is Thomas M. Jones, 4 | jobless man she had taken into her home because he had no other place to go. Fingerprinfs have| identified him as an ex-convict from Ohio penitentiary where he| | served under the name of Tully| McQuafe. : ————a————— | Soviet Gardener Develops Grape to Grow in Snow| ARCHANGEL, U, S. S. R, Oct. 30.—A - grape that grows in the snow has beeh developed by a“ Soviet gardener, Vladimir Spirin, who at the age of 70 -has made a reputation as a “plant wizard.” Spirin’s work is being done in| the Yakutsk province of Siberia at 59 degrees 30 minutes norfhern latitude. He transplanted theblack currant, a southern ‘grape and the| German berry Holliaph to ~the banks of the Aldan river in vak- | utsk. Spirin’s currant now can be grown in polar regions. — e C. W. CARTER RETURNS FROM THREE-WEEK VACATTION TRIP C. W. Carter, of the C. W. Carter Mortuary, returned to Juneau on the motorship Northland from a three-week vacation spent at the Goddard Hot Springs. ————— ELLIOTT FREEMING HAS' MINOR OPERATION TODAY Elliott Fremming underwent a minor operation at St. Ann's Hos- pital this morning. ———— W. W. Ankenbrand, who quit high school at the age .of 14 to| take a, job that.paid $3.65 a2 week, pow is Superlmendent of Schools * Funcral Saturday Funeral services will be held nex{ Saturday, November 4. The body will lie in state at the new Pain- leve Amphitheatre of the Conserva- tory ‘of Arts and Trades which PlONEER DIES AT HOSPITAL AS THE . RESULT OF STROKE Lewis Rukka, 67-year-old pioneer, who was brought in from Tenakee | last Thursday afternoon to St. Ann’s Hospital suffering with n stroke, passed away at 4 o'clock yesterday = afternoon at the hos- pital. Mr. Rukka »who was also| known in this vicinity as Lewis Ryan, had lived in Alaska for well over forty years and was well| known throughout <Southeast Al-| | John Torvinen, Matt Loukko, Jack | the Juneau-Young Funeral Parlors | Benson, . best sustained characters. |on Wednesday afternoon at zou‘Mr; Edna Hayden won the door c'clock. The Rev. Erling K. Olaf- | prize. " son will officiate and the pall | Music was.b) Qudnn. bearers will be' Charles Erickson, ‘ ’ iR e Wilson, Henry Wvornos and Waino | Kallio. Interment will be in Bver- green Cemetery. | ——— 'MOOSE MASQUERADE | IS GALA OCCASION, | ON SATURDAY NIGHT nwasnbigt.hneacthemn M’SPADDEN m ON CHICHA(:;:fiISLm With. his. limit .of .deer and birds, C. H. MacSpadden, . City. ‘Wharfinger, returned from a week's hunting trip en, Chichagof. Island | aboard _the _Estebeth ‘today, In spite of the stormy weather aska. He had engaged in fishing, jdarin Ball Room Saturday night that made some of.the going pretty mining and prospecting during his years of residence in the morth. when the Women of the Moos2 | rough, MacSpadden..managed to gave their annual Hallowe'en Ball. | walk, climb .and. crawl over most Mr. Rukka is survived by a The crowd was large, most of those of the mouniains on.Chiehagof Is- , brother in Minnesota and another | who attended were in costume and | land. living in. Pinland, as far as is everyone felt it a gala occaslon. m He is said to have been | JHe .made his .headquarters | at. Chatham on .Sitkoh .Bay aad Prizes were won by Marvin hunted from there. His party lived qx. financially, at the time of | Chase, most appropriate costume; on ducks during the trip and there Ists Dorothy Schmitz, most com- | were plenty left over for the fam-| her vacation aboard the motorship mflmwmbeheldmim, . T, Firiaved and Mr. M.’ ily, according to Mac. —_—— President Lebrun dedicated last Saturday. Former - Alaskan Is m':ar PAYMENT Ah.lh mining ventures, here. PARIS, Oct. 30—Premier Albert| s ! ED JOHNSON RECEIVING ON WAY SOUTH FOR TRIP : Alaska u Gold Mining Com- Miss Lorna Dickson, teacher 0t | pany i the Goddard school, which has & W. | three onth vacation during the|save winter, is on her way south forijeft hand. 3 —eto— Northland. Classified aas pay. Dead in Cambridge CAMBRIDGE, Oct. 30.—Robert is dead Sarraut’s Government, it is learn- 27 e 2 ed in official quarters, intends to| TREATMENT FOR CRUSHED Not Because We Are default.thi American war debt in-| HAND AT ST. ANN’S HOSPITAL Cheaper stalim:nt due ou Ceccmber 15::¢ | el e el 'Ed Johnson: is receiving treat- :BUT BETTER -’ o ment at St. Ann's Hospital for a . MISS LORNA DICKSON IS . ' |hand which was crushed when it got caught in the gear at the . mill this morning at 9 Tt .was only possible to 4wo fingers of the Tushed RICE & AHLERS .CO. PLUMBING - -+ HEATING Ask for your ticket! GEORGE BROTHERS PHONES—92 and 95 Five Deliveries Daily WHITE LINE CABS 25 cents in City Telephone 444 White Line Cab and Ambulance Co. ,THE H’OTEL OF ALASKAN HOTELS The Gastineau Our Services to You Begin snd' End-at the Gm»!’hnk of Every Passenger-Carrying Boat UNITED FOOD CO. CASH GROCERS Phone 16 We Deliver Meats—Phone 16 REACH for the JOY OF LIVING WITH RADIO. Now is the tine to have your radio adjusted for the wmter season of blgger an d bette; pr gtngns. Pmmpt and Efficient Repnfnng Radio and Engi ineering. Service .PHONE 501—Near Capitol Theatre ." 5. 3 Pl A Y WY e HEADQUARTERS ot Afle-erlllmqm ANTIFREEZE lflllhncufitfl.!. Good tui a whole ‘season—will connections @nd water ‘pump! away. Prevents rust. With this complete ‘radiator eheck-up—tight 2 CONNORS mm co. THE TREND is towaird “ELEC TROL”-of coiir 4.,' for t! not boil gln Y o7 Harri Mdéhme Silop '

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