The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, June 1, 1937, Page 2

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2 ATIONAL COTTON WEEK May 31 to June 5 Rush the COTTON-—-Upon whose production the nation is so i X ependent. ; COTTO N-=Wix ridespread use makes our lives so 3 much more pleasant. & ales of American cottons by purchasing your share. COTTONS FOR BOYS, GIRLS, MEN, WOMEN and HOUSEHOLD USES Women's Cotton Blouses $1.25 i 2 Seve : Mary Joyce at the Taku Lodge be- o bcm_,kf ‘.m.eril r,“fims' land H. S. Hicks. Hicks was bound i y : : z 4 2 2 fore procteding om to Hollywood. ypo punTER RETURNS | for Whitehorse on a hunting trip. i MMMWMME Mr. Delano, who assisted in photo- o =5 R e B o) ing the plane were Jerry Jones i R e graphic work in the production, also | T SHEE R EE ;‘01_1]_ and Murray. Stuart. { Ch Mad | took news reel pictures of the Fair- ¢ ~UNCall Bome GHORC 54 e o i MAY GUULER | Lharges Nade ARRIVAI‘S banks flood, will remain here, his 1Ad. ariving this afternoon. | ! . Against Vatican headquarters. AR ] |CHILDREN’S PROGRAM THAN NURMAL ‘LBy Nazi Govt. UVER WEEK END Bt e ‘The Game Commiscion vessel seal| WILL BE PRESENTED -] 4 _ sailed from Seattle at 10 o’clock 2 ’ | BERLIN, Jlunc ‘1.—’1‘}111(‘ Ggrma:j in:;n;?“ltleavil;nLfii‘:“?ormlrllgh.:ur;);:‘é; SlmdFay nkigl’lat ‘wnh Exe(’:uuve offi-| TONIGH'EVOVER KINY i . | Government has formally .chargg Alfred Lomen, of the Lomen Com- ¢ Fran ufresne, who recently i P i SAYS REPURT‘ the Vatican with endangering nor-| Fish arrivals in Juneau since Sat-|merical Company, and his son 0:;- underwent .an qperation in Seaftle, h:xlrwp:s;::xisoiotg: :lhvle}grf\::v:‘?;z { mal relations with the Nazi Reich urday included the Hinote, in this|fred, Jr, arrived hére from Seat- 2board. The vessel is'expected 0 4.0 tion of Miss Bernice Butler of ‘h_\ failing to‘ ffll».]"o“ the eritical |y omine with 3,000 potinds of hali-|te aboard the steamer Yukon and aurlye h‘:' “”“"‘1“3'77 |KINY will be presented over the , & speech of Cardinal Mundelin, in 8t “Sold | i immediately took passage for the v R AT air from 8 until 8:30 o'clock tonight. Highest Temperature Was| chicago, in which he called Chan- [Put. sold to the Marlyn Pish Com-|1nterior aboard the PAA Electra Chile Improves Salt | participating on the program to- 64. On One Da Low- |Cetior Hitler “an alien Austrian pany at 710 and 5.0 cents per|plane. Ll :night will be Ladema Johnson, Al- H ’ y, L v]?:ux\xhungrr” and termed German pound. The packer 31-B-969, Capt - > ! SAN FRANCISCO, Cal—To im- fred Gordon, Jacqueline Schmitz, i est Was 34 Degrees | Propaganda Minister Goebbels| Jimmy Young, was also in today| . MRS. DONNELLY HERE prove the national health, Chile! Betty Rundell, Astrid Varness, Shir- | £ S “crooked.” | with 1500 pounds of king salmon| Mrs. Harry Donnelly, wife of the has decreed that all salt for hu"{]py 0lds, and Patsy Fleek. Follow- The month of Jur passed e {Ior the Juneau Cold Storage. prom:lnel:f- Fl?t dmi:ing ll;mnd atr;’d man consumption shall contain 4‘1ng the children’s part in the pro-| averaged cooler thom nun with Other salmon arrivals, in port|merchant, arrived here aboar e per cent sodium acid phosphate. gram, Miss Butler will read a bed- p:r(‘ipgx:u!iCL Moy .« normal, BARR ONLY BUSY |Sunday, were: Elfin II, Al::m Yukon from Seattle and took pas- Chilean diet has been m;blyplack- fim:‘ story. and cloudiness Gecidedly above the JUNEAU AVIATOR Coast Fisheries packer, Capt. E. O.[sage for Fairbanks aboard the PAA ing in mineral salts, a scientitific' Last week, at the opening pro- _ average for May ling to the : Swanson, with 21,000 pounds; Dor- |Plane. survey disclosed. gram, Jacqueline Schmitz, Bonny : monthly meteorological report is- _— othy D., Capt. Albert Frank, 2,700 4 5 ; — .- Bernice Marie Nelson, Juanita Diaz, ! ued today by the Juneau Weather Alaska Air Transport Pilot L. F. pounds for the ACF., and Nakat, 700| HERRING PACKER ON YUKON Bottles Cast Into S | Billy Feero, Donna Jean Olds, Dodo ! Bureau Office. Barr made the only local flight out pounds for the ACF. Lee H. Wakefield, pioneer of Port ottles Last Into dea |1,,; 41 sophia Harris took part : The average temperature for the of Juneau today, taking off from E. E. Engstrom, Sebastian-Stuart Wakefield on Raspberry Straits, LA‘ BALi (f“l' N{u_v 25.—SIX | the program. month was 47.0 degrees, as com- here this morning at 11 o'clock in buyer, received 12,000 pounds of where he Gl’f‘_"fltm a herring reduc- ’U““L\flm] \\Vl‘nv !m:llm are being cast | I v CON pared with @ normal of 477 degrees. that company's Stinson seaplane kings off the Sadle, Capt. §, A[Uon Plant is a passenger lo Coro e don D‘”;‘L‘L’g‘m‘“E;’;L:: COATES | ‘lhe mercury reached its highest on a charter trip to the Apex El Stevens; 2,500 pounds off the Alms| = © © 505 o5 0 g R B 2 ' point last R inth, a5, the-Tih % tion Nido Mine on bt lnlelt)ewnh gapt, AL Barihtes: 1,000 PGk, atf| oa0re DawlERRISIer (o the sigie, She e Tk Tpdtte dorruerk | ©: 1L Cteiee, bis satid Aushies, a tcmperature of 64 degrees was|G. A and R. L. Olothier. From | the 31-C-51, Capt. Rlaph Jameson, mer Curacao to proceed to his to D_r i_l. U. Sverdrup of the Scrlpps;:\re passengers south on the Aleu- registered, and the lowest was 34 de- | Lisianski he was to go empty w:flnd 1,000 pounds of kings from the p]-aflfzr;fhf S,l_l{m“er 'ieflln"‘ inst_n%x(mn 0,1 Oct'in“r)g'a})_h)i;um A(-tliau I Wil Dy Shex Stk grees on the 2nd. The highest tem- | Sitka, where a girl from the Shel- boat operated by N. Savikko. 2 A . R 4 B perature on record for any May at|don-Jackson School was waiting to| Shipments of fresh-iced salmon F L d V N Y k F E h'b Juncau over a pexiod of 43 years was|go to Hoonah. Back to Chichagof, |south aboard the steamer Aleutian st La y isits ew OrK's Iair Exhibits 80 degrees in 1915 and the lowest|Pilot Barr was there to pick up included 72 boxes by the Alaska ~ " — - emperature over a similar per-| Steve Vukovich and A. Ashenbriner ; Coast Fisheries and 29 boxes by Se- B 3 TRE iod was 24 degrees in 1884 for Juncau. | bastian-Stuart. 2 R ; 1 { The t precipitation for the t evening, the AAT Bellanca 6 Boats taking ice over the week- 3 § month was 582 inches, or 0.57 inch| Skyrocket seaplane took to the air and included: The Fern, Capt. Jobn above the normal. Precipitation|for the first time since last aut- |Lowell; Elfin II, Capt. E. O. Swan-I (001 inch or more) occurred onlumn as Pilot Sheldon Simimons|son; Tern, Capt. A. Rosness; Hilda, D L s SH | 23 days, as compared with a normal of 17 TS, PILLOW CASI SPREADS, CHEESECLOTH, HOUSE LININ A PECIAL LOT COTTON YARDAGE ON SALE—8 yds. for $1.00 B. M. Behi'ehcié Co. In Juneau'’s Leading Department Store $1 ) Boys 81 Cotton Pr ES, TOWELS, B T SPECIAL PRICES! put it through its paces in a test hop, following extensive repairs this Children's Blue Chambray Playsuits—$1.00 Children's Cotton Slacks, ages Ladies’ C Pajamas—$1.00:and $1.25 Children's Cotton Crepe Pajamas—$1.00 Ladies’ Cotton Frocks .00 to'$3.50 Children 75¢ to $1.45 3to 8+—$1.25 otton Gowns and 's Cotton Dresses Cotton Suits .00 and up Cotton House Coats $2.50 and $3.50 ints, 25¢ to 50¢ yd. LANKETS, BED- Dorothy D, Diana, Capt. V. Kallio; 31-C-51; Washington, Capt. George Last month was the cloudiest May | winter Dalton; Nakat; Sadie, Alms Avis, on record since the Juneau.Weath- e, |Capt. John Anderson, and Dixon, { er Bureau office was established in Capt. Emil Samuelson. {1015 Tn svemage daily aloydipess HOLDEN ON CHARTER |, Tha pizoy l(;‘ok 1:mr rxicetu‘u: af- ' was 92 (cloudi being comput- ernoon, to make her first trip to i ed from sunrise to sunset on a scale TO HAWK lNLET AND ;Ll\e grounds after being extensively { fromo tv;fllu 10 being ent v], ly ' (] RET "RN’ YESTER"AY!;x’iu“xln:l(x:fle};mfl:%s: t:i‘;,n:iiz:‘ fl:xi- L) ey were y cloudy ! e SLa . S - { 8 i 29 el d v |afternoon the Libby, McNeill and Pilot Alex Holden, flying the §i month I was tl Marine Alrways Bellanca Pacemak- ;l.bbg' tender Mary-Lou from Taku i lu-urlu without a «l b5 day er seaplane, yesterday made a arbor. : day being one wi 30 pe ory . tor v light . { Frisor—gengerier— less of cloudin Oul of 5 DAkl charter roundflight to Hawk Inlet, ADRIENNE GLASS SAILS 9.9 hours, t shine received 30 per cent. an of ) hours sun- or w with H. Arne and Knute Olson as passengers, returning to his hangar here at1:15o'clock yesterday after- | | B. R. Glass, left for the south aboard Adrienne Glass, daughter of Mrs. The total wind movement for the | n ‘“f‘““yd Jarman was fHERE|pe " Aleutian yesterday to. spend month was 5192 miles, or an aver- g ‘Lhe. summer in the States. She will ocity of 7.0 miles. The Max- visit with friends in Seattle and ained perioc A. L A MEETING TO | with her grandparents in Portland. s 24 miles from the 4 noon, 60 58 per cent d at 4 ROWE ON NORTHLAND Episcopal Bishop P. T. Rowe is a passenger on the Northland en- ™ route to Sigka. He will return to Juneau later. he American Legion Auxiliary s tonight at 8 o'clock in the for initiation and a social gathering Mrs rry Storiehouse, Presi- dent, will preside, and the enthus- iastic response to the recent poppy sale will be discussed. The meet- ing is the last gathering of the organization for the summer. T ne Dugout BE HELD TONIGHT \ MISS YOUNG LEAVES | Miss Edythe Young left for Seat- (tle aboard the Aleutian. She is to |make her home with her grand- |mother in Seattle and will enter | her senior year at high school there. {Mrs. Stella Young, mother of Miss ;Young, tentatively plans to visit her 'daughter this summer, D Lode and placer location notices for sale at The Empire Office. WARDEN TELLS OF BIG FLOOD AT FORT YUKON Places Damaged in High- | Sam White Reports Many|Dr. Cheifetz, Miss Hansen{‘ est Water on Record cedented flood at Fort Yukon has been received here from Sam O. White of the Alaska Game Com- mission. “I had 14 inches of water in the cffice,” Warden White wrote, “and according to oldtimers this is the highest stage of water ever seen at Fort Yukon. It looked serious for a while and if it had raised an- other 10 inches I feel sure it would have cleaned cut all the buildings | on Front Street from the road- house down to the Northern Com- mercial Company. “The ice pushed in at Demars, flcoding his warehouse and broke down the trees and fences around the roadhouse. It completely wreck- ed the house of Linkweiler’s and took the sheds off Carroll's house It knocked down the cache at We line’s and a lot of heavy ice came in through the low place in the front of Randall's, Randall had 52 inches in his front room. “The only dry cellars in town are the ones in Demar's store and the one in our house. The water just started to come in our: front door when it started to drop. The | Mission and hospital basements | were both flooded. “To date (the letter was written on’May 20) the water has dropped | about five feet and the ice jam is still holding. Randall just called up and said the water was raisin again _so the Porcupine must be I8gting loose Mation Picture - Having ¢ompleted Alaskan scenes Delano disembarked at Juneau. Miss Phillips is to visit with Miss First hand report of the unpre-| Dr. Sonia Cheifetz, Acting Direc- | THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, TUESDAY, JUNE 1, 1937. Craig, Ketchikan ' NORTHLAND IN | twee. the weather was none too promis-| g Staff Completes . Alaska Filming ° Miss Eleanor Phillips and Leofiard U. 8. DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE, WEATHKR BUREAT Rudolph, Alex Jacobson, F. Barch- ,ardt, Mrs. M. Narce, Mrs. A. Car- roll, Isabelle Dobson, Florence Dob- son, Marion Dobson, G. L. Isles, Mrs. G. McAllister. The Northland brought more than two hundred tons of general cargo to Juneau this voyage. Purser Kon| Eriksson is replacing Purser E. P inch, who is ill and confined to Ann's Hospital her NO BALL SAMES Rained out w the game sched- uled between the Moose and Doug- las yesterday evening | Rained out will be the game be- the Elks and the Moose to- night, undoubtedly, as at 4 o'clock i g | ECa s 0 0 Gl et S A &% ‘ MacSPADDENS OUT ' Planning to visit with her p I | 1ts in Renton, Washington, for th | greater part of the summer, Mrs. H. MacsSpadden, accompanied by her four daughters, sailed south | aboard the Princess Louise. | WILLIAMSON HERE | OUT THIS A. M. FULLY LOADED in the filming of “Swift Lightning F. W. Williamson, Talkeetna fur| Norman Dawn, director, Jack Wea- gaym pioneer, arrived here aboard therwax, animal manager, and J. T. {ho steamer Aleutian. | Passengers leaving here for Fair- Coyle, business manager, passed SR R banks this noon aboard the PAA through Juneau enroute to Holly- RUDOLPH BACK IN TOWN Flectra plane, were: Mrs. Harry wood aboard the Aleutian, while Mrs, C. El- Bill Rudolph returned to Juneau |Donnelly, John Dunn, the | linger; Frank | Kendall, Mr. ‘and Northland from Seattle where he | Mrs. Winebarger, Alfred Lomen and { Alfred Lomen, Jr. J. J. Meherin, cday, a passenger aboard | | ] Mrs. Franklin D. Roosevelt is shown in New York City at the Empire State Building exhibit of the 1939 World’s Fair. She was et by two of the special policemen of the Fair, wearing the uniforms in which they will appear during the exposition. The First Lady also inspected preliminary models, plans and othe- features to be incorporated in the Fair. THE WEAT : . HER Children Given | THIS P. M. WITH (By the U. 5. Weather Bureas: Biiad Forocast for Juneau and vicinity, beginning at 4 p.m., June 1. Hea“h A“B"‘I’m" 3“ FDR .’UNEA“ Rain tonight and Wednesday; moderate to fresh southeast winds. | L] | | l LOC\L DATA . - y Time sarom fer Temp. Humidity Wind Velocity Weather MOtOYShlP to Sail for Hoon- 4 pm. yest'y 3018 43 79 SE 10 Lt. Rain 4 il 1 hi . 14 am. today 20.90 51 83 SE 14 Lt. Rain Give Tub.er(,ulm Tests, ah .and Sl”éa-T‘ClTE‘ll(en Aot R “ 5 B soum Diphtheria Inmunization ing at 8+0'Cloc AR TR P T With thirty passengers abonrd, YESTERDAY ‘ ronay ; tor, Maternal and Child Health [booked with Purser Kon Erikssen| Highest 4p.m. Lowestda.m. hlxm. Pzz:;l_n iam. Program, and Miss Dorothy Han- for this port the motors Station temp. 'fimn. | temp. te.lyv vel r;cm: 2(15. We.u)my‘ sen, Public Health Nurse, have re-|land, Capt. L. Wiiliams t|Atka 40 0 3 38 20 Cloudy | turned from a trip for health acti- |the City Dock here this aft xnon'gnflm{ns;e g: ; e o= 74 Lo vities in Craig and Ketchikan, At at 2:30 o'clock, and is to leave at|Barrow o 2 Aqe & Craig, all children were immunized |8 o'clock this evening from Cash: Nome 50 & | -43 46 22 »00 C‘xfludj{ against diphtheria and tuberculin|Cole’s wharf for Hoonah, from Bethel €0 54 l f~ 24 & : gloug' tests were given at the request of |where she will continue to Sitka,|Fairbanks gj g: gg 5; . et the parents to 99 children. | before returning here Thursday af- Dawson [ ondy All children of school age were |ternoon. e S it s T ke also given a complete physical ex-1 gix passengers, including onejDutch Harbor 2 b L P gudy imination; findings discussed and|roundtripper s Stocker, | Kodiak 42 42 | 40 40 8 258 Rain B roundtripper, Miss Amy Stocker, Batdova 43 44 | Py a4 10 144 Rain |advice given to parents. In Ketchi-|are booked through to Sitka. M!\_\{Jtor(o 3 i Vi ey 2 i o {kan, the Schick test was given to)gmunice Logan, school teacher at sl‘l";::“ 5; 7 h 9 ~33 . 376 children who were immunizec [ <ok, boarded the Northland there i { o ok | A € ka 58 56 5 5 4 98 Rair against diphtheria last January,| northbound and 1s among those go-‘gfi:::k;“ppn e Lo R AR s v through the Territorial Department | no to Sitka. She will return south Sedaniton b 4 pr 4 :52 4 s ‘Clou of Heglth, |to sedttle from Sitka aboard thefgoo o % 98 50 he 1 s v | Ninety-two percent of those im-jgpip Others for Sitka are: Jamesip oo 82 82 58 58 4 05" dlsar munized proved to be now protect-| garrison, Bishop P. T. Rowe, Tomlgan prancisco .. 64 60 5 50 . 6 0. Cloudy ed against diphtheria. The remain-|g.meon and Kenneth B. Edwards. oW Toik B8 8 | e k1 I o Bt 'Cld’v ing 8 percent will receive a second Coming here on the Northland Washington 86 82 | @ 2 6. ° Pt Cldif protective dose at the opening offgere: Miss Joan Woody, Mrs. Almal i ! ’ the by AL ‘]‘r;” McKinley, Miss Marilyn McKinley, WEATHER: CONDITION AT 8 A. M. TODAY Thirty-three children entering | . 7 RS DXt ¢ indergarten next fall were exam-|on ey M'”]‘\}_DXJ' f',"‘;;"_ %h'f(‘;f]t‘fl Seattle (airport), clear, temperature, 57; Blaine, élear, 44; |Vic- ined. Among the Jatter were sev- | Fornum, Mrs. J. Daas, B0W0lY irorin, clear, 56; . Alert Bay, fogey, 50; Bull Harbor, shwets, 80; Triple eral cases in urgent need of imme- |1y ison: MIS. J. L@ oL, - E-rsland, cloudy, --; Langara, raining, 50; Prince Rupert, .cloddy,( 51; diate medical care for which they | 1unter, B M. Williams, E. J. GO yeotchikan, raining, 48; Craig, misting, 50; Wrangell, ¥alning. 53; Pet- were referred fo their respective|UDS: D- Dulin, Mys. J Lynn, MIS.|oopurg, raining, 51; Sitka, cloudy, 48; Soapstond ‘Point raining, —; family physicians, 5 Sy Radioville, raining, 46; Juneau, cloudy, 52; Skagway, ¢loudy, 50; Gape Miss I. MoDondld, & Y, St. Elias, raining, 42; Cordova, raining, 40; Chitin, clbudy, 44; MéCar- H. D. Narvis, Mrs. H. Nar “'thy, cloudy, 42; Anchorage, cloudy, 46; Fairbanks, eldudy, 56; ‘Nenana, clear, 60; Hot Springs, cloudy, 58; Tanana, sprlnklh)g, 50; Savpon- ga, foggy, 50. Juneau, June 2. — ‘Sunrise, 3: 03 a.m.; sunset,’ 8:53 p.m. WEATHER SYNOPSIS A storm area of marked intensity has developed over the north- eastern portion of the North Pacific Ocean, the storm area being cen- tered near Kodiak, the lowest reported pressure being 28.90 inches at Kodiak. A steep barometric pressure gradient existed between Cape Spencer and the Prince William Sound region. High pressure pre- vailed from Alberta southeastward to the Hawaiian Islands. This gen- jeral pressure distribution has been attended by precipitation along the coastal regions from the Aleutians southeastward ‘to Dixon En- trance, by unsettled weather over the interior and western portion of Alaska, and by generally fair weather from Prince Rupert southward to California. Southeast gales were reported this morning over the Gulf of Alaska, the U. S. Coast Guard cutter Tallapoosa havin re- {ported a 70-mile wind in the vicinity of Hinchinbrook Island. | | ENDEAVOR II REACHES U. S. | | { | | i s With the Brenton lightship lénding an American atmosphere, the fine new racing yacht, Endeavor Il, built by England’s famed T. 0. M. Sopwith as a contender for America’s cup races is shown here as she sailed under her own power off Newport, R. L., toward Rher final destination, Bristol, R. L ~ ROTTEN Fishermen teking advantage of |the two-day holiday came back with {almost universal reports of “rotten,” | due to bad weather. Some of the anglers enjoyed a thorough ducking | while others stayed inside eut of} MRS. ADAMS HERE the rain and wind and saved the| Mrs. Horace P. Adams, former wear and tear on the human body resident of Juneau, whose husband jand ushing gear. ' |is now agent for the Alaska Steam- Some fish were caught, but there ship Company at Petersburg and were no optimistic reports. | Wrangell, arrived on the Yukon for i o s ARSI |a visit here, accompanied by her Empire classifieas pay. |son, Horace O. Adams, Jr. COWLING RETURNS Following a business trip to Seat- tle, of a month’s duration, during which he paid a brief visit to Grand Coulee Dam, E. J. Cowling, head of the Gastineau -Construction Com- pany, arrived back at his home here aboard the motorship Northland. e { e = i % e . % BOOKKEEPING SERVICE ' TRAINED AtéyCOUNTANTS Tax and System Service . JEMES C. COOPER COMPANY CERTIFIED PUBLIC ACCOUNTANTS Phone 182 Juneau, Alaska Goldstein Bldg. Fresh Fruit and Vegetables FRESH LOCAL EGGS DAILY California Grocery THE PURE FOODS STORE Telephone 478 Prompt Delivery 1 TRE TERMINAL “This Is Something Different That You Will Enjoy.”

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