The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, January 2, 1939, Page 2

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HAPPY NEW YEAR THE SEASON'S GREETINGS TO ALL OUR FRIENDS AND PATRONS . . B. M. BEHRENDS (0., Inc. «Juneau’s Leading Department Store” e ————————————— Ci ' '] Z"fm*gin ()f flfluf(’fty Virginia West being “suspendered” University of Washington varsity ball committee ruled that strap- less evening gowns would be banned from the affair as “immodest.” All co-eds who attended in strapless gowns were presented with suspenders and were forced to don them before appearing on the floor, Above we see edict-defying Virginia West being made “‘decent” by sister co-eds. Kaywto fi’éd Baron {ngliebmary THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, MONDAY, JAN. 2, 1939. i uPID Cupid did a rushing. business in Juneau during 1938, it is revealed in records at the U. S. Commis- sioner’s office. During the 12 months | just ending 147 couples received | marriage licenses compared with 140 during 1937. The complete list follows: Fred Leroy lian Litka. Bill Otto Stroup. Vaino Alexander Seppanen and Lena Hustoft. | Royal Allen Thompson and Helen Ruth Gray. Ernest Kaare Johansen and Clare {Dubuque. | Arnold Mogseth and Laura Louise Krug. . | James Willis and Mary Hubbard, William J. Nelson and Mabel Sha- fer. Lawrence William Fitzpatrick and Ruby B. Waldon, Frank Wilson and Clara Seevers. George Henry Mathews and May- belle Myren, Richard Lee Nichols and Eliza- beth Stewart Moore. ¢ Roger Hancock Bailey and Alpha Helen Furuness. Wwilliam Erickson and Lena A. Pigg. Jimmie Albert George and Lydia Mary James. Orrin Royal Edwards and Myrtle Marie Feero. George Alfred LaDreau and Ruth | C. Gregory. 8 | Paul T. Wolney and Tola B. Traf- | hagon. William. J. Niemi and Sigrid May Greiner, Andrew Dermott O Toole and Dor- othy J. Heins. Frederick G. Milligan and Flor- | ence Mead. . | Willard Alexander Gallemore and | Janette Colville Seggie. ! Gerald W. Hudson and Elizabeth | G. Ryerson. ' | John Frank Tandoo and Helen | Margaret Bingaman. { | Chandler and Lil- Witte and Mary K. [ ‘ \ I John Jacob Keyser and Avis Bea- trice Erickson. | John Frederick Morrison Madeleine Emily Cassidy. George Homer White and Roberta | Woodhouse. | John Emmet Myrtle O. Wick. | Frank E. West and Mary Ann Harris. Elbert Elwin Parmenter and Ruth | Ashley. | Frederick John Rowe and Mary | Elise Nordnes. | Norman O. De Roux and Elean- | ore M. Bogachus. | George Earl Bland and Brita Kar- | ina Ask. | William { Young. | Frank W. Heinke and Pearl Agnes | Paulson. | David John Simundson and El- eanore Evelyn Swanson. Karl Alstead and Opal Eulalia | Archer. Benjamin = Andrew Wright Nancy Nadine Didrickson. Glenn Ralph Benjamin Parker |and Nellie Rebecca Crowell. Daniel Ross and Mary Ida Kol- asa. Gordon Albert Carlson and Mary Frances Crawford. Herbert Jesse Neff and Amy Lou Druliner. William. M. Rogers and Jessie Virginia Clegg. Daniel Sharclane and Sarah Alice | Dalton. | Harold McLean Tullis and Wilma Cloveau. Ray M. Elliott and Louise Evelyn | Hollywood. | George D. Bayard and Ether M. Cashen. Homer Albert Williamg and Eliza J. Haube. David James Nichols and Helen Theresa Storms. Robert Dean Rossiter and Virgin- ia Anne Bardi. John Ernest Fowler aret Pimperton. Waso Savin Pekovich and Jelene N. Djukich. and Thompson and Klaney and Jennie and and Marg- Strand. Walter Fred Hall and Helen Eliza- beth Grasmoen. Herbert Mills Cressman and Pat- ricia Katherine Anderson. Gustay Adolph Erickson and Mary May Butchart. Edward David James and Ruth May Phillips. Corinne Johnson. Bert A. Routsala and Elvira Karp- pi Russell Carl Hance Schmaltz and Nelliel ™o toio) “Arfreq Viery and Dorothy| Robert Arthur Henning and Grlcei DOES BIG BUSINESS IN JUNEAU DURING 1938; 147 COUPLES GET LICENSES John A. McLaughlin and Bernice Peal. Leo Eugene Young and Alice Jo- sephine Wilson. Hulmar Bersten and Fay Marshall. Edward T. Williams and Elnora Elizabeth Griffin. ' Emil Samuelsen and Gyda Tork- elsen. Arnold O. Johnson and Helen E Anderson. Clyde E. Boylan and Hilja I. Bein- ikka, Lynn E. Tucker and Harriet M. ‘Barragar. Robert Alfred Gordon and Marg- uerite Winona Espey. Frank Woodrow Dukelow Hazel Phyllis Groome. and Albert Pasquan and Elsie Johan-| sen. August F. Williams and Mabel Roundtree. Fred Wildt and Inga Borgwardt. Jesse W. Wittmeyer and Ann Moore. Michael McKallick and Mary Range Burt. Herbert Lawson and Elizabeth Wilson. William Elmer Djernes and Estelle Daolores Hickey. James PFisher and Cecile Corliss. Borge C. Skov and Valerie M. Crum. Stanley Dean Pierce and Martha Jane Harris. Alex Demos and Hilda Mary Run- quist. Welby H. McCasland and Irene Morrison. Reuel M. Fleming and Merele G Milham. James Ralph Judge and Marjory C. Littlepage. Fred Newman strom. Joseph Rhode Werner and Jennie Berg. Frank H. Chinclla and Naomi El- len Sorri. James Edwin McConnell Oscar A Garrett. Nick Giatros and Mattie Kasko, Lloyd Gilbert Davis and Daisy Jackson. William Eugene Collen and Cecile Dougherty Brown. Vincent W. Mulvihill and Eva L. Hartje. James B. Gillian and Elizabeth 1. Bryan. Carl R. Lindquist and Magguerite Hickey. Danile Perrin and Margaret Akagi. William D. Fletcher and Fjprenge Zimmerman. Alfred Nordstrom Peterson. Daniel Rose and Dorothy Boyd. Edward Roller and Phyllis, Juan- ita Edwards. Jennings Mark Renfrow and Ma- thilda Dolores Sommers. Henry Kessler and Mary Elenore McAlpin. ‘Willis Peters and Marie Willis. Eugene Ricliman Johnson and Hilda Mae Green. Oren Addleman Nielsen, Vernon Elton Hodges and Steph- anie Africh. Thomas J. Ragan and Nina John- sen. Anthony J. Wickich and Margit S. Lindstrom. Olaf Nelson and Olga Munos. Homer M. Acton and Mary Nor- ris Goss. Raniel Twiet and Hilda Moen. Joseph Montgomery Snow and Gertrude Rena Jorgenson. and Mary Lind- Sparks and Edna Larson and Violet M. and Almg P. and Richard King Ford and Monte | Helen Arthur, Alfred George Swap and Mary Luella Hastings. ‘Peter H. Dick and Elizabeth G. Johnson. Walter Johns and Phyllis Wana- maker, Jack Bell and Amnie Johns. Walter Albert Bell and Jessie Mor- rison Daniel Naphan and Helen Hall- Wifliam Salo and Pearl Palo. Christian ‘Huber and Emma Jamp- Brunetta Ford. ‘Otis Price and Isabel Davis. Hentor Joseph Plante and Ruth Louise Goett. Ben S, Peerson and Louise Ros- ary Kardutoo. = , Bert Johnson and Goldie Halm. Kenneth M. Nelson and Lillian F. Hilt. Ahdrew N. Charlie and Ethel | Johnson. Clifford Berg and Patricia D. POLLY AND HER PALS * nasium Christina | Hussey. Albert Postma and Zola F. Guerin. Charles H. Femmer and Viva R. O’Donnell. Verne Allen Stedman and Henrietta Russell John B. Marin and Ruth W. Wood. William Eldred Helman and Alice | Jane Shaw. i Kendall Williams. Edward | Stybelle. William Lloyd Hildinger and Elise | Eleanor Schmitz. Milo G. Clouse and Verda Val- |eria Matson Jean Williams and Frances Lincoln and Stephanie Bahovic. William H. Trumbo and Mary | Jean McDonald Howard Edward Mosher and Win- | nifred Victoria Oberg. | Marie Eastburg. Steve Vukovich and Selma Wal-| stead. | Harry Lyte Treloar and Gert- rude Bagley. | | Hamilton Gigson and Elizabeth |sarah Chunn. William J. Engel Jr. and Gloria Bardi. Frank Charles Reed, Jr., and Relee Ellinger. 'DOUGLAS .~ NEWS | APPLICATION FOR SCHOOL GYM FUNDS | TURNED DOWN, PWA > | Mayor L. W. Kilburn is in receipt of advice received yesterday from |the Portland office of the Public| | Works Administration to the effect that the application made a couple | of months ago by the city for a| Federal grant of 45 per cent of the cost of building an auditorium-gym- annex to the new school | building, had been turned down. While the issue may not be a dead one for some future reconsideration the immediate necessity of trying to raise about $12,000 locally as the town’s portion of the cost of the proposed project is thus eliminated and city officials may breathe more freely again e ee MR. AND MRS. SAVIEKKO TO MAKE TRIP SOUTI FIRST OUT IN 30 ¥ Mr, and Mrs, Herman Savikko | have booked passage for the south ' on the M. S. Northland, to leave on or before next Friday morning ac- cording to the steamer’s schedule of sailing. This will be the first trip to the Outside for the couple in over thi ars. In 1905 it was when My !was Outside the last time first year here. He h Americar from ¥miarid in T 3 ing in Michigan. Mrs. Savikko came direct here from the old coun- try in 1906 and they were married in 1907, and here they have lived continously and rear a family of nire children two girls and seven | boys. It is to visit their two daughters Mrs. Fred Gebhart (Alma Savikko) living in Auburn, Cal, and Mrs. Caesar Brotani (Jennie Savikko) in | | San Francisco that they are making | ? the trip. 1 They expect to be away about two months. | RS E | MASONS AND STARS } IN JOINT INSTALLATIO OF OFFICERS TONIGHT | i At the Scottish Rite Temple in Juneau tonight, Gastineaux Lodge [No. 124 F. and A. M. and Nugget Chapter No. 2, O. E. S, both of |Douglas, will instal their new of- | ficers in joint ceremonies. Past Master Samuel Devon will | be installing officer for the Masons land E. E. Engstrom the installing | marshai. will assist as marshal. S0 2 ATTENTION MASONS Stated Communication of Gas- |tineaux Lodge No. 124 F. & AM., ‘will bo held in the Masonic Tem- |ple, Juneau, on Tuesday, Janu- ary 3, 1939, at 7:30 p.m. Installa- tion of officers. All members are Eurgcd to be present. Visiting broth- jers welcome. By order of the W.M. SAMUEL DEVON, Secretary adv. HAD TO MOP UP ETHER | HUNTINGTON, Ind. — A truck iwreck on route 24 was a head- ache to' sheriff A. L. Thompson. The truck contained 4,000 pounds of canned ether. Cleaning up the mess gave the sheriff several woozy hours. Miss Mae Fraser will install for|; the Stars and Miss Elizabeth Fraser P ‘Women In The News. Top Names | A Baroness, Duchess, : And Two Mrs.'s | Wallace A. Doe and Cecilia A.|; John Burns McCoskrie and Esther ASTOR Mrs. Vincent Astor, chairman of the committee for the Ice Follies in New York's Madison Square Garden, given to aid needy musicians, as she .ar< rived for the party. S | | | | l | L ROTHSCHILD Baroness Eugenie de Roths- child of Vienna, member of the banking family, who makes her home in Paris, arriving for her first visit to New York in ! 27 years. MARIE Grand Duch sia, one of the ¢ the recent Hu Marie of Rus- hief patrons at ssian students’ “A Night 4 i L : ANDERBILT \Z U. 8. DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE, WEATHER BUREAU THE WEATHER (By the U. S. Weather Bureau) Forecast for Juneau and vic Cloudy with occasional snow flur winds. . Weather forecast for Soufbeast Alecka: Cloudy with occasional rain over the northwest portion, and snow flurries over the northeast pertion, rain over the southern portion tonight and Tuesday; moder- ate to fresh southeast winds except fresh to strong over Dixon En- trance, Clarence Strait, and Chatham Strait, and fresh northerly 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 Cape Spencer tonight and Tuesday, fresh to strong east and north- east winds from Cape Spencer to Cape Hinchinbrook. beginning at 3:30 pam., Jan, 2: moderate to fresh southeast LOCAL DATA Barometer Temp. Humidity Wind Velocity = Weather 29.05 34 65 N 16 Cloudy 28.95 33 60 SE 7 Lt. Snow 29.00 33 9 S 6 Lt. Snow Time 3:30 p.m. yest'y 3:30 a.m. today Noon today RADIO REPORTS TODAY Lowest 4a.m. 4a.m. Precip. temp. temp. velocity 24 hrs. 28 32 16 24 6 -4 -2 -10 -24 ~28 4am. ‘Weathet Cloudy Pt. Cldy Cloudy Cloudy Clear Clear Cloudy Clear Pt. Cldy Pt. Cldy Clear Lt. Snow Max. tempt. { last 24 hours | 34 14 0 10 -4 Station Atka Anchorage Barrow Nome Bethel Fairbanks Dawson St. Paul Dutch Harbor . Kodiak Cordova Juneau Sitka Ketchikan Prince Rupert Edmonton Seattle Portland San Francisco ‘Washington ScHoococoococeceo Lt. Rain Cloudy Cloudy Lt. Rain Cloudy Cloudy Cloudy =i S 50 40 [ 0 WEATHER CO4DITIONS AT 8 AM. TODAY (airport), misting, temverature 48; Bellingham, sprink- ling, 49; Victoria, raining, 46; Alert Bay, raining; Bull Harbor, rain- ing; Triple Island, showers; Langara Island, cloudy, 38; Prince Ru- pert, raining, 44; Ketchikan, cloudy, 43; Craig, cloudy, 43; Peters- burg, raining, 34; Sitka, clear, 42; Tenakee, cloudy, 32; Radioville, cloudy, 36; Skagway, snowing, ; Haines, snowing; Seward, clear, 19; nchorage, foggy, 10; Fairbanks, p.rtly cloudy, 8; Nulato, cloudy, -14; -17; Stuyahok, clear, -5; Crooked Creek, clear, -12; -6; Solomon, clear, Golovin, clear, 0; Council, part- and Nome, partly c'oudy, 2 Jan. 3.—Sunrise, 8:48 a.m.; sunset Seattle , cloudy, Bethel, clear ly cloudy Juneau 3:22 pm. WEATHER SYNOPSIS A large area of low barometric pressur overlay all Alaska, southwestern Canada, and the northeast portion of the north Pacific Ocean this morning with a center of 28.40 inches at latitude 52 de- grees north, longitude 144 degrees west. A ridge of high air pressure extended from the Hawalian Islands northeast to California and the barometer was also high from Mayo southeast to central Canada. Light to moderate precipitation fell over the western Aleutian Islands, and from Southeast Alaska south along the coast to Oregon with scat- tered local snow over central Canada. Except for the southeast p tion, generally [ai ther prevailed over Alaska. Temperatu: were slig r Southeast Alaska this morning and warmor over north r Alaska. . Phil Plant and Wife No. 3 e Mrs. William H. Vanderbilt, || wife of the Republican gover=- nor - elect of Rhode Island, having a wonderful time on a Miami vacation, PAA PLANE DUE i Seven passengers from Fairbanks were to be flown in to Juneau teday with Pacific Alaska Airways, with Bill Knox and Bill Lavery pilots. This is Bill Lavery’s first flight au as a PAA pilot. Lavery airplane outfit in Fair- understood, and joined PAA a month ago. Passengers are, Mr. Morton, Mr. Frawley, Mrs. H. Donnely, Mr. Ap- pleton, Mr. Walker, Mr. Carlson, Mr. McDonald. O S A PLANTS GET AROUND BOONE, Ia.—Boone residents are wondering where next they should look for plants. They found an ivy vine growing throughethe brick wall of a school room and crawling across the ceiling. Then they found a weed patch in a cornice crack on top of the city hall. - COULD PROVE HIS AGE URBANA, Ill-When a 72-year- old Urbana man applied for an cld age pension he was asked for proof of his age. He referred authorities to his mother, 96, who is in good health except for her sight. Wealthy playboy Phil Plant is shown with pretty Marjorie King, former Broadway showgirl, who became Phil’s third wife, in New York, They plan & honeymoon safari in British East Africa. UNIONS GROW IN BRITAIN A De Poe Bay, Gregon, youth has | made a reputation by going unarm- LONDON—Trade union membei- | eq into the coastal waters an drag- ship in Great Britain and northeri | ging out octopuses alive. Ireland increased by 550,000 to a| it b g i total of 5,851,000 during 1937. Heart disease takes approximately T | three times as many American lives The loganberry, regarded as a | annually as all kinds of accidents hybrid of the wild blackberry and |combined. red raspberry, first appeared in a private yard in Santa Cruz Calif.| Today's News Tuzay.—Empire. A i sl i i . By CLIFF STERRETT S\ JUMPIN' JEHOSHAPHAT THEN WHY DON'T YUH QUIT 2 YESSIR, FREND-- IT K. ME FIFTEEN YEARS TO FIND OUT T HAVE NO TALENT ™ Kay Francis and Baron Erie Raven Barnekow jcting rumors that her wedding plans had been indefinitely post- poned, Sereen Actress K: rancis has announced that she and Baron Eric Raven Barnekow, with whom she is shown in this new picture taken in Hollywood, will wed in February. Miss Francis only recently returned from @ South Amer vacation, > B N

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