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SRR e ———— 4 ’/ = 8 First Lady Sees Labot’s “Pins and Needles” GOING BELOW FIRST TIME IN 38 YEARS George MaISh Has Held Job as Commissioner f()l’ |9 YPal‘S George Marsh, of Marshall, on the lower Yukon River, who has held political office in Alaska per- APPROPRIATION FOR TERRITORY REACHES HOUSE Slice for Alaska $2,354,970 Largest Item for Indian Office, Medical Relief WASHINGTON, Feb. 26.—A § 0 slice of the Interior Dey $125,000.000 appropriatio bill is recommended by the house haps longer than any other man, committee for expenditure in Al- and who hasn’t been Outside in 38 aska during the fiscal year years, was a passenger through 8 st items are Juneau on the steamer Baranof 000 for education anrd v this morning with Mrs. Marsh, for $695,000 for road work of which a ation trip. $160.000 is appropriated from spe rsh was first named United cial Territorial funds (the Alaska States Commissioner in Marshall in fund) 1919. He has held that office ever $408,000, for Bureau of Indian A ince. He also owns considerable fairs medical relief mining property in the vicinity of $202,000 for the care of the in- Marshall, also known as Fortuna sane Ledge. Other recommended expenditures Reporters will probably pester the include life out of Mr. and Mrs, George Schools, $74.000; legislative ¢ Marsh when they get to the States penses, $46,000; ming nvestica- Mrs, Franklin D. Roosevelt, wife of the President; Rose Schneiderman, chairman of the Women’s Trade but George isn't worrying about tions, §60,000; aries and iden- - Union League, and David Dubinsky, president of the International Lady Garment Workers’ Union are that. He is anxious to see what's tal expenses of the Governors of- pictured during an intermission of “Pins and Needles,” the musical play produced by Labor Stage in |11 vad in the last four decades fice, $25,000; investigation of prop- New York City. The First Lady appeared with atouch of lipstick, the first time she had used it. She g e erty to be acquired under terms of explained she decided to use it on the advice of her daughter, Mrs. John Boettiger, the Reindeer Act restoring indus- try through native owncrship 5 SUNJA H E NIE $25.000 Pl Spm—— AN Black Jack’s Son at Play Railrcad should be “available a - road until exprnded for every ¢ . periititre ineident to auhorized Delegate Dimond at the hearing o 1 el of the committee said that the Skalmg Star May Cross At- Government should not expect the ; D('Mn!ny Sponsoring Affair n Scottish Rite lantic on Plane with Pilot Merrill Railroad to balance its budget ¢ pay its own way until the capita investment is completed of DeMolay. J eting begins at 8 o'clock and will assemble all young men and women of Juneau and Douglas. with special invitation to those who of $50,000 to $100,000 and perhaps go along, too Department of Commerce offici- als said they might not torbid the Col. Otto F. Ohison festified that Temple at Jeast $1,750,000 was needed to — NEW YORK, Feb. 26 — Sonja “completely rehabilitate the prop- The first public meeting to be Henie, the Norwegian skating star, erty.” he'd in heonor of boys and girls will fly to Norway next summer in The Interior Department appro- of Castineau Channel who have a plane piloted by Dick Merrill, vet- priation bill also carried $35,000 for 3 age of 21 years, will eran overseas aviator ybe the Reindeer Service. tenight at - the Scottish The flight, to start here and end - -oo Temple where celebra is in Norway, was announced by Mike R . . be under sponsors of Jacobs, the sports promoter. He e"flf Apu"ca"t caid he would back it to. the extent Turng Slayer as i r first exercise their fran- trip if the plane has a good chance Req"est Relflflted p citizens. Parents, friends, ing safely, but that the rules ser residents are invited st “stunt” [ ts. Which > present. is another way of saying maybe —— Appearing on the program will they will issue a permit and maybe HOBOKEN, New Jersey, Feb. 26. be H. L. Faulkner, Mrs. Crystal they won'i j —Joseph Scutarello, disgruntled w Jenne, J. J. Fargher, Ned Maybe He Will relief applicant, is held here for the Rowe. rrest Bates, Jr., Charles J Pilot Merrill has not asked for murder of Harry Barck, aged poor- Jenne, and Bill Alexander 1 flight permit so far—and tha magter, who was stabbed in the — > maybe he will and maybe he won't Dok af his desk. “It all depends on whether the Scutarelle had requested a fooc plans for the flight materialize,” oider be mailed to him but was Merrill said. “Just now th are tod to apply In person. He pro very indefinite. Of course, it's up tested to such an arrangement anc SUNDAY A M | to the Department of Commerce. Tt wi Barck's back was turner A A g ; wheTher we can make the % b i Ol # B3 Francis Warren Pershing, son of the World War general, is pictured with | ! % not be any flight.” “This wouldn't be—by any chance —a publicity stunt, now would it?" the pilot was asked. -if there is going to tabibed him. his fiancee, Miss Muriel P. Richards, on the tennis courts at Palm Beach, Fla. Miss Richards is the granddaughter of Jules Bachs, internationally- i Word was received here today known financier. The young couple expect to marry this Spring. | 3 that the Coast Guard cutter Haida G z left Ketchikan at 8 o'clock this morning and will probably arrive | { TO“} know about that,” he in Juneau sometime tomorrow | replied. “but I am not going to forenoon ;nlml.v rm“ a permit until the plan: AR A | are_definite.” KNOXXVILLE, Tenn., Feb, 26 ] X | Miami with a winter carnival. Tk Uiniversity of Tennessee co-eds use W'x"“ I((':',: only other interested party JH'Ob]: was enthus astic about the flight, Outto céfn;iréfa #larm elock: & o'clock cla clse, too Eeveral of the girls and dates were dancing at a recreation as getter-uppers for 5 and for something OF WORRY NOW ANN ARBOR, Mich., Feb. 26. Conservationists and fishermen Beached their e WECOMA BEACH, Ore., Feq, 2¢ are (pot near he campus. The orches-| _mMy and Mrs. Roy Kelsey of De- worrying over a new threat to the (ra was in the middle of a sweel| ot who have a summer rom: | cmmercial fishing industry of the H H fune when the jangle of an alarm| pere, like to look for articles on Great Lakes—the sea lamprey " a" "l al clock startled ‘mc dancers and sent| ihe peach and now they have been This 'marine parasite eel-like. th» co-eds racing out the door. “We had to be back at the dor-| Their find was an old barnacle- ',!:.,,((1“;'[”}",3.% ‘,,m;f:,‘”]_(“‘,.,i ‘,,,21. PHILADELPHIA, Feb. 25. — Les- mitory at 10:30,” one of them ex-|encrusted cask of wine. The keg| |ike the smelt, reach the limits of ter and Charles Drake of Eimira plained. “So we set the alarm to be| was still intact, however, and on. ihe lakes and add to tors_ ale N.Y., came here for a celebration fure we wouldn't be locked out.” | opening it they found the contents| ready contributing to the depletioh but landed in jail in default of % | excellent. of the commercial fish supply in $1.500 bail- each There are about 2,000,000 lepers | it these waters. Along with them was Visadore in the world. “Alaska” by Lester D. Henderson Carl L. Hubbs, University of Ruggiano, twenty-one, of Lenola, T T e i Michigan ichthyologist, and Dr. N. J. Lester, twenty-eight, and John Van Oosten, in charge of Charles, twenty-four, told Magis- Great Lakes investigations for the frate Fitzgerald they broke into a Byreau of Fisheries, report the Civilian Conservation Corps camp lamprey s now found in all lakes near Monterey, N. Y. took $480 xcept Lake Superior and a pistol and came here “to The lamp equipped with a | spend the money. | - SKATE MARKET GOOD NEW YORK.—The sale of ice- skating equipment now is 10 times what it was in 1935, suction mouth, clings to fish, rasps a hole through the skin and then gorges itself on the victim's blood. 1t injects a chemical substance into the wound to prevent coagulation. SPEED counts with Janet Milne, 17, Saranac Lake, N. Yo | medal and trophy winner. If you yearn for rich whis- key, learn about GOLDEN WEDDING. Rich whiskey s 33 ALL whiskey ; : . it has had no peers for fifty years. Mark the Meritin this “Mark of Merit” Whiskey. Golden Wedding BLENDED STRAIGHT WHISKIES AS YOU PREFER —IN RYE OR BOURBON Copr. 1937, JOS. 8. FINCH & CO., INC., SCHENLEY, y Distributing Co., Inc. ™ : BONES OF A BRIDGE RATTLE ~ Algska Distributors skeleton-like near Leon, Spain, as evidence of war’s fury, The rails remained after stone supports were blasted away by government guns. THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, SATURDAY, FEB. 26, 1938. : pR— W. L. Williams, 18, of Jeffersonville, Ind., trailer, attending the annual convention of the Tin Can Tourists of the World. is shown at Sarasota, Fla., with his 50-pound home-made Williams, traveling elone, headed for California. He said his $25 outfit is as good as any factory-made job, and has all the comforts of home. The trailer is 7 feet long, 27 inches wide and 36 inches high. i, TO NORWAY and back went Peter Lyse, 6, of Bethle- hem, Pa., trying out ski fields. RADIO PROGRAM OF J. W. C. TO STRESS ' IMPORT OF FORUMS As a forerunner of forums on the cauge and cure of war, the Juneau Woman's Club is presenting a radio broadecast at 5 p.m. Tuesday. over station KINY stressing factors of importance to be brought out in the public discussions of March 6 and March 13. The program Tuesday will be glven under auspices of the Depart- ment of International Relations. Sponsoring the public forums will be the Juneau Woman's Club and the Business and Professional Wom- en’s Club. e Lives o Learn His Own Name DUBLIN, NH, Feb. 26. “Live and Learn” is the motto of a Dub- lin resident. He wrote to Aroostook, Me., where he believed he was born, for a birth certificate. He learned he was Dorset Beau- lieu, aged sixty-six. He had always believed he was Isaac Beaulieu, aged seventy. j ~ HELPS FOR HOUSEWIVES For stuffed celery, use small stalks or cut large stalks into two- inch length. Any of the following make good stuffing: chopped pi- miento-stuffed olives and minced ham; roquefort cheese and minced parsley; snappy cream cheese and mayonnaise; finely-minced tuna, celery, pickles and salad dressing; cream cheese mixed with dates and pecans; sardines, chopped and add- ed to celery, pickles and mayon- naise; chopped shrimps, tuna, sal- men or crab added to cream cheese and salad dres liver paste mixed with chopped olives and cream. Work outdoors — if possible— when you're doing over old furni- ture. To remove old varnish or paint first zpply a thick coat of turpentine. After half an hour wipe off this coat and cover the furni- ture with a coat of thick soap suds made in water and washing soda and applied with a brush—to save the hands. When this coat dries, remove it witha stiff brush and scrape off any left-over varnish with a dull knife. If a commerzi varnish remover is used follow wiowucdens carefully. Man, furnwure and floor polish es centain highly inflammable in- gredients, therefore they should be aplied in well-aired rooms. Cloth containing them should be destroy- ed or stored in metal-covered boxes Never store such polishes or cloth: near a fire. Above all, never work with such polishes near lighted fires. Add a teaspoon of vinegar to each cup of furniture polish to in- crease its briliancy. Shoe polishes may also be treated in this manner. Try an Empire ad. «{ WL FIT IN ANY LIVING ROOM THE NEW //6’/2&4&7%&’%@ A PRODUCT OF BALDWIN The greatest forward swep in piano design in this generation. Standard 88 note scale—yet a compact design of distinguished charm and beauty. See this sensational piano . . . thrill to the perfected tone balance of the exclusive Acrosonic scale. Learn how it fits your budget as well as your living-room. ALASKA MUSIC SUPPLY 122 Second Street Is Your Heating Plant Sufficient Juncau, Alaska HERE ARE REAL “BUYS” IN USED UNITS INCLUDED ARE: Used and slightly damaged Circulating Heaters. 2—Re-conditioned Hart full-automatic diesel oil burners (these gave former owners A-1 service. 2—Re-conditioned Electrol full-automatic burners. I—Midget Ray manual diesel oil burner. Rice & Ahlers Co.~Phone 34 ' ANNOUNCEMENT Title One-F. H. A. Loans Have Been Reinstated! We are now accepting loans under the terms of this act in amounts from $100.00 to $2,500.00 for financing ALTERATIONS, REPAIRS and IMPROVEMENTS. Pay- ments up to 5 years. Small amounts monthly. A NEW PROVISION —Loans up to $2,500.00 will be made for New Construction. Payments up to 10 years. Low interest, Applications will receive prompt attention. Columbia Lumber Co. Admiral Way PHONE 587 P ————— J!“ %i j i il i