The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, August 11, 1936, Page 2

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R R I B, THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, TUESDAY AUGUST 11, IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIINIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII!\IIIIIIIIIllIIIlIIIIIIIIIIIlllllllllllllIIIIIlllllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII Il SQWET AcEs ’ o ‘ : | 936 U. 8. DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE, WEATHER BUREAM “Leyaneyisky, here 18 a friend nr = | THE WEATHER | = Forecast for Juneaun aud vicinity, beginning at 4 p.m., August 11: | E Cloudy tonight and Wednesday, probably showers; m oderate = outheast winds. f j = ) LOCAL DATA E’A"men fi,om Russm Land | ; Time BdL)l:l:([‘.el' Temp. Humidity Wind Veloeity ‘Weathet = p.m’” yest'y 30 82 s 8 Cldy g Here La:isle\gmng— | 4 am today 298 47 % 8 3 Cldy Greete y rowd Nocn . today 2091 55 78 SW 2 Cldy ' = . | CABLE AND KADIO REPORTS <Onnunueq mom Pnge Gre) 5 . | | YESTERDAY | TODAY and all day Sunday and Sunday' | ;i,l;"l]er'l e | Lowestdam. 4am. Precip. sgm Station temp. temp. temp. mmn.vdmity 24hrs. Weath | night, ,unable to take off because Anchorage - | 50 57 0 TR | £5|of the adverse fiying conditions. | Barrow 54 i ¢ e 0 Cldy E Yesterday morning the sky cleared, | i No: 62 52 54 6 02 Clear | the weather became perfect and Pethel £& e 2 29 P, Cldy | E they took the air arrjving at Ket-| ‘ Fairbanks o b B | § Tce 9y £ | chikan shortly after 11 o'clock Ju-| | :“““\"“ b :'b‘ :i % 10" Pt. Gy neau time. Their plane was ser-|{ |*/St. Paul o : E: 19 0 Clear viced and after receiving weather | ‘Dutch Harbor 58 &0 6 0 cldy reports from Juneau, took off from | Eodiak o P 1 88 2 92 Clay Ketehikan at 4 o'clock, Juneau time, | f“"d"“‘ o |+ f; 50 Raln and - lelsurely flew ‘north to Ju- | Juneau 51 ¢ 8 14 Cldy neaw, ariving ‘over the city at 5:46 Sitka T e TR s O'clock and tying ‘up at the PAA Ketchikan 60 54 6 48 Rain i flol,t ‘at-6:08 o'clock | Prince Rupert 64 52 4 46 Rain i YntbbpreteF Edmonton 72 46 4 0 Pt Cldy Seattle 8 58 4 0 Pt Cldy Mtgr the “ice Had been broken, ; i ¥ ) following their'‘arrival and ‘becom- g;’;”‘;f“,gx v ,’Z "“; 2 g (é:;ly ing acquainted with those welcom- W it o 4 v | New York 72 64 8 01 Cidy ing them at the hangar's float, |/ | wash gt 20 68 4 06 Cld H | Frank Karabelnikoff took over the } TR 3 k < duties ‘of interpreter - The two So- | WEATHER CONPYTIONS AT 8 A. M | vigt fliers told him they ~were | [ Ketchikan, raining, temperature, 56; Craig, raining, 58; Wrangell, i ‘med ‘wanted their plane checked | . | raining, 54; Sitka, cloudy, 62; Radioville, clea Soapstone Point, &nd-'intended 'to take ‘off ‘on thn‘g. | partly cloudy, 63; Juneau, cloudy, ; Skag clear, 50; Yakutat, { hop ‘to Fairbanks at 10 or'11 o'clock , ah i, | clear, 58; Cordova, cloudy, 59; Chitina, clear, 52; McCarthy, clear; = this forenoon, weatlier permitting This radiophote from Berlin shows the Olympic torch bearer | Portage, raining, 56; Anchorage, cloudy, 54; Fairbanks, clear, 58; E 54 0 Woan Old Friend: lighting the Olympic fire at the Lustgarten, Berlin, reviving an | Richardson, clear, 58; Big Delta, clear; Rapids, clear, 57; Nenana, | £5| dust about that time. Karabel- ., ient ceremony and officially opening the games of 1936. (Asso- | Dartly cloudy, 63; Hot Springs, clear, 63; Tanana, partly cloudy, 66; nikoff said: ciated Press Photo) Ruby, clear, 54; Nulato, cloudy, 50; Crooked Creek, cloudy, 46; Flat, ‘I M ¥ 5 partly cloudy Ptmts! yours. You met him when in Fair-| A 5 i 77 : i i i R . bapks' several years ago on yom" . 3 P . P x P N 4 StrlPQS! tipto the states. He says your 14-"1()"1»(‘(1"s ass in geeview i Low barometric pressure continued this morning over the north- $ girl in Falrbanks is married.” | eastern portion of the North Pacific Ocean and throughout Alaska, . | Ginghams! “I am’sorty to hear that,” and | there being two storm areas, one centered about six hundred miles : then: extended his hand over the | west of the Queen Charlotte Islands and ancther one centered a slde of the cockpit and sald: “Hello, | short distance scuth of Una High pressure prevailed over the N Bassett.” Pacific Ocean in the vicinity of Midway Island. This general pres- - 8, OvBassett, traffic mhnager: in sure distribution has been attended by precipitation along the coast- ] Juneau ‘for the PAA, the friend al regions from the Aleutians eastward to Cordova and from Wran- | mentjoried, extended his hand and gell southward to southern British Columbia and by generally fair . .k ““0"5“‘§tw“5 "‘“‘;lwed-t ather over the interior and western portions of Alaska i 2 evenson Reports e Lty | " R. 'H, Stevenson, Operator-in- | ol iy HE B < per Ymd Charge of the Juneau station, Sig- TORREL VAGATIONS E: ; nal Corps, United States Army, in- o _ Mrs.-W. L. Torrell, wife of a d @ and up formed the fliers the Corps was St. Ann's Hospital employee, left on Prince the night for a month’s vacation in the Rupert Saturday ready to extend weather informa- tion when they were ready to hop SLAYING TOLD Buy: for school, play or “Sunday best” from off again. The airmen replied Du\:_;n” She will spend the dirst i they had, excellent reports as fur- | yl & art of her vacation w ends rge and varied assortment of new fall ey Bhd, excRlen) Tpa A RED. BLUFF. Cal, Aug. 11—Villas [r"c 0 M0 180 Hoe, e our : nished by the Signal Corps on the Wilkes, twenty-nine, has confessed pop pare 3 ;. De y cottons. Trimmings, buttons and other suit- entire light from’ Seattle and ex- |1 it deues Bk o e L Mecemte At ol sk i 1 1 pressed their appreciation. The lg- | s g E 3 g . | Noche ) tt, shing e | able dress accessories also specially i 7. 3 T 4 G i A slaying of bis brother, Frank M e i iced in minute ' communication = with bl 8 9 e e T SPECIAL SHOW ‘ PHgEd. each other, during the time in the MESeL . Tk HUE aptae] Americay Logjon - An T, s over & woman. The Viem WiS .Ip yOU COULD ONLY COOK.” - o Thompson, of the Juneau tabbed in. the back wit 8erew | oo m Theatre tonight with Her- AL, Wy driver 1 e e Advanced Fall Showing eiiss Bireet. ae s thatied | b bor Marii, Jan Aroarana by the fliers for the"excellent re | NEW TELEPHONE DIRECTORY Rt 4 ports . furnished by him and his staff. DRESS COATS—Fur Trim . SPORT COATS—Swagger Styles NEW TUNIC DRESSES i B. M. Behrends Co. In¢. - “Juneau’s Leading Depariment Store*” ‘VISIT OUR UPSTAIRS BARGAIN DEPARTMENT IIIlIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlIllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII|III|III|IIIIIIIIlIIIIIllIIIIIIIIII[IIIIIIIIIIII IIIIIIIHIllllllullllljllflfllluflI HALIBUT SALES ARE MADE HERE Halibut, was ,she w-s: o busmes today on_ the . local fish .market, seven boats being in with trips. The | To be issued September 1 and forms close August 22. For space lor listings please call Juneau and Douglas Telephone Company. adv. VISITOR RETURNS Mrs. W. L. Grisham returned on the Aleutian after a visit with friends in Ketchikan. Tired and Hungry The fliers admitted they were tired from their period of being “down” at Swanson Bay, and their flight, but like all human beings also - admitted they were hungry and ' believed. they would go to a hotel, after dressing in civilian clothes, dine and then take a rest The fliers quickly changed their = flying outfit and were escorted to the Gastineau by Bassett and Rus- siah friends, and the visit in the Capital ‘Oity of -Alaska really began. ; Fine Plane | Respects paid to the fliers, re;x—\ ‘dent.s then began to pay respuLs | to the blue bodied, red winged, spec- ! ally built Vultee monoplane vuth the’ insignia U.S.S.R.-H 208 on the ®. under side of the wings. “I's @ beaut," was the gonvral\ SAY ! ON A HOT MORNING I'LL TAKE MORE OF THESE COOL KELLOGG'S EVERY' TIME ! A OO AN shown in this radiophoto—the second ever to be transmitted from Berlin—passing the reviewing stand in the giant new Olympic Stadium there, on the opening day of the 1936 Olympiad Reichsfuchrer Hitler is indicated by an ar- row. (Associated Press Photo) American Olympic atheletes are O 0 S O [ GOVERNOR SAYS AR PROGRAMFOR NORTH IMMINENT : ‘Aiheld Development May Be Expected Along with Air Mail Set Up i “Gontinued from Page One) l\ox marriage to Count Nicolas Nie- roth, member of a prominent Rus-| sian family. Their family home is the Chateau St. Leyn at Cannes, | France. The Countess, whose hus- band is now in business in Paris, a world traveller. In fact there are few countries she hasn't visited. | Now, she says, she is delighted to be adding a trip to Alaska to her llist of Jjourneys made. Mrs. Pearson, prominent Los An- geles club woman, was one of the founders of the famous Los Angeles Breakfast Club, is on the Board of Governors of the Pleiades Club| which numbers among its members - |screen stars and Los Angeles social- Wntes Tacomans Is S H 0"' B Y Enjoyed Juneau % | friwuté paid, and that was enouch, . : Expressing - appreciation for the % "’t ¢l o il hospltalnv extended himself and Last evening while it was still the Tacoma delegation while here :fnynght lhfun?reids fr;)n; ahdlst'mcei recently Mayor George A. Smithey Ford, Capt Ole Brensdal, and the l;;;;;; 1.:12 fll:srls)efv:re tb:;nz]ae‘: of Tacoma has written Mayor I § e, t. Oswals ld- 9,- 5 Goldstein thanking him for the ,;‘fiz’:n:“gmp‘; By Mfiv:u' tertained and_entertaining, receiv-' Van Facmg [Imal for: Wile| 325K al) Ihanmie chim, 0 to the Sehastian-Stuart Rish Co,| (nE &3 sending radiograms and| Murder Killed in Shad- “I assure you that I not only en- | at 7:15 and 5.15 cents a pound. The 1OTOUBhly. enjoying themselves. | joyed the ride to the glacier but pous They proved good mixers and Ju- | f Courth + Diana, Capt. Waino Kallio, and '.hq: o y‘p];;o 1o ‘th’ q ;‘ s ow o ourthouse was pleased to have the opportunity Thelma, Capt: Bernt e gl s LN R the atids to meet you personally and to ce- Alstead, 8 : H : .mge Wi ated. D. S, Gi 1 ~Har- vy, e, My sl S 2 o e o] Vet SR LR ™ PRI, | o bt | o e i e it Pepirid SAL ORISR ententa. | T e e Wit hine. 4| sellifig 3500 poltadl LRA LG = Dyring thg, evening and. this fore-| yng trial on a charge of wife mur- | Juneau,” Mayor Smithey wrote u"‘ e ,:heflffinadf:,wewa?,d kot I;ro%:::\}] gwne;c in ul?oss ‘Z'Xfi;m ma 1%500 popu.ndx I v fioay. the Soviet fliers through in- der, was shot to d:‘alh here today Mav ui ask you to cun\tyey these of all of a! ashington ) i ) S S 9 r ay 3 P c ;)f:fll'tht Srsaldent fon Howit g |most of her investments are in| The Hyperien, Gapt. Oscar Obefg, "’"‘MF‘ gave out many interest-| pefore the eyes of his official es- sentiments to the citizens of Ju- Praises Schwellenbach, Bone “Senator Lewis B. Schwellenbach of Washington State has been doing fine work for Alaska,” the Governor added. “He is really our representa- tive in the Senate. He and Mr. Di- mond- work together and there has not been a thihg in which he has not co-operated with our Delegate to the fullest. With Mr. Dimond as our representative in Congress and Senator Schwellenbach lending his excellent assistance in the Senate, they make a wonderful team for Alaska, and both of them and my- self are most enthusiastic and ap- preciative of the outstanding work Dr. Ernest Gruening is doing for in his position as Director of " Territories and lshnd posses- sions.” - | sold 13500 pounds to the Alaska | Coast Fisheries at 7:16 and 5.15 | and Capt. M.:Lopp in the :om'u her home here. The first Dem-|S0ld 500 pounds of.halibut to' the | ocratic National Committeewoman|ACF at 7 and 5:cents. The, Fane appointed in Alaska, she has con-| ¢ame in late with trip of:halibut| tinued her activities in Democratic| Put had not sold.at, press time. ! politics in Southern California. An| Shipments of fish to Seattle to- active Roosevelt supporter, she is| da¥ included: 115 boxes of frozen vice-president of Democratic com-| halibut. shipped on the Victoria:to mittee of her Legislative district,| the San Juan PFishing and Pack- head of its steering committee, on g Co. in. Seattle by the Alaska the Advisory Board of the Hollywood | Coast Fisheries, and 5 tlerces: of Democratic Women's Club and on|mild cured king salmon from the the Board of the Federation of New England Fish Co., also on t.he Women’s Clubs of Southern Cali-| Victoria. The North.Sea took 10 fornia. | tierces of mild cured salmon from Though their plans for their Al-| the Sebastian-Stuart - effice hm aska trip are indefinite, it is pis-| 80d 15 tierces from the Alaska| { sible that they will make the trip| Coast Fisheries. hotel and apartment houses. Mrs. Troy has returned to Juneau | to see her friends here and visit ing_ bits. of \nloruwuon Far' the flying time, me: agtual time in the air | between scamc and Juneau, via eichikah was six and one-half| hours. M Seattle they flew off the cqurse aevtnl times, low and then M’udqs explqrmg into air plane, pontoon equipped, be ved endidly on the entire flight, and arrived here as in good a, mndluun as at. the take-off at Pedro. ‘A magneto on the . side of the motor needed at- Levanevisky said the air route , Seattle uonh to Juneau, fol- the inside passage used by s, Was just one of grandeur the surface was dotted here. Senator Homer T. Bone of Wash- ington is also aiding in the Alaska program, the Governor said. The Governor took in the Demo- cratic convention in. Philadelphia and reported it a fine example of a spontaneous tribute to President Roosevelt and the great work helpasture district hiis been doing for the people of [south of Fairbanks. Jack McCord the nation. “Returning to Juneau - with- Gov- erfior Troy is Mrs. Troy and her guests' the Countéss Nieroth and Mrs. Genevieve Pearsons. Countess Nieroth was Mrs m of New York before “The Hattie to the Interior and Westward be-‘ TR White Russians Are fore returning South. qu_rfl% Granted e — NEW QUARTZ AREA FOUND | ANKARA, Aug. 11..— than a thousand white Russlan families, B exiled since -the Sviét: révolution;| purpoges. They are staudying all have now been granted Turkuh' conditions even to plane equipment | citizenship through intervention byl which would be necessary. the Nansen international office for are highly appreciative of | 1;@ there with buzzing industrial activity. - fliers explained the pur- P{ pose of the flight, a demonstration u to' the probability of a regular route ' hetween the . and, Moscow. for commercial An area which recent arrivals in | Seward say may become the great- est gold quartz strike is the Good- about 100 miles has secured practically all the op-~ tions in the zone, and outside capital seems to be interested in the prop- | refugees, set up by the League of | the attention and many courtesies| erty. Six to eight-foot veins were| Natons, A hundred others, how-| e “in’ the various cities vis- discovered there last year averaging | ever, have been ted as ‘“un-| i air officials and all me- from $50 to $100 a ton, it is| desirables” ang 'Q.hpv,q Tug- chlnlu who certainly know their claimed. key as soon as. | motors, l Mon apd this was given here.| cort near the courthouse. Two of " his brothers-in-law surrendered following the shooting. | Handcuffed, Howe ran until he fell M!h three pistol bullets in his | Shenf( Couch said that the pns- oners - ‘'were Worth and Pinson Brown, married farmers, whose younger sister, Mrs. Hattie Brown Howe, was found dead in the woods near Dallas last year. They are be- ing held without charges. Officers said they believed that Howe had aceused his wife of fur- | nishing evidence for a liquor still raid. Ugline; No Grounds for Chinese Divorce | $age Chinese judges here have just cause she is ugly. |ner to a farmer at Yangchow. But | } the wife, disliking her néw hus- | band, succeeded in escaping from | him. She traced her first husbaud | and had him arrested for desertion. Now he must either remarry her Ior provide for her support. The case is complicated by the fact that a second wife. A’ Chinese merchant, tired of his | United | wife whom he considered ugly, sold | the size of Chancellor Neville Cham- néau.” ——————— Sues for Four Trillion, Will Take Goods Instead NAGPUR, India, Aug. 11.—A suit for four trillion dollars has been filed in the high court here by a wealthy Indian against the Brit- ish government. 1t is the largest suit ever brought in this country and may constitute a world record. The Indian is su- ing through the Secretary of State for India. The petitioner claims that his fa- ther-in-law died in London and ap- pointed the Secretary of State for India his trustee to property in India and other lands, including SHANGHAI, China, August 11.—1 two gold mines and three oil wells. The petition adds that if the mon- ruled that a man has no right to| ey is not immediately available he sell or divorce his wife merely be-| will accept property of equal val- | ue. The sum is approximately 10 times berlain, 1936 British budget. ————— AUTOS AT KETCHIKAN For the first. seven months of this year, City Gilder, of Ketchikan, issued 512 auto licenses. A total of 667 driv-| the first husband already has taken ers' licenses at $2 each have flsm i t?een issued. Clerk J. F. Van, BEBE’S an ideal hot-weather 4“1& cool milk or cream. Delicious! And Kellogg’s are always oven-fresh when they tnhifi. The exclusive WAXTITE inner bag protects them, even in hot, muggy weather. Kellogg’s give youutmostvalue. Made by Kelloggin Battle Creek. Noting takes the place of 7{4dlygd CORN FLAKES reach your Ready 10 serve with: 0 cooking or hother. AIR SERVICE INFORMATION HOTEL GASTINEAU Every Effort Made for .the Comifort of the Guests! GASTINEAU CAFE in connection PHONE 48§ WINDOW CLEANING

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