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L] SN aus THE. DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, FRIDAY AUGUST 12 1932 All-Alaska News Strawberry shortcake, made from home-grown berries, broughta full attendance at a recent meeting of the Anchorage Igloo of the Pioneers Cir banks, have sent a- considerable | number of prospectors there from Fairbanks. Ketchum Creek was/ of Alaska. The feast was served staked some time ago, but other by the Women's Auxiliary. creeks will be staked by the stam- peders. John E. Holmgren is reported to be in pay on Crow Creek in the Girdwood district between Scward!a new conveyor have been installed and Anchorage. |by the Evan Jones Coal Company {at Jonesville, north of Anchorage, With ‘the dredge that was taken |to facilitate the movement of coal to the Inmachuk River by Fors-| to the bunkers. gren and Vollner last year, opera-| tions are in progress this season. | pelivery has been made to the | Alaska Railroad at Anchorage of a| Hydraulic work is under way Ol inew locomotive, the largest ever! the ground of the Henry Creek|pought by the railroad. Dredging Company in the Koug#-|motive arrived in sections from the | rok, north of Nome. {Baldwin Locomotive Works, Phila- | delphia, which sent T. H. Brickley Dredging operations were expect- north to assemble it. ed to be started early in August| ol on American Creek in the Fair- 4‘ More than 2700 banks district by the American peen sheared from Creek Dredging Company, E. A Austin, Mnnager ICcmp'\nv has on Umnak Island. Wlth s&mples of platinum ore| yoy prices of furs do not deter from the west shoreline of Red|p R Smith of Entrance Island, Mountain in the Goodnews Bay | cook Inlet, from maintaining his district, Eugene Titnick and OV |fex farm. He has’'200 adult blue MacGahan recently arrived in Sew-|foves and 76 pups. Market ad- ard.. Mr. Titnick, who is a g20-|juciments are bound to come, he logist, will take the samples to the |t the Seldovia Herald. Alaska Agricultural College and Bchool of Mines near Fairbanks to Nabesna's aviation field, which is he ‘assayed. ‘on the Nebasna River bar abou: ¥ | five miles below Nabesna, is being Reports of six-cent and oe‘uel‘cm“ged Supplies are taken to pans on Ketchum Creek, near thejand concentrates taken from ths Daily Cross-word Puzzle ACROSS Solution of Yesterday's Puzzle 7. Not sleepin L Membranous 8 Kind ot n ; Au::u-nrs' CIAITTIAICINIA AlB] o Gotders ot ne o 5 Judan L IEZZ 11D]! [OMIZ | ICIE! 10. ©ermentea {2 Sou DA EIRISZAISIEA] |, (70" = . Wis P S|IOILACIE|L|L|S 17. Vibrate sym- 14. operatic solo |P|A APIEIRIUAA|PIPIL [E * mx::::mn-;.uy 1 RO AINITII FIMIPTI ZAE |A [R] 22 Teteost tish 16, Thronging Cll RICIUMIF [ERIEINICIE] * Lf‘"d_e o i3 Wouna ncie: Scotch |; [\,""""7"”]”" - ESIEZISEILILZS|TIEIM)| 6. orientai shiv b RN LRRIAN captain ree SIEINISIEZE[T D[O] 1. a Knight of B ealstian CIODIEIXZAPIEIT thut's Touna 22 Charge ror tne [AISIHIYEZAS| I [DIEISIHIOIW] , ,table o w5 v ot o [RIUIEBFSIPICIOINGIEIRIA| 1 £ e o a 33. Light repast #1. Color EIMS YINIE NIE[Y] 2. Tneir: French L 28 Large ofl can T e $. Flant naving a o eotnee © 43 Uprieht’ - 1. Wound with w19 Lacke . Sons of the In! P Ri 4. Furtive same parents Wweapon 41. Competent 35. German ecity 6L Winglike 2. Irish expletive $2. Malay canoe 86, Ocean 52. Be defeated 3. Commits 48 Throw Hehtly B 53. Goddess: Latfn - 4. ‘Drinking 46 Hypoeritieak S Hopn 51. Color quality vessel i 38. One who 55. Comfort 5. Equine animal 47. Genealogical professes 6. Crafty 6. Lincoln’s sec- record ignorance b7. Diminutive refary of Golf mound o1 Likely ending state & Oer /dERdAaRER ll%fill%fl.l 23 Illll/fll I ll ;Ififl%Ill%Illfll ABANG-UP BIRTHDAY PARTY means plenty of hospitality. When you make a Tot of prepara- tions, naturally you want good results. Use BUD- WEISER MALT and you’ll get results. BUDWEISER uniformity is due to 75 years’ ex- perience and the finest ingredients money can buy. 3 Ibs. in the big red can—light or dark. ALL SET.. .for Dad’s birthday ] ANHEUSER.-BUSCH lo Springs, northeast of Fair-! All-steel automatic coal ears and| The loco- | fleeces have! the flock of} isheep that the Aleutian Livestock | sN\F - WE S'\'\LL GOT $7 32 70 O BEFORE WE NAIL DOWN THEMTWO RINGS\DE SEATS -~ 4720 --SNF--SNIF - - SEEMS LAKE A MILLION -~ | BARNEY GOOGLE AND SPARK. PLUG | i | | | | | | ———— |Nabesna Mining Company by air- |plane. The new plane of the Gill- |am Airways, operating betwe:n 1Cepper . Center and Nabesna, can |carry a ton of freight. | pRUA Miss Irene Irvine 1s among the {students attending the flying school of the Star Air Service at An- chorage. She is believed to be the ifirst woman in Alaska to make a solo flight. At the Merrill Airport in Anchor- age, work has been started on a |new hangar by the McGee's Air- ways. |0n the field. l Two and a half acres near Mile 24 on the Alaska Railroad out of Seward, were hurned over by a for- lest fire. Some of the moss was three to four feet thick, and had been dried out by recent warm weather, William Sherman, Chug- |ach National Forest Supervisor said. | | Services of a doctor and a nurse lara available to tourists in Mount McKinley National Park. Presence of a doctor and a nurse in every |National Park is required by Gov- ‘ernment regulations. A Seattle doc- {tor was assigned to McKinley Park. | Miss Patricia Scheffler, daughter {of Mr. and Mrs. C. H. Scheffler, :rormerly of ' Cordova, is the nurse. | Decision has been reached by |the Western Alaska Fair Associa- | tiation to hold the Anchorage Fair | this year September 3, 4 and 5. | Exhibits will be limited to Alaska | products. One hundred and eighty whales have been received at the Port Hobron station this year. The number is far in excess of last year's. Prepared to go down 200 feet if necessary in search for w r for |the Hudson Stuck Memorial hos- ipital, Eddie Kehoe has left Fair- banks for Fort Yukon with his well driving outfit. The hospital now gets its water from the Yukon River. The American Legion Auxiliary poppy sale held in Alaska last May resulted in the following totals: Ketchikan, $137.60; Wrangell, $47.65; Petersburg, $3350; Juneau, $44297; Sitka, $17; Cordova, $120; Seward, $38.75; Anchorage, $91.40; Fair- banks, $89.00. Rev. M. F. Williams, in charge of the Episcopal Church at Fort |Yukon, and Miss Lucy Cornell, nurse in the Hudson Stuck Memor- jal Hosptial there, were married a% {Fort Yukon. They will spend a year in the States on their honey- moon. From his church work, Mr. Williams has a year’s furlough. At its expiration he and his bride will return to Fort Yukon. chorage. ‘Wiliam A. Keller, heart ailment in his cabin 40 miles age district. ful that Lhe son, whu was sleenlng $T, LOUIS | AR ‘There are two hangars now Ernest N. Williams and Myrtle Mae Gilbert were married at An- 63, died of up the Lewis River in the Anchor- Death was so peace-| WE DON'T THAT RASSUN' 7 - By BILLE DE BECK' * * \F SEE MATCH WE'RE SUNK--= 7,207 30 4$7.%0 1/ in the same bunk with the father, was net aware of the demise unfil morning. The son traveled afoot nine miles from the cabin to the Lewis River and then in outboard motor boat to Anchorage. An undertaker accompanied the son back to the cabin and interment took place near there. The Kellers had been mining on the Lewis and had taken out a little gold. ! Andrew Holm, old-time resident of Alaska, died at Seward. Patrick Moran, 75, Alaska pioneer, died at Pairbanks. Death resulted to a Kkingfisher when it flew against the plate glass show window of the J. R. Heckman and Company at Ket- chikan. Pacific or Japanese oysters are successfully grown in beds near Ketchikan by Barney Smith. Bi- valves that were planted three years ago and that were planted last March are displayed in a Ket- chikan store. All the oysters were grown from sead spawned in Japan. Mr. Smith is about to try to grow oysters from seed spawned in Ket- chikan waters. The worst enemies of the oysters are star fish and persons who learn where the beds are and dig up the bivalves. Several students of Alaska Agri- cultural College and School of Mines near Fairbanks, unable to obtain vacation work at wages, are mining for themselves. Fred Par- ker and Harold Schmidt are de- veloping unworked placer ground, under lease, on Fairbanks Creek, and making better than wages. Fred Kubon, William Burns and Prof. Henton have taken a lease on the tailings of the Crites and |r———smr—————— Feldman mine and are installing a cyanide plant. Robert Heath, | Robert Augustine and Perry Landis | are on prospecting trips. [ Roland Snodgrass, honor gradu- ate in the 1932 class of the Alaska Agricultural College and School of Mines near Fairbanks, has been| appointed instructor in agriculture by President Charles Bunnell of the institution. H Tt i After Chuck Sexton, night cook at the D D Cafe in Anchorage, had | told the police of two masked rob- | bers entering the restaurant and escaping with $86 taken from the| cash register, the officers arrested | him on the charge of having taken | an Alaska Railroad bicycle and riding it from Seward to Anchor- 1 age. For the third time in eight days,| the Alaska Sea Products, Inc., of | Cordova received a telegraphic order from California for processed | vacuum - packed crab meat. The | order was for 160 cases. Saloum’s IN NEW LOCATION Seward Street, near Sccond [od] INALDINE BEAUTY PARLORS | | Telephone 49w RUTH HAYES, I HAVE \T-- MR. GOOGLE -- | [ GARBAGE HAULED Reasonable Monthly Rates HEMLOCK WOOD Order Now at These Prices Full Cord .. ... $8.00 Half Cord . AN 50 cents discount for cash per cord E. 0. DAVIS . TELEPHONE 584 Juneau Ice Cream Parlor Try our fountain lunch. Salads and Sandwiches. Horluck’s and Sunfreze Ice Cream in all QUICK - -OFFICER.! BEEN TURNED LOOSE! ——-el SERVICE Rendered by EXPERTS Your automobile is a valuable investment and deserves expert attention. A monthly service will { keep your car in good condition if rendered by our mechanics. A poor service job is worse than no service. Let us quote you prices on different service jobs, CONNORS MOTOR CO., Inc. UNITED FOOD Co. CASH IS KING The Best in Groceries and Fresh Meats at Prices You 't LOCAL FRESH, LARGE STRAWBERRIES, 2baskets ... ... Can Afford to Pay ORANGES—Medium size, juicy, 2dozen ... .... 4 pounds .. .. .. 4pounds .. .. .. SLICED BACON—Eastern, Sugar Cured. Pound ..'.. . 4. PRUNES—Large, sweet, i CORN FLAKES— Largehegs. s .. B8 | . 0 un, RAISINS—Seedless, oL e & she " 29¢ .350 ..20c e e i BUTTER—Fresh Creamery, 2pounds .. .. .. 45¢ D e e SRR 25¢ e ettt i . 10¢ 29¢ e ettt WALDORF PAPER— 4rollsSors s v TR e L s 25¢ SAVED $24.40 IN ONE.MONTH! The other day one of our customers informed us that she had figured that on last month’s food purchases had saved exactly 1§ $24.40 by confining her purchases — for a family of four — to the l United Food Company. IT PAYS TO PAY CASH. It costs more money to conduct a credit business, there are losses—which the custdmer helps to assume. Why pay more? We Deliver Shop. at the UNITED FOOD and save the difference. S e .PHONE 403 | ! Al 3 1 S\)GGESTED THAT HE | BORROW 47.2° FROM SOMEONE --AND HE'S APPARENTLY QUITE WYSTERICAL #_ o L THINK A MANIAC'S Takes any decoration! You can paper Sheetrock— paint it — panel it. Or you can apply Textone, the new decorator that gives hand- some texture finishes. And Sheetrock does not . warp, is weather-tigat, dur- Z able and fireproof. Ask us about Sheetrock. Reg. U. S. Pat. Off. SHEETROCK ‘THE Fireproof WALLBOARD JUNEAU LUMBER MILLS, Inc. Phone 358 THE VOSS Electric Washing Machine $57.50 Delivered any place in Juneau or Douglas Compare the price with that of similar articles sold by mail-order houses And remember this is a darn good washer and it’s guaranteed as such Alaska Electric Light and Power Co. JUNEAU—Phone 6 DOUGLAS-—Phone 18 idison Masda Lamps—the Standard of Comparison Window Cleaning Phone 212 SIMMONS BEDS SPRINGS and MATTRESSES Beautiful in Design and Attractive in Color BUILT FOR SLEEP Thomas Hardware Co. N :)'G UNITED FOOD CO. “CASH IS KING”