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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, TUESDAY, AUGUST 28, 1934 PI.ANE CRASHES DOUGLA z Vance Earns $1,000 for Each glm|umnmmmmuumnmmu|m|m|mmmm|uuu||um|mnmm||||||u|unm|mmu||||mmnmunm|mmnmmmmmmmmn - WH”.E LANDING | NEWS Victory; Doesn’t Recommend | Game as Profession Though . LAST EVENING G000000000000050000000000000000000 8 $i I BARprw b GBE ; 3 e | OLD-TIME RESIDENT Pilot H. A. MacDionald and IS HERE FOR VISIT ! Ja(‘.k Harlin T)nharmed Mrs. Elvina Morrow, who resided . })y'Duckingin Channel here with her husband some 25 years ago, is stopping over in Doug- las for a few days’ visit to review the scenes of former days. She is ¢ McKibhin in Juneau sunday ev-|°D @ round trip rr_om her present eninz, Pilot ‘Howard. A, MacDon- home in San Francisco. Mrs. Mor- ald crashed. Capt, Wilism Strong's row is the daughter of Mr. and two-place ' DeHaviland ' Moth sea- | MrS: A- L. Anderson, who were also plane in Juneau harbor at 6:45 e S L o'clock last night According to witn Mac- Donald came up the channel to- ward J , made a steep bank and head in fast for the air- plane flcat near the Al Ju- neau rock dump. No sooner had his pontoons ctruck the water than the plane skidded, heeled over to the left side, dipped the lower wing intc the water and looped a somersault on its nose to crash bottom-side up in the water, with the wings o crumpled up against the fuselage. the space of a minute or so, Just 24 hours and 15 minutes af- ter his wedding to Miss Florence IHIIIlmflllflllmmlflillmHIIImIIIIIIIIIIHIHllfilllllllllIIIIHIMIIIHIHHHIHIIIIIIIHMHHIIIIIIIIIII"IIIIll|IIIHIIIIIIIHHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII||||IIIHIIII|I|IIIIIIIIHIHIIHIHIIIIIIIIIHIHIIIIIIIIIIIINIIIIIIIH!IIIHIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIlllIIIIIIIIlIIIIIIIIIIIIHII||I||||IIIIIIlIIIIIHIIIHIIHHIIHNIHl!lmlIIIIIIIIIlI||IIl!lllllllllfifillfllfllfl"llmlmflmmfllllIIIIIIIII!I“IHIHIIII!|IIH||IIIIII|HII1|HI e VISITING PARENTS Miss Impi Aalto, accompanied by | her sister, Mrs. H. C. Helmes, ar- rived here on the Aliska for a brief stay with their parents, Mx'.‘ and Mrs. August Azlto. Miss Aalto | 1as been attending summer schobl at Bellingham and will resume her | teaching at Petersburg next week. Mrs. Helmes is on a trip from Los Angeles. B NORCO BRINGS FREIGHT OLIZEUM onle thought that MacDonald had been killed, but scon they :a\\-nq,:f:; gu";:'l"y“’}fd here a’;"“% 1 a head pop up besi R R AR LaIncon BRs Gk b il pop e oo fon | charged n tons of freight for . followed by another, then Mac-| Donald and his passenger, Jack | °CAl merchants. Harlin, of Taku River Camp, B RS ETE | climbed on the pontoons of the NEW BARBER IN DOUGLAS submerged plane where they perch- Frrrneas % ed until they were taken off by| Floyd Hunnicutt is the new pro- the gasbdat M1817, owned by J. R.| i prietor of the local barber shop on ¢ Elliott. :Fer)xv Way, having made a deal The moment that the plane|With Fred Andres, owner, for the “ * M Al e it, | business. Mr. Hunnicutt is a re- ARTH[R D! ‘ZYY v AN( E r. ENi jcent arrival from the south. X }un\thnmeE h(?‘t‘ly h:-.?o;:?e }32: Sl:g;t- pibadadai o5 1 Ry, JAMES B. RESUON 1womcn weren't supposed to go to coming into the harbor which| GOING TQ INTERIOR ,ST. LOUIS, Aug. 28. — Arthur (pall games. If they did, they could have reached the plane first| - ‘Dazzy’ Vauw.-u baseball pitcher, | would see something or hear sqme- pasied it up and continued on to| Miss Margaret Abrahamson who DOV With the St. Louis Cardinals,|thing during the game that they A the City Float. lis visiting here, and Miss Vlslm“vhq h».\sv p:fmnd-owr 3200,?00 In | weren't supposed to. Now there A rope was tied to the planc‘Lundell will leave the latter part e 40 ye‘m? ‘thu\wh nis Amm]-- afe nearly e many. woiien at {e from the gasboat and with the'of the week for Anchorage where "':,/ ,w th”,m b .sr?x:xu»round b"“’l gaiies; a8 Jnbn, e '.'he pliyert * aviator and his passenger aboard,|they will teach this winter. Miss THE f“f’“‘ Spob la.wter mf‘fl:hflw to conform to stricter league * Mr. Elliott towed the plane to its|Violet Johnson is also expecting | 2nYoRe iS¢ does o |ccmjx}mond riles because of them. float. to leave in the near' fiture fdy i, Procesion fo smgll boys W4 Hfgsee Fo Do New.. Neither MacDonald nor Harlin|College where she will enroll as a | n'e &7 OPPortunily to do some-| “The automobile, the radio and was injured, and except for thv‘studem e plee. the movies have taken many away * shock of their sudden immersoin | dglie e i “It's too great a gamble,” says from the ball games, and so has and the cold water soaking which| MRS. KATHRYN GALEN TO the Dazzler, who has been paid golf. But the main reason for the he; . over $1,000 for every game he has low attendance is the obvious rea- S ey gilipred o 1 P ‘:,'(';:‘A;:;m'\""‘]'i’“\";m won. “I just happened to be lucky. son that money is still scarce. If MacDonald had taken his bridoi . But most of the men who give 3‘«1r|.lxa\‘:v an unumffl attraction, their best years to it, come out theyll still take their last dollar ! with nothing. In dlmost every oth- and go to see it. Look at that last er profession, even if you're just \me 205~ series in New York fair, your earnings increase as you | for exam |grow older. In baseball, they Vance st ance Company in the Terri- | oraase, and only the top-potch Cardinals w even in the majors, make enough in the cur v A.J. DIMOND | Your Delegate from Alaska to Congress WILL SPEAK AT THE COLISEUM THEATRE s11 OUL to Capt. Strong's trading DOst! Nrs Kathryn L. Galen, well at Tulsequah, B. C., earlier in the ynown resident of Alaska, formerly afternoon, and on the return pick- |of Cordova, and now traveling 191)‘-; ed up Harlin. [resentative of the New York Life It is thought that the plane is pyquy, past repairing, as the salt water ory is a recent arrival from Ket- will add to the damage already|chikan by way of Pe . ill hes hopes that the 1 overtake the Giants fight for the Na- tersburg and ; ke it worth wt tional league pennant. “I'd like to done to the warped and twisted! > i v oo P R e s By o e B ey M Sings ang ruswff 20| Wrangell. Mrs. Galen is located | At the end of this season, Vance |end my career in the world series,” S at the Gastineau Hotel and expects | plans to return to his hotel he said. ag - This morning Pilot Murray Stuart ¢, make Juneau her took MacDonald out to Tulsequah headquarters. in the amphibian biplane Kruzof,! siioe3 __ | doubtful if he w and Pilot Gene Meyring of the Al- '---,-m,--------,---,fl et s AT T FIRST ALASKA TRIP, aska Southern Airways dismantled azzy Looks Back PLANS TO RETU | the wrecked plane after it had BIG D4 VCF ; In the past decade, Vance has| been hoisted on the float by the P U ey > udied the game, watched the| Ellen H. Doughty, of Westfield, permanent | Homosassa Springs, Fla., and it is| — e — be back in the | CLUBWOMAN ENJOYS Highway, B. P. R. vessel. by Sk attitude of the players and the New Jersey, National Service Di-‘ Brobably tha osily portions of the AGLES’ HALL public change toward it. Here|rector of Chares Corporation and - plane which can be used again 3 ‘are a few of his observations: formerly head of the fashion de- ® are the motor, propeller and pon- Wedm-sday nght | ATTITUDE OF PLAYERS :|partment of Butterick Fashions, is toons, as the wings are crumpled Au t 2() playing profes-|a round trip passenger on the Al- and the fuselage warped and wa- gus {sional ball in the old Nebraska aska, delighted with her vacation tersoaked. . | state League, it was a common | trip north. b L EEN PGPP.V Music lthing to go into the manager's| Miss Doughty is a member of Mrs. L. H. Smith and infant son Small Admission {Toom at three or four o'clock in|the Business and Professional Wo- were to leave St. Ann's Hospital Ev bod . jthe morning and find half the!men's Club of Allentown, Pa., and ! for their home at the Juneau Dairy | wveryboay Invited ‘mam in there playing cards. And|while she was in Juneau met a today. PO Y i d they'd still be wearing the uni-|number of members of the local ;‘ ————————— et forrs they had on the day before.|organization. She is already plan- 1 SALARIES: “The high =ala.r'o.{ning a return trip to Alaska next A have brought an entirely different | summer. . Daily Cross-word P le : : g a O oC al y ross wor uzz | type of player into the game. Whm. s 1 K S I broke in, you couldn't interest a!| MISS EDlTH YOUNG ON L ACEs Solution of Yestetday's Puzzle, 17. Sanguinary {college graduate in a baseball job| ~WAY TO SEATTLE AFTER . 3 s0 . ::’r:mu jat $1,000 a year. But now he can TWOQ MONTHS VISIT HERE 4 Odor | make more money playing ball| 1 INTID ' ~ ~ 7, 19. About 3 3 | 3 ) / 3 Wi B Ae. ;e |than doing anything else. Every-|. Miss Edith Young, daughter of UNDER THE AUSPICES OF THE WOMEN'S g “,m,\‘»r tree victory jone’'s attitude toward the gamn Mrs. Stella Young, left on the . ¥ P 21. Smells S o i " 14 |changed with the high salaries.|Princess Louise for Seattle tospend N . o 45 Very w 2. Diblical tower | Basehall then became the most im- |the winter with her grandmother, DEMOLRAT[C CLUB OF JUNEAU i7. Persim who Is " RAthah et | portant thing to the plavers, and|Mrs. H. D. MacLeod and attend § f ‘hehind. the ever since they've been working at|school there. She visited with her ’ . i chnm“ he s {it, just like at any other px'a:es-ianher for two months this sum- A5 Muslem) chats sion.” | mer. ~ .20 Youand 1 ®. The widow's | CATERING TO WOMEN: “To RN THE GENERAL PUBLIC IS INVITED 21 Siberian river [A] 81 Portable bea |day the clubowners cater to the| NATURE'S HEALTH TREASURE 3 ' 47 24, Marked by mflmng 33. Lock of hair | women. They have ladies’ Days,| Soap Lake Mineral Baths. Nu- - flf:;:lrle; ‘I,v‘n- N1 L [EBMAITERV] . 'l'ogfi: h:l’l"‘d‘ |letting the women in free in the|Way Massage. Drugless Institute, tone ma EB B.WB 18, o‘! \hopc that theyll bring their men —adv. 35 Pooaicurt s Baaf9o% . lon Sundays. And I guess it's a‘ AR T B T s ° ° fo7 the ordl- 44. Continent: DOWN 45. Halt |good idea. But in the early 1920s| Daily Empire Want Ads Pay! pasy mindito abbr, 1. Turn to the :g g:lm'lcot i 38, Death notice 31 Yene goats left o adae | | y 3¢ Incline the 50, Particle 2. Employ 48. Babylonian o head 51. Dried grass 3. In that case ar god o . . v ‘00l t s 3 Wocars 39, Mineral | rll!l 1 c:rmfiea 6. Unit; 52, Tennis point | S T SR Y nmel v | "'-J - egative Weep vitently 53, Ong witn 8. Like stroke | ST RA FO R D | F f ‘ e & Bih .:,...’ R l ree ferries between Juneau and Douglas ‘e of disease 10. Haul 55. Indian | , Temith . Came upon 1L Some mulberry | | Free bus leaves Laughlin’s, Auk Bay, 7:15 p.m. One trip around Loop Road r Him! xovaRe ////”’. W fl. H‘/ I NN dEMEN l [ [ -1 1 11 VA"1 || Covnex' THIRD £\SENECA