The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, June 2, 1931, Page 8

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, TUESDAY, JUNE 2, 1931. - . : g __ : . T T |Treasury Balance of D 'l C r J11 The Queen on her departure EARLY SEASON May 31, §722. 752¢ aily Cross-word Puzzle CAPPS TAKING |QUEEN LOITERS [ ccom s Seteeny o 4 - Aol ] sengers for Haines, Skagway and RUAD PRUGRAM Below That of 1930 IN RA". AREAS . Acaiss Solution of Yesterday's Puzzle 6 Cliy in Okia- 16 MEN NGHTH AT SITKA' Tfl Sitka. They. were: d¥e .niet: cash balatios in ® 6 6 long low weat For Haines—A. P. Laurie, Frank the Territorial Treasury at ® S SILIAYS B[O[DTERURIAIMIP] 7. Use n broem ) O'Brien, Chester Wright, Louis Lo- Is UN E WA ® the end of May was $722- ® WILL B N [PIAIPJARNSIOILIOISEME RIVIA] 8 Not reni of ; ‘ dick, Carl Blakesty. o 20 accordimg io the o e peom- |EMLTHESILATISIMTIULILL o onutea in y For_Skagway—John Strom ani monthly financial statement @ 12 mee'ed DESIIRIEISHIAIEIR]IIAILIS bronouncing Mrs. R. Cherson. ‘ issued by Treasurer W. G. ® 5 G SICIR ASITIERINEIR 10 facmc Ty e For Sitka—Willlam T. Mahoney, + Pres. Flhon of Road Com-|s Smitn and made pubilc o- o F. R. Wadleigh, Pennsyl-|" “simmienc [SICANTIMEICHMPEIARIS Five Geologlcal Survey|[Number of Pedago%ues P B ] ) mission Returns from |o % from the Governors Of- 2 vania Expert goes North 5T o e [E[ERMIDIESTRIONIMMILIL 3} 5150 orun Crews Pass Through Here Will Also Sail |owonnor, G. Auston. Extended Inspection |2 ibe net balmeo was ‘ai- 8 For Season’s Survey |ii keny anote cErPECHR) A RS PILINE! 21 pahastiway Here for Interior South Saturday : { AD" v 19 1 'L‘"“ er 23. Burrowea einon roed wiek ‘tn (S Ovsianding wamacts i 8| To cake & s of Aadtun St WU Bt TR RIEIRIE RTINS ii Rebofe olh. | Heading a group of 16 men, 8. R.| When the sieamship Queen, Capt ERNIE KIRKPATRICK e f & it | year were consi ly less lelds tributary to the Alaska Rail-|, ‘ idence In i d Purser H. J. terior Alaska is getting well under s % % | 13 Capps, of the United States Geo-|J. E. Kolseth an way ,and while Wi Vagigs ase | than a year ago. The fothl’ @ [road, T, FeliWERIER, (EHACKVIERGH O tentiives an IE, VIE f LIE/OIN/ERD RIOIP| 31 Ry iles logical Survey, passed through here |Dix, sails south from Juneau next PASSES AWAY, SOUTH rough in sections, due to being cut| o oory g . ® | coal expert, will spend most of the |y, e v EIR 5 EININIEA) LITIOf 31 i 8 ol today on the steamer Alaska. The |Saturday forenoon, she will take £ Hadly 1y warns Miring the | T, B e Rl e and | fenrin TABSESITETISIMMIE[SIS] ;, come'ut e |group will be split up into parties|away many of the, teachers who | - Ernie, Kirkpatrick, well known Spring breakup, within a. few days| 3 oo, S e o i are passenvers on iy PAXANS 04 87 Hardenea 5 Bl 48 Siant ot two or more men and assigned |have been employed at Sitka and|Channel fesident, for years at the S i titaraios 7 TaaWE ahotld ha\e‘: hand ;.8 '59,379.54 as Alaska for Seward and o l\"c‘ 39. Portion 63. Grant the 36. Branched to varlous areas adjacent to the |Juneau schools during the ;pest |Nugget Creek Power House, died in $hiin 1n good:condition, said Maj.| S essinst #1 8 Il go from there to. Anchorage |fi° WhlS o ., 30 Doseied dre ure of o Alaska Railroad. scholastic year. Seattle, at the Virginia Mason Hos- Malcolm Elliott, President of the|' %00 0000000 o0 u\hern he will confer with Col. O.li1 Old stake in 42 Pronoun ‘While here Mr. Capps called on| The vessel, which departed from |Pital at 6:15 o'clock last night ac- | F. Ohlson, General Manager cf th fugrdiorss. ‘41, Roodiuie - . | 41 Bxclamation Gor 1 e cording Alaska Road Commission, who re-| : | R db RET- 08 AU tice " 48 Press forcis 42. Central part various Government officers, In-|this city late yesterday afternoon to advices received by his Sifined Tuesdsy $om an extended|over the ATaske; Rangs, eatller|I0od, Pricr to, Deginuig Ius/worle 113 ssessm iies 3 n: = é’tr: wheel |cluding the Governor, Maj. Mal-|for Haines, Skagway-and Sitks, |old-time friend, William J. Reck. trip. |than normal, and traffic is mov- | “"‘";‘L‘ hW Wfldlclsh‘_ il visit |, s hiEs b A R, 'm {colm Elliott of the Alaska Road |will not leave Sitka on her return| Mr. Kirkpatrick went south sev- He visited Seward, Kodiak, Dil-|Ing over it now. Maj. Elliott p‘.o_‘s of the coal districts adjacent :: F;T”: b1 “ 'r:»mr. Commission, E. C. Guerin of the|voyage here until Friday, after eral weeks ago but as his condi- lingbam, Tiiamns, Kasiloff, An-|cecded over it to Ohitina and re-|!0 the rallroad, he will pay partl- ) suratu Public Survey Office, and others.|commencement . exercises. in the tion grew worse, Mrs. Kirkpatrick chorage, Fairbanks, Chitina and|turned here via Cordova. The‘cular attention to the Matanuska The work of the surveyors is to|gitka schools. left for Seattle and was at his Gordove, nsing & plane fiom ‘Sew-|Valdes-Copper Center branch offleld as the Intexior Deperiment make an examination of mineral Teachers Reserve Passige bedside when he died. for his Southwest Alaska jour-|Richardson Highway will not be|ls said to be specially interested |zones, the development of WAICA|. poccage on the craft to the States | FOr several years previous to the |open until the latter part of this|in the development there of such | may contribute tonnage to the rail o 5Pl el oy 8 nunmber of | Treadwell cave-in, Mr. Kirkpatrick vestock Market Necded | month, probably about the 25th. |Veins as Wil supply Government Iroad. Additional men to assist in|giy, teachers. She will embark|Was employed in the power house The Gommission's program on| _ Unemployment Above Normal vessels, Southeast Alaska and Pa- Ithe field will be hired in the rafl- |, 41" nort for the States early |On the Island. AR & P In general, Maj. ELli iq,|cific Coast points with a fuel suit. road belt. Funds for the surveys et e Kodiak Island this season wil be| th ERICT, 311 enfp]:;';e;: i able to thelr respective needs ;;re oAb avatleld clmn’; Saturday morning numerous mem- confined to maintenance on and His mission is to determine the tional appropriation to ths Alaska bers of the Juneau teachfng staff.| Old papers at the Emolre oerlce to Abberts in prog- improvements which are now slight Highway ress. The great need Kodiak is a for meat products of its vestock industry, in Maj. Elliott's Settlers on the island, he report considerable success in ng cattle and sheep, but they are experiencing much difficulty in finding a market for their prod- ucts. “To a visitor, it scemed like a business that could be de- veloped with a profit both to the Territory and to those engaged in it. as there should be a market in Seward, Anchorage and Fairbanks for the meat,’ 'Maj. Elliott said. At Kodiak he met a hunting party consisting of Senator Fred- erick Hale, Asst. Attorney Gen- eral Seth Richardson and Sam Stern who had just returned from a successful expedition to Karluk Lake. They had carcasses of six brown bear and three cubs, and were delighted with the hunt. Build Dillingham Road From Kodiak, Maj. Elliott flew over the Valley of Ten Thousand Smokes on a six-mile road to Snag Point, where most of the industry of the district is centered. Most of the residents are at Dillingham. The road will make the Govern- ment hospital at Kanakanak ac- cessible to the people living at Snag Point Th> Commission has alloted $12,000 for this se n's work on the project, to be expended under the direction of Supt. M. C. Ed- munds of the Southwest Alaska district. Mr. Edmunds accompan- ied Maj. Elliott on the trip to Ko- diak and Dillingham. Tishermen in the Bristol Bay section are expecting a good run of red salmon and a busy summer. Visits at Iliamna From Dillingham, he went across Tliamna Lake and landed at Ili- amna Bay, A 12-mile road is now in process of construction con- necting the bay with Iliamna Vil- lage on the lake. This probably will be completed in one or two more szasons. It is designed to provide a short cut for traffic be- tween Cook Inlet and Kenai Pen- insula points to upper Bristol Bay. A stop was made at Kasiloff where the Commission sometime ago built a seven-mile road which opensd up a fine region. ‘The road is in good shape and has promoted the development of the fur-farming industry there. Be- tween 12 and 15 homesteads have been taken up along ths route, fur farms have been established on them, and they seemed to be doing well. From Kasilof Maj. Elliott flew to Anchorage and con- ferred with Col. manager of The Alaska Railroad, and proceeded to Fairbanks. Attends College Commencement He attended the commencement exercises of the Alaska College, where his daughter, Miss Ann, is| attending school. On his return south via Richardson Highway, she sccompanied him part of the way, returning to Fairbanks with Asst Engineer Ike Taylor. She will be joined by her mother and two sis- ters, Stewart and Jane, about the middle of June, to spend the sum- mer in Mt. Park. Richardson Ohlson, general | McKinley National Tighway is open| the sections he visited than nor- ,ma!. In every community visited |there seemed to be a greater num- |ber of idle men than on former trips. This condition, he said, was probably due to an influx of labor from the States. Many men, ap- parently, have come north in the hope of finding work, but without the assurance of employment, and some of them have not been suc- cessful in that aim. PLANE TRIPS FAVORED BY FINE WEATHER [Petersburg Makes Numer- | ous Flights to Nearby Places Aerial activities in the last few days have been favored by fine weather. Yesterday ,the Petersburg, Pilot Robert Ellis and Mechanic Brian Harland, took Lee H. Smith from Juneau to the De Vighne summer here, the aircraft made 2 flight over Mendenhall Glacier with a party of tourists off the steamship Queen. Later, the airship took four miners to Chichagof, and then went to Tulsequah to bring three men here. Today the plane went to Tulse- quah with four men. It returned and flew to Chichagof with Mike McKallick and four employes of his who are going to do some min- ing there. TWO MEN INJURED Samuel McGee of Douglas and Alexander Ambeloff of Juneau, bulldozers in the Alaska Juneau mine, were injured Saturday hight by an explosion. McGee's left eye was destroyed and his right eye is danger. place in Taku Bay. On returning| BY BLAST IN MINE| so badly hurt that its restoration| is doubtful. Ambeloff was hurt about the; face, but his eyesight 1s not in facilities, opportunities and pos- sibilities of increasing coal exports from the Territory. Before coming north he spent several days in Washington conferring with officers of the Interior Department. LM 9553 S GIVE DIPLOMAS ' T0 GRADUATES OF ST. ANN HIGH Prosentation Ml by Bishop Crimont Who Also Delivers Address Graduation exerclses, held last |evening in Parish Hall at which diplomas were awarded to three | students, closed the scholastic year |of St. Ann's High School. The three graduates, Lucille Norton, Mabel Ritter and Leonard Forrest, seated on a stage which had been transformed into a bower of flow- lers and greenery for the occasion, made a pleasing springtime pic- ture—bright, happy youth in a vernal garden. A splendid program of instru- mental and vocal music was pre- sented for the occasion. Miss Hel- |en Torkelson, in a piano num- ber, delighting with her talent and grace, and Sam Ritter thrilling |all with the beauty and force of his splendid baritone. ‘The three graduates deserve cre- dit for the delivery and execution of their Salutatory Class Poem and Valedictory. These students were the writers as well as the speakers {of their graduation numbers. Beginning of New Life Rev. Father W. G. LeVasseur, in presenting the class, impressed upon |== the members that their high school training had prepared them for | the beginning of a new and wider |life, and had equipped them to meet the emergencies that might 1 aris. “Now is the time,” he said, “when lal the principles learned in school are to be applied. The school now ‘puts its seal of approval on you for the fact that you have grasp. b i i ed these intellectual principles. worthy of figuring in that noble Your future life will tell whether |procession. You are the leaders; tor not you have grasped the seal” so direct your steps that in follow- The presentation of diplomas ing them, the others after you will was made by Rt. Rev. Joseph R.|present a line of march beautiful Crimont, who also gave the Com- and inspiring to the beholders.” mencement address to the gradu- | True To Self ates. | In commenting on the class mot- Rare Day In June '! to, “To Thine Own Self Be True,” The Bishop said in part: {the Bishop advised the class to be “The author of the line, ‘What |“true to home, to country, and to is so rare as a day in June’ must God—" to be champions of God al- have had in mind that June is the | ways and everywhere. There is no month of brides and graduates. | higher greatness and blessedness The two go well together; gradu- |than this on earth. |ates -are brides and bridegrooms | “May your school days have mold- announcing their engagement to a ed you more sefious and important 'phase \ In such a granite cast of life, the life in which théy are |That you will answer ‘No' to sin ready to play a bright and use-| Though that word were your last. men. You are the leaders of a lessons teach, procession of graduates who will And your steps guide all your life come after you out of St. Ann's through. High School. Make high and keep | Today, when new portals and fields aloft the mark which your succes- open to you, ful part as mature men and wo- | May your School days ever their Railroad. vour reach. “Seize 1t? Go forth! | Ownself Be True! “Be True!” Program in Detail The contplete program last eve- ning in the Catholic Parish Hall, follows: “Thanks Be to God” ... Stanley Dickson | Grammar School Choral Class Piano Selection ...Helen Torkelson Salutatory ....Miss Lucile Norton “God Made You Mine” ..Trinkans Sam - Ritter Class Poem, “Just & Handful of Clay” ... ..Miss Mabel Ritter “On the Ro&d to Mandalay,” ... ... Oley Speaks Sam Rm.ex' Valedictory Leonard Forrest Conferring of Diplomas The Rt. Rev. Joseph R. Cri- mont ,8. J., presiding. Commencement Address .. Rt. Rev. Joseph R. Crimont, 8. J. iClass Song .“Loyal and True" Baccalaureate Sermon Last Sunday morning at the 8 o'clock mass, the baccalaureate sermon was delivered by Father LaVasseur. After church services the grad- uates were guests at breakfast of Sister May Ludovic, Superior of St. Ann’s hospital. Sunday evening, . the graduates were guests of honor at a dinner given by their mothers in the rooms of the Parish Ladies Club. Other guests were Father La Vas- seur, Sister Superior Mary Ludo- vic, Sister Mary Stella and Mrs. |Mary Skuse. ———— Approximately 1,000 Confederate veterans and 2500 widows are on To Thine sors will have to look up to, to be His Sword Christ bflngs within Ithe pension rolls of Tennessee. ‘HIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIlIIIIIIIIIIlII|IIIIIII|III||IIIIIIIlIIIIIIIIIII|IlIlIIIIIllIIIIIIIIHIIII LARGE FRESH RANCH EGGS, dozen START YOUR ACCOUNT TODAY! SWIFT’S BACON, fresh and delicious, pound IS Hall Thursday evenin Picnic Grounds. — W. 0. M. L. PICNIC Weather permitting, autos will leave Moose g at 8 pm. for Loop MOOSE MEN I FOR INSURANCE See H. R. SHEPARD & SON Telephone 409 GARNICK’ flIlllIIIIIIlIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIllllllllll PHONE 174 |I||III||IlIIIIIIIlHIIII|||I|IIIIIIIlllIIIIIIIIIlIIIlIIIIIIIIIllllllll|||||llllIIlIIIIIlllIIIIIIIIIIII|II||I|ll|IIIIIIII|II|III|II|IIII||II Valentine Bulldmg EXPELLO KILLS MOTHS Hang in Closet Above Clothing 50c and $1.00 Juneau Drug Company free Delivery Phone 88 Post Office Substation No. 1 Musicby ¢ Admission $1.00 MOOSE HALL WEDNESDAY NIGHT Auspices Moose Lodge No. 700 MELODY ORCHESTRA ‘Smokey’s” Ladies Free | Tel. 92 - 95 SssssssssssssssssssssssssesssssessssiTesessssTaseTa Pass Up Everything —==TRY = George Brothers Five Fast Deliveries “Purveyors to Particular -People.” Tezssssssssasreessseeassiaressassansasatassaseatei| Betty Baxley New Frocks JUST IN! VOILES and PRINTS LIGHT and DARK SHADES Sizes:— 14 to 20 36 to 44 b—— R e FINAL LIQUIDATION The Leader Department Store s SsssssssssssssssssssasessesssssEsssad) WEDNESDAY NIGHT By the Newly Organized “MERRIMAKERS” Featuring Carl Fridlund on the Accordion ADMISSION $1.00 LADIES FREE Scandinavian-American Music i =zsseseessssmsaee e Trrrrrrrrr ) CALIFORNIA GROCERY SALE PHONE 454 LADIES’ SLIPPERS FIVE DIFFERENT STYLES ‘Special, $4.95 J. M. SALOUM Next to Gastineau Hotel WHI TMAN’S SAMPLER Inl1-2-3 or 5-pound Butler Mauro Drug Co. Phone 134 We Deliver

Other pages from this issue: