The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, January 13, 1931, Page 8

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!f i { H i LOCAL CHAPTER |, EXGEEDS QUOTA | FOR ROLL CALL Final Report of Chairman Holbl'ook RE'\"(’alS Meln‘ bership of 1,350 ing the re-| | Roll Call, 1 chairman shows the Ju- uota by al sub- $1471.05, represent- ing a membe nounced p of 1350, he an- Only five out of the 18 communi- er their ties reporting failed to bett 1929 record. The total re: $401 larger than in the 19 Juneau led with $74240 followed third with $111 t The results of the 1930 drive and comparative figures for 1929 follow: Town— 1930 1929 0 N e 3 Juneau $ 74240 § 61110 | WHO'S WHO | S 45.00 67.00 | Thane 23.00 7.00 | AND WHERE | Skagway 80.00 (I » Chilkoot Bks. 84.90 Wendell Dawson of Ketchikan is Haines 23.00 27.00 staying at the Gastineau. Klukwan 16.00 | 7 1. Goldsteln was a passenger on Hoonah 24.00 3700 Grand Jury Indicts Three | the Princess Norah for the States. Tenakee 33.00 19.00 | He will go to California where he Hirst-Chichagof 30.00 17.00 Men for Alleged De- | will meet Mrs. Goldstein, who has Chichagof 4210 | struction of Property |been there since November. They Sitka 115.00 103.00 | will return to Juneau shortly. Angoon 8.00 | Mr. and Mrs. L. H. Metzgar and Kake 18.00 30.00 Charges of destruction of property son Frank are on their way to Petersburg 111.00 76,00 OWned by others were made against | the States, They will visit in Yakutat 62.65 65.60 | three men in an indictment re-|Seattle for a while and then go to Scow Bay 8.00 turned by the Grand Jury this| California for a brief stay. Goddard 5.00 morning in the Federal District| Harry Sutro of Pybus Bay is reg- | Court before Judge Justin W.|istered at the Gastineau. Total $1,471.05 s1.06“,&\l—im’dmz The men, jointly indicted,| Mr. and Mrs. H, R. VanderLeest gie | were: Peter Johnson, K. Burcham |are passengers on the southbound | UNION PRAYER MEETINGS {B“d Frank Babcock. Princess Norah. Before returning ARE TO BE CONTINUED Sufficient interest was shown in the union prayer meetings held in the Juneau churches last week 10| warrant a continuation of them once a week. This was the decis-| ion of the ministers on Saturday | cvening at the close of the service| in the Native Presbyterian Church.| | en by Each Wednesday evening a union | continued in | today. sented by Assistant District Attor prayer service will be held in one of the churches. Tomorrow evening the service will be at 7:30 in the Northern Light Presbyterian church ne ed A week later it will be in the Methodist church. The place of| '™ meeting will be announced from week to week. ) !.'Ill!lIIIIIlIIIIl|IIIIIIIlllllllllllllmlll|||II||lIIl||l|||II||||IIIllllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlllllllllllllllllllIIIIIIIIIIIIIllIlll Our Final Shoe Sale January 13 to 31 Only men’s, ) LOT NO. 1 | LADIES'S OXFORDS \ in black and brown with| arch supporters. Values to $9.00. Wonderful bargains. Now closing out at— $1.95 pair LOT NO. 2 LADIES’ OXFORDS in brown and black pumps, slippers with high and low heels. Values to $8.50. All popular styles. Closing out at $3.95 pair RO RO PHONE 454 ilmllllIII||IIIIII|||IIIIllIIIIII|||IIIIIIII|I|IIIIIlIIIIIIlIIllI|||IlIII crime crusader, Robert C. Hurley ALL SHOES CUT LESS THAN CO misses’, ation on our building February 1. | and brown kid slippers and | pair. | MISSES’ BLUE AND RED L&lé fox:Mayor Associated Press Phote Judge John H. Lyle, republican designa- ion as mayor. They are allegea to have de- stroyed sluice boxes, flume hose |lumber and other articles owned| H. G. Watson on a mining claim at Montana Creek. The men were arrested after they had taken possession of |the Watson camp. several weeks ago Trial of Willie John, Sitka, on arge of attempted rape, was the District Court The Government, repre- y George W. Folta, had presen’ most of its case at noon today is representing e defendant. | Play wngoor (ol at The AlasZan LOT NO. 4 CHILDREN’S SHOES | All leather. Values to $3.50 | _ s 816 to 13. pair LOT NO. 5 MISSES' PATENT LEATHER pair. S N oxfords. Values to $3.95 Now—=$§2.50 pair :r Brown Shoes Sizes 614 LOT NO. 6 KID SLIPPERS Values to $3.75 C]oxing out at $1.50 pair Real bargains. This slocl\ must be 'n]d regardless of Cos 5 to 2. Chicago woild carry his gang fight to larger fields, He Is a by Sitka, $115 and Petersburg was candidate for Wonderful values in women’s, children’s oxfords, slippers, shoes. We will start alter- SEE THESE VALUES! THE DAILY LEO BROTHERS CHARGED WITH LINGLE MURDER Louis Gunman Taken Into Court—Indict- ment Is Read CHICAGO, I, Jan. 13.—Leo Brothers, St. Louis gunman, tall, young, cold eyed and stiff lipped, was brought into court yesterday Jury had indicted him for the mur- der of Alfred “Jake” Lingle, Tribune | crime reporter, seven months ago. The air of bravado faded when | Brothers met his mother for the first time in 17 months on his way from court to jail. Brothers' alibi will be he was in Michigan at the time of the mur- der home, they will visit Mrs. Vander- Leest's relatives in Minneapolis. Charles Sabin left last nigh' for afternoon and heard the Grand| , Daily Cross-word Puzzle 1, PASEORS , Solugion*of Yesterday's Puzzle & Drink ¥ Beoie """ PIACMATFARWATONE] & £ il mogeleor oTREd ;o . Voleress con- %?ILL'JHB [CIEIN[T] agm it prmoiles, [LIL E] INIS . Roman housy hold gods 19. Make neces- sary 1 Rigorous .2, Ol of rose one here e the speed of Perform L Go swiftly At mun nerntes (5 A Verotnhle exudation [F oNDIBJAISIE] '* ua'n Fecently [WIOIN] aptitude Carousals Rent_asunder 0ld word for T ki 42, Dristle v 4% Ceremony 4@ Crystallized raln 45, Nalt 31 Myseit a visit of several weeks in Seattle. Henry Roden, attorney, returned on the motorship Estebeth irom a business trip to Sitka. Dana DeVighne left on the Prm- cess Norah last night to re-enter; the young ladies’ boarding school | at Strathcona, near Victoria, B. C.| Mrs. V. Richards, whose husband‘ is a flier, left last night for a visit to her former home in Spring- field, Mo. E. O. Swanson, fish packer at Port Althorp, left on the Prin- cess Norah for a vacation in the; States. CHILDREN’S FELT SLIPPERS Sizes 6 to 2 at $1.00 pair BOYS' SCOUT FELT SLIPPERS Closing Out at $1.10 pair Sizes 2 to 5 e MEN’S OXFORDS in black and brown $4.95 and $5.95 pair Values to $10.00 Genuine Leather Shoes MEN’S CUTTER LOG- GERS SHOES with corks—and without Also. a good selection of hiking shoes reduced for quick sale. Buy now. l()’l‘ \0 7 CHILDREN’S PATENT LEATHER SLIPPERS LOT NO. 3 MEN’S WwORK SHOES Values to $6.75 Now $4.75 pair with leather or composi- tion soles Regular $2.50 pair. Sizes 2145 to 5. Closing out at $1.65 Leader Dept. Store GEORGE BROTHERS, Proprietors = attle. ==|nard at. Wrangell goes to Ketchi- All-Alaska News | ITEMS GATHERED INEVERY PART OF NORTHLAND Interesting Facts Abput Various Places and Per- sons Are Assembled Miss Margaret Balf, school teach- er, and Alonzo Cope, aviation me- chanic, were recently married at Anchorage. In the ruips of a burned house at Kenai, the charred bodies of Alford Danieloff and Billie Stepan were found December 23. It is possible that the men were killed before the fire. There is a report that the door to the structure was locked from the outside. The| house was owned by Steve Ephim, who has been held for examination | by Coroner Parrish. Red Steich broke his hip in a fall from the window of his room | in the City Hotel in Anchorage. He had been ill for sometime, and the authorities think he intention- ally leaped from the window. His sanity is questioned. ‘Wolves are so numerous in the Kobi district of Interior Alaska that natives are afraid to venture away from their homes alone. Ar- thur Wright who killed several caribou and left them a few days before returning to the animals to take them to Nenana found most of the meat had been devoured by wolves. L. C. Paternaude, 78, who went to Wrangell in 1898 and opened a barber shop, died recently in Se- He was the owner of con- siderable business property in Wran- gell. W. D. Gross of Juneau, who owns | the Coliseum string of motion pic- ture theatres in.Southeast Alaska, has made several managership | changes. Manager Frank L. Stan- kan, Manager Roy Dolgner at Sitka is transferred to Wrangell and Man- ager Louis Lemieux at Ketchikan is assigned to Sitka. ‘The Wrangell Shingle Mill is ready to resume operations under the management of A. Angarman. Hudson's Bay post at McDames' Creek, where the accident was re- ported. Hyder is experiencing the mild-| est winter in her history. The | snow fall is the lightest on record. | There is scarcely more than a foot anywhere along the lower Salmon) Valley. Temperatures’ fell to the| freezing point only two or three| times, mained there only a few hours. Fifty-two pleces of property in Anchorage are advertised in the Anchorage Times for sale for non- payment of taxes. The sale will be held January 21. aska Railroad, the schedule hours for the period between January 1 and April 30, according to an order issued by Acting Manager C. H. Holmes, is 9 am. until 5 pm. with the lunch period from 12 to 1. Anchorage Ploneers of Alaska have elected Henry S. Sogn, Presi- dent; Charles L. Kemp, First Vice- President; Tom Meredith, Second er; R. G. Southworth, Secretary; Thomas K. Orr, Chaplain; James Climie, Historian; E. J. King, Ser- geant-at-Arms, and I. Bayles will succeed himself as a. member of the Board of Trustees, having been elected for the three-year term. Frank Cleary, one of the early settlers in Fairbanks, who with his brother-in-law, Capt. -E. T. Barnette, also an early settler in/ Fairbanks, is operating a dredglng propery in Mexico, was in Seattle for the Christmas holidays. To the Alaska Weekly, he contradicted the report of the death in Vene-| zuzela 10 years ago of William (Swiftwater Bill) Gates, famous Klondiker. Cleary said he saw Gates in La Paz, Bolivia, seven years ago, that Gates then was en- gaged in mining in Bolivia and that he appeared prosperous. Joe Ward, Gene Brown and Peter Black are taking out a dump on the Chatanika Flats close to Chat- anika in the Interior. Herman Bloom, Theodore Rehn, Charles Peterson and Carl Wagner are winter mining the Oregon group and on Little Eldorado, near Chat- bedrock on Little Eldoradoe prop- erty leased by him from Luther C. Hess. Fifteen' criminal cases are on | There are 20,000 feet of cedar logs at the foot of the log slip, Charles Ross, trapper of Wrangell, there from the Clearwater River district with the pelts of eight marten, several ermineand a wols verine wolf. fisherman and Cassiar miners, were drowhed in PHONE 454 IlllllllmlllllIllllmlIllllllllllll|llll||ll||lllfllllllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlllllllllllllllIIIIII||III|IIIlIIlIlIlIIIIIIIIIIlIIIfi = by the Wrangell Sentinel from the the January term calendar of the United States District Court for the Fourth Division at Fairbanks. Liquor cases are outnumbered by has arrived | cases involving robbery and other crimes. . Fur is very scarce in the Chena . He reports little sign of |Hot Springs district in the Fair- banks area, H. K. Carlisle, ex- aminer for the United States Land John Esner and John oun'vlell Office, reported in Fairbanks on The his arrival from the Springs. and in each instance re-| For office employees of the Al-| Vice-President; I. Bayles, Treasur- | anika, Alf Andersen is sinking ‘o JUNEAU YOUTH EXCELS ‘A’ MARK Benjamin Messer Is Making Fine Record at Col- lege of Mines Benjamin Messer of Juneau s making a fine record at the Colo- rado School of M:mes at Golden. In the first quarter of his freshman year he received an honor mark in one subject of study and A's in all his other subjects. The honor mark is a super A. The mformxa,mmI as to the young man's grades was received today from the College by W. K. Keller, who just recently re- signed as superintendent of Juneau public schools preparatory to tak- ing up his duties as Alaska Com-| missioner of Education. Messer was graduated from the Juneau high school last June. Be- cause of his excellent schoXarshlp here he was awarded the scholar- | ship that is- allowed annually to this city by the Colorado College. NETTIE CASPERSON DIED OF DROWNING| Nettle Casperson, whose body was found yesterday at the water’s edge under a wharf at the rear of Con- nors' Garage, “came to her death by drowning,” according to a ver- | dict returned late yesterday after- P. J. Stribling (inset) escaped injury as his through a roof of light wood and tar paper in the busi Seattle, Wash. Associated Press Photo_ rpiane cracned s district of noon by a coronor’s jury in the gourt of United States Commission- er Charles Sey. Whether her death was accidental or intentional could not be determined. “The jury’s verdict closes the case,” sald Judge Sey. ‘The deceased is survived by a son, Neil Lynn, of San Francisco, and by a sister, Minnie Norris of Hia- watha, Kan. The remains are held at the Charles W. Carter Mortuary, awaiting advices from relatives. ——————— Ell Tanner, proprietor of the Tanner Boarding House, has left for a visit with his brother at Alert Bay. Complete Line of BRITISH FLIER CHANGES PLANS MOSCOW, Jan. 13—Amy John- son, British aviatrix, has left War- saw to fly back to London, aban- doning her plans for a solo flight across Siberia to Pieping, China. ATTENTION EASTERN STARS Juneau Chapter No. 7, O. E. S. will hold a regular business meet- ing Tuesday night at 8 p. m. All ] members are requested to attend. JESSIE KELLER, ‘Worthy Matron, FANNIE L. ROBINSON, —adv. Secretary. Dally Empire Want Ads Pay. CROSSE & BLACKWELL PLUM PUDDING 50 CENTS GEORGE BROTHERS Telephone 92 or 95 Five Fast Deliveries WOOL SHIRTS | Specially Priced at $2.75, $3.50, TOMATO SOUP 11 CANS FOR $1.00 GARNICK’S, Phone 174 ——d $4.00, $4.50 J. M. Saloum CALIFORNIA GROCERY PHONE 478 | | 49 ound sack . 2 1-2’s, Cottonwood Rapids in the Dease|only signs of wild animals seen by River, according to advices récelved | him Were !nch oL a bl.nd ot ‘wolves, & Order Some of These Goods Today and See for Y ourself MEADOW DEW BUTTER, 1 pound prints, per pound, 38¢; 2 peunds ... ieci, . o, 0L 75e CLOVER VALLEY BUTTER, (quarters), per Ib. 40c FRESH EGGS, mediums, per dozen .............25¢c FRESH EGGS, large, per dozen ...... ..........35¢ PICKETT BRAND HARD WHEAT FLOUR, .$1.75 BEST GRADE PINEAPPLES 21 2’s (many brands to choose from) per Cal . . o i 80C HILLSDALE PINEAPPLE, 2 PerCaR v s, bt R IR L e e DEL MONTE OR RELIANCE PEACHES, POT ORI - it v ins s e rat il bs N o G Heh BOC ' DEL MONTE CORN OR PEAS, s, 5 cans for ..$1.00 ORANGES, according to sizes, dozen 25c; 35¢, 50c, 60c COMPLETE STOCK OF FRUITS AND VEGETABLES---GROCERIES Sanitary Grocery “The Store 'That P'leaaes 1-2 s, broken slices; PHONES 83—35

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