The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, October 30, 1935, Page 7

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BARNEY GOOGLE AND SPARK PLUG YOU UNDERSTAND 27 ROUND 0P TH' OTHER B0OYS AN' COME T MY HOUSE PROMPTLY AT MIDNIGHT-- REMEMBER--YOU'LL GET TH' REST OF TH MONEY WHEN GDOGLE AN’ SMITH ARE (N TH' HOSPITAL- NOT BEFORE-; OKEY. JUDGE-' SIDDOWAY GOING SOUTH John Siddoway, oldtime p.osr“ct- {or, who has made Douglas his home | for the past two or three years is leaving on the Yukon for his former home in Salt Lzke. During the past summer, the old gentleman, now of age, diligently worked v he located cn the beach DOUGLAS a small | rado cre about a mile b Treadwell and was successful in ON ORDINANCES - Bond Measure ire PaséedLast Evening—Traffic Vio- lations Reported uext We to confi At a special meeting of the Council last night, the Government's cifer to purchase the $27,500 worth | of bonds covering the Federal loan | r and sewer projects was resolution and the im-; pcned until next weei al. - NGTICE TO THE PUBLIC This action followed the pa 4 o( Ordinance No. 73 which | city to issue (he bonds. i ing ome length to the City Council | beiween the Ready Bullion and Co vlaA‘ crdinance. Notice covering llle action of the Council in the matter appears | feree 1 FELIX GRA THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE WEDNESDAY, OCT. 30 1935 V[l WOoT ELSE HE SOV, Dutly Cross- ACROSS . Doleful 0la piece of cloth . General fight . Mexican rub- ber tree Frozen water . Worship Chart . Pertaining to & town or [S[PlolTIS] elty City in lowa Article of beliet . Building material Detest Solution of Yesterday’s Puzzle [A[L[A]S] IHEIEBIEJBHEJ [AlM] IR[EIS] word Puzzle . Feminine name . Cut off . Epoch . Long fish . inappropriate . Fly: before the . American university . Center of & wheel Before 8 . Half quart Owing Catch sight of Meta) fastener . Protection for an in- ventlon Pajd atten- tion to Struck gently Vase 7 Dude Untruth Wagers Pertaining to father and mother Sharp moun- tain ridge Floor, wall, and roof covering 49. Prudent in preparing for future needs 53. Point 54. Troubled Late: comb. form Piece out 7. Highways . Couple East ndian welght —adyv. City C.e Rescued Resume Similar . One with a dread dis- ease DOWN . Kind of shrub or tree 2. Scene of Davy Crocketts' death Not self-sup- porting Bdge . Keen Fur-bearing animals Kind of spice Disencumbers 9. Perfect golf Capital of Brazil . Leaf of the palmyra DEN HE GIES ME . DE KEY AN' TELLS ME TER BUS' RIGHT W AN' GINE DEM TWwo PUNKS OE WOIKS-- 'NEW ORE MILL INSTALLED AT 'MAYO PROPERTY (Ccatinned trom Page One) necke will return to the Mayo in January to direct production e new mill. Gropstis arrived in Juneau from Whitehorse last Sunday after a thrill- iny takeoff from /e ice-filled Yu- k-n river, and returned to Skagway 'iterday to pick up Wernecke, who ved by rail from Whitehorse, and age of both men. Wernecke {said that a large group of workers in the Whitehorse boat yard and | many bystanders watched the takeoff ‘Al the plane from Whitehorse wn.h, >nse interest. Upun his arrived here Sunday :-:'p tis said that he made no at- t> avoid the floating ice as sharp keels of his pontoons | heared through the soft newly-! -froz- | NEL\S BEL\S WAT'LL SNUFEY GETS f | | A LOAD OF THAT P TRUITT IN FAIRBANKS m |, Interior Saturday | “for Juneau ! FAIRBANKS, Alaska, Oct. 30.— | Attorney General James S. Truitt has arrived here by plane from Mc- Grath. Heé plans to leave Saturday Attorney General ' ‘Leaves' | all cities visited are unusually active because of mining revival and. gov- ernment activities. HEAVY SNOW ‘IN INTERIOR i FAIRBANKS, Alaska, Oct. 30— Sixteen inches of snowfall in 2% hours has disrupted the telephone 'rvice here and at Nenana. A sudden Chinook wind left eight inches of snow. for his headquarters at Juneau. The Attorney General reports tia | AT P ‘ move the wings from the plane md ship them by rafl, but although ice| from flying spray accumulated on me; propeller blades, the controls wers| almost useless from freezing, and t!\e' pontoons laden with two or three: hundred pounds of ice resulting from ' an air temperature of 30 degrees be- | oW zero, Gropetis brought the plnne to Juneau without mishap. Leading at Skagway Although the bay at Skagway is' frozen over, Gropstis had no diffi- culty in loading Wernecke and the luggage aboard the plane at Skag- wvay yesterday. The Chilkoot Bar- .acks tender Fornance arrived there ,esterday and broke. a channel shrough the ice to the dock. Gropstis axizd up the channel to the rear of the ship and loaded from the out- ide rail of the vessel, assisted by the rew cf. the Fornance. Grepstis stated today that the Al- aska Weather Bureau, particularly the Juneau branch, is entitled to a mreat deal of thanks and apprecia- |tion. Howard J. Thompson of the | Juneau Weather Bureau is always | willing to do anything in his power | to aid flyers, Gropstis said, and) |achieves a wonderful weather ser-| cekes without difficulty and steam om the river obscured his vision. d the first attempt to leave the r proved to be a failure, Wer- | 2:ke and Gropstis planned to re- | vice with the limited commiisteation system available. A, The Roman hagiology contains slx‘ saints named Catherine. 23 Sidiilit | Daily Empire Want Ads Pay! NOTICE TO HOLDERS OF JUNEAU COLD STORAGE COMPANY’S FIRST MORTGAGE GOLD BONDS Notice is hereby given that the following bonids will be redeemed on November 1st, 1935—Nurabers 90, 93, 94, 96, 97, 98, 99, 100, 102 and 103. In addition the following bonds of Novemiber 1st, 1936 maturity aré hereby called and will be redeemed on November 1st, 1935— Numbers 108, 109 and 110, These three bonds will be paid at $102.00 together with accrued interest. Holders of the above mentioned bonds are hereby requested to present the same for payment at the First National Bank on Novem- ber 1st, after which date interest payments will cease. JUNEAU COLD STORAGE COMPANY, Inc., By WALLIS S. GEORGE, Manager. Juneau Lumber Mills, Inc. under a separate heading, giving warning to offenders if such, there be. With one remitta: already hand for a taxi franchise or lice the need for another ordinance cover such applications is evide and will be acted on by the Co cilmen dL their regular meeting Fri- e alc of two lots, qune to Clar~ ence Geddes and the other to Lew Nunamaker was approved. It is und pod the two men will begin the early construction of homes on their properties. D | SCHOOL ATTENDANCE 1 NOW PICKING UP Destroyer Is Prepared for Dispatch to Tientsin it Tension Grows 30.—A Japanese s nearby. Tangku, ready to Tientsin if the ten- n Tokyo and the vernment head- With 58 present out of a possible 78 in the grades in session yester- day, Douglas Public School attend- | ance is gradually approacing nor- mal. The lower grades have been harder hit and of course are slower getting back. The first and second grades are still dismissed but the attendance, in the others was as fol- lows: Third, 9 out of 12; Fourth, 4 out of 6; Fifth, 4 out of 5; Sixth, 8 out of 11; Seventh, 5 out of 9; £ inir Eighth, 4 out of 6; High School, 24 called in cut of 29 ~ | esz deman ar2 to begin a ng the Peiping- ilway soon. Military Council was on to censider Janan- BEVERLY C. JUNGE | gan, JDi:‘kev &lrJfllfin;. John Mar- HAS CELEBRAT]ON cus Jensen, [elvin Nelson. CARD PARTY There will be a Hallowe'en card party given by the Rebekahs in the I. O. O. F. Hall Wednesday evening. Good prizes, refreshments. Public invited. Admission 50c. A large at- tendance is greatly desired. Grand door prize. —adv. B o i e SPECIAL DELIVERY TO DOUG- LAS! Daily at 10:00 s.m. and 2:30 p.m. Kelly Blake’s SPECIAL DE- LIVERY—Phone 442. adv, “l(‘nds Of Miss B(\rrly Junge met at the young 2 home Monday to assist in cele- rating her first birthday with her ents, Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Junge. A most enjoyable birthday party was enjoyed by the following guests: Evelyn Claire Hollmann, Elsa Edith Johnson, Adrienne Glass, Bet- ty and Patricia Nelson, Tommy Mor- e - Dllly Emplre Want Ads Pay! Where War Clouds (Jathm' in M ‘ncnukoau Bordet Clashes New threat to world peace is uen in clashes near Pogrlmchin-yn on the Manchukoan-Siberign border (as shown on map) between Man- chukoan troops officered by Japanese, pictured at top, and Soviet border S HSINKING . KRN © Hnvough. Constantin roug] Several ‘were killed in or 1« T anchukoans, pro. ... ..a. LADIES FROM MISSOURI FOUND . in the back of any old cook-book, in the “Useful Compendium of Household Hints.” “To test muslin for ‘filling’—rub a small section vigorously between the forefingers, and note any _starchy substance that breaks out of the fibers. “To test for. color-fastness — before buying wash goods of any kind it is safest to obtain small sam- ples of all patterns and soak in clear water. “To detect cotton in an ‘allwool fabnc—pull the threads apart and apply a lighted match,” ete. ik How funny they were — these old suspicions-of-everything shopping tests! Grandmother knew them all by heart, and descended on Mr. Biggs, the linen draper, with defiance in her eye. Her little, moistened forefinger shot suspiciously under every proffered length of sheeting or dish- toweling. Qhe took nobody’s word for anything! But how differently you approach a yard-goods purchase in any store today. A name on the selvage . . . a label on the end of the belt . . . a guarantee-tag that also suggests a method of washing. These are your safety-signals in buying. To the quetsions “Will it wash?” or “pure silk?”, the saleswoman has only to remind you of the trade name of the fabric, When she mentions a name familiar to you through advertising, your doubts are dispelled. YES ... we still look before we leap, but today that means we read the advertisements in the Daily Alaska Empire BEFORE WE SHOP!

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