Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
. $22.50 $32.50 wind-swept; storin-swept; or storm blown— and they are meet a warm recey Ili()ll THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, MONDAY, APRIL 2, 1934. ing with B.M. Behrends Co., Inc. “Juneaw’s Leading Department Store” CONGILIATOR Mr. Berg came to Juneau several weeks ago directly from Spokane, ‘Washington where he had com- the entire redecoration of. the famous Davenport Hotel. e e s som— Daily Empire Wans Ads Pay . skull and throat cut,’ jaw broken . and falsé teeth knocked out. Jor- 1 dan was shot in the left eye. i N ' ON CIGAR BUTT |.... o coouims oo e when they dismounted ' from' their - ‘ motor vehicles to question & man : and woman seated in a parked : . HUFFY MANNER AIDS lN cLUE car. near -Grapevine, - southeast of @ All interested "in the laundry | here. . 2 » i Witnesses said neither omcer b\lSXHESS Of Juneau and 4 r. | had a chance t.o draw their wllp- 23 . _ ” Development\sw,’ H&we'vex. Desperado and Woman|ons. cinity will meet at the offices z Show He Was Dismiss- | Companion Suspected Near the scene, A. C. Howerton, . a detective, ‘found a ‘oigar butt f Laun & - ed Over Month Ago ‘of Two Murders with the imprint of small: teeth. of the Alaska Laundry MON 4 i | B The Parker woman's Uking for big : s BOSTON, Mass, April 2. —| FORT WORTH, Texas, April 2.|black cigars is well known and it is DAY AT 7:30 P. M., for the 5 Charles G. Wood, Federal Com-|_Tooth prints on a cigar stub led also known she is Barrow’s com- putpose of = missioner on Conciliation ‘::’d the authorities to attribute the|panion. ) s*-4.._ widely known in the east, middle| siaying of two Texas Highway i i N 4§ ¥ ! west and south for his successful| patrolmen to Clyde Barrow, not- g e WDl’klug agreement. mediation in many important in-|orious Southwest killer, and &| poo pyaied Rulers' Meeting, dustrial disputes, yesterday an-|woman companion Bonnie Parker.|w.i e.v' april 4, Initiation. N nounced his resignation in &| The officers killed are E. B.|yiooUolt oot ene b sharply worded letter to Francis, wheeler and H. D. Murphy. They e o, T ) 2 Perkins, Secretary of Labor. | were shot down without * whrning | %P¢™ I B TS Wood charges the Secretary of — — — _ ¥ Labor with “having fallen down on ; the job” through failure to take & " *.* » lead in reconciling industrial bel- § ligerents and accused her of hav- ing caused President Roosevelt and General Hugh S. Johnson to ‘“de- vote their precious time to do tht‘ work which Congress obligated m‘ g o GET YOUR RABBIT LA} N " THE OTHER SIDE A WASHINGTON, April 2. — The| WE W ANT Labor Department said Charles G.| ' Wood was dismissed more than a| month ago by the Department.| y . Wood was a minor employe, said a Department statement and he did not resign but was notified more than a month ago his services| Btk £ Pe would not be required after he| completed work on which he was| ’ i e In the BAG! 2 CAPITOL AND COLISEUM ! THEATRES REDECORATED | Pack your clothes and BY CARL BERG, EXPERT linens in the laundry _— bag, send it to us, and 2 2z Both the Capitol and Ooliseum | yow'll smile! That's what "> Theatres have been attractively; thrifty women do! - redecorated under the supervision » 2% hm 3 of Carl Berg, well known theatre . and hotel decorator of Seattle. uneau ru TOOTH PRINTS Alaska Laundry Telégmph Systems to Have Code Communlcatl_on Line Heads Called to~Washington to. Accept Proposals SIX-PERSONS. FOUND SLAN | IN ONE HOUSE Inquisitive ‘Neighbot Re-| veals Crime Near | | Bremerton: WASHINGTON, April 2-—NRA | has attempted for the first time to impose a code on the telegraph and (Co*:Mm}ed rrom Page One) ———————————— | industry against its wishes | heads of all telegraph comp have been summoned here to cept the Blue Eagle agreement The Western Union has chal- lenged NRA's right' to produce a tode for telegraph communications the slaying of six persons found dead in the blood spattered house of Frank TFleder last Saturday night. Besides Flieder and his wife the Some Orenevert, ared an, "better| Industry, while representatives of known, as Bert Vinoent, the “Sing- the Postal advocated the action in ing Bartender” and former vaude- W ‘mmrest\ of the public.” ville ‘player, and his wife Peggy, 1 4 aged 30; Magnus Jordan,' aged 50, retired navy man and caretaker of the summer homes; and Fred Bal- | son, bartender in ‘a Bremerton beer parlor, A silent ‘witness to'the killings was a white cat. Robbery Is Motive It is believed robbery was . the motive, Two diamond rings of Mrs. ‘!"lleder, one a dinner ring valued at $1500, are missing. | The bodies were scattered all (about the house, battered or shot |to death. Two throats were cut |and the place had been ransacked. The bodies were removed to q‘mortuules last night after ' evi- dence ‘was taken by Luke May who is working with Sheriff D. k. | Blankenship. | May and Blankenship said the |deed was so ghastly that it ap- peared the killers might have been idoped or crazed or anxious to re- Only Half a Doten Vital Meastires Are Slated for Enactment WASHINGTON, April 2 Congressional leaders, for the first time, spoke with réal confidence of May 15 as the date for adjourn- ment. Only half a dozen vithl measures await actioen,, Among the legisla- tion to yet be completed are the final appropriation measures, tax, tariff, stock market regulations and a measure as yet not intro- move the last chance of being identified. duced, providing for new Public |" May 'said he believed Flieder,| WOFks funds. |Balsom and Chenevert | grim fight for their lives. | All of the victims had been tied jup or had their .mouths and eyes tapped. Flieder was a member of a pio- | neer Bremerton family and had | married ‘his third time. | i it d made 4| Miss Loretta Robinson, daugh- ter of H. R. Robinson, and James ‘Whesler, Jr., both long time resi- dents of Petersburg, were recently married at the Wrangell Narrows metropohs GRAY SUIT IS CLUE BREMERTON, April 2—A blood | stained gray suit came . into..the | case today when Isadere Laschlin |a tailor, reported it was: breught to his shop last Friday -afternoon after another cleaner had. turned 25 ‘bars . g SOAP—CRYSTAL WHITE SOAP, DILLINGER IN NARROW ESCAPE FROM OFFICERS Desperado Fight ights Way Out of Trap in St. Paul and Gets Away ST. PAUL, Minn., April 2—John Dillinger, with a submachine gun| . % Highest 4pm. | Lowest4am. jam. Precip. 4am. in his hands and a big green sedank:?‘:him US: ;:,te"]f“;vfl;f n:;;:&r::;; Btation temp. temp. | temp. temp. velocity #4hrs. Weather awalting for dim, shot his way out| Glee Club. | gnrmw ;é };3 2; 22 2 0 cclldy of ‘a police trdp last Saturday and | v o < jome 36 o ear once more foiled the law. |atrs. Gamn, L. Pressier, V. Pope.| B Sy Womi Ly ke Dy Finger prints left behind as he|yich, Mrs. Herbert Grieg, J. Fra-| Patwas ” - [l 1 8 A 0 Glear fled with a woman, belleved 10| ger, Miss Phocbe Ward, Dr. R. L.| Da%son G 0. Ry e have been wounded, and & man|gason and J. Barbeau. St, Paul 38 38 32 32 12 02 Clear believed to be John Hamilton, def-| Those who took passage on the Dutqh Harbor 42 38 32 32 4 10 Clear initely established one of the trio| Northland for the south were: For Kodiak 40 38 32 34 L] .08 Pt. Cldy as the widely hunted desperado Petersburg, Mrs. B, Anderson, Lil-{ Cordova 46 46 34 36 10 02 Snow who broke out of the Crown Point,|lian Anderson, Ralph Anderson, Jumeau “ 42 38 38 4 22 Rain Indiaua, Jall A G. Peters, Richard Wakelin;| S'K& = 3% ol e - s Wild Gun Fight P for Ketcmkan' Carl B. Berg; fm‘- Ketehlkan % by 8 e 9 b Cldy Hamilton was idénflfied through Seattle, Mrs. Lily B. Bfirlord ers‘ Prince Rupert 48 46 34 36 4 02 Pt. Cldy a description given the police by|pay) M. Sorensen, Miss Jean Rus-| Eamonton ooy - ool g o gou Mrs. Daniel Coffee, wife of the|gell Miss Harriett Joslin, G, w.| Seattle 48 44 40 40 6 08 Cldy proprietor of an apartment house.|molta, Jack Wilson, Miss Jenny Portland 50 48 40 N 4 20 Cldy The third floor of the apartment 5 2 San Francisco ... 62 58 52 52 12 [ Cldy house, which the trio occupied, was the scene of the wild gun- fight with the officers staged be- fore escaping. The fugitives left a few spots of blood as evidence leading to the opinion that a bullet fired by city detective Henry Cummings struck the woman. A miniature arsenal, includingl two submachine guns and road! maps of Minnesota, Wisconsin and Michigan were found in the apart- ment. | — e | Dr. M. Forwalter of Van West, Ohio, has a living turtle with two heads and six legs which was found on the bank of a Texas stream. PIONEER CAFE J. K. Paul o | | | “THE HOME OF | | it down. The suit has three elean- |, |ing marks on it and they are being traced in an attempt to find the owner. | Three men are being questioned |as part of the round-up of under- world . ¢characters. ¢ | | AUTOPSIES ARE HELD BREMERTON, Wash., April 2.+ ‘Auwpsies revealed ‘that Fleder had nine hammer holes 'in his skull, two on his faece, his thrcat cut, jaw broken and teeth knocked out. His wife’s throat was cut, | head battered and there are stab | wounds in the chest. There are 22 hdminer holes in | Chenevert's head and his Wwife had been shot twice. Balsom has five hammer wounds in thé face and WE DO OUR PART | “T_he Corner Drug*StOl,'e,; NORTHLAND OFF LOCAL DATA Time Barometer Temp. Humidity Wind Velocity Weather 4 p.m. yesty 29.94 42 8 sw 4 Sprinkling On the way south, the motor- 4 am. today 30.02 38 91 SW 4 Rain ship Northland, Capt. Leonard| Noon today i iR 86 EW 12 Rain Williams and Hareld Knight, pur- sef, docked in Juneau this after- CABLE AND RADYO REPORTS noon at 1:30 @'clock. It sailed for Seattle and way points at 3 u'clock.‘ YESTERDAY | TODAY | Among the passengers leaving Ju- Ehling, and the members of the| University of Club. sor an informal dance tonight at the Masenic Temple at 8:30. Re- freshments. 1. 8. DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE, WEATHER BUREAU The Weather /By the U. 8. Weather Buresw) Forecast for Juneam and vicinily, beginning at 4 p.m., April 2: Rain tonight and Tuesday; moderate southeasterly winds. FOR SOUTH AT 3 P. M. TODAY O Washington Glee ‘The barometric pressure is moderately low over Alaska except in the Southwest. It is lowest in Bering Sea with light snow or rain in Southern Alaska and southward to Oregon. The pressure is moderately high in the Pacific States, Western Canada and South- eastern Alaska. The weather is clear with lower temperatures in the Interior and Bering Sea. Temperatures have risen in most other districts. - e e DANCE DE MOLAYS ‘The order of De Molay will spon- Invitational. b i Daily Empire Want Aas ray adv. e } “Tomorrow’s Styles Today” | Prom Frocks Always One Showing Something Smart Standard and Distinctively f THE BEST! Different! | You can depend on the experienced staff of this organi- zation to carry out your every wish. Regardless of the price you pay, there is no sacrifice of dignity . . . no vari- ations from our high standards of service. Priced from 19.95 to $22.50 \ ‘\ e The Charles W. Carter Mortuary PHONE 136-2 Juneau’s Own Store “The Last Service Is the Greatest Tribute” | vi- formulating a i { IDEAL PAINT SHOP Cigars | Cigarettes Candy Cards The New Arctic Pabst Famous Draught Beer On Tap “JIMMY" CARLSON If It's Paint We Have It! PHONE 549 Wendt & Garster ALASKA MEAT CO. FEATURING CAKSTEN’S BABY BEEF—DIAMOND TC HAMS AND BACON—U. 8. Government Inspected ! PHONE 39 Deliveries—10:30, 2:30, 4:30 NEW SHIPMENT! Grandma’s Cakes and Cookies ® TELEPHONE 478 PROMPT DELIVERY , Co. oot Learn what a Modern Electric Range Wiil Give You in Economy, Cleanliness,, New Freedom The Largest Display in Alaska to Choose From Liberal Trade-in- Allowance—Convenient Terms Alaska Electrw nght and Ppwér Co. «. JUNEAU—Phone 6 DOUGLAS—Phene 18