The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, July 21, 1938, Page 2

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R RIS S T S e P { ¥ (oS} THE DAILY ALA; B. M. BEHRENDS CO., Inc. au’s Leading Depariment Store” oy june Queen Mother Mary “Hello” His Name Bans Golden K&ys} diat Crime Crime comm of law force tuted auth prove pe mis: help in Thomas Dewey, district attorney. Baltimore's commission is' the oldest in the Unite C n futy form open- ew buildin r teel key f the ceremony 150,000 murderers are at large CLO in ye turned back buildings Commissions Aid Police g up rackets and furthering the work of such as States, having been at work since 1923. 'More than a score of large cities and a dozen states now have privately financed organizations aiding in law, enforcement. e L Culprit Falls Into Glutches Of His Honor Mayor Preserves Peace and Dignity of Community with Sweet Foot Work Ted Price was fined $25 and given 30 days in jail today by City Magis- ! THES FOR MEN uits $29.75 low as Double and single- reasted models . . . . as CIH [11 o trate Harry I. Lucas 'on & charge s 8 of drunkenness. But that’s only ( ] You cant | the story. Price hmd the f or your |distinction of net enly being sens ore S AR R O tenced by the Mayor but He was ey anywhere. arrested by His Honor in due form after a spirited chase down an alley 8 in which the Mayor was reported to have demonstrated even greater |alacrity afoot $hah he did in the and Wilson Shirts | Fourth of July races. and . Neckties, | Tt appears that prisoner Price | was attempting ‘to kick in the door |of the Arctic Club when he at- |tracted the attention of His Honor who was -motoring leisurely along Franklin Street. ) “What's that man doing?” the [Magistrabe interrogated as he drew |up to the curb. . “Looks like he's trying to kick in that door,” replied a nearby wit- ness. “Well, well, so it does replied His Honor, looking longingly ‘up and down the street for a patrol- man. But there was none in sight. To Complete Your Wardrobe: ow FREEMAN SHOES Stetson and Hardeman Hats, Wilson and Phoenix Sox. S T S | ). Mayor | instantly saw his duty, but about the same time the ' kicker decided he ‘had businéss else-' i‘where and started to go away 'from there! Undaunted, His Honor struck out in pursuit. The race, though |brief, was' entirely the Mayot's. 'In a flash, anyway a couple of ‘lohg flashes, His Honor had the culprit in custedy, and, in the venacular |of the profession, was “calling the wagon™ . | A bit dismayed was the prisoner |as he appeared in the docket this {morning to look irto the face of |the arresting officer who was sit- ting in the seat of judgment. “Twenty-five dollars and 30 days,” T v sternly announced His Honor, as he More than 80% of our Knowl-|piaeq out his handkerchiéf from edge is gained through the eyes. |y "y roas pocket and polished his " | badge of authority. | “Get out,” sald His Honor’ latet to an inquisitive reporter. “I might {have at that, #f T'd had a badge and a clean handkerchief to polish |it with. Cant' ah’ official presefve the peace and dignity of the‘com= munity without you birds giving him the razzbefry?™ ‘Crying of Bakies 4 § s | PITTSBURGH, July 21.—Soime babies may make & racket crying, but then again some babies make a racket out of crying, according to Dr. Willlam W. McFarland, execu- tive director of the General Health Council. Babies are much cleverer than their parents give them credit \ for being, he added. “Every time he is picked up and comforted—he soon learns that by crying heé ‘can demand this and that attention,” said Dr. McFar- land. Explains Prisoner ¢! MONTREAL, July 21—“Hello," - boomed the Prinning man in the prisoner’s dock Hello yourself, but I asked you »| your name,” snapped the recorder’s r| clerk. Apologetically the' stranger identified himself as James Hello, forty-two and pleaded guilty to a charge. oitering e ———— TO LICENSE WALKERS HELSINKI, Finland, July 21— Walkers will have to have licenses if a suggestion put forward by the Chamber of Commerce at Abo, a town in Southwest Finland, is adopted. The chamber proposes that, view of the increasing number traffic accidents, special courses “road culture” should be given pedestrians and cyclists. Classes would be obligatory, and all who passed tests would be granted certificates. in of in to o Island, Wn. ons are coming to the fore as an invaluable adjunct Boys’ Prepara- in reducing crime. Working independently of consti- tery’ School orities, these civic bodies help to expedite justice, im- | with Naval conditions and cut down causes of crime. Both Balti- ining | d New York have model groups of this kind. In New York T“‘n.'.l{"“ on, headed by Harry Guggenheim, has been of great Discipline’ Write for Catalogue, 935 Henry Bldg., Seattie, Wash., BARTENDERS PICNIC SUNDAY JULY 24 WEATHER PERMITTING AT THE GLACIER DAIRY ROUNDTRIP BY BUS—FROM 12:45 TILL On Bainbridge Only School of its kind on the Pa- | cific Coast. Fall term opens Sept. 15. U. 8. DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE, WEATHER BUREAU THE WEATHER (By e U. 8. Weather Burean) | | { Forecast for Junean and vicivity, beginning at 4 p.m., July 21: §Clrled3'. with light showers, tonight and Friday; moderate south and southwest - winds: ! |~ Weather forecast for 'Southeast Alaska: Cloudy, with light showers, | tonight and Friday; moderate south and southwest winds. Forecast of winds along the Coast of the Gulf of Alaska: Moderate sbuthwest winds tonight and Friday from Dixon Entrance to Cape Hin- chinbrook. LOCAL DATA Time Barometer Temp Humidity Wind Velocity Weathe 4 pm. yest'y 30.15 55 9% SE 9 Heavy Rn. 4 am. today 30186 52 94 SE 4 Cloudy Noon today 30.21 54 76 SE 8 Cloudy 'RADIO REPORTS TODAY Max. temp, Lowest 4am. 4am. Precip. 4Rm Station last 24 hours temp. temp. velocity 24 hrs. Weathe, Atka 0 50 50 4 05 Rain Anchorage 63 41 - — - Barrow 52 40 40 10 0 Cloudy Nome 56 38 38 6 T Clear Bethel 70 50 50 6 £ 4 Pt. Cldy Fairbanks % 56 56 4 02 Pt. Cldy Dawson .. 86 48 48 4 06 Cloudy Bt. Paul 50 — — - — Duté¢h Harbor 52 40 48 4 02 Cloudy Kodiak 54 18 48 4 0 Cloudy Oordova .. 56 48 50 4 26 Cloudy Juneau .. 57 ’ 51 52 4 1.39 Cloudy Bitka 56 50 — — 08 Ketchikan . 68 52 54 4 0 Clear Prince Rupert ... 72 54 56 6 0 Cloudy Edmonton 80 48 48 4 0 Clear Seattle 90 64 68 6 0 Clear Portland ..100 4 4 4 0 Clear Ban Francisco 66 56 56 8 0 Cloudy New York 8 68 70 12 58 Rain ‘Washington (:...84" 70 72 4 3 Rain i WEATHER CONDITIONS A1 8 AM. TODAY Beattle (airport), ‘clear, temperature, 69; Blaine, clear, 58; Vic- toria, clear; 62; Alert Bay, cloudy, 51; Bull Harbor, cloudy, 58; Triple Istand, “cloudy; Langdra Island, raining, 50; Prince Rupert, raining, 56; Ketehikan, ‘cloudy, 58; Oraig, showers, 58; Wrangell, cloudy, 54; Pet- ersburg, ‘cloudy, 55; Hoonah, cloudy; Hawk Inlet, sprinkling, 50; Tena- kee, cloudy, 62; Port Althiorp, cloudy; Hood Bay, cloudy, 54; Sitka, eloudy, 52; Cape Spencer, cloudy, 53; Radioville, showers, 54; Juneau, cloudy, 52; Skagway, cloudy, 54; Haines, cloudy; Yakutat, cloudy, 52; Oape 'St. Elias, partly clotidy, 52; Cordova, cloudy, 60; Chitina, cloudy. 52; McCarthy, raining, 56; Anchorage, raining, 52; Portage, cloudy, 52; Fairbanks, partly cloudy, 60; Hot Springs, clear, 58; Ruby, partly eloudy, 55 Nulato, clear, 56; Flat, clear, 60; Stuyahok, clear, 57; Mc- Grath, partly cloudy, 72 Bethel, partly cloudy, 64; Platinum, partly cloudy; ‘Golovin, wmissing; Solomon, clear, 46; Nome, clear, 50. Juneau, July 22.—Sunrise, 3:30 am.; Sunset, 8:42 p.m. WEATHER SYNOPSIS The barometric pressure was moderately low this morning over the Aleutian Islands and over the West Coast States and high over Alaska ffom Nome southeastward to British Columbia, the crest being 30.28 inches over the Pacific Oceéan at latitude 50 degrees and longitude 150 aegrees. This general pressure dis‘ribution has been attended by pre- cipitation along the coastal regions from Cordova southward to Wran- gell, also over the Aleutlans, and by fair weather over the West Coast States. ' Visibility was restricted this morning over the Puget Sound re- gion because of moderate to heavy smoke. Teus Feminists Tfiéy’i'o Too Aggressive BEFEEREE oman / PYONDON; “July 21:“~ The first |and by those who depend purely ;m:'w“hecme‘ a member of the lon sex appeal. 1 Bar Council Iit into the | “Women's talons have to learn membei's of her' sex. The woman, |delicacy of touch.” Hannah ‘Cross, says her fellow fém- | — e inSts are not popular because they [ Only seven states, California, aré too aggressive. Colorado, Delaware, Indiana, Mary- “Fnis aggressiveness” she de- |land, New York and Pennsylvania, clates, ‘S shown by the feminist |fix the beginning salary of teachers who finds slights where none are | with four years of porfessional mtended, by the over-manly woman, | training at $1,000 a year or more. “YOU SHO KNOW WHATS BEST"” Those who know what's best—have enjoyed Pabst through five generations. Blue Ribbon Beer is a perfect companion_ to good food. Try it and see. | PABST Order a Case Today } R 94 -YEARS b . GOOD TASTE FO SKA EMPIRE, THURSDAY, JULY 21, 1938. » ¥ , BASEBALL TODAY | - < The following are scores of base- | ball games played this afternoon in {the twe major leagues: National League Brooklyn 2, 1; Chicago 5, 0. Pittsburgh 5; Philadelphia 4. New York 5; St. Louis 2. American League Detroit 3; Washington 7. Other games postponed on count of rain. — e YEAR ASLEEP, VICTIM DIES CHICAGO, July 21.—Victim of sleeping sickness for almost a year, Leo H. Laite, thirty-eight, former' engineering student, died at his | home. Laite fell asleep June 12, 1937, | and, although he roused for a week | | twenty-four hours later, he suffered a relapse. He was taken to his home from the Elgin State Hospital, where he had been under observation and care for three months, while his wife, Clara Laite, recuperated from an operation. It was not until Laite's removal that any one knew 6f his condition. i i Bear Battles Car; Finally Gives Up COBALT, Ont., July 21. — When a bear takes the bumper of an au- tomobile between his teeth and | starts: to shake the machine, Har- old Burke and Clarence Pearce will not argue with it. They tell this story: A large bear appeared on a road ahead of a car in which Burke and | Pearce were traveling to Cobalt As the machine slowed, bruin put one paw on the bumper and the other on the wheel. Then the ani- mal took the bumper between its teeth and acted as though wor ing it ! ac- Three Flights, *HOLD STILL’ British Princess Margaret, 7, might have told Princess Elizabeth; 12, when they and their father (right) and mother (in furred coat) reviewed 1,000 Girl Guides. Elizabeth wears a Guide uniform; Margaret is dressed as a Brownie. | with Herbert McClain, H. Christof- | fel, and Dr. Lowe, all for Port Al- | thorp; returned and took the fol- | lowing passengers to Atlin: Mr. and | Mrs. Robert Henning, Mr. and Mrs. Harold Brown, and Harry Hanson | - -oo— Marine Airway Alex Holden took the Marine Aix‘-b‘ 3 ways plane to Sitka this morning YUMA, Arizona, at 9:30 o'clock. The following pas- | Tra film actor, sengers made the roundtrip: | Thomas-Wyse were Thomas Riggs Jr. Miss L. Riggs, |yesterday. and Frank Metcalf. i e — Lone Cope took the Belanca out' Empire classifieds pay. TRACY IS MARRIED 21.—Lee Helen here July and married 3 days of them-Friday, Saturday, Monday at PHONE 478 MATCHES SEARCHLIGHT—Carton 29c Rit_z Crackers rhe.29¢ BORAXO CLEANSER 2 10-0z. cans 3sc FAMOUS Heart of Florida GRAPEFRUIT SUGAR 15 Ibs. $4.00 DARIGOLD Case $3JS CALIFORNIA HomeSroun “The Modern Pure Foods Store” GROCERY' PUREX AND MEAT DEPT. 2 QtSo 3 5 P Our Fresh Fruits BUTTER and Vegetables are RED SHIELD “ALWAYS THE 2 1bs. 63c BEST” PEAS . 6¢c PERS -3 1= 25¢ WATERMELON NEW POTATOES 12 Ibs. 45 Pound § § | | LETTUCE—CELERY STRING BEANS CABBAGE—CAULIFLOWER CASABAS—CANTALOUPES HONEYDEW MELONS HEINZ TOMATO JUICE 25¢. LOCAL RADISHES E G G s et 25¢ Swiss CHARD 98¢ FRESH DAILY FROM OUR 2 pounds FROM OUR OWN OWN RANCH FARM 1938 Choice Spring LAMB LEGS ... 1b. 30c STEAKS . 1b. 30c BREAST 2 lbs. 25¢ PATTIES each 5c TURNIPS 3 bunches Short Ribs _._1b. 18¢ Rib Steaks _1b. 38c

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