The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, September 23, 1938, Page 2

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| L e i— SEIRERI 2 £ e———————————————————————————————————— ——— s - e o - it et Ly 19Y4 1 T e R, ¢ O VR . i - iy i W, PO B Ao A PUN S —— What 1s Y our News 1. Q.? By The AP Feature Service Each question counts 20; each part of a two-part question, 10. A score of 60 is fair, 80, good. 1. Identify this senator, fa- mous for his fancy vests and courtly manners, who plans to resign after {i.c next session, 2. What is meant by Japan's Kwantung army? < 3. What does GHA stand for? 4. Laws to permit a Pennsyl- vania legislativecommittec rather than a grand jury tc in- vestigate charges against G ernor Earle and other Demo- crats haye heen declared un- constitutional. Truc or false? 5. Who is being meationed, as a result of a heavy renominat- Ipx vote in Missouri, as a poien- tial Democratic presidential candidate in 19402 (Answers on Page Six) CORDOVA WOMAN JUNEAU VXSITOR IT:IH reported here today; Mrs. W. B. Phl n, formerly prietor of the Model Cafe at Cor- dova, Mr. and Mrs. Harold Smith of this city for the past week. Mrs. Phinn has resided in Cor- dova for the past eleven years, and will leave Albany, Y., this evening on the steamer where she will make her home THE LOWEST the pro- | has been the house guest of | Yukon, | You Save 55¢ NEW FALL SLIPS $1.95 Rea. $2.50 Quality! Biy two or three . . you save s5c on each slip! Of pure dye crepe . . . €x- pertly tailored to FIT. Adjustable strap: Bra or V-tops. 32 to B‘ MO BEHRENDS C0., Inc. “Juneau’s Leading Department Store” Moose Ball Event Tomorrow night in the Elks Ball- room the annual Moose Ball will be given and the commiftee ir charge promises an eventful eve- ning. All proceeds for the affair will be sent to Mooseheart, Ill, to assist in the maintenance of the orphar children of deceased members. Arrangements for the ball have been made by Gildo Battello, com- mittee chairman, who is being as- sisted by Val Poor, Fred Erickson and Grant Baldwin The public is invited to attend this event > DILGS BAG THREE BUCKS ON CRUISE, ADMIRALTY ISLAND Bringing back three fat bucks tc prove the worth of their good right eyes, Mr. and Mrs. Howard Dilg returned to Juneau last evening after a five-day hunting cruise with Capt. Al Weathers aboard his diese boat Deutz. The two nimrods left Juneau last “aturday forenoon aboard the Deutz, which they had chartered for the trip, They cruised into a number of Admiralty Island and inlets where Capt. Weath- which a limit large port ers guided them to the game Mr, Dilg knocked over for | bag. Despite the unsettled weather, the frip was completely enjoyable, Mr the Deutz ing sheltered wate whenever weather turned 1g'1mt them. e ~ MATHIESON COMING Freeman Mathieson, of the A. J | force, is returning to Juneau aboard the Princess Louise after a visit | with his mother in Bellingham. He also had another important thing | to accomplish while south and that 26 to attend a baseball game with id utrhlmon mLLhmI, | ) Fr EVERY-DAY PRICES F AR ! Carnation—Borden’s mx CANNED doz. ssc "% §3.25 Wesson 0il Pint 2 For Sulad.~. \\ affles, Vegeta 5. YW Frying and delicious ile Cookery. 12-0z tin ... . L No. 2 tin No. 11 tin .. CASE LOT Daily Deliveries in 240 South Franklin a Hormel’s Spam Fanc StringlessBeans Relxancé‘ Aépcxraqhs Style Del Maiz Niblets Fresh Corn Off the Cob .. 35 17¢ 8 tins 98¢ 16¢ GROCERY Juneau and Douglas -PHONE 704 - e —— Tomorrow Evening Young Ameri Now 1Its the Jitter Jacket i LA MACI!INISTS LOCAL 514 "o 00nd Brin i s G ODD FELLOWS' HALL Men's Ol;'lgmal Chippewa. Irvine Latest Styles-Goodyear Wel Quality Shoes for Less! Open 8 a.m. to 8 p.m. dally VAN’S STORE MONDAY 7:30 P. M. ark Dress Shoés s UNS—AMMUNITION 278 S.. Frémkiis | | | fashion” lightweight wool frock plaided in red, brown and made on the bias except for the front panel. Other plaid frocks are designed of cottons as well as wools and appear in such lively color combinations as blue, ted and green, or brown, green and gold. Both simple dresses with white “schoolgirl collars” and shoulder-strap skirts worn over pullover-sweaters or washable blouses are shown. You'll probably be seeing many of these jitter jackets on college campuses throughout the U. S. this fall for the idea has caught on in a big way. The jacket is a casual sports piece of soft suede Little dizzy felt cutouts ornament the jacket which has shag dancers, football players, keys, musical instruments and even vegetables in- cluded among the designs. The New York models shown above wear typlcnl Jitter jackets. | the Alaska to Seward, Anchorage PWA ENGINEERS ON { and Fairbanks in connection with PROJECT lePEchoNs projects being carried on in all those | cities. To look over PWA projects in! the Territory, J. G. Shepard, PWA | NATIVE COUPLE WED Engineer-Inspector, and Gordon| David Rose of Kake and Doro- Wildes, office engineer, are leaving| thy Boyd of Angoon, native people, this weekend. Shepard is going to| were married by the Rev. David Ketchikan on the North Sea in con-1 Waggoner yesterday. The couple nepkiod, with. the public, utilities| was . attended by William and work there: and ' Wildes will | take| Mable ~Skeek. i Norwaren Dmner Event Last Night Mrs. Vena Crone prepared one of her delicious dinners for the eighty- seven Norwomen last evening at 6 o'clock in the parlors of the North- ern Light Presbyterian Church. Three selections were presented during the evehing by Mrs. Margar- ¢t Bowen, soprano, accompanied by Mrs. Carol Beery Davis at the piano Mrs. Bowen also obliged with an THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, FRIDAY, SEPT. 23, 1938. als Cort(unly F allm o for Plaids Scotland’s gayest tartans furnish the designs for scores of this year’s school frocks. It's the biggest plaid season the ]u\omlc fashion world has known in years. The “fall- chosen by this athletic ten-year-old miss is a and yellow | Enrollment at Juneau Schools Largest in History The largest attendance in history is recorded this school term at the Juneau public schools, according to figures at the office of Superintendent of Schools A. B. Phillips. A total of 238 are enrolled in the high school and 566 in the grade school, making a total enroll- ment of 804. - encore following persistent applause M[Ss DOROTHY DALY from her appreciative audience The Rev. John A. Glasse was guest speaker for the evening, the topic of conversation being, “Value of Norwomen.” Following his talk, he requested Mrs. Bowen to sing a poem that he had written for the organization, which had been sect te music, to the tune of “Smiles.” The dining room was under the able supervision of Mrs, Helen Web- ster, chairman, who was assisted during the evening by members present. Announcement was made that! October 20 has been set as the next gdtncrmg of the Norwomen. R J CLUB HOLDS ELECTION HERE Miss Louise Hildre was elected president of the J Club of the Ju- neau High School at a meeting of members, with Miss Myrtle Moe adviser. / Miss Sue Stewart s elected to the office of vice-president, and the office of secretary-treasurer went to Miss Mary Fukuyama. Activity managers appointed in- clude Sue Stewart, archery; Lola La Paugh, ping pong; Mary Fuku- | yama, volleyball; Mildred ‘Webster, basketball; Bernice Waugh, bad- minton. ‘ ..o “THE BEST 1S CHEAPEST” FRYE’S DELICIOUS HAMS Small Sizes Half or Whole PRIME RiB ROLLED gummiflnmmlmmmmmmmmmmm||1zmuuflm|||||||mummmmmlmmlu l!lIIIIIlIlllIIIIHHIIIIIIIIlllllIIllll"IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII|IIIIIIIIIII||IIIIII!IIIIIIIIlllIIIIIIIlIIIIIIIIIII|l||||lII|IlIIIIII||III||III| merican Meat, Co. TOM HUTCHINGS, Mgr, PHONE 38 -Pound FANCY 'i‘m‘mfls——-voundgse BACON- Sugar-Cured — Pound 35c PICNIC HAMS-Smali Sizes - Pound 2 4c POT ROASTS_Tie Besti — Pound RUMP ROAST ROLLED — Pound 35c if6 0’ PORK ROASTS — Pound Phone Your Orders Early! - Three Dehvonas——lfl :30, 2:30, 4 :30 ||l|||||||||||||||||||||l|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||l|||||.||||||||l||||||||||lll|llllll||||l||||"||||m"||mlll|||||||||"||l||||||| g 32 S e ] filmmflllll|IIIl|IIIllmlIIIIIHHIHIIIIIIImmflIIIIIIHIIHHMIIIIHIHIHIIIIIIIIHIIIIHIIIIIIIHIIIII]IIIIIIIHIllllllllllllllllll!lll merly IS JUNEAU VISITOR Miss Dorothy Da:y, of Seattle, ar- rived in Juneau Wednesday on thc‘ steamer a guest at the Gastineau Hotel for the past three days. North Sea anhd has been Miss Daly, whose mother was for- this city and her father the cationing in Alaska and will leave for the south this evening on the Yukon., NU-BORA Washing Powder Giant Size MORE MOISTURE Rev. Good (at baptism): name, please?” Mother: cival Reginald Mortimer Duc worth.” Reverend (to his assistant) : “A little more water, please.” Pioneer String Beans 10¢can GARNI Miss Frances Hammond of late Marcus Daly of Nome, has been va- | —K‘Garnick’sChats “A Neuspaper Within a ]\cwspaper THE FRIENDLY STORE SPAGHETTI Special Sc Ib. Algernon Philip Per- U. S. DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE, WEATHER BUREAU THE WEATHER (By the U. S. Weather Bureau) Forecast tor juneau and vicinity, beginning at 3:30 p.m., Sept. 23: Rain tonight and Saturday; moderate southeast winds becoming fresh Saturday. Weather forecast for Southeast Alaska: Rain tonight and Satur- day; moderate southeast winds becoming fresh Saturday except mod- crate to fresh increasing Saturday over Dixon Entrance, Clarence Strait, Chatham' Strait dnd Frederick Sound, and moderate to fresh southerly winds over Lynn Canal. Forecast of winds along the Coast of the Gulf of Alaska. Fresh southeast winds becoming strong Saturday along the coast from Dixon Entrance to Cape Hinchinbrook. LOCAL DATA Time Barometer Temp. Humidity Wind Velocity Weather 3:30 pm. yesty ... 29.89 51 8 E 18 Lt, Rain |3:30 a.m. today 29.80 53 81 E 16 Cloudy | Noon today 29.72 51 91 s 12 Cloudy { RADIO REPORTS | | TODAY | Max. tempt. Lowest 4a.m. 4a.m. Precip. 4am | station last2thours | temp. temp. velocity 24 hts. Weather | Atka 48 40 46 4 38 Rain | Anchorage 49 43 A L) 10 Barrow 32 32 32 16 0 Cloudy | Nome 50 35 36 4 0 Cloudy | Bethel 46 26 38 4 23 Clear | Fairbanks 58 4/ 42 4 03 Rain | Dawson 56 42 42 4 72 Clear | St. Paul 42 36 40 12 01 Rain | Dutch Harbor 50 42 44 20 T Cloudy | Kodiak 54 42 42 3 T Clear Juneau 53 50 53 12 83 Cloudy | Sitka 56 49 —_ - 147 | Retchikan 54 42 54 8 16 Ramn | Prince Rupert 64 50 50 4 0 Cloudy | Edmonton 64 36 38 4 0 Clear | Seattle 14 56 56 4 0 Clear Portland 80 60 60 6 0 Clear San Francisco 62 58 58 4 T Rain New York 66 52 54 24 - 4 Cloudy | Washington 68 60 66 4 0 Pt. Cldy j WEATHER CONDITIONS AT 8 AM. TODAY | Seattle (airport), foggy, temperature 50; Blaine, foggy, 46; Vic- toria, clear, 54; Estevan, clear, 57; Alert Bay, cloudy, 48; Bull Har- bor, drizzling, 48; Triple Island, showers; Prince Rupert, cloudy, 52; Ketchikan, raining, 53; Craig, showers, cloudy, 53; Wrangell, cloudy, 52: Petersburg, misting, 53; Sitka, cloudy, 50; Hoonah, clear; Wind- ham Bay, raining, 47; Hawk Inlet, raining, 46; Tenakee, cloudy, 56; Radioville, cloudy, 50; Juneau, raining, 51; Skagway, cloudy, 51; Haines, cloudy; Yakutat, cloudy, 53; St. Elias, cloudy, 46; Cape Spencer, rain- ing, 49; Cape Hinchinbrook, cloudy, 48; Cordova, raining, 46; Chitina, 44; McCarthy, cloudy, 38; Valdez, cloudy, 42; Seward, partly ; Anchorage, cloudy, 45; Portage, cloudy, 40; Fairbanks, clou- dy, 45; Hot Springs, cloudy, 40; Tanana, cloudy, 42; Flat, cloudy, 36; | stuyahok, cloudy, 36; Crooked Creek, cloudy, 36; McGrath, cloudy, 38; iBelhfl. misting, 41; Platinum, cloudy; Golovin, partly cloudy, 37; ;So]omnn. cloudy, 38; Council, cloudy, 32; Nome, cloudy, 35. | Juneau, Sept. 24.—Sunrise, 5:47 a.m.; sunset, 5:56 p.m. WEATHER SYNOPSIS | Bar¢metric pressure was low over the entire Territory this morn- ing with the center over the Bering Sea with a pressure of 29.20 inches |and another over the upper Yukon with the lowest reported readings, 29.20 inches, at Dawson and Mayo. The barometer was moderately high over the Pacific Ocean north of the Hawaiian Islands, also over the Canadian prairie provinces. Light to moderate rain fell over southern and interior Alaska during the last 24 hours and over north central Canada west of Hudson's Bay with generally fair weather pre- lvamng over the rest of Aiaska, western and central Canada and the | | west coast states. Temperatures were warmer over the Alaskan interior yesterday ‘with little change over the rest of the Territory. There is no substitute for Newspaper Advertising , i——— THRIFTY FOOD NEWS Friday, Sept 23, 1938 THE FRILNDLY STORE OYSTER soup for that rainy weather lunch. HOME STYLE PEACHES Stock up for the winter at this special price. LARGE CAN THE JOB PAYS BIG During an intense love scenc in the movies, when the hero was doing his stuff, wifie hudged her_husband and said, “Why is it {hat you never make love to me like that?” ¥ “Say,” he replied, “do you Khow the salaty that guy gets for doing that?” PEAS 10 MACARONI Special Gelb. 3 for B¢ CK’S GROCERY TOOT TOOT “How Jong does the train stop here?” the old lady asked of the conductor. “Stop here?” answered the functionary. “Oh, four minutes, from two to two fo two-two.” “I wonder,” mused the old lady, “if that man thinks he is the whistle.” ° JELLO CHOCOLATE VANILEA BUTTERSCOTCH k-

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