The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, July 17, 1934, Page 8

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¥ ] A S MRS THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, TUESDAY, JULY 17, 1934 ART NELSONIS IMPROVING FROM | POISON EFFECTS Victim to Recover from I'ness which Proved Fat- al to Brother Verne who is still Art Nelson at St Ann's Hospital as the result eating mus 9 improving accor McAuliffe, his p | His brother, died from the effects of eati the mussels befsre it was possible to get hm to Juneau and Mrs. Verna Nels i and the boys' mother, Mrs. Gus Nelson, are recuperating at home from the poisonous molluscs. Mr. Art Nelson’s recovery Is| largely due to the fact that the halibut boat Oceani¢c, Capt. Ole Westby, answered the distress sig-| nals of the sticken party and took the latter's gasboat in tow, and Capt. Westby's presence of mind in landing them at Thane and tele- phoning for the ambulance from there, instead of continuing to Juneau on the boats, according to Dr. McAuliffe. If the party had been delayed another half hour in reaching medical aid and treatment the results might have been much more serious, and without doubt fatal.to Art Nelson, he declared. — e SERBIANS ON PICNIC The members of the Serbian| Flag Society are enjoying a picnic | at Lena Cove today. Members are attending not only from Juneau but also from Douglas. ol S R b SABIN GOING SOUTH C. ©. Sabin leaves on a buying trip mboard the Yukon and will be absent for about one month. Mr. Sabin will visit Seattle, Tacoma and Portland. Mrs. Sabin is now in Seattle. e MRS. GRIFFITH HOME Mrs. Winifred Griffith, who underwent & major operation at St. Ann's Hospital some time ago, left the hospital for her home today. JUST RECEIVED Big shipment of CANNED GOODS and every- thing to' make hfn- a pleasure again ‘Southcrn Pacific that lodge. Mrs. James Roosevelt, mother of the President, is shown at South- ampton, England, with Robert W. Bingham, American ambassador. She was invited to visit the king and queen, and chatted informally with them oveg the teacups. (Associated g Ao Press Photo) ISAAC SOWERBY PASSES AWAY IN SEATTLE TODAY iLong Time Alaskan Resi- dent Dies Peacefully | at Age of 70 Years (Continued from Page One) | Railway as tele- | graph operator. One of the most active residents of Juneau in all civic affairs, and | a property owner, Mr. Sowerby was | well liked by the hundreds of people in all walks of life, who knew him. H- was initiated int dl the B. P. O. Elks lodge here on | January 14, 1914 and was a mem- | ber of the ElevenO'clock Club of He took a great in- ‘owned by J. B. Caro and Company, | Burford and Company. terest in the affairs of the lodge | as well as in his city and Terri- | torial matters, and served one term in the Ho of Representatives of the Territorial Legislature. Many\ of Juneau’ men and residents expressed dupl regret upon hearing of his death‘ today and the sympathy of the ' was shown over some of the work | or town family. PACIFIC TO BE USED FOR CARGO VOYAGES ON LOCAL ROUTINGS The motorship Pacific, formerly the mailhoat on the Petersburg, | Kake, Port Alexander and way ports run out of Juneau, com- manded by Capt. Paul Kegel, and goes out to his bereaved shipping, | is to go into private now that the company has lost the mail contract for the next four | years. { The Pacific will call in at all ports of the three mail runs tribu- | tary to Juneau, which are now | being handled by the Fern, the! Kenai and the Dart, and will be chiefly engaged in the business of J. B. Caro and Company, and J. B. Other car- goes will be taken, however, al- hough the vessel will not have a regular schedule of sailings for the time” being. Bert Caro and went out on the Pacific last Fri- y, and plan to rn from a over the nearby ter- in about two weeks. J. B. Burford President’s Mother in England [B AKER HERE T0 | STUDY ALASKA'S RELIEF NEEDS | Confers with € Gov. Troy Today Preparatory to ILeaving for Interior (Continuea from Page One) hop from H ines to Fairbanks, thence covering other interior points and fly to Nome for a few days in that section. to Fairbanks by plane, he wilk ¢ov- er the Alaska Railroad section, stopping briefly at Nenana, Mt McKinley National Park and pos- sibly other points enroute to An- chorage. After a short stay there, he will come to Seward and re- turn here by plane, visiting Val- de, Cordova and Yakutat enroute. Spend Day Here His schedule is arranged to bri him back here for at least another day's conference with Gov, Troy | and possibly a flight to Sitka 1nd other Southeast Alaska communi- es.. He is slated to take a steam- er for Seattle from here on July| 30. ‘This afternoon, taken out over Glacier Highway has occurred struction of there since the con- that road. He also done here last winter by the CWA. | In his discussions with the Gov- ernor and Mr. Taylor today, Mr. Baker owed a keen interest in direct relief and work relief acti- vities, both of which are under his, direction. He evidenced a ds:ir to approve methods of pr’?cedm" that would sim; )I fy problems a ing from pecul local conii- tions and was giving special at- jtention to tha rellel azganizaton setup. Lo g BROUNA LUNDSTROM HAS APPENDIX OPERA'I'I().\' Brouna Lundstrom, Alaska Ju» neau employee, entered St. Ann's| Hospital yesterday and was oper- | {ated upon for appendicitis Lhis morning. SRR S P CAPT. LANGLEY HERE Capt. Wallace Langley, wellknown interior transportatfon man, {5 a passenger south on the Yukon ac- companied by his wife. Capt. Langley has just completed an in- spection trip of his service in the interior. e Old newspapers tor sale at Bime pire Office. heng @@nbev The TANG of the RHINE /n the BEER of the CENTURY HE West is saying in ever-increasing numbers, this tastier beer is deliciously different—and that difference might be called “the tang of the Rhine.” 7 7 » Romantically, that rather describes the zesty goodness of Rheinlander. Pneiiully, Rheinlander’s mellow delight is the result of Karl Heigenmooser’s exclusive Munich formula, the million dollar Century Brewery where this master plies his brewing craft, and the exactly proper ingredients used and faultless care employed in making The Beer of the Century. 1 7 v Hops from Czechoslovakia, malt of the finest and the North- west’s unexcelled water all lend themselves perfectly to the brewing mas- tery of Herr Heigenmooser. Downtown or in the home Rheinlander is the wide-margin favorite. RHEINLANDER BOTTLED BEER brings the tang of the Rhine right into ‘o your home for the zest of your party, for dinner, for “a sandwich and—" Order CENTURY BREWING ASSOCIATION, 3100 Airport Way, Seattle a case of this delicious beverage today. Quart or pint bottles for your conven- ience. Rheinlander, though you might expect it, costs no more than other beers. Returning | Mr. Baker was, TROLLERS HERE WOULD ACCEPT | BUYERS' UFFER Cther Ports Believed Likely to Do Same Local members of the Alaska Trollers'’ Association voted last ev- ening to accept the price offered by the fish buyers. Offers are 12, 16, 4 and 4 cents at the base of operations, and 10, 4, 3 and 3 on the fishingk grounds. The 12 and 10 cents are for large reds, the 6 and 4 for small reds, and the 4 and 3 for whites and cohoes. The vote is said to be fairly representative of local opinion on the subject, although there were only 20 members voting, which is | about one-third of the Juneau ros- |ter. The ballot record shows ting to fish, and 9 voting continue the strike. Vote Not Final However, the Vote of the Ju- neau Trollers does not mean that L‘WV will immediately resume fish- as it is necessary for the Al- 1as Trollers’ Association as. a | whole to approve the action. Votes were being taken last ev- to prominent busme“ to see the type of settlement that | ening and today at all the fishing in Southeast Alaska, but up to the time of going“to press, nly Sitka, which refused to ap- prove the offered scale, had been |heard from. According to infor- centers Sitka Turns Down Sca]e—‘ 1} Radio Operators, Coast Ships, Are To Be Called Out NEW YORK, July 17.—Radio cperators on ships from the Pacific Coast will be called out on a strike as fast as the ships arrive here, the President of the American Radio Telegraph- ers Association announced. The radio operators are de- manding an eight hour day, wage increase and also union recognition by the Pacific Coast steamship lines. FOUR- HALIBUTERS SELL AT SEATTLE SEATTLE, July 17—Halibut ar- rivals today are as follows: From the westward banks—Re- public 45,000 pounds, selling for |8% and 6 cents; Western 40,000 | pounds, selling for 7% and 6 ! cen From the local banks—Sylvia, 18000 pounds, National 18,000 both selling for 7% and | pounds, |6 cents. .- 'SKAGWAY IS TO HAVE NEW WATER SYSTEM Skagway will have a new water ystem as coon as the project can 'bé bid on and the bids accepted, as the result of the PWA loan ap- p ed by the last Congress. Bids have been called for and specifi- cations can be procurred from L. E. Reynoldsen, City Clerk of Skag- | wa, H. L. Faulkner, representa- 103 TEACHERS WILL ARRIVE ON ALEUTIAN {Traveling Under Leader- ship of Noted Educator —Visiting Many Places Under the Ileadership ‘of Miss Florence Hale, Editor of Grade Teacher Magazine, and tormer President of the National Educa- tion Association, 103 teachers will er Aleutian at 2 o'clock tomorrow morning. The party, informally térmed an “Educational Crusadé to Alaska,” will be in the city approximately 8 hours, during whi¢h time they will be received by Gov. John W. Troy at the Governor’s House, will visit the Territorial Museum, and will have an opportunity to see the Alaska-Juncau mine and mill Started New York City tion was New York City, which they left July 9, crossing the con- Railway. aska will include Ketchikan, Wran- gell, Petersburg, and Juneau. From {here they will go across the Gulf |of Alaska to Cordova, where they will board a special train for the trip to Miles and Childs Glaciers. arrive in Juneau aboard the steam- | The starting point of the expedi- tinent via the Northern Pacific Towns visited in Southeast Al-| FAIRCHILD OF ASA TAKES RUN T0 SITKA TODAY Baranof Ret_l;s from Ket- chikan with Jacob Baker and H. G. Watson w4t 10:15 o'clock this morning the Fairchild plane, of the Alaska Southern Airways, Pllot Frank Knight and Lloyd Jarman, me- chanic, left here for Sitka and way points with mail, express and pas- sengers. Those leaving Juneau on the plane were, for Hawk Inlet, Xenia Kashevaroff and Legia K. Olson; for Todd, Mr. and Mrs. Lars Peder- son and Miss Pederson. Baranof Returns At 10:30 o'clock the seaplane Baranof, .Pllot Gene Meyring, and D. Howard, mechanic, returned from Ketchikan bringing Jacob Baker and Harry Watson here from that place. Mr. Watson made Ithe trip to Ketchikan on the Bar- anof last evening, to meet Mr. Baker who arrived there on the Aleutian. .- CITY OF KETCHIKAN REPORTS $13,034.56 DEFICIT END JUNE The City of Ketchikan finished the month of June with a delicit of $13,034.56, from which $453.07 tive of the city in Juneau is also in possession of information on | the project. mation received, the Sitka trollers were quite strong against accepting | the prices. It is believed here that Kctchi- kan, Port Alexander and Peters- | Pure, all of them greater salmon - - KETCHIKAN TO HAVE WOOD TENNIS COURTS They will see Columbia Glacler,|cash on hand leaves $12,531.49 that Prince Willlam Sbéund, Valdez, and |the city i3 actually in the red, ac- Seward. At the latter place, theycording to a statement published will entrain for Spencer Gla(,ler in the Ketchikan Chronicle recent- and Anchorage. ,Xy. The report also shows total Father A. P. Kashevaroff will|receipts since April 1 of $15848 as join the party here and continue against expenditures of $34,721. (~hmv centers than Juneau, will g |take the same action as Siltka.| ILaminated wooden decks will re- However, even if one of them place the present clay surface of, {agrees with the Juneau fishermen, | the two city tennis courts in Ket-| | the association as a whole will n v | chikan. Materials used in con- accept, as the majority would mwslnu.tlon of the new courts will | be against it. be creosote dipped for preserva- Cs -, — tion. Approximately $300 will be Shop o . uneau spent. IlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllIIIIlIIllIlIIIIIIIll|IIIlllIIIIIIIIIIIIIII!IIIIHIIIIIIIHIMIII|||III|IllllllliIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII!I]IIIIIIIIIllll|l|||||llll||ImllllllllllllllillIIllllIlllilllllllllllllllllllflIIIHIIIIIlIIIIIIIII!IlIlIIIlIIIIIIIIII‘ with them for the remainder of) e, N T AN their Alaska cruise, giving them HANNON GOES SOUTH the advantage of his profound' —— knowledge of Alaska lore and his- Mrs. Margaret Hannon, of Sew- tory. ard, is a passenger aboard the On the return to New York City, Yukon for the south for a months’ the expedition will travel across t. Mrs. Hannon is the daugh- iSouthern Canada. of Dr. and Mrs. J. H Romiz MRS. ter ew Hosiery Here Artkist Neva-Wet TR = = = @SEE OUR WINDOW DISPLAY FEATURING NEVA-WET, the miraculous new pro- cess that renders all sorts of fabrics impervious in water—Handbags that don’t get wet, hats that shed water like a duck’s back, dresses that are proof against perspiration and showers, window curtains that will not get wet AND ARTKIST STOCKINGS that wont spot in the rain, are more resistent to snags and give greater satisfaction. An amazing new process that makes stockings more satisfactory. NEVA-WET process does not change the ap- pearance or feel of the stocking. A miraculous new invention thai is revolutioniz- ing hosiery possibilities. Do they wash? Yes, they do. Try them. This marvelcus new process gives hosiery a hard- er eurface without changing their appearance. We introduce a revolutionary idea—ARTKIST NEVA-WET stockings $1.00 a pair or 2 pairs for $1.75—ARTKIST NEVA-WELT. ARTKIST NEVA-WET stockings have natural dullness. When its Wet—NEVA-WET stoekings are dry. ARTKIST NEVA- )VE'T rain spots! stockings put an end to Repeal or no repeal—legs stay dry in ARTKIST NEVA-WET stockings. WATER CANNOT PENERATE ARTKIST NEVA- WET STOCKINGS FULL FASHIONED Silk—Chiffon and Service W eight $1 Pair Or 2Pairs $1.75 Sizes 8% to 10% NEW FALL SHADES—Gun Metal, Mexiqus, Extra Dry, Liquer, Sherry Tone, Crash Tone. HPOSCSSP DEPT. STORE GEORGE BROS. .,Fren Mgn;handlse fl\vlrd 8P M fi‘mnflhy& S e 2 v ! | o

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