The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, January 28, 1935, Page 2

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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE MONDAY JAN. 28, 1935. DANCE FROCKS A special shipme for the President’s Birthllay Ball! Elks Hall January 30 in Cotton Prints Floral Prints Plaid Taffestas $10 to $22.50 B. M. Behrends Co., Inc “Juneau’s Leading Department Store” o I |Defendant Is* Given Sur- price During ld‘F Questioning (Continued from PQQ. i;0ne) nt arrived today defense’s case rangesfrom three days to more than a week: Defense Plans Chief Defense Counsel Reilly said he will perhaps call 15 defense witnosses and! the verdiet, normally ought to be forth ng ;about the middle of next week, . . Today Wilentg ;am(en W ination with, charts of Hauptmanns handwriting- w h ich. were placed| alongside the kidnap ladder. Has Lithe, Firm- Step Hauptmann walked to..the wit- ness stgnd this morning with a lithe and firm step. Wilentz immediately took up his! |cross examination and drew from Haupimann the_ fact, that, he made. ¥ '3 pleasure, airm e, tipsin, Calls . fornia, wih his, wife and, a rignd.. Hans Klnepnenh\u;g, He denlod hey. took & boat trp.. . ad| Wileniz also drew from Haupt- £ | mann the: faet:he am account orexpenses&nqung,mu me figures he put in.a book.were answered, th -sald whue»cf the figures are in the hook ‘ithey arg. h%«lnd true.” Question. 3 X to change % answer,,,do you? f | Yoy saved money mdun dlan’t B | mou?l. e | that Hauptmann, xv,nnod ed. money besides what he put in the. hook. and ‘my wife did not.| know . about it" “Oh, you were ;u(unz it on.youn wife,” said, Wilentz. Defense, Counsel, Lloyd . Pisher | Cal cnmw A., Lindbergh ' Jook~- ed carefully at the defendant. { & "Yfl‘n‘ v from your, wife. vwmt you?” | asked Wilentz. “No,” zepned Hauptmann, . “When did you first meet Mrs. Henckel?" asked Wilentz Mrs. ¥ ll!emfl(el is: the woman. pHiotograph- ed many times with, Hauptmann |l seaside resprts. { WOUNDED AS LONE'S FORCES | ROUT CITIZENS Pitched Battle Averted in What Huey Describes as Killing Conspiracy | (Continued fxom Page One) ammunition to kill' Senator Long. Conspiracy, Says Huey Songy was summoned by Long| before the District Court hearing| in the State Supreme>Court Cham- ber in the Senator’s attempt to' show that public officials and oth-' | sentative | tory. “Mack,” who' has spent a num- | ber of years in the fur and fish- |ing industries and who is widely known throughout the Territory, is greatly pleased to make a connec- | tion with the ever-growing and ag- gressive firm of Lake and Com- pany. Interviewed in sailing, Mr. McColloch stated: “It pleases me greatly to represent W. |J. Lake and Company and handle | their extensive line of liquors that 'is continually being augmented ta give Alaska a variety and selection that few of the States enjoy. After for the Southeast terri- | Seattle prior to | pending a_number of months i ‘T 1‘?30 5?45 Hauptmann, |the States, I find the prospect of | T Can't Remember” {going home and. seeing: old. friends | Wilentz drove hard with queries exceedingly pleasant.” and Hlummann mora . frequently a resomed to his “I can't remember” TO' HOMESTEAD! \m : s To homestead. in. the interior, the| - Was Mi 2‘“’!@1? there the. first | Garton family, is: on. the Yukon | time. you met?™ asked Wilentz. bound for Seward,. The: {amily took,| “HEF.sister: was,:’ ronlied. Haupt-. passage at. Seattle. Inocluded; are, iy Mrs. Garton, Bers$ Garton, "’"s Am: 2 ‘m;bwtux\.w Charles Garton. and Maxine Gar- | ton, | “I can't, remember,” was; Haupt- quw«s TORR “Don't, you, know. that. two weeks after you, met her, she introduced you &?( her . husband?”. . queried ——t——r BAKER HAS SUITE Dewey. Baker of the Juneau Bak- | | ery, is now making his residence in Suite I, Coliseum Apartments, Daily C ross-word Puzzle ACROSS 1. Deface ers had “conspired to kill him.” Songy testified he had been ar-| rested Thursday night with a gun, gas bombs and ammunition in his car. These things were given 0 him, he said, by Fred Parker, East Baton Rouge Parish Deputy Sher- iff; and' Fred O'Rourke, member of the Executive Committee of the BSquare Deal Association which is warring against Senator Long's dietatorship. Machine Guns Figure Songy said he was given the ar- ticles by Parker and the pistol by O'Rourke. He said he was told to find out “whether Long had any machine guns in his hotel suite.” Senator Long accused the Stan- dard Oil Company of responsibility for @ recent armed assembly of citizenry hostile to Long’s domina- tion ,and said his compromise with the company over the refining tax was off unless the company stop- ped violence. Long’s Version Senator Long said: “We picked up two men, one of whom was go- ing to drive the murder car. It was all fixed. My car was to be blocked on the highway and forced into the ditch. Then others were going to come along in another car and kill. me.” Listed by the Kingfish as con- spirators, were Distriet Attorney Fred Odom, sheriffs of Oberville and West Peliciania, a deputy sher- it of East Baton Rouge and Sth- ers. ~ “MACK” WCULLOCH 1S TO REPRESENT | LAKE AND COMPANY W. J. Lake and Company, Al- aska’s leading wholesale liquor dis-! tributors located in Seattle, an- the appointment of R. T. McColloch as their repre- | 4. Peculiar 7. Range of ¢« action Mexican rub- ber tres Dessert Sing in the Swissfash- [OIDIO[R] 1 (AL IOIE] 18 14 . Poinl ‘Those who re- meve from packages ) Makes uniform Wings . Dry 22. Edge of a hat . Distant Arllt;le of %Out oratory orn away Folowed the track: of 43; Sidewise Human trunk 47, Aoger o Youthful years 45! Large South 35. Some erican Pull_apart Cotton-seeding 49. slurdy tree 50. Bo situated 5L Period of money stringency saluflon of Saturday's Pllsl.‘ [IEgERER] RNEE JAINTDIU '1 EIDR I‘l[]f». 52. English river . At M gi.lw Eflflflu " you, found, awm f.hew N N 3T 39, Water' whieel’ Ry :0dn= 43. Ripple against title- & Then S rown 16 Depostt 2%5;3 tention WN % .tone.of 2. Animate 3. List of num- Ii%fllififllflil o amu; aum J HII%H!IIIIIII hIInI/a--q NS JEE CdmauE fl=lII%IIIII 1] = W/ ddm w////, oeamm cu!hr “Asid yéu're ff towork two steps at'a time on Wings of the Morning? inShilling Coffee wihiel with'réasonable care i /il o/ Wi o V) | 7%%%“-../// HIIII wi oo il II I III wu,,n&m xm-meump with yaur’ wife excited about i mann’s reply. “Why did you hide that fact, the, discovery of the $14,000?” fired | out - Wilentz. “So it. should be a pleasant sur- prise for her sometime, because my intention was- to build her a house sometime,” answered Hauptmann. Spelling Lesson Wilentz directed the defendant's dttention to the word “singnature” in a ransom note and asked Hauptmann: if -it was his habit |of, putting.“n” where it-idoes: not | belong. | . “No, not: a' habit,”” replied Haupt- _|mann. Wilentz : asked: Hauptmann to spell seventy and the onswer was “senv.” “You have an ‘n’ in there?,” asked Wilentz and the answer was Yes.” " was Haupt- CLOSING QUOTATIONS "TODAYN.Y. EXCHANGE iaf various issues today on the New York Stock Exchange, furnished by the Wilson - Fairbanks and Com- pany’s Juneau office: Alaska Juneau 17%, Amer. Can 112%, Amer. Power & Light 3%, Amer, Radiator, 14, Amer. R. M. 20%, Amer, Smelting 34%, Amer. T, & T 103%; Amer. Tabacoo 82, Amer. W.. W. 13, Anaconda 10%. Armour: N 6%, -Atchison -~ ‘Topeka 46%, Atlsntic’ Refining 24%, Ben- Bethl.ehem Steil 30.0 P 13, ca.t- erpillar 38, Cerro de Pasco 40, C. & Q. 43%, Chrysier 36%, Container B 4%, Cont. Can 64%, Cont. Oil 17%4; Curtiss*Wright 2%, du Pont de Nemours 2%, Electric. Auto-Dite 24%, Fair- banks-Morse 18%, Gen. Electric 23, Gen; Motors - 31%, Granby 6%, G N... 13%, « Holland ' Purnace 87%, Homestake - 346, Howe Sound 44 Hudson 10, Int. Nickel 22%; Johns- | Manville 49%. Kennecott 18%, Liggett & Myers 105%; Liquid Carb. 27%, Loew's 82%, Loose-Wiles 34%, Lorillard 120%, Marshall Field 8%, Mathieson Alkali 28, Maytag Co. 5%, McIntyre 37. Montgomery Ward 26, Nash 16, Nat. Cash Register 16%, N. Y. C. 17%; N. P. 173, Penney 68%, Pull- man 46%, i Radio 5%, Reynolds Tobacco 47%, Sears Roebuck 33%, S. P. 15%, Bocony. 13%, Sperry 8%, Stand. Oil Cal, 30, Stand. Oil'N. J. 41%, Texas Corp. - 19%, Timken Roller Bear- ~{ing, 33%. United" Aircraft, 13%, U. S. Rub- ber 14%, U. S. Smelting 107%, U. S. Steel 36%, West. Air Brake 24%, West. Electric 37%, Woolworth 53%, Calumet & Hecla 3%. Averages—Down. 1.14, Spot silver—54%ec. Toronto, Vancouver and Seattle mining. exchanges: Bralorne, $9.75, |Bremner 40c* at -50c; B. R. X. 17c, Carihoo Gold Quartz $1.25, Gol- conda: 32%.c, Montana: Consolidted 23¢c,- Nabesna. 750 at 85¢, Pioneer Gold: . $9:50, smnhm Sunshine $11.40. i ———————— NOYES RETURNS returned to- the First City, as a passeriger-on the. Yukon from Se- attle. ABOLITION OF PRESENT GAME | SETUP ASKED Terntorlal Control De- manded in Memorial— More Fish Legislation (Continuea rrom Page Ome) costing $100,000 a year, and that | the views of the Commission fail to conform with the views of the majority of Alaskans. In explaining his bill Mr. L}nv said: “Those of us who are look-| ing forward to ultimate home rule | have réalized for some time past| the rapid growth and expansion of the large number of Bureaus that| exist under ‘our Bureaucratic form The iolfowing a.re"‘clo’lii‘l”g prices, Premier $1.52, Silver- | of 'government. Take Over Bureaus “The only way that we, the per-| manent residents of the Territory, can eventually really function as| a government by and for all the | people of the Territory, is to grad*| 1ally take over the activities of thfl - Jederal Bureaus. We should begin | 5y taking over several of the Bu-| reaus: that are most pertinent to | he general welfare of the Terri-| 'sory.. Among "these are fish, fur| ‘ind game. > “On the grounds of emmency‘ wnd economy of operation I do| not believe that any thinking citi- zen will advocate the permanent vetention of a Bureaucratic form of government that has its head- arters thousands of miles away, ‘and from that seat of operation| sends forth edicts and pronounce- ments that vitally effect the lives | and livelihood of the residents of | the Territory, and especially so for| the reason that the Bureau's execu- \ tive personnel rarely if ever con- tains a bona fide Alaskan. The men who are qualified and con- versant with the actual needs and | equirements of the Territory are| onspicuous by their absence.” Fish Boat Seizure In line with the request of Delegate Dimond, Joe Baronovich of Ketchikan brought in a me-| morial asking that no seizure be made of fishing boats and gear until after conviction. Under the| existing procedure, the memorial| recites, authorities seize fishing | boats when they suspect the laW\ is being violated. The Baranov proposal would allow the accused | ,to continue operating until he wa:\ | actually found: guilty. 1 Two minor appropriation bills | were passed by the House, on granting $1,125 to the Treasurer’s| | office to pay the salary of Treas- | furer-Elect Olson until he takes of- fice, succeeding W. G. Smith April i1, and the other making an appro- priation to the Education Com* ‘missioner’s office. Committees Report Favorable . House Bill No. 12, providing for |2 tax on gommercial clam diggers, jand Hous€ Joint Memorial No. 6 requesting the order closing the season on Bristol Bay be rescinded, were reported out of committees with: - recommendation that they pass. One new law revision bill, intro- duced by A. H. Ziegler of Ketchi- kan, was presented. It would de- fine perjury and clarify the ex- isting statute. Most of the House committees settled down in earnest this after- noon to the consideration of meas- ures and proposals before them, the House meeting again in the morning at 10:30 o'cloek. - e BRICE COMES TO RELIEVE | HUDSON, OFF ON VACATION K. Brice, associated with theé| Sam Savin Shoe Store in Ketchi- | kan, arrived on the steamer Yukon | to relieve Manager Lou Hudson, of the local Savim Family Shoe Store. | Hudson is to make a combined ‘business and pleasure trip to the South and will visit his old home | in Oakland, Cal, while on his vacation. | B A oA e SR | Juneau: lce Cream | | | Parlors ¥ SHORT ORDERS | Candy )| “WINDOW CLEANING i 'PHONE 485 WOMEN’S GALOSHES One and Three 'Snaps $1 35 EADER DEPT. STORE ! GEORGE BROTHERS | Barrow | Nome U. 8. DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE, WEATHER BUREAU The W eather (By the U. S. Weathér Bureau) Forecast for Juneau and vieinity, beginning at 4 p.m., Jan. 28: Rain tonight and Tuesday; moderate southeast winds. LOCAL DATA Barcmeter Temp. Humidity Wind Velocity 29.58 41 3 E 5 2971 42 88 SE 12 29.44 47 72 SE 9 RADIC 2EPOKRTS YESTERDAY Highest 4p.m. | temp. temp. | -4 -8 I -4 Weatlet Lt. Rain Lt. Rain Lt. Rain Time 4 pm. yest'y 4 am. today Ncon today TOLAY Lowest 4a.m. 4a.m. Preeip: 4a « temp. temp. velocity 24hrs. Weatlirq -10 -10 0 Cleéar -20 0 Clear -8 0 Clear -4 .06 Cldy -4 [ Clear 20 Trace Pt.Cldy 24 0 Cldy 32 1.08 Rain 36 4.24 Rain 38 51 Rain 41 .36 —_— 44 -.08 Cldy 22 0 Clear 44 Clear 44 Pt. Cldy 50 Pt. Cldy Station Bethel Fairbanks Dawson St. Paul 2 Dutch Harbor Kodiak . Cordova Juneau .. Sitka - Kstchikan Edmonton . Seattle Portland San Francisco -6 o 0 54 0 WEATHER SYNOPSIS ‘The barometric pressure was low this morning throughout Alaska and over the northeastern portion of the Pacific Ocean, the lowest reported pressure being 2850 inches over the ocean. This general pressure distribution has been accompanied- by ' precipitation over the Gulf of Alaska, Southeast Alaska and over the Tanana Valley. Excessive rains occurred at Cordova, the 24-hour amount being 4.24 inches. Fair weather prevailed over the northwestren portion of the Territory. Temperatures were above freezing along the coastal regions from Cordova southward. Moderately cold weather prevailed over the Seward Peninsula. ‘ 7/¢AM ERICAN OIL BURNING HEATER AHEAD OF THE ,PROCESSION E wanted a heater that should be ahead of all others in both appearance and heating efficiency. We found it and now we are offering it to you—the AMER~ ICAN 0il Burning Heater. Y To really appreciate its beauty you | | Kl must seeit. Its rich walnut brown it crystalline: enamel. with gleaming chromium trimmings will make it a pride in any home. And for con- vemenc satisfactory heating serv- ice it can’t be beat. The AMERICAN Oil Burning Heater is built on the principles of the warm air furnace so as to give. rapid circulation of warm air. Giant heating surfaces (nearly 509 larger than other heaters) and long fire travel enable it to' give more heat from the same amount’ of fuel. ' Large water pan helps to humidify the air, making it not g\r:]ly comfortable but also health- ‘We have a complete line of heaters to choose from, with a size and model to fit both your requirements and your pocketbook. Be sure to come in and look them over. JUNEAU-YOUNG Hardware Co. fo LET US HELP YOU TO MODERNIZE YOUR HOME Krafft’s Cabinet Shop and Millwork PLYWOQOD—Any Size and Quantity PLATE and AUTO GLASS—Mirrors and Window Glass HARDWOOD and FINISHING. LUMBER YOU CAN DEPEND ON OUR | EXPERT MOTOR REPAIR! PHONE 411 Complete Service on Every Motor Need CONNORS MOTOR CO. Ine. ALASKA MEAT CO. FEATURING CARSTEN'S BABY BEEF-—DIAMOND TC HAMS AND BACON—U. S. Government Inspected

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