Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
BIIIIIIIIIIIII!IIII|illlIIIII|I||I|I|IIIIIII||IIIHIlIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIlllllllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII|IIIIIIIIIIIlIIIIIlIIIIIIIlIIIIIIllIIIIIIfl ‘ CHILDREN’S GARMENTS Greatly Reduced Children’s Coats and Nubby Wool Chinchilla. To Close Out at 1—3 OFF Children’s Woolen Dresses a in Wool Plai Novelty weaves in NO Sizes 8 to 16. A small group of Flannel $4-95 MRS. MAYNARD AND DAUGHTER OF NOME HERE ON WAY SOUTH Mrs. George Md}u.nd, whose hus- band is publisher of the Nome Nug- t, and Miss Mildred Maynard, their daughter, arrived in Juneau today aboard the PAA Electra from Fairbanks. Miss Maynard is secretary to Judge J. H. S. Morrison, of the Second Division District Court, and with her mother is on her way outside on a vacation. They are registered at the Gas- tineau Hotel. BPWC IS GOING TO GIVE DANCE SOON FOR LEGISLATORS The Business and professional ‘Women’s Club has postponed their regular business meeting for tonight and in its plflce thexe will be a meet- ew styles in several c Special $2.50 Cirls’ Bath Robes and Beacon Cloth Robes to sell at woolens. *0lo styles. French Several Union Suits™ for girls and All sizes. boys. s’ Outing Flannel Gowns Special—$1.00 M. Behrends Co. Inc. Juneau's Leading Department Store T TR | ing of committee members to de- cide on the date the club will give . dance for the Legislators, The next regular business meet- ing of the Club will be held. on February 1. A L AUXlLlARY TO MEET ON TUESDAY New members of the American Legion Auxiliary will be initiated tomorrow night at the Dugout ac- cording to President Lucilic Stone- house. A social has been planned to fol- low the business meeting and it is expected that cards will provide the entertainment. The new officers of | the Auxiliary are Lhe hostesses | for the c\ang Kentucky has 8238 miles of roads in its rural primary sy: S el Jordan, Wellsboro, Pa., a golden eagle— Walter trapper, caught rare in his section—in a trap intend- | cd for racoons. ClTRUS GROWERS KEEP VlGlL Woolen Toques Wool Lined Leather Gloves for Children and Misses Special—$1.00 Also Wool Knit Gloves at 25¢ and $1.00 Warm Pajamas In Jersey knit and outing flannel. One and two piece All sizes for boys and girls Special—$1.00 PART-WOOL Underwear THE DAIL\ ALASKA EMPIRE, 75° Mrs. Wi cent topic of conversation in Eng repérted to have joined the Duke Queen Mary, manded the Duke. upset over the incid styles in part-wool $1.15 =iIilllllllllImlllllllIIIIIII!!IIIIlllllllllllmlllllllIIIIIIIII|IIIIIIIIIIIII||||fllllllllllllllllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIH!IIIIIlIlIlIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIII|III|II]IlIIIIIIIIIl|||IIIIIIIIII[II||I||IIllIIIIIIIIIHII!IIIIIIIIII||I|Illlllllll"llll NS ARM DISCOVERED AT DUMP STARTS INVESTIGATION Commissioner and Marshal Probing Discovery of Human Arm This A. M. 1 Following up the report of Churles‘ MEANS PR'SUN D. Johnson, Indian, that he dxscov— ered a human arm among the refuse at the City Garbage Dump this, nmpw YORK, Jan. 18—Edward A morning, U. S. Commissioner FeliX|nretzler, 51 years old, of Brooklyn, Gray and Deputy Marshal John|yho onvicted by a jury last {McCormick, proceeded to the scene|pecember 11 of sending a threaten- | this afternoon. |ing. letter through the mails, has | On arriving there, however, they'psen sentenced by Judge Mortimer | [found that the rising tide had cov-(w. Byers in the Brooklyn Federal ered the spot where the arm was Court to serve two years in a Fed-| found, and they were forced to de-|eral penitentiary. | |fer their investigation until the tide! The indictment against Metzler | | shall have ebbed sufficiently. A‘c;mrged that last September he | Johnson reported that the arm|mailed a letter to Matthew T. looked as though it had lain in the|ray, attorney for the Guaranty Trust| water for not more than two or three | Company of 30 Nassau Street, Man- | days. ‘mnan. saying: “You have robbed | | me of my savings and may cause my ! death, but I will take you with me.” LABOR CONVENTION .‘ f"tlcicntist to send the CONTINUES SESSION %, ‘. : uman voice by radio waves was Vlenmxr Poulson, a Dane crown prince, appeared young beauty, Marta Bocafort of Cuba. MAIL THREAT ( ur- | ( Jn Royal Roml to Romanco’ tiam Allen, former Lor brother of fermer King Edward V This Soundphoto of Mrs. from New York to San Francisco over tcl PRINCE GOES NIGHT-CLUBBING yebrows were raised when the Count of Covadonga, former Spanish at a New York night club with this smiling Miss Joyce Henry, in: | Federal MONDAY, JAN. 18, I937 HOUSE PASSES | 'WOLF.COYOTE j BOUNTY DEFICIT |Deficiency Bill Is Push ed Along—Abgent Lawmak- | ers Arrive for Session | ‘ With its complete |present for the first time this ses- | sion, the 13th Territorial Legislature passed its first bill this afternoon when it approved the deficiency bill, |known as House bill No. 1. The | measure, which calls for $58,000 to | pay deficit in the various {bounty funds, including wolf and coyote, and $1,000 for auditing, now | | |gces to the Senate where it is ex-| | pected to get early action as daily ‘m;p\-uia are being made on the Ter- ritory by those who have bounty money coming. It will take care of | the bounty fund until March when it is probable the Legislature will set up an appropriation for the bi-| ennium in the general appropriation | bill, Reresentative Andrew Nerland of | th membership | | Kodiak {Cordova U. 8. DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE, WEATHKR BUREAU THE WEATHER (By the U. 8. Weather Bureau, Forecast for Juneau and vicinity, beginnin at 4 p. m., Jan. 18. Increasing cloudiness late tonizht, Tuesday partly cloudy to cloudy; moderate easterly winds. LOCAL DATA Temp. Humidity Wind Velocity 21 84 N 3 30.46 2) 91 0 0 3049 2 79 w CABLE AND RADIO REPORTS YESTERDAY FODAY Highest 4p.m, Lowestdam. 4um. Precip. ' 4am. temp. Iemp‘ temp. temp. velocitv 24hrs. Weather 40 40 44 2.14 Rain 12 -16 10 22 -16 -30 36 44 34 24 19 25 26 22 0 34 36 46 Barometer 3025 Time {4 pm. yest'y 4 am. today 12 noon today ‘Weather Clear Clear Clear Statien Atka Attu Anchorage Barrow Nome Bethel Fairbanks Dawson St. Paul Dutch Harbor -10 10 30 12 -14 36 46 35 30 27 16 18 34 16 28 38 44 36 24 20 18 -2 Clear Rain Cloudy Pt. Cldy Pt. Cldy Juneau Clear Sitka Ketchikan Prince Rupert Edmonton Seattle Portland Ean Francisco lome 34 34 2 36 42 26 26 9 34 36 48 50 |the Fourth, and Representatives | |Tolbert Scott and John Lichtenberg | were in their seats this afternoon,| having arrived by plane from the| Interior an hour before the House| convened at 3 p. m. Also arriving| for the session was Senator John| F. Devine of the Second Division One new measure was introduced | in the House today, by Coffey 1nd\ Rogge, calling for the revision of] | the pension hus GILKEY HELD | FOR ROBBERY | OF BEER HALL Confesses when Confronted | by Fingerprint Evidence | on Check, Knife Arrested on suspicion last night by the City Police, in connection with the robbery early last Friday morning of the City Float Beer Parlor, Jim Gilkey, 37, a plumber, has confessed, police reported this afternoon. : Gilkey admitted his guilt when his fingerprints were found to check with those found on the knife the burglar used to gain entry to the Beer Parlor by forcing a door. About $40 was taken by the bur- glar. The U. S. Marshal’s office co-op- erated with the police in checking the fingerprints. Gilkey is now con- fined in the Federal Jail SKETCH WAY i don mannequin, ‘became the re- 1 circies after she was youngest and favorite a visit te a phrenologist. was reported to have repri- Allen was transmitted lish soci of Y Iy ent, in stead of his frequent companion, Associated Press Photo) PITTSBURGH, Jan. 18. — Laszlo GREENE, BRUNELLE T BE GUESTS OF |ouir u w5t carese FEDERAL EMPLOYEES yway out of an enemy pnson CB]’HP in the World War. An Austrian Lieutenant on the Eastern front in 1916, he was cap- |tured by the Russians and intern- ed with 250 other officers in a camp in the Ural Mountains. ‘He helped publish a newspaper, printed from type another prisoner Joe Green, b])unku of the House from Hyder, and M. E. S. Burnelle, President of the Senate, of Cordova, will be the guests of honor at the Employees luncheon on Wednesday noon at the Terminal Cafe. Frank Dufresne, Executive Offi- cer of the Ala Game commission, will give a departmental talk as one of the series being given at the monthly Mcndu\' LGm-rlngs. {by- Gabor’s woodcuts. tention of an official in a nearby town, and Gabor was taken to che PLANE ARRIVALS ARE village to sketch posters. REGISTERED A’ | | A ZYNDA| jan girl who brought him a genu- Arriving in Juneau this afternoon |INe Passport to copy. aboard the PAA Electra, Represen-| With the forged papers and a tative Tolbert Scott, nis daughter [ViVer steamer passage booked by Miss Margaret Scott, Representa-(the girl, he reached Ufa, got aid tive John Lichtenberg, all of Nome, |from the Danish Consul, and final- and Representative Andrew Ner- |ly made his way across the German land, of Fairbanks, are registered at |border, then to Ausi the Zynda Hotel. e With the roll call of the delegates already seated and the credentials| | of the Juneau Lumber and Sawmill | Workers local 2683 examined and !the delegates seated, committees gave their reports in the fourth |day of the All-Alaska Labor Con-| | vention this afternoon. The convention was turned over to They btunned the 400 1TALLAPOOSA NOW ON in Juneau by the Customs |the U.S.C.G. Tallapoosa is now on |her way back to Juneau, having left }Unal aska this morning. | cloudy, -6; MéCarthy, clear, |dy, 2; Ruby, snowing, 9; Nulato, srowing, 6; Ohagamute, - TO FREEDOM |carved from wood, and illustrated ' That enterprise attracted the at- ' He won the friendship of a Rus- WAY BACK TO JUNEAU According to a message received | Office, | The Tallapoosa called at St. Paul | discussion of what were called “po- | litical” prisoners, among them being | McNamarra, Warrén K. Billings and i |Tom Mooney. i Others are King, Ramsey and Con- ‘nors of the Modesto case, Leo Gal- {ligar of the International Labor De- | fense, in California, Ray Becker, in !the State of Washington and Durk | Dejohn. Resolutions are to be sent by the | convention protesting the imprison- 'ment of all these men and urging }fihelr rélease. 'BARBARA WINN HAS " RETURNED TO HOME | LA | Miss Barbara Winn, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Grover C. Winn, re- turned to her Juneau home aboard lone of the PAA planes from Fair- > =555 - | banks. This scene was typical of many when Southern California growers | Miss Winn made the trip from Ju- battied a freeze in the coldest weather in 16 years in the citrus belt. |neau to Point Barrow on the Nortn It shows Verne Jobe, Covina grower, with h + wife and child when they |gtar and on return to Nome flew brought him a midnight lunch while he tei ~¢d smudge pots in their to Pairbanks where she has been orange grove. (Associated Press Photo) attending the University of Alaska.' |Tsland January 16, picked up three \members of radio operator Fulk’s | family there, and left again on the morning of the 16th at 11:28 o'clock. | Before returning to Unalaska, the |cutter called at St. George Island. R | DOTSOI\ ACQUITTED | Jehn (James) Dotson of Eagle River, arrested last week on a charze |of allegedly threatening the person lof J. L. Johnson, was tried this| morning before U.S. Commlsslcme‘ | Felix Gray, and was acquitted. i ey 4 o TR 1 Dallas, Tex., second largest city in |the United States to install parking meters on a large scale, collected $138,023 from them the first year. - An Indian village with more than' 150 fireplaces and a burial ground was uncovered recently by workmen on a WPA archaeological project near Williamsport, Pa. JES S (" Reports from California experts say insects destroy more timber than lumbering and forest fires. William Rhinelander Stewart, for some, years comsidered the richest and most eligible bachelor of New York’s upper erust, was married quietly | to the former Mrs. Newbold Ryan, shown with him in this picture. Pre- | dictions that the couple would wed were met with strenuous denials from both. Stewart is one of New York’s wealtiifest bluebloods. i Cloudy Rain Cloudy New York Washington 46 46 46 50 38 38 36 52 WEATHER CONDITION AT 8 A. M. TODAY Seattle, cloudy, temperature, Blaine, clear, 24; Victoria, cloudy, 132; Alert Bay, clear, 35; Bull Harbor, clear, 37; Triple Island, clear, Langara, clear, 34; Prince Rupert, tlear, 27; Ketchikan, clear, 26; Craig, clear, 30; Wrangell, clear, 20; Petersburg, cloudy, 8; Sitka, cloudy, 2! Soapstone Point, cloudy, 32; Radioville, cloudy, 29; Juneau, clear, 19; Skagway, clear, 5; Anchorage. cloudy, 18; Cordova, cloudy, 27; Chitinc -14; Cape St. Elias, cloudy, 34; P'urbmk 10; Hot Springs, ¢loudy, 10; Tanana, clou- raining, 25; SEee®S o cloudy; -7; Nenana, cloudy, Flat, snowing, 27. WEAT!IEIi SYNOPSIS gh barometric pressure prevailed this morning from Barrow and the MacKenne Valley southwestward to the Hawaiian Islands, there being two crests, one at Dawson where a pressure of 30.60 inches wa reported, and the second over the Pacific Ocean at latitude 46 degrecs and longitude 150 inches, where a pressure of 30.90 inches prevaile Between these two high pressure aieas was a “saddle” formation, ex- tending from Cordova southeastward to Juneau. Low pressure pre vailed over the Bering Sea region and the Aleutians, the lowest reps ed pressure being 29.60 inches at Atka. Low pressure continued over the Pacific Northwest States. This general pressure distribution has beea attended by precipitation over the Bering Sea region, the Pacific Coast States, and western Alaska, and by generally fair weather over the lumainder of the field of observation. It was much colder last night over the interior of Alaska and over 'the upper Yukon Valley and slightly warmer over the Bering Sea re- gion. Warmer weather will prevail over the interior of Alaska tonight. TEN NEW NAMES ARE DRAWN FOR GRAND JURY T 0 M 0 R R 0 W Some Luf those prevfm\my drawn are unable to report for duty cue Ten more names were drawn to-to lack of transportation. day for the Grand Jury which con- — > venes in Federal District Court to-| John Roderick Clark, middle-agod morrow. Names of the jurors drawn civil servant, was sent to jail for this afternon follow: six months at Edinburgh for stealing N. J. Bavard, William Busch, Alto 570 books from four-cent librari Feero, Annie Gair, Mike George A. Getchell, Mrs. G. Josgen- sen, Fred Newman, Mrs. John New- marker and Wilbur Wester. Daily Cross-word Puz=le 7 8. Worker in mof Crescent= shaved Romnn weight Late: Solution of Saturday's Puzzle [STAIC] llfilfiii ACROSS Spherical . Slopes Broad thorough- 9. N comb, form Amarh:l.n are Coliection of Tare or In- teresting objects on display . Strike a base- ball with- out swinging the bat 16. Dilute Unclose: ) Unpleasantly odorous . Minced dish . Outbuildings . Table utensil poetic . Singing . Struggle Paths S : NSEIG [ Substance used to gt 5 curdle milk eCur es N Less difficult R O ument Large bird . . Multitude stiftly proper . Hire 5. Press . Number . Symbol for tantalum At home 40. Exclamation 54, Glyes oft apor 41. One Indefinitely ;- o Vapor, | 42. Small quarrels DOWN 1 Turyfd—down coflar . Trick 46. Daughter of 2. Seeds 3. Canvas Cadmus sheller . Iron corrosion 50. Lens-shaped d ” ‘5;. The Greek N . Silkworm Take from 1 ll%flll L E N Jamm i anmm THE HOME GROCERY AMERICAN MEAT CO. ANNOUNCES That TOM HUTCHINS is now employed by us as MANAGER of the AMERICAN MEAT CO. | Gavril,’