The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, May 20, 1937, Page 2

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It had to come inevitable as the in view of the return to an era of ACK back. It was as morning'’s sunrise romantic gowns. Lace in soft illusive shades that give your. complexion a wonderful soft glow. / Laces are worn by afternoon or they are worn (Reprinted from the cur- rent issue of Harper's Bazaar.) liresses $22.50 YARDAGE priced from $1.25 to $2.50 yard by night. B. M. Behrends Co. Inc. Juneau’s Leading Department Store a setting for the affair. 'The gift were placed under an umbrella, dec orated with a pink and white cov- ering and trimmed with dainty morning glories and hearts bear- ing the names of Miss Patlerson Shower Honors Miss Patterson Light, Mrs. O. Jackson, Mrs. Gildo | Bottelo »| ? 10 YEARS A HERO----- Lindbergh took off from New York May landed at Paris 33 hours and 29 minute shown as the was greeted there by M then U. S. ambassador to France. e i n T. Herrick, On May 27, 1929, Lindbergh married Anne Mor- row, daughter of Dwight W. Morrow, U. S. am- riage. bassador to Mexico. The men are together at a New York airport bec two hown ar ho | “Mrs. 3. Moeller, Mrs. H. Edmund, IMrs. Elizabeth Bender, Mrs. Wil- llam Jarman, Mrs. A. Tucker, Mrs. Clarence Fergusen,® Mrs. Ed Walt- n tes! 1 and Sil Bride-elect to Be Married to Walter Sands at Ceremony June 4 At a by Mrs. miscellaneous shower given John Larsen, last evening, Miss Agnes Patte n, fiancee of Mr. Walter Sands was honored by a large groups of guests, assembled in the T.O.O.F. hall were b during the s. Jerry 'Cashen 'hist, and Mrs. rles Carter, consolation; Mrs. na Crone, high in pinochle; and iiiss Rosellen Monagle, consolation. The cut prize was won by Mrs. Jack Hayes. Yellow and white daffodils iormnd ‘md Mr. Sands. Invited to be present for the af- fair were Mrs. Vena Crone, Mrs, Henry Anderson, Mrs. Mrs. Gust Erickson, Mrs. Joseph Wehren, Mrs. Willlam Sundquist, Mrs. Jessie Harmon, Mrs. J. E, Con~ nors, Mrs. Amanda Doyle, Mrs. A. Bucher, Mrs, Miles Godkins, Mrs. A. Tucker, Mrs. Jerry Cashen, Mrs J. Lynam, Mrs. William Kirby, Mrs, Sa(hc Cashen, Mrs. Spencér DeLong, E. Monagle, Mrs. James Mrs. J. E. Neate. Mus. J. C. Pauerson, Mrs. Walter Butts, Mrs. James Primevera, Mrs Tom Selby, Mrs. Jack Hayes, Mrs. E. L. Gruber, Mrs. William Franks, Mrs. William Reck, Mrs. H. Starr, Mrs. Walter G. Hellan, Mrs. Walter Robinson, Mrs. John Newman, Mrs, Sig Olsen, | jonen, Mrs. Nick Bavard, Mrs. Em- mett Connors, Mrs. Olaf Bodding, Mrs. William Garster. ! rs. Nels Lee, Mrs. George Kohl- hepp, Mrs. Arthur Bringdale, M Ray C. Day, Mrs. Jack Lund, Mrs. George Jorgensen, Mrs. J. Manery. Mrs. K. Hildre, Mrs. Alfred Zenger, Mrs. S. Thompson, Mrs. H. Porter, Mrs. H. Lea, Mrs. A. Riendeau, Mrs. Streed, Mrs. D. Mead, Mrs. Rodr Darnell, Mrs. M. Doogan, Mrs. G. meh:i:n. Mrs. C. W. Carter, Mrs. . Paul, Mrs. Joe Wilson, Mrs. Law- rcnce Swanson and Mrs. John Lar- sen. Miss Nellie Simpkins, Miss Esther Cashen,” Miss Rosellen Monagle, Miss Dolly Baldwin, Miss Isabel Cashen, Miss Leonora Olsen, Miss Beatrice Bothwell. Miss Patterson and Mr. Sands are Late in 1635, while Hauptmann with their second: son, Jon. new plane before flying to Cope There the one-time Lone J. C. Michaelson, Mrs. Jack Gould, Mrs. Grant Baldwin, Mrs. Robert to be married on June 4 at the home of the bride’s mother, Mrs. Joseph U. 8. DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE, WEATHER BUREAT THE WEATHER (By the U. S. Weather Bureau, Forecast for Juneau and vicinity, beginning at 4 p.m., May 20. derate to fresh southerly winds. Rain tonight and Friday; 1 LOCAL DATA Barom>ter Temp. Humidiry Wind Velocity Time 4 pm 4 am. 12 noon today 54 46 46 29.92 20.97 30.00 CABLE AND RADIO REPOKTS YESTERDAY Highest 4pm. | Station temp. temp. | Atka Anchorage Barrow Nome Bethel Fairba Da St. Pau Cmun\.n Jureau Sitka Ketch Prince Rupert Edmonten Portland San Francisco New York i i Washington @ ok WEATHER CONDITION AT 8 A. M. TODAXY Seattle (airport), clo toria, cloudy, 47; Bull H Langara Island, raining thowers, 44; Craig, T dy, 49; Sitka, cloudy, raining, 41; Juneau cloudy, 44; Cordova, raining, 42; Chitina. cloudy, 4 1y cloudy, Ruby, partly cloudy, 43; Nulato, gamute, cloudy, 48; Savoonga, Juneau, May 21, — Sunrise bor ing, 46 WEATHER SYNOPSIS The storm area moted yeste Dutch Harbor has moved eastwar near the Alaska Peninsula about midway between Unga and Kodiak, 0 the Jowest reported pressure being 29.20 inches. attended by rains and gales in the vicinity of the storm. also reported along the coastal rezions from the Aleutians southeast- ward to the northern portion of Vancouver the Canadian northwest, while [air weather prevailed over the interior and western portions of Alaska. Lowest4a.m. temp. temp. velocity 24hrs. Weathe) temperature, partly cloudy, Prince 44; Wrangell, cloudy, 48; Petersburg, clou- Radioville, raining, 46; Skagway, raining, 42; St ; McCarthy, cloudy, 42; Fairbanks, part- 52; Hot Springs, partly cloud; clea clondy, 28 3:23 am.; y morning a short distance south of | Wilson, following which a recep- tion is to be held to which all friends uf the couple are invited. -Fnrmer Student ~ of Juneau IS On Security Counc Harvey Fremmmg Is Ad- i visor on Social Security ! Act, Washington, D. C. Weathe: Pt. Cldy Cloudy Lt. Rain 44 81 67 s 7 E 7 SE 12 TODAY 4am. Precip. 4am Harvey Fremming, former student of Juneau Schools and for some time a resident of the Gastineau Channél district, has been an- neunced as one of the 12 members to be appointed to the Social Se- curity Advisory Council in Wash- ington, D. C. The committee is meeting with the chairman of the committee on finance in the United States Sen- ate ‘o study the advisability of vari- ous amendments to the Social Se- curity Act. Mr. Fremming, who is president of the Oil Field, Gas Well, and Refin- ery Workers International Union, has offices in the Capital. He is the brother of Mrs. Z. M. Bradford, whose husband is a former Juneau postmaster and recent manager of the Standard Oil Company here. The Bradfords are now making their home in Wrangéll where he is now agent for the Standard Oil. — . — BASEBALL TODAY The following are the results of major league baseball games playcd this afternoon: National League Philadelphia 2; Pittsburgh 5. American League Chicago 3; New York 1. Detroit 3; Philadelphia 2. it was | Cleveland 16; Boston 5. e Construction of the San Francis-| co-Oskland bay bridge required; 145,000 tons of structural steel, 19,- {115 tons of cable wire and 200,000 !gnll ns of red lead and aluminum | paint, 40 40 22 38 36 38 34 34 38 38 40 46 41 40 40 40 09 Rain 22 Cloudy Clear Cloudy Clear Clear Pt. Cldy Rain Rain Rain Cloudy Cloudy 3 Pt. Cldy 20 Rain 48 0 Cloudy 5 0 Clear 0 Pt Cldy 09 Cloudy 0 Clear 45; Blaine, cloudy, 44; Vic- 46; Triple Island, cloudy; Rupert, cloudy, 45; Ketchikan, showers, 44; Soapstone Point, cloudy, 47; Anchorage, Eli showers, 42; Copper River, 50; Tanana, partly cloudy, 46; 0; Flat, partly cloudy, 41; Oho- sunset, 8:31 p.m. ! ! and early this morning This storm area was | Rains were Island and over most of awaited execution, the Lindberghs shi nhagen to demonstrate to a mecdical chanical heart he hvlpe(l invent. E C‘INCI: NEW YORK CHARLES “Spirit of America in toured the country in his in a campaign to make 1s. He visited at least one city Lindbergh, who obtained a pilot's license after their her husband’s flying companion. ame ing their plane for a flight across beria to the fled to ‘Zngland own exdmining a neeting ihe ne- from England Titis year the flying couple have continued their air tours with a leisurely PARIS FLIGHT HAS FAILED TO DIM COL A. LINDBE RGHS FAME * Tragedy struck the Lindberghs with the murder of their first child, Charles Jr. The strain of those days shows on the flyer’s face in this picture made during the trial which convicted Bruno Hauptmann of the crime. They Canada, {light to India. Touching North Africa, they stopped in Tripoli for a Vvisit with Italo Balbo (left) who once led a squadron of Italian planes on a transatlantic mgh! to America. GREEN ACTS N Who Said Pacitec? Jungau School DISPUTE ON NW. 'WAREHOUSEMEN AFL Chief Threatens to Oust ILA — Wood-" workers May Bolt SEATTLE, May 20.—Intervention by President William Green, of the American Federation of Labor, in the bitter Teamster-Longshoremen jurisdictional dispute over the In- land Warehousemen, also the dis- closure that the Woodworkers' Fed- eration of the Northwest may bolt the AFL. accelerated Northwest la- | bor strife today. | Green wired the Seattle and Port- land Labor Councils to oust Long- shore-Warehousemen, unless they agree to yield control of Inland em- ployees to the Teamsters group. A‘ few hours later last night, the Se- | attle Central" Labor Council voted, | | 156 to 67, to unseat delegates of the| Weighters, Warehousemen and Cer- eal Workers’ Union, which is an International Tongshoremen’s As= sociation affiliate. At Portland, Harold Pritchett, | President of the Woodworkers’ Fed- eration, which includes more than a hundred thousand Northwest lum- ber employees, said his group's ex-| ecutive committee would consider | bolting the AFL at Vancouver, Wasl\mglon. June 12 and 13. | UNIONS IN BRIEF CLASH SEATTLE, May 20.—Onc man was \slightly injured when two hundred {longshoremen and teamsters clashed ' briefly around the Bemis Bag Com- | pany plant here today. The plant, {which employs warehousemen af- |filiated with the ILA, was unable ‘lo operate when Teamsters’ Union |members refused to drive trucks| 'there. | R | A bt introducea recer | French Chamber of Dn,u ies de- |manded that all foreigners under| .50 years of age be expelled or put in concentration camps 48 hours after mobihmtmn orders e in the| 118 l Today's News Todny-l-:mpu-g_ . (ter i l"m Teachers Are Chamber Guests Vacation Farewell Lunch- eon Tendered Instructors by Commercial Group Juneau school teachers were guests of the Juneau Chamber of Commerce at its luncheon today noon at Percy’s, a vacation farewe:l gesture on the part of the Cham- ber to the teachers who are wind- {ing up their term this week. -aded by Superintendent A. B. teachers present for the re: Kenneth Ferguson, 'n, Miss Anne Rohwer, lden, Miss Clara Sny- Mary Kolasa, Miss Mabel Mrs. Marion Edwards, 5 Margaret Fadden, Miss Velma | Bloom, Miss Elma Olson, Miss Dal- Hansen, Miss Helen Parrott, . Helen Webster, Miss Ruth Cof- “r n, s Cynthia Batson, Byron tMiller and Walter Hautala. | “Plans for the reception of the Se- attle Chamber of Commerce Good (Will Tour were discussed briefly and the matter left with the Rev. [ /0. L. Kendall and Secretary R. H. The Pacific Ocean is anything bu | pacific (which means calm, peace ful) as the MacDonough, one of Uncle Sam’s newest type destroyeri vides high on a big wave during thi| uaval maneuvers neay Hawaii. Plant specialists at the cotton breeding experiment station at Flor- ence, S. C., > Breeding troubles, duction, and difficulty in raising calves are more evident in the win- following a dry yea e Gradual exhaustion of unde- rground well water has caused 20,000 acres of land to be abandoned in California’s upper San Joaquin val- ley. lowered pro- made more than 9,200/ leross breedings last year. |Stevens. The Seattle group will be here June 8. e | 4 AT THE HOTELS Gastineau C. 7. skewer, Seattle; W. A. Shan- non. Juneau Mrs. John Molver and son, Pet- {ersburg. Alaskan Ole Goldstein, Juneau. PR S | An epidemic in 1932 piled up from 9,000 to 10,000 dead ducks to the mile along the shore of Great Salt Lake \for a distance of six miles. - eee - — including most of the smaller types |of chickens, ifrom most others in the age at which they feather out. |for the Department of Agricultuie, who are coming to Alaska for in- FECHNER, MERRILL |:pccton of B0C oo b eais are AT KETCHIKAN w & FORESTERS TO MEET to leave Seattle Saturday on the Aleutian. e - Popguns, crocogilg -skins, frozen lobsters, cosmetics and oysters are among the many commodities for which American trade envoys re- port there are definite foreign de- mands. Regional Forester F. B. Heintzle- man and his assistant, Wellman Holbrock, are planning to sail to- night for Ketchikan aboard the motorship Northland for Ketchi- kan to meet Hobert Fechner, head of the Civilian Ccnservation Corps, and Fred Morrill, head of that work ey Try an Empire ad. mce 1878 Since 1878 ———. SEATTLE. U.S. A S ATTLE BR MM‘ & MAHING C0. CENTURY BREWERY | FOR INSURANCE See H. R. SHEPABD & SON 11 ‘Telephone 409 B. M., Behrends Bank Bidg Mediteranean “breeds of poultr,v.j differ consideraably | >

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