The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, March 15, 1938, Page 2

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e A R . GREEERR R R e e T i THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, TUESDAY, MARCH 15, 1938. Our Best Seller - NEVER go cut cof fast ion! Che 3se ¥ Special Purchas $2 A real casual coat! beautifully new satin, erepe I S “buy” n yoeur taifered spongy woolens, ed . . well Cereal nes worth $35 tweeds, monot B. M. BEHRENDS CO., Inc. “Juneau's Leading Department Store” Wed, Faces Kidnaping Charge Arrested on a warrant from Batavia, N. Y., Wesley Randall, aliag Frank Smith, was held in Denver, Colo., charged with the kidnaping of Ethel Ahl. Police said Randall admitted eloping with Miss Ahl eight years ago when she was 14 years old. They were married by & /justice of the peace in 1929, according to Randall, and she has borne four children, AT THE TRty = Gastineau Jul n gess, De land; J. Elde attle; Mr. and Mrs. P, J Clara Atkins; chorage. New Alaskan Sture Stenber John attle; D. D. Hull, wards, City. g ‘ASK ME ANOTHER’ begs Jean Demers, 3-year-old prodigy from Nova Scotia, who — BT LT HOTELS | £ H. C. Culp; Miss M. C. Culp, Se- L. 1, Goodnews B A. Boyle, Fairbanks; Glen Junea F. H. Colburn; R. C. Holmes; E. Martin; A. Syver- son; C. Nelson. Victor Power, Portland; A. L. Bur- or; Ethel Jennison, Port- attle; W. Hoch, Se- Fitzim- J. G. Rivers, ks; Mrs. J. F. Monkman, An- Jack Ladd; Mr. and Mrs, H. Mu- seth; Peter Koch; Lloyd Lively; Mrs. Simpson; Charles Lawson; E. M. Matson, Se- Seattle; Ken Ed- SPOKANE MAN ANNIVERSARY OPENING MINE IS OBSERVED IN INTEBIUR Msons Hold Pags Masters e ight at Scotlish Clarence Paulsen Will Start Rite Temple Two Draglines Working Past Masters Homer Nordling an Walter Scott took charge as wor- shipful masters at the meeting of the Mount Judge Lodge, ¥. and A M, last evening when close to 65 Mdsons gathered for the anniver- sary program in the Scottisn R Clarence Paulsen, prominent Spo- ne businessman and his mining sineer. Norman Ebbley, came in Yukon this morhing” and by plane to Fairbanks with Temple pla to start mining operations The meeting marked cclebration with two draglines near Fairbanks.|of the thirty-third anniversary of the founding of the lodge re. Daniel Ross, present worshipful master, cpened the ever nd refreshments were ~served clese;, A numBér of out o visitors were present for the -ee en spent the summer in the district last summer in- ating various mining proper- nd drilling ground on Nugget C ¢ on Lewer Goldstream about 15 below Fairbanks. already shipped in two lines which he will ating a block of ground e and a half miles long Creek. f he thought he would: find . Predict Highes! sross gold tax a burden, Paul- Aflm&ma’ Thls ‘:‘1'.\ n(‘i '\In I don’t see why. }f 5 He has yard ¢ ks t th on Nuggze Asked monéy 1§ for fsn't % g s = BN MUSEUM TO RECEIVE'* ALASKAN PICTURES BY MRS. D. €. ABRAMS The Rev. A. P. Kashevaroff *of the Territorial Muséum has r ceived word of the gift of several Al +askan pictures painted by the late Katherine Delaney Abrams to be donated to the muséum by the ar- tist's husband, D. C. Abranis of Sé- Predictions for the highest at tendence record ever fo be attainec in the history of Junmeau Public Schools were announced totiny witl release of enrollment fizi o the fourth six-weeék period of s ol attendance for the 1837-38 period _Pigures for the period which o this month show that 82¢ énrolled to pass the previo: wade, for the corresponding pe fh 1935, when 823 wére in ance. attle | * Tn June of 1935, 832 were enrolled : B. Phillips, superintendent d Mr. Abrams, Deputy Collector of | % e CGustoms, was formerly’ stationed in| Sates: a:.z(‘:{::gg”m- m:::?,‘,'”‘fl ,(“1 Skagway and Ketchikan and ' was| E&mg-‘afhgq l*g)rnb\/m' maryied fo Miss Delaney, daughter. ?g&hen' SERT of the late Judge Arthur K. Dé- i 8 ' Included among the pictures are '} § § scenes of Mount Edgecombe, the & interjor of the Russm} ,Church at Sitka, afd totem poles ‘at Kassan. now at: the; Hayes: Sho) ROTARIANS WILL" ‘1" visit aLaska ov - FOREST LAND i _ President Makes Recom- Indicaiion that some Rotarians . . s aitending the Rotary Internationat ~mendation in Special convention in San Francisco this Message toCcngress Alaska is given in correspondence to ¢ WASHINGTON, March 15.—Pres- the Junesu Kotdty Club, lt‘was €~ ident Roosevelt today in=a special vealed at the luncheéon meéeting of message, asked chg’l.h_\ to set up ‘:FI f‘llt"\‘r)‘ t[hlspnqq: Bt 1:;“:;;5 g::e, a Joint Committee to study the for- SO §0. % FRNIGEIN S 1€ ot land problem with a view of Weston Rotary Club of Weston, W. i 2 uf session to check “using up of our Virginia, pointed out that Mr. Sprigg A - ol t ace- expected to jnelyde. Alasks B his forest resources without replace western visit and asked for infor- mation, particularly about the fish- Janey, a number of years ago. summer will make a side visit to 4 from Burr Sprige, Presidént of the y,yino definite action at the next ing in the Juneau area. ment.” Theé President said that with some exceptions most of the states, com- 3 - : munities and private companies Rotarian Charles W. Carter, back | paq accomplished little toward for- {;?:‘:e(;lilltcw]ltc lVgestward. 0" est conservation. ‘This being so, it club today with an ceems obyiously necessary to fall ‘mierestinig atcolint” of *his trip. | pack on the last, defensive line of Says Showdown: Another: Flight Near On Coast By Wilkins Into Edward Vandelar Tells - NFEHC 1S Fufile AFL Workers They M Fight Bridges to Finish Distance of 1,325 Miles van Covered—No Trace of Missing Soviet Fliers Edward D. Vandelur, Secretary 4.—Edward D. Vandelur, Secretary the California State Federation : of Labor, today told the Western ' maIRBANKS, Alaska, March 16.— | Teamsters’ <Conference “A show-‘s’r Hubert Wilkins flew yesteérday | down on the waterfront here is not giom Aklavik in a northerly direc- far away. Right after April first pen jmto the Arctic for a distance there will be ships leaving for Al- ¢ 1,325 miles but reported no trace aska with 2,000 sailors, cannery of the six missing Soviet fliers. workers and others. # Sfr Hutsert reported by radio that “There are between seven and | giility was good. eight hundred longshoremen in San SN 2 F G i Francisco who are pledged to sup- 'I I ati Uf Kelioe Confirmed port the AFL, but Harry Bridges WASHINGTON, March 15—The said the ships would not be worked excepy by imported Eastern CIO groups,” continued Vandelur. “So it may be you men who will be asked to aid in bringing order out of these deplorable conditions to which Alaskan workers have been amazed New‘:!ork r:‘poner;hby BEVES FHE TR subjected:” 2 91y ‘tsfd:“:rh;m;mww;:o:m?z;' her store of info) jon. “They b . e = . Kehoe, - ua me,” says n, “the w Rebekah Benefit Dance, March 23, wm" 0' m . pointed as United States Attorney ing book of knowledge.” ElkS Hall. chilling Try Schilling Baking Powder! Makes lighter biscuirs and finer texturéd cakes because it's made with pure créam of tartar which forms smaller, more uni- form bubbles in the mix. Will never leave a "baking powder” toste! adv. for the Third Judicial Division of CARD PARTY WILL Alska with headquarters .at Val- BE H!l.D‘TOMORROWj‘*f" N GARDNERS LOCATED Women of Moose aré to éntertain tomorrow eévéning at a card party NOW IN SACRAMENTO to be given &t thé I. O. O. F. Hall iy béginning at § pm. when the pub- mom J. Gardner and Mrs. Gard- lic is invited to fake part in aR ner are now located in Sacra- évening of pinocthle, Whist and mento, Cal, according to a letter bridge. : , received by The Empire. They in- Preceding the party, & meetlog tend to return to Juneau in about will be held by the group &t 7 two months. pm. Mrs. A. J, Goodman is chair- —— man of the card parfy dt, which TODD THROUGH refreshments Wil sérvéd and | © J. Todd, United States Mar- prizes awarded. s shal of the Third Division, is & e i assenger on the Yuko: er- # "m‘*_y ’ . i |passens tkon this aft ¢ noon going through to the Trail Art Woodley, Anchotage aviator, oypy. is a passénger on fhe Yukoh going PR D to Anchorage. Woodley has a new PALMGREN ON YUKON plane aboard the stéamér, which Axel Palmgren, Fairbanks district he will unload at Cordova and mining man, is aboard the Yukon, fly in, |returning to the Interior, jsome mistake, he said. MODES of the MOMEINT by Adelaide Kerr SILVER STANDARD cn the sifver standard to achieve mid- Snow tonight and Wednesda, or winds except f Sound, Chatl U. 8. DEPARTMENT OF AGRICUUTURE, WEATHER BUREAU THE WEATHER (By the U. 8. Weather Bureauv) Juncau and vicin‘ty, begipning a2t 4 pm., March 15: moierate southeast winds. Weather forecast for Southeas! Alaska: Snow north porfion, snow rain south portion tonight and Wednesday; moderate southeast >sh over Dixon Entrance, Clarence Strait, Frederick Strait, and Lynn Canal. Forecast of winds along the Coa ¢t of the Gulf of trong southeast winds along Forecast for Alaska: Fresh to the coast from Dixon Entrance to Dry . fresh to streng cast and northeast winds from Dry Bay to Cape nchinbreok LOCAL DATA Time Temp. Humidcity Wind Velocity Weathe 4 p.m. yest'y 37 86 B B Lt.Rain 4 a.m. today 317 €3 B 12 Lt. Rain Ncon today 20.37 40 [ SE 16 Cloudy RADIO REPORTY | TODAY Max. temp. | Low st 4a.m. 4am. Preeip 1am Station 1ast 24 hours | tem). temp. velocity Zxbrs. Weather Atka 30 30 10 04 Pt.Cid Anchorage 36 Barrow -26 -28 12 Cicar Nome i 2 10 4 Snow Eethel 18 [} 13 oudy Fairbanks 28 -2 4 § Cloudy Cawson 2¢ 12 12 30 Cloudy 5t ul 22 14 1 8 Pt.Cld Dutch Harbor 36 24 26 4 Cloud Kodiak 36 28 28 13 Cloud; Cordova 33 34. 31 4 Cloud Juneau 39 33 3 12 Rain Sitka 29 34 i -4 Ketchikan 42 34 35 8 Cloudy Prince Rupert 44 31 36 18 Cloudy Edmonton 44 30 4 4 0 Cloudy Scattle 52 38 40 12 21 C Portland 50 2 42 4 36 San Francisco 58 52 52 [ 0 New York 52 34 3 8 Washington 60 36 36 12 WEATHER CONDITIONS AT 8 AM. TODAY e (airport) . a0; Blain Bull Harbor, wer 33; Prince Ruper snowing, 33; Wrangel cloudy 37, raining Soapstone Point, snowing, k Inlet, fos 34; Tena- kee, sprinkling, 40; Radioville, Juneau, cloudy Skag- nowing, 33; Haines, cloudy; Cape Hinchinbrook, raining, 35; Cape s, snowing, 34; C ova. clou Chitina, r, 12; MeCarthy, A sleek biack crepe frock goes ; Portage, snowin clouds Fair- sewsen chie. Ifs low-draped girdle is caught with a great silver leaf cloudy, 4; Nenana, cloudy, 4; H andElfe 6 S annna and ifs high neckline smartened with a necklace of beaten silver | 6: Ruby, cloudy, 0¢ Nulats, partly cloudy, 0; Kaltag, partly i which resemble coins. Sally Vietor's peaked cap:ofystitohed | Unalakleet, snowing, 12; Flat, snowing, 6; Ohogamutc ed velvet adds a splash of color. nowing, - s L | Juneau, March 16, Sunrise, 6:15 a.m.; sunset, 6:04 p.m. 4 WEATHER SYNOPSIS | S 3 il | (\“ SaiE A There has been little change in the distribution of barometric in il uperaton | bressure during the last 24 hours, low air pressure still overlying - = Alaska, the eastern portion of the n crth Pacific Ocean and wester: central Canada with the central pr essure of 28.80 es over the C CHANGES FLAGS ON WAY NORTH Dr. Herbert Ti;hy Is Now German and Be- lieves It Best (Continued from Page One) s on top of the moun- ain awl on their achs arout foot of the mountain It takes them one Life pictorial maga- @x . 5 i hed many of Dr B o & s He laughed Harry Stormfeliz reminded that he was going s 3 directly from a “mountain where Cod sat,” to “The Land the God Forgot.” “I work for German publishers,” Tichy thir id. “We do not know any- Alaska back there — not of s even do the boats run to it in the winter time—and so I come to write a book for German publishers and ce pictures for your Life.” Te Stay Six Months jchy will spend six nionths in in Matanuska, mining and various towns, writing He is glad| or a bigger Ger- | camps, Alaska for Germar now that he writes “Hitler dces good thing for which I laugh” Tichy said.- “He makes! ich man’s son and poor man's son six months in the labor camps cannot use their own money. Tt makes them work with their hands, all of them.” Tichy admitted he was a Nazi in Austrig, before he left. Charged with performing ¢ legal operation an 18 “You see,” the young Doctor said, girl, Gladys Ne r. in an is 1ing the benefits of Germany tenant ho on his father's 1 nto Austria, “Austria has only ingham, Mich.. estate, Haorry mfllion peoples, and two million Stormfeltz. 21-year-old heir, was held by polic ac, Mich. The 1 in s2rious Man Calls Palice To Attend His Baby them in of npt little and poor—we are part of Vienna. Now we are ./ a country of 72 milliol There was pride in Dr. Tichy’s ey but there was caution in his voice. “Please don’t ask me political guestions,” he pleaded. i D LABOR MAN IN NORTH A. J. Rockell, National Labor Re- Board representative, was a passenger on the Yukon from Se- attle to Petersburg. He will attempt ST. LOUIS, March 15.—It was a man’s voice on the telephone plead- just differences between a ing with Deputy Sheriff Charles workers’ union there and Colesworthy, “Won't vou please r Sea Foods Packing come out K here and change the i baby.” - o 5 “Sorry. but the baby department STAR AIRWAYS MAN is closed,” said Colesworthy “Then I'd like to have you for A witness in a divorce suit I'm going to file,” the voice said - Mourners Met af - Door bvfl“l}nrpse" GLASGOW, Ky., March 15 Ten relatives of Oscar Steenbergen. a former resident who lives near here came to attend his fu Steenbergen met them the . dcor. There seemed to have been Mr and Mrs. Charlie Ruttan of | cral weeks vacationing in the States. | Mr. Ruftan is traffic manager of ° the Yukon. z i, SHADURAS NORTH Alex Shadura and Pete Shadura Yukon, returning to the Airplane (¢ after a winter Outside. LA R e MAGIDS FLY OUT Magids, widely known Al- askan business man who owns trad- ing posts and property throughout the Territory, was an artival on the PAA Electra from Fairbanks today. i He is taking the Norah south. \ (he Star Airways. They are aboard . ¥ of Anchorage are passengers on the | @ of Alaska south of Cordova. Another low pressure area was centered off the Oregon coast. The barc ter was h to the northwest and cast of the Hawailian Islands. Ligh t to moderate precipitation fell over the soythern portion of Al 1 and over British Columbia and western Washington and® Oregon Wait for‘jéiléa Mothers : . i Pictured in the nursery of New Jersey’s state prison for women at Clinton, N. J., is this group of happy and well-fed children, who posed readily for the cameraman. In the last eight months more than_fifty-alx were born to convict mothers in the prison’s maternity ward. Children of women serving short terms are cared for in the nursery. After the tots are two years old they are ¢ither given into the cave of relatives, or sent to orphanages. . N;'ltion’s Lawyers Choose Pecora Anchorage, are returning from sev- 3 New York City, is shown as he was presented ks el Pt.yDe aney (left), of lrinnelnh. Guild at the Judge Ferdinand Pecora, of N with a gavel by retiring president John )¢ as he took over the presidency of the National Lawye guild’s convention in ‘Washi o i i

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