The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, December 17, 1935, Page 2

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

THE DAILY ALASKA FMPIRE TUFBDAY DEC. 17, 1935. Fur Trimmed Coats! The styles include the newest'. . . Furs, the finest at the price . . . Look them over care- fully . Compare them with other Coats you've seen this season . . . Every Coat specially priced! Sizes J4 to 44 ! School has . been || memory a bronze tablet on which , is inscribed the immortal sonnet. »4 son is capable of something noble.!" EMINENT POET DIES IN HOME IN BALTIMORE Lizette Woodworlh Reese, | Who Wrote “‘Tears,” Was | Prominent, American Art ‘ BALTIMORE, Dec. 17. — Lizette | Woodworth Reese, poet and author of ™Tears,” one of the most per-’ fect sonnets in the English lan- guage and one of the most famous, is dead at her home in this city. | Miss Reese was born in ‘Balti-| more County, Md., January 9, 1856, the daughter of David and Louisa Reese. She was educated in public ! and private schools and afterwards | became a teacher in .the public| ~{ schools of Baltimore, her service in that capacity, extended over .45 years, terminating in 1921 with, her retirement, In the Western High placed .in her| Miss, Reese, who characterized modern verse as “hard and unfeel-| ’ "|ing” and was an oppgnent of the modern spirit, of cyniclsm .and de-| .| featism, often said that to her life| was 3 symphony. of sweet experl- } | erice." ™ have learned that life is! good,” /she;said, - "‘and avgry per- | Flood Spreads Over Low-| 'METZGARS TO SPEND HOLIDAYS IN SEATTLE L. H. Metzgar, General Superinten- dent. of the Alaska Juneau Gold Mining Company, and Mrs. Metzgar | | arg leaving. on the Pringess Norah to | spend: the holid@y; with-their chil- | NEws PmATING dren in Seattle. They expect to be\ sone several weeks. SRS e ++ | Injunction Ordered. Re- ":E ]AMS IN | straining Broadcast Un- { sl Reasonable Time ALASKA RIVER s rencisco, cu e . | —Radio_ station KVOS, at Belling- ham, Wash., was ordered enjoined from pirating news from the As- sociated Press by the Ninth U. S. landSAAResidcnts Are | District Court of , Appeals, which declared thé ‘prectice constituted Forced to Flee “unfair competition. and uncon- scionably injured” newspaper mem- CORDOVA, Alaska, Dec. 17.—Ice bers in performing public function has jammed the Klutina River at and legitimate business.” Copper Center causing a flood over | A decision reversing the opinion the'lowlands and forcing the resi- of the Federal District Court. in dents .out of their cabins. The tem- ' Seattle was written by Circuit Judge perature there is .about zero. The William Denman. It ordered the flood wa'ehfrozeflncasm" the build- ' Seattle court to issue an injunc- ings Anl fee’ A tion restraining KVOS from ap- There arp 14 mohes of waler in the propriating and broadcasting new: COpper ‘Céntet’foadhouse. ‘gathered by Associated Press “for in members’ ~newspapers, during RAmO ART]STS TO - | which broadeasting of pirated news MAR’ DREAMLAN | may damage member papers’ busi- ness of procuring or maintaining Musgrave and his boys, well-known > consideration. tadio artists, who have been in Ju- | “upodving at our decision, con-} COURT ENJOINS 5 I a period following 'its publication to KVOS' most remote auditors The Musgrave Triolians, Percy | yneq supseriptions and advertising | Fnean for a few days, will make a | personal appearance, at Dreamland |in Douglas tomorrow. night, accord- sideration should be given to the ‘llkehhood that KVOS auditors| it is! BB B. M. BEHRENDS “Juneauw’s Leading Department U. 8. DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE, WEATHER BUREAU THE WEATHER (By the U. S. Weather Bureau) beginning at 4 p.n., Dec. 17: possibly showers; cooler tonight; Forecas* for Juneau and vicinity, Cloudy tonight and Wednesday, moderate easterly winds. LOCAL DATA Temp. Humidity Wind Velocity 39 93 s 4 39 98 S % 42 53 SE Weathe Lt. Rain Cldy Cldy Barometer 29.73 30.14 30.02 Time 4 pm. yesty 4 am. today Noon today CABLE AND KADIO REPORTS YESTERDAY | TODAY Highest 4p.m. | Lowest4a.m. 4a.m. Precip. da.m. temp. temp. | temp. temp. velocity 24hrs. Weatht Station 30 - =20 « -12 -18 4 2 41 -12 -16 -18 Anchorage Barrow Nome Bethel -6 Fairbanks - -8 -8 Dawson B 2 St. Paul e Dutch Harbor 26 Kodiak ... 36 Cordova Juneau Sitka . Ketchikan .. Prince Rupert Edmonton Seattle Portland San Francisco New York Washington -6 o 8380 | BE e owww - o cidy Cidy Rain & 33 38 36 34 14 42 38 48 30 32 Clear Clear Clear cldy Clear Clear Clear Clear 9 wSekReonan WEATHER CORDITIONS AT 8 A. M. Ketchikan, cloudy, temperature 36; Wrangell, cloudy, 35; Sitka, cloudy, 44; Soapstone Point, clear, 40; Skagway, cloudy, 32; Radio- ville, partly cloudy, 38; Taku Pas; partly cloudy, 30; Annex Creek, clear, 32; Juneau Airport, cloudy, 30; Whitehorse, clear, -2; Anchor- age, cloudy, 33; Fairbanks, partly cloudy, 10; Tanana, clear, 4; Hot Springs, clear, 3; Ruby, clear, -10; Nulato, clear, 0; Kaltag, clear, -2; Unalakleet, cloudy, -6; Flat, cloudy, -3 WEATHER SYNOPSIS ours over The barometric pressure has r portions of Alaska and over the Mac- Renzie River Valley, 1l crest beug 30.24 inches at Fort Simpson, Canada. Abnormally low pressure contiaued over the northeastern portion of the North Pacific Ocean, there being two storm centers, the major disturbance being centered about 800 miles west of Ore- gon where the pressure was 28.60 i : This general pressure dis- tribution has been attended by rains along the coastal regions from Unsdlaska to British Columbia fol owed by clearing today over por- tions of Southeast Alaska. Fair weather continued over the interior of Alaska. It was warmer last night over and over the Bering Sea coast, isen during the past 12 the eastern and sputhern he Yukon and Tanana Valleys Cidy | BRI ARV R | Oldest. Employee. of Alaska Railroad to Take Christmas Tnp ANCHORAGE, Alaska, Dec. 17 ) | Walter Jones; one of the oldest em A ployes of the Alaska Railroad, *leaving soon' for. a. Christmas visit is to his,relatives. in Vermont. | Jones was engineer on the old Al- <|aska Central predecessor to the Gov- | srnment line, e BARRACK ABOARD N. W. James-E. Barrack, proprietor of the p | Samson Hardware Company in Fair- : | banks, is a passenger'from Seward to | | X | Seattle aboard the Northwe: A. V. Cordovado, interested in min- ing property at Nome, is a passenger from Seward .to the States on the Northwestern } e { EARLINGS ABOARD N. W. ' | cy, and Barbara, from Seward to Seattlc on the North- western. - e SHOP IN IUNEAL" CO., I_nc Store” NAY IN MfiNTANA ‘Chief Execulix‘re Dies from | Heart :Ailment—W. El- mer Holt Now Acting GREAT FALLS, Mont., Dec, 17— Gov. Frank H. Coopey, Democrat, is dead 'here as the result of a neart - ailment suffered while at- tending the Highway Officials Con- | vention in Miami, Florida, sevenl | doys ago. [ w. Elmer Holt, of Miles Clty, | President pro tem of the Stal Senate, automatiealiy~-becomes Gov cmur to_serve untu the 1936 _elec- | tion. | Gov. Cocney's term would not | have expired until Jafuary, 193'1 | R o | HUFISON ON NORTH SEA | C. W. Hufison,lapdscape contrac- | tor at the Pioneers’ Home, Mrs. Huf- ison and Baby Hufison, are passen- |gers from Sitka to Seattle on the | North Sea. - | TRIMBLE ON DBPEBE L. L. Trimble, Route Agent for the ' Railway Express Company, is a pas- | enger from Sitka to Ketchikan on the Depere, ———————— LEAVES HOSPITAL J. F. Ross was discharged today from St. Ann’s Hospital in sat- | isfactory condition. ey, SAILS. FOR SEATTLE Mrs. Lena Peterson, employed at the Snow White Laundry, sailed for Seattle on the North Sea. ROl <o i GOES, TO STATES Don Call, baker at the Peerless Bakery, sailed for the States on the North Sea, 1 e BOUND FOR SEATTLE cmnm’s A special | Hospital, was buried today in Ever- Roy B. Earling, Fairbanks Explor- manager of the Matanuska Valley‘warks‘ of Seattle, who arrived here | ation Company. official, Mrs. Earl- |colenization project, and her daugh- ing and daughters Mary Lou, Nan- | temiorpthy, are pa were passengers on the Northwestern. 'Icr Seattle on the North Sea. await pirated , news because free and does not require a sub-| scription to a newspaper,” the court said. FFnS sove Cilie i nz to.an announcement made by 'Vnk'- Pusich, proprietor.. The Triplians, who have appeared | before the mike on many stations in the States, hail from Illinois, and | f2aturg close trio.harmony and clev- | er string music. They have been heard on several occasions over KINY since their arrival in Juneau. TALLAPOCSA ON PATROL Th2 United States Coast Gua cutter Tallapoosa, Lieut. Miles Imilay, commanding, left Juneau yester- |day cn routine halibut patrol, and | ' BRIDGE WASHED OUT ‘ DUGGAN SEATTLE-BOUND About 15 feet of trestle over the| E. J. Duggan, Superintendent of Klugina River at .Copper Center |the Kennecott mine, and Mrs. Dug- has been washed out by a freak|gan, are passengers from Cordova to ice-break, according to word receiv- | Seattle on the Northwestern. ed by Ike P. Taylor, Chief En-| R gineer of the Alaska Road Com—f CONDUCTOR ON VACATION mission. The damage will be re-| Willlam King, conductor on the paired in the spring. | Copper River ‘and Northwestern e e | Railway, is a passenger from Cordova BANKER ON TRIP {to the States on the Northwestern. O. A. Torgerson, Cordova banker, AT T Mrs. Torgerson and Sharon Torger- | HOLIDAYING IN STATES son were passengers aboard the Lee¢ Barragar and, Mrs: Barragar Northwestern from Cordova to Se-!sailed for.Seattle on: the North Sed attle. to !pend the fiouglan HANSON LAID TO REST |is expectd to return Friday morn- Albert Hanson, 23, who died oning. | December 12 at. the Government| -~ CILCHER SEATTLE BOUND W. N. Gilcher, proprietor of plumbing and sheet metal business in Fairbanks, is a passenger aboard the Northwestern for Seattle. | | D e [ COMING FOR CHRISTMAS | KIMBALL ON NORTH SEA | Mrs. Gunnar Blomgren, son Bfld‘ Bill Kimball, brother of Orriné daughter,. are passengers aboard| Kimball, sailed for Seattle on the the Northland for Juneau. North Sea. | e | e MRS. SHEELEY ON N.W. ISAACSON ENDS VISIT | Mrs. Ross L. Sheeley, wife of the| Paul Isaacson of the Isaacson Iron | | | | green . Cemetery. - following - funeral | | cervices conducted by Rev. A. P. Kashevaroff in the chapel at the C. W. Carter Mortuary at 1 o'clock. e last week on the Northwestern, sail- | ed for Seattle on the North Sea. | B - VS s o ar . & B BROKER ON NORTH SEA MRS. HART' DEPARTS | Chet’ Johnson, National Grocery Mrs. W. A. Hart, from Tenakee, left | Company representative, sailed for ! Petersburg on- the: North Sea. engers to Seattle | e EN BATHROBES Christmas gift value ., . . sms to $2.50 Trim ‘and “elightful, in many shades al‘id all sizes. % | N. A. McEachran, Schwabacher | Brothers' representative, and Mrs. | McEachran, are passengers for Se- ]aule on the North Sea, R slaty ¥ 8.6 .0 o _and Pillow Case Sets Ladiess SEAREY RS B ‘Kerchiefs .. Delicate; feminines A most' -app reciated Bt . e REI!.UCTION onallTOY S Every Man.. Matching or contrasts, ing ‘hankerchief sets. values. . . From In all latest patterns. .69cto98¢c . $1.25 T T T Mighty fine gift ' —a smooth, tasty straight whiskey shich needs no “‘maffling” with SHREWD SHOPPERS SELECT... Hiram Walker’s Royal Oak. There’s a reason, and that reason rezlly approaches that long-sought something for nothing—for Royal Oak is certainly a very smooth and satisfying something—and its price is practically nothing—or nearly so. A good gift that’s all whiskey and all-American. i “GANADIAN CLUB” IS THE “BEST FRIEND" SORT OF GIFT The man or woman who gives you HiraM WaLKER’s ““Canadian Club” for Christmas can be classified as a good, dependzble friend whose judgment can be relied on. ‘‘Canadian Club’ Straight Whiskey is soft and light of body, with that distinctly c/ear, smooth flavor that has delighted the tastes of folks up and down the world. Bottled in Bond in Canada at the age of 6 YOU DONT HAVE T0 HIDE “TEN HIGH” INA CMKTAIL' The real test of a fine whiskey is in a highball or straight. Hmam ‘WaLkEer’s Ten High Straight Whiskey is definitely a Aighball whiskey friendly cockrail flavorings. Of course, thar makes it so much the bettes as the chassis of a cocktail. And look at the price! DISTILLED FROM GRAIN ““Say,*said a friend, “just as I get set on a cocktail recipe and think I ve got the perfect combmzllon, the next time I try it the cocktail tastes different.”” ““Yes,”’ we replied, ‘‘that’s the funny thing about Gin. If's hard to control the smoothness and flavor of all its ingredients. It took us years to dis- cover how. Stick to your recipe and HiRam WaLker’s Distilled Five O'Clock Cocktail Gin, and.your cocktails will click every time.”’ RIA, ILLINOIS — WALKERVILLE, ONTARIO

Other pages from this issue: