The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, October 21, 1937, Page 2

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PHOENIX SOCKS o EXTRA-MILEAGE WEAR e TRUE FOOT COMFORT e SMART PATTERNS 40c to t > things in P nix. And — when you get Phoen you have socl that "cor plete” the wardrobe the well dre ed man. - B.M. Behirends Co., Inc. Juneau's Leading 1 TAGOMAN ARE INDICTED, FRAUD CHARGES Claim Made Nearly Two Million Dollars Was Sum Mulcted TACOMA, Wash., Oct. 21.—F eral indictments charging mail fraud in yialation of the Federal Securities Act, and also conspiracy, have been filed in the District Court against eleven former officers and salesmen of the People's Oil and Com- pany and associated companies The Federal Grand ju voted the indictments charging the defendants with collection of more than $1,881 000 from Washington State resi- dents The mon, pany; his brott William Markowitz accused include Joshua Sis- Milton Simons; and William former President of the com-} THE DAILY LASKA EMPIR NEW PURSER ARRIVES FOR ing out on its second to Lynn Canal ports, this morning with twelve tons of freight besides mail and ex- press left Juneau $1.00 on the Alaska Steamship Company |freighter Derblay, arrived in Ju- |neau last night on the Alaska to ssume his new duties as purser on i[the Sitver Wave. The Derblay has been laid up for the winter. Davis was purser for some time on the MS. Zapora which was i wrecked in Chatham Straits last 1 |spring. | Seven of the passengers who trans- ferred to the Silver Wave for Haines nd Skagway from the Alaska, were J. Rauenbuehler, John Mauck {and H. P. Wattenberg Chilkoot Barracks, and Mr. and Mrs. A. L. Brame and two children. BING IS GIVEN ( SPOKANE, Wash., Oct. 2 r, became Harr , PHD, today at Gonzaga University when the Rev. Leo Rob- /inson, 8J., conferred upon him the 4 Honorary Degree of Philosophy be- ! fore a gathering of students and i alumni that jammed the : auditorium. The school’s most noted alumnus was given the honor, it is said, “be- {cause his eminence has brought pleasure to so many millions of Department Store 'MRS. BAKER RETURNS FROM VACATION TRIP piceeur the, Crosby responded with a brief States with particularly warm fall expredsion of his gratitude. He said feather is reported by Mrs. Dewey the honor was the highlight of his Baker, who returned here last night |return, which is the first time since on the Yukon. Mrs. Baker visited nearly twelve years ago, when he with relatives in Everett, Wash. left Spokane to hunt for a job in Seaside, Ore, and Seattle. It was a band. like mid summer in Portland and - - An enjoyable vacation in along the Oregon coast in the fore part of October, she reported Mrs. Baker was back at her de in the Bureau of Fisheries today, having charge of the office during the winter mnths | - - | GANTYS RETURN HOME | Mr. and Mrs. P. 8. Ganty, who|Was Yelling Fan at World |have been in Juneau on business ~ . [for the past woek, are returning to, Series—Spectator Also at Grid Games | their Sitka home aboard the North- land. Mr. Ganty is in the mercan- |tile business at Sitka. George Kohlhepp, veteran of the OFE FOR WEANGELL 'men’s department at the B. M. J. W. Gucker, Juneau broker, left Behrends Co., Inc, returned to Ju- {on the Northland for Wrangell via p oVERE e K Kon after a trip | Sttka, lof several months in the States as far east as New York. He was ac- companied by his wife. Kohlhepp not only was in the grandstands during the final games of the big leagues in the regular K —e————— MRS. STABLER BACK Mrs. Howard Stabler returned to |Juneau aboard the Yukon, last {night, following a trip through the SILVERWAVE The motorship Silver Wave, of the IDahl Transportation Company, go- shuttle-run approximately passengers aboard and 124 George B. Davis, recently purser , soldiers forl DOCTOR DEGREE. campus| From Trip East TWO CHILDREN JOURNEY FROM DISTANT HOME Cotiie Halfway Araund World from Yugoslavian | Mountain Home (Continued from Page One) “I was a village-guest, and such favors and attention I have never known. It was as though I we royalty.” Land of Antiquity After a short stay in this fascin- ating land of antiquity, where a man’'s wealth is in his sheep, and wheat and stock are staff of life, Mrs. Bolyan took her children for| a trip about Yugoslavia for two | weeks, eventually arriving again at the city nearest to the mountain country, where the children’s rela- tives had journeyed to catch a last glimpse of Daci and Lawrence. The children had thought they were on | their way to New York. | “It was disappointing to the chil- | |dren,” Mrs. Bolyan smiled, “to find that they were still among Serbians after all the traveled miles behind.” New York?” they queried Is this Chicago? I thought you said |everyone spoke English in Amer- |ica?” ‘Then, turning to their relatives, | |they asked a dozen questions one would ask after ten years of absence | —not two weeks. | “How are®the crops?—Have the . wolves gotten any sheep?—How are |so-and-so faring?” And then to a brother who had been married while they were gone, “Have you.any children yet?” After the red-tape of visas and |examinations, the journey to Am-| |erica and Alaska was finally begun. | |Mrs. Bolyan addressed the children as “Honey,” frequently, and they | 1asked the meaning of the word,| which she explained as a term one | used when they liked someone. Com- ing over on the boat to New Y()rk“ ithe children took a liking to the waiter. | “Honey, may I have some more | applesouce, please?” became a fre- quent request the children made upon their waiter friend. | Schooling | Lawrence had four |school in his mountain home—all that the peasants can give them | | without sending the children away to the cities, and Daci b They entered the first grade in Ju- neau today, to enlarge upon an| English vocabulary already well |along, before moving up to the| grades which they should be in. How quickly they will learn is dis- {played by Lawrence’s learning to play bridge on the short trip from years of aces” when his cards are dealt him. All Juneau will love these .chil- dren. This reporter fell like the { proverbial ton of bricks for them | iand hopes that by Christmas, they | THURSDAY. OC SNYDER INDICTED : was jury |on Hiddl of has had two. | yrining Company | ehar, lan alter |session t were b |the Seattle. Already, he asks for “four |COnVene !JUNEAU HIGH CLASS 1. 21, 1937 ODES the o - TAILORED TARTAN Off to school this fall are going tailored tartans of cotton serge. This one is colored in brewn, green and beige. Its trim shirtwaist design with box-pleated skirt makes it a classic dress which may easily be worn again in the spring. FOR SCHOOL who is sham, Wash Bowen, BY GRAND JURY IN | ™4 AMALGAM THEFT bill grand in, Mrs. Simon Hellenthal, taught several of the gues their school days, called. not true nd ition relating Federal One true and returned by this mornin; Anthony J. Sn a charge of stealing amalgam from one the convers to 1 school nents were served sder was indicted IR 150 ounc the Chichagoff for sale at The Empire Office. an Empire aa. s cleared o ; Willie on at Kake The grand jury was continuing lay and additional drawn by the Cou petit jury which is slated next Tuesday - Thomas Skeek w ¢ of stabbi James in T in 16 for to from common colds you haw cold, or OF 1918 ASSEMBLES ief now with MOMENT special feature of the even- who s during Games | old were enjoyed and re- Lode and placer location notices Beware Coughs That Hang On No matter how many medicines tried for your cough, chest ronchial irritation, you can | Creomulsion. | trouble may be brewing and 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., Oct. 10. Rain tonight and Friday; fresh southeast winds. WEATHER FORECAST FOR SOUTHEASTERN ALASKA: Rain tonight and Friday; fresh southeast winds, except strong over Lynn Canal, Chatham Strait, Clarence Strait, and probably of gale force over Dixon Entrance. FORECAST OF WINDS ALONG THE COAST OF THE GULF OF ALASKA: Strong southeast winds, probably of gale force, from Dixon Entrance” to Cross Sound tonight and Friday; and strong easterly winds, probably of gale force from Cross Sound to Cape Hinchin- brook. LOCAL DATA : Barometer Temp. Humidity Wind Velocity Weathet 20.38 4. 9 SE 12 Lt. Rain 2951 46 97 s 4 Lt, Rain 29.57 44 95 sSwW 3 Lt. Rain RADIO REPORTS TODAY Lowest 4a.m. 4am. Pregip. temp. temp. velocity 24 hrs. 4 10 14 0 0 0 0 Time 4 p. m. yest'y 4 am. today Noon today 4am. Weather Cloudy Clear Pt. Cldy Cloudy Cloudy Max. temp. last 24 hours 10 38 32 38 44 4“4 48 46 48 Station Barrow Nome Bethel Fairbanks Dawson St. Paul ‘ {Dutch Harbor iKudlak |Cordova |Juneau | sitka ! Ketchikan Prince Rupert Edmonton Seattle | Portland |San PFrancisco INew York ... | Washington 30 28 30 36 40 44 40 £t 47 54 54 30 52 62 48 46 30 28 30 36 1 2 4 2 4 0 40 46 42 46 54 56 36 52 62 48 11 48 A7 WEATHER CONDITIONS AT 8 A.M. TODAY Seattle (airport), foggy, temperature 52; Blaine, clear, 52; Vie- toria, cloudy, 54; Alert Bay, partly cloudy, 52; Triple Island, showers; Langara, raining, 58; Rupert, showers, 57; Ketchikan, raining, 54; Craig, raining, 53; Wrangell, raining, 55; Petersburg, raining, 54; Sitka, rain- ;mg. 51; Hawk Inlet, raining; Radioville, foggy; Soapstone Point, rain- ying, 40; Junean, raining, 44; Skagway, raining, 41; Haines, cloudy; | Yakutat, cloudy; Yakataga, rainirg; St. Elias, cloudy; Cordova, rain- |ing, 44; McCarthy, clear, 26; Copper River, raining; Chitina, cloudy; | Anchorage, cloudy, 31; Portage, raining, 42; Fairbanks, cloudy, 23; Hot jSprings. partly cloudy, 30; Tanana, partly cloudy, 26; Ruby, cloudy, 27; |Nulato, partly cloudy, 22; Kaltag, clear, 24; Unalakleet, clear, 16; Flat, |clear, 19; Ohogamute, partly cloudy, 24. Junedu, Oct. 22—Sunrise, 6:51 a.m.; sunset, 4:37 p.m. | | i WEATHER SYNOPSTS | Low barometric pressure continued this morning throughout Alaska land over the northeastern portion of the North Pacific Ocean, there ;being a storm area of marked intensity centered over the North Pa- 48 13 1.70 Rain Cloudy Rain Lt. Rain 2.01 2.98 1.08 [ T 0 Rain Rain Cloudy Clear Clear Clear Clear 6 8 4 6 0 4 4 0 0 4 visiting here from cific Ocean at latitude 52 degrees and longitude 156 degrees where a | pressure of 28.50 inches prevailed. This storm area has been attended |by precipitation along the coastal regions from the Aleutians southeast- ward to southern British Columbia and over the upper Yukon Valley and by generally wair weather over the remainder of the field of ob- servation. East and southeast gales have been general along the coast- al regions from British Columbia northward to Cape Hinch#nbrook. | It was slightly warmer last night over the interior and western |portions of Alaska. A light run of ice in the rivers was reported at iHm Springs, Tanana, Ruby, Nulato, and Kaltag this morning. WORLD SERVICE | preside, and a book review will be ! presented by Mrs. H. L. Faulkner. | | B i AT i CIRCLE TO MEET} OSCAR ANDERSON THROUGH | | Oscar Anderson, Superintendent | Members of the World Service| of the Evans Jones coal mines near |Circle will meet at the Norlhcm‘Anchomg& was a through passenger Light Presbyterian Church tomor-|on the Alaska last night bound for |row afternoon at 2 o’'clock, for their the mine. |regular gathering. y Mrs. Claude Hirst, president, will| Try Top Notch Dinner—350c. adv. M“”m— - - - SWIMMING POOL, RECREATION ATINFORMAL PARTY CENTER BALLOT I, the undersigned, agree to purchase .. annual memberships in the Juneau Recreation Cente: will say to him in their polite and | season, but also was one of the yell- | untarnished manner that speaks of | N0 ling fans for the Yankees in the|centuries-pure hearts, “I like you| Pacific wor1d Series. He did not miss a|—you are a good man! s here a game, he said. ——————— Kohlhepp also witnessed one foot- T 'ball game and the attendance was _DUFRESNE IN TONIGHT g4 409 spectators. “I started to count The Alaska Game COmmISSION|thery put gave it up when a gate al is scheduled to arrive in Ju-|gii1e man told me there were 78,000 neau this evening with Execuli\'v‘in the grandstand and bleachers— |Officer Frank Dufresne aboard. n"'w\,‘hc»\',' said Kohlhepp. you cannot afford to take a chance | with any remedy less potent than | Creomulsion, which goes right to the seat of the trouble and aids na- ture to soothe and heal the inflamed mucous membranes and to loosen and expel the germ-laden phlegm. ! Even if other remedies have failed, | don’t be discouraged, try Creomul- sion. Your druggist is authorized to refund your money if you are not thoroughly satisfied with the bene- fits obtained from the very first bottle. Creomulsion is one word—not two, and it has no hyphen in it. Ask for it plainly, see that the name on the bottle is Creomulsion, and vouw'll get the genuine product and | the relief you want. (Adv.) States. She and Mr. Stabler tra- The company has a tract of oiljveled back East and visited in Ohio lands in Frenchmen Hills, eastern|before returning to the hington. |Coast. Mr. Stabler arrived six defendants were arrested late{short time ago. this afternoon, it is said in a Seattle! hotel suite after they failed to sur- render to the officers within a spec-| ified time. P o o P JUDGING CLASSES ST/ First of the classes in judging of first aid contests was held last| night in the high”school with H.' B. Humphrey, Safety Engineer of| the U. S. Bureau of Mines, in charge. The work was gotten under way and the next session will be held Oc- tober 29. Broome. Assembling i [neau High School I Mrs. Mabel Bathe-Nance SOLDIER IS GIVEN }um at her home at 407 Iry THREE YEARS ON [ Siore oo o oo, STATUTORY COUNT formed a colorful background | Class gue: embled were |Officer Frank Duresne abos Indicted by the grand jury on|Wilbur Burford, @ars. Hugh AGC chief has been in Petersburg | Bt N charges of rape and contributing to|Mrs. K. K. Kyler, Mrs. Arthu |the delinquency of a minor girl, | Bringdale, Mrs. Rene Ellinger, wi iJames F. Rogers, Chilkoot Barracks als0 present were Mrs. Fred Jonas for several days in connection with ! i game maticra .~ [FOUR HALIBUTERS SELL AT SEATTLE‘SOMM, pleaded guilty this morning,and her daughter, Mrs. James lin Federal District Court and was | ——— : . - ROMEY SULLIVAN RETURNS | Romey Sullivan, who has been in | RO Ketohikan and Metlakatla for some| SEATTLE, Oct. 2L—Four halibut-|sentenced by Judge George F. Al-| |time. returned to Juneau aboard |C'S from the western banks sold here exander to 18 months in the peni- {the Yukon |today. The Doric brought in 43,-!tentiary on each count, the sentenc- RS {000 pounds, selling for 9% and 9les to run consecutively, making a After inspecting road work in BOWLERS TO BATTLE | 90t & potind. Easdie 40,000 P"“‘f]‘:“‘lolnl of three years. i Ketchikan and other Southeast Al-| Gastineau Grogery and United|20d Polaris 47,000 P""““T-“""fif‘ sell-| The 19-year-old soldier was ac- aska points, District Engineer M. Food will meet tonight on the bowl- (18 for 9% ‘d“ld 9 cents; Daily 26,-'cysed of attacking 17-year-old Marie D. Williams of the Bureau of Pub-|ing battlefield at the Brunswick [000 poun: 9% and 9 cents.. Warne, Haines Indian girl. lic Roads arrived in Juneau last|alley + scheduled match. The Faith brought in 13000 — e night on the steamer Yukon. ] > |pounds of sable, selling for 5% SAVE THE DATE | | of the of members Ju- 1918, s hos- class oo 2 at $12 each, or, I agree to purchase ... annual memberships at the rate of $1 per month payable monthly, Mrs, Wade If and when sufficient memberships and dona- tions have been made to insure erection and opera- tion of the recreation facilities. Signed .......... - - WILLIAMS BACK Patronize Irving’s Market Address... Please mail ballot to Mrs. C. P. Jenne or place in ballot boxes distributed at various places in Juneau. | al The purpose of this ballot is to ascertain just who are interested and to what extent in the Swim- ming Pool and Recreation Center in Juneau. FOR INSURANCE See H. R. SHEPARD & SON Telephone 409 B. M. Behrends Bank Bldg. —e—— The double hull type of submar- cents; Visit 10,000 pounds, 5% cen! « | pEL e e Minelaying was originated during|ine is called “submer- - s the World War. Empire classifieds pay. : Chinas War’erci\; m Capitai D.F.D. Dance Saturday, Oct. 23, Douglas Nat. adv. sometimes sibles.” oo oo WORLD OPINION ' " L Remember!!! [f your "Daily Alaska Empire” has not been delivered By 6:00 P. M. PHONE 226 A copy will be sent you IMMED- IATELY by SPECIAL CARRIER. (Do not call after 7:15 P. M.) WINDOW CLEANING PHONE 48% OU'LL find roomy luxury and dependable service in reclining chair coaches, modern Pullman Tourist and Standard Pullman Sleepers — all Air-Conditioned — on the roller-bearing — NORTH COAST LIMITED It costs no more to enjoy the comforts of the NORTH COAST LIMITED than to travel on an (.hrdmary train. Dining car meals, 50c up — also tray seryice in coaches and Tourist sleepers at lunch counter prices. Thru cars to Kansas City, Twin Cities and Chicago. Ask for lowest fares to any point. Cable, write or call on KARL K. KATZ, Alaskg Representative 200 Smith Towey, Seattle PACIFIC RY. INSURANCE Allen Shattuck Established 1898 Fifty pickets bearing banners lined the sidewalks before the Japanese | Embassy at Washington, protesting Nippon's aggressions in China. The | efforts of the pickets were frustrated, however, when police shooed them l NORTHE R Juneau Alaska eway. No arrests were made. tesr Fran

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