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GOLDSTEIN BLDG. WILL RISE AGAIN Structure Is fo Be Five Stores High-To Cost Over $200,000 me this in Build- s of $200,- Juneau will ract wh new ' construction pro- new structi build will tein said the uilt on the urned in F 1 on the g site of the b bruary ¢ round floor biggest outside of , and with Build acros will again be the building in Alaska Building her -story Simpsi this summer stucco front National below the Goldstein pr Seward Street > another really The water in the harbor at Le Havre, office liner the Federal and twe serionsly i made in the United States we and York World's ¥ , also were Airst will thor- Juneau Outside ned to It will be Mayokok write at Cape Pr ivory carv how it i to be going to lieves it gesticn to ex maodern read vernment Wales and teaches doesn’t know just family happen fair, but he be- Lomen’s su Irwin, who - ESKIMO FAMILY HEADS EAST T0 NEW YORK FAIR Mayokok Wbrried About Seal Diefs of Children Zand “lgloos” the A plorer Dave wa. pon, He doc of him a ly how he’ll feels sure he boat in Seattle hat is expe esn't know exac New York, bu met the nd he d at that is worl children’s diet has occasionally civilized any too find it satisfyine worried about Mayokok said, pointing to his dark Bert, 6, Gla 4, Thornton Everett, toddlir 9 months to seal meat The real problem ing Mayokok is 1 Mayokok himse had steady diets Cape foods. He doesn't , good, nor does “It's them of our find it When Prince liy Wworld to make Robe! I'm of larter air, it will be fair promoter York 1 for him understand ' Htile 2, and clothes at stomed an is not a house of and Mayokok who igloo’ oW 36, full blooded Es and writes well sat in his room at the ht and con- Out- imo reads as as most of us, Gastineau Hotel last n In the lobby of the Gastine: morning, wearing the short luks best) with a plane for F u at Cape Prince of Wal wondered muk- lich he ks and near again 1sky reinde board retic dweller took a'Ju to New York N order 13 years ago. He has been Outside but thatl one time his family (one smiling wil d four children) have never been away from home. “I didn't get very well acquaint- ed, Outside, Mayokok said with a sad smile. “I'm out of place here gain at t 1 s to do. The “igloo will pr ably come up but when he tells them what an “igloo” really is, there will be disappointments ‘An igloo,” Mayokok ex choesing the unfamiliar words ily, “is made ¢ wood and sod.” questio! he feels. April Showers are kind to flowers BUT NOT TO HOMES! —FIX UP YOUR HOME— for Now and Later! Are all wood surfaces protected from alternate of good paint? Check these . or better, Is your roof ready? soaking and dryving with a coati points before you consider your home ready for spring . . ROOFING let us check them for you PLASTERBOARD CELOTEX BUILDING PAPER PLYW0OD ; PAINT BUILDING HARDWARE and TOOLS Insist on FULLERS PAINTS, they give SATISFACTION wherever used-inside and outside. Juneau-Young Hardware Co. French Liner Burns, Sinks ed fighting the flames. » removed. removed. ¥ THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, TUESDAY,.APRIL 25, 1939. Btes s FoR is, ence flagship of the French Merch:nt Fleet, burned through and sank in French oficials suspected saboteurs. ship sank a shipment of warplancs 500,000 shipment of Frenc France. An hoir before the A s picture rad as she keeled oer and went dow . - FAIRBANKS MINER LOSES cd from London to New York, shows the liner at Dock; Sabotage EVERY PRICE BRACKET S| Two persons were killed h art objects, destined the New )/ = .,/ ! Calverts Special n. HIS WAD T0 PICKPOCKETS SEATTLE, Vedin, 60, miner of Fa aska, lost $1,600 to pickpe S the entrance of a bank here yester- day. Gustav nks, A April 25, elderly acles Two young from behind recover his gl The jostlers don Vedin mar; dropped his Sp men jostled Vedin he leaned over to psses begged Vedin's par- overed the loss of pocketbook from his hip pocket short time later. The same tactics have been re- peated several times here during the past year and it is estimated the pickpocket gang has secured at least $4,000 his > “ SPRING MOVING GIVES HEADACHE; IS BIG PROBLEM (Continued from Page One) they may travel 600 miles to the Sacramento Valley Once there was work for proximately all who came pay was fairly good. Now of four working members to get $600 in a year. The is $400. Thousands live on ditch banks, or in the sage desert outside the farm belt. Disease is rampant in spots, although the State and Fed- er; agencies have attacked it. Typhoid and smallpox vaccinations are given to thousands. There is some h” dmong the ap- and a family luc aver n@l;i& R, REC U5 PAT. OFF RICE 8 AHLERS CO. Third and Franklin Streets— AU'S ROTARY CONFERI Ju - COMET MESSENGER AND PARCEL DELIVERY PHONE 777 Triangle Bldg. PHON 221 FOR YOUR APPOINTMENT Al VISCOSITY VALVES WITH DUAL PUMP migrants, but Ifar the 1 [ types whose farm; oly dried up blew away from under them [ Many California farmers bitterly re- |sent their presence, even though | they need labor in their costly in- |tensive farm California farm {folk say the transient hordes are ( hatbeds communism. Farm Se- ‘i urity people who visit the eamps {ay it is not so, that most are solid farmers Farm ority are Security says industrious COPR. 1939 CALVERT DISTILLERS CORP., DISTILLERIES : BALTIMORE, MD. AND LOUISVILLE, KY., EXECUTIVE OFFICES CHRYSLER BLDG., N. Y. C. {or of a | - But | most | states meantime their plight al- hopeless. N of their home have enacted laws making it difficult for them to return. Cali- fornia cannot shoulder the whole load. Farm Security is helping in a spot or two. Since 1935, £1,555,000 has been paid out in relief grants families stranded in California $250000 has been spent providing health and medical care. Fourteen permanent camps and a few “mobile” camps follow the wan- derers, in California, a few in other Pacific states is to Another mostly Meantime Farm Security 1,700,000 more farm families: are on the verge of being crowded off the land, partly by power farm- ing. ch tractor displaces one to families, an average of about thr families. Tractor sales have increased 50 percent in. five years, nearly doubled in parts of the | South. The tractor farmers are net criticized by Farm Security. Low — — prices force the surviving larmers[ 1 > cut costs where they can ROIARY HEARS It is a hard problem, but a bright FROM AFAR ON spot or two shows up, of which more another time. New Jersey, Texas Clubs| Respond Affer Reading Empire Edition - Try The Empire classifieds for| results. i one of the many exclusive RAY features which RAY LEADERSHIP! clinch | i Responses from far away as | Asbury Park, New Jersey and Dal- las, Texas, have come to the Ju- neau Rotary Club as a result of its sending out of 5,000 copies of the progress and development edition of the Empire ——PHONE 34 18-19-20 mmmmd | Letters from Presidents of those | lrm-m\.«,\- clubs have written to E. J.| (Kelly) Blake, President of the Ju- neau organization wishing the 101st district a successful conference here next month Conference Chairman A. B. Phil- lips said at teday’s luncheon meet- /ing of the club that a circus tent SPECIAL THE PETER PAN BEAUTY SHOPPE Must sell out, owing to the ill health of Margaret Lindsay, owner. Take Advantage of this Opporiunity—Get Your Permanent While the Supplies Last! $7.50 Permanent for only $5.35 5.95 Permanent for only 5.00 5.00 Permanent for only 4.00 flavor - Calvert Whisk — A BLEND GRADE “A “(iuslom-B\ended" Thiskey—86:8 aniv.h(w: psi 4‘\: Neutral Spirus.("l ‘fm.s rerte acfimcmcm‘n(‘ sivecly . enders. Made ited qu e alvert pered and registered by (4 LordCalvert smo key s Old Dru ality whiske: i ?L"‘A{.l)ld\)rum Bra Calve! rich, economi . proof—7 ert Killfully h\endzg':c(;::::d‘ special” OfEEL Sl aroma, “{pecial” Blended § 90 I‘mn€~7zw/a i S. Grain Ncu(n\ §pirit O\ Dr Calvert “R fectly blen “Reserve Grain Ne RICH, ME p FOR YOUR CUSTOMERS G.\CI’VC" i ded whiskey - - - Lo AT oth, rare. o " Blended Proof—65% —90 A 4 utral Spirits: n. 506 Grait Gin brings D€V e .. complete sat: gn')oy!l\en((.)id- Sram Brand isfactic Distll from 10US L Neutral Spirits ol | ALL THESE n. il ed Dry Gitrt 0% Americ: 00% 85 distilled o Grain Proof. BLENDS MAY BE OBTAINED .. FROM.US! ORDER W. J. LAKE & CO0., Inc. SOLE ALASKA DISTRIBUTOR SEATTLE, WASHINGTON for the barbecue at Mendenhall | glacier is on its way to Juncau.’Nor|h sea Several large displays have arrived | from Seattle and are to be placed | merchants’ windows here. | L] Enterlainment was furnished at Brlngs 49 in today's luncheon by Chief Kiutus Tecumseh, lyric tenor, whe will ap- | pear in concert at the Northern | Light Presbyterian Church Thurs- | To juneau day evening. He was accompanied | by Carol Beery Davis. { S e o - o ARRIVE HERE Copies May Be Obfained The steamer North Sea docked in Juneau at 8 o'clock this mornng | with 49 passengers aboard for Ju- neau, and sailed for Sitka at 2 o'~ clock this afternoon. Arrivals were Mrs. B, N. Plummer, B. N. Plummer, Mrs. Waverly Gil- \more, Pete Hunt, R. H. Fletcher, Mrs. C. G. Fletcher, Alex. Peter- son, P. H. Sloan, W. H. Lawson, Bill Spradlin, Frank Rozie, Charlie Spradlin. | 'W. H. Clarke, A. R. Wheeler, J. W. Moore, Charles McKinney, C. R. Heatherby, H. McGhee, Louls from Bureau of Fish- eries Office |Hiller, M. H. Smith, Nori Manle Mrs. H. X. Lindgard, Mrs. H. Long, Several hundred coples ;f the tng‘Mrs. R. Jones, E. Hein, Mrs. E laws and regulations for the prof Hein, Beverly ' Salsbury, tion of the fisheries of Alaska were | Tedetyed in todays mmalliby the U1 LDoks;Md Burke. | > F. L. Garnick, W. S. Karki, Mrs. S. Bureau of Fisheries office here. P The regulations are available to|W- S. Karki, Claude Peters, Sarah anyone interested, Don Haley, War- Betz, C. V. Telquist, Willlam Ko- | den in charge of the Juneau office, hak. A. L. Flesher, F. Kronquist, announced Marlene Plummer, J. C. Haldeman, Regulations for areas in South- Mrs. B. Vaughn, Mr. and Mrs. J. east Alaska remain virtually un- S. Jeffrey, D. A. Hoffman, Kaarli changed from last year except for Nasi, Kiutus Tecumseh, N. A. Mc- Jimmie a 10 day shortening of the season Eachran, Charles Brokke, Norman | at the start in the Sumner Strait, Rice. 3 | Clarence ~ Strait, South Prince of Outbound for Sitka were Sarah Wales and Southern districts. Smith, M. S. Whittier, Mary Smith, . Charles Burdick, John Durand, Jim pERM"’ lssuED 'I'o Hagen, A. Van Mavern, P. T. O'- Reilly, Jack Faey, John Laidham- REMODEL GROCERY = ™ s >-ee A permit to remodel the Home e winasgnny avneue ona ELKS. INITIATE E Street was issued today by the City Building Inspector to John' Hermle and Joe Thibodeau, owners. The location of the grocery office is also to be moved, Cost of the work | into the Elks Lodge tomorrow ev- is estimated at $300. Jack Groomer ening in the first initiation held un- | will do the work. der the new slate of officers, headed M e TR by H. C. Redman, Exalted Ruler. Melvin S. Leath will install a hot| Refreshments are to be served water heating system at 211 Dixon |following the lodge session. at a cost of $900 according to al B building permit issued today. Try an Empire ad, FOUR TOMORROW | Four candidates will be inducted| TODAY! LEGION ICE POOL Closes Midnight——APRIL 26 ICE AT NENANA " UNCHANGED, IS Ice conditions at Nenana remain ‘urichanged” today, though warm weather ranging up to 52 degrees ai, Fairbanks yesterday has opened lup leads in the Chena River, the | U. 5. Weather Bureau was informed | today. | Fairbanks reported that the Che- !na ice was still holding in front of 'the town. l > SHARPSTONE HER ON WAY TO MINE | Mr. and Mrs. David Sharpstone were to fly to Tulsequah today and the Polaris-Taku mine, where | Sharpstone is consulting geologist. The Sharpstones, registered at the Gastineau, have not been to Polaris since last fall. They returned from the south on the Princess Louisc and expect to spend about thr | weeks at the camp. 'HONORS FOR FIRST KING SALMON, CHANGE Andy Haffner claims the honor of catching the first king salmon “of the season in Auk Bay. He ‘got | his 18-pounder last Saturday morn- |ing. Yesterday ‘it. was stated that Mrs. A, E. Torgerson took the honor with her king weighing 18'% pounds ahead of her catch which was on Sunday. e — 'NORTH STAR TO . LEAVE SEATTLE TONIGHT, WORD Steamer North Star of the Office of Indian Affairs is sailing tonight from Seattle to start its annual trip around the Alaska Coast, according to information received by Claude M. Hirst, General Superintnedent for Alaska. | The North Star is expected Juneau about May 7. in TODAY'S REPORT . | -