The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, October 17, 1934, Page 2

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17, 1934. THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIR Men’s Smashing SUI'T and OVERCOAT SALE SALE OF SU ITS AND OVE R( () S you've This year, more. than ever, it's going to be THIS IS THE OCTOBER 8 prebably been expecting, well worth your while to buy. ‘Here’s the ~t0|‘\—0nv of the country’ leading makers found he had an overproduction, His only choice was to sell at the best price he could get. We bought. Here they are SUITS in two-button and three-button’ models. Brown, 'blue, ¢v mixtures. Sizes 36 to 42. belted style, single and double breasted, tan. Sizes 35 to 40. They s priced 50, $25.00, $35.00 Overcoats priced $20.00, $22.5(), $25.00 OVERCOATS in brown and blue Meltons. are all woel. P“r—n DON'T FORGET THE SHOE SALE on the Balcony at $1.00, $1.95, $3.95 Women’s and Children’s Star Brand Shoes “Juneau’s Leading Department Store® her husband's. arms but is auto and the ghductor then sped | L Is ength tod away said M Stoll| The ransom note, dem\mdum and the t 0,000, was found in an upsbmrs i droom and also warned the fam- FOUND ALIVE BY - ,;%-‘;;u TOHOMES, BUT from Cal‘ Found on t he y great I the ransom had been paid but she |are suggested by an investigating H' h ’ I d The St ily is very solicit- had not been rgturned to her commitfee of the South African 1g) way, In 1ana ious about her welfare and hopes |family up to early yesterday after- government as suitable sites for a TP she may be given every possible noon. celonization program which would (Conuinued frem rage Ome) |, ygideration. The abducted, woman’s husband give India an outlet for ¥ is. Vice-President of the Oil Refin- population and enable South Africa confined in an insane asylum. He | BDUCTOR fRICKY ing Company, She is also the niece |to Tid itself of its unwanted Hindus. is the son of a prominent Nash-| My 26, young socwety | of Frederic Sackett, pmmr United | South Africa has almost 200,000 ville man. ma kidnaped from her British Indians as a souvenir of 1860 when in- brought |the decades after {dentured coolie labor oon of October pretended after who Germany uuder President. ver. 'N—* home on the 10 by man States Senator and Amha.;g’%)r to IS PUT TO BED to i LOUISVILLE, Ky., Oct. 17.—Mrs. |have gone to the house to repair a HORNING flOES fiw"u |from India to the sugar plantations Stoll when returned to her home, |telephone. ‘0[ Natal. / was immediately put to bed and| Mrs. Stoll beaten over the | ornin? of Wasmq, lwhere Its. present plan of giving free details of her imprisonment were |head by an.iron pipe until blood he condu ts'a large” getlefal 'tore, |passage home to every Indian who only meagre. She was so exhausted | came r nurse was bound and is @ thrgugh passenger ‘fim‘ Sew- |will return, virtually has broken. |down because four-fifhs of the ard for B&!u!e on. the, Alpska that she as barely able to st (X3 malu it shorl" say fashion’s dictators of eve- ning wrap fashions, The new nightstime wraps aps pear in lengths ranging all the way from the waist to the floor. Patou makes a toe-length model of rich Burgundy red velvet aud collars it in blue fox, while Lucile Pa- ray fashions a flared three- quarter length wmadel of black velvat flGCflIffli with white fox, .. WEDNESDAY, OCT. B. M. Behrends Co., Inc. WMW is being held. The Fede e ily not to notify the authoyities was then to cantact certain individuals g 1 and guarded ashville | l i was spok M Stoll was suffering from a | ment ere cold at the time of her Shrensd Mrs. Stoll id Mrs. Robinson abduction. | L g ] 7 1 refused to participat T egotiations were made and CAPETOWN, Oct. 17. — Britis| AdeCleu Woma" Ta.(en som money and car within two days it was reported Guiana, New Guinea and Ecmeoland organized settlement.” surplus | from KIDNAP TRAIL IS PICKED UP IN NASHVILLE |Abductor’s Father Receives Ransom Money, Gives it | to Daughter-in-Law (Cunmluec trum Paee One) brotight @bout through a chain of events starting with the delivery {of the $50,000, last Friday by 4 Department of Justice agent, pos-| |ing, as an express company em-| ployee, The father of young Rob- inson took = the package and de-| livered it. to,/his daughter-in-law |last Mpnday.. She then took a {train for Terre Hautg, Indiana, the agents following. Trail Picked Up 1 The trail was then picked up in Indianapolis h the appe of Mrs. Robinson and.-Mrs. Stoll at the Clegg home. Mrs. Stall call- ed the Stpll residence in Louisvi Il‘. and asked that the way be cleare for her return, Minister Involved The Rev. Clegg agreed to the two,women to Louisville his automobile, The .call an the telephone was traced from Indianapolis from the| Louisville home 0of the Stolls so0| when . Murs... Stoll ; started.. home ageuts followed in another auto-)| mebile, while another detachment moved out from Louisville.. The kidnap victim's car was intercepted | at. Scottsburg, Indiana. In Chicago It is believed that Robinson, Jr is in Chicago where his father told by him Sunday night he mignt be found. The elderly Robinson is generally regarded as innocent of complicit nce take | in| i | in the crime. It is reported he! talked with his son, who tele-| graphed from Indianapolis, and| urged him to drop the idea. A madman’s laugh was the only reply. | Named as Intermcd Robinson, Sr., was namad in kidnap note the intermedia then Mrs. Robonsen, Jr ed as the second inter was nam- e said Mrs. Stoll was bru here ed by Robinson, Jr., kefore his wife proposed emigres were born and find India uncongenial. arrived on the scene. The investigating committee was Physicians said Mrs. Stoll is in appointed last year in the hope a fairly good condition |that the government of India This morning it had not been | would cooperate in the quest, Its determined whether charges will be report notes the inayailability of the filed against Mrs. Robinson, Jr other tropical regions under the Note Threatening British flag for Indian colonization, It was revealed this afternoon but shggests that in them Indian that the ransom. note threatened colonists might find “fertile areas if the kidnaper was molested the offering, great rewards to effective victim would be burned in a tank and. the ashes thrown into the Indian leaders in South Africa river, the tank then being cleanzd | regard the report coolly. Their chemically leaving no trace. But | countrymen are reluctant to leave Rabinson left his own fingerprints South Africa but desire freedom at the Stoll home on the note and the “non-Eurgpean” stigma this started the search, it is said. which classified them with the na-' Mrs. Stoll's own story will not be tive and mixed population. told until she takes the witness B . stand, Justice Department agents OLD NEWSPAPERS | said. “We want her testimony to be a surprise to the defense,” the agents said. It is believed the Robinsons dis- agreed over something and she re- | fused to f'ee with him — e, — GEORGE JONES ARRIVES FROM MINING PROPERTY In bundles for sale at The Em- pire office, 25c. Fine for starting your fires these chilly mornings. N — OLD NEWSPAPERS { In bundles for sale at The Em- pire office, 25c. Fine for starting your fires these chilly mornings. o i Ll e George Jones, former Deputy U. i S. Marshal at Hoonah, is a recent A fig tree imported from France arrival in Juneau from the Omineca & mining district where he has spent to Seattle bore six gallons of fruit the .last two months with Royal this year, proving the species can Shepard on. the latter’s property. be raised in the Northwest's cool ———— climate, its owner believes. SHOP IN JUNEAU! NOW! Ready for Distribution 4 “COMPI[ED LAWS OF ALASKA” 1235 PAGE ALY ¢ Official Compilation of Alaska Laws : $15.00 a Volume . 60c mailing cost SEND ORDERS TO Frapk A. Boyie, Territorial Augditor; Secretary, Terri- torial Law Revision Board. * ALARMS FRANCE U. S. DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE, WEATHER BUREAU The Weather (By the U. Forecast for Juneau and vieinity, Rain tonight S. Wegther Bureau) begzinning at 4 pm. Oct. and Thursday;moderate southeast winds. LOCAL DATA Time Barometer Temp. Humidity Wind Velocity = Weather 4 pm. yest'y 29.85 44 SE 22 Lt. Rain 4 am. today 29.73 417 86 s 8 Lt Rain Noon today 20.70 47 83 SE 20 Lt. Rain RADIO REPORTS | YESTERDAY | TODAY Highest 4p. | Lowest 4a.m iam Preclp. 4am. Station temp. temp. | temp. temp. velocity 24hrs. Weather Barrow 30 30 28 30 30 o Cldy Nome 40 40 26 | 28 10 .06 Ciear Bethel 46 46 34 34 4 08 Pt.Cldy Fairbanks 42 33 32 32 4 01 Cldy v 36 32 38 32 4 20 Cldy Poul . 42 38 36 36 28 28 Rain Dutch Harbor 48 48 40 40 20 a2 Rain Kodiak 48 40 42 42 12 12 Pt.Cldy Cordova 44 44 8 42 18 244 Rain Juneau 48 43 43 u 8 108 Rain Sitka, -~ | 45 - - — e Keichikan 48 | 4 45 6 Rain Prince Rupert 50 | 44 4 4 Rain Edmonton 30 24 32 16 PL. Cldy Sesttle 58 44 44, 4 0 I Portland 62 46 46 4 0 [o) San Francisco 58 63 52 4 0 Clear WEATHER SYNOPSIS Low barometric pressure prevailed this morning throughout Al- aska, the lowest reported pressure being 28.80 inc! near Nunivak Island. This general pressure disturbance has: been attended by rains along the coastal regions from Nome to Prince Rupert and’ scattered light precipitation over the interior valleys. It was colder over the interior and Western Alaska this morn- ing, elsewhere over the Territory the 24-hour temperature changes have been small. DWINDLING RAGE VISION OF DUGE : Fear Invadl;ligfll"lordes May | Eventually Pour Over Her Frontiers ‘Continued momn rage One) | Poincare, former president; Eduu-“ ard Herriot former premier; Mme. Ferdinand Foch, widow of the mar- shal, and Cardinal Verdier. Critics of the government, which | is doing nothing they say to en- courage marriage, are demanding | that it follow the example of the | neighboring dictators, Hitler and | Mussolini, who are making mar- | riage virtually obligatory for state | employes and attractive to others by bonuses Extension of water purification to the smaller cities where as many | as nine out of every 100,000 inhabi- fever, is among the suggestions to help lower the death rate. Phone 16 Private Booths WOODLAND GARDENS FRANKIE MACK'S MELODY BOYS LUNCH FREE! CAlIfORN * TELEPHONE 478 | - Nearly 40,000 féwer children wer born | than in 1932, while the deaths last 2ar exceeded those of the previ- ous year. the |net population gain of only 21,598, or 'lh\)ut on angd l'qu 50 that | tinues at the rate of the past six | wears, 4 itlmn 500 hirths ten years hen | “The number of coffins will far | exceed the number of cradles,” is | the ominous conclusion. LONDON.—The City of London | boot allowance of more than $14,- | 000. n byndles for sale at The Em-' cifiec, your fires pire -+ - Plans have been laid to start the Interior tants died in 1929 from typhoid Sion control project nedr Dalhart SHOP IN UNITED FOOD CO. CASH GROCERS We Deliver Coffins Race Cradies to French families in The births were 682,680 deaths 661,082 leaving a third that of 1932, er births eventually will mean marriages, says the appeal, if the birth decline con- “we all have no more Have Boot Fund police of the have an annual S eee OLD NEWSPAPERS - » 25¢c. Fine for starting these chilly mornings. Department’s wind ero- on 10,000 acres Texas. JUNEAU Meats—Phone 16 CAPITOL BEER P. 4RLORS AND BALL ROOM Lunches ES THE PARIS INN FRYED 'CHICKEN—PIT BAR-B-Q—BEER—WINE PEARL and BILL Dancing Every Night FREE ! | THANKSGIVING DINNERS : ASK US FOR DETAILS! . GROCERY DANCING Prompt Delivery Estahllshed 1898 INSURANCE Allen Shattuck Ine. g ‘ Juneau, Alaska b Juneau Cash Groce CASH GROCERS Corner Second and Seward Free Delivery ry v PHONE 58

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