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received cancellations of reserva- | DAVE RAMSAY ABOARD a tions which totaled 100 in one day STEAMER VlCTORl‘ during the strike, however, it was | LA a fairly good season in spite of | Dave Ramsay, former purser that. We hope for an exceptional |aboard the Kenai, being brok season next year,” he said. into the ropes on large steamer: New Equipment is freight clerk aboard the Victoria. During the last seasori two new | Mrs. Ramsay, recent bride, is 8 20-passenger steel busses, made by PEERERS: vislting n. Sastie, ¢ During the stay of the steamer, Heiser, Incorporated, in Seattle, 1 ms: were added to the transportation n port, Mr. Ramsay was recelving . X | congratulations. company’s equipment and it is plan- | B ned to add further equipment next | FAIRBANKS HEAD TRAVELS» season, Mr. Galen said. Mr. Galen expects to be in Wash- General Manager of the Fair ington for about a month and is banks Exploration Company, O. ¢ planning to stop over in Juneau‘EgXeswn, accompanied by his wif on his northbound trip sometime land son, Marvin, is a throug: in February. passenger on the Northwesterg R AT |bound for Seattle. 3 GROVER WINN RETURNS | iy | JUDGE ALEXANDER ILL | Grover C. Winn returned on Lhe Judge George F. Alexander 9 | Northland from Seattle where he;connned to his home today, suf- d 'has been on legal business for |fering from a slight attack of iMf» | several weeks. | fluenza. THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, SATURDAY, JAN. 5, 1935 | D(uly Crossaword Puzzle J.L.GALEN IS ON WAY EAST . Dowry . Former small coins worth |Goes to Conference in Washington, D. C., on McKinley Park ‘avoid blood | SEN. BRUNELLE ARRIVES HERE ON N'WESTERN :V!‘Em[’)(‘l‘ fl‘om COI‘(]OV& IS First Senator to Arrive for Coming Session Solution of Yesterday's Puzzle AlS Iflfl mng FDR Aide To Wed MINING GUUD _——__—-—I ACR Neither cold SAYS WGINN £ 22 . 17. Metal Prominent Attorney of|1§ Eist Singing In the A vll‘:}?):l(,l black Fairbanks and San Fran- e ey Mquia | cisco Here Southbound . Box . Death notice . Cravat . In India, & po- . Lubricate Move with & lever | . Large stove Money paid to 10 21. Spot on lxll}" ing care 23. Deal out sparingly Cravings Spinning toy wrmur con- 6% cents . Any monkey 25 Kind of dog . Gave one's (Continued mom eaze€ f o ettt o 10 'ML McKinley Tourist and Trans- ‘portanon Company, was a Juneau |visitor yesterday afternoon and evening on his way to Washing- ton, D. C., where he will attend a conference on the National Parks and the Alaska Railroad to be held on January 21. Secretary of the Interior Harol * | L. Ickes has called the conference | | and others who will attend include | | Director of Parks Arnold B. Cam- | merer, Col. Otto F. Ohlson, Gen- |eral Manager of the Alaska Rail- road, Harold W. Snell, special rep- resentative of the railroad and a | representative of the Alaska Steam- | ship Company. “Prospects for further develop- ment of Mr. McKinley Park will be discussed at the meeting. Tenta- tive plans call for the construction | of two new hotels at the park, one at the entrance and one further |into the park. Two Hotets Proposed “It has been suggested that the, | Alaska Railroad build a hotel at the park entrance, and if plans | carry through, it is hoped that it | will be completed for the 1936 sea- | son, as well as a hotel further in| |on the park highway,” Mr. Galen | said. [ “Present plans call for a hotel to accomodate 250 people at the park entrance and one that will | take care of approximately 150 ml Ohs) £ ; y > Mining in the Fairbanks district 2i | | has shown' a tremendous mcmase‘u. during the last season, Wxth both 2. feud . Cube root of 64 tentedly Makes a pre- Short for a man's name to Jur an to do so dur ssion, he said Previous to his connection with the C. R. N. W. railway, the Sena- was Chief Time Keeper at the Kennecott mine for several years following discharge from the United States Army at Camp)| [§ 4 Dodge, Iowa, as Supply Sergeant 4 £ g | ‘I am rather proud to have been ? . & ¥ the first Alaskan drafted into the army during the World War, but experienced slight difficulty as I was drafted by the Minnesota Board and was sent from Juneau to Fort Seward, a regular army post where no National army exist- ed at that time. It was settled by my being sworn into the regular army for only the duration of the | war, rather than the regular four ar period. T was transferred to| » Presidio, San Fancisco, for sev- eral days and from there to Camp Jodge where 1 served until the end of the war,” Senator Brunelle said Born in Minnesota Born in Red Lake Falls, Minne- on September 9, 1895, Sena- t Brunelle graduated om the grade and high schools there, later attending St. Thomas College in St. Paul Shortly after his gradua- tion, he came to Alaska, vin here in 1917 to accept the positior with the Gastineau at Per- severance which he held until the war brought a temporary end to his residence in the Territory. . Touch at the boundary line . Kind of fish . More pre- cipftows Greek letter . Breezy . Made over . Quiet | opened up and operawd at a profit, | according to John McGinn, promi- | nent attorney of Fairbanks and | San Francisco, who was in Juneau | § -L\:p:c‘t’t;:‘x. while the Northwestern was in . Join : | port. :gur)r;mrly Mr. MecGinn, who spends his' 5o, African arrow summers practising law in Fair- polson | banks and handling his quartz }m‘mmg property on St. Patrick Creek, on Esther Dome, near the Interior city, is,on his way to his winter home at San Mateo, Cali- fornia, and will return to Fair- banks in the spring. “There has been quite a quartz development in our camp during the last summer. The Cleary Hills Mining Company also had a good vear and a number of quartz pros- pects showed favorable indications. There must be thirty small out- fits operating near Fairbanks, near- ly all of which will take out enough duriug the winter to more than pay wages,” Mr. McGinn declared. “I believe the new price of gold is just beginning to really be feit and it is encouraging to note the number of young men who are tak- ing an active interest in prospect- ing throughout the Interior coun- try, for both placer and quartz. People throughout the Fairbanks area are optimistic about the out- look for next summer and expect an even better season than last year,” Mr. McGinn said. Old musical note . 1/100 of a dollar 3. Anarchists . Stitch . Comfort DOWN . Depressions between mountain . Painstakingly 37. An English queen Act of ul“n. Genus of the Il _UNIEEEE NN B ddd B a JumEE dEN aEENIEEEN] AW il il REN IIII”///lIfl-IIII /dan JdEEN) The engagement of Miss Pauli Tully (above) of New York, one o President Roosevelt's secretarie: to Charles R. Larrabee of Chicagc has been announced. (Associate Press Photo) WHITE METAL POURING INTO DENVER MINT TONIGHT MOOSE HALL A great booster for Alaska ticularly C ova, Senator nelle is greatly interested in the schools of the Territory, the Pio- neers’ Home and other 'lnn(un'l! matters. Among his enthusiasms is aviation and he plans to obtain a pilot's license as soon as he finds time to take the required training He dislikes ocean travel and de- clares that his one regret at being elected was the knowledge that he would have to cross the Gulf of Alaska Organizations to which he be- longs are the B. P. O. Elks, in which he is a Past Exalted Ruler of the Cordova lodge an t Dis- trict Deputy for Alaska West; th American Legion; the Shrine, Blue Lodge and Scottish Rite orders of the Masonic Lodge - OWENS ON BODAT par: Bru- Harry Owens, who in partnershin with Tom Yocuel owns ana operates the Tavern Cafe in Fair- banks, is on the Northwestern en route to Seattle. After a brief stay in that city, he expects to leave for San Francisco to arrange for the shipment of supplies for the Tavern Cafe, in the spring. He will return to Fairbanks on one of the early February boats. ————————— Shop in Juneau! \December Recelpts of Sil- ver Break Record, Sec- ond Time, 4 Months DENVER, Colo., Jan. 5.—Silver receipts at the mint at Denver, boomed upward during December and set a new high record for the second time in four months. The west's silver miners shipped 447747 ounces, worth $286,964 to the mint during December. This tops the previous ord of 426,249 unces received during September. - - KREMMER TRAVELS T Kremmer is among the southbound passengers on the Northwestern, which sailed from Juneau last night. Kremmer is dredgemaster with the Fairbanks Exploration Co., and is in charge of their dredge No. 8, operating in the Gilmore section of the Fair- banks Mining District. He said that 2fter a very suc- cessful season, the dredge was clos- ed down for the winter on Decem- ber 6. He expects to spend part of the winter in Seattle and San Francisco and return to Fairbanks during the latter - part of next month. FRESH FRUITS uml ALWAYS CALIFORNIA GROCERY Telephone 478 VEGETABLES § z s 5 z Prompt Delivery JOE GREEN IS ARRIVAL HERE ON NORTHLAND Joe Green, of Hyder, Represen- tative in the Territorial Legisla- ture from the Pirst Judicial Divis- ion, who was elected to his sec- | ond term in the legislature last | September on the Democratic ticket, arrived in Juneau on the motor- ship Northland yesterday, to join Mrs. Green, who was a passenger here on the Victoria. Mr. Green left the Victoria at Wrangell to spend several hours discussing legislative matters with residents of that city, before con- tinuing to Juneau. Representative and Mrs. Green are staying at the Zynda Hotel. S eee GROCERY CLERKS MIX 80, the grocery clerks will get together tomorrow at Brunswick | Alleys for a bit of bowling . . . at least, that's the idea of the sched- uled exhibition match between the teams representing Sanitary Gro- cery and California Grocery. The squads will meet at 2:30 o’clock. e NEWSPAPER MAN TRAVELS | for Canadian B BN AEEE ede- gl /' Gain Neted ‘ COLD WAVE IS FORECAST OVER EASTERN AREA Storm Sweeping Down from Canada Abates— Report Dozen Fatalities CHICAGO, II., Jan. 5. — The| cold wave which sent temperatures down as it swept across the northern part of the | trades. United States, is abating with fair and warmer conditions prevailing ure also will impose a check on |in the Middle West. Low temperatures are predicted the East and New England States with another sharp cold snap, the wave to hit early tonight according to the forecasters. Western Canada took stock of the suffering caused by the storm and at least one dozen or more fatalities are attributed to the cold | wave. Seven fishermen, marooned on | Jim Marshall, an editor on The |jee floes on Lake Simcoe, Ontario, | Seattle Star and author of the! | finally escaped. Three were pick- | well-known column in that publl<‘ed up by a plane and four made is mak- | heir way ashore when the lake | ing the round trip from Seattle 10 |finally froze over. cation, “Seattle ala Carte,” Sitka and return on the North- land. ————— MISS CAWTHORNE HERE Mary Keith Cawthorne arrived | been placed in the rock garden of on the Victoria enroute to Hoonah | as representative of the Indian| Washington. service. The colony of North Carolina in- | sisted en a clause guaranteeing re- ligious liberty before ratifying the | Unlud States oonsmuuon in 1789. | S e A foundation stone from the Kentucky home of Mary Todd Lin- | coln, wife of the president, has | the Girl Scouts’ headquarters in - oLD ?\EW&I‘APERS ‘In bundles for sale at The Em- pire office, 25c. Fine for starting | years, prominent Tacoma and Se- your flrcu lhese chllly mornmn. SHORTER HOURS FOR WORK NOW URGED, IRELAND § DUBLIN, Jan. 5—To the slogan of “more leisure without loss,” la- bor leaders have been urging leg- islation to reduce working hours. Sean Lemass, Minister of Com-| merce, who has on many occasions | praised the American shorter hours | policy, has agreed to introduce a bill to cut working hours in certain | | It is understooa tnat the mea.s-} the increasing tendency to employ | women and children in factories established under the Government’s | industrial drive: S e B. S. GROSSCUP DIES SUDDENLY TACOMA, Wash,, Jan. 5.—Benja- min Sidney Grosscup, aged 77 attle attorney, member of the firm | of Grosscup and Morrow, died sud- | denly here yesterday. e Mrs. James Champion, 66, built a comfortable home for herself on her farm near Holdenville, OKla., using logs she cut and hewed with her own hands. e A Shop m Junean? Mr. Galen said that while the waterfront strike necessarily great- \ ly damaged the tourist business m‘ the park, it showed a big increase over the year 1933 with an im- provement of nearly seventy-two | nercent. “Because of the 1mposs1- bility of gemng transporlation we ' “Dude” ® Admission $1.00 @® Ladies Free Haynes Orchestra Follow the Crowd TO THE keep vour crenir 4s |1 Capital Beer Parlors “GOOD AS GOLD!” ® ° SPECIAL. PROGRAM TONIGHT BEST MUSIC! DOOR PRIZE! o L PRIVATE DINING ROOMS FOR PARTIES, with Excellent Foods and Service (losing Out SALE WOMEN’S—MISSES’ SKI PANTS All Wool—Alll Sizes Reg. $5.95, Now $3.95 Prompt payment of accounts according to terms, will build a priceless credit record— “WORTH MORE THAN GOLD” Use your credit freely and pay all bills GIRLS’ CORDUROY-LINED SKI PANTS All Sizes, All Shades—$2.49 CHILDREN’S ALL-WOOL SNOW SUITS Values to $7.45—NOW $4.75 Leader Department Store George Bros. . by the 10 or promptly as agreed AND TRY one of those Delicious Fresh Olympia OYSTER COCKTAILS! [ ] HARRY KRANE will furnish SPECIAL MUSIC TOMORROW NIGHT. ALASKA CREDIT BUREAU CHARLES WAYNOR, Manager Valentine Bldg. Phone 28 | M m