The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, June 1, 1938, Page 2

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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, WEDNESDAY, JUNE 1, 1938 ! Save on Your Cottons We Bought Hundrec Savings Which Are Passed . of Yards at Hitge Along to You! Buy Them During NATIONAL COTTON WEEK You'll live in time to buy them a cottons the cotton crop is bloomingly mart your cotton cottol Pick ever- this Summer—and now’s t real savings. This year’s colorful — dll(] your fabrics is BIGGER than ns today! 2 5% Discount Stock Up On SHEETS! TOWELS! BEDDING! Fill your N ‘.V]i\z "If”‘\r;‘u.xh Vs prices! I SHEETS and PILLOW CASES Celebrati NE ous vou bottom linen closet to the hilt . . . at marvel- ng Cotton Week, we bring W merchandise at rock- 109, DISCOUNT MATTRESS PADS—COTTON BLANKETS—CURTAINS 20% TOWELS- DISCOUNT ® TOWELING BEDSPREADS , DISCOUNT B.M. BE CO. “June: L Berne and Ernest Ehler in Concert — I'riday, death occurred Memorial Day. All members are urged to be present. - Hiram Walker's DeLuxe Bourbon v hiski are Bend and are 7 Years Old. Available it popular prices. Ask your dealer! adv. ELKS WILL HOLD MEETlNG TONIGHT The BP.OE. will ]ml(! a meeting and initiation this evening at the Elks Hall at 8 o'clock, it was an- nounced today, C. H. MacSpadden Exalted Ruler. Announcement services will also be held for Gunnar Blomgren, whos: l{) e or .- harmonica was invented by Frapklin in 1762. The Jenjamin SEE HOW MUCH MORE a Dollar Now Buys in a New So little money buys so much G-E Refriger- ator that practically every home can now afford one. America bought more G-E Refrigerators last year than ever before, and this year G-E is even a bigger buy. Now Popularly Priced! Bigger dollar-for-dollar value . .. low current cost «. . long life with low upkeep. New, faster freezing General Electric Quick Trays provide in- stant ice cube release . .. two or a trayful in seconds. Six-tray models can freeze 48 lbs. of ice in 24 hours and average current cost is less than the price of ice. SOLD ON CONVENIENT PAYMENT PLAN ALASKA ELECTRIC LIGHT & POWER CO. JUNEAU—ALASKA—DOUGLAS MARYE BERNE and ERNEST EHLER in CONCERT Sponsored by the Trinity Guild—June 3—Masonic Temple e e e S TS Bottled-in- | HRENDS Inec. ling Department Store” June 3 — Masonie Temple REFRIGERATOR DOORS RECEIVE ~ MORE BANGING " |[Each Part of Modern Ma- chine Subjected to Inten- sive Abuse and Trials The door of the household frigerator is opened and closed more than any other door. of the house, according to W. S. Pullen, local General Electric dealer. +“A door-slamming machine slams the door of each test model 500,000 times, the equivalent of 30 year use, before the cabinet design accepted by . General Electric production,” he said. Other interesting facts revealed by M. follows: A jiggling machine shakes and jostles the test cabinet day in and day out to prove it sturdy. Finally | the abused machine goes to the hot room where it is tested for cold capacity. It takes 24 hours to manufacture a G. E. refrigerator, and three fourths of this time, too, is spent in inspection and testing. Parts are fitted to the accuracy of three tem- thousandths of an inch, o1 one-sev- enth the thickness of & human hair. The unit, is operated under, water. Women, as well as men, inspect each cabinet on the assembly line. Years of research and experiment | are required to perfect each im-| provement before it is incorporated | in a new model. General Electric started experimenting in 1912 with various types of refrigeration umL\'.‘ but it was not until 1927 that this company introduced the first com- pletely sealed refrigerating unit. = | Thousands of 1927 model Monitor Top refrigerators are still giving satisfactory service, but today al housewife ean buy a much improved version of the General Electric seal- ed unit refrigerator at half the cost; one that will operate on less than half the current used by its 1927 predecessor. R S TO WHOM IT MAY CONCERN | is for: refrigerator | Pullen are as I will not be held responsible for any bills contracted in my name by any other person, after this date, June 1, 1938. | aqv. EDDIE POWERS | Lmlum(’s for B rulvs This June Have Long Trains Also Short Veils RADIANT RUFFLING any gowns for the June marquisette is designed with feng trai bouquet reflects beth the spirit of sheer if white silk » high-necked bodi and a An old fashioned 1938 fashion in bride This one i trimmed with e of ruftling. e frock and the flowers, often very ently numerou 10ther. One of the owns has little d to the they shimmer ADELAIDE KERR AP Fashion Editor 1 Brides of 1938 are seeking noveity One in their wedding costumes. Dressm s who have | gewnec seme of year’s most famou brides say they never knew a s son when so many tried to be d ferent. s largely a Their skirts are By own frec set over white net birds tacke so that net siiver love sec- he kirt h the very long and veils a bride insists on a veil for an elaborate g. Even those are by a short one. the bride may flattering fluff Trair hort are uniess difference in ac- cessories and attendants’ costumes however. White or ivory gowns trains and veils will still be in the lead- when those glamorous wed- ding pageants begin to move down flower-banked aisles this June But there is ne in the way in which that traditional wedding paraphernalia is handled. Sheer gowns of silk net, tulle, mar- quisette and lace are in favor this year, though a number of the most fashionable spring brides have clung to ‘the satin. One Set Above Another Many are inspired by period sil- houettes—the lines of the Gibson Girl's high necked frock or of a Wmmhaltcr belle’s off - shoulder topped that airy face. novelty to this year's wedding pageants. A number of June brides will walk to the altar in gowns of petal pink or pale heaven blue with attendants cos- tumed in the same shades. A Bos- ton bride chose mist gray tulle for her bridal gown and dressed her attendants in vivid American beauty faille Pale Pink to Deep Rose Warren Pershing's bride select- ed heaven blue satin frocks and apple blossom bouquets for however have that around her Color lends 50 her PAPS, DOUGLAS | IN POSTPONED MIX TOMORROW Will Make Another Attempt to Play Rained Out Battle —Washout Last Night With three postponed now cluttering the sla following the raining out last evening of the game scheduled in Douglas betw the Islanders and the Elks, Wil A. Holzheimer, Pres 1t of the Gas- tineau Channel Baseball League this afterncon decreed that prompt 8 necessary to save the d immediately attempt to play off the of the delayed contests on the inally scheduled for ning of May 24. the first of the pos poned mixes will now be played off tomorrow evening at Firemen's Park weather permitting. The game will bring together the two old enemies the Moose and the Islanders, in a seven-inning fracas commencing at 6:30 o'clock. The two rivals are now knotted in the standings with an equal number of wins and losses, and will both be pointing for a win tomorrow to break the hated d lock. Pitching choices have rct been announced. ontest set the date first bridesmaids in contrast io her own ivory satin gown, while a white- robed bride from the South put her attendants in frocks which shaded from palest pink to deep rose More innovations are noticeable n flowers, says Irene Hayes, who has designed the wedding bou- quets for some of America’s most beautiful brides, This year color adds spice, garden flowers are combined with hot house blooms and both are handled in intriguing ways. Bouquets are not so large and al- most no foliage is used. One recent New York bride car- ried a bouquet of parchment roses rimmed with iris petals, another a white tulle fan covered with orange blossoms anfl a third a bou- quet of lilacs and orchids fringed with tulle. Regardless of novelty, however, most of this year’s brides strive for one result in their wedding cos- tumes — and youth. Fairchild Goes To Islands with Holden at Stick Three passengers went out to is- land points this morning with Alex Holden in Marine Airways Fair- child, Elwood Moore went to Sitka, L Stephens to Chichagof, round trip, and Frank Greer went to Tenakee, Today was “mail day” for Holden with a long list of cannery stops. e - In Sir Walter Scott’s old home, Abbotsford, can be seen the crucifix of Mary Queen of Scots, Napoleon's pistol and blotter, a tumbler from which Burns drank, Rob Roy’s gun and other curios. Pl WVWVTvmvvvvvvvvvvv vV vV My fate is in your hands To produce a bottle of BUDWEISER | takes months and months—and yet it’s a matter of minutes. Every operation re- quires perfect hour-and-minute timing. Barley must sprout just so long—and no longer. The clock has the final say-so on mashing, cooking, fermenting and pas- | teurizing. So, wherever you go in the | Atka home of BUDWEISER, you’re face-to-face with a clock. And, when you open a | bottle of BUDWEISER, you're face-to-face with that sort of enjoyment and satisfac- tion that only precise brewing can produce. MAKE THIS TEST! DRINK Budweiser FOR FIVE DAYS. ON THE SIXTH DAY TRY TO DRINK A SWEET BEER » YOU WILL WANT Budweiser’s FLAVOR THEREAFTER. o NOTE FOR HOUSEWIVES: A glass of cold BUDWEISER is always a thoughtful compliment to a husband ORDER A CARTON NO DEPOSIT FOR YOUR HOME REQUIRED — especially in the evening. Has he ever expected it when there was none in the icebox? Check up on your we. -~ ANHEUSER-BUSCH Budweiser AMERICA’S SOCIAL COMPANION PRS- 14 sS4 . FYVVVVYVVYS supply. Keep a carton on hand—and several bottles or cans of BUDWEISER chilled and ready for instant serving unexpected as well as regular occasions. ANHEUSER-BUSCH ¢ ST. LOUIS (3 U. 8. DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE. WEATHER BUREAU THE WEATHER (By the U. 8. Weather Bureau) Forecast for Juneau and vicinity, beginning at 4 p.m, June 1: showers tonight and Thursday; gentle to moderate southeast winds. Weather forecast for Southeast Alaska: Showers tonight and Thursday; gentle to moderafe southeast winds except moderate to fresh over Dixon Entrance, Clarence Strait, Frederick Sound, Chat- ham Strait and Lynn Canal Forecast of winds along thesCoast of the Gulf of Alaska: Moderate to fresh southeast winds along the coast from Dixon Entrance to Icy Point; moderate casterly winds from Icy JZ.nt to Cape Hinchinbrook. LOCAL DATA % Barometer Temp. Humidity Wind Velncity 30.07 48 82 s 12 29.98 44 91 s 4 30.04 48 % E 8 Time 4 pm 4 am Noon Weathes Lt. Rain Cloudy Lt. Rain yest'y today today RADIO REPORTS TODAY Low:st 4am. 4am. Precip. tem). temp. velocity 24 hrs, 36 36 4 40 - 30 30 38 38 40 40 29 Max. temp. last 24 hours | 42 62 34 50 4am Weather Clear Station Anchorage Barrow Nome Bethel Fairbanks Dawszon St. Paul Dutch Harbor Kodiak Cordova Juneau Sitka Ketchikan Prince Rupert Edmonton Seattle Portland | €an Francisco | Mew York | Washington | Cloudy Clear Clear Clear Clear Cloudy Cloudy Rain Pt. Cldy Cloudy SeRowdn | o Rain Cloudy Clear 0 Pt. Cldy 0 Clear 0 Clear 0 0 PN T - 54 54 52 WEATHFR CONDITIONS AT 8 AM. TODAY temperature, 54; Blaine, cloudy, 40; Vic- toria, cloudy, 47; Alert Bay, cloudy, 44; Bull Harbor, cloudy, 51; Triple Island, showers; Langara Island, cloudy, 47; Prince Rupert, raining, 42; Ketchikan, showers, cloudy, 49; Craig, showers, 48; Wrangell, Faining, 50; Petersburg, raining, 50; Sitka, cloudy, 48; Soapstone Point, shqvers, 48; Hoonah, cloudy; Hawk Inlet, cloudy, 46, Port Al- thorp, cloudy; Radioville, raining, 46; Juneau, raining, 47; Skagway, cloudy, 50; Yakutat, showers, 46; Cape Hinchinbgook, cloudy, 50; Cor- Clear Clear Seattle (airport), cloudy, 48; Fairban! , partly cloudy Nulato, cloudy, 5 3:03 am.; 49; Portage, partly cloudy, Eprings, clear, 55; Tanan; Kaltag, partly cloudy, 50; Juneau, June 2. — Sunrise, WEATHER SYNOPSIS With little change in distribution, the barometric pr still low this morning from the Guif of Alaska to the Arctic coast, lowest reported pressure, 29.70 inches, south of Kodiak Island. A ridge of high barometric pressure extended from mid-Pacific northeast to the Canadian prairie provinces, with a center of 30.40 inches off the California Coast. Rain fell locally over the interior of Alaska and over southern Alaska and northern British Columbia with generally fair weather over other parts of the field of observation. Mostly cooler temperatures were recorded over the Territory this morning, partly . Ruby, sunset, 8:53 p.n an effect of demureness [reezing temperatures being reported from St. Paul Island and Daw- son, Yukon Territory. LOVE NEEDED NO WORDS when Gertrude Levin and Solomon Deitch were wed in Chicago with Jewish marriage rites conducted in sign language. Bo&h are deaf mutes. RUGS for your CABIN 27 x 54 OVAL RUSH RUGS $2.75 27 x 54 RICE STRAW MATS 60c Tightly Woven and Longwearing These rugs are attractive and durable and are patricularly suitable for cabins and porches. Nicely decorated, easily cleaned and inexpensive. NEW ARMSTRONG LINOLEUM PATTERNS NOW ON DISPLAY P JUNEAU-YOUNG HARDWARE Co. Please Call for DEMONSTRATION Completely Equipped to REPAIR All Makes ALASKAN HOTEL Until Satarday Roscoe Townsend, ALASKA AGENT REPAIR COall at our office any afternoon this week between the hours of three and five to see the latest in kitchen and bathreom equipment installed in our MODEL APARTMENT. There are also many other interesting innovations, and all are possible through the F.H.A. Finance Plan. Let us explain and assist you with your loan. No obligations muurred Rice & Ahlers Co.-Phone 34 Third and Franklin Streets <

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