The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, August 22, 1938, Page 2

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2 THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, MONDAY, AUGUST 22, 1938 r I - I I , k | u. 8. DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE, WEATHER BUREAU - U ’s a L«mg, Long Trail to Hankow | | - | THE WEATHER 4. FES ADVANTAGE (By tke U. 8. veather Bureau) | Forecast for Juneau and ¥, beginning at 3:30 p.m., Aug. 22: l ' JRIVE Lt 0 HOFE | Generally fair tonight and. Tuesday; light to moderate westerly winds. IQAWBERRY P.!. LKED [ SHUCHENG Weather forecast for Southeast Alaska: Generally fair tonight and | Tuesday; light to moderate westerly winds. | | Forecast of winds along the Const of the Gulf of Alaska: Moderate i . 4 s | westerly winds tonight and Tuesday from Dixon Entrance to Cape k.xtensive bur\'v_\‘ of Region Hinchinbrook. lohv sl LOCAL DATA Made l’)_O”“ ials on Tie Barometer Temp. Lumidity Wind Veloclty ~Weathes isit Here ‘J 30 pm. yest'y .. 3025 ~ 170 29 w 7 pt.cldy “'fs % 3/ 3:30 am. today ... 3023 48 86 sW 1 Clear (Continued from Pagpr Ope) | Noon today 30.23 64 54 8 5 Clear flew over 800 miles of the proposed gD RLPOETS-‘-ODAY International Highway near Juneau | Msix. temp. | Lowst 4am. 4am, Preclp. 4am and may‘y. pvigigsore of-the: piie | Station 1ast24 hours I temp. temp. velocity 24 hrs. Weather posed route on the way south, He Atka L3t ‘ 46 48 4 0 Clear ric P T TR 4 ag 5 | 4 o 2 i T a e of the major problems of build- \5/ (e 1O NORTHERN KIANGS! || | Nome 52 48 48 20 29 Lt.Rain ; S A v 5 ¢ the highway, however, the route | 1| ROUTE FORDRIVETO BREAK || | ethel 56 B 5o aEE EC Glowig ok { A jcable | e rowmucumo T Fairbanks 58 i 34 54 4 03 LtRain ¥ & ok » wator Robert R. Reynolds of | iR pase Dawson 68 i 46 46 6 0 Cloudy i e A v B @ R North Carolina, who has been as [ | st Paul 52 | % = i A i ) &3 o '4 : north as Point Barrow and west | | | | Dutch Harbor 62 48 50 4 2 LtRain | ; he tip of Siberia as well as. the | A p Kodiak 68 5 50 4 02 Clear | s ~ Pribilof Islands, is also going south | & Cordova 5 4, ALL REMAINING COATS and SUITS § S0 Sy b H e ! || Saneh 7 o |aud 3 R ks in the Territory has been 4 Sitka 65 45 - — i : & connection with national defense, .valn""}o- »D,r,",.; four 0 10 20304050 | o 0 0 50 50 4 g Clear | 4 Hags_Prfige istol Bay Japanese fishing prob- L — 4 NI CE Prince Rupert ... 68 48 48 0 0 Clear ¢ nd other interests, he said. o —_— ; 1 Edmonton 58 26 36 4 a7 Clear = R DRESSES Army plane tied up at the| Although it's only about 600 miles trom i ts Hankow the Japanese have averaged only | geqiie pod | s e 0 Cloudy "5 ONE GROUP 1938 SUMMER DRESSES Pan American Airways float here| a littie more than a mile a day in t i r way toward Chiang Kai-She | Portiand 72 | 50 50 4 0 Clear P& when the southbound baby| capital—and they're not there by a hund ¥ the impertant stages of the ad- |San Francisco .. 60 | 56 58 6 0 Cloudy : C table for | T 5 Y pper ived it was delayed some | vance, which was (omp.u itively easy to Nanking. ¢ has been since June.—AP Photo. | New York 84 | 68 70 8 0 Clear ime coming to the float. —_—— - — - - —— | Washington _ 90 | 68 72 4 0 Clear i 5 [come if the President will I w B’K new develop ment of the squir WEATHFR CONDITIONS AT 8 AM. TODAY $3 95 UNABLE TO REACH L il ‘also ‘supgest, thit Rar i NEEB a o fu n the north, .and much smaller Seattle (airport), partly cloudy, temperature, 50; Blaine, cloudy, 46: i L] ANCHORA BECAU velt make ““\ trip. R»..)u- t ound squirrels first | Victoria, partly cloudy, 51; Estevan, “partly cloudy, 52; Alert Bay, ! s u‘!\"’\:‘] \:)\ RSE :"\\': v Make Careful Inguiry P M fc aska in 1877, partly cloudy, 48; Bull Harbor, clear, 51; Prince Rupert, clear, 49; Tri- et "ATRBANKS s, Aup. B Al it N s Yo e car F 1 Aq e TN ple Island, clear; Ketchikan, partly cloudy, 52; Craig, clear, 62; Wran- ONE GROUP DRESSES Afler encountering & Gulnm;’]a-\x‘m, Suitanor ovialie ahd . ”P FQCL [ ek y |+ i | gell, clea Petersburg, clear, 57; Sitka, clear, g53 Cape Spencar = ! hour headwind of extremely chopby | ,eticials here regarding th P | | clear, 54; Hawk Inlet, clear, 56; Tenakee, clear, 58; Port Althorp, clea: alue 525.( conditions and unfavorable weath-| T8l Tere FeERrding thei reeds % .fi LINne - STOCK QUOTATIONS, |t {556 nay cicaiB¥; Radtbpllis, s ment: < hooar b o Skagway, "1 « er at Broad Pass, the United States| city of Fairbanks, pinned { i § i N0 U = clear, 46; Haines, clear; Tulsequah; clear, 58; Yakutat, partly cloudy, s e fi’% Army plane with the two Colonel|pory s conat e oy A bl NEW YORK, Aug. 22. — Closing | 53; Cape St. Elias, clear, 54; Cordova, clear, 68; Chitina, clear, 48: Me- " ACRY &HC? o ? johr and party aboard, Te-|i,n¢on all members of the Guotation of Alaska Juneau mine| Carthy, clear, 42; Anchorage, raining, 55; Portage, cloudy; Fairbanks, - turned to Fairbanks Sunday fore- | senator llee Out ’ { 4 tock today is 10%, American Can |cloudy, 58; Ruby, cloudy, 50; Nulat>, partly cloudy, 38; Kaltag, cloudy. } noon, ned about two hours, re- |\ yniteq Siates Senator Robert ®.|Predatory iimal Chief Re-!1031, can Light and po‘m‘ i McGrath, cloudy, 54; Flat, raining, 47; Crooked Creek, cloudy, 52; ! - - fueled @ took off from here nl‘m,‘.“”“hv of North Caroli left \\v ' f Anaconda 34, Bethlehem Steel ¢lu\ahuk cloudy, 46; Bethel, cloudy, 52; Platinum, cloudy; Nome rain- 11:05 for Juneau here by PAA plane for Juneau and | POILS d Life Stan ling |5 Commonwealth and Southern | ing, B M B&"flf‘b}@ Ffic Col. Louis Johnson, Assistant Sec-| wi o6 south aboard the Afr 1ne n [3}~ 1%, Curtiss Wright 5%, General J\“wau‘ Aug. 23—Sunrise, 4:38 a.m.; sunset, 7:26 p.m. » c‘ wt’! ° retary of War, sald he was sorry he| gyroot to geattle. He ed 1 %, International Harvest- WEATHER SYNOPSIS P i ST At Leading Department Storet could not visit. Anchorage but WOuld| pereatter he is a-Senator from Al- ’ Pair- | €F 57', Kennecott 40%, New York| The storm area that was tentered over the ‘# ward Peninsula y ‘. o au £ fly south from Juneau laska as well as North Ca & i wy in Central 18%, Safeway Stores 19,|terday morning has moved northeastward and was centered this morn- ipb A mve—————————f | Both Col. Johnson of the War De-| " mpo firt air express from iair- 3 % ; pif Fouthern Pacific 18%, United States | Ing a short distance northeast of Barrow, the lowest reported pressnre f and Col. J. Mo,mm ‘]:’h”'\hnnk, for the States left F o y it : el 58 Pounds $4.88, Bremner |being 2948 inches at Barrow. This storm area has been attended by FlTZ GZE I{ALD HOPFS \ y th Assi 4 ant §r»r» :n\ nr' C 2 Sunday on the PAA elec! vhere 5 5 ! 5 asked 2, no bids. rainy weather over most of the interior, western, and northern portions . ’ ver doing merce, agreed that airports a A= [ it will connect with the PAA Alas's 4 3 = |of Alaska, with strong winds over the northern Bering Sea and the TO COMPLETE SURVE cAities, including communications | Gipbe: for Seattle Monday morn- o1l oh E ¢ DOW, JONE northwest coastal regions of Alaska, High barometric pressure pre- & 2 ADMIRALTY ISLAN > nd we .‘1:\,; ‘:.:‘WM are the major |ing and is expected to reac 5 v The followir Dow, | Vailed over the Aleutian Islands and from the Tanana aVlley southward =" \ I I3L! e R e o o | Monday night : ; Jones aferage over the Gulf of Alaska to the Pacific Northwest states, the crest E Both indicated they wil ) 'n‘m €| Authority to establish the air p z : | down rails being 30.60 inches over the Pacific Ocean at latitude 46 degrees and mappi d o a their best efforts in early realiza- press has been regeived here by ra- i 8 : /) utilities 19.69, up .10. | longitude 150 degrees. Fair weather prevailed throughout the Gulf of 1 ict ! !»’ and| tion for the same, dm Saturday. 2 7 ; % T Sy | Alaska_and southward to the Pacific Northwest states. N o by R. I Y n A Invitation to Roosevelt ZENT O A « th adir ‘ = : e Com- Lok AR RN ] And other SHANGHAl A P F A Sdiee nereace, BESSEY IS MEETING |an idea of the planned program so HELD IN JAIL o -t g ¥ ‘ ; ShACiRE My cent Iy cara Young said, and it w 1 : |that the National Resoudces Com-| Accused of causing a disturbance o e ik 5 ,,‘f”_"”(.(}f”“‘d\ Akt h SR o) WITH PLAN COUNCIL | mittee and the Northwest Planning | in a beer parlor, Harry McRobie was b : S e s e i ik & i i TH[S AFTERNOON Council may help in every way | being held in the Federal jail tod 5 ka, including Fairbanks, mext May h € | that they can in bringing about an | on a charge of being drunk and dis- G i o b B Biken Be BieEnactad t6 viait Baakle, ce i ) eing H. . Bessey, Executive Secretary (orderly development. . | orderly. h H y | Louis Johnson said he will ¢ o of the Northwest Planning Council | Get a new General Electric Refrigerator and you can count on piling up thrifty savings month after moath, year after year. Don’t be “white.elephant” bargain that is 0st more in “keep” than it can save. misled b; very ¢ a apt Here is a genuine bargain in quelity! New 1938 G-E models climax a smashing 12-year record of ever increasing values—more con- Simple, Silenf, Souléd-i‘n'-g'e.l G-E THRIFT UNIT with Oil Cooling now gives quieter operation, faster freezing, less operating cost and longer life. Start a new save-wave in your kitchen now, and enjoy greater convenience than ever. venience, more ice cubes, more cold capacity for less current cost than ever. And the price makes it the best buy G-E ever offered. Easy terms too, on the G-E Payment Plan. SOLD ON EASY PAYMENT PLAN- MSKA ELECTRIC LIGHT 8 POWER Cd ]UNEAU —— ALASKA —— DOUGLAS SHARP SKIRMISH Thousand Japanese Soldiers Tackled by Chinese Guerillas SHANGHAI, Aug. 22 Fighting came ominously close to Shanghai today when 1000 Japanese soldier and a band of Chinese guerilla battled on the western edge ity .in. the Hanjao area where Shanghai's: big airdrome is located. e MARINE AR FLIES MEAT T0 POLARIS With a plane load of meat, Lon Cope took off with a Marine Airways Polaris-Taku. Yesterday, Cope went in the morning with gerald and Harry Wat aerial photography job. Yesterday afternoon Cope flew to Polaris-Taku with C. R, and L. W. Carver, bringing in J. Dalzell. Pilot Alex Holden went out in the Fairchild yesterday with' Ray Keel- ing to Hoonah, M. Masonovich to Tenakee, Mrs. Ballinger, Mary and Buddy Ballinger to Chichagof, bring- ing in Jim Boyle from Tenakee, Arthur Davis and Nick Lawrence. Perfect, and How; That's the Weather And talk about the weather. Sat- urday was not such a bad day at all. Sunday was a wow from sun up to sun down. People everywhere enjoyed it, even to swimming Auk Bay, Lena Beach and the ol’ | holes out the highway. And today well it is almost like vesterday nobody is klckmp, California I |not a thing on Juneau yesterday nor today. But cross your fingers, it might “sprinkle” tomorrow. Pilot morning plane for out at 8:30 ierald Fitz- on an on e T | o — =3 | HOSPITAL NoTEs | Ed Sager, a medical patient .n St | Ann’s Hospital, was dismissed yes- | terday afternoon Hans Lundburg, a surgical pati at St. Ann's Hospital, left yesterd afternoon, | Mrs. Fred Nagle was dismissed from St. Ann's Hospital yesterday afternoon. Mrs. Tom Jensen, of Douglas, was it y admitted to St. Ann's Hospital yes terday for medical care, of the ¢ Watson, | lly is tanc up and H])'(‘s?nldll\? of the National | _ TS o - n shape found he Resources Committee, returned to} haid a ¢ r to Al Juneau on the Baranof this morn- | . he Ala me Com and this afternoon went into ¥ - 2 = he' cooperative spi ference with the Alaska Plan- 4 cent and trapping progr being Council relative to the pro- - visited m for the Territory. As Mr. Bes- These men in the game com- sey expects to sail on the Aloull'\u} ion of strain of ground which “I eem to be «jts the OLYMPIA BREWING CO., OLYMPIA, WASH., U.S.A. B e - e “Alaska” by Les D. Henderson‘ Try an Empire ad. TERRITORIAL and DIVISIONAL TICKET job, of he tomorrow morning for the south, a | the special meeting of the members of along the ecouncil in the city was ca]led‘ up this afternoon in the Governor’s| office. | The official was recently over the | collec- Interior and patricularly the Kenai pelis, one Peninsula in the Westward, his| es (o be mission being, he explained, to gef work: imal chief rrel Wa.ter Olympla Dcarc Olson Candidate for Re-election as TERRITORIAL TREASURER Anthony J. (Tony) DIMOND For Delegate to Congress For Territorial Senaior' HENRY RODER, Juneau For Territorial ‘Representatives: JAMES V. DAVIS, Jllliéali A. P. WALKER, Craig J. P. ANDERSON Juneau Jm HcCURHICK, Juneau The Democtatic Ticket Is Ipterested in the Welfare of Both Business and Labor VOTE IT STRAIGHT! ON SEPTEMBER 13 (Paid Advertisement) 5 the Water”

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