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RARNEY GOOGLE-AND SPARK PLUG LOOKY HYEH,SAIRY HOPKINS, I TELL YE YO TER MARRY NO SICH CRITTER EZ THET E'GAR ALLEN AN’ DON'T YE STICK OUT THET STUBBERN JAW O' YOR'N HAIN'T A-GOIN' HIM AN® HAIN'T NEITHER __ SARY'S A LEETLE TETCHED INTH HEAD, PAPPY. . L © 1934, King Featores Syndicare, Inc,, \ Grear Britaid fights reserved. ). | 4 Iee Crea m Piped “By Mile” . Brings Inventor $1,000 a Day | Clarence W. Vogt is a refrigeration engineer, and he gets ideas from cantankerous refrigeration pipes. One of them is ice cream ¢ by the mile, which is making him a fortune. By RADER WINGET of ice cream a day, about seven| '|NEGRESS LEAVES FOR | I KIN SEE HE'S AIMIN' | TER LET SAIRY MAKE A PLuMB FQOL OUT'N DISGRACE ALL f~ HIS KINFOLKS. .. HE YORE KIND, SAIRY, NO MORE'N A RAVEN'S A CROW... ‘THAT'S JES UNCLE JACOB'S WAY O TALKIN, I RECKON... HE DON'T MEAN FUR TRUE MORE'N HAFFEN A; WHUT HE o SAY. SALEM PENITENTIARY | TG SERVE TEN YEARS Blanche Nichia, who was con- victed of manslaughter in the U. 8. District Court here a year ago, in the shooting of Ole Storset at Yakutat, will be taken south on the steamer Alaska this afternoon in the custody of Deputy U. S. Marshal Walter G. Hellan. He will take her to Salem, Oregon to begin serving the sentence of ten years in the penitentiary pro- nounced by Judge George F. Alex- ander. | Through her attorney, George B. Grigsby, the negress appealed the case to the United States Court of Appeals in San Francisco, which upheld the trial held here and the sentence of Judge Alex- | ander. ——————— ATTENTION AMERICAN LEGION There will be a meeting tonight at the Dugout promptly at 7:30 p.m. All members are urged to attend. —adv. | ELIANCE ee TEAS SPICES YOU'D NEVER IS ANYTHING THE MATTER? E'GAR, T HED FIXED IT IN MY MIND SAIRY... I THOUGHT COME._ .. A GOOD WHILE AGO TER AX YE TER MARRY ME SO'S T COULD HEV A REG'LAR DWELLIN'- HOWSE AN’ LIVE LIKE A HUM BEIN' STIDDER LIKE A WOLF IN TH' WO0DS T BUT John Dillinger July 22, 1934 T WHEN it comes titne to cook a big THANGSGIVING dinner, every housewife thinks of her cooking uten- sils, and wishes she had a assortment of _!ll'gusewares, and PERCOLATORS: Both electric and’ stove. Toasters, Waffle Irons, S andwich Toasters in various sizes and all reasonably priced. CUPS AND and etched We take pride very seldom will you be disappoint- ed in finding the style of utensil you want. Stainless Steel, Alum- inum, Enameled Ware, or Tin, in all varieties and for all few more. ROASTERS Priced from $1.35 up CARVING SETS An indispens- . . able article for your Thanksgiving i table— Priccd from $3.50 to $7.50 MIXING BOWLS In all sizes Clear and col- ored glass, and srockery: Indi- vidual and sets. SAUCERS: Perhaps you need extra ones, and are not particular about matching the pattern. showing some very gaod values in plain We are glass and green crockery cups and saucers at 20c¢ each. B e it T b 4 y e o ! - Juneau-Young Hdwe. Co - [ ] - Homer Van Meter Charles Makley Harry Pierpont etty Boy"” Floyd | e Aug. 23, 1934 Sept. 22, 1934 Oct. 17, 1934 Oct. 22, 1934 Just a few months ago the Department of Justice announced rewards for the arrests or deaths of the ; seven desgcra(lues shown here. Today bullets and the electric chair have accounted for five of the seven. | LA | | NEW YORK, Nov. 9. — When | €€t to the gallon. Vogt figures a paper for lining tobacco tins stuck | Potential capacity peak of 1,50~ together and a pipe froze, Clarence 000.000 feet a year. W. Vogt laid the foundation for The ice cream end of his business an income of $1,000 a day. is well under way, he believes, and | That's what he said, “One thou- he is turning his attention to using | gand dollars a day” And just a his piping process for butter, cold| YeaT 5o Tié “was “struggling along cream, lard and other such mix- on $100 a day making ice cream tures. He is working out those ideas DOUGLAS dispatched from Tenakee., Not having showed up when, plenty of | time had elapsed for ‘its arrival, | the Oceanic left Saturday morning to search bays and inlets for the | missing craft. Only *“Baby Face” Nelson, new “Public Enemy No. 1,” and John Hamilton are alive and at liberty. Dil- linger and Floyd were killed by Federal agents. Makley died in an attémpted prison escape. Van Metex. was killed by St. Paul police and Pierpont died in the electric chair at Ohio State F'enitentiary. by the foot instead of by the gal- flon. Vogt, born in Louisville, Ky., restudied refrigeration engineering at {Cornell university. About seven iyears ago he was working in his own plant in Louisville when a large tobacco company found it couldn’t keep the half-block long sheets of waxed paper for tobacco tins from sticking together in hot ‘wéather. in his small shop in Greenwich, Conn. Among the latest is a cardbonrd! package for ice cream, butter and’ other commodities which can be| removed and sliced. Instead of tak- ing off the lid and digging out the contents, with his package the side is simply ripped opan to expose the entire. commodit; 10000 cs - uwvaenos |RAATIKAINEN RITES SET FOR TOMORROW John Raati- | “All Alaskans Acclaim ‘ Its Aroma. | The funeral for !kalnen, Douglas troller, will be held tomorrow afternoon at 2 o'- clock from C. W. Carter's Mor- —it’s time - blended from 7 choice tree- ripened coffees.” green Cemetery. | tuary, it was announced today. 1Burial will take place in Ever- | pected, so United States Commis- | CHARLES H. FORWARD TO sioner J. F. Mullen dispatched the | skippered by Ole | boat Oceanic, ‘Westby. back. LEAVE FOR MONTH'S STAY WITH FAMILY IN SEATTLE} After searching in Funter Bay | Charles H. Forward, Administra- and ' other coves, Westby reached |tive Assistant in the United States Tenakee Inlet to find that bad Forest Service here, will leave on weather had forced Gaveril to turn |the steamer Alaska for Seattle to Westby took the body to | spend the next month visiting with +his boat and arrived safely in Ju- |his parents, in that city. { e, neau -last night. NEWS R T MARRIED SATURDAY NIGHT Miss Margery Fleek and Mr. Tauno Niemi were unil in mar- riage at 8 o'clock Saturday night in Juneau. The ceremony was per- formed at the Presbyterian church, Funeral arrangements were com- pleted last evening upon arrival of the remains of the deceased. Services will be held at 2 o'clock ‘Tuesday afternoon at the C. W. Carter Mortuary. Attorney Henry Roden will delivery the eulogy. Interment will be made in Ever- green Cemetery. ' e FILES FOR SCHOOI} BOARD | WOMAN’S CLUB MEETS ATTENTION AMERICAN LEGION| The Juneau Woman's Club will There will be a meeting tonight |meet tomorrow afternoon in the the Dugout promptly at 7:30 American Legion Dugout. There All members are urged to|will be two speakers and a social —adv. hour will also be enjoyed. They called Vogt. He fixed that ‘with refrigeration. And then the ‘tobacco company asked him to fix / #some other little things in a plant manufacturing small bricks of ice feream. ! Vogt remedied that trouble too. AT THE HOTELS - | Raatjkainen was drowned in LICRC R SR SR N B BLENDED, ROASTED, AND | Tenakee Inlet last Tuesday. On VACUUM SEALED BY Thursday, Mike Gaveril started to ~ Gastineau Juneau with the body in a small W. C. Stump, Ketchikan, Mr. NATIONAL GROCERY €O: | native boat. Gaveril fafled to ar- and Mrs. C. E. Rnutson, Peters | ™ ¥ g |rive on Friday, when he was ex- Mrs. Cliff Roundtree, Pet- i S TR 4 Arne Shudshift, the first candi- date, has filed for the 8chool Board. ' The election will be held next week. >4 PRSIy NE A RN~ 20TH ANNIVERSARY PARTY Rev. John A. Glasse officiating. Miss Effie Fleek and "Alfred Fleek, cousins of the bride, attend- ed the pair. i Following the nuptials the young couple attended the Purple Bubble‘, pm. attend, | Then he tried to change the age- old process for making ice cream, ! a delicacy the Romans. are said to || have made using snow for refriger- | ation. X H ¢ Tries Flakes gt Ice cream for years has been , qnade in batches. The mixture was ' ‘poured into a freezer, paddled,; poured out and frozen solid. But| | gometimés the batches varied .in quality, and, ‘the process took ‘time. ; Vogt tried making it, among oth- er ways, in flakes like snow—and putting it into cakes that way. One day the refrigerated pipe “which earried the mixture to the snow- making point fréze . . . too much| | brine .around the pipe. 3 » But (he frozen ice cream mix- ture in the pipe was good to eat, Vogt found, and that rted him on his new idea. Today his patented | process makes ice ,cream by the mile in"pipes—one continuous pro-| cess instead of in “batches. Ice cream ingredients are poured into the ‘pipe; mixed, frozen, forced out under pressure in long rolls, chop- | ped off 'in small pieces, wrapped and delivered. # Vogt says ice cream made this | way is technically superior, because its quality can be controlled. His | process is guarded through licenses } from the original idea of making it to the time the finished product reaches the consumer in small packaged rolls. He figures a 25 per cent saving in power and refrigeration over the old method for making bulk ice cream, no saying in the finished oduct because of other costs that are higher, and a 20 percent final saving between his ct de- livered wrapped and ‘bulk ice cream delivered in the same man- 100 Miles A Day The first plant using his system was opened in Detroit in 1932, and now the plants using his -system have a total capacity of 100 miles burg; ersburg; N. L. Freeman, Prince Rupert, B. C.; Mr. and Mrs. Tom Elswick, Wrangell; Mr. and Mrs. J. A. ‘Berg, ‘Tenakee; Mrs. Jean ‘Larsen, Hoonah; Thelma Jaegel, Hoonah; P, N. Argell, Tenakee; Si Warwick, Hoonah. Zynda A. B. Chapman, Dundas Bay; Mr. and Mrs. Roy Hoffman, Ju- neaw; J. McNulty, Sitka; T. A. Wood, Sitka. ¢ Alaskan Charles Rice, Hirst; Mr. and Mrs. Nick Kahé, Chichagof; Rich- ard Thorne, Hoonah; R. Pekovich, Funter Bay; N. Jukich, Funter Bay; K. Lowe, Juneau, Alex Kabes, Juneau; John Price, Annex Creek; John Jensen, Petersburg; Oscar Williams, Petersburg; Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Elswick, Wrangell; M. L. Baldwin, Seattle; R. A. Jonn§or;, Juneau. SHOP IN JUNEACU: NOTICE TO CREDITORS In the Commissoner’s'Court for the Territory of Alaska, Division Number One, Before J. F. MUL- LIN, Commissioner and Ex-officio Brobate Judge, Juneau Precinct. In thé Matter of the Estate of ERNEST MILLAEGER, Deceased.’ NOTICE 1S HEREBY GIVEN That the undersigned was duly ap- pointed administrator of the estate of Ernest Millacger, ' deceased, on the 5th day of November, 1934. All persons having claims against the estate of said deceased Will present them, with proper vouchers and duly verified, to the under- signed, at Juneau, Alaska, within six (6) months from the date of this notice. 15 g DATED at Juneau, Alaska, No- vember 5, 1934. ALFRED L. ZENGER, Administrator. First publication, Nov. 5, 1934. Last publication, Nov. 26, 1934, ‘COAL . For Every Purse and, Purpose et 24> pACIFIC COAST COAL CO. no longer “\\". r\_,‘I/::z's_mw:Y/ Yo eyes. Qj.lflmdred! Here ¢ (h;ee-jgflggnhatofoflnwif 'ATCH thé oldest members of your family group. Do they sometimes put aside reading, or Bewing, as if the effort involved were 100 great? Often it s1 As birthdays mount, the pupil of the "becomes smaller. No matter how skilifully corrected with glasses, old eyes need more light than young ones do. More light than they get in 99 homes out mean a lof young you want eye comfort in your home both young and old. ; 1. Provide plenty of the new Better' Sight reading lamps, each equipped with' at least one -100-wait, or two 60’ or three 40’s, according to the number ; 3. Have the eyes of your family exaitit ined regularly by a competent specialist. BETTER LIGHT . ... BETTER SIGHT Alaska Electrllc_ L;ght & Power Co. JUNEAU—Phone 6 i DOUGLAS—Phone 18 s for Aryid & 2. See that walls and ceilings are light in eolor. A fresh coat of light colored paint or paper will work wonders. dance, returning to Douglas on a late ferry. They have taken the Riesser, cottage at Fourtq and F. Btreets, Both the bride and groom were born in Douglas, b bt Mrs. Niemi is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. G. A. Fleek, who returned here from Inspiration, | Arizona last summer after 17 years absence. Tauno is the son of Mrs. Ida Niemi, He graduated from the Douglas High 8chool class 1932. | He is employed at the Alaska Ju- neau. REMAINS 'OF J. RAATIKANEN T ARE BROUGHT TQ JUNEAU After days ovérdue, the 'body of John Raatikanen, who was drown- ed near Tenakee early last week was brought to Junean fast Aignt ' on’ the ‘scheoner Qoéani¢ which ! had been sent out by the U. S. Marshal's office to search for the boat on which the body had been ' | Mr. and Mrs. Guy L. Smith en- tertained a number of guests at their home Saturday night in cele- bration of their” twentieth wedding anniversary. Cards affc the evening’s pastime, prize ' Winners | being Mrs. Eng Engstrom and Chas. Fox for bridge, Mrs. Charles !8chramm and John Mills for pi- nochlé. 3 A beautiful Florantine . china ,console set was presented to Mr. and Mrs. Smith as'an appropriaf WOMEN’S pASKETB’LL Tomorrow night will be ladies’ night at the Nat and all women and girls of Douglas who are in- terested in practicing basketball gre invited by Miss Pepoon to be 4t the Natatorium from 7:30 to 8:30 o’'clock. e Private Boethsa “J’lfl_wg'g' Own Store” CAPITOL BEER PARLORS AND BALL ROOM Lunches Dancing Every Night ALASKAN HOTELS