The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, July 23, 1932, Page 8

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TARRR S E T TR v hh et v s bbbt ey C e e e L R e T e e e e P e e 2 e WILL LECTURE Rain Doesn’t Stop Morris: He MRS A, HAGLUND| F E, THUMPSUN ON CHRISTIAN Lays Sidewalk in ()ngmul Way mEs FU NERAL GRAND EXALTED “When in Rome, do as SCIENCE HERE - ly in you say has been doing \‘i]]llum Dxmmn Kilpatrick, St B. Arrives in |¥ Jun(‘au Today ie how t of the pany, m i he is et to harles W. been waiti pub- YUUNG BRIDE en- Ketchikan “Life Whi {Loses Her Ch (’l(lll(’r | Swimming on Ore- yon Beach Asks for S RAINIER, Oregon, July Mrs. Selma Wolff, aged 20 Divorce six months bride of Harold tangled in a piling hole Suit Filed Against Dancing Partner Wife, Music Hall Days res |Simmons Beach. Attempis ue he | frantic struggles to ly 23—Maurice Chev- nearly cost Fowler a from Hollywood less | Two men in a boat rescued v month, has filed a suit for Mrs. from Ynonne Vallee, his an hour later. partner in music halls B s e e won fame in the movies. 3 arged desertion. The counl° ’\” k Must Eat married in 1927. (uu\(’ of Discord |With His W ‘ife free is an old saying and when the job had to be coi t least several— | rain. In other (his crew to show up o i problem, how- |crew started to wol e cor around the CHINESE HIRES - IS DROWNED ‘»\a~ drowned when she became en- swimming beyond her depth near | by Harold Fowler :0[at Port Althorp, who came to Ju-| were unavailing. his life also. chartered the seaplane Wolff's body was recovered The Chichagof will return here this| the job but sted within 1 rained s for e job rning, rain g but the A canopy the width! k was er- of ce- me sec- is moved Ronm!a sunny day to start slight- | a specified time, and Yesterday he issued nterfere |bright and early tr [or shine. 1t was Juneau Succumbs to Internal Ailment 0 “do” |30 feet in length and |of the proposed sidew Morris | ected on stilts and po ade a|ment started. As beating [tion is laid, the ¢ to the next locatio | ™rs. Albin Haglund, well-known resident of Juneau, died last even- t. Ann’s hospital. She in il health for some as a result of internal time lay a| Morris expects to have the 200 4 ner of | feet of sidewalk on F n Street ment, but the seriousness of and 100 feet on Four t, laid condition was not so apparent to prompt her to go to the ho pital until a few days ago. Came to Alaska in 1913 Mrs. Haglund, whose m: name was Katherine Marie Log was born in Lethipudaas, Vas: ond, Finland, October 10, 1891. came to Alaska in 1913, taking Carter | away this ing for before tools are packed | afternoon. PLANE TO TAKE HIM T0 ALTHORP Eckmann Returns to Ju- Boarding House, the Welcome Cafe neau After Having land the Bergmanh dining room alne: | |She is survived by her husband Helped Dorbandt | and by a son, Hilding Haglund while | | The funeral will be held at 2 Chinese fly high. William Tom,|o'clock Tuesday afternoon an Oriental worker at the cannery |the Lutheran Resurrection Church The remains are at the Charles | days ago to obtain| W. Carter Mortuary. for an infected hand, | ———e e Chi chamr‘ Fowler. | today to take him back to Althorp. | idence at Douglas. There she Mr. Haglund were married 11918. They moved to Juneau in l . 1923. e n Prominent in Business In this city Mrs. Haglund prominent in the restaurant boarding house business. At v 28, — years, Wolfe, Her |neau a few herself | treatment Juanita Burns Wins Judgment for $29,579| LOS ANGELES, Cal, July 23 Juanita Burns, woman flyer, | evening | The seaplane came to Juneau |early this afternoon from Ketchi- kan. The craft left here last| awarded judgment of §: | Thursday with H. B. Freile of the nst Joseph Martin, brol | Naket Packing Company on a trap |whom she charged with breach of {and cannery patrol, on completion |contract in a proposed non-s NEXT TUESDAY Well Known Resident of Fraternal Organization Has RULER OF ELKS | Spent Thirty-eight [ Million, Charity Floyd Eugene Thompson, who rose from schoolmaster to a place on the Illinois Supreme Court bench, has been elected to the highest office of Elkdom at the convention in Birmingham. He was named Grand Exalted Ruler to succeed John R. Coen of Sterling, Colo. Milwaukee, Wis,, was chosen for the 1933 convention. Thompson was a successful can- o didate for the Illinois Supreme Court in 1919 and remained on the bench until 1928, when he resigned to become a candidate for Governor. | Warning against Communism, |Judge Thompson appealed to the |Grand Lodge to “fight together to store happiness and prosperity to our land.” Must Meet Demands “The problems of the day call |for the best that is in us,” he said in his speech accepting the high- est office in the Grand Lodge. “The ghost of unemployment and busi- | |ness stagnation is broad in t |land of plenty. The demands of {our charity will be great and we’ imust prepare to meet these de- mands.” { J. Edgar Masters of Charleno | Pa., was reelected Grand Secretary; Lloyd Maxwell, Marshalltown, Towa, | was elevated from the office of | Grand Treasurer. ed are: Other Officers Charles E. Broughton, Sheboygan, Wis., Grand Esteemed Leading | { { \ Other Grand Lodge officers elect- | | | | | NOW OPEN FOR BUSINESS WITH A COMPLETE LINE OF ELECTRICAL SUPPLIES THE LAST WORD IN ELECTRIC LIGHTING FIXTURES Vacuum Cleaners G. E. Sunlamps Floor Lamps Monarch Electric Ranges Electric Sewing Machiaes Electric Refrigeration Lamp Shades Food Mixers Sandwich Toasters Washing Machines And Many Other Electrical Appliances STORE OPEN TONIGHT UNTIL 10 0’CLOCK You are cordially invited to drop in and become acquainted POLAND DECIDES ON | |of which Mr. Friele was left at|flight from Tokyo to Seattle. M EVENTS FOR GAMES' CHICAGO, July 23. — Nicholas | Ketchikan. Bums said she had & contr S !Gimpel must eat his way back t0| Yesterday when at Ketchikan, | which called for the flight ab | Anscel Eckmann, pilot of the Chi- last April 1. When her time ca s Olympic team of twenty-| When his wife, Cheresa, appeared | chagof, was requested by Unitad |she said, Martin would not pro- nd three women, will|yesterday before Judge Daniel P.|States Commissioner W. C. Arnold | vide her with an alrplane, equip- on track and field,|Trude seeking temporary alimony |to go to the relief of Aviator Frank | ment, or transportation to Tokyo. Knight; William H. Harsh, Colum- U bia, 8. C., Grand Esteemed Loyal | Knight; Clarence Friedman, Mem- phis, Grand Esteemed Lecturing Knight; Henry Schoels, Oneida, N, Y., Grand Tiler; and Edward G. Hadley, Casper, Wyo., X Smith Electric Co. Let Us Help You With Your Electrical Problems )3 ANGELES, Cal, July 23— |domestic harmony. g and rowing. John Ro- Lpcn\hng hearing, of her divorce Dorbandt, who had been forced che for rhm Lo\mtry‘bm. she complained Nicholas spen'idnwn at Myers Chuck, 30 miles | pikan this morning. today. o decis- |more money on his pet chickens | from Ketchikan. From Ketchikan this forenoon, |NOW thers are 1100 subordinate d C)mp“t and pige than he did on her| Mr. Eckmann took gasoline 10|yhe Chichagof took E. Buschmann,{lodges = embracing approximately | (I"’I’R‘ THING ELECTRIC. 4[; 700,000 members. Assets of subordi- nate lodges total $95950,283, Grand | Secretary J. Edgar Masters report- | enhance [and that his affections were alien- (Myers Chuck. Mr. Dorbandt had |o¢ the Naket Company to Koater. s chances of wmnmg; ted when the fowl came into his|repaired broken struts in his plane|fa)) and then procesded here. in the women's division of {and with the gasoline that was greatly M. H. SMITH, Owner life. ——— international classic, Roman| “The only thing for you to do,” brought to him flew to Ketchikan Pensacola, Fla. residents - led 219 SEWARD STREET PHONE 354 lthe Judge advised Gimpel, “is to|in safety. On his forced landing unessed the arrest of one of the| In 1931, Masters said, expendi- | AT B | eat ur pets and settle your dif-|he hurt his right arm. The serious- policemen by another offi-[tures for charity aggregated $2,- 0ld papers for sale at Empire|ferenc |ness of the injury was to have he Tesult of an automobile [231,798, bringing the total for this Office. Nicholas agreed to try it | been determined purpose since 1880 to $38,215987.77. flIlllllllllllIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIII|IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIH|III|I|IlIIIIHIIIllIII||IIIlIIIlII||IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIllllllllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHUIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII|IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIlIIII||IIIIIIIlllIIIIIIlIllllllllfl Announcing the Opening of Our New Fountain Sunday, July 24:th z = | = | | New! Complete ! Modern! e i We have one of the most modern and best equipped Fountains in % : i Alaska. Under the personal supervision of MRS. IDA HANSEN. = Prompt and Courteous Service | SPECIAL to the R e e e PP UU SN | KIDDIES MONDAY AFTERNOON Two to Five FREE ICE CREAM CONES and GAS BALLOONS, while they last, to every child Try This New Service of Ours JUNEAU DRUG CO0. , MIIIIIIHWHIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlIIllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlIIIIIIIlII|IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlIIIIIIIIIIIlll|lll|||IIIIIIIIIIHIIII|IIIII|IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHHIIIII[IIIIIIIIIIIIlIBIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlIIIllIllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIllllmlHIIIIliIIIIIIilillllIIlllllllllllllllllllll s b visiting our store. et s i A '

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