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i H § i “ THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, FRIDAY, SEPT. 9, 1938. Seagram collected rare blended whiskies of the old days ++. paid $25 for each bottle . .. to prove conclusively that Seagram’s Crowns taste better = E FEATURED ON SATURDAY ONLY | Atty Trader Ison AT COLISEUM way South Atter Bt of the i Granide to Show Here—Demo- cratic Rally Tonight Owing to the Democratic politi- cal rally, having as the speaker, Al- aska’s delegate to Congress, An- thony J. Dimond, there will be no feature at the Coliseum Theatre this evening. However, Saturday only, another red-blooded action of the type that America has come to expect from the “Hopalong Cassidy’ Western stories, will be supplied in good measure in the latest of these outdoor romances, “North of the Rio Grande.” William Boyd comes to the screen for the eleventh time in the role cf the hard-riding, square-shooting “Hoppy,” who within the space of a year has become the nation’s fav- orite Western hero. With him ride “Windy,” played by George Hayes, and “Lucky” Jenkins, portrayed by the handsome newcomer Russell Hayden. . Taken from the Clarence E. Mul- ford novel “Cottonwood Guich,” the story is concerned with the manner in which Cassidy rids a wildcat frontier town of its crook-officials and in the same sweep annihilates a band of train robbers. Besides the hard-riding which characterizes these stories, there are a number of e provide many thrills. The cast also includes Stephen Morris, in a dual role; the charm- ing Bernadene Hayes, John Ruth- erford, Walter Lang, Lee Cobb, John Beach and Lorraine Randall.|nored traffic regulations over four The picture up}-mlds the fine stan-1and one-half miles of ,city streets. Si‘JAGRAM'S FIVE CROWN BLENDED WH ! fur and conditions generally were| citing railroad sequences which | Seagram asked its staff of experts—men long experienced in judging fine whis- kies—to compare the taste of famous blended whiskie: of the old days with 5 and 7 Crown. The whiskies were served in plain glasses. No one knew which was which. Every man chose Crowans. smoother, finer tasting” was the verdict! Finer taste always wins! Since 1934, Seagram’s dards for photography set by the previous “Hoppy” stories. It was directed by Nate Watt. Summer in North After a successful season at his | trading post in the Aleutian Islands, Fred Schroder is a passenger aboald‘ the Denali, returning to his winter home in San Francisco. Mr. Schro- | der is widely known in the north,| having been coming to Alaska for so many years “I hate to tell you| how long.” He operates the farthest | west trading post on the North Am-| crican continent, being located at Attu in the Aleutians. Schroder and Capt. C. T. Peder- sen, famed Arctic trader, have been partners for years. Back in the old days they were whalers and are the last living Americans who hunted sea otters in Alaskan waters. The | sea otter has been protected since | 1911 but prior to that time Schro- der and Capt. Pedersen were active- ly engaged in the business. The natives had an excellent year | in the Aleutians, Mr. Schroder re- | ported. There was a good catch ol“ favorable. Chief Mike Hodikoff of | Attu is Schroder’s right hand man. “Without Mike I couldn’t run my business,” commented the trader. - Speeding Useless VANCOUVER. — Chief Constable 1 W. W. Foster broke the law to show | motorists fthey didn’t save much time by speeding. He cut only three ! and three-quarter minutes from the usyal travelling time when he ig- "THEY'RE LIKE NEW!" YOU'LL SAY WHEN THEY COME BACK Doubtlessly many of 1 still in perfect style — send them to the ALASKA LAUNDRY and we'll return them clean and fresh and ready for another full season of wear. Just Phone 15 For Pick-Up ALASKA LAUNDRY t year’s clothes are | E. Seagram in 1857. over 129 million bottles of Crowns have been sold ...quarts, pints—all sizes. The real reason for the finer taste of Crowns is a blending skill —a craftsman- ship that dates back to the days of Joscph At the bar or wherever you buy—think “Richer, be sure. WHISKIES Teyic Fier ~ Ty BECAUSE THEYRE mis EY. 27149 straight whiskey, 72'¢% neutral spirits distilled from Amer AGRAM'S SEVEN CROWN BLENDED WHISKEY. 40 straight whiskies, 60% neutral spirits distilled from Amei SALMON RUN, PUCET SOUND, NOW FAILURE \ Pack Far Below Same Cycle 7 Four Years Ago—Can- | neries May Close \ | | i BELLINGHAM, Wash., Sept. 9. The sockeye salmon run on Puget | Sound is a failure. Canners and fishermen agree on this. The ])flf'k‘ is some 200,000 cases lower than the | pack in the same cycle four years ago. Canadian canners report the pack | in the Fraser River district is now 30,000 cases greater than last year. | Canneries in Bellingham and Fri- day Harbor are contemplating clos- | before you drink...say Seagram’s and Copr. 1938, Seagram-Distillers Corp,, N. Y. Crow an grains. 90 PROOF. ing because of the failure of the on. So far, there is also a discourag- ing outlook for fall fishing coupled with the controversy on fall prices. Purse seiners are reported bring- ing in their gear while gillnetters are leaving Point Roberts in hopes of finding better fishing in the Ev- erett district. Try the mmpire classitieds fox sults. Father Hubhard i To Remain Here For @en Days Arrives on Denali After 11 Years with King Island Eskimos Changing his plans as an- nounced this morning, the Rev. | Hubbard sailed south’ on the | Denali this afternoon but will return to Juneau within sev- eral months and show his | pictures. | /2 | — | After a year and a half with the| King Island Eskimos and an oomi- ak voyage with Eskimos to the east-| ward, to Point Barrow, the Re Bernard R. Hubbard, the “Glacier| Priest,” arrived in Juneau today aboard the Denali from Nome. Ed Levin will stop over with Father Hubbard here and Ken Chis- holm will continue south. Father Hubbard said he would show me-| tion pictures to Juneauites of the King Island Eskimos, their life and| their boxing and football which he introduced. “We introduced an Ice Bowl foot- ball game last winter and found the Eskimo a cracking good football player. We also introduced boxing| ‘| with regular equipment and found| the Eskimos, down to the paper| weight class, a clever boxer. It will all help combat tuberculosis, which so ravages the native.” For the King Island chief, who is boss of the island’s 200 popula- tion, Hubbard had praise. “For the 35 years that Father La- Fortune has kept his records, ihe Chief has been doctor and mid- wife,” Hubbard said. “In that peri- od of time, the Chief has delivered 1,200 babies with but one casualty- and expeditiously, too. “The Chief left the movies I was | showing one evening in the first X‘(‘l"; and came back in the second reel. | smiling the information that he had | just brought a healthy boy into the | world.” Father Hubbard said he found the King Islander the purest Eskimo remaining, a native who does not drink and is comparatively un- touched by white man’s ways. “The only thing most have gotten with their citizenship rights is the right to purchase li- quor,” the Glacier Priest said. During his stay at the building gymnasium and other ructures for the Eskimos, jackets, laced pants, caps, uxbak-Newton Shirts. Ask your dealer for gen- Duxbak Clothes. Style Book FREE. Huxbake: uine Uti 850 Noyes Street, Utic: e Dan Noonan, Juneau, Alaska Rel Get the Rifle YOU Wan in a Bolt Action NCHESTER t-. , ‘;:.\‘ &5 TRADE MARK MOD HE ren EL 70 100% WOOL CLOTHES ARE WARM 4 ENUINE Duxbak-made 100% wool Utica hunting and work clothes win every wear- er's satisfaction. Warm, durable, thoroughly shrunk, highly water-repellent. Hunting plaids and other colors. Mackinaws, cruisers, cossack .caps, socks, N. Y. Prize caribou, shot with a Model 70 Winchester by Fr: on'a trip with Jim R. Cunning 2) /addell, of 3 lomer, kable range of choice in Winchester Model 70 Rifles enables you to take your pick of any one of nine different modern calibers, from .22 Hornet up to .375 H. & H. Magnum. And for this range of calibers you have in Winchester Super Speed Cartridges—the newest development in Winchester success ammunition—a range of 30 different loads. Any Model 70 you choose will give you, first of all, the world’s newest and best in sporting rifle design, materials and gunsmithing. Remarkable for superiority of aetign. Dis inguished for supreme accuracy. A rifle perfectly adapted for the use of the newest hunting telescope sights —equally right with its.equipment in best metallic sights. And with its Winchester Super Speed-Cartridges a truly world beating com- | bingtion for whatever shooting you select them. See the Model 70 Winchesters at your dealer’s He will be glad to show them. Ask him for a free folder, giving full details. Or write to Dept. 5-N. WINCHESTER REPEATING ARMS CO, e B st R M 5 O, B S TS T OO . i NEW HAV! CONN,, U. 8. A, a booked-full lecture tour. kimos | island, | giving | | them electric lights and teaching |hierarchy of the United States, was which a Pontifical Requiem méss them to box and play football,/laid to rest today following the |was held Father Hubbard said he showed greatest funeral ever held in New The celebrated Cardinal’s boi,'« nearly 2,000,000 feet of March of | York. hood friend, George Cardinal Mun- Time and feature movie: | His friends of many faiths paid delein, of Chicago, delivered the Ie also said he took 150,000 feet!'homage, and churchmen and many | euls The Most, Rev. Joseph of movies himself at the island, and ' thousands packed the stately twin Frances Rummel, Archbishop of 12,000 stills spired cathedral for the service New Orleans was also present When he reaches Seattle, aboul | which included a procession in| Police said between 75,000 and September 20, he says he will begin | which marched most of America’s 100,000 persons were standing out- Roman Catholic dignitaries and at side the cathedral i “Give me the best Sleeping Robe & Sure | mean aWOODS ‘Eiderdown’” ) OUNTLESS times, Alaska's best dealers are asked in just those words to show their Woods Acctic Down Slzeping Robes. Because Woods Robes - Young Lomen Buys Peaches Here, Scarce in Nome Alfred Lomen Jr., son of the| § well known Nome busimess man,| have been the North's favorite make for over 30 ot off the steamer Denali this| Years. Interlined with Woods Everlive down from morning in Juneau after o week's| Northern waterfowl. No-drafe ventilation. Water- repellent cover. Cozy, warm wool lining. Ask Your Dealer Choice in weights and sizes. Also Woods Slecping Robes with pure wool insulation. Style and price to suit you. voyage from Nome and hurried up-| town to buy a box of fresh peaches “They're kind of scarce in Nome,” Alfred smiled. He is on his way back to his Seat- tle home with his mother and uncle | Ny WQODS MFG CO. LTD. OGDENSBURG. and aunt, Mr. and Mrs. Carl Lo-| men, after working this summer | near Nome. He is a senior at the' VOTE FOR CARDINAL HAYES BURIED IN PONP New York Sees Largest| Funeral in Its History— Thousands+in Crowd i ANDERSON CANDIDATE FOR ‘ TERRITORIAL HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES “My experience in the 1937 Session should render me more effec- tive in 1939.” NZW YORK, Sept. 9.—The late Patrick D. Cardinal Hayes, nativ: of this city, and Roman Catholic | For SATURDAY and MONDAY! NO MATTER WHAT YOUR PLANS MAY BE, YOU WILL FIND LOWER PRICES FOR FOODS AT California Grocery AND MEAT MARKET ‘ “Juneau’sOwn and Independently-Owned Store” CHOICES MEATS CUT TO YOUR ORDER% VEAL LOAF Pound 30c ALL SEASONED Ready for the Oven [ ] LAMB ROAST Pound 25¢ Shoulder Spring Lamb ; ® POT ROAST Pound 25c¢ Jello-all flavors, 3 pkgs. 19¢ _'l‘qmtge:p;viotmi Puree 25c CRISCO 3 Ib, can 59¢ TANG quarts 39¢ Grapefruit, No.2 size 50c Wesson Qil——quarts 49c Del Monte Pears 4 Sc Pineapple Juice 2 12-0z. tins Rl Dole 19c GOLDEN WAX CiJ . TE BEANS—; No. 2 tins 50c SUGAR e 59’¢ EVERY-DAY PRICE Coffee, all brands, Ib. 30 FreshFruits and Vegetables THE FINEST ALL THE TIME HOME GROWN: Beets, Carrots, Turnips, Radishes, Swiss Chard. Fresh Grapes- Ibs. 25¢ All Kinds Tomatoes —z Ibs. l9e Fresh—Solid ASK ANY OF OUR CUSTOMERS PHONE 478 Center Cuts—Choice Beef: L4 ; LAMB BREASTS Pound 15¢ For Stew or Bake [ ] GROUND BEEF Pound 25¢ All Fresh Pure Meat ® VEAL ROASTS Pound 33¢ Rump and Legs [ SHORT RIBS OF BEEF Pound 20¢ For Baking or Boiling “The Modern Pure Foods Store