The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, June 12, 1931, Page 2

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)

EASTERN CREW | THE ALASKA DAILY EMPIRE, FRIDAY JUNE 12, 1931. WILL COMPETE Daily C foss-word Puzzle Solution ot Yesterday's Puzzle (By the U. 8. Weather Bureau) Forecast for Juneau and vicinity, beginning at 4 p.m., June 12: U. 5. DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE, WEATHER BUREAU | The W eather > wA\g it e Fair tonight and Saturday, warmer Saturday; moderate east- LARE AL 4 hevwr one's erly winds. s y Ul IRIATI Stubs omt LOCAL DATA PIEIT A0 Rative d i Time Barometer Temp. Humidity Wind Velocity Weather _ refard -;E of enstern 4 pm. yest'y 29.95 54 4 s 8 Cldy f : e gountries 4 am. today ....2999 50 2% Calm Misti; Yale Sending Oarsmen,| s s =0 DlI IR . Oriental ; W 3 i o LALRI . Expression Noon today 3002 58 6 sW 3 Cld Mo First from East, for e y‘42¢ st contems! ABLE AND EADIO REPORTS i o |7 cles A TODAY Seattle Race L SLEE - S aruieie Highest 4pan. | Lowest4am, dam. Precip. dam. SPATTLE, June 12— The first east- Ay dunctions STAIM - “°{;§’lf;; oro-. Station— temp. temp. | emp. temp. velocity 2¢ hrs. Weather » west crew race ever to be held on| %. Clipa oft sud- [m1GTAT B HiPruBE of a L | Barrow 38 38 | 30 30 16 Trace _Snow the Pacific coast will be rowed here | 27 par tha LI IN| . Conserted Nome 38 36 | 82 s 14 10 Cldy LN June 16 by the 150-pound eig | farewell Dhy Yo ‘eoes | Bethel 62 62 | 40 40 6 0 Clear Yale university and the Univa ¥ur-bearing [O[D[E - Layless ais- | Fort Yukon 6 48 | 44w . Pt. Cldy of Washington on Lake Washing- | 30. Is defeated §¢ Thosé. that i Tanana 60 58 {8 - 04 cldy o [ nesisy’ - Ehor G0 8, A% "ifuo Tfom :g ey Fairbanks 6 52 | 40 40" s ] cldy The race will be the same day | 34 By ope's selt 48. First letter 5o o uoisUre, 23, Calyx lea Eagle 68 66 2 42 4 02 Pt .Cldy Crepey, Washable Sh as the Poughkeepsic 100 8 Sl sy ah b T DOWN A st Paul 5 48 | 407 s SEe o Cidy \ TEPEy, Washable Shan- which the Washington varsity and | 0 Koars: " Scoten £ 3iol0€% L e MOy vl | Duten Huchor .50 -4 0 2 0 cldy } s freshman boats will compete on the "~ “biper catching 3. Note of the B aurra(‘n ot Kodiak 58 58 46 44 0 0 Clear tung Dresses. Sleeveless | Hudson river. 3 Coarse Mo ecls o poSCale 2. And not Cordova 72 66 | 48 50 4 0 Cldy Crews of Washington and Califor- | |+ KInd of - F®io a Kind 5. Haif score b3 Fifty-one Jureau . 54 54 9 50 0 .03 Misting —Smart—New. Practical nia have Gompeted in the east for a 48 Brigk sud- e i Rl T Rl s0 gt e gl T number of years, but never has 1n" Ketchikan 56 56 50 50 4 80 Cldy for all s yortswear, eastern boat journeyed to the Pa- Prince Rupert ... 66 60 50 50 4 18 Rain A I ¥ | cific coast. | Edmonton 66 58 4“4 50 6 24 Clear | Don Grant, 150-pound coach at | Seattle 66 62 54 54 4 .01 Cldy Yale and former Washington cox- | Portland 70 66 52 52 4 0 Clear Sizes 14 to 20 swain, suggested the idea to Coach | San Francisco . 66 62 54 56 3 [ Clear ‘SISTERLUDOVIC WRANGELL GOE ENDSTYERRS' 'SOUTH, HAVING AS WORLD'S SERVICE HERE 3 PASSENGERS PLAYGROUND Western Pacific Officials Say Railroads Have Good Outlook | Hospital Superior to Be Transferred—Succes- ‘ sor Not Named i | Sister Mary Ludovic has been ro- | Jieved of the position of Superior of St. Ann’s Hospital in Juncau. She laft today on the steamship Prin- cess Louise for the Provincial MHouse of the Order of St. Ann at | Victoria, B. C. Her successor will| \mot be nominated until July 1. | " Bister Ludovic has been Superior of the local hospital six ye: which period constitutes the tcrm that the Order ordinarily allows any Superior to remain in any one place. Sister Ludovic' will attend .the Conference of Superiors to be; “held at Victoria this month. Her “appeintment to the office of Su- iperior of some institution other _+than the hospital here, as well as |cf Alaska, took passage for Peters- | hopes to conclude his business in: WRANGE Attorney General and Air- ways Representative Go to Ketchikan With three passengers, the sca-E plane Wrangell, Pilot Anscel C. Eckmann and Mechanic A. R. Sea- ton, flew south from Juneau this inuining with Seattle as its ulti- mate destination. John Rustgard, attorney general burg, Wrangell and Ketchikan. He Petersburg and Ketchikan while the plane stops at those places and then proceed in the aircraft to Ketchikan. A. B. Hayes, representative in Al- aska of the Alaska Washington Airways with headquarters in Ju- neau, was booked for Ketchikan, He and Attorney Genecral Rustgard be a Mecca for tourists,” said Reg- inald T. Kearney, in charge of. the || electrically operated units of the | Western headquarters in San Francisco. He ‘is a round-trip passenger on the [} steamship Admiral Rogers, which was in port last night. “This northern territory,” he de- (] jclared, /‘should be the summer, As ithe southern commonwealth is the winter, irdividuals who, llke the birds of the air, change their habitat with the seasons. Priced at B. M. Behrends Co., Inc. “Juneau’s Leading Department Store” LL GOES ALASKA SEEN “Alaska, like California, ought to Pacific Railroad, with resort of those fortunate Advantages Unrivalied “The scenic grandeurs, the huni- ing and fishing opportunities of Alvin Ulbrickson of Washington and a formal invitation was issued {which Yale accepted. | Ulbrickson hired his last year's | captain, Warren Davis, and the for- mer varsity bow oarsman stal meulding Washington's first 150- | pound crew. The race will b2 ov: a mile and five-sixteenths cours ‘The Husky lineup will likely b Ed O'Brien, stroke; George Dibble, | No.” 7; Marshal Dutton, No. 6;/ George Spence, No. 5; Bill Chase,| 3: Nick | baw, ain. | | \ | No. 4; Jack Shaw, No. Nichols, No. 2; Jim Waltk and CIlff Armstrong, co: Three or four of the oarsmen have had varsity training, but none has had racing experience. ‘The Fli crew will use a Washinz- ton shell and oars. ‘Wachington officials hope to make the race an annual cvent, ol L MISS HARLAND COMING Miss Frances Harland, who has| been attending a college of music her home in Juneau aboard th:! |Aleutian sailing from Seattle this morning and due Monday. sign of PIGGLY jin the south, is a passenger for | __ High prices are not a safe sign of high quality, neith- er are low prices a sure sign of good quality--but the WIGGLY always means known OId Papers for sale at Empire Ofice | | interior. EVE WHAT you HAVE in the future depends *—Less than 10 milles. A moderate storm is central west of Oregon and south of the Gulf of Alaska and the pressure continues to rise slowly over Alaska. The low pressure area which has caused light showers in Northern |and most of Eastern Alaska has moved eastward to central Canada and the weather has partially cleared in the eastern Interior and is clear, from Kodiak westward. Tesfperatures were lower yesterday in Interior and Southern Alaska and lower last night in the central SAVING HAVING | upon what you save in the present. ‘no escaping that rule. Fortunately, it is both There’s || easy and pleasant to save, once you start. It ! becomes a game. \ thrilling. Watching a Bank Account grow is like watching a garden grow, only much more HAVE A GOAL IN MIND Make Retirement in 15 Years your goal, or Travel, or a College Education for your children. Then you'll enjoy saving. First N_a;ional Bank ' LT G T T TR T MODELS SINGER ELECTRIC SEWING MACHINES PORTABLE AND CABINET b d Sold and Rented LT T e T T L L) pe— .thz nomination of her successor in this city will be made at the ap- ship Aleutian Monday. proaching conference. ! M. Anderson of San Francisco,|one of the great summer play- Sister Ludovic was accompanid who flew from Seattle to Juneau,!grounds of the world" 5% south by Sister Mary Stella and early this week is going to Seattle| Rajlroads are on ‘the m,e,hm Sister Mary Pudentienne. The lat- in the Wrangell. The Wrangell will of improved business, in the opinion ‘tor two ars merely making a visit|stop at Ketchikan tonight, and ' of My, Kearney. 1o the Provincial House and will continue to Seattle tomorrow. Mr! “They have been subjected to un- {} return to Juneau. ‘Andersan plans to fly from 8eame, just regulations that hampered op- e to San Francisco, Sunday. erations, while competing enter- MRS. M'AULIFFE GOING EAS Yesterday the seaplane Peters- prises, such as motor truck and Mrs. H. M. McAuliffe, wife of the burg, Pilot Robert Ellis and Me-|motor bus compenies and pipe doetor in charge of the guvemmemvchnnic Brian Harland, and the{jines have been left free of all re- |f hospital, was an ouigoing passen- scaplane Wrangell took 33 persons|gtraints, and thus have been able expect to return here on the steam- | thig part of the country are un- rivalled. ‘Alaska, some day, will be Alaska Electric Light & Power Co. JUNEAU AND DOUGLAS, ALASKA Phone No. 6 Phone No. 18 'BUTTER, 3 pounds ........ EGGS,.in cartons, quality at'lowest prices. 4 dozen ... 990 Extra Large, Selected’ . ' Fresh Creamery % | | AHTHIHIHRI RIS I QLU T LT “ger on the steamship Princess Lou- o:td tge s:;am;klflm :flnce l?l\;PXEfl to offer destructive ‘competition. POTATOES, PABST CHEESE, ; ) * . i is] hi orof exander on flights ” ‘reatmen ) & % if © e i A over Mendeonall and Taku gla. Ralloeds 1ok b lnsist:ng on (il 13 POlmdS cereean c One-half pound i e - PRINTING AND STATIONERY : > j clers. 3 | fair treatment from the public ser- |vice commissions of the several states, and the demands of the ,rail transportation systems for the (most part have the support of puk- {lie -opinion. “The outlook for railroads now is better than it has been in a long time.” LEAGUE TO GET RADIO ’ While Mr. Hayes is in Ketchi- | GENEVA—Work on the league of kan, Pilot Ellis will be in charge | ‘Nations' radio station is expected of the Airways' business in this | "7 begin soon with the exnectation city. Arrangements for plane char- - “of completing it before 1932. ters can be made with him. = : g Desk Supplies—Ink—Desk Sets— i Blotters—’—().l'fiée Supplies s . , QUICK-STEP 2 The best floqr paint that money can buy Juneau Paint Store ‘i \New Garnets SUGA FRESH FRUITS AND VEGETABLES il Make Your Selections ,E’arly----T(')”'Arrive on “Norco” The Kind That Spreads .- PURE CANE, . 100 pounds ....... L i o WILLIAM § RNE CALLED EAST; LEAVES, ON PRINCESS LOUIS Mr. William A. Swinburne, of Washington, D. €., who has been cleric to the Rev. Father W. G. Le Vasseur of the Catholic Church of the Nativity, has been called east on business and sailed for the south this morning aboard the steamer Princess Louise. Mr Swinburne, before leaving, ex- pressed his sincere thanks to the Right Rev. Joseph R. Crimont, S. J, the Rev. Father LeVasseur, 8. J, and Karl Thelle and all thers who contributed toward mak. ing his stay in Juneau so pleasan®. g —— Texas leads all other states in the | production of cottonseed products, I'T’S TRUE! Borden’s is better in Custards! Ever have trouble with custards? A watery texture, when what you want is gflm smoothness? Try Borden’s. You'll ve {;ss chance of failure, for this fine milk has “body”—a creamy richness that helps insure success. And what a . fresh, pure flavor you get with Borden's! 3 ‘l'm'af by the strictest tests in the milk Mmfl?«d@n‘x is fine milk. Insist on s. Sy elincn Eoapuy Frye's Delicious Hams and Bacon Three Deliveries Daily i 5 3 e It’s better and you can prove it! 'EVAPORATED MILK A/ Phone 38 l;AYifiDNchT " TAXI'SERVICE | Stiind

Other pages from this issue: