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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, WEDNESDAY, JULY 25 I'93:1. ISLANDER HULK L BTOORSADVANGE HIGH AND DRY, R OURNG TRADING T TN - THIS MORNING IN FINAL HOURS | romour—sHows at 7:30 and 9:38 ‘ ‘ e } ] 7 > ’ Success Cap—)s—Years of Ef- Gains of Fractions Up Are g DOUBE Feture B’LL | | '\ fort to Salvage Ship Made—Today's Close '} Sunk 34 Years Steady to Firm (Continued trom Page One) NEW YORK, July 2. — Stocks | | dipped and rallied nervously today. z In the final hours gains of frac- ) tions to around one point or so| STARTS TONIGHT many passengers aboard, south- boynd from Skagway, They run = | from $50,000 up to as high as $1.-} predominated. ) {500,000. It is known for a certain- Do & Today's close was steady to firn. | } | ty that there was some gold in the £ AL E | purser’s safe, entrusted to his care] . o CLOSING PRICES TODAY | t | by returning prospectors, and it isj i 3 5 ' 4 | NEW YORK, July 25. — Closing ! claimed that there is a large 4 i quotation of Alaska Juneau milm‘z slgpmex:t in ;hc express safes. Be- 3 ¢ S . L 9 stock today is 19, American Can || sides this, there were many, no % & 3 P 4 95'%, American Power and Light ‘fioubt. ,‘f'h° h_ad pokes noi gold dusz{ | B 7R ‘ 1 |4%, Anaconda _11‘5, ‘Ax:mour _B ! |in their personal effects. i . S k3 roiiveesan | (NEW) 54, Bendix Aviation 117, Amount Not Sure % JOHN BARRYMORE m"COUNSELLOR. AT LAWmG &7 | Bethlehem Steel 28%, Calumet and | But nobody knows for sure just SO B AN T —— |Hecla 3%, Chrysler 36%, Curtiss- |} ' ) IB) § E Great Star how much there is, or whether | St ik Clanieat Cikowrs 2aW, | = . even enough will be recovered to e International Harvester 28, Kenne- SsSS In His pay for the great expense to which ! o cott 18%, Electric Auto Light 18, ul Greatest Picture |- IR ] 2 Company 1%, United States en the old hull | Steel 36%, Warner Pictures 3%, | Certain it is that there is noth-| Pound $5.04'%, Nabesna bid .75, Sl § i !ing about the appearance of the ask 1. ; i | Islander now which would give| 5 waind? rise to any great confidence. The“GHA RTER TRIPS il -. 3 ‘wunu SH!ELBS i . W ] ANGOR, Me., July 25. — The | 3 i ol B s o il ¥ Gieat Northein Paper Company| Conquering Tuberculosis ) ) either in the wreck itself, or in OR @ charwr (rip for the Paci- has announced plans for cutting e | |the efforts to raise the ship. The fic Alaska Saimon Corporation, the 375,000 cords qf pulpwood next win- | LONDON — Within 20 years! \enb'u'é superstructure has been de_‘_seap]ane Baranof, of the Alaska ter, an operation which will require | deaths in England from all (orms‘ ‘,mofis-hedv principally by the con- | Southern Airways, pilot Gene Mey- employment of 4,000 to 5,000 men. |of tuberculosis have fallen 41 per | stant pounding of a two-ton clam-;”‘“g' Lwyd Jarman, mechanic, lg[t Other timber companies have made | cent, says a report of the Na- |shell dredge which was kept at Dere at 8 o'clock this morning knows the intention to extend op- | tional Association for the Preven-| wiMBLEDON, July 25.—Sidney e N T \ME | S 5 A0 WL i é v ogiinie ing a magnificent game of tennis 7 ced at Ein- ADDED ENTERTAINMENT .. |of the Tish traps of that company i b g e i S gt g et smms““::mnu Locatioh Notieed af Em PRMNE Lafl Bt AN in the Icy Straits district, and| Daily Empire Want Ads Pay diseases. e “Broadway Vanities” — A Musical Vodvil Revue' .Nothing is left except the hull|yyon ¢4 port Althorp where the ¢/ and what Iles within it. Ba“‘ere‘ilpasscngers left the plane. “RACING STRAIN” A cyclone of action with a youthful cast PUDLUIBUSSSSSS e s U | matches from Australla in the interzone final of the Davis Cup play to advance to the' challenge round against England, - ' o Both Wood and Shields had lost the previous matches but Lott #hd | Stoeffen won the doubles. 4 Wood defeated Crawfard and | Shiclds defeated McGratin ~JOHN BARRYMODAE with BEBE DANIELS, poRris KENYON, e T A | from long years of submersion. 11:30 o'clock this aft S . . ¥ f ternoon for | Death Still Lingers But even if nothing is ever re-|Ghichagof and way points with | covered from the Islander, the CUr-|mai) gnq express and Tony Petrio tis-Wyley Marine Salvage Com-|gag o pagsenger for Chichagof. cUNcESSIUN A REIMS, France, July 25.—Shells, the battered hulk from its sup-|gngq supplies for the Washburn fired in the world war still take a|posed permanent resting place in ouijop party and will do additional NAVY toll of lives on the battlefields 375 feet of water to the beach. |ppotooraphic flying in the Lituya more than 15 years after the sus-| Yesterday afternoon an Empire | gay region for the party return- e pension of hostilities. | reporter went to the scene With in 'ty jJuneau late this afternoon N i, it sppears (o be Guly 8| e Baranof was back at is e 0000000000000 'In the Fields of pany has accomplished a feat al-| mrom Chichagof the plane will | Workers in the fields where|{Mr. Ordway, in search of pictures . evening. : {pile of junk, barnacle-encrusted|pere at 10:30 o'clock and left at World War Battles . . feat most without compare in raising continue to Lake Crillon with mail armies once fought, children play.iand a bit more exact information | WHAT IS ADVERTISING? Claims America, Great Bri- ing there and persons searching|as to the real progress which had | for “duds” have been blown to been made. They found the emirei LORENCE HALE TOUR tain Will Eliminate bits upon accidentally striking the |deck of the ship out of water. Not Prepared by the Bureau of Research and Education, Advertising Fcderaticn of America T Political Issues fontng 2 : [only that, but both | lingering relics of war. Two meh, only ihaf, buy both propeller. shafts |} ARTY ENJOYS TRIP OME of the things most familiar to us are the oncs we least under- : recently were killed near Reims. |are out of the water at low tide, |’ “ QN = TORIQ) SET &b e Foteuan ammunition and|the stern being the land end. ;ABOARD s; 8. EUTI = stand. That is true of many well known objects and processes Machine gun Office spokesman said the United pyried shells and bombs, exploding | Part of Name Gone i - S st s v | e Do har s The namal which everyone uses constantly. States and Great Britain are both ' ywith pattle-like fury, held off sol- With almost perfect weather the acceding to Japanese insistence giers trying to fight a forest fire, of the Islander once flaunted it-|entire trip, the more than one definitely agreeing that political jn the woods of Hartmans-Willer-| self proudly to the world, only the hundred teachers who are “adven- issues will not be discussed at the yopf, near Mulhouse. | st five letters remain, the rest turing to Alaska” with Miss Flor- 1935 Naval Conference. | !lost through the disfigurement al-|ence Hale, aboard the steamer The most common and most useful substance in the world is the air we breathe. Yet scientists worked for centuries on harder prob- lems before anyone thought of studying the air to sce what it is made of and what it means to human life. ) -3 TR | ready described with the words|Aleutian have thoroughly - e - RUSSIAN ISSUE UP | “Victoria, B. C.” beneath, |every moment of their trip, ac TOKIO, July 25.—The spokesman On either side, a big Schooner,COl'ding to Miss Hale, tour con- | is fastened, the Forest Pride and ductor. of the Japanese Foreign Office the Griffson, across whose decks| "The teachers, most of whom are UN HuflsEvELT.w&s constructed a scaffolding for|from the Southern and Eastern | the support of the Islander which| States, are delighted with the asserts that Japan has sent Rus a | a proposal demending a definite answer on the potentially danger- cus problem of the disposal of the | resembles nothing so much as the |Scenic grandeur and cool weather Chinese Eastern Railway in Man- 'heavy naked rafters of a building, |0f the Alaskan coast and nearly chukuo. ! by which the cables are tightened |all declared that they wished to lof Delaware, broadcasting for the vaft,ér every lift. ; i ‘;etum t;iort a longer stay at some y : = ven now, every piece taken!'future date. Miss Hale, nerself, VRP‘;‘[‘“?:‘C:“; ::t‘ds;r,fg‘e‘ie";nfi"fio |from the ship is being carefully |Who had not visited Alaska before, Yes béen hypaotizng Ar;nericans pirs | washed out to glean any possible 'said she was coming north by her- follow him .in & haphasard pro- {gralns_of gold ,which may be lodged | self (the next time and spend sev- gram which i§ causing turmoil and .upon it. Rumors have been going jeral weeks in the country visiting Juneau Sunday evening, cominz corduRlon: ,about that much of the yellow|as much of it as possible. by way of the West Coast. | Das o i ;mi:al has llz:en recovered a]ready,j Paul Christian, of the National o e e | owever, was stated yesterday | Educational Society and Karl K. DALENE SELLS HALIBUT MUCH £0AL ERORIVED |by one who is in close contact Katz, of the Northern Pacific, made with the affairs of the salvagefthe round trip with the party, the company that grave fears are en- |former from his Washington, D. C., Anderson, sold 7,500 pounds of | tertained as to the possibility of |headquarters and Mr. Katz from fish to the Alaska Coast Fisheries o Vet L AR USRI j the gold having fallen out through |Seattle. The party was joined here yesterday afternoon at 5 and 3 & B = the break at the forward end, by the Rev. A. P. Kashevaroff cents per pound. | | either in the wreck itself, while ly- | who made the round trip to the - e+ " S CRAVES . ing at a steep'slant in the chan- | Westward leaving the steamer here B. P. 0. ELKS “The Clothing Man” y | hel bottom, or in the course of the last night. He gave talks on the Regular meeting tonight. ' Home of Hart, Schaffner and ":{ltempts to salvage the sh . It_rmsu?ry and Intcrgsting facts about adv. { M. Clothing ) iis spre_that any which was in the |the Territory during the Westward —_—-———— , cabins is gope, for they have been |trip. Shop In Juneau demolished. - In modern America, every man, woman, and child is almost con- stantly in contact with advertising in its many forms. Whether we re- main in the privacy of our homes, or walk upon the streets of the city, or drive into the country, we see and hear daily the advertising of huh- dreds of products. It is part of out lives, a background for many of our activities. Yet we are just beginning to study what it really means to us all. WASHINGTON, July 25.—United sii P States Senator Daniel O. Hastings, ZAPORA DUE S! ‘The motorship Zapora, of the Wills Navigation, left Seattle Mon- day midnight, and is expected in When we give the matter any thought at all, most of us think of advertising merely in its role of describing the many things we are asked to buy. That is primarily what individual advertisements are for, of course, but advertising as a whole does much more than that. It deeply affects our way of living; it influences the course of progress ahd civilization; and it is an important factor in all economic trends and The Pacific Coast Coal Company developments. received 350 tons of Nanaimo coal on the freighter Denali. The halibuter Dalene, Capt. S. E. Most people have not thought of these matters in connection with advertising, which is consequently not so well undestood as it should be. 1t is true that scientific studies of advertising have been made, but the results are not generally known to the public. Since advertising has become such an important factor in shaping our economic and social destinies, we should all know more about it. Advertising is really very old, but it was not untii modern times that it exerted a strong influence on the development of industry and culture. This was perhaps not anticipated by those who first used advertising extensively, such as the great showman P. T. Barnum, for instance, who sincerely believed that the public loves'to be fooléd. “Tomorrow’s Styles Today” * Final Mid- Summer Clearance NICHOLSON and MARJONE FROCKS Group No. 1 . Group No. 2 .. Group No. 3 A few remaining SUMMER COATS ALL PATTERN HATS SWIM -SUITS : SWIM SHOES Manufacturers and merchants pay money for advertising bécause they have found it an economical and efficient way to sell goods. They know that honest advertising pays better in the long run than the kind which makes false claims, and that is why most of it is honest. They also know that advertising is the cheapest way to sell a worthy product, and that is why advertised goods are often lower-priced than the un- adverri:ed kind. ; BEER of Guaranteed Qualities! The assurdnce that you are buying the purest and BEST BEER is yours when you pat~ ronize this establishment! Rhinelander and Alt Heidelberg ON DRAUGHT ® The Miners Recreation '} Parlors BILL DOUGLAS While individual advertisers benefit from the use of this efficient sales medium, the public is really the greatest gainer. Through adver- tising, we have been educated to a higher standard of cleanliness and sanitation, and we have learned of th> desirability of many comforts which we now would not want to be without. Besides raising our standard of living, which is always the fore- runner of cultural advancement, advertising greatly shortens the time between invention and utilization, which speeds the develobment of new industries and puts men to work. TABLE SPECIALS—— Any article—10 cents or 3 for 25 cents Se;ing is believing—Shop with us before you buy elsewhere. - STORE OPEN TONIGHT Advertising is the handmaiden of progress. . Copyright 1934, Advertising Federation of America = = £ = £ £ § = = = £ = = = E = = = = = = = - WmmflmmluflfllllllIllllllllllllfliilfllflllllllflllll"llflflfilfllflmmm HHHHNEH