The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, January 19, 1931, Page 2

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Raincoats : Specially Priced Models that every woman will like in brightly colored leatherette, warm flannel lined. Just as much care in making, style in cutting ahd quality workmanship as given to any other garment, so that you can be sure of a smart appearance even in a raincoat. Prepare ‘or a rainy day by getting one of these splendid raincoat values. Women’s Raincoats ‘ s 16 to 40 .€ Colors—Blue and Rel Special %4.95 MISSES” RATNUODATS & : 5 to 16 YOUR C11OUCE AT Ha!i Price i Y (] B. M. Behrends Co., Inc. “Juneaw's Leadi» . Department Store” MODES OF.THE MOMENT | | { | _JPARIG \ Loibte brezvtcdd | tweed, from” Blach caracel, At CLOSER W ATCH ON SAILES | URGED TO STEADY GRAIN AROUND THE WORLD By FRANEK 1. Wi (Assceiated Press ©arm Editor) WASHINGTO? C,, Jan. 18.— For $25000 a year, the Depari- ment of Agricniture believes it can (be immediately known. The trad-| | ers would be informed of the cir- cumstances instead of being sub- jected to the influence of rumors| and inaccurate information. protect the grain farmer against There is no law by which the : possible manipulation of the ex-| Government can regulate the size i change markets to his disadvan- of grain holdings in any one posi- { tage. tion, although no trader is sup- H J. W. T. uvei, Chief of the Posed to have in his possession’| | Grain Futures Administration, rec- More than 5000000 bushels at any | ommended to Congress with the One time. support of the Bureau of the Duvel says that about 80 peri get that such a sum be & ent of the time prices follow, up priated for the salaries of or down, sudden large purchases tional accountants to be st med ' or heavy liquidations. at Chicago and other grain kets to expand the Government’s record of transactions There arc It has not been uncommon for an individual to control 10 per cent of a single day’s market volume. It would be the duty of the additional accountants to provide | a day-by-day record of grain in all positions so the Government | might have information necessaryl to prevent unwarranted fluctua- tions. w0 accountants employed now and it is Duvel's de- sive to add «' icast five n Had the Government pLossessed reports as the new men are expec ed to provide, Duvel says, liqu tion of large lines similar to involved in short sales by the Rus- sian Government last summer would ——,e-—— Daily Empire wacs Ads Pay. W las the \ THE WORDER FiLk COLISEUM—TUESDAY A L | Mme. Kollontai, Russian Envoy to Sweden, Iinds Popularity i \ | i | | ing THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE. MONDAY, JAN. 19, 1931. Fine Cldthcs L.os t Lady Diplomat Her Po RESTRAINED BY GOURT ORDERS Must Not Interfere with Employees of Tex- tile Mills DANVILLE, Virginia, Jan The temporary injunction resi ing striki from interfering the frez movement of employces thrcugh the gates of the ile mills herc has bcen made perma- nent. B Wane as Stalin, “Iron Man of the Soviet,” Withdraws Patronage, Leaving the Communist and Autocrat at the Mercy of Radicals Who Assert She Is ‘“Too Bourgeois.” 19 was temporary injunction granted in November on affl |submitted to show workers werc forcibly restrained from entering the gates for work in the mills. The sixteenth week of ine strike ended last Saturday. i The mill sections are quiet but State Troops are still on guard. MEXICAN REVOLT QUICKLY NIPPED Leader Is Summoned tc Capital—Banqueted— { o rigis i Forces Disarmed STCCKHOLMy Jan. 19.—Madame | il S shae! i | Minister to Mexico. Although she o OO e omas; | had previously treveled through nhchE AF M AY HE AR [ liable advices receivad here said 15 Unlted States, visiting 81 cities in | ] §| Agrarians, followers of Luis Leon | {former Minister of Agriculture ASSERTS DUGTU;R<the Mexican Government, havr been disarmed by Federal troop weman diplomat because of her ap- 4 it ekt pointment as Soviet Ambassadress, | # Campalgn in be half of Commun- ism and women's rights, the coun- |near San Antonio, Chihuahua, tc |prevent a new revolt in Mexico. is in disgrace. 5 he She has been fired from her last ' ¥y Was not anxious to see her again. And so she was barred from News of the revolt has been cen- sored. job as Ambassadress to Sweden. 3 ey eintering the United States on h: 4 way to Mexico City. But this diant | Conclusions Are Reached Leon is reported to have beer gaining considerable power and bother M Kollontai. It didn't matter to her how she got tof After Monlhs of Con- ducting Research strength and was called to Maxice Jan. 19.—Hope|City for the avowed purpose of Maxim TATVINOFF £ MvE KoLLanT! WHILE — 9 1IN Mexico. rgecis Vagarily { The Communists are mad at her, because they say she has been liv-, “too bourgeois’ a life at Osio and Stockholm. She wears beau-| tiful and expensive .clothes and Mexico; so long she go there. But Mexico didn't take kindly to e the lady diplomat. Mexico said s! REKELEY, Ca travels about the city in @ GOrgeols sheltered Betram Wolfe, the Am- i, e deaf may hear and the|leaving his followers without s A“;‘ ,‘" d““f}l E"VCI"“' black erican Communist, who had been aifliction can be prevented, is held |leader. ey U SERE expelled from that country a year cui py Dr. Koriiz We ociate| The advices received here stated VRN 6 9T e. S0 the labor organizations'in Research Medicine in the|that while Federal forces were dis- . sident Calles to expel the Hooper Foundation of the Univer-|arming his followers, Leon was a Eaunting Mispiny, Iy in oo, yeautiful female Minister. leity of Califor |oest of honor at & banquet in who their representative In 8. president Calles didn't have Bl Of "ORUSSE ; iR W Sy S, 2 il country - whikh. ey ae g O a i ba after months cf Mexico City. ountry which they are anxious 10/aps. any dramatic. steps, as the Hone B | = impress with the new regime. [1ady cuddenly avered. thatsh o th" s SHpk PRI !health demanded baths in Ger- i s Miners Trapped by But Mme. Kollantai might still{,ono” S0 che went to Germany o the Fol | Explosi R d be riding behind her 1(‘] ‘]“‘ T imeats Mcxlu“mm of skull bones| Xplosion, Rescue 1 in Oslo, clad in e Viphp gt il ey o ing progressive or coat of chinchilla ¢ { Olty.t Inwena. s cHerep DAgE o : | CENTENNIAL, Wyoming, Jan, 10. : SgHaer | . ded the malady |—Bernard Holt, U. M. Dewery and ik ut with' doasah Bt kb ___“”1 b, aol ched B0 o definite diseased bone|A. M. Crites were rescued from a bt tie Communict Bady. Wor Biatin | o g PRAsE b “)" L’]“f;‘]’;:;? an s there is a possibility of mine late Saturday night where i5 the “Iron Man” of the Soviet| r: e g o ]‘9‘2‘; Al vals in which similar [they were trapped earlier in the Republic. He drove Leon Tr Rers Lidarad g Cacur from which the | afterncon by an explosion which with denunciation of the fair e: = rmer he: of > Re rmy. 2 or the condition may be dis- |started a fire. former head of the Red Army, In0 | ponent of free love. Ame the conditio y be d exile to Constantinople. Born in'y Ghhets 1A 1naig- Other gold miners, equipped with Georgia, south of the C.mc‘mi:ml:i):?;l:‘ FSReciY. S9-9i0. 10 108G — e — | gas masks went through the flames Mountai: this son of a shoe-| “Ho" 60 Summers sit upon h Ea“d finally reached the entombed a 9 » lives ar = i N § men and brought them safely out. malker, ols the lives and des-|yow lightly. Her bobbed hair is gh y tinics of some 150,000,000 people. I waxm pAwwh' and. her com-| R R SR Pcpularity Wang 5 s | John Scheer of Seattle is regis- plexion clear. Her figure is ish. Indeed, she gives the impre: Mme. Kollantai has not alonc STRIKERS ARE | U. S. DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE, WEATHER BUREAU The Weather (By the U. S. Weather Bureau) Forccast for Juneau ana vicinity, beginning at 4 p. m., January Occasional rain tonight and Tuesday, warmer tonight; moderaf casterly winds. LOCAL DATA Time Barometer Temp. Humidity Wind Velocity ~Weathi 4 pm. yest'y 20.08 37 97 w 1 Cldy 3 4 am. today . 29.87 35 100 E 4 Cldy Noon today .20.95 42 90 E 4 Rain CABLE AND RADIO REPORTS YESTERDAY TODAY Highest 4 p.m. Lowest 4a.m. 4a.m. Precip. 4am, Station— temp. temp. temp. temp. velocity 24 hrs. Weather Barrow 0 =gy g 0 a8 0 Clear Nome 34 32 | 30 36 12 0 Pt. Cldy Bethel e b 36 34 | 20 26 12 0 Cldy Fort Yukon 0 -2 | -2 12 —_ 0 Cldy Tanana 14 10 8 14 - 0 Clear Fairbanks 36 30 16 28 2 0 Cldy Eagle 18 18 18 20 14 0 Clear St. Paul ... e 34 | 32 34 6 01 Rain Dutch Harbor ... 36 34 34 36 - 12 Cldy Kodiak 42 40 | 36 38 20 14 Pt. Cldy Cordova . 44 42 40 42 28 1.00 Rain Juneau ... . 40 37 33 35 4 01 Cldy Sitka ........ . 55 — 39 5 o .19 —_— Ketchikan 46 42 38 42 3 o Clear Prince Rupert ... 44 44 | 38 42 4 0L Clear Edmonton ... 30 20 6 6 4 0 Cldy Seattle ... 48 4“4 32 34 0 0 Foggy Portland . 46 42 36 38 10 ] Clear San Francisco ... 58 54 46 46 * 0 Clear * *—Less than 10 miles. —— e ————— e The pressure remains unusually low near the Aleutian Islands and is low throughout the remainder of the Territory except th: extrem: North where it is moderate high, It is also high in Western Careda, the Western States and thence to Hawali. Show- ers have fallen in Southeast Aliska and there is some cloudiness in other districts. Temperatures have risen in the Interior and have changed but slightly elsewhere. CLEARANCE ON HATS All hats grouped in two lots for quick clearance All Gage Hats in velvet and metallic— Regular Value $12.50 Clearance Price, $4.95 One lot of felts, velvets and velvet combinations—Value $8.50 Clearance Price, $2.95 S e | Old Papers for sale at Empire Office fallen out with Stalin, but she h: not been on good terms with Max- sion of youth with her pugnacio | chin, round, large face and bright | WiLL Bfi_ PROBED ==t = im Litvinoff, the Soviet Forcign,ey“ It is such .women as she| Commissar. She did not keep it| gy " 1oon ! g 7 <E { who really pave the way for more a a secret that sho considered this| mogme by i weaker son Bread, Meat and Sugar gentleman an upstart. right for her to long as she W It was all nub Litvinoff as| s under the protec- But as soon as the| Aristocratic Background Prices Are to Be She is both a Communist and an | autocrat. The daughter of a fa-| I“VCStlgaled ous Czarist General, she was one & Witharegthy patrongyg g} the old Russian aristocracy whn WASHINGTON, D. C., Jan. 19.— d that she was not a| The Senate’s investigation into the 5 i renounced their high lineage to . . y lon; Instead | emprace Bolshevism. yprice of bread which failed to de- UNITED FOOD CO. CASH IS KING For Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday . she foundered in the cold waters 9I| per aristocratic ba ckground|cine when wheat and flour became | communistic criticism. | makes her radical view all the|CheAPer, may also include meat as " EventiylJdfo | more inflammable. She has been|Well as sugar. \ CHICKENS M.lk F d However, she has had more than | jnioviewed and her convictions| Senator Capper made the state- [ l (& Y 2 her cshare of acclaim. She "‘aired in every language of the‘,mem a thorough probe would re- felt the thrill of power in a fas world, She is & mouthpiece for her{Sult and his committee 1§ %o be er Ound j nal life. She has, g pyjent country. If she doesn’t|called to a meoting today and hear- P p 2 i ¥ S SEE T e witnessed the rise of a NeW PArty,| nocent the sanest aspect of Rus-|ings Wil probably start Wednesday. | =y the end of capitalistic rule, and| e hones and achievements, shel gt | FRESH LYNDEN the sudden release of women from| ao.s offer a romantic and stirring | NOTICE L. 0. 0. M. s \ a cu-;mmram'c serfdom to a recog- picture of woman's new place in| No meeting tonight account of b 2 nized position. h lecture by Mr. Henry Roden on BUTTER 2 d This is not the first time that! T lsn‘wfl; !"lmporm:t Events in éarly Ameri- ® poun $ « o o . the noblewoman = Communist has| NO’ can History. —adv. - been dencunced. | Al participents in Elks Beauty - oo — AMERICAZ\T CHEESE ) 4 o Barred by U. S. "Shop. Meet at Elks Hall at 7:30| Willlam Grinnell of Berkeley, ° ¢ In 1926 she was appointed Soviet tonight. —adv.|Cal, is a guest at the Zynda. Mold c ild,pound . . . . . . . 'NATIONAL AUTOMOBILE SHOW OPENS 1N NEW YORK 3 = POTATOES, nice sizes, 100 pounds net,sack . . . . BANANAS, Golden Ripe,pound . . . . . . . 8c "CIGARETTES, favorite brands,carton . . . . . . 118 PRUNES, Santa Clara, medium size, 7 Per 25 pound box, $1.75 50c pounds . i | Associnted Press Photo New York City, during the national heid in New York. More than 300 A view of a section of the ground fioor of Granc Central Palace, automobile show. The show I3 rated a blggest motor display ever new car and chassis models are on view. TEXAS FIGS, fresh shipment, No.1sizecan,2cans . . . . Buy the Best for Less _S. and W. Products Are Consistently the Free Delivery 39¢ Best

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