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DAY FOR BILLS, [ T0 BE OFFERED Seven New Measures Toss- ed in Hopper—Appro- priations Asked With Wednesd: introduction the last day for of bills, seven new ones were tossed into the House hopper yesterday afternoon just before that body adjourned for the day at 5:30, most of them asking for appropriations. They include: H. B. 83, by Hofman—Providing * for tha incorporation of commun-' ities, villages and settlements of 200 inhabitants or more outside of incorporated towns into Public| Utility Districts. H. B. 84, by Lingo—Appropriat- ing $189.50 to John Lake and oth- ers conducting a search for U. H McDawell in July of 1933. H. B. 85, by Lingo—Amending the corporation license law to re- quire salmon, clam and herring packers to submit statements giv- ing ownership, location of place of business and output for the year. H. B. 86, by Martin—Approp- riating $2,000 for Second Division road funds to repair the airplane field at Kotzebue. H. B. 87, by Murray—Appropriat- ing $10,000 for assistance and maintenance of a hospital at Ko- diak in the event an approp lion is granted by the federal crnment for construction. H. B. 88, by Walker—Repealing the existing criminal syndicalism laws. H. B. 8, by riating ion road funds for construction of a two and one-half mile ex- tension of the Lake Iliamna Port- age road from the end of the present road to deep water at Lake Tliamna. H. B. 90, by Green—Providing for election of mayors in incor- porated towns for two-year period. H. B. 91, by Walker—Requiring persons engaged in preparation and handling of foods in all industries to have physical examination. H. B. 92, by Walker—Appropriat- ing $15,000 out of the road funds of the First Division to construct a wagon and automobile road, a distance of three miles, on the existing survey leading from town of Craig to farming community sit- uated on Prince of Wales Island. H. B. 93, by Walker—Providing for right of workers to affiliate With unions ‘@nd protéeting them against discharge by employers as result H. B. 94, by Nordale—Providing for setting up a regulatory control unit under the Board of Liquor Control to handle licensing of places handling beer and wine; employing a “license officer” at $4,200 a year and two deputies at $2,700 each; and asking an appro- priation of $30,000 to carry out the provisions of the act. H. B. 95, by Lingo—Providing for licensing of cosmetician, beauty parlor operators; creating a Board of Cosmetology consisting of the Commissioner of Health and one - FINNISH Educational Club SOCIAL TUESDAY, FEB. 26 §P. M Entertainment Refreshments 1.0.0.F. Hall Admission, Ladies 25¢ MEN FREE! REEDLIN TEA ROOM Lunch Tea Dinner BY RESERVATION Telephone 203 l"pnrth Street Patterson—Approp- | S $25000 from Third Divis- an graduate cosmetologist from each Division and appropriating $200 for clerical help, postage, printing and stationery. H. B. 96, by Lingo—Providing a two-year scholarship at the Uni- versity of Alaska for students grad- uating from the various Territorial high schools with the highest scholastic standing. (Now known the Alaska Agricultural College and 1School of Mines.) o—Establishing Alaska to con- of Agriculture, the Depart- Experiment department rtments as are zricultural Col- H the sict B. 97, by University of of the exte: r dep: now in lege H. B. 98, by Committec—An $2,235,242.50 f Alaska during Ways and Me act to appropr the expenses of the next biennium - SINGLE HEAD OF WASH. LIQUOR BOARD ADVISED Praise, Criticism of State System Made in Aud- itor’s Report OLYMPIA, (Wash, Feb. 26— Praise and criticism for the State Liquor Board and recommendations that it be supplar a single administra were set forth in Auditor Cliff Yelle's general report on his running audit of the State store liquor system. - CARNATION MILK OFFICIAL HERE; A. B. Searles, Alaska 1 1 tative of the Carnation Milk Com- pany, with his headquarters in Se- attle, arrived on the Northwestern and is calling on the Juneau trade. Mr. Searles will return south short- ly . but expects to make another trip to Alaska arriving in Juneau about May 1 CALLS ON TRADE ‘REI.ATIVES OF 1 DESPERADOES A naval board of inquiry met aboard the U. S, S. Texas in San Francisco harbor to probe th: of the Macon which sank off Point Sur, Calif,, en route to its base at Sunnyvale. Lleur. Comdr? ‘r’i‘::::er: V. Wiley and members of the board are shown studying charts of the dirigible’s construction. Left to right: Capt. W. R. Van Auken, Rear Adm, 0. G, Murfin, Capt. H, E, Shoemaker lnd wuu. p= WORKMEN'S BILL IS TABLED UNTIL - - AWAIT VERDICT FRIDAY SESSION as | Fifteen Charged with Har-‘House Will Take Up Min-| boring Clyde Barrow, Bonnie Parker BULLETIN — DALLAS, Feb. 26. — The Federal jury, this aftcrneon, convieted 15 rela- tives and friends of Ciyde Bar- r.w and Bonnie Parker on charges of conspiracy to harbor fugitives from justice. Thes ¢ nvicted included the moth- erse of the {wo desperadoes. They cach received a sentence of 30 days imprisonment. | DALLAS, Tex., Feb. 26.—Crime trails of the late Clyde Barrow |are being studied by a Federal jury while officers pressed an in- tensive search for Raymond Ham- ilton, former Lieutenant of the Southwest’s desperado. Awaiting the verdict of the jury, lare the mothers, brotners, sisters and friends of the Barrow and Bonnie rker, his cigar smoking companion. { All have been accused of har- | boring them before they were shot {down in Louisiana. There are fifteen defendants, five others having pleaded guilty. Two mothers, defendants, Mrs. Cumie ~Barrow and Mrs. Emma arker, gave “mother love” as the reason for their clandestine visits with their children. Hamilton's haunts are watched, after he and his panion shot their way out police trap at McKinney. kidnaped, then released, , in their flight. on's last words to the ¥ ‘Well, I hope Gabriel does not blow his horn.” being com- of a They three e — FRANK SERDAR GRANTED CITIZENSHIP THIS A. M. Frank Serdar was granted citi- zenship papers in the U. S. District t' Court this morning. Serdar is & mtne of Yugoslavia. ing Tax Proposal at Tonight’s Meeting | t | [ | After hearing representatives or‘ industry and labor this afternoon i the Territoial House voted to ta- ble the Lingo wokmen’s compen- cation bill subject to call. George A. ‘'Lingo, author, announced he would ask that it be brought back for action at 1:30 o'clock Friday | | afternoon. ‘Witnesses appearing |before the House as a committee | all spoke against the measure | declaring it was inferior to present set-up. Tonight the House takes up the mining tax bill in the House cham- | bers at 8 o'clock. The measure introduced by Joe Green, proposes a tax on mining net income rang- ing from 2'% per cent on $10,000 to five per cent on a million or over. FORMER NOME WOMAN FOUND DEAD, SEATTLE Police: Discéver Body of Mrs. Ferguson in Her Curio-Shop Home the | | | SEATTLE, Feb. 26—The police broke into the Alaskan Curio shop, which was also the home of Mrs. H. B. Ferguson, aged’ 80 years, and found she had died pre- sumably on Sunday as the result of a sudden attack of the heart. Mrs. Ferguson went to Nome in 1900 and lived there for years. The curios she gathered at Nome form- ed the original curio shop stock. - Rising meg Costs-—-No Let Up Seen for 1935 News of advancing li arrival of income tax bl the past holid: public debt, family budget. had the greate the cost of living has nks for cason and talk nds another June, 193 & powe risen elght purchasi 1% costs, quiver through : c Clothing rates soaring upward. along 1934, th of incr wh T in two Jet-un in 1985, per cent, malnly in foods, cl?thlng During a five-month period in 1934, the cost of living by families of workers earning less than $2,000 a year increased 1. 8 per cent. nu bureau of labor statistic tary, of Labor Frances Perkins, fail to indicate any and house furnishing goods. Figures of upervised by Secre- e ¥ 3 SALARY SLASH OFFICERS ASKED | Offices from $5,000 to $3,000 Annually | Slashing of salaries of Terri- | torial FOR TERRITORY {Roden Would Cut Major officials by virtually $2,000 |a' year is proposed in a bill in- troduced in the Senate today by Henry Roden, aimed at five offic- |es. | the offices is now $5,000 annually !but this was cut 10 per cent for | the biennium by the 1933 Legisla- | ture; giving them actually $4,500. ‘mmey General, Auditor, Highway Engineer and Commissioner of Education would get $3,000 a year and the Treasurer $3500. The Highway Engineer now gets $4,000 minus a 10 per cemt cut. A group of bills were introduced {in the Senate today as the end of the time for submitting meas- ures draws near. Among them | \\(‘IE { o 44, 'mde umons, labor organizations, commercial clubs and business as- | sociations to incorporate. S. B. 45, by Roden—Provldmg rm- the sale by executors and ad- inistrators of real and personal ')roperly of decedents conjomhly.‘ S. B. 46, by aries of offic S. B. 41, by to recovery in cal tion. n—Cumng sal e of court ae- | | pleadings in cases “of ‘demurrer. The basic salary for most of | | Under the Roden bill the At-| by Roden—Allowing | en-'Rel!filll 4910 trucks o |cau_,e he had declined to sign the S. B. 48, by Rodep—Relating to NRA automobile code, Ford, many e arid_ 1 AYER QF MOTHER T0 BE HANGED BELLEVILLE, Ontalo, Feb. 26— Harold Vermilyea, of Ontario, Cal- ifornia, has been convicted of the hatchet murder of his aged moth- er and sentenced to be hanged on| May 2. Vermilyea was visiting his mo- ther at the time of the killing #% and the crime is sald to have been ithe result of 4 discussion over fi- VISITORS ARE LURED TO DAM NORRIS, Tenn., Feb. 26.—Nor- ris dam, which the Tennessee Val- ley ‘Authority is building near here, was viewed by 140,000 visitors dur- ing the last six months of 1934, the registration book shows. Six- ty of every 100 sightseers were from states other than Tennessee. Elizabeth Ochsner, heiress to $2; 000,000 of the $10,000,000 Ochsne! oll "tortune and Junior college stw dent, was married to Joseph G Scholtz, student and son of a Iurl lnr, In san Rafael, Cal. The conplcl the ceremony. (As ucllnd Pr- Photo® FORD INVITED TO SUBMIT BIDS ON | | | ARKANSASVOTES . TO HAVE LIQUOR AFTER 19 YEARS | Governor ? F orces Acnon t " When Demands Re- peal or $250 000 mn'/s le( Ark., Feb. 26— 'l‘he State Legislature has voted ta'end the 19 years of state pro- hibition.. Spurred by the demand of Gov. J. M. trell that the Legislators either appeal the dry law or ap- propriate $250,000 for eniforcement of them, both the House and Sen- ate immediately passed a bill to legalize package liquor sales. The state legalized 3.2 beer two years ago. - ee— - IMMIGRATION OFFICER SPENDS WEEK IN CITY o, e t .On routine matters connectéd with his office, R. F. Wyatt, Im- migration Officer stationed at Ket- chikan, js in Juneau this week. He is staying at the Gastineau while in the city. (BT AL 5 DAILY EMPIRE WANT ADS PAY! ARMY SUPPLIES = WASH!NGTON, Feb. 26. — The | War Department has sent an invi- | tation to Henry Ford to bid ‘en the and ‘éars ‘1o cosh around four million dollars, Be- | months ago, was not invited to bid S. B. 49, by Powers—Approp- .on Government purchases or his iating $4,000 for an airplane land=|pids were thrown out. He was def- ing field at Rampart. S. B. 50, by Powers—Appropriat- |signers, however, to submit figures linitely invited, along with code SHOE ing $4,000 for an airplane landing on the present batch of cars to be | field at Steel Creek. S. J. R. No. 1, by Roden—Provid- |jn authoritative quarters. ing for insertions when compiled laws are permanently bound. S e | INTERIOR INDIAN KILLS Word has been received by the|it favors modification of code re- . |Alaska Game Commission that an| quirements in order to obtain wid- ‘|Indian from Fairbanks killed a er range of competitive bidding in pin tail duck last fall that had | compliance ‘Ma.rch 23 when bids will be opened DUCK BANDED IN B.'C./so as to make the Ford bid ac- |been banded in British Columbia | in 1934. This is significant in that| it shows that ducks from the In- terior fly through British Columbia as well as directly through Canada to the Mississippi Valley, accord- night as a passenger on the Prin- Assistant | cess Norah. He had taken passage Executive Officer of the commis- | at Vancouver, B. C., after a winter ing to Frank Dufresne, sion. e, SHOP IN JUNEAU FIRST! |used by the CCC, it was reported Army officials expect the NRA will have revised existing code rcquirements before ceptable. The Army has reported auto purchases, > MILLER ON BOAT George Miller, Deputy Collector of United States Customs at Skag- way, returned to that city last ‘vacnnon in the States. - SHOP IN JUNEAU FIRST! GEORGE BROS o New Plymout h S Arrives! 'NOW ON DISPLAY ON OUR SALES FLOOR! Drop in and see all of the new features and you will realize 98¢ SALE Buy one pair Women’s Shoes at the regular price and receive the second pair in the same price range for LEADIR DEPT. STORE . Store Open Tonight More Than Ever ‘ T‘he Best Engmeered Low Pncé ; Car Ever Oflered' DODGE and PLYMOUTH DEALERS Juneau,??l?" ¢ aw i w. ¢ cCAUL MOTOR ’CO. Tt REFGE 7 e EE wis