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» 8 JUNEAU IN BIG CONTRAST WITH ENTIRE NATION Community ngl)l\ Fortun- ate, Says Heintzleman, Relating Conditions | | | | | (Continued from page 1.) ments which to clea away by negot Pictures Drought Areas A graphic picture of the drougl stricken section of the cour drawn by Mr. Heintzleman for the| Chamber. The enforced idleness of | laborers of all classes, including the so-called “whife-c class, | in that has added human mis- ry to the suffy | | | i ever visited severe drought that has the eastern part of the United tates. It extended from south-| ern New Jersey and Pennsylvanial as far south as Georgia and on the west to Arkansas and Oklahoma. Even where there was no drought visitation, every city has its bread- lines and all regular and many cmergency charitable organizations are working overtime to meet the situation caused by unemployment. | In the drought area, corn was burned up before it could even sprout ears, and a great majority of it for fodder. Vegetables were seared and that source of food sup- | ply wiped out. Farm wells, sprm_w‘ and creeks dried up. Many smal cities and some larger had thel also| water " supplies depleted and litfle | villages were forced to haul their| Livestock was | water in barrels. cold off, or died, because of the lack of both food and water. Fall fruit was stunted for food. Meney in Banis There is a great need for con fidence throughout the country, he asserted. The “psychology of fear”| is having a baneful effect on fi-| nances, business and industry. The banks of the country are filled with money, but bankers and heads of ir nent corporations say they| are powerless to lend for new cor struction or expansion of industries because there is ample productlun‘ of everything to meet the market | demand. More buying is necessary in order to bring about a release of money for financing new projects. The public cannot buy without| money, and the banks cannot make loans unless there i§ a revival of buying, and thus there seems to exist a “vicious circle,” which the country is now trying to work its way out of, he declared. The stab- ilizing effect of confidence, he said, | was one of the great needs. Given Vote of Thanks Expressing its recognition of the valuable service that Mr. Heint- zleman has rendered to the Terri-| tory by his efforts to stimulate the production of pulp and newsprint in Southeast Alaska the Chamber | extended a vote to thanks to him| for his work, and the personal as well as official interest he has shown. was not even fit to lmrvm" THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, THURSDAY, JAN. 29, 1931. SHE REPLACES ‘IT’ GIRL IN FILM BANK, TRAIN ROBBER RUN DOWN, CAUGHT Last of Six Ebers of Pa- cific Coast Gang Fin- ally Captured SEATTLE, Jan. 29—Charles Berta allas Harry Stone, ome of the members of a gang of netori- cus bank ang train robbers of the Pacific Coast, will face a murder charge in California. He is expect- ed to survive a bullet wound in the lung, a shot from one‘of four de- tectives who prevented his escape in an automobile after a terrific struggle, when his ‘companion, Gladys Rogers, tipped him off. Detectives waited to ‘afrest him as he entered his apartment after tipped over the telephone ‘as to his whereabouts. Six Come to Grief Berta’s capture, the Police here said, brings the sixth Nanaimo, British Columbia, bank xpbber to grief. Everett bank and robberies of tw: trains in California, and othm | hold-ups. Eddie Gorman, the first a.rrested in California, awaits execution for the murder dssocuited Press | Clara Bow has been removed from the position of a co-star with Gary Cooper in the film “City Streets.” Here is Sylvia Sidney, recently of the Broadway stage, who will replace her. Smith, whom he shot to death in| s T : Oakland, attempting to. escape ar- a natural endowment and its ex-|rest. ACROS! nuch Ale horses [WIA] S| the conutry Bravery Mineral springs Leave Budgeriike animal Having eovering A czar of Ruse I sla Wunderer Solution of Yesterday's Puzzle Daily Cross-word Puzzle 6. Orlental ship captuin . Auds Latin [TER] A consuerunle [1CIE] num [FIAN] . Grinding (voth/ L1 % Mimicned . Mutrons Loutrost | tate with eonyletion Portends . Fimous l’lflll feed Sllmu Appeise Meaningless repetition Son of Judak . Ceremonies i narrow 24, ers 36, 36. Lessened 41, .I-p-nu- eoln 38, Pertaining to 8. C the enr “». lmlltr ol the 29. Swaln The gang was also involved in| the recent $44,000 robbery of the| of Policeman Frank| Fights Racketeers | pression whenever and wherever 1]’)0.\5“}‘5 can only result in bene- Is Train Robber R. E. Sherwood was arrested here and worthless | § Assoclated Press Photo Ben M. Squires, economics lec- | |urer at the University of Chicago, ras selected “dictator” of Chicago leaning and dyeing Industry to tamp out racketeering. good will as a community asset| took the form of a personal experi- | ence in and friendly criticism of | this community. In 1926, he related, |he headed the vanguard of the | Wilkins-Detroit Arctic Expedition ' composed of 11 persons, three| Alaskans and eight cheechakos. From the ‘time they left New York | until they took off into the wxldsi from Nenana with the ill-fated) snow-motors, they were the reci- |pients of many courtesies at every |stop of more than 10 minutes.| There was one exception. That Mr. Smith’s talk on the value of _—_— é‘fio mfl . Newspaper Alliance which had syn- dicated the expedition's story. After the project had been abandoned | and the party returned to the FRAICHELLE ‘States, one of the members, he said,| The delightful new cleansing cream that melts as you smooth it on. $1.25 Juneau Drug Company Free Delivesy Phone 33 Post Office Substation No. 1 BOYS NEW CORD TROUSERS in white and brown are here * A big range of sizes SABIN’S 'iu!)flllll in Furnish- for Men” was in Juneau. Here they were met | by one official, acting in an un- cmclal capacity. This, too, despite Ithe fact that the Alaskan members | ‘had claimed Juneau as their home. Juneau, as a result, he saidy| fared rather badly in the publicity sent out to the North American who was a prominent lecturer, went as the guest of a tourist travel bureau in- terested in Alaskan trips. He was asked by it what towns in the Ter- to" California for one mon | fits,” Mr. Smith declared. |that a portion of it be built each |operation in the matter. |of its one resource—climate. It hnd} | residence |convenes next March. :ought to be spick and span when ,the Grand Igloo of Pioneers meets |and sent %o California to face trml for two train robberies. ‘William Bagley, also arrested hcrp last week, is a member of thc gang. The police found nltro- ‘glycerlnc and firearms in his apart- ment. T. H. Johnson, another member of the gang, is under sentence here for a Seattle bank robbery. Gladys Rogers is held as an ac- wmplice ARE INDICTED | INOIL FRAUD, Needs Road Bad:y Skagway needs a short stretch ch road badly to promote tourist |travel, declared Mr. Ashley. It |realizes that the cost of the project would be too large for completion in a single season, but he urged ar, beginning at once. The de- \rlopmonl of the tourist trade, he erted, is as necessary as that of 1y industry and it should be giv- en as much encouragement. The Forest Service has allotted 1$60,000 for a bridge over Skagway | River to be constructed next sea- son. He expressed appreciation for {that move but stressed the road |need. He asked the Chamber's co- Mr. Gallwas, who visited Los An- last year after an absence of years, declared that city’s great growth in that period was due en- \tirely to the activity of its Cham- |ber of Commerce and other similar organizations which took advantage Nineteen Fersons, Several Well Known, Used Mails to Defraud OKLAHOMA CITY, Okla, Jan. 29.—Jack Walton, ousted Oklahoma (Governor; Richard Enright, former New York City Police Commls.sion- er; §. E. J. Cox, once associated with Dr. Frederick 'Cook, Arctic explorer, and Henry Knight Miller, editor of the mazagine “FPeychol- ogy,” are among nineteen persons indicted by a eral Jury here for using the malls to defraud, in |connection with the bankrupt Uni- versal Oil and ‘Gas Company. Op+ erations are said to have involved $750,000. ATTENTION PIONEERS Auxiliary, Igloo No. 6,. Pioneers of Alaska, ‘will please meet at Carter's Undertaking Parlors on Friday, January 30th, 1931, at 8:45 A. M. to attend the funeral serv- ice of Mrs. Lovely, mother of Mrs. Alphonsine Carter. Funetal to be held from the <Catholic Church at 9 A. M. Kindly attend service. " —adv. nothing else to offer, but it did make the most of that. It is upon the aggressiveness and | activity of such organizations that communities become great and| prosperous. ‘The advisability | the city; premises of business and houses, vacant lots, ete., was urged by Allen Legislature of cleaning up streets, Shattuck before :the " There is no necessity for a gen- eral cleanup campaign now, as only & limited number of properties are in need of it, he said. The city here on February 25, and for the Legislature, he said. ~'The Entertainment Committee was -insructed by President W. W. ‘Council to make preparations for entertaining the grand officers or{ the Pioneers of Alaska when the Grand Igloo holds its sessions here. The Gavel Club was in receipt of | a letter from the Board of Home Missions of the Methodist Episcopal Church relative to a price on its local property in connection with the proposed improvement of the| capitol grounds. The Board will| Aspiroids The New Treatment i H I i ritory could be expected to €o-|make a decision at its next meet- ! fOl‘ |operate with it and Juneau hadling on February 9. § fared only lukewarmly. Secretary ¢. H. Walmsley re- COLDS “Good will is one of the great-|ported 45 requests for mxo:mmm»i est factors for the good of any received and answered during the!' ts nothing. It is'past week. § | BUTLER-MAURO i DRUG CO. 3 “When we sell it—it's right” SEEDS! GARDEN SEED! FLOWER SEEDS All Varieti | Place Yo HARRIS HARDW ARE CO. FRONT Now for Bulk SEEDS Have the seeds here when you want them and save by buying in bulk Telephone 134 We Deliver| Express Money Orders —GRASS SEEDS es of Seeds ur Orders you ‘get it. A small saving is you for 'years. and .beauty. These are STREET OKLAHOMAGITY Therein lies the difference. | l sl b A AaE I%BIIII%WII Illl/. l%filllll /flllll%% | lll i’ll I%Illll/// flll UEE WEEE mE Move Bluck bird 5. Severe DOWN 1. Sorrowful ome affalr 2. Exist 88. Above 8. Device for 40. Topaz hum- ralsing an ming bird anchor 41 minant 4 Lesson to & 4 ters' meas- story & Wiles Seoteh Ifl%lfln III/// ol [ STUDENTS WILL GIVEDANGEIN' ~ Hi SCHOOL 6YM ‘The Student Body of the Juneau High School will give a dance Fri- |day evening in the .school gym- Inasium and the public is invited to attend and participate in a good time. The affair will follow a basket-| |ball game between the boys and girls teams of the Douglas and Ju- neau high schools and should prove | to be one of the snapplest dances| Iboth students and general public may enjoy. Dancing will start about 10 oclock and as the mnext day is MRS, CARTER'S lof Mrs. |1y came to Juneau in 1894 to join MOTHER DIES AT HOME HERE Mrs. Celenia E. Lovely, 65,2 Succumbs to Three Years’ Illness | Celenia E. Lovely, mother Charles W. Carter, died yesterday afternoon at the home of Mrs. Carter in Juneau. Mrs. Lovely was born in St Paul, Minn,, Jan. 26, 1866. Accom- panied by her daughter, Mrs. Loves Mrs. her husband, Henry Lovely, who had come north in 1898. . They made their home in Ju- Saturday, when students may “sléep in,” perhaps the affair will last until well after midnight. Any- way there will be two hours of dancing.- “Tomorrow’s Styles Toda;” HOUSE FROCKS A clever assortment just received from the market. All sizes to 44 Priced at $2.25 “Juneau’s Oum Store” PRICE AND VALUE Many believe that Price and Value are one and the same thing—in the selection of home furnishngs, for example. is lower priced than another,. it must be a better value. Price is what you pay to get something; Value is ‘what it is worth after If you spend slightly more for a new living room rug than your ‘neighbor, and your rug, by ‘reason of its softness, rich coloriig and pleasing design, ‘it a continual source of pleasure to you, while she is dissatisfied with her rug—you have obtained a far beter Value. But your home fumlshmgs are ;with Make sure ‘when you buy that you choose pieces that. will be friendly, a source of pride when you entertain' guests—real aids to home comfort soon forgotten, elements of Value. J uneaw Young Hardware Company | —— They feel that because one article SEATTLE PRICE Plus Freight 40 cents per pound MANNING'S BLUE TRADE MARK COFFEE =S GEORGE BROTHERS PHONES 92—95 Five Fast Deliveries 1 neau and Dougiss nntil {June, 1930. Mr. Carter went there' Chamber Fund Passes $2,000 Mark in By-Mail Campaign OVER HUNDRED MINERS ESCAPE IN EXPLOSION Twenty—mne Known Dead —Some_of Bodies Man- gled, Others Charred LINTON, Indiana, Jan. 29.—Sev- en men were brought out alive this morning from the Little Betty Mine, near here, following an ex- plosion late yesterday afternoon. Eighteen bodies have also been recovered. I The total number rescued alive |is nine and the total dead is 29 all in the shaft when the explosion | occurred. o/ All men in the mine at the time o |Of the explosion have now been accounted for. | , The miners brought out alive 1907, when 'barricaded themselves in one of they went into ine Interior, living the entries of the main corridors for a tinte at Fairbanks and mov- when escaping gas which filled the ing from there to Ruby where they pit caused a blast. resided until 1925. They moved | The officials have not determined then to New Mexico and soon aft-, whether the gas became ignited or erwards established their home at 'whether 600 pounds of dynamite Roswell. i previously carried in exploded. Mr. Lovely died at Roswell ln' The shock was felt for 40 miles. Some of }3 bodies were badly for the obsequies and on his return mangled, others were charred, while to Juneau, the following month, some bore no marks. was accompanied by Mrs. Lovely. { The coal mine is one of the Mrs. Lovely was an invalid for largest producers in the State. Ap- the past three years. Her death proximately 115 men left the mine was not unexpected, |a few minutes before the blast. Surviving relatives are Mrs. Car- | . The membership fees of ® the Chamber of Commerce © today had passed the $2,000 fund from mail registrations, it was announced by Sec- retary G. H. Walmsley. The total of cash and pledges was $2,127 from 122 member- ship renewals. The Finance Committee will carivéds the town with- in a few days @nd complete the 1931 drivé, it was an: nounced. “In the meahtime, all the 1930 members are urged to send in their re- newals” by -mail to Mr. Walmsley. It 15 ‘not neces- sary that cash accompany the renewal, a pledge for the fee can be sent in to be o cashed whenever the sub- scriber designates. o0 000000 s0eoe o-o.o.-—o;-toooo.oo-o ter, Mrs. A. J. Day, of Crompton, Cal, a daughter; Mrs. Virginia Hickman, of Seattle, a sister, and MRS. YORK PASSES AWAY IN SEATTLE len by the Ladies' | s0th. —adv. | Was about 67 years old at the time agt ogepatie lof. her death, | Don't miss wie . ¢ance Friday, — night. H. S. Gym. Adm. 50 cents.| Play Indoor Gok at Tre Alaskan —adv. ' Hotel. (adv.} RN Wilfred Yelle of Spokane, a brother. —_— Funeral services will be held Fri-| Mrs. James York, wife of the day morning at 9 o'clock in the, Well-known Alaskan and former Catholic Church. |Prominent fur farmer at Sumdum, ——————— died in Seattle on January 15 and NOTICE funeral services were held Janu- jary 18 according to advices re= The Annual Chicken Dinner giv- ¢¢ived here by friends. Mr. and Ald of m.‘Mrs. James York went south about four years ago and have since Methodist Churech will be held Bt’ B the M. E. Church Friday, January |been residing in Seattle. Mrs. York AR RO OO S SRR The New Printed FROCKS FEATURING THE NEW PAISLEY SUITS 'Fur Trimmed—New Sleeves and Ripple Skirts Sizes 16 to 42 New Low Prices TRIANGLE CORNER IIllllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIllIIIIImlHII|IllllllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIII ; ,REMODELING SALE ¢ NOW 'ON Leader Department Store GEORGE BRO‘I‘HERS CALIFORNIA GROCERY : ' PHONE 478 m lit Proc%?&; ~ S Fi ive Dozen for $1.00 ORANGES, sweet and Jmcx per doz. ' ci ====a | S ANTEETEE TR CK’MMM 174 P