The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, January 22, 1940, Page 2

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e e 2 DUKER E BlAMES ON GRIEVANCE Fads in Lawsuit Labeled "Utterly Baseless” Local Politician Declaring that facts set a complaint filed in District have thé' ‘effeet of him, Sam Duker, local attor forth in “besmirching THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, MONDAY, JAN. 22 Singing in Rain—of Bombs A on the matter 1 AY T 1bso- H IS i Livestock Is The utter baselessness of the facts Lo Scared fo Death h in the complaint 1 to eve; BB O e matier merore | BY COYOleS se with the e 4 orely CHEYENNE, th Jan, 22, mpt to sat petty | Coyotes bring death to $1,300,000 ievance worth of livestock in Wyoming an- nually, a recent U. S. Biological rvey shows. In addition to the animals they ctually kill, the coyotes cause the athd of many sheep and cattle by cing them to overgraze. The over- grazing is caused by livestock band- ing together in eclose quarters for protection from coyotes. | P Graduation Exercises personal ot political gr oo BID DATE POSTPORED | ON'WRANGELL'S NEW POSTOFFICE BUILDING Word that the de of bids om t and Customt ha by Court 1l Postoffic 4 'ahd been furtk Republican candidate for Deleual ik M i - to Congress, y asked that re 1 K h H ers withold judgment on the ma ‘ eep Molner nopping ter until it is decided in court ary 1 e Duker’s statement is as follows w )0sLPONeE ‘:1 :NVER, Col ;L\n 22 .I‘L.x a “Saturday’s Empire carried an not been received ur for Mrs. Wilson McCarth item " re 7 toa suit filed against i ] 1 his kesping abreast of the family me by Mrs. Mildred Hermanu act- to bid on th 1 nmencement CPA'!-mul:lvs’ | ing for one Alex Minzhoff alleging tract and trac I * In ington, D. C, she saw| that he had been damaged by my|now available here, however her Dennis, receive his di-| failure to file a suit for him which OR ¥ \*1“““\ from Georgetown Univer- | I had allegedly beén employed to FO i R ity law school. Next day she flew file. Mrs. Nel anberg and daugh- Salt Yake City where her oy G dman, of Nome, yhter o e g s “In every law suit of course it ‘:““_'» M} b F ‘, \1 P’\ll\ b l-w daught Kathleen, was gradu- gossible to set forth dn a complaing | STTWEA 10 JUnean B - T Plt dted itront Mg Dhiversty i1, D1 Saturday and are at the Baranof |y jext day she was back home any alleged facts which desires to include. “As a matter f fact, mere allegation of such facts prov except | nothing and "has' no effect 1o ' bésmirch thé defendant proven in court. Conscience Clear T naturally ‘ask that in all fair-| ness everyone withhold their ment oh the matter until it nally adjudicated at which sure my aetions' in’ this' matter conscience on be fully vindicated. M _JITIIIllllllllflnmlllllIIIIIIIIHIIIII|IIIIIIIIIIHIIIIHIIIIHIIIIIIIIIllllll|IlhlIIlllIIlHlIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII|IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII|IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlIIIIIIIllllllIlllllllllllllllllllIlll; % : | i : plaintiff | however, the .umm awaiting 'phassage south for |vacatfon trip. Their husbands o |MINING togéther on Anvil Cree - attend graduation | daughter, “lin Denver to P of another at Kent School exerci: \4;1\ untit BARE 1N PRV eiun ruronr| OTERH Traffic Lights traffic lights burn out three unu-‘l as fast as identical bulbs in the red and amber signals? ’ It's true in almost every in- stance, says C. V. Btanker, super- | intendent of fire and police _x,-r.l nals. He theorizes it might be that because ‘the green bulb is at the | pottom of the signal it is closer to | the street and therefore subjected to grs‘aber degrees of heat. | BLOW STRU(K PHILADELPHIA Jan, 22. — The European war has struck a blow | !at the University of Pennsylvania's varsity swimming team, having claimed Francis J. Gosling Jr. of | Paget West, Bermuda. Gosling who finished second in diving in the Eastern Intercollegiate cham- pionships last year, is serving as a private in the Signal Corps of ithe British Army. He plans to \-.‘-‘ turn to school at the finish of hos- tilities. | e OMAHA, Neb., Jan. 22—Herman Erhorn and Jake Rachman, Oma-| ha newspapermen, met on a street| corner and reviewed their high school days at’ Rock Island. Talk got ardund to the football team of those days and they began calling off the hames of ‘the plav- 1940. ] U. 8. DEPARTMENT OF' AGRICULTURE, WEATHER BUREAU THE WEATHER (By the U. S. Weather Bureaun) Jan yderat § Juneau and vi light Mini ity, beginning at 3:30 p.m n Tuesday afternoor mum temperature tonig Forecast for udy tor sh, gusty rees Forecast light rain ove wind, ex about 33 Alaska: Cle n portion rtherly uesday e to fre for Southeast outl cep eas to Lynn C and strong Entrance Tuesday after- cinity of Dixon noon. Forceast of winas along the coast of the Gulf of Alaska. Winds along the coa from Dixon Entrance to Si will be f h st to southeasterly, increasing in the vicinity of Dixon and from Sitka to K i, fresh to strong east to north- LOCAL DATA Finland’s unconquerable spirit is reflected in this photo. fear is seen on the faces of these schoolgirls, singing in shelter as Red bombers roar overhead dropping dea on the capital. 'BLOCKADE RUINS |l n » BaATOW, HLWNY] Burn Out Before Red ers‘ They called off all but on judg-from Atlin in hi rim and i | fackle, Neither '¢ould remember | (HINESE FSH \! G is fi-|registéred at the Baranof Hotel MEMPHIS, ’I'em), Sept. 22. —'that fellow's name. i. I am| Barr cameé in emply and is to! Memphis police have pondered this, When they met again a wee k| 5 (TR later, Herman said, will | take a load of freight over t Wednesday . » hill | question for years: Why do bulbs used in THE DRAMA OF THE WORLD Is Under Your Eyes! Every day a mighly pageant unfolds . . . an intense drama more enthrall- It is life! Its mysteties. its thrills, its sorrows daily claim our attention . . . daily add interest o our individaal lives. It is vital! THE EMPIRE brings you this. Through its pages marches life with all its infinife’ variations of tone ! . . life: makes the news. Read THE EMPIRE with this in mind . ..s keep the gigantic werld panorama that makes THE EMPIRE tippermost. . With this perspective you'll enjoy THE EMPIRE more than ever befors! The Daily Alaska Empire Juneaw’s Newspapor ing than any play that was ever produced. Gripping! Dramatic! IfllmflllllllllIIIIIIImIlHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIlIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIllllllllllllIIIHMMIIMMIIIIMIIHMIIIIIIHIIHHIHIHHIIIHIIIIII “Jake, I know green 'who that tackle was. I!; was me!” |to HONGKONG, Jan, 22 “hinese reports the fish munity in Kwangtung Province suffered a loss of 10,000 and over 1,000 boats since the dec- | laration of the Japanese blockade | Faci with the alternative of staying at home or running the gauntlet of Japanese guns some 30,000 fishermen have been ad-| Kwangtung provin- | change their vised by the cial government to jobs Japanese destroyer: to have looted and fishing jun: 1 the suspi they nese MARYLARD RULES COUSINS MAY WED were guer carrying arm BALTIMORE, Md., Jan. 22, — If you want to marry your first cousin, and it's all ri 1 cousin, it's ¢ the of Attorney General Walsh ruled the request o county court clerk, that “are not within the collateral consanguinity marriage is forbidden by BEE STING BRINGS §8,000 DAMAGES NEW CASTLE, Ind Bee stings won an § for Vernie F. Rar h Ramey, an interurban sued the Indiana Ra 000 damages, al ng whose law, hat he su fered a perm ying to escape a swarm of bees h attac ¢ e switching a frei « in J 1937. The carrie; ded 1 the bees had beer ed ¢ it right-of-way by trusties of the In- diana reformatory. - M SS0URI DOCTOR CANCELS ALL DEBTS HOUSTON, Mu_ Je |J. R. Womack, a practi sician in xas County for | years, said he was cancelling debts of all those who owe for medical services. “If anyone desires to pay his bill, the money. will be turned over to the relief fund,” Dr. Womack said. The amount of his books the him mmlfllflmlIllllllIII|||IIIIImlImIIHIHI||IlmllIHIIIIHIIl|IIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII’||IIlllllIlIIIHIIIIHNIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIImIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlllIIIIIIIlI|I|||m|IIIIIIIIII indebtedness on totals more than $3,200. -ee THEY'RE GLUING - APPLES TO TREES HOWARD W. BLARKESLEE AP Science Editor BETTSVILLE, Md spray that prevents apples from | falling off the trees js announced | by the U. S. Horticultural Station! here. Premature falling of apples is one of the growers’ great problems. As thie fruit approaches the maturity and color for harvesting, in numer- ous varieties the danger of drepping becomes more acute. Orchardists gamble every day they let the fruit stay on trees. The new spray contains a drops of a chemical that pro plant growth. These growth stances have been discovered in the last few years. In strong cc centrations they will make roots grow out of leaves or stems. The spray reduced the falling of Williams Early Red apples from nearly total loss of the crop to al- Jan. 22.—A few otes L A sub- | T | tice side as Time Barometer Temn Humidit7 wina Veiocity ~ Weather 3:30 p.m. yest' 30.26 33 71 3 3 Pt. Cldy 3:30 am. today 30.19 31 9 NE 20 Cloudy Noon today 30.17 38 42 ENE 16 Cloud, RADIO REPORTS TOLDAY Max. tempt. Lowest 3:30am Precip. 3:3Cam Station last hours | temp temp. 24 hours Weath Atka 36 38 03 Anchorage 24 15 16 0 Barrow -2 ] > 0 Nome 35 19 2 0 3e 36 14 16 0 Fairbank 4 8 -6 0 Not a trace of Paul s 32 30 32 03 Helsinki air raid | Dutch Harbor . 4% 10 85 1 and destruction Kediak 41 40 40 43 Cordova 35 30 33 0 Juneau ki 37 0 Cloudy Sitka 41 05 Fun at the Fair Retehikan 4‘4 ; 0 Clot 7 3 0 Smoky 45 | 34 0 Cl¢ 8an Francisco . 47 | 41 42 0 Cloudy WEATHER SYNOPSIS barc iled this morning o Bering Sea the Aleutian Islands with vhe 1 orted pressure 29.00 inches a h barometric pressure prevailed from Barrow and ward to Califor the crest being 3092 in ov Mackenzie Valley This 1€er: essure distribution Although the New York World’s is closed for the winter, a skeleton staff remains on duty. Here pretty Ann Zabawski, fair employe, zoes scooting alang with Frank Gerety, World’s Fair policeman, on the “Road of Tomorrow” at the Ford Exhibit. BIDDLE BiD—In a shift by F.D.R., Judge Francis Biddle | (above) was named U. S. soli- citor general, to succeed Robt, Jackson, who in turn succeeds Atty. General Frank Murphy. most no loss. 1y actual count trees that had dropped from 642 per- cent to percent of their apples. dropped y a little more than one | percent ! The chemical used was napthalene acetic acid. It centration was one tk Al y percent. | Later tests with a spray containing | only ten thou of acid resulted in marked 1bition of drof of several v ot apples. - o Can t Be Personal ‘ KNOXVILL Tenn., Jan. 22— The Tennessee Supreme Court will net permit atto to indulge in | “personalities” such as calling an attorney by his first name. | Attorney R. D. Busbee, during an | i to Assistant neral Jack Smith | as “Jack. | “In this court,” rapped Chief Ji Grafton Green, “attorneys m to attormeys on the oppesing ‘adversary counsel’ and not indulge in personalities.” )] refer tended by | \ Is by ger y A weather ainder 1 Tt - € all throughou g Sunset 4:00 p.m Rodent Hewspaper Ad Rode Pays, with odeo s Greal Resulfs TONIA, Mo. it rat exte ¢ a 2 o M carbon monoxide from automo- e ( 1 Iribu bil exhaust ;,‘)"; into bur- W plu A ltte C 1 r Y n the floo: was | P . fri gas had been piped i - > ¥ ar B T bowl A Humpie 1 FROM KOUGAROK ne Hote v Kouzarol r, ar- n i i by PAA plane 1 d € T v tic arda Outside ri yrthern Nome for a trip. He L nd t Nome. 1 At the anof Hotel, o e Empire Want Aa | MODES of ¢he MOMENT ~by Adelaide Kery Brinz Results The touch of glitier seen in so many cocktail costumes appears here in black velvet gloves embroidered with multicolored secuins. They match the big halo hat designed by Madame Pauline,

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