The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, April 9, 1935, Page 8

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START TAKING SEAL AT SITKA | COMING WEEK Government Survey to De- termine Bearing on Fishing Industry of seal off the Sitka coast by the Bureau of Fisheries under treaty with the Canadian government for the purpose of ex- amining their stomachs to deter- mine what inroads the migrating erds make on the salmon and halibut industry, is expected to start next week with Warden Donald S. Taking LIMIT NOMBER | OF BEAR TAKEN ON ADMIRALTY New Regulations on Beav- er, Marten, Sheep, Goat This Season ACROSS 1. Happen 7. Worshiped 13. Eloquent public speaker 14, Structure for rearing vines [ATMATZTE] 15, est continent 16. Ages 18, Recline 19. Give } information 20. Metal fastener 21. Hoosler state: 2 bbi abbr. Animal a year 25, Blomld . Stu erso 28, Exvperl p'Vlr i 29, Reduction in the bag limit fory brown bear on Admiralty Island from two to one will be effective this Season, according to the new regulations on game and fur ani- mals just received by the Ju- neau office of the Bureau of Bio- logical Survey..The provisions are in keeping with the recently an-| aviator Maori village or com- munity Potassium carbonate obtained from wood ashes 34. Fatlike 35. Unaccompa- © 43. Interminable periods of time 44, Persian poet 48, Win 49. Written prom- ise to pay 50. Morbid (ATo]p] HRNER s1o]1 [R]e 7 Bam Haley of Juneau in charge | nounced Admiralty Island Bear The U. S. F. S. Scoter is believ-| Management plan: ed en route from Seattle and Due to the accessibility of the due here at the week end and Hal-|jsland many hunters have gone to ey will board the fisheries vessel | Admiralty Frank Dufresne, As- here to go to Sitka where the work |sistant Executive Officer of the of taking the seal will take until Alaska Game Commission, said, about the first of June. | with the result that the bear sup- ~ . - ly there is being depleted. The Claim Kill Fish }Zurenu had placed the limit on Complaints have been made ”““\Lho number taken at 35 a season, the rapidly growing fur seal herds|pe explained, and this number has, in their migration to the north|peen exceeded with the result that kill and eat many salmon and hali-| ¢ne new regulations were put in but, and last spring the matter was! effect. The season opens September | taken up with the Canadian g0V-|1 and closes in June of the follow- | breathing sound 61. Military students Access Unwilling Ornamental cloth cover- ing the back of a seat nie 36. Article of Jewelry 37. Compass point 38, American Jjournalist and con- gressman 41. Old speliing of rock m ernment and agreement was reach- ed for each government to examine a certain number of seals. The last survey was made in 1896 and 1897.| Haley is authorized to take 100 esals off the Sitka coast and| the Bureau is also taking 100 from Neah Bay at La Push, Washington. The stomachs will be sent to the Biological Survey in Washington, D. C. for examination. The Cana- dian authorities are taking seals off | the British Columbia coast for the ing year. The plan is to have hunt- ers go to other islands where bear| are also plentiful, Dufresne said. | Other Regulations Beaver, marten, mountain sheep| and mountain goat also will have increased protection after July 1, when the new 1934-45 regulations relating to game, land fur animals and birds in the Territory become effective. Heavy trapping in recent years, the Bureau report says, has made HEN el @ ANE ‘n necessary to close the seasons on beavers and martens throughout the Territory to insure the main- tenance of ample breeding stock in some sections. Two new refuge stomach with the fur going to the areas for beavers also have been native. |set up along the Alaska Railroad, Haley has just returned from Lit- near Grandview and at Honolulu, tle Port Walter where with War- and these animals are similarly den Fred Lucas he was making a ! protected on Baranof and Chicha- survey of the humpback salmon run|gof Islands and in the Mendenhall} in that vicinity. Count of the fish|Valley near Juneau. was made to determine the supply Protected Areas as they emerged from the streams.| Mountain sheep and mountain The warden returned on the Fish-|goats under the new regulations en- eries Ship Auklet while Lucas went| joy full protection in an area in south to Seattle aboard the U./the Girdwood-Anchorage-Matanus- 8. F. 8. Teal. ka drainage. This protected area; same purpose. Natives Spear 'Em Natives actually take the seals with spears and the government is prepared to pay a bounty for each WEDNESDAY ONLY W Potatoes 50-LB. SACK FOR $1.10 LOUISIANA YAMS 10¢ 1b. FAIRMONT Tomato PURE CIDER Vinegar 39¢ gallon Bring ycur own container Peanuts FRESH ROASTED 2 lbs. for 35¢ EXTRA FANCY Sunkist Oranges auce 35¢ doz. 6 cans for 32¢ One Jar of Silver and Metal Polish FREE with every purchase of $1.00 or more FULL LINE OF FRESH FRUITS AND VEGETABLES OPEN EVENINGS AND SUNDAYS PHONE 342 SEWARD STREET INGTO 4 3 l} \ ( \ { \ \ \ \ I} \ \ \ \ I} ll ) ] } \ { \ \ I \ \ § \ \ } \ \ ) 3 NEW HIKING BREECHES which has been established to as- sure maintenance of adequate breeding herds of these animals. includes parts of the drainages of Crow, Bird, and California Creeks, near Girdwood; the North Fork Ship Creek, near Anchorage, and Eagle River, near Matanuska. - - RETURNS TO WRANGELL James Nolan, liquor dealer in Wrangell, left for that city from SIZES 22 TO 36 LEADER DEPT. STORE GEORGE BROS. IO OO T Tttt OO T Tt T ttttrseo | Daily Cross-word Puzzle 8olution of Yesterday's Puzzle d o 10. 8Bystem of faith and ‘worship 11. Irelana 12, Stained 17. Scarce 23. Rights of uuln‘gh % ano fanother's T [o[p] GMN JAINTA[C] 24. Short sleep 25. South Ameri- can river 26. Sun £7. Line of posts or timbers serving as cade 30. Relatives 8L American humorist 83. Babylonian deity 34, Kind of ‘oll used in mizing 3. Half quart 39. Animal of the deer family 40. Varieties 41 ng{;:.; | 42. Patron saint & Norway 46. l)n!th:d.hgx. T 4. St ) erlnlo 52. Comparative en 54, Not any DOWN . Vessel for water travel . Gaelic . Balancing part of a kite . European country 5. Perform 6. Hereditary steward of an abbot rofit Feeling aver- sion for - Upon 7. P 8. L4 2/ HESSE TO SITKA William A. Hesse, Highway En- neer and member of the Admin- rative Board, was a passenger to Sitka on the Victoria. He will spend a few days there on business in| connection with the Pigneers’ Home. & A “om > SCOBEE TRAVELS 3 cobee, Juneau insurance velled to Petersburg on | for | \ |CRAVIOLINE HERE THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, TUESDAY, APRIL 9, 1935. PAA PLANE OFF ON SCHEDULED FLIGHT TODAY Three Make Interior Trip| on Second Flight of New Air Service On the second from Juneau to Fairbanks, the Pa- | cific Alaska Airways Lockheed Elec~ tra left the PAA Juneau airport shortly after 3 o'clock this after- noon. Pilot Joseph Barrows was at the controls with S. E. Robbins, co~ pilot and Ollie Ames, mechanic. Three passengers left on the plane, two for Fairbanks and one Whitehorse. Bound for the| “Golden Heart” city are J. B. E d | scheduled mgm‘engme, and will carry a crew of | | Kechnie. Warrack, of the Warrack Con- struction Company, Dr. Noel Dick, | of Ketchikan and Larry mggms,l Yukon Government Agent at Whitehorse. Mr. Higgins made the | trip here from Whitehorse aboard' the Electra on its inaugural flight from Fairbanks to Juneau. Good weather is reported except on the coast, with Whitehorse slightly overcast and from there to Fairbanks clear. The regular route by way of Taku valley into White- ! horse was followed. — o * FROM SEATTLE TRIP, Tony Cravioline, manager of !he" Gastineau Cafe, returned neau on the Yukon from Seattle.| He has been on a short business trip. EARLYS RETURN Mr. and Mrs. Rex Early returned! to Juneau aboard the Yukon from Seattle. He is connected with the| Chichagof Mine Company. They have been on an extended vacation| trip Outside, e .- HEBERT ON ALASKA Lyle Hebert, Schwabacher Hard- ware Company representative, is bound for Ketchikan on the Alaska from Juneau. Another well-known travelling man for the First City is A. VanMavern, West Coast Gro-| cery Company salesman. e | PEGGY M’'LEOD BACK Peggy McLeod returned from a six-mon vacation in California as a passenger out of Seattle on L. H. METZGAR RETURNS FROM BUSINESS TRIP (Continued from Page One) s the Winslow Marine Railway and Shipbuilding Company, were mem- bers of the editorial staff of sev- eral motor boat publications. The Trojan, of which Larry McKechnie will be master, is 72 feet in length, has a beam of 18 feet and a draft of 9 feet. It is powered with a 275 horsepower Atlas Imperial diesel | to Capt. Mc-, two in addition Power Plant Reconstruction Rebuilding of the Salmon Creek | power plant at the beach as it was{ before the fire of several years ago, will be begun as soon @s weather permits, Mr. Metzgar said., This plant will produce 2000 kilos watts of power to be added to the power used for the mine and mill{ due to the increased operation. Work on both the power plant and the flume is to be done by the regular crew of the Alaska Juneau from plans prepared by the en- gineering department ofthe com- pany. Special lumber to be used in the flume consists of rough fir, crecsoted fir and cedar, Mr. Metz-| gar said. ! Mr. and Mrs. Metzgar left Ju- neau on February 27 and con-| tinued from Seattle -directly to CALHOUN AVENUE WILL BE CLOSED| Announcement was made this afternoon at the City Hall that Calhoun Avenue will be closed to | traffic Thursday. .The street will be closed at Fifth Street, north about 200 feet, to all traffic but pe- destrians. This closing order was made, it was explained, in connection with | construction work, scheduled to | start Thursday, on concrete re-| inforcements and general improve- ment of the street. The project will be completed by chntracwr Lewis Drydahl for the city on a Public Works Administra- tion Joan. E: 5 y ‘l’he.rg will be a Tegular meeting in the'1. O. O. F. Hall Wednes- IWile of Hauptmann Ridicules Story of | Husband on Horse NEW YORK, April 9.—Mrs: Ani- na Hauptmann, commenting taday on the statement of the Rev. Mich- | ael J. Kallock, Catholic priest of | Cudahy, Wis., who asserted he had |often seen Bruno Richard Haupt- mann mounted on a horse survey- ing the Lindbergh estate, sald:; “It is a horse on the minister for | the only horse Richard ever rode was a’ merry go round.” ——————— HOLZHEIMER RETURNING ‘ District Attorney W. A. Holz- heimer,, who has been south' to San Francisco on legal business for | the Territory, is returning to his Juneau headquarters aboard the Northwestern. 5 day ight, April 10, a8 oclock.| e ed Drill tegm practice. All ¥members | RETURN TO FLAT urged to attend. ! | Mr. and Mrs. Gus Uotila are ~ v EDITH F. SHEELOR, 7 |passengers for Seward on the Yu- —adv. Secretary. .| kon from Seattle. They will jours s | ney to Flat, where Uotila has mine SHOP IN JUNEAU FIRST! linterests. dent Mining Company, who expects to! to Ju-| with the construction of the tug and barges and the purchasing of San Francisco, where Mr. Metzgar confered with P. R. Bradley, Presi-I of the Alaska Juneau Gold, visit the property here during the ing summer. After spending a week in San Francisco, Mr. and| . Metzgar returned to Seattle where he has been in connection | lumber for the Salmon Creek flume. | Mrs. Metzgar will remain in Seat- | 'the Yukon. She has been employed in Bailey's Cafe. tle until after Easter when she| will rejoin her husband in Juneau. NEW PASTOR FOR METHODISTS HERE| The newest addition to Juneau's| ! pastor group, Rev. O. S. Kendal, arrived here this morning as a passenger on the Yukon from Se- | attle.- The Rev. Kendall came herel from Idaho to take the pulpit of| the Metropolitan Methodist Church. 25c Dozen This ideal delicacy for pre-Easter and Easter menus achieves new delicious- ness with our famous recipe. Full of plump currants and imported spices. Get a dozen today. The new pastor is accompanied by“ A COMPLETE SELECTION OF NEW BREADS his wife and two children, Tom | and Willetta. | The Kendalls registered at the | Gastineau Hotel, where they will side for a week before moving into the manse. - -—— Empire Classified Ads Pay. AND DELIGHTFUL PASTRIES FOR EASTER [ ] I give you the mildest smoke, the best- tasting smoke. I do not irritate your tb.rmt. You wonder what makes me difl;rént. For one thing, it’s center leaves. I spurn the little, sticky, top leaves .\ . so bitter to the taste. I scorn the coarse bottom leaves, - so harsh and unappetizing. I am' careful of your friendship, for I am made of only the mild, fragrant, expensive center leaves, “«

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