The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, July 22, 1935, Page 8

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PAA ELECTRA | BRINGS EIGHT | FROM INTERIUR \ Four Passengers from Fair-| [ \ | banks Are Enroute to Yugoslavia rived in Ju- ernoon from o} one from White- aboard the PAA Lockheed r Juneau from were arco Vuyovich, eve lich, Cliff Radovich, Milo Majd vich, Mr. and Mrs. 1 Jensor Mrs. Louis G. Pat- terson. | Robert Logan, Pan American e; ecuti d Joe Morrison, we passe! from Fairbanks Whitehorse | P. C. Cushwa, of Salt Lake City, whose arm was broken in the wreck of Capt. Willlam Strong's flying boat July 13, at McDames Lake, was a passenger to Juneau from Whitehorse i Vuyovich, Fairbanks mining op-| erator, Angelich and Hajducovich, Fairbanks business men, all enroute to Yugoslavia, their moth- er country, for a visit. They expect to return to Alaska next October. Radovich, owner of the Inter tional Hotel in Fairbanks, is going to Seattle on a vacation Logan will return to Fairbanks from Whitehorse on the next sched- uled flight of the PAA Lockheed Electra. Cushwa is enroute to Seattle. A file of late issues of the Fair- months ago. Pholo) banks News Miner were delivered to The Empire by Marco Vuy N AVY GRU vich. Pilots Jerry Jones and Walter Hall were at the controls of the Electra on the flight from the In- terior 60, DESTROYER - t, Indianapolis Leave MOOSE T0 MEET ELK NINE |N *“'Bal;;y, ffii’f’eA“k GAME TONIGHT ccontouca om ease ono Contest Is Scheduled to Be d;“m. § itie Play for Third Time the 12-day Navy This noon, Phillips' welcome com- . mittee met at Gastineau Cafe for Since July a luncheon meeting to consider —_— plans for this week. Two definite GAME TONIGHT arrangements were made At Baseball Park—Moose vs Kayser appointed to Elk: at 6:30 o'clock (postponed rangemen for a game) uled informal dance at the Scottish ———— Rite Temple. Leonard Holmquist For third time since July 9, was appointed to handle any furth- when the game originally was er basketball games which may be heduled, the Moose and played this week. play a mu R pened City League baseball con- “VARMLANNINGARNA” test at Baseball Park at 6:30 o'clock wnizht. SHOWING AT UPTOWN The tilt is one — game: whick The screen version of a .’mml'. the City Swedish pl “Varmlanningarn £chedule on ‘August 4 which will be seen for th2 For the Elks, to 5 times tonight at the Uptown The- be a “last stand.” Four games lost ater, presents an star cast and and none won—that's the Antlers' 1500 extras. The production is record. One more defeat and mathematical chance of the half title is gone, he Moose, t00, must win if they| Folk dances and folk melodies are te keep apace of the flying features of the screen adaptation place Legion club, The Moose “Varmlanningarna,” (Warmland- have won two in three starts. | ers) and Goesta Kjellertz and An- based on an old play seen on Scan- dinavian stages for more than 90 | years. any second |na-Lisa Ericson are cast in im- portant parts. C. A. Cunningham, Winnipeg,| “Skane” and a Swedish newsreel Man,, and Blake Arthur Latta, Lat-!are also included in tonight's enter- ta, Ont, arrived in Ketchikan on tainment. the Princess Louise after taking B TR T passage at Prince Rupert, B. C.| PAA RADIO STATION They are officials of the Canadian| A PAA Ford freighter plane ar- National Railways. irived in Nome recently, with a e | party of three radio technicians ZAPORA iIN PORT | quantity of radio sup- |and a large The motorship Zapora arrived at the establishment of a the Commercial Dock this afternoon ation. The installation of bringing deck lumber for the e station will complete a Louglas bridge and a general cargo network stretching from Bering Sea of freight. to the waters of Southeast Alaska. Gold Is $35 Per Fine Oz BRING IN YOUR OLD GOLD . RECEIVE HIGHEST CASH I’Rl(l I WILL BE IN JUNEAU FOR A SHORT TIME ONLY! Help Prosperity by Turning Old Trinkets Into Spending Money GATHER UP AND BRING OR SEND IN EVERYTHING GOLD JEWELRY Rings Bracelets Emblems Watche Necklaces Spectacle Frames Cuff L Lavaliers Geld Pens Scarf l'lnl Lockets i Brooches Watch Chains Fraternity Pins Medals Ornaments Lodge Emblems College Emblems DENTAL GOLD Crowns Bridges Inlays Removable Bridges WE WILL BUY ANY AMOUNT YOU HAV) REGARDL CONDITION. A NGLE PIECE OR A BOX FULL. NO AMOUNTS TOO LARGE TO HANDLE. OF $2 to $30 for Gold Bracelets, Chains, Dental, Ete. Discarded Gold Rings Bring Good Prices Regardless of Condition. M. E. WILCOX GOLD BUYER Licensed on Tr Zynda Hotel ury Dept. Form TGL-12 Juneau, Alacka ISERS GREAT RESORT "2, . ) Sy i a1l A photograph of the board of directors ot United Artists in Holly- wood brought Mary Pickford, actress, and Douglas Falrbanks, actor, together in a picture for the first time since their divorce several Miss Pickford is seated ano standing (left to right) Samuel Go'dwyn, Charles §. Chaplin and Fairbanks, (Assoclated Press IS PADLOCKED ARRIVES TODAY Ganbling s Proibid Agua Caliente by cree of Presldent AG ly paid for by American dollars lost in its palatial casino by film celeb- 1 pad ties and thrill seekers, is today ocked on decree by the Presi- dent. All gambling was forbidden at the resort after Saturday night. erected The hotel Spa, restaurant and bars have been closed. The world-famed at resort a cost of from six was to ten million dollars. A CALIENTE, Mexico, July | 22.—This picturesque resort, large- to the Barracks. 16-YEAR-OLD ' GIRL CAUSES NAVAL RATIOS ABANDONED BY ~ SADTRAGEDY GREAT BRITAIN Did Not Wanl to Go with | Married Man So Latter ‘ Drowns His Wife | WORCESTER, Mass, July 22— | His love for a 16-year-old girl, not, E: named, is blamed by Newell Sher- Iman for the confessed slaying of | his young wife, mother of his two | small children, officials said. | Sherman, according to the auth- | orities, confessed he . deliberately {overturned his cance, in which he and his 23-year-old wife were pad- |dling in the fog-covered lake, and ‘then thrust her away when she frantically struggled to grasp him | She sank beneath the water. ; The young girl in question ob- jected to running around with a married man and Sherman said he tried to impress her by becoming single. Sherman is charged with degree murder. He is a me! of an old New England family. —-——-— BARRACKS HEAD IS JUNEAU VISITOR Here for a visit with Commander Medical Corps) C. B. Camerer, connected with Rear Admiral C. H | Woodward's staff aboard the U. S. | 8. Detroit, Lieut.-Col. Ralph Wayne | Dusenbury, in command of the tC’hilkooL Army Barracks, arrived here Saturday on the Army ship Fornance. Accompanying Col. Dusenbury on | the: week-end visit here were ‘Mrs uenbury, Miss Taylor, Mrs. L. V Castrer, wife of an Army lieutenant atiored at the Barracks, and Miss | Dorcas Dusenbury, the Colonel's ! niece. Mrs. Castner, a daughter of Ad- miral Rabey, renewed many Navy friendships while here. The Army ‘vi»nors were guests of Commander | Camerer aboard the Detroit yester- day, before the Fornance returned S L HELEN WILBUR, BRIDE Miss Helen Louise Wilbuxy 24, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. A. L Wilbur, of Fairbanks, became the bride recently of Kenneth Dean Bell, 24. Mr. Bell is employed by the Fairbanks Exploration Com- pany. The bride is a member lat Fairbanks. of | the staff of the First National Bank | Wounds Natlonal Pride to] Accept Permanent Infer- iority, Statement Says LONDON, July 22—Sir Bolton s Monsell, First Lord Admiral- ty, told the House of Lords today that England had definitely aban- doned the principle of naval ratios adopted in 1922 at Washington be- ause some nations felt it wounded national pride to accept permanent inferiority. WASHINGTON'S REACTION WASHINGTON, July 22.—Brit- ain’s abandonment of naval ratios| produced a statement from Chair- man Key Pittman of the Senate Foreign Relations committce that it constitutes abandonment of the| Washington treaty and is just an- ther move toward construing treat- ies as nnly scrap) of napfl* s SLIGHT GAIN lN HALIBUT PRICE - IS NOTED HERE| A slight raise in current local halibut sale quotations was noticed this morning. at the Juneau Cold Storage exchange board when 7,000 pounds went for figures of 5 and 3.35 cents per pound. The catch, off Capt. Peter Hammer's Ina J.| was purchased by the San Juan Fish Company. The Alaska Trollers Co-operative Marketing Association reported much activity over the week-end. Mixed salmon and halibut, amount- ing to 5959 pounds, was purchased from small ‘craft. The Diana rought in 3,751 pounds of salmon and 6,241 pounds of halibut The Sebastian-Stuart Fish Com- par roported total purchases of | | { | | | Arthur Court at Muskogee, Okla, bergh law for the kidnaping of two Paris, Tex. Le the first to die under the law. Kidnaper Gallows-Bound E FISHERMEN AND OTHERS TRAVEL BY AIRPLANES Pilot Simmons Kept Busy on Flights for Two Days . to Nearby Sections A number of flights in the Ju- neau area were made over the week \end. by Pilot -Sheldon Simmons at | | the « conitrols of the ' Alaska Air | Transport Stinson seaplane. i Wellman Holbrook, of the Forest Service and his brother, D. C. Hol- brook, : were ‘on a fish- ing trip to Lake ni".’.m. Satur- day n!ternoon‘ Later in the after- noon Pilot Simmons flew to Sitka with three passengers and returned t0 Juneau with Mr..and Mrs. Dan Ralston of Goddard ‘Hot Springs. Peter Daxis was a passénger from Sitka to Hoongh. Mr. and Mrs. Sam | Pekovich and Mrs. Nick Jukich were |taken to Hawk Inlet on still an- other Saturday afternoon flight. | Saturday evening Pilot Simmons |flew to “Lake Patco” with E. Nin- |nis, Lynn Tucker and Milton Dan- iels, intent ypon the capture of a record catch of trout. : On Sunday Simmons made a chartered flight to Lake Hasselborg | with Charles G. Burdick, Adminis- |trative Assistant of the Forest service, and two CCC workers. Wel.~ man Holbrook, George Turner and D. C. Holbrook were passengers on the return trip. They arrived in Juneau with about 40 pounds of 5 2 ! | | b; armed Federal a; t, leaves th- Federal | Goush, seorsd M B Wie sentenced Lo hing under the Lind- | , police of 8. Gooch will He forced t.he officers to accompany him into Oklahoma lcllowmg arrest in Texas, TOLL OF DEAT SEATTLE, July .22 —Fifteen vio- lent erdeen and four of them by drown- ings, fine trout caught almest entirely with flies. Mr. angd Mrs. A. B. Nicholas from. Juneau to Punter Bay and S8am Pekovich ‘from Funter Bay to Hawk Inlet, were passengers on a later Sunday flight. From Hawk. Inlet, Pilot Simmons flew to Lake Patco, NOME MAN ARRIVES; WIFE IS VERY ILL IN PAGIFIG Nw Thomas D. Jensen, former Clerk | ef the Court in the Second Division, Nome, and Mrs. Jensen, arrived in | “Pere E. Ninnis, Lynn Tucker and Juncau yesterday aboard the PAA}N:H";" Daniels with a typical catoh Lockhead Electra from Fairbanks.|’! tFOut from the mystery lake, Mrs, Jonsen was taken to St. Ann’s | Ye"e Picked up and brought to Ju- Hospital lact night shortly after the| 184 The Lake Patco fishermen deaths, three of them in Ab- occurred over the Pacific m almon and halibut over the | Northwest during the weekend as ol stated that many of their fish week-end amounting to 3,000|the area sweltered under abnormal Tival of the plane. Mr. and Mrs. Lo B ot gt o Jensen will leave od the Yukon to- pehias long—ane pounds. heat which it has been predicted " 2 5 A jously | ‘Pecimen ° ohserved by creditable ———— will continue for another day or | Pisht. Mis. Jensen is very serlously) ;o oo ill and will undergo a major opera- measures a full 22 inches. DAVID WILKINS DEAD iso Four of the deaths l‘esulwd‘l, ey agrrlval in Seattle.| During the afternoon on Sunday, from automobile accidents. st L e Pilot Simmons found time for a David Wilkins, 60 years old, T oty —— | flying lesson for Wilford Lund, who | steam-engineer by trade, resident OPERATOR OF TRADING MRS. KASALICA PASSES s, according to Simmons, rapidly of the interior since 1906, recently died at Fairbanks of heart disease. DAUGHTER BORN Mr. and Mrs. John B. Miller of Fairbanks, are parents of a 9- pound baby girl. He is Assistant {District Attorney for the Fourth { Division, erates a chain the day ectra and expects to sail for Seaftle| nbmld the Yukon tonight. POSTS IS IN JU U approaching solo abjlity, ——————— FROM ENGLAND Word has been received here of the death in Portland this morns ing of Mrs. Alec Kasalica, widely known Juneau woman. Mr. and Mrs. Kasalica have been residents of Jureau for the last 15 years The body will be brought here for burial. Louis G. Patterson, who op- of trading posts in Inter with -headquarters at bue, arrived in Juneau yester- aboard the PAA Lockheed El- Dr. George Guggan, a physician ‘rom Bolton, England, was a recent rrival in Ketchikan, having left he Princess Louise there after tak- .nn pnssnge at Vancouver, B. O. ChCStCl‘fiCld ... the cigarette thats MILDER ©1935, LigeeTT & MyERs ToBACCO CO, Chesterfield .. she cigaretre thar TASTES BETTER et S s { i Chesterfields are mild—mild but not flat. That’s one reason why. Apd they have plenty of taste—without bein‘gfharsh. That’s another reasonewhy: Everybady knows They Satisfy - Jjust about gll any cigarette can do. N

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