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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, THURSDAY, DEC. 15, 1938. |dun Simmons left here at mghtland high seas rolling up héavy surf, BRISTO'. BAY (Ir(ll'hu "I gnl(ll(’b Of Tl’rrl‘orl"l A(Imnnslratwn B(lSlc I"d"strl(’s RES(UE WORK |o'clock this morning with the three it is interesting to note that already gmdos for Lituya Bay, was loxcvd two Coast Guard boats, two Navy back from Dixon Harbor by a snow- | bombers, a Juneau seaplane and H H'NG MEN T o 3 o w-mrm and landed at Lemesurier Is- | Territorial and Federal Offices | (I} aominist RATION R £ PUBLIC WELFARE (NORMAL EXPLNDITURES) v j " AIDED T \]am, have also joined forces to get aid | DEVELDPMENT CWILo UIPE ERSENARON) (£ DEVELORMENT, (roans A waris MIBCELLANEOUS | Later he took off again, but off to the hapless shipwrecked seamen. MEETING BELL D.-------..------..----_------.‘-.---..--,-“-.A ape Spencer began taking ice in rly Monday morning, in res- a sleet storm and was forced to turn | ponse to signals of distress from the back for Juneau. 204 wooden hull mortorship Pateer- Men k, Food Short on, the cutter Haida mustered its Last word from the Haida beforc |crew here with repeated blasts of the cutter Morris sailed with Dr.|its siren and sailed to the scene, ar- 4 | : : Charles C. Smith recent arrival here | riving at the same time as the Al- LO(al Hahbu' Sklpper io who is to relieve Dr. Bingham of | aska Air Transport Lockheed piloted Establishment of More Canneries, More Boas, Is Under Discussion || e Il i SNRIOUNNRR N RO e = - | . _ |the Haida, was to the effect that|by Sheldon Simmons, sent out to i m SO 5 PTTRONN DRODNNND g - PIIO1 Guarder '0 U" two men are badly sick and the |reconnoiter. SEATTLE. Dm 15. — United 922 SN i . — (haned Harbor rest of the men are in no condition| Haida surf boats and motor laun- States Fisheries Commissioner | Q 3 P ! to hike. They have food enough have since been patrolling the Frank T. Bell, conferring with rep- 1923 ,mj | 2088 resentatives of the Br istol Bay fish- | ing industry, said the v\::mmu.‘ to last two more days.” just out of the curling grasp ssociated Press advices from! heavy surf, but have been un- state Chief Officer Gustaf| (ble to land. }({."f“35«, R I 76 -] ; ‘Conunuea Irom Fagr Cne) ment of new canneries in the nor- Q ;g,‘i&_‘,“ Z 80 Morris will then proceed to Lituya son, reported lost in the wreck,| Yesterday afternoon, two Navy s roblem for [ : Bay and drop off guides Vic Man-|leaves a widow and three children| jombers flew to the wreck from does not alter the ville. Howard Hayes, Anthony |in Seattle who said last night, “Dad’s | (he Sitka Naval Air Base and drop- stant engineer on the tersor | ice and the Customs and Govern- ind is believed to be among the sur- | *'s office, suides Tom Smith, Vic number of fishing boats the law | Thomas and Tom Smith with a|all right. We expect to be all togeth- | sed fcod to the survivors. Pilot Sim- SIEW fo ol X shore party from the Morris crew |er for Chirstmas.” | mons of Juneau and his mechanic | The law permits 1,090 boats |to proceed overland to Sea Otter| Able Seaman James Moore, winch- | Sordon Graham, also dropped food the Bristol Bay Area, Commissio Creek and the scene of the wreck. man on the Patterson, also washed | and clothing, totalling about 500 er Bell said the numb | Lt. Commander Ricketts of me‘flw‘rbmld and lost, is from Los An-|4ounds. just after the Navy Bomb- | is increased, the length of the f | Haida wired a recommendation that geles. He is the son of Mrs. Ethel| :rs had dropped their loads. i ing time may be diminis to should a Morris party go overland | Moere, Los Angeles milliner. He was | Today, a local halibut skipper § comy ate from Lituya Bay. a 31 years old, unmarried, and hac | Tom Sandvik. is to pilot another 3 : R ' camp be built for the Patterson | fcllowed the sea since a boy Coast Guard boat. the Morris, into seamen and could droj Survivers Known Here U harbor known only to halibut fish- H food enough tc all pr’, it Lester Campen, former Juneal | rmen and boatmen who are veter- RebEkahS planmflg need be. resident and nephew of Fred Cam- | 'ns of those lonely waters. H Haida Stands By en and Mrs. W. D. Gross, was as- Through the Commissioner’s of- é Ricketts said if the men be made comfortable and ta Yulefide Party Soon’ G | of medically, the Haida would con- | vivors whe have now been strandec | ianville, Howard Hayes and An- ‘% jWren meahers) o yhe BebeRsn tinue o stand by as it was in good | for the fourth day. Campen attend- | hony Thomas, all familiar with’the § lodge met last ev 2o anchorage just outside the break-|ed school here a score of years ago | esion through trapping and pros- § Odd Fellows Hall, plans were for- g e or later get| Also known in Juneau is Bob Bart | cecting, are being sent out to aid mulated for a Yuletide party, t & CHinAe o g0 B breakers | (rombonist and baritone who three | he stricken men. ! be given t and take the survivors off Ve ago was with the City Band It expected the cutter Morris cember 28, in charg « All Men Weak” \ere. Bart is beiieved to be a sea-| vill arrive at Cape Fairweather late Dr. Ray Lillian Car s — e | Last night Rick wired that man on the Patterson. onight and will attempt a landing e T TERRITORY OF ALASKA AUGUST 1938 i 2 it s ot daybreak: - by the new members = flashlight conve between | Speed Needed Initiation of the lodge will RELATIVE ANNUAL VALUE OF DISBURSEMENTS chip and shore revealed “the wreck-| Commissioner Pelix Gray said to- | “PAD ALL ; J place on January 4, while joint ir P PR — % 7 od seamen in camp report they are day on commissioning the servicc s e Diues, e (This is the fifth of a series |population for whose benefit these all very weak from exposure and all of guides to send to th> Pastersor | DENNION OF SCOTTISH =) pill be held on January 25. Instal-| ¢ grapng prepared by the staff | moneys are largely spent, this other- Two RUSSIANS J have sore feet, They request stimu- men, that “speedy assistance is nec- y ling officer for the evening Willl ¢ (po Alsska Planning Counc % 1“\,‘,(.;,1, emphasis on_human lents and medicine for couzhs and essary, with a heavy snowfall im- R“E IOMORROW N'GH"' be Mrs. Evelyn Hollmann, District g ,yine with the administrative | e education, ap- IN (HINA IS colds with two men sick. They also | minent at any time that would com- Deputy, who will be d by nd fiscal affairs of the Terri- |p 3 i ! need oil clothes and an axe.” Jlicate overland hiking and perhaps — J 5 g 1 i EEDTIED 10 3 ; on already | Scottish Rite Masons will hold Mrs. Joe Wehren, of D ; tciy. Others will appear in later | cther important interests to which Weather Severe cause the death of men already cottish _Rite s0ns Food donations we made last| jeeues of The Empire. It is the uk e | ially diverted, Y HA E This morning, the Haida repo weakened from exposure and suffer- | ‘heir reunion tomorrow night and night for cl s which will ;h\:‘l.\\(‘udv "lr i:'f"m.;., ever to o d s o a ty mile an hour wind blowing ing with cclds probably bordering |31l members are asked to be on be distributed by the Rebekah’s at! have been made in Alaska and | st of administration, including Bnsureid from the southeast with squalls of on pneumoni and pl‘ompllyca)l ].30 {’VCIO}:k‘wi(Lch 5 i 7 B € - s Fve n g 2 ins! . rles & a 5. Christmas. gives a picture of government argely current expenses for oper- . . 4 T k B | d W ' h n sleet, snow and rain that give the Man Against Nature w.nxfz)lun::cl:i ‘t:ivnanmx es S and of industries based on min- |aUns the various Territorial depart- oviet soveinment Comes 10Kyo believe @ICNING camp ashore anything but a pleasing| With mln Ilorc(‘.:) of ‘nmun’ seem- vorth, Ghatman. < erals, fish and wild life never |ments and offices, shows a remark- | . atmosphere. ingly banded together to prevent the (OUN(". MEHI"G befere made available. Most of |able stability throughout the twenty fo Aid of One—Navy Latest Aflglo -Amer- Alaska Air Transport pilot Shel- | reccue work with snow, sleet, wind| Todav's News Tomay.—Emoire v the graphs are plotted accumu- years an. In contrast, the ratio TOMORROW "'GHT latively, showing the individuat [of disburs | sments for the purposes Documents Stolen ican Developments valucs in subsequent strips ef |Of transportation, communicatio =) S s S5 esulithed nd mining declined hecvily de 108 ANGELES, C: Sec. 15. TOKYO, Dec. 15.—Authoritative Regular meeting of the Coun- ditfcrent ‘shading @ L ES R to 1934, b hows od-rate rela- o fop L Cal,, Dec. 1 7 g s ; in the legends.—Ed. Note) 934, but shows & modorate re b Soviet Governm has come to sources said Japan apparently ¢il has been set for 8 o'clock to- jtive increase for the past [cw years. the ajd of Mikhail Gorin, Russian convinced it is impossible to drive tl;:_xs’ro‘:; ’lfii"c’.'l\“’;filn"l.mlff":',‘, RELATIVE ANNUAL VALUE OF Until 1920 expenditures for the travel bureau agent, heid by the @ wedge between the United States SBURSEME! i construction of roads, trails and Pederal authorities on es aze and Great Britain and had decided 2 nounced today by Mayor Harry I DAERUNSEIS Janding fields represented a share | charges. SRR e e S s e Lucas. Routine matters are sched-| This graph is a counterpart of of the total proportionate to educa- Mikhail Ivanushkin, Soviet Consul | both. led, he said graph A5, showing disbursements| tion and public welfare but less in|General in New York City, arrived| The government failed to give ey made during the past twenty years|amount—decreases both in percent- here by plane last night and after final work last Sunday on its new > BOY HE[D up in percent of the annual total dis-|ages and amounts occurred from yisiting Gorin in the county jail, China policy as scheduled. An im- [l v bursements. It amplifies and sup- 1930 to 1734, inclusive, the all-time where he is held under $25,000 berial conference was said to have & plements graph A3, Treasury Dis- low being in 1934 bond, announced that the prisoner determined this policy two weeks 1 BALKS AI pllls bursements using the same groups| From that time to the end of the 'will be provided with one of the 880. It is believed now Japan is of disbursements, namely, Adminis- | period covered, a steady gain is de- pest attorneys obtainable. watching Anglo-American develop- L L tration, Education, Public Welfare | picted. Ivanushkin did not visit Halis ments, particularly any moves which : CHICAGO, Dec. 15. — Tommy and Development. Expenditures for| When using this graph for a more Sulich, Russian born naturalized Might be made after Ambassador | Dunklin, delivery boy for the Druve Development are regated into exact study of Territorial finances, American, arrested with Gorin. Nelson T. Johnson's t in Wash- RABHOR ROBES—the correct thing drug store in Waukegan, is not a two groups; one including only con-!due consideration must be given Federal officials refused to dis- ington rrom China ! . : L : patient but he would be if he had |servation of wild life, and the other to actual disbursement figures as cuss the case but Gorin and Sulich, R to give a man for Christmas. Luxuri- complied with orders given him at comprising road building, develop- shown on the right hand side of the the latter a former Berkeley, Cal. KlD“ApER GIVEN ously tailored. For the bath, for loung- - the point of a gun the other night. | ment of air fields, communication, annual columns. It is also advisable policeman, who resigned from the s . Tesced Someone telephoned an order for and money disbursed in the inter-|to consult the detailed graphs on Naval Intelligence Service last May, 20 YEARS ing, for traveling. In Crown Test g a package of pills and change for a|est of mining. Likewise, the dis-|Education (PWE. 2) and Public are acused of obtaining documents PNSON Rayon luxury fabrics, silk warp jac- $20 bill. bursements for public welfare are Welfare (PWE. 1) in order to ar- and other information of the U. S o When Tommy reached the ad- |broken into normal and emergency|rive at a more concise appraisal of Navy and sending them to Moscow.| PARIS, Dec. 15—La Plevitskaia, quards, fine wool flannels, and other, b dress, a man stepped from behind | expenditures, the latter appearing the relative values which this graph ——le . middle aged Ukranian concert sing- fabrics. a tree, pointed a gun at him, and |only in the years 1933, 193¢ and exhibits. er, has been sentenced to 20 years ordered: 1935, when Federal relief funds were | S REAT Y MO G MRS. LAVERTY HERE |imprisonment for complicity in the “Give me the cash and eat the |disbursed through the Territorial| : Mrs. G. W. Laverty and baby ar- | kidnaping of White Russian Gen. pills.” treasury, before being turned over' CCC officials estimate that 15 out |rived on the Mount McKinley for Eugene DeMiller, missing leader oi Tommy complied with the first to the Federal Disbursement Office. of every _100 CCC youths have com- | visit with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. |the Czarist War Veterans, an or- request In general, disregarding the re- Pleted high school. !J. M. Giovanetti. ganization in Paris. B His bosses are glad he didn't eat lief disbursement, the graph exhib- | S 000 one A k. the pills. its a fair uniformity, with one ex- 4 e —— ception to be noted later, in Terri- 1 E Real flIrS langu'sh torial expenditures for ‘lh‘»(; (Li)vo TOMORROW S i major purposes, in spite of he Imifafions Floutish mirecs scva s o o e | - STYLES pre Chrisimas f 17 | bursements from $627,537 in 1918 to 0 e $2,088,053 in 1937. TODAY_ BLOOMINGTON, Ind., Dec. 15.— One of the most striking revela- C L E A R A N C E Dyeing of rabbit skins to look like | tions from this graph is the increas- opossum, raccoon, skunk, muskrat ' ingly high share of education and and fox is called a threat to In- public welfare in the Territory's an- —(fa“ts— e ect R Jiana’s $500.000 fur business. nual expenditures, reaching in 1932 mos Game Warden Thom Flora said the staggering amount of 81 per- that the sale of genuine pelts will cent. On the average, these expen GBO"PI T S P o T e T $39.5fl be small this year because fur pro- | ditures for the Territory’s human values up to $69.50 g [ i cessors are going strong for imita-' resources run to more than 70 per- tions. cent. Considering the small white R | values up to 29.50 GROUPII ................ 149 values up to 25.00 Holiday CHARM .o o is yours) a clearance in price only A man needs more than just one robe...and Christmas is the time to see that he gets the right robe for the occasion. In fact, Christmas is the Telephone 723 During the festive sea- —'lresses_ son don't neglect those W it et points of beauty thml ars GROOP I .. ... . oopwesss .$14.95 time to see that a man gets the accessories that go to make him “well =] Midity ~— 2 prand St y('f]g,;(::l):r{;lt:b}?r{iyc(;h;;; GROUPII ................... 895 dressed.” And remember—men like merchandise with a reputation, and ,’ Open Evenings veloped Hatierigaly ot GROUPINI .. ... . .. 3.95 we have plenty of that kind here, conveniently arranged for your quick f : and effortless selection! all exceptional values in dresses and hats table ’ specials % % The ROYAL Beauty Salon ANN EARLY BARR—Owner-Operator 1 _h“ts_ "“ d 2!- Y?Jr'n AS ADVERTISED IN DECEMBER ESQUIRE 4 E SOMETHING FOR NOTHING 20¢ and 25¢ copl GROUPI .........$3.00 fa get We'll make you a present of the minimum down-payment KELVINATOR REFRIGERATOR b ho"se_f;f::": s H. S. GRAVES we have in stock purchased between now and Chr Payments on balance as low as $5.50 per month January 25, 1939. This includes a 5-year warranty. i ~ / __THE CLOTHING MAN— RICE & AHLERS CO. fr e RReme e . The Largest Stock of Men's Clothing and Furnishings in Juneaun g £ Thirdl and Fyanklin Streets———————PHON JUNEAU'S OWN STORE |