The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, January 8, 1937, Page 2

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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, FRIDAY, JAN. 8, 1937. The ate chamber. ate, content - - lllllllllllllIllllIMIlIIHIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlllllllhllllllllllllll|IIIIIIII||]|HIIHlflllllIII|I\ImlII|IIIIIIHIIIIIIIII}IIII!I|lllmlllll-|lllIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIlfl s s W At ey bt install any. Lean Harvests, War Scare SEN. COPELAND |[5¥ rici ity oo i o nmuuuummmmuuunm|umuuuuuu||||wmuummmu|l||||l||||||||||||||||u||u1mu||||||||muummm||||||mmm|mmnu||||nmulumuumul.w COCHRANSERVED Scientists Are | *° " pon pomeruams wevmsa sossaw | 5 ] ‘ THE WEATHER - = ! = = f fl t (By the U. S. Weather Bureau, ] —1 Forecast for Juneau and vicinily, Icyincing at 4 p.m., Jan. 8: = - Rain or snow tonight and Saturday;moderate southeast winds. = = | LOCAL DATA = E r “ ma""e Time Barometér Temp. Humidity Wind Velocity Weather = = |4 pm. yesty 3037 35 79 SE 14 Lt. Rain = =| |4 am. today 20.78 7 84 SE 16 Lt. Rain = = PHILADELPHIA, Jan. 8.—A New | noon today 2967 34 8 ; « = =‘Sen3101 flOm Nome Staun‘:h land thrilling chapter soon is to be| g W % B 2 L i = | Democrat and Author- |aaced to the saga of man's ceaseless | OABLE AND RADIO REPORTS = ¥ . thirst after knowledge of the earth YESTERDAY TFODAY t = ; | = | ity on Mining Law (50000 i Highest 4pm. | Lowestdam. fam. Precip. 4am. 9 = ! : 1‘ FHMN of Rep- “Fl()n'lv this clfy a party of scxen—‘ Station temp. temp. temp. temp. velocity 24hrs, Weather = A member of the tists will depart for the West In-|Atka 4 @ 4 a4 3 0 Clear = ‘rcfll‘x\!’“l' es during ”;*‘l:f:]‘atfi‘e' dies to conduct a series of under- Anchorage . 40 — b S, 4 12 [y &= | i sion of the Territoria 8 " | water experiments of singular na- Barrow . i 24 8 -4 -4 14 0 Clear = Every item listed is specially priced for this sale, and all are exceptional values. & |’ b’ cochran wi be in the thir-| e In's submarine, deep i sub- Nome - o A R S = 15 addition to the items mentioned we offer many more items at bargain prices, E |teenth session as a member of the | y,pica waters, members of the Bethel i 26 16 18 4 0 Cldy g 0 il d 1111011 J Ul E‘Q"MLL $ 12r(mp will make gravity measure- Fairbanks 32 30 24 2¢ 8 10 Pt. Cldy El e &=| Representing the Se m‘f‘d "“:‘0“ |ments in the study of how moun- Dawson “af g 44 . 2 0 18 Sisar v = == Senator Cochran comes from lome ¥ e} 1 d s k to deter- H 9 = % \ . . = ¢ , i tains are built and seek to deter- St. Paul . 38 38 | 34 40 22 0 Cldy = Waitresses’ ! Women’s Rayon ! Women's Rayon £ vhere he has made his home since |y, the exact shape of the earth. Duch Harbor .. 40 40 40,46 16 08 . Clear! = f { A = E he first came to A’]“‘ a ‘“b ; At the head of the expedition, Kodiak | SRR TR | Wi 16 04 Clear = o o ‘ ' v ts staunch Democrat, he has been ac-| ). js sponsored by the American Cordova 38 34 ¥ 3 4 152 Cldy = Whlte unifol'ms I} unlon su‘ts i es 5 tive in ¢he affairs of his Party|pyjjosophical Society, American Ge- Juneau 8y 35 F e ] 16 41 Rain ., o = ! { @8 | through many Y“"‘; = | ophyscical Society, and the U. S. Sitka 41 1 32 = i 05 v i = B K . ; = senator Coch uring his long s £ D 3 - = P R o £ § orted colors and si: &= Senalc Navy’s hydrographic office, is Dr. Ketchikan 32 32 32 36 8 12 Rain = Odd Sizes { Sizes 32 to 42 Ass €C. COIOIS ANA SIZ8S = years as an attorney in Nome has | nuivice Ewing, assistant professor Prince Ruperf .. 30 30 | 32 38 2 3 Pt clay = . { i k \ 4 = come to be regarded as an author- |, pnysics at Lehigh University. Edmonton ... 18 18 3.8 406 Clear = ac“ ! Eor or .oo = iy on mining law. His ability 8| acichine are Lieut, A, J. Hoskinson, Seattle o o ¥ % e = . | 1 his ularity among | 5 = ! ! E at, and popularity lof the U. S. Coast and Geodetic Portland T R B T ey 0 Clear u = ! { - who know him Is universal. ¢|Survey, and Dr. H. H. Hess, instruc- San Francisco ... 44 44 2 3 6. 0 Clar = ) §=| Senator Cochran brought no Pet | (or in geology at Princéton Univer- New York .. 46 40 38 40 16 53 4 Cldy e e g‘lvmslntion to Juneau. His only|wry Wi Ry s % o Sl = g ’ ¥ comment was that he was opposed| my0 " lan to shove off ; = ., Children’s Women's c [vs ptomisctos ABINOBHARSNY t |, e s Do e ANe wai WEATHER CONDITION AT 8 A. M. TODAY = N ckw Ew he Territory and believed that it,|n..ine Barracuda, and, swarting at Seattle, partly cloudy, temperature, 17; Blaine, clear, 13; Victoria, | = Wool Gloves € eal ; like a well regulated family, should | Tyjnided. will measure fhq accelera- CIeaT, 20; Alert Bay, clear, 36; Buil Harbor, eloudy, 32; Langara Isl- _— E 1 thin its income. |tion of force and gravity of a half and, raining, 42; Prince Rupert, raining, —; Ketchikan, raining, 33; = : s s 5 = me and the Seward Peninsula |poiaveq stations along the islands Craig, misting, 35; Wrangell, raining, 35; Petersburg, snowing, 34; - 4 E » had a prosperous season, Sen- tching toward Puerto Rico. Sitka, foggy, 34; Soapstone Point, raining, 38; Juneau, raining, 35; Palr 3 2 X & = wran said. Mining has Many fathoms below the ocean Cape St. Elias, clear, 40; Cordva, clear, 33; Chitina, cloudy, 32; = B e e : R rax 41 =d recently and will steadily |, face members of the group hope McCarthy, snowing, 30; Anchorage, partly cloudy, 25; Fairbanks, clear, = { BY THE YARD £ increase during succeeding ¥ears. | o obtain comparative records of the 14; Nenana, clear, 14; Hot Surings, clear, 17; Tanana, clear, -6; Ruby, R e e e i Women S & = wator Cochran brought the sad ¢/ .o or the attraction which the ¢loudy, 16; Nulato, clear, -6; Ohagamute, foggy, 20; Flat, cledr, 15. & = . = that J. P. Daly, former mem-{eqyih exerts on a unit of mass at WEATHER SYNOPSIS = Women's z sllk scar“ ShOI't Lengths = of the Tf"r‘_“’""l Legislature | yisopent points. This information A storm area was charted this morning off the coast of South= « = ° E‘“"" well-known in Juneau, iS s€-|.., pe gathered, Dr. Ewing ex- east Alaska, the lowest reported pressure being 20.50 inches. The = Fabrlc Gloves { Assorted Styles £ | viously 1ll in the hospital at Nome. | .in0q, by measuring the time of a barometric pressure was also low over the upper Yukon and lower = ! E8 a = | As to more news, the I-fg‘smmr'?:qn-ndulum swing. MacKenzie valleys. The pressure was high and rising over western = H ! . eaeh &5 |onsthing about himself, Senator|™ qprough this study of the vari- Alaska. High pressure continued over the Pacific Coast from the = Palr ¢ i E i’ h"‘d little to say. lous gravitational pulls in different Aleutians southeastward to California, the crest being 30.80 inches = § = His chief concern today was re-|geciions it is belleved possible to over the Pacific Ocean at latitude 44 degrees and longitude 140 de- = { E’“‘“” ing the arrival of his fellow |jo,n ghout the crust of the earth grees. Fair and cold weather continued over the Pacific Coast States, = ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,V,,,,_,,,w,,-,-fl¢~-««-m«»m—»mn«w | Legislators from the Second, Third iy the area, and earlier measure- the following temperatures having been reported at 5 am., P. 8. T, = " !‘w _} = ond Fourth Divisions, several of |ments nave shown an important 20 degrees at Seattle, 16 at Portland, and 32 at San Francisco. San = Prlnts and Perca es ¥ = “)f""‘_ have "’““_ oon the local | o relation between abnormal gra- Francisco reported a heavy frost at 5 am. Precipitation was re- i = gatnering 'OF (1NN _|vitational pulls and the occurence pored over the eastern and southern portions of Alaska while gen- g = = |of voleanoes and earthquakes, erally fair weather prevailed over the western portion. s = Short Lengths == |lands bills we found also that| The proposed study is intended It was warmer last night over Southeast Alaska and much cold- = Ba side s o ga % g% E Baby" Senator Holt introduced the|to shed light upon the mechanism er over the northwestern portionof the Territory. f = oc y é&fi 601e“s l 3 o“ == fewest bills last Congress. '[hf‘l("l‘l\ol\(‘d in the crustal activities of L -} = — = |was just one, seeking to investigate the earth which result in mountain 7] jers onto our place, Ted her = 2 Z wpa in West Virginia which Holt building and other major changes - Self-Educated” Dog vk gl ’ = = ' |5 home. He's a self-educated dog. = e e S s crrerrrorrerereoeee. == Charges has been converted into a|in the earth's surface. 4 M.i d F ?, s k ————————— S e gea e Ge et fap i MR OTTTR == |political machine by his colleague, L | nds Farmer's dtoc = = |scnator Necly. Neely introduced 3 s, Diell, Denen’ ur; Leanardviling Z Visit the Upstairs Department —Take advantage of the January Housewares Sale = |55 The It senator Long in., A black widow spider kept in & pINDLAY. O, Jan. 8, — When a|KaS mother of nine children, says = Z= | troduced nine bills, and Mrs. Long, bottle at Beaumont, Tex. proved fractious cow defies pasture fences|She 15 “1ost.” It's the first time in { ot rhatodh A e B i S 0 525 AR o7 B e gt = who finished out for him, threc|itS hardiness. Tt lived nine weekS , Oren Altman's farm near hele.!35 years she hasn't had a child in = = ‘more. without food and during that Hme Ajtman does not even bother to go|SCH0L ~Her youngest graduated = g - Wy i i | =5| senator Robinson, majority lead-|SPun @ Web and hatched several iy search of her, because Ted, col-|[TOM high school in 1636. = ‘o i : { : ===‘(=r put in 100. Tops among the Sen- | S¢0re young spiders. lie dog, belonging to his daughter, = == late freshmen was Senator Schwel- Rt rounds up the strays without or-| The Indian paintbrush is the = ° Y 3 .’ @ = lenbach of Washington with 110, Scientists believe lice originated der | State flower of Wyoming. i = == Senator Bilbo of Mississippi had 15, about the time birds and reptiles “He makes the cows, horses and | R T A 0N ST PG : 1 = e y ==, and the last one of which proposed differentiated into different ani- chickens ‘toe the line,’ " says Alt-| Colorado’s official State bird is ' = ]uneau Leaqu Department Store” ==7installing loud speake.s in the Sen-|mals. man, “and if a neighbor's cow wan- the lark bunting. i Fifty per cent of Missouri’s farm | Y ® /land is handled by tenants operat- CAUSTIC ’ THRIFTY 9 uxkes to be called doctor) and a ws Of Short term leascs, says M. F. WEEKLY FOOD > » er, professor of soils at the Boost (;rum Pru es in’36 VERY PROLIFIC Sl o e MR St COMMENTS xews I} e | A slight earthquake in the early construction of the Golden Gate bridge at San Francisco rocked the d into running for Mayor of New “In the wheat trade, there has ’yqu City if conditions were right |been a marked change from condi- tions prevalent for the past several| By JOHN P. BOUGHAN Associated Press Market Editor BILL - PLUGGER « et B R A ’Vewsnaper thm a Nc'uspaper CHICAGO, 11, Jan. 8—With grain years. As the result of small crops, |746-foot towers so much that the 2 & A o harvests of the world below normal|in some of the important preducing While we were looking up Cfllfl-;“’mkmen became ill. i and war-worried nations hoarding nations for two or three years, the Dunng ]_,ast Congress New R | ’IHL IRIENDLY STORE Friday, Jan. 8, 1‘)34. THE FRIENDLY STORE every available bushel of cereal,|tremendous surplus that hung over| ? B Yorker Introduced 420 Measures world markets has been reduced to| a point of the closest adjustment of supply and demand since 1926-5 prices of the principal grains pushed steadily higher throughout 1936 The world’s supply of many cer- Daily Cross-word Puzzle NUBORA Good thoughts are like per-| TRUE AND FALSE Merked Change Over Past Presid B n el out th: t y point the kets of Chi- cago and the 1ave func- Engineering Department University of Illinois of Copeland talks in a conversational almost devoid of- any the monotone, He holds an au- In predicting. that farmers equip- sprightly lines. IIIIII// IIIIII L] 7 flll// III 7 | Red: “Do you have any trouble Tall Cans—Flavored with Cheese and Rastus: “I'se franchized you don’t organize him. He’s de most confiscated man in our whole (SR ) tioned smooth! far under the ping their properties for electricity dience in the Senate, however, be- with>Shalt sid' ‘witl'” Tomato Sauce , Commodity Exchange Act, which be- Wwill realize a hgh interest on their cause his bills usually are loaded| P47 ////” ’/ 7 fl. 4 Doc: No; my wife says, ‘You om0t ot T g came operative the middle of Sep- investment, Lehmann says records With legislative pins and needles for i //’/// L4 // shall; and I say ‘I will'” 2 ‘0[‘ zsc 2 | tember ‘There has been an a indicate there will be 1,000,000 high- fellow members. Almost every Sen- flflfl.//fl..//fi | i sence in 1936 he says line-electrified farms in the country ator had a letter or telegram Irom‘ // | ] tacular market tactics, which in oth- by the beginning of 1937 somebody important at home de-| |57 .a /// —_— i er years and under conditions sim- >es manding changes in the food and / 7 ilar to those which developed this There is one death to every r drug bill. Same with ship subsidy. year because of drought damage, lion passeng = Even more so with flood control. .. ; would undoubtedly have caused vio- lent price fluctuations disturbing statistics eve railroad His legislative virtuosity amazes passenger- Newspapermen who can’t understand eals dropped to record low levels | ACROSS Solution of Yesterday’s Puzz|, 8. English | Wheat stocks, for example, were re-| Losses in Corn and Oats WASHINGTON, Jan. 8. — Peoplel, 1. Scuttle 9 o LR (i h';:fi::":fl:‘“: The Perfect Washi The following correction ap- cently reported shorter than at any Heaviest crop losses .of 1936, as| Who remember Senator Copeland of i [8 Bhanmz: - . Malarial feve % e t‘iv cle life al e Perfec ashing peared in a small town paper: if time during the past decade outlined by President Boylan, were|New York mainly because he writesf| & Bind the sum ot [FU[L : Baton: e | i Powder “Our paper carried the notice a Wheat, corn, oats and rye quota- o corn, oats and barley. The corn|a health coluin anfl wears a red 1 Age | | LARGE SIZE last week that Mr. John Doe r tions swept to the highest point crop was estimated at 1,527,000,000 carnation in his lapel may be sur-} ¢ Sticky stum ‘ & e is a defective in the police 1 since early in 1929 as the year closed. bushels compared to 2.229,000,000 Prised to learn that he also is the) 15. Peraining ‘to { 0—0—o force. This was a typographical demand from every sectiori of the bushels in 1935; oats made a yield!most ‘prolific bill-plugger in the mankind | 4oc error. Mr. Dee is really a detec- globe contributing to the upturn. of 784,000,000 bushels, a reduction|Senate. Loy on | | tive on the police farce.” = Farmers Profit [from 1835 of 413,000,000 bushels.| During the past Congress he in- Jgenal | ATt e ST 6 Robert B. Boylan, president of the| The production of barley was cut|troduced 420° bills, ‘almost double o Beneath this-stonie lies Murphy | Chicago Board of Trade, said that| from 282,000,000 bushels in 1935 to|the 240 of his nearbst competitor,| 20. Device for They buried him today. | BABBIT e farmers reveived the major por-|144,000000 bushels this year. Senator Sheppard of Texas. Totary to Tonth fox M6 dived A IS0 Hiley ! tion of the higher price level | Despite heavy losses in the north-| Copeland's bills, like those of oth- direct “purtenance TihE SV Wan kway. | “Although a disastrous visitation | west—spring wheat yield being only |er Semators; are made up mostly of [ 23, Central male i M’.,‘";‘,;,f“u,,. CLEANSER ! of drought over large areas of nor-|108,000,000 bushels compared to 159- | “private” bills coneeried with mi-| . character a5 sJlorce f WHAT HE NEEDED mally productive farm lands,” Boy-| 000,000 bushels last year—the total[nor claims, small bridges and har- * “engrave by 35 Soiance ot HEAL P Regular 3 for 25¢ - ¥ . i meahs of 40. Wora: DOWN an’s na ountaincer (taking son to lan states, “again reduced yields of |1936 United States wheat crop was|bor repairs. Aside from those, dots or. 3 Competant o gmpne neme NOW school room): “My boy's arter several cereal crops to a severe ex-| 627,000,000 bushels, or about 4,000,-|howevef, he probably has more big Short lines 46, Spakeciike fish s"fif.",:f"‘ 42 Devour | larnin’ rw";'z'.'h"ey youy;ol"" tent, increased prices have made up 000 bushels more than in 1935. irons in the fire at once time than| 3% GreAgetion #1. Land menive 5 of we moun 4 Frgnz Lissts | ¢ Teacher: “We offer arithmetic for this to a large extent. Tmproved| High and low prices for 1936 grain|any Senator. 0. Fairyiks fesival 3. Kind of fish 44, Dip Water | At SR e Hner hiv ke 4 Eor zsc English, trigonemetry, spelling, general business and the expansion|futures were: = Wheat $1.36% and 85| All during the ‘last Congress he| S 8cereof &~ 63. Right of & Conciiuehin8 o joitem a boat @ after an accident was being w!:' I8 { ? ul» b\‘J_\ln',; ))m\u‘ resulted in fair ‘(‘rnh corn, “.")“, and 52'% cents; lthored with an heir to th_e "Iamed P lnc&'q;;“t”:t"« .55. r?:epmcxe (r:hf;?:f; :3} fi:‘;u\‘]:my | ql:csflmed:.y a policeman. = lv.lnun!aineer: “Just give h"'? prices for farm products during the|03ts 5214 and 26%; rye $116% and|“Tugwell food and drugs bill” pub-|' 37, Race or 66. Beleaguer- 6. Three-toed 50, Grafted: | Married? early months of 1936. And drought|55% lishers disliked. - It failed of passage :rle:::l%: 68. Make laco 7. Drods up AT el Nt Bl e (DAt it Iy VAN CAMP’S e l:\" t:IliM w:l:;t ::{el:m::e- | damage later stmulated zxcLivi(;‘ A conspicuous 1936 development, |but doubtless he will bring it up lants 89 Wild ammal formally or b4 Fooimeonon | the worst fix I was ever in.” % ;"ryh i both in futures and cash grain. = |which President Boylan says prom- |again. # BBme Duten oty e R R v A notable feature of the year is|ises to result in increasing bem’m‘ menn i S - | an | the fact that in all grains, and at to farmers, was the establishment| GETS HEA 7 7] 7, / | i 0—0- ji all times, the cash markets have|on the Clicago Board of Trade of| With equal persistenoe he wor-| -' fli’.fl// . { e BEANS dominated the sitvation rather than|the world’s only futures market for|ried his commerce committee and Z "/ 3 ' 73 any speculative activity. Regardless soy beans | Congress with & ship subsidy bill.] u- /;..-..//.n. > iz of substantial advances in futur > S O S ThAt pied, Bray bl .7 72, Customer: “I want to try that One Pound Size A TRIFLE TWISTED contracts, the cash markets have y for revision®tnis dbssion.” Many ship .-.fl-. / ... chemise on in_the window.” kept ahead Electnclty Foiecast men will ‘hive nose of it. 3 L, //// Flustered Clerk: “Why-er- 3 Enr zsc Mandy: “Rastus, who is dat “Highest prics 1 grain fu- for One Million F The big flood control bill that , '/’ / 22 thank you for your kind offer, wlven} looking gentleman spec- tures. w Yot 6 i ‘the or Une 10N I'arms | ranged in amount at different times / madam, but we are very weH| e 1 sl ulatin’ up and down de aisles year, the general reaching ! | from ' "$2850,000,000 to $700,000,000 256 suited with the display we al- wid @e gold obstacles?” | top levels since 1933 main in- {was another of his pets. The com- ///////fl. ...////// ready have.” CANNED Rastus: “Don’t you organize centive being the persistent absorp-| CHICAGO, Ill, Jan. 8. —Rural merce committee; of which he is him?” tion of cash grain at material pre- electrification will bring a better chairman, had still*others, including “ “.- /fl.fl. Mandy: “No, Ah don’t organ- el miums’ over futures” class of farm tenants, says E. W.|the chain store tax. 0—0—o sPAGnE"l ize him. Ah’s never been pro- N Lehmann, head of the Agricultural, When plugging one of his bills, duced to him.” ] to market eguilibrium, Ik ‘huw so much heavyweight legisla- J

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