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RS By THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, MONDAY, MARCH 31, 1930. ; ‘ o I P SRS S S PR TR TR - T =) [, fymer, wess bov, 2% Weather Conditions As Recorded by the U.S. - ‘ i tonight and Tucsday cooler tonight; fresh southwest- Fromthe courtroom to the farmhouse is the unusual step taken by this Farm Relief All Bosh They also spent some time with Wéather Britean eN QL |ter, who has been singing over sta- Showers EASTER 4 |Marye Burns, Mr. Bernhofer's { Forecast for Juneau and vicinity, bew’~ning 4 p. m. today: . |tion KOMO, Seattle. She will{crly winds. pre bably change to station KGW.‘ for men who wear LOCAL DATA Barometer Temp. Humidity Winfl Velocily Weathe 48 | Portland, this week, Mr. Bernhofer | said Time Charles Warner, who has been 4 p. m. yest'y lill in Seattle for many weeks, is)‘ 29.87 a1 69 SE 14 Cldy I recovering nicely and will probably | 2980 40 82 sW 8 Sprinkling | returni Juneau soon, M, | = ————— e ] be returning to Ju Silits AlD BATHG 7Y T T Y VESTERDAY 3029 51 SW 3 Pt. Cidy Bernhofer reported. PR LR ~ TODAY i Low 4am.' 4am. Precip. 4am. sturdy farmer v i Highest 4p.m. of western IMARGNITA RETURNS f:mo"’* i B LB “““4‘" "e‘:p' Velaeity 24 hrs, Weather : | | Barrow 2 -4 - 10 .01 Cld; ‘ oood clothes Nebraska, | | AFTER (CALM TRIP %ore 8 ey s < Graduating i | — Bethel 28 20 10 - 12 4 01 Snow | | from the % Motership Margnita, Capt. Severin Fort Yukon 3¢ 30 22 24 o= 0 Cldy ? i { Every man who wants to make a gOO(l law college of P | Swans arrived in port from Sgkn Tanana 34 32 | 28 28 == 21 Snow ¥ . v r |and wayports at 12:15 p.m., today Eagle 46 42 35 38 —_ 0 Cly | appearance, wi]l appreciate that feel- Nebraska with the following passengers for |St. Paul 4 a1 ag R I & mg [ { Svais (B 1od at his best on Easter University, Juneau: Dutch Harbor 38 3 30 3 - .02 Snow ing. ot looking at hi % Miss Worley W. C. White from Gustavus; J. A. |Kodiak 8 38 2 @ O 4 Clear i Sundayv. Our men’s section presents | taught and Ramsay, Mrs. James L. Brightman, Ccrdova 33 32 8- 4 13 14 Snow 2 ibvir ag [ e its. Spri . - Henry Bryson and G. A. Collettz Juneau 483 48 28 41 14 01 Cidy the very best of Ll ’*“"[”~ Spring top- practiced law [from Sitka; S. €. Barrington, E.|Ketchikan 80 80° | 2 g . 0 Clear coats and furnishings, in new weaves, | until a Reid, Oliver Hansen, Joe Peabody,|Prince Rupert 50 59 | 38 384 0 0 Clear s e S Eany St threatened Sam Nelson, Carl Strass and Har- |Edmonton “4d 42 Y | R - ) * 0 Clear new colorings and patterns that are [ RErats [old Wennergren from Tenakee: W, |Seattle R s B T Ll 5 0 Clegy correct in every style detail. It is of a mortgage | 8. Peckovich, Pete Jelich, Petp Mil- [Portland ......... 08 68, | 48 48 . 0 clear 488 ) b % held against ler and Charles Sing from Funter San Francisco ..... 62 60 B T | . 0 Clear ! easy for you to be well dressed. Just 8 *—Less than 10 miles. choose your outfit here from Michaels Sterns superior values as low as $35.00 with two pair Imnis " GOOD VALUES IN BOYS’ her mother’s farm prompted her to abandon Blackstone in favor of the soil. In view of her own prosperity, she insists that “farm relief is all bosh.” (Internattonal Newsreel) EASTER SUITS | | cause we feel that it represents the | best possible value to be obtained at the prices as low as $13.50 with two pair pants. | { 1 | Juneau’s Leading Department Store ; [ THERE IS A FULL MEASURE OF 1 BOTH STYLE AND QUALITY IN ; THESE BOYS® SUITS FOR EASTER ‘ 3 E Blue suits for confirmation, suits in o : other good colors and attractive mix- \ . tures. Every one of them is here be- J 930 “TEST YEAR” IN INDIA, | FINDS GANDHI CHIEF FIGURE |Watch Out Kids! Tomorrow Is By BATES R. (A. P. Staff Wriien | March 31.—One x of the in today. His followers have clothed him mystic saintliness, fostered the b lief that through Gandhi only can| India achieve independence. i | Gandhi 1 L “ be underneath. Same warn- ing applies to adults. in | situation in In- All-Fools’ Day an nationalists demands ° Keep a sharp look-out to- e ringing in British cars and 1930 xh:' |® morrow, kiddies, for it is e ar in modern India’s poli- ‘o April Fool's Day, or All- e hen the 10-year trial of the |® TFools' day. Be suspicious if e ends, the character and ‘o you are given candy—maybe e reer of Mchandas Karachand s there is soap or hot-stuff in e Gandhi ] greater i |® it; don't pick up a brick or e tance. lo pocketbook. The brick might e Picture & or impostor, or ® disappear or only a scrap of e rebel ag rn culture, th |® paper may be found in the e fact remains that he is the most | ® treasure holder. Don't Kkick e picture: personality in India @ an old hat, big boulder might e . . ° . . . . se0000000000 e e————— |ADMIRAL ROGERS IN | FROM SOUTH TODAY and & i single P e & ’ remains has wh to Hindus the I ous ca Mohammedans u standard of nat m as literally born political turmoil which ha his life. His father, premier of small states, had rebuked a commissionier in j was demanded and C Steamer Admiral Rogers, Capt. s Frank Landstrom, arrived in port For a time he lived on 30 cents from the south at 2:30 o'clock tais a day, eating vegetables and es- afternoon with the following pas- overal Chewing all meat, milk and eggs. | Sengers for Juneau: i | Then reaction set in. | Anton Wallen, Nellie Austin, Mrs. He Chris Olson, E. E. Kalkins, Fried be cnly the whose .wa';'drub(' later avas to Payment, E. S. Taylor, Paul White, a loin cloth, bought a silk'yrigs R Blanchard, W. G. Strench. was arrested. But hat, a Savile Roy dress suit. | C. Goldstein, A. C. Black, and eight never was made That lasted about three m‘m"hs"vteerago N Both of his paren were devout Another violent reaction took him | p.rr. coming here she called at members of thi back to aceticism and he never! Tyee and Kake in addition to her regular ports of call, and i8 to go |to Excursion Inlet, Hood Bay and cult of Vishnu and - again attempted to westernize him- ted much of their religious enthusi- self. s is cont i - ‘”’I o : b }::”:‘ Jmmpgra;:y = L?vndnnfras Funter Bay on her Sitka trip. She used to be ve y and avoid- @ man named Lenin who after-|wijeive at 5 pm. today. ed all company € sandhi in, wards was to change the history| £ oy - :\‘}:a'sm'fi:‘m::n >Ak(\w mm \‘Ulol]fl :;“l the greatest forces in his! ALBANY, N.. =, Boaseh Sl me.” life has been the “Sermon on the| oo, Waves have been emploge S < i < iat Albany Medical College of Un- > cigarets, stole Mfum‘ says Gandhi. !ion University to protect rabbits m and contem- It went b\]';.i‘gh.t to my heart ON | poainst an infectious disease. use of what he the first reading,” he explains. “I!"my."Labbits were Placed between felt the enormity of t e of- felt that it contained the truth 1w, electrodes generating short ra- fenses. that renunciation is the highest dio waves. In 30 minutes the cur- At 13 Gandhi married, after the type of religion. rent induced fever ranging from Hindu custom, a pretty, stubborn “Although I chose a path my 105 to 108 degrees Fahrenheit. In- girl of his age with whom he was Christian friends had not intended, | geylated with ,an infectious dis- destined to quarrel constantly un- I remain forever indebted for the ease, they were given this radio til the birth of their fourth son. religious quest they awakened in treatment three times a week for He tried to su pennies to buy plated suicide bec Then, at his suggestion, r rela- me.” |seven weeks. tionship became as brother and | Gandhi studied the sermon and| C. M. Carpenter and R. A. Boak sister. henceforth became &an apostle of of the medical college report. to soon after his father’s non-violence. death, he came t» England t - ol L o his education at the Univer-, J. Redpath |the Soclety of American Bacter- |iclogists that these rabbits, with and Mrs. Redpath!one exception, developed no trace {battle with the ettt et £ P i Bystander i A Washington By HERBERT PLUMMER farmers w WASHINGTON, March 317 r farmer emerged victorious in can maki herwoman on capitol hill the other day, but nc field of West Virginia manufacture large quant of thejpr sed pins (of the spring varis rallied | bo to his support. i Dale was particularly ardent Hol made a lengthy speech in which he pleaded for a higher rate on the! ground that it would enable the didn’t care. farmers to dispose of wood which| The clot was now used only to bu fires. es | Tha battle w: 500, clethespins. taken .Fo espins forces then move (ferward their pergon of Charlie Curtis. He vote: ready troubled and disgusted with the turn things have taken of late te, the gray-haired old “BERNHOFERS BACK ‘With witherir fly at Dale. He pron Vermonter's speech on clo as “eloquent” and added that wanted to “stress his “The farmer raises set thef{ Mr. and anS’whO have be he since ea argument.” {the Prince: the wood-—= Seattle Mrs. n thi ent from Junea clothespins are made “Let us increase th: Forfeit Fortune for Love said Norris. brother, who is doing dentistr; Lee Wingate Carrol with his bride, the former Mrs. Audrey L. Coward, widow of the late shoe magnate, after their marriage sty of London. He was a back- were through passengers on the of the disease, although another ‘ward found Sauskrit hard Princess Norah. He is port steward:group of rabbits, also inoculated |but not exposed to the radio, had ’;‘*m with many a western- for the White Pass and Yukon river r over i lthe disease. over !steamers at Whitehorse. b which cost the bride §800,000. Mrs. Coward inherited $1,300,000 from the estate of her former hgsband with the stipulation that it should be reduced to $500,000 if she marricd again. | \ it was out of| they got back to clothes- A vote y voted for the in-| e, 40 voted against it. Sixteen | hock troops in the Merriment |“yea.” The Vermont senator's plea for| _The day had bcen saved for -the| this form of “farm relief” wa$ too|farmer. much for “Old George” Norris. Al-| ——,——— ; FROM SHORT TRIP| J. B. Berahofer, y in March, returned on | Norah last night from ; While south they visited just think of it—out of which the with Fred Gould, Mrs. Bernhofer's tariff, and all werk in Seattle, and with Robert Bay. | A calm trip was reported by Pur- ser Bahrt, with the exception of a l’stmng southeasterly . gale which |caught the Margnita out of Funter iBay. B e | |CHINESE TREE OF HEAVEN | STATE COLLEGE, Pa, March |31—The tree of heaven, an portation from China, ‘is possibly | |the most aggressive of all foreign {trees, says a report to the Ameri- | |cgn Association for the Advance- ment of Science by Prof. H. J.| |Lutz of Pennsylvania State Col- lege. | || This tree is competing with na- ive forest vegetation in both Penn- ania and California and grows | well on waste or abandoned lands, |along old fences or roadsides. { | It is a lucky tree to survive so! {well in the United States, Profes- | 18 says, because native trees ' |vsually are able to choke out for- | leign visitors. | "here are more than 700 species |of trees a foot or more in diameter ¢lon this continent. who accompanied him :south, will | remain in- the States for another month. Mrs. Henry Young, wife of the Rev. Henry Young, of the Metho- |dist church, returned on the Prin- cess Nerah last night after a three months’ visit with ' relatives and a friends in Oregon: ———————— Eighteen nations maintain con- sulates in Honolulu. d | | IS AGGRESSIVE IN U. S.| im-} except the Southeast and and have fallen elsewhere except is reaching Temperatures have risen in .the eastern NOTE.—Observations at Alaskan mainland ‘stations, except Ju- nean and Cordova made at 8 a. m. and § p. m, Juneau time. A low pressure area of considerable energy has moved rapidly castward during the past twenty-four hours and is central morning in the eastern interior and the pressure Noertheastern Pacific Ocean below latitude 55 degrees. |has been general over the western this is high over the Precipitation interior and Southern Alaska the latter district today. interior and this vicinity in the extreme Southwest. America’s Youngest District Attorney | | | | L pe UL g the vice president of t aby o R o 1 States stepped up and votn| | WHO'S WHO ] | e knockout punch. i | AND WHERE ! | one of the most amusir | PO e 5 /,_—_1-} ineidents which has occurred dur- | W Twenv‘.y-mil]e-year-é)ld dEdwin E |ing the whole tariff fight in the | b 3 .| Hicks, who graduated from the 'S(-na‘ 5 ' Miss “\rlll(j“’(?fl Morti Dl?‘ wiio h \"‘ University of Orcgon Jast year, and 5 ¢ |been atiending Oregon State College | fg'now the youngest district attor- Wh;‘ u 1t Corvallls, Oregon, for the past| ney in the United States. As pros- £ J 1 it |two ye: returned to Juneau on| ecutor, he frequently finds himself | nd auiumn fy,e rrincess Norah. She expeets| pitted against his own . father, s was i} i § ' o asked |}, omain some time with hor fam- | feading Tawyer of Grant CO‘""-"’ be more exact “spri pin 1Y, T Oregon, but he refuses to 16t this The angul Uiah| He referred to Smoot, but| s oo interfere with his vehement prose- started the fr he chairman of the fir com- |, Atrivals on the Princess Norah| eution of the State's cases. | A - did not seo fit. o enlighten | Dcluded William Strong, who has| ! - alerhatiaon] Newsiuoy c:fl{ Ohl:pn “‘1-“ Ty e © €nuEBtl heen in the Pacific Northwest on B Y { s ghe; ar iness s, one, Dale of V a short business trip. ~Mrs. SUroNg: | wyo . yames 1, Brightman, Henry Bryson and G. A. Collette, Sitka residents, arrived on the Margnita today to report for duty as petit| jurors. | e At the present rate of increase| it is estimated the Government's | Pribilof Island seal herd will num- ber 3,000,000 seals within 17 years. There are approximately 800,000 now. . “Slordons — SALE REALLY REMARKABLE VALUES v e . You get results from . ’ u y » For Councilmen--- HOMER'G. NORDLING WALLIS S. GEORGE H. MESSERSCHMIDT VOTE FOR THE Citizen’s Ticket For Mayor--T. B. J UDSON Tt pledges itself to give Juneau a business administration, making ‘civic improvements where most needed, in as large a measure as the finances of the City will permit without ex- travagance.. It will give the community full value in return for every dollar of tax moncy collected and expended.. FIRST | DOLLAR ‘