The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, July 30, 1931, Page 2

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D e Y NURSES’ W hite Swan UNIFORM DRESSES Made of goed quality poplin Sizes 34- Reg: $3.75 value Clearance, $2.50 each WHITE BUNGALOW APRONS Made of standard quality Fruit of the Loom Sizes 34 to 44 Reg, $2.75 value Clearance, Convicted of converting Govern- ment funds to his own use, former| U. S. Commissioner Arthur G. Fisk has been sentenced at San| Francisco to serve five years in| the Federal penitentiary an | pay a fine of SJ,UOO In passing sentence, U. S. Judge A. F. St Sure opened way for restitution Fisk is shown above in court. ! ] \ { \ \ \ \ N § N \ N N N § b \ § § \ I} { \ y { { | | § { | { | | \ Iy § | § { § § § § § ) N )\ ) SElNE BOATS TAKEN | IN SEYMOUR CANAL | BYWARDEN GARSTER With two purs picked up at Mol Canal W. R. C night on the crews over seiners in train, , Seymour Warden here last Chirikof to turn the to Federal authorities Fi r arrived heries $1 50 eac h cn charges of violating the Alaska Ficheries Law. Theboats were to have made sets at least| leged e mile inside of the m at| BARGAINS the mouth of Mole River } The boats were the Klawock No.| in broken lots of 7, Capt. George James, and Re-| liance, Capt David Peratovi rh ‘ MERCHANDISE of Klawock. The vessels arc d by Libby, McNe operated out of the and IAI)I)‘ \ Craig can- | | and Second Floor | is ssage, ors of runs of salmon in Stephens P. were large num main up B. M. W-mw,.m-mmmm’--”mm”m S O e SRS ur Canal yesterday, Garster said. At Taku BEHRFNDS the Libby plant yesterday | 4 had 46,000 cases and was only 000 short of the pack at this time! CO- I"(- last year. It got in two scow loads 2 ® of fish last night | - Juneau’s Leading United Department Store Lillion r manutacture’ in th ed by one G Slabes has_dgerea |since 1921, Ually Cross-word Puzzle 4 ) = ) 4 ) ) ] : ) ) ) N | | N N \ \ \ \ \ ) \ \ ) \ \ ‘) § | ] 4 \ § \ ] ] ) \ \ ) { ) \ 3 \ ) ) \ N \ 3 \ \ \ w\ 3 ACROSS Solution of Yesterday's Puzzle 7 Explated L Decorative, Give tempo= open-work fabric SIAIV] 9 6. Iridescent gem |31~ 10, e 9 Deed AlL i est vege- 12. Pass off 1n Pl plable growtn ! vapor ted >0em 14. Kind of beetle [SIT Along 15 Lukewarm . Princely tal- . Study n fami Unity AT tertainment . Compass potnt [RE fo . Sanction = wing to Direction |6[R » Bouthern coc= tellation : Fishing devics [UIRY . Delicate twin- |EJA ing plant 2. Perform ™ - Peoples . Sua go ireek el 8 One who ad |3 . Trenchant wit : usts the L . True i CFucn MilIN . G‘r::um Dass- ose . Plural Snane (ALLTT . artlere L L . Restra 39. Pertaining to 49, Corded fabric 59. Withered 46. Silkworm bodies at rest g’ g4l 60, Gogs down 47, European P O om89° 51, Sapphire of FNA. 43. Bustle imperfect 2. Salutation 2 5. Browns brilliancy 3. Head covering 3 48. Issue forth 55. Those having 4. Letter 54, from a source power 5 Atlternative ending $2. Three-toed 56. False shows 6. Horse of n cer- 57. French pro- sloth 68. Devoured tain gait noun ANTISEPTIC OIL EASE f‘i’OWERFU L. PENETRATI + HEALS ECZEMA AND OTHER SKIN D Must Give Results in 7 Days or Money Back. Make up your mind today that|because it is highly concentrated fyou are going to give your skin a|and a bottle costs but 85 cents. .renl chance to get well. The very first application will give you relief and a few short 4 Like a lot of other people, you've \ {reatments will thoroughly convince ‘ probably been convinced that the|yoy that by sticking faitnfully to “only thing to use was an ointment \ it for a short while your skin fi‘”d) byt in the big majority of |y, dcases these sticky salves simply ¢log | pemembper that Moone's Emerald pores and the condition pri-|oj is a clean, powerful, penetrat- 4 the same. ing Antiseptic Oil that does not " 1o ‘Mauro Drug Co. or | stain or leave a greasy residue and other nosd druggist today and |that it must give complete satis- inal bottle of Moone's fwuan or your money cheerfully —adv, |and generall or salve (some of them are very ‘tmublei will be a thing of the| 1931 SEAL TAKE LARGEST SINCE PELAGIC HUNTS jC()w-rnmcntiv'l‘a;kcs Almost 50,000 Pelts on Prib- ilofs This Season (Continuea ot rage One) | satisfactory everywhere. Ibi ealized in advance that on the k side the runs were likely light Consequently . when this condition developed there was no astonishment felt. The season was materially shortened there to insure an adequate escapement to the spawning beds. Owing to the unforseen appear- of a floating eannery on the side of the bay, an addition of 24 hours was made to the weckly closed period, and later ow- | |ing to the fact that other gear was moved there, the entire dis- was closed down a week ear- lier than was provided for in the original regulations. Mere Weirs Planned More than 1,000,000 fish had en- tered Naknek by the last weir count. Ugashik is in very fine shape |and like conditions prevail in the KH(hmk River district although no weir was erected there this sea- ‘son Next year it is expected that | weirs will be installed in every spawning stream in the district. Karluk has a very good pink sal- |mon run. The red fish, however, have not appeared in the quanti- ties that were to have been expect- ‘cd on the basis of the escapement _|of six years ago. However, the sea- t|son there is long and there is [plenty of time for them before it ends, The runs of pinks around Kodiak Island have been large, the Com- mi: d. Although the com- C € in Cook Inlet is below st year’s the escapement has been g nud. Leaves Here Tomorrow The Commissioner will remain in Southeast Alaska until sometime after August 20, before leaving for the States. He will sail Friday '|evening with Senator Wallace M. White and the latter's companions r a general tour of the district, inspecting all cannery and fishing operations, visiting spawning beds makiig a thorough inzpection of the division. He will be in and out of here ly until he departs for the - — TURNS SOUTH FROM " CONSTRUCTION JOB C. Sawyer who recently started road construc- tion on Yakutat Highway, is a pas- senger on the Admiral Watson en- route to his headquarters at Ket- H. Kyle, representative of and Reynolds Company, chikan. He will proceed from there to Kake where the company has another contract. The Yakutat job, he said, is well under way under the direction of yC. T. Gardner of this city. A crew of 25 men is employed. R PACIFIC TAKES DEPARTURE With a large cargo, the motor- | ship Pacific left Juneau this morn- ing for Port Alexander and way ports. Included among her out- going passengers was Mary K. But- ler for Knke D e BABY ARRIVES AT HOSPITAL | Mrs. Marie Varney is the mother lof a daughter born last night at St. Ann’s Hospital. The new ar- rival weighed six pounds and three- | quarters. | D SEAMAN BREAKS HIP J. H. Bryant, employed | engineer’s department on the steam- ship Admiral Watson, entered St. Ann's Hospital last night. He is g from a broken hip. FIRE ALARM CALLS /| 1-3 Third and Franklin, || 1-¢ Frcnt and Frankiin, 1-5 Front, near Ferry Way. 1-6 Front, near Gross, Apts. {| 1-7 Front, opp. City Whart. 1-8 Front, near Saw Mill 1-9 Front at A. J. Office. 2-1 Willoughby at Totem Gro- cery. 2-3 Willoughby, opp. Cash Cole's Barn. 2-4 Front and Sewadd. 2-5 Front and Maln, 2-6 Second and Main. 2-7 Fifth and Seward. -9 Fire Hall. . -2 Gastineau and Rawn Way. I § g g ¢ | E £ £ 8 ] F PR e RS m S0 THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, THURSDAY, JULY 30, 1931. |da or the Texas rangers to thg in tha|, Civil Guard, Relic of M onarchy Holds Republu'un Spam in Check Nowadays By A. I"DWARD STUNTZ MADRID, July 30.—Under the motto “honor is the principal jew- <l,” Spain’s resplendent civil guardsmen ride and -march across the rugged countryside of - the néw republic with a diligence and discipline inherited from monar- chial organizers. The civil guard is to Spain what the northwest mounted is to Cana- Lonz Star state. The future of the corps becamg a moot quéstion with proclamation of the republic. | Many left repub- licans ipsisted the guard be abal- | licans as 4 remnant of monarchial | oppression of the people. This the provisional government refused | to do. il Patrol In Couples ¥ Instead General Jose Sanjurjo, one of Spain’s most efficient sol- | diers, was recalled from duty in, Morocco and given its command. | Organized in 183 by the Duke of Ahumada the guard now numA. bers 30,000 mien. Twenty-nine divi- ' slons ‘of 'a thousand men and 200 horses each, are’ stationed in vari- us portions of the Spanish penin- | dular. To another division of 1,000 falls the constantly mobile duty ol guarding railroad trains. Lite for the guardsman, mmmued or 'afoot, generally is a lonely and thankless routine. Always patrol- | ling in pairs, they are distributed among the towns and villages dot- ting Spain's’ bleak and mountain- ous landscape from the Mediterra- nean to the Atlantic, from Gibral- tar ;to the Pyrenees. Strikes, brawls, incipient riots' place them automatically on 24 hour call. Even the public fies- ' tas, football games and bull fights The rest of his uniform is an mean work for the guards. More olive drab set off by scarlet cuffs General Jose Sanjurjo (lower right) commands Spain’s civil guard, a corps with nearly a century of tradition behind it. Above are mounted guards ready to charge ricters. At the left is the uniform worn by a guardsman on foot duty. | A black patent-leather, thra: cornered hat, sets the guard off from other fighting corps. It is a proud heritage from former times. gleaming silver spurs. The guards are armed with ri- fles, pistols and sabres. Thelr hvornc method in quelling disor- der is to bear down ahorse in a sa- charge. When necessary they often than not they help munici- and collar. The mounted men! plf* police handle tho crowds, wear black patent leather boots and SCARLET FEVER RAGES THROUGH swing the cutting edge down. Usu- ally the flatted sabre cuff DELEGATES ELECTED | TO LEGION CONCLAVE | ihe | 1’nvs MONTHS JAIL | TERM IS NOT LONG | ENOUGH, SAYS DIAZ 1 To most individuals a five-month Jjail sentence for engaging in a X‘A uun and tumbm bmw] would seem [Rihiasa By, Jask Diss. ek e Ent[l)ret Ntu slga ga kl R(l’ver‘.mh a term at the hands of Judge istrict Reporte Charles Sey yesterday. “Make it Swept by Epidemic At a special ing held Dugecut ‘Wednesday evening, John Bradford Post No. can Legion, electad seven dal and an equal number of alt to represent it at the Dapartm convention at Petersburg, August| 18-20. The post went on rccord a supporting Fairbanks for the 1032 convention. | ‘Those elected for W nine months, judge,” said Diaz, fur- | ther explaining that the five- -month 5 | sojourn would come to an 1 at g G Nordling, G. H. Walmsle: That the scarlet fever epidemic fthe wrong season of tha year. C. H. Helgesen, R. M. She : discovered early this week in Nush- Diaz was tried before a jury in | winiam Neiderhouser, _Russell H. igak village in Bristol Bay is the United States Commissionér’s fpreading to scattered villages and:| Court yesterday and found guilty remote places through the Nusha- of the crime of assault and bat- gak River district, was made known | tery upon the person of one Gus uers today by telegrams received | Rosenberg. Gus is said to have from there by Gov. George A.|heen badly battered up in ths fra Parks and Charles W. Hawkesworth, us which took place on lower | Acting Chief of the Alaska Divi-| Front Street in a car driven by sion, Office of Indian Affairs. Rosenberg. A supply of antitoxin has been; The code provided for but six rushed from Anchorage to Dr. W. months’ imprisonment, so Jud A.- Borland, Government physician|Sey wasn't able to grant Diaz his | Who is combatting the epidemic, ! rcqunsl, for the nine months. | and an additional supply is enrouh - > from Seattle. No estimate of the | number of cases, or report of fa- Hermann and: Robert - Kaufman. Alternates €lected were: E. M. God- dard, G. H. Nostrand, W. E. Hen- drickson, LeRoy Vestal, E. M. Wat- kins, J. H. Newman and Dr. J. B, Loftus. Among the visitoi~ present was Stewart Edward White, California | Legionnaire, who told some enter- taining stories of incidents experi- enced in Army life in France. e —— GUESTS AT GASTINEAU EARL WATKINS GOES HOME | Guests recently registered at the talities, has been received here. | Gastineau Hotel are Mrs. Rebie Dr. Borland has been authorized| Earl Watkins, who entered St.Harrington, Adams, Mass.; B. to hirz a suitable boat to trans- | Ann's Hospital July 14 for a sur- | French, Juneau; Charles Rugg, port himself and nurses and sup- ‘gical operation, left the institution | Washington, D. C.; Mr. and Mrs. plies to the affected pojnts deay for ms home | Thomas Barckstrom, Seattie. . Enjoy Your Home " WESTINGHOUSE PRODUCTS Attractively priced for Quick Sale and carry a year’s guarantee against defects TOASTERS—ELECTRIC IRONS— AUTOMATIC ELECTRIC RANGES—HOT PLATES—WAFFLE IRONS— PERCOLATORS—EGG BOILERS ik ALL REDUCED FOR JULY SELLING fpitail Electric Co. " “BRING YOUR ELECTRICAL TROUBLES TO US” NOTE—Special jrwdit‘éifbr repairing and rewinding fish poles Ve delegates were: | U. 8. DEPARTMENT OF AGRIOULTURE, WEATHER RUREAU The W eather (By the U. S. Weather Buress) S Forecast for Juneau and vicinity, beginning at 4 p.m., July 30; Continued fair tonight and Friday; gentle variable winds. LOCAL DATA Time Barometer Temp. Humidity Wind Velocity Weather 4 pm. yest'y 30.03 76 44 w & Clear 4 am. today 30.09 51 95 Calm Clear Noon today 30.12 n 53 S 3 Clear CABLE AND RADIO REPORTS YESTERDAY | TODAY Highest 4pm. | Lowest4am. 4a.m, Preclp, 4am. Station— temp. temp. | emp. temp. velocity 24 hrs Weather Barrow 40 40 |~ 40 80 12 0 Cldy Nome 52 52 | 46 46 14 04 Rain Bethel 72 2 | 48 48 b 0 Pt. Cldy Fort Yukon 56 52 52 54 ” 0 Clear Tanana 60 60 50 50 o .02 Cldy TFairbanks 60 60 50 52 > 01 Rain Eagle 64 64 50 50 » 0 Cldy St. Paul 50 48 42 44 ¥ 01 Rain Dutch Harbor 56 52 48 48 - 0 Cldy Kodiak 58 54 50 50 b J Cldy Cordova 0 70 46 46 > 0 Clear Juneau ki % 50 51 L 0 Clear Sitka .. 68 — 51 — A 0 Cldy Ketchikan K 4 50 54 * 0 Cldy Prince Rupert 64 64 | 42 54 o 0 Pt. Cldy Edmonton 6 72 | 54 54 L .62 Rain Seattl> 8 8 54 56 : 0 Cldy Portland 82 82 58 58 5 0 Cldy San Francisco ... 62 58 | 52 52 5 0 Cldy *—Less than 10 mifles. Pressure conditions show little change since yesterday except that the low pressure area over Northorn Alaska is developing consid- erably. Light rains have fallen o/er Western Interior and thehorth- western part of the Territory, gencrally fair weather prevailing elss- where over Alaska. While temperatures are warmer over Southeast Alaska this morning nearly all districts are somewhat cooler. SAVING HAVING EVE WHAT you HAVE in the future depends: upon what you save in the present. There’s no escaping that rule. Fortunately, it is both easy and pleaszmt 1o save, once you start. It becomes a game. Watching a Bank Account grow is like watching a garden grow, only much more thrilling. HAVE A GOAL IN MIND Make Retirement in 15 Years your goal, or Travel, or a College Education for your children. Then you I enjoy saving. First National Bank ALASKA MEAT CO. QUALITY AND SERVICE TO YOUR LIKING Meadowbrook Hutter Austin Fresh Tamales PHONE 39 Deliveries—10:30, 2:30, 4:30 THE HOTEL OF ALASKAN HOTELS THE GASTINEAU Our Services to You Begin and End at the Gang Plank of Every Passenger-Carrying Boat at BAILEY’S Pioneer Pool Hall _l Telephone 183 POOL—BILLIARDS EMPLOYMENT OFFICE Chas. Miller, Prop. LUMBER WHEN YOU WANT IT Juneau Lumber Mills, Inc. Phone 358 INSURANCE Allen Shattuck, Inc. Established 1898 Juneau, Alaska il

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