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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, MONDAY, DEC. 2, 1935 end-ol Ille-Se. ason COAT SALE TEN POINTS ABOUT l\'lRL ® Specia ® Inner ® Superi Accurate Sizing Reinforced Fronts Detailed Finishing All Silk Linings Advanced Styles $95.00, Now. 79.50, Now . 60.00, Now . 50.00, Now'. 35.00, Now. 19.75, Now . B. M. BEHRENDS (0. Juneaw’s Leading Department HMOOR COATS 1 Stitching Lining or Workmanship ® Guaranteed Two Seasons ® To Fit All Sizes .$57.50 50.95 * 38.45 33.75 21.25 NEW LANDSLIDE | VOTE VISIONED FOR RODSEVELT Mrs.” Holzheimer, ‘National Committeewoman for Al- | aska, Predicts Reelection (Continued rom eageé Omne.) Attending a meeting of the King County Democratic Club in Seattle, Mrs. Holzheimer, in an address to those assembled, reminded them that the Territory ‘of Alaska was thor-| oughly Démocratic in sentiment, and | remarked“that the Republicans had not even ‘offered a candidate against Alaska Delegate Anthony J. Di- mond. Dimond Given Praise In answering this speech, Wesley Lloyd, Representative to-Congress from Pierce County, spoke in glow- ing terms of the high respect with which Delegate Dimond was regard- ed in the National Capital. “I'con- gratulate Alaska on having such a f man to represent them,” he declar- ed. ‘“He is-one of the most respected men in Congress today.” Has Helped Territory | Mrs. Holzheimer spoke warmly of | the Matanuska Valley Colonization Project, which, she said, “has done more to make the United States }Alnskn—consclous than anything else which could have been accom- i plished.” Declaring that this proj- | ect of the Administration, once look- ed upon with doubt, was now gen- | erally ‘conceded to be a stroke of 13.65 Store ¥ genius, Mrs. Holzheimer referred to | the Roosevelt regime as “having done more for the Territory and its development than any other one Administration.” A great deal of this credit, she reminded Alaskans, is due to “the intelligence, unselfish- ness and constant recommendations of Gov. John W. Troy.” : Women’s Clubs Organized ‘Women’s clubs, says Mrs. Holz- heimer; have done a great deal to further Democratic thought and feeling in the States. “The trouble with most women’s clubs is that they instinctively or by accident avoid fundamentals,” she remarked. “Usu- | recent Italo-Ethiopian ecrisis. | Ito the public. | morning in the regular monthly ses- !sion of the Juneau and Douglas ally they ‘allow primaries and’ can- 9 | of her mother, Mrs. A. L. Smith, on | Saturday evening, in La Conner, Wash. Making hasty preparations to | : leave, Mrs, Summers caught the| North Sea for the south last night | | to be present at the funeral. Her re- 1 turn here is indefinite at the pres- ent time. e HOLDS SESSION ON WEDNESDAY DOUGLAS NEWS i} Mrs. M. J. Kibby and two children, Ralph and Betty, took passage last| night on the North Sea enroute to Portland, Oregon, where she will spend the winter for the benefit of her health. —— - — MRS. LEGGET LEAVES CLOSE SCORES didacies to go by unchallenged, and 3hv.er are surprised to find a‘man in | office of whom they do not approve. | The Democratic Women’s Clubs | throughout the country have en- deavored to educate women to an understanding of the whys and | wherefores of parliamentary pro- | cedure and their responsibilities if® sATUHnAY EvEI the election of public officials.” ’ Such a club, the Women’s Demo- | D. Barett, of the Frye-Bruhn team, | Cratic Club of Gastineau Channel, | ... | Was originated and organized in Jus| with a three-game lotal of 502, was| ... "yoo years ago by Mrs. Holz- the only bowler in the Commercial 5 league play at the Brunswick M_:wk;ler;z:ntmrs. ey leys Saturday night to break 500.| 5 Barett, however, placed second in the | individual game scoring with 181, ————— COMING WEDNESDAY Annual Sewing Sale, Tea, and Pat Robinson, of the Alt Heidelberg team winning first place with 194. Close scores were a feature ‘of the Turkey Dinner of the Lutheran 'lebl',,m(t ‘Tea, . 2-4:30; Dinner, Thanksgiving Day Theme ‘ Featured—Dances Orig- inated by Miss Naghel The December meeting of the Douglas Parent-Teacher Association will be held Wednesday evening, De- cember 4 in the high school auditor- ium. Since the meeting is 50 near Thanksgiving, the entertainment committee composed of Miss Grace Naghel, Mrs. Balog and Mrs. Edwards decided to use the Thanksgiving idea for the program. The performers tried out for parts and in many cases originated their own words and ac- tien. All costuming is to be very cimple, just enough to suggest what each character represents. There are to be only children performing on this program. Every boy and girl in grades 5 and 6 have a part and will be assisted by Billy Feero, Gor- don Wahto, and Robert Fleek from grade 7, and Catharine Campbell from grade 8. The festive Indian dance and chant are not strictly authentic but were arranged by Miss Naghel to repre- sent her interpretation of the wel- coming dance and chant after those executed in Indian tribes in former days. Reading, * ’s Thanksgiving,” Reading, ““The Twilight of Thanks- giving,” (the reader to be selected from a group of three girls—Arline Rice, Borghild Havdahl, and Doris Cahill.) One-act play, “The First Thanks- giving,” composed and arranged by Miss Naghel and children of grades 5'and 6. Characters: Pilgrim Father, Frank m Mother, Borghild rim Children, Anna- Doris Cahill, Kenneth Shudshift, David Smoot; Indian ‘hief, Elmer Savikko; Indian Danc- rd Kirkham, Roy Brown, orothy Langseth, Dayton Fleek Billy S} Indian Chanters and Drum Beaters, Arline Rice, I Feero, Robert Fleek, Gordon Wal “Thanksgiving Day” " by boys and grades 5 and 6 Piano accompa will be played by Catherine Camp- bell and Miss Nagh o 1 - MOTHER DIES Mrs. Esther Summers received the sad news yesterday of the passinz id b | scuthern California, to live. ents for ‘songs Concluding several weeks enjoy- | able visit with her sister, Mrs. John | Mills, Mrs. Dave Leggett left on the | North Sea for her home in Vancou- ‘ver, B. C. Mrs. Legget plans to stop off for a few days in Ketchikan be- fore proceeding south e LOKENS MOVE TODAY Hans Loken and family made their change of residence today, taking advantage of the improved weather | to transfer their household goods and furniture to their new home in Sal- mon Creek. R e — COUNCIL MEETING The regular monthly meesting of | the city council postponed from last | Friday night, is scheduled ‘for this evening at 7:30 o'clock. S, — HIGH SCHOOL HONOR ROLL The official Honor Roll for the second six weeks includes the fol- lowing: Special Honor Roll, Jennie {Johnsen, AAAA; Alavi Wah'to, AAAA; Regular Honor Roll, Helen Edwards, AAAB; Ruth Langseth, | AAAB; Arthur Reinikka, AAAB; Al- bert Brown, AABB; Albert Savikko, ABBB; Jimmy Doogan, ABBB; hon- orable mention, Ben Shitanda, ABBC. Report cards for the period covered were issued Wednesday before Thanksgiving. — e AASENS TO GO SOUTH Rev. A. O. Aasen, now in Ketchi- kan attending Lutheran Church con- ference, will be returning this week to Douglas and continue to Sitka where he will look after the church work in that city for a couple of days, according to a telegram receiv- ed by Mrs. Aasen yesterday. The | message said further that upon his{ yreturn here from Sitka, he and Mrs. iAa\;exl will then take leave for the !south on the first boat. They will | spend a month visiting in Vancou- ver and Seattle, and later go to | ( | During the immediate fufie Rev. ling K. Olafson of Juneau will hold ervices in the Community church [vm:il another minister is secured for, { the church. TSRS G 'WARNING | Persons are warned to keep out ‘mu of Evergreen Bowl until farth- er notice, on account of danget of 5:30-7:00 p.m. Sewing for sale ani contest bowling. In the three-game . —adv. LESHER TO SPEAK TO WOMEN’S CLUB| Capt. R. E. Lesher, formerly of the Juneau post of the Salvation | Army and now on furlough, will| speak tonight at the regular session of the Business and Professional ‘Women'’s Club in the Council Cham- bers. Capt. Lesher's subject will be “Peace,” and will deal with the in- ternational situation built up by the Thé talk, beginning at 8:45, is open Members of the club are askéd to attend a busineéss meet- ing at eight p'clock. Y WEEK OF PRAYER TO BE OBSERVED The Annual Week of Prayer will be celebrated by all Juneau churches during the first week in January, according to decision made this Ministerial Association, meeting in| the study of Dean C. E. Rice of the Trinity Episcopal Church. Observance will begin on January 5 and continue until January 11. A committee was appointed to make further arrangements. YAKUTAT PRISONER BROUGHT TO JUNEAU W. H. Dugdell, U. S. Commissioner at Yakutat, and Special Deputy Marshal Ed Herman arrived in Ju- neau aboard the steamer Yukon yes- terady. They had in custody Segundo Bag- bay, convicted of contributing to the delinquency of a minor, who| must spend 345 days in the Federal! Jail here. Sentence was passed on Bagbay recently in Yakutat. FAIRBANKS LAWYER HERE FOR MEETING Irving Reed, Fairbanks attorney, arrived in Juneau aboard the Lock- heed Electra yesterday. Reed is a member of the Alaska Game Commission, and will attend their meeting here this week. He reports that industrial progress is flourishing in the interior city. WORK PROGRESSES ON TENNIS COURTS Concrete may be poured tomorrow on the tennis courts being built in Evergreen Bowl, FERA offices an- nounced today. A curb is being built around the courts so that they may be flooded to provide a skating rink. The building of a retaining wall on the ground itself in the bowl to make a skating rink may be abandoned. Thirty men are at work on the project. .- ON INDIAN AFFAIRS JOB Mrs. Joe Wailte has taken the place of Mrs. Winston Spencer as a sec- retary in the Bureau of Indian Af- | fairs. Mrs. Spencer left for a honey- moon in the states today following her marridge Thursday. - .. — M’CLOUD ON NORTH SEA F. A. McCloud, Swift and Com- pany representative, was a passenger from the Westward on the Yukon to Sitka, where he transferred to the North Sea for Wrangell. e —— PLANE FOR WRANGELL Purser Bert Gillespie of the North Sea, reported that Tom Johnson of Wrangell who returned to his home on the North Sea, recently purchas- ed a 12-place. Loening flying boat in Seattle for future delivery. The new plane will be put in service in the Wrangell district. i IMPORTANT MEETING CARPENTERS LOCAL Union No. 1. Tomorrow Night-Election of Officers. All Members Urged to Attend session between the Frye-Bruhn team and the A. J. Camp team, the former won the first game by a sin- gle point, were victorious in the see- ond encounter by the narrow margin | of 18 points, and tied the tkird game. | The Folgers team defeated the Al Heidelberg team two games out of three, but there was a difference of only 10 points in the team totals. The complete scores were: Frye-Bruhn Co. B. Durgin . 120 107 117— 344, W. Gasser ......... 117. 112 101— 330 D. Barett 156 181 1656— 502 393 400 383—1i76 Camp ¢ 115 154 144— 413 139 116 120— 315 140 148 119— 407 ... 304 418 383--1105 Alt Heldelberg 102 93 137— 332 135 143 194— 472 . 141 176 160— 477 378 412 4911281 Folger 126 185 121— 382 146 168 145— 459 159 171 120— 450 Totals 431 474 386—1291 Commercial League games sched- uled for tonight are: California Gro- cery vs Brunswick, 7:80 pam.; ‘Rhein- lander vs United Meat, 8:30 p.m. i WINSTON SPENCERS SAIL ABOARD YUKON Mr. and Mrs. Winston Spencer, who were married here Thanksélw ing afternoon, sailed southward aboard the steamer Yukon. They will visit Mr. Spencer’s family in Denver, and then journey to their home in Fairbanks after a vacation in Cali- fornia. Mrs. Spencer, nee Renee Guerin, and her, husband were feted at a farewell party attended by 40 of their friends Saturday evening. - e ENSCH'S Totals A P. Robinson G. Robinson Lorin .. 3. Totals Jakeway P. Robinson Ed Radde Totals J. B. Caro J. Barragar G. Benson Looking for a job? a new. car? want to sell? serves hundreds quickly | Seientifix X-Ray Chiropractic will remove the cause of your stomach, liver or kidney trouble. Call 206 Main Street or Phone 451. —adv. Speecial Delivery to Douglas Daily | slides. 1. GOLDSTEIN, |—adv, Mayor, 2:30 P. M. Telephone 442. adv. — e — SHOP IN JUNEAU, FIRST! Read the Classified Section o EMPIRE Need some one to help with the housework? . . . . Want Got something you Our classified section and at little cost every day. Try it for best results. U. S. DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE, WEATHER BUREAU THE WEATHER (By the U. S. Weather Bureau) Forecast for Juneau and vicinity, beginning at 4 p.m., December 2: Rain and cooler tonight and Tuesday; moderaet to fresht south- east winds. LOCAL DATA Barometer Temp. Humidity Wind Velocity ".29.85 40 82 s 10 .29.58 44 83 SE 18 29.74 43 67 sSwW 6 CABLE AND KADIO REPORTS, YESTERDAY | TODAY 4 Highest 4p.m. | Lowest4am. 4am. Precip. 4am. ulnp. temp. | temp. temp. velocity 24hrs. Weathe: ! 9 12 -— - oum ..-18 -32 Clear -2 -12 Clear arern=10 -16 Clear +..=20 -36 Clear -6 Cldy Cldy Snow Cldy Snow Rain Rain Rain Clear Cldy Clear Pt. Cldy Weathe: Cldy Lt. Rain Cldy Time 4 p.m. yest'y 4 am. today .. Noon today Station Anchorage Barrow . Nome Bethel Fairbanks Dawson St. Paul Dutch Harbor Kodiak . Cordova Juneau . Sitka Ketchikan Prince Rupert . Edmonton Seattle Portland 4 San Francisco -20 -12 -14 -32 -10 28 34 26 32 “ 44 48 12 38 38 48 6 4 18 4 20 40 36 4 4 18 32 12 38 38 48 32 36 . | | 28 30 WEATHER CONDITIONS AT 8 A. M. Ketchikan, raining, temperature 45; Wrangell, raining, 45; Skag- way, raining, 42; Radioville, raining, 38; Sitka, raining, 41; Soapstone Point, raining, 41; Cordova, cloudy, 33; Chitina, snowing, 13; McCarthy, snowing, 8; Anchorage, cloudy, 15; Fairbanks, cloudy, -26; Hot Springs, clear, -50; Tanana, clear, -42; Ruby, clear, -40; Nulato, clear, -38; Flat, clear, -25. Cldy Pt. Cldy New York .. ‘Washington 0 0 0 02 0 WEATHER SYNOPSIS Low barometric pressure prevailed this morning over the northeast- ern portion of the North Pacific Ocean, there being three storm areas, one over the Gulf of Alaska a short distance south of Cordova, an- oother near Dutch Harbor, and the third about 800 miles west of the Oregon coast. The barometric pressure was normal or slightly above over the interior and northern portions of Alaska. This general pres- sure distribution has been attended by precipitation along the coastal regions from Unalaska to British Columbia and by fair weather over most of the interior, western, and northern portions of Alaska. Cold -weather continued over the interior of Alaska, the lowest reported' temperature ‘being 50 below at Hot Springs. MYSTERY STABBING HERE BEING PROBED BY LOCAL OFFICERS A ‘mysterious stabbing, reported to have occurred here 'Saturday night, was being investigated today by wity and Federal authorities. None of the participants in the al- KENTUCKY COLONEL' HAYES GOES SOUTH ABOARD YUKON J. T. Hayes, Alaska’s unofficial | Ambassador, and a real Kentucky Colonel, is aboard the Yukon for the States to do missionary work in . boosting the Territory. BOUND. FOR SEALTLE leged affair have been apprehended, authorities said, but the Marshal’s office recovered some clothing which was blood soaked near where the trouble is reported to have happened on the mine trail. One man is said to have been stabbed over the heart, but author- itiey said they were completing further investigation before they |could make a detailed report. No |one was reported in the hospitals here today suffering from Kknife ! wounds. —— - BURDICK ENROUTE HERE Charles G. Burdick, Assistant Ad- | ministrator of the Forest Service, left | Seattle for Juneau today. He will |stop over «in Ketchikan for several days on the way north. Mrs. M. D. Kirkpatrick, wife of the manager of the Cordova Air Service, is on board the Yukon en- route to Seattle. ———ae—— COUR' 'Y GOES SOUTH Robert A. Courtney, Anchorage business man, is a passenger on the Yukon enroute to Seatile, 'GARBAGE HAULED Reasonable Monva.g Rates E. 0. DAVIS TELEPHONE 584 Phone 4753 MUSICIANS LOCAL | NO. 1 L . o e MISS DICKEY ON YUKON Marian Dickey, secretary to Capt. A. E. Lathrop, is a passenger on the Yukon énroute to Seattle. | | | od | Meeds Second and Fourth Sun- | days Every Month—3 F. M. DUDE HAYNES, |. Secretary For Every Purse and Ever); 'Purpose PACIFIC COAST COAL Co PHONE 413 ALASKA MEAT CO. FEATURING CARSTEN’S BABY BEEF—DIAMOND TC HAMS AND BACON_——U. S. Government Inspected OPEN ALL NIGHT Alaskan Hotel Liquor Store Dave Housel, Prop. Phone Single 0-2 rings You are invited to present this coupon at the box office of the Capitol Theatre and reeeive tickets for- yourself and a friend or relative to see “Go Into Your Dance” As a paid-up subscriber euest of The Daily Alaska Empire Good ‘only for -current offering Your Name May Appear Tomorrow WATCH THIS SPACE