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- : - < | | . VICTORY DINNER WEATHER JUST | Daily Crossacord Puzale | [ROTARIANS SEE ANTI-CRIME BILL ‘! E | THURSDAY WILL | ABOUT NORMAL ; gigisse toworveweremme st MOVIES OF PARIS IS APPROVED BY | §. Out of date b P {2728 » F‘:-‘J'ffin:.fa [CIATPL TTTAIL ] ) lnufi"érflfl’ | | 1 pibision'ot [E[RITINIOISIE BMPIEIL [EIE] o Serow B BE G ‘ | Tmegern (1) INTVIPIRIOINIOIUINT 1o p#éi8*™ Pictures Interest Club 5. mihoreat tutd [LTEINOBMSITIVIMAINITIS| 1 Trelve Meimbets i Iotinationsl o | | R AILIOEISIMSIEIAl 1+ Gt R saminr g v = Democrats Will Celebrate Total Snowfall Is Unusually | . eeds’ MANERHIOMRAIT] i & b Convention in France Both Houses Rushing Work ) . | . 1 : -4 : Party’s Success with | HeaVY—MGXImun;-led, | 1 pmy e o A Motion plotures of Paris, show- in Effort to Clear Calen- 1 | 1 | Ry 3 ; ing what the Rotarians who attend Banquet March 4 46 Miles an Hour | & i, 1. Bl Lo A e st Dvied darsby Tomorrow P.M. . e A | [7aRmA r i | , this sum The Democratic Victory Dinner| The month of February -just pass- § 5 ;‘;gnfl‘ 3 ’5@[‘[“’,&1 808 ore In sfi? ‘;:;N:)c: gfr:nignvt:nnosn t‘:: The Walker anti-crime bill, which Thureday evening, will be & gala ed was slightly cooler tham,normal, li0d. INIQIOINIINIG| | e were shown at today’s Rotary lunch- would set up a Territorial Bureau ir ac ittee | with precipitation consideraily Be- | 1. Caddls ‘worma [TREISSES| * "a i of Criminal Identification and In- affair according to the comm £ ¢| 3 Wootball =, ruffians eon at the Terminal Cafe. i vestigation under in charge, and a large attendance low no and sunshine about| ng;lrtlvm 32. Prougs Cigars from the Ketchikan Club o under the Attorney Gen- s anticipated. |normal; according to the manthly | ADOF hola 38 Copper coins 62. Secondhand 33. Reglon il , was passed by the Senate this is anticipa s & | 24 Fall to 39, Slumber 53. Sister of 35, Col were passed, trophies won by morning and ordered . transmitted Judge George F. Alexander. will meteorgidgical report lssued todey| . . Los ro 40, Reguimr '+ gy pronss AR ** COULEERI &% |juneau Club for having a_better: | 10, e Bres. e e be tonstmaster. Speskers repre- by the Juneau Weathet B“?"‘ of-{ 8¢ Pefaian . » o ol i nmnm Botition attendance record for the past two to co-operate vuhmls 5 “e“ 7 senting the four Divisions of Alas- fice. g igf M onventions ; and lieFly 36, Pelidly | |onths than the Ketchikan Club. deportment and the Depagtment of ka, will be Speaker of the House Joe| ‘I'hc average temp?l‘w, "for the: or agree 1. Engtialr | - 65, Light open 38. “GreAt aches Charles Carter was official Justice in identifying crinfinals m'd Green, for the Pirst Division, Sen- |month was 20.4 degrees, or 0 de-| ,, pubile distinguished favrie trom little | |spokesman for the Juneau club in |checking against the inroads of per- ator O. D. Cochran of the Second gree below the normal, The mer- . _onotice . . . .. NGy "% 6. Losects s9;@mes . | |thanking the Ketchikan group, rep- | {sans ‘convicted of felonied 1330, the Division, President ‘of the Senate, cury reached its highest point: @urs g0d of the 43. Residence of - 5§ Small rugs. 41. Swoons” [resented by W. E. Brown of the Al- | Territory. | M. E.'S. Brunelle for the Third ing the moitth ori the 4th when a ., \ M{iL,, 45 petls Gonern DOWN 42 Murimurea |aska Steamship Company, former- | " Both the Senate and House were Division, and Senator Victor C. temperature of 45 degrees was reg- aynasty 44, Any assigned L Render of 5 Weonentedly )y agent in Ketchikan, and Rotary | pushing along\with heavy calendars Rivers of the Fourth Division. istered, and the lowest was 10 de-| 5 Qne; Scotch Business o oftect . 4 ‘;".‘,' Bid | rember there, but now in the Se-! ey 1h ah CPioft gl e i Brief community singing is also 8rees on the 2d. The highest tem- | highest 46 Son of Judah 2. : 'attle office, and Harry Race, mem-| own bills before tomorrow night, scheduled as part of the program, Perature on record for any Febru-| 4, ,b0ided i T ) | ber of the Territorial House of Rep- the final time, under the extension every unit of which, the commit- ary at Juneau over a period of 36 Brhn:crm:ot 1 uwal:?xel;-u 4 |resentatives, and Ketchikan Rotar- of time agreement, in which either tee says, will be hriaf end enappy. 43 years was 53 degrees in 1034, and| 4, o letmng o 1 T 5 fan. house cAN. conklder 168" OWn3 Peopo- < Ithe lowest Tebruary temperature | over a similar period was 10 degrees | e ———n 'below zero in 1917, The total precipitation for the! month, was 3.75 inches, of 1.84 in- FIRE VICTIMS ‘ches below thé normal. Precipi- WI I.L nlvlnE tation (0,01 inch or more) ogourred 'on 18 days, as compared with & RELIEF MUNEY normal of 18. The total snowfall at Juneau in February, 1937, was unusually heavy, the total being 543 | Pro Rata Basis Will Be Es- tablished for Distribut- inches, or 30.4 inches above the @yv- erage. There have: been only three ing Douglas Donations Februaries in 31 years of records! with greater monthly, snewfall mnn, occurred in Juneau 1ast month! The |maximum depth of: &now on: the ground at any time last momth wus 229 inches, on the 17th.” At the| Money received for the Douglas close of the month there were 7.0 rolief drives which several Alaska inches cn the ground in the vmnnyi cities, including Skagway, Fair- of the Federal ‘and - Territorial | banks, Ketchikan, Juneau and other Building. = communities are putting on will be There were 4 cledr days, 3 partly! prorated among those whose homes cloudy, and 21 cloudy days during; and business places were burned on the month. Out of a possible ‘261.2 the basis of the assessed valuation hours, the amount:of sunshine re.| of the property, with adjustments ceived was 8.2 hpprs. of 30 per made on properties that were in- cent. 3 sured, according to Mayor A. E. The total wind moyement for the Goetz and F. A. J. Gallwas, treas- month was 6,267 miles, or ‘an aver- urer for the relief committee. Fur- age velocity of 9.3imiles. The max- ther. allotments will be made only imum velocity, fof;'a sustained per- to those who ‘Will rebuild immed- iod of 5 minutes was 46 miles from iately. -\ the northeast on the 2d| W. D, Gross, chairman of the Ju-| The average; relgtive humidity at neau drive is now working on local 4 8. m. wis 72 pé. reent; at noon, subscriptions, ; 63 per cent; and at 4 p. m., 63 per cent. . \ Auroras were observed on the 2d, HENRY MOY BACK IZh‘l, and 19th, TO HOONAH AFTER | TELEVISION CONCERT BUSINESS TRIP| GIVEN HERE TONIGHT Henry Moy, Hoonsh merchant, Tonight the opening pzrformance - of the Television Concert under the ;’fi fni.;n:mb u:"e‘r. h‘:‘?u&:tflgzmg auspices of the Martha Society, will completing 8 two days' buying mp be given in the auditorium of tha} to Juneau. ‘N':rgxem zusght‘ ll:eksbywflan church | starting at 8 o'clock. w:;'n“.‘:yum:’um"“; rab Charles W. Hawkesworth Is in| soon as favorable weather will per- charge of working the Television mit crab fishing operations to be appartus that will bring show peo-| resumed, and that now boats are ple dressed in different national out prospecting for crabs. {costumes and singing songs of many lands, Hoonah is weathering the winter ‘ very well, according to Mr. Moy.. Mina Baclanova Solovieff, Valen- with relatively little sickness. lg“ e —————.————— h rson, |Torkelson, Clarence Rands, Ralph Try an Emplre ad. land Dorothy Waggener, and The Hungry Five, should put on a pro- gram that is expected to draw a4 HEMLOCK ARRIVES HERE ON REGULAR me:’;\m. an 50 Onne:;‘?- e orn busin * 1] e ad 7 W/ N V W/ ANEEE T T U@ i V. { NORTHLANDHERE THIS AFTERNOON Motorship Northland, of the Northland Transportation Company arrived in Juneau from Seattle at $ o'clock this afternoon with the following passengers aboard for here: From Seattle—Mr. and Mrs.John Tonkins, Mr. and Mrs. G. E. Gilles- ple, Mrs. H. B. Humphrey, Mrs. C. P. Heister, C._A. Stichler, Ed Reeves, Miss Betty Hamilton, Mrs. Grace Purdue, Severt Jacobson, T. Spicer, Edward Bowden, L. A. VanCleve, Bill Strever, Ernest Galasina, Mr. and Mrs, F. R. Sanders, Wilfred J. Lund, Walter Mahlum, L. E. Tucker. From Southeast Alaska ports —. J. M. Clark, Donald Lewis, Mrs. H. R. Race, A. Copstead, L. O. Gore, J. Newmarker, The Rev. Monroe, R. Brown, N.'A. McEachran, W. G. Hellan, M. 8. L. McCall, Andrew Grenier, Norman Hammer, W. Is- raelson. tinen, Mrs, Neil Anderson, James Xidas. 5 The Northland brought to Juneau GOOD VISION LIGHT SERVICING With Added Beauty Thursday, the Lighthouse about 85 tons of general cargo, in- cluding' one new Plymouth metor car. She has abogrd also about five Leaving her Ketchikan base last |tons ‘of freight for Douglas. Bhe is carrying considerable cargo HUMANE SOCIETY . _ IS BEING PLANNED | Business and Professional Women | {met in the Council Chambers-‘of | the City Hall last night and @is- cussed the feasibility of organising |a chapter in Juneau of the Soclety |for the Prevention of Cruelty to | Animals. b | The recent lengthy discussions and passage of the new dog ordin- | ance by the City Council savuome‘ of the women in the club the idea that such an organization for pre- venting unnecessary cruelty o mals might beformed in’ Junea: elsewhere. Mrs, Peter Hammer and Mrs. Ed- na Robinson led the discussion. | Mrs. Robinson took an active part for nine years in the Tacoma So- ciety for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals. No definite action will be taken on the matter until word is received from the Society’s head- quarters. At the next meeting of the Club, on March 15, a Public Relations din- ner will be held and Mrs. R. R. Her- mann will be in charge. as Pedrp Erig, 28, and Mary Jack- son, -20, were married yesterday at 4 o'clock in the Commissioner's Court by Judge Felix Gray. Both Erig and his bride are from Juneau. ‘Helen Monagle and A. W. Gustafson were witnesses. Secretary O. L. Kendall, and President A. B. Phillips explained the proposed division of District Number one, and the matter was referred to the local board of gov-| ernors for action. WAGE BOOST PITTSBURGH, Pa; Mar, 2—The Carnegie Illinois Steel Corporation |announced this afternoon a wage |incregse insuring $5 a day mini- mum’ wage for common labor, a 40- hour week and time and a half for overtime. FUR FARMEKS NOT IN AGRICULTURE; MUST In a recently announced decis- {fon, the U. 8. Bureau of Internal Revenue has determined that those | persons who are engaged in the rais- |ing of animals for fur, shall not be classed as engaged in agriculture for the purposes of the Social Se- curity Act. As a result of this decision, such Barbara Stanwyck says: PAY SOCIAL SECURITY | | Jim Braddock (left) and Joe Louis | after signing to participate in a title bout in Comiskey Park in Chicago ! | sals. struck these good-humored poses The Senate today also passed the June 22. Next time they square off there'll likely be no such friendly amiling. (Associated Press Photo) persons come under the proviswns} of the SSA, and all fur farmers em- | ploying eight persons, as well as | their employees are subject to the Federal Old Age Benefits and Work- men’s Compensation taxes imposed' by the Act. | e HERE FROM WASHINGTON ON WAY TO JOIN HUSBAND Mrs. Frank H. Mishou is a visi~ tor in Juneau from Washington, D. C., enroute to Stephens Village w| join her husband, the Government teacher there. Mrs, Mishou arrived in Juneau last week aboard the steamer North- western from the South, and expects to complete her journey to the In-| terior by air, flying with the PAA | |plane to Fairbanks tomorrow. From Fairbanks, she will charter another plane to Stephens Village. : ———————— One hundred and fifty new5 schools, hundreds of dwelling hous- | 2s, and more than a million square yards of asphalted pavement were | built in Moscow in 1936. [ COME UP UNIONTOWN, Pa. Mar. 2—Min- ers on a sitdown strike in the Big Jamison soft coal mine, began com- |ing to the surface this afternoon. The leaders announced the strike is ended. The strikers appeared cheerful and refused to talk to any- one. They came up in groups of five and six and went quietly to their homes in the nearby village. BARR ATTEMPTS AIR TRIP; FORCED BACK Pilot L. F. Barr, of the Canada Air Express, took off early this afternoon with freight for the Polaris-Taku mine. He encountered heavy weather off Taku and re- turned here to his landing field. e “Alaska” by Lester D. Henders» Sl ‘Today’s News Today—Empire. North | \measure appropriating $15,000 to }combat the wolf and coyole men- |ace and @ bill to reimburse the Be- | thel Home $6565 for care of children. |Two bills were defeated. Repeal of | the eagle bounty was voted down a. (was the Powers bill to give priox right to unappropriated or flood |waters for industrial purposes. Yesterday aftérnoon, the Senate {killed the bill which would have provided a ‘Tax Commissioner for ‘Lhe Territory to have charge of tax ‘ collections. | After recessing at noon, the Sen- |ate was to reconvene at 3 o'clock this {afternoon to consider a Jengthy cal |endar. ' FIEND'S WORK LOS ANGELES, Cal., March 2— Cries of a three months’ old baby took the landlady to the room of Mrs. Rose Valdez, aged 19, young ;mother and found her dead, ape parently an assault victim, Detec |tives said the body was unclothed, the back of her head had been crushed and pillows piled on uue 'womans’ face. “Luckies make a hit with care of my my throat” “When talking pictures arrived, my stage experience on Broadway gave me my chance on the screen. Taking throat became serious business with me, so I changed to Luckies—a light smoke. Of course I large crowd of Juneau and Douglas P:;“““lh M;:u";x .I:r Sitka are e. Hajtinen, erson, Sam 7 o Pappas; Jas. Ruffcorn, Mrs. F, Hal- ARE MARRIED smoke other cigarettes now and then but sooner or later I come back to Luckies. They make a hit with my throat and also with my taste.” L We offer a splendid service in supplying glasses that are not only corrective but becoming, Hemlock, William H. Barton, mas- |for Sitka, for where she is to sail ter, arrived at Juneau last evening|fram Juneau about 9 o'clock this shortly after 8 o'clock, after work- |CVéIng. She is expected to arrive ing lights and stations between back at Juneau from Sitka late Ketchikan and here. Thursday or enrly’ Fridey. Leaving port this morning at 9:50 o'clock, she worked Marmion Island ON T PORPOVA and two other lights in this local-| Harold E. Smith, district warden ity, returning to her berth at theifor the U. 8. Forest Service at Cor- Juneau Cold Storage dock this af-|dova, who was taken ill enroute to ternoon a few minutes before three{Juneau from the States, was yes- o'clock. terday afternoon released from St. Leaving tomorrow, the Hemlock|Ann’s Hospital, and plans to con- jwil wofk Lynn Canal, then out to-{tinue on the his post at Cordova ward the end of her area, at Cape|aboard - the steamer Victoria. He Spencer, She is expected to return|has just completed a vacation trip to Ketchikan in about ten days. to the States, z <4 RKO RADIO PICTURES STAR i NOW APPEARING. IN “THE PLOUGH AND THE STARS” as well. Nothing so quickly makes the features drawn and careworn as impaired vision. Nothing 8o quickly preserves the youthful appearance as properly fitted glasses. Call Today for an Appointment! Dr. Rae L. Carlson OPTOMETRIST ! Office Ludwig Nelson's Jewelry Shop An independent survey was made recently among professional men and women—lawyers, doctors, lecturers, scientists, etc. Of those who said they smoke cigarettes, more than 87% stated they personally prefer a light smoke. ' . Miss Stanwyck verifies the wisdom of this pref- . erence, and so do other leading artists of the : - radio, stage, screen and opera. Their voices are their fortunes. That’s why g0 many of them smoke Luckies. You, too, can have the throat pro- tection of Luckies—a light smoke, free of certain PURE B.P. 0. ELKS Past Exalted ' = il o b st aaivdos: T o Rulers Night s Isinacs i S ol O INITIATION (Oriental Degree) WEDNESDAY ENTERTAINMENT MARCH 3 REFRESHMENTS VISITING BROTHERS URGED TO ATTEND e A Light Smoke _“It’s Toasted”-Your Throat Protection AGAINST IRRITATION—AGAINST COUGH Copight 1937, The Anercas Tebacss Compasy