The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, August 20, 1934, Page 2

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Fall Clear.ance on Curtains and Draperies We are offering for a few days only a 20 per cent reduction on all Curtains, Cretonnes,-Scrims and Draperies RUFFLED CURTAINS 85c per pair and up RUFFLED COTTAGE SETS from 60c per pair and up NET AND MESH PA! CURTAI from $1.50 per pair and up PR ~\ A large assortment of CRETONNES from 20c and up SILK DRAPERY DAMASKS from 75¢ and up MONKS CLOTH in colors or natural 85c to $1.25 per yard CURTAIN SCRIMS, MARQUISETTES and NETS in white, ecru and colors All at 20% off regular price NEW FALL MERCHANDISE ARRIVIN ON EVERY BOAT [ ] [ ] B. M. Behrends Co.,Inc. “Juneau’s Leading Department Store” FORD BUYS FOSTER BlRTHPLACE MINISTER 5 IN VERY BAD, | KIDNAP TALEl None of His flock Anxious| to Welcome Him Back into Fold GOLDSBORO, North Carolina. Aug. 20.—No followers of the Rev. R. H. Askew are ready to welcome him back, not believing the min- ister was kidnaped. He is now in Nashville, Tenn., where he claims he was released by his abductors after being taken for a ride around the country, relieved of $40 of the church’s money with which he was to purchase bricks and his clothes taken away. “NERVOUS BREAKDOWN" NASHVILLE, Tenn., Aug. 20— The asuthorities heére expressed doubt that the Rev. Askew was kidnaped. The minister said Mildred Smith Chief blye: chaser of the mption is pretty Mildred Smulh “above, bruxpeue co-ed at Washipgun State college, Pullman, Wash., who been awarded the title of “Smile Queen of America”. . was selected in a nation-wide contest conducted by a tooth- m cmpnny lrnm # fleld ¢ 85,000 American ‘nrh Miss A touch of real going to sea was gxperienced by the Naval Aircraft squadrons on the recent flight {o rom Jupeau to Cordova, according | Lieut. Commander J. M. Shoe- Wr Wing Commander in chnrgc M the fight. | ©Onpe of the last planes to leau Junean, 7-P-2 was forced down in Gulf of Alaska several miles | children to entertain. belnw Yy,kutat when a wing gaso- | their vacations and helps them to line tnnk vent line worked loose, | acquire poise in entertaining their | and after several improvised ¢ pairs the engines quit entirely. For- I || was normal. by the efficient naval mechanics in 20 minutes when the plane took . off and proceeded along the coast. ‘The flight of the first nine planes to Cordova was uneventful. Low ,clouds were encountered west of Malespina Glacier, but the hori- zontal visibility continued fair and the planes landed at Cordova at /6 o'clock in the evening, mooring l | along the Cordova waterfront. The personnel went aboard the tenders Avocet and Swan. | Excellent Time Plangs 7-P-2 and 7-P-3, which had been delayed leaving Juneau when engine trouble developed in 7-P-1 bhefore the takeoff, left here forty minutes after the first squad- ron. They excellent time out through Icy Straits and past Cape Spencgr. After the latter point, they ed to an altitude of 3,000 feet to take advantage of a follow- Lng wind at that altitude. The wipd tion was determnied by sarvlflon of. the cloud formation. They continued along the majestic Fairweather mountains at a good clip. It was after passing Lituya Bay thiat the men in T-P-2 noticed that j|@ Wing gasoline tank vent line had worked loosé and was dangling be- {low the upper wing. This was fish- |ed into thé Hull by a mechanic jand all was thought to be serene €xcept that somie gasoline was leak- ing out of the wing tank. Being pumped up Into the wing tank from the hull by an engine- driven fubl puinp, was completely empty. ¢ Aft In’ Hull ‘Well trained for any emergency, ‘| the mechasdics -who were aft in the hull, manned the hand fuel pu.ips promptly dnd ‘both ‘engines picked up agdln ds soon as the empty gravity tank’ received some fuel from the hull. It Wwas thought! that the plahe could complete the flight to Cordové by continued hihd pumping, but nevertheless, it utat Bay abduction was not imagination but m s Ry Henry Ford paused to smile at the steps of the birthp! "P'i‘* wing vent line, admitted he might have had i WSRO CONE BACEEL 2 00 R . which he parchased ..gl"’ aiid Admital A. W. Johnson, aboard “nervous breakdown. pic-| e moved to Ford's museum in Dearborn, Mich. In the m ‘above, |tHé Wright, was riotilied. One hotel clerk identified a %ft to right, are R. F. Leonard, a Ford employe; Ford; T vas Gl b B¥ i beicw ture of Askew as that of 8 man| gith whom Ford negotiated; and the Rev. A. Yakiitat that thé engines finall who spent last Friday night as a| &t John the Baptist church. QUi and B0 il y guest of the hotel. Askew reported | ehurch, (Associated Press Photo) s traini; ear to police headguarters Bnlurdxg P icmm mthflh hh' h:tmm prote & upon the arrival of T. H. Hutch-| Mr. Koski has made no E; ol landing told ———— ings. his successor, on the Aleutian. | nouncement of his plans for the plane and taking off once ¢ Mr. Hutehings has been with the |future. He has been with Frye- {more. g 9 > Bruhn for many years and has =P-1, which was hoisted aboard A T. KOSKI RESIGNS company for a number of years \Brian (o mony wears and Bos),, P anted abonrd and has been manager of various Frye-Bruhn branch markets in Se- AS FRYE-BRUHN MGR. i mmhonotl\'rxuu"ue | of manager of | Temporarily, Mr. and Mrs. Hutch- %}M of Frye-Bruhn m 'n announced today |Hotel stomers. ————— — SEVERE COLD Hospital with a sevére cold. h Albert Napoles, Alaska Jungau ings are staying at the Zynda | miner, is a patient at St. Ann's and put overboard at Yaky- Navy Plane Forced Down On Gulf During Recent Flight from ]uneau to W Wostward |an extra cooking will not harm it. i J i | HELPS FOR HOUSEWIVES Summer is a good time for the It brightens guests. If the party food is simple there tunately the water was zeasonably‘wm be less difficulty in carrying calm and the dead stick landing | dishes. A large table set on, the Repairs were affected | lawn can be used to serve from. Frequently the guest list contains the names of many children, but the task of serving them must be handled by a few adults. In that case it may be advisable to have the boys wait on the table for the first course and let the girls serve the ice cream and cake. Always arrange an outdoor party so it may be t indoors quick- ly in case of ra OR1GINAL 5ii:DGE PRIZES Instead of buying odds and ends to use as bridge prizes,.get a loose- leaf notebook, type or write our your recipes which your friends have been interested in, add a few little hints you have found useful in the running of your house and give these books as prizes, - FILLING OR SUGAR COOKIES Peanut butter, thinned with but- ter and a little cream, makes a good filling ' for sugar cookies. Arrange after cookies are baked. COOKING AIDS If the sugar supply is low and a ,sweetening is needed for eold beverages, make a syrup by boil- ing sugar and water. Less sugar is required this way. If your cake frosting is too soft. Half{ Melting chocolate is sometimes | way between Lituye and Yakutat{a messy and awkward job. Try Blyu, the engines sputtered and|putting the chocolate on a piece .jone stopped. This meant that onelof waxed paper of thé wing tanks, from whichimelt by putting i flows ntd theé engine after]of a boiling tea kettle. and letting it t over the top The choco- late will come off the paper quite easily. Nuts can be ‘“chopped” for nut cookies by placing them in cloth and rolling them with a roll- ing pin. For a summer afternoon lawn party, try to have food that looks —as well as tastes—cool and re- freshing. Onrange, lemon or rasp- berry ice served with angel food or light sponge cake answer these requirements. If beverages are being served, leave the bottles in a bucket of ice until served. Frosted orange juice makes a good summer drink, and an attrac- tive idea for a lawn party is to have a big bowl in the: center of pilot and mechan.!one of your serving tables filled 0 the successful test|with big cherries, plums or other n the Gul, remn-mgi{ruit in season. -, EVERETT NOWELL BETURNS IBIGDH SINESS TRIP TO tat Bay, from Where it was flown | Everett Nowell, wholesale repre- Cordova, with Admiral Johnson | sentative, returned to his head- board, 2o rejoin the other planes, | quarters in Juneau after a busi- ——be ness trip t6 the cities of South- east Alaska. jand Sitka. OVER WEEKEND Over thi ne Meyring, pilet, and an, mechanic, was kept air almost constantly on passenger flights. evening at 5 o'clock it left for Ket- chikan with L. G. Wingard, W C. Arnold, H. G McCain and H. T. Jewell as passengers of | it stayed Saturday night, (uing to Ketchikan Sunday morn- | ing Fiom Ketchikan the Barano! (made a special flight to Rose In- let and returned to Ketchikan. It left there for Juneau at 12:30 o'- clock Sunday afternoon. Passengers returning here were L. G. Win- gard, of the U. S. Bureau of Fisl jeries and C. L. Canaday, Se | Manager for the Continental Can | Company, from Ketchikan and Tom | Scott from Petersburg. The Baranof arrived in Juncau 3 o'clock Sunday afternoon and ft soon afterwards on a charter {trip to Sitka with G. B. Rice, |son and supplies from Rice 3 lAhlch for the Pioneer's Hol | Again réturning here at 6:30 clock last evening, the plane left at once for a round trip to Taku {Harbor with Mr. and Mrs. R. J McKanra. Kruzof Flights Yesterday at 1 o'clock the ASA seaplane Kruzof, pilot M y Stuart, left on a round trip to Sitka for Rice and Ahlers Com- pany returning to Juneau by way of Todd. From Todd it made a tour of the Peril Straits P 3 Company traps for Nick Bez and came from there to Juneau. o'~ Kruzof left here for Todd, Tena It is due back in neau late this afternoon or e ing. Nick Bez is expected to ar- rive here on the Kruzof when returns. [MAHONEY AND JAMES M’CLOSKEY LEAVING | FOR SOUTH TONIGHT| patient in custody, United States Marshal William T. Mahoney will eave here this evening on motorship Northland. James M Closkey, local Federal Jailer, will accompany him as a guard. Mr. McCloskey has been in i health for sometime. While he is in Portland he will go through nh(‘ Coffey clinic. Marshal Mahoney is taking out Dewey Sharp, narcotics addict, to be turned over and James Nolan, insane patient, for Morningside Sanitarium. During Mr. McCloskey's absence, Bill Childs will he acting jailer, and John Martin, Douglas, has been appointed as guard replacing Childs. SHORTRIDGE IS HELD ON ROBBERY CHARGE! Charged with robbery, Earl Short- ridge was arrested Saturday by Federal officers. He was to have been arraigned before Judge J. F. Mullen in the United States Com- | missioner’s Court today. Shortridge is accused of having BARANUF MAKES MANY FLIGHTS! On . Saturday This morning at 8 o'clock the! | With one prisoner and an insane | to Washington | State authorities on an old charge, | the weekend the seaplane Alaska Southern Fog de-| tained the plane in Wrangell where | contin- | | the | | | | | | i | i | stolen $110 from Mrs. Willie James | in a Saturday morning. Mr. and Mrs. James had just returned here from working in a cannery in this vicinity and had their summer’s wages on their per- sons. Shortridge is said to have | accompanied them to a room and snatched the woman's purse out of | her pocket and ran. She reported local rooming house em‘lyi l | ! the case to the United States At-! rant was issued for Shortridge. e AIRWAYS OFFICIALS DUE HERE SHORTLY; ENROUTE TO NORTH Lyman S. Peck, Vice-President and General Manager of the Pa- cific-Alaska Airways, and Robert Q. Thach, Vice-President and Gen- eral Attorney for the Pan-American Airways, with headquarters in New York City, are expected to arrive here this week enroute to Fair- banks. They” will stop over here two or three days with Gov. Troy relative to matters relating to air transportation developments. The two officials will also meet Harrlee Branch, Second Assistant Postmaster General when he ar- rives here. He is due to leave Seattle on the Fisheries hoat Pen- guin next Saturday and to arrive here the following Wednesday. - eee —— MRS. STANLEY JORGENSEN GOES SQUTH FOR VACATION Mrs. Stanley Jorgensen and small daughter, Jill, are passengers on the steamer Prince Rupert for Van- couver, enroute to Billings, Mont., cll' ALASKA TOWNS|to visit Mrs. Jorgensen's parents. They will return to their home in Fairbanks late this fall. Mrs. Jorgensen was met here by local relatives and friends who visited with her aboard the steamer while it was in port. ‘|torney later Saturday and a war-| U. S. DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE, WEATHER BUREAU The Weather (By the U. S. Weather Burean) Forecast for Juneau and vicinity, beginning at 4 p.m., August 20: Showers tonight, Tuesday cloudy; gentle variable winds. LOCAL DATA Time Barometer Temp. Humidity Wind Velocity Weather 4 pm. yest'y 30.13 56 922 Nw 3 Rain 4 am. today 30.28 53 94 SE 5 Rain Noon today 3037 54 93 s 8 Rain 4 CABLE AND RADIO REPORTS YESTERDAY | TODAY Highest 4p.m. | Lowest4a.m. 4am. Precip. 4am. Statlon temp. temp. | temp. temp. velocity Zihrs WealheP Bafrow 36 32 32 12 Cldy Nome | 38 40 4 (] Clear Bethel 40 40 . 4 0 Clear Fairbanks 42 42 4 28 Cldy Dawson L 40 42 6 .10 Cldy St. Paul 48 52 10 01 Pt. Cldy Duteh Harbor 46 48 0 Trace Cldy Kodiak 52 52 4 Trace Ran Cordova 52 52 bl e Rain Juncau 53 53 5 22 Rain Sitka 50 - 0 60 Cldy Ketchikan i 54 54 0 .02 Cldy Prince Rupert ... 62 60 54 56 4 10 Clidy Edmoaion % 64 46 48 6 02 Clear Seattle 80 80 58 58 4 0 Cldy Portland 84 84 60 60 4 0 Cldy San Francisco 64 62 58 58 4 0 Cldy 4 The barometric pressure is slightly below normal in southern Bering Sea and central Canada, ng in the Aleutian Islands and rising elsewhere, with light showers in southern Bering Sea and rain in Eastern Alasa. The pressure is moderately high over the remainder of Alaska and southward with clear weather in the west- ern Interior and cloudy weather elsewhere with rain in Temperatures have fallen in ed but little in other districts. ~ the Gulf. the Aleutian Islands and have chang- CANNING NEEDS Jar Rings &ubbers Seals—Tops—Mason and Economy Jars and Jelly Glasses ORDER YOUR NEEDS NOW'! CALIFORNIA GROCERY TELEPHONE 478 Prompt Delivery rrrrrrrrrrrrrea) Your DOCTOR WHY PRESCRIPTIONS MUST BE FILLED ACCURATELY Your dector: will answer ycu with “Prescriptions must be filled accur- ately (the right ingredients in the specified amounts) in crder to meet the exact requirements of each case.” Accurate compounding at Harry Race’s is your assurance that you will receive EXACTLY what your doctor ordered for you. ACCURATE PRESCRIP- TION FILLING IS YOUR DOCTOR’S AND YOUR BEST FRIEND HARRY RACE, Druggist PRESCRIPTION SPECIALISTS Phone 25 Free Delivery THE PARIS INN (On Glacier Highway) SMOKY'S PARIS INN TRIO EVERY NIGHT AT 10:00 (Hear 'Em Do “The Flying Trapeze”) ' FRIED CHICKEN — PIT BARBEQUE — BEER — WINE Process Served Phone 2152 S S Confidential Investigations Alaska Detective Agency WM. FEERO, Manager Room 1, Shattuck Bulldmg . Box 968 LUMBER Juneau Lumber Mills, Inc. ‘We carry ah introduced anto the new colors at the recent shows. Connors Motor Co., Inc. Old Papers for Sale at Empire Office ”» 4

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