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39 PASSENGERS ABOARD YUKON FOR THIS PORT SEATTLE Yukon of Aug. 26 the Alas sailed for A Satu ka ports at y evening ten steer- last Juneau Mrs 0. C Moore O'Flynn, M ht and wife J 1am, Miss P. E E. P M M Du ebe N M Joe Mehs mother, Laino Aalto, Impi Miss Armstrong, Homer G ling, wife and two so! Mrs. Williamson, Dorothy 1 thia Batson, Len Harty, ¥ child, Mrs. J. Warner Sofoulie and two Schoetter, F n Hautalla and wife - YOUNG SET FETED AT PROGRESSIVE DINNER SATURDAY € y Kilbourne Aalto Nord- N. G Cyn- child Gray Grace Walter Bender qierry le progres- by 28 day dance and be was the theme of the enjoy sive dinner party attended members of the young set Sa night Guests first gathered a of Miss Josephine McGi a salad i at € residence of Miss Mary Lee Coun- cil. A main course was served at Miss El beth Terhune’s, while for dessert and coffee ,the young peo- ple moved to the home of Miss Car- ol Robertson. Dancing was the pro- gram at the residence of Mi Missy Mullen In addition to the hostesses, ¢ er members of the party includ the misses Katherine Higgenbotn- um, Anabel Simpson, Aline Goldstein, Jean Faulkner, Jean Mc- Donald, Anne Boyer and Barbara Winn; and the messers RO Simpson, Duncan Robertson liott Robertson, John Keyser, Sc Ford, Erling Bogge, Nelson Beers, ‘Willard Gallemore, Curtis Shattuck Sonny Gray, Bill Winn, Robert Hall, and Robert McGinnis. Mr and Mrs. Gene Sommers also at- tended E Maxine Jones, 17, daughter of Fil Beery. Jr., 22, son of the actor, were “Just friends,” they said. (Associate 21 PASSENGERS LERVE JUNEAU ON NORTH SEA Sitka Yesterday with 22 Inbound eturning from Sitka at 11 o'clock yesterday morning, the steamer North Sea berthed at City Dock with passengers for here. She left for two hours later Seattle with 27 Juneau southbound pas- El 99 -, RETURN Although they same trip last year, Mrs. Rose f Woody and her daughter, Gene- vieve, returned for another visit to Alaska on the Aleutian BOB CRAWFORD “Alaska’s Flying Baritone” IS HERE! 1 list Mrs. Guy McNaugh- 1 McNaughton, Wini- on, Ben Nordahl, Dun- Geor Morgenson, E. E. Jensen, Mrs. Gimble, Jack Gimble, Cecelia Gimble, Alex TO ALASKA § made almost Mary Je To! can Cogo, the ton Lacey ity EAL CONCERT TONIGHT AT 8:00 P. M. RAREST MUSICAL TREAT Presbyterian Church ADMISSION 40¢ FOR SALL! FAST CRUISER . . hour, sleeps two, cooking facilities 18 miles per and excellent for sport fishing. [ ] COMMUNICATE WITH Laurence Freeburn SITKA, ALASKA e ————————————— i YOUNG HOLLYWOOD ROMANCE? Bigloff, off, Slmmm‘ C(l“.\ l’l(’l‘(‘ fl'()ll] 2 CRAWFORD T0 " GIVE CONCERT THIS EVENING Baritone Soloist Arrives Here—Appears at Pres. Church at 8 o'Clock Robert “Bob” Crawford,. baritone soloist and former Alaskan, appears in a varied program of classical and popular music in the Presbyterian church at 8 o'clock tonight. The program, originally scheduled for May and cancelled when plane trouble in Texas made it impossible for Mr. Crawford to keep his en- gagement, has been eagerly await- ed by those who remember hearing Mr. Crawford when he was here three years ago. The story of this Alaskan boy is one of steady achievement. Bob Crawford was born in Dawson, and tpent his youth in Fairbanks. He worked on the Alaska Railroad when a boy, then went to the States and | worked his way through Prince- | ton College. He started the first or- chestra at Princeton. Walter Dam- , of the Boston Symphony, heard it and secured for Bob a scholarship in Europe, where stud- ied directing, voice and harmony. Upon his return to America, he |became Director of the Newark Symphony Orchestrd and is now |also director of the Bach Chorus in New York City. He is regularly heard over the NBC broadecasts. Ho not only sings but plays the wiolin and piano extremely well. Mr. Crawford's visit here is part of a honeymoon trip, spent in hunt- ing and fishing in the Interior. He arrived*on the Alaska this after- |noon, and due to an appointment to the mana of the New York Con nsuing wint his early return, will leave mediately after his program by plane for Ketchikan, where he will m Cowboy Buck Jones, and Noah denying rumors of their betrothal. d Press Photo) Mike Kasoff, Tom Nifon- N. A. McEachran, Miss Alice Coughlin, Miss Ellen MoKechnie, Miss D. Taylor, E. T. Shipley, Mrs. Lir ard, Miss Lindegard, Andrew Feterson. The outbound list: For Seattle—Helen Druly, Mar- tha Shudshift, Margaret Shudshift, | Lenore Arnsherg, Richard Williams, C. M. Reabe Mrs. Reaber, Mrs. y B. Crewson, O. H. Stratton,| rs. Stratton, Doris Stratton, Ger- | aldine Bodding, Paul Abbott, Mrs. £ ves Stolfi, Russel Stolfi, Mildred zht, S. P. Saunders, Mrs ator ich necessitates trip south. - Saun- START BRIDGE FILL Work of hauling rock from mine to the fill at the Douglas end of the bridge was started to- day and will 1ke about weeks. After the fill is completed ;I'nl’ Douglas road must be surfaced |before it will be open to traffic. It probably will be the last of October before the bridge and new road is officially opened, accord ing to the Alaska Road Commis- sion. © Ketchikan—Chat Knight, Mrs. L. Gates, C. E. Parsons, Fred Peter- | son, Ole Olsen, Dr. Rae L. Carl- | son For Petersburg—Kaj Louring, R. H. Slock For Wrangell—L. B. Chisholm - e HENRY NEVILLE IN HOSPITAL AS | RESULT OF FALL | Fire Departmeut, Police and Ambulance Called - - MULLEN BACK Sun-burned and feeling fine, U. S. Commissioner J. F. Mullin re- turned on the Aleutian from a va- cation at Beaver Lake, near Ben- nett Lake, above Skagway. The. fish were biting well and the sun shone all the time, he reported. He re- sumed his duties today. S S S Mrs. Helen Webster, sister of H. L. Redlingshafer, has established her residence in a summer camp next to Redlingshafer's home. Ann's Hospital yesterday af-{ on for treatment of a broken| on Willoughby Ave me loose gravel and ov | 1d plunged to the beac! | ville was somewhat scratched | and bruised by his fall but his frac- is considered to be the serious injury. Shortly after accident the fire departm: ned. The fire truc owed by the police car, oon after the alarm n. An ambulance was and Neville was taken pital | struck s only the summoned to the h | D.B. F picking raspberries in his gar witnessed the acci- dent and telephoned the Fire De- | partment. He s in less than a minute and a the boys were on the scene rendering aid 1 - EDISON'S SO DIES IN EAST Thomas /\.fi J Suddenlyij Stricken, Passes Away in Hotel SPRINGFIELD, M) ‘Thomas A. Eiison, J on of the famous in early Sunday from a heart attac a local hotel where had 1 istered under another name, a pr: tice frequently followed by mem of the Edison family to avoid at- tracting attention. He | ow, a brother, and two step-brothers and step-sist He was returning from a vsiit with his brother at the time of his death 26 Aug 59, nto; av is . EADLINE | | WASHINGTON. Aug. 26.—Presi- dent Roosevelt has fixed September 12 as the deadline for filing appli- tations for money from the four billion dollar world reliefs fund D SHOP IN JUNEAU! 2 LORD CALVERT Bourbon or Rye whiskey. Five years old. 100 Proot. Bottled-in-Bond under Canadian Gov- ernment 8t | | | | | | | of Music for the i im- & catch the Alaska and continue his %1 the three - DOUBTERS [uvmsr OUNDED AS CLEAR ‘Heaps Coor orr wrTH CAL **The fact is now,firmly established that (whiskey) causes a lowering of the temperature of the body." Whiskey on a hot day? Impossible! It's heating! AMAZING SCIENTIFIC PROOF THAT CALVERT HERE‘S another reason why clear heads call for that CALVERT drives heat from the interior of the body . . . rolls it to the surface of the skin . . .causes radiation, evaporation, refrigeration, a loss of body © 1935, Calvert-Maryland Dis- sllling Co. ine. Distitiery : Relay, Md. Executive Offices: Chanin Bldg., N Weds Husband Thrice for Safety FAUI_KNERAND ; BANFIELD FORM - PARTNERSHP Young Lawyer Becomes | Business Associate of Pioneer Attorney Announcement of a partnership of H. L. Faulkner, prominent. Ju- neau attorney, and ' Norman C. Banfield, who passed the bar ex- amination. Saturday, was made ‘known today by Mr. Faulkner, who (has been practicing here for 21 | years. The new law. firm will- be known as Faulkner and Banfield. Mr. Banfield came heré four and oue half years ago from Wisconsin !where he graduated from the Uni- | versity of Wisconsin at Madison, He was connected with U. S. Weath- |er Bureau until 18 months ago when he went into Mr. Faulkner's office. Mr. Faulkner is widely known, having been active in local and Ter- ritorial affairs for years. | National Bank Building. UNDER ATTAGK IN HER PULPIT Senora Mario De Casasus (with pet scottie), whom Americans knew as "a‘oots” Pearson, arrives in New York with husband, Mario (inset); with whom she will go through two more marriage cercmonies to assure legality. She divorced former husband in Mexico, SORST PLANE 1S KEPT BUSY Gorst Air Transport Boeing boat had a busy day Saturday rting supplies and equipment > camps in the Juneau area 9 a.m. the plane, piloted by Vern t k off for Lake Hasselborg 1 of groceries from Jus > plane then went to Mole st post accessible v e a ton of supplies delivered by the Forest boat Ranger No. 9. Two required to move the pplies by air from Mole Harbor ke Hasselborg. t then made three trips from the CCC camp at Lake Hasselborg to a CCC camp at Thayer Lake with camp equipment and other suppli |PRINCE GEORGE ON | FINAL RUN SOUTH; TAKE 9 PASSENGERS, ant Is Assaulted Taking nine passengers soum-! LOS ANGELES, Cal, Aug. 26— Angelus Temple was thrown into bound, the steamer Prince George' made its final appearance here on|? tumult when Walter MacDirmid, pipefitter, crept upon the | stage the 1935 tourist season Snturd&y' at midnight. The v ly at City Dock enroute to Van- couver, B, C, from Skagway. The outbound lizt For Vancouver, B. C.—John Doo-|¥/ld uproar as the man grabbed lin, Miss Scheibal, L. E. Tucker,! the -evangelist by the wrist’ and Mts. Trickek: M eo Ander-on |dmed a blow at her face, and was Mrs. Estacy Delamore, Mrs. Cheney, | 1634V for & cecond blow, while the Ribart Oignes evangelist continued to beat time For' Drines Ruert, B, O~ Albart to the music with hel_' free arm, T An orchestra man climbed onto iE the stage and Dirmid. Police’ artested him. Today MacDirniid was sentenced to pay a fine of $25 or spend five days in jail for being drunk on private property, When Aimee’s Assist- as the “Angel of Broadway.” Singing worshipers broke into a been e O'MALLEY LEAVES' Henry O'Malley, former Commis- cner of Fisheries, was taken from Ann’s Hospital to the steam- interrupted Mac- | They maintain offices in'the Pirst | [Tumult in Angeles Temple| 1 called brief-|8nd aimed his fist at Rheba Craw-/ 'ford, Aimee’s assistant, once known | Surprise™" Message Is.Givérq President C;/:s Orders t Lieutenants About Next Session i i o ¥ i i WASHINGTON, Aug. 26—In . surprise message last Saturday nighte to congressional leaders, Presiden Roozevelt asked for legislation ats the next session to preserve “such;‘ social and economic advantages” as were ghined in NRA and other emergency legislation, The Chief Executive in a letter to his lleutenants on Capitol Hill asked the Senate Committees to be- gin to formulate legislation in the fall so that a “well-considered pro- gram” could be presented at the opening session in January, He said that he would call representatives {of industry, labor and consumers into a conference during the re- jcess in an effort to reach an agree- =mem on the best means of accelers ating industrial recovery and elimi. nate unemployment, —_———————— EPIDEMIC TOKYQ, Aug. 26.—Nearly 1,000 have died in a nation-wide sleeping sickness epidemic. EONRS PP RS | TAYLOR COMES BY PLANE The PAA Fairchild, flown by Alex Holden, went to Haines yesterday on a chartered flight and returned (to Juneau at 6:30 p.m. with Ike P. Taylor, Chief Engineer of the ! Alaska Road Commission. - — SHOP IN JUNEAU! Schilling P“REVAN!LLA Its exquisite flavor never out of DESSERTS . freezes FROZEN Thayer At Lake it was di at a s {f owned by the For Service had been damaged )y a brown bear, w n tore holcs in both ends of the boat. On the return flight from Lake Has:elborg to Juneau, Forest Ranger W. A. Chipperfield was a passen- ger. Chipperfield brought with him a nice buck deer. er Aleutian in an ambulance. Ac- ompanied by Mrs. O'Malley, who | urried here when her hushand was icken earlier this month, O'Mal- will seek medical attention in attle. Kif » s ~ictineis ROMANCE JLMINATED A romance that began in Seattle | five years ago was culminated re-| cently in Ketchikan when Miss Lorraine Stuart and Robert Stew- of Ketchikan were married. The wedding was, solemnized by Rev. Ct Huddleston in the First Mzihodist Episcopal parsonage. —e- SHOP IN JUNEAU! -~ - ON SCENIC FLIGHT ve Vance, wife of Or. A Joy Wakefield, Mis: Mildred Johnson and Ed Larson were passengers on a scenic flight over Mendenhall Glacier Saturday afternoon aboard the PAA Fair- child piloted by Murray Stuart. Tropical research proves you're wrong! Clear heads cool off with CALVERT! NEU-LIFE A MARVEL FOR MINERS - A PURE HEALTH PRODUCT % Strengthens the glands and nerves, with renewed VITALITY, correct chronic indigestion, and rebuilds NEW HEALTH. Invaluable for preventing colds and glandular weakness, Money back guarantee on every package. Let us tell you more wonderful facts about it. Health Foeod Center Second Street Near Franklin VERT! ~ (4 * bk, Consular records show whiskey the 3-to-1 favorite over all other distilled spirits sold below the Equator. i & COoOoLS heat. Andremember . . . CALVERT'S not only cooling » - « it's the whiskey clear heads call for . . . the whiskey that, enjoyed in gentlemanly moderation, lets you salute tomorrow with a smile. Use good judgment. Buy better whiskey. Call for CALVERT, CEAR N Ca ert wiiswies: ’//}; //(A I/ CALVERT. It's cooling! Science proves it..proves / ar0¢/ 4 BEAT'THE HEAT WITH . .. CALVERT'S MINT JULEP Crush a'few sprigs of mint in 2 teaspoon- fuls of moistened powdered sugar. Fill highball with crushed ice. Add double jigger of CALVERT 1o sugar and ‘mint. Pour aver ice. Decorate with mint. L SPECIAL RESERVE ALV BRTS L BCTAL Blended Whkkles regardiess of price the fnest ohtalnable. Weite for CALVERT'S “Oulde toCoallngHot-WeatherDrinks.” Yours for the saking!