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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE. MONDAY, JULY 15, 1935. The Weather - mel:mflm) Save on Summer Clothes P S e e e BE SUITED GET YOURSELF A SUITL.We have in well made, nicely: tailored suits . SEE THEM! ’(;';"E GRISL]’ SHLK DRESSES, prints and plain colors ..values to $16.50, sizes to 44 CLLEARANCE, $7.85 WOMEN SILK SUMMER SKIRTS White pastel shades: Values to $4.95 Cleaarnce, $2.45 COTTON BLOUSES $1.00 j WOMEN’S SMOCKS marvelous values YOU SHOULD WOMEN'S SILK BLOUSES and Wool Flannel Skirts Values to SS.(N) NOW $2.45 W()\lL\"§ KNIT BLOUSETTES Values to $2.50 NOW $1.45 RAYON FLAT CREPE —85¢ yard DRESS TAFFETAS AND SUMMER SILLKS— $1.00 yard Sizes 14 to 20 NOW $1.95 8 COTT ()\‘ PORCH PAJAMAS (Jlear‘mcu-—ibl 00 WOMEN'’S BEDSPREAD SPECIAL Unusual values for RUFFLED CURTAIN Special—$2.95 pair B. M. Behrends Co., Inc. Juneau’s Leading Depdrtment Store VANDENBERG IS BEING GROOMED Mlchlgan Senatoy May fuse to accept the bid. Few men an afford to turn, down such an Come Out as Candidate |; | offer from ‘one of the great politieal on Republican Ticket parttes, and ne provabiy & no ex- By HERBERT PLUMMER eption. WASHINGTON, July 15. — The Foliticians point to Vandenberg’s attack on the President’s tax pro- “Vandenberg-for-President” boom talked of more or less constantly ram and the redeption it received since the Michigan senator’s re- as ‘evidence he will bear watchinz n "36. His demand that Congress election in 1934 despite the Roose- velt sweep at the polls, apparent- pass a “real tax bill And not a mere political appeal to mass pre- come out in the open at|judice” and the program he pre- :L,m sented, are regarded here as politi- Although the bespectacled, hand-|cally significant. some Republican Senator still scoffs at suggestions he is a candidate for the Republican nomination for President in 1936, an organization 'vmce of the Michigan Senator is X P becoming more and more known to Bank President thn people of the country. His ob- P S rmmuons on ¢urrent questions’ dre listened to by the politicians and ‘W( ighed carefully. | While he may not be making a CAmpamn for the nomination in any sense, lhls does riot mean that the His plan for taxes differs widely from that proposed by Mr. Roose- velt. He insists that the tax bill should be designed actually to bal- ‘R. B. Motherwell, formerly a In Washington state and manager of the 8;!( JLake of the Federal nno-t?;u \fanl Morgan Helps Launch Warship HIRAM WALKER “‘1 ~ PLANT ENLARGED 'S TRADE CROWS |Bottling Facdlhes at Distil- lery Are Bemng . | Doubled el G PEORIA, 1, Jaly 15—Bight | acres 'of land adjoining the original 22 acres of their plant here have {'been purchased by Hirlam Walker |'& Sons to, make room for a pro- ofam ‘of expansion, Vice-President {H. P. Willkie announded today. The original 22 acres includéd' the site of two big pre-prohibition dis- léries. THe ‘eight acres just pur- ed include the site of one. hus, with a tract of thirty acres, Hiram Walker covered thé area of three pre-prohibition operations. The expansion of the Hiram ! Walker plant in ‘the last few | months has been rapid. The original buildmg operation in 1934 ealléd for two rack warehouses which would eventually be increased to “ ix. In Pebruary, construction be- |8an on the third, which was com- | pleted in April. A few days before | ~ompletion of the third rack ware- house, construction bezan on the fourth—and during the last week in June work on the fifth rack war:- house " began and plans for ‘the sixth were apprgved. When these two buildings are completed all available ground space for building on the original 22 acre sitg will| have been exhausted. | Rottling facilities at the distil- Forecast for” Yunedt . Wegitifiing at 4 pm., July 15: Showers tonight and ‘I‘uuday. gmle southerly winds. LOCAL, DATA Barometer Temp. 56 52 54 Time 4 pm. yest'y 4 am. today Noon today Humidity Wind Velocity . ,Weathes 90 s 1 Rain 94 w 3 ‘Cidy 89 2, Rain RADIO REPORTS YESTERDAY | Higlest 4pm. | Station temp. temp. | Anchorage | Batrow . | Nome 1.0 | Bethel | Fairbanks " Dawson 8t. Paul ¥ Dutch Harbor ' Kodiak Cordova Juneau Sitka Ketchikan Frince Rupert ‘Edmonton Seattle Portland San Francisco New York Washington 6 50, 52 % 72 76 % a8 56 152 60 8 .. 59 74 ] 92 94 100 6 88 88 6 52 160 2 58 4 54 50 56 ‘TODLA™ Lowestda.m. 4am. Precip. 4a.i temp. temp velocity Nhn Wegitlier 30 46 58 58 . e Beo [ 44 46 50 48 52 58 52 62 B4 68 b4 4 72 aessa:—lixéfi Figg A u—.»waau%u WEATHER CONDITIONS AT 8 A M. Ketchikan, cloudy, cloudy, 53; Sitka, part cloudy, 54; cloudy; Soapstorte, cloaudy, 56; S .. temperatur: 59; Oraig ‘cloudy, 60; Wrangell, Radioville, showers; t - Althorp, (g way, cleudy, 5i; 'Anchiordge, cloudy, 57; Fairbanks, rain, 60; Neiana, cloudy, 62; Hot Springs, clear, (5 51; Tanana, part cloudy, 63; Cord .va, McCarthy, rain, 42; Nulato, part cloudy, ‘69; Kaltag, cloudy, 55; cloudy, 53; Chitina, cloudy, Unalakleet, rain, 54; Ruby, cloudy, 60; Flat, rain, 53. WEATHER SYNOPSIS A ridge of high pressure centered off ‘the Oregon' soast extends »CM!_ north beyond Southeast Alaska and Cordova “this" morning with the barometer low over the rest of the Territory. Light rains have fallen Gver the Seward Peninsula and the Kuskokwim and from Kodiak to upper Southeast Alaska, while the weither has been fair over other lery are being doubled to increase apacity to 500,000 caes per month, should the government permit run- J. Pierpont Morgln, who phyed a prominent part in the last war, wae ‘an interested spectator as his daughter-in-law, Mrs. Henry Spencer Morgan (whom he is dlowrt‘mcfing) acted as sponsor at launching of ti latest U. S. Navy isitio critiser Quincy, at Quincy, Mass. In back- eroundm Mrs. Morgan’s purents, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Francis Adams. PURSER M’NAMEE DESCRIBES NOME CONDITIONS NOW One of the fastest round-trips fromt Seattle to Nome, was made by the steamey Vietqria last month Purser L. J. MecNamee said here t Purser McNamee described the opening trip of the season to Béring Sea by the Vic while that hip was i port. 1wenty-nine days were required to ‘make the complete voyage and to ‘discharge the vessel's heavy car- g0, “There are a great many people In Nome now,” Purser McNam said. “The beach 1is lined with tents, and many ar¢' panning gol there, waiting to be taken by air-| plane to jobs in the Interior.” The pu also said that community was rebuilding from the rufns of its devastating fire last Year; Several new and modern store structures have been erected, and | the city has been replotted. Streets now being built are 90 feet wide, he {said. S A i ARMOUR RETURNS Den Armour, president of the Figgly Wiggly Alaska Company, left | Juneaw with his daughter for Ket- chikan on the North Sea. | ———— e FREEBURN HERE Lawrence Freeburn, whose father is connected with . the Packing Company, at Sitka, arrived | here from the Barhmof Island ‘port| cn the North Sea. ey | Hours FRE FREE $L.O first g the .. FISHERMEN FROM LOS ANGELES GO BACK; TO RETURN W. A. Trout, A. C. McBain and Dr. F. J. Grunigen, Californian fishermen, sailed for Seattle on the Alaska. The Los Angeles r enjoyed a successful trout trip to Lake Patco with Pilot Shel- don Simmons in the Ailaska Air | Transport Stinson seaplane last (Ffriday, and chartered the Wander- er, Capt.- Larson, for strip-fishing excursions on Wednesday and Sun- Hiany. All three ‘Californians have made plans to return ‘to the Territory or further fishing in the future None of them had ever visitéd Alaska before. | —— . ON ROUND TRIP ‘Mr. ard Mrs. Robert E. Power, agcompanied by their daughter, Miss Beverly Power, are round-trip passenger on the Victoria. They |are friends of Thomas B. Wilson, President -of the Alaska Steamship Company, and are socially promin- |ent in Piedmont, Cal., where they | residg. ——————— MISS M RMICK LEAVES | Miss Irene McCormick, accom- |panied by her father, Deputy Unit- ed States Marshal John McCormick, left here for Seattle on the' North |Sea. She will visit with relatives in Walla Walla, Wash,, before re-, Pyramid | tjrning here to continue school this ‘here a week after coming fall. ——— DAILY EMPIRF WA PAIR FULL 1LK HOSE SE. lity full fashion Hose. Choice of tal Neeklue or Pearl Necklace, $2.50, ROCK : CRYSTAL STRUNG ON SILVER-PLATED CHAIN | ninz the botiling lines from 6 a.m. ‘0 11 p.m. The new bottling linés il number -of employes in this section nf'the plant will be doubled. - e LIBEL CASE POSTPONLD The libel suit of tormer U. S. Marshal Albert White a~ainst Heard, Se tary of the Als Mine . Workers' Union, which was iuled for hearing Saturday has postponed for a week. White is suing Heard for $10,000 on rreunds ‘that he was libeled by the latter in an article appearing in “The Miner,” .a mimeographed paper, a year ago. ON ADMIRAI TY District Ranger W. A. Chipper- field, who is on Admiralty Island in conneetion with Forest Service work, is now at Sitka and is ex- pected back about the 25th. Chip- perfield left here on the Ranger IX right after the Fourth and on the 8th moved a CCC crew from Mole Harbor to Hasselborg Lake. He then went to Baramof, Ten- akee, Angoon, Hoonah, Port Al- thorp and Sitka. He will look over the trail the Forest Service is building from White Sulphur Springs to Dry Pass. After visiting several other points in the South- cast he will return to Juneau. - CAL S IN JUNEAU Stanley T. Olafson, with the De- partment of Foreign Commerce and | Shipping with the Los Angeles Chamber of Commerce, made sev- eral calls in Juneau this morning during the stay of the Alaska in port. Mr. Olafson is returning south with a delegation from the Los| 'Angeles Chamber who have been| |on a trip to the Westward. l — o NEW YORKER VISITING Mrs. Octavia W. Chase ‘of New[ York City, who has been on a trip| to the Westward, is ‘stopping over | in on Miss Serv- | the Alaska for a visit with Pear]l Peterson of the Forest lOAM. ‘to, 2 P. M. FASHION PURE —"$1.00 VALUE NECKLACE, Present this ‘certificate and $1.50 and receive 6ne $2.00 box of Face Powder, one $1.00 Ex- Quisite Perfume, a $250 Rock Cuf Crystal Necklace strung on silver-plated chain and ONE PAIR OF LADIES' FIRST QUALITY Remember, these are pure silk Crys- be ready September 1 and the — parts of the Territory during the Iast twenty-four hours. Tempera- tures over Alaska this morning are considerably cooler. FINE TROUT SERVED ABOARD TALLAPOOSA; FOUR MEN GET CATCH A fishing party of seamen aboard the Coast Guard Cutter Tallapoosa Miles A. Cornelius, Wm. J. Meyers, Dan D. Jeklin and D. O. Pratling— left Juneau Saturday night aboard the PAA Fairchild, piloted by Alex Holden with Lloyd Jarman, flight mechanic, for Lake Hasselborg. VACATION TRIP SOUTH 8. E. Robbins, PAA pilot, left on the Alaska this morning: ;He will travel by plane from Seattle to San Diego, where he ‘expects to spend six weeks' vacation with Mrs. Robbins and daughters Diane and Sharon. ce e, CLIFFORD ON SHIP They returned yesterday morning with a good catch of trout and reported that they had enjoyed a fine fish breakfast at the lake. D MINER IN HOSPITAL Forest Smith, Alaska Juneau mine mployee, who entered St. Ann's Hospital last night for treatment of an eye injury, was discharged today. e e TONSILS REMOVED Sherwood Jones, 8, son of Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Roshess, had his tonsils removed at the hospital this morning and refurned home this aftermoon. ———————— CORDOVAN IN HOSPITAL Harry Clark, who arrived from !Cordova on the Alaska this morn-' |ing, entered the hospital for sur-' glcal treatment. —eeo— EDUCATOR GOES SOUTH V. H. DeBolt, Superintendent of Schools at Fairbanks and former Superintendent at Douglas, is a passenger southbound on the Al-' aska for a vacation in the States.' | . . DECLARES WAR ON POACHERS Stanley Harbison, wolf trappe: from Dundas Bay, is in Juneau for a few days on business. He con- ferred with Alaska. Game Com- ‘mission officials heré and said He was declaring war on poachers, who hnve been molesting his traps. e TO STOP AT SITKA Mr. and Mrs. F. Christensen planned to stop over at Sitka and visit the Goddard Hot ~Springs. They were passengefs on the North Sea from Seattle, where Christen- sen is a wholesaler. | ‘@ /station. KINY here, jround trip from Juneau to Sitka Earl Chfford, ‘agent for the Mar- shall-Wells Hardware Company, left Juneau for Ketchikan on the North Sea. Sote e 20 FROM DETROIT Miss Viola Perry, secretary to the president of the Ethyl Cor- poration of Detroit, Mich, is en- joying her first round-trip visit to Alaska from BSeattle on the North Sea. - e — LEAVE JUNEAU Carl Wirth, representative of the ‘W. J. Lake Company, and Elmer Jakeway, Alt Heidelburg agent, left | Juneau for Ketchikan on the Al- aska. TO SEATTLE M. George, father of the three George brothers, grocery and mer- chandise establishment proprietors, left the city for -Seattle on the Alaska after spending an extended visit here with his sons. ————— T0 VISIT SON To visit with her son, a soldier at Chilkoot Barracks, for several months, Mrs. Fannie L. Patton ‘of Arbuckle, Cal; actompanied by Freeman and Richard Patton wasa passengeér for' Haihes from Seatile on the Victoria. —— e ARNOLD TRAVELS B. Arnold, managér ‘'of radio “madé the on the North Séa. MRS. JEFFREY TRAVELS Mrs. J. 8. Jeffrey, wife of the representative for the M.< Seller Company, léft Juneau for Ketchi- kan on the Alaska. Local Radishes, Onions, Turni ps—F resh Daily has been formed in Illinois for the purpose of having him named the G. O. P. standard bearer. A Chi- ‘cago attorney, Vandorf Gray, is sponsoring the move Vandenberg’s reaction to Gray's efforts in his behalf was a laconic “Not interested.” He says that he is net even acquainted with the man. That is typical of the attitude he has displayed all along, however.| He refuses to discuss the question at all. Even mention of it either is dismissed by him with a grin or with an impatent statement to for- get it. It nevertheless is true that the ance the government's budget. He thinks that only when the Ameri- can people begin to pay the bills|© will they come to value economy in; governniental ‘expenditures. From a political standpoint, many observers think this is just what the administration wishes to avoid at this time. With a national elec- |tion coming wup next year, they |say, ! | Democrats to impose any such taxes it is not the wish of the {on the people. ———.e———— ’ METCALF TO KETCHIKAN Frank Metcalf left for Ketchi- kan on the Alaska. l s been named presi: fi fs Fargo bank in San Fran Associated Press Phots) TO PETERSBURG A. VanMavern, representative of the West Coast Grocery Company, on the North Sea. | B | DELANEYS LEAVE Mr. and Mrs. Ed Delaney left Juneau on pany, is bound for Ketchikan, while | his wife is ticketed for Seattle. {traveled from Sitka to Petersburg! the Alaska. Delaney,| | agent for the J. B. Burford Com- | l‘l y(.-h ‘cannot come at this hour, send somcone to our store before and your set wnl be laid aside. $1.50 —Mail Orders Add 10c and This Ad— Wednesday Only! 4 Hours Only! . Originally $6.50 Valde for $1.50! “** Jumeau Drug Co. to 2P M JUNEAU, ALASKA .sg 3 le.sye $1.50 YOU PAY i ONLY FOR ALL FOUR ARTICLES Limit 2 Sets to Each Certificate PHONE485 Juneau Cash Grocery CASH GROCERS Corner Second and Seward Free Delivery CAPI TOL BEER PARLORS AND BALL ROOM Lunches Dancing Every Night Private Booths