The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, January 10, 1935, Page 8

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LEGISLATURE WILL OPEN ON Only Four TV[—e‘mbers at| Present in City—Others Are Due Saturday LEGISLATURE The Alaska Territorial lmz-slnbmc convenes here next Monday, Jan-| uary 14, but to date only four Legislators are on the ground. { Legislators now visiting in the| south, and from the Ketchikan | section, are due fo arrive on the| Norco or' Northwestern. { Other Legislators from ‘the Sec- ond, Third and Fourth Divisions are due to arrive on the Victoria Saturday morning. The Legislators now here are Senators Henry Roden, First Di- vision, and M. E. S. Brunnelle, Third Division; Representatives Joe Green, First Division and George A. Lingo, Fourth Division. With the arrival of the delega- tions Saturday, caucuses may be held Saturday night and Sunday to make plans for organmization on the opening day of the Legislature. The members of the Legislature, follow: FIRST DIVISION Senators Henry Roden, Juneau; Walker, Ketchikan. Representatives A. H. Ziegler, Ketchikan; A. P. \valker, Craig; Joe Baronovich, Ket- chikan; Joe Green, Hyder. | SECOND DIVISION Senators John F. Devine, Nome, Frawley, Nome. Representatives Garnet W. Martin, Nome; Tol- bert P. Scott, Nome; A. M. Cham- berlain, Deering; Howard Lyng, Nome. N. R. James THIRD DIVISION Senators James R. Campbell, Anchorage; M. E. 8. Brunnelle, Cordova. Representatives J. 8. Hofman, Seward; Charles Murray, Cordova; James H. Patter- son, Valdez; H. H. McCutcheon, Anchorage. FOURTH DIVISION Senators Luther Hess, Fairbanks; Powers, Eagle. Representatives William N. Growden, Ruby; And- | rew Nerland, Fairbanks; George A. Lingo, Fairbanks; A. G. Nordale, | Fairbanks. SITKA HOME 1S DECLARED WORK OF ART, BEAUTY Rice and Ah—i—;l; Men Name| Job as Best in Their Experience John B. Back from Sitka, where the Rice & Ahlers Company recently com- pleted two contracts on the Pio- neers' Home, C. H. Metcalfe, H. Freeburg, and F. E. Carothers, mas- ter plumbers and sheet metal work- | ers with the local firm, bmugm glowing words of praise for the, new home for Alaska's early settlers. | Not only is the building con-| structed in a perfect Alaskan set- ting, but the materials and work- | manship in the structure makes the home a credit to the craftsman-| ship of Alaskans, the local men | stated. The men also declared the two contracts completed, both subs to J. B. Warrack and Co., and H. C. Hastorf, Inc, to be the finest in their varied years of experience in the profession. The men handled the creation of a stainless steel kitchen in the home, and super- vised all ventilation installation, ‘heating plant, downspouts, trend. Recently the firm installed a| double kitchen drain and sink of the new pital here steel for 8t. Ann’s hos- - PETE RG TEAMS LOSE Both the Petersburg Town Team and High School quintet dropped basketball games to the Wrangell The Wrangell the prepsters in a while the lost by a Wrangell for- Town Team recently lads defeated low-scoring 18-9 affair, Petersburg Town club 35-21 count. Urata, ward, was the star. .. COUPLE MARRIED Wedding bells and Christmas chimes mixed at Fairbanks recent- ly with the marriage of J. R ‘Weaver and Evelyn Lewis oLv Nuw_urArz‘:h ln bundles for sale at e Em- iew, 250" Eing for stdrting yqr « these cllly mmhp NEXT MUNDAY' i | oil burners, copper | , drains, gutters, and other plumbing and sheet metal work. ‘The completion of the stainless steel kitchen is said to give the Rice & Ahlers Co., of this city the largest volume of building in that field in the territory and the com- pany is turning more and more to the development of this modern Daily Cross- ACROSS ? own in Maine [PIAICBHICH] S|H L [E | NTER] me 17. Topic or theme narl lectrified rticle ’ % Rle:r in Italy . In this wa . Easily yleld- ing to prese sure . Small fish . Pnnoo]k of & a . One's entire property . Went swiftly . Standard 40. Noah's boat Prvn]oun . Gontly Aloft . You and me . Irritate . Enrages . Natural cover- ing of the 60. Mllsd nln and L Advertlu- ments DOWN 1. Perfor.a a operation 8. Pattern or original after which ‘omething A copled head Literary frag- ments Written nromln to Solution of Yesterday's Puzzle [P} IVIEIREgH U E AITIE GAAPIT) e . Bofl! of Jewlsh THE DAILY ALASKA l-'.MPIRE THURSDAY JAN. 10, 1935. word Puzzle' 1. 0n_conat S Vi . ‘ Feminine nickname Glacta} ridges Committed with cone fidence . Secretaries . Before . Volcane . Billow 1 Poisonous | snake . Unctuousl; gelf-satise fled . Mixture of red and yellow #2. Formerly but not_now prefix 48. Bmall Incloe sures l!ol [S[P]Y 2. bjoct o( de- 49, Nostril l Part ot;lton 0. Genul of the I. échmuun Bflk b1 t way 52, Reuum fear 8. Be.the matter 55." English letter 67. From the signi music 68. Anfl hfln ely 11 Illkl llc. 18 Nm hes & w for an Clrfln Soae. i 19. Loose, fiowing outer gar- ment III@EHH’IWHHH //// D EEE dNN AN N dEN fll/%fll’////flflll/// iblad diid//JddER ddEN P led 1 4 ] | 7 /dJNEER | dEN fll’%ifilfl.l/ “ Y Wi 'l.///fllllfll% ; ol | /- “L V70 | | [T ot B l CHII.I]REN DIE WHEN BUS AND TRUCK COLLIDE Barrels of Molasses Spread Over Wreckage, Hampering Aid DEADWOOD CITY, South Dako- |ta, Jan, 10.—S8ix children were kill- ed and 14 injured when a bus and truck collided on a narrow bridge this morning. The sides were virtually torn off | each machine. SEATTI.E HAS COLD WEATHER SEATTLE, Jan. 10—The temper- ature dropped to 32 degrees above zero today. This is the first freez- | ing weather in 367 days in this city. — e — MRS. LYBECK MARRIED The marriage of Mrs. Helen Ly- beck and Henry Ronning was sol- emnized recently at Wrangell. The ceremony was performed in the home of Mr. and Mrs. Jorgen E. Ronning. Mr. and Mrs. Oscar Carl- son attended the couple R e SEEK TREATMEN'I’ The bus upset and barrels of | molasses from the overturned truck spread over the wreckage hamper- ing rescue work. pio LT ISR | Shop in Juneau! Mr. and Mrs. Walter Skof of Fairbanks left that place recently |for Rochester, Minn., where Mrs. Skof will receive medical treatment at the Mayo Brothers Clinic. Of All Children’s COATS $4.95 the child’s coat ., . $12.50, some fur triv all rare values. IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIiIIIilIIIII“IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII!IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIl AND JUST:EOOK -WHA! f you are wisv i you’ll certainly -replace’ ® THE LEADER Department Store George Bros. IT BUYS! NOW! Values up to ms, matching caps and IIIIIIIIIIHIII“HIIfllllllllllllllllillllllll R, CONDON IS SUBJECTED T0 HARD QUIZZING Delense Counsél Attempts to Bring Out Admis- sions by Witness ]D (Continued from Page One) did not affect me at all. I was there to get a letter and I got it.” Cemetery Wall Dr. Condon also admitted that the top of the cemetery wall was not very safe. He called it danger- ous, with spikes sticking out of the top of the wall. Dr. Condon formerly said “John’ climbed over the wall when he| got scared during negotiations. Sees Guara Dr. Condon also admitted he saw a guard about the cemetery, one only, about 30 feet away, when a man climbed over the wall, but the witness said there were some bushes between the man af@l the guard. The guard, Condon said, did not give any alarm. That Cough Again Counsel Reilly centered” some questioning about the cough of the man as he sat talking with |Dr. Condon on the bench in the| many as the result of ‘tuberculosis. Dr. Condon admitted the cough appeared to come from the man's lungs. This is one of the points the defense is expected to dwell upon to prove that “John” -was not Hauptmann but probably Isadore Fisch, whom Hauptmann said gav~ him the Lindbergh ransom money | to keep for him. Pisch died in Ger - | many as the result oftuberculosis. Mystery Women The injection of two mystery| women into the trial came this afternoon when Chief Defense Counsel Reilly waved letttef§ hefore | Condon and asked him if he show- |ed them to two women named Mrs. Hermina Koren and & Mrs.| { Busch. { { | Early Colonial planters shipped hundreds of pounds of tobacco to England in return for goods and supplies. 1 pr M”n W‘!’-lrlnmcq, | - | “Did you not say to the women | _/Yves on a farm near Hopewell and »|{in New York City in August last |the Chena River Bridge at Cush- l Dr. Condon rep]ied he remem- bered no such incident. Mrs. Koren was brought forward | and Dr. Condon recognized her as| one of two women who went to his home in the Bronx to discuss a real estate transaction. He then| remembered also the other wom- an was a Mrs. Busch. Four Kidnapers that you knew the kidnapers to |be four in number,” demanded | Re)lly “Not to my recollection,” replied Dr. Condon. It was explained that Mrs. Koren Mrs. Busch near Flemington. Attorney General Wilents = took over Dr. Condon for a few minutes to clear up some. confusions. Reilly had brought up the Doctor’s ire by asking him when he made no at- tempt to have a bus driver run down a man he saw on the street year, the man he recognized as “John” and identified as Haupt- mann. Dr. Condon was on the bus at the time. “It was none of my business,” he replied to a question asked by Wilentz. It was brought out that Dr. Con- don was on the bus and did ask ask the driver to stop but the latter would not. Later the bus did stop but Dr. Condon said he could not pick up the trail in the traffic. Reilly also seemed to have hurt| Dr. Condon’s feelings when he asked about his purported transfer as principal of a public school be- cause his associations were un- becoming ‘to a gentleman with a woman of the school staff to which the doctor snapped: “N> Sir.” | FAIRBANKS BRIDGE OPENED C. E. Burglin, assistant engineer of the Alaska Road Commission at | Fairbanks, recently announced that man Street in that city was again | open for traffic, although repairs | on the structure had not been com- | pleted. >~ SON BORN A son was born to Mr. and Mrs. Leo Hardy of Fairbanks recently. ettt 40H ,;w- FORESTRY MAN HAS FISH DELEGATES PLAGE BAN ON PRESS NUTIGES |All-Alaska Convennon De- clares Sessions to Be Secret A decision to release no news to the press concerning the activi- ties of the session, was passed by the All-Alaska Fishing Workers, Cohvention at I. L. D. Hall yesler-‘ day afternoon. Although efforts were being made to have the Convention reconsider its action, it had not done so at a late hour this afternoon. | The Convention, reputed to have delegates in attendance who repre- sent 9,000 Alaska resident fisher- men, opened here yesterday. It is the first time.in the history of Alaska that such a meeting has been held. It is for the purpose of uniting the views of Alaska fish- ing workers on major issues con- fronting them. After delegates had presented credentials yesterday and had been | | seated, one of the first actions tak- en, it was learned today, was to declare the meetings “closed” and the ban put on préss releases un- til the conclusion of the final ses- sion. Bt do s ! HAZARDOUS TRIP| C.J. Rhodes, Ranger W. M. Sher- | man’s right-hand man in the For- estry office, reports & hazardous trip by power boat over Lake Ke- {nai, a lookout being necessary 10 cleave a way throtigh the rapidly forming lake ice, according :to the Seward Gateway. Ice Blocks Way ‘The trip from Mile 18 to coop- er's Landing was made December 21, an unusually late date for such Rhodes reported that the CCC crew has installed bridges across l Quartz, Lost and Dry creeks to re- | place the washouts created by the |reeent storm and accompanying i high water, a work that will enable traffic in that region to be resumed. nnxshed touches have also been the terminus of the road at Coopers Landing, leaving only the bridge work to make the Quartz creek trail from the Moose Pass- Hope Highway to Cooper's Land- ing a finished job of which the residents will be proud. - e WINNERS NAMED Mrs. Bert Moody and L. E. Linck ~were recent winners of & turkey shoot, sponsored by Elks in l"ah‘bnnu DANCE ELKS’ Saturday Night “Dude” Haynes Orchestra Admission $1.00 | Ladies Free! voyage, as the lake is generally a | solid mass ‘of ice before that time. | HALL | | | sl They came looking }or gold o« but they found tobacco ...and tobacco has been like gold ever since! The tobacco raised in Virginia and exchanged for goods helped the struggling colonists to get a foothold when they came to America. i Later on, it was tobacco that helped to clothe and feed Washington’s brave army at Valley Forge. Today it is tobacco that helps—more than any other commodity raised in thi§ countrys the expense of running eur Govemey{tu In the fiscal year, d_?&?; 3 Government colle: t he tax on tobmn 1 Jfrom cigareties — a? C package of twenty. ¥z, ) Yes, the cigarette helpsa fot~and it certaully gives men and women a lot of pleasure, Smokers have several reasons for liking Chesterfields. For one thing, Chesterfields are milder. For another thing, they tasté better. They Satisfy. .w

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