The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, March 5, 1940, Page 2

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LW | : & T PRY L RidwES Fin This is an outlying Finnish vi fown Afire Affer Bombing white may be seen (left) on the roof of one of the buildings. They’re Marching to Finland’s Aid \ge, ablaze after Rusian planes had bombed it according to Finnish-ap- proved caption, which stated the planes had dived low, machine-gunning civilians. Two men dressed in THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, TUESDAY, MARCH 5, 1940. IHIRSTRETURNS ~ Welles Is FROM CAPITAL S ARD ARKANsas Resfing Up | For 2 Days 'Two Hospitals, Four Native Schools fo Be: Built i American Under Secrefary then Going to Paris Perfect! This Summer jand four schools will be built out of the current appropriation. Hos- pitals will be at Tanana and Kar atak and schools at Minto, Koyu- {kuk, Kwethluk and Nunapitchuk | - - ~ Bridge Is . General Superintendent Claude M. Hirst of the Office of Indian and London Affairs, Alaska Division, returned today on the Northland after 10| _ .. . : : | weeks in the States on Busimess and | “AUSANNE. March 6. = Sumner leave Velle merican Under Secretary Hirst Was at the Washington of- | )f StAte, per :’m.yv r‘;m"fr nryn\r: of fice for six weeks, during whic a1y i time he attended budget hearings. | *!1dying conuiions. "as BEHAG A ore Later he spent 30 days on leave M e AR AL oA visiting in Arkansas, his $orm er | Unuing his trib (o Paris and Lo by |to confer with Allied leader Mr. and Mis. Hirst drove acro i g o the country, missifig the worst of | ‘Omorrow night and he will remain e oold weather but finding the | there three davs, then to London for winter much more severe in the i"]”“" anys ";}'k 'mvpfm‘ 1“"" ":"" States than it was in Juneau ey "axd OO L e N hew construction. in_ Alaska | Will sail for the United States on {is planned in the Indian Affairs March M i budget for next year, Hirst said __|though in the summer two hospn‘\l»vi | | Pug Quit ToBecome Genfleman Winning a contest to find “the per- fect photographic figure,” in which 300 girls competed, Yvonne Duval was rewarded with a Hollywood screen role. Yvonne is a war baby, porn in Alsace-Lorraine in 1918. U. S. DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE, WEATHER BUREAU THE WEATHER the U. S. Weather Bureau) Forecast for Juneau and vicinity, beginning at 3:30 p.m., Mar. 5: Partly cloud onal light rain tonight and Wednesday, u temperature b 1t about 30 degrees; gentle southerly wind Forecast for Southeast ka: Light rain, little change in e perature t it and Wednesday; moderale southerly wind moderate to 1 over sounds and straits and Lynn Canal Forecast of winas along the coast of the Gulf of From Dixon Entrance to Cape Hinchinbreok, moderate scutherly; from Cape Hinchinbrook to Kodiak, mo ate sutheasterly LOCAL DATA Time Barometer 1emp. Humidity Wind Velocity ~ Weather 3:30 pm. yestly 42 m w 5 Cloud 3:30 am. today 37 80 s 6 Noon today 38 94 SE 7 Rain RADIO REPORTS | TODAY Max. tempt. | Lowest 3:30am. Precip. 3:30am Station last 24 hours | te np temp. 24 hours Weather Anch e 31 | 21 2 0 Cl Barrow -8 & -1 0 Clear Nome 33 2 32 01 W Bethel 43 32 0 Cl Fairbanks 38 8 [ Cle St. Paul 18 17 1 Diiteh Harbor .. 38 3 34 06 Rain Kodiak 41 37 38 18 Cloud Cotdova 42 32 33 0 Cloud Juneau 14 3 37 02 Cloudy Sitka P 37 18 Ketchikan 49 40 41 97 Seattle 51 41 41 85 ] Portland 6 13 44 33 Ain San Francisco 52 52 0 WEATHER SYNOP! centered off the coast of Langara ye: terds morning had intensified during the night and moved rapidly eastward into British Columbia this morning. Strong southerly wind were reported in the vicinity of Dixon Entrance last night sult of the passage of this disturbance but the winds had moderate that disturban The as a re ‘ n H ! [ Y ¢ pped it to| this morning Another disturbance of moderate intensity which h u 7 Jlmmy Mclarnin Tossed Up i bosine master in| been moving northeastward was approaching the lower Gulf of A I : : : i 4 ; aska with the lowest pressure reported about 600 miles south of | £ [ Prize RIHQ—S'OF‘{ of Jimmy Knew diak Island. Light to moderate rain fell over the coastal areas fr | Snowsl'de ) 3 5 \ e e e foflowed_tri-| the Aleutians eastward to the coast of Oregon. In the Int Rags fo R!(heS " eri ana| Wweather was partly cloudy and slightly colder this mornin | g hH % Juneau, March 6—Sunrise 6:43 am. sunset 5:41 p.m Y & re 2 ) By ROBERT MY T 5. McLar knew | 2 - S Train Is Wrecked - Sixteen | AP Feature Sers e en o0 | g e i b ST B Th Sbae ot D ! R HOLLYWOQOD, C March fight v ey S'u en's "lg as High 1001 | PersonsReporfed |ruc by tace kic wim the s Mclarnin now lives well but no 3 DR b dtioveiet. o | Killed unch s gule & gentieman thess| Sl EHERY. (B8 (50 L5 School is Burning o e vuwi naa varneed 1 Larnir ng his go e in th weekly assembly o e 7 He and waited then of the fire Ralph m:[?:‘j:don‘““ ‘.“” b er his ring dnys to marry—| DEDHAM, Feb. 20—While about| Eafon annouw that a1 yon and this c ¢ bitten it | ne exclusive Lakeside golf | 1000 students sat in the assembly | singing period would be conducts T it it i ARIAR por- | thioit B ore most of the film cele- (hall and sang songs firemen for | So loudly did the students sit T e P | s | vy forty-five minutes fought flames| they did nof hear the firemen i s G 2 """fid“"“ SHCH 08 et - | to the grimy boxing gyms that caused $10,000 damage to two arrive Volunteer ski troous from Swed .d Canada are shown marching with skis over their shoulders and rifles i $e-s waded thr lick you can hear Lol b slung across their backs as v v nt (o Finland’s aid on the northern front, according to the Finnish-ap- | it and emsrged unscarred men- ’\"‘I“t“ el e i proved caption tion ping Finland with military aid has provoked a crisis in veden. 'V()’"'w L"(;("l. b dhmmy MeLasnin of foday, “\Yl Sraa e G / 33 years aw from his birthplaze Lar FIE LGRS OFTEN—Wear Longer! i f HARIEV TUPNER STATE CONCLUDES On Czecl in Vancowver B. C, 18 a tribute O Bride-fo-Be Sets MA PRER 10 TATE (ONCL - On Czech O I AR v \ ale for Wa Iding : Lan YU O e Pop Foster. TR'/‘W(" E Harl i is leav- | The Government’s case against A that a scrawny, underfed 1 T Miss Mirfant Tea K6 chgage- |INE Seattle ne ay to return | Ralph Mendez Cordero was com-. PRAGUE, March * - A new $tand- Cld Pop trudged into an i (A”.S RANGER B@AT Workmanship ana ment to Mr. Kenneth Low v Juneau after receiving ”“‘“““]H)](\(Pd late this afternoon. Defense ard dietionary of tne current Czech fight {';l'r rium and be for a g hat TIs Sure to nounced recently chosen : n at Fortland, according to | testimony will follow. Cordero language is under preparation at the e to fight, T ere typical .. 2 3 = g Flogag Tau 6 as the date of her wedding w received here today. Mrs. | charged with assault with a danger- Ggeen Academy of Sciences and Arts, ol b ager lithoukh, the Bl Doveat Spvle wunch ‘j»'“' The wedding will be: soleninizeg | TUrner accompanies him ous weapon. the completion of which is activ S hibrd e babys | Lr e IANato0Ay 08 8 fon st & % oo dastaal P T RGN B ; work. It will be gone about at 8 o'clock in the evening at Trin- | ian PSR supperted by the protectorate id than the usual run of worlamie S e ity Cathedral with the Very Rev.|IBMIf RCE CAS| rnmen| SERORNE RS, AR 25 Criihs S RN sesaing the srvice MMIGRATION MAN Sult for divorce was tIB.f0 b6 ‘S Srminent Osot. ingulsta Many Hard Years radobn BESEGn, dunior PHONE Both Miss Lea and Mt. Lowe are KNIGHT IN TOWN District Court today by EVall D. gt work sitting over six million doc-| Years, hectic and tough, Iipied JRGIE S B ERObiPG ARG, Capt well known in Juneau. Miss Lea is | Moody against Anna Louise MoodY uments relating to the peculiari- In and out of sweat-smelling gymns G°8¢ Sarvela a graduate of the Juneau Hich | - m zrounds of incompatability. s of Este Wanhie: tongue, . & SRR choing | vefint " fhed > School, She is the daughter of Mr.| Immigration Inspector Dewey <o —= "special commission <; busy collect- two, the baby-faced kid and the fgo 000 N k' and Mrs. Harry Lea. Mr. Lowe has | Knight arrived today on the steam PEKOVICH BACK ing all new words and phrases which cld man with a limp, traveled. They Pl A et a(e been in Juneau for a number of |er Yukon from his headquarters at Mr. and Mrs. W. S. Pekovich re- were coined in the past years and took on all for $4. $10 2 vears and is employed by Wilbur |Ketchikan for a week's stay here turned on the Yukon today after gnce have become an inscparable —anything Pop could wangle out of F@'{fifl“efl in Ho!el e S s B Burford. He fs the son of Mrs. fon business. He is stopping at the 1z several weeks in. the part of modern Czech. the tight fisted promoters. Pop LR A Carrie Lowe of New Meadow Idaho. | Gastineau Hotel. East. They are at the Baranof and To speed up the completion of was a great teacher and a great —— , A l s expect to go out to the Mansfield this section of the new edition, the guy to grab every dime. NEW ORLEANS, M —Audry MODES O[ ffi MOMEN[ Today's News Toaay—Empire. Empzie classife results. Peninsula mine workings A S0ON. |Czech Academy, in an appeal, invit-| On to the top the pair struggled Campbell of Washington tele- e = o » " ———————— ¢ the géneral public to help it fa- until in the late 20’s, McLarnin bhoned back to a hotel (St by Adelaide Kerr . o ¥E |y 5 9 . [cilitate its work by reporting new was one of the best fight attrac harles) to forward a string of DCSIgners Ple‘ Them as BCSt Dressed 1mn U S {but truly Czech words tichs in the country, drawing down bearls she had left in her room. . i -oe huge purses. He fought the best » John J. “Mike” O'Le 1o he inquired as to the value. Said the Somet s h purse was telegram, “$80.00.” O'Leary 1 DIES SUDDENLY ”‘» { Yeung Corbett IIT out in Los Ange- suspected a typographical error, i i les and won the w 2lferwe checked the si: ix-peatl string VANCOUVER. B. C.. Ma'ch 5— championship with a jowe found the valuation {John MeNeil, of Toronto. Vice-Presi- One year later B 4 ate, id"nl of the Imperial Oil Company, the title in 15 rounds before a throng breathed sily again only | enroute to 1« eles on a vacation in New York that paid a record- he had paid $80.50 in express It of a sudden g $194,000 to see the battle. cl and insurance to get the heart attack Four months later Ji 1y regain- necklace started home - 29 Hero of “Battle of Mon leo” | VU ' King Honor: | & —— | Alfred Vanderbiit | ~|Panl_V. McNutt lfes, here are the “best.lressed” men in the I possibility, was selected as the “best-dressed fig- ‘Paited States, sccording to a selection made by | ure in the political world” The group also in- e Merchant Tailors and Designers Association of | cluded Thomas E. Dewey, also a presidential con- {America, in convention in Cleveland. Two mil- tender. National fashion honors also went to % lonaires, Alfred Vanderbilt and Angier Biddle | Lucius Beebe, New York columnist, and twenty m M the Jist. _ Paul V. MeNutt, presidential other: Lucius Beebe King George VI is shown decorating Lieut. N. K. Todd (left), of the British cruiser Ajax with = Di tinguished Service Cross as Britain honored the veterans of the “Baitle of Montevideo” which led to the destruction of the German battléship Gra? Spee. Left to right: Todd, the King, Cant. F. S. Bell of the cruiser Exeter, First Sea Lord Sit Dudley Pound, Prime Minister Chamberlain and Winston Churchill Picture radioed from London to New York, A shell pink rese and a mist of white veiling add flattery to this early version of the 1940 Easter bonnet. It's made of white crocheted braid, fits the head like a skull cap in the back, and is finished with a great chou in front, Walter Florelle designed it.

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