The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, October 25, 1937, Page 2

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

THE DAILY ALASKA LMPIRL MO‘\JDAY ()LT. _’) ‘)37 HALLOWE’EN SPECIALS DRESSES reduced—$7. 50—$15.oo AP TIR COATS—Dress and Sport Models Special Prices HATS—Reduced to ss.on Children’s Storm Coats Sizes 2 to 8 $4.50 and $5.50 Girls’s Skirts-$2.50 Girls’ Sweaters $1.95 and up House Dresses $1.00 and $2.50 B. M. Behrends Co., Inc. e et “Juneau’s Leading Department Stere” It Is Time to Watch Your Feet; Galosh Days Are in the Offing;' ‘&PR.INKLE ON COO] Topping off with talcum Me is the last move for foot fresh- ness. This step is best after the morning shower. (R SOAK OUT ACHES . . Here's a regimen that’s good to use every night. Start by soak- ing your feet in Ilukewarm, soapy water. SITKA OFFICERS ' 'HERE FOR COURT Deputy U. S. Marshal Ben Ficken of Sitka and Chief of Police Lyle Phillips of that city arrived in Ju- neau yesterday with Pilot Sheldon Simmons of the Alaska Air Trans- port. The two officers are here in connection with cases coming up at the present session ‘of court. e, Archbishop Usher’s chronology puts the date of the creation of the world at 4004 B. C. . By BETTY CLARKE AP Feature Service Writer It will soon be galosh time. Feet that have had the benefit of open- toed sandals and summer sun will hibernate in heavy shoes and rubber overshoes. That's a let’s give winter consideration 1 In the first place, be sure shoes and stockings fit. That's even more RUB IN COMFORY . .. | Olive oil, rubbed in well, comes | mext. Mary Howard, motion pic- change. SO tyre actress, shows hew. She some special ' Jets the oil stay over might. strenous feet Great Britain’s most extensive| farm crop is hay, of which 6,606,- important for foot comfort in Wit- g4y geres were harvested in 1935;| One of the first theatres in Nat- ter than 1n mammer its weightiest crop, turnips 10301,- chez Miss, built about 1828, was To Avert Fain 000 tons, the same year. constructed in & graveyard. ‘When stockings are too small they —— , give out in the toe. They also slide down at the heel, leaving the sheer part of the stocking to rub against the back of the shoe—and sprout runners. Shoes that are too small make tired feet perspire more than they normally do. And perspiration causes foot scaling which often is very painful. Winter foot care is not such a task if you make it part of your beauty regimen. It means: (1) Keeping the feet clean (2.) Applying a little olive oil or cuticle cream to the toes and nails now and then. (3). Cutting the toe nails reas- onably short—and filing away rag- ged edges. (4). Applying a little hand lotion or night cream to chapped parts of the feet and ankles. About Corns Some beauty experts advise using cuticle remover for callouses on the heels and the bottoms of the feet Others say it's best to rub the cal- Jouses with pumice stone—if you rub gently. Nearly all experts agree that corns shouldn’t be cut off except by a chiropodist. There's a simple night ritual that is almost certain to bring comfort to aching feef. It involves soaking the feet in soapy lukewarm water or a solution of baking soda in warm water, rubbing the feet dry with a Turkish towel and massaging them with olive oil. And it’s a good plan to dust the feet with talcum powder after the morning shower. If any trouble arises, consult your foot doctor. BRUNSWICK IS GIVING 2 BIG STRUTTIN' TURKEYS CONTEST BEGINS MONDAY-—Closes midnight of November 23. Three per- sons rolling most games will win a gobbler apiece. MEN AND WOMEN BOTH ELIGIBLE PLAY AS YOU EARN BRUNSWICK BOWLING ALLEYS [JAMES P.DALY | SUCCUMBS TO DDES LONG ILLNESS the mOffisNT Prominent Kl;;kan Passes Away in Seattle—Wide- ly Known in North James P, Daly, pioneer mining man, transportation agent and for-, mer Territorial Legislator, died at 6:45 o'clock Saturday morning in Seattle where he was taken a few days ago for treatment, according to word received here by Lawrence | Kerr from Mrs. Daly, who was| with her husband in the south. Mr. Daly had been in poor health | for months and enroute south Imm‘ Nome, where he had made his home for years, he was confined to the | hospital here early this year for| some time. He had been showing | improvement for several days, it was reported, but suddenly he underwent a change for the worse last Friday | night resulting in his death early) the next morning. The well known Alaskan had rep- | resented the Alaska Steamship Company for years in the north and | was in the Territorial Legislature at two sessions, once serving as Clerk of the House and then as a| member of the House from the Second Division. Afterward he often represented his company and the transportation business at the legis- | lative sessions and was highly re-| ‘garded by all who knew him. | | \DIES IN SEATTLE Mr. Daly had been interested in minmg for years and at the time of his death had considerable min- ing property in the Kougarok conn—i try. , He is survived by Mrs. Daly, wide- ‘ 1y known writer, who is living now | st 708 Union Street, Seattle. ‘ e SAM A. BERG, ALASKA BUILDER, BY THE otch gave the inspiration for this fall beret by Howard Hodge. Its brown felt body, mounting smartly from the forehead, is crossed by a rust and sand colored stitching plaid. A rust colored quill is thrust through the front. of the Alaska The latter sailed in command of a a trip around the world his father passed He t W. Berg of the St throughout the Territory had constructed building: Alaska towns. He built the Assem- Apartment in most just el on butlding s I)I\ building and several others Man Who Buil Many Ju-iyoias some at Fairb neau Structures Succumbs | and in other cities. to Extended Illness here was on the Juneau Clinic the Goldsteon buildin bout a year ago, after which he went south Sam A. Berg, widely known Alaska 'After puiting up two build! construction man, died last Mon- Seattle he was strick i1, day in Seattle following an extended ness from which he illness, according to "word received Mr. Bt v here by his son Art Berg, Juneau contractor. The elder Mr. before Funeral services in Seattle, D Loui has 4,794 mies gable na of navi- waterways. TOO LATE TO CLASSIIY FOUND--On Glacier Highway nea Richard’s Service Station, one black and white setter pup about 6 months old J. H. Walmer, U & I Cafe. dow, Mrs. | Avenai Berg was known Seattle; Howa Sec here, on a sSom, Art, Whati your pick Sor the ALL-STAR.. Liddie” Wth smokers in every part of the country Chesterfields stand ace high. It’s a cinch they’ve got what smok- ers like. You'll find them milder. . . you’ll enjoy that Chesterfield taste. Chesterfiel ] .. Ace qf them all Jfor MILDNESS and TASTE . DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE, WEATHER BUREAU THE WEATHER (By the U. 8. Weather Bureau) Forecast for Juneau and vicinity, beginning at 4 p.m., Rain tonight and Tuesday; fresh southeast winds. Weather forecast for Southeast Alaska: Rain tonight and Tues- 1 southeast winds, excep strong over Lynn Canal, Chatham ait, Clarence Strait, and Dixon Entrance. Ferecast of winds along the coast of the Gulf of Alaska: Strong southeast winds tonight and Tuesday from Dixon Entrance northward to Cape Hinchinbrook. U. s Oct. 10: LOCAL DATA Barometer Temp. Humidity Wind Veloeity 2042 48 8 gz 12 29.74 41 85 SE 18 29.82 41 81 SE 16 RADIO REPORTS | TODAY Max. temp. | Low:st 4am. 4a.a. last 24 hours | tem). temp. 47 36 20 18 40 32 38 24 38 22 34 30 42 ?2 44 44 50 53 52 62 58 68 70 4 46 50 | Time 4 p.m. 4 am | Noon ‘Weathes Sprkling Lt. Rain . Lt. Rain yost'y today today 4a.m. Weathel Precip. velocity 24 hrs. 0 0 .02 0 0 34 0 .55 50 60 a8 Station Anchor: | Barrow Nome Bethel Fairbanks Dawson St. Paul Dutch Harbor Kodiak Cordova Juneau sitka Ketchikan Prince Rupert Edmonton Seattle Portland San Franciso |New York Washington ze 3 20 32 26 26 32 36 42 44 w 50 48 40 58 54 56 40 32 WEATHER CONDITIONS AT 8 A.M. TODAY Seattle (airport), cloudy, tempe-ature 56; Blaine, partly cloudy, 50; a, cloudy, 50; Alert Bay, cloudy, 43; Bull Harbor, showers,. 48; a Island, raining, 47; Princ: Rupert, cloudy,*49; Triple Island, ; Ketchikan, cloudy, 51; Craig, cloudy, 46; Wrangell, raining, Petersburg, raining, 47; Sitka, raining, 46; Radioville, misting, 43; Inlet, cloudy; Soapstone Point, raining; Juneau, raining, 45; Skagway, raining, 46; Cordova, raining, 44; Chitina, cloudy; McCarthy, cloudy, Anchorage, cloudy, 36; Portage, raining; Fairbanks, clou- dy, 30; Nenana, cloudy, 20; Hot Springs, partly cloudy; Tanana, part- ly cloudy, 14; Ruby, clear, 20; Nulalo, clear, 14; Kaltag, clear, 22; lakleet ar, 20; Flat, foggy, 14 Juneau, Oct. 26.—Sunrise, 7:00 a.m.; sunset, 4:27 p.m. WEATHER SYNOPSIS Low barometric pressure continued this morning throughout Al- | aska, northwestern Canada, and over the northeastern portion of the {North Pacific Ocean, there being two storm areas, one centered a short distance south of Kodiak where a pressure of 20.00 inches pre- |vailed and the second storm area was centered near St. Paul Island, the lowest reported pressure being 29.10. High barometric pressure prevailed from Dixon Entrance southward to Oregon, the crest being 30.22 inches at Kamloops. This general pressure distribution has been altended by precipitation along the coastal regions from the Alaska Peninsula southeastward to British Columbia, also over the upper Yukon Valley, and by generally fair weather over the remaider of the field of observation. Temperatures were between 10 and 15 degrees this morning over the Yukon Vailey between Tanana and Kaltag. Nulato reported a heavy run of ice in the Yukon River this morning. Cloudy Clear Clear Cloudy Cloudy Samwe | Clear Rain Cloudy Lt. Rain 42 [T N Cloudy Pt.Cldy Pt. Cldy Cloudy Fog Clear Clear Clear o AROD RS 38 30 > 62nd and last county to be and 3,000 millions of miles from the d in New York State the |Earth. Bronx, formed from a part of New | York County in 1914. > iy | Revenues for the national organ- |ization of the American Red Cross most disiant planet is Nep-|for the 1935-26 fiscal year were calculated to be between 2,500'$11,565,293.74. The ltune, Taia cirz;:fi Laul ..dm 100% ngéf . on Mzs oree Get your last minute football predictions and scores from EDDIE DOOLEY with PAUL DouGLAs Thursdays and Saturdays . Columbia Network Copyright 1937, LicoeTT & MyErs Toracco Co.

Other pages from this issue: