The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, May 7, 1935, Page 4

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

Daily Alaska ROBERT W. BENDER - - Entered in the P matter. Editor and political to consider He gained pointment in November, 1928 Republican, election. In ca Empire and Manager ting SUBSCRIPTION RATES. Delivered by carrier In Juneau per month. paid, at th iubmm.. notity the B i un the delivery of their vapers. Telephones: News Office MEMBER OF ASSOCIATE The Associated Press | use for republic ft or not otherwis: local news publish PLASKA CIRCULATIO THAN THAT OF GUARANT ANY OTHER F and Douglas for $1.25 EED Cu! ticket Senator a third ting rates in advance, tories tively interested knowledge of Southwest Alaska The that — |career of the RGER will promptly or jrregularity D PRESS. entitled to the itches credited to « the nation abruptly e 46 O BE_LAF ICATION life himself as a his 1927, friendly about ship political commentator: and Insular the Justly I'ree to Be F¢ THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, TUESDAY, MAY 7, 1935. adopted State, and liked Westerner and radical seat in the Senate by ap- elected for a full term, in re-elected as progressive New Deal, in last fall's of his first was and a to the third party leader- recently considered head for possible have as Presidential timber, to As a member of the Senate Committee on Terri- Senator was to further Southeast ac- his and Possessions, th in Alaska, and Territory, toured last summer mourns untimely death, ded in the promising ear-old Senator from New Mexico. the midstream, lish. (New York Times.) Almost at the was insisting of folly, of the threats pay no Feder upon when many disliked what he said, an excellent example of what was Long made a speech new even for him. Administration the spending of relief money impossible al taxes. time when Secretary Ickes right of free speech even the country had meant. Senator in which he touched heights Furious at the action keeping from his hands in Louisiana, he made to carry out. Louisiana would To get any returns from her very the in citizens the Federal Government would have to send men into the State to collect them by force. Further- | more, if Louis central - Gove! WORTH A FAIR T Closing hour: with the handling of liquor in Juneau, to be settled by the City tion solving the at least it is Juneau, in fact, is what is kn town. The mine, the principal continuously with the result that must take their recreation at odd many of them during these sumn problem in at all hours and often passengers want to come ppey ashore regardless of the hour to see friends or just If they want liquor, there is no apparent difference in dispensing it to mouthing. They help to give the people an acecurate | Mrs, W. H. Case, Mr ure of the man who parades such matter before miss Lorraine They almost talking himself into political extinction. clair talked himself out of the Governorship of Cali-| fornia, and apparently out of public life altogether. Senator Long's tongue may yet do th: execution for him of free speech is valuable with kill some time. them legitimately at 4 o'clock in ® 4 oclock in the afternoon. things depends pretty largely o keeps. What may be the middle some of us that work at recognized working hours the day the ployed at night. Because hood at unusual hours he should be legislated against, what the City ncil had in mi Too, has been revealed in close restriction breeds bootlegging from 1 am. to 7 am on Sun: city, mer invites the law violat peddle his illicited wares. It cpvears to be not be sold but proper enforcement are properly carried out and the various dispensaries and liquor st their wholehearted supy ke inside the law the non-closing or out all right. It's worth a fair tr SENATOR CUTT death of United Sta may or a man it hardly it or so much in ‘The son Cutting, Altanta, Missouri, deprives member and the nation of an est clear-thinking statesman tragic the Senator Cutting was born on Long Island, graduatio Santa Fe, following moved to Immediately in 1910 he shortly after entered the newspaper publishing busi- ness. a controversial issue in connection The matter of doing the be first of the evening for and that is probably in an airplane accident yesterday near .. ... Senate of an ereignty.” would leave glorfying seceder. RIAL. his appears about | worth a trial. | own as a 24-hour of public speech industry, operates Permit such some of the shifts f«l‘lcl:m “i’fi" s toas, \1‘1)11((1{1;4. wome cover we mean hours. But mer months, too, not seditious. wine or beer some thing to m the public. the morning than n the hours one of the night for more generally the middle of those em- makes his liveli- fair that is tinctured sound and fury countrymen candal, by seems set nd the past that too Closing Juneau any other and Some of those better lcok or to get busy then the shall ions when liquor If the reguls operators of the offic eping their plac dinance will wo. ial. It female buccaneers may Le ores give little ING. A Filipino looking for weapons and with a tes Senator Bron- able intelligent, imable Former won't produce N. Y forgotten Harvard and has mentation he was one n from New Mexico, Yet all this stuff was freedom of speech. Council through elimina- | not incite to sedition, It probably is about as good a way as any of lof the Government by force. under the laws putting proper limits upon the right|Bert an cutburst frem such a source. the doctrine things that must be In fact, all means leave to their the front page spai Barrow ficials report has passed the peak. § '-nl.mwnul reports. just a little less sentimental more womanhood Sakdalista Furtv “moral s resources. vengeance. President an the sort of Americans produced of the Long after revolutionary talk is silenced ana continued to be overriden by the | nment, | This was understood to imply that she the Union. State as she would ‘“resume her sov- Thus we have the Senator | a possible defaulter and | It did | advocate the overthrow So it did not fall nor It was really a good thing to Ordi- | speak of freedom of speech as addresses that are inspiring and is broad enough to are foolish and even degrading. allowed utterance, if they are it is often a good and whole-~ tolerate ranting and demagogic lead to his Upton Sin- invariably work of self- However that be, his form in a reason, inste cf merely with If he wishes to make his fellow- him down as a nuisance and a him at liberty to do so may pouters down in the States had Alaska is stealing all Matanuska and thankfully, of- laurels. what with our epidemic, which, womanhood when the in China shot down a passenger her $70 for funeral exper a But if just the same leader is in Japan He remarked, “We lack That sounds like upport.” moral Hoover American s regimentation Perhaps Mr. Hoover a little World War, regi- during the and good ones. there Thoroughly imbued with the spirit of the West, wjll remain the solid fact that the best way to Senator Culllng became active in Lhu cumm(-rcifllwshare wealth is through pay rol (Toledo Blade.) FEMMER READY FORARRIVAL OF BERG SHIP( Dock Manager Returns from Ketchikan Meet— Boat Due Tomorrow Returned from an airplane trip to Ketchikan, D. B. Femmer, manager of Femmer's Dock, was ready to- day to receive the first arrival, to- morrow, of the motorship Evelyn Berg under the flag of the Ketchi- kan Steamship Company. Femmer returned from the First City with the advice that he “ex- pects, in the very near future, to have a weekly freight and passen- ger service” between here and Puget Sound ports to announce. The Berg and the John C. Kirkpatrick, Ket- chikan Steamship Company vessel are operating out of Tacom: The Juneau wharf owner made the Ketchikan round-trip in Pilot Sheldon Simmons' Skylark. He was flown there to confer with J. E Berg, head of the new steamship line, and John H. Mulkey, Berg's as- sociate. “I want my shippers to know support rendered me while acting as Freight Agent for Northland Transportation Company will never be forgotten, and that during the days to come, 1 will again be calling on them for their continued patronage for the new company,” Femmer said. Recently, the Northland Line moved the berthing of its ships to the municipally-owned City Doek, after several years at Femmer's Dock. many that their loy 1 was —————— EHOP IN JUNEAU FIRST! friends and g the WONDERS CF INDIA ON UPTOWN SCREEN WITH |RICHARD HALLlBURTON The wonders ur Indm, dramatical- ly brought to the Uptown Theatre screen tonight in “India Speaks,” an RKO-Radio release made by Walter Futter, who produced the nsational “Africa Speaks,” are re- counted by Richard Halliburton, ad- venturer and autho For “India Spea delves into fertile Hindu lore and mysterious regions. He takes us to | the Treemiri festival and its orgies, | the holy Ramadan feast, a purgmg; of multitudes in Mother Ganges,| the dedication of a living god, a deadly combat between a lion and| a tiger, and many other strange| and thrilling spectacles. S e RONAN IN FAIRBANKS ks" Halliburton 22 ye tomobile, the first to creep over the Richard trail, returned to the in- terior metropolis April 20 by train. Mr. Ronan, who was recently ap- pointed a Territorial deputy nse and liquor officer, told the Fair- banks News-Miner that he noticed quite an improvement in the old camp. e BOUND FOR MATANUSKA Olaf Halverson of Warren, Min- nesota, who has spent the past three weeks in Juneau making himself quainted with the country, leaves on the steamer Yukon today enroute to the Matanuska Valley. He is much enthused with the country and expects to make his home near Falmer, in the Matanuska Vall - PNEUMONIA VICTIM Edwin Walter Blakley, partner in the Imperial Cigar Store at Fairbanks, died April 21, a victim of a pneumonia attack. He had ved in Alaska for 31 years. > | Pamck 5. Kelleher, an old Lnnu‘Brol‘)Lrs rep: there| on resident of Wiseman, died April 21 after a brief illness | cal | Parker, | Merkle and Stuart John Ronan, who left Fairbanks|supporting cast, |KEELER AND POWELL IN MUSICAL FEATURE ARE NOW AT CAPITOL Dick Powell and Ruby Keeler, the screen’s most popular screen lovers, | sing several haunting melodies in | “Flirtation Walk,” military musi- now playing at the Capitol| | Theatre. With opening scenes taken | in Honolulu, Schofield Barracks and | other places on the charming island of Oahu, Hawaii, and the closing ones at the U. S. Military Academy at West Point, New York, “Flirta- tion Walk" provides the most ro- mantic background imaginable for | the original plot of the film. Al-| together, it is by far the best fea- ture Keeler and Powell have yet made. “Have a Heart,” starring with James Dunn, Erwin will be prev Jean Una s ago in Bob Sheldon's au-|at midnight tonight. e 4 HARRIS ARRIVES C. C. Harris, superintendent the Nakat Packing Com ed at Union Bay as a passenger on the Victoria from Seattle. He head- ed a party of 22 workmen broug from Seattle. A .A. Bruun, book- keeper, also arrived at Union Bay on the Vi R FOR HIDDEN I} Mr. and Mrs. D. F. Ry a party of-25 workmen whic the Victoria at the Nakat Packing Company cadnery at Hidden Inlet after a trip from Seattl>. Ryan is cannery superintendent. Also embarking at Hidden Inlet w D. Strickney, cannery e FOUR FOR CANNERY Four workmen were brought Seattle by the Victoria to Chatham Strait Fish Company ery at New Port Walter B S achran, Schwabacher entative, is the Alaska from of dis- s M bookkeeper. | from the alt- traveling Juneau tc | | Kctehikan, s that which |, ———— 20 YEARS AGO From The Empire ) e e SN MAY 1, 1915 The British Cunard New York- Liverpcol liner Lusitania was tor- pedoed and sunk by a German submarine off the Irish coast at Kinsale. The total dead were 1,216, the American dead, 119. The ¢ ip was bound from New York to vavr- pool. Reports from the front were ail of German successes. The German ampaign in Galicia had absolutely e ked the Russian offensive, On the Western Front{ the Germans had captured and continued to hold | many positions in the vicinity of Ypres. Ho , the German losses in the last few days had exceeded 35,000, killed and wounded. At a meeting presided over by | Mrs. W. E. Nowell, the Juneau Public Library Association was formed and officers elected. Mr: Nowell was named president, B. D. SLewan, vice-president, Mrs. R. on, secretary-treasurer and cBride, Mrs. P. J. Mahon Proi L. D. Henderson, Mrs. A. P. hevaroff, Judge Robert W Jen- umg~ Z. R. Cheney and Mrs. | C. DeVighne, trustees. Others, who signed the role as charter mem- bers of the association were Mrs. Howdeshell, Mrs. Charles | Goldstein, Mrs. H. VanderLees Mrs. J. Latimer Gray, Mrs. Louise K. Post, Mrs. Maud M. Vaut, John Reck, Grover C. Winn, N. L. Bur- ton, Mr. and Mrs. R. A. Gunnison, Mr. and Mrs. H. J. Fisher, H. C. Daniels, Mrs. J G Valentine, Mrs. E. W. Pettit, Mr: Vera Kaser, M W. G. Beattie, . W. P. L4 Andrews and Mr Robert W. Jennings. The 1915 Junean High School To- tem was issued with Burdette Winn, editor and ssell Cramer, manay ation included stor v Charles Skuse, Almcnd Richard: ys Tripp, Dora Irish, Simpson MacKinnon and Helen Smith. Maximum, clear. 69; mini- J. G. Welch, Mrs, | het | DAILY EMPIRE | NoTICE OF APPLICATION FOR["*-_I_)R()I‘L\W—WZ S HAPPY * ——BIRTHDAY | The Empire extends congratula- tions nnd best wishes today, their birthday anniversary, to the follow- ing: MAY 7 Ernest Halm John G. Erbland Bindseil George Franklin - \JAMES L GALEN HERE FOR BRIEF VISIT ON | PLANE TRlP. CORDOVA President of James L. Galer Mt. McKinley Tc portation Company, was in Juneau | sterday afternoon Cordova by plane cn his way to from Seattle. last three C., 15 spent the rington, D. con- R‘H 12z with National P heads and other offic concerning park matters. He expects to spend a time in Cordova looking af- ter personal business before con- tinuing ne park for the open- ing of ent season. was in Juneau, Mr. Gal- 1 with George A. Lingo ist Agent and Assistant Mana- Mt. McKinley Tourist and on Compnny - DEMOLAYS SHOWING HOOP SWEATERS NOW 2 the men new, rhaps you've Loiiced city more handsome on the streets, attired in nift bright blue sweaters. The fact the young men are handsome is net news; it’s the blue aters that attracting comment. The young men are members ¢ the 1934-35 champion basketball team of the City Basketball League, the DeMolays. Said DeMolays won their title many months ago, but the rs were received here only last week. The squad members now sportinz the ater are: Manager Dan Livie, Ed Garnick, Elmer Lindstrom, A loomquist, Kinky Bayers, Boyd Marshal, Her ; Berggren, and Hilding Haglund. - - e WANT ADS PAY! pEe-ODORIZE $2.00 Down $2.00 Monthly Alaska Electric Light & Power Co. JUNEAU : DOUGLAS DE-M OTH |Lode bears N |ed and existing under the laws of | the Territory of Alaska, whose post | Juneau, Alaska,| | has made application for a patent| | | thence N 5 UNITED STATES PATENT U. 8. Survey No. 1492, Anchorage Alaska, March 6, 1935. Serial 08356 Notice is hereby given that, pur-| suant to an Act of Congress ap-| proved May 10th, 1872, ADMIRAL- | |TY ALASKA GOLD MINING| | | COMPANY, a corporation organiz- office address is upon the following described Iude.&f lode mining claims and premises, | | all situated upon Admiralty Island,| Harris Mining District, Juneau Pre- cinct, Alaska, and described by the| official plat and by the field notes one file in the office of the Reg- ister of Juneau Land Duirict, An-| chorage, Alaska, as follows, to-wit:| | Beginning at Corner No. 1 Point Lode, whence USLM. No. 10, a cross on exposed bed rock on small |~ sland in Funter Bay, bears N 50° | ¢ 39° W 3253.01 ft, and running thence N 67° 577 E along line of mean high tide of Funter Bay 875.26 feet to Corner No. 2 Point lode; thence N 25°.56° E 395.95| feet to Corner No. 3 Point Lode; | 64° 00’ E 31590 feet to| Corner 4 Point Lode; thence S 12| 05' E 400.80 feet to Corner No. | Po'nt Lode; thence S 3i° 55’ ¥ (76.20 feet to Corner No. 6 Poin | Lode; identical with Corner No. : | )eean Swell Lode; thence S. 31 35 E 8092 feet to Corner No. Ocean Swell Lode; Thence S 88° 19 E 19442 feet to Corner No. 4 dcean Swell Lode, identical with Corner No. 1 Queen Bee Lode whence U.S.LM. No. 10 bears N 64 18 30" W 445285 feet; thence N| 18 20" 423.77 feet to Corner No 1 King Bee Lode, whence USLM | No. 10 bears N 69° 46° 10" W 1426.23 1 thence N 44° 57" E 206.00 feet to Corner No. 2 King Bee Lode; thence N 35° 27" E 184.50 feet to Corner No. 3 King Bee Lode, identical with Corner No. 3| Tellurium Lode; thence N 8° 47 30" E 33865 feet to Corner No. 4 Tellurium Lode; thence N 18° 15'! 380.65 feet to Corner No. 5 Tellur-| ium Lode, identical with Corner 3 Lone Star Lode; thence N E 666.60 feet to Corner No. 4] Star Lode; thence N 70° 00'| 15 feet to Corner No. 3 Otter thence N 5° 50' E 666.60 feet | to Corner No. 4 Otter Lode; thence| N 70° 00" E 1500.00 feet to Corner | No. 1 Otter Lode, whence U.S.LM No. 21, ranite boulder feet sq owing 12 inches above gronnd, approximate latitude 58° 14 North and longitude| 134° bears N 17° 46" W 2524 366.60 feet Lode; thence S 00" feet to Corner No. 1 Lode, whence U.S.LM. No N 6° 32 W 3211.05 feet; 5° 50 W 666.60 feel Lone Star Lode, identical witt Corner No. 1 Tellurium Lode whence US.LM. No. 21 bears N 4 W 3364.81 feet; thence S 18 16¢ W 175865 feet to Corner No. ? Tellurium Lode; then: 8 70° 00 W 216.30 feet to Corner No. 4 King Bee Lode; thence S 19° W 776.00 feet to Corner No. 5 King Bee Lode, identical with Corner No. 2| Queen Bee Lode; thence S 21° 08 | W 174596 feet to Corner No. 3| Queen Bee Lode, identical with Corner No. 2 Swamp Lilly Lode, whence Corner No. 1 Swamp Lmy\ 70° 00 E 1500 feet from which USLM. No. 10 bears| No. w 21 bears| thence S § to Corner No. 2 |N 54° 57 W 4573.01 feet; thence S 32° 00" E €13.40 feet to Corner No. |3 Swamp Lilly Lode; thence S 70° 00 W 1500 feet to Corner No. 4 Swamp Lilly Lode; thence S 32° 00| E 31265 feet to Corner No. 3 Hid-| den Rock Lode; thence S 52° 40' W| 150000 ft. to Corner No. 4 Hidden ; thence N 32° 00° W 600/ No. 1 Hidden Rock Lode, | identical with Corner No. 4 Valley| Lode, whence U.S.L.M. No. 10 bears N 35° 32 40” W 4685.45 feet; thence N/ erldons House, near Moose Hall |32° 00" W 423.45 feet to Corner No.| with de-odorizer set and dichloricide crystals, $15.50. Light, compact, easy to handle, powerful suction and— Guaranteed by GENERAL ELECTRIC Your requirements sidered here. S S D | Making Alaska Business GO! is just as much a part of our service as is pro- tecting the deposits of the Territory’s In 1935, as since 1891, supply funds for the temporary use of well- managed businesses of approved credit standing. residents. we are ready to will be carefully con- The B. M. Behrends Bank Juneau, Alaska 5 Valley Lode; thence N 73° 20’ E| 1 107 | ¢ Lone Star| ] Fraternal Societies ? PH lOTHFRAl’Y Massage, Electricity, Infra Red Ray, Medical Gymnastics. 307 Goldstein Building Phone Office, 216 DENTISTS Blomgren Building PHONE 56 Hours 9 am.’'to 9 pm. DRS. KASER & FREFBURGER | Jenne | DENTIST Rooms 8 and 9 Valentine Building Telephone 176 Dr. Geo. L. Barton CHIROPRACTOR 201 Goldstein Bldg. Phone 211 Office Hours: 9 o0 12, 1 to 5 Evenings by appointment au Building Stewart DENTIST Hours 9 am. to 6 pm. SEWARD BUILDING Office Pncne 4€9 Robert Simpsu; Opt..D. Graduawe Los Angeles Col- lege of Optometry and Opthalmology Glasses Fitted DR. H. VANCE OSTEOPATII Consultation and examination Free. Honrs 10 to 12; 1 to 5; 7 to 8:30 and Ly appcintment. Office Grand Apts, near Gas- tineau Hotel. Phone 177 | and Lenses Ground | | B | OF Gastineau Channel B. P. 0. ELKS meets Wednesday at 8 p. m. Visiting brothers welcome. John H. Walmer, Ex« alted Ruler, M. H. Sides, Secretar ki 1 KNIGHTS OF COLUMBUS { Seghers Council + No. 11!:0, Meetings second last Monday at 30 p. m. Transient brothers urged to at- tend. Council Cham- bers, Fifth St. JOHN F. MULLEN, G. K, H. J. TURNER, Secretary. | { i : MOUNT JUNEAU LODGE NO. 147 Second and Fourth Mon day of each month ir Scottish Rite Temple, beginning at 7:30 p.m. HOWARD D. STABLER. hipful Master; JAMES W, LEIVERS, Secretary. DOUGLAS f()ls, AERIE S 117, F. 0. E. Meets first and third Mondays, 8 p.m., Eagles’ Hall, Douglas. Visiting \brothers welcome. Sante Degan, W. P, T. W. Cashen, Secreury Gur trucks go any place any | | time. A tank for Diesel Oil | | and a tank for crude oil save | burner trouble. | PHONE 149; NIGHT 148 | | RELIABLE TRANSFER | ) E BDRRGEN | Commercial Adjust- | | . | ment & Rating Bureau | Coperating with White Seiv- | ice Bureau | Room 1—Shattuck Bldg. | | ‘We have 5,000 local ratings on file e Alaska Transfer Co. GENERAL HAULING ED JEWELL, Proprietor PHONES 269—1134 ‘ Di. J. W. Bayne DENTIST Rooms 5-6 Triangle Bldg. | Office hours, 9 am. to 5 pm. Evenings by appointmu.nt PHONE 321 HOTEL ZYNDA Large Sample Room ELEVATOR SERVICE S. ZYNDA, Prop. S. | ORAMAE HOLLISTER | LADIES’ TAILORING AND | DRESSMAKING | 411 GOLDSTEIN BLG. | Phone 564 | “+ Modiste from New York City Dressmaking, Remodeling, Alterations TELEPHONE 277 | ouROSE SUAREZ o | 273.80 feet to Corner No.6 Val!ey‘hm Lode; thence N 5° 42° W 279.74 ft.| to Corner No. 7 Valley Lode; thence | N 46° 15" E 306.24 feet to Corner' |No. 1 Valley Lode, whence U,SAL.M.E No. 10 bears N 45° 41' 30" WA 4120.65 feet; thence N 46° 03’ ' 324.11 fiet to Corner No. 1 Ocean | JUNEAU FROCK SHOPPE “Exclusive but not Expensive” Coats, Swell Lode, identical with Corner\ No. 7 Point Lode, whence U.S.L.M. No.10 bears N 45° 39’ 40” W 3805.58 | feet; thence N 46° 03'W 192.43 feet | to Corner No. 8 Point Lode; thence | 05" W 361.96 feet to Corner Point Lode; thence N 4° 11'| E 109 92 feet to Corner No. 1 Point | Lode, the place of beginning. Adjoining claims, as shown by the plat of survey are: | The Alaska No. 2 Lode, un- surveyed; % Jumbo No. veyed; Jumbo No. 2 Lode, veyed; Uncle Sam Lode, unsurveyed; King Bee, 2nd. Lode, unsur- veyed; Tellurium, 2nd Lode, unsur- veyed; Lone Star, end Lode, unsur- veyed; Ish Nik Lode, unsuveyed; Mill Site Lode, unsurveyed. FLORENCE L. KOLB, Acting Register. First publication, March 20, 1935. Last pubication, May 29, 1935, BETTY MAC BEAUTY SHOP In New Location at 12th anc B Streets PHONE 547 1 Lode, unsur- unsur- Maybe you'll have two or three dates, if you CALL 15 And have your Spring clothes put in first-class shape with our cleaning service. ® YOUR ALASKA Laundry SEE BIG VAN j Guns and Ammunition | LOWER FRONT STREET | Next to Midget Lunch | THE MARKET BASKET Provisions, Fruits, Vegetables Phone 342 Free Delivery | — PHONE 36 For very prompt LIQUOR DELIVERY THE JuNEAv LAUNDRY Franklin Street between Front and Second Streets PHONE 358 WARRACK Juneau Ice Cream Parlors SHORT ORDERS Fcuntain Candy I ) Sheet Metal—Oil Burners | Heating—Air Conditioners | | General Electric Oil Burners | Phone 101 . Front Street | — DAILY. EMPIRE WANT ADS PAY!

Other pages from this issue: