The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, February 19, 1938, Page 8

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8 ————————————————— SHIELS 1S DUE TOPRESENT CUP AT SKIBANQUET Fisheries Trophy Is to Be of Awarded Winner Jumping Event Archie W. Shiels Cup at th quet in the Scott money hi among $10,000 Smile Inventor Wams Congress About New Bgrgh Threat Students Take Opposite Sides on Question of Going to War WASHINGTON, Feb. 19. — Lester P. Barlow, naval inventor, has urg- ed Congress to go slow before au- thorizing a billion dollars for the Navy's expansion He said the new aerial mine makes necessary drastic alterations in present dreadnaught plans. He predicted the new bombs will be fiective in attack on all types of »s from a height of over 15,000 Chairman Vinson, of the Naval t leader in the drive for 15¢ appropriations, sug- part of a $15,000,000 fund to test a mys- aerial bomp” to which Barlow of Stamford, had made reference. to Barlow, the device force the entire al- TI5Us ey my ntor tier ording would actually fishing industry to donate . eration of the proposed $1,000,- P D 1 ;j Q - 000,000 Navy building program. mediatel; DR ] Bomb Attacks last year, Mr : 2 “Bombs dropped from tremen- tive designs at Pea Tfl {’fig l i PT dous heights could blanket an area go, and allowed the ‘ud ten miles square in three or four to make the final ! e L v minutes, 1 Barlow. “The attack Fisheries Cup, the Moller Tropi would cripple even master dread- and ten other cups are on display Ag DEBTS naughts by destroying auxiliary in the window of the ka Ele i ships which supply the larger ves- tric Light and Pow Company .15 building ey Sl .1lenbach The inventor further said he did Over 400 persons are evpecied to w€nRator Schwellenbach ;5 qare to even put the invention witness the jurmpin h of Suggests Payment in the patent office the Molier down} ish line ab After the equipment wizard had left the floor, Stamford fighting R ” Nl‘.(]t‘ I I lUt’UL(' . Louis W. Wilbert, Jr., 23, speaking for the Baltimore Peace Conference, told the House Naval committee that “an appreciable minority” of ACHIN L i D countries nator sgests to are to be sc and ¢ United State: the American youth would not fight given out at e gate where ¢ H pposed scaling do but - to defend this country under any cent admission charge for adul's gyres the owing countrics could conditions. be collected to aid in defray- supply produce that the United Some Son 2 expenses incidental with tI - States does not have and this would ~ Wilbert said these few were 100 r.val cf outside sk thus cut any competition with “our per cent pacifists who had con- = —— own citizens, scientious objections to war. Frank The Russian Nihilists we Senator Schwellenbach s Little, theological student followed sponsible for the murder of ( does not favor any war debt s Wilbert on the floor and declared exander IT in 1881 ment linked with trade agreements. vehemently that he would not fight at all, though the invaders should even molest his mother or his sis- ter. SFARS OFFICE BURGLARIZED DURING NIGHT Seventy-seven Dollars Gone from Cash Drawer This Morning A robbery of the Sears Roehnck order office at 205 Seward Street lasct night, netted the burglar $77 in cash, according to police. The money was in the cash draw- er when the office was closed at 6:30 yesterday evening, employees said, and the janitor told police the door was locked at midnight last night when he made his rounds. ‘When employees arrived at the of- fice this morning they found the front door ajar with the night latch on, and the cash drawer had been rifled. - TURKEY DINNER WILL CELEBRATE BIRTHDAY Tomorow is Skipper MacKinnon's birthday and he and some of his friends will celebrate the event tonight with a turkey dinner at the home of his parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. Simpson MacKinnon. It will be a stag affair, followed by a theatre party—or coasting. g s SRR Empire classifieds pay. organ richness in cathedral tone that swells up like the tide of the sea, or dies away like voices in a distant gondala. It's Soproni: “‘the finest accor- dion that ever came out of Italy”. Try it; test its respon- sive power; finger ifs “Stein- way' keyboard, SOLD BY ALASKA MUSIC SUPPLY 122 Second Street — — e Juneau | TREAT YOUR CREDIT. AS A SACRED TRUST. | Don’t Ever Disregard it! YOUR TRUST— YOUR CREDIT we mean. Your credit can be as useful to you as electricity has been to all man- kind—the tool that will bring you a richer life—but, like electricity, it also can throw you. If you are in the dark— Alaska cred't Use Our Pooled B ureai Account Plan CHARLES WAYNOR-Mgr First National Bank Bldg. Juneau —— Telephone 28 THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, SATURDAY, FEB. 19, 1938. Ball Bearing Says— Better Replace the Divots DRESS WARM FoR THE SKI' RACES TorMoRROW FoLKS— REMEMBER, IS NATIONAL Ny = THIS DEF ALASKA CANNER If You’fia_S_it-Down Skier CHARGED UNFAIR By JOAN DURHAM AP Feature Service Writer A skier is only as good as his worst turn. So, if you're a ndvice stay on trails set oside for novices, ad- vises Frank Elkins, ski expert. Don't try trails marked “for experts only just because you've heard there are only one or two difficult turns in them. And don’t expect your friend who is an expert skier to get any kick out of your novice trail with its eight-to-ten-degree descent — when he's used to descents of 39 degrees or more. Let him go his w i his group, and you go yours. Trail etiquette has lots of fine points you ought to check on be- iore you set out. They include these: Wear clothing that is light, re pels snow and water and fits loose- ly. Remember that skiing requires lots of bending When you feel you're losing con- trol, stop. Most accidents happen when you're out of control Respect all cries of “track.” They are to skiing what “fore” is to_golf. They mean, “Get out of the way!” If you fall, get up and out of the way at once Do your clowning on the sidelines. It may save you a bad scar. Remove all traces of sitzmarks (falls). That means replace your divote—filling up the holes you va- cate with snow. Don't try any trail until you have mastered at icast one elemental turn. Don't ski alone—or on isolated trails. (You might get hurt and suffer badly from exposure because you can't move). And help count the members of your parly once in a while. Have all your equipment in or- der. Nobody likes a skier who slows up his party to adjust the bindings on his skis. Keep your ski poles well to the rear, but don't drag them. They're COME EARLY Beat the Crowd to Douglas— apt to cateh on something and torow you if you do. In carrymg ssw plade the bot- toms together. Keep the tips down —even when you park them in front of the lodge. Put a small block of TO UNION LOCAL Alaska Glacier Seafoods wood between them at the middle, DiSCrifl]inating, trap them together and hang the poles onto the tips, fastening the Sa_vs Hope handle loops over each other. It you get caught on a trail stand SEATTLE, Feb. 19 —Charles W. still; don't dodge. An experienced H. Hopes, Regional Director of the skier will maneuver around you. National Labor Relations Board Don't leave anything along the has issued a complaint, ¢harging trail-—unless it's to mark a dang the Alaska Glacier Seafoods Cor- ous spot. poration of Petersburg, with dis- Never borrow—unless it's ki wax. crimination in its employment. Most skiers consider using each oth- Hope charged that cannery work- er's wax a matter of good fellow- ers of the Farm Labore: Union, ship. But be sure you supply your Lecal 222, CIO affiliate, were dis- share. criminated against in a hearing If you're A woman, carry your own March 16 in Petersburg. skis and packs. Don't complain The .complaint said the discrim- about the cold. You may let a man ination was based on “the fact pull you up from a sitzmark if a that the company entered an agree- But don't just sit ment with an AFL union when it up. knew that the majority of the Heimzalfil‘a‘nwfln Pirate Roster man is around. until one shows FINNISH CLUB WILL HOLD FLOWER SOCIAL he Finnish Educational Club is wer social on Tuesday PITTSBURGH, Feb. 18. — The zvening at the I. O. O. F. Hall, for Pittsburgh Pirates announce Ken- which occasion arrangements are neth Heintzelman, rookie southpaw now being completed. pitcher, had signed a contract for The flowers will be brought by the forthcoming season. He was the women and auctioned off dur- under option to Knoxville in the ing the evening. Dancing will be Southern Association last year. He held from 9 p.m. until 1 am. with made the trip to Pittsburgh’s Coast refreshments to be served. training camp, then rejoined the - > - club at the end of the season in| The giant cactus of southern Ari- time to pitch and win one game. zona and Southeastern Calitornia * WA it grows sometimes to a height of 70 BAR ASSOCIATION MEETS feet. The regular luncheon' meeting of - e the Juneau Bar Association was| The linenfold panel decoration of held today at Percy's Cafe where the late Gothic period*was common Judge H. B. LeFevre, president, pre- | in north Europe and England sided. Judge Simon Hellenthal of - oo the Third Division was present at Try the Empire classifieds for the luncheon. results. BEER WINE HILARITY mouth, I'd let him have it. Dewar’s (PRONOUNCED DO-ERS) Riley Is Cleared 0f “Beating Up” ' wiire LABEL Charles Waynr pory Young Miner Admits He \4 “Went to Work on Him” for Alleged Remarks (Continued from Page One) Attorney R. E. Robertson, de- fending Riley, asked the young man if anything more had been said 4 “Yes," Riley replied, “he kept say- ing he’d get me for this and tha he'd get a gun and some more stuff. And every time he opened hi Real cause of the trouble. it wa brought out, were unprintable re- marks Waynor was alleged to hav made about Riley, and which wert brought out in the testimony c Miss Fern Roberts, comely formei employee of Waynor, and Miss Edith Gabriel, who said she had worked for Waynor only a week. | Both testified that Waynor had| made improper advances to them,‘ Miss Roberts declaring that she| hadn’t been off the boat an hour | before Waynor made the alleged; advances and “persecuted” her dur-| ing all the time she was in his em- pl later, after she had quit work- ing, threatening, she testified, that he would “run her out of town.” Questioned by Attorney Robert-| son, Miss Gabriel said she had been | in Waynor’s office about four hours | before “he made improper ad- vances.” Miss Roberts said that Waynor tried to give her presents, “thun- dered” when she made the acquain- tance of young Riley and started going out with him, and embar- rassed her to the point where she told Riley about it. It was after this telling that the| handsome young miner said he de- | cided to go down and give Waynor ‘what he had coming to him.” “You sort of took the law into| your own hands, didn't you?” asked City Attorney Foster. “Well, it's my idea of justice,” said the young southerner, native of Texas. The jury, made up of the follow- ing, appeared to agree with him Frank Garnick, Roy Nolan, Guy Mc Naughton, George Gullufsen, Mort Truesdell and Howard Button - D MARTHA SOCIETY’S SHOW IS TUESDAY; ELECTION PLANNED Plans were completed by the Mar- the Society yesterday for the pre- sentation of “Music for Madam’ on the screen of the Capitol The- | atre on Tuesday. Sponsorship of the motion pic- ture was arranged several weeks ago by the Martha Soclety, and a committee of members has been in charge of arrangements. At the meeting yesterday, dessert luncheon was served with Mrs. M. S. Whit- tier and Mrs. Gunnar Blomgren as hostesses. Mrs. John Chappell was present- ed in two songs ,with Mrs. Clarencc Rands accompanying at the piano. while Mrs. L. P. Dawes presented a book review. Mrs. J. F. Worley and Mrs. E. M. Richardson are to be hostesses at the meeting of the Martha So- ciety on March 3, when election of officers will be held. The meeting date is announced for the third of March instead of the fourth, be- cause of the World Day of Prayer set for the latter date. On the nominating committee appointed are Mrs. Katherine Hooker, Mrs Henry Larson, and Mrs. George B. Rice. Washington's Birthday, ESTHER CASHEN < > PIANO JOHN NIEMI -~ e SAX OUR SUPPER SPECIALS Fried Chicken— Spaghetti—Sandwiches ~-REMEMBER — DANCING ALL NIGHT Joun marin’'s New Douglas Inn | Hodson's Horse (4th Duke of | Cambridge’s Own Lancers) Medal of the Universal Cookery and Food Exbibi- tion, London, 1888...one of more than 60 Medals Awarded to Dewar's White Label for Excellencs in Scotch Whitky. Blended Scotch Whiskies Both 86.8 Proof White Label Scon i g W ki In the period of India’s sweltermy ‘imoon, gentlemen outflank tropic heat with the highball of the highlands. .. 1 long, tall DEWAR's White Label and ioda. Medal Scotch of the World, with wer 60 decorations for distinguished ervice, command DEWAR'S White Label and be..."At Ease.” Dewar’s (PRONOUNCED DO-ERS) White Label The Medal Scotch Of The World BLENDED SCOTCH WHISKY s Copr. 1937, Schenley Impors Corp., New York Jakeway Distributjng Co., Inc. |'ALASKA DISTRIBUTORS

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