The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, October 23, 1930, Page 3

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The scholarships yield $750 and | $500 respectively each ye MINE STUDENTS dl of ing e neers throughout the United! States, and by donations from the American Institute of Mining and Metallurgical Engineers | In advising the Governor, of {awards, | wish | qualify for the ]hm\h subscribed by wives of min-| ! 2 the Auxiliary of Mining Insti- 1 thel tute Announces Two s Student Awards ! Alaskan students desiring to lakh“HUNTlNG PARTlES lN Aain i | WESTERN AREAS ARE degrees in mining or metallurgical | engineering, have an opportunity el aehins vecenty| HAMPERED BY STORMS established by the Woman's Auxil-! { iary to the American Mining I y weather in western and; stitute, according ta advices re- int gions have hampered big| ceived by Gov. George A. Parks|gam from Mrs. P. R. Bradley, w 1 representative of the Auxilia former local resident. ‘ ‘ [ \ ding to H. W. cutive Officer of the | {Game Co; fon, who returned| Applications for the awards|here last night after a two-weeks | should be made to Mrs. Bradley,|trip to Cook Inlet and Kenai Pen-| whose address 944 Avalon Av sula points. How of nue, Berkeley, lif, and should|the parties were su ful in get- | be on file not later than November ting fair bags of bear, moose, sheep' 1, next and caribou, he said Candidates must be citizens Mr. Terhune ed Seward, the United States who will signify |chorage, Seldovia and Kenai. At their intention of taking a degr Seldovia he leased a building for in mining or metallurgy at any col- headquarters of the district and in- of An- 'HENRY FORD IS |since he left this country. THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, THURSDAY, OCT. 23, 1930 JOHNSON REMOVES: TO NEW FRONT ST.. STORE W. P. Johnson, authorized local dealer in Frigidaire, Delco Light 2 i:md General Motors radio products, EUH“PEAN TR'P has moved to the building adjacent |to the Club Lunch on Front Street, the store rooms formerly occupied [by Yurman's Fur Store. It has been | completely renovated, refitted and {altered to meet the needs of Mr. Refuses to Make Any Sort | Johnson's trade. of Statement on | A S b | The quarters which have been ny dubject heretofore occupied by Mr. John- T son, have been leased to E. McLair, NEW YORK CITY, N. Y., Oct.{who will establish the Leather Craft —Henry Ford and his wife have (Shop there. He will manufacture urned from a trip to Europe. He (all items in leather goods and do said he would not make a |general leather repairing. ment or to an int ———e——— concerning conditions abroad or any other subject on the grounds he been misquoted in the press -———————————o HALIBUT PRICES | has . SEATTLE, Oct. 23—Three vessels with only 4,500 pounds of halibut arrived yesterday and sold the fish 10 and 15% cents. e e— BABY TO GO TO FRITZ COVE v for Juneau, will n increased ival will be Ed Han- Fritz Cove, rear soon have its pop! by one. The new a the son of Mr. and Mrs PR PRINCE RUPERT, B. C.,, Oct. 23. —Two hundred and nineteen thou- sand pounds of halibut were sold son, whose home is there. The here yesterday. American halibut baby, weighing eight and a half so1d for 4 and 11 cents and Cana- pounds, was born this morning in gian for 5 and 9.5 cents. St. Ann’s Hospital. - TR 2o e Francis “Shanty” Hogan, New f MOOSE COMEDY WILL BE GIVEN AT MATINEE As there are many children and adults who will not be able to at-| tend the evening performance of! “Keeping Up With the Joneses,” billed for Tuesday, October 28, the entertainment committee of the Ju- neau Lodge Loyal Order Moose un- der whose auspices the_play will be given, have decided on a matinee |performance in order that all who twish to enjoy the comedy may do | 50. i The matinee performance will} start at 3:30 the afternoon of next! Tuesday. This will allow all the {pupils to attend after the schools are dismissed. . Popular prices for both children and adults will prevail for the matinee. The opportunity wil doubtlessly be taken advantage of| by all who cannot attend the eve- ning performance. ) “Keeping Up With the Joneses”| will be presented at the Coliseum only twiceé, namely in the afternoon; and in the evening of next Tuesday. lege approved by the Society’s Ex- |stalled Eugene Tibbs as Game W ecutive Committee. Students, how- den He had ted to v ever, may indicate their preference Kodiak where Mark Winkler as to college. They must meet the cently took charge of a newly cre- committee’s requirements as to ated game district, but inclement scholarship, health and chasacter.! ther prevented the trip. pathitic ward.” LUCKY STRIKE=the finesi cigarette you over smoked, made of the finest tobaccos =the Cream of the Crop=—~THEN—"IT'§ TOASTED.” Everyone knows that heat puri~ fies and so TOASTING removes harmful irritants that cause throat irritation and toughing. No wonder 20,679 physicians have stated LUCKIES to be less irritating! Everyone knows that sunshine mellows— that’s why TOASTING includes the use of ‘the Ultra Violet Ray. Consistént with its policy of laying the facts before the public, The American Tobacco to review the reports of the distinguished men who bave witnessed LUCKY STRIKE’S famous Toasting Process. The statement of General Falk appears on this page. The American Fobacco Co., Mirs. - @1 Mrs. Jones says: “The fellow who York Giant catcher, was stabbed said — motherhood is glorious— but not seriously following an alter- should be examined for the psyco- cation with a negro. Coliseum, October first tried to beat Hogan with a 28. Something different. “It’'s toaste Your Throat Protection —aga[nst irritation - against co!lh WHO'S WHO AND WHERE The negro ry adv. 'baseball bat. - AR John Muller, banker of Cordova, is on his way to the States for a visit. He is a passenger on the Northwestern. Mrs. Stephen Stanworth success fully underwent a surgical opera-| tion at St. Ann’s Hospital this| morning. Mr. Stanworth is in the plumbing business in this city. | Martin Holst, captain of the fish-| .Img boat Wilson, is in the St. Ann's| Hospital for medical treatment. | P. U. Holmes, recently adjudged; demented after a hearing at Sew-| ard, is aboard the Northwestern in| charge of Deputy Sheriffs A. P.| Olsen and H. G. Cloes. The mental- | ly afflicted man has been commit- ted to the asylum at Morningside, Ore. R. Hungerford, United States Fish Warden in charge of the Prince William Sound district, is a | passenger on the steamer North- | western enroute from his head- | quarters in Cordova to Seattle on official business. Mr. and Mrs. Henry Pingel, mis- sionaries from the Koyukuk re-| gion, are passengers on the North- ! western for the States. Dr. E. V. Tavlin is a woman den- tist connected with the Bureau of Education.” She has been in the Interior and in the Yukon River country treating the teeth of the Indian population . She is staying at the Zynda for a few days. P. C. McCormack, independent GeN. O110 H. FALK One of America’s Leading Industrialists. President, Allis Chalmers Mfg. Company Vice-President, and Director, The Falk Corp. (manufacturers of steel castings, etc.); Direc tor: First Wisconsin National Bank, First Wisconsin Trust Company, Wisconsin Tele- phone Company, Milwaukee Mechanics In- surance Company, National Enameling and Stamping Company, Granite City Steel Co., the Falk Investment Company. President, Public Safety Comamission of Mil- waukee; Regent of Marquette University; Di- rector, Merchants and Manufacturers Assn, of Milwaukee. “The days are gone when a manu- facturer can achieve national ac- ceptance for his product merely through a vast advertising expendi- ture. Today’s intense competition demands that a product be identified with a quality distinctly its own. And so 1, as a fellow manufacturer, admire your enterprising use of the Ultra Violet Ray in the ‘Toasting’ of the LUCKY STRIKE tobaccos.” Alaska Legislature, who was in Ju- neau several days prosecuting his campaign, Jeft last night on the steamship Queen for Petersburg. Count Ivan A. Tolstoy, who spent a week in Juneau, after a sojourn of several months in McKinley Park and Interior Alaska, left last night for his headquarters in New York City. H. H. Benedict, Smith Van L. Merle and Smith Van Lloyd, big {game hunters from New York, are passengers on the southbound Northwestern. They are on their way home. Capt. J.. C. Green, head of the Signal Corps office at Seward, greeted friends in Juneau last night. He is a passenger on the steamship Northwestern enroute to the States. Capt. Victor Enquist, who took a tanker of oil to Seward recently and left it there, is bound south on the Northwestern. A. E. KARNES TO WRITE FOR NATIONAL SCHOOL PAPER ON KETCHIKAN Superintendent A. E. Karnes of Ketchikan, candidate for Commis- sioner of Education, has recently been asked to write an article for the Journal of Education, describ- ing the school system of the city of Ketchikan. This request came as a result of Superintendent Karnes's address before the National Education As- scciation convention at Columbus, Ohio, last summer, on the subject, “Alaska, Our Last Frontier.” A. E. Karnes, Superintendent of Schools of Ketchikan, and Demo- cratie candidate for Commissioner '0f Education, was one of the dele- gates from Alaska to the National Education Association convention held at Columbus, Ohio, last July. At that time, Mr. Karnes was elect- ed as Director of the National Edu- cation Association for Alaska. Mrs. Boylan of Thane was the other delegate. Telephone 183 EMPLOYMENT OFFICE candidate for the House of thel| TONIGHT Talking Reporter R ToTE T Ot T ILLINOIS APPLE COUNTY IS WITHOUT A RAILROAD HARDIN, I, Oct. 22—Calhoun County, Illinois's apple producing center, is without a railroad. All of its heavy fruit crop is moved to a rail terminal on barges down the Illinois River. A few years ago the Chicago and Alton extended its rails to the east short of the river. This eliminated a long overland haul. —————— nere are 38: per cent fewer farms in Cook County (Chicago) this year than 10 years ago. The Florence Shop | “Naivette” Croquignole Perm- anent Wave BEAUTY SPECIALISTS Phone 427 for Appointment | . Home Portraiture 'OF ' SEATTLE. 204 Front Street This studio will be in Juneau for a short time only. Take advantage of this op- portunity to have portraits of exclusive style—made by one of Seattle’s leading photo- graphers, and, in your own city. Photographs make the nicest Christmas present, Visit our studio—make an early appointment. The time is limited. HomEe PORTRAITURE OF | SEATTLE 204 Front Street (Fur Store Location) Pioneer Pool Hall POOL—BILLIARDS Chas. Miller, Prop. e Company has lnvimehc;ll Falk Meadowbrook Butter PHONE 39 ALASKA MEAT CO. QUALITY AND SERVICE TO YOUR LIKING Austin Fresh Tamales Deliveries—12:30, 2:30, 4:30 TONIGHT PLE.AN - ISBURY, o STARTING Penetrating the most uncivilized regions of the globe ace to face with primitive savages — throbbing tomtoms beating the weird rhythm of mysterious ritual — Andaman Pygmies physical and mental dwarfs existing exactly as they did ten thousand years ago! “STEEPLE Don’'t Miss This Mysterious Marvel CHASE” Showing for the first time “MICKEY'S in Alaska LUCK” Knockout Talking Comedies Palace 10-20-75-Loges $1.00 GREY'S| all Talking Picture William zox presen wilh GEORGE O'BRIEN SUE CAROL WARREN HYMER ELIZABETH PATTERSON o/RECTED 8Y A.F.ERICKSON ' COLISEUM {LAST TIMES TONIGHT 7:30-9:30 DRI LT T U | J. M. SALOUM | Men’s Hunting Coats i KEEP YOUR BACK DRY for Only $5.00, Special

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