The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, December 15, 1936, Page 2

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‘ THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE TUILSDAY DEC. 15, 1936. Dall Cro \or Puzzle U. S. DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE, WEATHER BUREAU i G- word BOOK BY ASTOR THE WEATHER | | Acngss Solution of Yesterday's Puzzle 6. Sh:nmx;](ti!;a?;d N E x P 0 s E s (By the U. S. Weather Burcau, . ; T . 7 7. Wild animal | Forecast for Juneau and vielnity, beg'=ning at 4 p.m., Dec. 15: | “".m,‘ 4 8. Fall behind Rain turning to snow late to.ight, cooler tonight; Wednesday l:: R“a’ L % A’;‘;’;:(‘,‘“ | HIGH SUGIETY snow or rain; moderate to frech southeast winds. or harvest 10, Flower : : 13. Song from an 11. Trial ’ LOCAL DATA 10 Footale Geer 17. Hindu queen | L ‘Time Barometer Temp. Humidity Wind Velocity Weather ig Kglvn:::“ '1.'.\. Fights | Do 1o Dy 4 pm. yest'y 2945 34 94 SE 12 Lt. Snow i fdvanes 31, Resicy | NEW YORK, Dec. li—Despite| 4 am_ today 2031 oy 03 S folsas t0 a v: 22, Open court the shudders of society, despite Ll’n,l Noon today 29.93 29 83 E 16 Lt Ratn A b & oo 3 Z 23, Jniesion objections of his son-in-law, John Leather Jac‘(ets blo,9s 20, pilisesd HIL‘IJD 2] 27 Waking wa" |Jacob Astor, 3rd, the irrepressible CABLE AND RADIO REPORTS B Bo s oor IRIEIEIFRRE(LIA] Z 23. Biblical region |Francis Ormond French has writ- YESTERDAY FODAY lamp o |EILIAITIE IR ' 20. Btrong thste |ten his book after all. Highest 4o.m. Lowestdam. 4am. Preclp. 4am. wool Jackets 6 00 and u ;tgg&;." SHREIL| Muses Mr. French, who once drove a| Station temp. temp. | temp. temp. velocitv 24hrs. Weather [ p | character 32 i B taxi for a living and attended a| Atka 34 34 | 32 32 24 .22 Snow % e in 3. Br;::{:m into” |taxi drivers' ball for pleasure, be-| Anchorage TR e sk. Pamgs $6 95 il s obeyea e W L |ins his “revelations” i the De-| ‘Bastow a1 Bl i A ‘ <3 B 20. hclsverln‘ 4. Moving in k;gwn LA whion, »f'e;ubex issue of Town and Coun- g(otnhel ;g .13 \ .;Qfl, _;3 : g Glear | on sailed | e - - -32 -3 lear | o 1 O e " T'ihiiea’ 1 Native metal- rmmmfl o | HP had announced in July that| Fairbanks ;18 -3¢ | -3 -28 4 Trace Snow SROW S%fiifi:’é $4o75 33!(1 u? N e ol ot Bl ompetna CFoid or °° | he had.yielded to the entreaties of| Dawson . N AT 0 0 oudy | 3. King Arthur's 49, Toward the 2 Junner | his family and decided not to pub-| St. Paul 34 % boosad 96 4 0 Clear 36 sy‘;'fifi?ror S % Articlmiot |lish the book, but here it is, under| Dutch Harbor 34 34 | 23 28 6 16 Pt. Cldy P w°ol Ca S 7Sc (o hmenie 50 Crlspcookde | el |the title of, “The Newport Idea.”| Kodiak 32:. 38 22 Ap foma o TNge Clear e 15 Shiient explosion " decorator It's a-mild title, for originally he| Cordova 36 34 | 32 36 8 10 Rain TR - had intended calling it “The Cess-| Juneau 81 vk 3588 1“3 Rain % to $Esm§ / pool.” | sitka e ARG IR e PR R g R o / It doesn’t take long for Mr. F‘rcnch‘ Ketchikan . 40 36 36 40 16 54 Rain ' ! Gg // // to state his theme. He doesn'| Prince Rupert .40 40 | 36 40 32 28 S | 00 H0Ves //// care much for society. Recording| Edmonton LR TR BT T 6 0 Clear | a conversation he had with his son-| Seattle 48 42 1 36 36 4 20 Clear to $l 25 in-law over the wisdom of publish-| Portland 50 46 40 40 6 06 C]d\.} . ing, the book, he says: i San Francisco 56 54 | 50 50 6 06 Rain | ) “I tried to make Jack understant New York 46 40 32 36 14 0 Pt. Cldy ! waaicap andscars " something that has been a jug-! Washington 48 40 | 30 32 4 0 Cldy ¢ - gernaut in my life ever since I was| WEATHER COND]TION AT 8 A. M. TODAY i sets sl zs to $l 75 barn-sio; Ayoubishnesgivt Ameri- | Seattle, foggy, temperature, 32; Blaine, clear, 30; Vancouver, @ » can smart society. i clear, 30; Alert Bay, clear, 36; Bull Harbor, cloudy, 37; Dead Tree . | Butter Snobbish Point, arining; Prince Rupert, raining, 40; Ketchikan, raining, 40; And-to take the socially regis-| oraig, raining, 42; Wrangell, raining, 40; Petersburg, raining, 3. tered down a peg he reports that| gitka, snowing, 34; Soapstone Point, raining, 36; Cordova, raining, 34: many homes they formerly occu-: Chitina, cloudy,. -2; McCarthy, cloudy, -2; Cape St. Elias, partly pled are now the mansions of | cloudy, 39; Anchorage, snowing, 9; Fairbanks, snowing, -24; Nenana “newborn snobs” of a“”-del"'fl*-‘ cloudy, -20; Hot Springs, cloudy, -36; Tanana, clear, -52; Ruby, clea sion days, including a former butler| _46: Nulato, clear, -42; Kaltag, cl -40; Unalakleet, clear - -39; Ohogamute, cloudy, -10; Crooked Creek, clear, Lined Leather Gloves who maintains the tradition of | pa¢ clear flflfll% -- snobbishness of refusing to receive i | only employes of the best famil- WEATHER SYNOPSIS @lik and wool V7] . // '. ies. Low barometric pressure prevailed this morning throughout Al- [>4 a-- It adds: | aska and over the northeastern portion of the North Pacific Ocean, “I have never been able to see| theer being two storm areas of marked intensities, one centered over why a Vanderbilt or a French was| the southern portion of the Gulf of Alaska, the lowest reported inherently any better than a Jones.| pressure being 28.60 inches, and another storm centered a short dis- Hose /i Il///fll ’ & { I didn't see it when my father's| tance south of the Rat Islands, the lowest reported pressure in that 1 45c to $l°25 ! sister, Elsie French, married Alfred| vicinity being 2840 inches. Low pressure also prevailed over the — - Gwynne Vanderbilt, vicinity of Lower California. High pressure prevailed over the Pa- “No more couid I see it when| cific Ocean in the vicinity of the Hawaiian Islands and for some S!(i socks soc allll 75c G MEN M A KE Back tfl New Ym‘k my daughter, Ellen Tuck French,| distance northeastward, the crest being 30.60 inches. Precipitation has married John Jacob Astor. I told| been reported over the coastal regions from the Aleutians southeast- Tucky then, ‘if you love Jack and| ward to northern British Columbia, also over portions of the Tan- [ | | | ] really want to marry him, then I'l| ana Valley and California, while fair weather prevailed over the Kus- s 9 S0 I St s il A i Bl i e S S T S i L S Ues E er help you all I can.” kokwim and lower Yukon valleys, and over the Seward Peninsula H t The first installment, illustrat-; Gales were reported over Dixon Entrance and the British Columbia B. M . Behrends CO; ll’lC. 1] ed with pictures of the society| coast. i n uue[ ena greats of past and present, tells of | Cold weather was reported over the interior and western portions . his school and college days and his| Of Alaska, the lowest reported temperature being 52 below at Tanana. i | difficulties in matching his meager| — B s TR > I s < T e = ‘ spending money With the Iuxury|people,” he said. “They're on their| Bobby Jones says goif is 75 Gun hl‘e, Tear Gas and il\::‘.i:v Y(;ARIT L:flcmnisn R:s:;;: his ramlly seemed accustomed t0.)toes and the noise and rush is good | cent mental and that any person ‘,, i '’ . 1o ors all co. 5 no i R Ty for your health.” who can master the rudiment ! ' s " oL 8 s of ] Juneau's Leading Department Store Grenades Used to Cap | will see the address, “Couer d'Alenc, man beer garden across the street Bl swing and conquer the mental haz- 3 ture Suspect ITdaho” with tne familiar figure of might have had something to do| ards of the game, can score in (i | Charles Hopper in their newspa- with it,” said Hooper. “So I wrote| Four hundred peasants are home- | 70s. PRt SN EIARNEIR NS O MO SO 0O SO R SRS I OO S OO O WS M W O NEW YORK, Dec. 15—Federal pers. a letter about that, to the old New | less and receiving State: g follow= 55 s S R RO AT Agents blasted an upper west side| For Hopper, who estimates he has York Herald and it was printed. (N8 a fire which destroyed the en-| The New York Giants were lead- apartment for 45 minutes early this| written 78,000 letters in newspapers Hooper was graduated from the ur_e Vl”?‘ée of Tohomen in northern ing passers of the National football FASCIST COLUMN IN MARCH ON MADEID morning 'in a siege in which gun-!in every country of the world, Union Theological Seminary in ASia Minor. league in 1935. Y 2 \fire, tear gas and hand grenades, returned recently to his native 1906. e Brunette, 25, desperado, and wound- stay after nearly 24 years in the said, “but I conceived the idea of ed his wife. | Far West. deing my work through letter col- J. Edgar Hoover was leader of the' Hooper said he loathed every umns.” attack. He s head of the G-Men.|minute of the time he was away In January, 1913, Hooper went T “ E R E I s w l N 'r R Y Brunette, according to Hoover, islfmm New York. But he didn't say West to stay. In Spokane, Seat- wanted for the kidnaping of a New anything about giving up the “vo- fle, and San Francisco he slept in ' Jersey State Trooper and for acation” he adopted years ago on furnished rcoms and worked in wE A T H E R A “ E A D . number of bank robberies in the|writing to editors. foundries, freight yards and apple P Middle West. Hooper, a mild-mannered little orchards. i Mrs. Brunette was wounded in[bachel()r with a white goatee, told Hooper went to Couer d'Alene 10' K"“ ve “"thr""i to fear from rain and snow if you the thigh. | how he happened to write his first years ago and began his work in| eep your feet protected. DEVLIN'S galoshes ‘and Hundreds of residents were arous- | letter to a newspaper when he was earnest. rubbers keep them snugly warm and dry. 3 ed during the siege and firemen | 17. ¥ Hooper said he ‘“never liked | ' were ‘called out to extinguish a fire| A drinking fountain his great Westerners” and used to say “goils” caused by hand grenades which set uncle, John Hooper, a bank Presi- for “girls” and sing New York the Brunette apartment ablaze. |dent, gave to New York in 1896, songs so he wouldnt forget his New | | was turned off one day. York accent. Try an'Empire ad. “It occurred to me that a Ge1- ‘Hele my heart goes out to thl’ : NOTICE OF DELINQUENT TAXES pii FAMIY [ On Real Property in the Town of Douglas City, Alaska TO WHOM IT MAY CONCERN: Easy to Easy to Notice is hereby given that the Delinquent Tax Roll of Real Property for the Town of Douglas City, . Look at Wear Alaska, for the year 1936 has been completed, and is now open for inspection at the office of the City Clerk, | ] and that the same will be presented to the District Court for the Territory of Alaska, Division No. 1, on! A ] the 18th day of January, 1937, for adjustment and order of sale. The following is the Delinquent Tax Roll L BRAND NEW SHIPMENT IN | ALL THE NEW ' List to-date, November 21, 1936. | Tax Roll Amount i No. To Whom Assessed Description of Property of Tax Penalty Total Marching in broken ranks with the insurgent flag at the head of the column, these Fascists are shown 3 Mrs. Mary Doogan.....House and Lot 3, Blk. 1 3 $ 24.00 $ 240 $ 2640 on a road leading to Madrid and further battle with the government forces amndlnn the Spanish capitals Lot 6, Blk. 1 .. - 1.20 12 132 (Associated Press-Paramount News Photo) Lot 8, Blk. 1 .. 80 .08 88 | AR e e R S L AL v D A House and Lot 4, BIk. 12 15.00 . 150 16.50, TYLES! L | 35 Jimmie Jackson House and Lot 5, Blk. 2 . 14.00 140 15.40 | S H ° Field work has averaged eight porary seaplane port sa as to obvi-| ¢ Joe Kendler ... House, Shed and Lot 5, Blk, 7 14.00 140 15.40 awau’'s hours a day for many years. The ate the necessity of flying over the Lot 6, BIK. 7 ... 5.00 50 550 SELECT Youns change, therefore, effects about Naval Base at Pearl Harbor. House and Lot 2, Blk. 15 13.00 130 14.30 Labo 11,000 workers, especially in the plan- 48 Pacific Protective So- | ’ r tation mills where three shifts will | . clety, care L. W. Kil- ; While Sizes Are Complete! be required to operate the machin-| Bigger Vegetables burn_ ... Buildings and Lot 7, BIk. 7. 25.00 250 2750 | Reform ery during grinding season when the 65 House and N.W. % Lot 2, Blk. 10 .. 7.00 0 .70 —— ] mills run 24 hours a day. | BEOKLEY, W. Va—H. L. Mas- House and Lot 1, Blk. 13 28.00 2.80 3080 With Hawaii developing into a Sey of Ghent says he grows cham- e g . 190, B o o T s PFifty thousand rural workers in MAI0r center of trans-Pacific avia- |Pion vegetables. He exhibited & at 13 Bnpl‘l-!‘m«._.A ::gg g 2%" e e ienous ion, the Territory has requested |five-pound turnip, & two-pound Po-| 7e vrie pusieh . ot SSRA A 1 Bk : Federal relief funds to the amount |tato and a three-pound carrot. - 5 > BIK. A Comp ete Line in Both y on January 1 as a result of reso- | mns adopv;yd by the trustees of of $1,900,000 for airport facilities. | R o R Hawaiian Sugar Planters’ Associa- Plans are being laid so as to make3 The Chagres River i in Panama. tion and recommended to the As- POS ble the diversion of commer-| Some specles of moths are active soeiation’s memhe{ plantations. cial aig traffic from the present tem- | by day, othu' by night. l%ifigim’ig’i e d?g’ Garage and Lot 2, Blk. 19 Residence and Lot N. % 3, Blk. 19 . House and Lot S. % 3, Blk. 19 Lot 1, Blk. 24 . Store Bldg. and Lot 7, Blk 46. Store Bldg. and Lot 8, Blk. 46 Bar Fixtures, Range and Equipment. Brown and Black. HOUSE SHOES Bal, Due .. 135.00 1350 14850 Cabin and Lot 8, Block 26 500 - 50 550 ; 1% i e Sl e 8 & i A Varisty of Styles 3 juanzon .House an ), Blk. X 3 i s 52.00 5.20 5720 and Prices. 5.00 50 550 200 b 220 OPEN EVENINGS W will bitve our el - e e UNTIL CHRISTMAS large supply of Flowers 200 2 e and Plants for Christmas. gfi gg ;:g i I i| DEVLIN'S 5.00 50 5.50 \ 5.00 50 5.50 : . Juneau Florists Shattuck Bldg. Phone 311 Across from Pay’'n Takit Witness my hand and official seal 31st day of November, A. D. 1936. G. BURR JOHNSON, City Clerk.

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