The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, October 14, 1930, Page 8

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JOHN PTACK'S REMAINS COME HERE TONIGHT Funer:;l Services Will Be Held Thursday in Luth- eran Church tonight re accompanied widow Mr in 1913, a his home on lan Island, died farm on Co October 3 in Se- attle. He had gone therc in the hope of resto: s health. Im- mediately on receipt of word of his demise, Mrs. Ptack left Juneau to brink the remains back here for burial. .- ELKS TO WORK THIS EVENING The members of the local order of Elks are due for a good work- out tonight. Last Wednesday night tees were instructed to proceed with tearing out of the stage in the auditorium for the purpose of cnlarging the dancing floor and installation of shower baths pur- cuant to creating a new activily by operating a hand ball court. Members at the meeting last Wednesday all volunteered to ap- pear tonight with crowbars, ham- mers, saws, etc, and bend their clbows to the work. The hour is 7 o'clock and a check will be kept on all absentees, without proper cxcuse, and their fate determined | at a later session e e————— the trus- Construction of Hoover Dam to Proceed Rapidly| WASHINGTON, D. C, Oct. 14— President Hoover said construction of the Hoover Dam will proceed | as rapidly as possible. At the same [SUSTUSTUSSSSUSUEESEESRE S 4 2 £ 24 4 St “The Latest Styles in Women’s Shoes ALW / AT ARNOLD’S GOLDSTEIN e e e e et By KEEN REGRET AT - IRPLANE CRASH Disaster at Kotzebue Cre- ates Much Sorrow, Alaska, Coast The crash of the plane Marquette Missionary at Kotzebue last Sun- day afternoon in which Father Phillip I. Delon, 8. J.,, Superior of Alaska; Father William F. Walsh, missionary at Kotzebue, and Ralph ¢ |Wien, pilot, lost their lives, caused % |keen regret not only in Alaska but § (on the Pacific Coast The plane crashed while on a test flight, according to Associated |Press dispatches to The Empire. |The motor stalled and the ship dived to the ground burying the nose into the frozen earth. The three persons aboard were instant- i1y killed | An Associated Press dispatch | from Stockton, California, said | |Father William F. Walsh was for- !merly of that city. He left there July 19, 1929, obtaining a special dispensation from Archbishop Han- na to leave the diocese for Al- aska. The dispatch further said he had legions of friends. An Associated Press dispatch from Spokane, Washington, said Father Delon came to the United States from France 20 years ago. Friends in Spokane said he had charge of the Desmet, Idaho, mis- sion, and was later a teacher of |mathematics in Gonzaga Univer- sity. He was highly respected by all who came in contact with him. Pantages Wins Another Trial The Appellate Court at Los An- geles granted a new trial to Alex- | RRESME ander Pantages (upper), multi- millionaire vaudeville magnate, | convicted of attacking Eunice | 1 Pringle (lower), seventeen, danc- KILLS FATHER’ | er, and sentenced to one to fifty | years in San Quentin Prison. I AWAITS AGTIUN (International Newsreel) | time the Executive said that as far' ¥ as the Government is concerned, -lhl['{eCn-Yea Old Boy De- points of law raised by Arizona | fends Mother Who Was will be expediated to settlement. | He said he hoped the various| Being Choked States will get together and settle e CLAREMORE, Okla,, their differences. e e | Thirteen-year-old Jay |day awaited action following the shooting of his father C. C. Bonner in the family home near Chelsea. | The boy said: | “Dad was choking mother so I shot him.” | Mrs. Bonner said her husband, knocked her down and tried to OVERALL NIGHT AT THE strangle her after a quarrel. She| ELKS' CLUB —adv, |cried for help and her son came 5 h — |with a shotgun | The boy stayed with his mother last night awaiting action. | DAUGHERTY IS 00T ON BONOS | | WASHINGTON COURT HOUSE, |Ohlo, Oct. 14. — Mal Daugherty,| 'banker and brother of former At-, tarney General Daugherty, has been released on bond after being Oct. 14— The Canadian Forestry Associa- tion has 30,000 members interested in preventing forest fires. — e — Nevada has only one farm for each 30 square miles of territory. | - | TONIGHT BOOTERY BUILDING Bty ! : wiam charged with embezzlement, misap- {propriation of funds and falsifica- Bonner to- ) THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, TUESDAY, OCT. 14, 1930. { Appendicitis |Germ Reported ACROSS Isolated 1. Bustle 4. Kind of rubber Solution of Yi | T Daily Cross-word Puzzle | esterday’s Puzzle EIP 9. State posith 10. Americas thor Conclude w O B MARBURG, Jugo - Slavia, 8. Anxlety [ 16. Wigwam Oct. 14—Dr. Piannanenstiel b sl AIRIE N E[L 20. Horses of & | has notified the National Medical Association that he 18, Uncloses: poet. 14, English river v E N certaln galt Reelte In mono- tone | RRE . Formal pablle discourses Legal conveye has succeeded in isolating and cultivating the germ re- Electrified par- ticles Grath —I‘M‘Ef-!m Z[=[R|m|») sponsible for appendicitis, ance Supposedly In Wan He said the culture intro- e njfure:inte . More profound Z o <PZmmS divisible partd duced into mice caused death from the malady but . Geometrical ratlo Insect cle Voleeless eon- sonunt L E T S E W introduction of an antitoxin Provided that Forelgn n Chemlecal suffix | sh O[O cultivated from bacilli to X And so forth: N ast driver | m|— 0> o[- -|Z[>[%|m| reduce inflammation allow- ed mice to recover. The abbr. In piace of I N Tumultuous disorders G O D E P E S T E R )ogmas ILIE] Q) 0| doctor believes the serum will Rigorous Mixed rain and HP>Z|onmirmoveox) - 0 oM(Z|Z{—O o> R E A D R [ R E »mm|D O|X|m[Zm | modify acute appendicitis in humans and prepare a harmless operation. 50. Puts money In the bank . Cleanse with water after 5. 53. Sllkworm 54. Light brown 55, Cried 56. Take heed of 57. That womam washing Myself . Large knife | True | Part of a coat | | . ° ° . . ° . . . . . . . . . . . . . . YW N 1. On the highest point of Narrow fabrle ardy H &N HALIBUT CRAFT TAKE ON BAIT Eagle and Attu Are Sched- uled to Leave for Banks Today Fish business in Juneau today | consisted of activities designed to put back into the sea some of the| catches of several months ago.! Bait—herring and dog salmon— ' was loaded from the Juneau Cold Storage Company's wharf into the | holds of the halibut schooners, Eagle, Capt. Jacob Engdahl, and| Attu, Capt. P. Petersen. The ves- sels were scheduled® to leave for| the banks this afternoon. 1 R GRIGSBY HERE FOR CAMPAIGN; Medicinal plant snow Cease Herole poem . River Islands Chlef god of Memphis nglo-Saxon slave One of the professions Llquor Sturdy tree 2. David Copper- field’s wife 3. Spoken 4. Hawailun food 5. Footless anle mal 6. Fall to follow ult 7. Anrees MINING AT MAY0 WILL CONTINUE DURING WINTER Livingstone Wernecke Flies to Skagway to Get Mrs. Wernecke The Treadwell Yukon Mining Company's airplane Claire flew from Mayo to Skagway yesterday carry- ing Livingstone Wernecke, the com- pany manager, according to word brought to Juneau today by the Princess Louise’ which called here enroute from Skagway to Vancou- ver, B. C. He came to Skagway to get Mrs. Wernecke, who passed through Juneau on the Louise Sun- day on her way north. The plane hopped off from Skagway yesterday on its return to Mayo. On the way to Skagway the plane stopped at Whitehorse, and there picked up Frank Murray, pilot of the Yukon River steamer Klondike. who was given a treat of a ride over the mountains to Skagway 4 The river pilot said the sky pilot surely has it over river navigators for speed. Mr. Wernecke in Skag- way stated that his company will continue operating its mill on Keno Hill this winter on its high grade oré from the Lucky Queen mine, and thus keep together the com- pany’'s organization of skilled men during the lew price of silver. He 2 declared that as soon as the price emocratic Nominee fOrHUNTED MAN ‘ SHOT, DYING Delegate Elated Over Progress Made BRANSON, Mo, Oct. 14—A man |identified as Jake Fleagle, long |sought leader of a gang which |robber the Lamar, Colorado, bank {in May, 1923, in a bloody holdup in which four men met death, was maining time before election day,|shot and fatally wounded by Kan- November 4, carrying his. campaign |sas City detectives and Federal throughout this Division. He was |officials here. conferring today with loeal party| Fleagle was shot as he boarded leaders relative to the final drive(a train for Hollister, another Ozark which will carry him from Skagway |town. through to Ketchikan and parts of | The Kansas City ; the west coast. sent here on information It is probable he will visit Skag- Fleagle was hiding in the hills. way, Haines and Sitka before mak-| Fleagle is expected to die. ing his local address. After that he will proceed south via Petersburg, ‘Wrangell and the west coast to Ketchikan, AT THE HOTELS Gastineau George Grigsby, Mr. and Mrs, John W. Jones, Ketchikan; Mrs. MAKES SHOWING (Continuea 1rom Page One) Local Campaign Coming Mr. Grigsby will spend the re- police were that Olive Trower, personnel clerk in the Bureau of Education, is on her way to the States to enjoy a month’s vacation. Dr. Wilbur to Remain in Hoover’s Cabinet WASHINGTON, Oct. 14— President Hoover announced today that Dr. Ray Lyman Wilbur, Secretary of Inter- jor, would remain in the Cabinet as Stanford Univer- sity would extend his leave of absence as President as long as necessary. The Pres- ident said Dr. Wilbur was too valuable a man to be allowed to leave the Gov- ernment service, veosoes e s e e BIG LEAGUER COMES TO SCHMIDT FAMILY If a little boy at St. Ann’s Hos: pital improves when he grows up just a trifle over his father as a baseball player, the lad will make the big leagues. He was born last evening to Mrs. Willlam Schmidt, and weighs eight and a half pounds Mr. Schmidt works for the Alaska of silver advances to 40 cents an ounce the company will resume its operations in the camp at full blast. The Yukon Gold company, a Guggenheim concern, also is de- This is the story of Puffy the Pig Who's not very small and not very big; Who leaves his pen on a Saturday morn To see the world into which he was born. (Copyright, 1930) veloping some of its properiy in the camp this winter, and several in- dividuals are engaged in develop- ment work. Silver at last quota- tions was between 36 and 37 cents an ounce. Silver mine owners hope that it will reach 40 cents beford long, and thus occasion a gencral advance in the operations of tha" Mayo district. 3 ————— Daily Empire Want Ads Pay. New Coats a 1S BUT ONE Made to Order REASON 44 ANOTHER SHIPMENT {tion" of statements following the Ben Melvin, Coghlan Island; A. J. | Juneau Gold Mining Company, and |fatlure of the Ohio State Bank of ‘Arrive, Arthur W. Carlson and O. besides he helped win the pennant 'for the Moose last summer in the S H E LLE D W ALNUTS |which he was President, Peoples K. Olson, Aberdeen; L. Reinken, {Bank and Drovers Bank. Calvin Thomas, E. J. Batton, Wil- Extra Fancy, Rose Brand—pound, 60 cents GARNICK’S—Phone 174 BEFORE YOU DECIDE | Wait until you have heard the new WESTINGHOUSE RADIO CAPITAL ELECTRIC CO. TELEPHONE 416 CALL ME SCHOM DANCE AT DOUGLAS, October 15 Eagles’ Hall AMERICAN DANCES SCANDINAVIAN- Banjo and Accordian Music EVERYBODY WELCOME Adm.—Gentlemen $1.00; Ladies Free A special ferry will leave Douglas for Junecau at 2:00 A. M. |gone to Prince Rupert. Bond was set at $40,000 and was furnished by his mother and brother. ——————— A. J. Arrives, representative of the Great Northern Railroad, came to Juneau this morning from Sew- ard. IR L T..A. M. Heney, Canadian Cus- toms Collector at Tulsequah, has silk, or wool, of 1isle, or silk and wool combined, we crave the pleasure of showing you what the well-dressed man will wear} Prices are a feat- ure, too, because [4%'s Just as possi- Bl %o duy the | smard thing eocon- |omically as it is | tue ordizery Sbe. SABIN’S liam Englehardt and Mr. and Mrs. J. Englehardt, Seward; L. F. Davis and Ernest Natah, Cordova. Alaskan G. D. Irwin, Funter; Neil Forbes, Taku; George Schlotter, R. W. Fer~ reld and A. Beachicic, Cordova; Charles Lee, Seattle. Zynda N. G. Bagby, Auburn, Wash,; Mons Anderson, Mendenhall Valley; E. E. Bounds of Seattle; Olive Trower, Bureau of Education, —————— I. A. Tolstoy, member of the fa- mous Tolstoy family of Russia, was a passenger on the steamship Yu- kon from Seward. —————— William A. Fairweather served 31 years as Deputy Collector of Customs at Tacoma, Wash WHY we ask you to come here for your printing. We believethatwe are equipped to give your work the prop= er attention and that we are able to turn out a satisfactory pieceof work. PUT US TO THE TEST “Tomorrow’s Styles Today Three Piece Knit Suits Shown in Novelty Patterns Cleverly Designed Sizes 16 to 20 years Popularly Priced Juneaw’s Own Store City League. —————— ! J. B. Caro, Juneau business man, | left on the steamship Yukon on a trip to Ketchikan. | Manning’s "~ Coffee 2 pounds for 89¢ "GEORGE BROTHERS PHONES 92—95 " Five Fast Deliveries Choicest soft, rich, lustrous skins . . . high in fashion and reasonably priced. CLEANING REPAIRING REMODELING A. MALACKY Furrier Phone 45 Geldstein Bldg. W atch for Our Big Display of i Holiday ~ Merchandise “Leader Dep't. Store - PHONE 454 GEORGE BROTHERS, Pro PHONES 83 OR 85 “The Store That Pleases” THE SANITARY GROCERY

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