The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, February 26, 1932, Page 8

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Mine “B” Shift won first place. Mine “A” Shift second in the teams. The fesults achieved by the other teams follow: Mill and MINE AND MILL WORKERS SHOW Operators, 99.17; Machine Shop, 99:13; Wharf and Day Shift, 98 98.67; General Mill 97.87; Mine Team, 98.40: Foundry Team, | enters, Ten and Twenty Dollar Coins Awarded High Score Contestants Gold Coins For Winners Every member of the winning n received as a prize a $20 gold coin and every member of the sec-| ond team a $10 gold coin, ‘the ing nted by L. H. Me General Superintendent of the Alaska Juneau . Mr. r made a brief ad- ating all the con- their excellent efforts. | In the First-Aid and mill T ol be eSS C testants on ~ RIS 7 TR b, 1 !John was then placed three-plece orchestra played selec- standing of the tions. mine ) s Department and Mill Ceiv 3 Repair Crew, each 99; Mine Steady|Were selected for the o “C” Shift, | and to decide tie cases. | Malmsbury, patient; | Mack, Oren H. Hatch, Mex Isaak. | THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, FRIDAY, FEB. 26, In the course of the evening, a On the ‘eleven competing teams, | |there were 66 members. Of twelve and prob mill worke: ed instruction, thre an extra problem was use Safety Service Representative The contests were held under | direction of George H. Miller, Saf- ety United States Bureau of Mines, Service Representative of the The captains, patients and other members of the competing teams | follow: — Theodore | Ivan - Diboff, | Andrew | Mine “B” Shift captain; Fred Soberg, Members of * Shift | Mine “A” Shift—Alf. J. Nygren, John Monagle, patient; P. Finlay, Phillip McKanna, Tom Lewis, Ted Bruget. Mill Operators—Glen Kirkham, Ross Fox, Grant Logan, Alex Gair, R. Bemis. | Defense attempt DEFENSE LOSES SILENT PERiOD ONE POINTIN | FIXED NIGHTLY FOSHAY TRIAL TO HELP RADIO Denied Attempts to Gm-jSignal Corps Stops Juneau- Testimony on Value Ketchikan Service of Securities i 7to 11 P. M. MINNEAPOLIS, Min., Feb. 26 to introduce t | Improvement in radio reception |in Juneau is expected to result timony to the market value of |[from the four-hour silent period securities in the inventory of |that will be soon established every W. B. Foshay Company was denw;‘mi:ht by the Signal Corps insofar yesterday in the mail fraud as cqneerns its service between this of W. B. Foshay and H. H. Her city and Ketchikan. Judge Molyneaux held that Her The following notice in connec- ley, who was on the stand, mig tion with the matter has been give his opinion of the value made public by H. W. Irvine, the secu: but that offers r in Charge of the Juneau buy the operties could not considered as material in showin ‘Bffective March 1 our medium - | frequency transmitters stand silent | there was a market for the secu Machine and Car Shop—Donald | ties. Stewart, captain; John Doyle, pa- | Henley testified the W. B. Fo tient; Dan Livie, Gus Erickson, Ole |Company had met all obligations Piubmon Olat. Larson, |to within a few days before Wharf and Electrical receivership and never had ar Wharf and Electrical Department |Overdraft at the banks up to tI —Willlam Bergstrand, Capt; W. B. |lime. Converse, patient; Kenneth Water- hous Forrest R. Bates, Leslie Hogins, George Roberson Mill Repair Crew—Thomas Larsen, captain; Pete Schmitz, patient;[but Bera Ruotsala, Art Berggren, Os-|time wald Varnes, George Ruotsala. | WNo. Mine—Steady Day Shift—Charles | comes Durando, captain; Chris Hennings,|ley wire patient; Ole Antonsen, Neil Heard,|and apparently is | Victor Hue, Wilmar Georgsen. [He has a burn two inches wid | Mne, “C" Shift—Ernest Davis across point of right should | captain; Mark J. Storms, patient; | Demons! three methods of |Ralph W. Mirget, John N. Butts, |scuing patient from wire, the | Leonard Hayden, Kenenth Drew,resuscitate by two members of t | Harley Mullins. eam pe! ning artificial resp Ladies Free | General Mill Team tion for two minutes each, cha | General Mill Team—Clifton Liv-|of operators to be made witr ingston, captain; ©. Lindstrom rhythm. Patient reg patent; D. Fleek, J. Hudson, H. conscicusness at end of artific R e e ittt it TUNEYOS, B.. = DI ;L»pl:xlllmh but suffers from shock ‘ Carpenters—Dan Kansen, cap-|throughout problem. Working tim tain; J. G. Morrison, patient; even (7) minutes. |tin Tarsen, John Jensberg, Hugc Fall From Ladder BE SURE TO TRY o, o A | Tttt S Garnick’s Checkerboard Coffee Alexander Gair, patient:|inz from the following injur Moose Dance Saturday Night-Moose Hall Wound of the right ey left thigh and a crushe hand. Patient is consciou suffers from shock. Workir ten (10) minutes. —Electrician accident n contact with fallen t He is found unconsciou not breat! infuries | broken Music by Arctic Players SCANDINAVIAN-AMERICAN MUSIC and DANCES FEATURED Admission $1.00 | captain; Rene Straiger, Edward Roller, Ed- |Fractured right elbow in L posit ward Cashel, Ceasar Sebenico. |dislocated left ki and wo Total of Four Problems ton point of left shoulder. Patic The three regular problems a ous, but in state of shock the extra problem, in case of a time, ten (10) minut were: ixtra Problem—Worker falls wh; No. 1—A charge of explosives|scaffolding collapses and receiv primed with fuse goes off before|the folowing injuries: Dislocat bulldozer gets in the clear, and left elbow (arm is straight); com- he suffers from the following pound fracture midway of rig {thigh, bleeding in spurts; lacera ! wound midway of left leg. Patient conscious, but | Working time, ten (10) minutes | BEHRENDS TELLS OF CONDITIONS INSTATES NOW | | (Continued rrom Page One) unior Prom Special A GROUP OF LATE [Trade and Finance Adjust ! Themselves to Pres- ar y roc s : ent Situation \are of the opinion that prosperity !is a condition that cannot be leg- islated into existence. In such'a matter, the public must be the captain of its own destiny. “In both trade and finance, ev- erything is valued now for what it actually is, instead of what it may be at some time in the near ov remote future. “In Chicago which is really ' the greatest merchandising center in the Unitéd States, I met out-of- town merchants laying in stocks as in former yeéars. Purchases, while as numerous may not have been as heavy. Many merchants in the proces of readjustment had let their stocks run unusually low, and purchases were of just suffi- cient quantity to fill in their lines and to meet needs of the immed- iate future. Bought Uusual Quantity “I bought my customary amount Watch Our Space for MARCH SPECIALS 30 Days Is Cash FRESH KILLED Chickens - Lb. 22¢ ARRIVED TODAY George Brothers TELEPHONES 92—95 FIVE DELIVERIES DAILY OTHERS UP TO $19.50 Hollywood Style Shop HOLLYWOOD STYLE SHOP “Purveyors to Particular People” | filing | limited to particular zones and what | When this information is obtained, ed | of goods, giving attention, of suffers from shock. | saleable | | | rom 7 p. m. to 11 p. m,, local time, except for handling ships, traffic and answering distress signals. Sit- 1, Haines and Skagway are closed nat time anfl traffic for Ket- iikan will be handled on seventy- two meters or sent to Seattle on hort wave. This arrangement is tentative and will be continued in ce only if traffic does mot suf- The people can cooperate by traffic early.” Requested By Club Establishment of the silent d is in response to a request de about a month ago by the Juneau Radio Club. | At a meeting of the club in the City Hall last night, members, who | ad received intimation of the gov- | ernments’ action, were profuse in | their expressions of gratification. | The club has completed e di- | | BUTTER FRESH CREAMERY Sanitary Wrapped viding of the city into twelve zone: In every zone, two members will og every instance of interference. | Will Compare Logs | Comparison of the logs of all| zones will establish what noises are Three nounds . . o s are general to all the zones. | fective efforts can be eliminate many of noises. Frank Garnick, president of the lub, reminded members last ct to urge owne 0 sets to join the club that the fmJn(‘,ml.; the membership and dues. the payment of| | | | | character of merchandis her The read, gre Three cans, .. tmel process is er difficulties in the st and in the Souththan onthe Pacific Coast Of the Pacific Coast. the best part is the Pacific Northwest. Seattle, I believe, is in better condition than any other place in the States. I attribute this to the fact that she enjoys such a large percentage of Alaska trade. Seattle’s commerce with Alaska is steady and lucrative for the Puget Sound metropolis. ‘Hotels in Seattle are patronized better than elsewhere, end trains and steamships entering and leav- ing have more passengers.” No Wooden Boxes In looking over merchandise that had just arrived from the States and that was still in the shipping packages in the store room on the third floor of his department store establishment, Mr. Behrends called attention to the containers. “Instead of wooden boxes as for- merly, large and small quantities of goods are packed now in a pliable paper pulp material, whica is covered with burlap and then strapped with iron strips. The con- tainer made of wood is almost obsolete. Ths change is inimical to Alaska timeber and sawmill inter- ests GOLDEN AGE SPAGHETTI NOODLES .25 Del Monte CORN YELLOW BANTAM TUNA FISH WHITE STAR In Three Sizes Small Cans . . . . 13¢ Medium Cans. . . 22¢ Large Cans. . . . 43¢ MACARON Four packages .. .. 2 cans Improvde And Repainted for While Br. Behrends was away, While Mr. Behrends was away Department Store had been im- proved and repainted. Besides the large storroom on this floor there is a display room for dry goods, a display room for household goods and furnishings, and a display room for shoes, trunks and men's furnishings. T am glad to be back in Alaska,” Mr. Behrends concluded. “The more I see of other places the bet- ter 1 like Juneau. It's the best or all” e e—— WILLIAMS RETURNS FROM TRIP TO SAN FRANCISCO After a five-weeks absence which he spent largely in conferring with divisional officials of the bureau at San Francisco, M. D. Williams, District Engineer of the United States Bureau of Public Roads, re- turned today. The discussions were largely regarding routine matters relative to bureau policies. —-—————— KETCHIKAN MAN CONVICTED OF RAPE IN DISTRICT COURT Chester Klingbell was today found guilty of rape by a jury in the United States District Court at Ketchikan, according to telegraphic advices received by United States Marshal Albert White. Sentence has not yet been imposed by Judge Harding. e e Iowa State college has definitely recognized ping pong as an intra- mural sport by holding an all-col- lege table tennis tournament. The Fort Worth Cats of the Tex- as league plan 10 exhibition games Telephone 24 this spring against Class A or bet- ter teams, 00D PRODUCTS We feature this famous DELL MONTE Brand . . . the largest packers of CANNED FOODS in the WORI.D NATIONALLY KNOWN Large Clean Fresh Standards Eggs Are Going Up 3 dozen Del Monte ALASKA SALMON SOCKEYES Tall Cans. ... ..29¢ FlatCans......22¢ FRUITS for SALAD No.1Cans.....23c No.2Cans.....27 CHEESE AMERICAN CREAM Mild, pound .-t ud B og DEL MONTE PEAS EARLY GARDEN Large Cans Two In justice to our ‘employees and families, store closed daily at 6:30 P. M. BUSINESS IS GOOD! . . . . . .LET’S KEEP IT GOOD IGGLY WIGGLY' Prompt Delivery

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