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— — e — PN A R AT e e RO ABABMINSUSADS AMS ~A 0 BooncalBsia . - PR S0 27, 1934. 1 BISHOP CRIMONT POSTPONES TRIP T0 ROME, ITALY Present Plans Are to Be in Lisieux, France, by May 8, Continue to Rome Sale of Men’s Overcoats d Top Coats Only a few days left in which to purchase an all-wool coat. For quick selling we have placed these coats in three groups. Because it has become impossi- ble for him to be in Rome, Ttaly, on Easter, which falls this year on April 1 the Rt. Revi J. R. Cri- mont, S. J, Catholic Bishop of Alaska, has postponed his ‘trip to Europe until the Ilatter part of April or the early part of May. Speaking of his change of plans,| Bishop Crimont said, “I had, | planned to combine my visit to| the Holy Father with the feast of | the Canonization of Blessed John Bosco, on Easter, but am ebliged {to postpone the trip, as I could, not reach Rome on that date. i “I feel it a great saerifice not| {to be able to be at his solemn glorification by the Church. My anxiety to attend that unique cere- (mony was largely because I was privileged to become personally ac- GROUP ONE GROUP TWO ai $5.95 at $11.50 GROUP THREE—ALL TOPCOATS at Half Price MEN’S SUITS THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, TUESDAY, FEB. Queen of Artists’ Models quainted with that wonderful man |five years before he died. He was| low l”‘i"“”‘ 68 years of age when I met him| iat Lille, France. I believe that| . his promised prayers and his giv-| "l 3 7/' "2!} 75 %29 75 len assurance are largely the rea- | DL d D G T ) . |son .that I became a Missionary ’ and am still living, as at the time| = lof our meeting ¥ -had been pro- | A 9 sl : nounced, by unanimous verdict of| Women’s Slippers and Oxfords Now is the time to buy a suit at these |the doctors, as having but a few years to lve. | |" “However, a compensation for| ]me has developed, for I have been | |invited to take part in the cele-! bration of Mother ,Agnes’ Golden Jubilee of religious Profession as a Carmelite, and the 50th anni-| versary of the .First Holy Com-! munion ‘of her little Sister, St., Teresse of Lisieux, both of which| will take place on May 8, at Lisieux, France. It is mow my plan to be in Lisieux on May 8, and either continue to Rome, or return to Alaska.” | St. Teresse, the “Little Flower" is the liturgical Patroness of Cath- lics in Alaska. Factory line for spring. Rather thaa send them back we are offering them at $3.95 and $4.95 Tuesday Is Last Day FOR THE RUMMAGE SALE ON THIRD FLOOR B. M. Behrends Co., Inc. Mrs. Bolyan. After some timg in Texas they continued on to Cali- fornia and felt almost home when they turned northward up the an’s sl A coast. Juneau’s Leading Department Store R o Mrs, Bolyan and Mr. Cox plan to charter & small boat to return to itheir mine at the head of Gel- meeting President’s| and” after soile “4iitie tHéré~dnd | den Harbor on the West Coast of new experience 10r| yisits with relatives in Indiana, ' Chichagot Island where tl}ey wu: who' has also met|Iilinois and Michigan, -continued D¢ MAPPY in their memories of the ¥ Wilson, the Tate Mrs. /last four months, their work and east to Washington, D. C. There | i " n Harding and Mrs. Herbert § _ |the plans which they will inevit- they remained, making trips to Ar ably G (e xt trip to B8 v‘\;zll B]s3 Alice I1"‘4:%);8‘#'31!‘lmgton. Mt. Vernon, Annapolis and | oo worth. Mrs. Bolyan found OuUr|other points of interest- in and | G, 3 Executive's wife one of|around the National Oapite), un-' 1 @m o anxious to get back g to the mine pow that we are so . { HAS VISIT W i MRS. ROOSEVELT ,' 1 ;0 t t charming women she has| ¢ 1 o B rish, Ant ke 5f el i Iclose. It will be like living the ot to remember ali € After they had watched Congress T ity of personality s rarely| s irip over again sed eaigy 7 fazis8 e, #8d .spent of the experiences we had and the evaral - Gapn WBAL) N ok interesting places and people we City, Philadelphia and Baltimore | H o saw. Of cours, before long, we the pdfty turned toward the south " he and basked in the sunshine at WiLL grohahlk. st pianuing whote s oadlrenend s However, ALASKA WOMAN est in ed it was one of the plac she most wished to wvisit, Mrs.‘ Mr.and Mrs. George Bolyan and Frank Cox Return i from 4 Months Trlp Bolyan said. Daytona Beach, Florida until they ™ Vil go next, and looking for- R 2 & t it ti 2 ward to another trip, for above | Mr. and Mrs. Bolyan, and Mr. | felt it time to begim their journey | thing, T love traveling,” Mrs Tea -and an ith Cox left their mine on Chichagof|back to the Pacific Coast. guery 4 4 g hour’s b Franklin D. Roosev White House, in Wi ngton, €., perhaps the outstanding perience of her recent trip w will be remembered by Mr her Bolyan declared. | —— - - | | Journey West Leisarely Their trip West was made as| leisurely -as. they wished with stops e 00000 000000 iO‘ various lengths at New Orleans, AT THE HOTELS L4 | Louisiana, Galveston, El Paso and e @ ® @ o @ ¢ ¢ o o ¢ ¢ o the Island last October and, showing| D. ir indifference to superstition ex- where a trip is concerned, started h from Seattle on October 13th in > the Bolyan's Nash sedan to cover Bolyan, who with a great part of the United States.| Brownsville, Texas. From Texas | i and t latter'’s mining partn “When making a motor trip, an|the party made shork murmns“ Gastineau ’ Frank . returned on the Norco Alaska license is worth its weight | across the border into Mexico, a Eva Curtis, Chichagof; W. A. after a motor trip through the in gol Mrs. Bolyan declared. |country which had become famil- | Allen, Los Angeles; Miss T. Arch- United States on which ti mo- The t visited Chicago, where iar on a motor fip to Mexico ambault, Seattle. ! tored 14,000 miles. the World's Fair was in progress|City two years ago to Mr. and | Alaskan Ray Walker, Vancouver, B. C.; - .- MRS. CHESTER HAMILTON RETURNING TO WHITEHORSE They Won Air Honors in Old Columbia iln. Chester Hamilton, whose husband is manager of the North- ern' Commercial Company, at Whitehorse, was & northbound pas- senger .on the Princess Norah on I . her way home from a vacation in the south. Cotton growers of the South real- ized about $856,776,000 for the 1933 crop; including lint and seed. REGISTBATION OF VOTERS Registration Books for Registra- tion of Voters, General Municipal Election to be held Tuesday, April 3, 1934, will be opened Thursday, Mareh 1, 1934, and remain open until Saturday evening, March 31, | 1834. American citizenship, twenty-one years or age, bona fide residence of the Territory of Alaska for one year and the Town of Juneau, Alaska, ocntinuously for six months immediately preceding said date of election are the qualifications re- quired. The plane “Columbia” A. W. HENNING, City Clerk. First publication, Feb. 23, 1934. e PIONEER CAFE | 3. K. Pagl & . } GOOD EATS” i Niek Novak Clarence Chamberlin Mabel Boll r Errol Boyd Ihe destruction by fire of the single-motored Bellanca monoplane, Columbia, at New Castle, Del. s:. ‘:%ftmuoldcky 7 on that w;atfi a br;lliant chapter of American aviation. In lflfihfio years - 3 olumbia set one of the early endurancy ds, ed by Cl lin Bert Acosta. 'A ‘e months luter, Chamberlin took her off goom’ Roosevelt Ficld. with hee. oweet, S S nAD 2 88 passenger, and set her down 8,911 miles away in Eisleben, Germany, to create & new J record. In 1930 Mabel Boll Rubber Boots—Shoe Pacs ¢ record. 1In 193 oll, so-called “ 4 T hinelin. Hparabel Boll, so-called Queen of Diamonds? groomed the ship for 8 || COST MORE—WORTH IT How , G in J. E: Gl i B 1 0 (R SA SUS s S SeY || SEE BIG VAN | plane to fly the Atlantic twice, Last June the gallant old ship made a round-trip flight te il IT’S A PLEASURE “Fo Belt the Old Reliable . {Mr. and Mrs. Lee Dolan, Juneau. B mas sullivan, who was choscn Precident of the Articts Modcls’ Club of Scuthern Califcrnia, a league recently in- d in the southland for the muviual benefit of 150 or more icnal models employed by prominent artists and art schools. intended cnly for mutual benefit. st pose fer a fameous painter. iss Sullivan is pictured in he: (International Hlus. News Photo) e The final installment of 1933 real 2 estate and personal property taxes y eauty |nt 5 | ———— will be delinquent after March 5, 1934. Payment should be made by that date to avoid penalty. State- ment ‘of the delinquent tax roll will be published on or before March 19, 1934, as required by law. A. W. HENNING, —adv. City Clerk. ——— e . Ny -e Fur-lined Suits (One Piece Coverall Type) Ideal for every Outdoor purposc; comfort and warmth at the most severe temperatures; entire gar- ment, legs, arms and body lined throughout with g 1 r beautiful fur col finest quality twill rubberized nd JOANNE CONNON | An ast nt made from Epsom | salts—one tablespoon dissolved in| a pint of hot water— h &5 the pores and keep the f §$14.95 and | .nq nealthy looking. Apply morn- and night, patting on liber: . §78 each y Y th cotton. ] Our Price Now $8.95 Button Type Zipper PType $11.95 Send 25% with order, balance C. O. O. plus $1.69 Parcel Post Charges Mceney Back Guarantee If in 10 days you are not en- tirely satisfied, your money will be refunded. GOVERNANENT SURPLUS COR 89 Greeupoint Ave. Brocklyn N. Y. Agents Wanted Everywhere P COAL || Time { WHOLESALE ToEat and 0 et RETAIL you'll find at Bailey's a great variety of tasty dishes. Youwll like our special business men's lunch. BAILEY’S BEER—If Desired | Pacific Coast Coal Co. Phone 412 1. 8. DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE, WEATHER BUREAU The Weather By the U. 8. Weather Bureau) LOCAL DATA Forecast for Jumeaw and vielnity, beginning at 4 p.m., Feb. 27: Snow or rain tonight and Wednesday; moderate southeasterly winds. Time Barometer Temp. Humidity Wind Vslocity Weather 4 pm. yest'y 29.36 29 98 W 3 Snow 4 am. today 2921 30 98 Calm o Snow Noon today 29.22 35 94 - S 8 Mist CABLE AND ERADYO REPORTS YESTERDAY | TODAY —_——mmm Highest 4pm. | Lowestd4am. Zam. Preclp. dam. Station temp. temp. | temp. temp. velocity 24hrs. Weather Barrow -10 & <1 | .12 a2 8 0 Clear Nome 12 12 ! 4 4 12 0 Clear Bethel 18 16 | 6 6 16 0 Clear. Fairbanks 16 12 | -14 -14 4 0 Clear Dawson 8 8 | =20 -18 0 0 Pt. Cldy St. Paul TR e e i cldy Dutch Harbor ... 36 36 32 33 0 Trace Rain Kodiak 36 .. 30 34 4 156 Rain v 36 36 | 34 34 4 0 Cldy 29 29 28 30 0 83 Snow 45 - | 36 - - 10 Pt. Cldy Ketchikan 42 42 40 40 20 -.18 Rain Prince Rupert 44 44 40 42 24 24 Rain Edmonton 28 24 i8 18 6 0 Cldy Seattle 52 48 48 50 24 .36 Rain Portland 46 46 44 50 10 28 Rain San Francisco 66 62 54 54 6 0 Cidy The barometric pressure remains low over ihe northeastern Pa- cific Ocean and throughout Alaska and Western Canada with rain or snow from Southern Alaska to Oregon. The pressure is com- paratively high on the Arctic Coast with clear weather over the middle and northern portions of the Territory. Temperatures have risen slightly in Southern Alaska and on Seward Peninsula and have fallen in other districts. | | I [ e e P ' INSURANCE | Allen Shattuck, Inc. Ertablished 1898 Juneau, Alaska % Tuneau Cash Grocery CASH GROCERS Corner Second and Seward Free Delivery i s s UNITED FOOD (0. CASH GROCERS Phone 16 We Deliver Meats—Phone 16 LUMBER Juneau Lumber Mills, Inc. 5 — Don’t Buy a W asher Blindly COME IN AND SEE THE General GE Electric A new shipment of these machines just received. Get yours now. DON'T WAIT. It’s a fast, trouble-free washer, oiless, bal-bearing motor. You'll be more than satisfied when you try it. SOLD ON EASY TERMS. Alaska Elt;ctric Light & Power Co. - DOUGLAS—Phone 1% 2 We're Off! ; . Give your car a new lease on life by_ having it refinished this Spring. Youw'll like our prompt, courteous and thorough service— and youll get much satisfaction from a dandy paint job. We're ready to serve you! CONNORS MOTOR CO. PHONE 411 FRYE'S BABY BEE “DELICIOUS” HAMS and BACON Frye-Bruhn Company Telephone 38 Prompt Delivery NEW SHIPMENT GRANDMA’S CAKES and COOKIES HOSTESS CAKES CALIFORNIA GROCERY PROMPT DELIVERY TELEPHONE 478 Old Papers for Sale at Empire Office