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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, WEDNESDAY, MAY |, 1935 P HEADING THE SUMMER SEASON BIG STRAWS £5.95 WHITE T-STRAPS WHITE OXFORDS WHITE SPORT OXFORDS 4.95 pair WHITE g | . PUMPS £ 1< g ) ;mn B. M. Behrends Co., Inc. “Junea’s Leading Department Store” as | { the| below the| d its| month on ! en a read- registered, ahd t on the first at 6| ® est April temper-} over a 40-year! in 1916, and the| 1 temperature for iod was 13° in 1929, 'I'l’!e1 rd was that mean of | lczical ing of lowest w ce W of 5 minutes was 25 miles APRIL WEATHER from the east on the 18th. The the south, E SGME The average relative humidity at | SUP‘IEY woRK m. was 74 par cent; at moon, | la & 5 > cent; and at 4 p. m, 55| i CHANGESNOTED == """ IN NORTHLAND | Winds Aloft !Senate Boosts Appropria- Month Was Cooler than| ©On ‘April22, at %01 p. m., oe-| curred the highest recorded wind Made by House - S 3 N for the month over Juneau and its | — low Sunshine Shy vicinity, computed from the 8 WASHINGTON, April 20.—(Spec- v k a. m. and 1:30 p. m. pilot balloon pril just vD:\“"d Department appropriation bill mak- normal, With( ging at an elevation of 46,997 feet ing appropriations for the: fiscal | was 2683 miles per hour from the year ending June 30, 1936, passed corespondingly | yost-soy The wind velocity mal, according | ea the House the bill carried an ap- re-| per hour from the south prepriation of $40,000 for the ‘con- tinuation of the work of the Geo- to $100,000 in the Senate, due to the clear repre- sentation of the work of the Geo- C. Mendenhall, Direclor of the Sur- vey, and Del Dimond when D B B‘NGS hey appeared before the subcom- mittee April 2. If the item can survive the con- "unusl’ in the field work "of the! Greatest Mlh_mly Geological Survey of more than Demonstration three times that which would be prevailing wind direction was from $l []u flnfl FBR B bens |27th, 29th, and 30th. tion of Forty Thousand Normal, Precipitation Be- |vetocity of the upper air currents ial Correspondence)—The Interior cbservations. The velocity of the be nor- the Senate Tuesday. At is passed at the s surface was 8 miles J'A«A.,uh: E NN icat Survey in Alaska. This was Survey that w made to| ( and remain. in the bill possible under, 1he -criginal .appro- the Senate subcommitiee by Dr. W. SovietdRupain Stages Its|when enacted, it will mean an in- was that of 1890 mean of 347 lpn;mon. ; Precipitation The total precipitation month was 496 inches, or 0.42 mLh al. The with a monthly (Continued trom Page One) were injured in posion'WARNER RECOVERS;; led with water and| LEAVES HOSP"AL > thrown from windows on| umrlmm\ 'So ml):lx]zolm“ opn cmu..x 5 ALl in 51 st deiveoh 4 ©% |pital with influe has recovered paraded in New York to, the point where he was able 5'“““1"‘1 ?"‘ to leave the hospital today for his {home. He been in the hospital | several w ed at about| L 71 XS e | CHOOL TAX aloft by the} merritorial £cnool Tax for 1935 unpaid by May 1 will become de- linquent. All male persons between LOURING TO KETCHIKAN |21 and 50, excepting U. S. soldiers The total wind movement la K. Louring, representative of theand _sailors, volunteer firemen, month was 5444 miles, of an av-)Pacific Bottlers Supply Company,|Paupers and insane must pay this| erage hourly velockty of 7.6 miles.|traveled to Ketchikan from Ju- A. W. HENNING; City Clerk, maximum velocity for a sustained|neau on the Northwestern, School Tax Collector. | when wette tmm T that of| total of 11.37 inches. was that of 19 169 inches. The ring the month| the normal, xlw‘ h, as compared ! 6 inches. 17“0;)1‘;L’lor of op, who has Anns Hos- iest of total snow was much belo total being 04 with a normal of Out of a po sunshine, the of sunshine r T or 40 per cent, cent ahove were 4 clear cloudy days during the month. groups S The Commur which is 4 pd normal. ‘There| 7 cloudy, and 19| is adv. ‘PODR GONVICT'S' LAW INTRODUCED APPLIES M.ASKA Social Secunty Bill Provis- ions Also Applicable to Northland b ¢ GARDEN weuld make the “poor conmt's law” Draw yom garden plot plan on that is in effect in States ap- paper first. Generally the rows plicable to Alaska, was Introduced thould run north and south, but it in the Senate Friday by :Hen. Ed- Is better to have rows run the long wa | R. Burke, Senator from Ne- way of the garden for convenience a. This is a eompsnion bill in cultivating. Remember that .R 157, introduced in the|the tall growing plants should not NAZI WEDDINGS U. 8. DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE, WEATHER BUREAU The Weather (By the U. 8. Weather Bureau) Forecast for juneau and vielnity, beginning at 4 p.m., May 1: Fair tonight and Thursday; light variable winds. LOCAL DATA Barometer Temp. Humidity Wind Velocity 29.95 51 33 E 8 4 am. 30.02 34 83 SW 1 It seems their efforts have not|N°(’" s @ 47 WNW 8 been vain. For the first time smce‘ EADIO ZEPORTS the war, birth registration passed _YESTERDAY the million mark last year, official | " Highest 4pm. | figures placing the number of 1934 gpasion temp. temp. | babies at 1169915, some 213,000 Anchorage 49 —_ more than in 1833. Barrow 6 The Teport emphasizes that 157,-! Nome 26 881 childreri were born in 1934 to Bethel 46 couples . who 'marriéd under the Fairbanks 34 matrimonial Joan plan. Couples who {Dawson 42 marry with .a government subsidy \St. Paul FALL SHORT OF OFFIGIAL GOAL 4 pm. yes Weathe: Pt. Cldy Clear Cidy (Continued from Pnge One) TODAY Lowest 4a.m. 4a.m. Precip. 4ain temp. temp. velocity 24hrs. Weathier 32 10 R ‘Trace 0 Trace 10 0 6 24 38 34 40 34 24 4 Pt.Cldy | Pt.Cldy Pt. Cldy Cldy Pt. Cldy 4 4 4 v 6 Cldy ] CLUB, House by the Delegate on January third A bill providing the .right of | il from the judgment of con-| in the . trial, court ,in Al- acka, in gl criminal cases an ivil suits, was introduced W Smu- or Burke at the same. time. SOCIAL SECURITY BII..L The Social Security Bill o pro- vide fer tho general welfare by establishing a system of Federal ge benefits, by . enabling the States to make adequate provision | for aged persons, dependent chil- dren, publie health and; maternal welfare, passed the HouseFriday. he bill provides. the samé bene- its to the Territory of Alaska that are oflered to the scveral. States. becoming eligible to the sonefits of the bill,j the State or torial Legislature .must pass {12 laws providing for financial carticipation by the State and cproved by the Social Security! | Beard. FLOOD CONTROL The bill -authorizing''the prelim- inary examipation of the Tanana| and Chena Slough wmx ;1 w to [he control of floods in cugh wes intreduced in the Sen- ate Friday through the courtesy of Senator Schwellenbach of Wash- ington, This is identical with H. R. 607 ~ intrcduced in the House, Thursday, by Delegate Dimond. TO PHOTOGRAPH ALASKA Earl Hammond, moving picture photographer and lecturer on Al- is eompleting his plans for ano'her source trip in Alaska. His slan for the coming seasofi is to o noith from Montana and work | his way down the MacKenzje Riv er, then up the Peel to Fort Me- | FPherson where he will portage over o the Porcupine River, following it down, to the. Yukon ‘ang then down the Yukon to the Bering Sca. Mr, Hammond is taking two mov- | ing picture cameras together with complete sound equipment to record trip. (DOM REPRESENTS | FRYE AND COMPANY; ERROR CORRECTED _— > Thxough an error in the adver- tisement relative to the opening of the Totem Grocery, in yesterday's Empire, under the ownership of James Ramsay and Son, M. W. ar |Odom was listed as a representa- tive of the A. C. Fry Company. Mr. Odom, well known Alaska 1 represents Frye and CAmpnny‘ packers of fresh and smoked meats. M’KINLEY FUNERAL IS SET TOMORROW Frank McKinley, longshoreman who died last week, will be given last rites by the Juneau local of the Intern:tional - Longshoremen’s Association towm orrow afternoon. The funeral servicss, at which the Rev. Erling K. Olatson will preside, will be held from the pariors of the Juneau-Young Undertaking Company at 2 g'elack. Pallpearers were named today. They include Willlam McPhail, James Irvin, W. Hart, Robert Mar- | tin, Tom Haenson.. and Charles Berg. .o SCOBEE 71O SEATTLE F. 8. Scobee, insurange iman, is on the Yukon bound for Seattle. NOTICE Notice is hereby given that ap- phications. for liquor licenses have| been filed with the Board of Liquor Control by the following: JUNEAU COLD STORAGE COM- PANY, INC., Juneau, Alaska, for WHOLESALE BEER AND WINE | LICENSE !urAqx Storage Build- ing, JUB, Juneau, Alaska, for | ICENSE for Elks Club Building, Juneau, Alaska. JOHN B. MARIN, Douglas, Al-| 'aska, for BEVERAGE DISPENSARY | LICENSE for Eagles’ Hall Build-‘ ing, Douglas, Alaska. A hearing on these apphwmons‘ will be held by the Board of Liquor Control gt Juneap, Alaska, on May 29, 1935 at 2 pm, | Protests or objections against the allowance of any of the above applieations should be in writing and filed with the Board of Liquor Control at Juneau, Alaska, on or before the date of said he.ulnss Dated April 29, 1935, BOARD OF LIQUOR CONTBOL | By FRANK A. BOYLE, Becretary. First publication, April 30, 1935. 'Last publication, May 7, 1935. 1 i shade the smnller ones. CPA REPORTS BIG PROFITS | FISCAL YEAR Over Three Million Dollars Cleared by Majority Owner of APA SAN FRANCISCO, May 1-—The California Packing Corporation has reported that the fiscal year net profits are $3,240,703 including a share of the Alaska Packers As- sociation of $1,013,329 increased net profit. The California Packing Corpora- tion owns 837 per cent of the stock of the Alaska Packers As- | sociation. DR. NEUMAN PASSES AWAY NAPA, Cal, May 1.—Dr. Daniel S. Neuman, aged 67, noted for treat- ment of eye diseases among the Eskimo of Alaska, and a grandson of the physician to Napoleon, died here during the night. ‘The Schillings Products represen- tative, H. B. Crewson, left for Ket- chikan on the Yukon. | Bay section. can deduct 25 per ‘cent of the' |amount of the loan for each child| [ born, | S eee e e o eses e 00 . AT THF HOTELS e e oo 000000000 Zynda * Mr. and Mrs. E. O. Swanson, Elfin Cove; Jane Fanelby, Juneau. Gastineau Harvey Fry, Juneau; M. M. Reese, Windham Bay; P. A. Heney, Jr., Windham Bay. R NEW MINING COMPANY Articles .of incorporation have| been filed with the Territorial Auditor by the Goodnews Bay Min- ing Company of Flat, Alaska. In- corporators are Anton Lindstrom,i Andrew Olson and Edward Olson. The board of directors is made up of these men and Axel Palm- gren of Flat and Robert W. Vin- nedge of North Bend, Wash. The capitalization is $50,000. They plan mining operations in the Goodnews ! ki g = ARRESTED AGAIN Glen B. Simpson, 37, who recent- ly completed a nine months term in the Federal Jail for passing bad checks, was arrested again in Cor- dova yesterday on a similar charge, according to information to the| U. S. Marshal’: office. Simpson | also is under a three years sus- pended sentence. - TO SEATTLE James Evans, connected with the | Astoria and Puget Sound Canning Comp'\ny, is traveling to Seattle on! 'the Northwestern from Juneau. Just say Happy-Peppy When in want of real good Beer- It will make you Happy-Peppy And will give you lots of cheer. Happy-Pe himself | LARGE AND LARGE AND STANDARD SIZE BOTTLES IN NANDY PACKAGES 1 S O S AR ST SR RN S B A _‘ BIG MAY DAY CELEBRATION Entertainment and Dance AT MOOSE HALL WEDNESDAY, Entertainment Starts at 8 P. M. DANCING STARTS AT 9 P. M. EVERYBODY WELCOME Ladies Free Admission $1.00 1935 MAY 1, 1935 Free Lunch Chevrolet and Pontiac Dealers %o CONNORS MOTOR CO. 44 50 44 51 58 56 32 60 62 60 ,Dutch’ Harbor Kodiak Cordova Juneau Sitka Ketchikan Prince Rupert Edmonton Seattle Portland San Francisco 02 0 Rain 8 4 Clear 4 Clear 1 Clear Clear Clear Snow Clear Cldy Clear 0 0 [ o 0 6 4 2 12 4 Trace 4 [ 4 0 WEATHER CONDITIO)N AT 8 A. M. Ketchikan, clear, temperature, 44; Craig, clear, 41; Wrangell, clear, 50; Sitka, clear, 42; Skagway, cloudy, 40; Anchorage, cloudy, 39; Nenana, cloudy, 32; Fairbanks, cloudy, 30; Hot Springs, clear, 20; Tanana, clear, 18; Nulato, clear, 12; Kaltag, clear, 8; Unala- Kkleet, clear, 12; Flat, cloudy, 30. WEATHER SYNOPSIS The barometric pressure was nmal or slightly above through- cut Alaska this morning, the cres. being over the Seward Peninsula. 1'This general pressure distribution has been attended by fair weath- er -along the coastal regions fron Kodiak southward to Dixon En- trance and from the lower Tanan: Valley westward to the Bering Sea, and by cloudy weather over the upper Tanana and Yukon Valleys. It was slightly colder this elsewhere over been small. morning over the interior of Alaska, the Territory the 24-hour temperature changes have 5 — A I’s Easy to Remodel Interiors with Sheetrock ® Building new partitions, finishing an attic or partition- ing off the furnace room is easily and quickly done with Sheetrock, the Fireproof Wallboard. Sheetrock is delivered to you in large clean, ivory colored sheets that are quickly nailed in place on walls or ceilings. Sheetrock will stay in place as long as the building stands because it does not warp or buckle. It is fireproof and contains nothing to support fire. It is ready for immediate decoration as soon as it is in place and the joints have been treated with the Armored Joint System. Sheetrock will take any decorating material. Call at our yard and see the actual boards of Sheetrock or phone for a representative to call and show-you samples and explain just how you can use Sheetrock in your re- modeling economically. SHEETROCK THE FIREPROOF WALLBOARD Thomas Hardware Co. NEW GOODS Arriving on Every Boat LEADER DEPT. STORE GEORGE BROS. Juneau Cash Grocery CASH GROCERS Corner Second and Seward Free Delivery AGENTS ALASKA’S FAMOUS HEALTH RESORT Ideal Spot for Vacations SITKA HOT SPRINGS GODDARD, ALASKA FISHING HUNTING First Class Accommodations BOATING Reasonable Rates CAPITOL BEER PARLORS AND BALL ROOM Private Booths Lunches Dancing Every Night WINDOW CLEANING PHONE 485 Old papers for sale at Empire Office