The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, June 13, 1939, Page 2

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2 (T " I "' T T 'mn::muwvuw'munu"w ( ARNOLD FIRST WITNESS The ideal hot weather shoe has arrived. E THEM NOW AT A hot weather shoe that is appealing (o the eye as well as com- fort to the foot . .. Japonica and wheat . . . black mesh with patent trim at $4.95 PLAY SHOES DEVLIN in blue, nat fort and style o have just received ten new summer PLAY SHOES and black. A shoe for every need with com- Jiggers Boxy. Swing and Casugl Styles DEVLIN'S SEE OUR WINDOWS OPEN EVENINGS i ‘Hearmg on Restrammg- THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRF,, TUESDAY, JUNE 13, 1939. HERE TODAYi Order Application Drags Slowly (Continued from Page One) and the picketing itself which he was at ail times orderly but| ly, in his estimation, “lawful.” Since May 21 Unien representatives notified him May 21, Arnold ‘said, that to en- force demands of the Alaska Sal- mon Purse Seiners Union for elim- ination of 20 per cent of Southeast Alaska Fish Traps they would pick- et all ships bearing 'supplies for canneries using fish ~from these designated traps Subsequent picketng for the Den- g orth 8ea and Laking, a con- dition - which has prevented the canned salmon industry from’ pro- ceeding in its seasonal activi 80 important to Alaska, was described. Application for the restraining order was made in District Court| here last Friday afternoon and Judge Alexander set the case for hearing today at 2 o'clock. Arrive by Plane Lawyers and witnesses for the hearing arrived in Juneau early this| afternooh in two planes from Ket- chikan. Pilot Herb Munter brought in At- 6 torneys A. H. Ziegler and W. C.| Arnold, Capt. A. Danielson of the Alaska Steamship Company freight- er Lakina which has’ been delayed | at Waterfall since last Thursday | unable fo mnload cannery supples, and H. G. Brazell, bookkeeper for | the Nakat Packing Corporation at Waterfall. | Pilot Bob Ellis arrived with Joe Stearns, union attorney; Eddie Su- | kow, Business Agent for the Alaska Salmon Purse Seiners Union, one of the defendants mentioned in the suit, and Femmie Thompson, Craig Delegate of the ‘AsPsU. - PAINTING IS STOLENFROM HONOR PLA(E World WitE—Alarm Sent Out from Louyre Mu- | seum in Paris ‘ PARIS, June 13-—~The Paris police today issued a world-wide alarm for Antoine Watteau’s famous miniature painting, “Indifferent,” stolen from | the honor place in the Louvre on | Sunday while hundreds thronged the museum. The painting $80,000. The robbery recalls the famous theft of Mona Lisa from the Louvre | in 1911. “Indifferent? is a study of a sev- enth century dandy. - e POLICE QUELL FIST FIGHTS IN FISHER PLANT AFL Strikers Attack CIO Workmen Proted- ed by law FLINT, Mich,, June 13.—Police here quelled three clashes between rival CIO and AFL divisions of the United Auto Workers' Union at the General Motors plants. The AFL group, headed by Homer | Martin, called a strike, Meanwhile, Martin planned to meet later with Gov. Dickinson in Lansing, to dis- cuss the “whole strike situation.” Tw omass fist fights occurred in front of the Fisher Body plant number one on South Saginaw Street. Later fighting broke out at the Atherton Avenue plant entrance as workers were escorted to the plant by police. AFL pickets were dispersed by | police when they attempted to halt| trucks with workers. at this en-| trance, | SEWING CLUBHAS PICNIC-DINNER A picnic-dinner w as enjoyed last night at Treadwell beach by mem- bers of the Monday night sewing club. ~After roasting wieners and toasting marshmallows around a| camp fire, the group were' guests | of Mrs. Joseph Selliken, at her Treadwell home. The evening was spent in’ sewing, after which the hostess served des+ sert, <|id is valued at ovm‘ it New Jer\e) cut its traffic deaths in 1938 to 885 from 1278 in 1037 and rather ‘large for Mrs. Hansen, smallest member of the ;,H}a\mted |iterally KING SALMON IS "KING” AT CLUB MEETING AIaska Is Represemed in 'Parade of States’ at Women's Session King salmon really went to town with' a ‘bang at the couneil meetir of ‘the General Federation of Wo- nén’s Clubs held last month in San Francisco, and the story of how i happened is told in a letter receiv this week by Mrs, R. R. Herman President of the Alaska Federa |of Women's Clubs, from Mrs. H | James Ferguson, former President ¢ the Juneau Woman's Club, who rep- resented the Alaska Federation of Women's Clubs as delegate at larce It all grew out of the fact the Alaska delegation was suddenly called upon to represent the Tor- ritory in the “Parade of State which was held on the closing nizht of the council meeting. Having hac no previous notification of this event none of the delegates were prepared with a costume that would represent sofne prominent founder of the Te: ritory, some particular industry. or some other eévent connected with it history. A hurried search for a parka anc mukluks was fruitless, and so delegation decided it would fea Alaska’'s most important indus even if the costume depicting it was not so picturesque as some of the colonial and other elaborate cos- tumes worn by other state presi- dents. A pair of hip boots. a southweste a ‘gaff hook and a king salmon did the trick. The boots were size H 12, P delegation, and the fish was &5 large “as shej but un- she entered the parade. and 'stole the show,” accordin: | to Mrs. Ferguson, who sent a col- | | account of the ceremony to Hermann d three ored Mrs ie fc par > of he heard wrote. to pick it up and her arms, but she ma plete round and ce sed her. If they couldn't see her they could at le smell that fish The announc for the 1t led color to the entry 'by stating that he fish was a trap caught fish, sent by mail to participate in the parade. A picture of all the participants he parade appears in the Ju { the Club Woman, official ‘maga of the General Fed Clubs, with Mr: prominently posed at one end of the ow, her Alaska fisherman cos- tume fc ||\1.h' a striking contrast to the beflounced and beribbo: cos- tumes of the m]wr participants, - TWO KILLED IN PLANE CRASH TO SHIELD CHILDREN ROCKFORD, Illinois, June 13. Ray Zuelke, 25, of Milwau and Audrie King, 25, of Rockford, a stenographer, were killed when Zuelke crashed his plane on a goif course after once attempting to land on a playground, then pulling out his burning ship apparently for fear of injuring frightened children e e - An efficiency expert estimates the average form housewife takes more than 200,000 average steps a year just to throw out the waste water. - D The number . of - hobs United States increased by 5,000,000 head in 1939. eve in in .the nea Face Morals Charge Rev. and Mrs. Joe Jeffers Municipal Judge William McKay of Los Angeles, Cal, has ruled that Rev. Joe Jeffers and his \\'ifz- Zella, must appear in supe- court to face a morals c!hugc It was charged that they weceived guests in their home while in the nude. GEORGE BROS. $20.00 Coupon Books $13.00 $10.00 Coupon Books $9.5 Only Baby Beef Sold Here! BABY BEEF POT ROAST -2 FRESH GRO FLUFFO SHOULDER LAMB ind from an average of 1,191 for the n_three years preceding 1938, 1 . COFFEE 3 Pounds SOC GUABANTEED —— We Grind It As You Like I ORANGE JUICE 12 cans . . Nature Sweet—Pure COOKIES—SNOWRALLS - 30¢ GRAPEFRU'T JUICE 2 « . o 49 BROCOLLI IN TINS EORGE BRUS PHONE 52-95PHONE 92-35 UNDBEEFR 25 roms B L 29¢ vt oPeBQ® - pounds 99c - S 69)0 U. S. DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE, WEATHER BUREAU THE WEATHER (By the U. S. Weather Bureau) Forecast for Juneau and Vicinity beginning at 3:30 p.m. June 13: Incre: cloudiness tonight, Wednesday cloudy, probably showers, cooler Wednesday; gentle to moderate westerly winds tonight becom- ing y Wednesday. st for Southeast Alaska: Cloudy along immediate west coast, inereasing cloudiness tonight over remainder of Southeast Alaska, Wednesday cloudy, probably showers, cooler Wednesday, except along immediate west coast; gentle to moderate westerly winds tonight be- coming southerly Wednesday, except moderate to fresh over Lynn Canal [ Forecast of winds along the Coast of the Gulf of Alaska: Moderate westerly winds tonight bcoming south Wednesday from Dixon En- trance to Cape Hinchinbrook. i LOCAL DATA parometer Temp. Humidity Wind Velocity =~ Weather 0 36 w 12 Clear 48 83 s 2 Clear 68 44 w 10 Pt. Cl'dy RADIO REPORTS TODAY 3:30a.m. Precip. 3:30a.m. temp. 24 hours ‘Weather 44 Cloudy 42 Pt. Cl'dy 30 Clear 38 Pt. Cldy Cloudy Clear Cloudy Cloudy Pt. Cl'dy Cloudy Clear Clear Clear Cloudy Cloudy Pt. Cl'dy Clear Cloudy Cloudy Cloudy Time 3:30 p.m. yesterday 30.14 3:3 am. today 30.12 Noon today 3007 Lowest temp. 42 40 Max. tempt. | last 24 hours 50 58 Station Atka Anchorage Barrow Nome Bethel Fairbanks Dawson St Paul Duich Harbor Kodiak Cordova Juneau Sitka Ketchikan Prince Rupert Edmonton Seattle Portland San Francisco New York ‘Washington o 48 54 64 48 50 54 62 70 59 70 50 62 4 80 | 60 [ 80 | 8 | WEATHER SYNOPSIS The barometric pressure was high this morning from the Aleutian Island and Bering Sea region eastward to the Gulf of Alaska and southeastward frem the Gulf of Alaska to northern British Columbia. This general pressure distribution has been attended by precipitation over the Aleutian Island and scatteringly over the Kuskokwim Valley and by generally fair weather over the remainder of the field of ob- servation. 8 Junefu, June 14.—Sunrise, 2:53 a.m.; sunset, 9:07 p.m. coccocecBoccocesco@89coBcos ELECTRIC RANGES REFRIGERATORS LAUNDRY EQUIPMENT WATER HEA’I:ERS at : Rice & Ahlers Co. Third and Franklin PHONE 34 HOT MEALS ON HOT DAYS bur a cool kitchen ulways—wnh a GENERAL ELECTRIC RANGE ® Swift, clean, penetrating heat of G-E Hi-Speed CALROD Heating Uaits go divectly into the food, not all over the room!You can cook a complete dinper on even the hottest of d;\)l ‘without raising the kitchen tempera- ture even 50 and you'll spend less time in the kitchen, too. SEATTLE PRICES IN JUNEAU WE PAY THE FREIGHT Alaska Eleciric Light & Power Co. Sales and Service—PHONE 616 JUNEAU—ALASKA——DOUGLAS PHONE 411 CONNORSMOTOR COMPANY | There is no substitute for Newspaper Advertising

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