The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, October 21, 1935, Page 2

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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, MONDAY, OCT. 21, 1935. ' : 5, 0000600003000060606000000000006000000¢ ses000 M A sw ER*DE i ‘ MUSSOLINI, THE WARRIOR, POSES ‘> U. S. DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE, WEATHER BUREAU | g4 e : | THE WEATHER | PI.A NNEB Bv il (By the U. 8. Weather Rarean) W - [i Forecast for Tuneau and vicinity, beginning at 4 p.m., October 21: Rain or snow flurries tonight and Tuesday, slightly warmer tonight; | light to moderate southeast winds. . - —— ' LOCAL DATA ks SR s Oclober 3] o in Pfll’l&h Hflu, |8 Time Barometer Temp. Humidity Wind Velocity =~ Weather I4 or u inter “ ‘,‘”I",r 4 pm. yesty 3020 87 36 s 12 Pt. Cldy Date and Place of 4 am. today ...3031 28 84 Calm’ 0 Clear by | . Ha]lowe en Ball i Noon today 30.30 38 57 s 7 Clear | : I i CABLE AND kiDio REFORTS Do you know how to make & domi- YESTERDAY ‘m EES TODAY no mask? H e 2 Highest 4p.m. | Lowast4am. 4am. Precip. 4am JURE 8 Durimk strip JERACH ENIE, Station mp. temp. | temp. temp. velocity 24hrs. Weather cut slits for eyes, and tie the cloth Anthorsge 2 $g TRy e e 0 g ne about your head, advises Mrs. W. W. Berrow 8 10 10 . 0 12 18 0 Cldy v $ nat 101¢ . O Nome . 6 20 24 10' trace Pt Cldy b4 A i | Juneau Drama Club, in anneuneing | Bethel 10 10 34 34 4 o Pt Cldy i abit .‘ .fnz{ f!e' r.m l.::. ~l|1l.u'l as that all members of the club .nnd Fai}bnnk& 5 30 30 (N | | 4 82 " Snow : weli. You'll find them in the their guests will be required to wear || Dawson 8 8 8 14 4 0 Cldy N < sy 3 i masks in their attendance at the. : e &4 42 40 36 36 10 0 Cld wlorful o ¢ and = % s b St. Paul y g colerfud tv and Drama Club Masquerade, to be held r— Dutch Harbor 44 44 40 42 4 28 cldy ding 1935 weaves in e Kodiak .68 80 | . 8% 9§ L Owar s R el - - ! AN ... 8 ] M W0 [ Cldy y how expert Costumes will not be insisted upon, Jelkeaw Biis 38 n i 2 28 0 ° Clear but prizés will be given to both men Sitka 46 = | 28 3 & 0 BRI (o 118 il S o Ketchikan e e Ty 0 Clear A DONIIRGE, Shifs (il Iiboy NGO Prince Rupert ... 44 44 9 g e 0d Clear Ll A e staged Edmonton’ ... 48 38 % 26 8 20 Snow (LI, SIL Popilar dances, with a few: square Seattle Ry i T T e U cldy 4LI, SILK | danees ahd schottishes for varia- Portiand - . 60 6 | 44 44 4 28 Cldy ‘ * S tion, will fill the program. I San Francisco ... 66 64 dr - 9e b 6 14 Clear 3 LININGS | There will also be @ ‘fortune-telling New York sorg & - WU B - B 18 0 PuLCldy A $ booth, where fortunes will be ‘dis- | Washington ... 8 68 | 58 58 4 0 Cldy : pensed without discrimination to the j g i RET R b — acmduloqs and incredulous alike. T s | WEATGER CONDITIONS AT § A. M. Refreshments suitable ‘to the oe- Premier Benito Mussolini, whose militant address in _R‘L'”f' wr:‘ i Ketchikan, clear, temperature, 32; Wrangell, partly cloudy, 33; Radio- casion will be served. answered by general robi n.of the E”‘_'W'::‘v 'Cé;,“fog:’_r A ville, misting, 36; Soapstone Point, partly cloudy, 35; Sitka, cloudy, 31; P tsaqpade (5 S0 TS| word réceiued of 1alah BEETE R aotnt TINWe) “n TR skagway, cloudy, 20; Cordov,a cloudy, 38; Chitina, cloudy, 25; McCarthy, q | bers -of the Drama Club anmd their (Associated Press Fhot cloudy, 20; Anchorage, cloudy, 36; Nenana, cloudy 20; Fairbanks snow- ;guzsu, Invitations, are being mailed 5 L S L ing, 26; Ruby, cloudy, 18; Nulato, clear, 20; Kaltag, clear, 13; Flat, | today, % ie 2 . | snowing 20; Unalakleet Tanana, Hot Springs, Crooked Creek, missing. Atilw | e tioi ! RTT ORI ER AR SR s e 0 4 — 4 ; INNER TUBES MAKE SWIM SUITS e SeNGRe : . - - | The barometric pressure was sli ‘htly below normal this morning % : s over the interior and northern portions of Alaska, eisewhere over the » % | Territory high barometric pressure prevailed. Heavy snow was reported '3 $ yesterday at Fairbanks, 7 inches having: fallen Saunday and an addi- ticnal 3% inches last night. Fair weather was reported this morning ” | along the coastal regions from Unalska to northern British Columbia. ‘ The ice in the Chena River at Fairbanks gorged last night. Nula- ¢ 3 I uTH | to reported a heavy run of ice in tha Yukon River this morning. " | 5 e »h‘ L 3 N . . 2 0ld papers ior sale at bmpire Office ‘ | SEATTLE, Oct. 21.—Hunters’ fire- PR AT R 3 ; S Bt jorms took three lives and seriously i h cunded a fourth in Washington and | |*ritich Columbia over the weekend | ; 3 . + e dea Seuzon openec. 5 Mr.E. E. Ninnis The victims are Donald Hayes, of K | ~“clm; Benjamin Alfred Peterson, of P i < | *rlington; both in Washington, and | You are invited to present this ¢ E} WI B i I C l George Reynolds of Chilliwack, B.C. coupor at the box office of the 4 > | 'Robert Fetsch, of Elma, Wash., was : l Th . . e ren S Oo’ nc. wounded. Caplto . L heatre - p X : oo oy o0 E i Juneau’s Leading Departiment Store ‘“T‘PDLT:; ',':::::f"lon t and regene[ !,l(‘kd(!tfl fo: {.uurbelf d AWARDED TO BULGER | TR A 1000000000000 0003P00002969000L 6909060 0000300000003000000000 00 | RI 2 0 see or the young women, aged 17 will relinquish their position {« The contract for installation qf |17e heating plant @t th2 City Do ns been awarded to J. A. Bulger “Gold Diggers Hitlerites Going io Herd Two Hundred Thousand Girls and serve six months i farm' ori Ly the special committee—A. F. Me- me:stead communities; helping Kinnon, Henry Messerschmidt and | farm mothers, doing bucolic chores: Wallis 8. George—appointed at the and engaging in social welfare work. | meeting of the City Council Friday of1935” : As a paid-up subscriber guest of The T selling for 11 cents straight; Aloha tan 1 that must be solved | financial question answered. kit 10,000 pounds, 12 cents straight. {efore the Nazi's big plan of placing | The project resembles conserip- HUNTING BOATING FISHING ) C l W e . }t. when the bid ad. ! ry Labor Cammps| e mens wvor service, -whion vight. when the bids were re i 3 d m omp utso G I !went into effect on a ‘compulsory| Bulger, who bid $1970.70 on the D‘ul Ala3ka Em ire 5y 9 ~tober i ;1 oviginal contract, with né al a- | T i 5 basis October 1, embraces * farm; | "I s . ! e tived. Wil siitipls Alis Heating 7 an These three pretty girls carrying cellophane sun umbrellas are - : ] |pishway, canal and similar work. v v aUN3 B D \wearing the latest thing in bathing suits at Miami Beach, Fla. The Good only for eurrent offering . { | Fo. young men this'is & 'mbmqumteiahd. £quipment. InFding, a..dizo2! .. guits are made of discarded inner tubes from automobile tires. (Asso- : | o mulitary service and lay my.lb‘.lmer and radiators. | clated Press Photo) Your Name May Appear Tomorrow : ment. B8 Gl % £ i Mzke Jobs for Oldsters sl if\ e rrmcetf i earee o] 1 WATCH THIS SPACE Nazi leaders stress the importence . i of hard work and community life i | T 2 | camps to the inculeation of Nation- | {0 ialist ideals, but admit that it | plays a part in the employment| 0 om by making jobs for older per-| 3 . 1 labor offices aré now pro- | for 80 per cent of the 10,000 ! n girls in the “voluntary” labor service, | i $ d but Nazi leaders say that the state | " will have to bear the gosts of the| i compulsory arrangement. | | Pay By Check— g To young men, meanwhile, the of- | 3 fer is made that those who have pre- | i i vicusly been in labor camps may be-: | It’s SAFER come group leaders after October 1 at | | a of 20 to 30 cents.” | than Cash! j < uslynewapapersare‘ N o A ) i attention to what| “ - > 4 £ Cash, kept at home or carried about, is in 3 ; birth of a new cul- & constant danger of loss or theft. With a t 73 e 3 eckin ecount, however, cash is tur2” in the workers' camps. Checking A t, hi sh is SAFE ? 'n’f‘hey geclbare that recreuflon ' 5 [ i until needed — is protected against }oss, ?::’;gp‘le“’g‘u::d flz‘;’;;”‘:;txc } ! theft or destruction. - You merely write a , i S bt 3 x - 5 : o { check to represent the cash in any transae- Tk, o e B In keeping with purposes of NATIONAL PHARMACY WEEK : o 4 form, speaking chorus, & A . .. P whizh eEsh SigHtlARGS tb the . .. . to do something bigger and better in the way of servicing check is ?ncglled antd rgtun;ed ?0:] legfl people’s wellbeing. S : - L S eated " in an- receipt— urther proteetion for . In H Mg umen the ne‘eds of these communities B We t.nk.( pleasure in an addition to the safety, consider the conven- i . ARMISTICE DAY " «i-is nouncing that we have been appointed exclusive agents for the ience of paying by check. It saves time well-known— you virtually write your money as you need t BALL IS PLANNED | it. Handle your f}‘nances é}}lle {(rgodegn, snfet, > (ONNAIRES SNV 9 \/ 4 N\ D convenient way—have a Cheeking Aecount BY LEGI NYAL” LINE OF FAMILY REMEDIES e X o PAY BY CHECK| Fians foe- G Ariies S il ' AND TOILETRIES i G Lty 2 v wi o - | - portant matters coming before the e ” l e d i l 5 | 1 he FU‘St Nfltlonal r Alford Jahn Bradford Post of the which we will have on 1splay ! American Legion when it meets in ' o4 % B k r ion tonight in the Dug- mna fe“’ days. 4 an | S ou clock. Commander E. M. % 2 A % & JUNEAU, ALASKA P 125 requested a large turn- Nationally advertised, it is a line that has stood the tests of time. as the membership campaign . o) CVOrV p o t5 tonight, and, this being the de- There is a mom‘y-lmck guarantee l:a(k of every one of the NYAL .? partment convention 'city next year, PREPARATIONS. They Make Good or We Do. § it 1s hoped to have every eligible Le- f 5 gion si 7 N ! s SRR s < 1 WATCH FOR THEM ;. 'ompulsory labor service for German girls between the ages of SEVEN HA‘L”B‘_ ; 17 and 25 has been decreed by the Nazi r isUTERS bt S i v Beo . them already live in camps, whence they go out “by the day” to SELL AT SEATTLE We nlrefxd_\ SAYEY. & (,ompl-ete stock 0.‘. t.he best in pharmacenticals HUNTERS! 3 help farmers’ wives with the chores, tend babies or do social welfare and maintain a truly ethical prescription department. ) You cail take s your P work. This comely college student, who specialized in biology, Seems SEATTLE, Oct. 21—The following i ey g i Y . R O Town Orders Solicited = to enjoy the sensation of splitting wood. halibuters arrived today and sold as p ut of Town Orders | sured you will bag the > : e follo: - ! limit. A wonderful game ? b By A. D. STEFFERUD compulsory labor service for women From the western banks—Eclipse o 1 season in this vicinity has ! ' BERLIN, Oct. 21.—To house the |on a parity with that for men is With 35,000 pounds, selling for 10% - 7 PR AN Bl 200,000 girls who must in 1937 begin | started. ' and 9% oents a pound; Brisk, 35,000 been proven — MAKE US PROVE IT! " 5 their labor service, 6,000 new camps | It's Like Conscription pounds, 11% and 10% cents; North- Special weekly or monthly rates to * ¥ ? o il be needed. | Provisions must be made for re- ern, 38000 pourds, 11% and 8% . P winter guests or hunting sarties. ¢ i Of these, 4,000 will be especially |leasing all young women of certain cents; Ithonia, 21,000 pounds, 10% , | 7 s La H il 4 g : rroups en and 10 cents. ‘gonstructed for them; the others|age groups from their jobs. Women ‘1 G S k H S ngs _will be pre-empted. | leaders must be trained. Work thust ~ From the local banks—Merit, 6,000 FRONT STREET—Juneau THIRD bTREET——Douglas J i lt a Ot Tl § Ay i The problem is the most impor- | be made available on farms, and the pounds, Forward 2,000 pounds, both - | GODPARD, KA

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