The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, August 27, 1935, Page 2

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Dady Cross-word Puzzle Solution of Y:mrdm Puzzle s crustacean gggg pEIR. . 30 ACROSS Shrim, ko Meadow Fastener Frequently Pointed tool (By the U. S. Weather Bnm b 4% Forecast for Juneau and vicinity, beginning at 4 p.m. August 27: Unsettled -weather, .probably showers tonight and Wednesday; light southerly winds. ke . Shallow re- ptacle . Furnish with weapons . American LL FABRICS By Came, togéthe: Ausic. drama Vegetable Presxdcm Heney o‘fAlnska- . Extiamaion or Schoolwear & OUR LINE OF FALL WOOLENS oy ::f:;.{a::b::r‘mg: |18 COMPLETE LOCAL DATA Barometer 'Temp. Humidity Wind Velocity 30.23 58 90 s 8 30.28 56 95 s 5 -...30.29 59 86 8Wo.' . § CABLE AND RADIO REPORTS YESTERDAY | Highest 4pm. | temp. temp. | | | ,:_:;-‘: 7 Time 4 p.m. yest'y 4 am. today Noon today ‘Weather Lt. Rain Lt. Rain Cldy = (ndian 3. Coral fsiand L Crip) . Vessels for heating liquids Donl Ingredlent of sealing wax "Tert of re- spect patience . Coyered with timber Decorations Astringent 3 TODAY 4a.m. Precip. 4am. temp, temp. velncity mhx;; w&nher % Tr: 34 16 . i 50 %fi:‘y 58 PL.Cldy 42 48 bry . Type ineasures , Animal of the enus hitis !rlcnn flles Station Anchorage | Barrow ... Nome Bethel Fairbanks Dawson St. Paul Mrs, Heney, M. A. Reese, Engineer- inxCharge at the mine, his son Tom Rn&e have arrived here aboard the | Windham mine's boat, the. Pheasant. Heney, who has been at the mine far the. last, thres stabed that he s going ahead with onemm “ 34 50 58 42 48 48 49. States ot rfiou 38 nd nsensibility 54 58 | 62 ' | 0 01 0 0 12 2. Botire aniount Ferocive 7 visually 4L I[nclin Lro eltowish ES [mplflll “ ver- Wool, Crepe, Heather-twist, Tweeds and Flan- N N ct Dlglnllh nels in an array of color and design, IL‘ST THE THING FOR THAT School Dress or NEW FALL GOODS ARRIVI] ¢ ON EVERY STEAMER B.M. Behrends Co:; 144 g i e Juneau’s Leading Department Store | JANE ALEXANDER TO GIVE BRIDGE PARTY Miss Jane Alexander will be hos- tess tonight at a bridge party at| her home. The following friends will | attend Mrs. Hugh J. Wade, Mrs. Willlam Kimball, Mrs. Clifford Morgan, Mrs K. H. Williams, Miss Venetia Pugh, Admlnlstratlon Blames wiss Elizabeth Kaser, Mrs. Everett > Nowell, Mrs. David Ramsey, Mrs. Long for Killing Pen- | o¥eh Jernberg, Miss Nell McClos- sions for Agcd key, Mrs. T. M. Reed, Mrs. Helen | Smith Cass, Mrs. Robert Bender, Mrs. Arthur Adams, Miss Lillian Alexander, Mrs. Donald Morrison, | | Mrs. Miles Im]ay Mrs. 1. Go.ldstem STOCK PRIGES TAKE TUMBLE - ON EXCHANGE Charged to Profit Taking—De- clines Heavy FINGERS OF iCoutinuea Trom Page One) in the Senate that was not popular.” With Congress over, the prospec- tive fate of the New Deal before the Supreme Court became the foremost subject in the Capital City. The case is the TVA. The Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals In New Orleans/ sustained the TVA Act as a valid exercise of Federal authority. PLANS ARE ABANDONED WASHINGTON, Aug. 27.— The new Social Security Board is re- ported from an authoritative source| Down Turn [S that plans have been abandoned to grant aids to states this year for old age pensions and other parts of the Social Security program,’ funds which are tied up in the de- ficiency bill killed by Senator Long's nubus;er e NEW YORK, Aug. 27. — Stocks tumbled under selling orders today and losses ranged from fractions! |to around three points. RECORD AUBIENCE, | Toe down tum is CRAWFORD CONCERT Robert M. Crawford, Alaska's “flying baritope,” gave his long- awaited program at the Preshyter- fan Church last night to a record quotation of Alaska Juneau mine! audience. He arrived with his bride stock today is 16%, American Can| yesterday afternoop on the Alaska 137, American Power and Light 6, from a hunting and fishing trip on Anaconda 19, Bethlehem Steel 36%, the Interior. He was accompanied General Motors 42'%, International in his program by Mrs. Trevor Harvester 53, Kennecott 22%, Unit- Davis. ed States Steel 43%, Pound. $4.97%, After the recital, an informal re-|Schenley Distilleries 33%. ception was held for Mr. and Mrs. Crawford and members of the| DOW, JONES AVERAGES church choir at the home of Mrs.| The following “are’ today Davis. Here Mr. Crawford herd Ma- Jones averages: Industrials, thilda Holst, local musical prodigy, ™81l 3473; utilities, 24.8. sing, and prophesied a most promis- PRETTRY a0 ing future for her. TEAL GOES SOUTH Because of his appointment to The Bureau of Fisheries vessel | the management of the New York L8l arrived last night in Juneau Conservatory of Music, Mr. Craw- and is leaving at 3 o'clock in the ford was forced to make his visit to BOIRINg for Seattle, taking crews! Juneau very brief, and left with his SOUth after the summer fishing wife on the Princess Louise. season. Capt. R. L. Cole is in et |command. Capt. J. R. Crawford| ESTEBETH BRIN’GS is also aboard. He is going ‘as far | as Wrangell where he will “take SIX PASSENGERS wmmand of the Widgeon. ter going to Seattle, thHe Teal When the motorship Estebeth ar- | il return here for fall pafrbl in' rived from Sitka on her regular|® "“n"“ district. kly trip, she brought six pas B e P il d o ¥ P |BROWN BEAR AT KUPREANOF The inbound Mst: The Brown Bear, new Alaska From Chichagof—Mike McKallick, C2m€ Commission vessel, was at From Kimshan Cove— Harold | XUPreanof between Kodiak and Bloomquist, Mrs. C. A. Bloom-|A{08nak islands last night, accord- quist. | ing to word to the Commission of- | From Tenakee— Nellie Oldfield, !¢ here. Sbe is on the way to the John Vavalls, Mrs. Vavalis. |extzeme westerly part of the Aleu- i | tians to look over fox farm condi- CARRINGTON TO SEATTLE | tions, Executive Officer H. W, Ter-| Glenn Carrington, a part-owner Or;hune and W. E. Crouch of the Bio- the hardware firm of Carrington | 08ical Survey are aboard. and Jones who has been here on LS R i a business visit for several days, left| MES. WARNER RETURNING on the Alaska for Seattle. He winj MiS Jack Warner and her stopover at Wrangell enroute south. ,d““gh‘e' Aleda Lea, are return-| RESBNS - L DI i ing to Juneau on the Yukon after ' BEERS-M'GINNIS LICENSE | Visit with Mrs. Warner's sister, A marriage license has been ls- | V'S G€orge Woods, in Seattle. Mrs.| sued by the U, S. Commissioner ot | Warner, who was Helen Lindstrom, Nelson 1. Beers and Miss Marie| %50 has visited her Josephine McGinnis. Previous plans |PATéAts in Bellingham. Warner is| of the young couple were for a|®3 employee' of the Standard Oil wedding in October. Miss McGinnis | COmpany here. said today they had not yet decided e R pmrinn e e Wate. Daily Empire Want Ads Pay! attributed technical factars Today's close was weak. CLOSING PRICES TODAY 12079. largely to profit taking induced by | NEW YORK, Aug. fl—clfilnz' Dow, | husband’s ‘ CHUREH YAGHT BRINGS HUNT ' - PARTY TOiTY Seyelyn II Arrives at Nooxn —Visitors Acclaim, Deer Opportunities \ What wafers around lflm};lkm | failed to pmduce in good nshlng the ‘mountains. near ay are providing in the way of &xcellent | goat and deer hunting. At least that |15 the sentiment of & group of ten | residents of St. Paul, Minn., and \New York City which arrWed here |at nogn today aboard 'thé €amp: | bell Church cruise yacht Béyelyn I The party, headed by Edward Fol ey, St. Paul railroad b ndlng con- tractof, left Seattle Au 4 and { came to the heralded ws und | Ketehikan expecting plénv.y‘ of fish nibbles. But high ‘water mmuon;t ,m the creeks and a uhornfl of co- | Boes served to disappoint them. | * Thien, ‘ten days ago, hey turned to ‘more northerly districts, And, apparently, Alaska's reputéition has | been saved. Both deer and goat have been bagged and, wmmon the | Sayelyn IT will leave for more hunt- ing areas, this time with bear | skin or two as the go‘ On Lhe‘ | southbbund trip, theyll try fishing | again. The trip is scheduled to end | in Seattle the middle of September, With Foley are his wite &ndl daughter, Margaret; Mr. and Mrs. ! Jules Hannaford and Miss Gertrude |Hannaford of S§t. Paul; Mr. and ‘Mu. Carl Swenson 6f New York; |H. E Stevens of 8t. Paul; and| Hugh Winslow of New York. Stev- €hs s & vice-president of the North- ern Pacific Railway. He, Bwenson and Foley h | to Alaska before. To the | trip is & new experience, Ve been 15, the | Femmer’s Dock. She is skippered | by Capt. Henry Durham: C. J. Thomas Is the ship's steward. —————— MRS. SOUFLIS COMING Mrs,: 3. E. Souflis, with her twol childreh, will arrive on the steam- er Yukon from Seattle. . ‘hus- bandhtheownero(lhefl%n numrmquwxwe 1 % m To charge of* 'in; Jnmsu office of .Hér hus- bands new Gontinental Dishileries 1 store; Mrs. Wiilbur Irving will ‘arst ‘rive on the Yukoun from Sedtt | tonight. % 2 ————i— GORST 'RLANE RETURNS The Gorst Alr Transport Boeig flying boat flown by Pilol Prank | Knight, which bas been held ‘at Wrangell since Sunday by - bad weather, returned to Juneau this afternopn at 1 pelock with Douglas Gray, a round trip passenger on. the plane. Shortly after arriving in | Juneau Pilot Knight took off on & scenic flight over Mendenhall Glac- fer with Miss Dorothy Fisber and |Gus Biwer as passengers L e | MORGAN AT ZYNDA J. P. Morgan, Lipby, McNeill and | Libby rwufiu. arrived on the Ahakq;ndulzuesxncme | Zynda. STIRE G Lol PR BARNET AT aAs’eru | 3. 8. Barnet, agent for Standard Brands, Inc., is registered at the ‘The Seyelyn 11 s 'berthed att’ _i Proving the cextent of the main Mlflh color 66 o tetation '6‘.: s . Perfect: golt M,Iu:hcll )aowvwh vhw lmi. ; finger. when his .38 automatic pistol discharged in, Gastineau. Cafe Sat- urday. might, the . bullet,, narrowly !missing diners in. ithe’ uiwmb was. given 8 lye . suspended sentence when arr ed in U. S. Commissioner's ‘Court today on a charge of ocareless aase of firearms. Rogovich, was sk gun to a friend w iin the msuumnt SAFFORDS AVE AFTER VISIT HERE Mr. and, Mys. J R. Bafford of New York, who have been' guests in Juneau ‘the past week of Capt. and Mrs. J, R. Newmarker, left on the AhShi They will make a side- wrip to Oaluorma /before returning to itheir New Ymk home. Mr. Bafford is Djssptor of Bu , ‘went off “ingy, at, the, Copper. Tnion Institute and &t one time was chief .en- gineer of ;the; Boston Steamship, Company, - when,, Mt. Newmarker was also in its eniploy. Numerous entertginments were| held in their honor, and their one fishing trip w; ,“eminently suc- eessful”—Mr. wmlrke'; catching 10 fish and Mr. Satford four, three of which were kings. Mrs. Hawley Sterling, wife of the Assistant Ohief Engineer of rhg flaska Road Commission, is returning to the city from Seattle on the Yukon. She has been gone two -months, having visited her f;lends in Portland, Ore., Saattle. and lond«;q ,|doing tempordry work inthe office. | wother in -Qakléind; Cald and with MEBS. NAYLOR APPOINTED WKA“WKJ’EBE Mrs. Gertrude Naylor has been| Mike Mc _prospector, appointed secretary-treasurer in the | arrived );e)'e f on the engineer-ingpector’s office, P W A, | Estebeth. A it was announced. today by Ross A. Gridley, Mrs. Naylor has been =TT DANCE PLANNED, The Alaska g 'mmoe has MISS SHAW ON YUKON Miss Marietta Shaw, Dutch Harbor ... 48 50 50 54 53 56 50 38 64 70 64 70 72 - 68 170 ‘'WEATHER CONDITIONS AT 8 A. M. Ketchikan, clear, temperature, 58; Craig, foggy, 57; raining, 58; Sitka, cloudy, 58; Soapstone Pojnt, raining, 58 .skngway, cloudy, 54; Port Althorp, cloudy; Radioville, raining; -Gotrdova, cloudy, 53; Chitint, partly cloudy, 48; McCarthy, cloudy, 46; Seward, cloudy, 52; Anchorage, cloudy, 51; Nenana, clear, 52; Rairbanks, clear, 52; Hot Springs, clears 50; !‘uby, partly cloudy, 50; Tanana, misln§ Nulato, cloudy, 52;' ‘Kaltag, raining, %4; Flat, cloudy, b4. WEATHER SYNOPSIS q High barometric pressure prev.iiled this morning throughout t‘e castern and southern portions of Alaska, the crest being 3044 inches over the Pacific Ocean about 330 miles west of Vancouver Island. Low pressure continued over the southern Bering Sea and the Aleu- tian Islands. This general pressure distribution has been accompan= ied by clearing weather over the Southern pohtion of Southeast Al- askg and by rains over the northern half of Southeast Alaska and over the Bering Sea, and by fair weather over the remainder of ths Territory. It was slightly cooler at Fairbanks last night, elsewhere over the ‘field of ‘observation the 24-hour temperature cha nges have been small 48 50 50 54 56 52 40 64 70 66 0 01 1.64 68 82 01 02 0 0 24 0 0 | aw oo Prince Rupert ‘Edmonton Seattle Portland 3 San Francisco . New York Washington P Do o MRS..I LARSEN AND by her son Franklin Larsen, left on | the Princess Louise. At Seattle they | tinental Can Company. ers. Defense Com- will meet Mrs, Lon Garrison, daugh- duled . a benefit ter and sister, and auto to Califor- |of The Bmpire in. various capadi- ‘dance at the Moose Hall at 9:30 nia to the Sequoia Forest near Red- | ties for: the past five years. He will former oclock tomorrow night. | wood whete Mr. Garrison s emr!make his home in California. ployed by the Government as for- est ranger. Mrs. Larsen will remain with her daughter until Christmas, then re- turn to Seattle and join her son Harry, who is émployed by the Con- .SON OFF FOR SOUTH Mrs. Harry Larsen, uccompaniedj Franklin has been in the employ I teacher in Juneau, is aboard the| >+ | Yukon for Cordova where she will| Mrs. C. Z Heppenstall, wife of be - Instructor in the schools' there.|one of the attaches of the Juneau | PGS | Radio Office, with her little son, FLIGHT TO SITKA |1s ‘& pastenget .&olith o the Prin- | Mr and Mes, Johnny Jack were eSS Lodise on a visit in the lpsfteng&rs to Tepakee and Arthur | | States. Lithdy went to Sitka this after-| noon " aboard the PAA Fairchild | flown by Murary Stuart with Flight| Mechanic_ Eric Schutfe. PR S e Edna L. Scheibal, clerk-stenoz~ rapher with the Alaska Game Com- | mission; Teft for Vancouver, B. C., : on the steamer Prince Georze. el e D] IN TAL | ) PH:AB::;}'W P::‘):::,’ of Lhe‘ Mrs. Kvernvick, who has been; |Alagka Juneau Gold Mining Com- | Visiting with Mr and Mrs. James Ipany, entered St. Ann's Hospital | Lynam, is travelling to Seattle on ‘this mornihg. Mr. Bradley arrived the Alaska. ‘ on, the Alaska on August 20 and| e T ERe e Tcgto_rq;d the hospidal the same day‘ IlARR] MACHINE for treatment of infection in his| SHOP foot from. wearing heayy boots on‘ | “ELECTROL an” ipspection trip through a mine| jin Idaho, He was discharged on August 23, and reentered the hos- | pital today for n,\rt.hcx treatment. | F———— | il | e l PAUL BLGB}DHOR‘N !‘-——-———— FINE Watdh and ‘Jeweiry’ Repaifing at very rensonable rites .. LIVIE GOES SQUTH John Livie, Master Mechanic | with ‘the Alaskn Juneau Gold Min- gy veling, to, Van- ,touver, B. C., unglsefime on t.he Princess Loulse. meg uheau, al term. of $¢ have: not , Hea}th Mmmai, Aoy T R Cahll o e |Gastineau Hotel. He arrived on Ithe Alaska. Southeasgei_‘ vagcination cm‘tlficate thns dt.me at once. Vaccinations are free at the Office of the Commissioner of : Signed; to the, pre\falence of Smallpox Alas aand espeoiafly i le r}di‘&n eni‘ofling for. the fall hool must show. a satisfactory Children who been vaccinated should have i W. W, COUNCIL, M. D. " Health Officer at Junesu and Territorial Health Commissioner Juneau, Alaska; August 27, 1935. Ay M - . 3 GET IN THE SWIM! Spend Your Vacation at Sitka Hot Springs Goddard, Al BOATING FISHING e, Ral HUNTING NOTHING, SERVES LIKE CONNORS' SERVICE Call 411 Now! e Connors Motor E L SRR o € instead of ea,sh-' When you make a purchase — whethe’t; . you pay on the‘spot or say “charg'e it? __the safe way is to Pay by Check! A Cheeking Account at this bank, with a ‘Hlb%tnntgil balance, offers the modern, businesslike “ way of handling Jinances safely. Your personal check safeguards each transaction and your funds on de- posit here are protected by Deposit In- surance. 3 For safety and convenienge, have your own Checking Account and-carzry:a Check Book instead of cash! The First National AE_2E NX5F N = |ed

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