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U. S. DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE, WEATHER BUREAU bt e 1 1 experts that the industry $100,000.000 in 1936 call amazing growth of the business trends is the rush of radio officials Eleanor Powell wre among the film celebrities are mucn in demand cn the air waves because their exdellent “ether personalities”. 'Bothers < MILWAUKEE, Wis, Dec. 8. — It Michigan State College never! sees Capt. Ray (Bu2z) Buivid of Marquette again it will be all right. All nze of Marquette’s touchdowns in thé last three games against the Spartans resulted from passes that were pitched by Buivid. The score of all three games was the same, 13-7, with the Spartans winning l.‘n. 1934, the Hilltoppers in 35 and a 3 car, tearing the house g into a. garden, wrecking rni:!mndmmduumnun. mmmmshwn-ma(mmmdmwrolmerm-l tree wood thin as tissue. He col- ored the slices with biological stains like a physician looking for the cause of disease. The result was| discovery that the “pitch” was made of what botanists call “ray” or pasy- chremous cells. These are the “liv-| ing” parts of the wood, which a few years ago would have been identi- fied simply as “protoplasm.” Chemical analysis showed they were filled with fats, fatty acids and waxes. These cells are visible only under a microscope. They are many times smaller than the tree fibres which make paper. They are ex- tracted by diluting the pulp and letting it run by gravity over a porous screen. The small cells fall fore 10 o'clock this morning in their fore o ek s mormne e | THIE NORTH TRANSFER hibian plane, destined for Anchor- e ks (Formerly operated by Pete Battello) age. Weather reports promised un-| s s o “oN BY o Gildo Battello limited visibility for Glass who has' Trying Hard to Give the Same held here for several days by bad | weather. He expected to complete | Fast Complete Transfer Service with a Smile Including Oil and Coal Hauling Anchorage this afternoon, after making one stop at Cordova. Passengers taking off from Ju- neau in the Sikorsky this morning were: Mrs. W. H. Erskine, William Evans, and C. M. Wells, who came with him from Seattle, and Lorraine Cozac, from Juneau. ———————— . Because of the many government- through with the water. ——o New construction in Birmingham, 269 per cent. sponsored art projects Uncle Sam was termed “the greatest art pa- tron in history” by Holger Cahill, the last leg of his return flight to Phone 81 eral art projects. oot B S St ATHER Y e THE WE ,/‘.fif 3 (By the U. S. Weather Bureau) ‘ . Forecast for Juneau and vicinity, 1 ing at 4 pm., Dec. 8: = . i ; Generally fair tonight and W ¥; moderate to fresh east- o q e A erly winds. Celebra!l(})ln lg_llll Be Held in B bk | P ers onal Gifts Scottish Rite Temple ‘Time Barometer Temp. Humidity Wind Velocky Weather ° 00 Tomorrow Night ey 2% % W 1 LiSnow . 3 90 B 4 Lt. Snow H Attractively packed, convey Celeyranifi the éxlrs; birL};day o{ Noon 26 63 s 5 Pt. Cldy h Juneau’s Rotary Club, a bangue CABLE AND RAD! the compliments of the sea- will be held tomorrow night at 6 ' YESTERDAY | - BEPOR;I‘OSD son in a manner pleasing to R Highest dom. | m_m“;»,.c,p hih | for members al heir wives. Statio Yetin: SR i A i both men and women. | Harry Lucas is general chairman A“mx o 4!(!)1{) t:gm. ] “;r;"“v 241}:5- “e?;ih‘” s 1 3 . | . ear Bath Package $1.25 o e e 6 Wit e s = g --Whe OF AW X gt b Barrow 0 -2 8 0 M 5 S s sl w ,scheduled to be speaker of the even- Nome 2 -4 M 0 Olar QIS OB ...ccoocccviimivemanssiniiobiood ing | Bethel 10 4 Clear % sSam Ritter is singing and is to F,L“j i v 8 " Sjow Wi led by Lola M Al ‘alrbanks 0 0 4 Trace dy Faticy Powder Pulls .............00 685¢ be accompenied by Lola Mae Al Dawson 32 13 183430 ks jexander, who will also accompan; < . L e R Wil 1d ] St. Paul 38 38 20 0 Clear {the quartet composed of acksor Dutch Harb 1 5 s Hostess PUHS """"""""""""" o i e ssc Rice, Raymond Graff, Sherwood 1 Kodiax el 34 :: i Og (g‘:t ' . Wirt and Cash Cole. : 9 | y Men's Shaving Sets .................. Pat Hussey and Pat Harland are| St iy 0 0 Glear | . |giving some dance numbers and Sitka 36 ki 5 i 36 Snow HOhd(IY Seemte |Miss Bernice Lovejoy is to sing| Yatohikan 36 3 R 15 - i jsome of her specialties. Edithe Prince Rupert 36 .:iG 3; 56 £ 04 Clo{u' Pendleton Bath Robes Young is the accompanist for the * i iy s S . «;‘1‘ s R?;’{ Jlast two numbers, while Cynthia| warren G. Magnuson, Seattle coun- Seattle . a8 P 5y H 5 .0" t. Cldy Corduroy Robes |Batson is to play for the commun-| ty prosecutor, was swept by ::’ Portland 50 48 46 46 B 2:2; ------------------------------ tv aigiod tide of Democratic votes into the ; < " ¥ ‘1} sing f e et congressional seat held by his San Francisco G!{ 58 | 52 52 4 Trace Cldy Corduroy pQ)CIl’l’l(IS .......................... friend, the late Marion A.” Zion:| New York 46 26 | 18 18 20 Trace Clear TRIP TO MEXICO CITY IS check, whose fatal leap ended hia| Washington 4 30 | e 6 0 Clear i turbulent political career. Magnu:| : 3 IEWELRY—BRACELETS PLANNED BY JUNEAU[TE son is pictured with a bro’d smila| WEATHER CONDITION AT 8 A. M. TODAY N 11 | after learning of his election. (As: Seattle, cloudy, temperature, 45; Victoria, cloudy, 39; Blaine, part- EARRINGS—CLIPS Mrs. H. L. Faulkner will leave sociated Press Photo) 1y cloudy, 40; Alert Bay, raining, 31; Bull Harbor, raining, 43; Prince H PEARLS on the Princess Louise tomorrow e Rupert, partly cloudy, 37; Triple Island, clear, 20; Langara Island, on an extensive tour, which, ac- partly cloudy, 41; Dead Tree Point, clear, 36; Point Grey, raining, . 65 t sl 75 cording to present plans will take 38; Ketchikan, cloudy, 33; Craig, cloudy, 37; Wrangell, cloudy, 28; = C 10 ® her to colorful places through the Peetrsburg, cloudy, 30; Sitka, cloudy, 33; Soapstone Point) clear, 30; * K ? 5 Southwestern States, into Mexico to + Juneau, clear, 22; Skagway, clear, 12; Cordova, cloudy, 23; St. Elias, Silk Slips’. ... L e tay $2.50 to $6.50 Mexico City. ‘ clear, 34; Copper River, clear; Chitina, clear, -10; McCarthy, clear, jj < Enroute south Mrs. Faulkner will | -18; Seward, snowing, 27; Portage, cloudy, 20; Anchorage, wcloudy, 8; E; » - 3 be joined by her daughter Jean Fairbanks, cloudy, -4; Nenana, cloudy, 4; Hot Springs, cloudy, 10; i ancy Boxed Hcmdkerchlefs ........ $1-25 at Palo Alto, where she is in her | Tanana, cloudy, -16; Ruby, cloud, 2; Nulato, cloudy, -10; Kaltag, ¢ 3 ), $1.35 § S junior year at Stanford. Mother Is MDRE PEOPLE | snowing, -4; Flat, snowing, 10; Ohogamute, snowing, 4; Crooked Creek, ported Chiffon Handkerchiefs ....65¢ and daughter will then travel into | snowing, 9. c B the Southwest, planning to spend | b 4 rut Evenir :'BGQ‘S ________________ $3.75 considerable ‘time in and around v _WEA""_‘ER SYNOPSIS £ i 2 colorful Santa Fe, New Mexico, a Gov. Troy's Recommenda- o B storm ses pevalid i mrtilh Over 1) St Betiie E iz I . . region renowned for its many in- . . o a, the lowest repo pressure being 28.80 inches about 300 miles ither Handbags .. $2.75 and up reglon renowned 10t 1 me ot |: ionh to Interior Depale 1 S0k b e MR R e vis intied over e s ss 00 t $10 50 dence of Southwest Indian cratts ment Cover Wide Field } northern portion of the Queen Charlotte Islands. The pressure was 4 1as ! mi! (ofc fd o e i 2 o o wid i (i | moderately high over the upper Yukon and MacKenzie valleys, the ‘' A v iss Faulkner’: ) i GCne) | crest being 30.22 inches at Dawson. This general pressure distribu- é 1 1p 3 ume ers, boxed....50c to 51.75 loFoéltt;wnifxz’gd’anNsk& upa::f;;e:e :l;fi ”_AVConum{de!:(im ,P,D,gi,,“e , tion has been attended by precipitation along the coastal regions leave from Los Angeles with Mrs. from the Aleutians southeastward to the Puget Sound region, fol- SR e S Sl w ML I L O. Sloane, wife of Dr. L. O. l‘?:g;”“;‘n I‘X];kas“‘;’:g :;t;:lzgg lowing by clearing this morning from Kodiak to Dixon Entrance. Sloane, formerly of Juneau, for old t‘l fhe I “', b et It was colder last night at Cordova and over the Seward Pen- Mexico and Mexico City. r:“u e d"‘;"."f s G ld]gbe :um insula, and much colder at New York and Washington, the tempera- {"‘ RN R S (‘nclhem;Zrlie:Ld > si;?: time. The tWe at New York having fallen 28 degrees since yesterday morning. o~ P g i ggested R s £ 8 ) ] mn[ s 0 nc DlscnvEH FAT final recommendation sugge i g o “ E W e . “ad- i». 1VE., | 1 & , that provision be made o an T'hey Know Their Own Minds il AVEe SV EAAA .’ & ditional com) i d y 6 petent executive ane IN PINE TREES technical assistant in the Gover- " A 3 g nor’s office.” o - Juneau's Leading Department Store sl U PRI 4 said the progress of Alaska during it BB e e . the last fiscal year was “far S S . Remarkable Find Reported greater than any previcus year. p Lo id of his wife and a mirror. e 1 Employment under the Federal em- & SR e AVIr me oi i'ilots husbend’s head and he is umpile e unen.ployment to such an extent o5 " b \ting the finishing touches on , FEADING, Pa—Edward Wiater, that the people entered the present ILLE, 1, Dec. 8—A with the aid of a mirror. 2L, s /8 Pensuedical sqidgt - By HOWARD W. BLAKESLEE fiscal year virtually without debts ¢ v *visible for hgle A‘g‘:gh;( fl‘;'efliow PR L SAVANNAH, Ga., Dec. 8—Dis- and, enabled them to finish it el _ o - covery of fat in pine trees, fat con- under stable financis! conditions.” ‘ 1 fashion- No Jobless Grads doesph 8. SIARY, Bls (i, who s Cer g taining the same stuff as human and _He said the record salmon pack ¥ cott Fleld, ar-| TUCSON, Anz—r. R. S, Haw- (akes a few. courses in his spare| OXFORD, England, Dec. 8—Ber- animal flesh, is announced by Dr, showeu conservation efforts were P kins, acting dean of the college time. 5 RIS nard Rankin, former Yale Univer- charles H. Herty, director of the successiul and aftributed the in- " i les half of agriculture at the University of | Wiater, Sr., sald lta” never 100 |sity halfback and pitcher, ended pulp and paper laboratory of Sa- crease in ¢ production to the m 1 n laid on Arizona, declares that not one stu- .late to learn something. his English football career for the vannah. higher price of that metal. ‘ ¢ I pilots ap- dent graduated from the college the " RV R season ‘when an old knee injury with the fats he found a cheap, - - - | roachi ild to determ- last 15 years is unemployed. | &m ffl Air Lin clipped him from the field. easy way of extracting which he said | ut the B i g o e | PO crare o o But mdwir:edwuuw his F‘tm:‘ promises two new industries. Rid- L T i eld . o - agree estab- | ing powers, concentrate ging the trees of fat, he said, makes 4 Covered Bridge Spooners 1isning an air service between War- | nis efforts on cricket during the j¢ possible for the first time to man- o A f P i ASHEBORO, N. C. e As in the saw and Athens with plans for its [coming spring season. Te knee, yfacture the finest grades of bond jses I or for Portrait “norse-and-buggy” era,'the covered eventual extension to Palestine has |first injured during a football game and book paper from the Southern g bridge is still the favorite spot been signed by Greece and Poland. |in the United States, is not ex- forests. | s NEW SMYRNA, Fla. — Ray E. for “spooners” in Randolph Coun- The journey between the two capi- |pected to prove troublesome at| mhe fats themselves offer a new i S i : cwér, artist, is making a life- ty, N. C. There are 42 of the tals is expected to take eight|cricket. | byproduct industry to the present Making further use of the good i sized head figure of himself, with bridges in the county. ' hours. Rankin, whose home Is Boston, newsprint makers. For Dr. Herty| V'8 Weather prevailing locally R CCER TR T B 5 18 at Merton College on a Henr: = P, today, Sheldon Simmons in the! o 3 tetlowabi ¥ found the same fats in the spruce' p o1 Lockheed Nugget, took off 42 |l . e d , Radio Industry to Gross $100000000 in 36 e | evepint g, o PV for st this forenoan st 11:30, ) ) % jof newsprint is made. with mail and three passengers. s ) T — [ 9 The tree fat is useful for making' apoard the plane were Charles A n n" asy "s isoap and for mining flotation pro- Goldstein and George Laiblin, who i o= \ cesses. With it is a mixture of are making the round flight, and A t » t (] Mmt | fatty acids andUW*;xel!s {J. J. McKenzie, who was travelling ! sefu to the Pioneers’ Home at Sitka. | 2 : & “ nls s n‘ One tree acid is oleic, a potent' Simmons was to return this after- -J_O?_m A. M. Pattison, 73, and his 70-year-old bride, the fo}:'n_\er ’mely J. i i 3 Chipps, of East Finley Township, Pa., are shown after their elopement ik {ingredient in the man body sought noon with the two roundtrippers and /"0l ding recently. They slipped away without telling the bride’s five DETROIT, Mich,, Dec. 8—Four DY Physicians for medical experi- one other passenger from Sitka. On Gpigren. “We're old enough to know our own, minds,” said the bride. auto. drivers who won Michigan ment. Another is linoleic used for!the outbound flight, he was to stop | ok 7 m Automobile Association paints. In the waxes is cholestorol, at Tenakee and pick up Steve Bro- : & ving agre which can be converted into Vita-'jac, for Sitka. | | success of the affair are Mrs. Ed tm for :“m:l:_ first e th:; min D. Returning at 3:30 o'clock this af- LUTHERAN LADIES Croken, Mrs. John Lowell, and Mrs. h""d’m‘q ¢ e Dr. Herty discovered the fats while ternoon Simmons brought back| ARRANGING SALE k. o. sacobson. Iy i trying to make book and bond paper | Charles Goldstein, George Laiblin | | e e | m’?‘z w;d?::cfim out of Southern pines. This he un- |and Fred Wendt. | NEX T THURSDAY| ;.z& 1y rrom Taku . give * says William H. Thomas, dertook two years ago after he had' i RN T | | L. F. Barr, _in his North Canada + friajor award winner who has drxv-’ developed methods of making news- A silver tea and sewing sale will Air Express Pilgrim plane, who was 7| "3 “brucks and passenger cars for. print out of all grades of Southern | | be given by the Lutheran Ladies Aid | held at Tulsequah by snow yester- 2% pines. ‘His pioneering work is spon- {on Thursday, December 10 at the day, returned to Juneau with ‘mail rule also has the bsckingvsored by the Industrial Committee church. The sewing sale will smrt;fmm the Polarxs—’r?ku mine’ this 1— of et C. Bischoff, coach dnv"iof Savannah and financed by the! at 10:30 o'clock, while the tea will jafternoon at 2:45 o'clock. i " H | be from 1:30 to 5 o'clock. M #hio has driven 400,000 miles in 21| Ohemical Foundation, Inc., of New PR Ry 8527 0 A i p . { . Magnesium is derived chiefly from - without a mishap; Daniel J.| YOIk Oity. L E | Mrs. Alfred Zenger is chairman ¥ truck driver, and Milton The handicap in making book pa- H . and those working with her for the |dolomite as dolomitic limestone. j{_‘ _ O o s oD | ez was what the paper industry|HOS Off This Forenoon for | ¢ . Sols o whom: have v sove|cals “Ditch” 1¢ s the surt whicn| Anchorage, Via Cor- | AR, A 400,000 miles without an acci- shows an occasional slightly dis- . | 4 Gaa mot in peper. ‘It is not dova with Four i dett po pape; i (] i g Sl e pitch, but Dr. Herty said mo ome| | mfiment. &y 3 i knew exactly what it was made of.] With four passengers aboard, pil- 3 Bulv'd To find out he sliced sections of |Ots Don Glass and Gordon McKen- ]L zie took off from Juneau shortly be- +