Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, MONDAY, AUGUST 13, 1934. um the Ba | charge of arrangements. The Hax», anof, piloted by Gene Meyring was LH SMITH DIES sent to \Vrangvl] at 1 '{D this after Miss Joyce and ge O'Brie the Juneau-Young Underta | Parlors accompanied the plane to ‘Wrangell | It is planned to send the body to Seattle on an early steamer and Death Comes to Owner of definite plans regarding funeral 5 . services and burial will be made Twin Glacier Camp on ,upon the arrival of Mrs. Smith in | to Wrangell the south. 1 Lived at Camp | r. Smith was 37 years of age| time of his death and had for the last five years at ier Camp on the Taku hich he had added many nents und comforts o moved to Cali-, th hh made herl in recent ! ar] u visited her plane sz,\t' Frid: mp on the tinue to Tel Nothing h on her' nditicn | of his| unusual ago to spend with him. | D - e time | PR | e L. Smith | SUFFERS BROKEN WRIST i s and | [ of her son’s death, Mr. Hay hiin t. Percy Redman, of Mrs 's yacht Stella Maris, left| Richard “Sonny” McRoberts, fell on the seaplane Baranof this|from a tree in the yard at his President Sees Vast Power Project On a high promentery overlooking the Columbin River, Presid cnt Franklin D. Rocsevelt viewcd ga:hed hillsides where will be con- ‘Ior Alaska which would permit t.ln( on smmuy Sunday and '[Monday of eath week from Sep- ‘tember 1 to November 12, giving Alaskans a total of 30 hunting ‘days None of the hunting stamps have been received here, it was said, and no intimation has been gnven when they would arrive. 'WILDFOWL STAY RS WERE IN 34 iz, o e e Alaska Unaffected by Mm-‘rles one of these stamps. or Change—Daily Limit | Do ~of 12 Birds Kept on |“Holiness” Preacher t Reported Recovered Only minor changes were made for the coming season on bag from Bites of Snake limits and maximum possession | S ! regulations for migratory wild fowl, | B¥LVA, Kansas, jAug. 13.—Vir- and these have little or no effect | W#lly: recovered from rattlesnake |on Alaska, it was made known to- | Dil€d, sustained in a DUN?'C demon !day, by H. W. Terhune, Executive ‘flr’u;:rmflés :tlo?rl:e"t: H’Jll_‘l_lll)fi' 1 officer of the Alaska Game Com- | Bréacher, e ster, exhiblted mission. 3 | himself before his followers yester- ) day as evi The bag limit on red heads, can- pm{ver o:vr:f&ce ;fe tc}:eed 3“(‘;“{“2 "‘“b“k’ lab"dt Scf?‘,‘p vy d““““" recovery, without medical aid, to Jrony FOBLE I o BOr iCAY. Oft"the greatest of all healers, Jecus these three species, only the can- | gt vasback is found in the Territory | Teester was in a bad way Thu:s- jendy ol e |day and Friday but would not The daily bag limit of 12, and | pon o doctor. Saturday his sw “ " BAG-LIMITS BN- 1 maximum possession number of .. o # gue began going down and h: . m'k':’ i“dea Jast year, re- |gus gple to swallw water. He mains unchanged. The dally bag | ;ppeared pormal lyesterday and limit on geese stands at four, Mr. today. Terhune said. % it BB ) Nothing has been heard relative | to the recommended " regulations SHI 1 been for some time visiting b and suffered a broken wrist. He structed the mammoth Grand Coulee pewer dam in Central Washin gion. In the picture, Frank A. Banks, Chief Engineer, is shown point- | erianons R I JonAAY son.' Mrs. Smith and Miss Mary s 13 years old and the son of ' ing out the location of the $63,000.000 concrete dam and power plan{, Mrs, Eleanor Roosevelt is sitting at her husband's left. (Associated S S O S Joyce, nurse, returned to Juneau|Mrs. R. MacRoberts. | Pross Priks) e - § Thousands of Chinese Are Facing Starvation . |OLSON SEIZES IMPORTED FISHTRAP AND SHANGHAI, China, Aug. 13. —Half a million Chinese are roported facing starvation as | the result of the most severe drought in Central China for | WHEEL SWISS LITTLE GIRLS sare looking very smart in these latest styles which are United States Cold Storage Holdings Are | Above Those of 1933, |Standard Oil Resists Big Demand of Bandits MUCKDEN, Manchuria, Aug. 13. 3 SEINE BOATS WASHINGTON, Aug. 13.—Cold storage holdings of fishery products in the United States on July 15 were 52 per cent ‘more than one year ago and six per cent above —Storage tanks belonging to the Standard Qil Company of New York, at Nanchang, were at- tacked by bandits following a de- mand . foi $10000 The raiders so simple and to make. inexpensive more than half a century. were beaten off. They are virtually without food and water. The Nanking Gov- crnnicnt believes it will be un- able to supply any succor, l‘ v e | he average past five years the United States Bureau of Fisheries | TR |Claims Herbert Hoover | | Started Groundwork for Present NRA Schedules SIMPLICITY |5¢ PATTERNS GUARANTEED PERFECT Thirteen Persons Arrested for Alleged Violations of Fisheries Law RETURNS TO HOME | AFTER VISIT HERE | Three seine hboats and a fish | |trap were seized last week in the | Ketchikan area by Warden Clar- Mrs. W. Hitchings, aunt of Mrs. ted States Bureau Hazel James Ferguson, who has been visiting here with her niece r some time, left on the Princess | Charlotte for her home in Cali- | fornia. 55c Ib. MAKES ALASKA, YUKON TRIE (A PRiNeE Ghogas! JOHNSONBURG, N. J., Aug. 13. [ J ® ] | — Herbert Hoover has received I N ) ) 3 Paul .H. Manz, ureasurer of the Manz Corporation, printers, en-|a] vers and electrotypers of Chi-| is a passenger on the Prince accompanied of NRA. Dr. W. D. Ennis, head of the Department of Economics | of Engineering at the Stevens In- | stitute of Technology, told the en- " gineers at the summer camp here, the former President’s Trade Prac- | credit for some founcation work Leader Department Store at local he: Tl United States| yyMES NOLAN COMMITTED received the G ze for Skagway, George Brothers by Mrs. Manz. 3 They will go down the river to Dawson, returning boats ‘seized | 10 PogrLany SAN"ARWM‘Nces Conference laid some of the south on a later Canadian National e Nakat Packi .rl 1 groimawark War e NRA, Hrst as T Lo oo ereaesoeee ey vty Rt SRS TS F Rk steamer. The Manz Corporation he other two were James Nolan, resident of Wran- | Secretary of Commerce and then T e is one of the largest firms of its nd oper who came here a short time|as the Nation's Chief Executive. oL A R LEAVE HOSPITAL kind in the Middle West, employ- ing more than 700 persons. | R BER, “870 : Amocat btrawberry Presenes f In cans, No. 2 size .... At GARNICK’S, Phone 174 v B 20, was Saturday adjudged insane | : n_siream | following an examination before a| months in Tombstone Bay, Portland| jury in the United States Com- | Canal. The former has five and |missioner's Court. He was com-| Mrs. John Martin and baby left he latter four me: 1. Fines | mitted to Morningside Sanitarium'St. Ann’s Hospital for their home ere imposed of $375 the Ulloa | by Judge J. F. Mullen. this morning. and crew, and $300 on the Herbert | — B. and The T-623, with four men aboard, | was seized Saturday in Fillmore, Inlet, Portland C’Hlal Thcy \verel— to have United States Cemmissioner's- Court at Ketchikan The Nakat trap was seized on' md that it was located and George Bros. An official survey of 3,305 rur: homes in a typical North Caralin: county revealed 31 log hecuses. 4 | | | | | | | A H g8 E g 5 2 B - 5 & 3 T i w © site not open = to l‘uhlng I was sed by Warden |Olson and a bureau watchman | l!lllllllmlllilII]HIIIHIII!III == iplaced in charge pending action the United States Attorney's It is expected condemna- (tion proceedings will be started | against' the trap in a few days. | - e - _ s Austrian Nazis in ! Germany Deported [ to Working Camps BERLIN, Aug. 13.—Orders have | been issued for transportation: of 6,500 members of the Austrian Nazi Legion, now in Germany, to i labor camps in East Prussia and another 4,500 to Pomerania and | NOW OPEN! New Midget Lunch 3.2 ‘Get Fish-eye View NUREMBURG, Germany. | fish-eye perspective will be possi- ble of the first open-air aquarjum in Germany, being built by the Nuremburg Natural History So- ciety. The pond will have a glass wall on one side with a misco- scope available. ean of American Playwrights, Passes .. ) Away in East, Sunday NEW YORK, Aug. 13.—Augustus homas, aged 77 years, dean. of merican playwrights, died as a esult of apoplexy at the suburban Clarkstown Country Club, his home, Sunday FOR AN OWL CAB AND A BRAND NEW PONTIAC STRAIGHT 8 SEDAN WILL BE AT YOUR l DQOR IN A “JIFFY!” Never Sleep! PHONE ROY THOMAS —106— MACK MAGORTY —WATCH for the cars with the GREEN TOP— Ericson Building on Lower Front Street @ HOT OR COLD LUNCHES @ SPECIAL STEAKS AND CHOPS @ SANDWICHES @ OPEN FROM 8 TO 8 DAILY @ PABST BLUE RIBBON BEER (exclusively) @ MODERATE PRICES — QUICK SERVICE MIDGET LUNCH i TOM and MARIE STURGE wmlIIIIIIIIIIllIlIIIIIII||IIIIllIIIlIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlllllllllHllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllfl “gmmmnm|||ul||||m||mu|nuuummu|||i|mmnum|lm||||||mu|mnm||m||||m||m|mm||||||||||u|||umm|uuu| pH o Youssoupofl Home Is Now a Museum MOSOW-—The Youssonpoff man- sion here, formerly the home 'of -the prince who killed Rasputin, the Czarist monk, is being turned into a public museum. The house was built in the 17th century and presented to the Youssoupoffs by Peter II in 1827. —————— MAKES TRIP SOUTH qmmmmhn i . Miss V. Franz, nurse at the Government Hospital left on the Princess Charlotte for a'short trip outside. OO0 00