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e s Bt 3 P ————— R— ———— e B e A AT AN . T 5% A s % w L o e each or 2~ $12.50 prlug 'ROCKS NEW Spr del priced! r young boleros moulded froc ee them to Prin trock low 18 fully ay! navy, black all crisply trimmed! 12 to M B. M. BEHRENDS CO., Inc. “Juneau’s Leading Depariment Store” ALASKA INVITED T0 COMPETE AT PERRY MATCHES ~ Lieut. Col. Mills Wires that Arrangements Have Been Completed Alaska will ]::4'.' ¢ to compete in the rifle matche: Camp Perry this summer, a ing to definite word received opportunity at ord- here last night by G. H. Leonard from Lieut. Col. B. W. Mills, Executive Officer of the National Board for the Promotion of Rifle Practice Col. Mills said definite arrang ments had been completed for Al- aska participation in Perry matches and further details would be given later Leonard was by Gov. John rangements for from Alaska to the matches in the event an invitation was extended ‘With definte word that the Terri- tory would be invited, Leonard said steps would be taken immediately to organize a team to include rifle- the recently appointed Troy to make ar- men from various parts of Alaska.| - 6OV, LEHMAN FOR SENATOR ALBANY, N. Y., June 21.—Gov. Herbert H. Lehman announces he will run for United States Senator to succeed the S. Copeland. Gov. Lehman said: “I will be a candidate if the Democratic late Senator Royal desires me to be one.” Gov. Lehman’s third guberna- | torial term expires next Decem- ber 31 ling a rifle team ia third BOY LIFER' BASEBALL TODAY & i Sell 3 The following are scores of base- pall games played in major gues this afternoon as received up to 2 o'clock National League icago 4; Phila t. Louis 1; Bo: Cincinng Ne Ame New York 5 League elangd 10 Philadelphia 2; St. Louis 5. Washington 7; Chicago 0. Boston 8, 4; Detroit 3, 5. e e Cope Makes Hop To Hoonah with Cannery Owne Lon Cope flew out to Hoonah on trip today with two pas- from the Aleutian, Peter owner of the Icy Straits Packing Company, and H. H. Hill- shire, newspaper man. On the return trip, Cope brought John White, cannery for medical attention. Alex Holden went out on the regu- Tuesday mail run in the Fair- ‘duld 71 and four pascngers SIMMONS 0UT IN LOCKHEED | Bremerton passenger back. He was| who came in from the THE PAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, TUESDAY, JUNE 21, I938 G e — YflUNG []|M[]N|] ’Sauho Oy Dunbar Soes Women as Social Force PAUL LIEN BACK HOME IN NORTH Young College Men' Will Spend Vacation Working in Fairbanks Area Back “home” in Alaska are Paul Lien, yo Fairbanks man, and John Dimond, son of Delegate ar Mrs. Anthony J. Dimond, who ar- rived in Juneau today abeard Aleutian and are continuing on to Westward, both enroute to Fairbanks. Lien, who has just com- pleted second year at Columbia Univers in New York, and young Dimond, who is a student at Cath- olic University in Washington, both expect to work in Alaska during the summer, John is going to work for Bob Bartlett on the latter's mining property at Miller House while Paul doesn’t know yet just what he is going to do. Before going east to Columbia, where he is specializing in journalism, young Lien worked for the Fairbanks News-Miner along with attending the University of Alaska for a time. Paul brought word from Corey Ford and Alastair MacBain, Alaska trout devotees and magazine writ- ers, that they would be heading for the trout streams of the north in 4 short time. y e ——— WELLKNOWN PILOT WITH. DESTROYERS Lieut. R. F. Farwell, of the U. S. Naval Reserve, is making his 24th navy pilot trip to Alaska today as pilot on the U. S. S. Barry, de- stroyer, now berthed in Juneau Farwell, who is faculty advisor for the Alaska Club on the Uni- versity of Washington campus, and a professor in the Business Ad- the ministration department there, is well-known in Juneau. He has brought more than a score of Navy vessels safely through the maze of islands that dot the inside passage and he also has compiled a log book of courses that s used by nearly every boat in the erritory. Lt. Farwell will bring the heavy cruiser Louisville north, leaving June 24, and arriving Juneau July 5 for a five-day in Boston Men Win Praise of Envoy . BOSTON, June 21.—Boston men lare just about perfect, in the opin- ion of Miss Marie Kane, Scotch ambassador of good will for the Empire exhibition at Glasgow, but Boston women— “I think the vocal tones of Bos- tcn women are a bit too shrill” said Miss Kane, although she cred- ited the fair sex here with impec- cable taste in clothes.” STEAMER YUKON Steamer Yukon is due from Skag- way at 1:30 o'clock in the morning and sails south one hour later. The steamer calls at Sitka, southbound | to Seattle. Mrs E. J. Fribrock and Iris Fri- are Aleutian passengers bnuml for Seward and thence to Snug Harbor where Mr. Fribrock is ., l TO SNUG HARBOR | ! | superintending operations of the :cannery there of which he is a Shell Simmons took the Alaska prominent stockholder Air Transport Lockheed out lo(\avi PR e o TR to the islands with C. L. Reed to DORANS ON ALEUTIAN Party Tenakee, Red Nitrinoff to Hirst and | Miss Nickinovich to Chichagof. Yesterday evening Shell brought the Lockhged in from Sitka with W. P. Mills and Ruth DeArmond. ey Mrs. Dave Doran, and James Doran, wife and son of the well- known Alaska line purser Dave Doran, are roundtrip passengers on the Aleutian. GETS HIS HIGH SCHOOL DIPLOMA I wa m lyaun flgh %chnnl Walla Waila. Washinaton This Certifies That FHavbare Niccolls fas completed a Convae uf Bhudy vrnn‘&:i fur graduation from the Walla Walla ‘Q@ School and in witness whereof is xwarded tfitl ‘ Diploma %Q Wplls Wailn, Bushington - this second dag of Fuwe, oue tymwaud wive Jundred and u.sp,.m. 4. P Perwident m’( Durectars Vi Re sl """,'"‘:f X °l';fi "4 PRISON DIPLOMA f1or Herbert Niccolls, who did all his school work imside prison, is reproduced above. It was awarded this year by the Walla Walla, Wash., high school under whose su- pervision the 19-year-old boy studied. DUE IN MORNING PORTLAND, Ore., June 21 Orr Dunbar believes « womanhood should solve the social problems of the United States. Be- cause she worked to put thi lief into practice, Mrs. Dunbar just been elected president General Federation of clubs, The new foremost organization large woman with soft r—slightl, and unbc has blue s and a ready Friends say has a comfor personality. 1 that one’s p on meeting her i ] you could sit down and talk anytime But § r-old considerably more dante. Missouri-born, -she c Oregon a cl was grad from Portland university, anc ed her club work in 1908, threc after her marriage. (Her husband died in 1928; they had two c! dren.) Interested primarily in public health, she was chairman of pub- lic health for the Oregon Fede tion of Women's clubs qn(l in 161 became ex t Oregon Tub: held that post until her recent el tion. Oregonians say she made tuberculosis association one of state’s most vital organizations. H work won her an honorary degree ha of the ‘Wom: head of the of women is a she first im- Mrs. Dunbar than a T as Contract Dispute Frances Farmer Sued for $75,000 in a breach of contract case in New York court, screen and stage actress Frances Farmer is pictured entering court to oppose the suit filed by an actor's agent, Sheppard Traube. Miss Farmer denies she owes the sum. APPEALSBILL SIGNED BY FOR WASHINGTON, June 21.—Presi- dent Roosevelt has sicned the bill to permit of appeals from Alasf District Courts to the Ninth Circuit Court in cases not involving less than $1,000. e by Lester D. Henderson 1“Alaska” MRS. SAIDIE ORR DUNBAR doc letters from Ore- lle la year-— € iven to a woman by | that school Besides her work with the as- ion, she was an instructor 21‘. community crganizations in the | University of Oregon’s department nursing education 1935, elected first vice-presi- (- e Ge Feleration, she i her creed this way plumb to the vn potential for women for the definite our unsolved anized ution problems.” of of sor CHANGES ARE | ANNOUNCED IN WILL WRITE ON U. 8. DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE, WEATHER BUREAU THE WEATHER (By the U. 8. Weather Bureau) ity. day NEWSPAPER MAN beginning at 4 pan., June 21: light variable winds, mostly Forecast for Juncau and vici Generally fair tonight and We | westerly. Weather forecast for Southeast Alaska: Generally fair tonight and FISHINVASION FISHING RULES g changes in mmercial fishing regulations yunced by Daniel C. Roper Commerce: Kodiak Area Herring fishery R ilation Nc 3 prohibiting commercial fishing for herring from 6 o'clock antemeridian of Saturday of each week until 6 o'clock postmeridian of the Sunday following is rescinded Prince William Sound Area the The follo are Se ar retury of Herr Regulation No. 2 prohibi fishing for herrin o'clock ante- meridian of £ of each week! un' 6 o'clo postmeridian of the Sunday following is inded Socutheast Alaska Area Sumner Strait District Salmon fishery.—Regulation No. 2 NORTHLAND IS DUE Wednesday; light variable winds, mostly weste T ) § Forecast of winds along the Coast of the Gulf of Alaska: Light to H. H. Hillshire Evicted from‘m\)dm.\u- variable winds, mostly westerly | LOCAL DATA japan Last January Barometer Temp. Humidity Wind Velocity ~Weathes for ‘Snooping’ st 3025 49 8 SE 12 LtRaln 4 a.m. today 3032 46 97 Calm 0 Lt. Rain “Kicked out” of Japan last Janu- | Ncon today 30.35 54 65 w 5 Cloudy | ary, fol ; into Navy and Army | operatiol H. H. Hillshire, a pas RADIO REPORTS senger on the Aleu headed to: TODAY for Bristol Bay “to visit my Max. temp. Low'st 4am. 4am. Preclp 4am riends the Japanese again.” Station last 24 hours | temd. temp. velocity 24 hrs Weathe Hillshire will write a series of ar- [ Atka 52 42 42 12 06 Lt.Rain for the Hearst “March of Anchorage 58 48 = 0 Jvents” section on Alaska, and will| Barrow 42 34 34 4 0 Cloudy also do background stories for For-|Nome 46 42 44 10 10 Lt Rain tune and Cosmopolitan ' Bethel 52 40 42 32 .01 Cloudy | While in Juneau today, Hillshire | Fairbanks 60 | 40 40 6 0 Pt. Cldy | flew to Hoonah with Lon Cope to|Dawson 64 40 40 4 01 Cloudy | see Hoonah for the first time since|St. Paul 42 38 40 14 01 Cloudy 1917 when he was working in a|Dutch Harbor 52 40 42 4 0 Cloudy | cannery there for enough money oJKmhak 50 44 50 10 0 | get him through the University of|Cordova 48 44 44 4 64 Washington. | Juncau 50 16 46 alm .15 “It was a remarkable feeling,” | sitka 50 45 - L 08 Hillshire said, “to fly over there | Ketchikan 58 | 46 46 4 0 Cloudy \ 27 minutes when it used to take| Prince Rupert 62 | 42 44 4 02 Clear us better than a day to get in by|Edmonton 80 | 50 50 4 0 Cloudy boat.” | Seattle 80 58 58 6 0 Clear Regarding the Bristol Bay stories| Portland 86 | 66 66 4 0 Clear Hilishire is seeking, he will board |San Francisco 64 52 52 6 0 Cloudy |a Coast Guard vessel at Naknek|New York 80 68 K 4 0 Cloudy and work out of there Washington 2 66 70 10 .02 Cloudy “I spent four years in the Orlenl."i WEATHER CONDITIONS AT 8 AM. TODAY Hillshire said, “and one year in Japan., I'd like to have stayed in Seattle (airport), clear, temperature, 63; Blaine, clear, 52; Victorla, Japan longer, but they told me to|clear, 58; Alert Bay, clear, 45; Bull Harbor, hazy, 52; Langara Island, leave.” clear, 50; Prince Rupert, clear, 53; Ketchikan, clear, 57; Craig, cloudy, On returning to the United States, | 55; Wrangell, cloudy, 50; Petersburg, clear, 55; Juneau, cloudy, 49; William Randolph Hearst called hirm | Haines, ; Skagwaw cloudy, 51; Hawk Inlet, cloudy, 50; Tenakee, {to San Simeon in California whprs“(lvudy »nah, cloudy; Port Althorp, cloudy; Sitka, cloudy, 49; he asked him to go east and writ2 Rw(novmc. cloudy, 50; Cape Spencer, clouds Yakutat, cloudy, 47; a series of storles on Japan { St. Elias, cloudy, 46; Cordova, partly cloudy, 58; Chitina, part cloudy, “Let me go back to Japan?” he|50; McCarthy, part cloudy, 50; Cape Hinchinbrook, cloudy, 48; Portage, asked. “I hardly think so—but at|cloudy, 46; Anchorage, part cloudy, 52; Fairbanks, clear, 60; Nenana, any rate, it will be interesting to| clear, 57; Hot Springs, clear, 52; Ruby, cloudy, 50; Nulato, cloudy, rmd out what the little Nippon is|46; Kaltag, raining, 47. | doing in Bristol Bay.” Juneau, June 22. — Sunrise, 2:53 a.m.; sunset, 9:10 p.m. Hillshire’s parting shot as he left| i . ’ The Empire’s offices this afternoon, WEATHER SYNOPSIS -| was a fervent statement that “Al-| The barometric pressure has risen during the past 24 hours |aska is suffering from a lack of|throughout the eastern and southern portions of Alaska and has fallen publicity of the right kind. Ever - | over the Aleutian Islands, the pressure extremes being 30.34 inches off one in the East, with the excep- | the coast of Southeast Alaska and 29.10 inches over the Aleutians in the tion of a few, still think there are|vicinity of the Rat Islands. This general pressure distribution has been Indians west of the Alleghanies,|attended by precipitation along the al regions from the northern and only ice and snow in Alaska. ”‘])nrlmn of Southeast Alaska northwestward to the Prince William Hillshire was formerly a radio op- | Sound region also over western Alaska and by generally fair weather erator on Alaska boats and this is|from Ketchikan southward to Oregon. his 34th trip to the Territory. Hl” v S———— 3 will be in Bristol Bay about 30 days |and will then fly to Fairbanks and | Nome before and south. 0| DIESEL MOTOR BARGAIN - Buda medium duty 100 h.p. full Diesel Engine in yacht Messenger, cost $5,000. Run 3,050 hours. Will sacrifice for $1,950. Complete with electric starter AT ELEVEN TONIGHT Motorship Northland, from Seat- (2) of supplement No. 251-24-1 is- ] sued on April 27, 1938, is amended |tle, is scheduled to arrive at 11 and such spare parts as complete piston, rings, conrod to read as follows: Within 1,500 feet [o'clock tonight. The vessel has and cylinder reliner. Installing larger power. See oint on an unnamed island at|many passengers aboard for Ju- | PASTOR H. L. WOOD, Alaska Mission Office, 2nd at » to Port Protection utes 4 second Clarence St Salmon fishery.—Regulation No. 15 (m) amended to read as follo naugh Islands soutn of s 7 minutes 10 seconds north latitude and west of 131 de- grees 43 minutes 30 seconds west longitude S e e ANCHORAGE GlRL WEDS ON OUTSIDE Mrs. J. L. Gmm a passenger on the Aleutian, for Seward, and railroad passage to Anchorage, went south through Juneau to attend the university as Dorothy Cunningham Returning to her Anchorage home today, she admitted she had been married, but would elucidate no further, .o DESCRIPTION OF DESTROYERS GIVEN The destroyers Barry and Hop- kins, now in port, are sister ships of the flush deck type. They each have displacement of 1190 tons, a length of 314 feet, beam of 30 fect, and draught of 10 feet. Their armament is composed of four 4-inch 50-calibre guns, one 3- inch ‘anti-airc'»°t gun and twelve 21-inch triple torpedo tubes. Both vessels have a speed of 35 knots per hour, with 26,000 shaft horsepower. AREFOOT BOY o 1931 became studious lad of aerbert Niccolls (right), in Washington prison on llleo ulrzlsl'f:: murder of a sheriff, gets diploma from H. K. Holm, W 1lh Wait~ school official, with Educator W, A, Lacey lo min- | survey and Main. ‘JUNE McCULLAGH PAULSENS GOING SELDOVIA BOUND| NORTH, ALEUTIAN | June McCullagh, of Seldovia, Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Paulsen, |a passenger on the Aleutian, after [Jr» Of Spokane, Washington, are & i i passengers for Seward on the Aleu- graduating a few weeks ago from iy, "y payisens will contimue to Fairbanks, near where Mr. Paul- sen has extensive mxmng mteresLs Congressional u including the Committee to make a two-month and appraisal of the rein- deer herds owned by non-natives. bl e b 4 BRESTLITOVSK, June 21.—Thir- ty peasants were drowned this afternoon in the Bug River when the bottom of their boat dropped the University of Washington with out. a teacher's diploma. is | e e ———— ---ALASKA--- Its Industries . . . . . Peaple . . . Riches Its Sports and Life . . . . . ALL IN ONE HANDY PACKAGE IN The Daily Alaska Empire Progress and Devélopmcnt Edition, 1938 FOR YOUR FRIENDS ... COPIES READY .. 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