The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, January 10, 1931, Page 8

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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, SATURDAY, JAN. 10, 1931. | . 1.3 h | . ’e NAVY AND AHMYf Muriel Is Still il of Fight [ALASKA URGED | Daily Crossaword Puzs ©. 5. DEPARTMENT OF AGRIGULTURE, WEATHER BUREAD A l R F 0 R c Es I N » Tfl RETAIN HER l ACROSS Solution of Yesterday’s Puzle & (‘;fie:.ar:' The 't/ eather { 1. Dillseed Rome ! i | | & Move on mMoP[s IISIPIAIRISIDIOIN 9. Among (By tho U. S. Weather B ) 10 e ¢ . 8. er Bureau ! [ o, Umstimate aot- [ABIETIMEEIR|T [E YOIV ER] I Ehiet netor Forecast for Juneau ana vicinity, beginning at 4 pm, January 10: | mal Tl R[E N1 [SEEMSEER] 1o Rain tonight and Sunday; moderate easterly winds. ‘ :z. ;;fi.,:enm- SITIIN TIAEJSIEINIDIS] 4. i 7 | | ‘ o i T ABRIATIS . Ilu’::y carriage: e LOCAL DATA [ ! SIE|T CHSPAMAIPIE]| oo Stigt enar- o Barometer Temp. Humidity Wind Velocity ~ Weather Army Will Hereafter Guard Professor at Alaska College| pIAR|ABOIL|AMPRIOBIE[D . 4pm. yesty .28 38 94 SE 6 Snow vastlines e oIVIAILMSENTAMRATE am. today ....3003 35 56 SE 3 Cldy Coastlines of U.] S Want§ to Keep.Saen : oYL TAIRICIAITIAIN] - hones o | Noon today 3008 36 R 3 pesnd Oversea Lands tific Material 4 HEG RENEEMELLIS 5 Khna e GABER AND BADIO:REPORTS - | forennn M EMALIAIS FT T YESTERDA WASHINGTON, D. C., Jan. 10—| | SEWARD, Alaska—Through the oarda SIAIL [A SAIGMMPIO[RIE[S] 32 Charked witn Highest QPHZ Lowest 4a.m ;l:):l‘;’reci 4a The aerial defense of the coastline neglect of Alaska, itself, many we perrame [AR[A|RJENT |1 MERIMLIIVIE Station— femp, Yemup.. | Adoip. tofup. velocity 3k Weathe 1 States and ove priceless relics shedding light on Fackik MEREMADORERMIIDIEA| " examination | Harrow S . D, L Ehiei & ow up to [the pre-nistoric record of Alaska| . Fertaining to [p[A|D|S MATIEIRSIEMIDIEINIT] *& Fob viece ot n |\ PiW - Tt T B e |are being carted away from the He e W 4. Astounded 8 | 6 8 4 -08 Snow i ntinent 6. Before DOWN 10, Weird Bethel 26 20 | 10 10 4 0 Cl 1ade to- | country each year to various parts 47. Shuped like a 1. Panile 41, Anger Fort Yukon -12 -18 | 1 i and General of the United States for museums trupezinm notices: colloq. 43 Disputehed Tanana 7 9 -4 -18 = 0 Clear | and private collections, says the L Clear over ex: 4 7)?";-':“("1“ Faltdnks s 5 | 6 8 = 0 Clear has been reached | ; Seward Gateway. This is rupidly‘ " port o priest 48 Mawsnchuserts | pagle % e 0 Clear ; 3 Re asiloa S raids on her 4 against hushand Bob (shown “"‘“"‘"K about a condition when it/ ‘* JIUNE 0. Tt St. Paul . e Y 2 Clear of \nw ork intends to go fections kuxugam\t AdPI:‘ n).,n, assemble a ccmplcic rccord in thc Y Kodiak 36 2 ! 5 3 i .62 y through with her diveree suit | New York society woman. opinion of Otto W. Geist, of the Cordova 40 34 32 36 10 A-, S o x: A e 3 s a s T museum of the Alaska College of | Juneau .. 3 36 23 35 3 "2 Cldy HuNDREDS ARE i3 B i | Agriculture and School of Mines. ! Sitka ... 42 £ } 32 '3; hikrd - ‘ ‘HL has been (‘.(’\Otllng §ome years Ketchikan 42 40 | 38 38 ] 44 Pt.Cldy I ¢ of his life to an attempt tor estab- Prince Rupert ... 44 40 38 40 0 46 Pt.Cld; lish a comprehensive historical ex- | Edmonton S pa i R e SN R E hibit at the college. Mr. Geist, 1t Seattle 48 48 ‘y 4 46 . 0 c?:r ‘ Tn UALIFY FOR LIN LE R |will be remembered, spent two o:/ Portland . 38 36 | 34 36 4 Trace Rmy A |thred years in the Arctic collecting San Francisco 58 56 | 3 Dust and Ynow Storms,| specimens, Both he and President Spokane ... 30 30 | .28 28 . 0 Cldy PR : Charles E. Bunnell of the College | Vancouver, B. C. 44 44 Freezing Temperatures GULF GUNTESTS Two Intimates of Brothers!usea their private funds in tnis l e o e T Are Ple\allml, | Captured—Important |work. The Alaska Legisiature has! - BT m e Sl e 6l Eol B | been slow to recognize the value of | The pressure has risen throughout Alaska except in the viein- SHANGHAI, Jan. 10 4{&.1(1-- d Pln\ Bey_,ms at 1 o'Clock! vidence I'oun their efforts to properly back them | ity of Kodiak where it is falling, and is above normal on the Arctic of persons have died in dus r Afl with funds that will bring their m- Coast. It is low in middle and Southwestern Alaska, and lowest ms which have now omorrow €rnoon | CHICAGO, T, Jan. 10.—Detec- hors to highest fruition. south of Kodiak. It is high from Southeastern Alaska to California p ot e on Ml(]gf" Course tives are said to have captured two | Take Them Away and thence westward. Light snow or rein has fallen in Southern hward from the 1 % o intimates of Leo Brothers, held (orJ‘ At the present time numerous Alaska and at Nome and clear weather is general in other sections deserts to the Yangtse Val-| W TR AR A the slaying of “Jake! Lingle, crime | scientific expeditions are yearly 41 of the Territory. Temperatures have fallen in Northern and North- A J\LI.\I»’.‘HN‘l rmllx;u ;Om;’.l Sk ":;".(r reporter of the Chicago Tribune,|penetrating Alaska in search of eastern Alaska and near Bristol Bay with little change elsewhere. ege prevails over Nort jqt noon the Midget Golf Course in The apartments of Brothers, where and also found important evidence.|treasures of incalculable scientific| | value. They spend thousands of P | s Ii HEAEEEE | o . e = ’ administration, lowering of prices, | | Widov & c1id 4 fing 14 di of thousands of Chi-(th® Charl :‘]:’;",“”“{“,““l_f;“’;‘,"_‘ w2l he formerly resided, were raided | dolars, not in Alaska, and nob for stoppage of federal contributions wlo:kmin;:n;?v;g{ h'i?i;i“ts'e’s‘f‘“ ; ApCRY mid month- tournament. irade apeiile vwo intimates | the specimens, but the outfitting of doles of various kinds, and increas- ) Peterson. He will leave tomorrow on 7. de-| hool boys will start at 1 oclock, |' alo the evidence. |the expeditions in the States. Much es in taxes. A Rl 5 eto0 Toc. Katolb ot gr below zero are repo: ade school girls at 1:30, high he States Attorney said he will|material is thus carried away and 0 bring the Ranger VIL, back to to death among and Many have frozen ik tricken populace D s. J. J. Connors is a passen- aboard the Alameda returning to her home in Juneau after a visit in the south. ger | Larsen and Thomas Ha 2 and high school ntries follow: boys—Phillip Bar- pol boys at girls at El Grade school 30. !tholl, Roy Smith, Henry Behrendts, old Hans Buddy Lindstrom ph Bardi, Herbert McLean, John rney, Lewis Taylor, Brice How- nnar Franklin K ard, Blomgren, s—Jean Vander- file murder charges against Broth-| persons as the man who shot Lin- gle. .- — ers, who has been identified by nine STREET LIGHTS |scattered to the four winds, one trunkful going here and a boxful Kgoing there, in the end making it jhard for anyone else to follow up their work. Most of them take nothing but the best leaving the | humbler objects where they are. As a rule such expeditions do not even finish their work, but dig up a mess and go, never to return again. | v IIII%IIII II%III// B % Sitka. The timber cruised at Tenakee is RANGER BURDICK ON to be cut by Jim Casco to be used German Politics Are Rocked by Adoption Of the Young Plan WAY TO KETCHIKAN for trap logs and piling in next After cruising a timber tract in|season’s operations, |burg to dissolve it on July 17 and Tenakee Inlet, Ranger Chi ¥ {to order new elections. He hoped | et |me new Reichstag might be one' more amenable to reason. ! ‘The very opposite happened. 'I‘he' BLAZE IN FRONT The time has come when Alas-| |saddled with a debt which they who captured 107 seats where previ- Too Much Carried Away |had done nothing to incur. ously they had only 12 members in “This work of collecting Au.skan‘ With the Young plan effective,!the Reichstag, was the political | |relics was started by President the next great question before Ger- | sensation of the year. Standards and Outer Glass‘fiunnell and 1" the Seward Gate- many was finding money. Bitter Pill to Swallow R A YO GO it 4 | extremists of the right and the left r, Vivian Pow- 9 e | = § . Vivan o [kans should awaken to the, fact| (Continued ftrom Page On®) |paqe big gains. The landslide of Sl )(;AR Sl M;AR son, M Stanwc /bil God- that Alaska relics are worth much Adolf Hitler's national socialists, o s 3 more to Alaska. frey, Bessie Powers, nid - Jarv. Patricia Harland, Beatrice Both- well, Mary Jean McNaughton, Mar- tha Peterson and Jane Blomgren. $3.15 50 Pounds Sugar school boy ivo Lahi- i bt 8 . way quotes Mr. Geist as saying, for| The cabinet neaded by Chancel-| i Rober mpson, Thomas Globes Modeled After |ihe Wihiple Fdason thabiue. inant v Finding the new Reichstag would (:ARNI (] hafe hn Stewart, James e g T ey lor Hermann Mueller, in which the impede rather than aid the prog-| Ty one ot b e Lamp Posts [too much valuable material Was Social Democrats were prominently | ress of this reform work, Bruening 2 HOREPL % ibeing carried out of Alaska"evefy Kai 4 s 4 ; Perkins and Hilding Lvear. Wi Boged tisat & Glibsk nauts represented, fell on March 27 be-|obtained a majority to vote for its High school girls—Jean Faulkner,| Newly instalied street lights in|ye ‘emwshzg s C“‘:S"- the parties supporting it could | adjournment, after its initial ses aldi ¢ 2 a o | fre i | not agree on financial measures. i Geraldine Bodding, Dana De-|front of the Capitol Building Were |, 1 that at least some of the ma- e Ao sions in the middle of October, to A |December 3. During this period e o e ggfii‘ififgfl:‘” our| Helnrich Bruening was appointed |the 30 laws embodying the reform | chancellor. With quiet determina- work were put in final shape by It is well to remind the Alaska! [tion he started putting Germany's|the government. public that the Alaska College. 8% financial house in order. When| wwmen the Relcnstag reassembled this time is well prepared to 100k | parljament proved recalcitrant, he|pecember 3, there w: thie i ‘e into matters pertaining to anthro-persuaded President von Hinden-:y to g g ter ; o hnl e [Poy, pliiolony, Pacrionw So Sl I oo Mt midgiclon; ox that it is not necessary to forward the bills called for the slashing |such valuable material to scattered museums outside the Territory. of wages, reduction of expenses of turned on last evening for the first time and successfully met every specification. They are now a part of the municipal system and will be in service every night. The lights are four in number. The standards and outside glass globes are designed to give the ef- fect of old-style lamp posts. The standards are of pressed steel. Each Vighne, Annabelle Simpson, Thelma Bodding, Amy Lou Guerin, Corinne Jenne, Barbara Simpkins and Dor- uxh} OIsou MILLER OPENS WORK IN FIRST Leader Dep't. Store GEORGE BROTHERS FINAL REMODELING A e 72 light is 500 watts. First of Winter | The standards were bought by ey N ) 7 | the Federal government. They will i NOVELTY | AID UN MUNDAY‘be maintained and their electricity PIONEERS DISCUSS f i i SALE DANCES | supplied by the city. Installation GRAND IGLOO PLANS | H H 1 [ A was made under direction of Ralph H We Have i . 4 B. Martin by the Alaska Electric| pioneers of Alaska at their regu- i 8 i Contlnues to J an., 25th Bureau of Mines Expert Light and Power Company. lar meeting last night discussed ar- H VAPURE | POUNDS and Will Organi T rangements for the annual session i ! fl . i JINIR 1 rganize lown JACK FOY IS SENT of the Grand Igloo, which will be \ i i BARGAINS IN ALL b { POUNDS Classes Next Week k:‘ltd in Juneau Fe:;ut;r)y t2!5;(. Com- f Two Sizes ; DEPART « N | mittees were. nam ake care MENTS of CANDY A class'in first ald will be started TO OREGON ASYLUM‘OI the various n‘:cflvlues. i i |here mext Monday evening by El;tc;ai;‘;l;};t:,E::ef;isxtlgll;gce:gy H 50c and $1.00 EXTR e e o Jack Foy, ident of this dis- . Aft- C L US ROUNDS and [/ Georee 1, aier, senior Foreman| hck Foy o seedent of this | G, e e miaved an - [§ Not Only Cheaper but A SPECIAL BUY | Mines. The work will be put on in|century, was taken south this morn- | freshments served. ing on the steamer Northwestern to ———w———— NOw ROUNDS Council Chambers at City Hall. £ FU | Firemen, Alaska Juneau employ-|be placed in the Morningside Sani-| Mr. and Mrs. W. S. Pullen, who BUTLER.'MAURO [0) J nd anyone else W sires to|tarium. Foy was adjudged insanec have been visiting their children in . | ‘(:i(.?vzdins{l.um‘);‘m‘\?S.‘;le;?d sare recently by a jury in the United |Seattle and Portland, left Seattle i RICE & AHLERS co- DRUG CO f} i . 9 9 cordially invited to enroll in this|States Commissioner’s Court and on the Alameda today for home. GOOD PLUMBING “When we sell it—it's right” ON LADIES’ AND CHILDREN 2 . | class, Mr. Miller said. A big enrol- | Was committed by Judge Charles e A pesii = . Guest Entertainer Sey. elephone e Delivel , COATS, SUITS and DRESSES Mrs. Frank Metcalf and daugh- He was turned over to Deputy |ter are passengers for Juneau on United States Marshal Nicholls who |the Alameda after spending several was aboard the Northwestern from |yeeks visiting in the States. Valdez with a party of prisoners. | “We tell you in advance what job will cost” |ment is expected. | Mr. Miller started a similar class at the Alaska Juneau bunkhouse last Monday. Later he will go to Douglas and put on work there. Classes in mine rescue work will also be conducted in the Alaska Ju- neau mine,.and before leaving here | ! “Tomorrow’s Styles Today a course of first aid instruction will | be given to local Boy Scouts. The| Complete Line 1 Pay Day Specials first aid class Monday will organize of | In Our Children’s 1 WOOL Department Express Money Orders for Dance— 3 R T A U TED KEATON 5 O°CLOCK DELIVERY Will be made TODAY to accommodate those ordering PERISH- ABLES and CHICKENS for Sunday Dinner. George Brothers TELEPHONE 92 OR 95 | TONIGHT SHIRTS AT THE WHILE THEY LAST—Get your Special “Goodwill” package of RADOX (Radiates Oxygen) OXYGEN BATH SALTS ONLY 10 CENTS Specially Priced FIVE FAST DELIVERIES COATS, DRESSE MILLINERY at $2.75, $3.50, $4.00, $4.50 New Elks Ball Room PfiONES 83 OR 85 “The Store That Pleases” 1 THE SANITARY GROCERY Enough for three luxurious baths Serenaders || Juneau Drug i) - £ ¢ : Company J M S l l_l§_|'| T T LT ‘ ; Musw Pree Delivesy - Phone 38 4 . datoum : Juneau s Own Store é » CALIFORNIA GROCERY s Post_ Office Substation Open January 10th until 9 P. M. = PHONE 478 The Home of Better Groceries £ ** No. 1 l!lIllllllflllllllflll‘-mlllllllllllllllllllllll.llfi [ l | f ‘ i 1 i \ | lfilllllll(lllllllllilIlllllllllllflllflflllllllllIIIIIIII!IIIIIII i

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