The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, March 26, 1940, Page 2

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‘2 THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, TUESDAY, MARCH 26, 1940. g e Colonization ‘ No Bearer Of Grudges Swarms of British Bombers Attack German Ba a [ Blll (on'alns LOUISVILLE, Ky., March 26.—Po- | tice Join B. sracaey vowed | befors court opened. he weuld dis- 0 more case: He aimost defendant QuotaJoker - =~ After filing away the warrant, o il R | the ju leaned over to whisper to < L _reporter That fellow once . AdmlS.,lOfl fo AIaSka of| curted the lady who became my I tined him, he mi Immigrants in Excess wiic and if 1 fined nin Yy think, it was spiitefulness, of Quota Provided - - W. A. EATON, FORMER Admission of nonquota im e T NN e of colon provided for the bill introduced CALIFORNIA MARCH 18 Senator Wi on March 13 it copies reccived here disclose, William Ames Eaton, mining man The bil “Any Al- formerly of Alaska, died in Cali- aska develo; tion may. jornia March 18 upen givix ees acceptable iving him are his widow to the Secretary of Labor agai Mary Eaten, and their two daugh- such persons oming public (ers Mrs, Frances Chisholm and charges {y as settlers persons yrs. Constance Stewart. not ineli citizenship fallin After leaving Alaska, Eaton within any of the following - was interested in oil operations in nd thereupon such per- California. , in the discretion of e - > o - etary of Labor, be admitted to SOMMERS BACK Alaska as nonquota immigrant R. J. Sommers, well known local upon compliance with, and for ccentractor, came. back on the Al- long as they shall comply with, aska today from a short business conditicns and requirements here- irip to Ketchikan inafter in this section contain: - - LIBBY MAN HE: Restructions E The bill goes on to provide that A L. Vaughn, Libby, McNeill ar those especially admitted to Al- Libby salesman, came in on the Al- must be between the ages of aska and is stopping &t the Gas- il 5 : 45, or the spouse of child tincau Hotel # Avenging swarms of British bombers hurled tons of explosive destruction on the German base of Sylt |or adopted child of such a pe BN % Island for more than \ hours in history's most sustained aid raid on one fortified objective. This | that each such immigrant st HALTE BACK Selmer Holle, Forest Service em- y Royal Air Force photograph, taken on a previous reconnaissance flight, shows the seaplane base at List | be certified as physically and men- on the island of Sylt. Points indicated are: (A) wireless station: (B) ngar; (C) seaplanes; (D) crane tally fit, that each such immigrs »"m ;‘:("{'}“Ni ;m _“"; Alfl)\k:: hl. for 1"'ting ¢ 1 aircraft; (F) cranes; (G) harbor; (H) repair hangar; (1) motor vehicles; (J) |shall take an oath to uphold P (\,\Ll,il]f O,ILI,\‘R:,,Q[),(,:::.' barracks; (K) men; (L) motor transport sheds; (M) building under construction. Constitution and laws of the Unit e ed States, that he shall engage oul 25 o b et : : in guch occupaticns as are out- TO ANOHORAGE bunted grounders and in almost J. A. Buchanan, agent for the 3 ned. i he charter b pvel- the same motion flipping the ball W 8B, Gharter |G- SR PV | opment, companies for a perlod of AlAska Railroad at Anchorage, with Grapefruii Grind——— ¥ 4 Back 10 the HEEEE at least five years after his ad- 'S Wif¢ is a passenger through i- ; IUs Risky Business s o Kthekn and DRE! the > today on the Alaska _ The air is full of baseballs. YOU| jpigrgnt shal have a passpor 5 R IR SIEe 0 ““’:“‘ your arms|e.om a recognized foreign goveri- CROWDY NORTH P and protect your face. Youre . on Mr. and Mrs. J. K. Crowdy and ceping close watch on the ball Gikiseh i Five Yeaks on are Alaska passengers for the of a pepper game nearby Whel—| ,, jmigrang admitted under the Westward. Crowdy —operates the whiz! peg that satled over | o Bt et up by the New York Mining Company at |the catcher's reaeh sizzles past| ghan not be admiitted to citi- Bethel a dredging unit JOUr BB, g zenship until after five years' re % 3,0 y You wonder how the players| o BT S E0 Tt he shall NEW HOUSEKFEPER keep from getting hit. They must| F0 e ¥ 0 uota tmn Miss Lee Ellenwood, of Seattle have eyes in the back of thel grant arrived in town today and will heads. Someone yells “heads up The bill, designated as the Al- J0iD the staff.of the Baranof Hotel and thos in danger zone aska Development Corporation: Ac as housekeeper. scem 10 instinetively whether| " 1945" y1ovides for the forming £ WY the ball is coming their was. Tt/ ;0 510600000 corporations for the TO MANOOK CREEK il e o senger visiting in Juneau today Few get hit, but some do. A OUT AGAIN, IN AGAIN Roberts is working placer ground vear or so ago Warren Giles, the| Charles Chuck, who was relohsed cn Manook Creek. ! business manager of the Cincin-|from the Federal Jail here only, a - i Reds, suffered a brain con-|week ago after serving a long term GODFREY ON ALASKA ission when a foul tip from a|ywas arrested this afternoon on a' Sam Godfrey, well known S hitter’s bat struck him disthe Bf Inteny 1o & Swalhi rd Peninsula mining man, is Now, LETS SEE HOW GWICIK Off in the corner of the out- >eo i passenger on the Alaska for the g, YOU CAN GET RID field players dash at a sawdust| por want and For Empire Vestward pit, leap, and throw their feet oul | jacsifieds bring result e in k slide. Then they get up ‘TEX:\N JOURNEYS NORTH nd shake the sawdust out of 5 6 | TO MAKE HOME IN ALASKA their cyes like a pole-vauiter who “Exit Smhng” — has fallen from tWe high bar, | Bound from Houston, Texas. to Manager a Busy Man s # ' Anchorage, Alaska, Mrs. J. C : . g Some teams hold two-a-day 4 Beardslee is a passenzer aboard the a2 y C\‘JAS"\r SONSql-?E?», kouts. The, matager drifts /fipm Alaska enroute to the Westward \ CE SOX ST R L’D‘ cup to another, watching| § city to join her husband, engincer THIS SPRING «F“Nlh(: the ies drill, He gives a word| & in charge of Civil Aeronautics Au- BUSINESS-OF NECLOSITY! here and there and oc- | thority construction work in Alasia ionally stops to demonstrate the | T - By 3 i o make & | DEPUTIES RETURN Spring training camps are as earing dark g: The heat gets times the manager asks a| Deputy U, 8. Marshals Walter much a part of baseball as the ou cut in the ~open but it isn't ) o tuter youngster. An Hellan and Sid Thompson re- World eries—an chuck ) bad if you're in the grandstand. ¢vnerienced catch. handles the | turned on the North Sea after full of color. ( tively flannel-uniformed Play- ihrows of the rookie pitchers | taking a party of prisoners to the few people, tho ha an owing, catching and hit e boss wanders over to give| States. opportunity to visit the camp: baseballs. Out beyond the park | ijcce tossers the once over, Then : - % and get a fi::t-hand view of tall, thin pines sway gently iere’'s hitting practice and the FOOT 'INJURED what actually cn ihere. |‘he breezes coming off the C n ‘takes a look &t :the| Al Anderson, local reporter, is That's why illen h, in That's the spring training 1y s hitting The man-| hebbling around his beat today 2 ies of th has he Florida towns where 11 , want to know if they saks | as the result of a foot injury suf- pai = Hintare: of the ‘ League .clubs are trainit od easy cut at the ball, wheth-| 4 fered in a skiing accident Sunday diamond’s pefruit grind” | days e their swing is smooth or jerky, | TIRE I This is the fir tery i rs, wearing long sleeve her their eye is good—that ATTENTION .0.E.8 AR ! their uniforn vhether they hit at bad balls. | Beguler mecing:of Jyseen Ghap- By DILLON GiiHAM freely. Some are in thel This spr training fol-de-rol | e :No, 1 S IMCatays i bin.- Sports Editor, AP Feature Service | outfield, shagging fungoes, OLh been going on for 54 years. | Yon and.cefoesmeiie, | cavort around the infield, scot ted it | | (Signed) LILLIAN G. WATSON, TAMPA, ¥ fi n | up grounders. In front of the he burly boys who played for| Mrs. Geraldine Bourque adv. Secretary. beats ¢ ul 1 the f 1 third-t e | 3 : ! lown on th I- | outs, down the first and third-bs 1 old Chica /hite kings e baked, reddish-orange ' clay of s, others play catch. A hal e 5 \,‘“ “’A‘x‘ld S;fif&;g:;l mmg"f f’°‘.“bl'2" husband, and t i v I 1 - e t N ; g o1 an el . 4 the infield. The brilliant rays, dozen bend low before the wooden beer during the winter! ter, )z-s. Geraeldfine!g;::;?e?::g:d FINE :.-.m:w ot clay, hit you in!stands, nimbly hopping about in t p Anscn had to take Lhem} to her death from the 17th fioor of the eyes. You squint, unless youre ' a pepper game, stopping hard- to Hot Springs, Ak, to boil out.| the Book-Cadillac Hotel in Detroit Watch and Jewelry Repairing Me gt so much publicity out of| fber writing on the wall with a lip- v TN TO WHOM IT MAY CONCERN the trip that he made it an annual | Stick, “Exit Smiling.” In her hand- | RENOTTTION om and the other clubs fol-| DaE was a letter to William s. | PAUL BLOEDHORN ‘ ISOLUTION lowed suit Paley, radio executive saying *J WHEREAS, Mr. George Lane, as representative of Washington b’ ) am tired.” S. FRANKLIN STREET - 15 s 0 .. District 1cil No. 1 of t Ma e Federation of the Pacific, did Cou AR e on the first of Jur 16 make the proposal that Local Industrial Union No I their Charter, providing that the International | % 2 | Hod-Car: Common Laborers Local No. 1395 accept WITH NORTH SEA DOMESTIC l into their tion members of Local Industrial Union No el | | without the cnt of Initiation fees or other sssments other than F. R. Townsend. Inian Island fox } 0“. BUHN[NG Fl.floll FuRNAcE i L ‘ B | farmer, returned on the North Sca B EASY T . i ] 8 | EASY 2 1940, Local 1395, Hod-Carriers roa trip to Seattle for a few 5 1LOW [11({)(?[258};]3 j | ing and Common Laborers Union, after having received special dispen- ATy s ' e s ot HRRding rate Tiacal RUAGELCIS Trrion uest at the Gastineau Hotel, | ® DESIGNED FOR.SMALL HQM- i i} No. 822 tuviting thelr members | members of our organzation 1"0sed expetls o leave soon| 105.00 with Ceil i as proposed by Mr » Lane; and g “)“;‘“ Bt e e e (Instaliat; tra) ’ 5 R B seaward entrance of Icy Strait nstallation .extra | WHEREAS. o rd, 1940, L Industrial Union No. 8 ; i 4 - PLAY 1 addressed a communication to Local 1395, Hod-Carriers, Build oI { | Union ed by M Common Labor rejecti our invitation DRUM AND BUGLE as prop: George Lane, as represe we of District Council No. 1 of the Mari —e | time Federation of the Pacific; (ORPS Io fORM 17 B T SR | NOW, THEREFORE, BE IT RESOLVED that Juneau Local No. 3 | 1395, International Hod-Carriers, Building and Common Laborers Union, A drum and bugle corps will be § ’ agreement made and entered into on the 10th day of 1938, | 00 VR Leslan at, 7:30 otelock to- s HANGE 310, by and between Local Industrial Union No. 832 and Federal Labor o o 'T'u"‘“‘f"“'“;‘ t-"gé"” Dug- i} c YOUR 4 , ¢ according to Post Comman- 3 | Union No. 2 ! der George Gullufsen : THINNED' OUT Dated at Juneau, Alaska, this 23rd day of March, 1940, g A International Hod-Carriers, Bullding and Common Laborers Union FORESTERS RETURN % LUBRICANTS! | Local No. 1395, American Federation of Labor. For Serviee men William N. | o, o } By JACK DAVIS, Financial Secretary. JUNEAU BUILDING AND CONSTRUCTION TRADES COUNCIL and Arthur E Gilover re- turned to Juneau today from fiek. AMERICAN FEDERATION OF LABOR. work south of here. Parke has By H. LESTER RINK, Secretary ady, bren at Ketchikan and Glover at : | Craig. Klawock and Hydaburg. | l . DEPARTMENT OF AGRIC THE WEATHER (By the U. BUREAU ANNUAL LEGION © ESSAY WINNERS Weather Bureau) ARE ANNOUNCED Forecast for Juncau and vicinity, beginning at 3:30 pam., M , Cloudy tonight and Wednesday, minimum temperature toni - - 24 de s; mcderate easterly wind. Winne rs for this division in th Forecast for Southeast Alask Cloudy tonight and Wednesday American ~ Legicn with asionals light rain over, scuth portion; moderate scuthe: Contest, have been announc The wind except fresh over sounds and straits and moder- papers will be nt to Ketchikan h northerly over Lynn Canal t of the Gulf of Alaska: vicinity of Dixon Entrance; and fresh Forecast of winas along the ¢ Scutheast and easterly gales in the and Anchorage for judging in com- petition with all Alaska towns | Senior winners usi the topic fresh; to strong easterly from Dixon Entrance to Sitka; True Americ east ®o northeasterly from Sitka to Kodiak. "B"“'”* s i LOCAL DATA seth, second. Both ¢ | : ‘\‘ In the junio roup, award Time Barometer 1¢inp. Humidity 'Wind Velocity ~ Weather went s ’ , yesty 18 50 36 9 Cloudy first c 18- today 9.23 38 Y Nw e Cloudy | today 29.10 51 3 (NE 15 Cloudy bl R ‘ RADIO REPORTS ent National Defenses,” v to Doris Miettinen, first, anc FLODAY Roff, second, They are attendin Lowest 3:30am, Precip. 3:30am. NS Sal o o Station i te np. temp. 24hours Weather He Jurteay Schools. e i B $é 24 2 0 Cloudy | Nome 17 | -3 1 0 Clear TRAPPER CONVICTED | g 2 0 Clouty Fairbanks i ¢ ¢ CF GAME VIOLATIONS | = ». 16 12 i | Duten 23 21 Charles B. Worthington of Dil-| Kodiak o4 40 lingham was 1 the Court; GOrdova % 40 of U Eric D.| Jeuehm o4 38 Tenno re ¢-season tra Sitka 2 o : 0 e ping and in and i"“h“““ A4 44 % (~":“" ver houses, a to v-ri"fl‘”" l:-i 4 48 36 Rain port received by the ¥ EREASS o o 91, e L OBndiedon Teom "W San Francisco .. 62, 56 57 04 Rain Worthin WEATHER SYNOPSIS Carlos M on. ton v fined $200 and given a suspend . 5 ¥ m:;"h’ all i, arge area of 10w pressure c Nerth Pacific Ocean and SO A ! sulf of Alaska this morning disturbance which has moving eastward and appr » Sound has from the ing er most KODIAK ICE souther] t of California gales and rain © to Dixcn E FIRM | can ¢ | IS IRCORPORATED ka has been cloudy and warmer with precipitation along the coastal areas from the Aleutians c:stward to Cordova et e Juneay, March 27.—Sunrise 5:i am. sunset 6:28 p.m a firm which will engage in the| ~ TR i g T La or the States April 3 from Fair- (;fu?. storage .l!l\l‘”:.lxllfih. iness PAUL JUDGE GETS where Judge ntly went PR i : g ork for the Alas Con- tion teda vl e woi A NEW APDOINTMENT ditor i orporaters of the $100.000 con- T - ux[x‘:( ‘.’1).{ ‘\\l' lp, lr;[Lu \\_\;_. rén A l" pARK SER\”(E PUBLIC CARD PARTY Taylor and Velma Al of — Juneau Business and Professio Kodiak. Paul formerly with the al Women’s Club public card par SRbI SRR District \ger’s office here, has March 29. 8 p.m., Dugout. Bridge roceived an appointment in the pinochle, and Tripoli. ac TWO ELECTRAS e A o d received For Want and For Sale Empire FLOWN N@g}'fi Judge and his family will leave classifieds bring results Two Pacific Alaska Airways p CLOTHES that are CLEANED flew out from here today for F OFTEN—Wear Longer! banks with 16 passengers abourd two for Whitehorse. Send YOUR GARMENTS to Flying norith to Fairbanks v € : TREANGILE M. Anderson, D. dansen, O. A A / White, Louis Midcke, A. Graham Pg -V B8y Mrs. O. Lieman, Mildred Mayr A. M. Hartford, Mrs. T. P. ) risey, Infant Morrlsey, Massey War- ick, Garrett King, Karl T '] Hallberg To Whitehorse—F orough Workmanship and Modern Methods Produce Work_that Ts Sure to Please You. 4 Hansen and E. A. Troverg BTG DENNISON HERE PHONE Sidney V. Dennison, Forest Serv- g ice representative at Petersbu [ arrived on the North Sea today \‘07 to ¢ with officials at Regic ce. He | to back Pet to burg tomorrow. MODES /e MOMENT] e e 3 e EW YORK adds long shorts to the re- b sort playlelothes pictures. These, design- ed for cycling, are of red and yellow rayon —the shirt checked, the trousers striped, ALIFORNIA has a ‘sofl word to say about slacks in this suit of rusy-velored desert cloth worn by Helen Wcod, of the “films. The shirt is hooded. g4 5 € R P P R—

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