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

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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, THURSDAY JULY 1, 1937 Wuman Bruugm Here Wednesday Mrs. Ralph Young, Bleed- ing from Tonsilectomy, Is Flown by AAT And—We have the CLOTHES YOU WANT at the PRICES Mrs. Ralph Young, bleeding se- |verely after a hemorrhage follow- |ing a tonsilectomy at Chahem Wed- nesday afternoon, was flown to Ju- |neau on an emergency flight by |Alaska Air Transport Pilot Sheldon YOU WANT TO pAY Simmons. She was admitted to the |Government hospital Michaels-Stern ‘ She was accompanied here by her : {husband by Mrs. Andy Gunderson, Su“s Qnd wife of the cannery superintend- Topcoats ent, who is a trained nurse. Rev s;o s35 $4o J. L. Webster and N. E. Impett Blue, Sport Coats |also came in from Chatham in the Men's Ties ~_4 §1 and $1.25 STETSON and HARDEMAN HATS in all latest styles $5.00 and $7.50 WHITE SHOES —for Men, Women and Children. SAMPSON LUGGAGE Trunks and Suiicases B.M. Behrends Co., Inc. | »hi ore truck accidents, Juneau's Leading Departmer Cl f July -t na, Tree Shortage Slows Reforestation Project! |with Jack Burford and Harry Inoya !for Excursion Inlet and Fourth of |July supplies for that place. He returned with George Ramstead. Wednesday at 7 p. m. he flew to Atlin with Joe McDonald, J. R. {been working on the road between |Tulsequah and the Taku Polaris mine. The men were to engage in $2 and $2.50 H L. F. Barr and Dominion Day in Phoenlx Hose Atlin, Pilot Simmons returned to 35c and soc Jungau today at 7a.m. ! This morning at 11 a. m. he hop- ped off for Sitka with Alfred |Dishaw, a round-tripper to Sitka, Stevenson of the Signal Corps on a fishing trip to Lake Eva. Simmons was scheduled to return O'NEILL, Nebraska, July 1.—Lee Deveveaux, 37, a construction fore- nian, thinks he has something c1 a Lroken bone record. He's had 29 \utomiobile and 22 broken bones. Baseball, three broken bones. Sha“ghal Gets B 4 resorts, tea houses and,| g,y nig Jungs have been punc- for at private parties and ¢, eq jn accidents. Three times doc- o tors told his wife he probably would Pful nf U s Althc actors have made " y I LI ) ir“‘l'“‘”““' '1‘”" "‘";"‘" Al “1‘“ In the last 10 years, he estimates, actor can or is three meals| i s a day. Almost all of the women’s| Da's SRARTCALOURIAT00: Spdopsor Siiip-Teasers "l | Chinese prejudice against girls on|susceptible to a variety of diseases. the stage. Di: rous forest fires have denud- SHANGHAI, Chi 1 ed large areas and there are now Since an Americ: cer came to to least a 15-year job ahead. Burlesque, knock-about farces a S TR music hall skits are nothing new in| MISSOULA, Mont., July 1.—Any-| More than 28 tons of feed were Shanghai, center of China's show one who has attempted to transplant'distributed at 500 emergency sta- a mountain pine tree will sympa-|tions in Minnesota this winter for thize with the Federal Forest Ser-|5000 pheasants and other game have been interspersed with the na- tive version of Sally Rands fan annually for the northern Rocky| The tallest known tree in Cali- dance, impersonations of Charlie Mountain region. |fornia, a sequoia sempervirens in Chaplin and Harold Lloyd and song So sensitive are the trees that Humboldt County, towers 364 feet. and dance men. Comedy skits are { | Bellanca. [ Pilot Simmons went out again Slacks $4 to $6.50 placer mining. After_gttending a joint celebra- this afternoon. | e — Football, three broken bones. | Moto: le wreck, one cracked 170,000 acres in need of planting. ‘A year’s output from the nursery world. And with the invasion of foreign movies and musical revues, sometimes slight changes in tem-|It has a circumference of 47 feet » perature will kill them. They are at the ground. }Wodm-sday afternoon at 5 o'clock |{Dermott and J. Petroff, who had Arrow Shirts (tion of the marriage of AAT Pilot Capt. Fred S. Edwards and R. H. { s the record: es and are presented at skull. few wamen ve overcome the| !will plant 11,750 acres so it has at stage entertainr traditional Chinese comedy acts ing and planting 10,000,000 treos‘ ————— aimed at In less than a year— Blackburn, Al McDermott, K. Mc- Rev. J. L. Webster to Sitka, and l'dK ures since 1921. parts are taken by men although a | IS boast of almost vice's Savenac nurserymen, rais- |birds. FIRST CHOICE in the Pacific West! above zi! motor oils at any price can give you more and bette: On Emergency MORROW KIN WED 1DR P. J. MAHONE | ‘Amelia Delays - DIES, SEATTLE Dangerous Hop iFormcr Juncau Physician ABOARD U. 8. CUTTER ITASCA ; ; AT HOWLAND ISLAND, July 1. } Will Be Laid to Rest Adverse weather forced Amcha Ear- Tomorrow hart and copilot Noonan to post- |pone the dangerous 2570 mile hop from Lae, New Guinea, until to- |morrow. The route has nevcr been £ | SEATTLE, July 1.—Funeral ser- vices will be held tomorraw for Dr.|sioun before. Paul J. Mahone, 55, prominent sur- ‘gt-nn, who died at his home yester- |day. HOP TOMORROW | .| OAKLAND, Cal, July 1—Amelia | Dr. Mahone was in the Medicallp, pyrt 15 scheduled to take off |Corps at Fort Lewis, Wash,, during! pom 1ae about 6 pm. PST today, |the World War and had practiced| acoording fo a radio received here {in Juneau, Alaska, for ten i by her husband George Putnam, His widow, mother and sister This time is about noon tomorrow vive there, because of the International | date line. WASHINGTON, July 1. The | Congressional Tax Inguiry Commit- |tee today was told by Abe Fontas ’all()rlll‘y for the Securities C(lm-: Imi.\mun. that Alfred Sloan, ('hun~‘ man of General Motors, and Mrs Sloan saved approximately $1,900,- 000 in taxes in two rs by personal | holding companies. |Just a “Bartender” So He Asks Divorce HOLLYWOOD, July 1.—“I |ried for love, but she made me bartender.” Paul B. Meserve, landscape archi- tect, so complained in his cro complaint for divorce against wealthy actress-wife, Margaret Hamilton. Parties, parties, parties. That's all the husband saw at their home | he asserted in declaring that he had lo be just the bartender. — e ur- ce at Douglas Nat. Saturday. adv. CIlH'll(a Rands’ music. Grand old BEER IS NOW AVAILABLE IN THE BRAND NEW STEINIE Bottle A fully ma- tured, rich and mellow brew — the best Milwau- kee Beer since 1855. KEGLINED For Sale at Your Favorite Dealer ALASKA DISTRIBUTOR W. J. LAKE & CO., Inc. SEATTLE, WASH. | | | mar- her 4 1LSO IN CANS Tourists will spend at lea: TRADE-MARKED (000,000 in Canada this year, a fi- {gure exceeding the peak of $309,- 1000,000 in 1929, according to an es- \tlnmtv by the director of the Can- |adian Travel Bureau. D Empire c‘lnwhmls pay. Constance Morrow, daughter of the late Senator Dwight W. Morrow, who recent- ly married Aubrey Niel Morgan, husband of her sister, Elizabeth, who died in 1934. The bride is a sister of Mrs. Charles A. Lind- bergh. The groom is a director of a large department store in Cardiff, Wales. The ceremony was. performed at the summer home of the bride's mother in leh lhven Maine. youngest MOVIE AGTRESS GIVEN DIVORGE LOS ANGELES, Cal, July 1. Rita Gray Chaplin Aguire, who is the mother of Charlie Chaplin’s two boys, and well known movie actress, was granted a divorce today from Henry Aguire, Jr., vaudeville actor. | They were married in September, | 1936, and lived together for only| two months. | New Health, Sanitation Laws Are in Effect Along with other laws and regu- lations enacted by the 1937 Legis- lature the new rules and regula- tions of the Territorial Department of Health are effective today, ac-| cording to a statement from that office. These regulations cover sanitation in restaurants, grocery stores, meat markets, barber shops, beauty par- lors, canneries and dairies. e A delicate film of ozone 15 to 30 miles up enables life to live upon the earth by protecting it from the ’vml(’n(‘u of the sun’s ultra violet rays. And Then M at Our Expense. . Americo's Newest Shopping Service. Yo Wards Warehouse for Fast Ord ling! Iinvented to Save You Time and Money. s ® B M EE ENEENNERNEENENYES NN EEENEN | See Actual Samp! taterials and Let Transportation is by eco- al group-shipping nom To You at Your Office, Where You Can See and Trained Clerks Help Select Your Needs! _ |Juneau | British Wowed U. 8. DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE, WEATHER BUREAD THE WEATHER (By the U. §. Weather Bureau) Forecast for Juneau and vicinity, beginning at 4 p.m., July 1. Cloudy tonight and Friday, probably showers; light to moderate _ |southerly winds. LOCAL DATA Bsaromter Temp. Humidity Wind Velocity Wesather 300 51 82 NE 4 Lt Rain 300 49 93 E 2 Lt Rain 30.2 53 8 s 9 Cloudy CABLE AND RADIO REPO”.TS TODAY Lowest 4a.m. 4am. Precip. temp. temp. velocily 24 hrs. 48 02 32 b o] 40 44 46 4“4 40 46 46 46 48 44 42 42 Time 4 p.m. yestly 4 am, today Noon today Max. temp. last 24 hours 57 38 48 64 66 60 50 50 52 52 53 57 62 62 4 4 82 70 4am. Weather Cloud; Cloudy Pt. Cldy Cloudy Cloudy, Cloudy Rain Cloudy Cloudy Lt. Rain Station Anchorage Barrow Nome Bethel Fairbanks Dawson St. Paul Dutch Harbor Kodiak Cordova 32 42 46 46 44 4 46 46 46 19 i 42 44 52 60 62 56 8 60 64 - 80 58 60 iWashingwn WEATHER CONDITION AT 8 A. M. TODAY i l Seattle (airport), cloudy, temperature, 60; Blaine, cloudy, 56; Vic- |toria, cloudy, 53; Alert Bay, cloudy, 50; Bull Harbor, partly cloudy, 41; "Inpk- Island, partly cloudy; Langara Island, partly cloudy, 52; Prince Rupert, clear, 54; Ketchikan, cloudy, 48; Craig, cloudy, 55; Wrangell, cloudy, 50; Petersburg, clear, 54; Sitka, cloudy, 50; Port Althorp, clou- |dy; Radioville, raining 52; Soapstone Point, cloudy, 52; Juneau, cloudy, ‘5(1 Skagway, cloudy, 53; Cape Yakataga, partly cloudy; Cordova, partly (mudy 49; Chitina, cloudy, 50; McCarthy, cloudy, 48; Anchomge part- ‘ly cloudy, 50; Portage, cloudy, 68; Fairbanks, cloudy, 54; Hot Springs, |cloudy, 56; Tanana, cloudy, 54; Nulato, cloudy, 54; Flat, partly cloudy, ',54; Ohogamute, clear, 59. z July 2. — Sunrise, 2:59 a.m.; sunset, 9:08 p.m. WEATHER SYNOPSIS The barometric pressure was high this morning along the coastal regions from the Prince Willlam Sound region southward to Oregon, |thence southwestward to the Hawaiian Islands, the crest being 30.36 linches over the Pacific Ocean at latitude 34 degrees and longitude ‘138 degrees, elsewhere over the field of observation low pressure pre- lvailed the lowest reported pressures being 29.50 inches at Barrow and \2950 inches over the Pacific Ocean at latitude 50 degrees and longi- 1tude 162 degrees. This general pressure distribution has been attended |by fair weather at Ketchikan and by unsettled and showery weather {over most of the remainder of Aliska. Seattle reported a thunder- | storm yesterday afternoon. 18 Sitka | Ketchikan |Prince Rupert |Edmonton | Seattle | Portland |San Francisco |New York . Clear Clear Cloydy Pt. Cldy Pt. Cldy Cloudy Clear Cloudy 58 62 56 aiBasnsnl vasroacssn goHRkokalBedokge" | | there is a little gap in the hills, and beyond it is the sea, and it is |there I do be looking the whole day long for ’tis the nearest thing to yourself that I can see.” By Love Letter = == LONDON, July 1—Authors and| aska Way Seawall other celebrities have applauded as CQlebnfion Phnned (literature a love letter written by a | |bare-footed Irish boy 30 years ago.| { SEATTLE, July 1.—Capt. {It was read at a recent Royal Lit-| Goddard will tomorrow meet City |erary fund banquet here. | Engineer Carle and Councilman { Maurice Healy, K. C., said the let- | Harlan to plan a celebration of the (ter, originally read at an assize completion of the Alaska Way sea- |trial at Cork, “could not be writ-‘wall which will be sometime in Sep- ten today in London, or Boston, and | tember. the trial judge at the time was so| It is expected that the 24-foot |struck by its beauty he supplied |bronze statue of an Alaskan Pioneer, ‘\ruud- for the boy and girl to get sculptured by Alonzo Victor Lewis, married. |will be unveiled at that time. “Far away from where I am now, T % The boy wrote: A J. i Empire classifieds pay. Fresh Fruit and Vegetables HOME GROWN RADISHES, ONIONS and FRESH LOCAL EGGS DAILY California Grocery THE PURE FOODS STORE Telephone 478 Prompt Delivery CHARTER BOAT PAL (Spacious) RECONDITIONED THROUGHOUT 40 ft. Length—Accomodations for 16 Sleeps 6 @ Trips to the Glacier @ Strip Fishing @ Pleasure or Business Exemine nerchandise before You Pay for It A Salesgirl Writes Your Order for You.:. EEEEENNEEFEAEESEEER S ERER AR ES A NS E NN AN BN EE N NN EE N MM EEEEEEREERE R NN NEEE PN : 10 YOUR ORDER IS WIRED TO PORTLAND IF IT TOTALS $50.00 OR MORE—YOUR ORDER IS WIRED TO OUR PORTLAND WAREHOUSE WHERE IT IS GIVEN PREFERRED HANDLING AND IS ON ITS WAY BACK TO YOU IN LESS THAN 3 HOURS! Try America’s Newest Shopping Service! Invented to Save You Money No motor oil 7‘37‘ 127 Third St.— Juneau Telephone 654 Behrends Bank Building r lubrication @ Family or Party Boat SEE SKIPPER MAX DORMAN at Lower City Float YOUR LOCAL OPTOMETRIST is equipped to give you complete eye comfort, as well as glasses. We have the most modern optlcal equipment obtainable with which to examine your eyes. We also offer an all year service which is depend- able, and conveniently located for your benefit. Our work is guaranteed to give satisfaction. Dr. Rae Lillian Carlson OPTOMETRIST Graduate: Rochester School of Optometry University of the State of N, Y. Post Graduate: Northern Illinois College of ’ ; Office Ludwig N OphtHalmology and Otology. ’s Jewelry Store Phone 31

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