The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, May 20, 1930, Page 2

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o i § B 55 e e T i T T R O e OB I 70 THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, TUESDAY, MAY 20, 1930. ua the welt with lisle toj shades for street and « LT TR BT Juneaw’s Leading =HIHREIN Service and semi -service we Phoenix brand which us- The service weight are full- fashioned silk to service weight are silk to the top. Both weights are available in all the smarter r spring 'B.M.Behrends Co, Inc. llIIIIIIIlIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII|IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlIIIII|||IIIlllllllIIIIIIIIIIlIIIIIIE IIIIIIIIIIIl!llIIIIIIIIIIIIIII|I|IIIIIIIIIIII||lIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIllIIIIIlIIII Special Hosiery Selling! How Small Are Your Feet? ight in the exclusive lly sells for $2.00. In size 8% only Now $1.00 y and foot. The semi- - g § H Iress. = £ Department Store GRAF ZEPPELIN LEAVES SPAIN; STEERS 70 SEA Big Airship Crossing At- lantic Now on Way to South America CADIZ, Graf Zeppelin bade farewell to Spain at 9:20 o'clock this fore- noon as it passed out to sea after flying over this port. Commander Eckener shaped his course due Southeasterly in a straight line for the Canary Islands and if maintained, the dirigible/ will be out of sight of the African Coast. Nineteen passengers are aboard for the flight to Rio de Janeiro, then north to Havana and Lake- hurst. The passengers include Mrs. Mary Pierce, of New York City and Prince Alfonso Orleans, cousin of the King of Spain. There is a great quantity of mail aboard the Graf and many pounds were left behind. —————— Peter Vachon, well known inter- jorite, is a passenger for the west-| ward aboard the Yukon. Spain, May 20—The| _today by Dr. Goddard who is vis- MISS GODDARD |Former Juneau Girl and Mr. Don Wright Mar- ried in Sacramento The marriage of Miss Dorothy Goddard, daughter of Dr. and Mrs. F. L. Goddard of Goddard's Sani- tarium, to Mr. Donald Wright, |son of Frank Wright, well known | Alaska canneryman, wasannounced liting here with his son, E. M. Gocdard, and family. The wedding | took place last night in Sacra-| 'WEDS IN SOUTH |with the bandit, calling for ‘help as {immediately to the sheriff’a office. ‘feet, 10 inches tall, fair complexion | M. CEORGE WINS INBOUT WITH ARMED ROBRER Local Business Man Bests Bandit Whom He Had Befriended wnh Ridé M. George, local business: man now in Walnut Park, California, gave successful battle to a bandit recently, according to word re-' ceived by his son Thomas here | today. The following account of the af- = fair appeared in & Los Angeles newspaper: Mike George of 2409 California Street, Walnut Park, will lkely pick his passengers with greater care in the future, after his selec- tion of a bandit to ride with him yesterday afternoon. George, who just recently ar- rived in this community from Alas- ka, had been visiting at the home of his sister on Virginia road near ‘enice Boulevard. After he left to come home, he was not sure of the right direction te follow, and so he stopped seme- where in the southwest séction of Los Angeles and inquired the way to Walnut Park of a young man who was standing on the curb. The stranger informed George that he, too, desired to come fto this community and volunteered to ride with George and show him the proper way to come. George drove east on Florence Avenue to a point about two blocks west of Alameda Street, when his passenger suddenly produced a gun, poked it against George's ribs and | demanded that he drive south on Alameda Street. George grabbed the man by the arm and allowed his car ‘to come to & stop in front of 2133 Florence Avenue. Then he started scuffling he did so. A traffic jam followed, and the| stranger suddenly leaped from the| ™ 600D HERRING car and into a dark ehcloséd car standing nearby. Then he was| driveni speedily east on Florence and disappeared. George reported | The young bandit was descrtbed &s being about 256 years or age, § { and wearing a gray suit and Hght | hat. The car in which the bandit fled tallles in description with that which was stolen from Charles arch of Los Angeles near the Los | mento, Calif, and Mr. and Mrs. Wright will make their home in |Southern California. { ! 'Both Mr. and Mrs. Wright are well known here. He spent sev-! eral seasons in Southeast Alaska' waters on the floating cannery. Mrs. Wright was employed here! for several years in the office of 1 Secretary of Alaska and later in the Auditor's office. She msgnea‘ about one year ago, spending several months with her parents went to Seattle. | ————— Miss Vida L. Buehler arrived on| the Yukon to visit with her sister, Miss Gladys Buehler, of the Ju- neau ngh School staff j and after |school at Hoonah, arrived on the Angeles River bridge on Norton Avenue, South Gate, yesterday, after Arch had been held up, . bound, gagged and robbed by a |bandit answering the description Herrmg Schools and King! Here are three candidates for the Texas democratic nomination for United States senate. to right: C. A. Mitchner of Sherwood, Morris Sheppard of Texarkana, incumbent and one of authors of eighteghth amendment, and R. L. Henry of Houston, who advocne- repeal of eighteenth amendment. Associated Press Photo Left Charlu J. Wrightsman (left), Tulsa oil producer, Henry S. Johnston (center), who was Imp| ached as governor, and Lee Cruce, fofmer Oklahoma governor, are candidates for the democratic nomination for United States senator in Oklahoma. Weather Con. Weather Burean tremé Southwest. Territory. €ern portion. The pressure remains *—Less than 10 miles. | NOTE.—Observations at Alasken mainland stations, <xcept Ju- nean and Cordova made at 8 a. m. and 8 p. m., Juneau tine. in Southern Alaska and is lowest near the Pribilof Islands and n»ar™'Vadcouver Island. ‘It is high fromb California westward and ih extreme Norihern Alaska. measurable rain was reported at Alaskan stations except in the ex- Clear wedther is general in other portions of the ‘Temperatures have risen except in the extreme south- low Fair tonight, Wednesday tle variable winds. LOCAL DATA Time 4 p. m. yest'y 29.75 49 4 a. m. today 29.80 38 !4 Noon today . 29.77 56 46 CABLE AND RADIO REPO! YESTERDAYX Highest 4pm. Stations~ temp. temp. | | Barrow . 18 16, | 12 Nome 36 34 28 30 Bethel 58 50 8 42 Fort Yukon . 54 52 36 46 Tanana 56 52 | 34 48 Eagle 52 48 30 44 St. Paul 36 34 | % 3 Dutch Harbor 2 " 42 36 38 Kodiaw 56 54 34 84 Cordova ... 58 56 | 34 36 Juneau . 51 4 | 81 88 Ketchikan . 56 54 | 34 34 Prince Rupert 52 48 38 40 Edmonton 66 62 32 36 Seattle 60 54 | 48 48 Portland 60 60 | 52 58 Ban Francisco ... 62 58 52 58 w 8 Calm w 1 ona As Recorded by the U. S, Forecast for Juneau and vicinity, bey'~uiug 4 p. m. today: increasing cloudiness and cooler; gen- Barometer Temp. l!lmldlty Wind Velociy Weathe Pt. Cldy Cldy Clear Precip. 4am. ity 24 hrs. Weather 8 0 Clear oo 0 Clear =y 0 Pt Cldy 2 0 Clear 8 30 Rain e 16 Rain 0 0 Clear 4 0 Clear 0 Triice Cldy 2 0 Clear 0 .06 Clear 2 0 Clear 14 114 Rain 4 .38 Cl & 0 mg; No ANDKINGRUNS ARE REPORTED Salmon Show Up All Over the Division Unusually geod runs of herring and king salmon are reported frgm |of George's Rassenger. Officers afe of the opinion that Retriever operated by his father.|{he' same cfiminal is mponxlbla Assistant for both jobs, .- — C. E. Ramsay, in charge of the Margmtn 1ast night accompanied by his wife.’ -—4—00-0—' Mrs. J. H. Flickinger, wife of the Seward agent of the Alaska|’ stemep Compdny, 1s & passen= ger westbound on the Yukon flIIlIIIII|I|IIIII|IIIIIII|||||IIIIIllIII||IlIIIlIIIIIIllIIIIlIIlIIII|I|IIIIIII|IIIIIIIIIIIlIlIIIIIIIIIIIIlIIIIlllHIIIIlIlIlIIIIIIIIIIIIIlIII NOW THAT IT IS ALL OVER We Get FOUR IMPORTANT FACTS from the MALONY BLOCK FIRE FIRST---A building located within a few blocks of the Fire Hall can be completly destroyed by IlfilIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIH"HIIIMMMMHIIHIIMHHI fire. " v RO afire. R A )} SECOND---When a total loss occurs, a sufficient amount of insurance is necessary to maintain credit for restocking or rebuilding. . THIRD---Premiums paid for adequate flre in- surance are very insignificant in comparlson with the return in case of loss sustained in such FOURTH---On heavy income producing prop- erties, such as the Malony Block was, the own- ers should, in addition to carrying fire insur- ance, have a sufficient amount of rent msurance to provide an income while a new building is being constructed. (This last form may also be written to cover owner occupied property) BRING YOUR INSURANCE QUEST[QNS TO US----We Like to Talk About Insurs ance Allen Shattuck Inc {from Ketchikan to north of Ju- |the 2| chikan on'the Yukon include Alex- several Southeast Alaska areas, ac- cording to Capt. M. J. O'Connor, Agent, United . States Bureau of Fisheries. Both species| of fish are reported to be present neau. Trollers around Tee Harbor and Auk Bay, Wrangell, Sitka and off West Coast are said to be making splendid catches and earn- ing’ good money. At Ham Island, in the Ketchikan district, 50,000' barrels of herring were reported in one pond. Ketchi- kan cold storages are understood to be fully stocked with these fish.| Large 'schools Were also reported| from Tenakee, Auk Bay and other points. ! AND WHERE | T e To start the reconstruction of the road leading from the Auk Lake Loop cutoff to Mendenhall Glacier, Curtis “Gardner ~of Johnson and Gardner, Portland road building fireh, Was ax arfival on the Yukon. After an illness of several months| in Seattle, Charles G. Warner of the Warner Machine Shop, re- turned to his home in Juncau on the Yukon. Traveling men arriving from Ket- ander Mayer and St ‘Cavanaugh. H. C. Nunan, with the New Eng- land Pish Company at Ketchikan, arrived here on the Yukon on a short ‘business trip. Walter B. King, Assistant U. 8. District ‘Attorney at Ketchikan, came ‘to-Juneau on the Yukon to coniduct ' offictal business here. Mrs. A. ‘'W. Kendall, whose hus- | band 15 superintendeént of the tele- phohe and telegraph system of the Alaska Rallroad; s returning to the Westward- on" the “Yukon. Miss. Willa Lindsey, stenographer with the Ohicago, Milwaukee, St. Paul Rallroad, is on her way to Seward on ‘the Yukon to visit with triends during her vacation. . B. Newcomb, wife of - _' of the U. S. Bureau he force a tCordova, ul e Dr., of the Corddva, Dr. Thomas G. Suthér- thorough passenger on the * With him is Mrs. Suther- Blchwny Deputmanz u. way south with Jim Bon| U. 8. Deputy Marsha]| ment funds, Harvey Sullivan, U. 8. Marshal of the Third Division is going south on the Alaska. He is custodian also, over two insane men from Fairbanks. A. A. Bennett of the Gillam Air- ways was an inbound passepger on the ‘Alaska. He is herc on busi- ness in connection with the estab- lishment of a new airplane com- pany in Southeast Alaska. Bartley Howard, prominent An- chorage citizen and oldtime Ala kan, is southbound on the Ala He is on his way to San Francisco on a business frip and will re- turh to the Territory about mid- June. Miss Roberia Roberts, who has been teaching school in Cordo and has been supervisor of musical | | education for Alaska, is a Seattle bound passenger on the Alaska. She s, to be married in the States. Among the arrivals on the Alas- ka were W. F. Rohrback and Hexn- ry S. Sully, traveling men. Miss Leonaine Hill, Cordova teacher, arrived on the Alaska. She is to take civil service examina- tions here for entrance into the offices of the Alaska Road Com- mission. K. E. Kohler, in the U. 8. District Attorney’s office at Valdez, is mak- ing a trip to the States on the Alaska. With him is Mrs. Kohler and' their daughter. Conrad Ness, athletic coach and instructor of the Cordova Public Sehools, is a passenger for Scat- tle on the Alaska. This is his first trip Outside in two years. While the steamer was in port he visited with a number of his friends here. He expects to return to the West- ward again this fall and will be principal of the Cordova Schools beginning next fall. Rose Portman arrived on the Margnita from Chichagof where she has been in charge of the school there. e SR A 32-story building, the largest and tallest in Oklahoma, is to be built at Oklahoma City this year. decide to bave a picce of printing done want it at once. Weare well equipped to give Furthermore, it will nof look ke & hurry up job, since our : Bandle rush work enables us to give it the #aine anfd attention that '_hn was recently !--oo---oo_o.-o | o TODAY'S STOCK . . QUOTATIONS . eec0eccccessoce NEW YORK, May 20.—Alaska Juneau mine stock closed today ot 6%, Alleghany Corporation 27, Al-| lis Chalmers 627%, American Can 142, American Telephone and Tele- ! g aph 244%, American Tobacco Di Anaconda 59%, Bethlehem | el 96, General Motors 50, Gold Dust 44, Granby 32%%, lnternntion-i’ al Hagvester 102%, Kennecolt 46, Missouti Pacific no sale, Montgom- | ery Ward 42, National Acme 17%, | National Bellas Hess 15%, Packard| 17 Phillips Petroleum 38%, Radio | Corporation 48%, Standard Brands 22%, Simmons Beds 37%, Standard Oil of California 69%, United Air- craft 71%, U. S. Steel 170%, Ward| Baking B 10%. i ——————— To determine the best fiber for| | | newspapers, the Bureau of Stan- dards is studying samples of pap- ers 50 or more years old. The chief consideration is color and strength in relation to -preserva-| tion. Saincumen o go oan s e { Miss Mayme Reck of Juneau was a returning passenger on the Yu- kon from Seattle. Fop e Phone 6 It Beats—As It Sweeps—As It Cleans Phone 18 Deifiendable 24-Hour Electric Serviee THE HOTEL OF ALASKAN KOTELS THE GASTINEAU Our Services to You Begin a;i Ead :at the Gang lelk of Every Passeniger- c-nylng Boat run 6,000 miles, $200. ECONOMY CARAGE—Telephone 146 Economy Garage has best used car buys in town Dodge sedan, $385.00; Chevrolet four coupe, 1928 model, $290.00; Chevrolet four touring, 1925 model, Alaska Electric Light and Power Company JUNEAU AND DOUGLAS, ALASKA q i Phone 3 Em mpire Prln + 74 i ‘We can print anything from an ordi- nary post card to a large Broadside. ting C'.u. ¥ 4 rinting Why buy ordinary printing when you cati get Quality Printing at the same identical cost. Before you give out that next print- ing job you have in mind, get our esti- mate — Be convinced that you can buy Quality Printing from us at the cost of ordi- nary printing. f-¢~ R e

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