The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, November 11, 1931, Page 2

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B T e T S T e TV T o b imperative need for increased membership and increased financial support. “Only by enlisting the help of all may we expect this year to get the increased revenues neces- sary to cover our programs, local chapter and Na- tional.” Fiftieth Anniversary Rpll Call American Red Cross FT 7 ROLL CALL is upon us and with it the 7 'IHE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, WEDNESDAY, NOV. 11, 1931. November 11,1931 —From a letter written by A. L. Schafer, Manager Pacific Coast Li sion, American Red Cross. | Tardleu, formér Premiet and now !Whole Laval Government is’ pus tlonal budget for 1932, This must i PREMIER LAVAL MUST EXPLAIN NS U. 8. VISIT Pact Made with President Hoover Faces Stern Test in Chamber (Cen':nued from Page One) clalists with Edouard Herriot in the van, did not like'it. In fact they voiced their dis- |} pleasure with considerable no; Memories of that scene may b lcvq!(ed when the Premier reappear: jon"the floor. Unemployment Issue 7 If he follows th2 usual pro-| ceedure, M. Laval will ask that all | mterpellqtions on foreign policie !be’ grouped and discussed on Fri- days. at course, however, would | delay a verdict on the trip to Am- |. erica and it 15 likely that the bate on that subject will be has tened. Foremost among the domestic| problems to be discussed the | second half of the “national qu -l ment ‘plan,” designed to give winber! work to the unemployed and thus stave off extremist agitation. ‘This 1s the pet project of Andre | Minister of Public Works, but the| ing"t. | But the big, long drawn out task before ‘the legislators is the na- ‘be finished by the first of April in Prison Gates to Open for ““Bobbed-Hair Bandit” * * * * * * Having Served Seven Years for Reign of Terror in 1928, Celia Cooney and Her Husband Are to Be Freed on Parole. Join the Red Cross Today! This space donated by B. M. BEHRENDS CO., Inc. LleUrmenfiyrmnenflpmmenlymsenfiyresenfipr “Stonewall” Hugenberg Now in Limelight in Germany| % ‘Alfred Hugenberg, feades. of the Ghmnan'] political old guard which seemingly ; was dead but has not sur- rendered, smiles genial, | ly as the cheers of Nazis and steel helmeters greet him when he ar- rives at a fascist rally.‘ | He is a staunch ally of 'Adolf - Hitler " in the campaign to wipe out 'social democracy in the | fatherland, and is a con-! stant foe of what he calls the “lie about Ger., {many’s war guilt,)/ On the platform he is bristling in both speech and appearance, his rigid, white pompadour and stiff By J. A. BOUMANN BERLIN, Nov. 11—Alfred Hug-|mystache adding ‘to the effect. His enberg, onewall Hugenberg” 10| gshort, erisp sentences are flung out | his “‘1’““:( 15 one of 't in the voice of adrill sergeant. of present day German pol Much was expected of his lead-| Relegated to the | ership of the German Nationalist | when the elec in September, | Party when he took office in 1928. 1930, reduced his die-hard na He controlled newspapers, advertis- ists’ representation in the R: |ing and film agencies, which car-| stag, from 78 to 41, he has b?en\ned his name into all corners of again in the forefront the last few |the Reich. But personal magne- weeks. tism was lacking. At the recent rally of nazis and | His nationalism is uncompromis- | steel helmeters at Bad Harzburg, ing. He was an outspoken annexa- he was right up in the spot t | tionist in world war days and afl-l with Adolf Hitler. vocated fighting to the bitter end There were some there who saw |in 1918. He opposed the Versailles on- {Railroad.’ » ALASKA NEWS Tvogula riourist travel by air io the Valley of Ten Thousand | Smokes, Mount Katmal and the largest active wolecano in the world —Aniakchak—yith its 30 miles of crater rim and gnother 10,000 thrills and wonders as represented in the phennomenort nature has thrown up on the Alaska peninsula; is now possible, thinks Al Munson, who was co-pllot with Harry Blunt! on the memorable exploration | flight of Father Bernard R. Hub- bard, the “Glacier Prieat,” over | Aniakchak volcano and the Valley of Ten Thousand Smokés. Mun- sen was in §eward thé other day to recelve treatmént at the Beward hospital for an infection of 'one of his hands. Pete Patten -has again assymed control of theé Aleutidn Livastock Company. Rex Sproat has resigned as general manager to fill & va- cancy in the. United States De- partment of Justice in Unalaska. Mrs. Patten is managing an eat- ing establishment in Unalaska. : E. P. Stowell has had a high grade flock of two dozen white TLeghorn chickéns shipped from Se- attle to his plice on Umnak Island. one of the Aleutian chain. After 25 days on_shipboard these pul- lets have recuperated and are now laying splendidly. Mrs. Ed. ‘Watkins, 85, a resident of Anchorage for 18 years, died there of heart trouble. She lived at MaCarthy before going to Anchorage. She is Survived by her husband, who is employed in the machine shops of the Al In merhoty of Russell H. Merrill, pioneer Anchoragé alrman, abea- con light for aviators will be in- stalled on the Afichorage Aviation . |America. His first trip was aska | of the “ American Chambers *% | Commérce. 1In the autumn of 1915 order to avoid retourse to the cost- 1y cxpedient of provisional credits. May Dcbate Tariff Other measure calling for par- liament's attention include the per- centage of foreign wheat to beim- ported, the naval building program recrulting for the navy, some read- Justment of the tariff and a so- clalist ‘proposal fo ‘restore propor- Hlonal. representation in the I 1ative élections of next May. . %) BARGN ElICHI SHIBUSAWA 1S DEAD IN TOKYO Notable Career of “Grand Old Man” of Business in_Japan Ended (Continuea 1rom Page One) ness operations, with which he w ccnnected as director or advis In 1903, owing to.ill health, he resigned all posts; except the pres- idency of the First National Bank. First In Charity Feeling the need of commercial education for the rising generation he established early in the Meljicra a commercial training school, which was the forerunner of the present Tokyo Higher Commercial School. Witih the support of the late Prince Ito and Count Okuma he estab- lished an alms-house called the Toyko Poor House. His was the first name in all charity move- ments. In the Japan-Russia war he rendered meritorious service to the state in raising war funds, as- gisting in the flotation of the war loan and afterward he was invari- aply consulted by the ministry on important questions of finance. His promotion to the peerage in 1900 was in consideration of the jmmense service he rendered to the country's commercial and in- dustrial development as well as to the cause of public welfare. Visited In America He traveled widely in Europe and in 1902 for inspection of commercial and industrial progress in the Oc- cident. In 1909 at the age of sev- enty, he visited the United States as the head of the Japanese dele- gation in response to the invitation of he révisited the United States to study the commercial and indus- trial relations of Japan and Am- erica “and to investigate questions of a political nature between the fleld by the Anchorage Women's Club. The 52-foot steel tower has | been erected. A regulation 24-inch beacon will soon be put in place. The ‘light ‘will ‘e the first' aviaton beacon in the Tetritory. United Btates commissioners should be paid salarles instea belng dependent on fees for com:- pensation, was a recommendation of the United Btates Grand jury at Anchorage. The jurors also en- dorsed the idea of having priso in Hugenberg the future titular treaty, the Dawes plan, the Young head of Germany if the Hitlerites | plan and every other méasure evar succeed in establishing their { which, in his view, was framed to dictatorship. | “enslave the German people.” Dr. Hugenberg earned the “stone- Hugenberg’s reduced following wall” sobriquet by his stifi-necked |joined the 107 Hitlerites Wwho attitude on whatever he conceives marched out of the Reichstag last to be the right course. He is an or- | February and again this fall. Na- ganizer of unusual parts, having |tionalists and Fascists are one in demonstrated that before ho their desire to overthrow the Bru- changed his seat on the board of | ening government and destroy .so- the Krupp works at Essen for a | cial democracy. They differ only place in the Reichstag. 'as to ways and means. i "PHONES 83 OR 85 “The Store Thas Ploases” THE SANITARY GROCERY - - ** work on roads, a practice that has been inaugurated in the First DI- vision. 1 John McMullin, Alaska pionger, died of heart trouble at Anchorage, | He first came North in 1897. had been in Dawson, Nome, ¥ banks, Ruby and Iditarod. He wel to Anchorage in 1917. two Gotintries. 'On this visit, when hé astounded Americans by his extraordinary energy and vitality he sought to induce American bus- iness men to cooperate, whenever possible, with Japanese capitalists in the economic development of China. 4 Baron Shibusawa was one of the greatest authorities in Japan on rese classics. He was an ardent W of Contuclus. One day of each month he devoted to re- g , having read to him pi e Rongo, orie of the four books of theories and philoso- phies @f ‘Confucius, and passages i ble that the fortune has left*is the greatest ever accummulated by any individual s man in Japan, though he approfifate”sum of it s not known. Old papers at The Emplre. he ~ next few weeks. broken the law. ; the State for the lo prison. | ght and work for her go STOCK PRICES TRADING TODAY Rails Improved but Pivotal Shares Fail to Respond | for Advances 1 NEW YORK, Nov. 11. — Stocks were irregular today and trading was very gquiet. Rails again improved but numer- ous pivotal shares and other groups failed to follow moderate ad-, vances. H Of the carriers, New York Cen- tral, Rock Island, Missouri and Pa- cific preferred, Chesapeake and Ohio advanced about one point. | The Atlantic Coast Line advanced four points. Miscelaneous issues up one or more points included Corn Products, Allied Chemical,| Eastman, Industrial alcohol. . The issues somewhat heavy were steels, Westinghouse, American To- bacco B, General Electric, Radio. The cable office closed before the regular stock quotations were | received today. They will be print-, ed tomorrow. i ————————— ,0CEL1A a2d EDWARD COONEX 4+ 1931¢ (N~ The amazing acts of the “Bobbed-Hair Bandit” are recalled by the announcement that the New York State Parole Board | ‘to release Celia Cooney and her husband, Edward, some time in the Celia is the original bobbed-hair desperado who terrorized small store keepers in Brooklyn, N. Y., back in 1923, in order, she declared at her trial, to obtain funds with which to pro- vide a home in which her baby could be born. the story was the arrest of Celia and Edward at Jacksonville, Fla, as they mourned beside the body of the baby for whom they had They were-sentenced to from 10 to 20 years in prison in 1924, and since then husband and wife have only scen each other on one occasion—when Celia testified in Edward’s suit agai =t of an arm in a machine shop accident at Celia is leaving prison with the determination to rippled husband. She wi tempted to revert to the gun again for a livelihood, es) she remembers that all her hold-ups netted her a m which she paid with seven years of her | ‘White ciden IRREGULAR IN - as decided A pathetic part of never be ially when $1,061, for William Finley, woodchopper on River, hurricd to Dawson t« the hospital after he had ac-| ly shot himself through the| arn | GARBAGE HAULED Reasonable Monthly Rates HEMLOCK WOOD Order Now at These Prices Full Cord $8.50 Half Cord $4.50 Five Cords or over, $7.00 cord E. O. DAVIS TELEPHONE 584 — L FOR NEW WOOLENS Fall and Winter SEE JACK, The Tailor SEE YURMAN New Fur Garments in New Styles Cleaning, Repairing, Remodeling Yurman, the Furrier | Triangle Building Mystery still veils the death of Fred Pankow, trapper and fisher-! man of the Iliamna district, who| was last seen alive early in April| and whose decapitated body and! | head were found in August near| | one"of his camps on the Chulitna | River. Whether death was due to| decapitated the dead body, has not been ascertained. — ., “Bud” Holbrook, Dawson-Gran- vill®# mail carrier, escaped with 2 blagk eye and other bruises on his face when his mail truck turned turtle on the rcad near Gold Boi- tom Creek. BANJO MUSIC | For entertainment and partles. Teacher of stringed instruments. HARRY BRANDT “The Arctic Banjoist Saindon Rooms Phone 537 natural causes and wild animals | e. HOTEL l S ZYNDA ELIVATOR SEBVICR 8. ZYNDA, Prop. ‘. engine and radiator. small cost. overheated. tion be sure and have the cleaned out. solutions. PREPARE YOUR AUTOMOBILE FOR WINTER DRIVING R & T RUST REMOVER will clean out all rust from the cooling system of your car and RUST PRE- VENTATIVE will stop rust from forming in your We are equipped to render this service at a very . Without this service the cooling system is not go- ing to function properly during the winter. Conse- quently your car will use moreé gas and oil and the motor will not perform as efficiently when it is Before you prepare your car with anti-freeze solu- We carry a complete stock of R & T RUST RE- MOVER, RUST PREVENTATIVE and anti-freeze Connors Motor Company SERVICE RENDERED BY EXPERTS cooling system properly | \ U. 5. DEPARTMENT OF AGRIOULTURE, WEATHER BUREAU The W eather | (By the U. 8. Westher Bureaz) Forecast for Juneau and vicinity, beginning at 4 p.m., Nov. 11: Rain tonight and Thursday; gentle southerly winds. LOCAL DATA Time Barometer Temp. Humidity Wind Velocity Weather 4 pm. yest'y 29.79 42 90 s 7 Rain 4 am. today .....2991 41 80 SE 8 Rain vABLE AND RADIO REPORTS Highest 4pm. | Lowest4a.m. 4am. Precip. 4smn. Station— tempn. temp. | emp. temp. velocity 24 hrs. Weather Barrow .. e ¢ 2 { 4 8 10 0 Clear Nome 32 30 | 30 32 B 04 Snow Bzthel .. 36 34 T | T 12 02 Cldy Fort Yukon 18 18 | Tanana .. 22 22 | 18 2% 16 B4 Snow Fairbanks 28 2 | 22 22 X! 24 Cldy Eagle 26 26 | 14 14 » 04 Cldy St. Paul ... 40 38 | 34 36 24 10 Clear Dutch Harbor .!. 44 42 | 34 38 12 0 Clear Kodiak 4 40 | 32 34 Calm Cldy Cordova 40 40 | 26 32 » 10 Clear Juncau 42 42 | 4 4 g 50 Rain Ketchikan 44 44 [ 40 42 Cam .10 Cldy Prince Rupert 42 42 | 40 42 Calm .20 Rain Edmonton 38 28 | 18 26 b3 0 Clear Seattle — — | 40 42 i) 43 Cldy Portland . N ] 48 | 36 88 2 02 Foggy San Francisco ... 60 56 | 50 52 ¥ 0 Clear *—Less than 10 mfles. The Bering Sea storm has moderated and movad slowly north- ward and is centered this morninz at Nome attended by precipita- tion at all reporting Alaskan stations except Dutch Harbor and Kodiak during the past twenty-four hours. Pressure remains high be- twezn British Columbia and Hawaii. Little change in temperature has been reported in the past twenty-four hours. Men’s Linen Collars Arrow Brand—All Styles and Sizes 5 CENTS EACH-—Regular 20c each Leader Department Store GEORGE BROTHERS -3 D e e e P e e JUST RECEIVED A new shipment of the old, reliable RID JID Electric Ironing Boards Will not jiggle, joggle, wiggle, wobble, slip or slide $ PRICED RIGHT—With a money-back guarantee. Alaska Electric Light and Power Co. Juneau—Phone 6 Douglas—Phone 18 EDISON MAZDA LAMPS—The Standard of Comparison : | ALASKA MEAT (O. QUALITY AND SERVICE TO YOUR LIKIN| Meadowbrook Eutter " Austin Fresh Tamal PHONE 89 Deliverias—10:80, 2:30, 4:30 Frye-Bruhn Company PACKERS—FRESH MEATS. FISH AND POULTRY Frye’s Delicious Hams and Bacem Pioneer Pool Hall | Telephone 183 POOL—BILLIARDS T .!itrrm. OF ALASKANnomm THE GASTINEAU Qur Services to You Begin and End af % H-_-I:ot,lvml’ugc ‘ & THE GHAS. W. CARTER MORTUARY “The Last Service Is the Greatest Tribute” Corner 4th and Franklin Sts. Phone 1362 SHEAFFER PENS, PENCILS and DESK SETS They carry a lifetime guarantee Wright Shoppe PAUL BLOEDHORN, Proprietor Y -

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