The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, January 1, 1934, Page 2

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I THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, MONDAY JAN. | , 1934. |||||||||||||||||||||ll|||l|||||"llllll"lllllllll||I||Il||||||||||||||||||"|||||||||||l|||||||||||l|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||. The Old P'(“.(, Mi ghf Be Ram‘ But I’s Home to Cleveland Indians WISHES FOR SUCCE AND PROSPERITY THROUGHOUT 1934 B. M. Behrends Co., Inc. “Juneau’s Leading Department Store” T e AT ALASKA JUNEAU ‘FAIR WEATHER' YETS §1,167,000 LOOMING AHEAD B I 1933 AT $2067 IN WASHINGTON Last Year's Operations Administration Barometers Larger than in 1932 and Forecast Things in Close to Its Record CommgSesslon (Continzed svia Page One) one for ladders, pipes and electrical | ;. cakles. By KIRKE MPSON WASHINGTON,, Jjan. 1.—Admin- ition baromet showed a dis- change around Christmas In November and early De- they were giving storm s about the January session They pointed to fair ‘on the hill” as the holi- 5 began. | ¢ heard less among Presiden- aldes and lieutenants about belligerent mood in which Con- was apt to return, and about and means of meeting that Instead, confidence was ressed that Mr. Roosevelt would it possible to carry forward program, even its monetary es, without serious, however opposition. ! REASONS FOR or {IMISM | tinct time cemk warn Employ 75 Mcn During the latter nine months of the year a force of 75 men was employed on this deep develop- ment work, which is a capital ex- penditure and is in addition to, the company's ordinary expenses for develcpment w Al(ozs‘h“r‘ there were 83 more men on payroll in 1933 than in the prrcod- ing year. 1% Early in the year, a hoist, hav- ing a capacity of 200 tons an hour ‘P from a depth of 4,000 feet, was' centracted for.. This hoist, his gether with the necessary clm-:n trical equipment to place it ke operation, will be delivered early| this year. ! he |y Cable s Laid Fower facilities have aiready been extended . into the deap level To accomplish this 2 subr cable to carry the power hoist was installed in the Lreek tunnel. | A number of things enter into this more optimistic attitude about the coming session—the collapse of he second farm strike; the at- of CWA to get the winter junemployment problem solved; the reased flow of Christmas and cther buying said to be directly due to the CWA move; the satis- | faction expressed by the steel, au- omotive and lumber industries with ial peiods with their NRA codes. [ Just how it will be presented !to Congress by the President is still a bit uncertain. He is known to have concentrated throughout December, not on the data alone; also on the language and method of exposition of his forth- oming budget message. in the Gold | tempt The necessary mai from which to build skips and cars for the new deep work have been ordered. All of this equip- ment will be constructed in the|" Alaska Juneau shops. In the mill preparations are now under way for the installation of a flve and one-half foot Short! Head Symons Cone Crusk grinder, if satisfactory, will repl: some of the ball m now being | | | | MAY ANSWER CRITICS j PRIVATE FUNERAL SERVICES HELD FOR ASTRID CROWELL| The Roosevelt habit of brevity in| jcommunications to Congress, it is | Private funeral services were r\x,oc‘vd will be strictly adhered held at the C. W. Carteg Mortuary | It is said to be the President's at 9 o'clock yesterday l}cfl’nmg for | P‘"'Pa* to make his budget mes- the late Mrs. Astrid Crowell, at/Sage unique among similar’ docu- which the Rev. Erling K. Olafson Ments in its attempt to translate officiated. Only the immediat ,mc financial aspect of Government | friends of the deceased were prps_‘qo that the man in the street Gfl !nd interment fook place in|Can understand it without the aid Cemietery. Mrs. Crowell"’r an actuary. u Mo relatives living in this| What is suggested is that Mr.| mtry but is survived by a 13.|Roc‘e\rnv. is preparing his budget old ‘son, Bjorne Pedersen, liv-|communication (his first) to stand| in Nord Honningsvaag, Nor-|as an answer to crities of his poli- | ‘with Mrs. Crowell's puxemslcies whether his moves on the| —————— {monetary chess board or his sep- i § R cxpenditures in Government book- keeping. Two new Senatorial names have come into the 1936 Republican Presidential nomination field. They are those of Arthur Vanderberg of Michigan and Frederic Walcott of Connecticut. Both are said by par- ty colleagues to he flirting with the idea. New York has had a vir- tual monopoly up to now. For the first time in their 42 years of annual football engaze- ments, Furman and South Caro- lina battled to & scoreless tie this zason. {a half at the stadium a Back to their old stampi vast Muncipal Stadiom behind! Park, in the dcar, dead days their headquarters, greunus go the Indicr That crowd you see is t when immortals like Nap Lajoie easons that By DEVON E. FRANCIS 1932 and 1933 ommodated CLEVELAND, Jan. 1—The In- ¢ wrs b dians are a-neadin’ back toward € the old Treservation because fans want to see the apple clear the fence Down on the Cleveland lakefront spic-and-span, pale gray and ver, is the city’s municipal s um, a thing of vast dista Start walking in the morning the home plate to the right fence and you have to take lunch along. So lamented genial Billy Evans seneral manager of the Cleveland' So they are going back baseball company, as hz leaned OWn inds, where ta back in his swivel chair and ex- around $8000 a year compare plained why the American leaguers I decided to go back to league park out at Lexington and Sixty-Sixth the Stadium. street, after a mournful season and land-mark, built in 1910; ittle down at heel pared with thHe Stadium, it's noth- he ing to write home about Here and there Blame was th ns tha Depressitn Not 80,000, by th congregatioa ed a ™ Bu VC(! dropr t the depression had much to rl’s it. The Indians— and their opponents, for that mat- imply could not lay on the sphere hard enough to defeat the Stadium’s vast reaches. to from field your 1xes a League th Nct Even Two RIIQn “Take that right field fenc said. “It's so far (spreading 1t hands like a man describing size of the fish th that not even two Babe Rut could lift the ball over it. The fa don't like that. They want t it disappear. Our drop if®atten- dance showed that. Then! there's another thing . . ." He settled into his chair. “. Tinances. We figure we paid $37.000 —a complete loss—to the city just - ineir sluggers - kind they used to cntertain at old League (upper) [ana Tris hacklv, happy to leave the and Tris Speaker made it that Speaker. On Speaker .gave Cleveland world's championship the ever won, But theyre fixzng it up now, chinking holes here and there dousing Tinseed oil on thz plan! ing. The stands will have t r faces washed and paint will bright- en the ramps re the erowds in surging the turn- only town through wouldn't be surpr ! business picks up a whale of a lot Artistically, we're going to have a son in 1934¢—and watch that ball clear the fencz.” - - NOTICE Finding it necess 1 coal and feed accounts, on and January 2 1934, coal and will be sold for cash only. 1v D. B. FEMMER. B Jones-Stévens Shop LADIES'—CHILDREN'S READY-TO-WEAR | Seward Street Near Third | the privileze of pla; big crowds. It's bad busi- crowds were the 20,000 on opening day of the Stadium, July 31, 1932, and two rthers of 46,000 and 48.000. “Outside of those thrce crowds, there wasn't a game during the Dall y Cross-word Puz'/lo ACROSS . Pirate . Agreements . Copy Worship . Refuse . Parent 18. Point . Poultry roduct . Allow i3, Insect . Sun god Violently distracted . Toward . Scandinavian measure of . Knot agal 3. Smiles broadly . Type of rail- way: eollog. . Greek letter Mexican rubber trees Six . Leglalative bodies . Bachelor of Arts: abbi . Long fish . Italian coin 50. News organ- ization: abbr. . Linger Useful 51, Prahlbm\m of rade 57. | Sewing \ implements fllll%// I fll/// il A AEmar o AN dRENN i M M Ads Pay! )aration of ordinary and cme'rgencv l Solution of Saturday’s Puzzle “Peminine name . Landmark, as a tree: Southwest- ern U. S, . Capital of New Jersey . Janitors of churches . Architectural pier . Welcomed . Operated . Experiences a certain sensation . Insects 3 Anxlellel 5 I\pDrB!se again Calis forth 4. Exists ‘Wild ox 8. American Indian . Poplar . Soft woolen dress fabric . Singing voices 5. Goddess of discord 5 P-.ohlemln 51. Small soft ass £3. Type measure POWN Apple juice ugh lava: Hawaiian 6. Pronoun 7. Furnish an- other crew 55. Myse 56. Have belng AGAIN! We extend our thanks and Best Wishes to all for I’// // A HAPPY NEW YEAR! JUNEAU VOLUNTEER FIRE DEPARTMENT urf 4. 8, DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE, WEATHER BUREAU The Weather /By the U. 8. Weather Buream) LOCAL DATA Forecast for Juneau and vicinity, | pm. Jan. i: le to mod- Barometer Temp. Weathe: Cldy Cidy Cldy Humtiity Wmd Velocity 30.05 1 g NE 14 today 30.09 1 14 teday » - - 4 pm 4 am Noon CABLE AND RADIO REPURTS " YESTERDAY | TTODAY Lowest 4a.m. 4a.m. Precip. 4am. temp. temp, velocity 24nrs. Weather -38 -38 0 Clear -12 Clear -18 Clear Clear Foggy Clear 30 Clear 36 E Snow 28 8 5 Pt. Cldy 13 4 Cldy Junéau . Ay 2 1 Snow iactchikan 16 8 Clear Prince Rupert 16 16 Edmonton -20 -20 50 50 48 48 56 56 Highest sy m. | tAmp. temp. | -28 -12 -14 -58 -48 -62 Station Barrow Yukon Fairbanks cldy cldy Cldy San Francisco The pressure continues high over Canada with a center of 30.84 at For Bering Sea low is moving into t in cloudy weather with sone a. Temperatures continied ior temperatures are lower n a slight ris the intérfor of Alaska and Simpson. A portion of the sulf of Alaska this morninz re- now from Cerdova 'to South- low throughout the Territory, while the coastal stations have ng MARITAL KNOT TIED lN MEXICO fswv Alice White, petite blonde motion picture actress, and Sidney lett, writer, were married in Magdzlena, Mexico. The marriage gl r v ed an engagement that was first announced by the actress in 1948 ng which subsequently was broken and remade more than once. (Assa. ~iatad Precs Photo) IQSLHLAPJ Allen Shattuck, Inc. Establisheda 189€ Junean, Alaska i & 4 Your Child’s HEALTH, GROWTH, FUTURE oper diet, fresh air, exercisé . .. and - sunshine. While they last we are selling the table model similar to the floor model shown $20.50 Special Price—Convenient Terms Alaska Electric Light & Power Co. UNEAU—Phone 6 . DOUGLAS—Phone 18 at a special price of only

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