The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, May 23, 1940, Page 2

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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, THURSDAY, MAY 23, 1940. ENT OF AGRICULTURE, “ATHER BU 3 & M t)wh\ (fn::-n::;env. agents, .Gm;iy . e Al ) ] o Sma!"alefky Nlncompoops e e oy Brftpsh ‘Mu( Imu» (,umur.s in Belgian Sroo( | THE WEATHER | been given, their letters stack up (By the U. S. Weather Bureau) ' _‘“‘ n{]) L‘”)": those of most pri Forecast for Juneau and vicinity, beginning at 4:30 p.m., May 2 Yet, in one department alone, degrees tonight; gentle variable he found examples of letters that forecast for Southeast Alaska cloudy tonight and F day; slightly warmer tonight; gentl: southerly winds Forecast of winas along the coast of the Gulf of Gentle to moderate south and soitheasterly winds tonig day from Dixon Entrance to Kodiik except variable tonizl vicinity of Dixon Entrance were contradictory, insulting, com- . L] Afe Ge"m rimm QW . mperinen, weakis apol tic, arbitrary, offensive, insin- cere, grudging, critical, petulant and indifferent Py JACK STINNETT tant he doesn’t realize the taxpayer e butter s bread LOCAL DATA v NGTON, May 23.—Jame HOOPSKIRTS FIRST Time Barometer lemp. Humidity Wind Veloc P& a quiet-voiced fellow witn ¥ / : ; 4:30 pm. yest'y 30.10 54 49 s 3 : Lk N f you think ti.s isn't v){mmxu:‘ One of tne first things the letter y aim. today 30.08 3 % NW 9 ’ P L i ask your congressman. There are writers learn is to get rid of the i today 20,09 59 41 s 3 3 volution that's spreat= |, 4045400 pieces of Government mail “hoopskirts”: “Your letter was duly to every government dePATt-|o;g gut of Washington every received We beg to advise RADIO REPORTS A gl Ay day and iU's estimated that 1000~ that As of even date herewith | SOBAY SRt RO 000 of these are personal letters Your letter of the 15th in- Max. tempt. | Lowest 8:30am. - Precip. 3:30am. the pork barrel, relie et day that Governmient|stant, ultimo, proximo. 1 beg Station lasi 24 hours | temp. temp. 24hours W . L4t ey n't get complaini to hand you herewith . and 80 5 24 20 20 What he's doing is showing the n, it isn't the employee’s on and so on nk 61 45 46 13 Cloj Pede les how to stream- in $hie gase of home| A py-product of Grady's pro- 41 33 I Cloud | " how | ow who went into hiding When giam has been economy, but he Dawson 7 42 42 } 1t Irt expres- | told his loan was to be norl- doesn't emphasize that. In one Mayo 52 39 41 ] Clouc jons, delete the $5 words, and ied and nearly fai rom ie- gency a survey disclosed that Anchorage 57 38 38 « out letters th nd like allief when he found e was 10 e jetters cost 75 cents apiece to pre- Bethel 1 34 Pt ¢ on the back ra than the | given 20 years to repay tead pare and mail. If this average 4 J ; ;s ik St. Paul 41 36 pompous high-hanttedness of some of ten holds for the 1,000,000 a day that e A e % Dutch Harbor .. 56 40 Cl niner official who's so self-impor- After three years of WOrking go out, that's $750,000 a day for - o . Wosnesenski 50 10 re) G 5. 4 B TR W TSGR T __....... Uncle Sam's Washington letters. = The censor-approved caption of this offic sh pture radioed from London savs it shows British troops Kanatak 45 Clou \ Grady became an expert o nanning a machine-gun post in a Belgian street. The gun has been set un on a street corner. Note Ff'»‘_““k 4" " 14 l 1 1 ITS T I M E TO episties by accident. An adminis-| Goockage in the background. Cmdfjm 52 | 3 60 R ) trator in a California college, he| ___ 5 e ;ur:-.m 54 38 08 Cloudy ) % 4 cute i * 4 5 35 0 Cle ! CHANGE YOUR was asked o assist In OFganIZA’| . oony That Wwas three: years vision. He has lecture cowsses alt called s yers his teani ‘ofice K‘f_w'mk”“ Z?) 39 ; P ! \ lion of the Land Bank office at| - “ the American University. And he had ) the majors—but | Prinee Rupert " i 3 cl { HEAVIER Bakalay, WImEcolw RN is co-author with Milton Hall of tnot from the Seal e, = % ol { almost overnight from 50 to 1400/ Since then. ‘Ne demand for| ' ot T iwiine Eifectiy rince George ’f.“ 4’ Cle { LUBRICANTS! employees. In coordingting the|Grady has been far in excess of ¢, 00 VO We ¢ up on Wally Berger,| Seatile w 52 Clea ! 4 work, he found employees needed |the supply. He has worked in the| = = 00 5 | the | Lloyd Waner, Cookie Lavazetto, Bob P.‘””“‘“_“ » & 7 Pt. C { ' most some instruction in writing | field for the Land Bank, in Farm . . = o 0G0 c e g Johnison olher harley said.| Sem, Francisco .. 63 53 I R \ ki & CONNOBS Holron effective letters. Out of the con- | Security, in the. census bureau.| .= e " " cnei i g vie- | BerE tielder, is now with WEATHER SYNOPSIS ‘\ luan'cnr ferences came Grady's plans {oriwsalher burefm. SRdiomaw . is| o0 ounting hotse, or makes | CginNS Lloyd Waner joined his s The disturbance in the Gulf of Alaska has ined nearly \ |DN COMPANY training and supervision. The Land | launched on circult of other Agri-| /., " w . der why you have to pay | l4€r brother Paul, with Pittsburgh | tlonary and has continued to weaken, while pressure has continued : Bank governor asked Grady w;cullun Department agencies, star!- s for umlh anart: after Pau! graduated {rom the Seals high over ocutheast Alagka., Pressure was low also over the Interio ( bbb dtdds v dromrirrme . oot drerroeesorvewy Come to Washington as a special | ing with the Soil Conservation Di- alecky nincompoop ju bel ol Lavagetl nd up with Brookiyn | but was rising this morning. Partly cloudy ather prevaile wer N s PO A PG 19 —— e ™ 2 after going from Oakland. And most of Southeast Alaska and light rains occwred in the Interio tient. The Grady revolutior 1 S e e . SRR O |of Johnson and Yukon Territory. Temperatures were ‘slightly lower over South- We thought Bob Johnson was| €ast Alaska this morning, : s B g 9:37 p.m riding on the reputation of his Juneau, May 24.—Sunrise 4:13 am., sunset Dldest Bank in Alaska Commercial Savings brother Roy, whom we sold Lo De- - e ¢ o gl ager) discovered that Ted was (AN BE FOOLED Johnson is the hardest hitting and |standing at the back of the box and highest paid hired hand with the overhand curves that were breaking Philadelphia Athletics across the plate passed Jennings so ON BAllplAYER “When I look at the Seals in the | low he couldn’t handle them, Lefty cellar this spring I think about how | moved Jennings up abreast of the a dea E we gave up too hurriedly on Berger, plate and he muredring those park By GAIL FOWLER Johnson and Lavagetto, how we troublesome curves ball is A, Kans., May ilence in the i ! ver the righ Safe DGDOSlt | AP Feature Service underrated the Waner boy “Now the player we tried to al- field foul line. The fans are li SEATTLE, May 23 Charley we almost let Earl Averill get away. most give away last winter looks ! tening for the tinkle of glass, 1 Graham, gray-haired owner of the “Tt costs so little to take just one jike a star cause their cars are parked in Ex g San Prancisco Seals of the Pacific more look, and it costs so much to S that direction and windshield Bankmg bY Mail Depaflmem Coast League, has sold more players fire a diamond in the rough, just occasionally are casualties of es to the majors than because we couldn't see past the Emprre classifieds bring results. home run hits for higher any other man rough edges But he can’t help but think about Truth of Graham’s words are 9 the “ones that got away boFns ot in. the - perormatice of Wally s Dress at Work Among those Graham sold “up- young Ted Jennings, an infielde stairs” are Joe Di Maggio, Dominic this year. The Seals asked waivers Di Maggio 1 Averill, Jimmy on Jennings last winter, but there O’Connell, Willie Kamm, Frank Cro- | W no taker setti, Vernon Gomez, Augie Galan Injuries eason meant Jen- 1gs, an une fielder - and hitter, found himself at # | Joe Marty and Left O'Doul { * But, watching the rain drench his | s y hotel room window here recently | third base | during a fanning bee, Graham r ‘We had g il TG | HIRAM WALKER & SONS INC., PEORIA, ILL. 90 PROOF en up on Ted. Then Friday ead Saturday " Friday and Saturday Cotton Slacks SPECIALS HATS peviin's |! SALE OF WHITE Pretty, feminine.gifts . . just t what your favorite Swee i Girl Graduate is hoping for! 1 " A . l q We've a grand collection on i [N our Main Floor . . . all de & s o > all A fashion expert takes notes on one of the favorite 19?;8 evening dresse A Pot of Gold et iadani g of the former Wallis Simpson, now the Duchess of Windsor. The frock M ‘l‘" 5 y( loct F o i adorning a wax figure of the former owner, was donated to the New York : HER TR - BaRSRchy | show, “Eighty Years of Fashion,” which is being staged to raise funds 3 for kits for Allied soldiers in France. | [ 4 Is Yours : | - ' Novelty Jewelry - - 1.00 Pastels Reg. 1.25-1.50 Sweaters - - 1.15 Pastels in cardigan and slip-ons Slips - - - 235 Dainty Camisoles Wide Lace Trim Tea, Rose and White L3 & ke Your . when you count the GOP Hopefuls—Past and Present | B i g <o dollars you save with THE EMPIRE classitied. Everything you want to Special Table = 1.45 All Siraw Hals REDUCED Summer FOR GRADUATES! Classics Alma Muel’ sels Smart felt classics that buy or sell is handled more easily if you use the classified. BUYING is made more easier through the classi- fied. : NOVELTY _GRADUATION go everywhare all Sum- Dance : MINIATURES containing B2 WHITE ad ‘Kerchief - 1 , . SACHETS and PERFUMES s Aad SO lon SELLING erchief - 1.00 priced| is made surer thru Value to'1.95 Lovely Gift for Graduate \@ S Sharmee with JACRETS Nylon Hose 1.3 e B Special at $3.05 Vogue Leota’s B =S | "s1.95 g $2.95 JONES- il STEVENS | DEVLIN'S the classified. READ THE CLASSIFIED EMPIRE ‘elephone | i 1‘ B g Mt Teuk “A. I ¥V, Phonephoto Thomas E. Dewey, (left), leading candidate for the Republican nomina- | tion for president, shakes hands with former Governor Alfred M. andon of Kansas, GOP standard-bearer in 1936, as they meet at Wichita. In-’ troduced by Landon, Dewey made a campaign speech warning against subservience which leads to totalitarianism, Y in the Baranof Hotel 9 o £ &

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