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

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e L T, NEW FOR FALL & WINTER—1939 Michaels-Stern SUITS & OVERCOATS ol 1 . . . . [ . \ B ! H ? ' H - 1 ' . breasted m S opular patterns suit m SUITS FROM $29.50 to 39.50 OVERCOATS: $17.50 to 35.00 and B. M. BEHRENDS CO., Inc. ment Store” “juneau’s Leading Dep: % § [] stead of covering their sun-tanned <> U lands of exotic flowers, the mod- ern Balinese girls deck themselve American tourists and Ameri- can missionarie are o« idered to be respor for the chang ¥ S \ich are taking place. To pre- = Tourists Make Bali Costly'scrve peace and maintain native 2 4 : 4 ustoms, Dutch authorities are now "'Nfl“‘mb POII t efusing entry permits to all mis- Like It a Bit sionaries i 3 | e b DEN PASAR, Ball, Sept. 21. — wparadise no longer pays” is the] MAHONEY BRINGS verdiet of young and old Bali na- tives, They complain they cannot afford the new standards of living| now in vading amous island of PRISONERS HERE FROM WRANGELL the Netherla sast Indies whici After a trip Outside which topk legend and tourist pamphlets call| him as far south as California, U “Paradise Isle.” S. Marshal William T. Mahoney re- The lure of “Western store-|turned to Juneau on the North Sea glothes” has gripped F whose | The marshal took prisoners to the 4 14; natives heretofore dres only in|States and then took a few weel 2 multi-colored strip of cloth worn loosely about the hips. vacation, friends v in B ing relatives cka and other Cali- Long-tailed shirts — worn out- fornia cities. st | side the trousers—plus fo and| Returning, he brought Frank feora hats are the coveted ar-|Perez and John St. Martin from esuii ticles now in the wardrobe of A Wrangell to jail here. Perez has > young Balinese m: hout-town, |six months to serve for disorderly 2 while in all the larger villages|conduct and resisting arrest and 14 dancing girls and their mothers|st. Martin faces a charge of pass- P are beginning to wear hip-length |ing worthless checks he woe cotton jackets, - ind-the-world thousands of visit the island Balinese dar the tourists. and for When the large ro tour-boats, carrying American touri pach year, special arranged for these performanc given weekly Den Pasar, prineipal city the island, Balinese performer: wear traditional YOUNG STERLING’S ARM INJURY HEALING, SAYS MOTHER, ON RETURNING Mrs. Hawley Sterling returned to For those the the their costumes of gorgeously brocaded silks. on after spending ral Seattle with her struck by an. airplane Tanana Crossing this After an operation, ling’s arm is healing slowly, Mrs. Sterling said, and he may attend school this fall at the University of Washington. sevs wel in summer. young Ster- But when youths and themselves in the evening for dancing and songs, “store shirts,” plus fours and fedora hats are the fashionable attire for the man. In- a maidens group of Balinese gather by /MOBILIZATION OF DO CK WORKERS at Marseille (above) is the first th hen Briand mobilized railroad men to break up a railroad sirike. This el « .;.wm dw.:;eb.;‘l.l'\:us:ll“.{:,r :‘l:n;li‘nc dock workers unloading a ship. :l'he. » an estl- 3 & e mated 5,000 dock workers under military discipline st France's vital sea gateway. PLANE RACING DEATH ON WAY TO WRANGELL Alex Holden Flying Dr. W. W. Council to Strick- en Woman Alex Holden headed a Marine Airways seaplane for Wrangell this ifternoon with Dr. W. W. Council aboard, racing against possible leath to a Mrs. Andrew Prussi, who is suffering with a strangulated her- Council received the “hurry up” me e from the Stikine Gateway ty and chartered Holden for the trip. Rough water, strong wind, and poor visibility make the flight a }mrl»lmn but if no landing is pos- | sible near Wrangell, Dr. Council will be put ashore at Petersburg and atch the steamer Denali for Wran- ell. four hours away. Dr. Council intended to operate jand return immediately. TAX PLANNED FOR BACHELOR ISTANBUL, Turkey, Sept. 21.—A V heavy tax will be imposed on all bachelors in Turkey if a bill now |being prepared by the government |is adopted. The main object behind the bill, apart from prvoiding a new source of revenue, is to guard against a threatened decrease in the try’s population. | The birth rate in Turkey is show- 'ing a decline, particularly in Istan- !bul, where there has been a steady decrease in the number of weddings during the last five years. A recent census disclosed that 61 per cent of government officials and employees aged between twen- ty-five and forty years are bache- lors. ——eeo— Liechtenstein - Cans lts Army VADUZ, Liechtenstein, Sept. 21.— The private army of this principal- ity between Switzerland and Ger- many, has been dissolved, and a police force has been organized instead. The 14,000 Liechtenstein citizens will be protected henceforth by 20 policemen he government says dents feel safer without the army which was made up of 520 farm- hands. The new police force needed because more tourists are coming in. Farley Gets Shave On Sunday—*“Even if He Is a Democrat” | CHEYENNE, Wyo., Sept. 21 —Af- andlaple and accommodating (also a | Republican), William Hoshaw might have gone to jail because he shaved Jim Farley, the Democratic chief- tain, on a Sunday morning. William Jeffers, president.of the Union Pacific railroad, recently wir- ed ahead to Cheyenne and asked Hoshaw, a friend, to meet a west- bound train and give Farley a shave so that Farley could attend church here. All the barber shops were closed and a city ordinance | provided a fine of from $5 to $50 for any barber who opened up and went to work on Sunday. Nevertheless Hoshaw obliged. Next Juneau on the steamer Columbia |day a rival barber attempted to |file a complaint against Hoshaw son Joe .who was and accused him of violating the propeller at Sunday closing order. Police dis- couraged the rival. Hoshaw said, “It wasn’t a matter of business, merely a matter of ob- liging a friend who had a friend ,who needed a shave, even if he is a Democrat.” coun- | Six his Cfash I T 8ix St, Johnsbury, Vt., youths were killed in this crash, which literally i wrapped their car around a tree. The youths, bound for a dance at New- port, Vt., hurtled through a guard rail at a curve near Coventry. The car struck a tree and burst into flames, Courtesy Is No |ce Cake But It Helps tq Gool Off By JOAN DURHAM AP Feature Service Writer W hat Is Your News [. Q? By The AP Feature Service There's no slack season in good behavior. Sultry summer days should be an incentive to it, if anything, even though you don't feel up to par, There are a number of things we can do to help each keep comfortable 8 The hostess, for example, will Each question counts 20; each bt 0n 8. Mok CORF SARRE. DGR | | part of a two-part question, 10 ts remove {1 coats if she A score of 60 is fair, 80, good senses they would like to do so. If Answers on Page 73, he doesn't suggest it, it's perfe 3 . ly all right, under fairly inforr What party does he lead? mission to do so. Naturally, v 2. In winning this year's Ben- | shouldn't ask permission on h dix race, Jacqueline Cochran set asions as formal part a new transcontinental west- should tt the coat-re- east mark for women, True or vir t hold over when tem- false? 3. What former Tammany Hall chief was a witness in the trial of James J. Hines in New York? 4. Name the “Brain Truster” who resigned recently as assist- ant secretary of state. 5. What is Almaden, for which p to comfortable levels. 't Be a Lolles ¢ the hostess nor her guests e summer informality as an loll all over the place in tremely informal positions in ex- mely informal attire. Lolling kept anybody 1 At the resi- €00! fnsurgents and government Other hot-weather hints troops in Spain have been con- | 1y the ladies: Don't take off your testing, famous for? shoes in public. Buy comfortable 1 keep them on. And don't hose down below the skirt ine. To the men: It's all right to mop our brow when oc ion demands. But don't forget to have on hand supply of clean handkerchiefs if you're going to need them. A Word to the Young No Celebrating ~ On Anniversary VIENNA, July 29. — The Twenty fourth anniversary of Austria’s de- To the younger generation |claration of war against Serbia that watch your behavior in the park {divided Europe in the war in 1914, and on the beach. Reserve your passed completely ignored here. good-night kisses for priva = o A B TR To guests who visit in localities FAULKNER TO SPEAK, where there is lots of swimming: Don't sit in your wet bathing suit anywhere € on the beach or in places the water won't ruin. sl ex | CHAMBER TOMORROW An account of his trip abroad this. summer by H. L. Faulkner | will feature the meeting of the! Juneau Chamber of Commerce to- | ' morrow noon in Percy’s Cafe, ac- cording to President Charles W.| PARIS, Sept. 21. — French cafe Carter. FUR FARM BUILDING STARTS NEXT WEEK | jroprictors who encourage any e |gambling game that has to do with Work is. expected to start next 'buying drinks for the winners are Monday on the construction Of‘svl'lu\lnl_\' disturbed over administrative buildings at the ex- ithat the bottom has dropped out perimental fur farm near Pclvrh-‘or the French beard market. burg, according to J. G. Shepard,| Many a Frenchmanh used to play PWA Engineer-Inspector. The proj- |“tennis barbe” on the terraces of ect involves an expenditure of |cafes in Paris. They sat on the ter- $10000 and will include offices,|races and watched for men with laboratory and other facilities. [beards. The first man to reach a Work on the Hope school, a $12.- |ten score won, White heards count- i e { | 000 project, is expected to getied one, black beards two and red underway in about 10 days, h(‘}bhm'(l\ three. said. | 'The game has few followers now, | for beards are not as fashionable as they used to be. WILDES BACK FROM INSURANCE MEETING! Keith G. Wildes, Juneau insur-} ance man who has been in the eastt at a meeting of the Top Club of | the New York Life Insurance Com- pany, returned here on the North } Sea. Mr. Wildes was in the New | York offices of the company and, then met with the top 200 salesmen of which he is one. S e | VAGGE ARRE ED Charged with assault with a dan- gerous weapon, Mike Vagzi wa rested by deputy marshals day and later released on his own | recognizance pending hearing to- morrow morning in Commissioner’s court. Vagge is alleged to have at-| tacked Sam Kuntz with an axe dur-, ing trouble over a cabin Vagge owns, land Kuntz rents. | | Vegetables, | OR TURKEY DINNER . Try One of Our the fact EVERY SUNDAY EVENING—A SPECIAL CHICKEN BOARD BY THE MONTH AND SAVE——! ERWIN'S CAFE South Franklin Street THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, WEDNESDAY, SEPT. 21, 1938. SALMON BRINGS I7 GENTS TODAY IN KETCHIXAN Highest Price Since 1931 Paid for 2,000-Pound Cargo by San Juan KETCHIKAN i Salmon brought cday 1931 on this fish ange, when the San Juan Fish- 1d Packing Company paid 27 Alaska the highest Sept pri ex- since ¢ pound for large red king almon Small reds brou, 16 cent 13 ¢ s and cohoes 10 cent | white cargo that brought the high was that brought in by Y French” Allain. | B S | CHILDLEADS SYMPHONY LORIN MAAZEL Maa who others Idaho, — Lorin Hollywood boy what MOSCOW, ear-old by instinct t be taught,” hi already di- sted his first symphony orches- tra, knows three symphonies. and plays both piano and violin Lorin shows the same origi- nality that marked the playing of scha Heifetz, when I heard the sreat violinist play - as a. child pridigy.” explains Dr. Viadimir Bakaleinikoff, former conductor of the Cincinnati Symphony orches- tra orchestra professor at the Univ y of Tdaho summer school Five months ago the child was brought to Dr. Bakaleinikoff by his ents, Mr. and Mrs. Lincoln Maa- The father is a prominent tenor. pa At a recent university orchestra concert, curly-haired Lorin took the baton and directed the entire first movement of Schubert’s “Un- finished Symphony.” “Lorin knows by instinct many things which others must be taught and my only duty will be to guide ability he shows,” says Dr. the Bakaleinikoff. R et 1CE! RETURN Mr. and Mrs. T. Spicer arrived on the North Sea today from a sev- eral menths’ visit in the States. Mr. Spicer is an AJ employee and has been recuperating from a broken leg. INVERSON TO FAIRBANKS L. E. Iverson, of the Forest Serv- ice fiscal office, left for Fairbanks on the PAA plane today, expecting to be gone about a week on fiscal matte: e HERE AND GONE 0. S. Sullivan, Internal Reve- nue Bureau Officer, arrived on the Columbia from Seattle and left soon after aboard the PAA Electra for Fairbanks. | f;_— ORTHOPEDIC || SHOE SPECIALIST |/ FOOT EXAMINATIONS Arch Supports—Callous Pads—Foot Comforts Made to individual measurements. APPROVED BY THE MEDICAL DOCTORS. John P. McGowan Gastineau Hotel Phone for appoinment. el : | Eat at ERWIN’S Caie! ENJOY A MEAL COMPLETE — WITH Soup" Salad, two kinds of Meats, plenty of Dessert and Coffee—for 50¢ | 75¢ ts! $37.50 Club Breakfas 21 | U. S. DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE, WEATHER BUREAU THE WEATHER (By the U. S. Weather Bureau) Forecast tor juneau and vicinily, Rain tonight and Thursday, moderate Weather forecast for Noutheas day; moderate southeast winds except moderate to fresh over Dixon Entrang Clarence Strait, Chatham Strait and Frederick Sound, and moderate to fresh southerly winds over Lynn Canal. Forecast of winds along the Coast of the Gulf of Alaska: Moderate to fresh southeast winds along the coast from Dixon Entrance to Cape Hinchinbrook. beginning at 3:30 p.m., Sept. 21: ast winds. ka: Rain tonight and Thurs- LOCAL DATA ne Barometer Temp. Humidity Wind Velocity = Weather ) p.m. yest'y 29.53 54 78 7 Mod.Rn 3:30 am. today ... 2972 51 82 18 Lt. Rain Nocn today 20639 51 88 SE 16 Lt. Rain RADIO REPOR' i TODAY . Max. tempt. Lowest 4a.m. 4am. Precip. 4am. Station t 24 hours temp. temp. velocity 24 hrs. Weather Atka 46 48 8 09 Pt Cldy Anchorage 7 33 - - 0 Barrow 32 8 30 10 0 Clou ‘| Nome 46 30 36 [ 0 Clear Bethel 50 34 38 10 0 Pt Cldy Fairbanks 44 38 38 4 11 Lt. Rain Dawson 44 40 42 4 02 Cloudy 81, Paul 43 b = P b Dutch Harbor 60 38 24 1.08 Cloudy Kodiak 58 40 40 4 0 Clear Juneau 55 19 51 18 1.44 Lt. Rain Sitka 56 51 i o 120 Ketchikan 58 54 54 6 40 Clear Prinee Rupert 62 52 56 14 2 Clear Edmonton 8 | 42 42 0 0 Clear Seattle 76 54 56 4 i Cloudy Portland 82 58 58 6 0 Clear San Francisco 62 52 52 4 0 Cloudy New York 68 58 58 10 241 Mod.R'n Washington 60 52 52 6 94 Cloudy WEATHER CONDITIONS AT 8 AM. TODAY attle (airport), foggy, temperature 54; Blaine, foggy, 54; Vic foggy, 54; Estevan, cloudy, 52; Alert Bay, showers, Bull H: r, cloudy ; Langara Island, cloudy, Triple Island, partly clou- y; Prince Rupert, partly cloudy, 5:; Ketchikan, raining, 55; Craig raining, 56; Wrangell, raining, Petersburg, misting, 51; Sitka, raining, 52; Cape, Spencer, cloudy, 51; Hawk Inlet, raining, 46; Radio- ville, showers, 50; Jupeau, raining. 51: Skagway, clous 51; Haines, cloudy; Yakutat, cloudy, 50; Cape St. Elias, cloudy, 50; Cape Hinchin- brook, cloudy, 50; Cordova, cloudy, 46; Chitina, cloudy, 44; McCarthy, A ;. Seward, cloudy, 42; Anchorage, clear, 38; Portage, partly 9; Fairbanks, raining, 43; Hot Springs, cloudy, 34; Tanana, , 37; Ruby, cloudy, 42; Nulato, cloudy, 34; Kaltag, cloudy, 36; McGrath, clear, 34; Flat, cloudy, 28; Crooked Creek, cloudy, 23; Stuya- hok, partly cloudy, 25; Bethel, cloudy, 38; Platinum, raining; Golovin, cloudy, 32; Solomon, clear, 33; Council, cloudy, 33; and Nome, part- ly cloudy, 32. Juneau, Sept. 22.*-Sunrise, 5:43 a.m.; WEATHER SYNO! t, 6:01 pm S The barometer was high over the centr: portion of the north Pacific Ocean this morping and moderately high from the Pacific Northwest to Southeast /Alaska, also over extreme northern Alaska and northwestern Canada, Low barometric pressure overlay the rest of Alaska with the center 29.10 inches, over the Bering Sea Ssouth- west of St. Paul Island. Precipitation has fallen over the Aleutian Islands and along the upper Yukon and Tanana valleys and from Southest Alaska to Puget Sound with scattered heavy showers over the area from Fort Smith east to Hudson’s Bay. Temperatures were warmer over the Interior and cooler over Southwest Alaska this morn- ing with little change over other portions of the Territory. | James A. Farley.” WHlTE GETS PHOTO It will be remembered that White. R[GHT FROM FARLEY when Farley arrived rec‘emly m‘ Juneau northbound, pushed his way Il‘,hr()u,‘,’h the crowd, up the gang- | plank delivered a personal letter to | Farley, and secured the PM.G.'s to the official registry W. C. White, Juneau’s only mai carrier, is exhibiting with consid- erable pride today, a large photo: graph of James A. Farley, Post master General of the United Stat: with the P.M.G. in his own hand writing “To W. C. White, Sincerely - eee— Tl:y an Empire ac. GOOD LIGHT wasnever SO CHEAP SEVENTEEN PRICE REDUCTIONS IN . SEVENTEEN YEARS SINCE 1921 Ever $ .15 Edison Mazda Prices Lowest STANDARD 10-100 watt, frosted ... ... 100-150 watt, clear 200 watt, clear 300 watt, clear 500 watt, clear 100-200-300 3-Lite, LE.S. HOME LIGHTI 5-1025-50 Watt, 34 V. .. 100 watt, 34 V. BOAT LIGHTING 5-10-25 Watt, 12 V. LARGEST ASSORTED STOCK OF El’ilSON MAZDA LAMPS IN ALASKA laska Electric Lizht & Power Co {JUNEAU: ALASKA— DOUGLAS' — FIRE is not the only destroyer of property. Other hazards take heavy toll, too. For a surprisingly small premium, have an Extended Coverage Endorsement attached to your fire insurance policy. It will protect you, in the same amount and under the same.conditions as your fire policy, against explosion, windstorm,.fall- ing aircraft, hail, “wild” motor vehicles, riot and civil commotion and smoke (from a permanently installed , oil burner). Come in, write or telephane. SHATTUCK AGENCY Office———New York Life

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