The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, December 31, 1932, Page 8

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R g THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, SATURDAY, DEC. 31, 1932. o Thnnv"m 0'MALLEY LOPS OFF 78 TRAPS IN NEW ORDER Fifty-three ;f‘}hem Locat- ed in S.E. Alaska—Two Are Owned Locally Seventy-eight fish trap sites in Alaskan waters were permanent- ly closed by regulations of the United States Bureau of Fisheries issued recently, effective for the calendar year 1933, it was made known today by N. O. Hardy, War- den, acting in charge of the local headquarters of the Bureau. Many of these, it is believed, were sites temporarily closed last year and on which the owners failed to pay their Territorial license taxes. Sometime ago, Commissioner Henry O'Malley advised the own- ers if licenses for 1932 had not been paid on the temporary closed traps they would be closed per- manently. Among those on the new list are a number in that ed in Southeastern Alaska waters, and more than 5¢ per cent of that number are in one district—North Prince of Wales Island; five in Icy Strait; six in the Western district; five in the FEastern dis- trict; three in the South Prince of Wales Island district; and sev- en in the Southern, or Ketchikan, district. Western and Tentral Alaska dis- tricts combined lost 25 traps. Two were in the Alaska (Peninsula area; two on Kodiak; 17 in Cook Inlet and four in Prince William Sound. Pacific American Fisheries were the heaviest loser with 10. Naket| Packing Corporation, Libby Mc- Neil & Libby and Booth Fisheries each lost four each, Peril Strait Packing Company lost three. | Two local independents who lost a trap each were: Dr. L. P. Dawes and George Franklin. The mer’s was located in Excursion Ir let, and the other on Admiralty Island. New Year’s Clearance ALL HATS Values up to $6.00 75¢ and $1.00 Daily Cross-word Puzzle 42 Down, 23 Across, 36 Down, 4 Down, 29 Across, 36 Acr 18 Across—a wish for the coming ye 3, 8 Across, 51 Across, _ACROSS Solution of Yesterday’'s Puzzle 10. Sait 1. Formerly 11, Endeavo, & Mimic 16] Baronot: abbr. 3. Finest PIAL[SEETIHIU[M] R[S] 20 lnmnnuuu of 3 Bageofa [EIVILIL AREIRBIERNE| 31 snu; in witn 1. e lower [LIAMARBAINILISIERQALIDIE] , Lars . Biblical 2, - 5. East Inaian ~ [FILIAICICITID PgLLED atiat o bird KT [N AlG|o the Renals- 17. Flower sance i 18. Up to this E/CIEIDIE[D RIOIUISIEIS| 23 New Testd- w e, [OVAREEOIOWSIEBSAL i, | = calyx joc TIA[ AIR| 24 First name of iy Nimcing eword [ETKE]S [BYSEIRIA[C FACIOITIE R amel. 26 Sea: French [SIEISITIE|TISEENIO[T|A = man B R . R D < R, trician | lic convey~ 29 Exis v 8. Fiihie saint: [ANJAMEEUIL EMABHOIRIAL] o Ono that re- 3 ASD T, D|OJN! RO INERT! | N nam{‘el the o E shells 32 Hchrpw plurar (OWIE[DEHEWIER AIGEE] 31, gquine. animat ending 34. Lake In New 38 Hawolinh sal- 4, A writing DOWN ' York staie 25 yrlimion composed of English cathe- 35 Genus of the $ word not ral city nettle 36. Article naving a Fish eggs 36. Number $1. Those who certaln let- & One who has 48, Splendor o fol- stamina: 9. Wise men low sult collog. 41. Thus 3. Shed was once e 4. Number 42 Word used In melied this Lo 5. Biblical char- expressing 0. cnoose by so. yoingle 800t ¢, Feminine 43 smaliest vote . Voleano name nteger S Kind ot 51, Period of tme 7. Clty In Ger- 45 Woolen oin 42. Toll with 52. Children's 8. Too late " eetts cape | painful Enme 9. Anclent Ro- 47. Feminine effort “Auld Lang—" man officials name mE & ,l AN T T F NN Jmm A CONVICTIONS TWO ALASKANS | (OF 2SEATTLE DIE IN FLAMES MEN EFIRMED NEAR DEERING Adolph Linden and E. W. John Hoyer and Leo Will- Campbell Must Go to iams Burned to Death Penitentiary —Details Lacking TAMS 10¢, 25¢ and 65¢ SILK KNICKERS Were $1.00, now 75¢ INFANTS’ KNITTED WEAR Everything in the store reduced ON SALE Tuesday, Wednesday WINN’S HAT SHOP Second Street, near Seward I GREETINGS TO YOU g ALL Fil s S s ,mer Presidents of the defunct Pu- g5 3, “IUNEAU'S OWN STORE” | OLYMPIA, Wash., Dec. 31.—The State Supreme Court has upheld the embezzlement conviction of the King County Courts of Adolph Linden and E. W. Campbell, for- NOME, Alaska, Dec. 31.—John Hoyer and Leo Willams were burped to death in a cabin near Deering December 25th. No de- tails have been received. Both men were well-known Al- askans and had been employed by Cordovado and Company for sev- eral years. ———.—— A spray gun nas been invented for applying ink to wornout type- writer ribbons. get Sound Savings and Loan As- sociation. Both men were convicted of em- bezzlement in connection with the building of a hotel and operation of Linden's radio broadcasting sta- tions. 15 years each. Embezzlements inivolved amount- ed to $126,000. Several days ago the Supreme Court also affirmed the conviction of W. D. Comer another former President of the Association, Co- mer was convicted of publishing a false statement of the assets of the institution. e NEW YEAR FROLIC Forty-eight per cent of the popu- AND lation of the United States is in communmes of less than aofln D ! NC[ AT Evergreen | | Gardens TONIGHT Music by Louis ANDERSON's DANce Banp Regular admission, $1.00 Dancing starts at 9:30. Favors and Noisemakers for Everybody! Entire Second Floor, Goldstein Building | Preceptor and George J. Whyte, PETERSBURG MAN IS tery, Andrew Cesar yesterday en- tered a plea of guilty in the Unit- jed States at Petersburg and was sentenced by Judge C. Clausen to serve five months in the Federal jail. morning by Deputy United States Marshal C. V. Brown. in Kirby Stephen, England, re-|miss themselves from office nor cently. give the electors a chance to act. ke it - el o . [ S NEW OFFICERS FOR DE MOLAY | TONIGHT; ALSO | ARE SELECTED BALLOON BALL Elective E Appointive Dances to E Given To- Staff to Hold Places night by Elks and Ever- for Half Year green Gardens Elective officers of the Juneau Dancing promises to be one of chapter of De Molay were chosen the popular ways tonight to cele- for the ennsuing half-year term brate the passing of the Old Year at a meeting of the order this and the coming of the New. week. Following their selection,| The Elks will hold their annual appointive officers were announced. |Hi-Jinx in their hall on Franklin The elective officers are: | Street, and Evergreen Gardens will Daniel Livie, Master Councilor; [give a Balloon Ball on the second Edward Cowling, Senior Councilor |floor of the Goldstein Building. and Peter Melseth, Junior Council- | Both places have been suitably | or. | decorated for the occasion. The E quator : LOS ANGELIS Dec. 31.—Carl fish. After treating the Atlantic sea- board to reindeer meat, he has stepped from Alaska, via Panama and is extending his food drive from the Arctic to the equator. Lomen is making ready to bring ' fish up from the Galapagos Is- lands in 700 to 1,000 ton cargoe: He has brought one of his refrig: erataor ships, the 8Sierra, from! Alaska and is making ready to send it to the equatorial fishing grounds where the tuna fish go in winter. The Sierra may get, away during today on its first experiment of the kind in the tuna HI JINX SET FOR |Carl Lomen Extends Food Industry from Arctic to Lomen is now going after tuna | ‘I.UST REINDEER man, an agricultural agent, said in explaining the innovation, depend chiefly upon fertilizer for neat. Canadian Govemment Re- Electrical heating is not only more, ports 2‘300 Alaska dependable, but the apparatus costs | Can Tuna F lsh less than $20, | Animals Found “We believe the electrical ar- — rangement will be a big improve-| OTTAWA, Dec. 31.—The rein- ment over the old-fashioned hotdeer herd the Canadian Govern- Ibed” he said. “The farmer mayv ment sent from Alaska to the |now plant seed at any time of the Mackenzie River delta three years Iyear and be assured he will have'ago to aid the Eskimos and In- | no trouble from the weather.” |dians, has been found near the | Alaska-Yukon boundary after be- ROBERTSONS TO HOLD | “6: e orcinal hera o 3000 OPEN HOUSE SUNDAY The appointive officers are: |Elks have arranged for the dis-|; Gordon Ingman, Senior Deacon; |tribution of elaborate favors. Mu- mdustry.—s_aid it " William Friend, Junior Deacon; sic will be furnished by the Sere- } Karl Alstead, Senior Steward; Ted naders' Orchestra. Electricity Takes i Hunsbedt, Junior Steward; Bennie, At the Evergreen Gardens, there | F ili ’s Pla - Messer, Chaplain; Duncan Rob-|will be favors for the dancers. The | ertilizer's ce ertson, Marshal; John Mills, Or-!music will be supplied by Louis| In Vegetable Beds' ator; Allen Elliott, Organist; 1Ir-|Anderson’s Dance Band. “ vin Hagerup, Sentinel; James Gray, - HOUSTON, Dec. 31.—Now they'ra substituting electricity for fertil! er in Texas vegetable patches. Almoner; Robert Henning, Stand- Y { S aNHer; Aler HoUI U s“"ST!cKING Tn The device installed in a simple ard Bearer; Arthur Ficken, First vhmdl. Preceptor, Gearge. L Ste, coil-like affair, buried several inch- Third Preceptor; Olavi Kukkola, . Fourth Preceptor; Jim Cole, Fifth THEIR UFFlcE es in a soil bed six feet wide and | Preceptor; George Danner, Sixth n 24 feet long. The coil and attach- ments are so arranged that the bed is kept at constant temperature, whether it be sunny or freezing i Seventh Preceptor. ——t e SYDNEY, Dec. 3..—All attempis by electors of New South Wales|outside. to abolish their upper house of| The coil is automatically con- Parliament—the legislative council|trolled, and when the temperature —have only resulted in increasingfrises the electricity is shut off. the number of the members of Winter-grown plants, M B. Vie- SENTENCED TO JAIL Charged with assault and bat- deer, there now remains 2300. Thom- as G. Murphy, Minister of the In- | terior said. R. E. Robertson| It is expected the herd will be vill hold open house from 2 to 5 delivered at the native vlilage of lo'clock, New Year's afternoon, ac‘ximmgazun at the mouth of t |their home on Seventh and Gold | Mackenzie next Spring. | Streets. Their friends are cor-{ The herd encountered frequent dially invited to call. olizzards on the 1,600 mile trek. Mr. and Mrs. Hard Times Masquerade Dance A. N. B. HALL—MONDAY, JANUARY 2 Auspices Young People’s Advancement Club CASH PRIZES Admission: Masked couples, 50c; unmasked, 75c. that chamber. For years batches of men, pledg- | ed to vote for abolition of the chamber, have been installed as legislative councillors. But most of them have changed their views and the chamber has continued. ! There are now 123 members, all with gold passes for free travel- ing anywhere in Australia and oth- er desirable privileges. The politicians will neither dis- ‘Commissioner’s Court Cesar was arrested yesterday Sheep were sold for 6 cents each HI JINX Elks’ Annual | New Year’s | Dance [ | TONIGHT FOR A REAL NIGHT OF ENTERTAINMENT BE AT THE ELKS’ HALL AND DANCE THE OLD YEAR OUT AND THE NEW YEAR IN Favors and Novelties For All With Si Many Courtesies Received Throughout the Past Year Admission $1.50, including tax THIS IS OUR NEW MONTH (Start Your Account NOW) FISHER BLEND FLOUR, 49 Ib. sack..$1.68 SNOWDRIFT, 6 Ib. pails $1.10 SHAKER SALT, 2 1b. tube SPERRY PANCAKE FLOUR, 10 1b. bags 52¢ We thank you all for your past patronage and wish you dll a HAPPY NEW YEAR At GARNICK’S, Phone 174 CLOS HAPPY NEW YEAR BEST WISHES FOR 1933 GEORGE BROTHERS LEADER DEPT. STORE i-l+l—H-i-H-l-l-l-l—l—H—l—l—l-l-H+l-H—l—l—l—H-l-l+l—}4- TO YOU! ncere Appreciation for the and ED ALL DAY MONDAY OPEN TONIGHT

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