Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, TUESDAY, AUGUST 30, 1938. > - o IFRA ls SEN D'N GJ U. S. DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE, WEATHER BUREAU | ] MOD E of he MOM E NT ‘ ; T THE WEATHER (By the U. S. Weather Bureau) by Adelmde Kerr MAN Tu ALASKA Forecast for Juneau and vi ¥, beginning at 3:30 pm.,, Aug. 30: 2 y senerally fair tonight and Wednesday; gentle to moderate variable ! vinds, mostly westerly eather forecast for Southeast Alaska: Generally fair tonight and )y To earn credit in chic this i 4 R R Wl‘flll_"\-\fli\.\\" H'i‘l‘d_l"dl" I”""“’:‘::’O‘v\:l:inblrv‘;:m;i‘\lznn;ll,‘v' w:(w:vrlv v St S g g P | " g Fores of winds along the Coast of e Gulf of Alasi Modérate ing policign flas peec Dimond Reports REPreseni- eierty wins tonight and Woanesday fren e toseis: Modérate i i T e tative of Federal Agency | Hinchinbrook s designed w s sun- i : urst pleats. It steps out with Lea\rlng Seattle Today LOCAL DATA jacket of beige and brown | Time Barometer Temp. Humidity Wind Velocity ~ Weather liagonal tweed and an elasti- (Continued from Pagr One) fRich DA, yessdl & 010 ‘)2 70 w 5 Cloudy gona o Ao i . 0 a.m. today ... 30.19 52 81 w 2 Cloudy cized wool cap 0! elly green, 2 Noon today 3013 66 54 w 10 Clear enlarged and ncw schools started. | RADIO REbaboa The Civilian Conservation Corps has | : i Y been a big help to the Territory | | TODAY | generally, and especially to the BEES. Setiot. Low:st 4a.m. 4a.m. Precip 4a.m native people, the Delegate said. A | Station la. l~4r;\n\n\ | hr';» temp. velocity 24 hrs. Weather large part of the CCC work h;\x‘:“{'l‘ ’ . ;‘9 | 5;0 16 4 0 Cloudy been done in Indian and Eskimo B"‘_r‘u"‘zafi-” i e 5 - 0 communities, he said. V;‘,:]T s b :.) :g 32 Lflgud\- Stop Japanese Fishing | g = g 5 2 : ain “We have been able to absolutely [Bethel # 1 = 5 S S stop Japanese fishing in Bn&'nl‘D“‘:\:“ o & ;‘0 4 15 Pt.Cldy Bay,” Mr. Dimond said. ‘Tt may |DOWSR 1 44 s g 0?{ %‘mr . ] P rery 3% o be ain not seem likely a very seriou | Dutch Harbor 60 54 54 8 0 Cloudy problem to some, but it was threat-| 'S4 & ! 55 5 : o ening our great fishing industry B ; | : . 0 Cloudy g Cordova 54 48 48 0 .03 Cloudy and if it had not been stopped it p e 60 { 50 52 2 % Clouid: ¢ surely would have severly erippled | i 59 51 ry = 5 _—_ the industry, if not actually put it Kew'mkan 66 | 50 50 7, < Cloudy out of business in that region. ; Prince Rupért 64 P 50 3 Fy Cloudy Commenting further on the fish- | Ednionton 78 48 52 x o1 Clo d;/ ing industry, the Delegate reiterated | geie 7 56 8 i e 01‘:3} that he was in favor of abolishing | g/t~ 8 | 58 1 3 - Glta: all fish traps. | san Francisco 2 56 58 4 0 Clear ' : 9 Delegate Dimond expects to re- | poo o b P et [ 5 6 L > q ~0. Iz () main in the First Division until | g oo 86 64 0 % % S“I‘ . 1z lo after the election September 13 and = . 2 PTNE ® then will return to the Alaska Pen- WEATHER CONDITIONS AT 8 A.M. TODAY 4 insula and Bristol Bay areas in Seattle (airport) foggy, temperature, 49; Blaine, foggy, 44; lc- connection with problems to be|foria, clear49; Alert Bay, showers 54; Bull Harbor, raining, 53; F A L L D R E s S E s ironed out there. | Triple Island, partly cloudy; Prince Rupert, foggy, 50; Ketchikan, B foggy, 55; Cralg, clear, 61; Wrangell, clear, 51; Petersburg, clear, 59; ; 3 3 Thi . € 3 ar, 59; Cape Spencer, cloudy, 52; Hoonah, cloudy; Hawk In- all diess wardrobe is here! This JRIL RPN vs cows | ks, clear, bl 3,”:,':' I I” bobvac i/ Y 0 i NOW WHEN HE BUYS COWS _ |iet cloudy, 54; Hood Bay, clear, 5¢; Port Althorp, cloudy; Radioville, R e ST llic crepes, sheér wobk s HE LEAVES CASH AT HOME| o104y 60; Skagway, cloudy, 49; Haines, cloudy; Yakutat, cloudy, 53: | smart silks, metallic _‘“Q‘ ) 'h'( h k;‘ Cape St. Elias, cloudy, 53; Cape Hinchinbrook, partly cloudy, 54; Cor- i - all quuiity frocks. New high necks, ROBERT LEE, Tex, Aug. 30.—|dova, raining, 69; Chitina, clear, 48; Anchorage, cloudy, 5¢; Portage, shirred bodice lim skirts! Black, l_'l('l: ; d. H. Smith, veteran catfle buyer, | cloudy, 51; Hot Springs, raining, 53. Fairbanks, cloudy, 56; Ruby, o colors. SHOV L ARLY for best choice! 11 to 16 never takes $1,000 bills with “"“\rluudx 55; Nulato, raining, 50; Ksltag, raining, 52; Flat, raining, 50 any more when he sets out to buy | Crooked Creek, raining. 54; Stuyahok, raining, 48; McGrath, raining, _ —_— e cattle. 52; Bethel, misting, 52; Platinum, foggy; Golovin, cloudy, 51; Solo- g “I tried it once and offered it in|mon, cloudy, 48; Council, raining, 4); Nome, cloudy, 48. I B payment for animals I had con-| Juneau, August 31.—Sunrise, 4:55 am.; sunset, 7:04 p.m SN : tracted to buy but cattleman after | | B Rdl’! HREN“S co.’ lnc' 4 |cattleman turned it down,” says ; J i oMESKHER SYNDESIS The other is Mel Washburn. They will use it or not, as he sees fit. Smith. High barometric pressure contnued this morning over the Gulf I “Juneau’'s Leacing Department Store” can save many hours for you be- Information sent to a newspaper!” ge hag to dig a hole, bury the|0f Alaska, the northeastern portion of the North Pacific Ocean, and cause they know every body and should be brief and to the point. It|} i 214 then make his bed over it|Over the Pacific Northwest states, the crest being 3036 inches over everybody’s telephone number. Both may read something like this: “Mr when he camped at night. Even| the Pacific Ocean at latitude 50 degrees and longitude 154 degrees. I-EAN | have been newspapermen for years.|and Mrs. Johfi Smith of 100 Any|(pon ne rested uneasily for fear {Low pressure continued over the Bering Sea region and the Aleutian g | They know New Orleans as you Street are the parents of a son {someone would attempt to Tob him. | Islands, the lowest reported pressure bm?r, 2040 inches at latitude knm\ your own attic. They know|dJohn Jr. born Saturday, Septem- PR T 48 degrees and longitude 174 degres, This general pressure distri ’ n, as O. Henry knew New Yor ber 10, at the Greencastle Hospital ITALIAN PROV. bution has been attended by precipitation over western Alaska, y Harlem youngsters could learn a|in this city. The baby is the cou- TO HONOR ITS GREAT|partly cloudy to cloudy weather over the Tanana Valley and by gener- neat trick from the little Negro|ple's first child. Mrs. Smith is the ETYA ally fair weather from Southeast Alaska southward to the Puget Sound boys in the Quarter. You walk| former Jane Debutante, daughter GENOA, Aug. 30.—Liguria, h,,mp‘region. with mornmg !ogs over the Puget Sound region. N(‘W Y()l’k (olummst Fmds along and suddenly one of chmynf Mr. a.xvld Mra Ntzrman Debu-'pm\ml‘l, of Columbus, Mazzini and| S < leaps to his feet and begins to tap.| tante of 22 Holiday Stree Caaciimats sl devite’ the Sant} Easy Formality in i the lite boye wear tape on| Ahough local etstom ome- |gycm Sepiembar 3 to Oclober 3 ol 4 (heir shoes. And they tap in front| times decrees otherwise, it is gen- |, coitc or festivals honoring the Southern City of you, looking back over their| erally considered proper to send o oencs OF testvals hono AN i houlders, until you toss them a|birth announcement only to inti- 5 I Schilling Pe%rfl ives Y°; By GEORGE TUCKER coin. It’s another of the ®ountless| mate friends of the parents. A YOUNGS SAIL SOUTH the urmost in fine flavor an s g 4 | vignettes of New Orleans you never small gift is almost mandatory : : . Kok NEW ORLEANS, Aug. 30 Im- Stanley Young, chief of the pre RIAL an DIVISIONAL licic. flavors in meats, vegeta- 1 New Obbana: pecole dine wei it ment. It should be sent as s00n as )o.i.o1 Survey, Mrs. Young and their bles + J sices—adds zest to here. And they seem happy. I asked ' powb?:— and lmaij :p tnld]owod bY gaughter sailed on the Columbia | T l c K E I g any meas. Schilling Spices have Seymour Weiss how he explai y ue e ; o=t _“'«"bl‘"‘ mOther ic” morning, returning to their | bees the standard of compari- this, and he replied: “There isn't| “v“c']‘f(‘m‘ he two are able to receive j ;6 in washington, D. C. | son . .: 57 years! much outside capital here. The peo- | v 008 BT } - | ple own everything themselves. And In nr lr s INTERIOR TEACHERS 36 GPICES —19 EXTRACTS there’s oil all over Louisiana. New 3 GOING TO KLAWOCK | wells come in every da Hazard Meler Renee Showell and Florence Wil- | p | And people dress well here Bl"a f“r Bn s lson, Bureau of Indian Affairs { There is an easy formality to “"‘“ | teachers who have been &eaching: general picture. During summer in W | school in the Interior, arrived in| New York people go around in| v ; ’J\m(‘au by plane and boat yesterday | a By JOAN DURHAM L4 sport shirts and shirt sleeves, fre-| , B¥ SOAN DURHAM = | ay, enroute to Klawock for | quently without ties. They dress| Fiedy | Lhe commg school year ‘ SEE THE to suit their own moods. It isn't| flras azes | Pink is for girls and blue for boys like that in New Orleans. You dress| p,ct. 5o S 00 BHC T | comfortably, but you don't sit iyl e | MANY NEW y = e Still, if mother prefers pink for :;“‘C'O‘n:_" BIHNR e - (s her boy’s clothes or blue for her pPAUL, Kug. 90.—Shikrice has TAKE THE GREAT PATTERNS ON | "ative oricuncans are devotea #11% theres no reason she should en some more o the sucsswori [EYaiANTol-YeYURS to sea foods, of which there is al-| ¢ 7Y It There's no reason, either, | ut of forest fire fighting. DISPLAY IN ways an abundance. When the|lf She has furnished her nur This time it is the “fire danger 4 : = |in blue and the baby daughter ar- R S g % | shrimp fleet goes out each season it meter,” a pocket-sized paper en- § r ;i f fenitaries of | FiVeS: that she should not continue|velope, with four slotted Wwindows | ¥ as DiGsAR by higidigmitaries of\p o nosen color -scheme I BT idi o] | the church. Shrimp are very im-| Al L . g A and a number-covered sliding rulk.1 SHOWROOM | portant. here, thdy are a culture,| number of Qquestions arise| Invented by J. A. Mitchell of the| | . and you can i Beve to. be & when the kunw baby comes. An-|fpake States Forest Experiment sta- | | connoisseur until you know the "”""C("‘\“2,;'“:::“_;:!’8‘ ‘:”::_‘:’;‘ tion, it is intended as a yard stick 0'8““ | difference between river shrimp| H;vnm_u”\ -|w~d‘|-muunm~- by which forest rangers may deter- | 1 and lake shrimp. | 2 mine the fire hazard in their dis-| ment is the combination of the Mr.| tricts on any given day. { And— Candidate for | Crabs, both hardshell ana soft| * M card e ”"‘_l‘“"’)’ card| Used experimentally in national Anthony J. (Tony) Re-election as | shell, .are obtainable at all sea-| 0¢ MI &ne Mrs. card, which i) forests of the Lake States region, DIMOND ’ no part of |sons. And they are Su,.prib,m,‘.1"j‘"}}lfi hha_h!l\ I lflm'l than the|the meter has proved unusually ac- RS, ITO L vour home |mcxpen.slw In the west end, along | > e8¢ (hg[:i ‘.‘"d', bea ;5 "_"” curate and was found especially ¢f- For Delegcfle to IEBR RIA ; Ry the, Pontchartrain drive, are a|"®Mes of both parents in the cen-|fective in sections where large ress TREASURER important 'number of notable but small sea- \ e concentrations of men, as in the Conq CCC camps, were charged with protection of a large wooded area.’ It permitted the ranger in charge to conserve his manpower, utiliz-| |ing the men on other tasks on | “low-danger” days, and in sending {food diners where bathers emerge | | from the water and appease their | appeties over quantities of clams,| shrimp, oysters and other git's from the sea. This is one of the things to do—go swimming at night than floors They receive the hardest wearand are entit- For Territorial Senator: HENRY RODEN, Juneau i 13 jand follow with a seafood dinner. ONE FORM large crews at once to blazes re- OLYMPIAN led to the { AL nights the bars and supper| evsroey = |Ported under high-danger condi- pi_ k4 for 686 miles over the Cas | For Temlona] Representatives: finest care. | clubs in the exclusive hotels age al- 5 p 3 [ | ways crowded. The Roosevely bar ter, In the lower right-hand corner| Relative humidity, wind veloc- 2?»?3:23:":;3:33}&“5% JA“E vO D “s, Jmau is perhaps the most unusual in the|may be engraved the street, town iy, number of days since last rain- goo ™ /g pass through the foremost |city, It is brand new. It is pan- and state address fall, amount of rainfall, and condi- junpering, azchar, mining, ranch and 5 | COVER {meled entirely in African walnut.! On the baby's card, which js ton of vegetation (whether green, yacation regions. The Milwaukee Road | A P WALKER, craig i the wood coming from one gigantic| aboui half the size of the Mr. and| CUring or dead) are factors in opera- iqthe only road operating over its own &0 YOUR {tree. To this unusual setting Paul Mrs. card, usually appears the tion of the meter. rails all the way from the Pacific North | Ninas has lent four murals, the|baby’s name—in the center. In the! When the meter is set on these coast to Chicago. FLOOKS 'suh]cct matter of which are pecu- lower right corner is engraved the | factors, the resultant reading s WITH {liar to the Deep South. There is a|date of birth. No other informa-|the fire hazar(li’ “quotient.” These| A great train—the OLYMPIAN | ol ' soes S quotients number from one e }u)Lt.an picking scene. a market tion goes on ll{t card, e : i PR L e “heau scene, a river front scene, and a The two cards usually are tied amples of the meter’s i this splendid frain i 9 ‘proceusmn of tourists on a tour of together by a bow of white, blue ACCUTAcY, it was found during o SAuiPped, A the French Quarter. All are in bril-| or pink ribbon, so that both the| €St period that only 1.4 percent of | commodations in bedroom cars, stand- L . | | 3 ing | 4 o > |liant colors and set in graceful| parents’ and the baby's name show. “"“_ fires occurred on No. 1 days, \‘"= ::3,, mg,,: The Democratic Ticket Is Interested ARMSTRONG'S icurvefl. Many baby cards having blank While 465 percent occurred on No. tourist sleepers P » ‘ i spaces Into which the baby's name © days; and the average area burned and Luzury- | in the Welfare of Both Business It was here that Meigs Frost, and birth date may be written are W8S only acres on No. 3 days, lounge coaches. L l N o L E U M newspaperman and local char-/now on the market. Although their Put 1368 acres on days rated 6 and Appetizing | and Laer i | acter, introduced me to the El Dicy! use is frowned on by many of the T [ meals for 50¢. | = ' ] . g | tador. This is a cocktail based on. so-called socially correct, there is ————— | Also tray serv- | v o T E lT s T R A l c H T H Proved for economy, attractiveness, rum. The story goes that some no reason why they may not ke, WORKING ON RAILROAD | iceintouristcars | cenvenience — a thoroughly practieal triend of his returmed from Cuba used, since doing so often saves| ENDS HALF CENTURY and coaches. | ON SEPTEMBER 13 b : . very angry at the El Presidenw, time lost in putting through an [ ERN CITIES r floor-covering for every room. | which is the strongest of Cuban, engraving order. ST. PETERSBURG, Fla.. Aug. 30. LOW FARES TO EAST (Paid Advertisement) & | cocktails, So they staged a revolu-| Under ordinary circumstances an- —Bill Hogan has retired after work- | For further Inmuwtl;'fllnfif /| : |tion and invented the El Dictador, nouncements are usually sent from| I8 OD the railroad 48 years with-| =2earestSteamship r i > LA N . il out missing a single day. The 66- General Agent i Juneau-Young Hardware Co. | because a dictator, they explain,| Mr. and Mrs. to Mr and Mrs. - a R. E. Camson, g, A 2 | alone can kick the pants off a presi- For the Newspaper year-old engineer has driven a lo-l White Bldg.. roun.hl- and Union St. There IS No Substltute for dent. 1t is perfectly proper for the par- COMotive the equivalent of 26 Wash, L3 times around the world and never had an accident in which anyone ,flg was killed. Meighs Frost is one of two “insti- ents of the new baby to send an tutions” here that visiting scribes announcement to the society editor will do well to communicate with.!of the local newspaper. The editor| MILWAUKEE Roap 1 Newspaper Advertisin g