The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, December 16, 1937, Page 2

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2 7. THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, THURSDAY, DEC. 16, 193 U. 8. DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE, WEATHER BUREAU Y —e S SURFAGE SHIPS HITE FOX : i | THE WEATHER JUST IN TIME for GIFT HUNTERS! ¢ | v (By the . &, Weather Bureas j ' M | Forecast for Juneau and vicinity, beginning at 4 pm., today: i s O | Cloudy with occasional snow tonight and Friday; moderate to fresh 4 | | southeast winds. ) s L Weather forecast for Southeast Alaska: Rain south portion, cloudy | with occasional rain northwest portion, cloudy with occasional snow { oL ¢ 55 | northwest portion tonight and Friday; moderate to fresh southeast ¥ Secretary 0[ State Hull An-| gi:;c:;-‘:;ccg:rg:sh to strong over Dixon Entrance, Clarence Strait and N N | nounces. Official Re- | Forecast of winds along the Coast of the Gulf of Alaska: Fresh to * A | lf Ab d | strong southeast winds from Dixon Entrance to Cape Spencer; mod- § \} | port irom Abroa ¢ erate to fresh easterly winds from Cape Spencer to Cape Hinchinbrook. . Lo S \ LOCAL DATA | £ gionunugl 19om Pige te) \ Time Barometer Temp, Humidity Wind Velocity Weathet , Donald, special correspondent of the \\ 4 pm. yest'y 29.39 36 89 s 6 Lt. Rain 3 London Daily Times, in the Orient, 4 am. today 2032 38 4 B 4 Lt.Snow ] and who has been covering the Sino- Noon today 2044 37 81 8 8 LLR.&S. i Japanese conflict, declares Japanese RADIO REPORTS o surface boats made a broadside at- TODAY 4 © tack on the American gunboat Pan- Max. temp. Lowest 4am. 4am. Precip. Mam. ay in the Yangtze River last Sun- Station last 24 hours terrp. temp. velocity 24 hrs. *eathu . day following the attack of several Atka 32 24 2 4 T Cloudy Japanese planes which dropped Anchorage - 20 7 A - 0 s bombs. Barrow -4 -8 -4 14 0 Pt.Cldy McDonald’s statement was being Nome 18 | 10 18 4 1 Snow confirmed by survivors of the Pan- Bethel 8 6 8 4 0 Cloudy . ay who have arrived here. It is Fairbanks 8 -12 -12 4 0 Clear The Kind of Cravats Men Them- declared that st about .the same Dawson -2 -16 -2 6 T Cloudy o v b the d é time the Japanese planes began {St. Paul — 14 24 6 04 Pt. Cldy Sel? \,S’ B‘ 'Jy‘ 4’““ Halt do;‘en 't swooping over the Panay and Stan- Dutch Harbor 34 24 24 4 A5 Pt.Cldy You'll find Silks and dard Oil boats, the Japanese river Kodiak ... 36 32 36 4 14 Rain Reps A e Stripes Narrow craft steamed near the Panay and Cordova ... 42 30 30 0 T Clear eps . .. WIQ k,’“‘l C5; aNCLLONY operied fire with machine guns. Juneau o 39 34 38 4 39 Lt.Snow ¢ Str ~ F igures and Pin Survivors said the attack ap- @ o |Sitka . 41 33 — — R " - NI peared to be malicious as the Stars ) PE NO=MH |Ketchikan 42 36 42 0 53 Rain D 2. 2 j 8s 10! and Stripes were floating from all 'WEVE HEARD YO THE FINEST WHITE FOX INTHE Prince Rupert ... 44 | 38 44 12 32 Cloudy A [ 'fl American vessels at the time. _ O AR A W GRS AR Edmonton ... 30 16 20 4 0 Clear A &,“‘@0, E.ZS, 1,50 [ hl e The story so far: The North |%f i Seattle 52 46 48 14 04 Rain Y % VS SiaE Tk grocieer O Neli s |l s c o u T s Portland 52 T R Ui Rain ayd U tfl 3 00 ANNE E ISLAND sailor doll in his search for the | | . | [san Francisco 62 52 52 4 0 Clear G up to 3. AU I ' dén of the whie fox whére Hel- | | | |New vork 40 3.8 ol oty i i S ga, a doll, is held prisoner. | AT **| Washington ... 38 34 38 4 T Cloudy EBY 'N TflP Traveling with the sailor is a WEATHER CONDITIONS AT 8 A.M. TODAY { 135 - uirrel no bigger than a house- TROOP 610—DOUGLAS. Seattle (airport), cloudy, temperature 48; Blaine, raining, 46; Vic- =2 g REEL 3 fly. Sponsored by Douglas E“g,lesftnria, cloudy, 47; Alert Bay, showers, 38; Bull Harbor, cloudy, 41; Tri- A Lodge No. 117. Scoutmaster, ‘Ckiple Island, cloudy; Langara Island, cloudy, 46; Prince Rupert, rain- CHAPTER SIXTEEN McDonald; Asst. Scoutmaster, EIToY ing, 43; Ketchikan, raining, 42; Craig, showers, 45; Wrangell, raining, | . : ' Flee.kv M 40; Petersburg, raining and snowing, 34; Sitka, raining, 39; Radioville, P e ;“‘:’l "‘S’ Den! e C"fmglpusw( ;flgé :;1, dt:“ IDO“‘::ES,raining. 83; Hoonah, cloudy; Soapstone Point, raining, 39; Juneau, « s the North Star searched for City Hall at 7: FOnesiay - snowing, 34; Skagway, cloudy, 31; Haines, cloudy; %akataga, clear; St. Metlakatla Packers at TOP the home of the white fox he was ning, December 15. Nine members|mjigs, cgloudy, BB:ZCo}l"dova.dg’lenr‘ 25; Chitina, };lear. -22g; McCarthy, Of Ketchlkan almost as confused as you or I of the troop were present: Gordon clear, -20; _Anchorage, clear, 10; Fairbanks, clear, -14; Tanana, cloudy, DiStl’iCt ]\vonld have been. He looked down Wahto, Senior Rairol Leader: Bobla: Hot Springs, clear, -16; Nenana, clear, -14; Ruby, cloudy; Nulato, | ;Xrom the sky and Q]I he could see Fler.ak_ Patrol Leader; Jim Devon,'cloudy, 10; Kaltag, cloudy, 12; Flat cloudy, 15. P g Thg WallHawh " Afinette’ ‘Thiand \-\a‘:”;x:;ul\y(ax‘x‘i (:hll::(l)lfllil‘{‘:rvtr]l](;s.fig. '.Sfi:;b;;afl’;;x:lkfl?»ul.c.:.:ll:{l‘txnlli‘r;z;k_ Juneau, Dec. 17. — Sunrise, 8:45 a.m.; sunset, 3:07 p.m. & {Packing Co., whose cannery at Mel- ,104 her by blinking his one eye Cashen, Billie Feero, Billie Spain,| WEATHER SYNOPSIS ‘!akntln is now on (hg blddell's block ', brightly, and saying, “Have and Ken Loken. The barometric pressure was low this morning from the Bering In the U. S. Commissioner’s office v, ceen the white fox around with| Frank Drsul passed his second Sea, Alaska, and the north Pacific Ocean eastward to Manitoba and he!orc_ fourteen Metlakatla repre- , ;o19» class signaling test. {Ontario with a central pressure of 28.80 inches at latitude 52 degrees sentatives, k_nas for the last two years gy ello,” said the fairy. “No, All boys who are able to make|Dorth and longitude 156 degrees west and secondary centers at Fair- ¢ been the biggest singlf caqned .s{ll- I didn't see him, but I heard he the trip will leave the City Hall at;VieWw and Churchill in Canada. The barometer was high from the Ha- mon producer in the Ketchikan dis- passed here with a doll in his mouth. 8 o'clock Saturday morning to cut waiian Islands to Oregon and California. This general presure dis- m’ct £ |He was headed west.” Christmas trees which will be of-|{ribution has been attended by light snow over Seward Peninsula, the 3 | The cannery, which was buxl_t in, so the Star traveled on, waiting | fered for sale and the funds used‘Aleutlans, upper southeast Alaska, northern Alberta and southwest of 1915 and has been added to since, ground in the sky for the West Wind to send boys to the Scout Cam 'Hudson’s Bay, light rain cver Kodiak Island and from lower southeast was purchased by the United States that came by very soon. “Say, have next summer. Scoutmaster McDon-|Alaska to central Oregon and generally fair weather over the rest of % g Gu\(emmem and leased on a share you seen the white fox and a doll?” ald also announced that tests wouldi““‘ field of observation. Temperatures this morning were warmer Y | - ~ basis—a certain percentage to the gsked the Star. be passed on the trip. jover northern and northwestern Alaska and colder from the Interior ] e ren s o- nc. cannery and a certain amount to the| “Sure, follow me.” said the West A [to the Guif of Alaska with little change in other parts. ] 3 n " ] lessee. |Wind and he flew across the sky| & ol Aot fasines | / In the past five years the can-'and swooped down around the goomrmacter Gens Rhode: -rrons| Mrs. Floyd Dryden was cha jct the Phil- ", i R N, e o " 9 \ Scoutmaster, Gene Rhode; Troop s. v yden was chairman| Criminal convictions in the Juneau's Le ing Department Store ,pery has been under the lease of mountain top where the white f0X Gommittee— Homer Nordling, chair-|0f the affair which was marked by ippine Commonwealth dropped to i#«i§ W. A Pries, Ketchikan banker and lived. “In there” said the West pon. Capt. Clark, Russell Clith- @ school hour with Florence Sabey il per 10,000 population in 1935, the go. President of the Annette Island Wind. ol e AW e sbar w./presiding as teacher. Christmas lowest percentage in 32 years. Fipes oot rrmce it frotrmeaftfrotrceUf v} 1151000 Packing Company. Today in| The North Star looked down and O s ekt ol S R R P e wprery e R o TR 1 B |the Hotel Juneau, where M. Pries soon he saw one of the little black,D?r‘fi;p'cn met in thé Legion Dug-|Which was concluded by the serving| DT | British Wage Scale, ; a promise ':1 m’m- work futh TREASURE H,UNT 0]: ils staying, he said 337.5,000 had been mc_}es come aut_ wearing a whitejom last night at 7:30. sigmnng“’f refreshments. y ear, even if could predict with {turned back to the cannery during apron. She brushed off the 800D | a1 drill contests were th %)) e | f:f:r lauea | Annual Employment, some mee that tne annual SKI CLUB PLANNED. ithe_npasz five years. - {and went in again. Then he saw the oo 0 (U0 (TRIET S FREE KO8 8 S = e 4 e ) . " deie ] income would be the same or high- ( hree canning fines this past white fox who stepped out, sniffed| . .. & 4 A omas Paine, the Anglo-Ameri-| home-made Given Thougui inU. S. - FOR NEXT SUNDAY‘summer run through the season’s/the air, and wentll?ack in. {08 Boop Siiomapt discussed ican philosopher and author, died cake / ] - But there is a fair possibiliy| _ i {pack of 184,000 cases, and last year,| The Squirrel Creeps |nst approvad. The Aurora Bopeallaly,yego’ He was borniin: 1987 st J ; (Continued from Page One) that part of the recent coolness fet| Reservatlons are now being m”‘l‘e.a record pack of 202000 cases, each| “Ho, ho, T'll rush back and ten| A0l is leading the Flaming Ar-|ppeatforg in Norfolk, England. | = here toward urgent Labor remands [0F the treasure hunt to be heldlyme jeading the Ketchikan field in the sailor,” said the Star, He found| °¥, Fatrol in inter-patrol contest | o e hig -y by the Juneau Ski Club on Sunday | 3 4 4 . |started at the first meeting of the to take a lower wage per hour he is due to a belief that high hourly when malts ‘or Miloe’ e individual packs. ltlm sailor playing with the B TOntE. A matrol Jeniiers’ sotin AhEricah coblart seeds pisnten il | will simply get léss pay for himselr, | Wage levels were one of the factors MO, Taln or shine mempers Wil| The company has elght traps,(tiny squiel. “Follow me” hell"oro- & PAUol leaders’ meeting) A g e at least until investors get interest- | contributing to the current business Sather for the search, meeting 8tisng 99 seiners working to keep its|called. -3 oatipd, SO DERL Mnray evenlog )| SancnUAE Sy R, Ia0s S| . . o % b ule- Irving Noble residence at 1109R {olevators going during the season.| In an hour they had come to the ~ NORLITE TROOP |produce JEite s .much fibge .as S h llln ] However, the ; story has in, however, the ques- SR ling, the grofp | LIS CAnDETY has two fish elevators fox's mountain. The sailor diant) Norliteman Boy SCD‘;“‘NT"‘?_‘;‘; mle‘t}na“ve i cni g | stirred some Government of t debatable. Likely John G » instead of the usual one. |see a soul. So he sat dewn on a| vt orltema At | 2 = m‘: Dot o faediinag 1 would not aitogether agree ‘{‘111 i “l’r e ”;”“;_'e o é°°°~‘ Wages paid range from 40 cents/pile of fir cones to think. |Church last night. Twelve members| Loge and placer location notices| Baking Powder L E A Following the search, dinner i t0!yn pour to 75 cents an hour with| “How .about my creeping in|Were present as follows: Cyril Zu- for sale at The Empire Office. S ———————— cent policy of encouraging I ters have been authoriz- at a be served—just where, the commil—}au scales geiting 10 cents extra there?” asked the squirrel no bigger | bOf, Alfred Brown, Bill Wood, Chee Malcolm Bot h_’g.)‘ ho“f}" IJ:”, e _ S g ey tee is keeping secret, along with all |on ‘your “for ovettime. |than a house-fly. Hermann, Bob Penny, « sacrifice of less time on the job. |ed t 1 precanceled stamps SR IR e ) e R | : ot It would requive a hardy public affix them to second, third R el Out of 400 people hired during the| “Have you the courage?” asked |Faulkner, George Walmsley, Mike - - official to come out with a recom- | fourth class mail during the Chuist- |'* 5% F‘ F. Clements is taking |Scasol last sumimer, 80 ‘pef' cent of the saflor. |Moptos i Giliee, Deun i 24 mendation that labor accept a mas rush to save gift and card o P B lunians |the workers were Metlakatlans. No ‘Tt doesn't take courage” said Truitt and Hallie Rice. Six appli- i e Re T o i | sand the eanhie xmexmtmm.‘ due before midnight o jenta) help is used. {the squirrel. “He won't see me.” cations for enrollment were receiv- X R ) ) e SR o) __ tomorrow, with the telephone num- | oo Pries, bidding on the lease, So the sailor set the tiny squir-{ed from the following boys: Harry a4 ber 466 during the day, and BIack ¢, pe renewed, is R. J. Reynolds.|Tel in the snow and watched him|Watson, Jr, Griffith Nordling, lmpor',ed 634 b nighl |Vice President of the Annette Is-|Scamper into the white fox’s den, Richard Rowe, Jack Newmarker, S o 5 D He was gone for a long time and|Harry Sperling and John Bavard. Direct from Italy €S l a for Their H and Yours S. Franklin Street |land" Packing Co. Both men will return to The First City when their NEW ORCHESTRA; | bidding business is complete. ‘IT’S GOT RHYTHM” | FRET. (T NS { CARD OF THANKS An as yet unnamed orchestra last| . s night showed (played) its wares| I w‘lsh to thank all_my friends for before an enthusiastic audience at(their kind sympathy in my bereave- the Elks' turkey shoot. ment in the recent death of my The new outfit seems to have the . “swing.” There are seven pieces: |Masonic Lodge, Rev. Kendall, music Howard Barrett, piano; Bob Lan ,-and singing rendered, f.o those who te i e}; so kindly donated their cars, also iuncle, Ed Andrews, especially the then he rushed back to the sailor| Patrols were organized and pa- |with his eyes fairly popping. trol leaders appointed: “They’re in there, and the doll| Cyril Zuboff, Acting Senior Pa- |looks very unhappy,” he said. {trol Leader; Weasel Patrol: Skip. ‘Quite a Curiosity’ | MacKinnon, Patrol Leader; Hallie, | “We've got to go in” |Rice, Assistant Patrol Leader; Bea- |sailor. “Going with me?” ver Patrol: Jim Glasse, Patrol Lead- “ “Certainly,” said the squirrel.|€r; Huskies Patrol: Malcolm Faulk- Patrol Leader; Bill Wood, Darrell Naish, Scoutmas- said the i They walked up to the fox’s door,|ner, and the sailor shouted, “Ahoy, there. | Scribe; Anyone home?” They heard “clump, | ter. fclump” coming toward them. Then| opening in its new home; with RAY STEVENS in TELEPHONE 3 sorbs water and softens like a sponge. This water-softened mass aids elimi- nation. All-Bran is a crunchy, toasted ce- real. Eat it with milk or cream and fruits. Delicious in muffins. But, how- ever you eat it, use it REGULARLY: eat two tablespoons of All-Bran and drink plenty of water. If you do this | every day you can aveid common con- stipation—and cathartics, too! Every glx;ocer sells All-Bran. Made by Kellogg Battle Creck. SANTA CLAUS LIGHT & POWER CO. JUNEAU—DOUGLAS Commencing Saturday, we are OPEN EVENINGS UNTIL CHRISTMAS guitar; Marvin Chase, slap-sticl & 3 hey saw tw g fiddle; Coleman J. Crow, Irish|ihe beautiful floral, offerings. P :;;:;;le:vy:fi METHODIST LADIES’ | drum acrobat, and Tom Tomkin, | BARPLD WILSON {do you want?” AID HOLDS “KIDS” i Masterful Craftsman- | saxaphone. i | o 77t # 7m0 meet you,” grinned the sallor. PARTY LAST NIGHT|| prefers to leave a 1 ship in Purest Ital- Howard Barrett is directing the‘]o Nqubehtsv (‘)gzluneqxg : mwxexv: I:;:n;‘ yotuh‘l:? the finest white S ift. A : n November 7, , on a cold win- orth. . A worthw: ; an ALQbGSt?r | ter moonlight mghv,_under condi-! The white fox grinned very a: drile';:’a:;’Q:gh::r:]?;ge::";fgfgfi e o (\\/QS@:\S "’Ur~j‘).}: Ends }‘g_"::)smzha; “sr;l:g: e:’:;zs:;;ph:::; g:::iedsy a‘::?f?m‘ Who fo youtlg years ago,” the informal party Genercl‘l Electric - Smoking Sets—Ash |made by L. V. Winter and E. P. Pond,| “Me and the squirrel,” said the (0 the Methodist Ladies Ald was [ il Bl TI‘CI\/°7 b aeo ICI"“ {With the resultant “Lights O’ Ju-|saflor, and he held out the “ny‘hed last night in the church par- eganer wi 5 it ineau,” prints which have had a|squirrel no bigger than a housel’ly.”ms gathering s large ‘group ‘of s d Powder Boxes world-wide distribution. The grow-|{ “I declare,” said the fox. “'l'hat.‘s""embe's and thelr dhilitren; the bill now an . ia ) ing demand for same is now sup-|quite a curiosity. Come in.” { 1FOV\/’GI“S O’f} PbGd | Ay plied in' five sizes now on sale by| So the two went in. Think howi [ T for years to come. g ana many otner iaed Winter & Pond Co., and The Hayes [brave they were! N ) ettt I 1 C s CouGH DRoP ™" Temeow. v | | Never Want to see " objets d'art T L : 2 " Anoth ‘1 Dust . . Litter . . Grit . . they're all the Just received in a Ala ASKA FED s Avmcs AND ' Another Cathartlc. same to the New General Electric ... |. shipment from - ] 3 { : Ry It gets them all — and leaves your Here’: vay to AVOID twq — Tialy. 'LO TION ! o Consation and etarien | TOOM clean and fresh as new. 2 : NTQC : ol Simpl; i Will be OPEN FOR BUSINESS tomorrow forning in its 1 gazu“{é’vsy&‘%‘fii‘fig&?gfifffiflfif SOLD ON EASY PAYMENTS . y eating soft, 2 H b s JUNEAU new location, at 119 Seward Street, street floor of the afi;l;vileéuaxngfes';e;hoe:%es'{mgs : 4 144 g . { vitamin “B,” “bulk.” . : Valentine Building. ‘Necessary alterations to the site | elosg's Aél-mggagé‘oa sousce ALASKA ELECTRIC . : : : n x"‘— - Marble works have been just completed and the Association is now | tinal tract and promote xegular elimi- : nation. All-Bran has “bulk”—it ab- Y

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