The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, August 1, 1935, Page 7

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THE DAILY ALASKA EMP SHMURSDAY, AUGUST 1, 1935 NG AND flhe SOCE‘N 1S:0UT FOR YOUR, SCALP--IT_SAYS HERE IF YOO AN' LO-WI2IE DON'T QUIT MEDDUN' WITH TH" DOCTORS WHO 4 ARE TAKIN' CARE OF TH' SEXTUPLETS THEY'RE GONNA RUN YOU L OUTTA TowN -~ 80s' MAH BRITCHES AN' TTHEV 'GOT ‘JUDGE PHRM lN BACK M - JUDGE UPHAM T Twelve persons were injured and searchers were seeking the body of anw employe believed kftted the rackhouse when a terrific exp'osion and fire swept through the huge Hiram Walker distillery in Peorla, Ill. Damage was estimated at $2,500,000. Flames are shown licking at the rackhouse where 6,000,000 gallons of whisky were lost. (Associated Press Photo) DEUTSCHLAND SAILS; PIERS |said Capt. Heinrich. Daus’s only | comment to questioners. Another officer, furnish his me, said: vite trouble’ Sixty detectives, 75 patrolmen " d 20 mounted officers as well as scores of ranking police of- ials guarded the pier. “Why in- pes FRO® WORCESTER VAR '/ Henry H. Forbes, prominent busi- No! Violence lakes Place ness man of Worcester, Mass., is a in Ncw York—Sw;s- pasenger on the Prince Robert for . that ship’s round-trip cruise from tika Not Flown Vancouver, B. C. With him are his |wife, and two daughters, Catherine NEW YORK, Aug. 1.—With police g and Elizabeth L. lining the’ approaches to the pier, | — the Hamburg American ]iner.: FRO& PARIS Decutschland sailed early today with |© The lone French passenger on out any violence that marked the[the Prince Robert on its current! sailing of the Brémen last Satur- |round-frip voyage from Vancouver, day. |B. C., is Marion C. Tipton, a resi- The police kept the crowds from dem of Paris. congregating. e The swastika emblem was not at| Continental Whiskles are dis-| the masthead. ! tributed throughout Alaska by Wil- Well if it is down it is down,” bur Irving. Telephone 10. adv.! Glrl’ “Murd: r” Story Doubted w York police are investigating with skepticism -tungé gzfi'uthea Kapssudy (above), pretty mlld at Long [slnndheshu(%u? killed John L. Burness above), wealthy broker, with hammer (inset), at swanky Atiantic Beach, L. L, “because he was a cheapskate.” Autopsy of body, found in lnlomobfle in garage (arrow), of afriend, disclosed Buxnen died of carbon monoxide asp! yxintlon "Story ot lhh-hnkn of wealthy men with dvmnfiu being ba who declined to| ~ | the sixth. EXAMINATIUN FOR SUBSTITUTE CLERK; LOCAL POST OFFICE The U. S. Civil Service Obm- mission announces a post! effice substitute clerk examination for the purpase of establishing an eligible |register from which selections may be made to fill existing and future vacancies as they may occur in the positions of substitute clerk in the Post Office Service at Juneau. Existing vacancies: One substitute clerk. | Applications must be on file at the office of the Manager, Elev- enth U. -8 Civil Service District,! 450 Federal Office Building, Seat- tle, Washington, not. later than the| | ‘hour of closing. business on Aug- ‘ust 17, | Copies of the announcement of | this examination |information as to place of exam- ination, requirements, salaries, etc,) | and application blanks may be ob- tained from either of the follow- ling: Gustavus H. Skinner, Secre- |tary, Board of U. 8. Civil Service |Examiners, Alaska Road Commis- |sion, Juneau, or, The Manager, El-|! [eventh U. 5. Civil Service District, |450 Federal Office Building, Seat- | tle, Washington, or the Postmaster, | Juneau. LA AT THM no-nu s e {f'l.l‘fl * 6 0 0 Gastineau T. Brumfield, Chilkoot Barrgck; | R. J. Parker, Chilkoot Ba.rracks M. | Joyce, Taku;' Mrs. Walter Wood, [Ny ¥.; John Felix, Chilkoot Bar- racks; Mr, and Mrs. J. Holmes and 2 doughiters; E. L. Wasson; Car- | cross; Buster E. Coxley, Chnkoob Buracks § Alaskan R. F. Brown, Chilkoot Barracks; | L. A. Johnson, Chilkoot Barracks; Curry Begley, C; nkoot, Barracks; R. G .Chell, Chilko t, Barracks; R. | V. Loftin, Chilkoot Barracks; J8! | Nichols, Chilkoob Barracks; MeLean; ey Cailkoot Barracks; C. Leighton, Chilkcot Barracks. Zynda ' John H, Jones, Haines; | Walters, Haines; S. H. P. Vevel- | Stad, Juneau. ‘ONI.Y LOCAL BANK FISH AT SEATTLE; £ PIHCES ARE IHGHEK SEATI& July yHARBME ar- | rivals: today were all‘from- the - cui banks as foliows: ‘Wireless, bmusht in 15,000 pounds, | Delight 12,000 ‘pounds, Eastern 15-; ‘000 pounds, Tonic 15u0¢ pounds, all selling for 8% and 7% cents; | Merit 2,000 pounds, 9% and 8 cents; ;F C. Hergert: 10,000 pounds, 8% land 8% cents. i _—.-‘-0_—- | CONTINENTAL WHISKIES are PURE and NATIONALLY adver- tised. . See Wfibu;' Irving, Gas- tinedu Hotel, ~adv. (containing full | | Chilkaot Earracks; €. B! Gregnry‘v Johnny n By BILLIE DE BECK y THANK. YOU SO H, JUDGE UPHAM-- L SURE THERE JON'T BE ANY MORE TROUBLE -+ - kL e Lo Mbrivs, Bas'éball,wChewing i Gum Attract Paris Bridal Pairto U. S. of America D}stlllery and Bottling | Works Not Touched by Recent Flames - PEORIA, Ill, Aug. 1.—With dis- tillery and bottling lines runtouch« cd by the flames, and with stocks of seven million gallons of matur- | ing whiskey contained in two huge | warehouyses to draw .on, Hiram | Walker & Sons at Peoria showed | normal output for the week closing | July 27. Despite the losses sustaine .ed by the recent fire, there was.no i let-down in production. A construction program, tempor- "arily delayed when the flames con- | sumed materials intended for com- ;pleuon of the fourth rack ware- house, was resumed as new mater- 'ial arrived. The program calls for completion of three neéw ware- houses before the end of the year. When the plant was built a year ago only two of its six warehouses , were completed, but provision was made for four more. The third | warehouse unit—the one destroyed iby the flames—was finished on { April 15, the fourth is nearly com- | pleted, and ground was broken fon the fifth unit a month ago, at which time plans were approved for L Mile. Joce Laval, only daughter of the Premier of Fraln —d Count Rene de Chambrun, lineal descendant of Lafayette and nephew of the late Nichelas Longworth, have announced that after their marriage late in August they will spend a month in Canada N"i the United States. v % A & | 'By ADELAIDE KERR game—-to see the world serlesi He PARIS, August 1.—American mov- | predicts the showdown will come les and baseball are included in the petween the Giants and the ¥an- horjeymoon pldns of smiling Made- | kees, molselle Jose Laval and Count Rene‘ Both he and his fiancee already | @& Chambrun. |have strong links with America. i e Alfter their marriage, which prob- | Mademoizelle Laval visited Wash- | ‘:’;fl bofe:;?:::edo‘:o crne&?x;; ::“hamT will take place late in Angust, ‘mgwn with her father in the.fal. | ergeney .oreated by the fire. | thej oflly daughter of France's pre-|of 1931, when e conférred with { Distilling operations continue al the customary pace and fifteen car- loads of liquor were shipped from | the Peoria piant during the forty- eight. hours following . the: fire. Bottling lines operated -at their usual capacity on: the day: following the fire and all. departments were functioning nermally, A special grew began the: work of removing ,the' debris. .frony the site of the third warehouse but it will not be rebuilt until the fifth and sixth units have been com- pleted. Ground was hroken for the fifth warehouse several weeks ago dant of Lafayette expect to sail for \by almost everything she saw from a month in Canada and the United New York skyScrapers to American States. {“energy.” “1 like Americans,” Mademoiselle | ©ount Ts Honorary Citizen Laval said in her careful English. By -her wedding to the young She sat opposite her future hus- goung she will become a distant| band in his high ceilinged law of- yelagive by, marriage of President fice 'and twirled his big sapphire Roosevelt, for he is a nephew of | B Sem———" engagement ring. the late Nicholas Longworth, former She Likes Chewing Gum | speaker of the House of Represen- | “When I visited the United States tatives, who married the President’ S| | with my father in 1931 I learned to' cousin, Alice Roosevelt. |like -the | American hobbies—liked ~ Rene de Chamrbun is a gunt- S ¥ DOUGLAS i | the'movies and even chewing gum. great-great-grandson of Lafayatte. ‘NEW? S |T hated to go home. His mother is the former Miss L oA | And American women are Clara Longworth of Cincinnati and E chaiming! I haven't English words his father General de Chambrun | ¥ - " |lenough to deseribe all I think about who retired a year ago as cem- them—T'll have to get Rene to-teach mander 'of Prench colonial truops me some. But you must use the'in North Africa, worG ‘chorevn®l I hope to mect a! 'TAX ASS| ik MEETS G 'rhe. Douglas Gty fimmu sitting a5 @, Board of Hauslimstion; com- pleted the final hearing on assesss- \back O of the United States, was author- Rene de' Chambrun’s faverite ized by special. permission, because ment matiers last eveping and the Ameriean hobby is baseball. While of his honorary citizenship, to take | roster of values a8 pssessed sunas in ‘the United States he wants to the New York: bar exunlmhn fusz about, the same as. orjg‘lnnuyw take” his' bride—who has never seen several yeah ago. Rg pused M Dresented to the Coutitil by Asses- 5 o5 T e e | Local Raduhes, Onwm, CALIF ORNM GRO! 'PHONE. 478 Ao rm:pé’ Sotrections and rewmmuM£fi:d 'm'e' reduchoq: B ¥ fll’li le\tfl for ayment. within: ,perh;d endin Bprember 30, ol TO LOOK odn: rn:w .Rev, K. Orsoh"fi‘s an “arrival on| lane of the egl\c ‘omg; Van- | couver mdf k’r om’ the ‘ocal ficld, wi fike vl,‘ of start~ ing reguldr nz services in e Community * Wn&mtlonal Clilrch. Recently L, i o of d the plage i, djscuss ing i i ace. ' bers' and’ otk fi‘aee)ng§taro’1n the place. W, s pred . Everecdy Flashlights ' = MOVE § “Y§ Monccr Cigar Lighters edn;e::;nfrm\" W Guarar.teed Iron Cords have, | Boudcr Lamps iE Bridgc Shades SEE.THE WINL )W FULL—ANY ARTICLE YOURS FOR' $1.00° WARNING ‘ Shooting of firearms or the use| of sling shots within the City Lim- lis is prohibited engl wil be pun- laska Electr c Ll fit oneM cm%b;?pfi:: I g anad. Power Co. Y c B, ; Dwms—l’hone 18 erties, including the U. S. Post Oftice will be prosecuted. i —adv. mier and the young lawyer descén- | President Hoover, and was- thrilled | Count, Réne, who as a descen“nz 1 great many. of them when I go of Lafayette is an honorary citjzen | e firm nme Feturned to' | Paris at the end of 1934 to practice here. He also, has been admitted ta the Paris bar. The day after he got to town he | met Mademoiselle Laval for the | first, tinde at a dinner party at a friend’s house and sat next her at! table. \Their engagéement was an- nounced six months later, Her Golf Score Improves The ‘pair have much in common, meh vivacity. Both have studied law, both are interested in politi~ :al science and both love golf. The day they became engaged Mademoiselle Laval scored a birdie n @ .par three hole, the first time *m had ever done it. But she hasn't studied much; law lately, because, | ‘e, says, of my thme. MISS FRODKS 41 HERE TONIGHT MisshbEoy Flobes, or! eed- kill, N. Y, lawyer and author, is a passenger for Juneau aboard the Prince Rupert due here this. eve- ning. Miss Frooks, according to an As- | soctated Press dispateh to' The Em- | pire from Vancouver, B. C. last Tuesday, is coming to Alaska in | hopes she will “find out what's the | matter” with the Matanuska colony | ’cheme, | 'Miss Frooks Is quoted as saying: “They (the colonists) are not happy. T want to know why. I am going to see the Governor at Juneau and then fly to the colony.” Continental Distiling Corpora- tion is the largest in the WORLD. Call Wilbur Irvinig, Gastineau Hotel. —ady. - -ee Several Hollywood casting direc- tors keep the names of former stars in their files for first crack at pos- le role: “Rene takes up too much | GARDS ARMY 10 PLAY TONIGHT; TITLE 60 DUE NI e Scheduled Both have dark eyes and hair and' for Cn“cal Con[es‘ Tomorrow Night GAME TONIGHT At Bacsball Park—Chilkoot Barracks vs Cardinals at 6:3¢ c'clock (exhibition) . GAME. TOMORROW At Bascball Park—Moose vs | Legion at 6:30 o'clock. i I The lull before' the storm—that's jone way to describe tonight's exhi- ibition game between Company E or the Chilkoot Army Barracks and the Cardinals, Juneau league team, at 6:30 o'clock at Baseball Park Being an exhibition, doesn’t mat- # anr much, one war of another, just which team wins. But--tomorrow night, brother! Then is when the fun begins! AL 6:30 o'clock tomorrow night, the Moose and the Legion cross bats in a regularly scheduled and highly critical City League game. Today, the Moose lead the Dough- boys by just a half game for the second-hal! champlionship. Only five more scheduled Leagus games remain to be played and two of them are Moose-Leglon alfairs, Victory In each case will be a sorely sought prize. As for tonight's game, it will be the second appearance of a visiting dier nine from Chilkoot Bar- racks here this season. On Jume 24 an Army nine was beaten in the rain by an All-Star team. Tonight's game, too, was threatened by a heavy drizzle this morning. B The CGin Pots 6f CONTINENTAL if operatéd to capacity could furh- ish the entire world with GIN. adv, | French-Italian Dinners GASTINEAU CAFE GASTINEAU HOTEL' BUILDING Wines—Beer FOR INSURANCE See H. R. SHEPARD & SON | _ Telephone 409 B. M. Behirends Bank Bld‘ el & | Corner Second and Juneau Cash Grocery | CASH GROCERS Sewa.rd Suka Hot 8 prufgs‘ wqu FISHING e Private Booths Established 1898 (- B s 2 P e o T PR i UNITED FOOD 0. | CASH GROCERS : 1 Phiote 16: We Deliver CAPITOL BEER PAR AND BALL ROOM ' Lunchés ! i Dancing fiQ&M Meats—Vhrone 16 IN SURANCE AflenShatmck Illca

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