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

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L ERH I ‘GIRL MARKET' VIOLIN, PIANO WITNESS MAY | RECITAL GIVEN TELL OF LIFE, NEXT THURSDAY Glimpse of Past History of [Miss Frances Tanner and Miss Nitto May Be Un- Miss Dorothy Fisher folded to Jury Will Give Program DEFENSE ‘GAINS BIG | e POINT PRESENT TRIAL|: her wil evaning, piano re Miss Tanner She of Washin She studied under Helen Livingstone Also Ex-;“ | teach pccted to Take Sland, Pantages Case Another Man SAN DIEGO, Cal, June 8- has been di of Miss Lydia Nitto, youthfu! S0W- 1 pypic sifao0ls for the tr * case when defer s resumes Cross e the State’s Interlos securad today. 1 Over the protest of the prosecu- n:z:w:dnr! Thur defense counsel obtained | % F%* on of the Court to delve | ‘OVer™ nto the girl's mode of living after ibed the hotel party here hich resulted in the Alexander Pantages - — COLE TRANSFER Law. The State charges Miss Nitto) and Helen Livingstone were brought | here from Los Angeles to attend| Court MOVE OFFIGES the party. | Miss Nitto will probably be onl 3 (e stand most of today too be fol-| Two Well-Known Business-| es Go Into Capitol Elec- | lowed by Miss Livingstone. | ———————— ‘ tric Store ATTENTION EASTERN ST as! 4, Juneau! 3 Order of Eastern Stars, J ling on the corner f Second and Chapter No. 7 will meet Tuesday| “ | WA ots, which has been evening, June 9:h. A regular bu fs‘::":;‘:d Sll";“ ;‘m “Clj\pnnl s Sioper ness meeting is to be held. Visiting] _ SR s e ot | Company, the Cole Transfer and | St dll | the Railway Express Agency have JESSIE M. KELLER, |00 their offices from the build- Worthy Matron, |0 noxt to the Juneau Bakery cn FANNIE L. ROBINSON, |goyarq Street. All three business (o Secuetiy, enterprises will be conducted in|g : hich Bv”‘(hn Second and Seward corner Oha. syl oM. . Who 12 store in the future. Spring, Texas, received its name,| : e,| ™ Cash Cole is owner of the build- has started flowing after being dor- 4,7 0¢ second and Seward, and he e e also is the proprietor of the Elec- - O “oltric and Transfer companies and | Q| | Express company. he Florence Sho agent of the g i ;,l;‘one 427 for Appomtme& \\ By housing all three enterpr in one store with each having se arate and ample space, saving be effected in overhead expens and yet more efficient service will be given customers. PICK MEN FOR " LONGWORTH'S SEAT IN HOUSE Democratic and Republi- can Committees in Cin- cinnati Endorse Men For Congress | CROQUIGNOLE and SPIRAL | | WAVES Beauty Specialists | ) BERG HATS A Great Value for CINCINNATI, O, June 8—The first steps in the selection of a successor to the late Speaker Nich- olas Longworth as Representative from the First Ohio Congressional District were taken Saturday when the Democatic and Republican Ex- eccutives endorsed candidates for the primary election that will take place in August. The Democratic choice was State Senator David Lorbach, and the Republicans picked Attorney John B. Hollister. The selections are considered cquivalent of nominations. Sl P Iris Gray, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. J. L. Gray, is returning home for her summer vacation after at- tending college in Oregon. $5.00 H. S. Graves The Clothing Man Order Y our Sugar Now BEST CANE — 100 1b. Sacks gt At GARNICK’S~Phone 174 $5.50 Into the store room in the build- |k string of matrimonial ventures, is M and clothes which she brought back involved according to Uncle, is ab -Alas C. V. Trail, chief er Ketchikan Cold Stor 13 yea has T f the the the (33 gne (1 position. He and Mrs. Trill w sojourn for while in the Sita t decided in what engage cn his hikan. Alfred Howe of Ketchikan, while on a hunting trip at Pybus Bay, shot a brown be: the hid: meas- seven and a half fer(. Ralph n, a fox farmer et Pybus v, killed a brown bear 'the hide which measured 11 [2e5, Parts of deer hide were found iu the stomachs of both *er May. Between Indians were stricken by the epi- demic, reports Mrs. Agnes R. Fletcher, government hurse at Kla- wak iss Julia Don ist bure: an, who conducts ys that the steam- ships Yukon and A [cutian will be provided with tourisf. bureaus this season. Ve chikan pioneer, and 1/ who have been sojcurning in the States, will leave i’eattle Satur- day for Ketchikan, where they plan to spend the sitmmer. Red Men’s lodge jof Ketchikan, said to be the ricteest lodge per capita in the world,: has arranged to give some of the imost valuable property in the heart|of of the city for street purposes. : Six feet off the front of the lodge's real estate will be given to the municipality for the widening of - Dock Street. The city will pay the expenses of cutting off the front af two build- ings and putting on n{w fronts. Boy Scouts of Ketchikan will be- gin their annual summer encamp- ment Saturday. It will be held at White River under h(: professional leadership of Scout Eyecutive Har- ris G. Clark. Helén Hillary and 'Walter Met- rokin were married in Anchorage. Harry G. Steel, publisher of the Cordova Times, is foreman, and D. W. Stoddard, city clerk at Ancho- rage, is secretary <f the United States Grand Jury which recentlv convened at Valdez. Discussing still another man, Peggy Hopkins Joyce, famous for hel | ses Polakoff. The man under consfderation this time is Uncle Sam who reminds Miss Joyce that maybe she forgot to declare some jewelry | ka News | J. B. Heckman, p¢ominent Ket- Heckman, | THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, MONDAY, JUNE 8, 1931. “In Her Life pOBERS CALLS - HERE WITH 81 ROUND TRIPPERS |Admiral Liner Brings Larg- est Party of Tourists This Year With the largest party of tour- |ists brought north this year, the | steamship Admiral Rogers, Capt. C. C. Graham and Purser R. V. Har- ris, arrived at Juneau from Seat- |tle at 11:30 this forenoon. She left at 3 o'clock this afternoon for Haines, Skagway and Sitka. She will be back here Friday on her | return voyage south. ! The round-trip tourists number 81, "and as indicated in the artistic | passenger list that Purser Harris has issued for the occasion, they | hail from all parts of the country. The souvenir passenger lift, con- taining the names and home ad-| dresses of the travelers, is beauti- | fully illustrated on the front cover | in four colofs besides black and white. The front cover gives a| marine view from a¥waterfront | town, having a fine specimen of | a Totem pole. Mountains, clouds | and fir trees impart realistic ef- fects. Sketches in blue, typical | of Alaska, adorn other pages. 1 Eleven passengers brought by the | vessel disembarked at Juneau. They were: | ‘George Grigsby, Miss Alice Coch- | ran, Mr. and Mrs. James York, Mr. and Mrs. E. H. Clifford, Mrs. F. Waller, Roy Monroe and three steerage. — e — Out of 8739197 families in Great Britain, 1,092,399 are childless. | REVAMPED VETS T0 MEET MOOSE Postponed Game Is Slated for 6:30 Tonight Be- tween 2 Low Teams The Moose-Legion postponed game, raihed out last week, will be playéd at City Park at' 6:30 p.m. today, it was announced this morning by Karl Theile, Presi- dent of the organization. Bob Keaton or Lowe will hurl; for the Vets and probably Erskine for the Moose. It will be a re-arranged outfit that faces the Paps tonight. Ellis, appointed manager last week, has made several shifts in his players which he expects will tighten up the team's defensive play. It has been weak in this department all season. The Veteran offense leaves noth- ing to be desired. It has an array of dangerous hitters, some of them liable to park the ball at any time. If Ellis can stop up some of the holes in his inner lines, he will have a club that is hard to stop. —ll——— RETURN FROM VISIT Mrs. E. E. Hill, wife of one of the attaches of the U. S. Signal Corps station, returned home on the Northland after a visit of several weeks with her parents at Petersburg. Pan e Miss Etta Show, principal of the Juneau grade school, left Satur- day on the Northland for Seattle. After a few days there, she will go to Newport, Ore. She plans to spend most of the summer vaca- tion there. pictured above with her attorney, | from Europe in 1922. The amoun' jut $50.241. | at Fairbanks. They will make their home this summer at Chat- | anika, where the bridegroom is em- | ployed by the Fairbanks Explora- | tion Company. | Fire, which raged for three days [in timber and which was fanned by high winds, came close to #ur| farms on the Kasilof River in the | Kasilof district. 1 Six girls and six boys constituted | the graduating class this year at| the Anchorage high school. Luke Elwell, of Seward, Alaska | guide, and Mrs. Elwell will try to capture two live Kenai Penlnsula moose in the Tustamena and Ski- | lak lake district. The animals are | wanted by the San Francisco Park Commission. TENDER FERN SIGHTS INFANTA NEAR JUNEAU Lighthouse " Craft Thinks Barrymore Yacht Going to Chichagof On an inspection tour of light- | houses, buoys and aids to naviga- tion in Southeast Alaska, the light- house tender Fern, Capt. Barton, called at Juneau Saturday. = She put into port in the afternoon and left at midnight for her base at Ketchikan. Aboard the Fern was Capt. W. C. Dibrell, lighthouse in- spector for the District of Alaska. In coming nwth from Ketchi- kan, the Fern last Saturday sighted the yacht Infanta, aboard of which are John Barrymore, famous acter, and Mrs. Barrymore. The Infanta had made a brief call at Peters- burg and was bound from Fred- erick Sound into Chatham Strait. It was thought she was headed for | Chichagof Island, where Mr. and Mrs. Barrymore are expected to visit J. H. Cann. | The Infanta is expécted to come to Juneau before she returns south. HARDING AND FOLTA i KILL THREE BEARS Group No. 1.—$2 Group No. 2.—$5 “TOMORROW’S STYLES TOLAY” .50 each or 2 for 53.91')/ .95 each or 2 for $9/50 From Tuesday, June 9th to Sqturday, June 13th Again we offer Values of Genuine Merit : DRESSES FEATURING THREE GROUPS - COATS An offering of coatsin two price groups $14.50 and $18.50 Former prices up to $35.00 . After having lost 20 days along | ON WHITING RIVER the Tanana River, having started; up the stream frora the Marvin; Federal Judge Justin W. Hard- Roadhouse at the mouth of Tolo-|ing and Asst. United States Dis- vana River, Robert Serafino, pio-}trich Attorney George W. Folta neer Alaskan, came upon Alex Hed- |bagged three bears on the Whiting lund’s unoccupied cabin where there |River area on a 10-day trip which was a plentiful supply of food. Ser-“ended last week. One Grizzly and afino had subsisted on spruce buds | two blacks, one of which was brown 11 days just before finding the. in color, were bagged, none of them cabin. of extra size. , The two hunters returned home Olga Strandberg, a student at the| yesterday on the Helmar, which Alaska College of Agriculture and| made the trip to Snettisham Inlet School of Mines at Fairbanks,|Saturday night to pick them up. GEORGE BROTHERS Five Fast Deliveries 4 Gitda o WG AT 155 daughter of Mr ,;nd Mrs., dD;v\d =5 randberg of Anchorage, an ar- | = Dueny i 'KUSKOKWIM TRAPPER FINED, SKINS TAKEN ry Doheny, who graduated from the college in 1930, were married Charged with illegally possessi! furs, A. R. Eldredge was arrested jon the upper Kuskokwim Jast week by Warden Oddie Hallson jand taken before the United States Commissioner at McGrath, said in- | formation just received at local headquarters of the Alaska Game | Commission. He entered a plea of Igullty and was fined $130 and costs. | Eldredge had in his possession 19 marten and one land otter skins which had not been sealed. The | pelts were seized by Hallson and forfeited to the Government. % | — e & ! GIRL BORN AT HOSPITAL { WMrs. E. L Keithahan of - 1is the mother of a daugh yesterday afternoon at St. YYVVYVYVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVY < < 3 < B < < « « D) < < < < < < < « < < > Group No. 3.—$8 95 each or 2 for $14.95 BATHING SUITS Values Straw Models — Shapes — both misses’ Chiffon Dinner Dresses Now $16.95 Regular $5.50—Now $2.75 Suit SURPRISE TABLE A clearance of odds and ends and broken lines and A sizes—yalues up to $5.00. ) Clean-Up Price 50 cenfi up to 827.50 HATS Were $8.95 NOW $3.00 — Final on Felt omen’s and 35 Cents Each / o No Approvals .’ No Refunds k2 Juneauw’s Own Store

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