The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, April 12, 1938, Page 2

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—w———————————fi - THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, TUESDAY, APRIL 12, 1938. The Easter Coat | youwant... | at the price you wanl to I)ll‘\' Coats are front page fa Spring! Come choose complet lleetion boxy, collarless, swagger wre high in style B. M. Behrends Co., Inc. “Tunectu’s Leading D JUDGE HOLZHEIMER IMPROVED AFTER SEVE R E ILLNESS District Attorney William A. Holz- heimer has been seriously ill since he went to Ketchikan for attend- ance at the court term, according to his assistant, George W. Folta, returned to Juneau on the Yukon Choicest FOR EA *15 Sizes for Misses, Women! hion news this from our coats fitted, s, reefer coats! . LOW in price! up to 29.50 who & ed of est larless dressy the sizes. ens. one ® Smooth Wooléns! ® Newest Style Details! ® Newest Spring Colors! Every coat beautifully tailor- new Every coat crepe lined! New- vle stitchings; ets! Nz newest Spring shades. The most flattering, wearable Spring coats ever! Fitted col- boxy and tuxedo swaggers . . come see them all! Tweeds, smooth wool- Spring woolens! details in clever | smart, new pock- vy, black, and the coats coats, (very new!) swing - baek, Choose you like best! All epartment Store” — this morning. The Judge confined to the | hospital for 10 sulfering from bingles, but is out and around again now, Folta reported. He probably will return here in about two weeks with the court party R More than 5,000,000 head of live- stock was shipped from Texas in 1937, LILIES STE Re! DOZENS of POTTED BLOSSOMS of Delicate Perfection JUST ARRIVED UNITED FOOD CO. 5 Fast Deliveries——PHONE 16 e e e e B INAJ,TOWED INBY DA Il Ole The halibuter Ina J., Capt. Hanson, was towed into port this| § morning by the halibuter Ida 11;| Capt. John Sonderland, from Gull Cove, in Icy Strait. A | Both boats had approximately 5000 pounds of fish aboard and |sold teday. The Ina J. stripped a cam shaft, | NUBTHLAND | | | ship Northland, was taken from the | \slnp to the hospital when the North- | land reached Seattle last m.-ek,I |it was reported in Juneau today. | Purser I. Emanauel is taking| Winch'§ place this tffp, While in| | Sitka last trip, Winch contracted a | cold that deyeloped into flu by the‘ | time he reached Juneau southbound. | —— | DE MOLAY MEETING f DeMolay members are to meet irl :rrsulur session tomidirow might at 17:30 o'clock .in the Scottish Rite Temple. l | ———————— ! ATTENTION HEBEKAHS | Regular business meeting 8 p.m | Wednesday, Aptil 13, 1.0.0F. Hall ‘Vlsiwrs welcome. adv, S e — Lieut. Luis F. Candelaria, of the | Argentine naval air serviee; in ms made the first airplane crossing of| Ithe Andes, PURSERILL Purser E. P. Winth; of the motor- | s }!mht the maseuline eye. Your Easter Bonnett Will Please the Men This Year FLOWERED PILLBOX These three Easter bonnets pell for their favorites in spr hats. This little black siraw pill- box is massed with rese and mauve fiowers in front and enveleped in a veil. Note the jeweled butterfly clomped to the biack spring suit. eived the mosl votes from men in 2 ing SIMPLE SAILOR Sleek simplicity characterizes a trim navy blue sailor accented with 4 big pearl hatpin and swathed in a dark blue veil. Howard Hodge designied it to wear with a bluc-striped gray weol suit which has a gem-studded fish anchored to the lapel. ymm— e TRIM TOQUE Crisp while pique makes an Easter toque which fits the wearer's It is finished with dark blue ribbon pinwheels and Sally Victor head smoothly. a veil to mateh and tops a dark blue crepe spring frock. desigried it. By ADELAPE KERR AP Fashion Editor se This yeat's Easter hats will please | men as well as women, for many of theit have been designed to de- n have given way flatter faces. The dizzy lines and angles of last in many collections to wearable hats that Flowers are smart. The “femi- nine” ones, such as lilies of the val- | ley. mimosa, lilacs and hyacinths, | trim toques, rim pillboxes and are massed on little forward-pitching plateaux. Ribbons, quills and birds also are used, while veils are hav- ing one of the biggest vogues they have known. Both smooth and rough straws are seen. Big wide-brimied hats, sailors, pillboxes, toques, boleros, up-rol'- ing Bretons and forward-tilting Watteau chapeaux are all here. ck and navy blue spiked with white or fresh young colors; straw yellow, “toast, chaudron (henna tan) and white are all smart hat hues. So much for fashion facts on spring hats. The rest of these notes Easter bonnets are devoted to ! what men like and dislike in femi- | based on a canvas nine headgear, of bachelors and married men in ne of America’s largest organiza- Men hate hats that careen off on >xireme lines, calling attention to the hat itself and attracting notice on the street. “Outdoor advertis- ing " one exrcume calls it. 1] e chapeaux that perch prec: sly on the head and keep them in a cnn&l"mt dither lest they fall off. They don’t like extremely large flat hats that obscure a woman’s face and vision and bumyp into taxi doors. They like hats that “belong” to the face and reveal it (even if it isn't particularly beautiful), that conform to the shape of the head and that are suited to the size of the woman and the place where she is. ‘hey d. They prefer rather small “neat” hats designed on not-too-hard lines. Most of them like big hats, too, if U. 8. DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE, WEATHER BUREAU THE WEATHER {By the U. 8. Weather Bureau) Forecast for Juneau and Rain tonight and Wednesday; ., beginning at 4 p.m,, April 12: moderate southeast winds. Weather forecast for Southeast Alaska: Rain tonight and Wednes- moderate southeast winds, Clarence 'Strait, Chatham day trance, Forecast of winds along the Coast of the except fresh southerly over Dixon En- Strait, and Lynh Canal. Gulf of Alaska: Fresh coutheast winds tonight and Wednesday from Dixon Entrance to Cape Hinchinbrook. LOCAL DATA Time Barometer Temp Humidity Wind Velocity Weathes |4 pm. yesty 2973 43 82 SE 10 Lt. Rain 4 am. today 29.75 38 96 s 2 Cloudy | Noon today 29.78 40 82 SE 14 Lt. Rain RADIO REPORTS TODAY Max. temp. Lowest 4am. 4am. Precip. 4am. Station Iast 24 hours ' temp. termn. velority 23bre Weaths Atka — 30 32 6 0 Clear Anchorage 44 32 . A v Barrow 4 -4 -4 12 0 Cloudy Nome 36 30 32 18 10 Snow Bethel 38 | 30 32 4 15 Pt.Cldy Fairbanks 48 32 32 4 0 Pt. Cldy Dawson 46 | 26 28 4 0 Cloudy . Paul 36 | | 30 32 10 19 Cloudy Duteh Harbor 42 i 32 34 14 16 Cloudy Kodiak 36 | 32 32 4 15 Clear Cordova 44 | 36 36 10 17 Rain Juneau 43 | 38 38 2 55 Cloudy Sitka 45 39 — — 37 3 Ketchikan 46 | 42 42 10 16 Cloudy Prince Rupert 52 | 40 42 10 .02 Rain Edmonton B0 | 30 30 4 b Pt. Cldy Seattle b6 | 44 46 6 06 Rain Portland 58 | 46 46 4 03 Cloudy San Francisco 60 50 52 4 0 Cloudy New York 52 | 40 46 10 0 Pt. Cldy Wacshington 68 | 48 50 8 0 Cloudy WEATHFR CONDITIONS AT 8 AM. TODAY Seattle (airport), partly cloudy, temperature, 44; Blaine, partly cloudy, 42; Victoria, cloudy, 42: Alert Bay, cloudy, 86; Bull Harbor | cloudy, 39; Triple Island, cloudy; Lingara Island, showers, 42; Prince they are not too wide and flat and | Rupert, raining, 43; Ketchikan, stowers, 42; Craig, raining, 41; Wran- (are worn on suitable occasions. gell, raining, 38; Petersburg, raining, 40; Sitka, raining, 40; Radioville, They love hats that have allure|showers, 37; Soapstone Point, raining, 40; Hoonah, clear, 40; Tenakee, and reflect individuality, for ex-!cloudy, 44; Hawk Inlet, snowing, 36; ample, one flecked with hyacinths| cloudy, 40; Cape Hinchinbrook, o bring out the blue in your eyes. with birds, bugs and bees). raining, Juneau, 38; rainifig; 38; St. Elias, Skagwdy, cloudy, 38; Cordova, raining, 38; Chitina, cloudy, 32; McCarthy, cloudy, 30; An- They like flowers (but not mixed chorage, cloudy, 30; Fairbanks, par.ly cloudy, 37; Hot Springs, cloudy. They 32; Tanana, cloudy, 30; Ruby, cloudy, 34; Nulato, spitting snhow, 34; vote for color and veils if they are Kaltag, cloudy, 34; Unalakleet, pattly cloudy, 37. not too “]oud' and too bxg Imnmvemsnts For Harbor$ in Alaska Are Up House Committes Approves of Projects at Skagway ———Also Undlaska tCmmmwd !xum Page One) of the work will be 8105,000. At Unalaska Improvements proposed for Unal- aska harbor by the Chief of Engin- sers and approved by the River and Harbor Committee consist of tHe re- moval of a large obstructive tock and part of a reef to provide a clear channel at the entrance to the har- bor, and dredging of the entrance of the channel to not less than 350 feet wide and 25 feet deep. Devel- opment of this project will remove much of the difficulty that the larg- er commercidl and Government ves- sels have in navigating the entrance channel into the harbor and will afford them greater safety in ap- proaching the wharf and will also increase the availability of the fac- ilities already established. The bulk of the work ptroposed at Unalaska harbor will consist of under-water blasting and dredging of hard ledge rock. It is believed that the cost will be about $60,000. Favorable report by the Board of on the Unalaska project was urged upon after careful consideration of Engineers for Rivers and Harbors advetse reports by the Division En- gineer and the District Engineer, Justification for the final approving report is provided in the statement of the Chief of Engineers—“The Board notes the isolation of this frontier community, which serves as a base for operations of vessels | of several Govertiment tepartments, and reecognizes the importance of | providing a safe channel of efitry thereto for the largest Federal- owned ships. It concludes that the proposed improvement is fully justi- fied by the reasonably assured hene- fits to commercial shipping and to the Federal agencies involved, and recommends accordingly.” Sl o 3 PLEAD GUILTY IN CHILD-BRIDE CASE KETCHIKAN Court T’ermfill Be Com- | pleted in About Two | . Weeks, Says Folta | | ‘ Alackd’s Child-bride casé origin- |ating in Petersburg last fall has | resulted in a plea of guilty to con- | spiracy on the part of the groom, |the bride, and her father,. accord- :mg to Assistaht District Attorney | George W. Foita who returned on ‘the Yukon to Juneau after being in | attendance at the court session in | Ketchikan . cost 12, half Filipino and half native, was married to Arcado Tagaban, a Filipino, last October 29 in Ketehi- kan; Folta said, after going from Petersburg to Ketchikan for that purpose accompanied by the Sil'l'fll Juneau, April 13.—Sunrise, 4:5) am.; sunset, 7:07 p.m. WEATHER SYNOPSIS 1ku and over Low barometric pressure prevailed this morning throughout Alas- the northeastern portion of the North Pacific Ocean there being two storm centers, the major disturbance being centered over the southern Bering Sea, wher2 a pressure of 29.06 inches pre- vailed, and the minor disturbance being-centered off the coast of Ore- The girl-bride, Marie Reyes, age| gon, the lowest reported pressure in High barometric pressure California and the Hawaiian Islands. that vicinity being 29.76 inches. prevaile 1 cver the Pacific Oceanh between ‘This general pressure distri- bution has been attended by precipitation from Nome and the Aleutians southeastward to Oregon and by cloudy weather over the remainder of the field of observation. It was warmer last night over the interior of Alaska, the tempera- ture at Fairbanks at 2 a.m. being 32 degrees, or 12 degrees warmer than yesterday morning at the sam> hour. father, Elias Reyes. At the cere- mony all three testitied the child was 16 years of age, he said. Sen- tence has not yet been passed. Alvin Merig, Harry Ek and Charl- es Pierce, who were involved in the attempted jail break here last Dec- ember, pleaded guilty before Judge George F. Alexander, Folta report- ed, and Merig and Ek were given a year and a day each and Pierce 15 months on the count. Merig and Ek were already under sentence of five years each after conviction on a fish piracy charge here last fall and Pierce was under seven-year sentence for larceny. Theodore Hallin, the Ketchikan man who fired a bullet through Ketchikan cafe window, smashing the beer mugs of several men sitting at a bar, was given 14 months on two counts involving the careless use of firearms, the prosecutor re- ported. The Ketchikan term is provmg one of the shortest trial terms on record, Folta sa#id. With one ex- ception, a gameé law violation ap- peal from Wrangell, all brought in- to court on criminal charges plead- ed guilty, he said. The court prob- ably will wind up its business in Ketchikan in about two weeks and then return to Juneau. R It is estimated that state legisla- tures cost edch family in the Uni- ted States about 35 cents a year. If a Cold Threatens.. Timely use of this especially designed aid for nose and upper throat, helps prevent many colds. 30¢ ond 50¢ Vncks VATRO-NOL |llllll THE FRESHLY CLEANED CLOTHES No need to feel out of place in the Easter parade just ’cause you weren't able to buy new clothes. WE'LL CLEAN YOUR CLOTHES SO WELL THAT. YOU'LL BE SURPRISED AT HOW FINE THEY LOOK! So get them togéther now, get the whole family’s and call us up. We'll pick them up, clean theém and deliver them before Easter. Just Call 15. YOUR It's Spring Cleaning Time, Too— Are Your Rugs and Drapes Clean? ALASKA LAUNDRY We Use the Famed ZORIC CLEANING SYSTEM Known for its uniformly perfeet resilts, and ex- clusive with us in Juneau—— PLUS STA-PRESS “Holds the Crease”

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