The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, August 11, 1938, Page 2

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FINAL CL ON ALL OUR LADIES' SUMMER STRAPS EARANCE WHITES! — TIES SANDALS These Shoes are NOW, with us. whi ) what you want immertime is still 1ey are quality prod- ucts, combining good leather and good craf tsmanship into perky, attractive footwear. Broken Sizes in Several Styles B. M. BEHRENDS CO., Inc. “Juneau’s Leading Department Store” BRADLEY TALKS ON WAGE, HOUR BILL AT C. OF C.; A. ]. President Says 5-Day Week Being Considered Under New Act (Continued 1rom Page One) in the! scale is the minimum provided for act, and while our wage higher than that of oth gold | mines we wish to work out some program that will avoid a reduction in the daily rate of pay. “It may require some time to work this problem out to its best conclusion, and it will probably need the exercise of patience of all concerned before the matter i finally worked out.” The Rev. E. E. Bromley, Presby- terian minister at Ilmllmh also ws a guest of the Ch ber today. A. B. Phillips, Superintendent of Schools, just back from a vacation Outside, reported that he and Frank Garnick, who is now in attle where Mrs. Garnick is undergoing medical treatment, represented the Chamber at the Potlatch of Prog- ress in Seattle at which time Al- askan Way was dedicated. He re- ported Mrs. Garnick much improv- ed when he left Seattle. Taylor Endorsed During its brief business session, | Your ou ~, A Here’s a money- whiskey! Don’t m is better than ever! Copyight 1988, Notioaal Disifers Products Co IMr, | Mz srwdur BOURBON WHISKEY he iber endorsed Chief En- |gineer Tke P. Taylor of the Alaska Road Comm on for a place on the International Highway Commis- ion when that commission is chos- President Roosevelt. Donald locator for the A. R. as the “father of Highway,” has been recommended by the Fair- banks Chamber and several other groups for a place on the commis- en by MacDonald, and known the International sion. John W. Jones, Chairman of the committee on the Dart mail route, |reported that Capt Einar Haugen, !who is operating the service, had {obtained 80 signers to a petition |circulated along the Dart route, lasking a change to the former service of leaving here on Wednes- day instead of Saturday as the new contract calls for. The petition has been sent to the Postoffice Depart- asking for the change and Jone reported that it was Haugen's intention to follow ment pt lit up in person unless action was forthcoming on the petition. He aid there was general dissatisfac- tion with the present schedule. ———————— |PRISONERS CLEANING UP DOUGLAS BEACH| Through cooperation of the U. 8 I's office and the Forest Service a crew of prisoners from the Federal Jail is at work clean- up the Treadwell beach at glas. The crew under the super- vision of Deputy Marshal William Markle started work yesterday. The Forest Service is providing tools ing land transportation for use of the prisoners, Thom Gaety Augle GREAT WHISKEY BUY! ing, palate-pleasing this JUMBO “ VALUE, men! Windsor’s price is the Towest it’s ever been. And its guality cutive Officas, New York City THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRh, THURbDAY AUGUST 11, M[;NAMEE KING Sorflng Pumhv That Are Tart - OF SWATTERS, | CHANNEL LOOP Moose and Hks Split Top| | Ten Places on List— Haglund Loses Crown Channel 1938 | King 'of &astinean | League batters for the regular baseball season is Joe hefty young power-hitter, | outfielder and general utility man son average of 436 gives him a wide | edge over the next regular perfor- mer on the list, Earl Forsythe, Elks captain, who his 8387. Two players’ names come before McNamee's on the final list of averages for the season, Odell and Shaw, but both of thém played in only one game ind cannot be considéred for slugging crown. Hilding Haglund, last champ and McNamee's ifter a rapid climb in mid-season, fell by the wayside during the last weeks of the season and finished just within the charmed clrcle of three-hundréd hitters. Moose {first-sacker, Joe Snow fin- ished in third spot when his team- mate Bob Kimball also failed to maintain the pace in the last games. Kimball fell back two places to finish behind Tom Martin, with an even one-out-of-three record. ‘The final averages of the 56 league performers shows the Moose and Elk squads each with five three- hundred hitters and the Islanders with hone. The Moose, however, have the edge in that their top cloutsmén are all regulars, while the EIkS have ing their list “one-gamers” lead- McNamee, | catcher, | | for the Moose filne. McNamee's sea- | s s the | season’s | teammate, | | 1 Fit, lime ana femon berry juice may be used in place o By MRS. ALEXANDER GEORGE AP Feature Service Writer Don't throw away those left from cans ef fruit. You can us juice them in your summer thirsi- quencher: Every smart summer hostes on the lookout for new and tangy fruit-juice combinations. For will fill the punch bowl with the time and again in thg next m results. d J Empire classifieds pay. Final hitting averages for the| yeeks. 1938 season are: What juices make the best sum- Player Team ABR H Pct.|mer drinks? There are many. Somc *Odell E 3 0 3 1000/may be served alone, sweetencd a Bhaw E 2 1 1 .500|pit and thoroughly chilled. Other McNamee M 39 18 17 436|are delicious in combinations. Ap-| Forsythe E 62 12 24 .387|ple, apricot, grape, loganberry, cur- Snow M 69 24 26 .377|rant, raspberry, strawberry, pine- *Martin M 47 5 16 .340!apple, grapefruit—those are a few *Russell E 21 3 7 333 The Tart Touch Kimbal M 43 8 14 32| Bear in mind that tart drinks MMacSpadden E 57 11 18 316|are the best thirst-satistiers. Haglund M 40 14 12 300{ Try this Fruit Chill in your punch Turner D 43 6 12 .293!powl: Boll together for two minutes *McAlister E 24 3 7 .292)two cups of granulated sugar. and Addleman E 60 4 17 .283!two cups of boiling water. Cool. Add| *Abramson E 39 8 11 .282)two cups of orange juice, one cup of | Grant D 50 8 14 .280| pineapple juice, one cup of straw-| *Blake M 43 6 12 .279|berry juice and half a cup of lemon | Manning D 62 4 17 274 juice. Chill until serving time. Then | Robertson E 12 4 3 .250| combine with two quarts of iced| ‘Werner M 48 11 12 250 water and two quarts of un]lml‘ Foster E 59 11 14 .237)ginger ale. Quickly pour into a "““"anll\ J. Schmitz M 50 9 11 .220|which contains a large cake of ice *Rodgers D 19 3 4 211, Have you ever made a smagh? Any Bonner D 59 6 12 .203 , frozen fruit juice added to any fruit-| Jensen D 59 8 12 .203 |ade—with or without ginger ale— Andrews D 40 2 8 200 [ may be called a smash *Balog D 15 0 3 200 A Smash Hint *Fultz M 5 0 1 200 Here's one recipe you can vary| *Palmer D 11 3 2 .82to include any of your fuvul'mh *F. Schmitz .M 44 4 8 .182, combinations: Lawson E 68 4 12 177 Boil together for two minutes| *Pinkley E 20 2 5 .172|two cups of granulated sugar and| Converse M # 1 8 17p|two cups of bolling water. Cool. Gray E 25 3 4 .160/Add two cups of pineapple juice,| Ellensberg E 19 4 3 .58 one cup of apricot juice, one cup| Roller D 60 8 11 .157{0f orange juice and a third of a Grummett M 39 7 6 .s4jcup of lemon juice. Pour into a Niemi D 52 5 8 .54, tray in the mechanical refrigera- O M 12 4 2 .143|tor (or into a regular freezer) and *Bradley E 15 0 2 133 let stand until mushy. Then quickly Erskine D 60 7 8 .33)|add to two cups of iced water and| *McVey E 27 4 3 .11 tWo quarts of ginger ale Hagerup E 33 1 3 091 Serve your smash in tall glasses Smith M 28 1 2 .of7 Which have been half filled with| *C.M'Spadden M 18 0 1 056 | chopped ice. Top each glass with *Fisher E 0 0 0 .o mint leaves, red cherries and small *Bretz e i R _m'balh of pineapple or apricot sher- *Hautala E 1 0 0 .00 b;t. You'll have a regal heat- +Her) chaser. Y 411 pric Fruity Ice Cabes Barner . E 4 0 0 .00 Have you ever thought of add- Koski E 4 0 0 ‘m‘ing blackberry cubes to plain old- "Nowell E 5 1 0 4mwfas:hianed femonade? They are de- | Boyd D 6 0 0 .ooo tctous and are very easy to freeze. Notsoh D 7 1 0 lopo|Allyou have to do is mix two cups “Woods o %y p | of berries with one cup of water 3 and half a cup of sugar. Boil for Bl M 9 0 0 000|s. minute Cool and strain. Then firtndipsien record unchignged sAmce pour the juice into a refrigerator last. publication of averages, Aug- |tray and freeze it. When you get ek §. 2 tiréd of Blackberry cubes try cherry, AR O] grape, blueberry or apricot cubes. Try The Empire. crassifieds for|’And experiment with them in other -drmks than lemonade. ' Small fruits, berries and diced fruits—frozen—give ‘a dainty flavor when used to garnish punches. Frozen ginger ale broken into par- ticles is also a delicious addition to punch or chilled drinks served in individual glasses. HOLZHEIMER TELLS OF SITKA SHOOTING Jermone J. Armstrong, groller, {has been bound over to the grand |jury on a charge of first degree | murder following a hearing om the case in Sitka, according to District Attorney William A. Holzheimer who has returned to his office_here after investigation of the tragedy. ! Peter Allard, who Armstrong is| charged with killing, was shot in | the back of the neck with a‘ 30-30 | rifle at close range, the bullet com-! ing ot the side of the jaw, Judge! | Holzheimer said, during a seufffe aboard the trolling boat Fagle at Kaliana Bay, near Sitka, last Sun- ‘day. According to the account, the! District Attorney said, Charley Wel- |come and Allard were scuffling on! | the boat and Allard had Welcome ' “down ‘on his back. Armstrong 1§ al- | leged to have fired the rifle from the cabin door a few feet away. Weicome and Armstrong, he saidl ‘were partners. — e juices ‘are” combined in a re f the lime juice for brighter col GRANDPAPAS NOW TAKING UP DANCING Men Are Noh;viShowing Op- posite Sex They Are Keeping in Trim By GEORGE TUCKER NEW YORK, Aug. 111 was in one of those Latin supper clubs, having a late coffee, when this man came in. He was about fifty though he was gray, he was 1 and lean, and there was no s of dissipation about his face or eyes whatever. His whole manner seem- ed assured and easy. He came in about 2 am. and with him was a woman who may have been 25 or 45—I couldn't tell and it doesnt matter anyway. He held her chair for her and gave her a cigarette and they talked pleas- ¢ a few minutes and ordered supper And all the while, orchestra was playing tangos. Very good rumbas and tangos. They caught at your feet and made you want to be out there remember, an rumbas and dancing. They must have caught at her feet, too, for presently she {said: “Well have one now, yes, before the waiter gets back I |could hear her very distinctly be- cause their table was next to mine, |{and in a nightclub this means that I was practically sitting in her lap. “Of course,” he agreed, and they got up and danced. They danced beautifully. You would expect this in the woman, but this man was a superb dancer. He did nothing that drew attention to himself, other than the fact that he danced so perfectly that most of the others suffered by comparison. He danced as ily as you lift a cigarette to your lips. If the music said rumba, he knew what to do. If it said tango, he was all right, too. T like to see that in a man. I like Democratic HENRY RODEN, Juneau fieptesenling Professional and Business Men JAMES V. DAVIS, Juneau Operators. ‘A. J. (Tonty) DIMOND shing Pensacola Punch. 938 Will Help quuulmo a H eat W/m*v Sweetencd Fasp- | to see a man, particularly an older man, who knows what to do when the time comes to do it. Most men nl‘ that age give themselves over wn a hybrid form of toddle when | they dance, no matter what the music calls for. Waltz or tango, it makes no difference to them. And you know they don't enjoy it. Af- ter a couple of rounds you can tell by the expression on their faces that they wish they were home or at least back at the table. If all the men in New learned to dance correctly I really believe that within a year 40,000 ) chiropodists would be destitute. | g { And yet the dance is catching on in New York. Among men, I mean. More and more you see older men {who handle themselves as ade- quately as their younger brothers. I don't mean fossils and sugar daddies trying to cheat the grave. !I mean average business men who like {o keep, fit even though they are fifty As a matter of fact, many of them, secretly or otherwise, take instruction at the numerous dance chools in New York. There are scores of them and their instruc- tion halls are filled most of the time. I know one man, a naval of- ficer, who s he belongs to a country club where everybody takes lessons one night a week. And the older members tango and rumba and waltz as well as their sons and | daughters. And so I say hoorah to the papas and grandpapas who are able to tell three-quarter time from the shag. It certainly makes this world better to look upon. For nothing is as graceful as a dance well done, and by the same token nothing can | be so awkward or unlovely as the off-balance trundling of a man be- wildered and lost at sea. OMERA FUNERAL IS HELD TODAY Ike Omera, who passed Funeral services ror 86-year-old pioneer away Monday morning at the St. Ann’s Hospital, were held in the Catholic Church of Nativity this morning. Interment was in the Catholic| plot of the Evergreen Cemetery. | Repiesentinq Small JOHN PR Represehimg the Miners. VOTE IT STRA!GH'I‘ (Paid Advertlsment) A. P. WALKER, Craig Representmg F:shermen. J.P. ANDERSON, Juneau Representing Agriculture and Horticulture. McCORMICK, Juaeau U. 8. DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE, WEATHER BUREAU THE WEATHER (By the U. 8. Weather Bureau) Forecast for Juneau and v, begin 11: Rain tonight and Friday; modera uthe: Weather forecast for Southeast Alacka moderafe southerly winds, ¢ Forecast of winds along th g at 3 vy winds. Rain tonight and Friday; cept moderate to fresh over Lynn Canal. Coast of the Gulf of Alaska; Moderate :30 pm., Aug. to fresh southerly winds tonight and Friday from Dixon Entrance to Cape Hinc k LOCAL DATA Tiae Barometer Temp I“umidity Wind Velocity Weathes 3:30 pm. yest'y 30.05 72 38 w 12 Clear 3:30 A.m. today 30.12 52 86 w 2 Noon today 30.11 60 ki S 5 RADIO REPORTS | TODAY Max. temp. | Lowest 4am. 4am. Precip 4am Station last 24 hours | temp. temp. veloclty 24 hvs. Weather Anchorage 65 52 - - - Barrow 43 10 40 4 0 Nome 54 52 " 19 35 Bethel 54 50 2 30 3 Fairbanks 64 | 54 73 -4 Clear ) Dawson 82 | 56 56 0 Cloudy St. Paul b0 43 14 K Clondy Dutch Harbor 66 54 10 16 Pt.Cldy Kodiak 58 54 4 X Cloudy Cordova 60 52 4 0 Cloudy * Juncau 3 52 2 0 Clear Sitk: 64 | - — [ Ketchikan 62 | 5 4 0 Cloudy Prince Rupert 56 | 50 4 02 Cloudy Edmonton 4 50 4 0 Pt. Cldy Seattle 7% 58 6 0 Cloudy Portland 8 | 60 4 [ Cloudy San Francisco 66 | 56 4 0 Clear New York 82 | 74 16 121 Cloudy Washington 90 | 76 4 88 Cloudy WEATHER CONDITIONS AT 8 AM. TODAY Seattle (airport), cloudy, temperature, 58; Blaine, cloudy, 54; Vic- toria, cloudy, 53; Alert Bay, cloudy, 49; Bull Harbor, raining, 54; Triple Island, raining; Langara lsland, missing; Prince Rupert, clou- dy, 53; Ketchikan, cloudy, 54; Craig, cloudy, 58; Wrangell, clear, Petersburg, clear, 64; Sitka, cloudy, 56, Hoonas; c!omh. Hawk Inlet, raining, 56; Port Althorp, raining: Radioville, misting, 54; Jlllh‘.lll, cloudy, 55; Skagway, cloudy, 57; Haines, cloudy; Yakutat, foggy, 56; Cape Hinchinbrook, raining, 52; Cape St. Elias, raining, 54; Cordova, raining, 51; Chitina, cloudy, 54; McCarthy, cloud 0; Anchorage, mist- ng, 55; Portage, cloudy, 53; Fairbanks, raining, 55; Nenana, cloudy. 56; Hot Springs, raining, 55; Tanana, cloudy, 57; Ruby, raining, ! Nulato, raining, 50; Kaltag, raining. 52; Bethel, raining, 50; Platinum, foggy; Golovin, raining, 52; Solomon, raining, 54; Council, raining, 53; Nome, raining, 51. Juneau, Aug. 12.—Sunrise, 4:13 a.m.; sunset, 7:55 p.m. WEATHER SYNOPSIS High barometric pressure prevailed this morning from Kodiak and Cordova southward over the Gulf of Alaska to latitude 35 degrees, the crest being 30.58 inches over the Pacific Ocean at latitude 44 de- grees and longitude 150 degrees. Low pressure g vailed over the Aleu- tian Islands, the Bering Sea, and the northwestern portion of Alaska, the storm area being centered over the Bering Strait, the lowest re- ported pressure being 29.44 inches. This general pressure distribution has been attended today by precipitation over most of Alaska, except in the vicinity of Petersburg and Wrangell where clear weather was re- ported. RADIO CLUB T Plane Crashes, MEET TONIGHT 12 Are Killed All mcmbfls are urged to be DEBRECEN, Hungary, Aug. 11.— present for the meeting of the Twelve persons were Kkilled, the Juneau Radio Club this evening at bodies burned beyond recognition, 8 o'clock at the home of Stacey in the crash of a three-motored Norman, on Fifth Street. Hungarian passenger plane near Regular, and important, business here early th morning. matters are to be discussed at to- S S SR night’s meeting of the club. Georgia grows about twice as many acres of velvet beans as any ntlmr state. No More Fleas On Cat or Dog! KITCHEN SHOWER IS " GIVEN MRS. HENNING Mrs. Robert Henning was hon- lored last evening with a kitchen ! shower at the Gold Belt Avenue home of Miss Sybil Godfrey. The evening was spent in sewing i tder Here's & quick, sure, easy wa, dish towels, each guest embroider- | o1 " e ficas. . Simply spr nkle ing an original design on one the powder lightly through the fur. corner, with Mrs. Zalmain Gross Then watch the fleas roll off ! BUHACH is safe, cheap, odorless— keeps pets healthier and free from fleas. In Handy Sifter Cans 25¢ up at Drug, winning the prize for the best designed towel. Guests for the evening included Mrs. Gordon Ferguson, Mrs. Zal- |main Gross, Mrs. W. E. Gerwels, |Miss Louise Gerwels, and Miss Mary Wildes. TERRITORIAL and DIVISIONAL' TICKET Grocery, Seed Stores and Pet 8ho RUH/\CH Oscar 6. Olson Candidate for Re-election as TERRITORIAL TREASURER Election Sept. 13, 1938 SEPT. 13TH

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