The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, February 5, 1936, Page 2

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|IIIIlI|IIIIHITMIIfiIITIIIfiiI“i"fllllllIII!IIIIIIIlIIIIlIIlIIIIIlIImlllIIIIIHIHIIIIIIIIIIIIHHII i «| 'We Must Make Room for Spring Suits and Topcoats [ ] No Alteraiions—No Approvals ; Group No. 1— = = = = = g = g BROKEN SIZES—GOOD VALUES g %14.95 surr : Group No. 2— Group No. 3— Michaels Stern Suits Values up to $32.50 For §24.7 Suif Michaels Stern Suits Vaolues up to $45.00 For $29.75 Suit IR A Better Times Drive TICKETS on ALL SALES $1.00 and Over! VOTE NOW! ALL REMAI! OVERCQATS id 2% Fine Value—All Wool MEN'S ALL LEATHER, .. DRESS OXFORDS A $5.00 Value for SPECIAL $14.95 = | §3.95 MEN'S HATS-—Dark Brown $5.00 value for $3.9 5 B.M.BEHRENDS CO., Inc. “Juneau’s Leading Department Siore” = = = E O T R O WOMAN'S CLUB } Louisiana’s New First“—ijémily LASTECHOOF MR DIESIN HOUSE TODAY Bankhead Cotton Control | Act, Kerr-Smith Tobacco and Potato Acts, Out WASHINGTON, Feb. 5. — The | House of Representatives rang down | the curtain on the Bankhead Cot- ton Control Act, the Kerr-Smith T0 ENTERTAIN CITY PIONEERS Women W}: Have Lived 40 Years in Juneau to Be Honored at Luncheon A luncheon, honoring all Juneau women who have lived forty or more s in Alaska, will be given March 17 by the Juneau Woman's Club, according to decision made Tobacco Control Act, and the Po- yesterday in a long and busy ses- | tato Control Act today, in & speedy sion of the club In the City Coun- | ratification of the Senate-approved | Cham ; bill appealing those measures which ‘!,, An invitation to ‘I)e‘ e guests | was voted by that body yesterday i o.[ the Douglas nd Woman's at President Roosevelt's suggestion. b Club on February 21 Douglas Action on the Bankhead soil : was accepted, and will replace the conservation subsidy bill has not ’ usual social meeting of the club. .| yet been taken. ¥ Plans for the February radio ———————— ¥ broadcasts, which will be based on i the theme “Know a Bet I were outlined, and e next Fri- { day’s broadcast placed in the h | of the Department of Public W | fare, Mrs. H. 8. Graves, Chairm ey i = ather A. P. Kashevaroff, Ct Nomination, of Judge Richard Leche as governor on the Democratic | tor of the Territorial Museum. v ticket, a victory which virtually assured him of election next No- | b ! | be the speaker vember, gave the late Huey Long’s political machine a smashing tri- n‘:&‘;‘]')fgf'(}z:‘z' I;xmfi\ewl-;?nfi | Following reports on the Bobbic Wmph.since Leche was the Long faction's choice over Cleveland |4 "rioational Peace Conference | Burns hday Ball and oth Dear, anti-Long leader. | was defeated by the House of Com- ‘ ¥ was ad- N st ~————" monS toflay 'by a yoté of 2P8 %0 137.0 . " Journed i WBRLD DAY UF special World Service, “On Earth| R 2o A § # \ Peace, Goodwill Toward Men,” will| 1 FIRE VICTIM’S BODY I be lod by Mrs. Waggoner. : 1 bIVE i TAKEN TO CORBOVA | Preceding this afternoon service,| 3! , 4 | Mrs. Erling K. Olafson will offer i The s of Harry O'Neill | 2 brief history of the World Day of D E ii who last fe January 26 a Prayer. { fire in the 0 Apartments, w | Posters and leaflets bearing shipped or Northwestern for uBSERVEn HERE emblem the “Christ of the Andes ,MBATH’:‘EJO‘%?' S:;k"'fi:hi; % 1 burial in His widow, Mrs { will be distributed next Sunday hy:‘ra";er hnss'beer'l senteenced to dfe §! A. O'Nei his brother and —_— { all Juneau churches. i i B sister, W O'Neill and Mrs. N 'lh P L } t P <b ter-| - D k\(l): thle gtnll;}vn Ma Bth'fo;“me slay- George oty sompanying A‘bl ern 1gn resby | STURROCKS RETURN g lasf lovember o is young | partner, Johnny Anthony. | He was convicted by a jury early Mrs. A. Sturrock, wife of an!i,qay Alaska Juneau employee, and her S L the remains to Cordova jan Church Scene of Spec- | ial Services on Feb. 28 | PIONEER LUND 1S returned from a| fl scuRE (By the U. S. Weather Bureau) ! Forecas® for funeau and vicinity, beginning at 4 p.m., February 5: Fair and continued cold tonight and Thursday; fresh to strong east to north winds. ' LOCAL DATA | ¢ Time Bar;x;l;;er TlelmpA Humidity Wind V. ty Weathe ETCER | >k 2 p.m. yest'y . 50 NE 12 Lt. Snow Merrill Kauffman, Age 45, W. S. Pullen in Second e B TR Clear ~ oon today i - 1 Despondent Over IlI Place at Elks Alleys 8 Clear 1 CAELE AND kADIO REPORTS verty Last Night Health, Poverty t Nig bl i i Continued from Page One) Ed Radde, of the Blue Ribbons, Highest 4pm. | Lowestdam. 4am. Precip. 4am. i bowled a new high three-game to-; Station ter:n- temp. | temgp- temp. velocity 24hrs. Weathes tak - o . | tal score—603—and a new record| Anchorage s, 3 e =g 0 — e o O e wocrer """ | individual game score—321 for_the| Barrow -3 -36 A2 e 0 Clear | i doo e o e omee employed | Brewers League division of 'the || Nome 4 4 100 -8 18 0 Clear | e “]dfkm;n was nng dur- | current tournament at the Elks| Bethel 0 0 -4 -4 12 .01 Cldy “f}“g;a‘ 1034 W n member of a | Alleys last night. Radde also took| Fairbanks -3 -30 38 -38 6 0 Clear g"‘cl’ o :_" t W xti?;\'nan x‘;w where second place in the game scoring for; Dawson -26 -28 -48 -48 4 0- Clear )‘? R e s tionally 1 the evening with a score of 210.| sf. Paul 36 34 3 34 20 10 Rein i \1“" Rar H:~. “'_,‘Q e 1‘]30\-011‘ ar| W. S Pullen, of the Rainiers, was| Duteh Harbor 48 40 0 42 12 Trace Clear o enmocott Mine. last summer | second in the totals with a score| Kodiak 36 34 24 26 6 0 Cldy mx(' is s’n(; 1o have been let out be- | °f 546, and third in the game scor-| cordova ocd o "o e 0 Clear of high blood pressure. He alg | N8 With 208 Juneau L 5 -1 14 Trace Clear | #as empldyed tn recent years by he | Tne Hoslucks won three game:| ik a2 g 0 'Alaska Rallroad and the Alaska |{TOM the Olympians, the Blue Rib-| getolifican 3¢ 30 18 18 6 10 Clear 'R;Ad Gomission bens administered similar declsive| prince Rupert 32 32 20 28 10 0 Pt Cldy ¥ T Poor Health defeat to Alt Heidelberg, and the| mamonton .20 -22 32 -3 0 o Clear ' | | Last Sept:mboe‘;rhe‘:zceived ey | SAS Bldes, Wity dHAndioap ad=| goqtify 40 38 | 3% 36 10 Trace Cldy cal treatment,at the Veterans' Hos- | VA1'a8€ Of 30 polnts per game, won| portland .40 36 | 3 3% 4 Trace Ciy | pital in Portland, Oregon, and aflo“‘g;"n;":: o iiwe paties from the| sin-Bvmielsco ... 88 B L s 8 4 0 Clear ;remmlmz to Juneau was on FERA \RREE New York Bl mod oo cldy s o i by iy Z ington 2 % 26 10 0 | meuimatiom and faling eyesight and |, OW/mPiins bs. Horluoks e ' b is said to have threatened sulcide | Ombans — o s WEACHER CONDITIONS AT 8 A. M. everal times, i e 439 | Juneau, clear, temperature, -3; Juneau Airport, clear, -3; Chi- | Morgan 144 144 144—*432 e Relatives in East | F. Henning 167 195 153— 51| chagof, clear, 3; Taku, clear, <12; Burwash, clear, -52; Whitehorse, According to Tetters found in his |~ ] clear, -50; Cordova, clear, 10; Anchorage, clear -9; Fairbanks, clear, possession, He 1s strvived by his | | qou 460 519 408—1396] 40; Nenana, clear, -24; Hot Sprin3s, clear, -13; Tanana, clear, -26; | father. J. G. Kauffman of Holtwood, | yoynps | Ruby, clear, -20; Nulato, clear, -30; Kaltag, clear, -25; Crooked Creek, inm-‘s.\fv;lnml; a“slste; rrn: ;lcn‘r‘_\ Sweum 163 169 102— 434| clear, -15; Flat, clear, -18. avils TN e ity | e ORI 162" 104 164 630 Abnormally high barometric pressure continued this morning Kauffman entered the army m % o e s —| over northwestern Canada and ove: the greater portion of Alaska, Los ‘Anivieh i " 1910 and Ywis atss | , T 496 532 43541453 | no erest being 30.94 inches at Barrow. Low pressure prevailed along charged in 1919, Alt'Héideibergs ‘06, Biue RiSboks the coast from Ketchikan sout.hm::d to hSeaule; the lowest pressure The body is at the C. W. Carter Alt Heidelbergs. being 29.60 inches a short distancz north-northeast of Vancouver Mortuary, and “funeral plans are . % i 1 Py Island. The barometric pressure was also low over the Pacific Ocean pending. g;; s 11}; XHZ 113‘_' :3‘;’ in the vicinity of the Hawaiian Islands. This general pressure dis- B AP - !\ 'v: 156 166 187_ 50y tribution has been attended by precipitation from Ketchikan south- Hnn CH|SHOLM iR . i o — 5091 \ard to Portland and over the southern Bering Sea, elsewhere over a0 o e | Alaska fair weather prevailed. g o e o Unseassnably cold weather prevailed over theé northern portion 138 113 3, Of Southeast Alaska, Juneau having reported a minimum of 5 below, GUES Tn va 168 147— 432' which is the lowest temperature recorded in any February since 1917, L] Radde 210 162 231 o3| ‘When a temperature of -15 was recorded. Totals 462 408 4911471 January 19, the Councils motored SAN FRANGISC& = :COUNC“‘S VISIT REX to Wannamash, North Carolina, to East Sides vs. Rainiers | visit with his parents before pro- / East Sides— | BEACH IN FLORIDA ceeding onward to Florida, whe:2 Man Who Accompanied Handicap 30 30 30— 9 Rex Beach, well-known novelist and | Davlin 140 140 140—*420| Dr. and Mrs. W. W. Councll, life-long friend of Dr. Council, Hubbard on Alaska Iverson 142 197 201— 540 | who recently left the national hopes to repay their hospitality of Trips, on New Job McCormick 140 148 202— 490 capital for a motor trip into the last summer. b Southern State ding thi b ———— S ST N - outhern s, are spending s . - -~ SAN FRANCISCO, Cil, Feb. 5. F'Ijot_als 452 515 573—1540 week with Mr. and Mrs. Rex Beach HIGHWAY SIAN RETURNS Roderick A. Chisholm, professor of Rainiers— |on their winter home ranch in SO TR geology at Santa Ciara Univer: Mrs, 151 151 151—°*458 sebging, Florida, according to ad- — Louis W. Turoff, Resident High- who accompanied the Rev. B. R ""“' 151 151 151—*453 | yjces received in Juneau today. way Engineer for the Bureau of Hubbard on his varous expeditions ©en 182 156 208— 646| pr. Council expects to be in Public Roads, arrived on the North- lo Alaska, has signed a three year s - == ——lJuneau before March 1. There is western with his wife and son. Mr. contract as Athletic Director and | 101 484 458 5101462 come possibility that Mrs. Council Turoff, who spent two months in Graduate Manager of the University .- verage—Did not bowl. {may remain longer in the States, of San Francisco. He was a former | _ TR€Ye Will be no bowling at the | yisiting her parents in North' Da- Santa Clara University tackle on the X3 Alleys tonight. ; football squad. ‘Tcmorruw the Grocers League | y ‘\J'\H bowl the following ' games: | 4 WALS‘[‘E[N G. SMl'rH | Pabst vs. Happy Homes, 7:30 p. m.:f | Amocat vs. S. & W, 8:30 p. m.; BACK FROM CAP[TAL‘ Relxance7 Libby, 9:30 p. m. Spokane, Washington, will be asso- ciated with the local roads offic until May, when he will return to his post at Seward. ta. Leaving the national capital on UNITED FOOD (CO. Walstein G. Smith, Vice-Presi- dent of the First National Bank of Juneau and former Territorial( Treasurer, returned on the steam- er Northwestern last night after a trip to' Washington, D. C. | While in Washington Mr. Smith appeared as a witness at the com-| HGPE MINING GROUP INCORPORATES HERE The Highiand Creek Mines today filed articles of incorporation with the Territorial Auditor's Office. CASH GROCERS Phone 16 We Deliver Meats—Phone 16 | WINDOW CLEANING | mittee hearing on thé proposed bill named as Hope, Alaska, with 'to abolish fish traps in Alaska. He Charles 8. Mathison, Leo C. W. Principal place of business was ‘ PHONE 485 i visited Delegate A. J. Dimond, Tke | Sears and Carl Blakesley, all of Taylor, Chief Engineer of the Al-|Hope, the incorporators. Authorized | 3 aska Road Commission, and other capital stock of the mining com-I Alaskans during his week's stay.in|pany was set at $24,000, with in- the national capital. | debtedness limited to $12,000. BETTER TIMES CONTEST STANDING OF CONTESTANTS Votes Counted to Tuesday Noon, Only) ’I‘H‘EHOTEL OF ALASKAN HOTELS The Gastineau 6ur Services to You Begin and End at_the Gang Plank of Every Passenger-Carrying Boat " om January 30, was laid LAID FINAL REST Lewis Lund, well-known old-time resident of Juneau, who died of heart trouble at St. Ann's hospital to rest today in Evergreen Cemetery. M. Lund, a resident of Juneau since 1889, ‘was born in Norway und had I no known relatives in Alaska . Funeral services were héld at 2 s o'clock this afternoon in the Chap- ol at the C. W. Carter Mortuary. ‘Rev. Erling K. Olafson delivered the funeral address and pallbearers were: Tom Hanson, Oscar Chris- John Gravrock, Ole Angei- . Tom Dull and John Pastl, < Junsau’s observance of the World Day of Prayer, February 28, will be consummated in the Northern Light Presbyterian Churche, according to decision made by the Advisory Council of the Juneau Interdenom- inational Council of Christian Wo- men, meeting at the home of Mrs. and afternoon with anyone lcome to attend all or part of either or both sessions. luncheon will be served between sessions. Morning service will be conduct- ed by Mrs. Waggoner and Mrs. C.. | C. Personeus. In the afternoon, the his home, A potluck | two daughters | | trip to Montana, where they visited | | relatives of Mrs. Stwrrock. | —— | PARKING LOT READY The new parking lot on the Fifth| | Street side of the Federal Building,| recently completed by relief labor, | has been turned over to Building| Custodian George Gullafson by the| FERA, and is now ready for use. - A ELMER CAPSTEAD ARRIVES Elmer Capstead, brother of Raout | | Capstead of the Piggly Wiggly Mea* Department, arrived in Juneau yes- \ terday and expects to make this city LADIES’ AID POSTPONED Meeting of the Lutheran Ladles’ Aid Society, scheduled for tomor- row afternoon at the home of Mrs. Harry Stonehouse, has been post- poned a week, due to ugusually cold weather. e Gil Rich, Biack Mannufacturing Company representative, sailed for Seward on the Northwestern: Mrs. Frances Redmond and Miss Martha Kostrometinoff of Sitka, who have been visiting in Juneau for the past week, are returning to their \ home on the Roedda, leaving! tas. | /i1 night, ¢ T e WEDNESDAY—FEBRUARY 5 ' ‘ { ; John McCloskey ! 1. RUTH LUNDELL 338,450 i 2. IDA ROLLER ... 209,775 : £ 3. ESTHER DAVIS . . 191,650 You are invited to present this z 4. ELISABETH KASER 169,325 coupon at the box office of the g‘ gi%%FEPOWERSAé, = _ 162,875 4 ‘ ; T BARRAGA | 142,450 : . 7. THAIS BAYERS ... . 138775 Capltol Theatre ‘«.%' ggggELgHITFIEkDLE & . 126,900 (D { : N MONAGLE 124,750 d recelve ti E 10. ROSA DANNER ... 109,050 g g e i 1. CHARLOTTE POLET © 102,350 relative 1o see 12. LINDA FURUNESS . 102,050 : ; 3. INGA LINDSTROM 100,700 14, ANITA GARNICK 99,025 “Black Slleep” . LUCILE FOX>:....i.. ,000 ; > ; 17: (fi‘gRTRUDE CONKLIN 65,550 » ;As a ?pmg-l{& Sl?bscr{ber of The { ] 18. RHODA MINZGZOHR . 65,125 agl ] | 19. ELEANOR GRUBER 65,100 nally Alaska Em ire o 20. MILDRED -SHAFER 61,675 ; by i B gé gglg%my SREES% N' 53,550 Goed only for current offering ) E ANDER 53,225 23. MARY NORDNES . 42800 YeurSata Shr Aowar Tangtsew ; . 24. CATHERINE YORK 41,675 WATCH THIS SPACE 84 25. ROSIE AFRICH .. 39,175 R ; 26. BERNICE REIDLE 37000 | : 27. MARY PEARCE ... 38,650 - 3 2. HELEN PUSICH 32750 F R ESH 29. LINKINGBEARD 375 o : 30 JERRY ENGEL __ . 18925 Fruits and Vegetables 31 EVELYN STEPHENSO 17525 32. GEORGIA SNOW 15,525 i 33. MARGARET LINDSTROM 15.375 . A.I'-WAYSI 7 ] 3. VRN, 14 California Grocery + 3. VERNA HILL 11,475 - G 36. ANIELS 10,800 ; . AR 37. ELSIE BLOMEEN . 10,700 - ' THE PURE FOODS STORE ~ 88, "EVELYN GODDING 10,600 . Telephone 478 Prompt Delivery

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