The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, February 19, 1936, Page 2

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WASHINGTON'S BIRTHDAY 3 - * - * * ~ * * * e DINNER DRESSES and FROCKS Reduced from $35. w$19.75 STREET and OFFICE DRESSES ‘ Reduced to $14.50 Only a few WINTER COATS left Specially Priced for Clearance 00 Store Closed Saturday——Washington'’s Birthday B. M. Behrends Co., Inc. “Juneau’s Leading Department Store” MRS. T. M'KANNA DUE HERE TUESDAY Mrs. Theo McKanna, Président of the American Legion Auxiliary. De- partment of Alaska, will pass CONDITION OF SEC. SWANSON DR, TOWNSEND CALLED ‘QUACK’ F through Juneau next Tuesday on 1 the Northwestern enroute to her | Fairbanks home, according to ad- vices received by the local Auxiliary officials, and read at the s meeting held last night in the Dug- out under the management of Mrs {Hospital Antnities Report Navy Chief Passed ln\mllgahon ol His Plan as Well as Others Ord- vredbyReprescntali\'os :?‘ IJ :fi;”w and Mrs. Waino Hen- Good nghl X U ! 3 It was also announced that the % : o WASHINGTON, Feb. 19.—Investi- meeting of the Junior Auxiliary WASHINGTON, Feb. 19. An Townsend and other ipparent improvement in the con- dition of Secretary of War Claude A. Swanson is reported today at the Naval Hospital. Capt. George Thomas, hospital Commandant, said the Navy Chief 1ad a verv god unight. sleeping wbout x hours. gation of the 1d age pension plans has been or- dered by the House. The inquir voted after Representative C. Jaspex e R sriginally | | Bell, Democrat of Missouri, charged | ! | | | | scheduled for Saturday |has been postponed until February 1(1} F. E. Townsend with being ¢ "HOLLY EVANS STICKS TO “BANANA BELT” of latan and a quac lls which afflict o s a doctor ture.” R St :“('(,‘""l""z‘)v“‘rf‘““‘_‘; eatiel Holly Evans, of Your Cab Com- York, asserted the movement is |PANY. Teturned to Juneau on the ; iy 42660 e il e \\n toria after enjoying a vacati and R, E. Clements, co. |\ Sitka, Petersburg and Ketchi-| Townsend | Evans said he spent his vaca-| |tion in Southeast Alaska becausu’ !he was afraid he would freeze to! ;\h’dlh if he visited the States. RESIGNS POST IUNICR C;l(;l;( HOLDS ‘MPS LOUl’S.lZANN '1 TU RAD'GALS BIRTHDAY PARTY FRI.! REPORTED BET"‘:R Admlnlstrahon in Offlce Mrs. Louis Kann, wife of the pro- | Since Dec. 30 Qu'ls n irthday in the church | prietor of K s 5c to $5 store on Friday |Juneau, is recovering in the Seattle | Face, Election Victory according to | General Hospital from an emergency | neement emanating from the \appendectomy periormed sever ;11! 1 offices ays ago. of the ummmmmr:n are Hospital committees all goes we ment Winthers. | ber re 1all, Lenore Olsen, Astrid cretary of the ion Plan v Town- send Old The Junior rection Luthe i Choir of the Resur- | an Church will cele- | | 7:15 MADRID, Feb. 19.—The Spanish government has resigned in the face |of the apparent election victory by authorities agree that if | Radical parties. she will be able to start| The government, headed by Pre- turn trip to Juneau early l"}lmn' Manuel Portela Valladares, 75 been in office since December Jirde: h, - -ee BLYTHE GOES SOUTH Dorothy Fors, Hele: The resignations, Tucke 4 . d from office which remov- all appointive ad- Betty Reed, Mar-| John Blythe, of the FERA offices, | ministrative officials, are regarded Doreen Heinke | eave on the Alaska tonight for ! g5 preparing the way for the es- K. Olafson, Director, |Seattle, where he will receive medi- 3 ) tablishment of a new government | of radical polmral complexion. \' - | will be in charge. D o .- GEORGE MARTIN DIES NIIW FUR EXECUTIVES R' ]“ STEWART BACK Martin, Indian, died at the| The Board of Directors of The FROM VACATION TRIP Jimmy Clark in the Indian |Seattle Pur Exchange announce the \ llage this morning. The remains following officers for the ensuing rritorial |are at the C. W. Carter Mortuary }.mr Henry Wagner, president; R. e, re- No funeral arrangements have yet|E. Lang, vice-president; L. H. Black, a three been made }swn*tar) and Michael Dederer, > | treasurer and general manager; Mr. WALLSTEDT 'OPS ENROUTE |Wagner succeeding C. H. Black as Sigurd Wallstedt, merchandise Ll” dent and Mr. Dederer stepping broker, with, headquarters in Ju- |up from assistant manager to treas- au, stopped off at Ketchikan to|urer and general manager. h he travelled aboard the Vic- | Ge me of R. L. Stewart, of Commissioner of Mines' Of turned on the Victoria after weeks’ vacation trip Mr. Stewart visited friends relatives in Spokane, & Portland. He reports extre weather on his entire trip. - and tle and mely cold | | — - ST. ANN’S PA-”ENTS | coria \:1:(’!"0\::111 come north on the | C“::]O:‘D.(%‘Tf;!f :)N :ADID p L 5 arles Joldstein, luneau ur TO HONEERS, HOME - merchant, will speak on radio sta- WILCOX WESTBOUND 1(1“1 KNX in Hollywood at 10:40 A""*x C les F. Wilcox, who accompan- ! jo'clock tonight, according to word| recently | 'ed a 1 x.m-d States Marshal's party | received here brought here from Fairbanks, and ' ul with prisoners, in the capacity | Asa Martindale, of Craig, w eave rd. is returning to his Valdez| A tonight on the Roedda for Sllka.’““""‘ aboard the Victoria where they are to enter the Pio-, ot > neers’ Home. SHOP IN JUNEAU, FIRST! Two aged inmates of St Hospital, Allen Crane > » white leghorn pullet at the {North Carolina State college poultry lhl.,xnt produced 313 eggs during her | pullet year, 1300 miles from Atlin. = MINER SMITH , Dtuly Lross-uord Puzzle IN JUNEAU Tn ACROSS Solution of Yesterday’s Puzzle - ::e::;l out 1. Be In har- 4 mony 1. Bril_gg into & 6. Labeling Skating arena . Small barrel . Water wheel GET SUPPLIES, 55 i 8. 9, 10. Inside 11 12. cannot be obtained in Tulsequah, | which does not hoast of a store of any kind. The town of Tulsequah,; located at the junction of the/ Tulsequah and Taku rivers, about 23 miles above the mouth of the| Taku, consists of “two and one-| half houses,” he said, “I live in the log cabin and George Bacon| and his family live in the house.”! Last summer Mr. Smith worked at the White er mine, operated | by D. C. Sharpstone, seven miles| up the Tulsequah River, and Geo Bacon was a forman in the mi he said. After the mine was closed ! for the winter last fall, Mr. Smith cut a right of way from the mine| to the river bank. He expects to re- turn to work in the mine in the spring but intends to set out next July in a prospecting expedition to the Princess Lake country aboul “There are not too many p: in the Princess Lake countr: said, “and you can ‘snipe’ while you are looking for prospect. You can't lose Born in Russia, at Mosc in 1872, Mr. Smith came to New York| s in 1892. He became a naturalized ROOF FIRE THIS A. M citizen of the United Stales “in' A gmall roof fire at the r Cleveland’s administration” at Wau- of August Smith, near the Decker kegan, Illinois, he said. He was em- Building, was extinguished at 9:15 ployed by the Pinkerton Detective o'clock this morning by the Juneau wages a goad Agency in Chicago in 1904, “because Fire Depa t. Da & Wath 1 could speak five or six languages.” ported to be less than $10. he said. He speaks Russian, Polish, — e, — Lithunanian, Austrian, German and| Yes, Suh! I'll soon be with you! adv English. He later worked in Dawson and came to country in 1912, when he struck out into the interior of British Columbia, and has prospected in various parts of the country on both sides of the international boundary since that time e e SAM BAKER DUE HERE NEXT WEEK; mines near SHOP IN JU L'\i AY, Flhs'l" the north (AlL FOR PA\'M T ()}‘ B ALL DU l' AND OUTS DING THE McKINNON INVESTM COMPANY, JUNEAU, ALASKA. PUBLIC NOTICE is hereby given to all persons holding unpaid bonds and interest outstanding ag the McKinnon Investment Co | pany, Juneau, Alaska, that in pu !suance to the reservation made ! TI.P ON BUSINESS the Company in its Deed of Trust and mortgage given to its bond- [pamai, hollers on Sept. 1st, 1925, as fol- Sam E. Baker, Alaska represenia- lows, — “And the McKinnon In- tive of the merchandise brokerage | vestment Company reserves the firm of Weaver and Baker of Se- right to any interest bearing per- attle, was a passenger on the Vicforia [jod or periods, after the interest as far as Ketchikan, and expects to | payment date of Sept. 1, 1823, to arrive in Juneau about a week from pay the principal and interest due today to call on his trade. of all or any part of the said bonds Mr. Baker reports business on the | then issued and outstanding, and upgrade and President Roosevell’s | cancel and retire the bond or bonds popularity in the States increasing gso paid without prior notice to the in direct ratio. He anticipates, he nolder or holders thereof.”—That said, that business this spring will \the McKinnon Investment Com- be great enough to cause a shortage | pany hereby calls all bonds and in merchandise, and warns merch- | interest outstanding and the same ants wishing delivery to be a\mxe(l‘wm be paid in full at the B. M to order early. | Behrends Bank in Juneau, Alaska, ‘on March 1st, 1936, and no further BUSTER ANDERSON | principal or interest as provided in lsaxd Deed of Trust and Mortgage GOING WESTWARD‘w.u be paid to present holders on |said outstanding bonds after that M. (Buster) Anderson, associated |date !with the Midnight Sun Transporta- | | Dated at |tion Company in Fairbanks, is a|28th day | passenger aboard the Victoria en- | route to Seward. Anderson accom- | By LOCKIE McKINNON, panied William Lavery, Fairbanks President. aviator, who was decorated with the pirst publication, Jan. 29, 1936. | Order of Lenin in 1984, to Seattle & Last publication, Feb. 26, 1936. few weeks ago, and will remain in | Seward until he is rejoined by La on the return journey to Fair. bmnks Pilot Lavery’s brother, R. K. wuvexy part owner of Lavery's Store | ;in Fairbanks, who passed through |Juneau a few days ago enroute to |Sentfle on business, will accompany |his brother from Seattle. 'LEGION CONVENTION COMMITTEE MEETS TONIGHT IN DUGOUT All members of the American Le- gion Convention committee, both ‘!rom the Auxiliary and the Post, Juneau, Alaska, of January, 1936. McKINNON INVESTMENT CO., this Wings of the Morning! |are requested by Department Com- Fly out of bed. | mander A. E. Karnes, general chair- e |man for the convention, to meet in f?m“ thet fragaot mll” | the Dugout at 8 o'clock this evening Schillinnnnng Coffeeee!!! to go over further plans for the con- vention which is to be held in Ju- unusemcmberl&&.ands LAST RITES H.E.I.D commming uuup!!!” There are two good ways to make coffee— FOR percolator and drip. W. J. CASEY Either one is more deliciov. Last rites for William J. Casey, if you use the Schilling Coffec ploneer Alaskan who died February| specially prepared for it. 14 at St. Ann's Hospital, were held |this afternoon in the chapel of the C. W. Carter Mortuary, Father william G. LeVasseur officiating. | Interment was in the Catholic | plot of Evergreen Cemetery. The deceased had no known rela- tives in Alaska. —— - Forty states and eight foreign countries are represented by the 1,702 students at Duke University. Schilling Coffee Two kinds One for drip. One for pereolator. N ] Wi /W e ==Ilfl% == ;:1’;:’:;' . Resembling a —_— ertaln 16. Symbol for Sl Ran Short of Food at Tulse- tantaium 1 Living 16. mognlngl 20 Merchants quah—Will Prospect | 5 suiied i Mare breciot N C 19, Hoosler 2 Shvere mn New Country { state: abbr. 2 Percolates 21. Creep away abjectly & fum | Jce Smith of Tulsequah, who,| 22 Small portion H m;'f prefix with Mrs. George Bacon, arrived| ,; peaerc' " 3 Calmer here last Mondey evening aboard| 25 Solid water - T the Coast Guard cutter Tallapoosa,| 26 Remain an act 27 The absolute i ek |after having been marooned at superlative 38 1‘;!?3;“:: (;‘am l&(‘fif .,'.‘H”‘u 3 “xm’,y lack of transportation facilities, ex- | ing ® 1) 52 |\";‘,““;f}c 5 ATetinindia | pulen 53. Approaches pects to return to Tulsequah within| 30 Goddess of - 4 QOPRTEN aw e iz Pertaining to a few days with a stoek of pro-| 31 Most inde- 44 Proceed 08004 = P”"fmfl pendent 45, Novel by Sir Dresses 5 & visions. 34 Bew Dirdt Walter mall grain s poScessity Mr. Smith reported that he Jr\d» 3. LighC oy b kI 3. sy;w‘;l'nhvls"(&rm o AR his partner were “running short of | g Acquire by “ M province: 4 Type meas- 51. Symbal for grub,” and that additional supplies labor abbr. ures I%%E- %I"lm% LOCAL FILIPINO IS MOVING TO STATES D. M. Sarabia, wno arrived on the Alaska, will leave on the tame ves- sel tonight for the states where he will make his home. He has been connected with Karl The'le’s Dia- mond K cannery at Wrangell for the t five years as cannery centract- upplying labo Mr. Sarabia formerly owned the chicken ranch in the Auk Bay district which is now for sale. He decided that his connection e Diamond K cannery was more advantageous tban rii‘ing chizk- ens and tables and will des is time to the cannery busi- He was one of the leading in the Juneau cclony. or with vege U. S. DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE, WEATHER BUREAU (By the U. 8. Weather Bureau) Forecas® for funeau and vicinity, beginning at 4 p.m., Feb. 19: THE WEATHER Fair tonight and Thursday; moderate easterly winds. LOCAL DATA Time Barometer Temp. Humidity Wind Velseity Weather | 4 pm. yesty 3021 12 30 SE 6 Clear 4 am. today 30.14 ] % w 4 Clear Noon today 30.10 16 25 NE 14 Clear CABLE AND KADIO REPORTS YESTERDAY | TODAY Highest 4pm. | Lowest4am. 4am. Precip. 4am. Station temp. temp. | temp. bemp velocity flhrs Weathe- Anchor: 26 = 21 — —_— Barrow 8 12 | r-30 26 18 o Clear Nome 24 20 | e aeusiag 0 Clear | Bethel 30 30 | am s [ 0 Cldy Fairbanks 4 4 -2 4 4 0 Cldy Dawsor -24 -4 | St. Paul 36 R e T 0 Pt Cldy Dutchi Harbor 5¢ 40 | 3 38 4 0 Rain Kodiak 38 ‘38 36 36 4 46 Rain Cordova g | 2028 4 0 Cldy Juneau 1198 i L g, 4 0 Clear Sitka 2¢ — | 9 - - Trace Clear Ketchika n 18 16 | 6 6 4 0 Clear Prince Rupert 22 22 o B 4 24 Pt. Cldy -8 -16 24 -22 4 0 Clear 98,/ .38 28 28 4 [ Clear Portland 30 30 26 26 [ 0 Cldy San Francisco 60 56 |7 c82 i g 4 16 Rain New York » g | B a3 10 Cldy Washington 28 18 [ 10 18 8 Cldy WEATHER CONDITIONS AT 8 A. M. Juneau, clear, 24; Chitina, cloudy, 4. temperature, 13; cloudy, 8; MecCarthy, clear, cloudy, 4; Nenana, clear . 2; Kaltag, cloudy, 8; U Radioville, clear, 12; Cordova, clear, -18; Anchorage, cloudy, 21; -4; Ruby, partly cloudy, -5; Nu- akleet, cloudy, 14; Flat, partly WEATHER SYNOPSIS Several important weather obs>rvations were not received but from those that were ning, this received, it would appear that the barometric pressure distribution over the Oanadian Northwest and Alaska has changed but little during the past 24 hours, the pres- sure being high over eastern Alaska and the MacKenzie River Val- ley and Ocean. low over the northeastern portion of the North Pacific Precipitation was reported over the coastal regions from the Aleutians eastward to Kodiak and over California. Precipitation has fallen during the past 24 hours over portions of Southeast Alaska and British Columbia, and the Eastern States, weather this morning. followed by clear Warmer weather was reported over the Tanana Valley this morn- ing while relatively cold weather continued from Southeast Alaska southward to Oregon. was 5 above, Prince Rupert, Washington, D. C. The minimum temerature at Juneau last night 10 below at Petersbburg, 6 above at Ketchikan, 16 at 26 at Portland, 2 a ove at New York, and 10 above at JACK PRICE ENROUTE TO M’CARTLYY MINES J. J. “Jac! Price, owner of the Pariners Placer Mines near McCar- thy, passed through Juneau on the Victoria The Partners Placer Mines, he re- ports, is a hydraulic proposition, with the outlook for this year’s oper- ations very encouraging Price is a thorough Alaskan, hav- ing mined in the Dawson, Fair- banks, Sullivan Creek and Iditarod sections before settling in his pres- ent location Now'.. Is the Time to Pay Up Those Neglectecl Bills! s oy o S iy _E \ Peter Pan Beauty ! Shoppe j PHONE 221 MARGARET LINDSAY, Prop. HELVI PAULSON, Operator The Ideal Time To Keep Your Credit Good! You not on}y keep your future credit good, and get from under the shadow of worry from an accumulation of irritating debts . . . But by paying them up NOW you will garner a lot of votes for your fav- orite contestant in the BETTER TIMES DRIVE and help her win that trip to Cadliforia and Mexicol DON'T DELAY! Pay All You Can Today! “h o AL ) o ) ”

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