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1937. 2 THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, MONDAY, SEPT. 13, Handsomely Cut Coats Superbly Styled and Tailored Season's Newest Materials Women's Sizes 12 to 44 PRICED FROM $12.50 to $39.75 - Girls’ Sport Coats Good Selection of Colors, Styles and Materials Sizes 2 to 16 wasn't good either, so finally they took him out center where he be- |longed, where everybody could sec PLAY AUTHOR Anti-Suicide Club How Hyman came up with the . . 3 |tickets at that zero hour is | s I Bmfl "vg testimonial to his adoitness. The house had been reported sold out for days. 1 13— CRAMENTO, Cal., Sept. STAGE FRIGHT The mother of the de, blue- ed. Always he is serene and un-|and Mrs. Gullufsen were married | The mother of k;}\“ blon: eyed girls too, has had says i U. S. DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE, WEATHER BUREAU THE WEATHER (By the U. S. Weather Bureau) Forecast for Juneau and vicinity, beginning at 4 p.m., Sept. 13. Rain tonight and Tuesday, cooler tonight; moderate southerly wind. : LOCAL DATA | = b | A State-wide campaign against sui-, Time Barometer Temp. Humidity Wind Velocity ~Weathet : ANOTHER HIT = | cide, to be waged through the press [4 pm. yesty 2082 51 80 SE 24 3t Bain ;. } P Billy Rose bobbed up ‘:‘ diately |#0d by radio, was announced here 14 am. tod 30.05 51 97 w 3 Lt. Rain Cliff Fischer Called Out in|he was leaving almost immediately |, 5, corporation of The Sui |Noon (oday 3042 50 g & o St N. Y.—New Tlp i for the coast where l‘\l.,“ 18 work |cide Prevention Society of Amer- RADIO REPORTS o, @—| ing on a picture, can't get ioa TODAY Robert Taylor fof this town soon enoush’ Be| Ty e the direction of Robe " Max. temp. Lowest 4am. 4am. Preclp. 4am. e growled. He .\‘:nd he wa .‘;,(:lelw- Rehkugel of Oakland, the group| Station last 24 hours temp. temp. velocity 24 hrs. Weather By GEORGE TUCKER |feke & ‘g‘”“’d‘; d:g’ aom has been campajgning there against | Anchorage . 62 | 31 = = IR . NEW YORK, Sept. 14.—The 1a.<|.,m$l~*1«i)'}; I‘];{". M ,;\th_ has an-|Suicide for more than a year. Reh- | Barrow :32 ‘\ 30 20 7 Cloudy week of really hot weather in New P ,.( hit “im‘ all the alluring, |Kugel says that a number of de-|Nome 1’4, | ‘44‘ 8 12 Cloudy York was made less intolerable by W L BEE N die s ghat | SPORdent persons already have been |Bethel 56 36 4 01 Cloudy the new Folies Bergere. It was the | o007 S0 W * 00T o super- | talked out of ending their lives Fairbanks 56 40 10 0 Clear first opening night of the smmn'"‘“x ‘.n ik 14 | - 7 Dawson 58 42 0 16 Rain and for the first time in our life we| W5 |Mother Devises M T T b e heard an audience clamor wildly i 2 h 4 Dutt'h Harbor .;4 | 42 44 4 47 Cloudy for the “author.” | Congratulations Chore-Chart Eogek % ol gt 8 il S’,“:f This came at the final curtain . - . | e 12y wmore thkn 100 actars; daneacs, | Georg e and Esther; For Triplets Juneau 54 [ 50 51 3 106 Rain ; e Sitka 57 49 4 = 84 acrobats, and emnrlni_n(*rs on smi,(, More Happy Days Ahead LORAIN, O.; Sept.. 13—Being &) Ketohikan & | p w5 3 oo i The whole vast audience of 1,700 L LS b first nighters began to cry “Fisch- | ay, September 13, is a red |Uriplet might be considered fun by |Prince Rupert ... 56 52 54 12 14 Cloudy gl el L S R A e e George |s0me folks, but it's just a bore to!Edmonton 76 | 44 44 4 0 Cloudy ;‘rx..sch(c:rl'”m : i :c”nl-(i:u:‘{: r(\?v] 1‘- kux‘\‘ own Juneay 0¥, Jean and Janet Mills, 11-year- | Seattle 68 56 56 8 0 Clear Mr. Pischer is a cosmopolitan|couple and popular members ‘)r’g{‘(l‘l‘ll?:‘l‘“;;\‘;:;‘l:s of Mr. and M :::;tl;x::mmo ';3 gg :{: é g Cléx]uccfll; wanderer who spends most of his|the American Legion organizations. =T = " % Sl UES Bl ; f b g Europe. His savoir aire is undoubt- (on September 13, 1918, that M. |"5M Y 588 g g | J 56 oudy WEATHER CONDITIONS AT 8 A.M. TODAY CWaTH appene 3 Seattle (airport), cloudy, temperature 53; Blaine, clear, 48; Vic- '"gljd;m that night. After an in- ;&H,S,i“‘:;fi m:ltx, ];:(r,ml;udl ZLLD “.‘:_\ sompe trouble with their sill\ilgrity. toria, clear, 54; Alert Bay, clear, 46; Bull Harbor, clear, 48; Prince terlude of prolonged cheering & no bugaboo to their happiness, and | 1 tell one of them to do some-} Rupert, raining, 55; Triple Island, raining; Langara Island, raining, couple of his assoclates managed today friends were cxtending con-|(Ning aud forget which one T told, ) 55; Kelchjkan, misting, 52, Craig, raining, 55; Wrangell, raining, 53; to drag him out on the stage. Helgratulations and best wishes for|MrS: Mills says, “so I've “v‘_‘-anfl“dIPt‘t"rbbur&_ raining, 52; Sitka, raining, 51; Radioville, misting, 48; Ju- was white as a sheet and he faced many more happy years. {a ‘chore chart’ to keep track ofineau, raining, 51; Skagway. cloudy 52; Soapstone Point, raining, 48; the house with the stricken antic- sk Dl ivm‘m Cordova, raining, 46; Chitina, foggy, 38; McCarthy, fogey, 30; Portage, The thing that irritates the chil- |dren most, however, is the common of schoolmates: “Hey, ipation of a man the chair, going to LYMAN SNOW HERE " TO ENTER SCHOOL Lyman Snow, nephew of Mrs, C.; fLundle g A P. Jenne, arrived Saturday evening | s on the Northwestern to spend the 1700 AT $10 PER The crowd enjoyed every moment | greeting | Trip.” of it, clamoring all the louder. 3 ‘Petticoat Parade Then, finally, Mr. Fischer made his Year with the Jennes. a4 TR bow. He said something comparable | He will enroll in Juneau High Dishiked by Nurses to, “This makes me very happy School. For the past r he has| and L kot glad you like our show,” been in Bremerton, Washington | SYDNEY, Aus Eept. 13— but we cannot quote him accurate- | With his father, Monte Snow. |Njghtly “petticoat parades” have ly. We couldn’'t hear. For once in e a5 R |brought objections from Sydney PRICED FROM $4.50 to $15.00 B. M. Behrends Co. Inc. JUNEAU'S LEADING DEPARTMENT STORE will head the entertainment com- n mitiec § ) u B a“fijg rs. Walter Hellan has charge of | a"garuu o the entire ffair St Gu ill be Father La Vasseur,| LA POKXTE, 1ad., Sept. 13—Sher- { Father B and the seminarians,|iff Joe Wolf has outlawed “kan- g r T T d T. S. Hoch | garoo courts,” mock hearings con- - ~ ducted inside bullpens by prisoners ¢ LEGION TONIGHT themselves at the La Porte County Hall to celebrat 1 Final action on Mutions and |JA1 becsuse he jays “too mepy ve! Memt e CDA ¢ t to he sented at |Abuses arise sheriffs approve such ient Conventi f the bt sk e > Wolf says, because they the Depar Many “courts,” Mrs, T. J obson 1 ¢ American Legion at Anchorage / of the dinner, while Mrs. Ber eptember 20 will be taken tonight |8ive the prisoners something to do Foote will supervise it the regular meeting of Alford |24 Keep them out of mischief. Decorations will be handled by John Bradford Post in the Dugout.| A Dew prisoner usually is charg- Mrs. M. E. Monagle, Harry Delegates to the convention are|®d With “breaking into jail” The Walmsley, ughton t away tomorrow on| iudge” always imposes a “fine.” George the convention city. 1 the prisoner can't pay the “fin ll: —money, cigarettes, candy or per- sonal belongings fellow prisoners are permitted by “court rules” to | frisk him. In Wolf's jail the prisoners are r(old to pass the time at odd jobs, or at playing cards and checkers. 'BOYER AND JENSEN LOW BIDDERS ON TERRITORIAL JOB | Boyer and Jensen Construction |Company of Douglas was low bidder lon renovating the Territorial Build- |ing at Third and Seward Streets, | when bids were opened today by the Territorial Board of Administra- tion. The company bid $17,668 on| the job which proposes to put the building, formerly occupied by the Uptown Theatre, into shape for housing the Planning Commission and other Territorial offices. Other bidders today were: Men- denhall Construction Company, 1$18,749; Hans Berg, $20,758; Mello and Jackson, $18,663; Larson and Bolm, $18,543; Krause, Klein and Redden, $18,466. RECENT BRIDE HONORED AT TEA| Miss Pearl Peterson was hostess | | Saturday afternoon at a tea in the | {MacKinnon Apartments honoring rs. Robert Marcum (Helen Tor- recent bride. Girl em- ployees of the U. 8. Forest Service where Mrs. Marcum is employed were in attendance. | NEW MUSIC HEAD STARTS CLASSES Robert White, new head of mu- sical instruction in Juneau schools, arrived Saturday on the North- western to take charge of his class- es here. Mr. White, of the University of Washington, succeeds Byron Miller, who resigned recently. Mr. White Wwill have complete charge of music teaching in both schools. the MOMEN W | FOR GOING PLACES Slim black dinner gowns with lon: This version, to town in fall ck slip, Design by Germaine Monteil. leeves came fashion shows. in bla made over a bl is cut with a very deep decollelage. k lace n his life his voice failed him and the words he murdered were mere- ly faint formations on his lips. | Can you imagine, say, Helen Hayes blowing up in he rlines? That was what it was like. There you know what I want to be when was, however, one extenuating cir- 'I grow up?” the Rev. Charles| cumstance. Maybe the thought of |Jaynes, Jr., 7, asked. all that money had him unnerved In the next breath he answered There were, remember, 1,700 people the question himself with, “I want | present at $10 a plate. Figure it to be a fireman by day and a| >oo —— out for yourself. Our‘ mathematics preacher by night so I can ““"'_IlEastern il!agers won't stand the strain. persons here as well as hereafter. 1t was, actually, an ebullient oc- NG s | Draw Goed Incomes casion. Everybody in town was on | NOTICE TO TAXPAY hand to welcome the new seasolh,| Taxes are now due and payable,, WASHINGTON, Sept. 13. — The to see and be seen. Mel Hyman of 1f unpaid by September 15, they be-|annual family income in mid-west- M.G.M. came in with Robert Tay- come delinquent after that da rn villages is $1,227, according to lor in tow and practically demor- provided however, that if one- a recentl, ompleted Department of alized the house. Incidentally, he of the amount be paid on or before Agriculture study of 2,000 odd fam- isn’t beautiful as some ofthe cur-|September 15 the balance will not ilies in 13 Pennsylvania and Ohio rent reports have it. He is merely 'become delinquent until March 15 Vi . a good looking bloke who Kknows next. If payment is made in full on how to wear clothes and, more im- or before September 15, a rebate of Preacher, 7’ AsPlres gh not part of their uni- To Be Fireman, Too torm, 50 nurses at the Nightingale {home must “show petticoats” to a senior staff member each night be- fore going on duty. They were de- scribed as “cumbersome, Grundy things” by one nurse, who added: “I wonder if Florence Nightin- gale wore one.” Altho OMAHA, Neb. Sept. 13.—“Do Similar surveys, made previously, put the New Englend village fam- portant, how to make an entrance 2 percent shall be allowed. After ily income at §1420, and the west- without falling over a chair. September 15 interest shall be added |ern (Kansas and North Dakota) at First they placed him at sec- 'at the rate of 1 percent per month!$1,193. ond row table on the extreme right but that was no good, so they | tried another on the mez. But that adv. until paid. H. I. LUCAS, City Clerk Many fall gowns will be made of wool and rayon jersey now Canned Salmon advertising affects prosperity here QUESTION: Caz the advertising of Canned Salmon help &ri;zg’ greater prosperity to the Territory? ANSWER: Yes. The job of Canned Salmon advertising in the States is to increase the use of Alaska’s greatest food product. If this adver- tising influences U. S. residents to eat just one more pound of Canned Salmon per year than they eat now, Alaska’s annual pack will be en- tirely consumed. Result: a more stable market for Canned Salmon, more money coming into the Territory, greater prosperity and secur- ity for Alaska families. Silnon Rcgpe of e Week SALMON PUFFLES WITH SPICED APPLE RINGS 1 cup medium white sauce 1 tbsp. scraped onion 1 thsp. chopped parsley 2 chopped hard-cooked eggs 2 cups (11b.) Canned Salmon %4 cup shortening 2 cups flour 2 cooking apples Brown sugar Tomato catsup ening into flour and 14 tsp. salt; add enough cold water to barely hold mix- ture together. Chill pastry, roll thin, cut into six 5-inch squares or rounds. Place a large spoonful of salmon mixture on half of each piece, fold over, seal edges with fork. Make three slits across each turnover, insert a salmon flake in each slit. Glaze tops with equal parts egg yolk and milk. Bake in hot oven (450° F.) for 20 min. . For apple rings, core apples, and cug into thirds across apple. Place rings im baking pan; cover each with 2 tbsps. brown sugar, 1 thsp. tomato catsup. Bake in moderate oven (350° F.) for 30 min. turning apples often. Serve hot or cold, Serves 6. T'o white sauce, add scraped onion, chop- ped parslef'. chopped hard-cooked eggs, ¥, tsp. salt, dash paprika. Drain and flake Canned Salmon and add to mix- ture, reserving %, cup salmon for decor- ation, Make pastry by cutting short- This recipe is typical of those appearing in the national magazine adyertising of the Canned Salmon Industry {cloudy, 42; Anchorage, partly clou ana, raining, 46; Hot Springs, clou 44; Tanana, cloudy, cloudy, 41; Nulato, partly cloudy, 44; Flat, partly cloudy, 44. Juneau, September 14. — Sunrise, 5:26 a.m.; sunset, 6:24 p.m. WEATHER SYNOPSis High barometric pressure prevailed this morning along the coastal regions from Skagway southward to Oregon, the crest being 30.38 inch- es off the coast of Washington, elsewhere over the field of observation low pressure prevailed, the lowest reported pressure being 29.34 inches over the Pacific Ocean at latitude 50 degrees and longitude 56 de- lgrf-os. This general pressure distribution has been attended by pre- jcipitation over most of Alask and southward to British Columbia and by generally fair weather over the West Coast states. 39; Fairbanks, cloudy, 44; Nen- 48; Ruby, 'TWO HOPS ARE MADE Bt i TO TU[SEQUAH TODAY 4 STOCK QfiLVJO:rATIONS 1 BY MAR“'E AIRWAYS; NEW Yonxismt. 13. — Closing $1% |quotation of Alaska Juneau mine Two hops to the Polaris-Taku |gtock today is 10%, American Can !minu at Tulsequah were to be un-|gow, American Light and Power 8, \ grmken _this afternoon by Marine | Anaconda 48%, Calumet 11%, Com- All“_V'flY Pilot Alex Holden. monwealth and Southern 2%, Gen- Pilot Holden took off at 2:30 p.m., | apq) Motors 49'%, International Har- accompanied by Mechanic Lloyd |vester 93%, Kennecott 54%, New {Jarmon, with George G. Griswold, | York Central 27%, Southern Pa- {Jr, engineer for the mine, F. J.|cific 31%, United States Steel 93%, - Bartholomew, and R. J. Thomson. |cities Service 2%, Pound $4.95% |.On the second trip he was to fly |Republic Steel 20, Pure Oil 157, O. Olafson, F. Miller, J. Hillstad and Holly Sugar 24, U. S. Treasury bonds R. Hemming to Tulsequah, |2%s 97.17, Atchison General fours | Tomarrow two trips are scheduled 109%. to Tulsequah, taking additional | {miners to the Polaris-Taku. 'I?hr‘ DOW, JONES AVERAGES men arrived in Juneau on the Prin- | The following are today’s Dow. jees Touige touny. |Jones averages: industrials 158, | Saturday afternoon Pilot Jack |yaiis 4077, utilities 24.39 Hollister flew a glacier hop with | A s i |L. V. Winter and a companion. | - eeo — { Marriages, in England must be Lode and placer location notices solemnized between 8 a. m. and 6 for sale at The Empire Office. p.m USED WASHERS? Who Wants a Used Washer When You Can Buy a NEW GENERAL ELECTRIC WASHING MACHINE $5 5.00 SEE THESE GE FEATURES —Activator Washing Principle —Permanent Lubrication —GE Silent Gears —Lovell Wringer _Sol_d&;fiagy Terms ‘ai Alaska Electric Light 8 Power Co. JUNEAU—DOUGEAS Art Griffiths Ymi m:e lnvit'ed to present ~ais coupon at the box office of the ¢ Capitol Theatre nnd receive tickets for your. self and a friend or t relative to see “Garden of Allah” As a pald-up subscriber of The Daily Alaska Empire Good only for current offering. Your Name May Appear Tomorrow WATCH THIS SPACE <