The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, October 29, 1934, Page 8

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“PRETTY BOY” ‘AIR SPEE[]STERS\ 57 urope’s Royal Children Face Sudden Call FLOYD BURIED ;ARE ATTEMPTING ~ £ iy G ‘lee Petor I, from C(assroom to Thron(? IN UKI.AHUMA‘TU MAKE REGURD; o i , Thousands of Curious Look/ txght of 19 Contestants| on While Funeral | Australia Bound Still | Services Held ‘ Trying for Goal ] SALLISAW, Oklahoma, Oct. 29 LONDON, Ocf. 29. — Cathcart —The bullet-torn body of Charles| Jones and Ken Waller have landed “Pretty Boy® Floyd was burled in|at Allahabad from Singapore and; Sunday. | will take off tomorrow for England. | the rugged hills at Atkir B.P. O. ELKS while thousands of curious look- They are on a boomerang dash| home in an attempt to establish a ol he Sherifl ffice said the record from Melbourne to England. | ] ercwd was hill pebple; many; Bight pf ! the o.l,;mal starters | % of whom knew the outlaw in Nfe. |¥rfom Milderhall to Melbourne dre | E s It was the largest crowd ever gath- still trying to reach their goal in| ROLL CALL ered in Sallisaw. 1 Austratia | Floyd, notorious Southwest out-{ Col.’James Fitzmauriceé has re-| law, was killed by Federal agents | turned here after three hours fly- in Ohio last Monday. ing toward Australia in an attempt BT o T AR SR | to establish a new record. A piece | MANY CORDOVANS ARE of his shield on the undercarriage | r ENROLLED IN COLLEGE of his plane fell off over Brussels| WEDNESDAY i and the plane has been brought » Seven students from Cordova are | here for repairs registered this year at the Maska Agricultural College and School o 0 b 31 8 P M A ot ate, r. Wood- | BISHOP J. R. CRIMONT ctover . M. row Johansen and Wilbur Lane | bl are taking up Civil Engineering; LEAVES FOR BlSHOPs i ick vning, ick O'Neill s ey . Richard Downing, g MEETING IN CHICAGO Visiting Brothers Cordially : gineering course; and Helen Me- | Bishop J. R. Crimont, S. J.,| lnvited i Crary, sophomore, Will take up ATts{ oot oric Bishop of Alaska, [ook! Royal children fh half a dozen Euorpean monarchies face the pos- George, stand between her and the throne, She w#s 8 years old on | and Letters. passage for Ketchikan on the!sibility of becoming, like Peter II of Yugoslavia (center), rulers in April 21 and thus far has been kept as free as possible from thoughts ‘}v' oN ;z:fl: VACATION | Northland, on ms way to Chicago, [their own right while yet in the school rocm of some day becoming a Queen, like her great-great-grandmother, i 5 2 i Til, where he will attend the meet- | One of them, Michael of Rumania (right), already has had that Victoric — — —— — 4 Willlam B. Phinn, proprietor °“)’11S1£d :’;erfmmhc Bishops to be!experience for he was “boy King” under a regency from July 20, 1927, Two tiny States also have children as prospective rulers. In Lux- FRESH DATES the Model Cafe and Dispensary at He will stop fof a-short time. in | | until deposed by his own father, King Carol II, on June 6, 1930. He the little grand duchy hemmed in by France, Belgium' and Cordova passed through' Juneaufre- |, hest m . and_continug frob | /2% “only 6 years dld when placed on the throne. Now he is titled Prince Jean, 13-year-old heir of Grand Du In bulk, pound ________________________________________ 10¢ cently on his way to Southern C#li=| :rc louth oh an eardy steamer, | “¢#and voyvoda of Alba Judia” and is heir to the crown. He was 13 i prepared for d s head of the government e fornia. He expects to return north{ “wfle in Chicago Bishop Cri- l)emh old ou October 25. He and King Peter are first cousins and Down on the Mediterranan, where cosmopolites gather to woo for- At GARNICK’S Phon 174 with Mrs. Phinn on one of the | nont will take part in the Silver |have been biayu.&’es at family gatherings. tune at the roulette wheels of Monte Carlo, two youngsters, Princess ’ e { early boats next spring. Jubilee of Cardinal Mundelein| ‘The Belgian dynasty rests apun the baty shoulders of Prince Bau- | Antoinette, who will be 14 on December 28, and her brother, Prince AR i A R which is also to be celebrated in'doin (left), heir to Leopold III, King of the Belgians. He was four Rair who was 11 on May 31, to succeed their grand- T ! CORDOVA WOMEN'S CLUB | Chicago, He expects to return to | years old September 7 and became Crown Prince when his grandfather, | fathér, Louis II, as P parents are divorced and | BEER-WINE CONTROVERSY AUXILIARY OFFICERS - do‘:; ;v;::::,‘s 'g]e:;f“g 2 i‘fwrc:;; g:ncuube:iurins the latter part of | King Albert, fell o his death from @ cuff near Namur, Belgium, Feb- il has been under that if Prince Louis dies tne children’s father, REMAINS UNSETTLED YET INSTALLED AT CORDOVA W, Kehbe spoke on the subject ORI ruary 17 of this year. ] Prince Pierre, son-in-law of Louis, would become regent for Prince| .. v (3 “ A r ), Great Britain's royal pet, is Rainier. But the mcther, Princess Charlotte, who renounced her own case of the United States| Ay 5 recent meeting ne.d at § of “Business Law.” There was a NEW U. S. CITIZENS ) Princess Elizabeth (second Ilom et " e mim i {against R Naka, over the issue or i i large attendance to hear him, farther away from regal honors, since her bachelor uncle, the Prince rights to the throne, ma t be reinstated by Louis and Antoinette | Co ot = T T lcense, is- Cotdova. ofi;th. Auwesiesn ' eglon T 2 S The following were granted fun | ©F Wales, and her father, the Duke of York, second son of King might conceivably get the ahead of her brother. } s R Yo G a ik A”’f‘l“ar:‘t the tollowmg ofrlcerfdwv"" ATTENDS COURT SE“‘ON ‘cuiyenshm papers at Fairbanks | i = R e o i — Ieroimits Sliat : Be' 1s¥ Dok 16 cltiesn inutelieG; Kie Chadwick, President; ‘ | Sadie Herring; First Vice-President; after a hearing before Judge E rs to Paint | to do water colors in Nippon ] pilot for the Boeing Company last [of the United States, came before |pertha Allen, Second Vice-Presi- Attorney J. L. Reed of Valdez|Coxe il Inge Tryggstad, who| Arg;iu]l’r;‘le $ 4 Divin sitting on the floor with his leg U Saturday night at the PilgrimJudge Simon Hellenthal at Cordova | gent: Ellen Chase, Secretary; Jose- e Ilying an IVING crossed . 3 Jjourneyed to Cordova nf a | o 1 huret he . bric o g% " b 1 et 'at Uil me:czrugou: :&a_\ also given permission to change | | ( g.}wn}nl C.):x.m 'I"flt bndcz‘rfcenm. A‘ftcr hearing arguments phine Taylor, Treasurer; Asta Jac- B fhet ot his name to Inge Trigstad, Gio-; | Wainright began sketching from is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. on both sides, Judge Hellenthal ghsen Chaplain; Mary Nickoloff, i Ty | vanna Contratto Vernetti, Hans| NEW YORK, Oct.29.—Doing pas- the air when he did charcoals of IN ALA S KA HA Smith of Spokane, Wash |deferred decision until a future| gergeant-at-Arms; Mabel Bingle,* 4 | Peter Hansen, Lars Hjortkaer Han- |{els of Bermuda landscapes while such fliers as Clyde Panghorn, Clar- The newlyweds flew to Santa date. Historian. FINAL PAPERS GIVEN 3 Monica in a Boeing plane after the | B | R et sen and Gustav Levi Larson. ence Chamberiain, Ruth Nichol sat- NINE NEW CITIZENS e B | flying over the islands d;: x:n]o.t He 4nd Ruth Elder. His Bermuda pas- ceremony. They will make their _ { At & sessioft of the District Court| EXPRESSION OF THANKs |51y Samuel H. Wainrig] r. He is are being exhibited at a New home there for several months. 'NEW PROPRIETOR, s TO REENTER U. of W. held at Cordova nine applicants for| The many, many friends of the| plans to don a diving helmet, take Scott is a well known Alaskan s o RAROICE ROADHOUSE 2 final naturalization were made‘law Ernest Holm take this means|some (oils and paint submarine flier. kx:(\»(\i"x:c?:\dl‘:\:ilwf‘ g‘if)n";hfmv;,;lel Wx]l}nm Schodde who had been z(x‘)l)));;'lcnn cltizens, They are John|of expressing appreciation for the|scapes when he returns soon to the OLD NEWSPAPERS SEATTLE, Oct. 20—Cilmaxin BRI i omEs Riahardion H?:I\;A':w g e e""plfi"e"b d:;'"; .L:e kS"Exm{"“ - | Britis v SR 3 ged m s by nks ora- s“uretdndohansen Ole Pelerso_mmanv kinds acts extended during }Bnu;h colony. X a romanc egun in Cordova three This year marks the 200th anni- hands. R. M. Keith of Valdez is ): ‘:‘unzmn:‘ n::lr L;X;. Faiv-‘l))am-, . dm. anz, Goebel, John Axvldihls last illness and particular| Born in Kobe, Japan, of mission- In bundles for sale at The Em- | years g0, Miss Mpyrtle Smit ation of Luther- the new owner. This roadhouse has | distr Cl‘ h;‘ left for Seattl ALO r(‘: Ar:: mnnx; Ludwig Kristoffersen. ‘thank: is extended to Mr. L. H.| ary parents, Wainright, who is now pire cffice, 25c. Fine for starting | teacher in the Lafayette school, be- exiles from Salzburg, Austria, to been for many‘yc u'.; the rend‘fl?vou‘s o:mell (i} l;niversilm feWnshin ton on Maximoff, Joseph Feely, Jose | | Metzgar. Jabout 40, received his early training your fires these chilly mnm!ngs came the wife of Clayton Scott, Oglethorpe's Georgia province. for fishing parfi(’; £ mrl cantfnue his :'yugnc th"reg 3 Avilee, and Willlam Otto Wahrer. —ady. HIS FRIENDS. from a Japanese artist, He learned = =——————— — LR ol ] 4 pax CLOSED ALL DAY WEDNESDAY —and the boys smoked them —and the girls raked in the nickels and the dimes —and they sang “a hot time in the old town’ TO REMARK ALL ITEMS ON “Payn Takit’ Plan { = [/ B T package 7 @ WATCH FOR NEW LOWER PRICES IN i OURFAMILY LIQUOR DEPARTMENT, @ S George Bros. | PHONES 92 and 95 Five Fast Deliveries *the cigarette thats MILDER g oBELLA BOA, Vit QbEEDZIEE? o W e , j‘maagarettc thatms'msnmxn

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