The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, September 4, 1934, Page 7

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

; R T By BILLE DE BECK TH' DANG REVENQOERS AIR A-MESSIN/ tions, Mrs. Alex Gair and John| Mills; for whist, Mrs. Jerry Cashen | and Alex Kiloh were high scorers | and Mrs. Gertrude Laughlin and | John Marin the lows, | ‘Schi;giflg o) | BARNEY GOOGLE AND SPARK PLUG e i/ sovy/ 1’LL GIVE HER SOUND ASLEEP AT LASTz MEBBE LUCY-BELLE'S PAPPY... THAR’S SOMEBUDDY | OL’ MAN HAS COOLED TWENTY BUCKS » M. Baghls’ W mrcanbit i & At o =} i ‘ K BAcK HERE TO WORK 1o S E AR Ol Wu‘ S el ) | Douglas by the Auxiliary. Refresh- | Tlag = flavor! Lots of it! THOSE TWO S 7% g & ved ISR NG CC! Makeslalor of difference in RATS 1S okns et e del L Rk epple pic or cinnamon toast DOWN - - | MRS. SERIT AND CHILDREN Y { LEAVE FOR VISIT, JAPAN \ | Mrs i, wife of the Doug- Its, 1 yman, accompgnied by Se————————— | thelr hildren, “Ipst ont' dhe STt ONS mEEG IR {Haleakaln Sundiy enroule 1o her) ippe Channel Exchange! F e ax ORI 0N S| SECOND HAND CLOTH g i | Beught, Sold and Exchanged || = WILLOUGHBY AVENUE Opposite Cash Grocee D ULy 13._(-—054:’&, et ed here this morning with all the { teachers on hand and a full at- |tendance of pupils. The last teach- | o ar Lucile Pepoon, -~ ool S ~ % = = S M land Saturddy or Fred Holmberg, | foreman for the Seims - Spokane | Company, >ve will be a meeting of the |to resume’ his duties as Mar- Ladies’ League this evening at 7:30 ' shal and foreman of street repairs. o'clock in the league rooms. Im- M \ i \ M | Mis: M:rgarct Pimperton and Miss ! ¢ |Lee Thoma came in Sunday even- | Gomps R ook H OF ling on the Princess Loulse after | i, pu; e g | 9 | spending a part. of the summer|ne town with the Douglas Bridge. | St. /‘Jln S vacation at their homes in the - oo WORK HAS STARTED ON | States. | SCHRAMM RETURNS . NEW DOUGLAS ROAD | —————— | AL ! Mus[(- ] i 7 LEAGUE MEETING | Charles Schramm_ acrived home ! | i With the arrival of the North-| R from Ketchikan on the Northiand ; Department on the new| Schramm . remained . in Ket- contractors, . Douglas and A.,H. Camp- | pcrtant business, including arrange- | chikan for a short time longer and bell, tim and paymaster,|ments for a goody sale and tealis expected to return in a few days. CLASSICAL AND work on the project is now under- {to be held on Thursday, is the - o —— s i BEAY way in good shape. purpose of the meeting RUMMAGE SALE SEMI-CLASSICAL Equipment for the job, which in-| e > ~ Lo 1) e R ) % | PP T . cludes two large tractors, a 30-ton FORMER COACH HERE B sdoiteyelistabic g ,}'flli,‘::;‘f:,'""&iw)‘f | Specializing in {Easaling shovel, ErgREEEE all i B3 tember 11, location to be an-|{ Beginners necessary small equipment, were former basketball | | = o s i unloaded from scows at Cowee [soach and manual training teacher | "OUNCCC 1€ L LY Pon infosmation soaks Creek on Sunday morning, and in |here, arrived on the Princess Louise RUMMAGE SALE [¥ ForIBLOrnavien: ANMY a comparatively short time a road |for a few days visit before con-| o Iul\(r" (‘4‘“'15 v‘vxli‘ Hold:'d \t from the beach to the end of the [,nuing on his way to Fairbanks ,>° ~“15€3 W A ’ B old road was built. Work on the where he will teach in the high |- ummage Sale on September 1L | ¢ St. Ann’s Hospital ; ;| Donations for the sale will be new highway started at this point|schcol at sthat place for a second Shille hhsantad A | {today. Fifteen men were at once |term. B P T e SR given jobs and this number will > *> > - { be added to until forty or more| RETURNS FROM VACATION | $O0000#00000000040000400440000¢. will be put to work. They are to be 2 divided into two consecutive shifts,| Mrs. Felix Gray came home Sun- 'HE annual meeting of the Buropean Centre of the Carnegie Endow- (J. A. Spender, (England); Dr. Earle B. Babcock, Directeur-Adjoint of cach working five hours a day or {qay evening after enjoying a ment for International Peace held recently in Paris brought to-|the European Centre; Professor Dr. Moritz J. Bonn, (Germany); Pro- |a total of thirty hours a weck. month's vacation trip south. Mrs. gether leaders in international affairs from nine countries. ferssor Alfred Nerinex, (Belgium); Count Paul Teleki, (Hungary). s > = Gf.“y reports having enjoyed he Dr. Nicholas Murray Butler, the Endowment's President, and Dr.( g..104: Count Carlo Storza, (Italy); Count Albert Mensdorft, (Aus- SCHOOL REOPENS irip -V(IW b alkdi ik Harle.B. Babcock, representad Americanonthion. tria); Dr. Nicholas Murray Butler, President of the Carnegle Endow: e of evident prosperity were n #Plans for bringing better international understanding between the ¥ Honnorat, (France); Marchese Piero Misciat: ‘The 1934-5 term of schoo! s 1ble. peoples of He world were discussed. All of the members felt that there | Ment; Senator André Honnorat, ( e i e telli, (Italy). 18 little likelihood of an impendi ng war, Standing from left to right in the group are: Professor Henri Lich- Four other members of the Committee: Rafael Altamira y Crevea, tenberger, (France); Dr. Erich von Prittwitz-Gaffron, (Germany); M. | (Spain); Gilbert Murray, »u-:ngland); Nicoias S. Politis, (Greece); Guillaume Fatio, (Switzerland); M. Georges Lechartier, (France); Mr. [and Joseph Redlich, (Austria), were unable to attend. Refrigeration Makes An Even Deeper “Deeper Hole SPRAY POND FOR (COOLING WATER, REFRIGERATION * " HOUSE Gold Mific 29 AlR INTAKE DERUMIDIF HOUSE AIR PASSES THROUGH COLD SPRAY AND IS BLOWN DOWN ; il TR 1] world’s ous'ruction of an artificial ccoling plant on the surface of the decpest gold mine c¢n the Rand in South Africa will aid man to burrow evea deeper in his quest for the precious metal The diagram indicaics the lccalicn of the cooling units and the way in which the ecld air wi the miners belcw. depthc of the mine. BY HOWARD W. BLAKESLEE (Ascociated Press Science kawor) NEW YORK, Sept. 4—A new era in penetration of the depths of the earth opens with the break- ing of the heat barrier which has slowed progress of the “hard rock men” in the world’s deepest hole, 8380 feet, in the Robinson Deep mine of the Rand goldfield in South Africa. This hole is one of the three on different continents, all almost equally deep, all gold mines, and all now reaching the barrier where rocks are eternally hot. The heated rock is only the top- most barrier which science faces. Deeper lie others, which if they shpuld ever be penetrated probably would require the hard-rock men to wear armor. Artificial Cooling Enlisted The first barrier is about to be cracked at the Robinson Deep mine ! be pumped into the shafts to aid The photcgrapk shows men at work in the lewer by erection, on the surface, of a half million dollar refrigeration plant by the Carrier corporation. I will send a cold wind down a three-mile-long, slanting shaft. to the 8380-foot level. It will relieve a temperature of 100 to 120 and a humidity 2 100 percent at which the strongest hard rock huskies work at only 30 per cent efficiency. The plant will create at 8,500 feet the temperature conditions now prevailing at 7,000 feet. Since the mine, worked at full pace, as is being done in these days of high- priced gold, grows deeper at the rate of about 1,000 feet in five years, the air-cooling system is counted upon to add seven and a half years to its life. As to how much goes, geologists’ deeper gold esumates differ. tone promises to be rock pressure, the squeeze due to weight of the | earth above. This pressure prob- ably accounts for most of the heat, such as the 103 degrees of all the rock at the bottom of the South African hole. Brittle Rock Danger If the rock is brittle, this pres- sure may cause fragments to pinch off and shoot out with explosive force. A small chunk might kill a man. If the rock is soft it tends to c up, like putty. Finally comes the growing ex- pense as mines go deeper. The possibility which some economists foresee of a world shortage of gold may be a long-time factor in post- poning the expense limit. bz ing through the heat bar- rier is hailed by mining experts as lan economic as well as scientific feat. The gold known to lie within reach in the Rand is expected to more than pay for the cold wave ‘1 equipment, Artificial Lake Built One of the refrigeration prob- {lems is lack of sufficient space for nt size units at the bot- tom of very deep mines. The South African cooling will be furnished by an artificial lake for spraying and cooling water and two refri | eration units on the surface. These will combine to drive 400,000 cubic feet of cold air a minute through a tunnel into the mine shaft. The other two deepest mines Morrovelho in Brazil, at 8,040 feet and the Champion Reef mine, My- sore, India, at 7,580. Several gold mines are down more than a fnile, - _ A. VAN MAVERN HERE |l A. Van Mavern, representative of the West Coast Grocery Com- pany, arrived on . the Northland from a trip covering many Alaska points couth of Juneau. - - SHUDSHIFT GETS FIRST HUNTING CERTIFICATE The Douglas post office began selling migratory bird hunting stamls last Saturday, issuing the one to A. Shudshift, one of the most ardent of local hunters. ——sea My Beauty Hinl. ETHEL SHUTTA Any ensemble may be enhanced by an appropriate stocking shade They range all the wuy from 15|but marred considerably by the miles to 40. wrong one. To be smart. do not Below the heat barrier the next joverlook this little fashion detail. AUGUST WARM MONTH:SHORT ON SUNSHINE Half Inch More than Normal Precipitation August was slightly above the wcrmal os to temperature and rain- fall but deficient in sunshine, says jiy OBUEE ,,f“'ffig:' (ki £AM DEVON HONORED To the Electors of the City of EY LADIES’ AUXILIARY |Juneau, Division No. One, Terri- Do the |tory of Alaska o : v“:f"l“' s | NOTICE is hereby given that Bl v pursuant to an Act of Congress,|Auxillary F. O. E, entertained at a e~rd party In the Eagles' Hall approved May 7, 1906, entitled “An | Act Providing for the Election of a Delegate from the Territory of Alaska,” and an Act of Congress, japproved August 24, 1912, entitled “An Act to Create a Legislative Assembly in the Territory of Al- aska, to Confer Legislative Powe Thereon, and for Other Purpo: jand in formity therewith a Gen- eral Election will be held on }TUESDAY. SEPTEMBER 11, 1931 ‘b('twonn the hours of 8 o'clock lam. and 7 o'clock pm. of said day {for the. purp of clecting the following officers, to-wit: A Delegate to Congress; One Ter- |ritorial Senator; Four Territorial | 30 and Aerie 40 and ast nisi Belween members of the local Auxiliary were present. Both bridge and whigt were play- ed. Prize winners for the former were: high scores, Mrs. Robert Bonner and A. J. Balog; consola- R. C. Mize in his monthly report. The mean temperature was 55.8°, or 05° above the normal. The warmest August of record was that of 1911 with a mean of 605° and ccolest was that of 1914 with a mean of 52.7°. The highest tem- perature was 70° on the 6th and the lowest 44° on the 30th. Previous ‘remes for Au L 87 clive'y. TI was only one day with & mazimum temperature of 17¢°. Tha t pracipitation of 7.7 ches was 047 inches above th: nermal. The driest August of rec s that of 1910 with 1.55 in- and t weltest that of 1901 14.04 inches. There were 24 th measurable p. i the otal greate inches on the 17-18th. There were 17 consecutive days with measure- able precipitation, from the 7Tth to 23d inelusive. The pe: > of mean relative humidity at 4 am., noon and 4 p.m., were respectiveiy 93, 79 and 6, There were no clear days, 5 pari- ly cloudy and 26 cloudy ones with only one day recording 100 per cent sunshine * The average hourly wind velocity for the month was 4.9 miles per hour and the prevailing direction from the south. The maximum velocity of 29 miles per hour from the southeast was cn the last. There were 958 hours of sun- shine out of a possible 476.1 or 20 per cent. This is about 70 por cent of the normal amount, - e WILL VISIT IN OREGON Mrs. Sam Moyer and baby left aboard the Prince Rupert for a trip outside, during which Mrs. Moyer will visit her sister in La- Grande, Oregon. ! The Winner If the person who holds 151 on the Atwater-Kent radio that was awarded at the Muckers’ Ball Saturday will present their ticket at 417 Goldstein Building any time this week they will receive the radio. If person holding this ticket has not presented it be- fore Saturday evening the radia will be awarded to the next number which is 321. rrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrorossd end 36° | Representatives to Legislature; One | | Territorial Treasurer; and Two Di- ; |visional Road Commissioners. | The Common Council of the City |of Juneau having heretofore, by | resolution, duly designated the vot- | ing precincts of said City and the Polling Plac2 in each thercof, the i«:!ecmrs are hereby notified: That all duly qualified volers residing within the boundaries of | Voting Precinct No. One of said |City of Juneau, which are as fol- {lows: All that section lying on the northerly side of East Seccond Street and West Second Street and the said Second Street extended across the tide flats to the Cily Limits and easterly of Gold Creck will vote in the Fire Apparatus Room in the City Hall Building, located at the corner of Fourth | and Main Streets, the same being the duly designated Polling Place | in and for Precinct No. One, City of Juneau. That all duly qualified voters | regiding within the boundar) ori Voting Precinct No. Two of said | City of Juneau, which are as fol- lows: | All that section lying on the| southerly side of East Second | Street and West Second Street and | the extension of said Second Street agross the tide flats to the City | Limits will vote in Mrs. J. M. Giovanetti’s Store, located on| corner of Front and Main Sts,, the | same being the duly designated | Polling Place in and for Precinct No. Two, City of Juneau. That all duly qualified voters | residing within the boundaries of | Voting Precinct No. Three of i City of Juneau, which are as fol- lows: | All that section lying on the naortherly and westerly side of Gold Creek and the oil pipe line of the | Electric Light Company, including the Seatter Addition, will vote in E. Millaeger's residence building located on Willoughby Ave., near Seventh St, the same being the duly designated Polling Place in and for Precinct No. Three, City of Juneau. Dated this 28th day of August, 1934, (Signed) THE COMMON COUNCIL OF THE TOWN OF JUNEAU. - By A. W. HENNING, City Clerk Pirst publication, Aug. 28, 1934 Last publication, Sept. 4, 1934. ALLEYS WILL BE CLOSED FOR % A FEW DAYS FOR A COMPLETE OVERHAULING 000000000000 0000090000000060000000000000000000005 White bread should grace your table at every meal Pure whole wheat bread is as healthful as it is a wel- come variation. Serve it oftener. Only the most expensive unbleached flour and whole sweet milk is used in Peerless breads. Our Ryc bread eombines the delicious flavor of special flour and a hard, chewy crust. It's different. The slow, thorough baking of Peerless bl‘?flds gives them their beider flavor, helps * in making better toast and maintains consistent wholesomeness. Raisin bread has more milk than white bread. Plenty of big raisins make it addi- ticnally appetizing. PEERLESS BAKERY AT ALL GROCERS—ASK FOR IT!

Other pages from this issue: