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NEW MEMBERS, | CITY COUNCIL, ARE SWORN IN Permission Granted Stand- | ard Oil to Build Under Old Fire Ordinance | | umbents ine and Fr with the Ralph Be ) vote u 1 oil! 1 construc- | n of its new plant on Willoughby nue under present fire dinance. A new fire ordinance been under consideration by meil, and has passed reading, has isions objected to by us cil companies and others. Ac- n on this ordinance was rlu(mr“d‘ the first regular meeting of the | Council Friday night ' Frank Metcalf, appearing as con- | sulting engineer for the oil com-| pany, presented specifications on the new Standard piant, pointing | out that the company, due to the| various nature of its business, always | guarded against fire hazards of all kinds. New Mayor Judson said it was hi opinion that Standard would not build a plant v\hlrh was hazardous | to the city and urged that action aken last night as “it will sim- ply mean the Standard Oil will move to Douglas if we den't omething about 1t.” Other Councilmen voiced a s'mi- lar opinion and vote on the motion Councilman M rschmidt to company to proceed un- present ordinance showed | ithout a dissenting - Covncil endorsed the recom- | ndations of the U. 8. Army En- pineers for a small boat mooring | tasin to be built just north of, the | Douglas bri on the mainland side | ol Gastineau Channel Matter of buying electric he for the city dock was put over i il ne; meeting and the Council authorized notice calling for appli- cations for city positions under th new Council. Applications must be | received at the City Clerk's office by next Friday and the following positions are to be filled: Street Commissioner, and Magistrate, Police Chief, sistant Chief, two patrolmen, wh inger and assistant, Librarian, cem- | etery caretaker, health officer, gar- bage caretaker, radio inspector treasurer, city attorney, Action on the applications are expected to be made at the meeting Friday night SANITARY MEAT BRANCHES 0UT New Type of Display Case Installed—Made by Krafft's Shop Ed Shatrer, manager of the Sani- tary Meat Market, announced the ccmpletion of improvements in his 'l\np today. The latest type of dis- y case with refrigeration and stem has been built into nitary window. “It is not only the latest and most practical system of display and re- geration,” Mr. Shaffer explained but every single unit was built locally. It will give us ample display room, for our business has increased n the last ten months to the point here we were forced to make some rt of an addition. We have also added a new speedy G.M.C. panel delivery truck which we will start to use immediately.” Krafft's Cabinet shop installed the case for display purposes, refrigeration system was sialled by Rice and Ahler. ALASKA TAKES MANY FROM HERE TO WEST While Company to pro has the | | been the which var do City Cl and in- in port here ged a qu cquipment, for the new Company building ' the Westward at 6 o'clock this morning, the Alaska took as passengers outbound from Ju- u: For Yakutat — Mrs. Hardy Irefzger and her small child; for Valdez—W. A. Berls. For Cordova mes Anderson and Hardy Trefz- Alaska dairy Juneau the ntity of For Seward—Charles King woff, L. Sisson, R. Gerwel Hansen, Mr. and Mrs. Dan Stan- orth, Meloin Adams, Wiley Par- sons, James Johnson, William Ko- lunder, H. H. Gubser, Grenold Col- s, J. A. Hall, Jr., R ker, Mrs R. D. Russell, James Ward, D. L Dutton, Thomas Willett, Thomas Judsen, Jr., James Anderson, Oscar Clausen, Mike Sullivan, Hazel Par- ker, Herb C. Dunlep, J. J. Logan D Today w 8. I New Empire \This Is the Way They Il Crown th : 4. Royal Greys: These are the horses LEGION DROPb OUT Alford | erican Wi 1. St. Edward's Crown: Thi the crown of England. 6. Westminster Abbey: This is the church at the end of the road rC would ca OF CITY BASEBALL FOR TH:S SEASON i Post, Am- onor a ie thi . meeting It me to lea nt the Le yue offi 7. Canterbury: And this is the archbishop who will crown the King of England. tuve THE DAILY ALASKA EM.P]RE TUESDAY APRIL 13 1937. GEORGE'S BUSY WANTS STATE Freighter Oduna DAY IS HIGHLY - T0 HELP OUT Taking Lumber = FLOOD WATER OF CEREMONIES GRAFT PROBE to Westward INTO 1 TOWN Ritual on M_a;7|2 Will Be- San Franclicn Grand Jury| Alaska b8 Ship Brings Stores in 'Raymond Wash., gin the Minute He to Hear Investigator | Piling Her for New Damaged—Extensive Leaves His Bed Atherton Tonight | Standard Oil Dock Area Is Covered (Continued “Proin Pags Ong) SAN FRANCISCO, Cal, April 13. Enroute to the Westward, as far as| RAYMOND, Wash, April 13. o R ~—The County Grand Jury has asked Uganik, the Alaska Line freighter| Eighteen inches of water has been Tenight the Grand Jury will hear night, and this morning moved to|cific Ocean into Willapa Harbor. | £ | tution houses have paid one million [ber Mills this afternon and is to}wide and was reached at 2 o'clock v The Oduna is carrying no pas-| | construction of the new Standard ELECTED BY ROTARY |thousand feet of lumber at the As ss AGENT ard. the regular luncheon meeting of {aboard about 2,500 tons of cargo. at the Juneau Ice Cream Parlor. [chinery, trap netting, and dyna- McClain, Percy Reynolds a:u han’ as Successor steel sections, for shipmept by rail the luncheon, named the following B | ooty ot duidn Cati B bt structing a bridge. In her cargo Betale, President; W. O. Carlson, 1ng 3y EBARA. ek 0 MahAS On her westward voyage the Odu-\cy Reynolds, Sergeant-arArms. e e headquarters in Seattle.| g, o ong "Uganik. {Rev. Don Christiansen and the Rev. company for some {ime as agent| m TERRITORY to Anchorage on the steamer Alas. pepper Stevens, of the Jones-| GRENADA, “ sippl, April 13.5¢ government operations of ships| siré trinclo: ddant Gltiee: Iynched two negroes for the killing| : W | be 1 from the taken to the scene of the killing per cent in quantity in 1936 com- GALE FORGES Chorme Queen e King in the middle of the theatre. There he archbishop annoints him in the | form of a cross on the head,,bt and palmns of both hands while four! §3 knights of the garter hold a rich| ilken pall overhead. After the annointing the king i rirdled with the sword of state ir \ purple velvet scabbard, He re-| imoves it, after a prayer has been| & and carries it to the altar. It| |15 redeemed with money and carried | § {naked before the monarch during| lm rest of the ceremony. Guns Salute Crowning Next the king is invested with the stole and imperial mantle and ing to St. Edward’s chair, | receives the orb, a ruby ring, and | his scepter. The archbishop consecrates St Edward's crown and reverently plac-| les it on the king's head. Guns at the Tower of London, signalled by a telephone operator {high in the Abbey, boom out the |news and the people—inside and out—shout *“God Save the king The peers put on their coronets trumpets blare and the Abbel bells 1 VI: This is vear the crown. ., .. Ray Stevens has resigned as Ag-, (ent of the Northland Transportation As a resuli of winning a con- test to select the most peautiful and shapely of Brozdw cherines, siunning June Blake, 17 (abeve), won a chance to I!llLWY\l\LI‘. ON YUK After the benediction the king !goes back to the throne. Shouts of “God Save the King” agein swell through the Abbey as drums roll and trumpets sound Coronation of the queen follows then the procession back to Buck-' R.O. Bullwinkle, Traff ingham Palace over a sl . for the PAA, is returning t The imperial crown which leadquarters in Seattle abua~d will wear on this drive Yukon after an inspection trip intoj more than three and a balf the Interior. compared with the f of the derby he wusual | unces | wear Merriment £ the on spot-l afternoon to the sur: of the | Day | Back at larchs will appear | balconies in late ng in response the state to participate in-the graft Oduna arrived here at the Alaska-|driven into the downtown stores by investigator Edwin N. Atherton, who the Pacific Coast Dock. She shift-, The crest of the flood covered an i § #8 | qolars annually to the police for|sail from the Mill dock for Orcalthis morning. The high tide was sengers, but brought to Juneau a\ | |011 Company dock here. The Odu-| Directors for the new Rotlary year When the Oduna sailed from Se- F] ed Charman A[ Hves ol IShe is now carrying through to the Those chosen were C. D. Beale, Kel- | George Walmsley. om Seward to Fairbanks, near 4 for the Alaska-Juneau mine was a|Vice-President; the Rev. O. L. Ken- cessor, Fred Charman, arrived on ‘ v - Guests of the cl han, Assistant Manager of the NTC,| na will call at Orca, Cordova, Val the clu gtoday were the I% Teemtn resident. of | Sl |George J. Beck of Ketchikan. | Juneau. th his om 3 on the City Dock. | | Col. Otto F. Ohlson, Manager of‘ | |ka. The official has been Outside! ill wi ( season a Stevens Shop, returned aboard the Deputy Sheriff ¥razier said he has ¢, Alaska during the mannmc‘ mon- ? - R of a merchant near here. The ne- American agricultural exports investigations. Juneau dock about midnight last a howling gale blowing off the Pa- jcharges that gambling and prosti-|ed from there to the Juneau Lum-|area five blocks long and two blocks protection at 6 o'clock this evening. 1114 feet. ipment of piling to be used in‘DlRECTORs OFFICERS i { HAS RESIGNED Ina is to take aboard one hundred| i | | mill: - . mills here, for shipment to SeW-|pooinning July 1 were elected at |attle on her present voyage she had the Juneau Rotary Club today noon | Westward mainly lumber, coal, ma- A gt R ot SR | North Sea, with Mana- |mite. She has aboard two huge The directors, meeting right after where they are to be used in mn_‘officers for the coming year: C. D. dall, Secretary-Treasurer, and Per- board the North Sea. Accompany-‘new Pty quty, hoiat. it £ ' dez, Seward, Port Graham, sm,g‘nev Jack Webster of Sitka, the Mr. Stevens has been with thechL_ OHLSON BACK | Schilling LYNGHED the Alaska Railroad, is retummg‘ TURNS since last fall and was in charge North Sea after a business and pica- | been informed that a mob has gyrike, i 120,000 square miles groes were taken from a small jail, 'declined 5 per cent in value and 10] million steaks tonight More than of territory summit of Mosunt Diablo, Calif. and lynched pared to 1935 Janet Gaynor says: “Leading artists of the screen prefer Luckies” “I live at the beach most of the year and there is hardly a weekend that a number of friendsdon’tdropin. Naturally, I keep several brands of cigarettes on hand for guests, but the Luckies are always the first to disappear. I supposeit’s just natural that Luckies would be the favorite brand because most of my friends in pictures have discovered that the long hours of rehearsing and shooting at the studio place asevere taxon thethroat. Leading artists of the screen prefer Luckies because they are a light smoke that sympathizes with tender throats.” g’m-fh]m FEMININE STAR OF DAVID O. SELZNICK’S TECHNICOLOR PRODUCTION OF A STARISBORN"" The king's last major duty |the day will be the broadcast to his s empire. Special radio equipment is being installed in the palace for For the royal rulers it will be y—but for their loy- ill be a colonful Something of the 1 prevail in the which will flow through » Park — transformed for the occasion with refreshment stands, helters and troop tents. loodlighted buildings will add the spectacle, and, from scores restaura , pul and theatres cho the cry “God Save the the m s drink his h and watch special entertain- for into the night. COACH SLICKED UP LONDON, April 13—The state ch in which King George and beth will drive to West- { Abbey for their corona- ,uon has been specially smartened {up for the occasion. ' | Early one morning, to attract as' }l'mv attention as possible, it was! taken to an old firm of coach=- builders in Chelesa fqr re-gilding and renovation. i Although built 175 years ago for lQucen Anne, the coach is still in |good running order and repair. It is very heavy and is generally drawn | at walking pace by eight horses. | e CHACON GOES AGROUND; IS ~TOTAL LOSS %Six Men of C—r:w of Alaska | { Bound Motorship Es- cape with Lives VANCOUVER, B. C, April 13. — | The American motorship Chacon, 50 | tons, 'enroute to Alaska, grounded on Cape Mudge, Strait of Georgia, | | yesterday afternoon, toppled under !a heavy wind last night and is re- |ported a total loss. r The six-man crew reached Camp- bell River early this morning and | boarded another American vessel | | Alaska bound. i ., { SMITH TO CORDOVA Charles Smith, formerly with the U. S. Signal Corps here, was a | passenges to the Westward on the | | Alaska. He goes t8 the Signal Corps office at Cordova from Seattle. R n exaecting lal subjects it iting one. that draw the coach. . to |of hes ments 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 Gaynor 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 so many of them smoke Luckies. You, too, can have the throat protection of Luckies —a light smoke, free of certain harsh irritants removed by the exclusive process “It’s Toasted”. Luckies are gentle on the throat. A Light Smoke “It’s Toasted”—Your Throat Protection AGAINST IRRITATION—AGAINST COUGH President William A, Holzhei- { the City League said today E: ceting in the near to outline 1s for the base- the Moose, Elks . have declared inten- SHONBECK TO ANCHORAGE of entering teams, | A. A.Shonbeck, former Democrat- - lic Territorial Committee Chairman, | with Mrs. Shonbeck, is aboard the Alaska, enroute to his home at An- chorage after a business trip Out- ka Steamship | side. Westward | nied by Mrs.| THE FINEST TOBACCOS— “THE CREAM OF THE CROP” McDONALDS BACK - e - MISS DICKEY RETURNS Juneau| Miss Miriam Dickey, Secretany of steamer Alaska, | Capt. A. E, Lathrop, financier of 1 4 trip to the States.|Cordova and Fairbanks, is a passen- D S — ger to the Westward on the Alaska D. Tenderson, after a visit Qutside, Copyright 1937, The American Tubseco Campany Lester