The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, September 22, 1933, Page 2

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S THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, FRIDAY, SEPT. 22, 1933 Thc \n*\\ ‘smrsr of ¢ Loolqng For\\ ard” Brings New Plans for the Home That Can Be Easily and Economically Fulfilled Large selection—all sizes of Axminsters—pur- chased at lowest prices and offered at lowest prices. Size 7.6x Size 8.3x10.6 was Size 9 x 12 was HIT AND MISS 7 was 9 was $21.50, $17.25 18.75 24.50 28.75 NOW NOW 29.50, NOW 3350, NOW S RAG RUGS 23.50, Size 27x54 at 9c each_ \DOW SHADES, 36x6, 85¢ Q {of the information division of the _ | month: R Green and Tan, 36x7, 9c K <~ . . The New York Alaska Gold| Complete line of Curtain Rods Dredging Corporation was granted it renewal of fixed public point to| % point telegraph license. | ¥ | _W. T. White, for many years connected with the agricultural ex- y periment stations service in Al-} e r aska, was in Washington this week | ® | O g 3 [} 20 on a vacation trip. Mr. White is ? ’ sk B e 5 s e ey , 3 now living at Eugene, Oregon. He pan’s 3 5 attending ' the post-graduate Juneau’s Leading Department Store B el ey s n - : | ! i 57243 S0 ke i SR s 4o **“"’*’“"W-%r‘*»-—"'—‘—“h*“—’“—vv— - ™. Delegate Dimond spent all of DR. SMITH HERE [FORMER JUNEAU BOY | ,, S32° &7 Taeies raasric vomce . [ by v, e Tk We take this opportunity of| puring tne t # s S A h[ARR 0 EG thanking ‘6ur many, many, friends| loug‘imyg Avem!:;l)flfl;;ss v:)mllehe“wu tion of the Public ‘Works program lhD IN R ON | for Indian and Eskimo settlements 74V for their expressions of sympathy|are ‘operating, only eastbound ve- priveg 0 BEGIN quK R |and for the many beautiful flornl‘mcm Arteio it s Aibeckon «6t| T MK, - Je IRy informed that | Dr. Fred W. Gould, formerly of | offerings sent us during the illness power Franklin Street) will be per- the matter would be gone into Jnmn and brother of Mrs. J. B.|and loss of our beloved wife and|mitted on Ferry Way and on Bey| carefully - -at . & mesting of the| Bernl\O!Lr and Jack Gould of this| mother. 'ard Street. south of Willoughby Public Worksv Board. Jorn Col- 7, was married last month to| MARTIN OLSON. | Sivenivs lier, Commissioner of Indian Af- | Miss Beulah Thomas, of Porfiand, MR. AND MRS. W. A. i fairs, has approved the program | Ore., “according to word received GARSTER. o —adv. C. J. DAVIS, in toto. | by his family here. P SR ‘I—m‘im 'Chlef of Police. Alaska Represenlahve of| Dr. Gowld was graduated from| paq MONEYIN BANK | AT SR B Public Works Board |the Juneau High School in: the i ‘J. H. DUNN HONORED ‘Whiether - early ‘approval will be| 1c Works Board | cass of 1924 and then attended| The financial report of Ketchi-| given ‘for construction ‘of Federal OPCI‘IS Offlce Here ‘J"d was graluated from the North|xan recently made by City “Treas-| J. H. Dunn, former Clerk of the bulidings ab Kem;ikxzn i ‘:;" _ | Pacific Dental Coliege in POrl-|yrer J. F. VanGilder shows $2-| U. 8 Districi Oourt of the First ;’;‘;;gew]s kgeflmsgi.str‘:m Ai (Continuea from P e {land, Ore. Mrs. Gould is a Nor-|sg; g5 cash on hand or «in the|Division, was given a dinner re- o include | = Page One) mal school graduate and taught| panks J oently by - the: Ketchikan . Masons, | 1988 1ist of such buildings, inclu ~———|school in Oregon before her mar- 2 ing the Alaska projects, has been ministration, H h | ringe. : 51:?",2 ofee. the . W. A for . He is to show how| » Ko thek e in Ban- P zl sfon. ‘In conversation Wi 13 ", i to go about applying for funds dc’:h é,zf,,f :\:‘:c h;:l. (l:?)u:';:l is Dfl!ly Cfl)s&word uz e various officials and in formal § for meritorious pro; advise 25| practicing dentistry. 4 communications, Delegate Dimond } ,' ‘which thnuuh, & ACROS solumnuvm rday's Puzzie - 10. V-".! on the has ‘stressed the meed for' thosej possibly mot publicly owned, are | B o4 e . |and other Alaska buildings. P engaged in rendering service to Wi [Qlo [ETA] 7. Coin " larTo date P. W. A. has shown lit-| ?hc lpuhhc canobtain Federal funds |, NORTHI‘AND DUE HERE :ll ggfi gb?ggpflga[j :\‘n' . tle »disposition to Ow: K. 'building’ or improvinz that service. [ p : 3 r Al ineral spring projetts: A badly needed: post- Will Fill Gap LATE THIS AFTERNOON 7Y iit;xm.uu ‘Bfln ‘:.Ll - "‘EEW uros ® ¢« |office in New York City and a| His office will fill a gap be-| fiwt = ‘ . ELIRIE NN o iom on 4 play- || few other scattered structures are twsen Federal projects and »hosfll Motorship Northland is sciaeduled m & _A"':' ‘:;:r . {4l that have passcd muster, and : of Territorial and municipal char-|to arrive in port at 5 o’clock this F [A] 3. stacien Min view of that attitude it is dif-| gt acter. For the present, he said,|afternoon from Seattle. From Ju- [‘B Q[IE} wzl;o mu- || ficult to say how the program ‘be-] = with the co-operation. offered. by ncau the Northland goes to Sit- NEE 8] o .,..1‘,‘,.,.‘&‘;‘5' i| fore the Administration: at this time 2ll of the existing agencies, it/ ka, returns here possibly late Sun- - L‘B 32 Inhabltant or: | Will fare. will mot b: npecessary to empl ;| day ‘afternoon or Sunday evening suffix i The history of the efforts to] any staff. However, as the work and proceelding south will call at IRIAN | =L || hasten construction of «the Ket-| increases and its scope broadens, Kak>, Prince Rupert and ‘Van- IGIAIN]T] [}][][‘_13 e \he | ehikan and Anchorage ~buildings orized to employ such couver besides the regular ports. ¢ ‘B[flflfili[} A g"“‘.‘:;l" lh“ been up to how at least al D s may be necessary. R g ———e———— | 38" Staze plaver T AR 26, Meager story «of disappointments. Even he doesn't know at this GTITT o B DBE \' 1 TRERST e ‘“,".'-,‘{12'.’ It seemed last year that con- stage of his administration just, 11, Wash fizouy wobted = ¢ ‘Princaly n- - PeLAMne to | stpuction might. begin soen. That how numerous and extensive his| . Paesid i o ,m,‘, tan family 40. Make """ | was when the Wagner: bill was duties and functions will be. Of L Rpmoaet aheda L RS e ghpeches: | passed by Oongress appropriating one thing he is determined, it . T agsbal Take into Q. Covered the $100,000/000 and -setting forth pro- will be as genuinely Alaskan as ‘“' oy £ o hfllm- . e . " jects from which an interdepart- hé can make it, and as represen- 4 Scandinaviad ¥ mrmnn y &g o iove fdental oard. ‘composed of Treas- tative of Alaskan sentiment as| v goar o oher $5.Brimk (of'h | gy, Justice and Interior: officials even Alaskan desire. *or 0. mc.h:rm 50. perceive Tt ‘choose, Projccts of Merit ; worship 5. Ses eaxle That board approved the Ket- To projects of merit he willf - chikan project and passed by the Jend every possible assistance, that | onie ‘at Anchorage. ~ Plans for i Be made very clear. “And there | ‘The money ‘you spénd on a Ketchikan were drawn and it ap- H ought to be sufficient projects of |{ washwoman 52 times a year; peared that the long wait of Ket- % merit to take care of every need|§ the cost of soap and wash- «chikan for an adequate building " for employment relief,” he de» ing utensils that have to:be was about over. ¥ clared. frequently replaced; the But. the interdepartmental board i 5 will be ome of his dutiss to|{ wear and tear on clothes far 3 tdo slow)y. When Congress | : pass upon the question of whether{) greater by home .methads; 1 met this Spring the funds for the ‘1 projects do or do not fall within | the possible illuess due to public-bulldings, whith Wwere lying jdl2 in the Treasury pending the the category of those for wmch‘ Federal - funds can be obtained, | also, as to their merit or lack of | it After he geots the office organ- | jzed and the work started, he ex- | pects to spend much of his time in the field, watching the progress of work, observing the manner in which it is giving relief to unem-l ployment, how the work is being | performed and, probably, looking ! over proposed additional projects. HI-LINE SYSTEM Groceries—Produce—Fresh and Smoked Meats Front Street, opposite Harris Hardware Co. “CASH AND CARRY: unsanitary processes or overs taxing of your vitality . just add these up and then compare the result with our low-priced laundry serv- ice! //// FORMER ALASKA WOMAN'S FOURTH BOOK PUBLISHED “Sourdough Gold"" Is Lat- est Alaska Book Written by Mary Leé¢ Davis' WASHINGTON, Sept. 9.—)Spec- correspondence) <= “Sourdough) new book by Mary Lee'} to be published today said a let received by Delegate Di- | mond from the author. The book as for its subjeet the early gold sh days and' s fmased ‘upon & wnal kept “by a ¢physician iR 898 and 1899. “This is ‘the fourth Alaska book | by Mrs. Davis. She lived several at Fairbanks, where her d, John A. Davis, was in of 'the ‘Bureau of ' Mines He is now chief enginesr ial i Gold, Davis ge station. | Bureau in Washington. Mrs. Davis has-been in Massa- | chusetts during the summer but | will return to Washington this ; Dominic Vernetti has been ap- potnmd postmaster -of ‘the new | office at - Koyukuk Station bl pointment of A. H. Kingsbury, as postmaster of Haines has announced by Joseph C. O'- | Mahoney, First AssistantPostmast- | General. A third postal appointment is ‘mu of Hans Seversen to be post- master at Iliamna. | Bt | The Aroostook Broadcasting | Corporation, on Presque Isle, Al-| iaska. was granted a special tem- | porary authorization - ‘te operate| | from 10 to 11 a. 'm. and from 1/ |0 4 p.m., Eastern Standard Time, {ion Sept. 5, 6 and 7. fime when contracts were let, were | diverted for the use of the Civil- ian Conservation Corps The well was ‘dried up: Nevertheless the two-fold need | for the baildings—to alleviate un- employment - and to ‘provide the United . States Government with proper housing fagilities—~remained, and ‘when the - Public ‘Works Ad- ministration was created, with three billion doliars at its disposal, the ln&efiewunenul Board was|’ ‘building ‘price: Delegate Dimond early endeav-j Ketchikan almost immediately. Ev« n the site was transferred from the' Interior to the Treasury De- partment last May. ‘In the case of Anchorage, a site would have to be chosen and plans drawn. GOLD REGULATIONS 4 Regulations were issued by the Treasury Department this - week relative to conditions under which newly mined gold may. be export-} ed'so as to command the world) ored to secure-inclusion of & pro- vision whereby all gold mined thisj.~ season would be eligible for ' ex- port;” his idea» being ' that those}” who had not” had opportunity “to' ship the metal ought to be pro- tected. However, tne Treasury Depart- ment was unwilling to write a specific clause along those lines for fear that hoarded ‘gold mi¥ght be saccessfully disguisad and ex- ported contrary to law. & It seemed when the regulations were made public that the De- partment had endeavored to pro- tect those who vhad ‘accuinulated gold prior to the Executive Order of August 29 by inserting the.pro- visions - that = banks = which ‘had bought prior to that date without; thought, of hoarding it could ship and sell it at the world price. That appeared to be adequate pro- tection but it was in part done away with when. printing of one of the affidavit = forms revealed that gold gathéred prior to August 1 of this year cannot be exported. As soon as the various forfns of affidavits ‘have been ‘printed the Délegate will see that: some ar» sent to Alaska - without ‘délay to fill early’ heeds. Latér is'expect- ed that they may be obtained from the Collector of “Custonis. ALASKA 'RADIO The PFederal ‘Raflio ‘Commission | reports ‘the follsving Alaskan up- POTATOES—Yakima N : Bag, 25 pounds ............iiiiiiiiiinns ONIONS, : ] pounds SR GR AI’LS—Tok ays; pound i COFF EE——Our Speqal pound .. .. ... I SOUP—Heinz, MATCHES, ‘carton .. .. .. TEA-Bloe R.pbon, pound .. ¢ H dozen S MJLK—Apy Brand 15cans .. .. ... CATSUP—Pmts (RN 2cans.. gk P ‘Sdcc Probably showers tonight, Sncurd‘y generally’ fair;’ - moderate westerly to northerly winds. Time ! Barometer Temp. Bumsdlly Wind Velocity Weather 4 ‘jp.m; yest'y 2923 58 .. (186 v AW, 12 PL.OMy | 4 aim. today BB 4 82 w1 Cleat m the U. 8. Weather Bureau) 2 - HOOAL DATA Forecast for Juneaw and vicinity. beginning at 4 p.m. Sept. 22: Station w temp. vélouity l‘hfl. Weather Barrow 26 26 16 ' Trace Cldy Nome 28 28 8 0 Clear Bethel 26 %6 10 0 Clear Fort Yukon .. 36 34 32 32 4 [] Cldy "Panaifa 7. 36 36 % % 4 0 Clear ‘Fairbanks 8 % 8% 30 4 92 Snow St. Paul 40 @ % 38 12 “Trace cldy Dutch' Harbor u 2 | B 4 0 cldy Wodiak i .. 40 40 % B 0 Clear Cordova . 4“4 44 2 42 4 a2 Clear Juhean . .. 56 56 ® mu ” o1 Clear Ketchikan ... 60 58 48 @ 4 n8 Rain Prince ‘Rupert ... 56 56 i e @B 4 46 Rain Edmonton 66 56 32 36 4 0 Cldy Seattle . 68 56 46 48 6 42 Cldy ‘Port1and .60 56 5 80 85 .18 Cldy San Francisco ... T0 64 58 58 4 0 Clear O O S . = R R The barometric pressure is moderately low from Interior Alaska to Oregon. "It 3 lowest iri Southedst ‘Alaska, with ‘rain or snow from’ ‘Fafrbanks' to'Portland. Theé' pressure is high between Cali- fornia a¥id’ Hawail @hd in- Western Alaska with clear weather over fHost” of "' Weeter ‘hafi@ ‘Northern ‘Alaska &nd m GUir. Teémperature chnnges fiaw beell ummpoflant : plications have been recefved: ! mit for &'Yiéw poiht to point tele- graph station on Cralgie Creek. s point telephone siations at Eagle, Hot Springs, Fort Yukon, Circle, McGrath and 'hmx RANGES—Sweet and Ju;cy, Zthtles.. ._'. GRIVE Sy Vay FVS APK m_‘ m Quqhty Pa}pef MAT()ES—So;xd mpc ‘ 'Your Cl;mce NO’i‘lCE TO TRUCK OWNERS 'W. E. Dunkfe. ’Construction per- Owners or aump trucks desiring to ‘haul rock * on | Willoughby Ave. fill will please call at office Alaska Road Commission Saturday morn: ing, S;ept 23, and sign for work. ! 1. GOLDSTEIN, Mayor. Northern Cormeréial Co., con- truction permits for new point to —adv. ) i) 0D (0.} 1, Shoppmg be e s .« e “e se se ek e “UMEAT DEPARTMENT CHICKENS—Quah;y. a « . se se o% e e e

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