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| TUESDAY, FEB. 12, 1935. TABLE LINENS.” Pure Linen Tablecloths " Finen Luncher Cloths, $1.50 S e s e P Lace Tablecloths $l.95 and $4.95 Do Mercerized ' .,a l Restaurant Napkins s 506 dogen B. M. Bebrends Co., Inc. “Juneati’s Leading Departmént %(o.ve ., FEIC, sarfe INEETT on Ala.s‘ks‘g soil, before the d, ¢ coggenxs znd ‘avia nt States ever heard of a dez:la“!‘?ékmtqzorg{ui;1 of war. That is the way it hap-|to profit. pened in'the Japanesé-Russian con-‘ The Army prograin, edlling for a flict. = Japan struck, then declared |base in Alaska, does not ' designate war.” \the location as yet. One base Take Millions to Stop | would be'in ‘the Canal Zope and Once in the Territory of Alaska, |the’ others in four Statés. declared, | - ARMY OFFICERS PUSH PROGRAM IN COMMITTEE. Delegate Dimond further t will take millions of dollars and Link Proposal sal with West Coast Defense from possible thousands of lives to gn; the Japanese out. | While giving support to the Wil-| %32 TUD REe-Yer 1 G Temlony to Canal GIVES FIG“RES in the interior of the Territory | (Oontlnued from 8 one) _|where by rotation of Armly fliers gineers could develop equipment especially suited to such flying. on Lhe sunny beaches fornia.” Delegate Dimond described the strategic locations of Alaska as directly in the path of any pos- sible attack “from the Orient, es-| pecially from the Empire of Japan. | Dimond Outlines Position “Alaska, as she lies there, is as defenseless as a babe in arms, and is the only possible route of attack against the United States,” said the Delegate. “I recognize that fortification of Hawaii is a neces- sity but I fail to see where the fortification of Alaska is not just as important. “In case of war, Japan is mnot | cox bill, Delegate Dimond told the| committee, he had a pending meas- | ure to establish an Army air base ON FISH LABOR or Cali- they would become acquainted ! with flying in extreme winter R ~, vl weather and Army aeronautic en- | Indlvxdual Earnings Throughout Year Re- ported at High Rate (Continued from Page One) Problem in Pacific Almost at the same time, the House Patents Committee heard | William Mitchell, retired Brigadier General and former Assistant Army|— Air Corps Chief, assert that “our|an average earning of $430.34. One problem is the Pacific. 1f Japan| thousand ‘minety-four residents em- reached Alaska, she could reach|ployee fishermen earned on -an New York. She would not pay any | average of $458.38. attention to Hawail. She would go| Western District; 21 directly to New York and it would only take about 20 hours.” Mitchell's testimony " before the | canneries were employéd’ fhside the cannery| with an nverage eaming of $144.00. war ‘but instead, a major portion | istration of all patent pools wnh‘s,de the cannery “#t an average of Japan’s fleet and probably two|the Patent Office and said pooling | earning of $439.77. Sikteen Natives or three brigades of trops will be| of patents by craft manufaccur-‘we,-e employed Wfll& the cannery : = - —|at an “avetage" earning of fllaas U. 8. DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE, WEATHER BUREAU, | Ninéty whites 'were empioyed out- ! side the cannery at an average 'r? | earning of $328.44. Nine hundmd The 4 eat’ler "eevem.y nlne resident flsherrnen (By the U. 8. Weather Bureau) carned' an ‘average of 107759, paid natives for 'work inside the cannery, $132,155:28. Total amount patd ~‘whites for ‘instde eannery work, $121,804.48! ‘Total amount paid §4i Forecast for juneau and vielnity, beginning at 4 p.m, Feb. 12: Clearing tonight; Wednesday partly cloudy; moderate easterly winds. that switch,” sneered Wilentz. when Wilentz said: * \this Public Enemy Number One of the World, Hauptmann, we've found | him and 'he is hefe fof your judg- | ment.” |that would be committed if reporting—=A" um ‘of 129 vau’ 3 going to write us a letter declaring Patent Committee urged direct reg- | Fifteen whites were employed in- 4 Southeast “Alaska—Total amount | | e ey Mhdant Glfirlyfa E&Lm Twenlv nmth Annual Danbe Attorney General in Summation (Continuea fron: Page One) conviction c}}" murder in the first he'll'be thawed out when he hears a8t Hauptmann FI Hauptmann sat mationless, hu: is animal, Hauptmann blinked anfl Ilushed. i Attorpey General Wilentz asked thexe be no mergy for Hauptmann. “You can’t compromise with mur- der and. murderexs. If you get the feeling « that this e¢ase . is what Reilly says is, a perfect case, it is your solmen duty to find a verdict of murder in the first degree.” Is Declared Menace. The Attorney General asked the jury to put -Hauptmann' ‘out of the way as a menace,”. He also pleaded that no mercy be shown the defendant. Wilentz denied that all of the evidence ~upon which the State hopes -for conviction has been cir- cumstantial and enumerated that part of the case which he said was not circumstantial. Besides calling Hauptmann “lower than the low- est form in the animal kingdom,” Wilentz also compated him to. an unruly bear in.a 200 which has to be killed. Identification As not ciccumstantial evidence, the Attorney General listed identi- fication of Bruno by Dr. Jobn F. Condon and Joseph Perrone, taxi |driver, who said Hauptmann paid ]hnn §1 to deliver a note to Con- don; the board in the closet with the writing on it by Hauptmann; identification of Hauptmann by Amandus Hochmut, Millard Whited and Ben Lupica, as the man seen lurking near the Lindbergh home before the crime; Col. Lindbergh's identification of his’ voice in the cemetery; brokerage accounts, the sleeping” garment and the ransom money. All Significant The - Attorney General said any one of these were significant but would shrink -to: absolute insigni- ficance in comparison to the crime “this man be freed. That would be the ‘crime of ‘the century.” Events Reviewed As “Wilentz reviewed the events that followed the kidnaping, nego- tiations for the ransom and the sending of the sleeping suit to the Lindberghs, the Attorney Gen- eral draped the tiny pair of pa- jamas_ across the jury rail. Some o]’ the women jurors gazed lat them and swallowed: ‘Hauptmann “listened with tight lips as to Ij‘ischA Wilentz said the — N 4| be one of the most successful in HREMEN,S BA“_' She Flies Through the A1r— 33[] 000 RELIEF IS CLIMAX OF a2} | DEFICIENCY IS VAGAnflN DATE I ASKED IN SENATE Gree'l Thter esi Rate Bill Passed by Upper House in Short Session *) to Be Held Tonight in Elks Hall Today, mdeed is destined to be a red-letter day for Juneau. Not only is it Lincoln's Birthday, with Appropriation of $30,000 for pay- ment of deficiency in the funds | for the relief of destitute for hien- Japkins degyee.’] ks and all Fed- d Napkins | the result that banks nium ending March 31 of s g P The Attorney General turned t0) .., and Territorial offices 'are VLR e mé’mfiiq{”fi I““W‘“"“ ) \elosed, but tonight 15 the ‘twenty- the Senate this afternoon by Sen- gALE PRICE A et who b b {'ninth annual repetition = of that ator N, H. Walker ‘at the brief A sw_‘e';‘ e:il :uest:z;s TN dance of dances—the Firemen’s session of the upper house. . as torne; b 1Qe s General’s voice when he said: ¥ Bail Senator John B. Powers .also iscount |~ Wwith dancing scheduled to be- brought in & measure asking $800 o “He is cold, yes, he is cold, but . y 9:30 o'clock in- the Elks to reimburse William Isenmenger the dance promises to of Fairbanks for services. rendered in search for Bob Smith who. dis- appeared, in the Upper Gulkana | Lake regions in the winter ,of 1926 and '27. | Ballroom, | the long string of social’ affairs | sponsored by Juneau's ' ‘efficient Volunteer Fire Department. Under the direction of Harry| One measure met approval of the { Sabin, general chairman for the Senate, the Green bill providing | dance, the’advance ticket sale has Fraulein Maxie Herber the interest rate of not. less than reached such proportions that a| two per cent per annum that can Fanciest of the fancy skaters in Germany is Fraulein Maxie Her- ber, who seems to be skimming |: over the ice with the greatest of ecase while winning the fancy 1 <kahng champi nshlp at Garmisch- ,banner crowd 1s forecast. | LEGISLATURE DEIVES/INTO O, Bmum ERS : ; _ f D ks sl Reve{t* %M!eesfiath old papers tor ' gale af Emplre Offlce\at o e e R B ST, T : has already passed the House. . Two other proposals were passed il to. third reading on the calendar tomorrow, one the Brunelle mem- orial asking $200,000 from the Fed- | eral . Government to. compensate | the Territory for educating Indians jand Eskimos and the other the | Murray commercial clam -diggers l be paid on Territorial funds. It —————— ermg ormation on ‘__. How' to Raise Finances Wnys an meons of raising reve- nue 16" carry the ‘Territory through the next biennium were discussed | at 'a joint meeting of the Senate and House revenue and flnancej committees last night with several | persons ' representing the various industiies in atténdance to explain their amount of taxes paid toward Territorial 'expenses. More than $2,000,000 is requlred fo¥ the ''biennium, according to! past outlay, ‘without consideration; of ‘any appropriation measures that might * later” ‘be " passed, it was shown. The big bulk of the reve-| nue comes from the fishing in-| dustry with the mines paying a| lafge share, it’ was revealed, in the| discussion of affairs as they now affect the Territory. Possibility of | an increase in taxes for the latter industry was taken up but no ac- tion taken as it was merely a ses- sion for gathering information. Among’ those appearing before| the joint committee were L. H. Mpgtrgar ‘of the Alaska Juheau Gold Mining Company, J. D. Har- lan of the Hammon Company at Nome, H. L. Faulkner, represent-| ing the mining industry, and J. N.| Gilbert, represeriting the Alaska salmon canners and fishnig in- dustry. | SHOP IN .IUNEAU FIRST' | defense did not prove anything ex- cept that Fisch was a‘'poor man, never owned an auto, had the cheapest room in which to live and | gave everything to Hauptmann, ev- erything he had before he left for Germany. Wilentz said Hauptmann supplied him with the money to make the trip. for ©s little as A complars ine of the famous G-E Mowitor Top models with all modern years pro e e et paid employee fishermen, t“ost.- 860.61. ‘Total amount paid’ types of resident employees, Gl- 111,974.84. .- AT THE ALASKAN Andrew Hoffner, Juneau; Anderson, Juneau. WEATHER SYNOPSIS The storm area that was centered over the Gulf of Alaska yes- terday morning has moved southward This morning it was centered a short distance west of the Queen Charlotte Islands. The pressure was relatively high over the interior of Alaska. This general pres- sure distribution has been attended by precipitation along the coast- al regions from Cordova southward to Seattle and by clearing weath- er over the upper Yukon and Tanana Valleys. Fair and cold weath- er pl'nfllfi! over the lower Tanana and Yukon valleys. SHOP IN JUNEAU FIRST! LODAL RAYA natives for “utside labor, $20,083:50. Time Barometer Temp, Humidity Wind Velocity 'Weathe | mota) amount paid ‘whites fof eut- 4 pm. yesty ....2047 40 e SE 12 Misting | gide Tabor, $127,058.96. Total amount 4 am. today ....2052 ‘3¢ 88 s 10 Sprinkling| ,aiq employee fishermen, '§317,- ! Noon today 2044 38 91 w 4 ©ldy | gog 73, "Total amount paid all types RADIO 2EPORTS g;"_’ 5”“‘, resident, émployees, 728 | YESTERDAY - | TODAY ‘Géntral - Alaska—Tota1l hmm' 4 Highest 4p.m. | Lowest4am. 4am. Precip. 4aiL. | paid “natives'‘for “work inside’ the Station temp. tcmy { temp. temp. velocity 24hrs. Weatlie1 | cannery, ' $66,186.44. Total amount Barrow AT 1 -28 -26 12 [] Clear | paid whites for inside cannery Nome . abisy 4 | v <2 8 .02 Cldy| work, $10088612. Total amount Bethel FRLCRSE | -12 -12 -2 4 [ Clear | paid, natives far outside labor, $23,- Fairbanks . . -8 -8 <16 -10 4 0 Cldy | 774,08, Totdl amount Paid ' whites Dawson . 14 0 /P G T 1 Cldy | gor ¢ ‘laBor, $10,146.42. 'Total St. Paul 6 16 16 24 28 Trace PtCldY|gmop Duteh Harbor ... 26 24 16 24 6 Trace Cldy ssol n”iwp‘gxin?s:? % Kodiak . oL s B 4 0 PL.CIdY|an “ofi-Allaska residentem- Cordova . R 32 34 4 Trace ClAY| piovees, $761,450.78. Juneau .. e fly 4 35 %, 19 & Rain | % yvestern ~ Disteict—Total amoutit!. Sitka. . 43 M Tl L ol | paid ‘matives for ‘work inside - the Ketchikan 40 3. 38 8 28 Cldy | canniery, "$18576100. Total amount | Prince Rupert . 42 36 40 4 24 Rain paid whites Tor inside c ery Edmonton. ... s8° 1 , B, g ClAY ' ork, '$6,596.55. Total amount paid Seattle 5 . | 40 42 10 Trace Rain|,.pvecege outside labor, $2,382.08. Portland .. il W i Lon ClaY | 1ota) amount paid whites for out- San. Francisco L : Clear| ide labor,’ $20,559.60. Total amount Vie ( comvenience features. A GENERAL@ E1ECTRIC LIFTOP REFRIGER with sealed-m,;tggl mechdmsm In add;fioa,_m ‘% mndml 1 year warranty, matchleu G-E mechanism for only 87 -fi" m for MIJ #1.40. @ year! Lighs & Power Co. Don’t ever spend a penny for Classified Advertising until you've considered this: 0R There are two types of people who read “Want Ads”: those who read them out of curiosity and those who read them for a purpose. : Thosé ‘who read them for a purpose spend their money where it will do the most good. . . They are the people you want to reach. They’re the people you MUST reach if you're going to get your money’s worth... They mean business. That’s why Empire results count. Rep]ies come from: people who are genuinely interested. BEveryone who has really tested want-ad results, will tell you it pays to read and use the d a 1 y Want-Ads _give you 4 more tection against failure of its in the emplre laska Electric Juneau — Douglas