The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, July 27, 1933, Page 2

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£l THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, THURSDAY, JULY 27, Breesettes, 2-pie ce, $1.00 Non-run Rayon Bloomers, Panties, 4 Stepins, 50c each Non-run Rayon Pajamas, 75c pair Lace Trimmed Dance Sets, $1.50 Princess Slips and Silk Petticoats, $1.95 each Ladies Cotton Gowns, white and colors, 50¢ Ladies’ Brassieres, 50c¢ Rayon Slips. 50¢ Girls’ Rayon Combinations and Slips, 75¢ each Girls’ Rayon and Pongee Pajamas, $1.00 each Girls’ Rayon Vests and Panties, 50c each Children’s Lisle Summer Union Suits, 50¢ REMNANTS E New Materials—New Assortment I All at Half Price B M. Behrends, Co.; Juneau’s Leading Dopartmcm Store Thl. remarkable picture nhow- lq—chroudod rock of ‘Ages Reef, fugged promontory of iste Ro| 0 ‘any of \p- 118 pmm dn boatd. The ship an.uy listed to Lisle Union Suits, Ladies’ Lisle Vests, 35¢ each 5¢ haw the patatial éxcursion stéamse: F ap R FORTY-Ef L HALJE HY | BOARDS NAMED §Y PRESIDENT SATE Are tq R}; rt I thine dlat ]y Ql’ S rograms —_— | WASBINGWN .mly 21~Presi- | dent’ goo%évelt« ws y named 48 Boards of three’ mem rs "edch to; formulate public works programs worthly of quick approval for em- ployment and boosting the Federal xpénditure list in a cross section of the nation. The members of the Bosnu in- clude Democrats and Repubuca.n\ with a generous sprinkling of en- gineers, business mén, bankers, merchants, editors, publishers and labor leaders. It will be the duty of the boards to study wortHy projects in their respective States and forward rec- ommendations immediately to ‘Washington. ARE WA ‘m REDUCE TAKES Unless Curtallm;nt Madc; at Once, Local District | V ! May Be Closed § (Continued from Page Ome) “The limit catch for Area 2 be- tween Cape Spencer and Willapa Harbor will be reached very early | themselves to ‘curtail. the -present | 3 Already , three| rate of landings. million. pounds of fish have been landed: from this area more than last year at the same time. “The catch limit in. éach area {was_ fixed by the Commission at sych amounts as it deemed could safely be taken without damage to | the future supply. was done | after full public hearings at which | | the Commission pointed out very | { definitely that unléss there were {some form: of curtailment the sea- son would close early. It was B | further pointed out that, unless the treaty. should . be amended, the Gommission had no power to spread the catch over a longer season, but this would have to be done by the fleet itself. Some Have Curtailed “The Commission .is informed that the vessel owners and ' fish- ermen made a sincere attempt to work out veluntary curtailment and that a large part of the fleet did curtail; This fact, together with general -businiess improvement, probs ably - caused - the -rise in halibut prices. .- Many vessels in Area 2, however, did, not -join in the cur- tailment, and unless.those inter ested in this area themselves im- mediately take hold of the situa- tion the limit will probably be reached by September 1 and Area 2 closed. “Full warning was given last year in regard to this situation, and it" is now desiréd to repeat theé warning. The members of the Commission’ would ' regret exceed- ingly td'see any distress among the g+ L&“E“pe jqun. BOYS ARE RUN" R e BVER BY AUTO; 3 ARE KILLED Bodies Are Found on Hlsh : way — Skulls Foun Crushed—No Clues MARTINSVILLE, Virginia, July! 31.. — James. Hammond, Howard | Hammond and Arch Purdy, rang- ing from 12 to 15 years of age, were killed and Archer Dillon was severely injured while lying asleep on the shoulders of a highway, near Spencer when they were run over by an unknown driver. Fall Asieep The boys, who lived near Mar- tinsyille, were walking home from| Stuart, Dillon sald, when they stopped to rest and fell asleep. A man named Tatum Bent, on .an early morring fox hunt, made discovery when the headlights ' Ris car revealed the three in a row and the injured } nearby. o crushed and the bodies were mu ms.* 6 the three boys had bgen crushed was carried to a| he told ‘The officers | the driver | the boys. | In Kidnaper War (Continued 1rom Pags onea In a recent wtdely dhc-ql kidnaping cate #e family netifted 'us W instructed’ thein' l% inig all mail' to cur such a way' tha$' the prints on' the em preserved. These prints -nlvéd the case. In another case the kldmwers used an airplane. Obviously, ‘no private family could hope to deal effectively with such modern meth- ods. The only way is to turn to such agencies as the bureau of in- vesngauon, that is- equippzd to cope with the present-day organ- {ized underworld. P How Time Is Lost We were not. notified of the O'Connéll kwnlping until Monday night. The' young man disappearéd Friday. ‘Wie learned of it ‘through' a telegram to Senator Copeland of New York. That meant four days of supremely valuable time | was lost. Let me enplmin -nh. the family in such a situation can depend on federal officers for quiet, efficient sécret operation. The spirit of this department is, first and last, to get re- sults. It is difficult to say Just why this hideous crime is on the in- crease, Most likely, the expected repeal of the eighteenth amend- .ment, is driving criminalg.inte: this new field, as they-foresee the logy of a good living 'through- the sale | of - liquor. Legalized- beer hae+al ready deprived many- ef M o( their usual illegitimate unemploy- || ment. ‘We are planning, and m al xeady receiving mich cloger CO- ation. with' local autl gSsary more men will ‘the tedefal fofoes untl: the ‘Wave - Kidna ‘anl friends’ a%’ orng 4 % xgpasy LEAV) AFTER THREE DAYS H Ernest N. Patty, Dean-of the' eral days. steamer Yu\nn ?fl%&fiflm ance man, left for the" on the steamer Yukon, ,z\fl& Dt 1 Coop| vis mapocfive mdents heré for sev- Déan Patty will talk to s dents [a ciated” With the J'un'eau-Yoihg Hardware Co., ‘and representative of several ‘furnituré and hardware fisheérmen and hope that steps will pramptly be taken for such cur- tailthent as will' prolong the sea- son.” oF “TREASORE HUNT” unusual’ and hilarious time last ott ;he instruction codes, left in| separated places in this , ‘telllig them how to pro=' hoHtiss! T déid in the Treasure' Hunt and|d0Waitogethor and shared the same mfi; et r.given by Mrs. R. J. 'ti}' ‘Wallls George and . Tke lor . for Mrs. irablé; of Portland, Ore. who is her sister, Mrs. G. F. Free- " The qnuu gathered at Mr. Tay- «home to receive initial in-| stauctidhs as to how to proceed, then it fivé ears started out to nt the Hidden directions. They|: were first to proceed to the Thane Road Whepe .~ further - instructions ‘Alaska, Asncunum éonege and[were supposed to be hidden in ~code.. Through the unexpectegd ~of an ally, the hunters that they were to go Anchordge: on, his return. trip to 1o Toleh Hotk near Montana Creek s t0" fihd' the ‘next set of coded in- drivers of the different cars g at. top speed in an attempt. first to reach the treas- pro. The exciting adventure ended L cottage of Mrs. Somme en’ in' the wood pile at theé pommers cottage, |as long as the financial situation | | today. ‘t.le work will unless action is taken by the fleet | Twenty-five Juneau women had/ Hatty, directions, which’ were® all writteh| gd ctions;’ then under bridges, etes mérry hunt continued with WORK TO START ON WILLOUGHBY AVENUE | FRIDAY SAYS MAYOR Willoughby Avenue s In such a serious condition that it has been decided by Mayor I. Goldstein to| start work tomorrow on the lower |end of the avenue and continue of the city permits, he announced All local labor will be used and| include a fill of | about 400 feet. “We cannot waif any longer for the Federal Gov- ernment funds to carry out this work as the situation requires im-‘ mediate attention,” Mayor Gold- stein said. ‘; e | Advertisements in today's Empire | tell you how much foods, clothing | and household nceds will cost you| before. you go shopping. | 3MEN HURT {Take-off for thhl Over Atlantic b{ Four Fliers Delayed DUBLIN, July 27.—The wheels of the plane which Australian Capt. T. P. Ulm and three compan- jons planned to fly to North Am- erica, sank in the sand at the Port | Marnock Airdrome near here re- sulting in injuries to five persons. Planks were being put under the plane to raise it but the machine shpped pinning three persons under | the fusilage. They and two fliers were hurt and taken to a hospital. k,'A BYNOPSIS: The one bright spot in Nicholas Boyd’s tragio’ falk [rom sturdoni:vn’the movies to luneliness and oblivion has been the kindly attentions young and pretty Geor- gie Bancroft has forced upon him. Ana he has dismissed them with & shrup. Nickolas has ulrumnne nero oice too'often, and a’searred face,a limp angd canceled contract are his rewart Even' Bernie Boud.” his wife, has tefe him to sall for his native’ England atone, ‘and-in his gloom Georgie's well-meant minis- mmu;: on'the boat lave made no iMrsdeton, But 1oib he has turned wp af the tnn th the village where Georgie lives with her dissolute and-violent uncle. Cbapter 11 _* GEORGIE’'S CALL walk down the village, She bad:offereo to help Mrs. Love- lock about the house as she had al- | ways done betore she went to Amer- | lca, and had been bluntly repulsed. “I've managed without you all thls time, and: I ean go on manag: ing,” was all the thanks she re- ceived. “It hasm’t been very long," Geor- | gle reminded her. “Six weeks Is no time at all.” “It seems like six years when | you're left to do everythiug. for an | ungrateful man who's never sober.” | Mrs. Lovelock retorted. “Not that I'm complaining. Heaven knows.” “It sounds rather like it.” Georgle sald. She slipped down from the table where she had been sitting swinging her legs, and walked out of the house. It was a dull morning, with a sus- piclon of mist hanging about the trees and flelds which seemed to | speak of‘heat to come later in the day. Georgie walked along slowly, her eyes very thoughtful. Nicholas Boyd would probably | still be in bed, she decided. She hated bed herself, it always seemed such wicked waste of timeg besides she was always afraid that if she something good. Not that anything very much ever happened in the sieepy little yillage, but all thé same perhaps some day It might and then it she was aslecp in bed, how would she be able .o i participate in t? { 'She wondered which room Mrs. Speéars: had given Nicholas at the Boar's Head: Georgie knew all the rooms. There was one where Queen Blezabeth was supposed to bave slept;. it was all old rafters and still contained a high four-poster bed- stend. Georgle's uncle said it was all rot about the. Queen having ever slept there; he said that if she had occu- pled:half the beds she was supposed to bave done; she must have spent her entire life going trom one innm 10-the other.. At any rate, the Boar's 1d was very old; it had a secret. passage (blocked up now) and one or two old fireplaces, Mrs. Spears had done her best to unerve its artiquity; most of the rniture was antique, and last year hqn increase of custom /had made es8ary to bulld out the old din- #groom, she had insisted on bay- 1ng it done “in keeping,” as she ex- | préssed it. “Georgle thought 1t was a pity Nigtralas' had not told her»whiere be intendéd tc stay; she might Bave helped him by telling him which was and most comfortable bed- reom, and they might bave travelled i{eabicup - from tho station, ‘which would have "een clieaper.. She won- doud what he would say when he dlqefl).od that-he had walked right ”,anemys cnmp, heuolt be- H . would at once plek up] .nd. 80 somewhere else, and that n wo! be a pity. he slghed and quickened ber footsteps. y the World FORGOT A New Serial b Ruby M. Ayres_ IN .the morning Georgie took a| overslept herself she might miss | When Trouvé had licked her all over, they went into the Boar's Heac togéther and straight across the low ceilinged, black-raftered hall to Mrs Spear’s own si:ting-room. Georgfe opened the door withou! knocking. “I've come back,” she said, by way of apology. Mrs. Spears rose from a paper strewn desk. She was certainly as Mrs, Lovelr :k always described her “one of the painted ones,” 'for even at this early hour of the morning she had a complexion the like of which could not even have been rivalled in Hollywood. and ber bair was of that brassy shade which the unen lightened mistake for gold. But she was a zindly soul, as Georgie knew well encugh, and i she was blunt, she was at any rate unaffected and honest. “Well, | am glad to see you,” she said, and bending frow her superior beight she gave the girl a resound- ing kiss. “l heard you were back,” she sald. “Your uncle was In bere last night. Well, and how are you?” “Very well, thank you. lovely time.” “I'll bet you did,” Mrs. Spears said heartily. *“You're looking tine. And have you lost your heart to anyone?" Georgie shook her nead. “And oovody bas lost theirs to me,” she said quaintly. “Which is al! to the good,” Spears declared. "Time enough for you to think of a husband in anotber ten years. By the way, I've got a gentleman staying here who must have come over on your boat as you both arrived yesterday. Mr. Nich olas Boyd.” Georgie ~added. my boat,” she said. stay long?” 1 bad “Yes, he was on “Is he golng to E'S .aken the rooms definitely for a month, becroom and sit- ting-room. Funny he should come here of all places,” she sald; her eyes searched the girl's face with sudden suspicion. *“He hasn'f come she asked witt a twinkle, “Not by any chance,” Georgle said tirmly. “I Jdon’t think he likes girls ried.” *“As It ttat makes any difference, Mrs. Spears mocked her. married ones are always the worst, in my opinion.” “Well, he’ isn’t,” Georgle sald “He's been il}, you know.” “lknow, and a fine mess he's made of his face, basn't he? And him that was so0 handsome.” 3 “It's'the jort of scar that fades in time,” Georgie sald’ quickly. “And anyway | never mind scars myself.” “That’s because you: haven'’t got any,” the landlady of the Boar’s Head asserted. "It your face was all smashed up like Mr. Boyd's, you wouldn’t be too: pleased about it, you mark my words,” To cbange the conversation sbe asked how ber uncle had been be having during her absence. “Just the same,” sald comfcrtably. mo he.isn’t dead.. L . here till'we closed, and then.I had to get Alt to walk Bome with him,” “1 know. I heard'them come fn,” Georgle sald. o “It's, Q’ tyou:and pulu, Mrs. Spears went on. “And’ ;qdr uncle quite the gentleman. It's bard’ on you !00." “Oh, I don‘t mind,” Geor‘fl- sald. “It's no use worrylug=jt's no’ use workying about anything; it doesn't haln’; E:\: room hnlfi Mr. Jdoyd got? “The ane you like—that looks over the garden,” Mrs, Spears.told her. “And the, sitting-room n door. "Trouvé was lying on the flag: stones outside the Boar's Head when turned the corner, r SPEARS had told. her that % years agc old stage coaches tfl.&mfl up over those flagstones deposited be-powdered ud be-ruffled gentlamen at mu of the Boar’s Head. She also that Nelson ad.once thie night there on his way to Porlsmoutd, accompanied by Lady flw { “:Aashe drew nearer, Tronvé raised IM' head and looked up, then when he spoke his name he waved a wel- tall and rose slowly to greet eorgle went down on her B‘i“.*"“ ber arms ronnd bim. T8 | 8 -mnchotldolnomm about points; his head big and his legs too long, rgie loved him, 837, wben | have a 1 ghall keep a: :::fi qfi.-oc {he things which promised herseif, He said he wanted to be quiet, and he'll be quiet enough there; a bit tao quiet, I should say, after the lite he's led. Are you going to wait and see him?" “Ob, no,” Gsm’flo said In, md(hn tright. “He doesn’t kiow I live here. 1 don't think he'd be very n{nuddtho did. so I hope :mn won't tell him.” “Not, me, I've enonlh u do. to, mind my 0w business, but I thought. as you'd called in, perhaps you wanted to see him.* z “I'wnt to'see bim right enongh,” Georgle tole Lersélt with a sigh, as she walked home again. “But that isn’t the point.” Ot course they would be | &nu to meet &oi fler cr later, and could not b> rude and pnlmrm: he did not know her. Her hand went. deeply into her coat pocket: and closed over bis cigaretie.case, - .. ' In the meantime she could walt, | (Gopyright. 1933, 13, Doudleday Doran) Georgle reviews her r Serrorrow, and i not thrills 1l Mrs, after you by any'charice, | suppose?" | very much, and anyway he's mar | “The | J. 8. DEPARTMENT OF mmém.‘ruu WEATHER BUREAU The Weather LOCAL DATA /By the U. 8. Weather Bureaw) Forecast for Juneau and vicinity, beginning . at 4 p.m., July 27: Rain tonight and F‘ridny. moderate southerly winds. 4 Time Barometef Humdity Wind Velocity Weather 4 pm. yest'y ......2099 64 62 w 8 Sprinkling 4 am. today ....29.94 52 95 s 7 Rain Noon today .......29.98 53 ' 9 . 8 6 Misting CABLE AND. RADIO REPORTS e eeee——— YESTERDAY | TODAY ; mmao’n| temp. Prociy '::W- W temv veloclty 24hrs. Weather 64 6 52 52 50 50 4 0‘1) 33 g:g 60 58 | 56 56 4 04 Pt. Cldy Fort Yukon . . 82 80 50 50 4 0 Clear Tanana .. - 80 80 48 50 0 0 Clear PFairbanks 8 58 58 4 0 Clear Eagle 80 4 44 4 0 Clear St. Paul 52 44 46 10 .06 Cldy Dutch Harbor .. 64 48 50 8 0 Cldy Kodiak 56 50 50 0 0 Cldy Cordova 54 52 52 0 02 Rain _|Juneau ... - 64 52 52 7 A5 Rain Sitka 68 - 48 - 0 0 Cldy Ketchikan ... 62 60 48 50 4 14 Rain Prince Rupert ... 60 54 46 50 4 .08 Pt Cldy Edmonton 92 90 58 60 10 [] Pt. Cldy Seattle 8 76 54 54 4 0 Clear Portland 80 80 54 54 4 [ Clear. San Francisco ... 70 64 | 54 54 4 0 Clear The barometric pressure is moderately low and falling rapidly near the Aleutian Islands with light rain over most of Southwestern Alaska and moderate rain in Southeatst Alaska. The pressure is moderatley high over most of the northeastern Pacific Ocean and from Oregon to the Gulf of Alaska with clear and warmer weath- er in the Interior. Temperatures reached eighty degrees or above over much of the Interior yesterday. 'WHITE LINE CABS 25 cents in City Telephone 444 White Line Cab and Ambulance Co. THE HOTEL OF ALASKAN HOTELS The Gastineau Our Services to You Begin and End at the Gang Plank of Every Passeénger-Carrying Boat Juneau Lumber Mills, Inc. MURESE€O We Carry a’ Full Line Junean Paint Store FRYE’S BABY BEEF “DELICIOUS” HAMS and BACON Frye-Bruhn Company Telephone 38 Prompt Delivery DON’ T MISS Anythmg Good! ~ BEER LUNEHES Salmon Creek Roddhouse ; ANTON REISS THE TRENDP is toward “ELECTROL”-of eaaw Harri Ma

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