The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, March 16, 1936, Page 2

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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, MONDAY, MARCH 16, 1936. PROGRAM FOR VOC. TRAINING IS ANNOUNCED Second Half of Activities to Start at Douglas Govt. School for dancing and-daytime wear $8.75 $13.50 NEW SKIRTS— NEW VEILS™ 25¢ and 50c FLOWERS- 50¢ and 65¢ NEW GLOVES $1.25 NEW HOUSE DRESSES AND SMOCKS— $1.00 to $3.50 NEW SPRING KNITS NEW BLOUSES— $1.25 and $2.50 $2.50 and $3.50 EW NECKWEAR 65¢c and $1.25 NEW MILLINERY— $3.25 to $6.95 B. M. Behrends Co., Inc. “Juneau’s Leading Department Store” III_IIII||IIIII||I||III|III!IIlllIIIIIIIIlIIlIIl!lIIIIIIIIIIIII|IIIIIlIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIHIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIE IIIlII!IIIHIIIIIIIIII!IIIIIIII!IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIH'IIlIIIIIIHNIIIIIHIIIIIIl|IIIlHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII!IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHI‘ % .IIIIIIIIIIIIllIIIIIIIIIIIlllIIIII_IIIIIIHIflIIIIIIIIIIIIIII T is occupied building cabinets and benches to care for the tools and place machinery in the manual training shop. Instruction is the use of the steel square, finishes, and metal work will follow. In taxidermy a goat's head, deer’s head and small bear are among the finished mounted specimens. Just now the class is engaged in making buckskin while a brown bear hidc and wolverine is being tanned. Two deer heads, and a large moose head | are in the pickle barrel to be mount- ed when the forms arrive, and a large black bear hide is awaiting | t0_this work. later regarding this. The course will consist of ten lessons. Cooking. Friday 1:30 to 4:30, with Mrs. C. N. Crone in charge. Demonstrations in all kinds of good- ies with an eye oh the budget are given. Anyone wishing special ln—I struction may bring the material | and the dish will be demonstrated. Friday 6:00 to 10:00 & second class in wood work or taxidermy continu= ing the Tuesday night activities. Native art has been added to the | school program, an hour after close of the regular time being given over € |he said. IIWNIIIIIIIIIMMIHMMIIIIIflilllllmllIHIMlllllflfllflll BROUGHT OUT IN LABOR HEARING { 2= Government Is Stressing| ' Angle in Connection with | Discrimination Charge | | (€ atinned from Page One) A list of the 880 employees of the | mine were obtained, he explained, | and the men voting checked against the list. was not on the list the baliot was ! thrown out; he said. Mr. Connors said some of the Un-| ion men told him they did not vote because they were afraid, and he stated some of the Union men on the committee which called the strike had gone to work when re- employment applications were ta- ken. | Interested Citizen | Asked why he had served on the committee, Mr. Connors said that he did so solely as an interested eitizen of long residence in the commun- ity. “A $5.000 daily payroll was being held up here by the strike,” he said, “and we had to do something. Ev- erything T have ig the world is tied up in this community.” He explained that it was upon pe- tition of men who wanted to ge back to work and citizens of the Som- | munity that action be taken that the city held the poll. | “Everything seemed to be dead- locked and nothing was being done. “What the business men and citizens of the community want- ed was to find out how many of the men ganted ta go bhack to wort and get ‘them working if possible. We didn't care whether they were Union men or not.” | Questioned further along that line, the Collector said: “That was the whole reason for this vote. Both sides claimed a majority of the em- ployees. We didn’t know who w {in the majority and didn't care. The | sole purpose of the community was to get the miné operating again No partiality was shown toward eith- er side, but after the poll was taken back to work.” why the Union never voted on < straight question, of whether or not to strike. He replied, “that is onc of the things I never could under- stand. I don't know yet. That is why we went ahead to get an ex- pression of the employees.” that the government was nearing | the end of its witnesses and it is possible it will rest its case shortly Defense Attorney Carl E. Croson has a long list of witnesses to call before the hearing is concluded. GEORGIA GOV.'S HAND TIED BY ~ COURT RULING Talmadge Told Slale Funds! Cannot Be Withdrawn | . Without Appropriation ATLANTA, Ga., March 16.—Three judges today held that State funds cannot be withdrawn without an, appropriation bill. The decision came as a blow to, BACK PAY NOW | If a name appeared that, we knew a majority wanted to go Mr. Connors was asked if he knew . N binatic) and ¢ demonstrated a amois comprise n this wool swagger coat over a chamoi “fly front,” navy clips, school girl sailor of navy felt is ¢ kidskin oxfords are traced with a and navy Indication was given this afternoon JAPANESE FIRE Navy Ride'sistyle Crest in Smart New Suit Drnssvs £ma an invigo spring color com- h po trt suit dress whic es a navy s crepe frock. The new stitched belt are interesting details. The harmingly young, while the navy pattern of shining braid. SON OF SPAIN'S T0 RECOGNIZE {United {on stch a move at | aguay. IPICKET SIGNS NEW REGIME DISCARDED AS IN PARAGUAY STRIKE ENDS States Joins Other Nations in Cere- monies Today Building Service Employees Reach Compromise Set- tlement in New York 16.—The ! WASHINGTON, March NEW YORK, March 16.—Thous- United States concert ands of union elevator operators withh Argentina Chile, Peru d other building service employ- { and Uruguay, wi nd diplom s tossed away picket signs and ition to the new Government began returning to work Sunday guay after a two eeks’ strike that dis- n in 2,400 apartments tructures. A compromise settlement w after a 15-hour conference. s said the settlement was reat victory.” als acting Par- officis Asuncion, ng today with ('TRFMO\'I S ()BN'I’R\'I‘ZII “a 31 A March 16 ages and hours will be fixed at The United and five Latin- e end of each of the next three American ave récognized|vears on the basis of prevailing Par 1 L ultaneously Provisional Presid and economic conditions, i a The settlement also provides im- Franco declared a state of peace mediate re-employment of strikers with Boliv and wage and hour arbitration e - ide for many miles, and was visible BALL OF FIRE n on, D. C F r! a s were felt at the fir white flash, followd I minutes later by a deep, can- ke rumbling J. Templeton, an airline pilot blotting out the moonlight 1d feared first that the flash { would envelope the plane. It quick- Flam”“{ M. (p()r g(\(’n fo} ly disappeared over the ocean, he 3 added, “in the whitest light T ever Hundreds of Miles— fi5as? Falls in Ocean | T Glacier Bay National Monument nsidered to offer an unusual r scientific study ot ior, of resulting move- NEWARK, N. J., March 16 minz meteor close to ear tled windows and awakened slumb- | 8 erers as it shot across the central |ments, and the development of New Jersey sky early today and |flora and fauna, and certain valu- vanished, apparently in the Atlantic relics of ancient interglacier The meteor lighted the- counlry W’INDOW CLEANING PHONE 485 - OPEN ALL NIGHT Alaskan Hotel Liquor Siore Phone Single O-2 rings UPON SOVIETS LATE DICTATOR \ et —— AT AMUR RIVER Thirty Shols o Labor- Jose An.m. ia Rivera Jailed T('h'phone 409 ‘ ers to Flee—Casual- ties Not Mentioned MOSCOW, March 16.—Tardy patches from Khabarovsk said t »momm 1 Japanese - Manchukuan |soldiers, driving along the Man- chukuan side of the Far Eastern frontier, fired upon Soviet work- imen dredging the Amur River on | March 5 | Thirty shots forced the laborers {to flee. No casualties were men- ! tioned. UHDER CUSTODY for Leading Spanish Fascist UlSOldClb 5.—The Leftist Government has arrested Jose An- tonio Primo de Rivera, son of the late Dictator, on implication that he is the leader in recurrent dis- orders of Spanish Fas The roundup of scores of leading Fascists and Monarchists jammed olice quarte: 1t is hoped that, errorism and attacks on churches! and convents may be quelled. e MADRID, Ma FOR INSURANCE See H. R. SHEPARD & SON B. M. Behrends Bank Bldg. FaiihEis o | 'I‘l'lE TERMINAL “Deliciously Different Foods” Catering to Banquets and Private Dinner Parties INSURANCE Allen Shattuck | tanning and mounting. Wood-carving. Monday 3:30 to|Gov. Eugene Talmadegs financial BLAZE DOES The program for the second half of the activities in the Douglas Gov- cinment Sehool, sponsored by Mr. A. E. Schoettler, Vocational Super- visor of Alaska, is completed and in full swing. It follows: Better Homes. Mrs. Crone, di- rector. Monday 1:30 to 4:30: Advis- ory period and visiting homes upon request, 7:00 to 9:00, Home decora- tion, flowers, picture frames, vases :nd seasonal decorations wers among the projects. Beauty par- lor activities and first aid were also given. Woodword or Taxidermy. Tues- day, 6:00 to 10:00. Mr. R. Dupree | director of taxidermy: Taxidermy and wood work alternate; wood | work being given the first half of with Miss Lucille Pepoon, Domestic Science teacher in the Douglas High School, in charge. Special attention is being given to remodeling cloth- J ing and fitting patterns. | Gardening. Thursday 7:30 to 9:30. Mr. Anderson, proprietor of gardening. In the first lessonm, classification of soils, as clay, silt, sand; mixtures as clay loom, sandy loom, etc. depending on size of par- ticles, humus, peet, elements in | soil, and need of lime were discussed | | under head of soils. Under selec- Sewing. Wednesday 7:30 to 9:30,] Juncau Florist, gives instruction in| tion of plot, instruction in drainage, need of sunshine and fertilization | ))e discussed. was given. Care of house plants | was touched upon, methods to com- 4:30, with Frank James, well known | totem pole maker in charge. Native basketry. Tuesday 3:30 to 4:30, with Mgs. T. Wilson, Jr., as- | sisted by Mrs. T. Wilson, Sr., both‘ good basket weavers. Chilkat Blankets. Wedriesday | 8:30 to 4:30, with Mrs. Mary Martin in charge. Metal Carving. Thursday 3:30 to| 4:30, with Frank James, instructor. Knitting. Thursday 6:30 to 7:30, with Mrs. Henry Stevens in charge. These classes in Native Art are dictatorship, since it restu&ned TFalmadge and his appointed Stabe | Treasurer, the ousted Treasurer and | |four depository banks from pnymg out any money except as directed hy the statutory appropriations of 1935. The Assembly failed to pass the 1936-37 appropriations bill. ,|DEPUTY BRINGS TWO PRISONERS TO JAIL given primarily for children; but | | adults are -welcome. Beginning this evening, the evening class in ‘etter Homes will R Nearly 70 per eent of the 1934 Deputy U. 8. Marshal &. W., Sani- |ples arrived from Hoonah aboard the Roedda today with two prison- ers in custody, Duncan Johnson and | Nick Lawrence. who must each spend | four moriths in the Federal jail for the month with Mr. M. Harmon, | bat mildew being given. Last Thurs- | total lode-gold Production in Al- drunk and disorderly conduct. manual training director in Juneau | day was given over to the dm.u»iun‘:u;kl canie from mines in' South- | High in charge. To date the class | of vegetables. BARNEY GOOGLE AND SPARK PLUG LET HIM GO, LOWI(ZIE -~ ('LL TAKE HIM OVER TO THE BARBER SHOP-- There will be more | east Alaska. e Samples will return to his post Wednesday. WHUT'S ALL TH' FURSE ERBOUT-- BORAH PUSHES - 6. 0. P. FIGHT - TOCALIFORNIA WASHINGTON, March 16.—Unit- ed States Senator William E. Borah today pushed the fight for the Re- publican presidential nomination into the fifth state, as California supporters prepared the G. O. P. primary there on May 5. Senator Borah will thus clash with Gov. Alfred W. Landon, whose | pledged to him strategy for | | supporters, including California’s Governor, Frank E. Merriam, hav | completed a slate of deleBates| By BILLIE DE BECK BIG DAMAGE MILL PLANT Departments s of Five Cmes i Join in Fighting | Oregon Fire | PRESCOTT, Oregon, March 16. — | Damage to the extent of $30,000 wa done by fire to the Clark-Wilson | the blaze was halted by firemen. | Fire apparatus from four cities, Longview, Kelso, St. Halens and | Rainier came here to aid the local | department. The mill will be closed at least | & | one month for repairs. | — 1 | | Lumber Company plant here before | = lg . Established 1898 Juneau Alaska J uneau Cash Grocerv CASH GROCERS Cerner Second and Seward Free Delivery PHONE .' CAPITOL CAFE AND BALL ROOM Lunches Dancing Every Night Private Booths MIDGET LUNCH Featuring Home-Cooked Meals and a choice of Beer, Wine or any 10c drink with meals or sandwiches Open daily from 8 a.m. to 8 p.m. including Sundays TOM and MARIE STURGE o [0

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