The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, June 5, 1931, Page 8

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DATES OF FAIR FIXED; MARTIN T0 BE MANAGER S. E. Alaska Fair Associa- tion Re-elects Directors and Officers - . | tor machinist mates, first class; P. 1 Ch r, R. Shoss, E. E. Yek and PATRUL VESSEL | L. B. Massey, seamen, first class; | F. M. Young, R. W. Spencer, R. C. PUTS INTU PURT Mattison, seamen, second class; F. | W. Christensen, engineer, second |class; R. Domingo, officers' stew- ard, attendant, first class; M. L. Bal- ou, R. M., second class; H. V. Rock and E. B. Lowman, R. M., A]erl Based at Kc;chikan“““’d class; E. W. Jackson, B. M., s v . | fixst class. | Relurns n](‘,l'(‘ Tomght | ‘Some of the ship’s complement or TOH]O]‘I’O\V | have been in Alaska waters be- bats, fore. Captain Nelson was on a scheduled for this evening, the 11;-11:Tn0c'inrv of the| With a com -f{,f T' 21, the Unit- {Ponss CHEGIES sse Sones ;vauld i e e S Isay posliy O | 1N & company of el "~ lin this part of the Territory 12|fall had been almost continuous ho! s and directors of the|ed States Co: Guard patrol boat, | vears ago. for 24 hours and there seemed lit- Scu Alaska Fair Associa-|Alert, a i in Juneau from her tion ye day at B. M. Behrends | base at Ketchikan this morning.( \in the low hanging clouds fro Bank, dates for the 1931 Fair were | Which both the “just and unjust” | wern years directors of . two three terms d and for . will depart on her return to| Ke ikan tonight or Tamorrow;JUNEs Is uUT| 'are getting their wetting. forenoon. Her mission to thisport | [ is to receive from the United States| almost certain. t Collector of Customs, J. C. Me-| INTERE T off on the first available evening being Bride, the regular monthly pay ks When weather conditions are favor- t'er, due officers and crew, the practice | able and the schedule permits. The here for pay being fol- | many of the smaller, of coming lowed by LCS ANGELES, Cal, June 5.— John Re direc S. Pullen, J. P. Anderson and W, vessels of the government that do A Los Angeles newspaper failed 0 the Elks again Sunday, and will B. Kirk. not carry paymasters. {I'Melw a single inquiry as to howW neeq all of its strengthh’ For that ¢ the directors meeting all of | The Alert is taking the place of ;*he Wlf matches were Progressing 'game, tha officers of the board were re- [the Cygan, which: recently was;;"fl}g ;xind on the dr;]ys_o g]eorrge elected as follows: J. F. Mullen, | withdrawn from the Ketchikan |VOIBt's first two matches mlhe re- President: J. P. Anderson, Vice- |base. The Alert reached Ketchikan Nt British Bmfi!fll{r although BOXING RECEIPTS resident: W. B .Kirk, Treasurer,|from San Diego last Saturday. This e ooy J"’fms p{yed all)road SHOW INCREASES and W. S. Pullen, Secretary. Mrs. |is the first time she has been sns;‘:"}:fnh“;fi‘ service was amosbl Dave Housel was elected chairman |these parts. | ped. o o el h dies Auxiliary. | The dates for this year’s expo- The vessel is 125 set 23! feet long, -3‘. THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, FRIDAY, JUNE 5, 1931. Postponement of the game was It will be played lay-off tonight will not hurt the Moose club which is slated to meet March, with the exception of Janu- RAIN MENACES 17 LOCAL MEN GAME THIS PM. 10 AID ScouT Postponement of Moose- Veteran - Game This Evening Probable At mid-afternoon today it looked | . as if the Moose-Veteran battle of | Monday, Small Crew tle chance for any immediate bro.ikangle River between June 8 and - CAMP IN 193 LEag,le River Outing to Start Goes Tomorrow | With twelve local men schedul |to spend several hours each at| | June 20, the 1931 Encampment of | the Juneau Boy Scouts officially will begin Monday. ! An advance crew will go out to-' morrow to get the campsite ready for the major group of Scouts. |Four boys and a leader will un- |load the Sea Oftter which is to| leave here tomorrow morning. If| weather permits tents will be put up before Monday. Cars will take the remaining | feet and 6 inches breadth, and 8 AT THE HOTELS ,ary, when new license fees were tion were fixed for September gooi g inches draft. She is diesel| o g icollected, returned the largest re- 9,10, 11 and 12. Plans for it were |oqyjppeq She was built at Cam-| GASTINEAU—Mrs. J. A. Berg, Ceipts to the state athletic commis- | e i ped A SRR IO g N 3, n 1096, Mrs. B. Halvorson, Tenekee; J. T, sion since last August. The total be on of W. 8. Pullen and Ralph under the personali . = o company consists of | Tenneson, Seattle; H. G. Parker.‘lw”“ted was $12,660.78. Albert Nelson, chief bos'n. captain; |Walter Gerwels, Juneau. RQERVIE T, ) g 3 Mn, C. B. Hannum, bos'n, executive of-| ALASKAN—George Powell, Auk| Road improvement schemes cost- T T ficers W. L. Moyer, machinist; F.|Lake; J. Kruger, Yakutat. ling $150,000,000 have beer. approved Jo> Rollo, promising young paint- |J. Fuller, chief bos'n mate; W,i ZYNDA—R. Markoe, Juneau. in Great Britain, while others to er, was a newspaper office copy boy | Potter, chief motor machinist mate; | —.--—— ‘cost $125,000,000 have been app:-ov- | while he studied art in Chicago. 'L, L. Harker and L. C. Smith, mo-| OIld Papers ai ihe Emblre. ,ed in principle. Always Something New... and BETTER TO ARRIVE ON NORTHLAND Strawberries, 3 Baskets for 49c¢ Chickens, Fresh Dressed Ib. 26¢ MILK FED Broilers, - - - Pound 35¢ DRY PICKED — FRESH — DELICIOUS — Gooseberries - - Pound 18¢ 14¢ ® WASHINGTON — POUND Asparagus PHONE US YOUR ORDER TODAY! George Bros. Telephone — 92 - 95 Five Fast Deliveries “PURVEYORS TO PARTICULAR PEOPLE” : boys out Monday, regardless of the weather. Tom McMulleh, cook,; will be aboard the Sea Otter to-; morrow morning, and will have Jea 00D FELLOWS WILL OBSERVE MEMORIAL DAY When he pecame wealthy he set aside $30,000 as a perpetual fund for benefit of dowerless . brides so that Cupid might never again be frustrated in the parish for want of a “setting up” fund. The ‘“foundation” has grown to $35,000. This year $2,000 in in- terest was divided among 11 girls. Each bride's share is determined by number of applicants and the inter- est the young woman might have in their parents’ estates. : e A o Old papers av the Empire office ROMANTIC LEGACY SMOTHERS BRIDE’S JOURNEY TO ALTAR BATON ROUGE, La., june 5— A fund established 107 years ago has just furnished $2,000 for dow- ries of 11 West Baton Rouge par- ish brides. Romantic Jullen Poydras once Special Services Will Be|ioved a girl of the parieh, but way unable to marry because neither he Held Next Sunday in A D Presbyterian Church |22 £ had riches [ DANCE | MOOSE HALL SATURDAY NIGHT Auspices Moose Lodge No. 700 In accordance with a time-hon- ored custom, members of the In- dependent Order of Odd Fellows, in all the various branches, will ob- serve Memorial Day by attending divine service in a body nexi Sun- day morning. The services will be held in the Nerthern Light Presbyterian church at 11 o'clock conducted by the iev. C. C. Saunders. ‘The members will meet in their lodge rooms in Odd Fecliows Hall and proceed to the chureca in a body. All visiting Odd Fellows are urg- to join in the servi-s everything in order by the first of the week. | Following is the schedule for in-| structors at Eagle River: | Tuesday and Wednesday, June 9| and 10, Wellman Holbrook andi Harry Sperling; subjects, forestry,| fire-building, boxing and swimming. Thursday, June 11, M. L. Merritt and C. H. Flory; subjects, ento- mology and botany. Friday and Saturday, June 12 and 13, E. C. Guerin; subject, over- | night hike. Sunday, June 14, Vis-| itors’ Day. Monday, June 15, Dr. Council; subject, archery. Tuesday, June 16, Camp Day. Wednesday, June 17, Forrest Bates and T. B. Judson; subjects, bird study, clam digging, chopping. Thursday, June 18, Har- old Smith and B. D. Stewart; sub- jects, surveying and minerals. Fri- day, June 19, E. M. Goddard and Simpson MacKinnon; subject, sea- craft and marksmanship. | ———.—-——— TWO BANKERS | FOUND GULTY Jury in Federal Court Con- victs Officials of Vio- lating Laws FORT WORTH, Texas, June 5.—‘ W. L. Smallwood, Chairman of the Board of the defunct Texas Na- tional Bank, and C. C. Johnson, Vice-President, have been convicted by a jury in the Federal Court on charges of violating the banking laws. Sentence has been deferred. The bank failed in January, 1931. The shortage was $1,500,000. The bank officials were accused of misapplication of funds, false entries and falsification of reports to the Comptroller. 1 .- ! COMMUNISTIC VILLAGE FORMED NEAR TOKYO TOKYO, June 5.—Japan’s first communistic village has been or- ganized in the suburb of Tsuchiura, Tbaraki perfecture. It embraces 14 families, or 70 persons in all. The community members have decided to move into one large house of the apartment type so as to lead a thoroughly cooperative life. They will hold their fields as common property, work them to- gether and divide equally the pro- ceeds from the rice and other crops. — .- Maine had no fatal automobile accidents during last March and February. EXPERIENCED COOKS PUT UP FRUIT IN SMALL QUANTITIES Hills Bros. Follow Similar Rule by Roasting Coffee a Little at a Time By adding the halves of fruit to the hot syrup a few at a time, the boiling temperature is maintained and the fruit cooks to firm, tender ness. This principle is apparent in Hill Bros.’ process of roasting coffee and the result is a uniform, deli- cious flavor no other coffee has. A constant stream of expertly blended green coffee is introduced into the roaster in automatically measured lots of about three pounds. As it {nsfles through, uniform heat roasts t a little at a time. When the og- eration is over, every berry is roasted to an even degree that could never be secured any bulk- method of roasting coffee. This_process is fittingly called Controlled Roasting. It was orig- inated and patented by Hills Bros. and develops a savory, delicious flavor that no other process can Because Hills Bros. Coffee is mfiked in vacuum, it is always h. By this process, air, which destroys the flavor of coffee, is taken out of the can and kept out. Ordinary cans, even if air-tight, do not keep coffee fresh. Ask for Hills Bros. Coffee by name and look for the Arab—the trade-mark—on the can. Sold by grocers every- where. Hills Bros. Coffee, Inc., lornia. San ' (ENGINEER TO LEAVE ©na 4 FOR YAKUTAT ROAD PROJECT SATURDAY With two assistants, E. J. White, Resident Engineer, United 'States Bureau of Public Roads, will leave tomorrow for Yakutat on the Ad- miral Watson where he will be stationed this season, it was an- nounced today by M. D. Williams, District Engineer. Mrs. White will accompany him. Loren Sisson, local High School graduate, and H. A. Miller will aid Mr. White. He will have charge of the en- gineering on the road project at Yakutat. This is one and one-half miles long. The contract for con- struction was awarded recently to Sawyer & Reynolds. C. T. Gardner, local member of that firm, will be in charge of construction. Music by “Smokey’s” MELODY ORCHESTRA Admission $1.00 Ladies Free Order Your Sugar Now BEST CANE — 100 1b. Sacks —ats At GARNICK’S--Phone 174 DANCE PARISH HALL TONIGHT for sale at The,’ Old papers Empire. SILQUE HAND LOTION None Better s 50c — 85¢ Auspices Nativity Club i y L ; ; ‘ Juneau Drug Music by “Smokey’s” 1 Company MELODY ORCHESTRA Free Delivery =~ Phone 38 I s Post 0!11? Sluhshuon Admission $1.00 ¢ Refreshments | ; 0. o HEPG | T e L T --—--W}l SALE GRADUATION * GIFTS LUGGAGE — PAJAMAS DRESSES — COATS — HOSE SHIRTS — TIES FITTED BAGS PULLMAN TRUNKS A Large Selection at Wholesale Prices LEADER Department Store Final Liquidation Sale

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