The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, September 2, 1931, Page 8

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b 8" JUNEAU SCHOOL | CLASSES START NEXT TUESDAY ) B ke e Reai Thiis) Week—Enrollment of { 700 Expected All teachers in the Juneau Pub- lic schools are “f ac- counted for,” and sume in both schools on Tuesday according to an made by superintend R. S Raven this morni Nearly all of the teachers who were here last! seazon took their vacations in the| States. Most of them have returned | and the remainder are on thelr Way north. New Teachers This Year Among the teachers who have been added to the staff this year| are Miss Ruby Apland, who has' been teaching in rth D.iko:n.1 and who will teach the third grade. | Miss Evelyn Seevers, who re-: cently taught in the public schools at Yakima, Wash., will have charge of the art department. Miss Pauline Reinhart, who hails | from Demming, New Mexico, will, teach instrumental music | Miss Mary Kolasa, who taught in the Juneau schools three years ago, has returned to teach the fifth grade. | Mr. Elmer Wentland, who taught' science at Riordan, Washington, will have charge of the science! class. ! Roster of Old Faculty | Mr. A. 8. Dunham will be prin- cipal of the high school again this | year. Miss Etta Shaw will be grade | school principal and teach the eighth grade. Marjorie Tilitson will| teach mathematics; Miss Enid Burns, science and girls' athleties; | Miss Helen Gray, home economics; | Blanche Kelly, language; Dorot Israel, English; Margaret Yea key, commercial. In the ‘Grade School Teachers in the grade school are| September ————— THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, WEDNESDAY, SEPT. 2, 1831, - *Depressed” uncement | | v \ g Once among the wealthiest of Eng- lish nobility until taxes and re- duction in’ income affected her estates, the Marchioness of Cur- zon, of Kedleston, Alabama, Lon- don’s leading American-born host- ess, has recently been in sore fin- sncial straits. Now she is reported s having reached a satisfactory arrangement with her ereditora. seventh grade, Miss and Miss Josephine grade, Miss Helen grade, Miss Delma grade, Miss Donie second grade, Miss Mabel and Miss V. Bourgette; fi T Miss Iva Tilden and M Alice Erb. Miss Blanche Turner will have charge of the kindergarten Large Enrollment Expected An enrollment of 700, une largest in the ory of the Juneau pub- lic s , is expected this year, Super nt Raven said, and one new room in the third grade has been added to care for this ex- follo E: as Ann Tu Starr; Hanson Taylor; Monscn ton ; sixth fourth third llment last year was The new I school bus, driven by Burt nson, will be in operation on T carrying pupils from various points on the Glacier High- from as far as Mendenhall | lcop. The new bus has accommo- SCHOOL SUPPLIES Pen and Pencil Sets Tablets | Note Books Crayola Sets Juneau Drug Company Free Delivery Phone 33 Post Office Substatiom Ne. 1 [OSS——- ! the dations for 35 passengers and is expected to take care of all the pupils from that district on one The bus calls for the children 17 and takes them afternoon. - " DROUGHT { WETTER CLIME all the way from Russel- nsas to make their home in Jun Mrs. Ora D. Pledger and her daughter Anna arrived yes- terday on the Princess Louise. Mrs. Pledger is a sister of Mrs. L. R. Hoggins. Miss Pledger will enter the Juneau high school as a fresh- man, According kansas to Mrs. Pledger, Ar- is slowly recovering from |the disastrous effects of last year's drought. There was no lack of moisture this year, she said, and cotton growers face disaster from overproduction. - eee TILLMIDNIGHT Specials Every Night from 6 to 12 UNITED FOOD (CO. “CASH IS KING” TELEPHONE 403 et e Prompt Deliveries S e PPN 25 and 50 cents per package l p L) The New Paper Handkerchief Butler Maur Phone 134 Express Mo 0 Drug Co. We Deliver § ney Orders z ) Picciy WiGeLy 'MIDN IGHT SPECIALS FROM 6 TO 12 P. M. TELEPHONE 24 WE DELIVER JUNEAU FIRMS GET CONTRACT pROSS © aratned dirt Rralne r stop [5] Daily Cross-word Puzzle Solution of Yesterday's Puzzie Late [P . Rubber . High card A Farther below the surface L Artll language . Mother . Large peren |H ON NEW SCHOOL, o | R. J. Sommers and Rice & nial plant Color Ahlel’s SuCCCSSful Bid' ders on Hoonah Job Contracts aggregating slightly less than $20,000 have been award~‘ ed for the construction of the new | Device for winter trave! Uon "}0‘ ted naspira Follows the track of . Go up 28. Jewish month Bvergreen tree Egyptian Sofar disk Hidden Book of the Bitle Was sorry Covering of certain !‘lllllmlll e V\f;rd of nega- tlon Exists Government school building at| Hoonah, it was announced today by Architect N. Lester Troast, Office 3 of Indian Affairs. | R. J. Sommers Construction Com- | pany was the successful bidder for | erecting the building and Rice and | Ahlers Company was given the| contract for installing heating and Plumbing equipment. Mr. Sommers’ bid for the building | was $16,018 and that of Rice and | Ahlers Company was $3,685. Work | on the structure will be started as soon as materials can be landed | on the ground. It will be a two- | story frame and stucco building. Local materials will be used on construction. Other bidders on the projcc:i were: Warrack Construction Com- | pany, $17,000; Raymond and Mus- ser, Juneau, $17445; Berg and Dry- dahl, Juneau, $19,683.30. | In addition to the successful bidders on plumbing and heating, other tenders were: Harri Machine Shop, Juneau, $5499; Hawver and Alfors, Juneau, $4,072.90; and Dav- ies Manufacturing Company, Ket- chikan, $6,216. AHUES CREDITS O'MALLEY WITH 0. Go away g 42. Buzs 3. Res 45 Ridfeu 4T, Prepares for publication 48. Musical char- acters DOW 1. Units ot welght Y% o @ik 7 7) . Take back ublicly . Frozen water . Myselt . Finish . Algonquian Indian . Auditory FIEE e Roman bronse coln . Unruffiea . Eat awav . Tle with & rope Fencing saword . God of love . Take offense at Publia ‘speaker Fords . Scrutinize . Flne fabrio . Ceremony . Journals « . Entertalned Mother of Helen of Trov Act of hold- o In a state of combustion Heavy cord . Rounded roofs . Army meal 40. Small round mark Sunburn Stroke en- abling the batter to reach first se Jumbled type As far as 44 46. b A .% 42 RESTORING RUNS Veteran Canneryman Con- vinced Commissioner Vindicates Policies capement was unusually large. “And this condition is the result of the intelligent and aggressive conser- vation measures applied under the direction of Commissioner O'Mal- ley,” asserted Capt. Ahues. (Continuwz from Page One) i . streams, and at times when they| WHITNEY RETURNS SOUTH couldn't get enough otherwise, I saw them ascend streams and us- ing clubs drive spawing fish back downstream to outside the mouths where the seiners could take them. The result was inevitable. The supply diminished, and many streams were almost without any Capt. George H. Whitney, re- tired, of the U. S. Steamboat In-| spection Service, is a passenger | ander, after visiting friends in Ju-| neau for the past three weeks. ! TO TEACH IN SKAGWAY Miss Judltn Blom, graduate of the University of Oregon, accom- panied by her brother, Clarence Blom, passed through Juneau yes- terday on the Princess Louise, en- route Skagway, where from Eugene, Oregon, - to Miss Blom will teach in high school. Her brother high school this (will be a student in the Skagway year. ————.———— Electric power change necessary “for the to Seattle on the Dorothy Alex-|upkeep of a new telephone ex- in London would light a city of 30,000 population, spawning fish at all,” Capt. Ahues|™ said. Runs Are Restored pUUUUIL But this has all been chang- ed. Today fishing closer than 500 yards of the stream mouths is a dangerous occupation that leads to loss of boats and gear, fines and imprisonment. Areas are closed when there is any indication that overfishing has taken place. Traps are more rigidly regulated and a limit is placed upon areas in which traps can be operated. Last Fall Southeast Alaska had some of the greatest runs of sal- mon ever noted. This year, former- ly regarded as an off-year, found more fish in the waters than the packers could handle and the es- DANCE Auspices L.O.0.M. No. 700 “Tomorrow’s Styles Today” VOILE DRESSES for the AFTERNOON and EVENING AT HOME BE SMART at SALE PRICES Final TONIGHT | Clean-up Values up to $4.95 All to Go at $1.75 each MOOSE | HALL Music by Smokey’s Melody Orchestra Juneau’s Own Store -~ Everybody Welcome Admission $1.00 ettt A i |CHARLES TULKA || endeavor to take his audience with 1| visited, through some of the more || interesting experiences that came || to him. g wE WILL LECTURE ~ ABOUTTRAVELS Vagabond Reporter of Prague Will Deliver at Elks Hall Friday Sixty-one thousand miles of globe trotting with Charles Tulka, Vaga- bond Reporter of Prague, Czecho- slovakia, is promised as a treat to those who hear him lecture at Elks Hall Friday evening. The lecture starts at 8 o'clock and will consume one hour. Mr. Tulka arrived here last week from Ketchikan and will leave in a few days for Cordova. It is his plan to spend the winter some- where in the Arctic regions of the Territory. Three years ago, as a youth of 22 years, he answered the call of adventure and started on his jour- ney. Since then he has wondered far and wide, visited in 22 different countries in Europe, Asia and the Americas. He has had many unique experiences, met thousands of people in all walks of life, feasted with rulers and had pot luck with some of life’s unfortun- ates. He has traveled by every means of transportation except dirigibles and submarines. Much of his journeying was afoot and | through torrid deserts as well as pleasanter climes. In Friday night's lécture he will him over some of the lands he SITKA MAN IS GIVEN 90-DAY JAIL TERM After a trial in the United States Commissioner's Court at Sitka yesterday, Joe James was found guilty by a jury of violating the Alaska Bone Dry Law, “ac- cording to advices received here today by United States Marshal Albert White, | Judge R. W. DeArmond sen- tenced James to three months im- prisonment in the local Federal jail and to pay a fine of $300. He will be brought here on an early boat. ——————— TALMADGE RETURNS FROM 40-DAY STAY IN SEATTLE Capt. Kenneth C. Talmadge, of the Alaska Game Commission, re- turned yegterday after a month's stay in Seaftle where he received ! the new patrol boat, Marten, from its builders. He was present at its launching and trial runs. The Marten was shipped to Cor- dova aboard the steamer Yukon, passing through here Tuesday. It will be operated under its own power to Cook Inlet where it will make regular patrols during the Fall and early Winter months. King’s Son 11l ALASKA MUSEUM REGISTRATIONS CONTINUE 6000 i()ver Six Thousand Visit- | ors Booked in June, : July, August Registrations at the Alaska Mu- seum in Juneau for the months of June, July and August totalled 6,271 according to figures made public today hy the Rev. A. P. Kashevaroff. This registration is only 158 under the same months last year when the tourist business || was much larger than during the past three months, The registrations show visitors were present from all parts of the world and all expressed much in- terest and keen delight in the Alaska Museum. The registrations for the months of June, July and August for the past two years follows: 1930 1749 2910 1770 6429 Assoclated Press Photo The buko of Gloucester. third sor of King George of England, Is recov ering from an appendicitis opera: tion, 1931 1750 2668 1853 6271 ATTENTION B. P. O. Elks Meeting tonight at 8 p.m. Spec- ial entertainment and BIG FEED. All members requesed to be present. adv. Entertainment Committee. JAM for EVERYBODY LARGE JARS—ALL FRUITS 45 Cents At GARNICK’S--Phone 174 GEORGE Brothers MIDNIGHT SPECIALS FROM 6 P. M. TO 12 George Bros. PHONES 92 and 95 June ... July August Total Five Fast Deliveries Announcing a Completely New Idea in Vests and Panties . . . Vasareties In the Hand Knit Manner They Have a Positive Yen for Clinging Do your .daily dozen play tennis, ride a h Vassarettes. ... walk a mile, orse, or dance in Such gay little dainty things . . . there’s never a bulge or a hump beneath your frock, for the full- ness is knitted in. Full fashioned to con- form with the'natural figure, they cling to the body, never stretch...and laun- der most beautifully. There’s so little of them, such soft undies, they: never cramp your style nor eurb your free- dom. In all sizes of course. Peach, pink, and Lisle Vests . Lisle ‘Panties Al Silk Vests All Silk Panties white. 2550 2.50 5.00 5.00

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