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DIIIIIIIIIII|III||IIIIIIIIIlIllIIlIII|II|IIillllillll||IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII||III"IIIIIII“I"IllillllliIIIIIIIIIII'IIIIIIIIlIII"lIIIIIIIIIIIIIIiIIIIIIIIllIfiIIIIIIIII|IIIIIIII|IIIIIIIIIIIIiIIIfl Spring Fashion Festival THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, FRIDAY, APRIL 5, 1935. a suit? a sheer? tweeds? We know the answers fashion question . . . and are.ready:to.tell you just what you'll negd.to fit/pexfeetly into the style picture o eager to show you the of the fashion designer’ in and talk things over! the subtle flattery of thi and our prices. Brims ~that droop ~that flare —that shadow ~that flatter Gloves Handbags Scarfs B. M. Behrends Co., Inc. Neckwear Shoes Umbrellas “Juneau’s Leading Dopar}mem Store” 000000000000 L !}jllllll[jllllllll“mm@ differentials and the cost of con- | ¢ Wa' . BUILD'NG BAIN struction and operation, as com- hansson when the Waseca came | .;A 4 with the same costs to their into port, she testified. The cap-| - titors. > SUIT OVER VESSEL REVEALS ROMANCE STARTED IN ALASKA *bc.\ulc SEENINU. S. SHIPPING Al | WASHINGTON, April 5. — The| outright government subsidy Presi- dent Roosevelt wants to give the . shipping industry to place opera-| tors of the American merchant ma- rine on a parity with foreign op- erators will increase ship construc- tion and bring back under the Am- erican flag the patronage now g en to the more modern foreign| vessels, South Trimble Jr., a de- partment of commerce attorney, de- clared today. He also said the question of old- age security and other matters of personnel are necessary for an ade- quate merchant marine After Karl A. Crowley, Times) between an Alas- and a white The romance an Indian 1 tain of a fishing vessel, which was culminated in marriage, was in- jected in a case being heard in Superior Judge Howard M. Find-! ey’s court here. Rudolph Johansson, 1413 Queen Anne Ave., pretty Indian girl in modern white girl's clothes, is the wife of the captain of the |a legal battle is being waged. She |handed over her 7-weeks-old baby son, Lloyd, to other Indian girls, | friends, when she took the stand special at- |after her husband had testified. torney for the Postoffice Depart R. H. Maslan, owner of the Was- ment testified the Department feel and brother of A. L. and Ben the duty of administering a mar- Maslan, Seattle attorneys, seeks ine subsidy should be given an|to recover $2,000 for the chartering agency familiar with commerce and |of the boat in 1933. The defend-' shipbuilding, Trimble gave the|ants, House Merchant Marine Commit- | man, operators of the Klawock tee some suggestions as to how a| Packing Company, fishing firm of Federal subsidy could be applied. |Klawock, Alaska, say the vessel He propesed the government give |was used two days and then was direct aid to the operator by a out of commission. gubsidy worked out on the basis ax] From the shore of Klawock, Mrs. cap-' fishing vessel Waseca, over which! Joe Gluck and Sam Free-| Johansson ved .to Caplain ‘Jo- tain waved back. Later they fell ip love and were married. Another Indian maiden, Miss Bertha Pera- trovich, training to be a nurse at) Columbus Hospital, was to he called as a witness to support the testimony of Johansson that thc boat was in-order, but unused. S MANY YOUNG MEN ATTEND COLLEGE MINES COURSE A good portion of the students Im.cendmx the ten weeks mining short coprse at the College of Alas- ka this year were hona-fide Rros- pectors and plan to camy their short course training back into the hills with them, according to Bean Ernest N. Patty of the College, in {an initeryiew in the Farthest-North | Collegian. “Many of them were young. men, is pot willing to endure the hard life of the prospector. The young prospector is heginning to appre- ciate the fact that he cannot de- | |pend entirely upon stumbling on easy-to-find outcrops of ore. realizes that the prospector of the future must be well-trained if he is going to increase his chances af success in his yventure,” Empire Classifled Ads Pay. gt COAt? wql print? --light wool? Handkerchiefs showing the fallacy of the sute-l |ment that the younger generation | He | lIllllIlIllll][l]llllllllllll!l to your particular {-Spring . .. We'ke smartest examples s skilh o waocome ! You'll appreciate s year's fashion ... % . HHHHHHHHIIllllllllll“lIIIHIIIIIHIHIHIIIIHIIIHIIIIIIIHIIIIIIHIIIIIIHHII IMHHHHHIHMlllmllmmlHHII|I|IIIImmflImfllIII“IIIIHIIHHIIHIIIHIHIIJHIlll|||ll||||||!|I||||||||I|II|II||IIIIIIIlllllllllfllllfllllllllllllllllllllllll“ll"" HosiBry 4 Dl § MK SPRinG PREP ARATIONS { (canumd from Pagc Onm {intexest is being shown in new furpiture, a store representative in- dicated. | 8til another - commercial house | ehowed a]um of spring today with | clever dlsplgy of Easter candxs; being fouid in the Juneau Ice | Cream Parlors. Percy A. Reynolds, | manager of the establishment, re- cently ins new booths, so that house is “dressed” properly for the " son of spring. ! ‘Ruth ‘Carfson, and the Florence | Shop, anhounced special Easter | hair ' dress features in prppnutionl for the coming Easter Sunday “pa- rade.” /i $a peing Is Here | |" Then, tdo, thé Harry Race and Butler-Maurg q!rug stores told to- day of special cosmetic displays to attract milady. Yes, there' ’sprmg is” hefe ——— NOTICE TO0 THE PUBLIC no doubt about n—‘ Pile. Driver Operators of the Car penters Local Union No. .1, have |set their wage scale at $1.00 per hanr effective al once. CARPENTERS LOCAL UNION NO. 1. ] ndv. ‘LOOSE ANKLES' WILL BE GIVEN BY DRAMA CLUB Decision ME to Present Public Performance of Comedy in May About four weeks Juneau theatre-goers a chance to witness own Drama Club in public presen- tation of “Loose Ankles,” smart, modern three-act comedy. That was the decision reached last night as the Juneau Drama | Club met at Juneau High School Director Ted Danielson has is- sued a call for all drama club members interested in trying out for one of the 16 character parts in “Loose Ankles” to be present in the mathematics rooms of Juneau High School tonight. The try-outs will start at 7 o'clock, he announc- ed Several from today may expect details . concerning the play remain to be decided, espec-| jally the exact date or dates and place of presentation. But one thing’s sure: Juneau's revived ‘lit- tle theatre” movement is definitely under way. A public performance of a three-act play is assured for this spring. Mrs. Grover C. Winn, chairman of the club’s important miscellane- ous committee, provided anotk feature of the business meeting when she announced that Marjorie Tillotson and Stanley Nygren would be in charge of U club entertainment program next month. Mrs. appointed librarian, Mrs. Anna Snow was applauded ' ,when she arose to thank the club | for naming her an honorary mem- bu Mrs. Helen Webster, Grade School instructor, gave an opportune talk on ‘“Production.” Inasmuch as the club is soon to plunge into four weeks of intensive work in preparation for ‘“Loose Ankles,” Mrs. Webster’s speech, ap- parently based on much staging ex- perience, was well-received. Juneau their city’s| Miss | Mildred Hill was | Price Says Hoover Letter Is Causing More Confusion Now (Continued from Page One) a number of Californian mpublx— cans started a movement for Gov- ernor Merriam for President. Happens In Both Parties There is nothing new in t cli; on to switch the conve tion to candidates the anyone mentions issues. It happens regularly in both par- | ties, in spite of the fact that the f))oliLicmns of both parties love to is a government of principles, not government of men.” Many a worthy cause has been rejected | vanced it. ional theory conventions, that men and issues platform first, then select the nom- inees. The catch is that any can- | didate having enough delegates to {nominate him uses those delegates so to control the platform com- { mittee. Even then, more than one can- didate has calmly though adroitly repudiated those parts of the plat- \form he did not like. | “Candidate-Talk” The public declarations of Re- publican leaders—including Mr. Hoover — have expressed special to keep the question of andidates out of the present phase { party deliberations. t seems doubtful whether they ally have had any hope of doing hat it will be very hard to mplish can be seen easily—es- lly now that Mr. Hoover has ken his silence. B |War Dead Found ; in Lost Graves ARRAS, France, bloody battlefields, now ing ms and busy factory sites, still vielding the bones of sol- diers from unmarked graves of 20 years. Many of them are identified to April 5—Once moment | go on telling the voters that ‘“‘ours| | merely because the wrong man ad-, following | should be kept separate, adopt the flourish- | U. 8. DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE, WEATHER BUREAU The Weather (By the U. S. Weather Bureau) Forecast for junedu and vieinity, beginning at 4 p.m., April Fair tonight and Saturday; light easterly winds. LOCAL DATA Barometer Temp. Humidity Wind Velocity 30.00 49 24 s 5 29.94 33 7 s 1 29.91 44 49 12 Time 4 pm. 4 am Noon Weathe: Cldy to today RADIO 2EPORTS YESTERDAY | TODAY Highest 4p.m. | | | Lowest 4a.m. 4a.m. Precip. 4a.n temp. temp velocity 24hrs. Weatlier 31 12 14 30 30 Station Anchorage Barrow Nome Bethel Fairbanks Dawson St. Paul Dutch Harbor Kodiak Cordova Juneau Sitka Ketchikan Prince Rupert Edmonton Seattle | Portland | g7 4 San Francisco 2 | P 54 temp. 16 32 38 14 26 14 10 4 4 26 4 20 10 4 22 Rain Rain 4 4 4 8 8 4 Cldy WEATHER CONDITIONS AT 8 A. M. Anchorage, cloudy, temperature, 35; Nenana, snowing, 32; Hot Springs, raining, 34; Tanana, cloudy, 31; Fairbanks, snowing, 34; Ruby, cloudy, 32; Nulato, cloudy, 30; Kaltag, cloudy, 34; Unalakleet, cloudy, 32; Flat, snowing, 32. WEATHER S YNOPSIS A slight and narrow belt of low barometric pressure extended from the Prince William Sound region to Ketchikan this morning while high barometric pressure pravailed over the remainder of Al- aska and the MacKenzie River Valley. This general presure dis- tribution has been attended by fair weather throughout Alaska and by precipitation over the Pacific Northwest States. Seasonable temperatures were reported throughout observation. the field of watch or a ring is the means of naming them again after two de- cades on the “Lost in Action” lists. Unidentified bones are placed in a common charnal house with a last brief absolution by the village priest. WINE WINE WINE Port or Muscatel, $1.50 per gal. |Bring your jug. TOTEM GROC- ERY. adv. B S o MILLWOOD "I‘elephunc 358 for prompt deli y —adv. A corps of searchers, divided imu! - e teams of three, is pacing off nearly | is the Green Hay name of a be sent home to rest in the village every foot of earth where battle | farmer living near the town of churchyard. Often a penul a was known. | Enfllevllle Tenn The entertainment closed with | the presentation of a one-act dra- matic sketch entitled, “Defeat.” Miss Mildred Logg showed much ability in her careful delineation of Nance, a gangster “moll.” Grover C. Winn and R. E. Robertson (two eminent thespians) were detectives and Walt Woodward played the part of Jim, a kidnaper, most artis- tically and gave a convincing char- acterization. The newest thing in food IS COLOR. Makes 'dishes more attractive more appetizing. Try it 1£5 fun. 8 attractive shades. - Schilling Ligws Colors FOOD Nere Giving it toYou Straight STRAIGHT KENTUCKY BOURBON WHISKEY CedarRiver) STRAIGHT Bounlou | = A Bourbonata Popular Price STRAIGHT EIGHT STRAIGHT BOURBON WHISKEY lN’rnol An Excellent Whiskey Moderately Priced. By shopping at THE JUNEAU CASH GROCERY you will save time, money and energy. CHARGE— PHONE BUT1 High Courteous, N O 5 58 Creamery 2 POUNDS 69¢ You also will receive ABSOLUTELY Deliveries—10:30, 2:30 and 4:30 ‘ER rore Fresh FREE OF Smiling Service and Prompt, Efficient Delivery. PHONE 58 Prepared Spaghetti Milani’s Famous Recipe 11b. jar, 15¢ CHEESE American Loaf Pound, 29c¢ POTATOES — Washed Y akima No. 1, 25 1b. cloth Biscuit Flour G. A. Brand Large pkg., 31c I bag EGGS Large Standards, Extra Fresh Alaska Pink Salmon Fine for Salmon Loaf 3 tall tins, 35¢ APPLES Extra Fancy—Winesaps Box, $1.89 COFFEE--M. 3 DOZEN 89¢ Fresh Asparagus Fancy Pound, 20c J. B. and Schillings, California Vacuum Pack, pound . . . . . . 29¢