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VALUE-F'RST CLOTHES /) <7 ’ Flee Tepd! wing lines Wa look ther: all < ver--and thole lot i of [lorhester. In a soft, ‘uxurious fabric suck as the TOURCOT! is a smart dres 7 coat desy e o inherent irformality #nd .ion- chalance. Warm, toc-—acd light- weight. Ty on 1 fewoft arrivals—and y u'llgoont L tor pleased a ¢ Lover d ever L »io D d thaa e ¢ Department Store” Navy Reveals Japanese Spy Acts in Alaska from Fage One (Contix Al 1ava ating ponest Some of 10,000-ton crv comm.. n tigation of included Lake Cif) Louisvilic Ports In addition, rier Lancle; vessels sepaiale askan watc ferent poris. inciud ard, Vaidvz, Jineau, Ketchix Kodic sland, In anotle gation into flotilla of tle know coast. I cruised Amor Zane, ‘Wasmuth, p and Jupan wale lookod long w! to Wra th ing Sea. ese rra vor, Dal Much confidentiol information on how to defend the Territory from tr FALL FAFHIONS pigeons in the park. Both dresces oo piping around white pijue colfars and cu up and dowi the front of each dress, R JUVENILES Sheer gray wool makes new 1ail frocks for this juvenile pair feeding Leadershipls Up. | To Businessmen crnsqlifleclaresu Community Cannot Prosper i Unless They Accept Responsibility I(Jmmnu(‘dilrx'mu‘ rage One) { of your community and if you do not accept that responsibility, then community becomes stagnant.” Pointing out that he once thought live and let live” was sound phil- osophy, the speaker stressed that |in later years he has come to the conclusion that the motto should be “live and help live.” Man cannot (live unto himself, he stated, and it |is the duty of the business man to |live and help the other live by }k('(*])lng up the morale of the com- munity. In bringing out his three points, Mr. Croson declared that by taking an active interest in fraternal af- fairs the business men would be aid- ing these organizations and conse- quently the entire community from which they are made up. He urged strong support of the schools, not to tell the educators how to teach, but, |rather, to be sure what they teach. It is only through taking an ac- tive interest in local government that business men can help in as- (suring good government, he stress- ‘v(l Too often, he pointed out, it |is the tendency to look upon govern- ment as a thing apart. | “You are the government,” he de- |clared, “and government reflects lonly what you as business men make it A | Coming with the Potentate as rrrrrrrreerreeeeessd puests of the Chamber were Steve | Brethorst, widely known Seattle at- was acquired, torney, and Judge William Steinert, 1. They added: Chief Justice of the Washington rart of the United State Supreme Court, both here with | 1 s nations look for more the Seattle Shrine s virgin terri-| Other guests were Lieut Comdi within view.|Helham of the Coast Guard cut of this Terri- ter Haida, the guest of Comdr United Stales, N. G. Ricketts of the Haida; Charle: preparis to Milot, representative of the Alaska were made Steamship Company, and Garrison of teaching Turner, landscape gardener at the| ards of the Pioneers’ Home, e around the Territory. | . the Far Eastern situa-! | said, the studies made | were more “exhaustive Holbrook, John New- Faulkner left for e nis afternoon at 3:30 Grocerymen Hurdle Butch- 10 pilot Ray Renshaw in o it Piletn the Int stal Airways plane after ) Commercial Race | the is Co., Inc. turally The cruise yecitic prrpose fficers officer year -+ - RENSHAW FLIES 3 TO KETCHIKAN man man and ¥ Ke'chik i had brought Mr. Timmer- nan to Juneau from the First City | Touching off the fall bowling sea- | son, two Commercial League alley now rival” by su- cquads let fly apace last evening at for centuries the only {he Brunswick Recreation alleys,‘ commercial sugar. ond when turmoil of battle had e . subsided, the Pay'n Takit five-man | vielding plants include .quad was found 1o be out in front | shrubs and herbs. at the gun, having nicely hurdled, 3 another squad of newcomers, rep- resentyng the American Meat Com-| pany, by a matter of slightly more | than one hundred pins. ‘ Leonard Holmquist led the vie-| torious charge, topping by about} three points Shavey Koski, leader | of the losers, and the only other| roller to smash the five century| mark. Holmquist headed the lists| with a 513 total. Lloyd Hildinger | abetted the winning cause with the| only single game score above two! hundred. | This evening brings the United Food and Brunswick five-man pin teams together for the second con-| test of the new Commercial League slate. The ten mllers will tangle| at 7:30 o'elock at the Brunswick. | Scores in last evening's opening round were : PAY'N TAKIT Art Judson 121 166 Art Burke —.. 109 148 L. Holmquist 198 176 L. Hildinger 148 202 Mike Seston 145 144 urce of Rul 11— 401 126— 382/ 139— 513 148— 498/ 125— 414 Totals 721 835 652—2208 AMERICAN MEAT CO om Hutchings 106 98 104— 308 »avey Koski.. 177 167 166— 510 Mert Benedict 140 139 136— 415| B. Kaufmann 149 171 174— 494 Phillips 108 121 137— 366/ 680 696 —ee Dog Saves $800 In Saloon Holdup NEILLSViLLE, Wis,, Sept. 2. — Firing a shot that struck near the proprietor’s head, two bandits lined up eight persons in a saloon near here and aped with $46 after overlooking roll of $800 thrown to the floor. Rux Thompson, pro- prictor of the tavern, threw the $800 to t#e floor as the bandits en- tered, and a pet bulldog picked up ‘Uu' money and carried it away. Totals a | - - | Oliver Goldsmith is said to be ithe only English writer who ex- {celled in three branches of litera- ture—as a novelist with “The Vi- |car of Wakefield,” as a playwright olorfu!'y accented with red BRITISH SEE No More Mothers ° Helen Greene Following protests of other en- tries at selection of Helen Greene as “Miss Washington, D. C.” for the national beauty pageant at Atlantic City because she was a divorced mother, judges ruled that mothers will be barred from the contest in the future. | ITALY BEHIND SEA ATTACKS Shape New Naval Policy for r Empire After Medi- terranean Sinking (Continued from Page One) | a large hand in the Mediterranean Sea trouble. SAYS “RECOGNIZE | FRANCO” FOR SOLUTION | ROME, Sept. 2—Well informed persons here said today the way to solve the trouble in the present sit-! uation resulting from the submar- ine attacks on Mediterranean ship- ping is for all powers to recognize' the belligerency of General Francis- co Franco, Insurgent leader. One Fascist official said there was no Italian reaction to the Brit- ish Cabinet meeting because the matter didn't involve an Italian sub- marine. Therefore, it didn’t concern | Italy, he said. Parking Test Stumps Many InMaryland ROME from the frozen tundra of |to the ial Africa, twent; lwas enroute today on an ‘(U compare two or the worl {primitive peoples gro natives bave known only had compare them with. T | been fact ing under tions,” but it is |Beyond the | tain life, thei far more ¢ ed the the village. establish trading lines. however, goes fighting for the mere fun of it from the conquered enemy.” {Dr.” Himmelheber is slow and uninventive. |stinl { heating an Eskimo lights a fire, that’s when lit gets really cold in his home. He 'has to open the door and in comes the icy be easier than to build a little stove|’, lof |chimney. {that one j This Fisherman *. Williams there are fish and other to fish jida, |carefully examining his catch and {throwing & { thos o Insurance Co., has fish. be fresh, he expl fish may That as a young chicken is far more ten-|with figures of people working long d palatable even {been caught any more than an old | vestigating the ocean and air-mail !chicken is has just been killed. |{friends don’t know, and he won't (tell, but they insist that there must be a secret. are epicurean ecstacies, I — .. Eskimos Fight for |APPOINTMENT Fun and Freeze | OF BLACK IS Frumichnice GIVEN BOOST | Alabama Man Is Friend of Roosevelt—Also of New Deal Acts By PRESTON GROVEL WASHINGTON Sept. 2.—Nobody could accuse President Roosevelt of buying a pig-in-a-poke when he named Hugo L. Black to the Su- preme Court . Black opinions as have been recorded on white paper. And they've on the Roosevelt side. His maiden speech in the Senate was a battle for Muscle Shoals. He wanted chedper nitrate rates for farmers. That was in the Repub- lican era when a young Democrat {from Alabama was nothing but al voice crying in the wilderness. But Black stayed to see TVA become a fact in 1933. His last battle in the Senate was his own bill which he says would | put a bottom in American living{ standards; the wages and hours bill.| NEW YORK, Sept. 2. — Bound Alaska steaming jungles of equator- Hans Himmelheber, r-old anthropologist | pedition s most iskimos and Ne- nine-yes “Most of our Arctic exxplorers the Eskimos and primitive people to y have all the extraordinary kimos make a liv- unfavorable condi- Senator miles o all been a other no struck that the such said. of course, is admirable about 1 the Eskimos do vork necessary to main- culture is very poor. “Primitive Africans,” he said, “are eative. They have form- big state organizations, while Eskimos’ largest social unit is by he “That, “When Africans go to war, it is to The Eskimo WHAT TO EXPECT So what can be expected of him| oak-lined room where the/ finally sit down to. iron out a decision? | First it's expected that Black | will go right to work. He'll face that little court nicely polite Justice should eliminate him- self when a controversy comes up in which he is personally interested. But Black’s been a Senator ten He's had his finger in hun- |dreds of laws. If he were to be- come dainty about the laws he |should or should not pass upon he |would truly become the phantom | Justice, appearing on the bench only \now and then Besides, he's artists dozens of s for the wages and hours bill jhave been pleas to act, and act now As Judge, helll have several New Deal laws on which to act The Holding Company bill is on the way up through the lower cour’s, And when that bill was dyiny, of anemia in Congress Black wes the ‘To Charles hypodermic that shoved it through enactment. Just as the fight over the act was on Black opened his lebby investigation. In a handful of d; he had proved that hundreds of telegrams flooded Congress, op- posing the bill, had been paid for by the power companies. In a fe- ver of self-righteousness Congr |passed the bill not even taking nnylhinfll {in the When confronted with a problem, | & B¢ GLF d, the Eskimo Another incredible thing — they haven't invented way of their little When igloos. wind. Yet nothing would| years, stones with a walrus-leather They haven't thought up roasted lip-service times. Half his Tosses Back His “Agefid‘ficatches‘ CINCINNATI, Sept. 2 So when he goes fishing in Flor- he _surpri his friends by large percentage of William: and It seems that f the Western president ithern Life theory about i | SENSE OF HUMOR Most folks just insist that a fish| Through doz Senate ses- ns, but a fresh|sions Black has beat the drum not necessarily be tender. for the rights of people as against all depends on its age, just the rights of property. He's bristled a 1S er than an oid hen. " hours while others were out of work. An old fish, says Williams, is not|He's inveighed against fortunes built though it has just from shoe-strings Wwien he w in- tender just because it contracts. He has insisted that big | busine: has jumped state lints, So when Williams catches a mess and must be controlled by national of fish, he selects the young and|laws. ender ones and throws the others ack How he He'll probably he sitting on the cts them his{bench when the Securities and Ex- change Commission comes up for review. He'll be there when the right of PWA to lend money to cities for power plants comes up. He'll .be there when his old pet TVA arrives in the court again. | He's lent such measures a help- British Beer Better FLarE ling hand for ten ye HORPENDEN, England—British ate, and it'’s an extremely safe Williams’ fish dinners| beer is better today than it has ever hell go lending the same helping been, {member of the Barley Valuation| And fortunately for a generation claimed H. M. Lancaster, hand. BETHESDA, Md., Sept. 2—After Committee of the Institute of Brew-|of student lawyers still in their cra- all these years the State of Mary-| ing, citing as example “the growing|dles, who will grow up to study Su- land has decided that the holder demand for beer brewed on our preme Court dicisions, the new As- of a driving permit should how to park his car And behold the new gadget the motor vehicle department’s ex- aminers are ecarting around with | them: The thing looks very much like | a plumber’s nightmare, with a lot of elbow joints. Set up along a| curb, the gadget marks off a park- | ing area a little longer than the | average automobile. The trick of the examiner is to tell the applicant for a license to park his car within the bounds of the iron frame. It sounds easy, but 20 applicants | missed the target in one day, and failed to get a driver's license. More Wives Ste For j[unsupnun‘ CHICAGO, Sept. 2. — Domestic Relations Judge George W. Weiss notes that improved business has sent a record number of wives in pursuit of husbands for nonsupport. ‘When a broadened business pic- ture started an increased flow of funds into the pockets of errant husbands, forgotten wives who had seen nonsupport cases crumble in the dust of the depression renewed agitation for support, Judge Weiss | 50, : He estimated renewal of these for- gotten cases has increased work of the social service department 21 per- cent. e Argentina is primarily an agri- {with “She Stoops to Conquer,” and |as a poet, with “The Deserted Vil- lage.” Tiny ball buttons march cultural country, importing 75 per cent of the manufactured products lic uses, 1 know system | America.” in the United States of sociate Justice Black has a delicate- ,1:; cut sense of humor. Its smart to stick with ... Whether you enjoy an evening at home or away, keep yours Johnnie Walker and soda. There’s no better whisky than Scotch and no better Scotch than Johnnie Walker. Red Label is all 8 years old; Black Label 12. JOHNNIE WALKER BLENDED SCOTCH WHISKY CANADA DRY GINGER ALE, INC., NEW YORK, N. Y.; SOLE DISTRIBUTOR that says a| ; mittee can’t find the box of pictures U. 'S. DEPARTMENT OP‘VAGRICUL’I‘URE. WEATHER BUREAU 3 THE WEATHER ' (By the U. S. Weather Bureau) Forecast for Juneau and vicinity, beginning at 4 pan., Sept. 2. Fair tonight and Friday, co tonight; gentle to moderate west- erly winds. LOCAL DATA Temp. Humidity Wind Velocity 56 95 s 4 51 92 0 0 62 66 w -0 RADIO REPORTS TODAY Lowest 4a.m. 4am. Precip. temp. temp. velocity 24 hrs. 62 | o] - 0 56 42 0 Noe 52 46 46 4 T Bethel 58 46 50 6 Fairbanks 56 42 2 4 Dawson - st. Paul Dutch Harbor Kodiak Cordova 50 Juneau E 51 Sitka = Ketchikan 58 Prince Rupert 56 Edmonton 52 Seattle 56 Portland 60 60 T4 2 WEATHER CONDITIONS AT 8 A.M. TODAY Seattle (airport), foggy, temperature, 53; Alert Bay, raining, 49; Bull Harbor, foggy, 53; Prince Rupert, partly cloudy, 53; Triple Island, partly cloudy; Langara Island, cloudy, 53; Ketchikan, clear, 56; Oraig, cloudy, Wrangell, partly cloudy, 54; Petersburg, cloudy 58; Sitka, cloudy, 55; Radioville, cloudy, 52; J.uneau, cle: 5 Skagawy, cloudy, 51; Tenakee, cloudy; Port Althorp, partly cloudy; Soapstone Point, cloudy, 54; Cordova, partly cloudy, 57; Chitina, cloudy, 50; McCarthy, cloudy, 44; Portage, partly cloudy, 46; Anchorage, partly cloudy {Fairbanks, clear, 43; Hot Springs, partly cloudy, 44; Tanana, cleas ; |Ruby, cloudy, 45; Nulato, cloudy, 36; Kaltag, Unalakleet, missing;/ {Flat, raining, 46; Ohogamute, raining, 48. | Juneau, September 3. — Sunrise, 5:01 a.m.; sunset, 6:56 p.m. i WEATHER SYNOPSIis | The barometric pressure was high this morning from the Endicott iMountains and the Seward Penin:ula southward over the Pacific Ocean to the Hawaiian Islands, the crest being 30.54 inches over the Pacific Ocean at latitude 46 degrees and longitude 154 degrees. The pressure was low over the Aleutian Islands, Alberta, and off the coast of northern California. This gen-ral pressure distribution has been attended by precipitation over the southwestern portion of Alaska and over Alberta and Saskatchewan and by fair weather over the re- mainter of the field of observation. Weathet Lt. Rain Clear Clear Barometer 3009 30.16 30.15 Time 4 pm 4 am. Noon yest'y today today Max. temp. last 24 hours | 4am! Station Weather Anchoerage Barrow 42 6 Pt. Cldy Cleak Rath 0 Cloudy 60 54 Rain Clear g{ear ear Cloudy Gloudy Rain Ciear Clear Cldy Clear Clear S Pt New York Washington 5 Chamber {again. booth can be fixed up Here’s Opportunity For Civic Duty; {Where Are Pictures? B FISH DEALS MADE ON SEATTLE MARKET Who put the Chamber of Com- merce pictures where? after the Southeast Alaska Fai the pictures used in the Chamber booth were stored away carefully in a box for future use. Now the Chamber is prepar- ing its booth again, but the com- SEATTLE, Sept. 2—The Polaris came in from the western banks today and sold 39,000 pounds for 10 and 9 cents a pound. From the local banks the Visit brought in 17,000 pounds ef sable, aith 11,000 pounds, both selling for 4'. cents; Alitak 7,000 pounds of sable, selling for 4%, and Husky with 4,000 pounds, getting 5 cents straight and those wio handled them last year are not in the city. If whoever has the box in storage will plea inform Curtis Shattuck of the Fair commmittee he will be credited with | - a great stroke of civic duty and the|“Alaska” " by D Lester D. Hendetgon. ’~ PACIFIC COAST COAL CO. PHONE 41 Fresh Fruit and Vegetables HOME GROWN RADISHES, ONIONS and FRESH LOCAL EGGS DAILY California Grocery THE PURE FOODS STORE Telephone 478 Prompt Delivery - Oliver Sarnisto Yon are invited to present ~ais coupon at the box office of the Capitol Theatre and receive tickets for your- self and a friend or S relative to see “Rembrandt” As a pald-up subscriber of The Daily Alaska Empire Good only for current; offering. Your Name May Appear Tomorrow WATCH THIS SPACE