The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, June 8, 1938, Page 2

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B. ii. BEHRENDS C€O., Inc. “Juneau’s Leading Department Store” ot b . o A L TONGASS BRINGS C ALIFORNIANS GENERAL CARSC, ENTHUSED OVER 9 PASSENGERS ALASKA VISIT ne arty of 125 Enjoying| Feavy Sights Out Highway To- ) eral. okrgo, bringing in iwo engers and tak two out g Passengers. amivi ¢ wua| day—Be Back Friday Crumrine ¢nd Josephine Cru & . T i while outbound passc (Continued from Page One) Mrs. F. V. Smith Jackie N = SRATAGE bel E. Scott, Mrs. Stelld e Tt Pauline Shore, this noon Bk ‘ Syl doad Mrs. Elmer H.| from the Po then go to 1 Shiry Db centraes from the Admi Van Brundt, Dr. Roy M Gold Mining Company. G P E /illiem M. Waterman, Mrs, Wil- RTINS SR BGOSR NPT [ n M. Waterman, Miss Beatrice | Webster Emma J. Whitmarsh, | Miss Ele Williams, Henry | DOl‘OihY Winter, G. Woodside. Mis. C. H. Youngken Stearns Mi: herine Zipper. Roff School of ; SUMMER CLASSES Now Enrolling Oven-fresh every day! Uni- | form, golden loaves . ap- pealing to the eye and to the Telephone Blue Studio—526 Fifth St. : | PEERLESS BREAD appetite. AS A PAID-UP SUBSCRIBER TO mment? A half dozen y had worl ourc statu gress On ion t ally perm pite vel C cast and git stru tion bers and ! the The Daily Alaska Empire is inviled te present this coupon tonight at the box office of *“~CAPITOL THEATRE AND RECEIVE TWO TICKETS TO SEE “BREAKFAST FOR TWO" g Your Name May Appear—WATCH THIS SPACE { course a te. g rebels | mined to respect the treaty re 4-H Club Holds Last evening at 7 o'clock, the meeting of the home of Mrs. on Fritz Cove Highway. Ele which time Betty Nelson was elected president of the organization; Mar- upe frs. Florence Syverud, charge of extention work of South- making nothing.’ There are at present, eleven mem- following: Irene, and Bernice Haffler, Patr | Salisbury probably will hide THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, WEDNESDAY, JUNE 8, 1938. | Part y Sails i e | Me xico Shows Another Flaw in Neutrality Act Continued from Page One) appears to be ith the Havana treaty d the n: to help uppress civil wars. way out was provid- tion. If any nation de- outbreak is justi- nize” the rebel legitimate belligerent arms or not, as it irs here say the rebel it may p as a ) ship Now if a civil war should break Mexico the United States ! be confronted at once with uble question: B ould it abide by the treaty help out the Cardenas gov- Or should it abide b neutrality act and refuse aid ther side? | PICKING THE ‘WRONG HORSE’ after the Ha- treaty was drawn up, Brazil a revolution. In keeping with srecment, the U, S, government Henry Stimson as Secretary of .. permitted arms to mo 0 overnment, forces. By the time reached there, the rebels had They, ook over the shipment of arms intended for the other side Stimson Vror back- was dubbed " Henry for presumably {ing the wrong side, There are good es here who say he knew the would win but was deler- gard- The rebels didn't kick too much because they suspected the time wonld come when they would| want the treaty lived up to in the ame way. Those rebels are now the government, The Constitution provides that a shall become the ‘“supreme the land” but the same| s is enjoyed by an act of Con- such as the neutrality act. e high source gave, the opin- hat in event of a civil war in Mexico the President would be mor- obligated under the treaty to it arms to go to Cardenas (in of oil land even seiz though it meant ignoring the neu- trality act. - First Meeting the 4-H Club was held Dave Dishaw, ction of offic s held, at w Patric ddes, vice-president; Radalet, secretary; and Bernice Haffler, freasurer. Susie Winn will hand le all publicity for the club. rs for the girls include who is in Alaska, and incidentally, or- ganizer of the Club; Mrs. Chet Ellis, Mrs. L. Iverson, e 4-H Club, with its many in- ve branches, has proved popu- lar in the States. It is an organiza- without dues, that features the of “something from in the club, Susy and include the Winn, Florence, | Betty Nelson, Ouida Ward,| Marie Hannah, Nora Bareksen, Mar- vel Geddes, and Patricia Radalet. OFFICIALS BACK FROM WILD LIFE TRIP, ADMIRALTY After a several days visit to the | east side of Armiralty Island where | | they studied the feeding of bear and later the Tracy Arm goat coun- try, Dr. H. L. Shantz, Chief of the Division of Wildlife Management for the U. S. Forest Service from | Washington, and Regional Forester B. F. Heintzieman, returned to Ju- neau They expect to go next to Hassel- borg Lake and then to Glacier Bay, where, the Regional Forester said it is hoped to develop recreational facilities and wild life. Bishop's Palace, last night on the Forester Air Ba@d Shelter SALISBURY, England, June 8. If and when enemy planes start bembing Britain, many people in under Bishop's “palac Dr. Neville Lovett, Bishop of Salis- | bury, has offered the city a private bomb-proof shelter beneath his of- ficial residence. Air raid precautions officers who | inspected the shelter said even the | heaviest bombs couldn't reach it. \CHAMBER MEETS TOMORROW NOON Regular weekly luncheon of the {Juneau Chamber of Commerce will he I | Cafe, scheduled to come will ield tomorrow noon at Percy’s Considerable business is up and plans be made for the joint luncheon with the Los Angeles Chamber Fri- day 5 aboard the Prince Robert. — - Empire classifieds pay. | | | | ! < oer Post Cra i A party-led by two ministcr ‘ v Mcnica, Cal, bound for P« 0¥ of Will K ers and Wiley right: Elgin Thrapp, radic i ) e, & Kipy Dr. Roy Curtis of Hillst : : crown he new after the fight he intended guitling the ring for choosingsixes. And, of course, the most pepular six of all is this new Chevrolet—the Six Supreme! Discriminating people prefer it hecause of its high quality . . . because of its great value . . . because it's the only low-priced car with all these fine car features! "“You’ll b= AHEAD with a CHEVROLET!”’ fléfi JUNEAU More than 3 out of every 5 motor car huyers today are ky Henry Armstre Be) fmeke nd world's welterweight champi m Squa {e b W L {le to = il this piclure was made in the round, said PERFECTED HYDRAULIC BRAKES 85-H.P. VALVE-IN-HEAD \ ENGINE GENUINE KNEE-ACTION* ALL-SILENT, ALL-STEEL BODIES SHOCKPROOF STEERING ™ TIPTOE-MATIC CLUTCH #On Master De Luxe models only. NNORS MOTOR CO., Inc. ALASKA U. 5. UKPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE, WEATHEK BUKKAU THE WEATHER (By the U. 8. Weather Bureau) beginning at 4 and Thursday; pm., June Forecast for Juneau and vicinity, . gentle to mod; y cloud howers tor prok ate soutl w Weathe for Southeas y probabiy ith portion, foreca wers, north portion, par tonight and Thursday; gentle to moderate south:rly winds Forecast of winds along the Coat of the Gulf of Alaska: Moderate * y fresh souther wind ong ¢ i Dixon Entrance to Dry I modcrate (o fresh casterly win m Dry Bay (o Cape Hinchin- brook. LOCAL DATA Time Barometer Temp. Humidity Wind Velocity Wenthes m. yest'y 29.98 41 a4 NE 10 Lt. Raixnt 1 am. today 30.10 13 90 w 2 Lt.Rain Noon today 3012 48 k&) w 7 Cloudy RADIO REPGRTS | TODAY Max.temp. | Low st 4am. 4am. Precp dam 1ast 24 hours | tem" temp. velogity 24 hrs, Weather 38 40 10 32 Cloudy 42 - 0 30 30 32 0 Cloudy | 42 46 4 T Cloudy » 10 42 4 03 i3 & 6 6 0 WSOl 50 0 0 0 St. Paul 3 36 10 0 Dutch Harbor 34 38 4 06 Kodial 40 10 4 0 Pt.Cly Cordova 2 44 1 Cloudy Tuneau 10 13 2 Cloudy Sitka 42 tchikan | 42 44 4 Prince Rupert 49, 41 4 monton 0 52 10 0 Seattl 6 50 50 10 T Portland e 52 [ 0 52 10 0 p York 86 0 60 16 1.16 Washington 92 66 66 8 03 WEATHER CONDITIONS AT 8 AM. TODAY Blaine, cloudy H 40; Bull Harbo rince Ru- showers, 56 cloudy. kee. clot ah, part] artly cloudy Juneau clou- y, 46; Cape Hinchinbrook 8; Cordova, cloudy, 46; An- temperature, 4 partly v Island, y cloudy, 47 Sitka wttle (airports, partly clondy, clo Triple 46 Lar partly cloudy. tehikan Wrangell, cloudy, 48; Petersburg sstone Point Port All dy, 47; Skagway, ¢l cloudy, 46; Cape St. 51 1 cudy cledr, 62; Ruby WEATHER SYNOPSIS The barometer was high this moming o Southeast Alaska onth- a and thg Pacific Northwest with a central pressure of latitude 44 degrees north, longitude 144 degrees west, and al Arc t. With the lowest reported reading inches south of the A Islands at 1o » 180 srees west, low barometric extended over the Bering Sea, and western and interior air pressure also overlay the Canadian prairie province Edm 1. Light precipitation was Aleutia lands estern Ala from Corc the coast to Puget Sof with scatte local rains over central and tern Canada. Tempe ) were mer over t t of Alaska yester but cooler uth: Alaska with little change over other portions of the rritory ATTENTION REBEKAHS ular busine June 8, LO.OF. Hall, 8 p.m. RUTH BLAKE, Secretary REVIE Wiz HOME DECORATION | S a tribute to spring—the home-planning season— | we’ve arranged to show you more than thirty decora- tion ideas—combinations of floors, walls, fabrics, and wood- trim that give budget-wise rooms smart individuality and cheery comfort. ' Plan now to visit our floor covering department . . . to see these eye-appealing color schemes designed by foremost decorators to take the guesswork out of home-planning. See, too, how the latest designs in ARMSTRONG’S LINOLEUM provide rooms of unusual beauty at prices most moderate. ~$30.00 For example, a 9’ x 12’ floor com= pletely installed for only. .. .. ; Other room sizes at proportionately moderate prices. meevng Wednes- ) al o ke | LA ah " .l o A

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