The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, July 25, 1934, Page 2

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| | SATINS, » Approvals e Pl i S e e “Juneau’s Leading NOTED AUTHOR DUE HERE BY PLANE TODAY Corey Ford to Make Al- aska Trip in PAA Plane from Stewart Lake Corey Ford, well known writer who plans to a good part of the summer in Ala material for articles € ‘Territory, and a photo er, traveling with Mr. Ford a ing pictures which are to illustrate the articles, are expected in J & meau this afternoon from Stewart Lake on a Pacific Alaska Airways 12+ passengcr Ford seaplf\ne '\ccord» SALE 30 Dresses VALUES TO for S Cas PLAIN COLOR SILKS EVENING PASTELS COTTON LACE and KNITTED DRESSES Sizes 14 to 44 No Exchanges B.M. Behrends Co., lnc. Department Store” THE DAILY ALASKA EMPth WEDNESDAY, JULY 25, 1934. | 2.50 CREPES . No Refunds ing to Joe Barrows, acting General Manager of the P. A. A. who ar- rived on the seaplane last night | from Fairbanks on the way to Stewart Lake to pick up Mr. Ford and his companion. Mr. Ford, who has been spending the last ten days fishing in the vieinity of Stewart Lake on his way north, is best known for his humorous work and among his re- cent books is “Salt Water Taffy" an hilarious take-off on Miss Joan TLowell's book “Cradle of the Deep.” Mr. Barrows, pilot 8. E. Rob- s and Fred Milligan were aboard e which left Fairbanks| ay afternoon at 4:45 o'clock | and arrived here at 10:45 o'clock last night. They left about 10| o'clock this morning for Stewart b the ' Lake and expected to return here this afternoon on the way to Fair- hanks, —— e 0Old newspapers for sale at Em- plre Office. & -,,~--M~,~Wm~mmm---m--¢,m~-,--”~-~m-- | |the space to be used will be car- | |ever, MORE REPORTS ON SHOOTING - OF DII.LINGER Two Women \Vere wnth Desperado' at 'nr‘n\e—-ro- lice Make Statément CHICAGO, 1, July 25. police said Mrs, Anha Sage admit= | neer restaufant men of Juneaw and | ted being the waman in red who|who owned and oconducted: the accompanied John Dillinger, des- perado, to his death trap. She said she knew him as Jimmy|to meké his home, and has taken | Lawrence. Mrs. Sage also said Mrs. Rita Keele, divorcee, was woman with them when Dillinger was shot to death last Sunday night when leaving a North. Side theatre but the police quote her as saying Mrs. Keele is also known Polly Hamilton and tipped off authorities. No Tip from Women The East Chicago police, how- said neither women had any- thing to do with the :Dillinger trap adding that an underwerld character had seen- Dillinger . mfl given this information: to &he Ra+ |, lice, P,Lre officials said Lhnt all L;\lk f a woman in red tpping “us off? is untrye. Both women {led.from the scene of the :shooting.. Mns. the her dress for apother. Mrs, Keele | declined to go back to the scene {home in Parge. It is not knowa whether either of the women. will claim the $15,000 reward. FUNERAL ARRANGEMENTS MGCORSEVILLE,; Indians, July. 25. | —John Dillinger's ' father brought. he body of his slain. desperadp son back to his home town.yes- y. The hody lay in the old family home while a steady:stream of curious passed by the casket. - The funeral serviees will be: held tomorrow. A plastic surgeon patched up |the dead bandit's face which: had been bullet shattered. A ERECTION OF GARA IS POSTPONED Lateness of the season and the unsettled condition of the long- shoremen’s strike has led to. the postponement until next year of the planned erection of a new building for the Juneau Motors, | ,,cmrdmg't,o Frank McCafferty. However, the fill being made in | ried forward. The proposed site is across the street from the pres- ent one. Next year, when the fill has had a year in which to settle, the building will be construeted on that foundation. = Previously, it was thought that it would be nes cessary to build a eoncrate: foundas tion. pinda Beer Now Enters the Age of Stee ern. war. ¢ - practically cities of steel. strong, light thant has ever known before. and durability, Long ago the navies of the world went on the steel standard. Wood- en ships could not survive a mod- Today's warships are Above—Light ‘steel tralm are rapidly changing all pre- vious theories of railroading. At right—Modern beer comes to us in steel barrels— sanitary, By LATTIMER SHAW B Prosperity raises her head tfrom the long sleep of de- pression, it is evident that American industry 15 en- tering inte & new and vastly more extended Age of Steel New alloys and new welding methods producing articles Of greatly jucreased cleanliness, strength, safety, beauty nd with only a fraction of the weight of 4he woeden anad iron products they replace, have already begun to put a vast number of our objects of daily use on a steel stan- tratns, mm hnnowcn in history, the nation-wide distribution and to & serving ot l!s product. ‘fhe modern uui High speed |titied t0—=g90q b brewing industiy. |trucks nave made the plunging|ss geod. Povived after the fong drought of |i.ams of brewery norses a mere ro-|the brewery. in ¢ mmm Way 1ts old | mantie memory. And now our best|re-bern brewing mmu 48 archaic |beer comes to us in steel barreis|out of 1is. long:. MM which sufficed when brew- |instead of the outmoded containers |equipped: to meet . vmnn& “ 'pwmty ‘ac- remembered by our fathers, A modern brewery is commnhu 'equipment and W 3 coudition & when it jeft (L y 10 S0P STH s in BEER PARLORS Pioneer Restaurant Man Réthrnk' 19’ Operate’ *Lukich Coumér Here 1! ‘Tom Radomch. one of the pio-| | Alagka Grill here for-many dyears, has returned here from Ketchikan over the lunch department of the Capitol Beer Parler, i was an— the other|nounced tpday. He assumes ahnrge‘ taday and will be ‘open lor this evening - Mr. Radonich wlu make a spe- cinlt,y of- Junches without- attempt - ing to serve dinners. “We "will feature a fine variety of luncheon dishés and ‘hope to give Juneau the finest place . of its kind da. the north,” he said today. ,~Goming . here in 1894, just 40 yeara:age, Mr. Radonich opened ‘a lunch counter in . a .corner.af:the old: Louvee,.. “T had Just 75, cents o Tay: name,” he reealled: today with-8 smile. ‘A ‘year:later:he.and Billy . Taylor opened the ‘Alaska Grill im & building -adjoining:-the Louvre, where: he onezalediifor i munber af.years, wi - 1o | Sage returned there after changing | 1ter be moved to "“3 bulldinz naw.: eccupied by the . Gastineau Grocery.-where for years:he ran {and later went. to her:'motheys|®hak Was:termed one.of the best restaurants: in-.Juneau. . He moved to Ketehikan several years: ago and was engaged in the restaurant business there for some time. A dew years: ago, :on .the advice of sioians to-get out in the:open, ‘turned to prespecting. He has tompletely regained. his health now 8nd,.is back . here: to: start:again ‘Ilure hfl dld 40 years ngo : Trouble in Stockyards of Chlcago Contlnues to” 'Be Threatén CHICAGO, II., Federal July 25. — The Government and State | joined hands today to preventua threatened spread of - the stock- yards' strike where 70,000 head of Gattle are:ravaged by thirst. and hundreds have:died in their: pens; 1Gasl Steffenson,- Becretary -of the Regional Labor Bosyd of NRA hur- Mx here) to work. for. arhitration, #nd the Sfates Attorney urged the loaders of:both perties to meet: him juMeanwhile the strike leaders hayve-Mewed @ waning of.a general m'h« Chicego -unjess their de- vwn MA 3 Brands ”% HOUBTON, Texas, July 25— gales lashed the Texas oanst - today; plling . great . combers setiding TESTHERES i AUDITOR LEAVES AVBTTaR—er LT Mrs. W. D. MoDermott, traveling 1Coast Com- yony and: the Ooast - Coal Amkulnm‘onme = phow: olllees . iiov Rotioes at K- B W |trict Engineer Daily Cross-word Puzzle « ACROSS L Dry and barren - 5. Satlated Solution of Yesterday’s Puzzle 13. Guldeway 1n a knitting machine 10. Horde todder [MTA[T[SPAOIRIE[SHAS|P|A] 21 Head cover-' e B BRI S A TIA e = ool 1 Pcrlpln{nglo iRle |T|EH Ill!lIllmnIE ;:. gux;":zfl': 2 n 0l O!n ma.fl PNAE lxcer;n[:r?uz: emas P|E D] electricity 1 Summ.r‘l’uy 20. Obliterate : néy American Indlan tribe Followed the scent Always . ‘Not any : so?mmng o0 3 Eu.r.n.. inner course Long narrow b Bowr e s 3 WM %y gl 5. Folinged. with solemn . Zealous wonder //// 7 fi. V flll%fl T nlllil é/ )amm 1] ,I d7//xam %lll%fllfll. . Fatuy f 5 y fruit ise men Pu!lx‘;o oht with othe: . Flower 5 -Bhabb" ; Dulllnk Ught . Parulnln. to the eountry Conmuum 48, remu- delt. 47. For o & 2 Infrequently Inbow met with 49. Exchanged 3. Pagan god 1 g 4. Abaudans 54 English school 5. Lake in New 55. Ward off % York siate 66, David ops / 8. Title ot pern / Mohammed 1. Little child 58. chked 8. Eple poem, 59. Roman em- . 9. Capable of perof . contradice 60. Waste allowe tion ance 10. Dropsy 63. Sun { 1L In a line 64 Harrtet B, " _ | 12. Small_an{mal Stowe char- of Symatra acter II;II/ B ana AEENEN W EE MEu WRIBHT & STOCK LOW BIDDER ON PETERSBURG J0B FAlRCHlLD PLANE OF ASA HERE FROM At 12:30 o'clock this afternoon the Fairchild sec@glane Pribilof, of the Alaska Southern Airways, pilot Alex ziolden, arrived here | from its Cordova base with Elmer | Higgens, Chief of the Scientific Its Bid of $76 793.30 for Division for the U. S. Bureau o Three-Mile Project Is Under Estimates With a bid of $76,793.30 Wright | and Stock, Inc., well known Alaska road builders, were the lower of two bids received today by the United States Bureau of Publi Roads, for construction of the Mountain Point section of Mitkof Highway, at Petersburg. The tender was -also $2369.50 below the en- gineering estimates of the bureau, it was snnounced by Acting Dis- Ivan Winsor, who opened the bids. Seims Spokane Company, with headquarters at Spokane, who re- cently bid low on the Douglas Highway project, was high this time with $80,630.30. The work consists of grading and surfacing about a three-mile sec- tion of Mitkof Highway. Clearing and grubbing of the project was done earlier this year by the Bureau of Public Roads on force aceount. It will be an eight-foot . standard road surfaced with gravel. ‘The excavation totals 39,000 cubic yards, unclassified, and a few hun- dreds years of structure excavation. The gravel to be used amounts to about 8,000 cubic yards. Acceptance of the lower bid has been recommended to Washington by Mr. Winsor, Work probably will be started about September 1. e | W. Faunce and K. A. Ffluflce.fli‘w | | ( | | A group of flatfishes or floun-| ders have two eyes on one side of the head and none on the other. Fisheries, W. A. Bartholomae, K.| passengers. The plane is to return this af- | terno¢n to Cordova where it is per- | manently based, according to A. B. Hayes, company manager. S SR APT. F. SVENSSON GOES SOUTH AFTER VISITING LIBBY CANNERIES HERE Capt. F. Svensson, of the Alaska |department of Libby, McNeill and |Libby, passed through Juneau terday on his way south from Kenai where he ‘looked over the been visiting all of the Libby canneries to the Westward and says the pack, particularly in the Bristol Bay district will exceed all expectations. — > — Shop w Junean — 30- Summer Special For Month of August Swedish Massage HURRY! 6 Treatments for $10.00 PHONE 10 Mrs. J M. Malila S S§TRAW HATS WHILE THEY LAST BIN'S Everythmg in Furmshmgs for Men” | 7/ AREnR| % A | tormey, if desired. aboard the steamer Aleutian yes- | cannery of the company. He has| Was Interested 4 12, : oy CORDOVA TODAY; i FINE || 1 11 U. S. DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE, WEATHER BUREAU The Weather (By the U. S. Weather Bureau) | Forecast for Juneau and vicinity, beginning at 4 p.m. July 25: Fair tonight and Thursday; gentle variable winds. | LOCAL DATA | Time Barometer Temp. Humidity Wind Velocity Weather { 4 pm. yest'y 30.16 8 36 s 1 Clear 4 am. today 30.13 58 ki Calm 0 Clear Noon today 30.07 4 39 8 2 Clear CABLE AND RADIO REPORTS YESTERDAY | TODAY Hignest 4pm. | Station temp. temp. | Barrow 56 46 Nome . 48 48 Bethel 54 54 | Fairbanks 76 2 Dawson . 80 80 St. Paul .. 54 52 Dutch Harbor 54 52 | Kodiak 2 72 | Cordova 2 72 Juneau . 80 8 i Sitka : 0 oot | Ketchikan 84 80 | Prince Rupert ... 86 86 Edmonton 72 72 | Seattle 80 8 Portland 84 82 San Francisco 68 64 Lowest 4a.m. 4a.m. Precip. 4am. temp. temp. velocity 24hirs. Weather 38 38 20 0 Cldy 46, 46 12 0 Cldy 46 46 o 02 Pt. Cldy 54 54 14 34 Cldy 56 58 10 0 Pt. Cldy 44 44 6 Trace Clear 44 46 0 28 Rain 54 .54 4 0 Pt. Cldy 52 52 4 0 Clear 55 56 L] L Clear 52 - — [ Clear 56 58 0 [ Clear 50 58 4 0 Clear 54 54 0 0 Cldy 58 58 8 0 Cldy 60 60 4 0 Cldy 56 56 6 0 Cldy Prince Rupert. the extreme Southwest. CALL FOR BIDS The City of Skagway, Alaska, is nstalling’ a complete new ‘water distribution’ system. Bids will ‘be ceceived at the office of the City Clerk at Skagway, Alaska, for the nstallation of this system in ac- rdance with the plans and speci- cations on file in the office of L. E. Reynoldson, City Clerk, at Skagway, Alaska. Such bids will be | received within two weeks from the | date hereof. Appiication should be | | made to the Olty Clerk at Bkag—; way, Alaska, for such plans and detailed information. Before ap-| plying for such information please | consult H. L. Faulkner, City At- Dated at Juneau, Alaska, July 1934. First publication, July 12, | Last pubhcatwn July 27, 1934. 1034, Watch and Jewelry Repairing at very reasouable rates . PAUL BLOEDHORN [ FRONT STREET I.L__ ALASKA WELDERS J. R. BILVA, Manager If Possible to Weld We Can Do It Willoughby, Near Femmer Dock PHONE 441 | i | K \ The baroylemc pressure is hizh throughou:, Ala.ska wxlh pnrny cloudy weather in most districts and clear weather from Cordova to The pressure is comparatively low on the Arctic coast' with thunderstorms last night in the central Interior, and is slightly below normal south of the Aleutian Islands with showers in Temperalure changes have been slight. 7N An Exacting Science In our sincere endeavor to fulfill all of the requirements of this essential occupation we are keeping constantly in step with the great advance- ments which are being made. These new discoveries and developments contribute to make our funeral service a more comforting tribute, L 4 The Charles W. Carter Mortuary PHONE 136-2 “The Last Service Is the Greatest Tribute” Miming Lecation soiices at Em- pire office. STRAWBE TELEPHONE 478 'VEGETABLES Fresh Each Morning CALIFORNIA GROCERY RRIES and Prompt Delivery that’s rolled up from t! ¢ PHONE 221 PERMANENT WAVES That Keep the Ends Always in Curl No more straggly ends—wit] est, most natural wave on mfi. It’s only $5. Peter Pan Beauty Shoppe SEOOND FLOOB.—TRIANGLE BLDG. this permanent he en And the soft- Evemun by Appointment

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