The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, August 30, 1935, Page 8

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Dall ¥ Cross-wor(l I’ufizle ACROSS OLDTIMER OF WASHINGTON PASSES AWAY 6. Stralned to a high nervout piteh Pirate Historical period Male sheep That thing cal com- position Solution of Yesterday's Puzzle mation Relate 27. Natural cover- ing of the head . Destroy utterly Soft groan Least tight 37. Decorate . Covering of the eye 35, Cover the In- side of again . Italfan city . Snapping beetle . Sound of an explosion Coliege degree Entitled HOQUIAM Wash € se puzzle Yot any . Midday . Bgyptian river Isiand of Napoleon's -+ CLOUD BERRIES ARE NOW READY TO BE GATHERED . Lowest note of Guldo's scale 83. Thus called in Fi ed “cloud berries” 2 in her native coun | Just cold small be n amount of over the top, just er berries will tom toward the from the top down. wanted for out of the barrel wit chisel; when thawed th lmmpm.ol} 5, S8 . 0 be a most healthful fruit!sians travelling through the country el ol fe persons in many | and who avidly pick and eat them. s::xf‘ mv’l’-‘,"“. rn Europe. Cloud | Mrs. Hammer says’ these berries ey grow on a low bush and|are now ripe hereabouts and ad- record of the berry and of the lo 1- |only in swampy pl They are | vises strongly that they should not bérries, which are in alplentiful about Juneau but n | be scorned. She believes that mar- similar man and which also more so in the Interior, and along ‘km’-\g of the many wild Alaskan grow wild, and pientifully in Alaska |Icy Straits where they are known | b could easily be made profit- and would give employment to many persons. Russian sometimes seen there berries because they by Rus idered cloud be NATIONAL | LEADERS { THESE WHISKIES WITH ANY OTHERS IN THEIR PRICE CLASS! READ THE BACK LABEL-- KNOW. THE AGE PENN-MARYLAND CORPORATION A division of Natioral Distillers, N. ¥. C. O A R LINOLEUM FOR EVERY ROOM IN THE HOUSE Kitchen, Bath, Dining Room or' Living Room—we have the pat- terns and colors to suit the most fastidious taste, The NEW FALL showing of ARMSTRONG LINOLEUM will de- light you. The new patterns are unquestionably the most artistic .and attractive ever shown. Tans, browns, greens, blue, grays and reds. No matter what color -(-hvm(-‘_\nu wish to follow out you will find it in i this new assortment. All 1()|l}l~ of Borders in stock and we are equipped to install any kind of a decorative linoleum floor for you and will gladly quote you llr"“l‘\ on ‘lll' (l’”]l’l( te J()I) You are assured of a satisfactory job when we install your Linoleum. JUNEAU-YOUNG HARDWARE CO- T 00000 | would leave for Fairbanks soon was! {would hold an important meeting| g |at 7 o'clock tonight at the Alaska |new Sea Scout |directed the George Bacon to Juneau, and on ithe second trip D. MecMurphy, J. | 'were passengers. America Ran i:, World' Movie Facilities | MELBOURNE, Aug. 30.—Australia provides more movies per capita than any other country in the world, | according to figures compiled here. For an estimated population of lnml. (/mmberlmn, Who Taught Rogers to Spin| Lariat, Dies in South| 1S INCREASI NEW YORK, -Aug..30.—A ris | trend in retail trade and indus SIMMONS IN FROM SEATTLE The Alaska Air Transport Patco flown by Sheldon Simmons arrived I.IBBY PARTY HAS BUSY DAY The Libby, McNeill and Libby | | party arriving here yesterday morn- LOS ANGELES, Aug. 30.—Frank | Chamberlain, aged 65, former Okla- | yma cowboy, one-time stage per-| r and who is said to have this morning at 9:15 o'clock. Sim- ¢ Will Rogers to spin the|\D8 aboard the cannery tender New 6,630,000 persons there are 1286 |production, but: a slackening Sunset from Taku Harbor, had a o ! mons left Seattle yesterday at noon at, is dead here. d isit inty 'of - tiberest movie houses or one for 5287 per-| wholesale markets, is- reported 4y and arrived at Ketchikan last night - e bysy day visiting pointy of Mterest | Dun, Bradstreet, Inc., in the wi 3 in the Juneau district. ‘The party was taken in a bus to Charles Rudy’s fox farm on Gla- Sweden, one for every 5,545 per- cier Highway where they fed the| . Austria, one for every 7,882; bear and. were photographed b%! gnited Kingdom, ope for every i . Ken Chilholm, Ed Levin and George | g o4 : America, one for every w_‘:;u X y:: which had been bert Getty, assistants to Father B. R! Japan, one for: every 59,043 | al mmer’s Dock since Tuess Hubbard, who escorted the party. md Russia, one for every 0,500, {day, left nort last_night. The par The party then went to Mendenhall |; of St. Papl, Minn, and New York OLDTIMERS MAY BE Glacier and inspected a new cavern tourists d plan to hunt formed in' ghe ice, called’ At the before féfutning to Seattle in " Mrs. Pearl Burford, President g NASHVILLE, Tenn,, Aug. 30. — the Juneau branch of the Ameé Governor's home, and were giiests at midgle off riext month, a display of motion picturés taken by Father Hubbard which were shown at St. Ann's Hospital. Rube Robinson and Ray , Caldwell, |ican Federation', of Business af s baseball oldtimers, have applied Ior‘Pmtessionfl ‘Women's Clubs, arrives umpiring jobs in' the Southern As- |tonight on the Northland from af sociation for the 1936 season. e fextended trip to the States, during T. A. Morgan of the Columbia Lum- ber Company, was a round-mp passenger aboard the plane which left Juneau last Saturday for the south. Simmons reported perfect weather throughout the return trip. He|Ff encountered a storm on the way south last week and stayed one day in Ketchikan, ly review. —_—————— SEYELYN I LEAVES & . The Seyelyn II, Campbell Churclf Other countries are given in bhei SCREEN WRITER TRAVELS | following “order— Miss M. Cummings, resident of | Angeles, Cal, and a script for motion pictures, is a nd-trip tourist on the® Prince t from Vancouver, B. C. She ompanied by her mother, Mrs. ummings. e - MRS. HAHN RETURNS Mrs. V. 1. Hahn, wife of the su- rintendent of the White Pass and yukon Route, was a passenger on he Prince Rupert to join'her hus- and at Skagway. PR P SO MAYER ARRIVES Alexander Mayer, jewelry sales- man, arrived here from Petersburg 1 the Dellwood. er ROBERT HALL TO LEAVE CITY SOON; SEA SCOUT MEET Announcement that Robert Hall popular young newcomer to Juneau, ! | | | Libby steamer Otsego, which brought them from Seattle, for the return trip south. UNITED FOOD 0. The party sailed aboard the, New; — - fwhich she attended - the natioxf Sunset late last night for Taku Harbor where they will rejoin’ the SHOP IN JUNEAU! | convention held in Seattle. co-incidental with the news that| Hall's Sea Scout ship “Baranoff” TR Marine Ways Dock. Hall will board the steamer Yu- 'kon on September 10 for Valdez,| there to take the Richardson High-| way into Fairbanks. He will Jom his sister, Marian, who left Juneau| {last week. They both will enroll at ithe University of Alaska. Chicaso”und s "hr:‘;"ff;: “Your Home Owned Grocery and Market” Empire i Tonotromw s BARGAINS He has helped organize Juneau's venture and has moving of the' mail ship Pacific from a beach to its |present location near the marine Wi dock. Local Scout officials had no an- nouncement to make today regard- ing a successor for Hall. Chair- man Wellman Holbrook of the Dis- trict Committee is to confer with y, the Sea Scout sponsorship agency, this week o the questn n of a successor. - FLY TO HASSELBORG; RETURN WITH FISH Percy Reynolds, of the Juneau Ice Cream Co., and The Juneau Liquor Store, and Mrs. Reynolds; W. H. Bacon, Gray Line Bus Com- pany, and Mrs. Bacon, and Mrs, Mary E. Case of Portland, went to Lake Hasselborg on a fishing ex- pedition. The party left aboard the PAA Fairchild flown by Alex Holden at 7 o'clock last night and returned this morning at 10 o'clock with a fine catch of fish. Mrs! Case, who has been visiting her sister, Mrs. Edith Sheelor since her arrival on the Alaska on August Serve plenty of these vege- tables, garden fresh! Stock fresh every day! TOMATOES Rosy Red 2 lbs., 25(: CARROT S Large Bunches gy o i g oM. e nevs sl 6 for 25¢ Buy SA TURDAY for TWO DA YS Q: R TPEAS Store Closed Monday . ' I Fresh Garden Picnic S pecmls You'll Need! °. - RS 3 lbs 25c Plusnin a picnic? Having guesis? Taking your lst week- i H‘;fi::nmw?z:agcij:dufl;fx‘:n:yfix‘;e’a( o end trip? You'll want delicious meals in-any event . . ; and i Jafmsan: miade two, (o1od 15 Tylno- you’ll find the things you neéd at this special Bufc, nt pnces i quah yesterday afternoon. On the first flight the plane brought Mr. and Mrs. D. C. Sharpstone and CURN on COB New Yellow 6 ears, 25¢ that make them bargams' il e PAPER PLATES—AIl Kmds and s 50 colors, package ... ... .... . Swgge'subns' From Our MEAT DEPT ST TR PRt Pt tebrasaras ST T 1T A Mosterd, H. Holmberg and S. Saari ————— FORESTER DUE SUNDAY The Forester, with Regional 'For- ester C. H. Flory aboard, is at Hanus Bay in Peril Straits today and is expected 'to return to Juneau prob- ably Sunday. Mr. Flory has been on an inspection trip and also testing out the' new radiophone ) with his office ever since he left. - TER MINER PASSES 4 PACKAGES Mayonnaise And you get 10 cents back by returning empty ‘jar QUART 99¢ CRACKERS Sndns or Grahams 2 POUND BOX 38¢c CANDY BARS All Popular Kinds 4 FOR 15(: PER POUND ~ 30¢ GRAPES Seedless or Malagas 2 pounds ~ 25¢ coco4 NEW TEN STIR Cup and Saucer FREE with each pound for | | ! f According to a telegram received !in Fairbanks by John L. MoGinn, | Joseph Walter Lee Henderson, 69, (Esoer Creek miner, died in Seattle | recently. Henderson prospected in 1Fa|rba.nks for many years. He will be buried in Sedttle under the aus- | pices of the Masonic Order. R ety BUTTER Fresh—High Score 2 POUNDS - 69¢ SHOP lN JUNEAU! VIKING CLUB Card Party and Dance —— Extra 'lilyge‘ 2 DOZEN 19¢ L. 0. 0. F. HALL Saturday August 31 REFRESHMENTS Cards at 8 P. M. PUBLIC INVITED Canning Fruit WILL ARRIVE TUESDAY Place Orders NOW! Cap NE F FREE PROMPT DELIVERY RS L S WQN i Admission 40c .P,HO e : OR{_,;.‘ e ST ; Rk g P tu,,;. B | ; Einvg = ¥

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