The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, January 31, 1938, Page 2

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CALL OF SNOW DRAWS SKIERS FURRED COATS $25.00 Many Make Trlp to Cdlun New Slalom Course Is Popular SILK— SATIN— WOOLEN— TAILORED | COATS ything except the thermome-| ter combined yesterday to make ing conditions perfect on the Doug-| las trail, and despite the 12 degrees' above zero, recorded at the cabin, at noon, scores of skiers spent the| day along the trail. More than 40 skiérs made the| trip to the cabin, leaving early in the morning and coming down cur- ing the early afternoon. At le: hundred were skiing on the mead- | ows along the trail, including =a large group of Junior Ski Club members at the flume. | The meadow by th2 flume was the center of new activity, where colored tlags outline a slalom course, Scores of skiers spent the afternoon there perfecting turns. Among skiing accidents, the most serious was that of Betty Wilcox, Juneau high school student and daughter of Mr. and Mrs. H G Wilcox. Betty was injured in a fall just above the main steep hill of the trail, on Saturday afterno She was accompanied by Sue Stew- art, who first aid care, and ta- ken imnfediatcly to Juneau for med- ical attention. Feeling much ketter today, she is expected to return to school in a few days, however, five stitches were required to treat the cut on her head. | Bud Whiteside received a severely ,wrenched knee, yesterday, and v (treated at the Juneau Medical ¢ Surgical Clinic, Gene Rhode came 'to work today with an injured arm and Bill Clark was seen lmping " with a battered knee { According to Joe Werner, presi- ldent of the Juneau Ski Club, plans COATS $6.50 . CHILDREN'S ' CHINCHILLA Group 1 $10.95 GIRLS’ SILK DRESSES reduced to 1.95 each B. M. Behrends Co., Inc. "JTuneau’s Leading Department Store” JOUNSON NAMED HOLDEN HOPS LICHTENBERG =55 = % - BOY SCOUTS TO BE | TESTED TONIGHT BY yesterday to mine at Tulse- sengers and dir ex- Polaris-Taku with pa rw |lu' q um FROM NUM Seward Peninsula Merchant Says George Laiblin Ticket TEAM EXCURSION - PR Traveling Squml Will Turn ]\'fl.’:”\ WP PO Out l-onubhl in High < e e Juneau Boy Scouts o > | Scout wiil meet bet : School Gym GUAST GRIPPEB ’ Bodrd of Review at 7:30 p. oy a Johifison, Douglas Eagl i day in the High School gymi mpeoting in tests | where examinations in variou nan ind coach been elect- | _Jack Lichtenbers, weil KNOWD wiy o conducted i e B T e A8 tive from the Second Division in'epapp of the examinations tonight chorage Fur Rendezvou the Territorial Legislature last year,!svo George Jorgensen, J. P. Wil Tonight the boys will turn out| passed through Juneau today aboard 'jams & R. Ferguson, J. Irvine No- B the THlgh Bokiool gy fo beglH| CANADA SUUT the Yukon ! ble, Curtis Shattuck ‘H, B. Hum- fgetting “hep” to each other’s style | “I'm nol going to hint" Jack'phiey Frank MoDermott, Honry of 1. Johnson will aitempt to| laughed in his stateroom just betore parmon John Keyser, O. L. Ken- combination | brunt of a starting f ho will carry the Jine u to sce fthe the boat pulled out. “And I haven't! \dall and Capt. John M. Clark time to change my mind, thank hea-| 5 g Phillips 1§ chairman of the vens! Pilings close tomorrow, and poaq of Review. Ships Lashed by Gales, Air | Service Disrupted—One Plans are also under way for a| st there goes the 15 minute whistle.” Lig fund-drive dance for the team's| Vessel Is in Trouble Lichtenberg, who is taking a com ¥y tr: ling expenses to the Westward b |bination business trip and vacation H STUNEHUUSE ¥ fracas. The Basketball Dahce willl SAN FPRANCISCO, Jan, 31.—Gales to the States s he will re!urn ] be held next Saturday night in thelashed ships off the Pacl Coast ubout April 1. Elks' Hall with Barrett’s band do-|teday as the storm centering near Though Lichtenberg will not mn.. , ing the honors. {Cape Blanco, Oregon, moved inland, n;- said George Laiblin, a Re]nmen- -ee PAA PLANE {the Weather Bureau forecasting at tative from the Second Dj 11( ast two days of rain and snow from year, is “going strong” .nnd wm — ‘C«n.ld'\ to the Mexican border. ‘uobably come to Juneau next _Vuar A Pacific Alaska A ys Electra | coastwise freighter Nabesna as Representative again is scheduled to arri in Juneau to- |1s battling heavy s near the cen-! “I've had enough,” Llch(enberg morrow from Fairbanks with mm-|(m of the storm after the crew h'lde\‘(plaln(’d when he was asked why passengers aboard. |managed temporary engine repairs,ihe was not running. “The Demo. Snow between Juneau and Fair-|it reported. Other ships and the crats of Seward Peninsula have banks has held the plane at Weel t Guard have been notified |everything well in hand anyway.” Field since yesterday. |that the Nabesna, of the McCormack | o - > Line, would attempt to continue the FISH SHIPPED voyage to San Francisco under hnl - own power. COMING IN RIFLE SHOOT Juneau Club Recel\'es Chal- lenge for Match with Club in Minnesota JUNEAU WOMAN HAS An intra-club .22 rifle match held ARTICLE IN NEWSPAPER by the Juneau Rifle and Pistol Club New Englar Fish Company| Capt, Lewis Borasco and crew of | yesterday at the indoor range in ripped 459 boxes of frozen salmon six have been rescued from the! An illustrated article in the maga- |the Fair building resulted in a three to Seattle today aboard the steamer |fishing trawler Antone by the Coast!zine section of the Christian Sci- Way tie between Jay Williams, Har- Cos P e Yukon today, ftotalling 45900 Guard after the boat's propellor had ence Monitor of the last edition, ry Stonhouse and Bob Henning. In pounds, become tangled in a net and driven|gives a by-line to Caroline Todd, the shoot-off honors went to Stone- L3 _—eee ashore near Point Reyes shortly well known Juneau woman. | house, PAA DUE after last midnight. | The article, dealing with Alaskan The local club starts its postal | Showers, show and wind disrupt-'aviation, also gives a credit line match with Seward tonight at the A Pacific Alaska ways Lock-jed air service up and down the beneath an airplane photo, to Keith range and also has accepted a chal- hieed Elect , was due in Juneau coast. Two inches of snow was re-, |Petrich, Juneau High School stu- lenge from the Forks Rifle Club of jate this afterncon from F |ported in Seattle {dent, who took the picture, and the East Forks, Mnn., a match which is with nine passengers ahc The China Clipper remained at Alaska Air Transport Company, cf‘scheduled to end March 2. Several ‘cording to information received just Honelulu waiting orders to return whose Lockheed the photograph was | other postal matches are to be shot [6) Ahmvdx taken. by the local riflemen. i By The AP Feafure Service ‘ ¥ When Japanese t began to thead toward C living in the Unite eally were 'arounad They had en eager to 1 help to the folk wme from start of hostilities, but that eag- idicd 75,000 Chinese in a come from Canton or its nearly all c im have rélatives there. The ! program t6 Trelp win the war involves the Chinese: New Year’s Day, today, January 31 Instead of burning up their money in fircerae nd eat- ing in at feasts, according to the old Chinese custom, the colonies of Cziestials in San Francisco and Los Angeles have announced they will send the cash home for food, cloth- irg and medical supplies. The San Francisco group, largest settlement of Chinese outside of the homeland, has led in support- ing the troops. Early in the con- fuct it raised $450,000—an even million and a half in Chinese cur- reney. Now that Canton is being toreatened they are out to raise £600,000 more. Here's how they're doing it: 5 has redou ] . THEY SEW . Here’s a pile of flannel jackets all packaged for shipment to China and destined to comfort colle some of China's wounded. THEY MARCH . . . g The Chinese love a parade, At the opening of the refugee clicf campaign 1,000 marched while 19,000 lined {he streets ic watch them. These boys are pupils of Nan Kue Academy, a private schoel in San Francisco, with their banners. THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, MONDAY, JAN. 31, ALONG TRAIL ! BOARD OF REVIEW, Clunfimu m I Gom o to Turn Its New Year Party Into a War Reltef Rally r EAT . .. Business hoases arc enlisted in the camnpaign. This sign says the shop part of proceeds to war sufferers. 1938 MODES o[ t/re MOMENT ‘ by Adelaide Kerr FOR SNOW SLOPE gany brown and chamcis yellew make a smart color a winter sports suit, combining a waisteoat jacket and plus fours. brewn tepcoat is lined with yellow-plaided wool. ® ® 0 80 0 00 0 0 0 & .,fereq off Oregon, the lowest reported pressure being /S 1. Q. ANSWERS yuk of Egypt ESTEBETHIN : ¢ 5. Eire scheme for The | U. S. DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE, WEATHER BUREAU (By the U. S. Weather Bureau) | Porecast for Juneau and viciri v. beginning at 4 pm, Jan. 31: |Generally fair tonight and Tuesday; fresh eas erly winds. Weather forecast for Southeas Alask; senerally fair tonight and Tuesday; fresh easterly winds, except streng over channels having an "’(us ~west direction, and strong northerly winds over Lynn Canal and Chatham Strait Forecast of winds along the Coa:t of the Gulf of Alaska: Fresh casterly winds tonight and Tuesday'from Dixon Entrance to Cape | Hinchinbrook | LOCAL DATA Time Barometer Temp, Humiily Wind Velocity —Weathet |4 pm. yest'y 3027 23 34 SE 10 Clear |4 am. today 29.99 15 67 w 3 Clear Noon today 29.80 24 32 E 16! Clear RADIO REPORTS | TODAY Max. temp. | Low:st 4am. 4am. Precip. 4am. Station last 24 hours | tem» temp. velocity 2: hvs. Weather Atka 42 36 36 6 .82 Pt.Cldy Anchorage 19 1 = ¥ 0 Barrow . 12 | -10 2 10 0 Cloudy Nome 24 | -2 0 4 T Clear | Bethel 16 | =10 -10 4 0 Clear | Fairbanks 0 -6 2 4 07 Snow | Dawson -22 {0k ugd 0 02 Snow |St. Paul 30 | 28 30 20 03 Cloudy iDutch Harbor 42 | 30 40 10 0 Cloudy Kodiak 40 | 32 32 18 0 Pt.Cldy Cordova 28 | 20 26 4 [ Clear Juneau 26 { 13 15 3 0 Clear | sitka 35 | 15 ax o 0 | Kétchikan 34 16 16 4 0 Clear Prince Rupert 30 | 18 20 4 0 Clear Edmonton -4 -24 -24 4 0 Clear Seattle 40 | 34 38 4 T Cloudy Portland 34 | 30 30 12 02 Cloudy San Francisco 54 | 50 52 10 09 Rain |New York 56 | 48 52 38 T Rain | Washington 62 1 54 54 6 7 Cloudy WEATHER CONDITIONS AT 8 A. M. TODAY | Seattle (airport), | toria snowing, temp rature, 33; Blaine, cloudy, 30; Vic- clear, 33; Alert Bay, snowing, 27; Bull Harbor, snowing, 32; Tri- (ple Island, clear; Langara, clear, 25; Prince Rupert, clear, 20; Ketchi- kan, clear, 17; Craig, clear, 15; Wrangell, clear, 15; Petersburg, clear, 2; Hoonah, clear, 12; Hawk Inlet, clear, 4; Sitka, clear, 18; Soapstone Point, partly cloudy, 28; Juneau, clear, 22; Radioville, clear, 25; Skag- way, partly cloudy, 15; Cape Hinchinbrook, cloudy, 31; Cordova, clear, 16; Chitina, cloudy, -18; McCarthy, clear, -30; Anchorage, clear, 18; Fairbanks, cloudy, 0; Nenana, missing; Hot Springs, cloudy. 2; Tan- ana, partly cloudy, -2; Ruby, clear, §; Nulato, clear, -8; Kaltag, clear, |-12; Flat, clear, -9; Unalakleet, missing, Ohogamute, clear, -5. Juneau, Feb. 1. — Sunrise, 8:07 am.; sunset, 4:21 p.m. WEATHER SYNOPSIS The barometric pressure was 1w this morning from Southeast Al- arka southward to California with a storm area of marked intensity 28.90 inches ® over the Pacific Ocean at latitude 4} degrees and longitude 130 degrees. ® Abnormally high pressure prevailei from the Aleutians and Bering Sea ® British Columbia southward to California and by géherally fair weather B e 2. England (Sir Hubert Wil- o p, eastward to the Mackenzie River and southward to the Da- Tfl fi Pg % e kins) and Rus ;4 the crest being 30.86 inches at Nome and Bethel. This gereral a¥ ® 3. The Insurgen pssure distribution has been attended by precipitation from Fairbanks ® 4. Decrease. ward to Fort Norman, also over the Aleutians, and from southern o ° ISLAND PORT > E‘ !fl FIGHT T0 s successful bidder \d waypoints mail $11,440, for a fo July 1, ac- Albert Wile the Estebeth, w for the Sitka /run with a bid for year contract beginr cordunz to Postmaster - BURDICK IN, HOLBROOK OUT 000 delegates voted against proposal flmldmg Steel ward p()lflL\ in connection wi Civilian Conservation Corps work, Charles G. Burdick, Administrative Assistant for the rest Service, and head of CCC work in the Ter- ritory, returned to his hea arters here today aboard the Yukon. Southbound on the 1 to- day was Assists il Fores- Works, on the first ter Wellman Hol tender ordered for to be gone a month on I ing industry. The vice business in Seattle, Portland and San Francisco. SEATTLE, Jan. 31.—Work is steel tender is $40,000 and will be 76 e SURREALIST THIEF SREiue. HOLLYWOOD, Cal—A burglar 1. who entered the Putzel galleries o % R here liked the ultra-mod: art. RINK HEARING. ON He passed up a $10.000 Corot and other valuable works to make away with several su ist canvases. - - Jellyfish are compc | per cem water. cy of two Hoonah minor girls, started Cuun this amrnoon THEY DANCE rice grusl and will devole “mammoth dragon dance” @2 006c 0003 00 Fur Use, Alaska der way at the Commercial Boiler| cannery | the Alaska Fish- the PAF of Bellingham and will c feet long,| powered by a 240 horsepower diesel!from Treland 52 years ago, he heard! in ®. S. Commissioner's for himself. “8a (,()l()l)rate n N ew Waywuu sell pads from Maine to Cali- These Chinatown beauties are further- ing the cause by heiping to advertise a to be held for benefit of the Chinese campaign. ® cver the remainder of the field of observation. Light snow was report- ed this morning over Vancouver Island and at the Seattle airport. Easterly gales were reported this morning over the Straits of Juan de Fuca Davis sporte B It was colder last night over Southeast Alaska, western and north- 2 pany \\/“,\ \\n ”1 on ern Alaska, and warmer over the interior from Fairbanks eastward to 3 t A the Mackenzie Valley. tract Awe \.,{ several months ago. William discov- it ARG I "a a Br ered that manufacturers of artific- to QLD i Unlimitec hanc “]" lial flies and bugs were paying good f ;»,.{', # g poin! port Voted Lewis by prices for deer tails because the soft, , en W “‘ b g : s A M ~ B . e waterproof hair is just the thing Fields from Ch A o) Miners Convention |for flashy orange, red, yellow and from Hoonah SE 31.—Dele: ‘Br i i E = By The O'Briens groaned. Since » Estebelh w AW A to th ed Mine Workers’, CHICAGO, Il] J(ll], 31.—The F(‘d- 1885, they had been throwing away cn its regular ru - convention directed John L. eral Grand Jury today indicted John the .mils 3 ning at 6 c'clock, resuming s Lewis to earry on for the CIO and %m(llund alias John Anderson, on g ule voted its un °d financial sup- of kidnaping the late Capt. James V. Davis, owner srt. Less than one dozen of tre Charles Ross and “doing him bodily the harm.” U, S. District Attorney Igoe said he will ask for the death pen-| |alty. Tlfe date of the trial has not |been set. See Your Dentist Now, Before 1939 - e | SAN FRANCISCO, Jan. 31.—The San Francisco world’s fair manage- | ment advises all the world to see its Kefl s a m I |dentist before 1939. | In that year 10,000 practitioners | offices. The International Dental un-| ,Ccngress meets here in connection 'will be temporarily away from their iwlth the Golden Gate International | exposition. WAKE UP YOUR LIVER BILE— CHICAGO, Ill, Jan. 31.—As long as horses wear collars and fish snap, t deer tails, the O'Briens will have 5t business. Shortly after O'Brien came here tor Delivery is to be made May ‘;]lml;ei\‘:e::fi??;m}?:a&):; h:‘:;y;:.?: wlT“o“T cAloMEl tecting wounds. Collars always And You'll Jump Out of Bed Feel- were hard on horses, so O'Brien putl ing You Could Push a Bus Over ! | The liver shonid pour out two pints of |two and two together. He bought|; Ui, iu 500, bowels daily: Tt this bite Hearing for Lester Rink, charged deerskins from Wisconsin Indians,| snot fowing freely sour food doesn’t digest. with contributing to the delinquen- made up pads to sirap on horse t just decays in the bowels. Gas bloats up | | onr stomach. You getconstipated. Your was collars and—he had a good business | \h le system is poisoned and you feel gour, i the worid looks punk , fizzy drinks. palatable inrsh purgatives are makeshifts. 2 sowel movement doesn’t et at the cause. It the famous, sure acting Carter’s Little ver Pills to get those two pints of bile e ireely and make you feel “up and . Harmless, gentle, vet amazing in mal bile flow freely. Ask for Carter's T Pills. Lok for the name Carter's on od package. Pric ; He figures that he and his son, — |William, have made things easier }icr at least a million horses. They Iormfi and expect to carry on until |the last horse drops. ¢ 1 The O'Briens got a terrific shock © INs. co. N A LET US TELL YOU THE ADVANTAGES of our “Open Policy,” that automatically covers all shipments bought or sold by the policy-holder. although there is no charge until the shipment is made. SHATTUCK AGENCY PHONE 249 Office—Néw York Life P o g Hepl &

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