The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, October 18, 1938, Page 2

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If You Want Style and Quality at a Low Price ... don’t miss these Amazing COAT . VALUES Sports and Dressy Styles! Style . . . Quality . . . Luxury 28 5 furs . . . everything you want in . your new Winter coat! These '40 are tailored of fine woolens, warmly Inlrr!lned . . . choose yours today! $65.00 Newest 1939 Styles! WOLF! PERSIAN! FOX! BEAVERI B. M. BEHRENDS CO., Ine. “Juneau’s Leading Department Store” The returns show that Leroy M. Sullivan, Republican, is elécted Sen- ator for the Division over George T. Laijblin, Democrat. All others elected are Democrats. The unicameral or one-house leg- | islative plan was defeated in the Di- vision by the overwhelming vote of 617 to 257. All Democrats, with Ex-| | Summary of Vote Cephon of Senator, Are The summary of the vote received | ini' the Second Division by various Elected on Sepl 13 | candidates for office, given in order | © sevs iRy ot tiie semnd‘or' strength, follows: ‘omple returns ol > . | For Delegate — Dimond, Judicial District in the Territorial White 178;, Grigshy, 150. election and referendum held Sep- 3 tember 13 &ppeat in a late issue of :"‘ Treasurer—Olson, 649; Chase,| mne Rey, John A. Glasse. will de- g liver. the eulogy. and: interment will the Nome Nugget just received here. They 'are_ all official excepting for| For Senator—Sullivan, 569; Lai- | be in the Evergreen Cemetery. —— two precincts, which the Nugget says | biin, 546. were carefully checked and reliable. For Refires(-ntauvns—l,vng' Todnys News Toaay.—Empire. Martin, 711; Dowd, 574; Porter, 546; Taggart, 492; Cremer, 414; Seiden- verg, 223; Anderson, 198;: Bloom- quist, 88. ——,—— Thomas 0. Colling IND DISION VOTE IS FINAL Funeral services for Thomas O, Colling will be held tomorrow after- noon at 1:39 o'clock .at, the Chapel of the Charles W. Carter Mortuary. 765, 749, The Daily Alaska Empire Presents THE FIFEH SERIES OF _ By ALFRED T. FALK Director of Research and Education, Advertising Federation of America Presented nationally through Newspapers, Periodicals & Radio in the 1938 Program of the Advertising Federation of America to promote a better understanding of Advertising. Advertising at Work 1 Your Wagts and Advcmsmg 2 Selling éum meg 3 Machines, Jobs, and Advertising Benefits of Adtmliamg 4 More for Yofir Money 5 Culture on the Payrolf The Voice of Ind;uury‘ 3 Buulv For_Sale 6 What Is Business? 7 What Is a Consumer? S A Copyright 1938, Advertising !oderluon or Amel‘(eh FIFTEEN INTERESTING AND' EDUCATIONAL DISCUSSIONS OF ADVERTISING RELEASED BY THE Buréau of Research and Education ADVERTISING FEDERATION OF AMERICA 330 WEST 42ND STREET, NEW YORK i %42 3 WATCH FOR THEM! B e Pt e e o v e @ i S g 8 THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE ) Election.Returns, ’ Fall Brm 28 Sm'v ze Bu gs Back Foutth Disision, Arg Nearly All In Official Fourth Division election ‘tetu¥ns have ‘been recelved at Fair- ‘banks from Sleetmute and Kalskag I'precinicts. This 'leaves only Quin- hagok to be heard from. The final count of absenteé‘votes, numbering a- yery few ‘votes, also is to be | made. y H Summary Summary of the returns to date | follows: | Por unicameral, 951; against, 1- 1655.. For De'~mte — Phannq 1793; |Grigsbv, 569; White, *72 For Treasurer—Chase 778; Olson, | 1701 | - For Senator—Joy, .1016; Laboy- |teaux, 1,573. Laboyteax is a Demo- lerat. _For Representatives, - | «Reservations' Yor ‘the ' Norwomen Rites Tomorrow| jbanks. The bride is the daughter Rogge 1,521 : | . Gardon 1,502 0 (Cases per 1.000) * Tander 1321 Spencer 1.309 Here's how the sniffles went one Jehinston 1102 medical offic ' Colbert 1,067 xmwe . 920 , Fowler * w FLU,GRIPPE ACCIDENTS CHILDBIRTH TONSILITIS MEASLES HéAlT DISEASE COoLDS &HEUMATISM | dintter, scheduled’ to' be held at 6 o'tleck “Thursday evefilng in the parios ofthé Northern Light Pres- bytetian Ghutch, may be made by| m Miss Mary Jeannette Wmt» | tter, by tomotrow evening. -Miss Venetia Feerd, talented mu- | sician, will present several piano se- lections during the course of the af-| fair, and an interesting talk will be given iy Mrs; H: L Faulkner, con- | cerning her recent trip to_Europe [T | ¥ | WED AT FAIRBANKS = <) Hoge .W Alice . Ellen: Robetts . and By The AP Feature Service Johirt: Howard Bayless, members of | WASHINGTON, Oct. 18 two of the best known pioneer fam- | coryza (say kor-EYE-za) ilies were recently married at Fair- here again It's not a new of Mrs. Ellen. J. Roberts of Frank- \ —just the tiny lin, in the Fortymile district. The' the common cold groom is the second son of - Mr.( poctors can't MUMPS NERVOUS DISEASES APPENDICITIS This chart shows how colds ra The virus i a drug causes dance germ or that e it even with | 8 What Is Adverming.’ 9 Ad:lemsml Makes Work C 10 Advutum. Lowers Pmu ll Ounges thout Chnsmas IZ The Mop and lu Palx 14 Mllk For Babm 15 Mngl( in the Ku(hm and Mrs. Otfo Bayless of Fair-|powered laboratory microscopes banks. slips through porcelain laboratory = | filters which hold back other bac- ! teria. They think it is a minute organ- {ism. They KNOW that autumn 1 {one of the high points in the year’s | coryza cycle and that the common cold is toward the top of the list of diseases disabling people for a week or longer each year The U. S. Public Health Service ialso believes the physically fit succumb to colds almost as readily as the weak, although good physi- cal condition helps modify a cold’s effects. Researchers have discovered that babies are likely to have fewer colds Ibrcauso they are less frequently ex- | ALICE PALMER ILL Miss Alice Palmer, music instruc- tor in the Juneau Public Schools, was taken to St. Ann's Hospital late yesterday afternoon suffering from a sudden attack of the flu. Her con- dition is reported much improved !odfly !AN FEB_MAR APR MAY JUN JUL AUG SEP OCT NOV DEC T T T T 18.1 _ 15.7 I 15 R 90 AT 20 ST 8 SR 7.2 5.9 I 5.6 I 5.5 IENENNN 5.1 I (CAsES PER THOUSAND PERSON disable year-—the “cold curve” for U, S. ers’ families. nked among leading causes of ment. posed. Children under five, the Health Service says, are more sus- ceptible than any other age group. Young adults catch colds more often than elderly persons. While there are no national fig- ures for the common cold, the Health Service offers a sample <howing the incidence of the com- men cold in medical officers’ fami- for two and a half years. lies There was a regular decline in colds between April and August, the officers found, but during the months of many colds, September April, the trend was irregular. The chart at top is based on the| 1925 study, when the peak was reached in mid-October. The pre- to vious year the peak came a few weeks earlier. The lower chart indicates colds rank high among the ailments causing disablement. It is based on a National Health Survey of 1935- 36 in 81 cities wherein 2308588 persons were canvassed. Of these,| IMISS SNELL HAS U. 8. DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE, WEATHER BUREAU | THE WEATHER | i (By the U. S. Weather Bureau) | Forecast for Juneau and vicinity, beginning at 3:30 p.m., Oct. 18: | Showers tonight, Wednesday rain; moderate to fresh southeast winds. | Weather forecast for Southeast Alaska: Showers tonight, Wednes- | day rain; moderate to fresh southeast winds except fresh to strong !uvnr Dixon Entrance, Clarence Strait, Chatham Strait, and Frederick Sound, and fresh to strong southerly winds over Lynn Canal. Forecast of winds along the Coast of the Gulf of Alaska: Fresh to | strong southeast winds along the coast from Dixon Entrance to Dry Bay; fresh to strong easterly winds from Dry Bay to Cape Hinchin- brook | LOCAL DATA i Time Barometer Temp. Humidity Wind Velocity =~ Weather 3:30 pm. yesty . 29.94 52 3 E 25 Lt. Rain 3:30 am. today 30,03 55 67 E 14 Lt. Rain Noon today 30.09 55 64 SE 11 Pt. Cldy | RADIO REPORTS | ' TODAY | Max. tempt. Lowest 4a.m. 4a.m. Precip. 4am. | station last 24 hours ] temp. temp. velocity 24 hrs. Weather Atka 44 | 34 40 16 28 Lt. Rain Anchorage 54 44 —_ £ 0 Barrow 28 | 24 26 26 0 Pt. Cldy Nome 36 | 32 3 12 0 Cloudy Bethel 38 | 34 36 8 .03 Cloudy Fairbanks 52 42 50 12 0 Cloudy Dawson 50 46 46 10 — Cloudy St. Paul 38 32 34 28 13 Cloudy Dutch Harbor 40 34 38 8 15 Lt. Rain Kodiak 46 46 46 14 38 Clear Cordova 50 | 46 48 20 60 Lt Rain Juneau . 57 | 50 55 1 1.02 Lt. Rain Sitka | 58 | 51 + = 128 Ketchikan 56 | 50 52 & 15 Cloudy Prince Rupert ... 56 | 44 46 6 [ Clear Edmonton 54 | 28 28 6 0 Clear Seattle 60 | 42 42 4 0 Clear Partland 60 | 44 44 4 0 Clear San Prancisco 66 | 52 54 4 [J Clear New York 86 . | 60 62 6 0 Clear Washington 86 | 54 56 4 0 Clear WEATHER CONDITIGNS AT 8 AM. TODAY Seattle (airport), foggy, temperature, 37; Blaine, foggy, 34; Vic- toria, clear, 45; Alert Bay, clear, 44; Bull Harbor, cloudy, 43; Langara Island, partly cloudy, 49; Prince Rupert, clear, 44; Ketchikan, cloudy. 52; Wrangell, cloudy, 53; Petersburg, cloudy, 54; Sitka, raining, 54; Cape Spencer, cloudy, 50; Hoonah, cloudy, 53; Hawk Inlet, part- ly cloudy, 50; Tenakee, cloudy,53; Radioville, cloudy, 52; Ju- neau, raining, 52; Skagway, raining, 47; Haines, raining; St. Elias, cloudy, 50; Cape Spencer, cloudy, 42; Cordova, raining, 47; Chitina, cloudy, 44; McCarthy, cloudy, 38; Seward, raining, 40; Anchorage, clou- 50; Portage, raining, 46; Fairbanks, cloudy, 50; Tanana, cloudy, 41; Hot Springs, cloudy, 42; Ruby, cloudy, 37; Nulato, misting, 36; McGrath, cloudy, 38; Flat, raining, 44; Stuyahok, raining, 33; Crooked Creek, cloudy, 30; Platinum, cloudy; Bethel, cloudy, 35; Solomon, snow- ing, 32; Nome, snowing, 35. Juneau, Oct. 19.—Sunrise, 6:44 a.m.; sunsef, 4:45 p.m. WEATHER SYNOPSIS With the barometer falling over the northern portion of the Ter- ritory this morning, a trough of low air pressure covered all Alaska except the southeast portion. One center with a pressure of 2810 inches was south of Unalaska at Jatitude 48 degrees north, longitude 168 degrees west, and a secondary center was located over the lower Kuskokwim with the lowest reported pressure 28.78 inches at Bethel. A ridge of moderately high barometric pressure extended from South- east Alaska over southwestern Canada and the Pacific Northwest. Light to moderate rain occurred from the Aleutian Islands along the coast of southern Alaska to Dixon Entrance with generally fair wea- ther over the rest of Alaska, western Canada and the West Coast states. Temperatures were warmer over the interior and southern pos- tions of Alaska this morning. Lila Sinclair of the Olds, Lillian Olson, and Robert Snell, brother honoree. Following the birthday dinner the guests will attend the movies. S S TR U B BIRTHDAY DINNER Marjory Snell, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. James Snell, will be hon- ored at a dinner party this evening at her. West Fourth Street residence, in celebration of her birthday. Those present will mcludc slurley An Indian icgend holds that fire was discovered when buffaloes’ hoofs struck sparks from rock and set some' dry’brush anre D N— 400,000 were disabled a week or| more. [ PIONEERS AS JUDGES Three pioneers who were in the | Northland in the early days—John J. Buckley, Leo Rogge and Albert Ohlson — will judge the costume contest at the “Days of '98" cele- bration in Fairbanks November 12. A simple frock plus glittering accessories makes @ eo-tuue for a fes- F tive evening. Here’' crystal berries and disks of dark red sequins lend e glitter to_a high-necked black crepe dress finished with a black taffeta girdle. dark red velvet flowers, The black antelope hat is trimmed with rose and Fur Coat .., Jacket, Bolero or Scarf : choose yours from the largest selection in the north . . . MINK—SEAL SQUIRREL WEASEL MUSKRAT CARACUL FOX SCARFS & Co. Open Sltl’xrdly’ Evenings Y+ HE: "Going my wdy, lady?” SHE: “'You bet!” Right down to THE EMPIRE to pick some swell CHRISTMAS CARDS Telephone 374 I

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