The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, October 5, 1932, Page 2

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J. 8. DEPARTMENT OF 4( CULTURE, WEATHER BUREAU t The Weather A H DATA g % My ' U 8 Weuthier Bureww): i ress Forecast for Juneau ahd ‘vicinity. beginning at 4 p. m, Oct. 5: , Generally fair tonight and’ Thursday;’ gentle variable wings. b Time Barometer Temp. Hum!dity Wind Veiocity Weather : ® p 4 pm. yest'y ....3016, 58 63 NW 12 , Clay i | \ 5 4 am. today .....3037 43 95 Calm 0 Cl H lnte' Former Governor andlgov. : |. Noon' today ....30.53° ' 84 4 w 12 di::; | er?tthorces omll_lahon CABLE AND RADIO REPORTS ? [ 1 L of Lehman, State Ticket & ~ToAT | : ‘ i | (Continued irom: Page One,)- Highest 4pm. | Lowest4a.m. 4a.m. Precip. " ; Lol - s Station temp. temp. | temp. temp. velocity 2akrs. w‘-fi. ! lof his speech that the ‘“swing o Barrow 20 2 18, 20 1470 Clear Benigiiaty. e n" di Nome 38 36 36 38 . 14 .04 “Rain ; ¢ where throughout the country. Tt Béthel 42 4 24 28 . £ .0 Py ; § 45 due in part to the unseMfsh|- Fort Yukon 82 32 30' 32 12 0 Clear 3y desires of the leadets 1o avoid sel- Tanana .. - 30 30 28 34 4. 10 Cidy y : fishness and - individual deSires; anid' Faitbanks ‘% 3 3 3 6 16 Snow ¥ 4 new Winter Coats are broad shouldered ¥ |1 am gad to add the & { Eagle 52 dg 24 280 0 Cldy i H : i« New. York to the list” ; st. Paul - ] 4 42 ~ 4 . 18 ‘Trace Cldy i ¥ and the favored lengths are seven-eighths or Proposed Comproshissy Duteli Harbor 46 . | 48 50, 24 Trace Rain i W : Leaders of the New York Oity Kodiak 54 3 38 0 0 ¢ cly LS re T 5 Sih ok 3 . Democracy weré assembled in ths Cordova 52 40 40 6 13 Clear w one inch helow dres many coats have fur e e ; feie i pa. « 8 o B Cléar ' ) e oo Pk, PR e § e nearly all day yesterday Trying to Sitka .. —_ ! &H 0 ‘0 Clear leeves as well as collag trimming. bawckit 0t - o pidgraitt St sl Hetohiian 38 6 & 4 Trice Ciear . |break the deadlock,. The names Prince Ruperf [} 50 52 8 02 PLClay v o Senator Rcbert F. Wagner, for- Edomnton ;: | 4 a8 6 0 - ./ Olear P ‘|mer Gov. Alfred E. Smith and Seattle | 54 B¢ 0 0 ; ru"(’(l fr om $1 ()-75 Mayor John Boyd Thatcher sere Portland B | eme s 0 Pt.Cidy ¢ suggested. John H. McCooey, San Francisco 58 56 56 4 [ Cldy Brooklyn leader, proposed: Benator | - Wagner for Governor; Al Smith | for Sendtor and- Mayor Thatchet' for Lieutenant-Governor cr Comp-| ! troller. Al Smith and Gov. Roosevelt re- plied the same to every sugges- tion: “It is not satisfactory.™| They insisted upon the nomination of Lehman for Governor and the renoniination of Senator Wagner Jand other State officérs. 'The con- vention was in session only five minutes at rioonh and the negctia- ticns ‘were mesumed. It was not until’ Al Smith and A Goy. Roose- velt met on the stage just before Smith'‘placed: behman in nomina- tion that the agreement to with- draw Thatcher and agree to the Smith - Roosevelt program was reached. The unison of reconciled Al Smith and Gov. Reosevelt was irresistible. { Otlier Candidates After the nomination of Lieut.~ to $57.50 The pressure is high in the Interior and relatively low on the Arctic Coast with moderfite rain or snow id portions of tfe Interior and Western Alaska and cleating weather generally in most of South- ern Alaska and the extreme North. A moderatz storm is central south of the Aleutiari Isalnds with unsettled weather in the extreme Southwest. 7 tures Have risen over most of Southwest Alaska and have fallen in extréfiie Eastern Alaska. COPPERANER [ | ROUTEMAYBE | .| OUT FOR YEAR)| Betty Baxley “Papers just ‘acquired by the|Snow Shed Collapse May] HOUS_E | National Museum fzar stamps of T U R l d f i 2 long-forgotten revenie act pass- 1€ P anroas : or Remainder of Winter an unusual pleture showing how the 10-inch garter snake ti Hstrem? curious lbou‘; a spider in 5t. Charles, TlL., was taught that i gfln’t pay to menkey with what dida’t concern him. The reptile becany enmeshed in the spider’s web and for 24 days he made futile efforts ¢ . free himself. But when he succeeded in bunkinia strand of the flims trap, Mr. Spider wag right there to weaye another. The unique battl ayor guim of St. Charles, who awarded inlmr‘lfiuhnif:nl K. 0 q WOLVES PREYING|G:cz, o 2o ON SHEEP BANDS,"o: >0 S FLORY DECLARES -3 == = NEW MILLINERY Many small shapes and turban effects shown was finally stopped by in the new Winter Hats—Velvets, felts, crepe fabrics M. Behrends Co., Inc. Hunters and' Trappers Re- ! ! Sh ed in the early days of the Re-| ;. S aikD) Yine artme: Sror .| Gov. Lehman for Governor, the 1 ee public. FROCKS Juneau’s ding Department Store g e R et port Intenpr & p Bonds, bils of exchange, and| oo T nominated Sehator Robert F. Wag- Herds Thinned t pr ory motes all had fo. carry |, Sl o O R bkt e Sieenee flpronsnfliion ner, Attdrney-General John J. stamps. A note for $100 was'daxed' oo recently, BE oot - Bennett, and Comptroller Morris (Continued from Page Onhe.) $1. A $500 note hed to carry a press _dispatdhes 'to Thepmmbe Bire, 8. Tremaine. i $2 stamp. £ i3 } Williarh Bray of Sitka, former |yjisiad, A trained: soientitic x gg‘)’(‘:a"sl{";‘él i‘:::rm mep":r‘t‘; In pastel and the new Democratic State Chairmian, was |starf 1§ on the ground’ to' conduct| They have become acclimated, rapatbadih today. It & nat be- nominated for Lieutenant-Governor |¢he work. and forage and climatio conditions | yioveq that the company Wil be dark tones |and John Fitzgibbons and Elmer |-+ I ber. the siege guns. By BYRON | No matte be 12 how much dust cd by the Pre the public' ¥ill' not" be 2 the next few sight of the fact that a!by eath party. But it so happens s also is to' be elect- may ntial mara s |'E. Studley were named for Comn- gressmen-at-Large. born of natural circumstances. Only one-third of the Senate is glected at @ time. The total mem- bership is evenly balanced now between the parties and of the ithirty-odd seats to be filled this iyear, about half likewise is held that most of the Democratic seats are in normally Democratic ter- tory. To hold what they have, the . The buildings - rest on concrete foungdations. They aré practically hermetically sealed, making them temperature proof and-almost en- tirely. . sound proof. | The United States Weather Bu- | reau at Fairbanks is co-operating i the studies by atmosphieric ob- servations from the groumd to as high ab 18,000 fest. Plana ascents areé made twice daily, the plane carrying dufomatic recording i struments. Studies of temperature, wikd veloeities and directions, and berature range of 54 degrees was | ber of {gold now going onh in interior Al- seem to agree with them. The ani- mils are all healthy dnd show a normal rate of growth. Uncmployment Declnes There has been a noticeable de- crease in idle labor in the imterior since early last Summer, Mr. Flory said. While this is partly due to the fact that a large num- job-seekers, disappointed in their quest, have returned to the States, an important factor is the increased interest in pros- ritory. while most of the Republi- |, . N4 | hecting, Pass on' Richardson: Highway . open The Congressional campalgn com- ey jo: |DArOMEUS . pressirés i€’ Bainig'| " lomgly 45 move prospesting for e “longer: than dre preparing to oring cut|con, Seais are in disputed terri-|igge on 4 recent flight, a temn. 2 POt for traffio somelime “omgerc Hia aska than for a great many years,” able to effect repairs this Fall. The shed was at a pdint parall- eling the rapids in the Copper Riv- er. It was endangered by heavy rains last August and temporary repairs were being made' when the entire structure was - taken out by w an earthslide. rr—— To facilitate movemefit of bup- plies into the interior communitizs served by the railroad, the Alaskd Road Commission will endeavor to! i 14 keep the summit at Thompson’s ot A is usual; it was nced tdday by Ike P, Taylor, Acting :Chief Tecorded. ©On the ground 52° ‘e zeto was shown and at 17,- 000 feet the thermomctaer regis- tered 12° below zero. College Enrclment 97 The current enrolment at the Alska Oollege is 97 pupils, all taking reégular cotirses of study, Mr. Flory said. This will be in- A lot of this activity of course,! Democrats need to carry Alabama, toward personal cnds.|youisiana, Arkansas, Florida, Geor- thelr own sakes, individually, gia, Nor‘h Carolina, Oklahoma, ins want very much to keesp Kentucky, Missouri, Maryland, Ari- v government meal tickels and zpna, Ohio, Kansas and New York. while|he Républicans to hold what they e came reasons the culs arz|haye, must carry Conneeticut, Col- g to become the ins. |orado, Wisconsin, Towa, Vermott, Beyond this, however, lies 2 na- | pennsylvania, Hliriois, 'Washington, Mr. Flory declared. Many of thé unemployed have obtained grub- | stakes and have departed for the ‘hills to search for the elusive pay- sireak. — e Engineer. All fréight will have ‘o move in from Valdez to Chitina, a distance of 131 milés, and then be handled by the rallfodd to Mc-({ Carthy, Kennecott and’ gther points. s O - — —— - ] & GARBAGE HAULED | Reasonsble Monthly Rates MRS. ROSENBURG RETURNS K i Capitol Hill. the national T | ate tion of funny people in one group as n the occasion of a film premiere in Woolsey, cigar-chewing gagster; | *; Lupe Velez and her er,' team mate. “Schnozzle” seems to ’ e of a time. | and House. H Jimmy Durante, better Sueenie, and Bert Whee DEMOCRATS HAVE EDGE No one disputes that so far as the Senate is comicerned, the Dem- ocrats stant. with:. an advantage tional stake for each party. No one(New Hampshire, South Dakota, belter than party managers North Dakota, New Jersey, Nevada, ,that whoever is elected President Califoriia; jwill be at a great disadvantage gnd Indiana: lif he faces a hostile majority on It is for this latter reason that iously, while virtually all the Re- orginzation will be!puplican seats are under deterrin- devoting increasing attention from | eg attack. on to the campaigns for Sen- | Utah, Oregon, Tdaho Only a small percentage of the Democratic seats is contested seri- G. 0. P. TRIO IN BATTLES Reports which come over the political grapevine, for instance, agree that as distingulshed a Re- publican* tni- oas Senhators Moses, Watson and Smoot is in the midst nt “Castle of Hea ‘soaring white walls and New York Hospital- gnificent structure ill have a staff of 1,436 tion for 1,007 patients. Up] terior of the o] rating rooman the buildi most completely equipped in the world, persons when it is in full operation and accommoda.- | r photo shows the in- ng. It is the | of campaigns as hard-fought as any in their whole lives: When Democratic claims are imade agalnst such old-timers as these, the Repliblican organization takes note and sends out for re- inforcements. BITTER CAMPAIGNS AHEAD In- the House the entire mem- la great talking-pdint of the fact |that they already have picked up | and soon will b& debatable precinct: law for- children less old in quarries, {nilnes, workshops and stmilar es- tablishments. creased materially at the begin- ning of the second semester when | a numbet of former students now employsd in variotis mnies in ¢the district, will return to the insti- tution ‘to resume their studics. The Oollegs’ has taken over the Matdnuska Experiment Station and preparing to0° do some ‘work™ there, Mr. Flory said. A Mr. Burrdughs, | a graduate of Oregon State Col- lege, has been placed in charge. | The creaniers, formerly operated| by the Alaska Railroad at Curry Las beenn moved to the station wheré" it {5 1ioré convenient to the | farmers of the district. ~This, M. | Flory said, would bénefit the hotiie- steaders of Matanuska Valley and result in an increased dairy pro- ducts output for the region, Mutk Ox Herd Thrives - The hérd of nilisk OXEN, traihs- planted from Greenlanid fo Aldska last year, are tAni¥ing ‘at the Alaska College pasture, where L. bership of 435 is up’ for re-election: J;S(Pfiflé};fi:‘:gmhe ’::n“; |{ CONNORS MOTOR ‘The Democrats, in' the majority ’I‘héxe-m ) i 2 m»flu; CO ir the present House, have made no-dncil . 5 herd, but none was e; this After an absence of three months in the States during which time she visited relatives' in Los An- geles, San Francisco' and' Portland; Mrs. Sam Rosenberg arrived last night on the steamer Alaska: | Teerrons w | GARL JACOBSON JEWERER Pt s S S IT DOESN'T PAY TO} TAKE CHANCES With faulty brakes: M- your brikes don't. act smioothly and’ firnily the longer youw walt the greater your chances for an accident. Let us' gt your car in' trim for ¢ winter seasori: - . velir a8 the animals are’ all young. NEW GEM 5 BLADES—and $1.35 MICROMATIC RAZOR—with ~ ONE 35c TUBE COLGATE'S or PALM. OLIVE SHAVING CREAM Allfor 50 cents This all phat & Congres- ([l ; - : SAVE it. Ge oyt e e f SPECIAL €EOMBIN ATION 1w anleeh » Vahie The world: has aceu! mulnfiéxh'z" An s month, 18 a S0 ben i tollow. 74 Jgnda‘fio 3QC

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