The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, June 21, 1935, Page 2

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NOW! It is with pleasure that we again offer you these high grade MICHAEL-STERNS MEN’S SUITS . . . and with each suit selling for $30.00 or $35.00 We will include ABSOLUTELY FREE One pair of Star Brand All- Leather Shoes or your choice of any man’s hat in the store! opportunity! TUNE IN ON K-I:N-Y AT 7: TONIGHT @ This offer expires July 3 D e e PN S SIS SO S Dress Up For the Fourth | LET’S GO! Rflimung An Old Custont We invite you men to take advantage of this 45 and hear TR()\( HAK~ch!ul‘ed Accordion Artist — - . [LIQUOR LiCENSES Free Dancn' ISSUED BY BUARD | Another number of were; passed upon yes 3 Board of Liquor Contro * & | places in virtually al t Territory. Those for Juneau and su and ships follow é John B. Marin, Guy Tony Simin of Dougla 2 X jac, Thomas Tilcon b I X /\ ,,’ Wortman of Sitka; T. John Giardi- aturday Night na, Shamrock Beer Parlors, Skag. Vi | way Liquor Store, H. A. Dsdman < lzum Keller Drug Company of nfl“‘: np‘w! " | Skagway; John T White of Please TROI’C” ‘1K ‘ll,’S’C jant Camp via Haines; Ernest O, CMATE 4 P Shannan of Elfin Cove; O. G, Hill- » : man of Hoonah; Ed Snyder of Vi Thé Fourth, Tenakee; Mrs. John Wierenga and‘ ‘Pmd A. Brouilette of Hair Alas- . m : 4 v @Try our Hamburger Sandwiches ka Steamship Company, steamers 14 J < Victoria, Northwestern Yukom, . ; i Alaska and Aleutian; Juneau Gold ) . bode @ Beer @ Light Wines Storage, Elks Club, Ed Jahnke, Jim Make this a joyous Ellen, Dan Russell, Albert Forsythe, Fourth of July, We A o e Myna Lynn, W. K. Burford and £ haye all sorts of noise CIIICKE\ DI\ }\,I,R M. Botelho, Jakeway Distributing makers and decora- 1 IVINEY Co., John Pastl, Guy L. Smith, A, tiohs, firécfackérs and | Magnano Co.,, Westco Liquor Prod. fireworks, uets Co., MeKesson and Robine:| o Bunday—2t6-10:P.. M. | Wm. T. Douglas, and Matt Louk. 9 4 ko of Juneau - INSEATTLE Gold Rush Part ‘e{n‘ts At- 1 Therell) be K pitter irails), to break; no frost, “biting like driven nails through the parka’s folds,” no < howls of hungry wolves; no., bliz- zards—and no eggs at a dollar a thrgw,. But'thousands of Sonrdoughs will be hitting the trail to Seattle in i Augukt and ‘hunting the, “pay dirt” i of remewed Te-unions with companions . of . /thirty-eight 7| vears ago.on the glory trails, the bitter trails, the:, golden,, trails of the first istampedes. The world m cnnngod mpe mw.u.flm 18, OICMLMMAM trains | Paciflc, Grost. Northern, Milwaukee | Line thnd Canddian. National, there will -be' the “Tanana JKid,” “Aber crombie Chartie,” ‘lrem'n Louis | and the resti .y o R ~msmmmwbgme ever . held- or which ever | largest \bebof parliament. from Yukon Ter- We also plan, to bring over Vancouver, B..C., and & squad ‘of || Royal Mounted Police; to: add: color. And ot threeidays-the men and women ‘'who traveled .the toughest |trail in all the world and .opened jup the golden: empire ' which. has produced ‘six hundred million_dol- lars in gold, will Jaugh together, and sing together and. dance ,to- ther and remember the glory days ‘of the gold rush. | Committee Active | .The promotion comittee . has 1bccn active in _personally visiting | Alaskan' < associations .in Portland, | Tacoma' and ‘British Columbia with | invitations. Railroad lines are co- ' operatng. with advertising and spe- | clal rates. Headlights of “the reunion wm ,/be the banquet, the grand ball and thg mcnlc 2 Stampedt. e dauatters ‘405 ‘tlc Bldg., Seattle! 8 oo Te- VIBS Fonmrs PLOWERS N HOVING PICTURES 1' The fluwer 'nfians in Juscau lamd alse' out on . the Highway are always a Source of ‘interest to tour~ |ists. - Many pictures of the gardens |have been''taken. ' Last Sunday, lone tourist took' many feet of moving picture “of the varied col- mfl tulips in' the garden 'of Mrs, ’A.lbert J. Forrest on Glacier High- way. % —«-——«‘o‘—— SISTERS TO SOUTH S Sisters Mary Barhaby of Daw- |son passed through Juneau this | morning on the Princess Charlotte enroute from Bkagway oo Victoria, B. C. Sister Mary Thecla of Skag- way, who has been visiting in Ju- neausfcr several days, sailed: with Sister Mary ‘Barnaby on the Prin- cess Charlotte for Victoria. T e “Ther¢ will be @ meeting of, b | formet ‘Alaska-Juneau employees of e | Empire Classitied Ads Pa). Douglas at the Council Chambc!g in Douglas Friday evening, June 2| at: 830 pin. 4The’ Mine Workers, ‘aittend. e — | DAILY EMPIRE wur ADS PAY! Douglas ‘men to —adv. Seward Street At FORWASHINGTON Directot' Mfi@ of'vw}'af‘ngefl Institute to Take-Charge Duting His Absence Mr. ang, Mrs. Chn.rle‘s w, Milller and d.lughlfir Francs qdem at Reed College, Portland arrived in Juneau, today on the Northland trom Wrangell. Mr. Miller, tor at Wrangell Institute, will be ih charge of the office of Indian Affairs here while Charles W. Hawkesworth, Assistant ,to. the Di- rector in the U. 8. Bureau of In- dtan Affairs, is in Washington. Mr, Hawkesworth leaves Monday on the .Yukon for the National Capital for conferences with Com- missioner John Cellier and other officials in Washington. The Miller family will liye at the Hamk@swortu ame\"hln in the city. <52 ONE WOMEAN IS LINED UP, FEDERAL JOB WASHINGTON, June 21.—Promi- nent Democratic leaders predicted one woman wfll be ‘selected for one of the three places on the Board which will administer the Roosevelt Social Security program. None, however, would advance the wom- an’s name. The Social Security bill is still in conferernce. b i, G - o ety CARO IN BUSINESS J. “Bert” Carp, for many years employed by J, B. on Front Folger and Co. products and other present Iocanon about a week. dlrec-fi wholesale lines. He has been at his| ~ WAWKESWORTHITHREE SOURDOUBHS : LEAVES MONDAY ! TROUBLE EUROPE AT PRESENT TIME Two Are cfinternational. Importance—Other Is 'In“ternal BASEL, June 21 ——Three dispuhes : two inWrnacional n,nd one_ internal, { held Europe’s attention today. Foremgst in* importance is the Anglo-German Naval. Agreement i a modern, navy thirty-five per cent} under which Germany can build' as large as the British fleet. Capt. Anthony Eden, ; \Minister for} the League, of Nations Affairs, is engaged in an effort to calm down French authorities who claim Greal Britain meed to the wreckage of the Versailles Treaty. From Paris Eden will go to Rome to seek peace in the conflict be- tween Italy and BEthiopia. Ttaly may withdraw from the League if Geneva interferes in African af- fairs. Yugoslavia is without a aabinet following Government r&signazions. German and Ttalian influences are decidedly at loggerheads in the politics of that important member of the Little Entente. Both fac-| tions are ‘attempting to gain con- tml of that power. ) PR~ 3 S £ CAPT, YOUNG | PASSES AWAY SAN FRANCISCO, Cal, June 21. —Capt. John <Crosby Young, re-; tired skipper of sailing ships and one of the original organizers of | the Alaska Packers, is dead at his| |home here at the agé of 87 years who has beeu | Young and several associates; built the salmon cannery on Chig- Caro and Co., has opened a special- | nik Bay in 1889 and entered into|a picnic at Lena Cove today. Prep- ty wholesale office and warehousnisn agreement with other cannery|arations were made for a gala time Street handling J. A. operators which is said to have been the beginning of the A. P. A. S eee SHOP IN JUNEAU! can’people. toward liquor. "ler, who was in charge of all pre- (By the U. 8. Weather Bureau) Forecast for Juneau and vielnity, beginning at 4 p.m., June 21: Cloudy tonight ~and . Saturday, probably showers; light soul.h- east winds. LOCAL DATA Time Barometer Temb. Humidity wmwmn Weather 4 p.m. yest'y 20.99 64 41 B 5 Pt. Cldy 4 am, today ....2081 48 . izt BF Cldy {Noon today .. 29.68 66 e 48 Lo Bee ax d i t fi . N e . dan l : - g e 3 . vel — 19 nkling 3 34 4 o Cidy 4 48 4 0 Clear 40 40 4 0: Pt Cldy 56 6 08 Cldy @ E 4, .0 PLOdy 48 22 \ 2 n 46 3 46 14 Z“ 'g"{n 164 46 : 4 0 Pt.Qdy 60 : ‘48 Calm 0 PtCldy 6 64 b ® 2. 0 ' Oay 6B - 49 - Calm .Q Pt.Cldy 56 56 50 50 4 a8 , Rain Prince, Rupert ... 50 50 50 50 4 10 .. Rain Edmonton . - 64 60 48 52 4 0 Pt.Cldy * Seattle %10 52 52 4 0 Clear Portland By hed, % 56 4 0 PtLCMdy ‘San Francisco ... 10 62 52 .54 .. 8 0 Clpar New York . 72 62 68 10 0 PtCldy Washington % 64 72 6 0 Pt.Cldy WEATHER CONDITIONS AT 8 A. M. . Ketchikan, raining, temperature, 51; ‘Wrangell, cloudy, 58; Sitka, partly cloudy, 50; Craig, cloudy, 59;. Port Althorp, clear; Radioville, clear; Skagway, clear, 50; Achorage, sprinkling, 52; Fairbanks, cloudy, 58; Nenana, clear, 62; Hot Springs, clear, 62; Tanang, smoky, 64; Nulato, clear, 62; Kaltag, clear, 58; Ualakleet, clear, 54; ‘Rmby, , clear, 56; Flat, Dpartly cloudy, 58. v WEATHER SYNOPSIS Low barometric pressure prevailed this morhing throughout Al- aska, the pressure being lowest over the Aleution | .and a short ' distance west of Dixon En‘rance. High preéuk‘e ‘prevailed from the west coast States southwestward to the Hawaiian Islands. This general pressure distribution has been _atténded by precipitation over the southern Bering Sea and light showers oyer poftions of Southeast Alaska and the Tanana Valley, and by fair weather over the remainder of the Territory. A smoky condiion prevailed at flot Springs and Tanana this morning, ! SERBIAN FLAG SOCIETY liminary arrangements. Fine weath- HOLDING PICNIC TODAY |er contributed to the success of the 100 members of !families, according to Charles Mil- occasion. The Serbian Flag Society assist- s ia ed by the Sisters’ Club is holding e f LUDWIG NELSON 1 and a “feed” and other refresh-| | %” 'ments for over } w I Philoo—General Electric Agency '1 : FRONT STREET 4 or senszble drmkmg ETWEEN May 23, 1934, and April 29, 1935, Seagram’s shipped 40 million bottles of Crown Whiskey from its distillery in Lawrenceburg, Indiana. This fact has an unusual significance. It illustrates more than a great industrial success. More than an astonishing popularity for Crown Whiskies. Actualfy it illustrates a surprising trend to sensfbie drinking on- the part of the :Ameri- { Perhaps this séems like a contradiction. The fact is, however, that the success of Crqwn Whiskies is dug only partly to Seagram’s § skill in distilling and blending. It is due in even gteater part to a moderate public attitude In May, 1934, when Crown Whiskies were introduced, most experts believed that the cag -NNE WHISKIES SINCE-1857 3 ~ i (-,$ & U8 ¥ 4 average Ametican wanted “Yust- whiskey” the lowest possible price. Crown Whiskies did aot flfi this Mfi‘ cation. Crown Whiskies were fine me'flow gfemh' —like the truly fific blends before Prohibi- tion. They were modentely pfifle‘. But M were not chéap whiskies, “ Quité frarkly, Crown Whiskies were de- i signed for people who weré Mn& o paya little miore — for peaple ‘who really enjoy the bouquet, - warmth: uazlndr of’ fine whiiknfl‘ We could not and did not® ?ah&é‘m Crown Whiskies, within 60 days, would be- ' come the lacgest: ulh-g.An&fln m' at any ‘price. . That, however, is encdy what lnmed. And thereis only one explanation. - * It is simply that many Ameticans o enjoy fine whiskey. That is the secret of Crown i success. For this success we express our ap- préciation. ra Wi Y

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