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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, MONDAY, SEPT. 24, 1934. Many fur trims in a great variety of woolens and styles. Popular Prices DRESSES ® One group of silks and woblens that are extra good values at $7.95. ®A group of Children’s Dreésses priced to clear at $3.00. NEW MILLINERY $2.95 and up Children’s Winter Coats Just Arrived CHILDREN'S BLLUE CHINCHILLA COATS For Storm and Winter Sizes St B, e ), 5198 Sies: 7oAl ... . 0l el .DDB B. M. Behrends Co., Inc. “Juneau’s Leading Department Store” EVIDENCETD BE PRESENTED INNEW YORK “Continued rrom' age One) * which he passed and which was also found in his garage. To' Break Alibf ;. Mrs. Hauptmann has rallied to 1h¢r husband’s defense providing an alibi that he was with her on the |nignt of the kidnaping. District Attorney Foley said: “We have taken statements from Hauptmann and his wife and have' lots «ef evidence to disprove their alibi.” ! Treated Hauptmann f Dr. Otto Meyer has informed the police he treated Hauptmann on January 3, 1933, until April 17, of that year, for a leg ailment, ap- parently caused by a fracture or sprain. The Lindbergh squad said footprints outside of the Lindbergh { nursery indicated . the .kidnaper illmped away heavily. | More Money Found e ‘ Department of Justice agents have reports and showed today that $18,500 of the $50,000 ransom money {has been recovered, including 'the $2980 turned In on May 1 ‘last |year at the Federal Reserve Bank by an unknown “J. J. Faulkner.” e SAM LIGHT LEAVES FOR SOUTH ON PRIN. LOUVISE, Here’s 2 smart turban and scarf set for fall wear. From Revilion Freres, the Persian turban is of stenciled kid with the scarf matching. Lilly Dache, the designer, is matching only fur hats and coats this year —not tweeds. With tweed she recommends felts. (Associated Press Sam Light, wholesale liquor re- presentative, took passage for the south on the Princess Louise. COL. LINDBERG 'P;iice Chief Describes Capture of Hauptmann (Continued from page One) traced a $20 gold certificate to a AT GRAND JuRY shoe store in Fordham and from y that merchant we secured a de- Lty i ""f41 " |scription of the man who passed Will Lend His Aid Against “subsequently, one of the ran- H {som bills bearing an automobile li- Hauptmann, Alien Ex- ;(-nso nllmber was discovered in 1 Convict, Under Arrest {the Corn Exchange Bank at Park Contihuea rrom Page One) { Ave: and 125th 8t. From there the bill was trated to a gas station in o |the vicinity of the bank Paullin, wens to Hopewell g0 tell| «rast Tuesday morning, Bruno the New Jersey authorities about'gichard Hauptmann was seen to the letter but that the officials did jeave his residence in the automo- Tot dppear Much HitEresied. | bile bearing the license Wi ap- District Attorney Foley however |peared on the bill, and started to- TBIVETPIN U. 8. DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE, WEATHER BUREAU The Weather (By the U. 8. Weather Bureau) Forecast for Juneau and vicinity, beginning at 4 p.m., Sept. 24: Fair tonight, Tuesday cloudy and cooler;gentle variable winds. LOCAL DATA Barometer Temp. Humidity Wind Velocity Weather 30.26 57 29 w 10 Clear 30.27 40 92 Calm 0 Clear 30.22 52 59 s 2 Cldy CABLE AND RADIO REPORTS PAULLIN DID Time 4 p.m. yest'y 4 am. today Noon teday - KIDNAP GASE {Warden's Daughter Gives “ Further Corroboration About Disclosures + iContinuea rrom Page One) | AR 5D & ‘xhn strange letter to Paullin.” Paullin told * what ‘uxriio. He {only of an extr lin then said: YESTERDAY | TODAY Highest 4p.m. | Lowest4am. 4am. Precip. 4am. temp. | | temp. temp. velocity 24hrs, Weather 34 34 4 Trace Cldy 50 50 8 950 Rain Station 4 52 64 72 40 48 42 28 44 42 Clear Clear Cldy w Paul i kidnaping. paid little heed to the eonvict's story. Regarding it, he said: “It's a bust.” Extortion Case Foley said he has a clear case of extortion ~against. Hauptmann. Mrs. Anna Hauptmann, last Sat- urday night said neithér she nor her husband knew Paullin. She her at a Bronx restaurant on March 1, 1923, when the Lindbergh baby was abducted, and that he could not have been in New Jersey at' the same time. Admissions Hauptmann admitted he was a carpenter and ‘werked in a lum- beryard near Hopewell, N.J., where the baby was snatched from its crib. The lumberyard in which he worked handled the same peculiar marked lumber from which was made the ladder the kidnaper left behind, Hauptmann’s automobile, through which he was tracked down because of ‘the vigilance of Walter Lyle, a gasoline station’ dttendant, a bank and detectives: of two states and federal agents, was reported pur- chased 'in Lakewood, N. J., not far from Hopewell, the day before the ———-—-——— RUMMAGE SALE At the old florist shop on Third Street, by Ladies' Guild, Friday, Sept. 28. Contributors appreciated. Phone 6004. —adv. .. NOTICE TO TAXPAYERS Owing to the change in date of delinquency for payment of taxes from the first Monday in October to September 15, an extension until October 1 will be allowed this year. 1f one-half of amount due is paid by October 1 the balance will not become delinquent until after March 15, 1935. Interest at 12 per cent on delinquent taxes will not begin until October 1." Payments made in full by said date are subject to 2% diseount. A’ W. HENNING, —adv. City Clerk. also said her husband called for' _ ward Yorkville, with the detectivesihe could have killed following. {was a good enougt ! Arrest Is Made |and knew how to build | “When nis car reached Tremont |Strong enough to suppor and Pary Ave, the detectives halt-| It Was not until Pau led Hauptmann's car, directed him|tioned that Hauptmann v 'to get out and searching him, found | woodworker that we knew I janother $20 gold certificate 1dcn-"’7""» said Miss Thomas. tified as part of the Lindbergh ran- s i ' | som. “He was immediately taken back| to his house and while questioned there admitted passing the $10 and| $20 gold certificates found by mr-i |'police. He'*denied, however knowledge of the Lindbergh som money. | “Meanwhile a search of the place was instituted and a pair of shoes located and identified by the Fordham shoe store propriefor was found. |" “In continuation of the search |of the house, Detectives John Mur-| where lumber bearing a pec phy, Frank Dunn, and James Pe-|mark similar to that found on | trosini of the New York Police De-|{lumber in the ladder, wh partment, Sergeant Wallace of the|found at the scene of the New Jersey state police, and Spe-|ing, is to be had. cial ‘Agent Turo of the Depart-| “Despite the fact that ment of Justice found, after a dili-| mann denied he had a |gent search of the entire premis-|{record I have been adv t es, $13750 hidden under the floor|he admits he was on parole a of the garage and in the sash oflescaped as a stowaway from Ger- the door. many to prevent his to pris- | Came As Stowaway {on there” | “From the many conflicting stor- | ks -2 s SO jes Hauptmann has told detectives,{ MRS. WAINO HENDRICKSON we learned that he is thirty five] AND DAUGHTER TO SPE |years old, born in Saxony, Ger-| SEVERAL MONTHS SOUTH many, and after serving in the Gvr-! man army, stowed away on the| Mrs. Waino E. Hendrickson and | steamship Washington, arriving in|her daughter, Miss Dorothea Hen- the United States at New Yo n|drickson, left on the Pr Lou- 11923, |ise for Vancouver, B. C., end | _ “He stated he had odd jobs about veral months with Mrs. Hen- | the city until 1926, when he mar-|drickson’s family in that ecity ried and made his home in the| - Bronx. 1 ATTENTION REBEKAI “Strangely enough, he explains,| There will be & reguwlar meeting that shortly after the ransom mon-|0f the Perseverance Lodge No. 2 A ey was paid, he quit working and|in the L O. O. F. Hall Wednesday devoted his time trading in the|Sept. 26, at 8 pm, followed by a stock market. social meeting observing anniver- “He explains the presence of the|sary Rebekah Lodge. All Odd Fel- money as ‘a result of careful sav-|lows and Rebekahs invited. Pro- ings, and the gold certificatés as|gram and refreshments —adv, | foresight, with word of the sup-!| | posed inflation shortly after Presi-| dent Roosevelt took office. Blank Denia! “However, in tracing back bank which, he the gold certificate: all| dental of each phase of his ran-, “Somewhat significant is a i mission that he had been emp! in the neighborhood of the Lir | bergh’s Hopewell home as a carpen- { B “In addition the detectives | established beyond ques he had access to a lumber retu to ACROSS | 1. Go b . Reach across 9. South Amer~ lcan river Daily Cross-word Puzzle Solution of Saturday’s"Puzzle 9. On the side away from the wind . Broad shal- low vessels (VIR Z IDIRIAICIGIH| T ZAS|E|T) ’ E%}"nmus S [0} 7P OIE] (WIA| . Behaves Large tubs | Foundation of modern business . Feminine name Anchor . South Amer- ican country Small t:rrel Lower the bottom . Repetition | | Wi or mak- | 50. Be the mat~ ter with 61, Deserve and Teceive as uipment g. Cuble meter * ~ voleanic $3. Neighborly working gathering $4. Remain b5, Cards next below the <k oll jack s o B E - e L Vi A Delicious Drink Mix canned ORANGE JUICE, 20c and * PINEAPPLE JUICE, can, 10c At GARNICK’S, Phone 174 B Lo W% IRIARZ [AIG[A| O[R[1 |G]1 [N]A| E% (TIEN] TR T [ /3 14 T T ARNSE ARER D EEM/ /NN L1 T . Roman [El RIAIT[E] emperor . Became . Male sheep Attendants on the sick . Transmit 8. Shrewd . Plerce with something pointed Cllylln ann- 1. Nomizal value of tock 2. Devoured 3. Stays 4. Horseman's goad 8. Ancient reek Greel milestone 8. Metal fastener I Bxiet Yz 54 o L] WL PHONE 478 150 52 b8 h Harbor . 6 48 48 40 Rain Rain Cldy Dut Kod ) Cordova . Junean Sitka Ketchikan | Prince Rupert | sdmonton 28 58 | 50 | 60 | SRS AR RO BN B D OB San Francisco The barometric pressure is moderately low over Western and Northern Alaska and falling over most of the Terrifory. . A severe torm is central about four hundred miles south of Unalaska with in that vicinit yand light to moderate rain in Western Al- The pressure is moderately high from the ecastern portion of the Gulf of Alaska to Oregon with clear weather in the Interior and Southeast and cloudy weathcr in the eastern portion of the Gulf. Temperatures were higher yesterday in the Interior and were lower from Kodiak westward. aska. yby the Commission on force ac- count. All trucks desiring to work on the project can show up on the fill between 7 and 7:30 am. on Wednesday with a load of rock, Mr. Sterling said. There are some 4,000 yards yet to be hauled to complete the fill. - ROCKFILL APPROACH JOB TO BE RESUMED | WEDNESDAY MORNING Work on the rockfill approach on the Juneau end of the Douglas Bridge will be resumed mnext Wednesday morning by the Alaska | Road Commission, it was announced today by Hawley Sterling, Asst., Chief Engineer. This is being done Cotton acreage in California was reduced 38 per cent for 1934-1935, according to the University of Cali- fornia farm advisers’ service. —————— WINDOW CLEANING PHONE 485 LUMBER Juneau Lumber Mills, Inc. QUARTS, case . . $3.55. PINTS, case . . . $360 @ OLYMPIA @ RHEINLANDER @ ACME @ RAINIER @ HOP GOLD @ AULT HEIDELBERG ‘ @ Visit our Family Liquor Department! CALIFORNIA GROCERY ‘P:romp‘t Delivery