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AT VR Sy R e i 4 R A Sy N ! ? § IN SCHOOLS OF BUREAU PLANNED No Striking Changes Need Re Expected, As Educational Chief serts akanak, the two men seeeded t om Kar >d back and | Per Mou Hooper Bay, Ha »d St. Michael and me, White to the Yuk Kokrines, 1a Fairbanks where ] days were spent. They then »d into the upper Yukon, ng at Circle, Fort Yukon and g to Fairbanks, Center, Valdez by steamer to Cordova :\nrlK to headquarters here. Gets General View The purpose of the M. | Gordon said, was to get a general view of as many of the schools and differsnt communiite d people as. poss! . There s no time to \dy individual problems and no | study was either contemplated ance or attempted. But a| ns ton, t Unalakleet. Moun- visited and Galena, thence to on to back returni hencs to Copper [ of people they serving was obtained which, he added, will be of real value in the administra- tion of educational affairs and the out of policies affecting ministration Ar g here last Monday after- | ncon, he plunged into the task f familis himself with his en- tire organization, next year's work and consideration of data upon; which future programs will be at| least partly based | ¥as Varied Experience Mr. Gordon comes to his job here th a wide and varied experience | with unusual technical qualifi- His work has carried him | cations. into many parts of the world and | involved the study of cultural; problems engendered by the con- s of races and differing civili- on: He was a teacher in Japan three yeéars, in the American School, where as many as 14 different racial groups were represented. He visited Korea and China, observing cultural influences and studying problems arising from racial con- flict He returned to the United E es leisurely by the way of Europe, spending some time in in- vestigations. He spent sometime as an in- structor at the boys school at Lawrenceville, N. J., known as the “prep’ school for Princeton Uni- versity,” and at the Friends Select School in Philadelphia, Fisk Un versity, a Negro institution in Nash- ville, Tenn. Attends Paris University Next came two years in France, at the University of Paris, special- izing in ethnology and French col- onial administration. With this MEN’S ALL WOOL Loggers’ AND Cruiser Coats Colers — Red and black and green and black $10 and $11 values Now $6.50 MEN'S ALL-WOOL Khaki Colored MACKINAWS $5.00 Many other money-saving bargains J. M. SALOUM Across from Goldstein Building | and | here without any fixed program, he said. He had no panacea 'o; offer and until he has had time | | coun THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, WEDNESDAY, JULY 13, 1932. Though Facing He’s Home to Face the Music asco Last December. Capi RIVAL, FROM SouTH AFRICA SRS ; M=s Eruey DEPeEW as22 DEPUTY. Overtaken by the long arm of the la Martin Deputy, alias Marshall Depew face charges in connection with the | wealthy Kansas City woman, last December. death sentence—kidnaping being possible being released after being held fo demanded $75,000 ransom, but did with the plot. i uick attempt an Clever detective worl P he professed relief that he is no longer a fugitive and has admitted his ; & rome ety in the asco that cnded in Mrs. Donnelly and her chauifeur {can be established. Such a sit r 34 hours. The kidnapers had luzmon does not, 1}0\\'0\'(5)‘, obviate e { " ot have the nerve to go through |the necessity which rests | upun ke iChaimier. OF SR to- Deputy fled to New York after the failure of the get- |the plaintiff of maintaining b morrow will be host to three not-| d joined the crew of a freighter bound for South | allegations by competent - ed guests, it was announced today | i y Kansas City authorities resulted in ; ? 1 ad arry Sperling, Acting Secre- ke Al Gk horiti lted in | mony. The plaintiff has alleged by Harry Sperling, Acting Secre-| his trail being picked up and Cape Town officials were requested to arrest | ot which if proved, would tar Those invited are: Judge| e when he reached that city. However, Deputy deserted the | =\ 000 " " merritorial statute. | James Wickersham, Delegate to the fug ship at Beira, East Africa, and mad he was finally trailed Deputy’s bigamous wife, have been it is probable all will ved at Capture Martin Deputy, Extradited From South Africa, Is Glad and arrested. members of the kidnap clique, including Mrs. Ethel Depew, said to be Death Penalty ! FOR TERRITORY IN TAX ACTION Upholds Non-resident Trol- | lers’ Tax in Dismissing | i Freeman Suit | for Donnelly Kidnaping tal Offence in Missouri. In an opinion handed down here | last Monday upholding the Alas- ka non-resident trollers’ tax, Judge Justin W. Harding dismissed .he suit of Wood Freeman, Seattle troller, against the Territory to i prevent the collection of the $250 | license tax, declaring that the | plaintiff had not proved his con- tention that the tax is prohibi- { | tory. | “This case has been pending | {since the summer of 1929 and has | | been before the Circuit Court of | | /Appeals, which declined to sustain d !Judge Harding in a ruling on @ |demurrer that sustained the val- ‘idxl,\' of thé tax. H. L. Faulkner i\\'ho represented Freeman here, an- | | !nounced an appeal would be ta-| % 4 e \ | ken again. 55 2800 4 GV | .| Looking quite as alluring in a baths 1 A Oh e ?:“ed gevernl wee '/:‘ ing sufi qas she does or’\z the stage | fago as to certain lssues of fact,| and screen, Lupe Velez, famous ofly bearing on Freeman’s con-| Mexican star, is shown as she en-/ |tention that the annual av joyed the cool breezes at the exclu- learnings of a’ troller in Alaska | Mive Atlantic Beach Club, Long 1s-| B |did not exceed $500 and that,| iand. Ngte _‘hv:_b%na-meci suit o | therefore, the $250 tax imposed by | bRy the Alaska Legislature was prohi | bitory and in contravenation the White Fisheries law. Testimony was offered by man to show his own earnings | that of other trollers in subs “(muon of his contention, wl ‘me Territory, represented by At- torney General John Rustgard, age | “ LOCAL CHAMBER 70 HAVE THREE NOTED GUESTS i / produced other witnesses to ton- + Mis. Nepty DoNNELL Y. tradict it. w, in Johannesburg, South Africa, »!n his opinion, Judge Harding Q "'is back in the United States to {said: “The Court cannot e, Dclegal(' Wicke rsham, kidnaping of Mrs. Nell Donnelly, |in absence of reliable stat Although Deputy faces a that there is any way in whi a capital offence in Missouri |the average earnings of a tro a! Father Hubbard and Paul, | ‘1 K. Gordon Be Greeted e his way to Johannesburg, where Meanwhile four other alleged her Bernard R. Hub- known as the “Glac- and Paul W. Gordon, , Alaska Di- Indian Service. re- Congress, F . bard, wid “He is not relieved of the ibiMty of the situation wh arrested in the United States and | ronts him, nor can the ‘to FREa Al togntiey | presume facts in his favor. | The Court cannot strike an av age to determine the average mon- vision, All three have arrived here with- came the opportunity of consider- TORK AVOIDS ENGLAND i : able travel in Morocco to observe NDON, July 13—The stork's|€lary return throughout the whole in the past few days. It is ex the results of French penetration v to England are becoming less (¢ maged o oagRolly -aliendsioe 0o} in that country frequent. There were 7451 fewer| “The plaintiff has failed to prove the !“'\mm‘r»\hiv will be on hand . . | that th b . to greet them Mr. Gordon then revurned to the |babies in the first quarter of 1932 s & fac hat the average earn ol p, United States and entered Columbia | than in 1031, the rate of 153 a|ings of t ollers are such {nattshe Jufigo.vfka \)\‘,m; e KI“M University, continuing his work in thousand being the lowest on rec-|tax 1impo lichy the:| Tegisikiire | Bauitiay Jrom (e PN BIC ethnology and cultural studies. In ord. |upon non-residents, in_ relation to fous (Resion. of <Conetoee o2 T ti richt a further expl tion o: he vol- with the Commanche Indians of hibition of his right to fish in i " |canoes of Alaska Peninsula. Mr. Oklahoma | His next assignment was with the Institute of Government Research, ! his studies were among the Pueblo Indians of New Mexico. | He was engaged in that when the| cpportunity was offered him by the | Indian Service to come to Alaska | as Director of Education | No Panacea to Offer He is approaching his problems to survey the field intimately, does| not pretend to know just what serious problems are to be en- red Certain general principles, he| said, will of course apply to the| work. But even in them practical} cation will count for much, | knowledge of conditions in 1l communities and among al races is necessary be- | can be made to fit ef- » they vely. Mr. Gordon visited Hooper Bay, reported seriously ravaged last Spring by famine, following a per- jod of flood. So far as he could learn from the villagers there were no deaths from starvation. “It i true that there probably was some privation from hunger, and the residents were weakened due to that cause,” he added. At the time he visited the com- munity, the population was robust and in good health. There are about 200 residents, and 45 enrolled in the school. The population was camped along the shores of the bay, fishing and putting up food for the coming winter. “These peo- ple, due to their isolated situation and the natural geographical dis- advantages of their location, un- doubtedly lead a precarious exist- ence, Their homes are in dugouts on an eminence above the general level of the country, and these, while habitable enough at this time of the year, are probably damp in the winter months. They seemed to be assured of a normal quantity of food supplies for next Winter” he said. Family Coming Soon Mr. Gordon hopes to bring his family, consisting of Mrs. Gordon and a three-year-old son, to Juneau in the near future. In faot, as soon as he is able to obtain a suitable house for a residence, they plan to come north without delay. OUR FAMOUS COFFEE | HAS ARRIVED ! Garnick’s Checkerboard Brand, pound ..29¢ 3 J { { Alaskan wate! whose arrived Monday after section of | Gordon, |in this city, having visited a large the Territory. Your COMPLEXION Envied fy Women WOOSE AND ELKS &2 = mied & Mert 61 ASH TONIGHT NO SALESMEN; > HOTELS QUIT Paps Advance to First, Place in Race if They | Defeat the Elks | The Moose club tonight, always weather permitting, has a chance |to climb to the dizzy top rung of lers in the smaller cities say that many hotels are closing because | government restrictions so hamper international trade that commer- the percentage ladder in the Cliy cial salesmen in Hungary have |League last half pennant battle. decreased from 5000 to a few hundred. | If the Paps can humble the EIks, | whom they take on at City Park this evening, they will squeeze in- first place by a half-game mar-| yin, which is the edge that thei Elks now enjoy themselves | Jack Schmitz has been selected | by Manager McKinnon to stop the EINAR OLSON TO GO ON VISIT TO NORWAY Einar Olsen, prominent in the fish industry in Southeast Alaska, Bills, and Manager Art’ is con will leave Juneau this week for dent he is equal to the task. Norway, his native country, where The Bills have no real intentions |he will visit until late next Spring. of relinquishing their present com- He recently came here from Pet- fortable berth to the Moose o |ersburg. anyone else. Jimmy Manning has| Mr. Olsen has been associated Ibeen picksd by Manager Andrews as fish buyer with the Marlyn Fisa im turn back the Moose threat. It |Company of Ketchikan for seven — u‘ougm to Le a real baseball game.|years. This year, he has been 4 s e stationed at Petersburg. He was BUTLER. MAURO ASTROLOGIST BEER | at Sitka for two years previously, DRUG CO | HOLLYWOOD, Cal, July 13—!and was in Juneau several years > LU, !Dr. Henry J. Gordon, astrologist, |before that. sees a wet future for the U. 8. A.| ————————— Y\ SAFETY at ‘Presenting _the nation’s horoscopel The largast ice crystals in the to the national astrological con-|world, sometimes measuring eight- | vention, he predicted light wines een inches across, are found in !fig?’ufluc STOR[ :‘:tn\i beer by 1935. | coves in the Ural Mountains. A Regular Free' $4 Purse WITH EVERY DRESS SOLD THURSDAY AND FRIDAY BEAUTIFUL NEW SUMMER DRESSES AT NEW LOW PRICES $6.90 to $10.90 CASH SALES ONLY Sizes 14 to 44 Hr,n. at last you get profes- sioial beauty results with a simple, easy beauty treatment in your home. In simple form it con- sists of cleansing, nourishing and protecting with the 3 famous Cara Nome Creams, and finishing with Cara Nome makeup. CARA NOME CREAMS GARNICK’S—Phone 174 Coleman’s Hollywood Style Shop ROBT. CRAWFORD COMING NOR TH; PLANS CONCERT .'|Son of Pioneer of Fair-| ’of his early days headquarters are | BUDAPEST, July 13—Hotel kepe- | Sms on the ds %TWU YEARS 0F1 -\ QUARRELING IS ENDED, FATALLY Seattle Man_ghoots His Wife and then Takes 4 His Own Life SBEATTLE, July 13.—Cilim banks Well Up in | Musical World | Robert Crawford, son of Ron ng & Crawford, pioneer of Fairbanks, is | “constant quarrel for two years, coming to Alaska during Septem- |Bd Ledlin shot and seriousl | wounded his wife and then kil | himself last night. | Mrs. Ledlin is in a crit | |dition with two bullet her abdomen. | Mrs. Thompson, mother of | Ledlin, sail she and her dau; ter had been listening to the when Ledlin entered the roo: “:nlled his wife. After pr and declaring she wanted | isiting the scene ! will give a con-| and also in In- ber and while re ical con- wounds in cert in Juneau terior towns. Young Crawford is now a promi nent violinist and is the Musical Director of the Newark Music Foundation, Newark, N. J. Crawford began his career as a violinist under Doug. Morgan, the first violinist in Rurbunk.s,} now a linotype operator in the| en to the radio, she fina ¥ Times Printing office, Washing- | sented to answer Ledlin's call. The two went into a hall and a mo- ton, D. C. Crawford, besides being a musi-| cian of note, is also an air en- thusiast and flies his own plane.| o don’t know what Californians He will ship his plane north when | will say about this. It looks very he comes cn his September trip | much like a slap at their glorified Harrison Potter, Crawford’s accom- | climate. ~Kay Francis, famous nist, will also come north with) movie actress, and her director hus- he violinist. " band, Kenneth McKenna, are shown g strolling on the sands at Atlantic Mrs. James Wickersham, wife of | geach, L. 1., soon after their arrival Alaska’s delegate now in Juneau, | from the coast. They were enroute made flights at Washington with| to Europe, but a last-minute pic- D INNER Mr. Crawford. She says his con-| ture engagement called for a cert in Juneau should prove to|change in plans, so they’ll vacation | L be a musicalfitmt o in America. i THURSDAY EVENING 8 J From 5:30 to 7 ! jment later shots were heard. Special | SURVEY SHOWS ADVANCED ! ‘)l NAB ITALIAN EDUCATION NOT SO VALUABLE 85(' i | According to a report issued by ¢ {the Women's Bureau of the Unit- ¢ ed States Department of Labor of Th C ff REL'G GHEATS}& survey of working girls in offic- e 0 Pe ' les in Philadelphia, Pa., girls with COMACCHTO, Italy, July 13.—’cn1y grammar school education Sho 0 !P:)licedll""e arrested two men'make mors money than the girls p p i charged with manufacturing imita- | with high school or rtial coll tion Etfruscan pottery, burying n‘edum;l;]_ N Mrs. Katherine Hooker in fields and then digging it up!-——— st oz s £ « in the presence of trusting tourist buyers. SAWYER'S SON LOSES LIFE IN AUTO MISHAP Norman Sawyer, 21 years old, son |of Ernest Walker Sawyer of the {Department of the Interior, was |fatally injured in an automobile accident, and died within a few |hours after having been taken to a hospital, according to an article in a late issue of the Seward Gate- way. The accident iS supposed to |have happened in California July The young man was graduated last month from Stanford Uni- versity, California. News of the tragic occurance was received at the 'Anchorage head- quarters of the Alaska Railroad, the Gateway says. Ernest Walker Sawyer, the be- reaved father, in his capacity of an official of the Department of |the Interior, gives much attention to Alaska sffairs and is a frequent visitor to the Territory. He is the special repfesentative of the Gen- |eral Manager of the Alaska Rail- | road. Scandinavian-American DANCE TONIGHT, JULY 13 AT A.B. HALL MUSIC BY ALBERT PETERSON AND HARRY KRANE and His ORCHESTRA 'fi [ Admission—Gentlemen 50c¢, including tax, Ladies 25 cents | DISTINCTIVE STYLES IT’S GREAT NEWS when Patriot shoes can be bought at this price Yes, it’s great news to men who know the high quality of Patriot shoes. Only a few times during the year are our shoes re- duced in price, because at regular prices they represent values far above the ordi- nary. For one day’s selling we offer these unusual values to those who demand bet- ter quality footwear. Types for formal, business, dress and sports wear. $4.50, $6.00, $7.50 B. M. BEHRENDS CO., Inc. Juneau’s Leading Department Store