The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, August 13, 1935, Page 2

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THE ,DAILY A _' SKA ummer Clearanee Continues FALI. MERCHANDI! IS BEGINNING TO ARRIVE AND STILLI. A FEW RF’WAH\”{'\Y SUMMER GOODS IN STOCK \\HICH _WE ARE OFFERING AT HALF-PRICE OR LESS. 12 Only Mer’s Topcoats Values to 335‘00 SALE PRICE $1'7-50 No Approvals—No A]teratiom e Men’s Dress Oxfords $4.50 pair A Men’s Heayy Bib Overall and Jumper $1.35 each 4 Women’s Summer Coats and Sui CLEARANCE PRICE 515.00 No Approvals—No Alterations Sch«ml Girls’ Jackets $2.50, $5.95, $6.50 A ssortment of B('r('l,s Your 50 cents Choice PR Women’s White a‘n‘d Two-Tone Oxford and Slipper $2.95 One Lot Women’s Sweater Blouses Oxford darid Str 1.50 each Clwmnm3> BOSEUENT S CASSOSS SR . - S ,........;,..,. New Arrivals o Advance showing for Fall of ,dressy‘,\ffur-tfimé med and the very popular tweed sport 'tiodél coats. Also a very advanced showing of New sarly Fall Dresses in satins and crepes with vel- vet combinations and metallic trims. Women’s and Misses Wool Skirts, %’I 95 One Lot Pullover bl We m\ltc your early inspection of these Fall models. B.M. Behrends Co.,Inc. . Juneau’s Leading Department Store F complaints, GETTINI! ‘BUSY OVER PULmCS Republicah, Democrdt Ex- press Views Bt Enters Into Prefllcfiod | WAsmNoTou, AUg. 11 nx;ga |States Senator Arthur ¢ |publican of Kansas, |the political picture again with the {comment that “practically any mien | mentioned as Republican Presiden- |tidl candidates for 1036 can defeat | Roosevelt.” ; 4 | /Senator Capper named Borah, | Vandenberg, Knox and Gov. l.l'p-" don, of Kansas, as good Republican | timber. | Senator Capper refuseéd to discuss: Hoover. .. L“IkS” BY REED p FAIRVIEW, Michigan, AUg. 13.— Formle%%kjdsm:‘: Benllt;or | Dcmdcrat of Missourl, pre- d(cted t.hat i the Repubuca.ns tof d"lx they nmimud as nnd.{ e- |velt cah e défeated in 1 6. i MAY BALANCE ! ~ BUDGET IN ’36‘ Chalrmad bf Hoise Appro- pnatlons Committee \ Exptesses Hope | | . WASHINGTON, August 13. aopg, | that, the Budget will be balanced' next year w expressed by Chajr- man Buchanan, Texas, of the House Commitice, which opriation bills thfough ready, this_session of Congrnss' ‘hls approp) dabed $8,153,000,000, over ’tw!ce as much as the ordinary bud-! get. “1 think there is a good chance ! fot a balanced budget next session,” !said Chairman Buchanan. “I fig-| ure that the country has recovered so mucl‘ We won' l..havp to spend 50 much riext year. We ‘can stop lend- ing andwb gil! o g g N g | BOARD THIS W K For the purpose of conslderlnz iany tax assessment claims, that may be presented, the City Counell will meet as a. Board of Equaliza- {tion at City Hall at 8 o'clock to- night. Although there have not been ., many . early, indications . of according to a City Hall_source today, the City Fath- ers will be kept busy with a routine examination of the tax rolls pre- paged by City Assessor H. R. Shep- ard., The Bogrd of Equalizauon will meet nxgmly through Saturday. Thc Y. Righ n also will lnciude e regulnr I;Lty Council | | | ‘meetmg . YACHT KUKU,BdEs;_. LOWE AWAITS STONE , TUESDAY, AUGUST 13, ACROSS 1. [Huminant 83'ut'en ot ¥4 1935. D(uly Cross-ivord Piizzle ircle of light 11 11t of the eye . Move quietly Salutation . Southern con- stellation [nspector of welghts and measures sloping letter F Plage of bliss Night befare an-event card with & single spot Vessels for heating liquids - Score of one (“ish Meudow s lukged mountain crext things that belong together Postpone 5 Water bottles River bottom One that gives less than pal on a golf hole 5 French diatect spoken In Coulslana Sacks on & baseball diampond Long piece ot wood or metal Large tub Unite fnto & lengue Gaming cubes Room In a harem i, Having an offensive M::)‘EM““; to 2 pounds 8 . Course of eating . Small box worn at the girdle by Japancse 4. Make woll man roa Assert to be DOWN b long cut . Region . Runs quickly | That 5 r Raiasd bank of 3 Dumh men\ln of length - Ange; Excuse: N)IIW 65. Fortune AEENE ANE flll Wy, dudEEEdE “rPEL A | B/ dNdd ' Il=lfll7%/llll Rush D. Holt—“baby Senator’—distens in at the cracker barrel. WASHINGTON, Aug. | disguise around the market places | at_Bagdad to learn how the people | liked. his_administration as caliph, | Sendtor Rush D. Holi has a hank- nrmg for straight-from-the-shoul- | der, comments. 13— Like| | Harun-Al-Raschid, who hovered in keeper. | Marw Drwes de Sltty | An American speedboat is the latest diversion of Dowager Queen i the Black Sea, where Madam Hel- Jitiea rival ,yach; mvid dng s}xfr lege ;port N?Qh s, second, visit the Kuxu‘ owned , by wafd White, paturp} R Kuru, le Ln her hi%nfh at_Keeny's. Float this fore- n After she had gonc, the Canim, |owned by Edmunfi Iawe, Jr., re- tired San ,Francisco pué\lness man, moved l‘mm Femmer's Dock to the fJoat. Lowe, Js, awaitipg the ex- ‘M ‘esrival: of bisifeiend; Lewis )" the' mouon picture actor, on another yacht, the Serena. pr L G B sy He ufixd sm‘wfi e .Den Adu;l. sfipenm.endem or gqnnhucnou for. the PAA, Carl h,- | i tolberg. and Clarence Johanson Holt has Just of amipling about the country talk- ing ‘to peopie, most of the time without benefit of introduction, be- cause he wanted to hear them ex- press their opinions honestly. They did, even about Senator Holt. Once he stopped store in Kansas to buy a package of gum, not because he wanted the turhed. The bBoat, dxppea{ ang, o eened _to such an, extent, [‘ut of the Qucen’s American 1s |1ost her camera Qverboa.; fn{w then, a Rumanian marine ofticer | alwags St in thé trofit seat with the' Queen to guird agalnst acel- dent. By special favor o1 the Bulgarian governmem Queen, Marie al- lowed to enter Bulgarfan tetritorial waters in her speed boat. without| special pérmit. Frequenfly she drives' to Euxifiogrd and Varna, where King Boris of Bulgarfa has palaces. But she never drives to Eforia, on s,t and e zo in and talk with the cracker | barrel crew. He was making a sp*ech iq the next town that night | penqd with, “I hear young | ta‘fi(mg tonight.” < He Knew Him e's crazy!” announced the per.. - the contrary,” said Holt sol- ; “I think you should hear ena Lupeséu, her’ son’s red-haired! soul-mate, has a‘sunimer villa. —————0—00——_ A pprbprmttons finished 5,000 miles | in a country | gum, But it Was a good excuse to | “Know him?” asked the store- | “Lived with him ail my life” | grinned Holt from behind his sun- burn. “I'm Holt.” Anyway, the store keeper came to the speech, and shook hands afterward. | Uses Dull Days To some it seems incredible that a Senator can keep his eye on legis- lation and travel 5,000 miles since January at the same time. But Holt is both restless and curious in a big way. He wants to know what| voters are thinking even if he does not agree. So he watches the Sen- ate calendar closely, and when he sees two dull days ahead he lights out in an auto or airplane. He talks to people at gasoline stations, \cros.» roads stores, railroad stations, all-night restaurants afid pool halls, “Those are the places In which \people dawdle and gmsxp about | politics,” says Holt. “I'd rather hear them than the péople I meet where I make speeches. Fef people, dre quite honest when flfly‘re talking |to a senator who is their guest for . the evening.” Boosted, \fo. Oter Eight: Bitlion, - PP e n g gl one hundred g mfllhm, Lwe thotisand |traveled by plane from Fairbanks v.. to Nulato last Friday. They will DRgAM OF MEETING {remain_ gt Nulato for some time,! PLACE FOR SCOUTS NEARING COMPLETION | constrycting , a , new rqu_o station at that point. Nulato has no sum-| mer landing fields but is used as 8 wiiiter bdsé when the PAA planes are equipped with skis. 1t is of upnslderablé importance as a welithr " obsrvition * poifit as it marks ¢ Qivision betweeri codst afid intetlor weather. of the Virginia IV. mes ED fiqi %HANGED Wwith the help of four consecutive fy 3 ha"’ . clght bilifon, i, fifty- three n;fir‘e‘d aml fd ll'l wh v:‘lt signed the second defic clency bill, goal of having a permanent home cn the old mail ship Pacific is near- ,ing realization. The Pacific, last night, was floated and towed from '_“+ her beach “graveyard” to a spot on FIRST HUNTING Ll(‘FNii‘ the tideflats just astern of the hull Distinction of getting thé first residence hunting Ticense in South- Marie of Rumania. This photograph, by James A. Mills, Balkan correspondent of The Associated Press, shows her ready for a spin. | | | - < 13.— | American speed-boat, built on the! shores of Lake Michigan, which she! | drives across the Black Sea every| | day from 70 to 80 miles an hour. BALCHIK, Rumania, Aug Barred from royal powers by her son, Carol, King of Rumania, Dow- ager Queen Marie, now 60 years old, has decided to forget her disap- pointment by becoming a motorhoat et Bereior Bas gave ik, ‘eral times driven the boat at such She has acquired a high-powercdterrific speed that it almost over- | Apparently possessing no sense of | itian from Seattle for a visit with east Alaska goes {0 Guy McNaugh- | The schedule of the PAA Elécira ”‘ foot tides starting today, the [ton, it was reported at the Alaska which ‘formérly left Fairbanks for Sca Scouts hope to float the Pacific Game Commission office today. It Nome at 9 am. on Saturdiy and t© its final resting place, along- is the fitst time tHe fesident hurit- neturned the same day, %as becn Side the Alaska Dry Docks marine ing licenses Have been required in changed fo leave at 9 am. on|VAYS: the anrlbory and they are reported “n'mrsdny and return either Thurs. The Scouts, incidentally, arrived much in demand. day of Friddy depending on weath- ' just in the nick of time last night, —bb = @ conditions. . It is thought that as the repaired Pacific was begin- BALLS ARRIVE |the tew schedule will offer better ning to float off to Auk Bay on F. W. and Mrs. Nellie Ball ar- connection with steamers at Ju-'the high tide. However, four of rived in Ketchikan on the Aleu- neau, | them, led by Robert Hall, and with the help of Capt. Kell Larrson and Kinky Bayers aboard the motor- ———— G. F. Talmadge. SHOP IN JUNEAU! 1 The Sea Scout Ship ‘‘Baranof’s” | ship Wanderer, towed the old mail craft to the tideflats. - — JAKEWAY LEAVES Elmer Jakeway, Tt agel o ine turning to Seattle on the steamer Aleutian, having taken passage here. ——— —,—— MEHERINS ON ALEUTIAN Mr. and Mrs. J. J. vehérin took passage on the Aletifian here. Mrs. iMeherin is booked for Seattle, while her husband, connected with the Hills Brothers Products Company, is ticketed for Ketchikan. - e ADAMS RETURNS Mr. and Mrs. P. H Adams re- turned to Juneau from a South- east Alaska port on the steamer Aleutian. Adams is associated with the Seattle Hardware Company. S S anticipated this year by Pacific coast fariners. U. 8. DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE WEATHER BUREAU THE WEATHER (By the U. S. Weather Bureau) Forecast for Juneau and vicinity, beginning at 4 p.m., August 13: Fair tonight and Wednesday; light to moderate northwest and north winds. LOCAL DATA Barometer Temp. Humidity Wind Velocity 30.07 54 81 w 6 29.94 46 95 s 2 2992 60 58 W, ‘14 CABLE AND RADIO REPORTS Time 4 p.m. yest'y 4 am. today Ncon, today Weather” Lt, Rafn Cldy, Pt cltiy ~ YESTERDAY Highest 4p.m. temp. temp. | TODAY | Lowest4am. dari. Precip. . 4h. Station | temp. femp. velocity 24hrs. vhem. 64 38 48 56 58 60 Anchorage Barrow Nome Bethel Fairbanks Dawson St. Paul . . 54 Dutch Harbor ... 54 Kodiak .. 64 Cordova 56 Juneau 56 Sitka 59 Ketchikan 62 Prince Rupert ... 58 Edmonton 86 Eeattle ... 86 Portland 100 San Francisco 66 New York 82 4 14 Washington 90 82 ki WEATHER CONDITIONS AT 8 A, M. Ketchikan, cloudy, temperature, 53; Craig, cloudy, 54; Sitka, cloudy, 53; Wrangell, cloudy, 50; Skagway, cloudy, 48; Soapstone Pt., raining, 50; Radioville, cloudy; Port Althorp, cloudy; Cordova, clear, 53; Chitina, clear, 50; McCarthy, clear, 42; Valdez, clear, 60; Sewdrd, clear, 60; Anchorage, clear 58; Nenana, missing; Fairbanks, cloudy, 50; Hot Springs, cloudy, 50; Tanana, partly cloudy, 47; Ruby, cloudy, 46; Nulato, cloudy, 42; Kaltag, cloudy, 44; Unalakleet, mising; F'l:xt cloudy, 44. 36 46 54 56 56 52 54 64 56 54 60 56 84 86 98 58 30 48 42 46 Clear Rain Clear quays,. Bt. Cldy Cidy© Clear Clear Cidy @w ol 6 46 a0 46 4% 52 50 58 60 64 54 | o o&iE Clear Rain* Cidy Clear Clear Cldy Pi. Cidy Cidy FNC R O WEATHER SYNOPSIS High (arometric pressure prevailed this morning throughout Al- aska and over the Gulf of Alaska, while low pressure was reported over Alpeitz. This general pressure distribution has been attended by local showers over theé interior of Alaska and by clearing weather over the Gulf and Southeast Alaska. Hot weather prevailed yesterday over the Pacific States, the temperature at Portland being 100 degrees. INDIANS MAY OFFICIAL REPORT SOON GET OLD IS GIVEN ABOUT AGE PENSIONS HALIBUT LANDING Northwest | WASHINGTON, Aug. 3.—(8pecial | Correspondence) — The bill intro- ‘idur:cd by Senator Norbeck of South | Dakota, to provide old-age pen- |sions for Indians who have attain- led the age of 65 years, in an {amount sufficient to bring the in- ! dividual income of the pensioned to $1 per day, Wwas reported out July 29 with'a number of amehdments. !It passed the Senate July 30 as jamended. As it now stands the bill i definitely includes the natives of fAlaska, and the term “natives of ‘Alaska" is defined in the bill to in- clude Indians, Eskimos, Aleuts, or other aborigines of Alaska who are of native blood. The benefits of this proposed legislation would be iextended to those of one-fourth or morz native blood who are eligible by age. \nfumfiflzf FOR NAZISM BERLIN, Aug. 13—1'he swrm The records of the International Fisheries Commission show that for the period from March 1 to July 31, this year, the following amounts of halibut have been landed in the various ports on the Pacific Coast: Area 2 Area 3 - 9,121,752 8,259,720 6,684,208 1420t Total 15,755,055 8,402 36.! These figures have been correct- ed to date but are subject to furth- er corrections. For the period from March 1 to July 31, 1934, the following land- ings were recorded: Area 2 U. S. Fleet 11,306,317 Canadian Fleet 7,561,489 U. S. Fleet Canadian Fleet Area 3 13,908,944 227,243 14,136,167 1035, the Total 18,867,806 For the month of July, i following amounts of halibut were landed: Area 2 U. S. Fleet ... 2,654,975 Canadian Fleet 1,786,916 Area 3 2,029,819 36,996 Total 4,441 flBl 2006815 Acknowledgment . is made of the asqstance given by the Depart.mem Troopers, after a year of eclipse, of Fisheries, Canada, United States are being reorganized as a quality Bureau of Fisheries, and the Cana- unit of the Nazi defense against dian and United States Customs in Columbia Brewing Company, is re-|~ “state enemies” of Semetism and “palitical CatholoCism.” The fate of the Reich’s Steel Helmet Veterans is still uncertain. {MRS. TROAST HERE FROM WESTWARD After spending the summer at Anchorage, with visits to the Mntn-, | nuska Valley colonization project,’ Mrs. N. Lester Troast, nccompam‘-d‘ by her three sons, arrived here on| the steamer Alaska last night, ‘ Mrs. Troast Joined her husband, archifect , and. Bureau of Indian Affairs ofl?khai Her husband, since returning from Palmer, where he| aided in desighing and constructing buildings, at olony, has ided at the Zyndtl?.ii?om The Tr 5 now are stayifig at the Auembly] Apartments. CLIFFORD ARRIVES Earle Olifford, connected with the Marshall-Wells Hardware Company, arrived here on the Aleutian from a Southeast Alaska port. {ahsence from his | was operated upon by Dr. T, Doug- the compilation of these totals. ——————— CLIPPER OFF HONOLULU, T. H,, Aug. 13.—The clipper ship of the Pan-American a;ys Teft ear!y today for Mid- way, slan The cralg arrived here from A'Lamedn last Saturday morn- ing. i y »—@u.—- MARSH BETURNS HERE. OPERATION IN SEATTLE ankson Marsh, who retumed on the North Sea, is greatly improved. While in_Seattle, during a month’s Juneay home, he ilas, an_eye, ear, nose and throat specialist. ¢ SS 3 ' W. D, Gross, manager of the Coliseim Theatre chain in Alasks, turned to Juneau from a saudn- Alaska DOFf, 88 a passenger on , the Aleutian; A shortage of Bartlett pears isl GET IN THE SWIM! smd Your Vacation at R Hot Springs BOA'I‘ING FISHING

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