The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, April 4, 1933, Page 8

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PR Vv RNV AT '8 THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE. TUESDAY, APRIL 4, 1933. WILL INSTALL [OFFICERS ARE LOCAL PASTOR | CHOSEN;MOOSE THIS EVENING HOLD ELECTION | Rev. Glasse to Be Offlcxall)' Inducted by Alaska Presbytery \ . F Rodenberg Will Be Dictator—Other Posi- tions Are Filled Edward F. Rodenberg was elected Tonight at 7:30 o'cloc lic installation of Dictator of Juneau Lodge No. 700, A. Glasse as pa al Order of Moosé, at a largely crn Light Pr y attended mesting last night. take place ai al Other officers chosen for the the service being in charge Of coming year were: Vice-Dictator,| . members of the ry of Al- Guildo Battello; Secretary, Grant aska who arr on the A. Baldwin; Treasurer, Emil P. missionary coming Rundich; Prelate, Sam Ritter; ‘here from re the Trustee for three-year term, Robert Presbytery be ession. | A. Light; Delegate to national con- The ir mon. will be vention, C. H. MacSpadden; Alter- preached by the Rev. Jackson L. nate Delegate, Ralph Reischl. Webster of Sitka, and other mem-| Four new members were initiated bers of the Presbytery who are last night to swell the rapidly in- expected to be present are the creasing membership of Juneau Rev, Carl W. Griffiths of Skagway, lodge. the Rev. Eugene Bromley of Haines, e the Rev. Robert K. Fogal of Hoo- nah, and the Rev. David WaggonerlHuusE PASSES of Juneau. Max Scriber will sing “My Task” i by Ashford; and members of the K BILL choir will st with the congre l gational singing, Mrs. J. C. Staple- ton directing, with Mrs. Trevar\ ANENTSGHUULS Davis at the organ. All on the Channel who ar. interested are most coriaily invit- | ptt % e Measure to Re-organize| .o - Schools Is Passed with Minor Amendments DISTRICT COURT WILL BE IN SESSION AT 11 | TOMORROW MORNING | Getting down to work directly tative Hofman of Seward. It upon its return to Juneau after amends the present highway act by a heavy session in Ketcikan, the requiring a re-organization of the | United States District Court will Divisional Boards, putting them on" be in session tomorrow morning at a per diem basis, making the Ter- 11 o'clock to take up current mat- . ritorial Highway Engineer Chair- (Cunh'lhfll from Page One.) Daily Cross-word Puzzle ACROSS - Pokes: colloq. Body of water Notion Ballad _ v Bolution of Yesterday's Puzzle 9. Brave, rega. lute and noble . “The Gloomy Dean”, . Animal ‘with i 6. 8. Among 2 3 s ALASKANS AR GLAD OVER TROY APPIONTMEN Back from West- \ {Meherin, | ward Trip, Says Interior- |Akska SURVEY PARTY LEAVES | | ites Feel New Deal Here People at the Westward and In- terior are happy over the appoint- ment by President Roosevelt of John W. Troy, Juneau publisher, to be’ the next Governor of Alaska, according to J. J. Meherin, who re- turned to Juneau aboard the Alas- ka yesterday morning, after a four weeks' trip that took him as far Narrow road antlers Huge rock . Accomplish 7. Burn supers - Colostial being | ficially Shap 18, Genus of : Seng out planis ; 19. Antenna . Cw“y L X vt 20. Great Lake 3 Tl"lefl ‘'ull of briers . Newspaper 24, Liquefies paragraph 26. Notable per- , Mentally " fods of his ‘sound tory . Tall coarse 27. Exists grass stem 29. Officeholderg . Elusive 30, Spasmodic | Thick soups muscular . Wreath or contraction rla; 32. Greek letter Ball- By 3. sign of the | Wager nfinltive . Composition 34. Bard 48, Parasitic 2 sur \ for one 35 Port {nsects 3. Laments 41 Doubls 3T Compulsion 49, Bovine animal & Light helmot 43. Son of Judah 39. Title 50. Smooth 6. Fine driving Utter 0. Gazea 81. Units o partifien 48, Donating the 42 Afternoon 52 Organ of sight 4. Attentlon ‘maiden functions b3. RQ 1. Forever name 44. Possesed W & Unnaturalized 41, Close 45. Small fish 1 Klnd of sall residents . Pronoun ANE N AN N ters that require immediate atten- man of each of the four district tion. Boards, and authorizing them to| Whether or not special grand supervise and direct expen-itures on and petit jury panels will be called all projects involving not jaore than at this time, was not known today. $3,500. S \ The bill retains the present co- CLEARY HILL MINER IS |operative provisions and leaves nllw BOUND FOR FAIRBANKS major projects in the hands of the | Territorial Board. D. R. Gustafson, operator of the; Mr. Hofman is also the author of Cleary Hill Mine, near Fairbanks, 3 joint memorial, introduced today, and Mrs. Gustafson, are passengers’patitioning Gongress to remove pro- aboard the Yukon, bound for their tection from sea lions. ! home, after a winter's vacation Disapprove Aid Repeal i Outside. | The House Ways and M’nnx! B - HAOE: SR PALK Pmspecwrs Ald Act, recommendmg that it do not pass. It was passed: y the Senate recently by a unani- NEW George Hogg, of Hogg Island, Kodiak, has just made arrange- Dis- Tous vote. :E:Lzsor:vm;rnfie:m;?rkmggy The House concluded its routine | business before noon and recessed | SRS it inenln @R Sor iine until 3 p.m. in order to consider a resolution to' Congress asking the | exclusion of Alaska from the pro- vxslons of the Connery 30-hour per | week labor bill SILVER VER IS TO 'BEDISCUSSED | coming season, according to a communication received today from L. Preschner, of the distributing company. e e Miss Margaret Kiloh, who suf- fered a broken leg a week ago and has been confined to St. Ann's Hospital, is improving rapidly. OLL AT CONFERENCE By 5-3 Vole Authorizes| sections 725 to 738, of the Com- |piled Laws of Alaska, 1913. lial in second reading. The memor- SENATE PAss*Es D'VANE'S BILL FOR PIONEERS Trustees of Home to Care for Surplus (Continued from Page Six) the Compiled Laws of Alaska, 1913, relative to the redemption of prop- sold under execution of judg- ment; No. 39, to amend section 2,529 relative to choosing jurles m‘ Commissioners’ Courts; No. 40,/ | combining the statutes on the meth- | od of selecting and impaneling grand juries; and Bill No. 20, pro- viding for the disposition of un- claimed personal property left with consignees or bailees, and repealing The Senate also considered three code amendments and one memor- ial, urging a survey of Bering Sea Fisheries resources, was continued on the calendar until tomorrow for TEN INDICTED IN BURIAL OF WOMAN ALIVE £ Grand Ju;rn California Acts in Filipino Cult Case MARTINEZ, Cal, April 4—Ten murder indictments against mem- bers of a Filipino cult, charged with participating in the buglal alive of a wife accused of unfaith- fulness, have been returned by the Contra Costa County grand jury. Witnesses testified that Mrs. Ce- cline Novarro, aged 26, was tried by the cult tribunal, convicied, beaten and interred alive by toré¢h- light on the night of last Novem- ber 19. The woman’s body was exhumed from the grave on Jersey Island, in the San Joaquin Rive,, last Sunday. Harvesting of the 1932-33 oyster crop from the Chesapeake Bay to the Gulf of Mexico gave employ- |an amendment at the request of !Senator Lomen. Congressme—n—-\flill Be Call- ed Together by Sec- retary of Treasury Burners for Ranges Cireulating Heaters Heating Stoves Small Heating Plants See one of these $25.00 burners under actual working conditions at ALSTROM’S NEWS STAND Rice & Ahlers Co. “We tell you in advance what job will cost” | States Senator Key Pittman told the newspapermen today that Sec- |formed him he would call a gen- |eral conference of Congressmen | within a few days to seek plans to |aid silver. | |TERHUNE RETURNS FROM TRIP TO H. W. Terhune, ficer of the Alaska Game Commis- sion, who has been in Washington, D. C. on official business for sev- eral weeks, returned to Juneau on the Yukon this morning. ———— Agricultural use of explosives is a new subject taught farmers by the Alabama Polytechnic Institute | extension service. ANOTHER SHIPMENT OF CUT FLOWERS Daffodils, large stems, dozen .20¢ Canned Fruit and Vegetables, large cans, 2 for At GARNICK’S, Phone 174 $ DAY SALE $ Exceptional Values Department Store - Open_ Everlings WASHINGTON, April 4—United retary of Treasury Woodin has in- | WASHINGTON, D. C. Executive Of- ment to about 17,000 men. Vote For Peerless Bread At All Grocers TR R T north as Fairbanks. “I was in Fairbanks when news of the appointment came, Mr. Me- | herin said, “and everybody to whom |T talked seemed to feel that the appointment of Mr. Troy portended bright things for Alaska and was the beginning of the Roosevelt ‘New Deal’ in the Territory. I found the same feeling existed wherever T stopped on my return to Juneau.” From a business standpoint, ac- cording to Mr. Meherin, who is representative in Alaska for Hills trip he has made in three years. “After the bank moratorium ev- erything began to look better,” Mr. Meherin said. “While times have not been bad at the Westward or in the Interior, they have been quiet. Immediately following the moratorium in Cordova, where I was at the time, Cordova received word that two of the canneries there would operate this season. The next day a shrimp cannery- man was wired a contract from {San Francisco for 500 pounds of chrimps a day. People there feej| that the country is over ti.c hump of the depression and that gocc times are ahead. ising at Fairbanks where many |small gold mining properties are openjnu up. And a similar con- Brothers Coffee, this is the best| | Judge and Mrs. “The coming season 100ks prom- | dition prevails at Anchorage. Pew- ple there are interested in the fact that English capital is going into Willow Creek with extensive deval- opment plans.” Something intangibie as hap- | pened to people throughout Alaska, Mr. Meherin said, that is making Lhem feel good times, and that has m in a mood to buy again. Mr Meherin will spend about ten days in Juneau before leaving for Ketchikan and other Southeastern ports. ON YUKON TO SPEND SUMMER IN INTERIOR With plans to make isolated sur- veys along the Alaska Railroad and the boundaries of Mount McKinley National Park, a party from the Bureau of Public Surveys left for Seward on the Yukon this. morn- ing. Floyd G. Betts is in charge of the party which includes J. E. Stewart, L. A. Dauphing, H. Tor- kerson, E. Kinnecutt and F. A. Gardner who arrived in Juneau this morning from Seattle to join | the party. They will remain 1n the Interior all summer, according to present plans. . JUDGE WiCKERSHAM AND WIFE RETURN TO JUNEAU FROM WASHINGTON, D. C. Judge James wickersham, form- erly Delegate-to-Congress from Al- aska, and Mrs. Wickersham arrived in Juneau this morning on the| ;. 0,1 Yukon from Washington, where they have been since last November. Until they move into their home at Seventh and Seward Streets, Wickersham will be at the Zynda Hotel. — - —— ALASKA ROADP COMMISSION MEN ENROUTE TO CHITINA Charles Garwood and Charles Littlejohn, foremen for the Alaska Road Commission with headquart- ers at Chitina are aboard the Yukon, returning to their homes| after vacationing in the States. 30- HOUR WEEK LABOR MEASURE MENACES NORTH |Five-Day WJBill in Con- gress Threatens to Kill Local Industry (Continuea rrvm rage Gne) interstate of foreign commerce any article or commodity produced or manufactured in any mine, quarry, mill, cannery, workshop, factory or | establishment situated in United States or foreign country in which any person employed or permitted to work more than five days in any week or more than six hours in any day. Passage this bill will greatly reduce proportion wages paid local inhabitants Alaska in fishing and probably other industries. I ap- "peared before House Labor Com- mittee today urging exemption Al- |aska from scope bill and particulars ly that provision bill be not applied bona fide residents Alaska, but without suceess. Will attempt se- cure amendment on floor but out- come uncertain. If Legislature agrees my views prempt action should be taken and wire to Chair- man Labor Committee House and Senate.” Chamber Also Acts The measure was discussed today by Executive Board of the Cham- ber of Commerce and Secretary G. . ‘Walmsley was directed to send a telegram of protest to Delegate |Dimond to be transmitted to Con- |gress. | Members of the Legislature also wired Chambers of Commerce of |their respective communities urg- |ing similar action be taken. | e, RETURNING FROM VISIT | Mrs. Frank Granite, whose hus- iband is operator of an oil well at Katalla, is a passenger on the Yu- Jkon for her home. flflllllllIII|lllllllHlllllllllillfllmlillllfllllllmlIlllllIIIIIIIIIIIIIllllllIIlmlmllllIIIlllllllllllIIllllfllllIIIlllllllllll|llllllllll“ll|||l||Illllllllillmllllllllllllml flIIIIlllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIHIIIIIIIIII lIIIllllmlllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIHIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlllIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIllllllIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIB PROGRESSIVE TICKET Vote It Straight For Mayor THOMAS B. JUDSON For Councilman For Cou GEORGE E. KRAUSE ncilman JOHN GREEN For Councilman J. B. BERNHOFER Vote This Ticket Straight for Strict Economy in City Management VOTE EARLY. Polls open at 9 a. m. and close at 7 p. m. COMMERCIAL BROKERS RETURN TO JUNEAU FROM WESTWARD TRIP Back from their first trip of the year to the Westward, where their coming is said to be the annual harbinger of spring, half 2 dozen traveling men arrived in Juneau on the Alaska yesterday. They bring ‘word of better business and pleas- ant journeys, Commercial brokers arriving on the Alaska were Oscar R. Hart, of ' | Floeser-Hyneman, San Francisco; Boxter Felch, Munsingwear; Frank Scully, McKesson Drugs; J. S. Jef- frey, M. Seller and Company; H. B. Crewson, A, Schilling and Company, and J. J. Meherin of |Hills Brothers, Mrs. Jeffrey accompanied her husbad on his trip to the west- ward. Chet Johnson, of the National Grocery Company and J. P, Mor- gan of Libby, McNeill and Libby. left on the Alaska for Petersburg yesterday. H. D. Carbray, of the Seattle Hardware Company, arrived on the Yukon today from Ketchikan, |PIONEER PACKING CO. SUPERINTENDENT ON YUKON FOR CORDOVA ‘W. H. Gilbert, accompanied by his wife and two children, Billy and Marnie, are passengers aboard the Yukon in port this morning en- route to Cordova. Mr. Gilbert is superintendent of the Pioneer Packing Company of Cordova where preparations are now being made for the season's operations. Dick Gammon, master mechanic of the Pioneer Packing Company, is also aboard the Yukon. —————— MISS SILLS ARRIVES Miss Vollie M .Sills arrived on the Yukon: from Seattle and will be employed in Juneau at the Cash Bazaar. Miss Sills is regist- ered at the Zynda Hotel. . | Read the ads as carefully as yot | read the news articles. = AR e ; g R o

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