Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
SCHEDULE SET ACROSS Solution of Saturday’s Puzzle 1n an‘: of the L. Nominal value . Goma Tobth of stock ESs fotth 4 Fll‘*l lhought Dresses the feather: ezul!st . Mythical mon- ster THREE % CO“‘m’lnd e Low tufted - “lant 2. Bosihatn Bar of wood state: abbr. or metal . Sandarac tree . Princely Itale Postponed Contests to Be i: iaiian tver | polan family sin Run Off This Week, 1% ek . s 18. Monkeys Holzheimer Say b pratile Back in the city rom a visit to 21, Rapld Ketchikan, William Holzheimer, 3. Short fora acereal i president, again assume S o Bowepric the Baseball or fepeat . the keel wee nd edly 42, Redder DOWN 1. Loulsians i B 29 44. Biblical 1. South Ameri- ooy Y T how the three rer o country can’ animal oaury Saiine iRa Ais: sohiad 31 48. Couple 2. Lopsided 43. Native metale e o SO, B LS 50. Night musie 3 Fury bearing There will be no contest tonight 62. First fsole of g. gg?“ a ::lt o ct:.mpellndl 3 1 OV r 25. a wife of 3 eral 4 ! and probably none tomorrow. Rain Henry VIII 6. Second of two 46, Smell ssures that. However, the fir r 36, Plant of the 5§3. Always mentioned 47. Nothing more . 4 : ; veteh fam- 84, Rocky pine 7. Liberty han day will find the Moose and the e <A, & o bome gp pablet S schex B r the 8 ed-out 88. Fertile spots 5. Burrows ny ¥ rd of the R Ss ACARCLY for Anelr '”m“ O 30 MO 56 9. Vines of a cuckoo contest of July 19. Then, on the 4 syimming or worlk certain type family next day, if possible, the Elks floating 67. Exist . Insect 61. Before play the Legion in a poned from July 21 That leaves the ly cr | Moose-Legion tilt, postponed from ! ’ July 28, to be played. It probably | will be a nine-inning affair and| . will be scheduled next Sunday | | If both the Moose and the L!‘—} ‘ gion defeat the Elks, then next| .. /. // Sunday’s mix will be a true cham- pionship match, for both teams | // // //‘.. . //fl. | will be tied for the lead. In that | ; event, should the Moose win, a Lit- | / fl.. : tle World Series between the Le-| -.fl.-//fl-.% gion, first-half winner, and the| Moose would be necessary { However, should both teams go into Sunday’s game tied and should ! the Legion win, the Little Woul Series would not be played -so SALMON PRICE | RISES AGAIN ONLOCAL MART| Trading Activity Brisk at| Cold Storage Plant Over Week-end Fish trading a good pace at age plant over the activity swung into Juneau Cold Stor- at week-end, THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, MONDAY, AUGUST 5, 1935. Daily Cross-word Puzzle oo 1R B NG | 29 PASSENGERS FINE DAY TAKES LEAVE JUNEAU MANY SHOOTERS ON NORTHLAND TO RIFLE RANG least with 37,500 pounds of mi salmon and halibut, and 20,500 o & pounds of straight halibut being Motorshlp Clears Port Oldtimers Show Young- brought to port The activity also was marked by another raise in independent deliv- They cred prices for salmon. are Early Yesterday Morn- ing for South | sters How It Is Done— | Warning to Hikers sive style. now: 15, 6 and 4 cents per pound,| gEATTL E, Aug Steamer’ Al- hh weather man, velnz unusual- with cohoes heing bought for 4 aska cailed o A ports last 1y posd natured vesterday, pre ent- cent:. The top price formerly was|gaturday on at 5 o'clock ed Juncau with one of the finest Ag celits. with 170 first class and 7 steerage day: of the season, which brought The Alaska Trollers C passengers aboard. fifteen and twenty Marketing Association The following passengers on the s to the rific the largest amount of f Alaska are booked for Juneau: completed by the @na brought in 15000 f| Tom Redlingshafer, J .W. Erwith, t Scrvice at Mendenhal, mixed salmon and haiibut while | wife and four children, L. E. Tuck- another packer, the Foster, had!ar ang wife, Harry L. Adams, Dr., Préliminary sighting in o rifles 10000 pounds. A total of 5000 w, D. Hunt and wife, H. C. Agnew Was done cn the 50-yard anse pounds more was brought in by|ang wife, Pay Henry and wife, H. S q h old timers as Mort ‘srues- | five other boats. Waller, Paul Abbott, Carl N. John- 4¢il, Guy McNaughton and W. B.| The Co-op agency also purchased {son, Matilda Holst, Mrs. Jennie Ki squinted along the barrels | 9,000 pounds of halibut from the|golst, C. V. Evickson an? wife, Ed- ifles in a brilliant sun and Vivian, skippered by Capt. Char! 1es | ward Maurer, George Fester, Betty ¢hdeavored to demonstrate to some Larsen, for prices of 5 and 4.10 Kruger, Helen Krieger, A. C. Oh- ©f the younger generation the arg cents per pound. {man, A. B. Martin, Mrs. A, N. Of hitting a bulls-eye which they The other straight halibut sale of the day was made by Capt. Bernt Alstead of the Thelma to New Eng- land Fish Company. This catch totaled 11,500 pounds and went for | the same prices. ! Sebastian-Stuart Fish Company | also purchased mixed catches of! salmon and halibut. The packer Sadie, whose skipper is Capt. S. A.'at could | rapia / see. Several slow and sheots were had on the was made to the 100-yrrd range, and' ESTEBETH ARRIVES Istrange to say that the best shoot- | FROM SITKA TR“) ing w ;vrlain; on this range. Scorcsj; ,of all way from 73 to 93 out of e 100 were made on the range, with & “dark horse” | in for one set of slow fire| Smith. fire {50-yard range before progress The motorship Estebeth arrived Pacific Coast Dock at 10:30 dropping Btevens, brought in 6,000 pounds,'c'clock this morning from Sitka and hitting the bullseye for 97. He! While two trollers accounted for and way ports. She was sched- disappeared, however, while his rec- | 1,500 pounds more juled to reach port yesterday, but ord was secure. { TR hey original departure here on the BURNETT LEAVES run was delayed 24 hours because! THOSE altending the shoot in ad-| Al Burnett, brother of William of arrival of mail from the south, 9ition to the above were Roy Nolan, | and Dave Burnett, left Juneau on' The inbound list: M. 8 Jorgensen, Scott Ford, J. W.| the Northwestern for Seattle. He From Hawk Inlet — Mrs, Helen LeIVIs L. J. Jewett, Mr. and Mrs. had been here about two months Sakamoto and child W:. P. Scott, Mr. and Mrs. C.. E.| as a musician and plasterer. He is From Tenakee—John Reille, {Smith and Mr and Mrs. J. W.| travelling to Seattle to accept a From Hoonah—Dorothea Camp- J00€S: Gene Weschenfelder; others were there off and on through the . day. At 3.00 pm. the shoot was dis- continued and all declared that it had been a most enjoyable sport | and one of which they dgsired more | in the future position offered him there, bell. Wanted ! One One The rifle club wis! s to call the 1€ attention of the public to the fact that the area next to Mendenhall i | | Glacler where the rifle range 1s] situated has been set aside for tar- get shooting purposes by the For- est Service. Hikers wishing to trav- erse the left hand moraine of ‘the Glacier should always .obgerve| whether or no red flag is on| display at the range club house be- fore venturing in the vicinity of the | Rigging Slinger Choker Setter ; |'i|h‘.z(‘. U.. Lfm red flag is displayed One Whistle Punk e a4, Tok"sentuil I;nrn is great danger from rlcu-: chet shots. EXPERIENCED MEN ONLY! ek - > | Kansas May Boost “Tariff"; ® On Marriage and Divorce : as., Aug. 5 pres- Juneau Logging Company | mssion v et ou vt parture will have to bear an in- creased tax burden in Kansas, Searching for possible additional revenue, the State Research Bureau Legislative Council suggests hiking marriage license fees from $3.50 to $4 and setting up a $2 fee for, di= vorce registrations. Office at Juneau Lumber Mills Sea Scouts from Hawaii 329,000 FEET OF LUMBER LEAVES FOR MATANUSKA Freighter Forest King Calls Here Yesterday Afternoon Approximately 1,500,000 board feet of Southeast Alaska lumber,is trav- elling to Seward and the Matanuska Valley colonization project on the freighter Forest King today. Officials of the Juneau Lumber Mills said today that 325,000 board feet of the cargo was doaded on| the vessel while she was in port| last night and this morning. Thc‘j black hull of the Forest King berth- ed at Lumber Mills Dock at 4:30 o'clock yesterday -afternoon and sailed for the Westward at 9 o'clock this morning.. ‘The ship, sailing -originally from Scattle, picked up additional cargo at Ketchikan and Wrangell mills| for the colonists. LOUIS READY FOR KINGFISH 60 WEDNESDAY CHICAGO; August 5.—Joe Louis, who now is being called the Brown Bomber from Detroit, concluded prepafations today for his lo~round4 bout with King Levinsky, Chlcngo heavyweight, here Wednesday night. | The Chicago fish-peddler, mean- while, plans to polish off his train- CASEY ing tomorrow. | Te Bomber is favored to win and| | thereby take another step toward a‘ | championship match. He recently | defeated Primo Carnera in impres- | even sea scouts from Hawaii arrived In San Francisco aboard thesun-r Malolo en route to the national Boy Scout jamboree ‘in Washington, D. C., starting August 20. Equipped with ukeleies, they. will tour the country before reaching Washington. Left to right (front row) George Gilman, Karl Katt, Vernon Smith, (back row) Edward Bryant, James Beardmar-. Al Susa and Richard Paimer. (Associated Press Photo) also plans to start the ather side- SHATTUCK | wal roject upon whic was SIDEWALK PROJECT oy bidcer lust week s soon. a: ARTS TOMORROW necessary Public Works Adminis- tration forms and contracts arc completed. Meanwhile, Work on the onz and one-half | work on the Gasti- |biocks of sidewalk paving in the | neau Construction Company street. ase D — -Shattuck addition, the con-| paying projsct was at a standsti REAVING ON .58 NNy [ for which the firm Was t5qay, the heavy rain forcing a ces W. F Staley, legal advisor of the gyarded at the City Council meet- | sation of concrete p iring o activitio Ketchikan and Juneau in connec-|y,s announced this morning b; tlon with settling clalm disputes, 1S ficials of the Foss Cunstructlon‘ leaving tonight on the Yukon for company. the scuth, returning to his head-| Tne work, which is under a mu- SR s ARG completed in about one and one-| PBITTSBORO, Miss., Aug. 5.—Bod- Forty farmers have applied for | half weeks, providing good weather | ie Bates, negro accused of attempt- croiion control work on 1,700 acres |prevails. ing to attack a 22-year-old white of land in Asheville, N. C. | The F'os Constructlon Company | woman, has been lynched by a mob. Forest Service who has been in 2 Friday, will begin t,omormw, s: quarters in Portland. ‘nlclpal contract, is expected to be | agamlz‘e, foo ”864‘ Bfl/dflé’fl @ And that’s why the tobaccos in Chesterfield. are carefully. balanced one against the other ... not too much of ene—not too little of another, 1 . 7 ! We take the right amounts of * the right kinds of four types of to- bacco— Bright, Burley, Maryland and Turkish. 1t is this balancing of tobaccos % that makes Chesterfields milder and mks them taste better. vd dm ‘!J 0{» © 1935, Liceatr & Mvaas Tosacco Co. - Francisco mining engineer, arrived RETURN FROM | o B Depores INSPECTION OF MINE PROPERTY Gen. McRae, Ira Jorale mon Fly Here After Ex- tensive Interior Survey Gen. A. D. McRae, of Vancouver, B. C., member of the Canadian| Senate, and Ira B. Joralemon, San | ‘n Juneau yesterday from Fairbanks aboard the PAA Lockheed Electra.! Gen. McRae and Joralemon have for the last three weeks been en- | 3aged in inspection and survey of nining developments along the Yu-| Mrs, ‘Anna ton River m the Coal Creek, Wood- | “woman ' in Sage (above), _the red” who is credited . ‘hopper and Rampart districts. Gen. \mth \lttmfiohn Dillinger “on ct.‘h‘. McRae stated that he has made a|®Pob,” will tour of the interfor for the same :x:o‘:thw i"':;n‘:'lfi“ h:::m:: purpose during each of the last She was arrested by G-Men when five years. | Dillinger was ambushed, Placer mining development has | suffered in the Fairbanks district 3 from lack of water this summer,|MJAMIE MARTIN AND JOHN VADAS MARRIED Gen. McRae said, but recent rains have furnished plenty of water Mamie L. Martin and John Vadas were united in marriage by the within the last few days and every- | one is back to work. Gen. McRae will leave for his home in Vancouver tonight on the ReV. Erling K. Olafson -at the Yukon. Joralemon will remain in|Resurrection Lutheran Church par- Juneau for two or three days to in- |50Nage Saturday night at 8 o'clock. pect mining properties in this dis- Qii‘:\ee:el:rk and H. E. Evabs were ol < e 'S, 4 ict before returning to the State: Mr. &0 Nire, Tadas wili resids at the Assembly Apartments, Mrs. Vadas is a sister of the ———— | FISHING EXCURSION | K |George brothers. TAKEN, TURNER LAKE | e AR —— i ROBERTSON RETURNS Dr. and Mrs. R. H. Williams, Mrs. | iy Guy Harold Smith of Columbuz,| Attorney R. E. Rober¢son reluen- Ohio, C. B. Arnold and Miss Lad- ing to Jnueau Sunday by the PAA die Kyle enjoyed a fishing excur-wbockhcei Electra from' a profes- sion to Turner Lake on Taku Arm | sional trip to Fairbanks, Sunday afternoon aboard the Gorst % Boeing flying boat piloted by VArn{‘ ’ - Schilling Pepper Mrs. Smith, . who made her fr;z' will season a plane trip on Thursday (o L“t‘{e' Hasselborg, has become an enthusi- | astic flyer. She will sail tonight aboard the Yukon enroute to Co- lumbus, Ohio, with her husband who has been in Seward on busi-| ness. | Laddie Kyle, who has a studio in| the Gastineau Hotel, and who is| at present engaged at preparation of an illustrated book on Alaskan wild flowers, made several sketch- es whue at ’l‘urner Lakc million steaks tonight. Y es o e CllCStCl'flCld the cigarette thats MILDER : : CllCSthflCld Ilc; cigarette that TASTES BETTER Mo