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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, THURSDAY, MARCH 29, 1934. — . |Petersburg Girl Is MARANVILLE ~ [MAT AND MIT "es ot e EREAKS LEG. | SHOW DATES o dso ks OING HOME SET, APRIL 13 {Seventh and Eighth Grades Will Pull Of Some- thing New Here | SEATTLE. March 29.—Miss Mil-| | dred Johansen, 19-year-old Uni-| | versity of Washington student, who | is recuperating at her Petersburg,| Alaska home from a serious auto accident injuries suffered on De- | cember 6, has been awarded §3,- | 500 damages in the Superior Court | against Frank Edward, truck op-| | erator whose machine struck the girl. He and his employer have agreed to the payment. The girl's| | father, Sverre Johansen, appeared | for his daughter. o ee—— | MORE NATIONAL WORK PLANNED President’s Emergencyj Council Is Preparing | Ambitious Campaign | ton Brave Player, Vet—l ern Baseballist, Out of | Game Three Months | PE.TERS'TU;G. Fla., March 29 —Hard luck overtook Walter “Rabbit" Maranville, of the Bos<| Braves, when ' ‘his| Why not to make dates on Fri- day the thirteenth? The reason is divulged by the advertising committee for the Sev- | i coming mmlenth and Elghth‘ Grade mat and pEg thibumn.mit show and is that everyone the New York Yanke: | should reserve this date for the es. | was removed to the Maranville tal. | big fistic frolic in the High School ‘gym. A lively show is being e 3 | staged by the boys for men, women AR WAL e cue 2 - land children. * The program win| yhth inning and was called| | ! ¢ [ . X include boxing, tumbling, wrestling, nce to the injured player., 8.1 | and a special act of combat acti- said Maranville will bplvities (RUAINLS ROEN RS Livewire committees have been he 43-year-old player was en- fy X t " his twenty-third season in organized to take active charge o ”“,);" G the show under the supervision of! | Maranville's leg was broken be-|James Pelley, gym Instructor. The| \ASHINGTON, March 29.—The | knee and ankle. boys are striving to make the event| progigent's Emergency Council is 5 Brave was stre the biggest and best performance | ., sidered the possibility of an am- te ched JOINS HOUSE IN Also Overthrows Roose- | will mean by just iding ne revenue | swelling the public debt that much more. | 1In the vote to override the veto, the 33 Republicans all stood solid MORE BENEFITS = FOR WAR VETS enti Roc to meet d- or ain Democr: Byrns Statement Representative Byrns said possible that President for mew taxes nditures caused by the ge of the Independent off bill over his veto. I do not know the President’s plans but |in view of his position he expressed in his veto message, it is entierly | possible he will ask Congress to provide additional revenue.” velt's Recommendation s on Pay Cut Return 15! (Continued from sage One) or about one hundred twenty-six million dol-| BRI . i 95 5 | EUROPEAN LEAGUE TEAMS TO BOWL AT ELKS TONIGHT IN MIXED TOURNAMENT year, and lars. Today the Administration pond- | ered without an immediate answer on where to get the money for the cost of the new legislation. Ceurses Open Several cou are open but y speculation had it that either new taxes will be suggested or a deficiency appropriation will be voted to expand the budget by the r.eeded amount Lhe latter In the Elks' mixed bowling tour- nament the following teams of the Furopean League will play tonight: 7:30 o'clock, Swedes vs. Italians. 8:30 o'clock, Laplanders vs. Dutch 9:30 o'clock, Norwegians vs. Bri- tons rees BREP % S VR YT Daily Empire Want Ads Pay course alone without '_!hat would be necessary under the | ! proposed law. | i Seeking Air Mail | | The Alaska Southern Airways | 'is still endeavoring to obtain air| § mail service between Seattle andi Juneau, the Chamber was advised | by C. A. Hayes, General Manager. | He enclosed a copy of correspond- LURE OF NORTH |ence with the Postmaster General ‘ | the necessity of the service on the| Gold Is Magne[ that Is At- Postal authorities. This action was [l‘aCllnngde A"enhon 5Iu!ion sent to Washington by rhc‘ i local organization. A letter from Delegate Dimond | PR {and asked the Chamber to urge | taken several weeks ago in a reso- | Here, He Says “ | informed the Chamber he had in-| __|troduced a resolution authorizing | tand directing the War Department | cludes its- famous ‘‘good-natured”| i, survey mngc local harhbrpand its map of the Territory, descriptive ) oaqg for a small boat refuge. He pamphlets describing the Arctic enclosed a copy of the resolution, crui:se of the Victoria, a general|ynich was published in The Em-| Alaska folder, and special adver- pire earlier this week. i tising campaigns being carried on " G G Garland, Chairman of the by the company and the Great|ajacks Department of the Tacoma ! Dt ‘lem.\d Chamber of Commerce, advised the | Iou‘r{e::::g:.al“‘hp:“d. Chamber that organization was u_c-‘ in’ the pa’s‘l tively aiding Delegate Dimond in {enjvy B of ita iost BROADEIOAN his efforts to obtain an appropria- | 7 S tion to construct ‘he Alaska end| 1 tourist years, he said. N k . L Ketchikan Ts Improving 10( the Pacific Yukon Highway. Business and industry in Ket- | chikan have improved materially (Continued from Page One) are three or y as at any time Alaska is expected to Registration Near End G. H. Walmsley called attention in the past three weeks, according d on base (-u,h]_n]g}or the year and are arranging to!pitjous national program for repair | seat hered by the players of | smoked a | to G. W. Folta, Asst. United States Attorney who returned from there this week after a stay of about 90 a record crowd. I work and rehabilitation to be fi- “No, we are nou superstitious,”| nanced by banks and private to the approach of the end of the! period of registration for the mu- nicipal election. Registration clos- es Saturday and the election will te set as Dr. Gideon the| said Mitchell Daniloff, head of the! sources. . with an improvised splint be-|advertising committee. “We feel| Gen. Hugh S. Johnson is men- ambulance ved. that our show is such a sure-fire tioned as the possible head for| PP | attraction that no bad luck can the scheme which would involve | WESTWARD overtake us on a 13th.” setting up a new Administration | SCHEDULE CHANGED| Mr. Pelley, commenting on the Unit. | i | nature of the show said: “We to changing from the sprinz|are geu;ngiawe;y fllwge?er from | Gifts to Nazis i & Aho er schedule, | the professional atmosphere pre-, | unm‘z»)r I‘r’":xko:1xn:\r“i‘xllbe uhable | vailing at ordinary smokers. We Made Tax-l"ree‘ {o stop at Sitka westbound next|are putting on an evening's enter- | but both passengers and |talnment of clean sport without| MUNISH, Germany, March 29.— | aboard for that port wi ;flny of the objectionable features.! To encourage bequests and gifts! to the steamer Vic-| The women will enjoy the show to the Nationalist Socialist Party . either here or at Skagway, it | @S much as men. The boxing dem- the Government has announced today announced by R. J. Mc- | onstration is hailed as the big ath- | that all such donations would be zanna, local agent for the Alaska|letic event of the year in many | freed from the usual taxes, the schools in the states and is spon- | theory being that the gifts are sored as an annual affair.” ! “in the service of the state.” KEON'S | | mship Company. will stop at Sitka| y south on its next McKanna said. | HOSPITAL WE Stivers, Depuy Customs, who tment at the last severe sore throat yesterday. - — five varieties of sugar ca in 1925 accounted for almo: e syrup production now are by the department as inferior. U has beea St. Ann two fo left hospital All Bunnies ® for the Kiddies! @ Saturday afternoon at 5 o’clock we will ded of agriculture WAKE UP YOUR LIVER BILE— WITHOUT CALOMEL And You’ll Jump Out of Bed in the Morning Rarin’ to Go 1f you feel sour and sunk and the world i0oks punk, don’t swallow a lot of salts, mineral water, oil, laxative candy or chewing gum and expect them to make you suddenly eweet and buoyant and full of sunshine. For they can’t do it. They only move the bowels and & mere movement doesn't get at . 'he reason for your down-and-out feeling is your liver. It should pour out two vounds of liquid bile into your bowels daily. I this bile is not flowing freely, your food doesn’t. digest. It just decays in_the bowels. Gas bloats up your stomach. You have a thick, bad taste and your breath is foul skin often breaks out in blemishes. Your head aches and you feel down and out. Your whole aystem is poisoned. It takes those good, old CARTER'S LITTLE LIVER PILLS to ge¢ these two ounds of bile flowing freeiy and make you Feel ““ap and up. They contain wonderful, barmless, gentle vegetable extracts, amazing when it comes to making the bile flow {reely. But don’t ast: for liver pills. Ask for Carter's Little Liver Pills. Look for the name Carter's Little Liver Pills on the red label. Resent a | substitute. - award 8 Live Rabbits @ Be sure to get your tickets—An opportun- ity to participate with every purchase! | | UNITED FOOD CO. “Your Home-Owned Grocery and Market” 3 e Neckwear They're de luxe effects, handpicked for Easter wear. Some are gay and glamorous; others very sedate and refined; rich silks and satins and a raft of the new treatments in the crocheted ties that are back so strong for this spring. S b In’ “Everytling in Furnishings for Men” TRIANGLE BLDG. E OO BT Dance Music TONIGHT days on official business. Janu- ary and February were extremely | dull, but there has been a quicken- ing in all lines this month. The sawmill has started opera- | tions and has* the largest payroll {in the community. Its owners said |the outlook was the best in five or six years. Two wire netting factories are running day and night | to fill orders from salmon canner- ies. be held next Tuesday. H. B. Wooliscraft, bridge engin- eer from Seattle, was a guest of the Chamber today and was in- troduced by O. H. Stratton, who is in charge of design and preparing specifications for the Douglas bridge. Mr. Wooliscraft is check- ing Mr. Stratton’s plans and fi- gures. Capital Beer Parlors The trollers expect the highest price in several yea for king salmon. Other fishermen are hope- | ful over the outlook for the sea- (son. There is a general spirit of | optimism among the people of the entire community, Mr. Folta said. Asks Better Enforcement YACHT BEARS ROOSEVELT T0 BEER LUNCHES DANCING ® Pull with us and we win! rOVi HALF SIZES ARE NO HANDICAP ) TO SMARTNESS! Here are coats to bring you chic if you're five feet five or less. ldeas that flatter and add te your height such as jabot lapels trimmed in gala- pin on a coat of basket weave woolen . . . a scarf tying under your chin in a coat of wool matelasse that wraps you up like a chrysalis. We’ve many more, made for you by Printzess. .. in your exact size, at the price you want to pay. Better enforcement of the local . motor vehicle traffic ordinance was jurged by the Chamber, and a let- | ter has been sent to the City Council calling attention to alleged reckless driving of trucks and oth- er machines in the business dis- trict. The Chamber has also taken up the question of sewage disposal from the Alaska Juneau Boarding House. It is claimed that it is being dumped into an area in the BRIT. NASSAU MIAMI, Florida, March 29.— Bearing President Roosevelt to the southern fishing grounds, the As- tor yacht has left the territorial tomorrow expects to be at British Nassau. This is according to a radio received by Marvin McIn- tyre, the President’s secretary, sta- waters of the United States and by | BOOST IN PAY, SHORTER HOURS AIDING LABOR Wage Increases Prevent Strikes in Several U. S. Sections WASHINGTON, March 29.—Ex- panding industry continues to suf= fer from growing pains but the balm of shorter hours and higher wages are easing the discomfort, A new wage contract affecting coal miners and operators in the major portion of the Appalachian District, provides a seven hour day and five-day week with in- creased wages. With 186,000 steel workers al- ready promised a ten percent raise on April 1 and about 140,000 more expected to be given the same promise today extending the raise throughout the industry. An increase in wages has ended the strike of truck drivers and helpers, at Indianapolis. A member of the National Labor Board has gone to Camden, N. I, to try the shipyard strike there which affects starting of work on a $45,000,000 construe= tion program. On the other side of the picture, two big airplane plants in Buf= falo, N. Y., with delivery guarans teed on contracts worth $4,000,000 met the strike of employees with an order to ‘hire men” New | strike threats are also reported in | Northern Ohio and brought fevers ish efforts by Federal councilias tors to avert walkouts. : The New York City taxi strike is still unsettled. - D and settle {Foreign Publications Under Ban in Austria VIENNA, March 20.—One huns dred foreign publications have been banned from newstand sale by the Government in a drive to sweep | what the Administration considers | immoral or otherwise objection= | able newspapers and magazines off | the streets. The list includes Post, Variety, . | True Story, American, Wide World and some French magazines. OB- tioned here during the Chief Exe- cutive’s vacation trip. drainage district from which the city’'s water supply is taken. The viously some are banned not on moral grounds. Public Health authorities have been asked to investigate the matter. Referendum on Pulp Bill The Chamber has asked the Ter- ritorial Chamber to sponsor a res- olution before its Southeast Alas- ka members endorsing Senator Dill's measure, now pending in the Senate, prohibiting the importation into the United States of pulpwood, wood, pulp and other woods that go into the manufacture of pulp and newsprint, it was announced today. This measure, it was point- ed out, will aid materially in estab- lishing the pulp and paper manu- facturing industry in -Alaska . A protest has been sent the House of Representatives against a measure there which, the Chamber was informed, would require the services of four licensed men on cannery tenders. It was advised by | A. W. Shiels, President of the Pa- | cific American Fisheries, Inc., that |this would adversely affect Alas- | kans now employed on that type of | | craft. Canners, he said, try to em- ;ploy as many Alaskans as possible |on their tenders, but licensed mas- | ters, mates and engineers are not | | available here in the numbers AT A B GOLD § FOR SALE ARGAIN MY HOME ON SIXTH AND TREETS SEE Oliver M. Olson Gastineau Hotel 1,2 or 3 Pound Easter Wrapped Boxes @ Also a fascinating selection of ereams, cunning decorated eggs, chocolate rabbits, ete. @® Easter Breakfast Favors Juneau Drug Company “THE CORNER DRUG STORE”