The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, June 9, 1931, Page 9

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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE ‘ALL THE NEWS ALL THE TIME” VOL. XXXVIIL, SECOND SECTiON JUNEAU, ALASKA, TUESDAY JUNE 9, l93| MhMBhR OF ASSOCIATED PRESS PRICE TEN CENI{ ALASKA PILOT DOWN, RE.M@TE FIELD UNABLE TOGET INTO AIR FROM SMALL SECTION Flier Delterle, Prospecting, Mushing Out to Se- cure Assistance CORDOVA, Alaska, June 9.—Pi- lot Deiterle, of Kennecott, is mush- ing to civilization after landing 50 miles from Long Lake, in the Bremner country. Deiterle was on a prospecting flight and made a perfect landing on a small cleared spot. He was unable to take-off again, not hav- ing sufficient clearance room for a runway and will ask help from the Alaska Road Commission to clear an emergency field so he can bring his plane out. e CHAMPS TAKE 3RD STRAIGHT FROM DETROIT Lefty Grove ¥ Forns 40 Mis! Tenth Victory for This Season PHILADELPHIA, Penn., June 9. —A four-run rally in the sixth in- ning enabled the world’s cham- pions Athletics to win the third straight of the series with Detroit, yesterday afternoon by a score of 7 to 3. Earl Whitehill, nlthough beaten by Lefty Grove, who turned in his tenth victory of the season, held the Mackmen hitltss for four in- nings. —_ e GAMES MONDAY | —_— Pacific Coast League No games were played in the Pa- cific Coast League yesterday asthe teams were traveling to open this afternoon on a new schedule for this week. National League New York 6; Chicago 1. ' | Dunedin national museum by a pri- American ieague St. Louis 4; Boston 0. Detroit 3; Philadelphia 7. Cleveland 4; New York 1. Chicago 4; Washington 18. STANDING OF CLUBS Pacific Coast League Won Lost 38 34 35 31 29 ... 28 .. 28 22 National League Won 28 25 25 22 23 20 19 14 League Won Lost 34 1 30 17 25 . 25 . 18 16 19 17 Juneau City League Won Lost bl 2 3 4 e | 4 - — MUSEUM GIVEN TWO EGGS OF EXTINCT GIANT MOS Pet. 613 557 556 508 AT5 459 452 373 Hollywood Portland Missions ... Los Angeles San Francisco Seattle ... A Sacramento . Oakland 24 27 28 30 32 33 34 37 Lost, 14 18 18 22 23 24 24 33 Pet. 667 581 .581 500 .500 455 442 298 St. Louis Chicago New York Boston Brooklyn . Pittsburgh Philadelphia Cincinnati American Pet. 156 638 556 532 .400 381 3713 370 Philadelphia Washington New York | Cleveland Chlcago . SRR | 8t. Louis Detroit Boston Pct. 14 429 333 Elks Moose Legion AUCKLAND, New Zealand, June 9.—Two perfect specimens of Mos ezgs have been presented to the vate collector, whose grandfather | lmmd the relics more than half & century ago. The gift is a rare one, for only six other Mos eggs are known to exist. The Mos was a gigantic flightless bird akin to an ostrich, but larger. It was extinct’ when white men |first came to New Zealand. The |bird lald an egg about 10 inches in length. PROVE POULTRY VACCINATION WASHINGTON. Agricultural colleges have demonstrated that poultry can be vaccinated success- fully against contagious chicken pox a practice first advocated in Hol- land. | ———————— Old papers ror sale at The | Empire. NORTHWESTERN - TOURISTS VIEW LOTS OF ALASKA Steamship Makes Plenty of Calls Between Seattle and Juneau Twenty-seven tourists making the round trip between Seattle and Ju- neau on the steamship Northwest- ern are seeing moge of this part of the Territory than usually is ob- served by Southeast Alaska visit- ors. at 9 o'clock last Tuesday night and which arrived in Juneau at 6 last evening—six days on the voyage—is calling at numerous cannery sta- tions as well as at all the larger ports. The Northwestern, Capt. J. Liv- ingston and Purser J. E. Hewitt, had 97 first-class and 97 steerage | passengers out of Seattle. Virtually | all her steerage passengers were de- stined for canneries. Delayed By Fog Coming north she was delayed 12 hours by fog in Seymour Nar- rows. She stopped at Quadra,-Ket- The vessel, which left Seattle | ,chlkn.n, Wmngeu Petersburg ‘Wash- | ington Bay, Port Conclusion, Port Armstrong, Chatham, Fawk Inlet, Todd and Tenakee. The vessel left here last night for Haines and Skagway. She will come back to this port early Wed- nesday morning, and after a brief stay will sail for Dundas Bay and Sitka. From Sitka she will de- part for Seattle. | Pasvengers For Juneau Passengers who disembarked al Juneau were Alfred Dishaw, Or- | lin Grinde, G. M. Gamewell, Mrs. | G. F. Gamewell, J. T. Jefferson. Persons who took passage here for Haines and Skagway were; For Haines—Arthur Hanson. For Skagway—K. C. Talmadge, R. L. Lilleward, Fred Jaegel, Mrs. Ernest E. Laubaugh. JAPANESE TRAVELS, FROM TOKYO BY WAY | ALASKA TO SEATTLE En route from Toklo to Seatile, ‘Torchiro Ari, prominent Japanese official connected with the Bureau and Unalaska of the Aleutian chain, He left the Japanese supply ship at Unalaska and voyaged on an American boat from there to Sew- ard, where he boarded the Alaska. After arrival in Seattle, he will em- bark on a Japanese trans-Pacific liner for his homeland. lllIIIUIIIIII!IlIIIIIIHIIIIIHIlIIIIIIIIIIIII SPECIAL TOURIST DANCE at the of Fisheries ©f his country, called | on members of Juneau's Japanese | colony yesterday while the steam- ship ‘Alaska, on which he is a pas- senger, was in port. | Mr. Ari left Japan on the Japan- ese ship that took gasoline sup- (plies for Seiji Yoshihara, Nippon good -will flier, to Attu, Adak, Atka, Elks Hall TONIGHT DANCE MOOSE HALL WEDNESDAY NIGHT Auspices Moose Lodge No. 700 Music by “Smokey’s” MELODY ORCHESTRA Admission $1.00 7 Come and Enjoy an Evening of Fun with E_arle Hunter’s Serenaders B.P.O.E. Supervised Ladies Free III (AT I - OO » QUALITY STYLE T T T 593 Pollcewomen In U. S. Are Half for " 0f World’s Total GENEVA June 9.—The United | States with 593 has approximately | N NN \ \ A\ one-half the women police in the s a report to the League |of N Policewomen have proved their orth and now are definitely estab- lh hed in the police work of the world, the report declares. Their most useful services are detection of crime, social welfare, and pro- tection of women and children. The chief countries employing women police are: United States, 593; Germany, 159; Great Britain, 150; Poland, 67; Holland, 33; Denmark, 7, and Swit- zerland, 4. SEE US FIRST Highest quality building materials at lowest prices in many seasons is a good rea- son why work should now be started. USE ALASKA MATERIALS SHINGLES and LUMBER JUNEAU LUMBER MILLS, INC. Phone 358 IIIIIIllIIIIIIIIIlIIIlIlIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII|IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlIIIIIII|HIIII|IIlIl||||||||||l||||||||I|lIIIIIIIllIIIIII|I|IIIIIIII||I|IIIII|I||lIIIII|l|IlI||IIIfllIIIIIIII||||||||l|I|IIIIIlllllllllllllllllllllll!llfl New Shipment on Today’s Boal REAL QUALITY DRESSES | QUALITY WONDERFUL STYLES GREAT VALUES Today’s Price $6.90 PAY LESS — MUCH LESS NEAR FIRST AND MAIN 6.90 Sport Styles For Shopping Semi-Formal ALL SHADES Chiffons Georgettes Prints Crepes Very New Materials “Never so much for your money” 1930 Prices — $14.75 to $16.75 QUALITY STYLE Today’s Price $6.90 PAY LESS — MUCH LESS COLEMAN’S HOLLYWOOD STYLE SHOP

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