Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, MONDAY, ‘OCT. 6, 1930 —PALACE~- STARTS TONIGHT . BIG DOUBLE BILL RUDY VALLEE in “CAMPUS SWEET- HEARTS"— EVELYN - BRENT REGIS TOOMEY Action — Thrills and Song in ONE Program TALKING REPORTER Only News of Its Kind 10-25 50—Loges 75 cents NEWS G ATHERED FROM ALL PARTS OF NORTHLAND Items of Interest Toncerning Persons it and OQccurences fl'pken Leg Baldy” presages the advenit of winter in Ketchikan. As in fdrmer years, he has arrived ! . withg, !the first cold weather. He will {femain until spring. . “Baldy” is arbea gull. He is named for a croolad leg. ! Arter an investigation by Dr. W. H. fhase of Cordova, Chairman of file Alaska Game Commission, the Kodiak brown bear that maul- ed ike Kalmakoff at Kanatak has fBeen exonerated of blame. The bear,~a mother, followed by her two « oubs, ran from Kalmakoff when she first saw him with his companion Nicoli Ruth. The men/| pursped to catch one of the cubs, which could not keep up with the mother. ~When Kalmakoff was closa to one of the cubs, the moth-| er turned and rushed at him. She! mauled and clawed him an instant| and; then, evidently frightened by! his pereams, left him. She hastened away with her cubs. The injured man was taken to the hospital at Kodiak. He is recovering from his woulnds. Study of eivic affairs by the Cor- dovA Chamber of Commerce shows that from 1911 to 1829, inclusive, $89.947 was spent on street im- provements in Cordova, exclusive ! of $40,000 expended on the city| dock and its approach. In 1928-| 29, the sum of $11416 was appro- priated for street work. Indian fishermen of Belkofski, about 50 miles east of Unimak; Island” on the island east of Uni- mak Island, made as high as $1,- 450" individually in the recent fish- ing! season. Andrew Hotovitsky, whe was with a boat that ‘cleared thi§ amount for every one of the crew, has gone to Seattle to enter | the University of Washington. f ‘Wrangell recently, enroute to Te;graph Creek to t the Sti- kine Indian Agency, ©. C. Perry, Assistant Indian Commissioner of British Columbia, with headquart- ers at Victoria, told the Wrangell Sentinel that the affairs of 24,000 Indians in British Columbia are administered by 17 Indian agencies. The “Aleutian Native” and the “Umnak Native” have carried West \about 40 per cent of the Umnak {village people for the trapping sea- | son. The “Umnak Native” will remain near the trappers all win- ter. Umnak Island is one of the extreme western islands of the Aleutian group. . Salmon were plentiful around Unmak this season and very native family has its quota of 1,000 fish for winter use. The salmon are |dried, salted and smoked. The Aleutian Livestock Company lon Umnak Island has completed the season’s clipping and most of the wool has been shipped south. | Thousands of sheep are now out on fall pasture. Indians along the Tanana and Yukon Rivers are threatened by a hard winter, in the Peter Vachon of Fairbanks who spent the summer at Tanana. The fur take was poor last winter, and indications, he said, were not good for much improvement this coming | winter. scant because wet weather during {the summer curtailed the curing of fish. As the result of a boiler explo- sion in Kimbel Brothers' sawmill at Mayo, two millmen, Hoctor Beaulac and J. LeRochelle, French Can- adians, were killed. Mrs. Turner Townsend has re- turned to Dawson from her first trip to the “outside” in 20 years. She visited sons and daughters in California, British Columbia, Nova Scotia and then crossed to Europe to see a daughter in Ireland and relatives at her old home in Eng- land. Her trip occupied nearly a! \year. At a meeting in Anchorage of the Kenai and the Susitna Valley Mink Breeders Association, deci- sion was reached to hold an ex- clusive fur and fur animal show tnc Anchorage December 13 and 14. Fur farmers in all parts of the Territory will be invited to make exhibits and fur buyers from the States will be asked to attend. Mrs. Alexander Black, mother of > ithe second white child born at W”bat you practice in |2 king custard| is always practiced in i i H . r spasting H I LS BROS CoFFEE |Dawson and the first white child born at Tanana, died recently at her home in San Francisco. Mrs. Ethel W. Keller, a resident jof Alaska for 23 years, who lived for the last several years at Fair- banks, and Howard L. Rider, for- merly of Valdez and now a farmer at Palmer near Anchorage, were married at Anchorage. John Hosler, who worked for the Fairbanks Exploration Com pany, has left for the Lena River dis- itrict in Siberia, where he will join the Alaska group of mining men C(Yanmn BAKED iz small dishes cooks more evenly than when! cmkcd in large pans. Since Hills | Bnos roast their coffec 4 few pownds | a!m time instead of in bulk, every | btry is roasted evenly, This con-| tinwous process—Controllcd Rowmg pquucu 2 flavot o' other coffec. has, Fresh from the original vdcusm Easily 'employed by the Soviet Govern- ment to introduce American min- ing methods. Mrs. Clara Rekate has presented !sixteen popular boeks to the Daw- |son High School. With her hus- .band, who owned rich mining ground, she lived in the Klondike in its burrah days. He was lost ,on the steamship Islander, when she sank 29 years ago off the south end of Douglas Island. After his ‘death she worked his mining prop- lerties successfully. She visits Daw- son occasionally. Her ‘home is in | Sacramento, Cal. John Solomon and Miss Kath- erine Dorsey were married at Nome. They will make their home opinion of | The dried fish supply is| - Margaret Ravwr. the young lady of Quaker Town who won the Toronto Marathon swim for women, and the $5,000 first prize, with her policeman-dad, George Ravior, her mother, friends and neighbors, in front of her home when she returned from Canada. (Iuternational Newsreel) By HERBERT PLUMMER 1 WASHINGTON, Oct. 6. — Sen. | Thomas Walsh of Mon:ana must have chuckled silently when he| read in the papers that Loul Cramton of Michigan had been d feated in his effort to keep his seat in the House. Senator Walsh is having the po- | litical battle of his life to hold hi seat in the Senate. For that rea-, son probably he is able to appre- ciate the situation all the more. | Walsh and Cramton got mixed upi in a feud at the close of the lsat Congress . The latter, as chalrman of the| sub-committee on appropriations in the House, succeeded in getting | through that body an amendment | to the interior appropriations bill | that construction of a road through | the Glacier national park in Mon- tana be held up until private own- | ers either sell their property or permit the government to condemn it. Walsh owns a summer home in this area. Not Consulted H ‘What Walsh objected to—and he ! fought with the tenacity of a bull- dog on the floor of the Senate—| was that Cramton consulted neither him nor Senator Wheeler, his col- league, about the thing. The Michigander is a recognized authority on the question of parks. He has visited most of them, has made a careful study of their needs, and has come to the front in the ‘House whenever this question was up for discussion. Added to this, Crampton is a| member of that powerful group in the House which guides the expen- diture of public money, and is jeal-| ous of the House's right in such | matters. Stocky, robust and bespectacled, he fights to the last ditch when aroused. “We should get rid of the private holdings in our national pnrks,"‘ |said Crampton, after Walsh had suceeeded in getting an amendment through the Senate staying the power of condemnation of such property, “as soon as we can and secure the national parks for the people of the nation. “Senator Walsh knows that in ownership of a home in the Gla- cier national park he has a certain area that is his, and the rest of us have what is left.” Battle Royal Cramton remarked further that there have been parks where it was wanted to establish automobile camps for John Jones and his fliv- ver, and in order to do so the land| had to be bought. “I have thought sometimes,” he [said, “that all we own is the scen-! ery and that all the land (in parks) was in private ownership.” The battle went on merrily for | quite a while. Conference amr conference between House and Sen- | ate was necessary before final agreement was reached. | It was finally agreed that me< government would have authority to condemn any land within any of the pnrks except thosz used exclu- 1 o et £ e P & et A Washington | Bystander sively for residence or religious pur- | poses. This was by no means to the lik- {ing of Walsh, and he did not hesi- !tate to say so. .- Claim.s U.S. Is Drmhmg Less {Year by Year WASHINGTON, Oct. 6—An 80-page mimeograph report of the Internal Revenue Bureau says that statements made that consumption of alcoholic bever- ages is greater today than prior to the adoption of the Eigh- teenth Amendment are unwar- ranted. The report says it ap- pears that the consumption of alcoholic liguor in the United States is growing less year by year. iSister of King Boris May Wed Italian Duke SOFIA, Bulgaria, Oct. 6.—Prin- cess Eudoxia, sister of King Boris, of Bulgaria, is reported engaged to iItalian Duke Charles of Spoleto. The Duke is 32 years of age. “Tomorrow’s Styles Today” Children’s Berets One group of Velvet models . . . Regular $2.95 values for $1.50 One group of Felt models —were $1.90 and $1.50 — Special for 95¢ “Juneaw’s Own Store’ AMERICAN LEGION ARENA Next Smoker October 11 Noted Mermaid Returns Homé IH AL[BUT fl(m AND SALMON UNLOADED Prices for Flat Fish Range' About 10 and 6 Cents. Over the week-end, fish in en- ticing variety, were received in Juneau. Halibut, salmon and black cod were unloaded upon the wharf of the Juneau Cold Storage Com- pany. The carga of halibut total- ed 30,200 pounds, was brought in by the Avona, Capt. Olat Larsen, 6,500 pounds and sdld for 10% and 6 cents to the San Juan Fishing and Packing Company; the Ina J, Capt. L. Andestad, 6,500 pounds sold for 10% and 6.0 cents to the New England Fish Company; the Ford, Capt. Ole Brensdal, 4,- 500, sold for 10% and 6 to the San Juan Company; Emma, Thomas Ness, 6,500, sold for 10% and 6 to the Sebastian-Stuart Fish Com- pany; the Margaret T. Capt. Peter Hildre, 5,000 pounds, sold for 1045 and 6 to Sebastian-Stauart; the Fane, Capt. Ole Johanson, 1,200, sold for 1056 and 6 to the San Juan Company. The salmon catches were by the 'T3380, Capt. John Pademelster, 300 pounds for the Juneau Cold. Stor- age Company and the Atlantic and Pacific Packing Compeny; the T- 3375, Capt. J. Thomas, 70, for the cold storage company; the Alms, Capt. A. Bartnett, 100, for the cold storage company and the Atlantic and Pacific; the Erma, Capt. Ed Doyle, 1,000, for the cold storage company and the Atlantic and Pacific. The cod was carried by the Lou- helen, Capt. Knute Hildre. It toe taled 15000 pounds and was for the New England Fish Company. b WHo's WHO AND WHERE Deputy Marshal C. V. Brown of Petersburg is in Juneau on official business. He is staying at the Zynda. J. C. Rohn is among the guests at the Alaskan. N. G. Nelson, Joseph Rujes, W. A. Caldwell and Owen Vide are nwzlatered at the Gastineau Hotel. | Evelyn McCormick, 10 years old, successfully underwent an opera-r tion for appenditicis this mommg at St. Ann’s Hospital. United States Commissioner Jos-‘ eph J. F. Ward returned to his' home in Skagway on the steamship | Queen yesterday. { Cholera Quarantines Are Now Being Lifted‘ MANILA, Oct. 6.—The cholera quarantine against Iolilo has been lifted, the disease having been elim- inated there. The Island of Sa-| mara is now the only quarantined | district and will probably be re- leased tomorrow. Coste and Bellonte Are Off for Florida NEW ORLEANS, Oct. 6.—French Trans-Atlantic fliers Coste and Bel- | lonte have left here for Pensacola, Florida. They are due in Atlanta this afternoon on their good will tour of the United States. More Arrests Are Mnde, India Trouble BOMBAY, Oct. 6.—Members of the War Council of the All-India| Congress, have been arrested for publishing a banned Congress bul- letin. The President and four COLISEUM TONIGHT 7:30-9:30 FAST COMPANY. With EYELYN BRENT. JACK OAKIE RICHARD "SKEETS' GALLAGHER Capital Electric Company TELEPHONE 416 NIGHT ‘llVlc: 4502 WESTINGHOUSE MAZDA’TAMPS “The Lanip Suipfeme® { | 1% - RADIO REPAIRING ELECTRICAL SUPPLIES LET US CHARGE YOUR BATTERY Authorized EXIDE' BATTERY Service Station FRONT STREET WHY NOT TRY THEM? Trupak, H. B. and Palacé Canned Goads Lead NORTHERN SALES AQENCY (W. W. Batcheller) * Second and Main St. Out of High René Distriet Pioneer Pool Hall Telephone 183 POOL—-BILLIARDS EMPLOYMENT OFFICE Chas."Millér, Prop. members have been sentenced to four months rigorous imprisonment. THE MOST COMPLE TE COLLECTION OF Christmas Greeting Cards WE HAVE EVER SHOWN IS NOW READY We suggest you make your selection early. The charge will not appear on your statement until January 1st, 1931 TELEPHONE 374 ----- And our representative ' will gladly call and show samples. -« The Empire