The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, May 27, 1938, 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)

o1 ol ALL JUNEAU GRADUATING CLASS THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, FRIDAY, MAY 21, U. 8. DEPAR'I‘M!NT oF AGR!CULTURE WEATHER BUREAU | HE LARGEST ISTORY {OULD BE PROUD ( IN TIH OF HER HIGH SCHOC)H B. M. BEHRENDS CO., Inc. “Juneau’s Leading Department Store" IS PROUD OF JUNEAU'S THI THE GRADS: EM GOOD FORTUNE, AND APPROPRIATE AND S GRADUATES, . WISHES SUGGESTS AS TRULY EASE GIFTS FOR 6n URE TO PL [ ] DRESS and LOUNGING ROBES . . . . LUGGAGE . 1,/ RRESS and SPORTS SHIRTS . ... NECKTIES . . «y BAIAMAS -y DRESS und SPORTS SHOES . ... e 3 SPRRLS JAGEETS HOSIERY . . . SWEATERS . . . BELTS s SHIHTS and SHORTS ... MICHAELS-STERN SUITS BERNE-EHL by the Senior and Junior Trinity Guild- COLUMBUS, O Agriculture Director E feld believes the average farmer i suffering severely from the reces- sion. Hanefeld, however, opines that normal times will return by the end of the year and that the farmers far better off now economic speaking, than they were in 1932, General Electric GIVES YOU | AMAZING SPEED CALROD, General Electric’s amazing new Hi-Speed heat- ing coil, cooks as fast as any fuel. No waiting—no matches =and no guessing. Calrod gives exact amount of heat needed. Cooking utensils rest directly upon the glowing roils no heat wasted on brick or air space. Calrod is completely insulated, sealed air-tight in rust-preof metal. And Hi-Speed Calrod just one of Genéral Electr many modern features. the others today. The lo, New in Style, ow in Price. '8OLD ON EASY TERMS Liberal Trade-in Allowance ‘General Electric and TOPCOATS [ ] ER in CONCERT—FTiday, June 3rd——-Sponsored | 938 Farewell Tea Is I R S On her across the Pacifie, |she will spend June 13 in Honolulu, way Rirplane Fishing Teh kS, fmed during her visits there last B. Weather Bureau) car. She will be in Yokohama Forecast for Juneau and vicinity, beginning at 4 pm, May 27: lee" Yesterday June 20, Shanghai, June 27 and Tu Be Prntested Partly cloudy tonight and Saturday; moderate westerly winds. | Honkong, June 30. i AT el R Montheas: Aucka: FParly iy tonrs i F r Dn"le Ta Ima Hor ahip Will sreive July 2 40| AANTKCHARNANCLOM NaWW: | S ) 4 esterly winds, except moderate to fresh over Dix- | Manila, wher will be met bY | _The county fishing industry plans . oh Euswe. | Mr. Hanson, Their wedding will be it the ehite Tt Forecast of winds aleng the Coast of (he Gulf of Alaska: Moderate | the ang:of *her ‘arrivay gt s “‘lmlf:nz ity Ll ‘ :2 {xj::?a“;:;e:zdfi‘r:gi :omghl Sl brdag R g M Riay SOClal Engagem ents [0' | M an ineer with Santa Barbara fishermen charge 0 strong southerly winds tonight and Satur- I . : g ¥ a day from Cape Fairweather to Cape Hinchinbrook. Bride-to-Be Are Many o Pag aR pany that planes patrol waters off Ven WCA' Hara Prim‘ t D(‘ sarture v nd their I 11 b€ at one of the turs fan(l Santa Barbara counties, Time Barometer Temp Humidity Wnd Velocity ~Weathe | I - ‘d."’pp""“ g Ml ‘“?"“ e 4 pm. yest'y 30.17 48 63 4 Cloudy | : et ‘ulgh‘ schools of fish. On that signal 4 am. today 3047 ar 6 N 5 Cloudy | For Miss Donie Taylér, who will| At the village of Rattvik; Swe - | schooners along the coast-—in’ com= Noon today 3012 52 36 w5 Cloudy |leave Tuesday on her way to Man-|den. there is an interesting: church| |munication by radio—cbRverge on R, :PORTS {la where she will be married to|Service which can be attended only| | the school with mile-long nets, mak- O BEPORTS miy {Mr. Rolf Hinnen Hanson, Ms. (Py persons over sixty T AT IS L Max.‘temp.” tiowest 4am. 4am. Precip safe | Gertrude Naylor and Mrs. Robert ¢ 7ol 3 Hi e T = W T2 . Statien last 24 hotrs | temp. temp. velocity 24hrs Weathe nder were hos s at tea at the Mf»hvvw. Hu" great French dra- EU.\n College, England’s famous L itk 48 ! 38 s 14 » Lt Raih |Governor's House yesterday after- matist, was the son of a valet of | boys' school, was founded by Henry A Anchorage 87 | 32 0 noon 1 ; Louis XTI, VI in 1440. Barrow 38 ) 10 0 Cloudy Over sixty of Miss Taylor’s friend —_— Nome 38 32 31 10 02 ralled to wish her happiness and Bethel 46 44 1 14 07 bid het farewell. Fairbanks 54 36 36 8 T Presiding at the e, wherz Dawson 58 32 34 0 0 slear |1 centerpiece of white peenies and St. Paul 44 32 36 6 18 Lt Ran\ white candles carried out a bridal Dutch Harbor 50 | 33 42 16 78 Pt. Cldy ;nnl(‘, were R. E. Robertson, Kodiak 52 { 4 50 18 T Cloudy |Mfs. C. W. Hawkesworth, Mus. Cordova 52 33 38 4 0 Cloudy arles Goldstein and Mrs. R. P. Juneau 19 41 41 5 02 Clondy |Nelson. Miss Alice Palmer, Miss Sitka 49 10 - 12 Dalma Hanson, Miss Alma Olson e Ketchikan 56 38 46 6 0 Clear |and Miss Mabel Monson served. | Prince Rupert . 58 4 4 12 0 Clear | During the last several weeks, Miss ’ | Edmonton 82 46 46 4 T Clear |Taylor has been entertained by | Seattle 82 54 54 4 0 Cloudy (many of her Juneau and Douglas | Portland 84 | 54 56 4 0 Cloudy | friends. Tohight she will be guest| San Francisco 58 54 54 6 T Cloudy |of honor at a dinhef party at the| New York 64 54 60 8 69 Lt. Rain | home of Mr. and Mrs. T. A. Morgan. | Washington 58 56 58 6 67 Cloudy | Wednesday, Mrs. Ike P. Taylor was| WEATHFR CONDITIONS AT B AM. TODAY | hostess at dinner for Miss Taylor.| B T R K | Miss Taylor, who came to Ala<lm‘ _Seamv tairport), cloudy, temperature 52; Blaine cloudy, 5 ltrom her Hesi i Pexdd I 1006, toria, partly cloudy, 50; Alert Bay, clear, 43; Bull Harbor, cle S Sailt . % has hosts of friends in Juneau where Triple Islahd, clear; Langara Island, partly cloudy, 45; Prince Rupert, she has taught ifi the public schools cloudy, 43; Retchikan, partly eloudy, 49; Craig, partly cloudy, 49; |7 .o ““'p Sbaptioh ‘ot 1hat - Yoar Wrangell, cloudy, 48; Petetsburg, cloudy, 50; Sitka, raining, 44; Soap- | g i i | stone, Poiat, paxtiy ¢louds, 485 Radioville, cloudy, 51: Hoohiah, clear, Popt |Pent in Hawall—since. she came Althorp, cloudy; Hawk Imlet, cloudy. 46; Juncau, cloudy, 47; Skagway ‘"m”‘_‘ 4 PR 4 ’s cloudy, 48; Yakutel, parfly loudly, 46; Cape Hinchinbrook, elody, 43; | During her last Week In Juneau che‘. Cordova, cloudy, 48; Chitina, cléar, 44; McCarthy, cleaf, 40; Anchor- |She 1 & guest at the home of Mr. H 1 agé, elolidy, 46: Portage, cloiidy, 46; Fairbanks, clear, 50; Hot Springs, |And Mrs. R. E. Robertson. When she “e‘ns a ‘clearl‘, 501; R{;lhyhpartly cloudy, 46; Nulato, partly cloudy, 46; Kaltag, ‘11:;;;;‘1‘1“”.:1? ~|‘:1(j":,\"li‘l‘lg ‘”"‘1‘:\' ““““ i aftly cloudy, 44, g B L TN 3 Juheau, May 28. — Buh#ise,13:10 am.; sunsct, 8:45 pm ”""" J'}:"""'»"] the good wishes of all h \he firs who know her » WEATHER SYNOPSIS After spending next week end in f\l\fi“s High barometric pressure continued this morning along the coastal | Seattle and Tacoma visiting Mr. and e regions from Cordova southward to British Columbia, with a crest of |Mrs. H. M. Hanson, parents of her 13044 ihches over the North Pacific Ocean at latitude 52 degrees and |future husband, Miss Taylor will longitude 146 degreés. A storm area of marked intensity prevailed |take the press of Russia frc '“1 over the Alentians and over the southern Bering Sea region, with falling | Victoria, Tuesday, June 7. S0LE U.5.AGENTS Schieffelin & Co., New YORK CITY + IMPORTERS SINCE 1794 pi wré this morning as far east as Kodiak Island, the lowest reported | ~ pressure being 28.70 inches over the Bering Sea between Dutch Harbor 1 2 and St. Paul Island. This general pressure disfribution has been at- H E LPI NG AlAs KA MAKE tended by generally fair weather from the Prince William Sound re- | gion southwéard to British Columbia and over the interjor of Alaska and by rain along the coastal region from the Aleutians eastward to Ko- —Masonic Temple Metcalf Returs From Mmes Work Frank Metcalt returned to Juneau THE BOOK OF ALASKA WILD FLOWERS By ADA WHITE SHARPLES and visitors to Alaska of Residents have seeing had the same whole experience fields of wild flow ¢ With no book or guide to aid in iden- tifying them With more than one hundred | and fifty photographs, the book is a thing of beauty as well as a prac- tical guide The book is also a clever solutivn | vestigations. of the gift problem; what to give| Metcalf did investigating work at that is useful, beautiful, lasting and | Halleck Island for Ketchikan inter- economical ests and also spent several days near For sale at the NUGGET BHOP. | Chichagof at the American Gold! Price 3125 adv. Mines, being~developed by a'grou | Chichagol after several weeks in frtrorrrsrbiirrmriis TEMPTINGLY DIFFERENT | | DISHES ARE YOURS BY PURCHASING; THE 4 ; FINEST MEATS OBTAINABLE PREPARED BY OUR EXPERT MEAT VENDERS 9 r.m:,a.“ | H A EACH ~.~..... PAN BII. Pouhd last night with Shell Simtons from | the islands, conducting mining n-| SNAPPY Ustfrozen— of Juneau men. Regarding Haleck Island, Met- calf said six men are wi ground there that appeatrs to s | good mine. The ore body lies in a shear zone, Metealf said, with the quartz.cut by dike rock. Good values have been found on the surface, he said, and |the quartz appears to be the same sort as that being mined at Chicha- | gof. SACRAMENTO, Cal, May California’s highways, E. Raymond Cato, c¢hief of the California State Highway patrol, has recommended a definite maximum speed limit or night-time, driving. PPY SERVICE P ¥ 27—1 | To reduce the hude accident toll on| The Pacific Try an Emy NOTYICE | Coast Coal Co. bunk- rking on efs will close noon on Saturdays dur- | 0W | ing summer months y indications of being a real 7, 1938. Effective I R pire ad. Summer AT SALE! STRA WBERRI1 RASPBERR SHELLED Per Pound . ; PRIME. sa'mx nom BEEF RIBS-——RUMPS CHOICE LEGS O’ LAMB._PORK-—VEAL—ROASTS Fresh Dressed- Roashnq-—-l"&yinq—-fihwmq CHICKENS $ A Summer hat sale when you want it! Cartwheels, new wid bretons . . every fa tels.- Bms "Juneau’s Leading Department Store” Straws! Felts! 195 e brims, rolled hats to flatter ce! White, pas- %//////////// 7 STANDARD oy PRODUCTS HOICE w; ith "Vr Industry FI;APPERS—tradm—fur farmers — yes; Standard Oil works for everyohe S engaged in Alaska’s three-million-dollar fur rANg:::Z’:A:JOUN: industry! Dependable Standard Oil Products mean "g Moro. oit better heat and light for many a trapper’s """‘Pfi.red cabin and trading post. Planes flying to these M STANDARD PENN MoT points rely on Standard Stanavo Aviation <X moi.?:] G pure Penmyh.,,"a Products; and when rivers are navigable, = 3 i STANDARD .,,, unsurpassed Standard Gasoline and Motor h':!‘r drop a fu|f oy o?:l;f_ Oils travel with boats engaged in trapping. Alaska’s fur industry knows that Standard Oil Service fits its needs better, too—even in such ‘details as the stronger containers in which Standard Oil Products are shipped to prevent damage and loss from leak- age duting teansit. Rely on Standard Oil for your own Petroleum needs — it pays! STANDARD OIL COMPANY OF CALIFORNIA More Than 100 STANDARD OIL PRODUCTS Serve Alaskan Transportation— ' Industry—Homes STANDARD

Other pages from this issue: