The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, September 11, 1935, Page 8

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ANOTHER CLUE | S S st EMPIRE, WEDNESDAY, SEPT, 11, 1935. D le\‘ Gets 15 Cents iWorth of Hnmhurgm Daily Cross-word Puzzle Cosi 0, ) ACROSS Solution of Yesierday's Puzzie 11 Mournful ™ o Cents ; 1. Aeriforn flulk . 16 Sorrows | . W d: ith I I s Rusty, famous Juneau cat who| s W tea " [BIUISEAPIAICIT c[ule]s] '* ot d"'" o has had one hundred kittens with| , g \eapon A[SIEP/OID[OIRIZACIRIAIL| 0. epair by nda- more expected momentarily, has, 12 Tree CIE|RIEMIOIN| I [AJL 0! Wk :"“" vlece jexisted seven vears and three| I BIINE, MIAIPASIEITHYF [AT] * “ation: ™" |months ‘on a diet of liver and * " peri TIRIOITAOIPISAA] I [T z variant S 1 % Cu i Up hamburser. And every day for that| 15 0f the side TETNPAER|I BROIGIRIE|S b, e moke Se en Lurling Up period Rusty's mistress, Mrs. H. C.| _ the wind = [GIPEAPIRIEICIE[DIEGALIO| 3 karse rarm 0 hicay . Vexed: col H from Campfn‘eAnlers Shippey, proprietor of the Fern| 1 Y&¥ed: SIEIP[1 IAQUILIEBEAILIL etiant Q Beauty Parlors, has telephoned the| 20. Small pleces NIAIP HIOIDEAIL 25 Wearles Off to Scene Alaska Meat Market for a 15-cent| z;. measued o EE] 1 Soraag % der of Rusty’s favorite food. 237 Device to keer [SITIYEsiolUR@R! | M 30. Cone-bearing BULLETIN — ANCHORAGE, resterday, Mrs. Shippey, making a,wheel from IPIARESIE]L [SIMIOILIOIGLY] T.n':‘k orin Alaska, Scpt. 1l—Landing on telephone request, was| ., backward AIN|ITIEFZSIL |A[PEAS [E [E about Ryone Lake, 150 miles north- | at the note of hushed| 37 Catentor noia- (ST IQWIATIVIRIEGATIEIA] 4 mvfi':“mxm east of here, Pilots Steve Mills in §itne'iatiahgh. voice ing & dcor T romaining ' § shu . a 4 and Drn (um(lma’l dru»rnun}cd ered her. However, some| 28. Symbol for Jrchf! "%r 1. ing -r::: last night that the campfire s after she had made her| ,, gicke! 4. Throw 2 §t Pertaning thought might prove a clue to <t for delivery, a taxi arrived | §0. Light repast 42 Ful, round, 3 g e g jssi ines' party, A ks | 31. Worthiess dog and resona definitel. 31 Pokes e, MiNnE e R door, and a somewhat-wor-| 33" Morning: (5. 0ld musical 4 Rise (o the feet 39 Extent of sur- started by Indians in the Lone icihg ool Ariver assiBX hex g o b LA oy Buttc region. The pilots have e package he carried con-| 3% MOR( of the 4 Ciosed § . Soniugation 49 Telivs. oaet returned here. i the hamburger she had ord-| % 48 Aftectedly 8 Slight wound 42 Pecullar s | 5. shy 9. Natives of a 43 The present . er 27. Sheets of glass 40 Entirely British time ka, Sept. 11.—| «The bill is 40 cents” said the| 3% Curved struc~ §0 Soft drinks: _country o gain from a campfire |cab driver Member 61 Sheep b} U R area, 50 miles| “But I oply ordered 15 cents' ge, gave hope worth,” said Mrs. Shippey. the | that it missing Pilot smoke on a was sixty miles nort of orted ay but he| the extra mileage. turned to Anchorage, refueled took off, accompanied by Pilot Don Goodman, to visit the locality of the campfire. They were equipped with sleeping bags and field es glass- might course have search for three DART RETURNS ON RUN T0 ALEXANDER trip to the Back Irom her regular r and way ports, motorshi Float at nocn. Three pas: The Dart, tod on the Up- per City Float going min- or repi pr to Friday morning on The inbound list From Baranof—John another tip. O. B, Hawkes; from Saginaw—Ray Wil- liams; from Windham—Gudmund Jemsen. - e CHITTENDEN L R. A. Chittenden, t. ng man, is enroute from Juneau to Seward ever on the Yukon. -lIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII|IIIIIIIIIIII|IlIIIIIIII|IIIlIIIIIlilIlllllllllllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIh 25¢ to FAIR cab. the | m Pilot Mills re- rather th and |ious to please their customers, but not certain of the financial advant- | age of taking out the large van to! deliver the “But it costs a quarter for the said the driver, e unhappy. looking still It developed that a faulty phone | Lone Butte|connection had given and didn’'t have enough gas to fly|the Mrs. Shipey Transfer Company n the meat market. Anx- Ryan that amount of cat-food, | Juneau Transfer had turned| Ifll/fllfllfl/lflfl el i H % IWI 7AEREEN) = " MISS JOYCE RETURNS, sailing gered the light craft and the Ya- | the matter over to their neighbor, the Your Cab Company. Mrs. Shippey paid the 40 ccms‘ and Rusty had her dinner as usual. | B | TWIN GLACIER LODGE Mary Joyce left this morning for! her Twin Glaciers Lodge aboard Capt. William Strong's boat, the Redbird. Miss Joyce arrived here| Monday aboard the motorship Ya-| kobi, Capt. Tom Smith. | M ce leit the Twin Gla-| Js lll I%illl/% EL T flll/lll uEN JENEE II%. . | 7] W ] ciers resort Monday with Mrs. Don | Abel and the Universal Pictures Corporation, who had spcm se\eml days filming scenes in region, aboard the gas boat ’Vlnry J. enroute to Juneau, but heavy as caused by high winds endan-| SPEED TESTS REQUIRED OF | kobi was summoned to Annex Cr:nk| to complete the voyage . e TO FETE TEACHERS Juneau teachers, who have been | much feted since their arrival last| week, will be the guests of Mrs. Georg Tulintseff at an informal | tea tomorrow evening at Inquiry by P. O. Department tests of ,ships carrying; ocean mail, it is disclosed, have 8 o'clock. ice, a $100,000 refund from Speed and tonnage ibs ows carrying mail. required in their contracts. |Ocean Cairins Subject of WASHINGTON, Sepj. 11.—Speed withdrahval of one vessel from serv- with the government seeking T. of vessels largely governs the rate of pay in A long study of leg books and records of voyages recent- ly caused officials of the Post Of- fice Department to doubt the abil- ity of 21 ships to make the speed Tests already conducted, officials| for the firm, is interested in the OHIO AIRMAN VISITS HERE | ommercnal Aviation in Alaska MAIL VESSELS F. A Hortman nteresed'in KANAGA ISLAND SEEN HERE AS WEATHER AID Possibility of New Station in Aleutians May Mean Much A new Weather Bureau station at Kanaga Island in the Aleutians, the possibility of which was men- tioned by the Associated Press in The Empite, would be a great aid Iin weather forecasting work here, jHoward J. Thompson, associate meteorologist in charge, said today. While he could net say to what degree the plans for the new sta- tion had advanced, Thompson did explain its value to Alaska, and (particularly to Junesau. Kanaga Island, he pointed out on a map, is approximately 400 miles west of Dutch Harbor, pres- lent site of the most westerly ;_Weather Bureau station in Alaska. In Storm Center ! “The site of this proposed sta- {tion is especially adapted to giv- ‘mg Alaska excelient indications of future weather,” Thompson said. “It is,in the Aleutians, known as a ‘storm center.’ For instance, to- iday's ‘'weather map shows Kanaga |1sland to be in the direct center ror a low pressure area. If there were a station there we would know ,much more about this particular storm than we do.” | It was pointed out that trans- Pacific ships, plying between the | Pacific Northwest and the Orient, ipass as close to Kanaga Island on the “great circle route” as they do to any other Aleutian island. Es- | tablishment of a station there would 2id these ships as well as the Ter- ritory. f Type Not Known At present there are three sta- tions in Alaska ranked as ‘“first order.” They are at Fairbanks, Nome and Juneau, which is the | F. A. Hartman of Dayton, ORip, the North Pacific with a complete burg, where he visiting his uncle, Earl Ohmer, of the Alaskan I1Glacier Sea Food Co. 'ably spend about two weeks in Ju-' age an® Fairbanks, where he ex- jpects to investigate the aviation situation. g5 Hartman and his partner, H, 8.’ Johnson, own a Ford tri-motor and a Waco F plane. The ships are in use on advertising contracts and man, who acts as business manager | spent two weeks service. |arrived on the Yukon from Pelefs- weather forecasting information Peasants Rise Against Reign, Mme. Lupescu BUCHAREST, Sept. 11.—Na- ticnal Peasant Party leaders rallied their followers for an advance on the capital in a drive to remove Mme. Magda Lupescu, the King’s friend, as 200,000 will join the farmers’ march sometime next month. MRS. H. GRIBB PASSES AWAY | ANCHORAGE, Alaska, Sept. 11— Mrs. Harry Cribb, 59, a native of Astoria, Oregon, and a pioneer of the gold rush to Fairbanks and ,other early day camps, died Tues- 'day after s long illness. Mrs. Cribb lived in Anchorage 20 years. She was prominent socially and was Past President of the Fed- erated Women's Clubs of Alaska. She is sutvived by her husband. MISS WDONALD TRAVELS Mi Mary Jean McDonald left on the steamer, Aleutian for -Se- attle for o ‘vdéatidn trip. Her moth- er is planning on joining her in October. They may return here before the Christmas holidays. . v PWA WORK PROGRESSING The new City Hall at Fairbanks will be completed in about a month, according to Ross A. Gridley, PWA State Engineer-Inspector, who has just returned from an inspection|” trip to the Interior. Contract, for the sidewalk work in that city was let September 3 and that construc tion also is now under way, he said. At Seward, where he also visited, he found plans for the hydro-elec tric plant about half completed. g _ FOOT IS NOW O. K. Milton Bagby, A. J. mine em- ployee, who entered the hospital on PERRY BEATEN En-: skm Nongi M. D. Williams, District Engineer, U. 8. Bureau of Public Roads, Te- turned on the Yukon from Seattle where he has been inspecting the bumsu vessel mxhwny. which has BY ALLISON IN TENNIS UPSET e Texan Smashes Briton - in being made. The vessel will - be U. 8. Tourney by 3 '35.‘2';:‘.'"0.“33:’ e repartadls Stmght Sets FOREST HILLS, N. Y., Sept. u' —The two-year reign <of ; Gmt| ‘| Britain’s great Fred Perry. as the 4 United States tennis cHampion| OAKLAND, Cal, Sept. 1l. ended here this ~afternoon 'when M;:.mtrmh :‘r‘mm Wilmer Allison, 31-year-old nghtlu Texan, defeated Perry in mtee} Republicans. This straight sets, 7-5, 6-3, and 6-3, |Ver's announcement rece The smashing victory of the Am-|todsy. erican was enacted before a capac- 0r V. 7, R ity crowd of more than 14,000 per- " A. J. MAN. TRAVELS sons. It was one of the greatest up-' B. Malsernoff, employee of the sets in tennis for several years as Alaska Juneau Gold Minirig Com- Perry had reigned in virtual con- Pany, is a passenger on the Alaska trol of the world's single play ror to Seattle. : several seasons. MFATIS - AT By this win, Allison gained the H; O. Halvorsen, bookkeeper at right to meet Sidney Wood in the the Part Ashton canenry, is & pas- finals tomorrow. Wood, a New senger o the Alaska from that port Yorker, gained the final bracket— to Seattle. making it an all-American one—by trimming Bitsy Grant today. —— e — ENGAGEMENT OF MISS OTTESON, BRISHAM TOLD! Popular Ketchikan Girl, -|. Juneau Business Man to ! Wed Farly in October . Engagement of Miss Margaret Ot~ teson, popular Ketchikan girl, nnd W. L. “Monte” Grisham, young Ju- neau business man was announged in ‘Ketchikan last week. Miss Ot- teson is a graduate of Ketchikan F“P"‘! \ qndht‘l-fiundly 3 8 puppy. Then' he's off to work on Wings of the Morning! Weather Bureau headquarters for September 8 for treatment of an|High School and formerly active 'l‘rySdllllmgCofl‘ee the Territory. Seven other stations injured fsot, was discharged thic|in the Rainbow Girls. i It's M, and dependable are known as “second order” in morning. Since completing school she has With mbl‘ care Alaska. Whether the proposed Kan- . — been secretary to A. H. Zlegler, 4 aga Island station would be of the LEAVES HOSPITAL Territorial Representative and well it delivers & deliious cup. tirst order type, Thompson could Mary Rhodés who entered|known Ketchikan attorney.. She’ r 's’ 'W of the uommgl not say. the hosplul for medical treatment |served as Chief Clerk of the House Yesterday's Empire dispatch told on' September 8, was discharged|at the last session of the Territorjal /hew Dr. E. B. Calvert, Chief Fore- yesterday. Legislature. o c i ln g Icaster, had said in Los Angeles that e ———————— .The wedding is to be in tho e.{lly |a station at Kanaga Island was STORY IN HOSPITAL part of October -in Seattle, The| Iplanned in a program to “blanket” F, H .Story, of Skagway entered| couple will make their home ir * the” hospital- yesterday for medical| Juneau where; Mr. Grisham ' s An‘wosdul.hngCo‘fl’eu. treatment. He is employed by thé| manager of the Harry' Rape Dm; g“fm White Pass and Yukon Railway. compans;_ H " ‘ Onefotdnp. forced me‘Hartman said that he would prob- - SHT s S neau before he leaves for Anchor- “barnstorming” flights, and Hart-‘ Phone 151 Ride to the Fair in Safety, Speed and Comfort with YOUR CAB CO. 1-11|||c||||||||||||||m_muu|1muuumuu|||||||||||||n||||||||||u|||||||||||||||1u1 YOUR FURNACE A COMPLETE Air Conditioning Unit Let us shew you how, with just a few hours of work and a few simple attachments, we can make your furnace do double duty—supply clean air, without draft, at a constant, healthful temperature all win- ter and act as a ccoling unit in summer. FOR DETAILS PHONE 34 TODAY CAN BE RICE & AHLERS GENERAL ELECTRIC OIL FURNACES | Brothers, Galveston and Port Ar- 'allowed each hunter under the spec-| JOAN MORGAN HERE |ial permit. 1 Eight deer were planted in the/ Joan Morgan, who has. heen |district in 1916 and the -Commis- ]tel. She expects to spend a vaca- said, demonstrated that the Mar-|commercial aviation possibilities in garet Lykes, operated by Lykes|Alaska. Hartman expects to visit with his/| thur to Santo Domingo, could not friend Joc Crosson in Fairbanks. | make the speed specified for class ‘I met Joe Crosson in 1932 while five vessels in which the ship was I Was terminal manager for the listed. The Margaret Lykes was American Air Lines at Louisville, | tested over a measured mile. As a Ky.” Hartman said. result of the test the government Hartman sailed for Petersburg seeks to recover $400,000 paid over On the Yukon at the time the Fath- {a period of four years. er Hubbard tour party came north ! | Officials declined to say what Several weeks ago. He i5 very much 'or.her ships -have been marked for impressed with the vast interest tests. They said, however, that there Father Bernard Hubbard has arous- | are some 20 such ships on the At- ed in the States regarding Alaska.. |lantic, Gulf and Pacific coasts. i “The vastness and beauty of Al- | Post Office officials said that no aska appeal to me tremendously,” |tests have ever been made of the Hartman said, “and Alaskans are ability of vessels to fulfil mail con- the finest people I have ever met. | certificates. IlR ALBRECHT The Alaska Game Commissi on patrol work in connection with the Matanuska Colony from Anchorage and will be joined ‘there by War- | orage last Friday evening. thet vessel is now enroute back,| BARNES TO WRANGELL Cordova area at the request of the Aleutian. ’ |tract speed, but that they had been As Father Hubbard remarked, 1| RIS LRGN IS MARRIED vessel Seal, Capt. K. C. Talmage,' opening of the deer season in that bringing a bride, the former, dens Homer Jewell and George B.| The bride is a former operating being at False Pass last night. F. 8. and F. P. Barnes, connected.; . residents there. One buck is being e o S— !classified according to speed and am really sold on Alaska.” is scheduled to leave Juneau to- PALMER, Alaska, Sept. 11.—Dr. area. Warden Clarence Rhode is Blanche Smith, of Parkesburg, Pa. Nelson, Jewell has been to the|rocm supervisor of the Abingtdn| The deer season is being opened!with the Wrangell Packing Com-+ tonnage described by the ow-ners. e morrow afternoon for Cordova for T. Albrecht has returned to the going from here to handle the work The marriage took place in Anch- Aleutians cn the Brown Bear but; Memorial Hospital of Philadelphia. |from September 20 to 30 in thejpany, left Juneau for- Wrangell on undergoing treatment. for her eyes in Fortland * for several months; under care of Dr. Frank Freeburg- er, arrived on the Yukon and is jvisiting at the Governor's home until next Tuesday. She will then continue her journey to Anchorage to take up her home with her mother, Mrs. George A. Lingo and Mr. Lingo. AR Al RANCH ROAD COMPLETED ~|° The road to the California Gro-j.' cery farm, cwned by Bavard Bros., was completed yesterday by sur- facing. Pete Pappas and Gus Ne- cotas were the contractors. . i sion estimates that there are now some 1,000 deer in the area, thus allowing for a limited kill. - e, — ENTERTAINER HERE Echo Cangalosi of San Francisco arrived on the Yukon yesterday and is registered at the Gastineau Ho- tion of indefinite length in Juneau. Cangalosi has appeared as an en- tertainer at the Royal Hawaiian, Bell Tavern and other recreation centers in San Francisco. —_———e—-——— SHOP IN JUNEAU! SHOP IN JUNEAU! HHOP IN JUNEAU, FIRS'I" 5 tion pape for and other edusa pictures, of chargee. jntormation ‘on we have met the increase ot o investorse AL Ail(,A " pIER TWO t ‘n o )mo': ::16 is, it is nocoasar:”:&m”‘"r N 34 eam:auon ¢itn all po nbin\nn 4} fi i soun;issoka Line is, therefore, go! al ’ ¢ ; ?t;:iniu educauoml pro;ran “é“u“! | l&hools toaohers. ,libr:x"lz:: L ] L s tional groups == St e ; 3 maps are; by Storie rs and toaohors' As 8 re!\fl-"n every one pt data tith oomplétg ' s n Alaska, g are propax‘ed and s ; mgazines. i e - Alaska come to U rmanent, :’BI T D:.lly Em]fiw Wnnt Ml Pl!’ A MIHIP COMPANY- TEA?:::‘LE WASHINGTON AR L ol - v ‘glamorous ’?‘P noept of 1::0 genera & ) é nished free Al ing f“r.nt to |uh001 sinoefflv. ‘ il e Che Gllska Line

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