The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, April 22, 1935, Page 7

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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, MONDAY, APRIL 22, 1935 | FUNERAL SET TOMORROW PLANNING STORE BUILDING MADLAND TO SEATTLE GUCKER RETURNS F ATHER FEARFUL Bessie Anna Edwards, 3-year-old| R. B. Lesher, formerly head of| Traveling from Seward to Seat-i After an extended trip to the | Indian girl who died at Government | the Salvation Army and head of tle on the Alaska is Hamry B. Westward, J. W. Gucker, mer- *'# | Hospital Saturday, will be buried | Juneau's welfare work, is preparing Madland, Carrington, Jones Com-|chandise broker, returned to Ju- g | in Evergreen Cemetery after fun-| | for the erection of a store building pany representative. “nenu on the Alaska. | eral services tomorrow. The funeral |at Willoughby Avenue next to the - ——to— | R B | P “j MIALOVICH LEAVES i ROUSE ARRIVES Red Mialovich, recently a patient| F. F. Rouse, Pacific Fruit and ‘TIRED OF HUEY S PALAVER’ FIRST LOANS FOR NEW HOMES BY| service, read by the Rev. A. P./AERA commissary. He alrcady has FHA MADE HERE Mrs. Keith Wlles, Geonge Sheeper Willl Erect Houses Immediately First loans for construction of new homes in Juneau under the mutual mortgage insurance pro- gram of the Federal Housing Ad- ministration were . approved Satur- day by the First National Bank and B. M. Behrends Bank. At the same time, committments to insure the mortgages were given by Director John E. Pegues of the, Federal Housing Administration The loans were made to Mrs Keith G. Wildes and George F. Sheeper. Construction of Mrs. Wildes house on 12th Street, in the Irving Addition, will start in the next few days. James Larson is the con- traotor, and the plans were drawn by the architectural firm of N. Lester Troast and Associates. The house will contain three rooms and is to be rented. Mr. Sheeper's home will be locat- ed on Evergreen Avenue, in the Seatter Addition. Mr. and Mrs. Sheeper will occupy the house. Con- tractors are Elingen and Crowell. Columbia Lumber Company is fur- nishing the material. According to Mr. Pegues, further application for insured mortgazes are now being considered. - - LIGHT COMPANY’S CITY HOOP LOOP TROPHY DISPLAYED Presented by W. 8. Pullen of the Alaska Electric Light and Power Company, a silver trophy stands today in the firm's window on Front Street, emblematic of the City Bas-| ketball League champion. It's a perpetual trophy, and it's “retroactive,” inasmuch as it goes back to the 1933-34 victor to in-| This | clude the George Brothers. season’s winner, the DeMolays, also is emblazoned on the trophy. The prize will remain in the Light Company window for today, then will go to the George Brothers for a week, and then to the De- Molays. Its final resting place will be the Juneau High School trophy case, where it will remain waiting for a new champion next year - .- FOUR HALIBUTERS SELL AT SEATTLE, SEATTLE, April 22.—The follow- ing halibut schooners arrived today, all from the local banks: Blanco, 11,600 pounds, Alitak, 9,000 pounds, both selling for 11 and 10 cents a pound; Freya, a new craft owned by Arne Jangord of Tacoma, formerly master and owner of the Chancellor, 10,000 pounds, selling for 11% and 10%; Evolution, with 10,000 pounds, selling for 10% and 10 cents a pound. - . DAILY EMPIRE WANT ADS PAY! Schilling Headed by a two fisted congressman from the cow country, Rep. P. L. Gassaway (above), a group of representatives has organized to whittle down the power of Senator Huey P. Long. “We are the mean- est scoundrels in congress and we are damn tired of Huey's line of palaver,” said tl.c Oklahoma democrat. “We are going to knock him over.” (Associated Press Photo) STRONGEST SEA G.0.P. LEADERS UNION SPENDS | HAVE INFORMAL DAY IN FIGHT GATHERING, MY, Newly Formed Maritime One Presidential Boom Is Federation Pacific Unde- | Announced—Plea Made cided on Constitution | for Parly Unity SEATTLE, April 22.—The Mari- itime Federation of the Pacific, the | strongest seamen’s union in the world, its organizers say, spent Sat- urday here fighting over politis WASHINGTON, April 22.—A plea | for Party unity and infusion of young blood, and an argument against any premature committ- ments as to candidates or a plat- All day long it battled over Ar- o .. "Wo 2qvanced to a group of ticle 11 of is proposed constitu- o FOF U KO B G AL Federation, 1o, white, Kansas publisher, ad- dressing m an 20 high in the 0. P. at a luncheon last Satur- | tion which says that the formed of eight unions, | press its views on pub tand shall back the Un |Party, Many meomi 1id not be done. e Federation finally adjourned over the weck-end after pa. ing for a of the men who die summer’s maritime The Federation fixed July 5 of eac year as a memor .m-nwrv da Five men w dispute Cal, in It and those oundad s an extraordinary gathering attending the luncheon a theme spurring regional but steering way from feel that this idates. Prosidential Bcom it was disclosed that a boom had been started fred M. Landon, of Kan- as, 'n'l this altered plans for hold- ng a giant G. O. P. meeting in €% gansas City and as a result the pre 1 rally of Mid-western Re- publicans will be shifted from Kan- £as City to either St. Louis, Chicago, Minneapolis or Indianapolis. 'lnv meeting Saturday, around the n table, was one of the largest informal rallies since’ the day in hcnor in last ast year's strike, D CHARLES WORTMAN LEA FOR SITKA ON NORTH S @ = | Charles Wortman, preminent ) | Sitka druggist and memb i Kashevaroff in the Indian Village |dumped seven feet of rock in the| chapel of the Russian Orthodox location, eradicating a serious sew- | Church, will start at 1 o'clock morrow afternoon. to- | | age problem. The work is a private | weeks, left for Seattle on ! enterprise. 1 Alaska. at St. Ann's Hospital for several | Produce representative, was an in- the_bound passenger from the West- iward on the Alaska. apa Dionne Wants to Ap- i point New Physician | to Make Examination [ CALLANDER, April 22.—Oliva Di- onne, father of the famous quin- | tuplets, said here today he believed | his five Jlittle daughters were more ill that it was reported and he ask- ed the government that he and his wife be allowed to appoint a doctor | to examine them. | Marie, tiniest of the quintuplets, [ |had a temperature of 101 today | The others were reported improved y J | from light colds. Dr. A. R. Dafoe, WE HANDLE | their physician, reaffirmed previous statements that there was no need | for anxiety over the condition of |any of them. - 'WINNERS SELECTED IN SCOUTS’ AWARD Mrs. Goodman and Mrs. Mae McKinnon were awarded prizes this afternoon as numbers 106 and 261 were selected at the Butler Mauro Drug Store in the Glacier Patrol's Girl Scout affair. Mrs. Goodman, winner of the first prize, was awarded a soap and perfume combination, while Mrs. | McKinnon won a shaving set. | The purpose of the affair was to |raise money for the Girl Scouts annual summer camp. Members of the patrol, headed by Mrs. Milton A. Lagergren, who sold tickets are Barbara McSpadden, Isabel Parsons, | Betty Jean Keith, Mary Elizabeth Rice, Dorothy Fors, Betty Reed, Sylvia Davis, Gm'don Clithero. ‘Kohler’ PIPE AND FITTINGS \(’u* Trial ()rdered n Heart Balm Case Involving $100,000 CHICAGO, TI1, April 22.—Federal Judge W. H. Holly has set aside the $100,000 heart balm judgment awarded Mrs. Helen Bedford Jones, of Evansville, and granted a new trial in behalf of Mrs. Mary Ber- nard Bedford Jones, second wife of Henry Bedford Jones, the author. Phone 34 - - SHOP IN JUNEAU FIRST! ’I}ze cigarette industry could never have been what it is except for these modern ciga- rette machines . . . Standard’ PLUMBING FIXTURES Highest Q‘u:alit y HOT WATER STEAM VAPOR and Montag AID CONDITION PLANTS Every Plant Guaranteed ¢ Braden Both Full Automatic Last year we sold 36 Braden Burners. Ask for list of satisfied owners. i/mt Science really knows 'dbqytf"mdleing cigarettes is used in ) UGGETI‘ & MYERS TOBACCO co. ber of the Fioneers' Home Board, left for his home on the steamer North Sea after spending the last ek in| 1932 convention. Still No Agreement The meeting engendered unity of They make good cigarettesand | Jureau on a combined business and purpose but no unanimity on the PURE \ JANILLA | Pleasure trip. i | method of approach. o g ;l.l-‘l.‘ ';I‘A\'FV g | The Roosevelt Administration : - E TRAVELS came in for the usual criticism. Its cwu”‘ttflm'or”m” Mys. . Gary Bach, wife of the ' gome gy the meeting were in- land Transportation Company ¥ el FE clined to view success in 1936 as freezes out of lagent in Ketchikan, is a round diberii R g an At \g/‘ | passeng '1‘711 1”[‘)!:; I?’O*'lhns(": ‘*’3‘1" tack on the New De: t a is accompanied by her son, Gary, Jr. 1 o ot FROZEN DESSERTS .l \\'m could be made or rits of the Republican Party h\!hel than on “demerits of the opposition.” Cthers declared the Republicans 3 and will win” if the Re- get busy. White favored the midwest meet- ing but insisted it should be dis- ociated from any pa alar can- to. The Nugget Shop | s v SHOP IN JUNEAU! There are Curio Shops here and there but if you miss Pile Drivf‘r Operaters of the Cat penters Local Unicn No. 1, have st thelr wage scale at $1.00 per hour, elfective at once. CARPENTERS LOCAf UNION NO. i is distinctive with better and fair dealing. You will be sorrv, as it goods, better variety Our satisfied customers ar tha Union and almost every in every State of country in the glche. adv. NOTICE T9 CLIDITORS the U. 8. Commissioner’s Court Drceipet, First f Alaska. In In addition to our large collection of Nativn #laska Merchandise In for the Jurcau Division, Torrit Probate. You will see a fine selection of the Estate of Dec Notice is here iven mal A. Bren Svydney Laurence ) o 5 undersigned, James adm! of Alaska Scenery 1935, of t Juaeau that are worth the price of your ticket.if you see nothing else. Territ: All per the estal g claims against aid decedent are of the s hereby notified to present them VISITORS WELCOM/E! with the pro; vouchers as re- quired by law n six months ® from the date of this notice, to the undersizned administrator, at the office of George B. Grigsby, 501 Goldstein Building, Juneau, Al- e Nu et op | Dated April 1, 1833 JAMES A. BRENNAN, A { JUNEAU, ALASK Adminis First publication, April 1, [jcast publication, April smokers know each individual cigarette receives the most care- ful inspection. You'd hardly believe such attention to detail possible un- less you could see it with your own eyes., When the Chesterfield tobacco comes to the cigarette making machines it has been blended and cross-blended. Then it is cut into long even shreds just the right size to smoke right and burn right. Every Chesterfield Cigarette has to be perfectly made to get by our inspectors. Until you open the package yourself the cigarettes are scarcely touched by human hands. Mild ripe tobaccos, skilled workers and the most modern up-to-date_machinery all help to make Chesterfield *the cigarette that s milder, the cigarette 'that ta.rm better, Tanks DOWN SPOUTS GUTTERS PIPE FLASHINGS ‘MARQUEES Everything in Sheet Metal Guaranteed Work ESTIMATES FREE RICE & AHLERS CO. “WE TELL YOU IN ADVANCE WHAT JOB WILL COST” Phone 34

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