The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, May 11, 1932, Page 6

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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, WEDNESDAY, MAY 11, 1932. LY AND HER PAI Y'GOT ANGEL | UNDER LOCK < AND KEY SOMEPLACE, NO, BUT SHE AIN'T AROUND, ELMER SO Y'BETTER D (YER COURTIN L WHILE THE RTINS A s ~—~———— WHY. LOVEY/ BUT SURELY SWEETHEART, I'M ENTITLED TO AN EXPLANATION! DOUGLAS NEWS CANNERYMAN ELL AND MEETS WITH head of the Ellson meeting h had a It was o have the | Marshal . he taboo | city limits | HERE COUNCIL i | William P. Br {ken to the hospital which op- @ fall from a of “the Douglas|Tecovering slowly | to ascertain the rnal injuries. e OUT OF HOSPIT, John Doogan was brought home following an operation ago for appendicitis. R w0 was ta- | sterday after | was reported s were taken if any, of L ‘B. Eilson Facking Company erate the plant @ Packing Company this sum- se from the arrived here yes- | the Yukon to look| in connection with | ¢ ting the plant in readiness (or: G the season's operations. 3\\\{," day, evening a speci City Council held at h Mr. Ellson was present. The Jatter explained some of his plans for the season and certain details connected with his tenure of the site were nd the assurance: co-operation on both sides X- 1y, weeks meeting The rcgular meeting of the Alford John Bradford Post No. 4 will be held at the Dug- out Thursday, May 12, at 8 p. m. Visiting Comrades wel- come, —adv. faztor) were mutual. ——————— Adjutant. COUNCIL BANS SLING-SHOTS | iy D CHICKEN DINNER Strawberry Shorteake At Mrs. Hookor's Coffee Shop Thursday, from 5:30 to 7, 85 cents, —adv. At the special meeting of the City Council last night several side issties to the main purpose of the e i T OFFER OF REWARD Offers of rewards have been made through this office for information relative to the stealing or the de- struction of the following trap lights which are aids .u) naviga- ion, namely: $35.00 Reward for information lead- ing to the arrest and conviction of the person or persons stealing or destroying the storage battery light and equipment from Libby. McNeill & Libby's Fish Trap No. 8, situated on Fisher Point, Chat- ham Straits, Alaska. $35.00 Reward for information lead- ing to the arrest and convietion of the person or persons stealing or destroying the storage battery light and equipment from Libby, McNeill & Libby's Fish Trap No. 10, near Pybus Bay, Alaska. $36.00 Reward for information lead- ing to the arrest and conviction of the person or persons stealing or destroying the storage battery light and eguipment from Libby, MeNeill & Libby’s Fish Trzp No. 11, near Pybus Bay, Alaska. $35.00 Reward for information lead- ing to the arrest and conviction New Stock OF Summer Pull-Over Sweaters With and Without Sleeves $3.50 to $5.00 of the person or persons mutilat- | ing, destroying or shcoting out storage battery light on Libby, MoNeill & Libby's Fish Trap No.| 12, near Cape Bendel, Alaska. Persons having information rela- tive to these depredations, which, we @re informed, have been com- SABIN’S Everything in Furn- ishings for Men to this office. UNITED STATES ENGINEER'S OFFICE, Federal and Territorial Bldg. Juneau, Alaska dv. A SHERWIN-W LLIAMS Al Ideal Finish for Kitchen, Bathroom and Basement Walls SHERWIN- WILLIAMS .7 SEMI-LUSTRE Soft attractive tints are practical ith Semi-Lustre. Rooms stay dainty and inviting because fin- ger matks, kitchen-film and win- thl;'s i’; ;l::‘l}:d{\ this hui'l, tight g inish so easily and without streaking. You will be surprised and delighted when you leatn how beautifully you can also finish woodwork and furniture with Semi-Lustre. A Fast-Dri Floor Varnish It's a_pleasure to finish wood and printed linaleum with S-W MAR-NOT Fast-Dri .‘Vamiifi—w' eodwork and fumiture, too. No inconvenience because it dries rapidly m?, i'n:onvtnifince because 'm:r-not wedl 91\0! we.m—wfloon s‘liy ¢ 30 onger when ung ‘amish, 0% Cncalor . 42 e Morsgt [E04 Vemish, Weies w USE SHERWIN-WILLIAMS QUALITY BRUSHES FOR BEST RAINTING BESULTS The Household Enamel of a Thousand Uses Yeur favotite colors on that breakfast room set—the children happy with re-finished g- and your rooms new again with fresh new enamell Repi vaing ENAM- LOID will do it. So easy to apply and tapid drying for your convenience—long preating and gasy to keep clean—for your complete satisfaction! mitted since the close of last fish-| ing season, will -please report \hemi aring 75 Y ears, De Here is Pope Pius XI 50 years d4ge when he was plain Father Achille Ratti, but already dis- tinguished for his talents as a scholarly librarian. Then— T0 KING ISLAND, ROCK IN BERING 150 Eskimos Inhabit Barren Pinnacle FATRBANKS—King Islanders, residents of a jutting rock in the Bering Sea 90 miles west c¢f Nome, ©aw an airplane land there for the ot - time recently when Pilot Art Woodley and the Ver. Rev. F. | M. Menager arrived in the Catholic mission plane, The plane in making a landing was set down on a fairly smooth st h of ice under | the island er 1 face, says the Fairbanks News-Miner which interviewed Pilot Woodley on his recent visit to Fairbanks. Seven hundred fee! high and a mile and a half long, the island is described as being nothing but a sare rock, the last place in the {world to which it would seem a group of people would be attracted. Natives Are Happy Nevertheless, the 150 Eskimos lving ‘there are believed by Mr. Woodley to be happier and better off than natives anywhere else in Alaska. They are exceptionally clean and are ocut off from contact with:civi- ization which might spell ruin to them. The ice pack ¢annot be crossed in winter. In the summer the Eskimos go to Nome to bar- ter their famous ivory. ‘There is no lack of food for the islanders. Never a day goes by but faey gel three of four seals. They hunt with ivory spears, wearing white parkas so they can creep up on the seals wout being seen. Hunt Every Hunting is car of the year reg ther. Seals and crabs from_the susten- ance of the Eskimos. Crabs are plentiful, huge 38-inchers being caught while Father Menager and Pilot Woodley were there. There is no shelter from the ele- ments and the houses are pitehet |on stilts ‘@long the face of the Day ed on every day less of the wea- construction. They are strapped ‘together with walrus thongs ankl walrus-hides are used far covering. White Woman On Island The only white woman on the island is Miss Frances Ross, daugh-' ter of Capt. and Mus /Thomsas Ross of Nome. A Univensity ' of Washington student, she #s study- ing ethnology. Tt was expedted-she would return to Nome inthe plane but she declined b do S0, ipre- ferring to remain until the cutier Northland calls at King sland in the summer, W, Father LaFortune, Catholicpriest, {is the only permanent whige resi- dent. it The regular meeting of the Alford John Bradford Post No. 4 will be held at the Dug- out Thursday, May 12, at 8 Thomas Hardware Co. p. m. Visiting Comrades wel- come. —adv. Adjutant. bet Two White' Persons and‘mrm-.xmem of Alfonso XIIT, | | cliffs. No nails are used in their| In 1921 he became Cardinal Archbishep of Milan. He took as his motto “reptum transit,” meaning “it passes rapidly.” This was prophetic, for— By ANDRUE BERDING VATICAN CITY, May 10. | old on May 31, is the oldest reign- | ing monarch in the world and yet the second newest one. He became an independent sov- creign by virtue of the Lateran treaty with Ttaly in 1929. Since then he has seen two royal changes in Eurcpe, the ascension of Ca in Rumania and Spain’s de- The other European monarchs compare with the pope in age a: '1(»110»\\. Gustav V. of Sweden George V of England Victor Emmanuel IIT ¢f Tialy 73 66 Haakon VII of Norway Albert of Belgium Wilhelmina of Holland ... | Alexander I of Jugoslavia Zog I of Albania | Carol II of Rumania ... | Boris TII of Bulgaria | Emperor Hirohito of Japan is only 31 and other Asiatic mon- archs do not apprcach the pope in age. Neither do King Fuad of Egypt nor other African poten- | cate { ‘Although dean of the monarehs, | the pope is as hearty as any of‘[ them. King Gustav of Sweden could play a better game of ten- nis, King George of England could| ride a horse better, and King Haa~- kon of Norway could hunt b:*'/t‘er,1 but Pieus XI could give anyone! of them, except Albert of Belzium,| a handicap of pices and beat mountain. Each quarter century of Piusi XI's life has ended in a year im- portant to him. When he was 25 years old in 1882 he tock hisi| university doctorates in Rome and! went to Milan to begin his life's work ‘as a librarian. At the age of 50 he’ became pre- fect of fthe famous Ambrosiana | a couple of preci- | him elimbing a post that he went to the Vatican las prefect of the Vatican library. completed ten years in the papacy mination on his program for mod- ernizing Vatican City with radio, a railroad, a new library and a new art gallery. ‘These things may be his most lasting marks of fame. FARMERS URGED TO TEACH CALVES EATING' HABITS AMES, Iowa, May 11.—Calves, like children, must be taughf to like certain foods, Rex Boresford of Iowa State College believes This farm specialist puggests penning early calves away their mothers and giving shelled corn and whole oats when ten days to two weeks old They will acquire a taste for grain, Beresford has found, and even after being pastured will pat- ronize the grain racks. : Calves born later, he has diseov= ered, will follow the early ones t0 the feed pen and will quickly ac- quire the habit of eating grain, — e — ATTENTION EASTERN STARS A regular meeting of Chapter No. 7, O. E. S held tonight at 8 o'elock Juneau will be Ohristian X of Denmark | :trmi in the United Stai Court | quantity of flour. This year too will mark the cul- [] from || them || TO ME, YO 4 IMPOSSIBLE an of Sovereigns m Norma Flor- ld MacDonald omas Burns, James Jr., Alvin Antonio | Pecet, Robert Edz , Philip. |Tvan Gil, gohn Roland Snodgrass, {¥red Arthur Kubon, Olge Strand- kcsg Doheny, € Pratt Moyer, {Aldwyn David R s, John R. | Witcox. |, Phil Allen, Matanuska, awho suffcred . the of several T and other when Jhe and dise harrow thrown from 'a wagon in rming belt, is making rapid recovery at the An- chorage hospital and soon will be &ktle to get back to his work, Frank Cooper ntly, his clam ‘canner; ilchio, will be confer: in Clausen, cf fracture 23 juries the was in Seldovia g equipment for project for Nin- ic, n a maximum capacity cf 500 cases. Cooper and his sons will be bcth digers and packers, | For eight months in the year, |Cushman Street in Fairbanks will be an arterial highway and auto- mchbiles may travel at the rate .of 120 les an hour, instead of 15 }as elsewhere in city. From December 1 to Ap 1, ¢he street not be deemed an arterial (highway and the 15-mile Wmit will not be in force, according to or- ance enacted by the City Coun- Eight months later he was - elected Pope. And here he is as he appears today, rounding out three-quarters of a century of an eventful life. {of Cordova is installing this year a new fast American Can Com- pany Fish Filling machine and ‘Autcmatic Weighing machine. This will greatly increase the capasity cf the canner Rczent high waters in the vicin- of Fairbanks dollowing the aréaking of ice in the Tanana Riv- er batted 1,000 percent for the mosquitoes. The flood diluted the {oil that had been sprayed on ponds, breeding places of the pests, de- jclares the Fairbarks News-Miner. Hither the ponds will have to be prayed again now or tourists will |leave the Interior metropolis as n as possible after reaching here this summer, e “Tomorrow’s Styles Today” NEW DRESSES Delightfully LOW PRICED $5.95 to $12.50 Were values to $27.50 In Novelty Print and Plain Silks Sizes 14 to 44 Marin Kamo will soon go on s District at Fairbanks on the charge ¢f unlawfully having in his pos- session and ‘transporting a bull mbose killed out of season. Miss Virginia Brown by vote of her assotiate students in the Fair- banks High School was elected May Day Queen for the observance that was held under auspices of | the ‘Auxiliary of the Fairbanks Le- | glon ‘Post. Scon after June 1; the Farthest North ‘Country Club at Fairbanks | will officially open for the summer | season. | Thieves entered the :warehouse | of Lacey and Noble at Fairbanks | one night recently and made away | with 1500 pounds of barley and a At Commencement exercises of the Alaska Agricultural College and School of Mines, this year, degrees | library in Milan. It was from this | Now at the age of 75 he has | FURNITURE and HOUSE- HOLD GOODS LIVING ROOM FURNITURE DINING ROOM SETS BEDS—TABLES—CHAIRS LAMPS—RUGS—RANGE ELECTRIC HEATERS—WASHING MACHINE—DISHES PHONOGRAPH—ETC., ETC. At the Home of the late William Britt on Seventh Street SALE STARTS FRIDAY, 10 A. M. EDITH HOWARD Worthy Matron. FANNY L. ROBINSON, —adv. Secretary. | the University of Montana will be |the principal speaker at the bane quet. His subject will be “The Crigin of «the Recky Mountains as Read in the Inlant 'Empire.” .- INDIANS TO PUT BETTER FARMING METHODS TO TEST TAMA, Towa, May 11.—Mesquakiz |Indians oh -4 nearby resstvation are delving into a lore which to ie them has always been mysterious [—soil improvement, drainage, seeds 1,000 U. OF W, GRADUATES TO GET DIPLOMAS Ceremo nmill Be' Held June 13—Baccalaur- eate on June 12 SFATTLE, May 11.—Clad in|and animal husbandry. traditionial cap and gown, more | wn.h O. C. Culver, agency farm- han 1,000 University of Washing- ;er, they lmvz_snen: long ‘winter on graduating s-udents will file €VEnings studying better farming past President M. Lyle Spspcer methods, their prineipal aim being to receive diplomas at the annual |&Ple better to provide for their commencement exercises Monday, | families . June, 13, Prof. Joseph P. Daniels| NOW that spring is here they are has announeced. jeager to put into practice their Albert Eaton Lombard, banker NeW ound knowledge, just as but and civic leader of Pasadena, Cal, |® €W decades ago their forefath- will be the bacoalaureate speaker, |6'S found in spring's advent sig- W Sunday, June 12, at the Unive nal to migrate or to embark on a Pavillion, where all exorc hunting expedition. be held, Professor Dani How ow vegetables, raising Montana U. Head Here B ering hogs,, the -euring On May 26, the .annual moving- and canning of xxlemsvand the im- up assemibly, at which graduating provement of reservation roads are seniors yield their -seats, .will e Subiects cspecially popular witd held in Meany Hall, Commencement | them. ithe fifty-sixth dn University history, ‘will begin Friday, June 10, with the annual Sigma Xi- Phi Beta Kappa dinner and ad- 4 L) oy whill B ATTENTION DE MOLAYS Regular | g tonight at 7:3( o'clock. —adv, il Dailv Empire Want Ads Pay 'Y Charles H. Clapp of “.COLD WATER PUMP B CHROMALOX ELEMENT GUARANTEED FO ‘. CIFE TIMEDY ° CHROMIUM FINISH WILL NEVER TARNISH . PERCOLATOR-TRAY- SUGAR AND CREAMER ~ETCHED TO MATCH 45¢wa'lfii 50:AWEEK NUGGET SHOP . DRUGLESS HEALTH INSTITUTE DR. G. A. DOELKER Progressive Chiropractic Phs;‘sicien Ultra Modern Equipment—Cabinet Baths Phone 477 Corner Front and Main Sts. Office Hours—Night or Day Good to Know— Question: Is Niagara the highest waterfall in the United States? Answer: Ne, Yosemite. AND— “BARGAIN HEATING” was made popular by coal users who ... . start their fires with IND) COAL, then . . . bank it 1 CARBONADO % YOU try it! of satisfaction with every load. Call Us Direct—PHONE 412 Pacific Coast Coal Co.

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