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THE DAILY ALASKA LISSEN, You DONT HAFTA WORRY ABOUT OUR HOTEL BILL-- NOU'LL GET YoUR DOUGH! W-WHAT 2 DIG Lp % 24.22 BY TOMORROW -~ + APPEARANGE OF MOV CoLg Preparations for Picture /AUXILIARY TO GIVE 4 CARD PARTY MONDAY A public card party has been an- nounced by the Ladies' Auxiliary of and. Increased Min- !Douglas Aerie Fraternal Order of Eagles for Monday evening, July ing Stir Camp The party, featuring both 25 ANCHORAGE—There: wWas MOIC yigge and whist, will be held in thay the usual spring activity a' g Eagles' Hall following the reg- Nome foowing the arrival of the ., neeting of the Auxiliary. sleamer Victoria from Seattle last 2 month, according o an artm:‘ NG TO in The Anchorage Times quoting! 3, 8. C. Bassett, manager of ‘th:l ypo ;onn Johnson, farmerly Miss Anchorage office of the Alaskan no),v Megoit, and her baby boy, Airways, who returned to Anchor- i, passage on the Yukon today age July 2 from a visit of several ¢ vajdez where they will make weeks in the Seward Peninsula hir home,, During their stay here country. The principal cause of 4he (hoy were the house guests of Mrs. unusual activity was the presence , g Goetz. of a score or more of movie peoplc AR S among the passengers on the Vic-| pyaAS§ NEW BACHELOR HOME toria, enroute to the Arctic for a winter of location in conmection ke Gaveril moved into his owx with the filming of The Eskimo,lcottage next to the telephone office stirring northern story by €Gaplain {oqay where he will be at home to Peter Freuchen, Danish author, pis friends, from now on. Since he who is there in person to see thal pyrchased his cottage about three the setup ds as it should be. {months ago, Mike has been putting Came North By Juncau in all his spare time working on Captain Freuchen came north the building and the interior has from Seattle aboard a steamship becn refinished throughout. by way of Ketchikan, Juneau, Cor- | W A SR dova and Seward to Anchorage. IS NOW IN ILWACO He flew from Anchorage to Nome with Pilot Matt Nieminen, and the same plane brought Mr. Bas- in Douglas three years ago, sett back to Anchorage. since has been an instructor in The trading ship Nanuk, which the Nome school, recently returned has been chartered by the Metro- to her home in Ilwaco, Wash. LITTLE KNOWN LADUE DISTRICT the vanguard of the company and with the remainder of the motion picture outfit, the old mining camp Country Eight Days’ Walk from Dawson Is Vast Virgin Area RETURNI VALDEZ Miss Hazel Johnson, who taught town took on the appedrance of a movie colony. | In addition to the members of the movie party brought from the states, the company will use about ten families of nadives, and at the time Mr. Bassett left Nome arr- angements were being made to gather a large number of Eskimo, hunters at Teller for the purpose; of selecting the most likely ones, for the work in hand. | PATREANRS — s e el TheTyo :cre Tz?)kat:eo?axmn“:bomd ties and wild game conditions in S {im- the LaDue country, in which are b Saun ;‘r‘:du“;[‘isn’“n“;fa;‘fi_ the headwaters of the Fortymile ¥ - and Sixtymile Rivers, tributaries D i‘;&;‘;a{."fifiré of the Yukon River, are discussed at ler = 3 i in the Fairbanks News-Miner by having been taken to King island : ¥ by Aviator Joe Crosson to have Abe McCord, who recntly came i from the district after a year there ':M natives go from there %o Teller "y, biang to return at once. 0 ‘compel for selection. It has gl e The LaDu little k . It is not been deckied whether the Map. |t LaDUe 75 [HLG_KDOWR uk would winter at Teller or not far from the boundary line 1 in at Point Barrow. The separating east central Alaska from reeze 1in 0 director of ‘the picture project west central Yukon Territory. i g} McCord came from the LaDue hopes to have the picture COM- 'y, 4y by way of Dawson, walk- pleted by _F‘eb"“”{]- vie outtit, 08 there in elght days. He took a In addmor;,_to anelx::ge:iea con. boat from Dawson to Circle Ci the steamer Victor) = siderable number of job seekers ai Nome, resulting in the creation, No Trace of Man of an unemploymenb‘ snuauofi‘ The creek in the LaDue district which was the cause of ’:f’ ;‘“e on which he has been working apprehension on the part OME shows no trace of farmer occupa- officials. tion by man. There is an unlim- Not Ffio“l? ""“;he usuay lted amount of virgin ground await- There was more than ing the prospector. amount of miining under way and | pg. yas put down several holes more in prospect, but not enough .,.4 i satisfied with the results. to provide work for the many WhO geyera] Fairbanks residents are as- were Seemhe“-m s sociated with him in the prospect- Two of { [ammon com] ing venture. dredges were operating during the| Tpe Lapue is a great game time Mr. Bassett was in Nome and | country, McCord says, and on sev- the third was to start soon. iAlll eral occasions he has had to shoot three of the dredges are Within y.rs which' were molesting his sight of Nome and there are ““::' dogs. Bands of wolves traversed erous others scattered over the the section all winter. district. In addition, there are quite pjack, brown and grizzly bear are a number of small outfits working | found there. It was not known the this season and more tham the jgtter species were in the section usual number of prospectors scout- yuntil Louis Lyckens saw six big ing around for new paystreaks. ianimals on a hillside one day and Department Inspectors Trow- peing short of meat and taking bridge and Gilman, :'ho :"eretesf!?t !them for caribou or moore started from Washington to inwvestigal € | for them. On appraoching closer reindeer situation and seck a solu-|he <aw the gamboling animals were tion of the grazing problem, were hygh hump-backed grizzlies and he still in Nome when Mr. Bassetf ioft them strictly alone. left there. McCord left his dogs in Dawson Task Will Be Difficult and will pick them up when he He did not learn what progress goes back. they “had made with their wvrk; ——————— but it is ‘his opinion ‘MY will| MRS. WATSON LEAVES TO not find their task a simple one. VISIT INTERIOR FRIENDS Mr. Bassett has spent many years ——— on Seward peninsula and he knows| Mrs. H. G. Wagson, wife of the something of the reindeer situa-|Secretary to Gov. George A. Parks, tion amongsthe natives from lm'-‘,len here.\vday on the steamer Yu- sonal observation. . (kon for Seward. She 4is enroute Nome has been a veg bu:t}' N;;;w Fairbapks where she will visit port this season. Mr. Bassett says several weeks with relatives and there were nine planes there onef friends. dav during his stay on the pemn»( - - SABIN’S sula. The number included two lvmh{ in Furnishings for Men From Circle he traveled by auto- mobile to Fairbanks. B s SPECIAL SALE TODAY “See our windows for Special Prices and Sale, Close outs at cost. ) —adv. from Anchorage. | | | and | FRESH MuaG! I GUESS HE FORGETS “THAaT SOME DAY SULLY'S GQONNA BE ThE CHAMPION o e WorLD/ COME: ON,OL' BOY, WE. GOTYA GO OUT AND | GOLF STARS IN Ohio River Offers Much Anguish for Public Links Boys | LOUISVILLE, Ky, July 19. — Long drivers among the munici- pal course golf stars of the nation will find things to their liking in |the annual amateur public links |play starting today. | | Shawnee golf course, whers the championship began todaj and | continues through Saturday, has | par 5 holes which run from 54 to 520 yards. | Bu! if a player is too “stout” with his driver he may land 3 ball splash in the Ohio River on No. 3. Besides, there are five holes where a hook or a slice will find “old man river” waiting. ! Course Rather Flat | The course, 6430 yards long and | covering 145.6 acres, lies about four |miles from the center of town in |the lowlands of the Ohio river. |Par is 36-36, 72. | The course is ather flat, but i!hat disadvantage is compensateld {for by an abundance of cleverly conceived sand traps and natur iuuches. Lombardy populars sep | arate the fairways and add to the | hazards. | The No. 1 hole, 500 yards iu length, par 5, is a dog-leg witin a straight-away shot of 266 yards |to the direction flag. An ex- |tremely long driver might get an | early advantage with a drive over | the fence that pokes an angl ‘flm fairway. River Big Menace The slow-moving Ohio, annually piles up enough san: traps to take care of all Loui:- |vlle's - building needs and golf |traps, first becomes a natural ha- |zard on No. 3. There an un- | usually long shot would roll down |the river bank into the roughes. |of rough. The shot is straight to- ward the river bank. On No. 4 a wide and open fair- | way of 335 yards invites a par 4 |but a slice means the player need not look for the ball. The fairway | parallels the river. : A slice on No. 7 means the ball is headed for the Gulf of Mex- ico, while on the short 15th and the long 16th and 17th the piayer who hooks can go down to New |Orleans to wait for the pellet to float past, | While the river adds to trou bles of the “dubs” as well as al whicl ithe beauty of the scene, it serves ¢ rampages the course is under wa ter. But it usually drains quick- Iyl, as it did last February, and the ground keeper says the rich silt is @ real aid to fairways and the greens. The first qualifying round starts today and the second qualifying round is tomorrow. First round match play begins Thursday morn- | ing, second round that afternoon and third round and semi-finals Friday, with the final match play | for the championship Saturday,| July 23. i ‘All matches will be af 18 holes except the final, which will be Olympic Veteran g i s Associated Press Photo Dorothy Poynton was only 13 when she competed in the 1928 Olympics and hopes to represent the United States as a diver again In the games at Los Angeles this year. RAY STEELE, £0 T0 DRAW Referee’s Decision of World’s Title Bout Booed by 10,000 LOS ANGELES, Cal, July 19— Jim Londos, of New York, and Ray Steele, of Glendale, Cal, wrestled ito a draw here last night. Although the match was billed + the world’s championship, bes wo out of three falls to a finisk ten thousand fans vociferously ob- jeted to Referee Don MDonald’s action in calling the match a draw after two hours and fifteen m: utes of wrestling and a fall gain: dos wrestled Friday night. in Seattle last HALIBUT RECEIPTS AT SEATTLE HEAVY SEATTLE, July 19~The follow- ing schocners. arrived from th western halibut banks today: Dor 44,000 pounds, selling for 3 an.l 4% cents a pound; Ilene, 43,000 pounds, selling for 3 and 4% cents pound; McKinley, 44,000 pounds nd Pacific 33,000 pounds, both ing for 3 and 4% cents a pound. Arrivals from the local halibut banks were: Oceanus with 20,000 pounds, selling for 3 and 7 ceni a pound; Faith with 4,000 pounds of halibut and 4,000 pounds of sa- ble, selling for 4 and 5% cents and 2% cents a pound; Husky with 5,000 pounds of halibut and 4000 pounds of sable, selling for 3 and 6% cents, and 2% cenis a pound. R PACIFIC BACK IN PORT From Port Alexander and way- ports, the motorship Pacific re- turned yesterday to Juneau. She Miye Muroaka, sprinter; Yur/ | . twenty-three, LookIT MIM! HE'S A GOLD MINE, UNCLE. . AN TLL SELL - YOU HALE ’ K “TWENTY-FouR ~ PELLET TAKEN EMPIRE, TUESDAY, JULY 19, 1932. : By BILLE DE BECK ANOTHERLEAD | FROM JURGES |Chicago Cub’s §hortslop‘ Goes to Hospital for Operation CHICAGO, Ill, July 19. Bi Jurges, Chicago Cub’s shortstop, | | took another trip to the hospu.ml last night and had another bullet | removed. Jurges was released from th(-“ Associaled Press Photo Japanese misses who will seek laurels in the Olympic games in Los Arngeles reached the United States aboard the liner Tatsuta Maru at San Francisco en route to the south. Left to right: Capt, Masako Mahe, javelin; Mitsuye ishizu, discus; Asa Tsuchikura, sprinter; Yayeko Sagara, high jumper; Michi Nakanishi, hurdler; Sumi Watanabe, broad jumper; high iumper, and Taka Shibata, sprinter, Hirohashi, BERG IS GIVEN DECISION OVER iBritisher Wins Again 0ver’ Cuban Negro m 15 Round Bout NEW YORK, July Kid" Berg, British seored 2 second Chocolate, Cuban negro, winning a 15-round fore 20,000 fans. The crawd booed the decision. Berg weighed 137 pounds and Chegolate weighed 130% pounds. HARRIS LIKES COLORFUL FOES DETROIT, July 19. — Manager Bucky Harris likes to send his Ti- gers against American League teams that run to colors. The Tigers so far this season mopped up with the White Sox Red Sox and Browns. JACK KEARNS 1S MARRIED NEW YORK, 19.—Jackie lightweight st nigh, decision July 19.—Jack Kearns, sleek and brainy fashion-! plate who managed Jack Dempsey, has married the daughter ol a athly Kentucky colonel. He and Miss Lillian of Louisville, were wed at the home of Mickey Walker, former middleweight nampion, in Shrewsbury, N. J. Jack is Mickey's | manager, Mr. and Mrs. W, r attended the couple and the Rev. Henry Owens of Red Bank performed the ceremony in the room where Mick- ey and the former Clara Helmer of Brooklyn were married in Feh- ruary, 1931, with Kearns as best man. With Mr. and Mrs. Walker, the newlyweds plan to sail shortly for Furope where Kearns is haope- ful of aranging a bout between Mickey and Larry Gains, British heavyweight. The bride’s father is Col John K. Kansler, a retired Louisyille business man. — e —— As an economy measure, the Phli- ippine government School of Te- KID CHOGOLATE victory over Kid | be- | | have | Kansler, | hospital a wi ago after appd:’-‘ ‘er.tly recovering from bullet wounds | suffered when he attempted to| | prevent jealous Violet Popovich! | Vallie, divorcee, from shooting her- | |self in his hotel room because of | |his cooling ardor, | | A recurrence of pain in his right side led to the discovery that one of the bullets fired when he was | |trying to get possession of the {girl’s revolver, had lodged between the ninth and tenth ribs on his| right side. One bullet had been | (removed pweviously. \WANT QUALIFYING | ROUNDS BANNED, LONDON, July 19.—The British Ladies' Golf Union are considering a proposal to abolish qualifying competition in next year's tourna- ment. Players in the 1932 cham- | pionship expressed dissatisfaction ,Wwith the medal play rounds. A !handicap list may be substituted. EL Fly-Kil KILLS FLIES, MOSQUITOES BUTLER MAURO DRUG CO. EXPRESS MONEY ORDERS ANY TIME Phone 134 Free Delivery “Tomorrow’s Styles Today” Latest in Slip-On Sweaters for Sports and General Wear All Colors and Sizes legraphy has been ordered closed after 30 years’ operation. INSURANCE Allen Shattuck, Inc. Established 1898 - brought to this city E. Grinnell‘ from Windham. HAYE YOUR OWN CHECKING ACCOUNT.. . . . and keep your balance up to a reasonable point so that you can" pay-your obligations promptly and protect your cr standing. Pay-by-Check — it testifies to your reliability and good business judgment . . . and Goce fants il be SAFE vl needed. Come in, your check book is ready! First National Bank of JUNEAU . MW ITS SAFERTO PAYBY CHECK W o | . o L e s 3 CALIFORNIA GROCERY SPECIALIZING IN FRESH FRUITS AND VEGETABLES e e Prompt Delivery Phone 478 it Window Cleaning THE Royal Range ™ Quisk and Even Heating O¥en Eliminates Guess Work and Baking Failures Large Cooking Top Surface Long Lasting Body Construction NOW ON DISPLAY Frye-Bruhn Company PACKERS—FRESH MEATS, FiSH'AND POULTRY Frye's Delicious Hams and Bacon Three Deliveries Daily Phone 38 UNITED FOOD CO. *“CASH IS KING” FOR INSURANCE See H. R. SHEPARD & SON Telephone 409 B. M. Behrends Bank Bldg. ALASKA MEAT CO. QUALITY AND SERVICE TO YOUR LIKING Meadowbrook Butter Austin Fresh Tamales PHONE 39 Deliveries—10:30, 2:30, 4:29 THE CHAS. W. CARTER MORTUARY “The Last Service Is the Greatest’Fribute” Corner 4th and Franklin Sts. Phone 136-2