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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, THURSDAY, AUGUST 30, 1934. S By BILLE DE BECK_ PLANE NEWS 17 PASSENBERS BARNEY GOOGLE AND SPARK PLUG o B { WHUT ? NO FUR=-HATS i OK\T, STEVE, THE Fo? 0 »o IF THEIR HEARTS \E | ! LRETLE RASCALIS CALM (AR e e ARE SETYON GH*E.N? R e kiS00 08 mornin. the | flN NURTHLABB W AS A CUCUMBER _.PSST- o AS WELL MAKE UP "COON-SKINIUHATS HEARN Eg‘&"‘é WHERE gt ot g | VA BETTER NOT (= YORE MIND THET OKAVL_ _ TEL\.O‘ S 4 ELONG — B iibt, Crer ring, Digyd H MENTION NOTHIN’ MORE wo), THEM YOUNG-UNS GO DOWN TO A ~rH|Ng 8 Jarman, mechanic, leit here for G I- ABOUT A FUR-PIECE IS GONER THE VILLAGE AN’ Berner's Bay with H. DeWitt Smith 3 ECR'LUCY-oOR FUR HATS 22 _BELLER AN’ C. DeWitt Smith, Harry Townsend Fog HEM N HAW. - 1T 73 SULL "ROUN" and n Banfield, The pas- RTA UPSETS HIM-_ = sei i the plane there and KETCHIKAN, Alasks, Aug. 30.— the anof returned to Juneau Motorship Northland docked here N artiving here at 6 o'clock at 2 o'clock this afterfoon from Seattle and safl§ early this evening The plane left half an hour later for Gastineau Channel ports. for Hood Bay, with Charles G.' The Northfand has the follow- A Burdick, District Ranger of the U. ing passengers dboard from Seat- S. Farest Service, who made the tle for Juneau: Mrs. M. L, Brin- trip to investigate a forest fire dle, Miss Phylls Jenre, Charles froported from that district. They Jehne, Mrs. E.' Robinson, Miss ©. | stopped in Hasselborg Lake to pick Martine, Duncan ‘Robertson, Mrs. wd “""‘f‘“ upr Al Tilson, head of the Forest Crozler, L. Gill, E. S. Evans, Miss pe et i g : Service crew on' Admiralty Island, Ccrinne Jenne, Willlam Mahoney. | renceville, N. J., schoolboy whohas |ized a year ago when Jack _(}uv&-I |m;¢ Foxx. Subséquently " Grove, " an'l‘\'x'o members of l!'n' <'x:rw. ‘z\.,m Miss "l-'. Kmnqmsv,,MMrs.c Hceleu A PERRY FAVURED had critics disagreeing violently ds | Tord of Australia occupied the finai | £arnshaw and Walberg were sold KENAI LEAVES ‘”"“""f“ e Hood TEay: M. Tllson R stttk to whether he ever will attain “i.- | kracket opposite Perry is hy no} | and now the rumors are that even % ”“ e - g s:"hx:-lxl:v(.‘;tn\x]\‘(:;l»; ‘;:rmgmw,‘:m;'flngmm Kirk- ternational” caliber, has come with | means remote. A Iu KEEP TlT a rush in recent weeks to indicate Critics' who have watched he may, after all, prove the phé- gzel the giant Czech, play in nom his performancs as a junior|ope, say that he is definitely head- i‘::xI:l;l;“:eclzthmar;(;;:eryi\;l:}; ‘ ovet about three-fourths of an acre hdm. Boston IR e .nm tRréutlied" 4 SyaNiabIS = gl = —— The Yankees came back to win| timber, and Mr. Burdick re- Ppostal Service, T. Canaday, Fred | agdthi 1n>188% b &Moce then they| \.nl:"d to his Juneau headquarters. Rasmussen and M. ORourke as promised. |ed for a place in the world's f The sto: - Sharl ) Bryan “Bitsy” Grant, the Atlanta|10 this year. Unorthodox in Have béen On the decline; unable| The steamer Kanai, Capt. Charles Hoonzh and Sitka RASOREIZORS. atom, will be trying to accomplish i his tremendously powerful arives| to find replacements for the “ir-|Carison, master, and David Ram- e — something as startling as he did| have blasted many an oppenent | replaceables” Ruth s playing his|SaY» Purser, sailed for Sitka and With E. M. Godaard‘Mrs. E. H. < in last year's nationals when He off the court. He trounced both . 1N¢ DISEest outpouring of AMer- 1, yesr now as the running- | “2YPOrts at 6 o'clock last evening clifford and J. B. Warrack as pas- DAIly I-Zmplre Want Ads Ply . Frank Parker Is Given upset the then-champion Ellsworth | Crawford and Vivian McGrath | loon JAse24ll fandom that hasbeen mate of Lou Gehrig in the ba attiig |08 the regular weekly voyage, with séngefs (he Baranot left at 1 ) . & Vines. Bil not especially bitier & i ” cen in many a month very likely o.qap The old Babe &till has 'a {21 passengers o'clock this afternoon for a trip to Chance in Meet Coming {ha; that victory, ana other wins| e rx;;tifltu:m:m::fl:i10'3“1:‘3;?‘“'nne,».\nd the definite passing of flaiv for the spectacular but Hig| Thosw leaving Juneau were Gert- Hooneh and Sitka. At Hoonah, Mr. Up Next Month over Davis cup stalwarts, failed to|one victory over Perry and nrnd’? m’“"gg‘ When the terrible TIZers eye nas lost its sharpness, his wing fUde Olsen, Lenora Olsen, Leonard Clifford was to L e c l lng ” 5 gain him a cup berth this year,|tne latter to five blistering sets at| -0 Detrolt mauled the fading jis o)t frustiijesd and¥his Jegs tMe|Olcen. James Connor, E. E. Bailey, o continue to Sitka kel Eaverthsiasd is YHET ‘hootigpn: et ] b | Yankees in both games of a doU= cpeed essential to regular big league | ENPraim Johnson and F. E. Fam- back here this afternoon. By JOHN W. STAHR [ | bleheader in New York. d 8 eagUe | marin f e; Pl Seattl o, ! has compiled one of the best rec-|— . e Petformarice. marin ot Tenakee; MIs AWilllam | i Bl ol (Associated Press Sports Writer). ords of all the United States cam- | NOTICE OF HEARING OF | whi Ch‘ hzmn{lle of ‘baitln' POWEr . mhere's no successor for th"’"“‘:” for Chichagof; Mrs. Martha =~ Word was r(:cexvcd 183t vening | paigners this summer. ) ) b i s for so long rested ON in sjaht and probably mever will| Huntington, Mr. and Mrs. George by A. B. Hayes, company man-, FOREST HILLS, N. Y./ Aug. 30. FINAL ACCOUNT [the shoulders of Babe Ruth and he He has achieved all his major | M2hone, C. R. Wright, Mrs. Charles that the seaplane Chichagof, ' —Fred J. Perry, who happens to be Lett Given Chance |Company has passed on to thig ey, Mrs. E. M. Feldon and E. H. Plot Alex Holden and Raymond o In the Court of the CommisSiNer |pattering band of Bengals f Aois-playing ever 20 Jeste in the | . 5 Hey'. recHatdt” & B e er the world’s - No. 17 tepnis. player Then there is Berkeley Bell, b tie eiiole 6 htadke DY ‘(A' i e fn;,'\ o TOM | majots, hitting over 700 home mmiwl ord for Hoonah; Katherine E. (‘x ley. mechanic, reached Szattle p p A and who obligingly ‘proves it every old-timer as tennis careers go, b’ X' |\t il e The Babe him- anq receiving over 2,000 bases on | OSborne, Margaret A. Smith. Ge: at 4 o'clock y time he gets a chance, will bestep- a player who, bulwarked by im-| ivision No. 1. sitting in Probafelself is nearly through, faltering & balls, He' looks now like an el |Nelson and Mr. and Mrs. William tord ) with S. A. C | The luxury of good pepper i ping right into one of the merriest proved health, has staged a spir't-| - B 5‘““;“"-“ ct, }“"‘fi,_c“"lj‘:““ through his 215t and last seds, derly aghlete; knowing he is 1i-|Nelson for Angoon; and Herbert General Superintendent of Air and | anyones. It costs no more intra-national net arguments the ed drive thie season which fs al-| VoSS White, Tsq, Commissionericon as a regular and only LU yancially well off and about to say | Bremmer for Sitka. Railway Mail Service of the U. S.| . famous West Side Club's stadium most sure to move him from his! 2nd Ex-Officio Probate Judge. |Gehrig and Ben Chapman:remain farewelf ts 'his baseball future. | e . 2 i R has known when he defends his ndtional ranking of 18 to withia In the Maticr ~r wne Est ate of (to remind onlookers of the last except postbly as a manager. [ RUMMAGE SALE [ e e e American championship here Sep- i irst 10" He is playing better 1 JAMES A NETTLES, Deceased.clouting P:"“' of Yankee ‘cham- The Girl Scouts will hold a Rum- tember 1-8. '/ than he did in 1929 and 193, NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN,|pions. om top to bottom the y [mnue Sale on September 11 v. Perry and his doubles partner, When he edged into that select that LYMAN E. REYNOLDSON.)current Tigers pack a harder wal- SR e SOCHBAN | - o i w; [ ] Be young Frank/ H. D. Wilde, and roup. |Executor of the estate of JAMES | op than Néw York or any other Into this situation, which was| '~ =~ the rising Osechoslovakian star, Wilmer aii.-~ < Davis cup 'A. NETTLES, Deceased, has filed |club in the American League can entirely inevitable, the Tigers have | | THE FIRST DIVISION Roderich Menzel, constitute the eran who was left off this yeav ;| herein, and rendered for settlement show. 4 rushed along to take advantage| | GARDEN PATCH 3 & . ¢ entire forelgn threat in this tour- team, has been incoueitent in nisihis final account of the admin-| Wot ofly is Mickey Cochran rid. of the American ELesgue's chang-|| o pcopn J t t ney. It is one of the smallest for- American appearnees but at time.|istration of the said estate; and Mg herd among a atch of real ing order. Where the Boston Red| | [ C l l f T l & ntingents the meeb hias ‘ever Bal FiBin ptr;" the" weghts whicn | that a hearing will be had upunf*luaun packing moré dynamite in Sox particularly girded themselves Fruits and Vegetables andutate tor Terri Orla iog ghined him tie aavinal No. 2 same, before the undersigned, at | their bats than anything Detroit with expensive talent in the hope AT — . l ’ What the meet lacks in overseas ranking last yei:. his office in Skagway, Alaska, on [knew in the palmy days of Ty Cobb of capitalizing on the break-up of | gls ature entries, however, will be more than The 1934 Davis cuppers—Frank the 28th day of September, 1934, at and Saw Crawford, but the Tigers the old order, Detroit responded tof | CO L E M A NS z counterbalanced by the intensity of Shields, Sidney Wood, Lester Stos-:2 o'clock P. M. |seem at 'ast to have broken the Mickey Cochrane’s leadership and| ! Pav 1 5 Election Sept. 11, 1934 B B sl “tomen” st fsn and George’ Torr—wiht All persons interested in said | Fastern stiangle Hold on the Amer- raced o the top of the heap at| ay Less—Much Less | | | “comebackers” who hope to show on hand to defend tleir pre-n y appear at said time,|lcan League peak a comparative minfmum cost. Front at Main Street ol % that they merit serious considera- nence. Lott especially has, he sayr, place and file objections in| It has been exactly 14 years since Except for the purchase of Coch- | '~ T e s M T tion for our Davis cup team. decided he is a bit weary of being Writing to said account, and contest ja Western club has won ihe pen- rane, the Tigers made no great) ___ . _____,__ e 5 £ Parker, Grant and Bell known only as “the world’s best the same. -xmm Tris Speaker piloted the outlay, nor did Mickey himself! | Tomorrow’s Styles Todfl}‘ . The long summer campaign has doubles player” and will be out to! GIVEN under my hand the seal | Cleveland Indians to the top in make many changes in the chub B l N ]‘I been. featured by the performances polish up his reputation as & solo of the Probate Court this 21st day 1020 and the Tribe beat Brooklyn"left in his hands by Bucky Har- uller auro ~ of three home-bodies in particu- performer. |of August, 1934. |in the world series. Since then, ris, who shifted his managerial Jar, each of whom has dreams of Foereign Final Again? CANVASS WHITE, \the Yankees have won Seven pen-°fortunes to Boston. He has sim-| Bi-[ia CO 3 figuring in the long-awaited re- World-champion Perry, of course, Commissioner and Ex-Officio [nants, the Senators three and the ply gotten results by supplying the b capture of the famous internajiou- looms as the big obstacle for the| Probate Judge. Athletics three to keep a ronopoly spirit of leadership that a lot of al trophy. Americans, but the possibility of an |First publication, Aug. 23, 1934. |of honors along the HBestern seas ¢ood ball players needed. | “Express Money Orders Frankle Parker, 18-year-old Lav- all-foreign final such as material- Last publicaticn, Sept. 20, 1934 board. T <o S | Anytime? 2 T 2y S s SH O — i “ ’ ‘ SUPREMACY OF THE EAST *1300 POUNDS OF I T S Juneaw’s Own Store” PoRe, % ol A HitAtne G SALMON IN TODAY & ooy abled three Eastern teams to dom- F AN ATE F R ENA TOR inate the American League, mak- Salmon arrivals this morning were { \ ing things eo ome-sided that i nL)e White Eagle, Capt. Arnold Our- terest began to slacken in the mid:' 15, 1000 pounds for the Co-op; FIRST DIVIS[ON | west and club owners were discour- thé Oulu, Capt. John Aankanen, . |aged in their efforts to combat the 1:300 pounds for the Co-op; the bogey-men, especially those wear- Fern, Capt. John Lowell, 11,000 " ing New York and Philadelphia pounds for W. O. Carlson; and the uniforms. Sadie, Capt. S. A. Stevens, 14,000 L - The first break in the Eastern Pounds for E. E. Engstrom. . (4 dynasty came when Connie Mack A e s N 0 Pussyfootmg N 0 Str(uldlm 2! O e e / ’ o pions of 1929-31 inclusive, Al Sim- Set of Timber Fallers wanted at - mons was the first star to go, end- once. Apply Juneau Lumber Mills. & 37 YEARS IN ALASKA ing his slugging alliance with Jim- —adv. Our public men boast of our wonderfu! resources in gold, fish, fur ‘ “ [ and forests while at the same time petitions are constantly sent to D l C d P le Washington for help to keep our people from starving—if we ve the i al y ross-1or: UZZ go0'd, the fish, the fur and the forests—why ask Washingtc aid? . i : Bl EE 8 g by s oVnaiinRton fitaid ACROSS Solution of Yesterday's Puzzte 1. Feline P Politieians talk while the Territory slips. L &tnd of animal § E ttuce 3 I stand for ACTION not TALK. F & sainder 5:": Gmufl 1 T ¢ ] rofe = . P R ava. i r s | 9% 19. Thick black I you believe in ACTION, Yote for me; if you believe in TALK | st Enigndn e Haoia © ] | UP[RIO "lfl EQ suppert the TALKERS. ot el BEEN BTV 3. Pronoun ¥ LS. " o =3 i scale As a member of the first Territorial Senate from the Fourth Divi- | 13 Worship ] 3 Artiem sion I introduced and championed thd passage of laws designed to im- i 7 Jappu L ; 0 £ 2. Comb natlon prove the condition of labor. ' These laws are in effect today and are i .flw:l&r 4 dniversally ‘approved. a member of that body 1 voted for the abolishment of the l.hon Jeht 217. Con, um'HuI 28. Exclamation 29, Novel Omens The birds 21, Urchin fish trap. . As a member of that body I supported every progressive piece of {31 outet saeity 31. Meadow a 1 vy eff 1 \yve” apecisl i g of & 32 Long steps legislation m‘troduce(l and opposed every effort made to serve specia e 3¢ Most ari interests : . Sailors 35. Orf:‘g?':fa"y‘ Examine my record in the 1913 Senate Journal; by that I stand 40. Say further e 3 Voiceless mixing or full. ¢ . .. consonants 48 Betore . DOWN Steeping I propose to continue my efforts along these lines. That woman g, Clippings } 5‘,"&};3' fah 38 The south. o 1 favor the operatwn of many small canneries as against the huge L Crdoka oukloy §¥gpmimenced | 8. Mexican institutions we havé ‘now’; small canneries, owned and cperated locally Floz AT T R e (ol 4. Edible tuber will bring added employment and business to Alaskans and added popula- Ry L fishe angles g “"""" $ P o 40. Duration butar s Not ar tion to the Territory. wighout be- 51, Rodent © - S “ snon -hrm' For years 1 have advocated the establishment of a Territorial glitning or 82 lntc"r‘:!vv'}:]s.m');’ @ Al mmmg bureau, with ‘a conipetent mining engineer in charge, to assist 45. Lucky i . upubllm 47. English river §3. Uv\rhr mine 10 Sen enele Pure whole wheat bread is as_healthful as it is = wel- come variation. Serve it oftener. &ily the most expelnive unbl T leached fl and whole sweet milk is used in 72 Peerflss breads. in the development of promising discoveries and furnish needy pros- pectors with transportation dnd assay facilities. ° 1 favor the establishment of experimental fur farms and granting title to islands used by fur farmers. 1 maintain that all Territorial officials should be elected by the people and be responsible to them. 1 propose to lay the foundations for an OLD AGE PENSION SYSTEM under which pensions will eventually be paid to aged people as a matter of right and not of charity; AWAY WITH THE POOR- HOUSE AND THE BEGGING FOR SUPPORT IN OLD AGE. 1 am for a reduction of the present high cost of Territorial gov- ernment (and that is no dream) ; I propose to use the savings thus made for the development of Alaska’s industries. The liquor situation must be improved; I shall heed the opinion of the majority of our people when dealing with this subject. It is a large and pressing issue and will have my close attention. As the wife is IN FACT ‘an equal partner of the husband, why should she not be an equal partner with him IN LAW? I am for abso]ute equality as to property rights between husband and wife. Let the business of the Territory be run for all her people and not for the benefit of a few office holders and théir satellites. “THE GREATEST GOOD FOR THE GREATEST NUMBER” i my creed and we need ACTION now. ' LET’S GO. HENRY RODEN it Adfuintutati o vt S Pl o iy Hl/fllfllfl%flflfl II=WH== Our Ryc bread combines the delicious flavor of “special flour and a hard; chewy 7 / s a-.g/-/ /% The “slow, thorough é::h: ’O:m:::r less .. breads gives them (heir- bétter flavor,- % i 2" o i inbwat:;:’fusbt?l:ta wtl;.:sfesnfiet 54 ntalllth N § 37 II// 7