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2 I's Up To You | --take your pick WHAT SHIRT AND TIE DO YOU LIKE? @ uIg W &8 Whites, Plaids, Stripes, Solids, Dark Tones .. WILSON BROTHERS & ARROW SHIRTS BOTH OFFER WHAT YOU WANT —BOTH ARE HIGHEST QUALITY. at $2.00 and $2.50 AND-—IF IT'S TIES! You can Find Yours in the: WILSON WEDGELOCK—at $l.25 or the ARROW TIE———at $1.00 PIQUE MAKE B. M. BEHRENDS €0., Inc. “Juneau’s Leading Department Store” By ADELAIDE KERR AP Fashion Editor What every woman 1 know about new 1938 fashions White bat lov seheduled for a big pring and summer mode. New washable pique glove designed in six, eight and ten-button lengths wear with eeved 1rocks. White collars, bandings and pipings of pique or linen are very chic. Costume Jewelry Favored Pigskin is a good ory color for black, brown and navy blue. Costume jewels continue to grow |in importance. Among the smartest clips jewel-veined gold ¢ n- amel leave Hoins-of-pler spill- ing pearls lapel bauble and accents ire play in the Two Jolly Rockefellers to short- aces are anothor ¢ are having the biggest > they have bad in many |sons. They bloom on hats, dresses, | suit lapels, waistlines and veils. Bright nosegays are clipped to ev- ening slippers and glove Sweaters *Are Important Sweaters are an ‘outstanding fash. ion trend. In soft cashmere knits— copper, ‘'maize, blue and deep green—the re worn as suit blous- es and adcented by striking costume jewels. A brimmed hat spring’s best buys, worn until. August New bags are roomy erally, top-handled Stiede, patent skin are the s shoe’ leathe; designers say. Gabardine still is good. Open' toes are ‘going strong. Nnvv blue, copper and black are ! the put.s anding Ioocwear colors. “‘.mu Mrs. Frank Boyle, and Mrs | John W. Jones were in charge of refreshments. Mrs. Hazel Reid placed high and | Dr. Rae Lillian Carlson, second, in S | contract among the women, while| Shell Simmons hopped twice to | H. L. McDonald and Frack Boyle| the Tslands today in the Alaska Air | placed first and second, respective- Transport Belanca. |1y, for the men winners in contract.| This morting Shell went out io \n«. pinochle, Mrs. E.“M_ Polley was Hoohah to bring in Oswald Thanem, | wintier ' of the first prize, and Mrs.| H. Murphy and Ray Levecque. | W. Rasmusson, second, for women. Going out again in the afternoon W. Hiliman placed first and Harry Shell took Leonard Bender to Co- Lea, second, in pinochle for men. bol, and Roland Bender, Steve Che- e | ha, John Perainen and Joe Yovano- Ten of the 59 judges who signed |vich to Chichagof. | the death warrant of Charl I‘ Yesterday Simmons took Joe Me were executed at the Restoration herin to Sitka and Gunnar Blom- in 1660. gren, Jr., to Gustavus, B ML - G SHOWER GIVEN FOR MRS. JACK STANYAR For Mrs. Jack Stanyar who is to !leave for the south on a vacation trip on May 2, a shower was given last evening by Miss Marjorie Foun- tain at the home of Mrs. Jack Gar- rett. Spring flowers formed a setting for the affair, and' invited to be present were Miss Margaret Pearce, Mrs. Roger Bailey, Mrs. Paul Eck- lund, Miss Geraldine Feero, and the honor guest. - SPRING INFORMAL DANCE Y By the Business and Professional ‘Women's Club in the Elks Hall, Sat- urday, April- 23. Music by the Al— askans. ad Flower: sba- sea one of the it can be| is since and, gen- ather and test and his son, John, Jr., enjoy & hearty banquet given in their honor by the Tarrytown and North Tarrytows N. Y. John D. Rockefeller, oil tycoon, laugh at ‘the reception before a Chamber of Commerce of Irvington, at u:e Westchester Countxy Club in Rye, L‘am Party nf Tnmty Guitd Well Attended Daffodils and pussy willow formed a setting for the card given last evening by the y Guild for which occasion guests for ten tables of contract and pinochle | were assembled; | Mrs. William Jarman and Karl Hahn were in charge of Mrs the F G. Hanford of WRANGELL Respectfully solicits Your Vote for the Territorial House of Representatives from the First Division — on the Democratic Ticket. A RESIDENT OF ALASKA FOR 23 YEARS THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, THURSDAY, APRIL 21, 'White Will Be Big A(‘wnt Colnr This Soa.son De('rve of Fashion 5 A SUAVE OFF-THE-FACE HAT AND GLOV! calf- -BUTTON LENGTH CREPE FROCK. SIX N TE S OF AND WHITE PRI The Rulers of U. S. Steel in Action This is indeed a rare picture, for it is the first time that a newspaper cameraman has photographed the annual meeting of the board of directors of United States Steel Cor George K. Leet, secretary; Nathan L. Miller, general counsel; Myron C. A. Farrell, director; Benjamin F. Fairless, president of U. S. Steel mwly-elected chmrmnn of the board, youngest to dLUI\n the po: *he company’s founder. UMNAK ISLAND' neau Commissioner Precinct In the Matter of the Administra- tion of the Estate of H. C. Indian Office Sendinv Sup- plies from Here Aboard C. G. Cutter Alert DAVIS,, dece ] \Vl\lll"l D S u..m and as Administratrix of the Estate of H. C. Davis, do- ceased, and to her attorney, L. FAULKNER, Esquire: YOU ARE HEREBY REQUIRED An unmrm»dcntcd exists at Umnak, about | of Unalaska in the Aleutia | symptéms of scurvy st * cording to a message to the ouu of Tndian Affairs here. Emergency supplies were being obtained herc to appear in the above-entitled today and will be dispatched aboard Ju- . DAV individ- TO GO WITH and Edward R. Stettinius, Jr 317, st with the exception of Charles M. ‘Schwab, 1938. Forecast for Juneau und Generally fair tonight and Weather forecast tor Friday; moderate casterly winds Forecast of icinity, Friday; moderate easterly winds. Soutbeast Alaska: nds alony the Coast of the Gulf of Alaska: U. 8. DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE, WEATHER BUREAU THE WEATHER (By the U. 8. Weather Bureau) beginning at 4 pan, April 2 Generally fair tonightand northerly over Lynn Canal Moderate pt casterly winds tonight and Friday from-Dixon Entrance to Cape Hin- chinbrook. LOCAL Time 4 pm. 4 am. Noon 30.09 42 37 teday 49 Barormeter Temp Humicity Wind Velocity DATA Weathet Cloudy Clondy Clear ) w 0 89 47 5 5 7 RADIO REPORTS Max. temp. t last 24 hours | 46 45 -4 36 44 36 32 38 42 42 42 11 45 50 50 48 64 64 56 82 86 Station Atka Anchorage Barrow Nome Bethel Fairbanks Dawson St. Paul Dutch Harbor Kodiak Cordova Juneau Sitka Kelchikan Prince Rupert Edmonton Seattle Portland San Prancisco New York Waghington 34 5 39 34 i 10 32 36 36 34 n 32 32 Lowest 4a.m. temp TODAY 4am. Prectp velocity 25 brs 4 09 0 03 .01 4am Wealhe PL. Cldy temp. 34 Lt. Snow Cloudy Clear Clear Lt. Snow Lt.Rain Li. Rain Cloudy Cloudy e e Eomak| | woa Clear PL.Cldy Clear Cloudy Cloudy Cloudy Clouily Cloudy 56 58 RN TR O NP WEATHFR CONDITIONS AT 8 AM. TODAY Seaitle (airport), cioudy, toria, cloudy, 46; Alert Bay, cloudy Island, partly cloudy: 38: Ketehikan, partly cloudy, 42; Craig, parily cloudy, 42; Petérsburg, cloudy, cleaf, 38; cloudy, clear, 42; Soapstone Point 38; 'Hawk Inlet, clear,'38; Juneau Hinchinbrok, raining, 38; St. Elias, Chitina, cloudy, 38; MecCarthy, barks, clear; Nenana, clear, 14; 18; Ruby; cloudy, 20; Nulato, cloudy, cloudy, 28. Juneau, A SHORT-SLEEVED, SLUE April 22.—Sunrise, WEATHER ‘The barometric from the Aleutian Tslands southeastward one over the Aleutians, the lowest report- 29.32 inches at Atka, 'th Pacific: Ocoan at latitude 50 degrees and long!- there being' two storm ed pressure bei eentered over the N tude 150 degrees, where a pressure pressure prevailed over areas Fort Norman. from the: Aleutians Alaska, also at Nome, elsewhere over the ther prevailed It ‘was colder last night over the Yukon Valley, the lowest reported low' zero at Aklavik. Cool weather Valley, temperature at Fairbanks at 2 am. today. a tlear, Hot Springs, clear, 30; Tanana, 4:31 am; the “interior and eastward to the Mackenzie Vall Light precipitation prevailed eastward to th> northern portion of the Gulf of of 14 degree; témperature 48; Blaine, cloudy, 38; Vie- 38; Bull Harbor, cloudy; Triple Langara Island, cloudy, 39; Princé Ruptrt, elear, partly cloudy, 41; Wrange!l, 44; Silka, cloudy, 38; Radioville Hoonah, cloudy; Tenakee, cloudy, 39; Skagway, clear,. Cape cloudy, 41; Cordova, cloudy, ' 38; 32; Anchorage, cloudy, 37; Fair- i clear, 24; Kaltag, cloudy, 24; Unalakleet, sunset, 7:27 p.m. SYNOPSIS pressure continued moderately low this the Puget Sound morning to region, and the second storm area was of 2650 inches prevailed. ¥ and northern portions of Alaska the crest being 3052 inches at along ‘'the coastal regions field of observe=n fair wea- Mackenzie Valley and temperature being 26 degrees be- also continued over the 'T above zero having been reported upper §r STOCK QUOTATIONS 1 £ ¢ Al NEW YORK, April 21. — Closing quotation of Alaska Juneau mine stock today is 10%, American Can 85, American Light and Power 4° Anaconda 287, Bethlehem Steel Commonwealth and Southern Curtiss Wright 47, General Mo- tors 32'%, International Harvester 59'%, Kennecoftt 34, New York Cen- tral 11%, Southern Pacific 11 United States Steel 45%, Cities Ser- vice' 1'47 Bremner no bid asked 2, Pennsylvania Railroad 16, Pound $4.987%. poration. Left to right, they are: Taylor, retiring chairman; James TAKE DUE NOTICE. hand and official Alaska, April' 12, WHEREOF wI £SS my cal Juneau, 1938. (Seal) at FELIX GRAY, U. S. Commissioner and Probate Judge. First publication, April 14, 1938. Last publication, April 21, 1938. e st p”y" = DOW, JONES AVERAGES The following are today’s Dov/. Jones averages: industrials 115.40, rails 21.30, utilities 18.03. - o — Extorfionist Is Sent to Prison PADUCAH, Ky., April 21.—A con- fessed extortionist, Russell Clen- nendon, has been sentenced to a ten-year term in a Federal peni- tentiary. Clennendon pleaded guilty to sending letlers to a hosiery mill worker demanding $3,000 and threatening to harm his intended vietim's daughter. 7Y Ml Persons under 10 years of age formed only 175 percent of the population in the United States ln 1835, compared with 19.6 in 1930. OSBRI R e : Today's News Today.—Empire. " Quilt Memirial ~ ToWar Veterans | BURNSVILLE, N. C.. April 21— The names and records of Yancey | county’s 850 World War veterans are ' all neatly preserved for pos- terity in the stitches of a quilt. Mrs. W. B. Robertson made the memorial quilt &fter spending four years 'collecting the names. She is the wife of a doctor and with'her husband’s help checked even the ! most' rémote coves of the moun- | tatnous '‘¢ounty to make sure ‘the Tist was complete. A soldier's name is stitchéd into each square of the quilt. After the name of “one who is no longer liv- |ing is a gold cross and underneath the name a symbol to show where lhe died. court on April 30, 1938, at 10 00 o'clock’ A:M., in Juneau, Alas answer the petition of Harold }Iv Post, John Re John F. Mullen | and The First National Bank of Juneau, and the further petition of John F. Mullen, and the further supplemental petition of John F. | the Coast Guard cutter Alert: when Mullen, and to then and there show 'she arrives from Ketchikan, C. M. cause why you should not be re- Hirst, Education Direclor, said. The|moved as administratrix of said | Alert left Ketchikan yesterday, it lestate and should not be required was reported, and was expected to to bring forthwith into the juris- go to the Westward, probably a.|diction of this court and to account Dr. Leslie White, of Unalaska, re- stock of the Alaska Chichagof Min- ported the emergency to the Indian | ing Company, an Alaskan corpora- office here, having received the tion, and all other assets of said story of the plight by radiophone, estate ecoming into your possession ! officials said. or knowledge, and to account there- Supplies being purchased here in- |for. clude' 1,500 pounds of r, 30!» pounds of sugar, 200 pounds of o pounds of lard, and a quantity LA)HOLDEN FL!ES rice, dried yeast, oranges, tomatoes| OUT SITKA BOXER, NORTH STAR | SAILING FOR NORTH | Harold H. Post, John Reck and far as Umnak direct. for 52,000 shares of the capital meal, 500 pounds of potatoes, 200 to smu \um Alex Holden went MAY 5 AND MAY 15 te Murine Airiass Betinea an wpl ght Mechanic led Ju'n'ul t.u~ The Indian Office vessel Boxer is|day. to bring back Lyle Hebert, scheduled {o sail from Seattle May | Hoffman and Lu Liston 5 on her first trip north this sumi- 156 g B mer, taking supplies to Indian sta- FILES ARTICL vl tions north of the Alaska Peninsula, Articles of incorporalion have and North Star will leave Seattle peen filed with the Territorial Au- May 15 on her first Alaska voyage! ditor by the Western Auto Suppt of ‘the season, according to the In-| Company of California. Capital is dian Office ‘here. The North Star|listed at five million and Larry Ha- also will make her annual voyage gen of Ketchikan is named as Al- to the Arctie, going as far as Point|aska agent. Hal R. Baker is Vice Barrow, leaving the latter part of | | President of the Company and S. Anguxt or early September. G.'Miles, SecmaYY —— If elected—My Policy Will Be: *Progressiveness, and Equal Rxghts for All” i Scouts Turn Out Strong Yesterday Thirty-eight Boy Scouts of the American Legion and the Norlite troops met last night for the heavi- est turnout in several weeks. In the American Legion Troop, * plans were discussed for next Wed- nesday parents’ night, and two new members’ were admitted. The two new members are Jim Torell, and Billy Allen. WAR VETERANS INJURED, RIOT NEW YORK, April 21. — Seven men, described by their comrades as ' American war veterans, were injured: in ‘a‘ riot last night at the Yorkville Casino, where a Pro-Nazi German-American Bund was hold- ing a meeting. e —— PROTEST WAGE SLASH NEW YORK, April 21.—Officials of Standard" Railway Orgamlzations, speaking ‘for more than’twenty-six thousand railroad workers, protest against the carriers’ drive to cut wages: s A ‘The organization represents work- ers employed by - five :hllrotda in the eastern area. — o —— \Alaskn" by Lester' D. Henderson. METHODIST CHURCH CLASS ENTERTAINED Mrs. E. O. Fields and her daugh- ter, Hazel, entertained members of Hazel's Sunday School class of the | Methodist Church at an informal social evening last ‘night at the Fields home on West Tenth Street. Informal games were played and refreshments were served. Mothersf of the class members were also present. i MRS. WEISS REPORTS Announcement is made that av, the meeting of the Women's Ohrist- jan Temperance Union on Monday afternoon, it was Mrs. Lester Weiss, not Mrs. Clarence Wise who report- | ed on the W.C.T.U., organ, Unum‘ | Signal. P podiid ABu]mPIam . Made from choice tea leaves, Schilling’ gives you a clear, re- fmhmgcupdmuddmin