The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, September 20, 1933, Page 2

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

FLANNEL All-Wool Attractively striped with tailored collar. Small, medium and large sizes. Ladies. $6.00 Childrens. $2.50 We also ez of outing flannel Night Shirts 'ry a complete line and Pajamas for men and Nightgowns and Pajamas for women and children. They come in many patterns and all sizes. Reasonably Priced! M. Behrends Co., Inc. cika B. Ly e d s . . flmeau’s Leading Department Store ANDITIS NEWS _MHTWA (Continued from Page One.) i Woodin, who really is ill and can leave or stay as he desires. | THE “LOW-DOWN" ACTION: It has just been dis- closed that some weeks ago Gen- eral Johnson himself, at a ha tily ¢afled cenference of his as- sistants at the NRA, laid down the law in characteristic cuss-words to one or two who had been bot- tling up news about the public * business. | REVOLUTION: In these days when a Senator has to get into a fist-fight to make page one, who remembers the time when most of the thunder in Washington em- anated from Senatorial throats, whether ' Congress was in sesslon or mnot? COLLISION: One reason the public works prosperity drive hasn’t been faster in getting started is that' many contractors are afraid to bid on construction jobs with the price of matetials jumping un- An raational romance former Mrs, Courtne €nvoy Takes Bride P m‘ ot daughter were born of this unien v Borden, of Clucngo, and Dr. Felipe Espil, Argentinan Ambassador to Wash~ when the wife 'challenged tenets ington. They were quietly married of the Church of England end THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, WEDNESDAY; SEPT. 20 TANNIE BESANT [A-) WATER MAIN = =252 | 'PASSES AWAY IS DYNAMITED OLD AGE CAUSE W OR'OF CRANK it could not have been the result of an actident. The small house over the pipe Intematlonally Known Re- Thlrty-mch Water Mam ligious Leader Dies in Above Gashyeau Avenue | Bombay, India Is Par‘lly Destroycd nnmn at that point had been forcibly entered, the evidence show- | | - (Contmueq nom Bare One) tu;rmnueq rrm Page One) ing conclusively that the mstenmgs ’of the lock on the door had been withdrawn. ‘The dynamite was| evidently laid on the wooden pipe| | close to the air valve. 'I'he explo- sicn destroyed the house, Blew off the air valve and broke a large »m le in the pipe, | Water Floods ; | The water, gushing mgh from | the hole, cascaded down across stroyed a small, pepthouse, & 3-inch | Gastineau' Avenue and 'descended air valve and broke a large hole |, torrents ‘dowh Ewing Street ifito in the pipe, forcing the ;t,uvv:; Front, sweeping small debris, sand {nward and bending the iron bands,| 5 small rocks into the street. also inward. | Water backed up to Connors Motor y and down the street to The water escaping was 'q““'tcmnp alént to the discharge of & six-inch ! Swanson's. pipe. 'If the big pipe had been| olaf Torkelson, City Strect Foré-| broken in two pieces, ard the full' pan, with a smafl crew was kept force of the water' thus escdped it pusy keeping open the drajnage! in a disastrous slide, wrecking peing flooded, until the water in houses and possibly causing 10ss of | e main was exhausted and the life. ’ supply valves closed. It required! trucks " eight hours to clean away the debris from Front Street. Traffic, however, was able to move after a short time this morning. Little Loss to Mill There was little loss occasioned to the Alaska Juneau, it was said. The milling plant was forced to shut down for a few hours while the damage to &he plpe was helng repaired. Its financial ' loss Wwas almost equalled by that of the city i City Offers Reward’ Aroused by “the action, ‘which is believed to have been the work of some crank, possibly some dis- i gruntled individual seeking employ- ment, Mayor I. Goldstein today publicly announced the "eity wil pay @ reward of '$500 for informa- tion leading to the arrest of the person or persons responslble “Who ANNIE - BESANT ever ‘did It, Is 4 menace to' the lite She asserted’ that she herself| pfim‘"’“"”fl wirtef e i hdd been reincarnated many times nuisante. and ‘ought ‘to be W“' T ittirta, (o pEotat She [loodmg and said her m?z life began lzoa’hended," declared the Mayor. Lot the ‘Sofes oh’ iower Front e g ‘She - cred"’?d by her| “nore’ than, 20 persons are known Street and in’ cleaning up Front' G m_L)'{ occult DOWETS, DAT™{ i, have heard the explosion. Wil ;troPt Cl_fl"w“"c’" It was tz;lmm- fam Markle, Speeial Night Patrol- ¥ with C. W. Leadbefter, |,z way in the vicinity and saw | beginning in 1895, Shejy,, gre Oliver Drange, executive | had made a cla)rvo]yant te>teunal:’r;&1;;n‘ thé Juheau Cold Storage, Dan tion of chemical elements Whicl R had added to the knoyledge of the 'm“m&hfl ek A, P e long lines parallel to those Mayor Iz Called orthodox chemists and y ‘Within two or three minutes after it occurred, Mayor Goldstein was summoned to the scene from his home nearby, and was there {at 12:50 oclock. With L. H Metzgar, General Superintendent of the Alaska Juneau, he visited the ke 7P LADIES' ALTAR SOCIETY FOOD SALE Saturday, Sept 23. in the Dis-| "tric Light and Power Co. RE | Seccnd Messiah | |' At Madras, India, in 1925, Mrs. Be: predicted that a second h would appear soon. Her ! prediction was made at the céle- bration of the fiftieth anniversary of the Theosophical 'Society and oni ‘her behalf it 'was revealed thati 'l to; the grrest and d line on Septenber the person in whom “the reincar- gonteol as profest against a. police | manifest was Jeddu Krishnamurti.| mx”m::w“wz N o, aihe ’Iho latter, a Hindu and gradudtel . j.c i¢the frial. They were con- of Oxford, was 30 years old ug an #ppeal and thereupon withdrew Hindu Was “Vehicle® Mrs. Besant later said she never| e Phpliel, Splataing ‘they Bt h a ¢ prociaiming’ Kitsha it out ‘only to vindicate freedom {had any idea of proclaiming of the ‘firess! her belief that' the young Hinda! was the “vehicle” for a world‘:lr h::ug‘;;;:l?fm:"h:fin;oaz hn L I‘C]C““:r tf\"zt dacm'fl’h ax::lm:: she acted as her own defense. She JIEOLEIE . RUERENER HITRR S {lost the case. Mr. Besant lived ation of CHAS" woullt e’ el Cur- USURN 115 siuulaan.. ey victed 'in 'the lower court but won the time. namurt! ‘a8 the Messtdh, But st‘wed’l Uonit of ‘this case grew an action lon a world tour, which mcludediunm 1917 but the daughter and is probable it would ‘have Tesulted | yonts, thus preventing stores from ! | play Rooms of the’ Alaska I:‘.le/‘-l ARD! -Enfiau will pa 5500 00, for any information leading T M VTR BLUE EAGLETS MEDIATING IN ‘MANYREGIONS -~ B e |Settling Disputes of U. S. Between Cipital and Labor WABHING’IDN. Sept. 20.—Blue Eagle “men ‘today labored to oil the indystrial machinery made creaky by fri¢tion between capital and labor. | Several strikes are subsiding. |under administrations of NRA mediators but other troubloys con- dn.mns still prevailed. Howeyer, gome other industrial secwrs kre signing the coal code. * In Detroit, after & four-hor can- ference, NRA mediators reached a jsettlement in the strike of the Bowler Roller Company and med- iators have also averted a strike in St. Louis among the dress workers and amofig ‘aeronautical workers in Buffalo. On the other hand, 15,000 paint- ers and paperhangers have walked out in New York asking for shorter hours and more pay. [ Japan Plans Annexation Oi Shnhukwan, Report g et flEN’PBIN Bept, 20. preparing to annex Shanhaikwan, |the great wall town where the Sino - Japanese hostilities began early in the year and add it “to Manchukuo. This is the reliable information received here. e % One of the first. activities pro- moted by the new Fort Worth, s Golf Association was city- pumrm tournament. A AR o ay a rewar Jof‘ conviction of the person or_persons resyonuble for blowing up the ‘Alaska Juneau pipe 20. GOLDSTEIN, - Mayor. | the United States, in 1928, . her brother in latér yeédrs were on P Upon her arrival in New YOrkiy oo o cordiality with their Krishnamurti was asked: “Do you! . i .. are the second| "wp ' pesant embraced theoso- phy in 1889 after W. T. Stead, edi- tor of “The Review of Reviews” asked her to review “Secret Doc- 1'ttine” by Mme. Helena Petrovna ‘Blavatsky, one of the founders of the cult. An interview between reviewer and' author resulted conversion of the former. Mrs. ‘Besant broke with her Socialist friends and in 1893 took up her | believe that you Christ?” | He replied: “No, but I believe \Lhat I am the new vehicle for the "world teacher.” But_ five years later, on another| trip to this country, Krishnamurti| said he had “grown up” and noj longer held to the tenets of Mrs. Besant. “No one,” he said, “can formu- late an adequate religion for am-/ { | ARRIVING ON other individual.” mfi 1de| pe S ARG oot ASyEE Mrs. Besant was born in Leon- ' don, October 1, 1847. Her father, William Page Wocd, was an Eng: . lishman, half Irish. Her mother) was Irish, and she always referred to herself as Irish. When 20, Annie Wood married Rev. Frank Besaat,] who later became vicar of Sibsey, in - Lincolnshire;. A son and ‘& Marriage Discord -I The, marriage ended in a discord. 2 Y ou’re a crook— “The identified with free thought and n the capital by Justice Bailey of 2 der the urge of the NRA prosper- the Drsmct Suoreme Court, ;’e(x,mh“sgfl“éwfu u;;‘;er takSL:; 1:;: ¥ ity drive. S% oy | s 3 ffasg SERIOUS: ‘Exttact from form daugther with her. She became | i ( A th’d" § b suceess of ‘W. J.. Bryan’s First Battle,” 1896 camapaign, apnd of Cause,” by Jefferson Davis. ———.ee Salvation Army Is lJetter sent out by the Tennessee Valley Authority inquiring about an epplicant for a job: “We are interested in knowing what evidence he has given of pub- lic spirit and social mindedness. In what activities has he °nzaged which were primarily in their pub- lic interest and not Tor fiancial which reviewzd the President's re-employn ent FAME: The professors in the Bureau of Education may be inter- ested to know {hHat wheén a uni- versity padume recently applied for ‘a job as typist in a Washing- ton' néwspaper shop, and was ask- Evangeline mander in Chief for th ed States, advised President velt in a letter made public the Army had signed the ag ole about’ Genetal Johnson and cial , institutions throughout the NRA, he Wrote it “General m"ntry ment for its 2,000 religious and s the 2 the “The Lost Charles Bradlaugh, Also Under NRA Code and personal profit? Please be spscific.” NEW, YORK, B pt. 21] —Paid em- 2L ployees of the "Salvation Army Y EDUCATIONAL NOTE been placed under the pro Booth, th. radical political movements led by a member of Parliament, and when the two re- published a pamphlet on birth A Murfeg'er e q =»mp~ P9 ¥ | P Exclusive Agency HE was found unconscious, his m "and then was his wife. It ulbw situation of i Dobson” throughout. NON-MEMBER: A Government employee' (whder no code) sends in a suggested NRA poster for government departments with a motto touching on a sore spot in Administration circles: “How do we do our part: Our policy is to m as mny faithful employ~ ible antl cut the salar- all we keep 15 per cent.” SS OPPORTUNITY: Dis- dre consider- BETTER EATS FOR BETTER TIMES VISIT THE Capitol Beer Parlors Best Dance Floor in 'Alaska "' PRIVATE BOOTHS' INE » NO ihe ad) ; w-lk'x;d. .;hu:egodw w:mxr:’to M, destined to e:: that bridged lifetime of ha 38 .. BETTER DRINKS in ghe. . ot PHONE 569 #d Leader Department Store Gobige’ Brofhiers : b o xR | A Sfihb%tflfla»:fl’m orth d}ls mag ‘as he Daily Alaska Emptre NEW GOODS EVERY BOAT! WIena 2 SR SRR AR MY HERE SR YN == y,e» gone, né‘d"é’fiu cation . fie&hlmumblm‘ ol;name. ?mm‘ed y a woman as Jimmy husband, he spent day after day i g I;'n 8 near comg, eriminal, a bgrglar, = killer—by a total :trangu “who md she called « mel..en‘hwn 4’ pn?“yest' 12928 6Y 87" NE 18 cidy in Parts|4 am. today .....2014 = <8 @ s 2 Rain Noon fioday oo 2024 48 95 s 7 m cfl.l.l Afln RADIO REPORTS ® Japan:. 18 |- 1. 8. DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE, WEATHER BUREAU ‘The Weather /By the U. 8. Weather Bureau) LOCAL DATA Forecast for Juneas amnd vicinlty. beginning. al. 4 p.m., Sept. 20: mm tonight and Thursday; moderate southeasterly winds. Barometer Temp. Humidity Wind Vetocity Weathes 'IODAY lfl'anhll 4am. Preclp. 4am. temp. temp. velocity 24hrs. Weather Btation Batrow 18 flzo 8 0 Gldy e e g | ii2e "%he’ 20 ' 08 R o 0 8 g W s 0 E'g: Fort Yukon . 84 34 32 32 4 14 Cldy Tanana 40 40 28 28 0 02 Snow “airbanks 8 3 28 28 4 04 Cldy fagle 44 3 34 4 06 Cldy t. Paul, o 46 46 3% 4 10 Trace Cldy ¢ tch Harbor ... 46 48 4 44 10 9 Clay Kodiak . 5 50 38 40 12 0 Clear = Cordova 54 54 4 4 0 04 Clear Juneau . 61 61 | 46 48 2 0 Rain Bitka ... 8 = 4% — R L Rain Ketchikan 56 54 50 50 12 . 130 Rain Prince Rupert ... 54 50 8 5 30 34 Rain Edmonton . 64 56 2 wu [ 0 Cldy Seattle 72 68 54 54 12 24 Clear Portland ... 7 72 | 55 56 | S Glear San ‘Francisco ... 66 62 56 58 B 0 cuay .. ‘I‘he baremetric preqsure is lowthreughout Alaska. It is lowest in the eastern portion of the Gulf of Alaska with ‘snow in the In- terior and Northwest and rain frcm Southeast Alaska to Oregon. The pressure is moderately. high near Hawaii and relatively high and ris- ing in the Aleutian Islands with fair weather over Western Alaska and the Gulf. peratures, ros2 yesterday *in ' éxtreme ' Eastern Alaska' u!d‘ Tell it the weszem portion of the Territory. . ; ley Cross-word Puzfile AcHOBS ¢ - “Slution of Vestardayre P 1 dom L Winglike alhy Side runner & Falot indica- 12 Mon nmedan i G[flfl [SITIEIWENTIHIE] uobie: var. 10, Mejt E [RIN[EJRIUTY] 13- Motstens o [OITIER{AIBIE] * '"3las 0 15. Divizions of AL - E'IEB [OINIEIS] 2. Fars ot & 16 Ltalian city 12. Sbort tacket 3% 5 #i’r?“" 18. Deputy 2. i i 3 7 Tb.n " Hewelr) e e Wiuh!p’ " 21 mitery e 2 Place in -oost- 33. Rut mn"ry « | tioh azain 35 Action at taw FY o 8 e | 30. Tranqurllity byfl o |3 B 2. Tler { sencumber 42, Sanetion | 36. Red dve 44. Compel 31. Wagon track L 46. Determine :& Army officer i ‘erd D 47. Rowing. |rln- hatem 1 g ! 41. Hardens : "’&1‘.’?."1.? ¥ faray 10 Code o | 43. Distant 54. Ridicules L O nigh- 50 dtcanine |44 Metai-benring 58, Sandarac tree et potnt of 51 Headlal @ompeunds §9. Radiim emas 4. Took up again 62 Song froman J ¥ 46 Coat with an nation 5. Commerce opera ’ Talioy of iin 81 Donate 6. Tatters 53. Horses 7 ind lead gL Swine 2. Unit 54 Puts on . | 46. Condensed | 63 Delihetul 8. Middle 55. Low haunt a1, Farore Be. Ipacac siant b3 P‘fik P 51l o | 48 Vallevs [ mmv." 10. Sommed W Nimber it i i i I/ i % A CA and CASH AN Corner Secon Free Delivery 213 A IDEAL PAINT SHOP Iflnnt"’e filwe*lfi' #pid Wendt&Gauter 2 Radw-Telephone Equipment - uim_fmm STATIONS—+PORTABLE wiABANSMITTERS —RECEIVERS ;To Meet Your.Requirements Notthern Radio Co. Vmee% e B T ;lt_&quhl W-‘h‘ HI LINE SYSTEM reshiand Sinéked Meats om&itenamflnéwn‘eCo ’OASBANBGMY‘ o ¢

Other pages from this issue: