The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, June 8, 1933, Page 2

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g T T e MRS nlllIIIIllllllIllIIIIlIIIlIIIIHIIIHIIIIIII|IIiI|IIIIIIHIII|IIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIlIIlIIIIIlIIIIIl!llIIIIIIIIIlIIIlIlIlllllII]_IIIIIIIlllII|IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlIIIIllllllllllllllllllIIIIIIIIII TROYANNGUNCES 3 APPOINTMENTS FOR NEW BOARD i Dr. Robert Simpson Among' “Three Named by Him for | Board of Optometry { The appointment of threc mem bers composing the Tarri Board of Optometry, the fir: to be named in the Territory, was announced today by Gov. John W | Proy. | Those named W Dr. Robert | Simpson, Juneau; Dr. Rae Carlson, | Ketchikan, and T Brown, | Fairbank: he B on its dutics on July ! the new Optometlry Law b effective. | The appointments, said the G ernor, were made the sug of the optometrists of the tory, themselves. They were m m.\‘ without any consideration o v)oxh.~. cal reward or balance. The pmx- tions are unsalaried. Dr. Simpson’s appoin ente nt is A three years, Dr. Carlson t and Dr. Brow for onz year. Th.- Board elect its own Pri vn“ and Secretary, and is \m}u\w'\l by the law to “make such n|1v' gnd regulations, mot inc with the law, as may be ne ary for the propsr performance of its duties; make such rules and lations, not inconsistent with law, governing the applicants and applications for lice and| make such rules and not inconsistent with may be necessary to Practice of optometry.” Several other simi main to be filled by t These include: Boa: Examiners, Board of Pi Board of Medical Examinér expected these will be made within a few days. E. 0. MDONALD AND SON GET TWO BROWN "BEAR ON ADMIRALTY Edwxrd McDona)d_ who was 13/ years old the day he left New York | City«by United Air Lines’ with His| father, E. O. McDonald, for a bear dunt in Alaska, won the honors| for the family as far as getting brownies goes, his father proudly go' boa is re publiz #aid today. Mr. McDenald got one seéven feet long and the boy's was eight feet. Guests of Governor {Mr. McDonald and his son came into Juneau just before noon to- day with Joe Crosson on the PA ne after a 21-ddy hunt at Mol bor on Admiralty " Island, after luncheon, at which they were o guests of Gov. John W. Troy, the plane for Fairbanks. expect to go to Point Barrow in | search of polar bears tomorrow and Edward says he is going to get the biggest polar beay, too. They p to return to Juneau and con- ‘tinue south by plane with David | llough, of Miami, Fla., who is | ‘hunting at Mole Harbor, in two weeks. Among the avia- $ign. cpmpaniey; in which. Mr. Mc- ‘Koski May Essay to Stop! | hurlers | He may assign himself to the job! | New York. LAt S0 ‘,, s e e B. M. Behrends Co., Juneau’s Leading _THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE IIIIIIIIIIIII|I|IIIIIIIIIIIIII|IIIIHIIllll||IIIIIIIHHIIIIHIIllIIINIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIII|III||IIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIII‘IIIIIIIIIIIIllIIIlIllIIIIIIIIII|IIIIII|III|III||IIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIII Dainty Print DRESSES' That can be worn on so many .occasions throughout the Summer and especially desirable for their smart attractiveness, in patterns and colorings as varied asatheir design and style. B i In Two Groups Specially Priced at $7.50 and -$13.50 Sizes 14 to 44 Inc. Department S‘tdre i i AL SMITH VOTES FOR REPEAL PRIGE QFFERED the elestion of delegates to the New S$mith is shown behind him. (Anorl Former Governor Alfred E. Smith grinned broadly an he register in a New York polling p'ace just before casting h FOR SEALSKINS HITS LOW MARK Stormy ‘Weadther ‘Cuts Sitka Take to 62 Low prices and stormy weathe cut down the s2aling operations, of {Indian hunters of Sitka, .according to a report made today to Capt M. J. O'Connor, Asst. Agent, United States Bureau of Fisheries, by Spe- cial Warden Donald S. Haley w returned on the patrol vessel geon from Sitka. The hunting erations have been closed for year. Buyers are offering only $5 skin, Mr. Haley reported. Thi the lowest price ever recorded the: {and is $4 under last season’s of- ferings when $9 was paid the hunt- d- op- the ned the |€YS. allot in This season’s take only numbersd York state repeal cony n. Mrs. (62 skins. The first pelt was taken ated Press Photo) on April 18, and the last on June MOOSE TOMEET ROBERT TAYUIH BILLS TONIGHT Drive of Paps Toward First Half Victory I'he Elks and moose will meet tonight at €ity Park to’ play off the game that was washed out last esday, it was announced thisl ufternoon by Pr ent Karl Theile of the City League. It will be ‘a regulation “T-inning affair Manager Koski has made no pitcht: selection this afternoon,' and said it depended on how the looked in the bull Wed of stopping the speedy Moose who} | seem headed for a first-half cham- pionship. Jensen, who turned back the| |Elks in his last appearance Jgams!! them, is Slated to try to repeat! that * performance for the Paps! fiow two full games ahead of the Legion outfit as a result of last night's. vietory. Donald is a director, the Pan American Airways. MoDonald and his son made | t a record trip to Alaska from They left that cil a Saturday by plane and at Admiralty Island on that they were delayed a d\\ a forced landing at Buttedale is RE-OPENED Scandinavian Rooms. Single steam- heated rooms $1250 month. —adv. — eee For the first time in- several ye no golfers from Oklahoma | or Louisiana were entered in the 11933 southwestern sectional qu\hf}- ing round for the national open eee Classified ads pay. 3. The weather was unusually stormy and the u|mlmummummmmmmumflmmmm ‘HlllllImmlflIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIMHIIIIIHNHIIIImmfllmfimfllmllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII Five Dollar Average and five-man oared THURSDAY, JUNE 8, 1933. CHAMBER BACKS LOGAL GONTROL OF FISHERIES By Ove rwhelmmg Vote Adopts Motion Endorsing Dimond’s Measure (Continued from Fage One) instead;.of Congress to-administer| and Territory. interest of every Aiuskan, and convinced for the canners, for it to do so” he { the best I am themselves, | de clared. Wickersham Supports It Judge Wickersham5s brief talk on it was direct, to the point and effective. He disposed of the argu- ! ment that it is a political question, citing that both he and Delegate | Dimend, his' opponent last Fall, made local control of fisheries one [ the principal pledges of their | campaigns. “If it is a political proposition, it is umiversal politics and I am for it,” he asserted He declared it is a right that the Territory ought to have pos- sessed long ago, adding that “any man who thinks anything of Al- | aska ought to be for it.” Both parties are pledged to support such a plan and any person who voted for Delegate to Congress last Fall voted for it and Jought to be honest enough to support it now,” he added. He pointed out that Delegate Dimond is going to need the help of every Alaskan to get favorabie action on the measure. It will be | strongly opposed by powerful influ- ences and he expressed the fear that they would prove sufficiently strong to prevent its passage. Cites Own Effort Judge Wickersham cited his own | efforts to get a similar bill passed ! two years ago. He said he had compared in detail the bill be | sponsored and the Dimond measure jand found them substantially u]l‘l]llca] in their provisions. He |had met with stiff = opposition, {and the strongest, he said, came from Juneau. The committee to which his bill s referred had called upon the retary of Interior for an ex- ion of opinion. That officer, m turn, submitted the question to | Gov. George A. Parks who had | reported adversely upon it. He re- ferred to the then Governor's letter in which the basis for his opposi- tion was alleged lack of finances | to provide for proper administra- |tion and regulation, that the cost ‘wou!d be too much for the Terri- ‘to“y to assume. “It isn't anything of the kind,” | declared Judge Wickersham. He 't.hen analyzed the various expendi- |tures of the Bureau of Fisheries Wi _| for several years, explaining their meaning. He spoke of the vast : [producnon of the mdustry, grea&e\ regulate the fisheries of the| Territory. . It ‘gives the Territory| the authority to. take them over when it gets ready. y ought to be controlled by| It will be for the| lto date than that of all other| 7. 8. DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE, WEATHER BUREAU industries combined. Ceuld Cut Expenditures ThB "7 he It was his judgment, he said,) ea't r that the Territory could administer| the fisheries for one-quarter of By th :00‘“‘ i | what it has been. costing. He again e S MeathergBurean) emphasized the = opposition that Forecast for .Yllau_n and vlclnlv". beginning at 4 p.m., June 8: Delegate Dimond would encounter Showers tonight and Friday; gentle variable winds. |in his effort to get the measure| Time Barometer Temp. Humity Wind Velocity ~ Weather | passed. 4 pm. yest'y 29.75 51 56 W, o # Cldy [ However, he asserted, one source 4 am. today 2067 » 8 w 3 s 4 of opposition that he, himself, haa|Noon today 29.63 46 7 s 10 Rain !cncmunored, would not be thrown CABLE AND RADIO REPORTS | against Mr. Dimond. | “Thank God we have got a Gov- YESTERDAY | TODAY iernor who is in favor of it, and| ¢ Highest 4pm. | Lowest4am. 4am. Precip. 4am. I am going to support him,” hel Station temp. temp. { temp. temp. velocity 24hrs. Weather | declared emphatically. Barrow ... 2 26 1416 4 0 cldy “It is a measure of Home Rule|Nome . 46 34 30 32 6 01 Snow that ought to have been adopted|Bethel o 48 42 | 34 34 8 Trace Pt.Cldy long ago.” gm;)la Yukon . 58 52 38 40 4 04 Cldy | anana .. 58 56 | 26 26 lear [ Roden “Detends "Bill | Fairbanks 54 52 38 38 i Tx'gco ccm\ Mr. Roden defended the bill Eagle 62 58 40 40 4 0 briefly. He asserted that the timeigt pay; . 38 33 36 38 20 18 had not come to discuss how thelDutch Harbor ... 44 1 36 38 6 "o Territory. could administer the fish- Kodiak 56 54 44 46 0 0 eries. ‘The bill merely extended, Caordova, 54 54 36 38 4 0 | to the Territory the right to,do $0.| yuneau 51 51 | 28 39 2 06 Cldy It would rest with the chlalatme'snkn 54 —_ ; 38 — 0 A 0 Pt. Cld; to say when and how it should be! Ketcmhm STy 48 ; 3B 36 4 06 ‘C]E‘Bfi done. Prince Rupert ... 52 50 | 40 4 4 12 Rain Mr. Connors declared that long! Edmonton 52 | 40 44 4 12 Cldy distance control had driven the! portland 60 | 48 a8 6 52 Rain fishing boats of the Indians off|Seattle PA° 1 62 86 413 ida Rain the waters of Alaska, from an San Francisco 60 56 | 50 6 0 Clear occupation that had given them! livings for ages, and put them on| the beaches to starve. lior and from the Gulf of Alaska to Oregon. He pointed out that there a‘e'ancl the Gulf of Alaska with showers in Southeastern Alaska, in Alaskan tions of the eastern Interior now 10,000 children educational institutions and . soon The barometric pressure is moderately low in the eastern Inter- and portions of Bering Sea. jsure is high south of the Aleutians and modemately high in southern It is lowest in Alberta por- The pres- they would be graduating at the pering Sea with partly cloudy weather in those districts and cloudy rate of 1,000 annually, “What's all| this for, cannot administer our resources in our own interests and for the fu-| ture generations what is the use of| us staying here?”, he asked. \ entific Work Untouched Anderson told /the Chamber, Mr. o weather over nearly all the remainder of Alaska. Temperature chan what's the use? If We| have been unimportant. 1 Executive Board reported allotted $20 it had to the re-organized Girl Scouts and sponsored its or- ganization. A letter from "that the scientific work of the| | relative to the forthcoming Good Federal Government, costing some| Will Tour of the Seattle Chamber $50,000 annually, would continue 0 of Commerce was received. be done by it. ry. 1t con- | It does a similaritained a short list of names of| work throughout the entire coun-“hose who have already signed The Territory would not be up for the trip. Mr. McGovern said required to duplicate it, and ex-lg complete list would be sent just| penditures for that class of activity|prior to sailing. | would not have to come out of the| ‘Territorial treasury. {Aet have been Copies of the Industrial Recovery received by the J. E. Pegues closed the discussion|Ghamber and may be seen at the by maintaining that during normal|office of the Secretary. business periods the Territory could, rhe Chamber's latest game folder finance administration costs without, i pecejving considerable favorable difficulty. He cited figures [‘Omlpubhmtv Secretary G. H. Walms- official sources showing annual| ey reported, reading one csnment h balances in the Territorial | from the Marine Dige s‘.‘ tle. treasury ranging from $600,000 to He reported 15 ing 0 received some $850,000. Had the Territory and answered durin, e past week. been in control of the fisheries b O I g during those years, it could have, RETURN TO CHILKOOT expended just as much money as, s Montgomery McKzen, wife the Federal Government did and, of Lieut. McKee, and F. A. Hillard still had healthy balances on hand Since 1929, he pointed out, busi- ness and industry have been sub- nng They normal. Naturally the cash re-| end wife of Chilkoot Barracks, ame to Juneau on the Forpance, registered at the returned home on Gastineau, curces of the Territory have de-|ioday. creased. Improvement has already started. Indications point to turning prosperity for the fisheries and when they prosper the Terri- tory does. Lack of finances, he| contended, had not been establish-| ed and fear of it ought not to be allowed to prevent endorsement and support of the measure by the Chamber. Chamber Aids Girl Scouts Little other business was tran- sacted by the Chamber today. The To AUl Who Suffer Stomach Agony, Gas 4 and I ndigestion | | June 17. LOSES LIFE AS BOAT CAPSIZES Drowns Near T.enakee When ' Boat Swarmps—+ Companion Makes Shore Nonald Ta; age unknown, was drowned near Tenakee last night when a boat swamped in which he and Jack Branden were proceeding to their eamp from town, according (to advices received this afternoon by United States Marshal Albert White. The body was later recov- S \ered. Taylor's companion succeeded in swimming ashore. He ' went to Tenake2 for aid in recovering ‘the {body. The accident occurred between 7 and 8 o'clock Wednesday evening. Taylor’s mother is said to reside at 3,790 Ashland Avenue, Detroit, Mich. ~ She was notified of the tragedy by Marshal White today. — MRS. MALONY AUSTIN MARRIES PROFESSOR OF MINING AT U..OF W. Mrs. Malony Austin, Mary Malony, has recently mar- ried Herbert Corey, Professor in the school of mining engineering at the University of ‘Washington,| according to word received here by Arthur ° Thane fgom mutual friends in the States. ' —..——— GOODY SALE Lutheran Ladies’ Aid, Suwrdny. —adv. formerly boats used by the hunters were un- able to take the ocean on a ma- Jority of the days of the season. The herds were unusually abun- dant and seal were in sight almost all the time, — - EVERETT MAKI AND MRS. LILY MAKI BOUND ‘OVER TO GRAND JURY WED. Everett Makj ana Mrs. Lily Maki were bound over to the Grand Jury at a hearing /in the ‘United States Commissioner's Court yesterday. The bail for each was set at $1,500 by Judge Charles Sey. They are charged With assault with a dan- gerous' weapon op ,Enoch Carlson. | Money Back If One Bottle of Dare’s Mentha Pepsin Doesn’t Do You More Good Than Anything, You Ever Used. You can be so distressed with gas not get rid of such attacks alto- and fullness and bloating that you'gether? ‘Why have indigestion at] thlnk your heart is going to stop all? beating. | Wit this wonderful medicine you| Your stomach may be so distend- ‘can overcome indigestion or dys- {ed that your breathing is short and pepsia, or any abnormal condition| | gaspy. ithab keeps the stomach in constant You think perhaps you are suffo- | rebellion and one bottle will prove cating. | it. You are dizzy and pray for quick| Over 6,000 bottles sold in one| relief—what’s to be done? | small New Jersey town last year— Just one _tablespoonful of Dares Ask yourself why. Demand Dare’s| Mentha Pepsin and in ten minutes Mentha Pepsin, a pleasant to take, the gas disappears, the pressing on, health building stomach elixir that thc heart ceases and you can|Butler Mauro Drug Co. and regular breathe deep and naturally. pharmaeists anywhere in America, ‘Qh! What blessel relief; byt why | guarantee. —ady. * LOWER FRONT —— e —— ‘While the team was batbing 236 [for seventh rank, the Houston club of the Texas league took an early THE RE-OPENING OF THE NEW S(}ANDINAVIAN and.gBY«S,TAL BATHS TUB—HOQT OR. COLD SHOWERS—STEAM BATHS Steam Heated Rooms, $12.50 month. Special Rates, Day or Week TELEPHONE 513 FOR APPOINTMENT ~ * Under New Management ST, écross from City Dock Entrance MR. and MRS. EL1 TANNER ! Foster McGovern' the ship | A CTIVITY IN - BUILDING ON SAN COAST SHOWN FRANCISCO, Cal, Jupe 8. —The huge expansion -of . Pacific Coast building activity is shown by May citi 000, 1000, a tres permits from 25 of the leading The permits totalled $36,- dous increase. ——o—— WOMEN OF MOOSE GIVE CARD PARTY TONIGHT The Women of the Moosz will ntertain this evening with one of their popular card parties at the Moose Hall. Games brid €ac that will be played are e, whist and pinochls with at- r the winners of h. Delmuus refreshments which have proved one of the attractions of these par| ing will be served dur- the evening. -—— Classified ads pay. have always wanted a washer J UNEAU—Phone 6 which would YO | Require No Attention ; Dry Clathes More Quickly { Wash Faster { } Eliminate Bunching and, Tangling Save Money CALL AND SEE G E WASHER | Alaska Electri¢'’ Power Company | DOUGLAS—Phosé 18 | do these things THE Light & | INSURANL.E Allen Shattuck, Ine. . [Egtablished 1898 Juneau, Alaska’ § vy SCHLITZ BLUE RIBBON |

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