The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, November 12, 1935, Page 8

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8 S ——— SEVERAL HURT, = New Federal AUTO CRASH ON BLACIER ROAD Mrs. Percy-E;y nolds in Hospital After Collis- 1on Last Night Mrs. Percy Reynolds sus' “1ed a proken jaw, and several other per- sons were slightly injured, when the Reynolds’ auto collided with that of R. C. Rieck, driven by John Garbell on the Glacier Highway, near the Harry Wal n home, t evening The Reynolds’ car, driven by Percy Reynolds, was enroute from the city when the accident occurred. | Mrs. Reynolds suffered various cuts and bruises in addition to the broken Jaw which necessitated her confine- ment in St. Ann’s Hospital Garbell and his two passengers Eckley Guerin and Jack Lennon were thrown from their car. All re- ceived slight lacerations. Three small boys in the rear of the machine es- caped with the loss of a few teeth Both cars were badly damaged. Im mediate investigation was made by Deputy Marshals John McCormick, and C. H. MacSpadden Maloney, Charles F. Hosford, Jr., BAVARD FAMILY HOLDS ANNUAL REUNION MONDAY The annual reunion of the Bavard Hospital attendants today report- [amily was held yesterday afternoon ed the condition ¢! Mr-. Reynolds a the California Grocery ranch on to be satisfactory. the Glacier Highway. 6 SRR Food and drink were served in| OLD NEWSPAPERS ibunda: and dancing in the base- ment provided amusement. e THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, TUESDAY, NOV. 12, 1935. Coal Commission at First Session o DEMONSTRATION s mi rners plan Supreme Court action to test legality of Guffey coal act the Federal Bituminous Coal (t“;nr\'x‘\‘x:‘i;:\‘;ngea‘l(d under the bill, meets in Washington for the first time. Seated (I tor.), are Walter H, chairman, and George Acret. Standing are C. E. Smith (1), and P. Tetlow and son, Herb Dunlop, Edith Bavard, THREE ARRESTED ON Mr. and Mrs. Frank Rouze, Mr. and Mrs. George Kohlhepp, Gus Brown, DRUNKENNESS CHARGE Joe Sunick, Joyce Hitch, George Ba- vard and Jim Xidas. Peter Pappas was host this year ta the gathering. E. R. Johnson of Juneau was ar- raigned before U. S. Commissioner oo J. F. Mullen today and charged wi;h being drunk and disorderly in a pub- bl b lic place, He entered a plea of not Luncheon and home made candy guilty, and bail was fixed at $250. sale, Presbyterian Church Parlors, Two women were jailed by city Friday, November 15. Luncheon serv- police this morning on an alleged They are Mrs. Nels CODKING CLASS BE HELD NOV. 2 Third of Popular Vocation- al Education Programs Features Thanksgiving i The third of a seriés of cooking demonstrations,’ sponsored by the ' Vocational Department of the Terri- torial Schools, will be held Thursday, ' November 21. The same arrange- ments for place of meeting have ben made with the Martha Society of the Northern Light Presbyterian Ghurch, who have been very gen-| erous with the loan of their rooms and equipment for these demonstra- tions. Mrs. C. N. Crone announces that she is planning a Thanksgiving menu, with roast fowl, dressing, cranberries and pumpkin pie, ete. At the same time a lesson in the use of the cheaper cuts of meat will be given There has been a request for even- ing demonstrations for the benefit of those women who are employed during the day. The Vocational De- partment hopes that thdse interested among that group will enroll in the Juneau evening school when the next term opens December 3. Further announcements concern- ing the details of this demonstration lesson will be given next week. One hundred and seven women attended the last lesson on October 2, which 2 APARTMENTS DESTROYED BY HOLIDAY FIRE Firemen Battle $3,000 Blaze in Boynton Build- ings for Over Hour A fire last night at the Boynton Apartments, on Willoughby Avenue, with damages estimated at $3,000, was extinguished by the Juneau Fire Department after four hose lines were laid and firemen battled with the flames for more than an hour and a half. ‘Two 2-room apartments were en- tirely destroyed, only a charred shell remaining, another two-room apart- ment was seriously damaged, and windows were broken and exterior walls scorched at neighboring apart- ments. e One-Story Buildings The Boynton Apartments are lo- cated if two one-story buildings at 333 and 335 W y Avenue. The fire occurred in the building housing Apartments Nos. 6, 7, 8, and 9, at 333 Willoughby Avenue, originating in Apartment No. 7, when a lamp was overturned. Apartments Nos. 6 and 7 were so badly damaged they will be torn down and removed, according to Mrs. | Fred Boynton, owner of the build- ing. Apartment No. 8, which was less badly damaged, will be repaired.i Mrs. Boynton said. | In large bundles for 25¢ per bundle. Those in attenaance, beside the ed from 11:30 to 1:30. Adults 50¢, similar charge. Just the thing for starting fires immediate members of the Bavard |children 35c. Tea served from 2 to 5. Smith and Margaret Erickson. these chilly mornings. at THE EMPIRE'S office. Get them family, were: Mrs. Emmett Connor Make your Christmas selections of and son, Mrs. Simpson MacKinnon fancy work, etc. o —adv. Daily Empire Wan: Ads Fay! glumuulmfimmmlmmm||um’Tmiinuuuuununuumumm||||||||m||||il|||il|i||||||||||m|||n|||uumu||i||umuim!|n|||mn||||uunmmmumullg Now On Display 1936 PONTIAC Silver Streak More Beautiful Than Ever! BUILT TO LAST 100,000 MILES! ALL THAT’S BEST OF DROP IN TODAY was about the capacity of the North- ern Light dining room. | - .- ! MISS MORAW, MR, KEATON, ARE TO WED Ceremony by Father Le- Vasseur—Reception at Home of R. Keaton Four Lines Are Laid The alarm was turned in at 8:45| o'clock last night and the fire was} reported extinguished at 10:20, said Fire Chief V. W. Mulvihill. Four lines of hose, totaling 1,350 feet of 2% _inch hose and 500 feet of 1! inch hose, were used in combating the flames. Mrs. Boynton stated that the Ju-' neau Fire Department displayed maximum efficiency and abaility in extinguishing the fire, and deserves the highest praise for confining the flames to a limited area. ‘The fire last night was the most serious in Juneau within the last two years, according to Fire Chief Mulvihill. A woman, the daughter of a ten- ant in a neighboring apartment, fainted at the scene of the fire, but was immediately revived with no ill affects. | e BERNERS BAY ORE SHIPPED T0 THIS EITY Ashenbener and Kobyi Bring Product from Mine ! —To Be Sent South | Karl Ashenbener and Jack Koby, prospectors, who are developing a mine in the Berner's Bay district, transported approximately 1,100 pounds of ore from their property to the end of the Eagle River road, where it was loaded aboard the Hi- way Delivery truck operated by H.| R. Whitfield and transported to Ju- | neau for reshipment to the Tacoma smelter. l Ashenbener and Koby have had a, number of samples assayed, and the 1,100 pound shipment will be in the nature of a test run of the values found on their property. If the ship- | ment is found to be as rich as findl-i cated by the samples which have been assayed, Ashenbener and Koby‘ | In an informai weading, to which cnly members of the family are in- vited, Miss Doris Moran will become the bride of Mr. Ted Keaton Satur- day evening, November 16. The Rev. Wm. G. LeVasseur will perform the ceremony, which will be held either in the parish home or in the residence of Mr. Robert Keaton, brother of the bridegroom. A wed- ding reception for friends will be held, following the ceremony, at the Robert Keaton home. Miss Alice Moran, sister of the | bride, and Mr. Robert Keaton, broth- er of the groom, will be attendants. The bride-to-be, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Michael M. Moran, of Re- | public, Wash,, is a graduate of Pro- vidence Hospital, Seattle, and is now practicing her profession at St. Ann's Hospital. She is a member of the Graduate Nurses' ssociation of Gas- tineau Channel. The prospective groom is the son of Mr. and Mrs. J. P. Keaton of Snohomish City and has been twelve years in Juneau, where he is an em- ployee of the Alaska Juneau Gold Mininz Company and a member of the Elks’' Lodge. The couple will make their home in the Coliseum Apartments. In attendance at a miscellaneous shower, given last evening by Mrs. Robert Keaton, Miss Ida Hendrick- son, and Miss Eunice Anderson, in {honor of Miss Moran, were the fol- lowing persons: Misses Edna Schie- bal, Marghild Oygard, Helen Jen- nings, Margaret Tatham, Viola Franz, Donie Taylor, Alice Moran; hope to convince authorities that ex- tension of the Eagle River road at RIOT PRISONER SEEKS FULL PARDON Refusing paroles and seeking a full pardon, Ray Becker (left), sole remaining prisoner of the eight convicted of second degree murder for the Centralia, Wash., Armistice Day riots of 1919 left the state prison at Walla Walla for the first time since June 22, 1921, to appear in feceral court at preliminaries to a hearing on his patition for a‘writ of habeas corpus. He is shown outside the federal building with his attorney, lrwin M. Gocdman, of Portland, Ore. (Associated Press Phota) TONIGHT ERIC FREY “The Blind Baritone” will present a concert in the NORTHERN LIGHT PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH, assisted by WILLIS E. NOWELL, violinst, and ac- companied by MRS. TREVOR DAVIS. A special added feature on the program will be the singing of Swedish and Norwegian songs. CONCERT STARTS PROMPTLY AT 8:15 P. M. Admission at door—40 cents ALL THAT’S NEW Solid Steel “Turret- Top” Bodies by Fisher pistons Improved triple- All - silent sealed hydraulic brakes with new chrome - nickel alloy drums choke Enclosed Knee - Ac- tion on “8” and De Luxe “6” partment Smoothest of ‘* 6 ylinder en- gines with silver-al- loybearingsand full-pressure meter- ed lubrication inders Even double K-Y frame = = = E = = £ = = = g = = = = = = = CORPORATED — Electroplated light- weight nickel - alloy Simplified starting with automatic Concealed | u g gage and spare tire com- New full - length water - jacketed ¢yl stronger CONNORS MOTOR C0. and see the THE CAR that has the WHOLE TOWN TALK'ING.' Exclusive Distribitors i 0000000000000 Mesdames Mary Torell, Aileen Torell, Emmett Connor, Ver Soley, V. W. { Mulyihill, Margaret Killoy, Nellie | Kirkpatrick, Mary Monagle, Marian { Hendrickson, Trevor Davis, Esther Goss, W. W. Council, May Godkins, Dorothy Johnson, James Berry, Ken- neth Junge, Q. C. Wigmaster, George Kohlhepp, Harley Turner, Velma' Keaton, A. Honeycutt, Frank Boyle, Richard Williams, James Primavera, William Walther, Dorothy Russell, H. M. Hollman, Henry Sully, A. Wal- ker, John McCormick, John Finlay and Robert Jernberg. i I s CORRECTION MADE John A. Blythe, District Work Supervisor for the local FERA, who was quéted in the report of last Friday night's City Council meeting as having informed the Councilmen that “the city must do its part in taking care of destitute women,” and that “the Governor’s office demands that the city take care of its share of relief work,” said today that these statements are incorrectly'quoted and | i give the wrong impression, and that Le did not appear at the City Coun-’ cil meeting in an official capacity. ————— NOTICE Ten dollars reward ($10.00) will be paid for information as to the iden- | tity of the hoodlums who smashed over $100.00 worth of windshield and door glass back of my shop Satur- | day. Hereafter children playing on old cars is forbidden and names will | be” turned over to the Police. |adv. DUTCH'S ECONOMY GARAGE AR T OLD NEWSPAPERS In large bundles for 25¢ per bundle. Just the thing for starting fires these chilly mornings. ‘Get them at THE EMPIRE'S office. the earliest possible date is neces- ! sary to the development of their mine and surrounding mining ground. —————.—— NOONDAY SESSION IS HELD BY ROTARY CLUB The regular weekly meeting of the Juneau Rotary Club, President How- ard D. Stabler, presiding, was held this noon at the Terminal Cafe. In addition to the regular busi- ness meeting, piano selections were played by Forrest Bates, Juneau High School student, an interesting talk deseribing her trip here via the Pan- ama Canal was given by Lucy Sin- clair, exchange school teacher from Newport News, Virginia. Miss Har- riett Cuttler, another exchange| teacher from Newport News, was also a guest of the club today. A, B. Phillips made a brief talk urging support of the Red Cross drive. FUNERAL SERVICES FOR | FLORA CLARK TOMORROW Funeral services will be held for Flora Clark, five-year-old Indian girl, | at the First Presbyterian Church at 1 p. m. tomorrow. Rev. David Wag- goner will officiate and interment will be in Evergreen Cemetery. Flora Clark died at'the Govern- ment Hospital Sunday. She is sur- vived by her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Jacob Clark, and two- sisters, ——————-—— MISS DALTON LEAVES Shirley Dalton, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Jack Dalton, is leaving for Seattle on the North Sea, where she has accepted employment. Miss Dal- ton 15 a'graduate of the Juneau High School, L e e e e DR. RAE L. CARLSON Optometrist of Ketchikan IS AGAIN IN JUNEAU TO EXAMINE EYES AND FIT GLASSES Office at the Gastineau Hotel Phone 10 for appointment or call at Room 203 Better Light Better Sight New Stock Just Received IES Approved Study Lamps PIN-IT-UP LAMPS BED LAMPS PARCHMENT SHADES [ J Alaska Electric Light and Power Co. JUNEAU—Phone 6 DOUGLAS—Phone 18

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