The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, March 21, 1934, Page 2

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R T ———— A —— e e————————- ——————— A ———————— . THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, WEDNESDAY, MARCH 21, 1934. Gooa/ C/o[/lés A Consider them from the result that youlll quality idea at prices One group new drtbses $13.50 quality— ’ New Bl any | angle—with find: these coats embody every new fashion idea; every that will please. Neib Millifiery New Scdrfs N. ew N ecmvédr liFses S5 SPECIAL Excel]ent B. M. Behrenc Leading Department Store PRESIDENT IS USING MAN TO MAN METHODS Truce Gives Chief Execu-|c tive Opportunity to Talk Things Over (Oonnnued from rage One) way managers and employees this afternoon agreed to submit their wage dispute to arbitration by Jos- eph Eastman, Federal Rail Co- ordinator, as proposed by President Rogsevelt. A. F. Whitney, Chairman of the Railway Labor Executives Associa- tion, earlier in the day accepted the" services of Eastman after re- jecting suggestions for continuation of the existing ten per cent pay cut agreement. Whitney repeated labor's demand for restoration of the old scale and an increase of tén per cept on July 1 TEAL IS ASSIGNED TO *Juneau’s s e e 000 mc0 0000 ° AT THE HOTELS s e 0000000000 Gastineau Patricia Schlichting, Seattle; J. Manahan, Seattle; L. L. Trimble, Seattle; S. C. Willard, Ketchikan; Mr. and Mrs. Hardy Trefzgar, Se- attle; F. H. Schrader, Seattle; Mar- jorie Johnson, Ketchikan; Marian nd, Ketchikan; L. Rasmussen; ge Durner, Juneau. Zynda McGrath, Sitka; Mrs. Petersburg; Esther L. M. Vincent, Nisselle, Seattle. Alaskan William Kelly, Seattle; A. H. Doran, Seattle; George Gibbie, Se- attle; M. Richard, Seattle; J. Salch, Seattle; M. Hodge, Seattle; M.| Salem, Seattle. A S MR. AND MRS. HARRY O'NEILL BORN AT ST. ANN'S TUESDAY Mr. and Mrs. Harry O'Neill are | receiving congratulations today| from their friends on the birth of | a baby daughter |evening at 8 o'clock. Both Mrs. 1 are getting along nicely, ac- ing to the attending physician. r. O'Neill is on the staff of the \‘thforma Grocery store. e —— | | SITKA SEA PATROL KETCHIKAN DEMOLAYS \ The Teal, U. S. Bureau of Fish-/ eries patrol ship, will sail from Seaftle on March 25 for this port, according to advices received by| Capt. M. J. O'Connor, Assistant Agent of the Bureau. It will be assigned to the fur seal patrol out of Sitka for the month of April and part of May. It has been unofficially reported that the Teal will be stationed here during the coming fishing season. This could not be con- Med here today. In the past| ever since its construc- has operated in Cook Inlet gy STETSON HATS m Hats at the Store. —adv.| i INSTALL NEW OFFICERS At a recent meeting of the Ket- | chikan DeMolays, the following of- | ficers were installed: | Master Councilor, Edward Bor- gen; Arthur Nelson and Cl.vde Johnson, Senior and Junior Coj cilor; Norman MacDonald and | vis Finzel, Senior and Junior Den- |cons; Edward Tolan and Roy Self- ridge, Senior and Junior Stewards; Sentinel, Phillip ‘Elliott; Chaplain, Mark Woodruff; Marshal, William Robertson; Almoner, Dan Stark- | weather; Orator, Donald Pedersen; Musician, Fred Paul; Standard rBearer Walter Brice, and Precept- |ors, Charles Barkas, Willlam Wik- strom, John Hall, Pat Lloyd and {Baard Lervick. A dance followed the installation services. Daily Empire Want Ads Pay PARENTS OF BABY DAUGHTER | weighing 7% pounds at St. Ann's Hospital last | O'Neill and the baby | FOR NORLITERS {More than 100 Churchmen and Their Guests At- tend Monthly Dinner | their guests were ‘troated “to “a&n ‘exoeuent musical program by “Wil- | Mis E. Nowell ‘and “his senior string ensemble last night in the Base-| | ment of the Northern Light Pres- byterian Church at the clubmen'’s | monthly dinner. | Auditors of the miniature ‘con- cert were spellbound by the musie of Mr. Nowell's pupils, and gave Mr. Nowell an ovalion when he | played a solo mear the end of the evening. | A movel and" interesting ‘number of the program was & showing of pictures ‘of shipwrecks in normem waters and a talk on the histories| of them with stories by survivors read from the records by M. ‘Whittier, © Chief Deputy U States Colle¢tor of Customs, Who' has been gathering the collection of pictures for the past tourwen years. ? ! Elmer Reed, in response to a de- mand from several of the Norlite-| men, gave a reading, “The Kobyk Maiden,” and ' J. J. Fargher ‘sang a number of Irish songs.” Commu- Nordlmg WRESTLNG BANNED JOHANNESBURG, South Africa, March 17—As the outcome of- an “all-in” wrestling match - between Henry Iislingen of America ng Ben Sherman of Canada . the- city: council has banned all-in clashes here, referring to the sport' as “brutal and degrading.” The bout in question ended in rioting. Solano county, Cal., officers claim Daniel T. Valdez holds a state rec- R B I8 g’”’"m’ NOWELL STRING . ENSEMBLE PLAYS F nity singix_lg was led by Homer At 11 o'czore, last might the! steamer Alaska, Capt. C. V. West-| erlund; commander, and Dave Dor-; | an, ‘purser, left Juneau for me Westward by way of Skagway and Haines. Those who took passage on the steamer were: For Haines, A. Van Mayern; for Skagway, J. O. Sten- | braten, Henry Messerschmidt, Peter More than 100 Norlitemen and| Victors; for' Véldez, John F. Cham- berlain, Ed. E. Berndt; va,” Sami Hamador; ‘for Seward, Mrs. M. Moran, Martin Moran, Hnrry ‘Euudson, Frenk P. Roe, 8. \ Hermanson, ' Everett Nowell, Oharlés™A. ‘Hawthorn, ‘Albert, Carl- | son;"Gus Y Aslund, Mrs. ‘R. J. Mc- Kanpa, Arne Lund, Carl E. John- son. WESTWARD for Cordo- 'EXPERT HERE 10 SUPERVISE REDECORATION & Capitol and Collseum The- | atres to Be Entirely Gone Over and Modernized Carl Berg, who is manager of the: decorating department of B. F. Shearer and Compéily, of Seattle,|: and now the house guest of Mr. and Mrs. Cliff Daigler, has start- ed redecorating the Capitol Theatre. After the completion of the Capitol Mr. Berg will take charge of re- decoratmg the Coliseum theatre. The interior, entrances and foyers of both' theatres will be brought strictly up-to-date by Mr. Berg, who has had a great deal of experience in decorating both thea- tres and hotels of the finer type. He came here directly from Spo- kane, Washington, where he had charge' of redecorating the famous Davenport Hotel. Mr. Berg is being assisted in his ! work here by Dan Russell, well known local decorator. TALLAPOOSA IN PORT THIS P. M. FROM PATROL Coast Guard Vessel Ex- pected to Leave for | Seattle Within Week | ers as a move to balk a3 l. DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE, WEATHER BUREAU The W eather /By the U. 8. Weather Buresu) LOCAL DATA Forecast for Jumeam and vicinily. beginning at 4 p.m., March 21: Fair and colder tonight, Thursiay fair; gentle variable winds. Tune Barometer Temp, Humulity Wind Veiocity Weather 4 p.m. yest'y 30.06 36 4 SE 5 Snow 4 am. today 30.23 30 96 Calm 0 Clear Noon today 30.36 41 37 NE 11 Clear CABLE AND RADYO REPOETS YESTERDAY | TODAY Highest 4pm. | Lowest4am. zam. Preclp. 4s.m. Station temp. temp. ! temp. temp. velocity 24hrs. Weather Barrow -22 -22 | -2¢ -2¢ 4 0 Clear Nome 14 14 | 4 10 12 0 Ciear Bethel 16 16 | 16 18 6 Trace Snow Fairbanks 18 14 -14 -14 4 0 Clear Dawson 26 18 | -20 -18 0 02 Clear St. Paul 26 26 | 26 30 16 02 Cldy | Dutch Harbor 38 38 36 38 40 2.38 Rain Kodiak 40 36 | 30 34 4 02 Snow Cordova 44 42 | 28 28 4 [ Clear Juncau . 37 36 30 30 0 03 Clear Sitka ... 40 - | 27 - 0 0 Cldy Ketchikan 40 38 15 T8 88 0 110 Rain Prince Rupert 40 40 | 34 36 4 .08 Clear Edmonton 32 28 22 22 4 0 Cldy Seattle 60 56 | 44 44 4 0 Clear Portland .......... 70 70 50 50 4 0 Clear San Francisco ... 72 64 52 52 6 0 Clear The barometric pressure is lov in extreme Southwestern Alaska with rain or snow over most of Southern Alaska, followed by clear- ing in the eastern portion of the Gulf of Alaska. The pressure is high and rising throughout Alaska, exc:pt in the extreme Southwest, with generally fair weather. Temperaturas have fallen in the Interior and have risen in Western Alaska. Possible restoration of the mon- archy in Austria is seen by observ- esign of | German Nazis to win control. Arch- duke Otto of Hapsburg (above) pretender to the throne, is believe to have support of powerful Prince 5 von Starhemberg, leader of Heim- wehr-Fascists. BOWLING “Tomorrow’s Styles Nothing like the thrill of % NEW STETSON HATS a ten-strikel Develop your || Today’ See the new Stetson Hats at the game on the finest alleys | Leader Department Stcre. —adv. you ever played on. Brunswick Bowling e A. Van Mavern, well known mer- At 12:45 o'clock today the U. S.: Coast Guard cutter Tallapoosa, Commander Fletcher W. Brown, re- turned to its Juneau base after| being away since March 3 on hali- | but patrol. During the time it was | away the Tallapoosa cruised ap-| proximately 2700 miles, going as far | west as Kodiak. i Short calls for fuel and water | | were made at Cordova and Seward and the cutter put into Kodiak | long enough for J. W, Ollmham Assistant Surgeon with the U. S.| | Public Health Service, to examine| |two young Indian men, for U. 'S. Bureau of Indian Affairs.| The men, Nick Zahroff and Mike | Javloff, were both found to be in serious condition. The latter is a patient at the Woody Island Bap- tist Mission, near Kodiak. With the exception of a severe | storm lasting four days, during the | early part of the patrol, the weather was not exceptional, of- ficers report. The Tallapoosa will be in port until the latter part of this week when it will leave for Seattle to; undergo its annual overhaul, Capt. Brown said. e e the | chandise broker, left on the steam- Alleys / AL er Alaska for a business trip to T Pool Billiards atyouse o Cigars Tobacco Soft Drinks ~ Barber Shop in connection Lower Front Street, opposite “ s s Wiptr and Boot 'Juneaw’s Own Store ITS Wise to Call 48 Juneau Transfer Co. when in need of | MOVING or STORAGE Fuel 0il Coal Transfer | INSURANCE | Allen Shattuck, Inc. Established 1898 Juneaun, Alaska DANCE WEDNESDAYS SATURDAYS Mandarin Ball Room Revelers ot s s FOR INSURANCE 1 See H. R. SHEPARD & SON Telephone 409 B. M. Behrends Bank Bldg. PO 'MINERS’ UNION WILL! BALLOT ON OFFICERS,' A. B. HALL TOMORROW| The Juneau Miners’ Union,which | \elected 19 trustees as a policy| board at meetings held last Mon- | day will hold two more meetings tomorrow to0 nominate and ballot | for officers, it was announced to- day. The first meeting will be held at| {10 am. tomorrow, and the second at 7:30 pm, Both will take place | in A, B. Hall and both will be limited to members only. | — e — | EVERETT NOWELL LEAVES ON BUSINESS TRIP TO THE INTERIOR AND WESTWARDl ! Everett Nowell, Alaska represent- | ative of Blake, Moffett and Towne, paper manufacturers, and Ballou and ‘Wright, automobile accessories, | left Juneau on the steamer Alaska "t,o make his first trip to the West- | ward and Interior, since taking his new position. He will be away for several| weeks before returning to his head- quarters in Juneau. SHERWIN. -WILLIAMS OTINT | A Sanitary Wall Finish for Use with Hot or Cold Water D Degcotint is an ideal wall coating for the decoration of all interiors. It gives that soft, velvety, water-color effect so essential to refined surroundings, and can be applied on plaster walls, wood, or any of the various wall boards. 5 Ib. pkg., 60c e homas Hardware Co. Juneau Cash Grocer CASH GROCERS Corner Second and Seward Free Dehvety D e e e DA 1 Phone 68 Juneau Lumber M dls Ine. | LUMBER ’ |~ ALASKA MEAT CO. |1 FEATURING CARSTEN’S BABY BEEF—DIAMOND TC HAMS AND BACON—U. S. Government Inspected AT ANY time—break- fast, lunch or dinner— PHONE 39 Deliveries—10:30, 2:30, 4:30 yow'll find at Bailey's :;;:“ Yo-’ll’ I::eu:i ¥ 2y Pk gt WINDOW CLEANING PHONE. 485 BAILEY’S Old Papers for Sale at Empire Office FOR SALE! G.B.‘AdaMay’ for Trolling or Seining Register length 31.3; overall length 39.5; round stern; her register beam 9.4; depth 4.4 GROSS TONNAGE—10.8 NET TONNAGE—9 20 Horsepower Heavy Duty Regal Engine Boat in best condition and engine practically new George Brothers Or . mecaomad THE SANITARY GROCERY PHONES 83 OR 85, “The Store That Pleases” .

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