The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, March 14, 1932, Page 2

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

;"‘ ;? * have an early spring,” THE g L] DAILY ALASKA EMP) , MONDAY, MARCH I4 1932 ew Coats for Spring and Easter Price $13.50 and $19.75 A distinctive showing— smartly fashioned of rich fab- rics and in the colorful modes Nothing has been left undone in our of the new season. efforts to secure the choicest models that fashion has de- creed as correct for Spring coats. B. M. BEHRENDS CO., Inc. Juneau’s Leading Department Store [ souna to Gastineau Channel “Pussy willows testify to the ad- of warm temperatures and vidence their certain continuance. ong the coasts of this part of the PREDICTED BY EVANS' PURSER Admira] Boat Brings 19 Passengers and Heavy Cargo itory the buds on the bushes wollen nearly to bursting. Crocuses Are Busy B »dl’\ in eve has gone away for a few day crocuses have pushed themselves | {above the ground to blossom before {any of the other w flowers. Soff | outhern winds caressed the ship all the way nort We had a fine trip.” The Bvans, Capt. bound from Seattle to Seward, ar- sald R. V.|rived at Juneau ai 6 o'clock Satur- Harris, purser of the steamship |day night. 8he remained four Admiral Evans Saturday evening hours and then proceeded West- in commenting in the warm rain | ward that had prevailed during the ves- Large Amcunt Of Freight sel's entire voyage from Puget Seattle, the vessel 1011=d 1,000 Dally Cross-word Puzzle “Scuthiastern Alaska is going to At ACROSS Solution of €aturday’s Puzzle 8. Fragile 1. Sunken fence o3 Kind ot far Py befor 0. Declare i Al CILIOB[ERTT] 11- Gone by &1 17. Thus AIERIAITIOR] 15 Harden SETIOL|U| 20 King of == cheése 13, Comtor ST EE 21 Looks for eminine EIAT 33, Central par name s 24, Heated 18, Myselt IN|O[OIZIE|D compart- 18 Coven u, <E|SZIEIL Fange " © Inside of D Bl IT| 2s. Dashing in eces PIRIVIDIE! 59 afiure CIEIAISIE|S }e ioker term T 31. Not so muc] IRITIS 33, Pertaining to 4 \E[SZZTIED| DArl{ua 5 ;".?::15:,‘" SIEMAERII] * Pmintid . Germ_cells HIRIAI [M| 38 Customs 28. Cover with SIETISEIS] © Tears oor 30. The Indian 42. Positive g3, cAMUDErTY 47, Episcopalian 59. Character in electrio . Casua bishop ol rthurian ole observation Now York legend 43. Pintail duck 84. Everlasting: 49, Artificial Rt 44, Browns In the French language sun 36. Type measure 50. Metric land 1. Sandwich 46 Qherwhe 37, Renew measure filling 18, New 39, Slamese Terminate s Tt red Testament b colng egative by P°‘°:'f‘ spelling of . Long inlet votes . Pronou o4 of the sea 55, Take the 4 In a state of 50. Bird of the 41. Buropean principal 5. clombustion cuckoo Shhr. ¢ b7 Feminine * “point 51. Color 42. Top cards " ending 6. Marks of 54. Thorough- 43. Cut of meat S. Tale of smission _fare: abbr. 45. Explate adventure 1. Utilize 66, Not out place where the | C. C Gmham“ SOME INCREASE IN FURBEARERS, BUT TAKE SMALL {Fur Ammal Supply Grows, | but Cold and Snowfall | Cuts Annual Take (Continued rrom Page One) in some sections were from forage shortage due ows, but no heavy losses n to have octurred up o resent time. | Stuck In Storm Snow driven by a 40-mile wind drifted in hard-packed masses on the Alaska Railroad north from | Curry to Broad Pass, and rendered | almost powerless all efforts of a | huge rotary snowplow pushed by | two engines,” Mr. Terhune said. | There were 13 ‘passengers aboard, | intluding ' four women and oné child, and 15 trainmen on the pas- senger train and rotary crew. For three days, train and rotary were sfuck at Hurriovane Guich. Food supplies werée obtained from shipments in the express car, and a “hot car” of produce consigned to merchants in Fairbanks. . Cooking {was done in thé firebox of a stove [in the cabgose. The first day of the blockade, trainmen prepared a | potato salad for lunch for the 28 | percons. Potatoes for it were boil- ed two at a time in a tomato can in the stove fircbox. Scme of the world’s' Tinést 'scéh- ery was on tap, but it palléd-af'er three days and nights. Motnt Me- | Kinley's rugged contours ‘andhoar; head was in view ‘every day, but beds of day-coath seats and' .0 blankets, no lights, and the blasts of a 40-mile wind in 40-below zero weather, robbed the view of & Jot of its attractiveness after:the first day or:s0. Affer three days, aia came and the train moved on to the Broad | Pass station.’ There & short '@ist- |ance north, another blockade was | encountered. ‘A drift 12 to 15 feet |deep and 1,000 feet long had o be | plowad out before the train couid d to Fairbanks. It tock four ays hard work to clear the track. During that time, the passengers | were fed in the railroad messhouse where one cook and the station agent labored 24 hours every day to make things comfortable. The wo- |men aboard the train weré moved |to the station where temporary 1artérs were arranged for them The men slept aboard the train | Recommends Carry Blankets { “It was a unique experience and on2 that was not 'xltogv‘h er with- ottt compensations. othing that | could have been done \vnx neglected | by the trainmeén ‘in their c'rorts to take care of the passengers,” said | |Mr. Terhune “But I hope if it| should ever be necessary for me to undergo a ‘similar experience, the raflroad will by that time have stocked the trains with blankets for use in such emergencies, and possibly stocked. them with emer- gency rations. {ibou herds | suffering tons of freight and booked 60 pas- cengers “for ‘Northern ‘ports. ‘She | dischargzd” & heavy cargo and dis- embarkéd 19 passengers here. Those getting off at Juneau were: Mr. and Mrs. H. 'W. Brereton, Mrs. C. Helgesen, Mrs. E. Thomas, Miss Patricia Dale, Miss Jane Mor- ris, Major L. B ‘Atkins, P. A, Tilte- vand, J. P. Statter, W. H. Caswell, M. Floridian, J. P. Walker, Bert Swanson, Frank Nash, Antone Iver- son, L. B Bigham, Lewis Waugh, Joseph Laville, Persons who booked passage here for Sitkd and the Westward ‘were: For Sitka~Mrs. Lois 8. Ulreh, Betty Jean Ulrich, Mary Ann Ul- rith, Donald Ulrich, Mr. and Mfs. D. 8. Wright, Mrs. Agnus Young, Mrs. Johanson, E. Johanson, Etta L. Rayson, William Oft, J. B. Lof- tus, T. F. Brennan, Dr. H. W. Al- berts. For Yakubtat—Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Williams, Charles Edwards, J. M Nilson, T. George. For Cordova—R. H. Chadwick, Baxter Felch. For Seward — Jean Dompht(‘r Frank Scully, Alfred Hovelin, S. A. Montague. For Kodiak—Dr. and Mrs. Wil- liam Kirby. ———l———— FOR MEDICAL TREATMENT Anna Baroumis is a patient in . Ann's hospital, having entered il ll——= RE-ENTERS HOSPITAL John Bolstad, 81 years old, en-| tered St. Ann's hospital Saturday cnly Saturddy @fternoon, afterhav- MEALS DUE TO POISON| A dopey, tirea feeling is ALWAYS | a sign that waste food matter stays | too long in the bowels. It fer- | ments and forms gas. It breeds germs. Tt is sure to poison heart, kidneys, brain. Adlerika washes out BOTH upper | and lower bowel. It brings out poisons which cause gas, nervous- iness and a dopey, sleepy feeling. It contains no harmful drugs. Get Adlerika today; by tomorrow you feel the wonderful cleansing effect of this German doctor's simple remedy. Butler-Mauro Drug Co., {in Douglas by Guy's Drug Store. —adv. evening. He had left the u\su(uu”m ing been there a considerable Mme 1 SLEEPY FEELING AFI'ER' I HOUSE,SENATE up T0 AGREE ON |* of Shanghai INJUNCTIONS ' ts Riot chxv,mumsts Attempt Hold Demonstration n Chicago Occu patwn Differcnces_Between Two Labor Dispute Bills Are Settled CI \(xO March 14—Three po- g licen ere shot and wounded in WASHINGTON, March 14—Dif-|eatt-mpting to quell a demonstra- ferences between the House and |tion Saturday afternoon aga. Senate on bills to curb the use of (th anese occupation of njunctions in labor disputes are| hai. The demonstration took ironied out by conferees of the two |in of the T e Congress branches. { Man demonstrators when the, mour Agteement on the terms of the| legislation assured early completion {chargod of Congressional action on the| T officers d Gunman 8 measure sponsored in the Senate)phen Chuck,” who said he can by Senator Norris, of Nebraska, and |frcm Canada. They knoc k in the House by Representative unconscious and hurried him te LaGuardia, of New York. Jail The conferees agreed to broaden| Th:» Communists attacked 60 po- the House provision for jury tnlals|lice -ationed at the Tribune Tower M contémpt ‘cases' to include’ pro- |in anticipation of the coming of tection for newspaper Editors who |th owd which had twice been criticise judicta¥ attfon. The House |refus-d a permit for the meeting. bill provided. for a jury trial only ———e——— ' éases ‘growing «dut. of 1abor dis- SEVERAL LEAVE HOSPITAL putes: MRS. ULRICH AND 2 CHILDREN FOR SITKA several hospits pa- C. E. Rice, on March inst Mrs. Frank P. Ulrich left lasc"" Saturday evening on the Admiral|Ke! Bvans for Sitka to join Mr. Ulrieh, | G¢ who 4s in ¢harge of the Geodeuc*“i" ed who entr: R. Duncan en- Chbservatory Station there. - With |tered March 3; Ivan Misoff, who Mirs. “Ulrich ‘went her three chil- |entercd March 13; Thomas Hizging dren; Mary ‘Anm, Blizabeth amq|Who entered March 9 and M. Pa- Dotiald.* Two daughters, Doris and |8ar2n, Who entered March 10 - — Virginia will stay in this city to‘ continue- attendance at the high\ Warren C fted St schoo.! At the termination of the|tric: attorney the Thi school year in Junme they will go to D! visited Juneau Satur Sitka. | rt time. ~He is e >d police cisco. TGKEEN MARBLE LEON TROTZKY PLANT STARTS: BREAKS EXILE 70 MEN ON 108 has boen granted ion to spend thres months Alelska Quames, Idle Since 1928, Resume ITQA'E BUL, permi in Czechoslovakia for his e will leave Turkey for the firs me in his three years of exile, 3 | within the next two weeks. Mrs.} Operatlons Trotzky will remain here as host- After having been closed e e 1928, ‘h[‘ Ah a quarries of at To- of Prince AT THE HOTELS , sSuthwest (of ®- e 11, have ‘resumed cperations. ities add another indus- Gastineau of - considerable slze J. A. Ramsey, M. C. Edmund. part of the Territory and aze, T. H. Huddleston, Val- imulis ¢ R. , R. Wakelin, chipping getierally. Joyce, Taku River; Come Frozm Seattle , Cordoya; R. J. A force of 70 workers, headed by chr.:lrd John ‘Coats, Chitina; E. Assistant General Superinténdent T. Ba Nome; Mr. and Mrs. B C. C. Thomas, came north from W. Bereton, Spokane; Frank Nash, Seatttle on the steamship Admiral Fairbanks; L. E. Bigham, Ketchi- Evans, which callad at Junsau Sat- kan; I Iverson, Bellingham; R, urday night enroute from Seattle iams, Fred Jaegel, C. Ervine, to Seward. They disembarked at Soita, Juneau. Wrangell last Friday and were = t rom there to Tokeen. In ad- Alaskan to them, 12 workers were, H, M. M , Juneau; Art Hed- hired at Wrangell. When the plant man, Taku; G. Algren Cordova; under complete operation i* n, L. Maroitz, Port Aithorp. will employ 40 more workers. For a month past, repairs to bunk | nd mess houses have been in pro-' nd mo c mpany’s holdings s for the work- Zynda Charles Avery, United States Navy; J. P. Walker, Wallace, Idaho; E. Waugh and son, Spokane; EI- > mer son, Petersburg; Alfred he resumption of operations at J. Motz, Chilkost Barracks. ukecr\ qu: es is due to fhe — - - in the states for e construction, {" atput of the quar- | ries w. nll be transported by barge & wlmtyouwmu t> the company's finishing plant at ll IN PRINTING Laco Some will b2 shipped to ,l when you want it! the finishing plant at San Fran- 3 Try s out with your next job on a business trip and wil in a short time to his home aldez, e Miss Lillian Patricia Dale was an intoming passenger 6n the Admiral Evans which arrived in port Sat- urday night. She Is visiting here Foe o PATRICK’'S DAY DANCE ST. w!'h hér” mother and- stepfather Big time promised by the E! and Mrsy; Harvey. L. Clark. of | Ma 17. Favors, refreshments t}m city. Her first impressions ‘of | music by Serenaders. —adv. .‘lum-au are good she says and she - fhay make it her permannet home./ O©Old papers at ‘1me Impire. | FRESH DAILY At Your Grocers “Remember tlhe Name” BREAD A-tinglingrhome for lunch, their sturdy, growing bodies almost shout for the hearty strength Peerless Bread will give them At All Food Stores—Ask for PEERLESS PEERLESS BAKERY PEERLES BREAD (=] wholesome ... .. nourishing . . . ... satisfying " ... .. & You may never know how good a healthy, vitamin- packed bread can taste un- til you watch your lusty youngsters devour the nut- like goodness sealed in the delcate crusts of PEER- LESS Super loaf. HOME. .. BAKERS health. | “(the participation of the baby kid- [ naping, “ | reporters. NO POSITIVE INFORMATION KIDNAP TRAIL Nothing of Conciéte Na: ture After Thirteen Days of Search (Centinuea from Page Gne) not give you any encouragem:nt.” The American said this was learned in conversation “from an authoritative source.” IS INSIDE JOB NEWARK, N. J., March 14.—Hen- ry “Red” Johnson, sailor suitor of Betty Gow, Col. Lindbergh’s nurse- maid, was described as a clerk in by Deputy Police Chief Brex' here last Saturday night, when he was permitted to talk to Brex said he believed the kidnap- ing was an inside job but he ex- oneratéd all of the Lindbergh em- ployees. He refused at that time to amplify his statement. B S NOTICE After several days spent in the hospital have now returned to my {olfice where I shall be glad to re- ceive my paticnts. adv. DR. GEO. L. BARTCN. Daily Empire Want Ads Pay SAVE HALF WOoOD CLEAN HEMLOCK 14 in., 16 in., 24 in. Single Load, $4.25 5 Double Load, $8.00 A discount of 50 cents per load is made for CASH LEAVE ORDERS WITH GEORGE BROTHERS Telephones 92 or 95 CHESTER BARNESSON Telephone 039, 1 long, 1 short Not Only Cheaper but Better RICE & AHLERS CO. GOOD PLUMBING “We tell you in advanee what job will cost” THEO. S. PEDERSON ALASKA HOME DECORATOR Estimates Furnished Free General Painting Contractor Shop Phone 354 Res. Phone 402 Shop at Third and Seward THE MIDGET LUNCH NOW OPEN Horme Cooking MODERN PRICES Owned and Operated by MR. AND MRS, TOM STURGE “If You Can't Eat &t Home Eat at THE MIDGET”

Other pages from this issue: