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8 : THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, THURSDAY, AUGUST 30, 1934. RESULTS BLANK [z 0 IN SEARCH FOR "> " KALISPELL. Mont., Aug. 30.— Donald Parker, local lad with taste for the old West, loitered on a corner, a pistol hung jauntily in a holster at his belt. % 3 . | Morris Kair, 15, approached and l'“p(‘ or SUCC(’SS b) -I-hlb indicated an interest in the weapon. Evening in Hunt for Body | Parker knew the gun was not . L4 loaded, even if Kair didn't, so he of Abel Katainen |whipped it and jammed it into Kair's midriff. The pistol went off, jan who com-|a bullet i jumping - from 'sajd proba he would live. the harbor| parker was wrong about the gun ng had not not being loaded search for | SRS abandon- pENGUIN AND EIDER e Ap- ied on Katainen, missin being c. were s TNOC Two of the vessels of the Alaska with — grappling neey of the United States Bureau nt being dragged back and|or pisheries — the Penguin, Capt. g the bed of Gastineau|y,ison and the Eider, Capt from the Juneaulyses were in port here yesterday. T Is_thought that| 'mne former is enroute from Se- Mrs. Katainen may have hooked ;ine to the Pribilof Islands with the body night before last supplies for the residents of the William Feero, local private de-|oq) fighing communities. The Eider tective, is conducting the search|; " enroute to Seattle from Kodiak for Katainen's body, and Diver A.ly, tne bureau's summer crew. cents to the " ' - |afternoon. but without success so far. It is S jat by this evening some| 1l have been obtained. More A"- Maii S LONDON, AALv —Ietter mail arried by air from England to [talled 61300 pounds in the quar- OF TRIBES face rode into their hunting lands | and for many years after, ('\ni { B SHERIDAN, Wyo., Aug. { C to the spot where ! B the two tribes met to t ; 2 after long years of |} Featuring @ tor =nmity, a bronze marker has |{ ¢ £ 2 i been set to remind younger Crow. |} and Cheyennes of the peace pact I their chieftains Ik Generations before the first pale- T* ) L tribes were ruthless foes. During a 1ecent rodeo here, when Crows | and Cheyennes came to do their | dances, the chiefs invoked the | white man's ecraftsmanship to| #he marker. When it was finished | ghe monument was place in fron of the grandstand on the r grounds, site of the smoki e LOVE LAUGHS, Bash COUNTY LINE RUTHERFORDTON, N. C, Aug. 30.—A couple obtained a marriage license in Rutherford county, came | to Gray's Chapel Church, most of which stands in the adjoining county of Palk, and asked Pastor J. A. Fry to unite them. State k 2 Jaw specifies a marriage must bel| Telephones 92—95 performed in the county that is-| sued the license, so Mr. Fry solved the problem by ushering the cou-|\. ple to the small, far corner of thej church that is in Rutherford coun- | ty by a few inches—and there &he‘ yows were taken. S e Piety of Chinese Son Wins Honor by Nation LANKING, Aug. 30. — Because Teng Ching-Yao, 36- lager, stayed by his parents’grave for three years, the nationalist| government “ has set up a votive ta in recognition of his filial iefy. ‘Teng’s native village, south of Hpubu, the center of China, In Anhwei province, now is called| officially, “Filial Son Village.” Grave watching for three years has been regarded by Chinese for centuries as the acme of filial devotion. The son builds himself | 8 mud hut alongside the graves of his parents and there meditates and prays. If single, he must not get married; if married he must Jeave his family alone. Doctor Says Powder May Cause Catarrh BOURNEMOUTH, England, Aug. 30.—Theodore Just, London aural gurgeon, said at the annual con- ference of the British Medical As- ,sociation that nasal catarrh was Anore common among young women #han other persons { “I think the reason is not that ,¢hey are more neurotic” he de- clared, “but that practically all iwomen use face powder ~. “Many women are particularly susceptible to orris root and I am Jold that orris root is to be found n certain makes of powder” , WANTED 3 . of Timber Fallers wanted at . Apply Juneau’ bumber MUIs |A favorable wind helped the fight- ers to bring complete control over n00on, the body jand Kair crumpled to the sidewalk, | |tanks. | abdnial. Doctors | s P. Johnson, Ketchikan trol- is believed to have dmwnedl the United States Marshal’s office His boat, the Fex, was picked Decision and last Monday by other 7€ I the hospital forts 0 toeate the body of IN PORT WEDNESDAY ! vessel, which was afoul in the kelp feared Johnson fell | | Trafalgar Square 67,375 vehicles ' for Alexander in com- trolling boat in the day lost of the Fex in a fog. sight |— A search of | n the vicinity of where ! Starts Expansion has been mmle | o s ation of a 36-man council rep- resenting various industries |[F PSS S SIS P ETER P A N Beauty Shoppe PERMANENT WAVE for as low as Second Floor Triangle Bldg. Phonc strengthen the bond of good fel- | lewship Not a rustle of their beadad gar ments broke the stillness as they gathered to watch workmen in a ftundry pour the molten metal for | the first peace pipe and burying - af the tomahawk. From metal remaining, talismans | were made for each of the chief: some of whom, as young bucks, boasted Df scalps of the enemy. ! Five Fast Deliveries =1 END OF SEASON SALE! DAYS MORE ENDS SATURDAY HURRY'! JONES - STEVENS TROLLER FEARED WIND SHIFTS; ™3 ES&‘;“;&,;?‘%%SJ“‘ S0CK PRICES., . PO%ARD BALEY MELD ITONSLECTOMNY STAVEE DROWNED: BOAT OIL BLAZE IS I oor o Mo Bessie urman, . IS FOUND EMPTY Hass P. J(E;on, Ketchi- kan Fisherman, Believ- ed to Have Lost Life tertained at luncheon at Moder'sl UNDER Coffee Shop. Covers were laid | for 14 persons. Guests included: Miss Yurman, ses Bess O'Neill, Henrietta Sell, M CAMPANA, Argentina, Aug. 30— v | Mize and Dorothy Aalbu and { Mrs. Stanley V. Grummett, Mrs. the disastrous oil blaze which James Orme, Mrs. Arthur Judson, threatened to destroy the city after Mrs. J. G. Shepard, Mrs. Edwin the explosion of 27 immense oil J. Blake and Mrs. Sally Shafer. Only half of the forty men work- | of one oil tank started a fire, haVE‘ TAKE nEcLlNE } Charged with threatening to l;llI' A warrant was Issued yesterday ‘qu Marie McGuire, Howard afternoon for the 9 Williams, Pearl Peterson, El- | Traders Gemng Ready for fixed at $2000 pending a hes NEW YORK, Aug. 30.—Stocks' were nervous today. Some traders| Daily Empire Want Ads Pay! ing on the job when the exvlosion |F[CKEN RETURNS TO gt;w'gecih ;hii;bofog:;n:e cg:pam—" SEARReS — — ley was arrested here last night |Jackson, local Indian, on a charge TE IN D bv Federal authorities. He was ar- |of larceny in a dwelling, but he mngned before Judge J. F. Mullen was exempt from under arrest pend- today in the Umlc)i States Com- ing his recovery from a tonsil- ¥ sioner’'s Court "and his bond ectomy which he underwent this in; morning at the Government Hos- pital here. \m Bailey is accused by Mrs. M RCCGSS—CI‘}’{SCTOdaY 1( ‘uire of having _threatencd to| S eav -rmoL her. She said this occurred | e 1S alleged to-have stolen $150 Rather avy fon two occasions. |in mone d other property from s NS |John Perrin in a local rooming . house. i been accounted for. T After stiffening, the list drmed b 18" mieing Known! SITKA ON THE KENA] down during the last hour. to be dead, one is missing, three are gravely injured and 19 others Some metals resisied any decline. | \ Deputy United States Marshal| ‘qhe close today was rather I_[AD[R D[PI. STORE | B. F. Ficken of Sitka returned to|nhggyy. ——————— | 8 | his home yesterday on the steamer | Bonds were heavy ‘on the curb g " Traffic Grows |Kenai after having spent a day ¥ GEORGE BROS o ¥ {here. He arrived by plane from CLOSING PRICES TODAY LONDON—Traffic in busy ce= |Sitka Tuesday evening with Peter| Ngw YORK, Aug. 30. — Closing | Hitrrv! - Mosvel % % ters of London has increased more | Quick, committed to the local Fed- |quotation of Alaska Juneau mine urry! Marvelous Values in o than 50 per cent in 10 years. In eral jail to serve out a $200 fine!gioek today is 18%, American Can | were counted between 8 am. and 8 pm. At GARNICK’S, Phone 174 an' 8 Poor lamps waste electricity like | ) {uucets waste water. famous {7 monogram. Ours do! 0 That’s why we suggest you make our store headquarters for all vour lamp and lighting needs. N ) ) \ ! \ ) ) 3 ) N § I i ) ; | @ Measured Light for Better Sight! @ Ask About Our Sightmeter! (] (] sault and battery. 198, American Power and Light 5%, | |Anaconda 12%, Armour B 61%, Bethlehem Steel 29%, Calumet and , |Hecla 8%, Cutiss-Wright 27%, Lan' | eral R. & W. FLOATING SOAP, 4 bars ........ 25¢ Harvester 27%, Kennecott 19, . |United States Steel 34%, Pound for the bath and fine laundry I$5.02%. Nabesna 91, B STEWART EDWARD WHITE, MRS. WHITE AND GUESTS ite, Col. and Mrs. Roger Fitch Lticust Alaska { HOP IN JUNZE REOPENING ) St ar, this morning bound for tne Last evening M d & tine Cafe. L o Drumim, cng.ncer of the Kuru in i H NEW FALL | | WOOLENS | + 011. up year swing ma- g i % Motors 29%, International - - I g to “hop sCma as you § LIAVE ON YACHT KURU a two-day visit in Ju: rt kdward White, notcd >\{he Thry're i wife and their guests, left pe iyt drcams, and a o acht Kuru vetee (hot s + hao and M.& White nosis i w dinner at the Gas- u Cafe. The occasion of the ' g o ner was the birthday of Charles | additicn Lo the honor guest,! present weie Dr. and Mrs. C. DeVighne, of Juncau, ¢ Bellknap, nophew of Mr. | % ) three a.e guests ab.aid Kuru on its present cruise of - ' 60 50 n. Sik and We 5% in. Brewn Scrgs M. lled S 51 in or : St. Ann’s i % O M Department C CLASSICAL AND EMI-CLASSICAL Specializing in Beginners For information apply St. Ann’s Hospital Alaska Electric Light and Power Co. JUNEAU-—8 DOUGLLAS—18 SRR AR OO 1 Don’t let them go on in their 0 inefficient. ¢osily way. 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