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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, TUESDAY, JULY 13, 1937. i | M h f BE U. 8. DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE, WEATHER BUREAD g ALAGKA BRINGS, New Meiaters ¢ THE WEATHER " { . + ‘ 4 | ¥ - 2” FR ; 0 a ry u ra i (By the U. 8. Weather Bureau} . Forecast for Juneau and vicinity, beginning at 4 p.m., July 13. | n i Cloudy tonight and Wednesday, possibly showers; gentle to mod- 8 erate southerly winds. o b s LOCAL DATA N E G L l G E s s ; ooty = Time sarom>ter Temy. Humidity Wind Veloclty —Weathee - " Steams Toward the States| Organization Backs Move!Dr. Aronsen Approves of|s pm vesty . 005 61 2 . 8 5 Cloudy ¢ Monday Afternoon After | for Community Swim- Establishing Labora- |4 am. today ... 3010 56 Roubvr e g P A J A MA s : 5 Noon today 3009 67 58 AW [ Clgudy ¢ ’ Hour Stay in Port Here ming Pool tory Here CABLE AND RADIO REPOPTS ] g § DAY 4 | 3 In port for an hour, the steam-| Announcement of the election of| The feasibility of establishing a b g i : & ! ] g 3 S ¥ .m. Precip. 4am. . . f i & 3 S : ship Alaska salled south Monday |Lu Liston and Elroy Ninnis to mem-|tuberculosis = control program in Max. temp. Lowest 4a.m. am Fashion is the breath of l}fe Jlat 5 pm. with 27 leaving Juneay | bership in the Juneau Rotary Club|Southeast Alaska, with laboratory| Station last24 hours ‘C;';P» temp. * velocity 3““)"3- Weather to us .. we live for it and with for the States and 18 for South- |marked the meeting of the organ-|headquarters in Juneau, was voiced gnc}.mrnge e 7: e 5 W p- Olear ¥ east Alaska ports after depositing ization at noon today in Percy’s|todny by Dr. Joseph Aronsen, tu-|Barrow 4 | s ) 4 o Pt Cla it twenty-four hours every %0 perbBHN N riop the TWEREE] Cate. berculosis expert, who is covering [ NOme £ Y R P, e . v . pale. residel < gl ” ro o - | 2 39 b o day. ]usf Sif')p and think for ward. Charles Beale, president, presided|the Alaskan area through the Bu-| ZHUEE i o 51 56 4 T Dlear Coming here were: Mrs. N. Swan, |at the session and visitors were F.|reau of Indian Affairs. DAWsoh 74 | 44 46 0 02 Clear a moment how dull YOUR Mrs. C. Brickson, J. Sahll, C. H.|S. Dickenson of Seattle and L. .| Sending in a report. foday recom-| D3SO L Rl Rl rd 1ifa 'W()Uld b(? wnhout the ex- Metz, H. Howard, E. Gxovaneui.v’."‘l'“* of KL‘Q‘('.hlklnl‘ bm.llx Rotar- n.wn(lmg.prumuu«m of a l.ubv‘rmlq-‘ Dutch - Harbor 50 46 46 6 01 Cloudy T. B. Brown, G. C. Winn, Mr. and |ians, and Robert M. Douglas of the|sis program here, Dr. Aronsen is Kodiak 54 50 50 6 11 « Cloudy ciiement of new clothes. Mrs. F. M. Yost and Lucy Yost,|Standard Oll Company of Seattle. |leaying for Ketchikan aboard the|Sor e == 79 5% X2 b x Cloudy Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Murch and| Voling to back the Chamber of Northland to continue study of the|y ot 68 5 % 3 8 Mist J. H. Much, Jr. F. E. Warner, M. Commerce for a swimming pool in|practical problems of establishing | gy~ " T | 54 554 B 03 : }{OUSE COATS are the lflst 8. Moe, M. Kashof, J. Edmiston,|Juneau, the club appointed F. E.|the prublcm.‘ Following a ""h“r"‘Ketcmkan 58 54 56 0 16 Cloudy 3 3 |[Edna Anderson and C. Coyne. McDermott, M. J. Wilcox and O.|stay there, he will proceed on south.! pri e Rupert ... 62 54 b4 0 24 Cloudy word in negliges. These Those leaving Juneau were: For L. Kendall on the pool committee.| Associated with the Phipps In-|pamoneon 8 46 46 0 0 Clear ~, i i f Seattle—Mrs. Charles Sabin, Mr.| The luncheon program included a |stitute of the University of Penn- gaaitle M6 60 60 6 T Rain L}O(It.S come m a var}ety o and Mrs. P. J. Sternig, Tnez West, |{lute solo by Tom Kendall, accom- |sylvania, Dr. Aronsen has been re-| poriand 4 62 62 6 0 Cloudy -fabrics and colors. Sizes 14 Frank Benson, J. M. Brewster, V,|panied by Miss Kathleen Carlson; a{cently working with the Bureau of{ san Francisco 62 56 56 10 0 Cloudy to 4? C. Spaulding, Elsie Lundell, Theo';n*:ullqn!: by Miss Carlson, a vocal solo|Indian Affairs on tuberculosis|New York ... 86 66 68 4 4 Pl. Cldy " 2 Qwens, Mrs. H. Nelson, B. F. Kane, by T «;m lK(-ndull':,l accolmpfinleld l;y problems. He arrived in Juneau sev-| washington 90 4 8 4 0 Clear Jerry Goss, A. Schwartz, M. A.[Miss Carlson, and a piano solo by eral days ago. < & Jones, G. M. Grasty, Joe Schultz,|Miss Carlson. J. B. Burford was in| Transportation has been consider- | WEATHER CONDITION AT 8 A. M. TODAY Prlces ss ,5 t° B. Vanderbilt, Melford Arndt, H.|charge of the program. ed one of the main disadvantages| geagtle (airport), cloudy, temperature 60; Blaine, cloudy, 56; Vie- Ll Junta, George Hartle, George New- % o2 e to carrying on extensive work with|ioria, cloudy, 57; Alert Bay, cléudy, 54; Bull Harbor, foggy, 55; Triple gard, Joanne Sabin, W. Kember, . the Natives in Alaska, but following|sjand, foggy; Langara Island, cloudy, 54; Prince Rupert, raining, 56; l‘ ’ &% Dave Evans, Mrs. W. H. Martin, | his investigations of the past week,|Ketchikan, cloudy, 57; Craig, cloudy, 59; Wrangell, foggy, 57; Peters- ., 5 0 'L. 8. Rice and W. T. Roberts. Dr. Aronsen believes that travel by phurg, cloudy, 58; Sitka, cloudy, 57; Tenakee, cloudy; Port Althorp, 1 For Petersburg—George Moser, R. plane will fit in satisfactory withcloudy; Soapstone Poift, cloudy, 55; Juneau, cloudy, 55; Skagway, 4 Amundson, J. B. Loftus, T. A. the program. Education of Indiuns‘clnudy. 57; Cordova, cloudy, 56; Chitina, clear, 58; McCarthy, clear, 58; GING P’AI AMAS : Thatcher, J. Scott. "" "surgen s to improved standards of living will {Valdez, partly cloudy, 60; Seward, cloudy, 56; Anchorage, partly cloudy, LOUN mn For Wrangell—Mr. and Mrs. Wil- be a main feature of the program, 62; Portage, raining, 60; Fairbanks, partly cloudy, 68; Nenana, clear, ' Satin Shiped Taffeta and liam Whitehead, Grace Lincoln, W. H H as well as thorough research into|60; Tanana, partly cloudy; Ruby, clear, 656; Nulato, partly cloudy, 74; . : G. Hansen. WI“] Alr Attack causes of spread of the disease. |Flat, cloudy, 55; Ohogamute, cloudy, 60. b’ Printed Silk— & For Ketchikan—Lawrence Kerr, . S e Juneau, July 14. — Sunrise, 3:15 a.m.; sunset, 8:56 p.m. H Mrs. H. Nn;dnes, Emma O’Connor, NIECES 0!,' GOVERNOR £ WEATHER SYNOPSIS k Mary Cauthorne, Dr. Sonia Cheifetz, 4 d i i s7.50 and up Lyle Hebert, Leon Rankin, J. Hm_\Waves of Flghlmg Govern- VISITING IN JUNEAU, Tlfie haro&ebrlf: pressure ws:shemfll this n,;rning from the MacKen- son, O. Wheat. ment Planes Reporled on % Vi 5 zie valley southwestward to. Southeas f" Alaska, thence southward over ) il P R RN 2 Mrs. Charles Broughton of Day- the Pacific Ocean and southwestward o the Hawaiian Islands with a Sizes 14 to 44 Three Separate Fronts ton, Washington, and Mrs. Hubert|Crest of 3052 inches about 500 miles west of the coast of norihern AU o - | i Ovc:rton of Olyn:lpiu Wash., nieces California. A slight barometric depression prevailed over the North | MADRID, July 13.—Government of Govs John W. T‘ruy ;r;ived in | Pacific Ocean a short distance south of the Alaska Peninsula, the low- offensives, bolstered by air power|juneau aboard -the Northwestern | €50 reported pressure being 29.80 inches. This general pressure distri- 4 the Madrid forces have never before und are to be guests here untj) | Pution has been attended by precipitation over Southeast Alaska and p shown, hammered Tnsurgent 1ines|icqving aboard the Aleutian. over the coastal region from the Aleutians to Cook Inlet and by partly B l fon Lhrf,p separate fronts today and| n honor of the two visitors, Ml_S"‘clmlcly to cloudy weather over the remainder of the field of observathf:. ° ° e re 00 e [ itnesses sald the fighting was Up|garle Clifford, who knew them as | In nine states, poys of 14 and ilb“;’:/uir\‘l(%l 2?,.‘1;1::2;; new phase of Iris and Glenna Troy in Port Town-| nIEs |girls of 12 years of age are consid- X 4 | Bk Rk s 5 send, entertained with Mrs. G. F.| [ prey § i g JUNEAU'S LEADING DEPARTMENT STORE i |this war,” one visitor said. “Tn size Soech oot et e A S5y wilo-lo glee RN St Y0 CIO, AFL Lead Cl ted | ood ey S Lt i Freeburger cabin. Miss Harriet May, | | Florida, Tdaho, Maryland Missis- § eaders Llose! been able to put in the field mech-| : 1 by i) e s UBI0, viand, 3 ATy LT T : anized power which perhaps may be |*NO/Cr guest at the Governor's) NEW YORK, July 13—L. New-|gipni New Jersey, Rhode Island, ATl ) IR R 3 R in Conference as ok ‘:l o ¢ perhabs may be |y ome, was also honored at the af- house, 72, former Chairman of the | mennassee and Washington, p ] F Threats Fl iy (orcea f sl for fhe Gengl fair. |Board of the American Smelting Thr nl“as ress y (e Said waves of government| TOMOTTOW, Mrs. George F. Alex-|and Refining Company and identi-| | iyt NEW YORK, July 13. — Threats | fighting planes bombed the Insur- ander has asked a few friends to| fled with L,he Guggenhn?m bl | § f f . e S o i meet Mrs. Broughton, Mrs. Over-|for many years, died here today af- | | of raids and counter-raids in the|gent batteries and nfachine-gunned iss May at her home in!ter a lingering iliness. | ur erman ace nation’s rival labor camps today!the troops, making it almost impos- |00 and Miss May & Shaas ] e b | b L touched off the heralded “open war- |Sible to send reinforcements to the|the afternoon from 4 to 6 o'cloc [ { — | —— fare” in the OIO and AFL battle for |front west of Madrid. TAT 1T QAT g | | Mlss‘NG WIFE‘ VIENNA, July 13—The Ausiro- Tywo fisfed Youngster Mak-{control of 40000 members of the|s e AR L ONE HALIBUT SALE 4 i IGerman Commission of experts . L TQUpgRLer longshoremen's association. [ MADE ON EXCHANGE | s [have agreed that control of the ing Bid for Fistic As a prelude to the struggle, the| {J; Y, One sale of 800 pounds of halibut,| SAN FRANGISGO. Cal, July 13— Effort B(‘in % Matf(‘ to Con_\prnm in both countries,” in the in- Spothght leaders of both sides held confer- - {off the 30-D-768, Captain Lester \The Alaska Packers Association will eIng ) ;1« rest of the German race,” will iy ences behind closed doors. Princi- | Walton, was made to the New E"g'may a regular $2 dividend August 10 m}j{ l?oy d\)‘/ngh:i Fi)rmer eud, tho froquent newspaper aUaks) gg vy July 19 A1 Hostak, [PAS Idicated that it s a fight to| MDR Gflln‘ln]r;d _Pish Company at prices of 7.0 o stockbolders on record July 31 usband, on Lasboat e i‘:;;}ff’"r‘:isy‘::‘e‘“:::;g T;;d]i‘! Joseph Ryan, International Long Thé Alaski’ Coket’ Maherias ship.! Postal receipts at Augusta, Ga.,| of the kitchen i RS T ) s | Wb 5 shoremen’s Association president, waSHINGTON. pE=, ped to Seattle 54 boxes of frozen have shown a gain for 43 consecu- : An:v a]-t .Nn.nlxl.m. [;\lu;.\;\l\[\n;x )hl‘;’WOODS BUY LYNAN :::k'::);erm};erfmto:;gg::r \:;\er;pot:e declared “we are not taking ulti-| gniren SLalesOC.o;\r‘xllircl:' dep’::fi Hatibut. Jtive months. _; been missing since the night of Juiy Q ] 4 S » The M 4 5 5, reported today that no direot con-| HOME IN SEATTER|ijgnis in his meeting with Eddie|™2tums from anyhody.” The WIti-|ment reported that June imports tact had been had with the Roy! —— “Babe” Risko, former world mid-|matum served by Hamy Bridges. of gold totaled $262,000000, the larg- Wright gashoat on which Mrs. Nor-| Warden David Wood, Jr., of the|dleweight champion, who lost hisPresident of the Pacific Coast ""g.'ll‘-*'f amount in any month since the man was reported to have left Ju-|Alaska Game Commission and Mrs.crown to Freddie Steele. shoremen groups, said the CIO islgolq sterilization program started in neau after being hauled from the|Wood have purchased the James E.| " The fight is a schedyled ten|ic.crmined to invade the water-|December. Exports amounted tof water at the upper city float and|Lynch home in Seattre Tract and | rounder. ronk [only $80,000. June imports of silver so far he had been unable to find (€xpects to start shortly renovating - {amounted to $6,000,000, while ex- the vessel |and enlarging it. The Lynans are ol MRS. ELLA ST“.L, iporLs totaled $244,000. ile at Shelter Island yesterday {80ing south. SIX COME HERE MRS BIGGS SAIL | TRREIER, o6 55 TR in a plane, Norman was told by an| The Warden paid warm compli- ABOARD JEANNE e ’ Indian there that he had seen the,ment to The Empire vl:}:» fit;zl ad- FOU-OWIN'G VlSIT‘ | o Wright boat and that he had ob-|vertising columns in making known served three persons, aboard Nor-|the purchase. It was an Empire ad Six paséngets’ game {0, JRaesy Mrs. Ella H. Still, mother of Mrs_l Fhaas 4 from Tulsequab! this .mornidg 4 an believes one of the trio miy bejthat led to the deal. aboard the Jeanne, Captain Wil-|N. Lester Troast, accompanied by| WASHINGTON, July 13. — The his wife, but so far he had b B ATRTEY 3 her daughter, Mrs. Francis Biggs,|House today overrode the veto of | left aboard the Alaska for the south |President Roosevelt to continue the Verne Bren- |enroute to Mrs. Still's home in Nan-|low interest rates on farm loans for A tucket, Mass. |two more years. The vote was 260 Mrs. Still has been visiting Mrs.[for to 97 against. liam Strong, whgch docked today at 9 am, Coming here were: dleson, Charles H. Smith and his granddaughter, Billy Wilms, Duncan MINER TAKES BRIDE IN JUNEAU unable to contact the vessel directiy.| A J, Norman also contacted Wilfred Blake, Mrs. Norman's son, at a can- | at Seppale Point Sunday n ke had scen nothing of his| Orville W. Reid, Alaska-Juneau|wjcreed, William Van and George |Troast since before Christmas, and | IR 1t RRLEE mployee, gnd Hazel H. Heslin, Who| popbins. Mrs. Biggs arrived here shortly | FISH HAWK HERE - ast night No:m.n vent by pl recently arrived here from the| The Jeanne will await freight and |after. During their stay in Juneau The Fish Hawk, tender for the to Swanson unit Bay and|States, were married yesterday af-lpassengers off the Princess Louise,|they have been extensively enter-|Sebastian-Stuart Fish Company, Shelter Island 1 effort o get!tornoon by U. §. Commissioner Felix|which is scheduled to dock here | tained. arrived today at the local docks trace of hi ir. wife, or Gr The couple expect to make | tonight at 9:45 o'clock. Mrs. Biggs will visit with her after a voyage from Tyee. ! contact the W )0/ A s wome in Juneau. ————— mother for three or four months. | (‘mro = an is or [ v B T g o GOES T S A St. ( in is ihe patron saint of NAVY SHOOTERS ON LOFTUS TO PETERSBURG George Robbins, who came to Ju- mFLE RANGE TODAY Dr. Jules B. Loftus, Territorial neau aboard the Jeanne today, flew | : s Veterinarian, sailed on the North-|to Whitehorse aboard the P.A.A.} _|western for Petersburg in connec- Electra to assume duties of thej a:;%"w':rsxmn%f,ffif ;’::fl_ tion with the establishment of the Lower Post in Liard, which was re- denhall Rifle range this afternoon|ReW fur experimental station o[lcenuy purchased by the Taku Trad- | in Forest Service CCC trucks to|Which he is to have charge. {ing Company ffrom O. L. Anderson. {work out their shooting eyes oyer e i ) I the local range. While the Northampton riflemen were holding their shoot, the trucks lwere put into service bringing 50 isailors from the Salt Lake City, which is lying in Auk Bay, into Ju- neau. Try an Empirc .d. Jsii EVERYONE T 0—MAID” ' PURE LIKES ‘n‘m » ICE CREAM ‘Because It Is Expertly Made From the Finest Ingredients! In Alaska’s Most Modern DAIRY PLANT. it's fresh . . . it's delicious . . . it's healthful. It's made from the finest ingredients; rich cream from Juneau's surrounding country . .. fine cane sugar from the south _ . fruits and flavorings from all parts of the world. It is ali blended and frozen into the rich, smooth gooc}; ness that is found in every spoonful of “JUNO-MAID ice cream. For health, as well as pleasure, ord'er your ice cream on a quality basis, by insisting -on ‘TUNO- MAID” Ice Cream. e : PRODUCED BY uneau Dairies, Inc. " AndServed by Your Logal Cafes and Stores. - © ' . R — O | HOSPITAL NOTES —— C. E. Woodman, a medical patient, {was admitted to St. Ann's Hospital last night. iss Laura Krug, nurse at St. Ann’s Hospital, underwent a ton- silectomy this morning at the hos- pital. ' Mrs. B. Jeagle, a surgical patient, was dismissed from St. Ann's Hos- | pital today. —————— KERR ON VACATION Lawrence Kerr, Clerk in the Dijs- trict Attorney's office, sailed on the Northwestern for Ketchikan from iwhere he will go to Bell Island at the upper end of Behm Canal for a month’s vacation. — e Try The Empire classifieds for results. JAMBOREE BLOWOUT. Tootle! Tootle! Here’s the 100-piece ; Lhaml from Region Four of Boy Scout-dom. They furnished one of | “the highlights for the Washington Jamboree. These Scouts are from ©hio, Kentucky, West Virginia and Virginia. 180 - Los Angeles *As compared with other foods in diet Acme Beer is relatively non-fattening. —