The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, July 9, 1935, Page 2

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4 gllllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlIIllIIIIllIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIlflflllllIWIIImmllllIIIIIIfl|IflIIII||IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIflHMflIlIII|II ‘ Mid-Summer Sale of Ready-to-Wear! The B. M. Behrends Store is ofiermg b v In keeping with our policy . outstanding values in this .'\1111\1 Il Mid-Summer Cleararnce Sale! e ONSTRUTION liu vme“ BOSSES TRAVEL | FISHERIES: MEN, TO MATANUSKA! PILOT’S WIFE A party of eigit, expert con-f ' (Gontinuéd from Page One): struction superintendents, experi- cnud in handling itinefant work- off, ayer the Gult, B low, At [ers, s .aboard the steamer Alaska |3 ol " aglo tr{;ry‘n i o ‘mhy bound for Seward and the stated the Fairehild was then over ‘\Au anuska Valley colonization Pro-; yakutat, 1000 feet, in,the air and Hm The , men;. all from Seattle, with & vhibm;y of elgm, miles. | | boarded the vessel there and were| opoerator .1, .dn., direct |interviewed when the Alaska made| ommunication with the Tallapoosa !IHllllll““||llllllll|\|lfl|llfl||1|“llll.. » = |l FOR GIRLS Your Choice . I AR RO AL S AR AR flllllmlmllllmmINIHIIllI|IIIllllmlII|lIIIIIIII|lIIII||III|II||l|IIIIIIII|IlIIIIIII|Illl\llllllll|IIIIIlllmmmulllI!lIIIHIlIIII|||I|I"NH\IIHWHH|N"H“M"“IH Since the House customarily does [ ing, industry anywhere in the suP‘REMEGUURT | not take itself nearly so seriously | Blc SBHAP ‘N world.” as the Senate, the pro[e:’auons‘ ! While . Reugnifz .speaks. for his that all revenue legislation must | o argamuuon only, /in the ab- MIGHTY FAGTOR originate in the House, under the LABUR mRGLEs sence oF a.central erganization of constitution, sounded a little hol- coopu—guye nnigns. is. yiews are low. In practice, it is quite the or- * ragarded in labor circles as signifi- dinary thing for the Senate to w cant. " amend tax bills. The real story is that various in- Although in Recess Con-| gress Contemplates Many Decisions (Centinued from Page One) | lawyer is consulted. He “I am in grave doubt says: whether opportunity. We have grouped a selection. B: M. Behrends Co., lnc* SILK DRESSES . . Here is your carefully " $1.95 MILLINERY this weck we are offering the most unusual values, Coats-Suits-Dresses A GROUP OF COATS AND SUITS that we{gdar- antee you values at original retail prices up to $59.50. This week we offer you a choice sI 5 at the reduced prive oft. .y e v B85 500 : A GROUP OF WOMEN’S DRESSES that were a8 marked to sell up to $22.50 NOW, these dresses come to you ss CHILDREN'S COATS AND DRESSES . We offer you a choice in these lines, Values up to $16.50 for .. ... NO MORE . We offer you the choice of any hat 1n our stock - ) NO APPROVALS—NO EXCHANGES—NO ALTERATIONS CAN BE MADE DURING :THIS SALE - “Juneau’s Leading I)v[nulment Store” flucntnl House members are nurs- ing a feeling that the House has been getting the worst of it steadily under the Administration program. They complain that House roll calls have been used as trial balloons, and that whenever there has been any parliamentary “dirty work” to do, the House has been asked to take the lead. Soon Go SCIENTIS American Federahrm and TRAVELS WESTWARb 4L Organization, May to Mat | (Continued 1rom rage Jte) v. g, 3wt NO'LESSE" $1.50 " TR 9 B P . = L) 1.5 SON, n | - bonad B, Wl\\!n. A S0p: xomove student, in. the Columbia university S8chool of Dental and, Oral Surgery in New York, is & passenger. to SeW- mmmmmmmmmlmlumlmmmnunummmmmlmmunnnmmumumumnnm ' sioner of Fisheries, a brief. stop here this merning. W. H. Colisch,. superintendent in charge; struction expert, and the ‘following construction, superin tendents: W. Langhland, and J. Owley., tion with the 8. R. Fuller, Jr., in-| | vestigation party, order. The Fuller party, expected to 'make a Juneau stop today, is en- | rcute to Seward and the Matanuska | Valley .via the Coast Guard cutter | Shoshone. “The eight members of thls con- struction party .from Seattle on the | Alaska know how to handle itiner- ant workers,” Dillon. said. “That’s one reason why we were selected. If this Matanuske, thing 'is a tough proposition, that's. all right with us. We'll do’ dur'best to get con- truction work 'goipg.”, Cannery Head Says Fishing Worst Yet In Bristol Bay Area BELLINGHAM, ash., July 9.— Fishing conditions in, the Bristol |Bay area are worse than in 1930, | the worst year in the hlsQory of the | salman industry .in. that district, President; Archie, Shiels of the Ba- cific ;American Fisheries company, | has been informed in a message. Shiels said his company lLiad an- | ticipated for five ygars that this ,would be the case due to the regu- | |1a%M6§ 7 of, the salifion pydled and so makipg . no apumpl. to. mh pr can although it Has two canneries on the bay. FORMER FISHERIES . COMMISSIONER HERE ENROUTE, CORDOVA Henry O'Malley, former Commis- was a brief visitor in Juneau during the stay of the Alaska. He == is_enroute to Cordova for some trout fishing and to take colored| pictures. The former Commissioner denied reports that he was visiting Alaska | tq investigate the fisheries. for any Senatorial group. He said he merely was after. trout and ex- pected to remain in the Cordova region about two weeks, He indicated, however, that he did not belleve reopening of Bristol Bay was, advisable, —,———— Cardiml LaFontaine Passey Away in Venice; Reduces Sacred College VENICE, July 9.-Cardinal La- Fentaine, aged 74, Patrierch of Ven- ice, died tcday of arterioscerosis. He was once. mentioned as a possible successor to, Pope Benedict. Cardinal LaFontaine's death re- lard from Seattle on the Alaska. He !is boupd to: the Interior, near Bet@- | is fal the Senate can properly receive this| They felt the tax-the-rich plan |ganda,” he says, “is being tuthed on % ¥here m“;vu’lwm his f W paper. It c ns statements that {would be popular with important|for this purpose. In the. Western Df+ Lewman ’-.jm"'“‘h ‘ reflect on Senators. Some | sections of the voting public, and |states special attention is being dj- | | Dr-Waugh,: ‘passed hrvldxv of these statements are scarrilous!” House Felt Slighted There was far more than appear- ed behind the House flareup over the proposal to have the Presi- dent's tax-the-rich program tacked positively that there was no reason why the|rected ‘toward breaking up, the Senate should get the credit, and‘esta.mm.u. in 1917, This. destructive the House left to play the role of | a ditto mark, In short, while the constitution was the talking-point, praetical pol- | effort . by labor leaders | made in the face of the fact, mat' the ‘4L organization, by joiné actipn ! of “employes and ‘émplogers, in 1917 is belng -lunenu .recently . enroute. tp. the Wesmrd. is a noted orth Lo remain in New. York to take - |aminations, 15 am enroute, {0 e ities undoubtedly had much to do|institited and has nce; ., o' ta ghe : PABARE erclee 43 bil In with the case. That is not at al : e ighest -&q‘ akisgiio 1o father. 11 Mo { gommey the ) unusull 1 3 ey Study. National guardsmen stationed at Tacoma, W were sent to Tacoma under orders of ‘Gov. Clarence D, Martin to _ worke W, ks.called late in March. (Associated Press Photo) b ana am,; will go aboard the : %‘g , new game_commission L, ash., are shown keeping crowds on the move, The troops 9ive protection to lumber industry |Biver, Coal trana m route ‘hom which is .coming north to en- M ice. The new craft h’ e by. Capt. Jobhn O. and is due herc about the !int week in August. ; BOUND FOR SUNTRANA | . Mr. and Mrs. Edward Corey, of, Buntrana are Teturning north 4o thelr home after a visit: of | months fn’ Wuhlnlum Bnce Dol Mr. Corey is employed by the Healy Corpmmn at Sun+ ¥ VISIT FATHER o fFo,,visht her ; father, Mrs. K. H. Hefferman is, 4, passenger on the Alagka, from Seattle to Nellie Juan. Accompanied by her son, Bobbie, she, will spend the summer with her father, Bd Hapley, owner of the Nellie Juan cagnery. Tt ——— SHOP IN JUNEAU! duces the membership of the Sac- red College to 49 out of a possible 70. CAl fi{? TENDER . ES SHORT CALL The cannery tender Moria from be Libby, McNeill angd Libby Com- pany plant at Taku Harbor visited Juneau briefly eéarly this. afternoon. Skippered. by Capt, .Andrew Froy- |White to .the city, then re Harbor. The. ship berthed t.the Iumber mill dock. —_—————— OFF TO WESTWARD __Jobn F, Chamberlain, Alaska rep- rmuz{ve for the Pacific Marine ply and Tea Garden products, eafled for Valdez on the Alaska to- day. Chamberlain will go on to Seward, Anchorage, Fairbanks, Sel- dovia and Cordova. Mrs. Chamber- lain, who has been with him during his stay in Juneau, will accompany. hlm on the trip to the interior. e buum SIMSON DSAD Simon Simson, 67 years old; form- er store, pperator at Nome, recently of the Unlve"sity District, Seattle, is dead at Seattle After an illness of cnly a few days. Survivors are his widow, Frances; two sons, Louis of Seattle and Jerome of Oakland, Calif., 'and a daughter, Mrs. Lillian voynow of Long Island, N. Y. —r———— MRS. POWELL TRAVELS Mrs. C. J. Powell, wife of O. M. Powell, veteran Nome mining man, is a passenger on the Alaska from Seattle to Seward, enroute to the Interior city. Members of the party include:|soqsq Guud wave length. W. H. LaVictory, master| pjot Kirkpnmd Wl he remem: mill builder; J. Wilms, tunnel con- bered as. the..pilot of, the, plane Baker, F. Blakely, John Dillon/ R, |Ur., from Cordoya. via Juneau and According to Dillon, the EI'W‘D The haby was | was selected in Seattle by the m .swallowed & safety pin, . The Washington Emergency Relief Ad-|pin was later removed by natural ministration - officials . in co-opera-{methods. appointed , by |, | washington, D. G, .FERA officials|makes his Southeast Alaska head- to put the Matanuska project in|quarters in Juneau. Mr. Hawkins [ana Mrs. Kirkpatrick has been with | this morning | land, the Moria returned George ol also - the..Juneau . office, , using the Merpy e Flight: ¢ ; a, recently flew. Mrs. George ray and her 8-month-old George tchnnn, o a hospital in Seattle. sauth. as he Others on Plane | Mr. Wingard is well known, and is* widely ‘khown th the Westward her husband who bases. his at Cordova. CURRENT PRICES PAID FOR CATCH Current prices were paid for a 7,200-pound catch of mixed salmon and halibut purchased this morning by the Sebastian-Stuart Company at the Juneau Cold Storage plant. The catch was :brought, in by S. A. . Stevens on. the Smle and was the only one, repotbed sold here today. S e e Night Porter, Seattle Cafe, Trussed Up;Safe Taken by Two Robbers SEATTLE, July 9—Two men who trussed up the night porter and carted off a 600 pound safe from Hallberg’s Restaurant last night, will find $1700 in the safe, if and when they open it. A. W. Hallberg, night manager, said the men entered the cafe on "Pine Street between Sixth and Fifth avenues, after all except the porter had gone home, e .,-— ‘plane TO KENNECOTT Dr. C. J. Toohey. is travelling to Cordova from Seattle on the Alas- |ka. He will reside af Kennecott,| where the copper mine has re- opened. Accompanying him are his wife and daughter, Jean. ¥ e FROM CINCINNATI | F. E. Busse, an undertaker from Cincinnati, O., is aboard the Alaska | from_ Seattle, bound for Cordova and the Gold Belt Tour. With him are his wife and father, Edward J. Busse. —e e ON TOUR One of the Alaska’s passengers |bound for Cordova and the Gold| | Belt Tour is C. T. Vandenover, exe- |cutive in the International Milling Company of Minneapolis, Minn. -, NOYES SELLS SHIPS W..W. Noyes, owner of several fishing vessels in ‘Ketchikan, ar- rived in the First City from Se- attle on the Alaska. He is said to be arranging the sale of his ships. e GRIDLEY RETURNS Ross A. Gridley, Territorial En- gineer - Inspector for the Public | Administration, returned to Juneau from a Southeast Alaska port on the Alaska. ———— SON-ARRIVES D. .W. Mahoney, son of -United | States Marshal- William, T. Ma-| honey, atrived here from Ketchi- kan on the Alaska. i RETURN Ahm w.ncmsz Harry G. McCain, City Council- man and. City. Attorney, and J. F. VanGilder, City. Clerk of Ketohi~ kan, returned. to that city on the, Ala*ka from Beattie, They hae.bgen n the. states; townplgw purchage privately-owned utilities .in the d{First City for ;the municipality. e BEAUTY WINNER TRAVELS Miss Johnnie Wllke, beauty con- test winner of Pelly, Tex. is en- Joying the reward of her victory as a round-irip passenger from Se- attle on the Alaska. f ADAMS ON ALASKA P. H, Adams, Seattle Hardware | Company representative, and his| daughter, June, arrived here on the | Alaska from Ketchikan. | —————— FISKE TO SEWARD F. L. Fiske, American Radiator Company representative, is travel- ing to Seward on the Alaska from Juneau. 4 GUCKER TO SELDOVIA | Jack Gucker, merchandise broker, | took passage on the Alaska here| for Seldovia. _ | ———— RADIO MAN LEAVES G. .R. Galletly, inspecting en-| gineer with the United States Army | Signal Corps, left Juneau for Sew- | ard on the Alaska. He had been| here for a few days, inspecting the | llocal station. Th 8. l’-&ir sd-n, PR (1} G lnh, Forgcast for' yuneat’antl vietnity, beginnihg Tuty, 97 Rain tonight and Wednesday; modemwmarly winds.’ LOCAL nAn Time Barnfibter ‘Temp. mu-mw wind Vetoclv.' wm 4 pm. yest'y 20.94 69 57 8. 12 Clear. 4 am. today ..29.96 58 79 -8 16 Cldy, - Noon today .20.99 56 92 '8 4 Lt. Rain RADIO REPORTS = YESTERDAY | 5 ‘ropa~ 7 4 Higgliest 4pm. | Lowest . 4a.m. Preclp. 48.C g ; Stagion temp. temp. | temp. temp. velocity mm Wi Ancharage 69 a 56 — Barrow ... 40 40 1 %8 fi‘ 6 Nome 88 56 o agl g 4 Béthel - 60 ! 54 59~ ‘B4 Calm Fairbanks 8 82 | 54, 5ed 4 Davwsor 7% 6 42 1 46 4 st. Paul 50 48 4 44 ett e Disteh “ Harbor 54 b4 46 46, Calm .02 Kodiak .. 54 50 50 0 4 126 - Cordova 2. 88 158 50 ‘B0l 8 o Juneay L0 68 55 58 4 .0 AR IO | e 50 e oam 0 Ketchikan ... 60 60 53 ,é:‘ & e Prince’ Rupert ... 68 568 52 @ 4 -0 01 Edmonton .... 72 | 48 .50 6 0 Seattle 62 54 B4 4 0 Portland ... 68 52 ' B2 g D San Francisco ... 64 60 52 - 52 Sania ¢ New York . b S el T 8 14 ‘WasHington 6 0 74 4 0 WEATHER CONDITIONS AT 8 A. M. Kewmkan. cloudy, temperature, 54; Craig, cloudy, 56; ' Wrangell, raining, 58; Sitka, foggy, 54; Radioville, cloudy; Soapstone, cloudy, 55; Port Althorp, cloudy; Skagway, cloudy, -68; Cordova, part cloudy, §6; Anchorage, clear, 62; Fairbanks, clear, 70; Nerana, clear, 66;" Hot Springs, clear, 66; Tanana, clear, 68; Nulato, cloudy, 60; Kaltag, cloudy, 58; Unalakleet, cloudy, 52; Ruby, cloudy, 50; Flat, foggy, 51. WIATIILB SYNOPSIB A (.rough of low pressure with centers over the Guif of Alaska and the mouth ‘of the MacKenzie River overlies Alaska this morning.' A high’ pressure area covers the middle. . Pacitic . Ocean and extends over the Pacific' Coast north to Ketchikan. During the last twenty- four shours heavy rain has fallen at Kodiak and light rain_over; the Western and lower Southeast portions of the Territory, with gener-| ally fair weather elsewhere. Little change in temperature is shown' by this morning’s reports. FGWLER LEAVES TO | ACCEPT NEW POST John E. rowier — much better known to his friends here as “Jack” —left Juneau this morning for Cordova: on the Alaska. From Cor- dova, young Fowler will travel to McCarthy, there to accept a posi- tion with the Bremner Gold Min- ing Company. WINDOW CLEANING PHONE 485 During his year's stay /here as an |employee of the Alaska Juneau Gold Mining Company, Fowler has made many friends, especially among the younger set. A graduate in mining technology from Washington State College, Fowler left Juneau to accept a posi- tion which will call for gold assay and gold amalgamation work with the Bremner firm. 0 Juneau Cash Grocery CASH GROCERS Corner Second and Seward Free Delivery PHONE 58 THE HOTEL OF ALASKAN Hd"is:u The Gastineau ! Our Servites to You Begin and End it t‘i}, ‘Gang Plank of Every Passedgér-Carrying Boat “Stm ta Stern” Cdll 411 Noiw!. CONNORS MOTOR CO cx.miet rmcmuauv Established 1898 Juneau, Alaska CAPITOL BEER PARLORS Afinlc;::L ng?ntlng Every Night Private Booths’ RICE & AHLERS (0. Plumbing Sheet Metal Work , PHONE 34 Heating

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