The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, April 12, 1937, Page 8

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ELECTRA COMES IN WITH SEVEN ABOARD SUNDAY . | Plane to Return to Interior Tomorrow—Ailing Can- dle Oldtimer Aboard aboard sted by v af- 1 her amer Al- w M erday we M Harry Sheepperd horne, R. O. Bu 1, Robert J. Casy. Louis Fairk to the On the pl ival here he was taken imme ately to St. Ann’s Hospital by am- bulance from s enroute tki - -t Empire classifieds pay. ) aboard the | 1 aboard the| Move Westward = | Face Suff l;’yl:orblems. How- ever, as Excluded from Relief Regulations 12.—Fed- that |OPEN BIDS TONIGHT | | ON B.B. GRANDSTAND | e of the will meet iman being | Fror 1936 more than 10,-| 1000000 people visited Lenin's tomb | in Moscow Red & e Miss Krancis Perkins, Secrotary of e i —— ——y . ‘ | S EASRRSALSNRARERLERL RGNS I2SRARRIAARRLLILRARRLLRA 721 10 Labor, who was among the first to confer with President Roosevelt SIGRID’S BEAUTY in Warm Springs, Ga., is shown leaving the White House. “Gren” Collins Leaving Again For Interior SALON NORAH IN PORT HERE ENROUTE SOUTH SUNDAY Canadian S;eamer Has But Ten Out of Skagway— Takes 13 More Here C: iny ten southbound passen- gers from Skagway, the Canadian Pacific st er Princess Norah ar= rived from Lynn Canal Sun- it one o'clock, and t 7 o'clock, after tak- aboard thirteen more passeng- outhbound from Juneau. ving Juneau aboard the Nor- ah were: Mrs. T. Cashen, Floyd F. Volk, Mr. and Mrs. W. C. Mc Carthy, Joe George, J. K. Popovw, the Rev. and Mrs. T. A. Sandall, J Harrison, F. nicroft, J. L. Morrison, J. G. Tel- ford. MARTIN MAKES DIRE THREATS OSHAWA, April 12.—Homer Mar- ing Li upon his return from his vacation tin, President of the United Aul«)-‘ mobile Workers of America, threat- ened possible new strikes in the United States General Motors Cor- poration plans here last Saturday night, if the strike of the 3700 Canadian GMC workers is not set- o tled amicably. Martin said: “If they don't make Thompson, T. Thor-, Hughes, at 75, Still Is Try ing KETCHIKAN HAS 600D BUSINESS, By MORGAN BEATTY (AP Feature Service Writer) WASHINGTON, April 12.—Chief {Justice Charles Evans Hughes reached the age of 75 yesterday, April 11, with the guiding hope of his lifetime seriously obscured by an era of social unrest, That hope often has been dis- cussed privately by close Washing- ton observers, and long has been an:open secret among those who: know him best. Simply stated, it is a desire to be recognized by historians beside the great John Marshall as . “Hughes, the Chief Justice.” 3 / Parents Disappointed The visions of the man who be- gan his career as a youthful prodi- y were disclosed first to disap- inted parents long before he en- tered college. They wanted him to |become a Baptist minister, follow- ying in his father’s footsteps. But |young Charles took up the law. | He has been drafted into many ]u!hr-r pursuits, including the Gover- \norship of New York, the Secre- |taryship of State, the Republican| | Presidential candidacy. But the |guiding light always was the same | 4 —the brilliant fame of John Mar- shall, the man who in Washington’s iday established the Supreme Court's ‘vqlm]lty among the other branches; of the government. , He accepted an Associate Justice-| !ship on the Supreme Court bench, !but that wasn't quite enough. When| |the opportunity came to take the |guiding scepter in 1930, he nccept»: d | Purpose is Disclosed ; For a Niche Beside Marshall’s - TRUITT FINDS Judge Sa{s_C_a:\neries Pre- paring for Busy Season —Settles Tax Cases Ketchikan is going forward and [emoymg excellent spring business, jaccording to Attorney General (James 8. Truitt, who returned from the First City on the steamer Bar- janof after being there in conneq- tion with two cases before the ourt, \ He represents the Territory in its \license tax actions against the |Merchants and Miners Bank and {Demmert Packing Company. As a result of judgments the Territory will receive about $8,000 in tax money, he reported. Canneries are preparing for the season in Ketchikan, Judge Truitt said, and there is in evidence a hum jof business activity. Everyone feels hopeful for a good season if labor troubles do not interfere. He re- ported they are now laying the foundation for the new Federal building in the First City. /GUBSER IS OFF FOR ARCTIC;TO START WOLF CAMPAIGNS With an intensive campaign directed against wolves and oth- ,er predatory animals mapped out for spring and summer, Harlan v ANNOUNCES INSTALLATION OF THE NEW Duart Deiux Permanent Wave Machine PERMANENTS *$5.00 INCLUDING SHAMPOO AND FINGER WAVE EPgsts PRIMOL . .. in our wave solution to insure a "FINISH"” of Per- fection and Softness. Phone 318 For Appointment. #u iy 7/ - | Gubser, district agent for the Game Management Division of the U. S. Bureau of Biological Survey, is to {sail from Juneay for Seward aboard !the steamer Alaska. at one time that public men in po—‘ From Seward, Mr. Gubser will |sitions similar to his own probably}go to Anchorage, Fairbanks and the should step down when they have|Kuskokwim country to set into mo- passed the 75th milestone. ition the predatory animal program |being undertaken co-operatively by the Territory and the Biological Survey. SEEE of the cars in Canada under union condi-| At once his purpose was disclosed,| o CHIEF JUST ICE HUGHES they won't make them in the and his first efforts as Chief Jus- We will give them|tice was to seek speed and eff; iency for the Court. He drove him-|{ BHTEE self and his associates unrelentingly OPinion that would lend additional pronouncement by Hughes himself SITUATION QUIET {until, two years ago, he had brought| Weight to Sheic ppopouncomehiye, join Warden Sam White at Fair- OSHAWA, April 12—The situa- the Supreme Court abreast of its Fite Wag-agsin Hm banks. The two will go down the tion is quiet here. No efforts have work. He submitted the proof of| But fate was against him, even| Yukon on beaver patrol before Col- been made to cpen any of the this accomplishment recently in his though he made a good beginning | lins goes on into the Nome and plants. Pickets are onduty ,also letter to Senator Burton K. Wheeler;wnh NRA_ by obtaln;ng a unani- F A Arctic regions during the summer. Mounted Police. of Montana, opposing the Presi- mous decision declaring that law Change in Price of 5 Warden squared >, |dent’s plan to enlarge the high tri- unconstitutional. He also got an ‘Gold “Silly Gossip” : e bunal 18 to 1 decision for TVA, the Roos- ly Gossip | After contacting agents in those ace s wi his mates | oy B I é q:;?:l;:rms they had been giving EVELYN BERG HERE By 1043 the political and econo- evelt Administration’s excursion in- | Declares Morgenthau cee;t:::“(;llg'a g;?:ifl&uwu':) :hme"hzzg him for his “painless” beaver trap. WITH 400 TONS OF |mic horizon were alive with the to the public ownership of power. } i {of the Colville River, where a cam- It developed, the Duck Creek Cor- CARGO FOR JUNEAU signs of a changing age. The New The first serious obstacle was| WASHINGTON, April 12—Sec-! P i bR g respondent reported, that it wasn't \Deal had come, and with it a train the famous gold cases, where the retary of the Treasury Henry A. l‘”i ng x % =t n{’r ; Gren’s trap that was at fault for : lof social and humanitarian and Roosevell administration undertook Morgenthau, Jr, in discussing ru-| < “;‘: d“"‘ e;’:fi . e m:l"‘ ot calibiriy FiHeT e A, Diokk Bringing about four hundred tons economic legislation that represent-|to revalue money. The Chief Jus-|mors of the change in the price of‘x°"lyvs s e:dr o bze 3-‘;" Soq l‘:fl' Creek.. Rather, the need for g Of C8TEO to Juneau, half of it gen-led vast departures. Right along tice succeeded in having the act|gold, said: “We know of no plans '@ “‘;‘;:Y-t r. Gul ‘:l'fll: ‘Y “l:s “man" trip. There was evidence eral merchandise, and most of the with the New Deal was developing upheld, but the decision was one of |about changing the price of gold."&é“l“fi]s m" . !éoigt;.:t. nm: -wn e that some one had sprung the traps remainder building materials, the within the Supreme Court itself a the hated 5-to-4 divisions. He also added that it was only COiVllle River ot Teady to con- Alaska Transportation ~ComDany four-man die-hard opposition to| He had to yield to a similar di- freighter Evelyn Berg &rriveg iR ail of the departures. |vision, however, to win the recent ) lusilly gossip” concerning the na- centrate efforts against the wolves hefore. 0o RN Bamo e ions monetary policies that have hroughout the Arctic region on Three had been tossed some dis- bro port here from the South at 3 p™-' The turmoil was reaching a cres-court approval for the Washington ‘clock this morning, and is due 10 cendo just as Hughes was preparing.State minimum wage law, whose i the reindeer ranges. tance from where they were orig- been circulated in recent weeks. | sail south for Hoonah about mid-|(o take his second step toward im-|principle appeals to his idea of pro- . e inally placed. or NUKOR o o south , night tonight. From Hoonah, she mortality. He began pressure ongress. Boars imported from Russia now' Approximately 15,000 homicides Highway from Anchorage will make her way south by way of his colleagues for a unanimity of A tragic note is provided in the on the Montere s run wild and are hunted for sport,are committed in the United States Wrangell. - . o T to Palmer Closed by Mud AR OO ER ninsula, Calif. each year. Docking here first at Femmer's Dock, the Evelyn Berg, Capt. Alden ANCHORAGE, Alaska, April 12. Hansen, shifted this morning to fhe = — The Anchorage-Palmer highway Juneau Commercial Dock, and is to is now officially closed to allow shift again late this afternoon to' the frost to leave the ground which the Alaska-Juneau dock from where is now soft, making the highway she will sail tonight. almost impassable due to mud. The - e ) Alaska Railroad is operating daily Lode ana p!acer iocaiion notloes trains while the highway is closed. for sale at The Empire Office en Grenold Collins Alaska Game Commission is sailing tons on the steamer Alaska tomorrow, to United States. will g resume his duties in the Westward time to make up their minds.” and Interior. Warden Collins goes first to Anchorage and then will “"TOMORROW'S STYLES TODAY" For the Girl Graduate Special Offerings for Tuesday and Wednesday COATS and sm'rS—$9.9s t0 $22.50 And as charming as a spring morning. No need to study the catalogues and Home Furnishing magazines, to see what is the vogue in furniture and home decorations and what is new and up to date. A visit to our Furniture Department will answer all these questions. The new arrivals are not only new in Juneau, they are the latest creations of America’s finest craftsmen, such nation- ally known factories as Imperial Furni- ture Co. of Grand Rapids, Heywood Wakefield Co. and . Fashion Flow, Inc., have contributed to this display of lovely pieces. Charming Occasional Tables, Coffee Tables, Magazine Racks, Drum Tables, Settees, Chairs. DRESSES—In a vast variety of Styles and Materials One Ilack—Speeial—$.4.95 " FASHION FLOW Furniture has taken the entire country by storm, and little wonder, the styles are MOD- ERN and conservgtive, graceful yet sim- ple. The advantage of buying on the add a piece plan, just as you would a set of dishes makes it easy to assemble a suite and the prices are so reasonable PR you will be delighted. REMEMBER — the nationally advertised price prevails in JU- NEAU . . . and YOU SAVE THE FREIGHT. Start a Suite NOW! uneau- Young Hdwe. “Let’s all hear the Music Festival Concerts.” Other Groups from $6.95 to $l'6.95 MlLLlNERY——R&IValuesforsz&S Floor T CHARMING ACCESSORIES to accompany these above mentioned items Lamps with the 3-way light. $8.95 ¢ JUNEAU’S OWN STORE ™ O 0 O A gfinMulmummlmmlmmuummulfinmlm IHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII!IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII!IIIIIIIIIIlllIIIIIIIllIIIIII|IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII||IIIIIIII:12mIIllllllllIIIIIIIIIIIIHn!flllmillllllllllllfllfllllfllllllimufi

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