The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, June 11, 1936, Page 8

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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, THURSDAY JUNE 11, 1936 he ne month to assist in the| (hun native ;state prior to around, ROSPECTING BY - *oenelf PASSENGERS 27 MUSKOX T0 = series of sched- The animals which came from| vo weeks between Greenland were purchased from the | from Nome Y an investment of from $1.000 to $1,500 each, revealing the great furs are gen- cost of restoring wild life to its AREA PLANNED A M lIHLE! about 35 per| and that mm- ers in his area are prospering and Mrs. C mnlluyhn Boris Magids, Mus. Chamberlin, to La New }:!.l(‘;‘pl' S the Gastineau Hotel w guests yester torial Trea n in the rastineau Café --e St they \"» HIRST EXPECTED TO RETURN HERE MONDAY amberlin r ; C. M. Hirst, Director of Education O the Indian Bureau, is expected P RassenEerl op sy urn to his Juneau office Mon- e i1-jalene. frogy e 1¢ Aleutian from the West- Aty visiting the Kuskokwim Chester Brown, formerly a upper Yuken and other Interior st for the Northern Air Transport tions, according to word to Charles now of the Arctic Airways, ba orth, Assistant Director at Nome, is flying the plane north, and will cooperate with Mag and pr J. F. Van Ackeren, Medical Di- Mrs. Chamberlin in the development yector who accompanied Mr. Hirst program, in which W. W. Johnson the Westward, left the Haida| { the Union Construction Com sterday at Knaknak and will visit | pany of San Francisco is also inter- other medical units in that section ested before proceeding north to Nome| Magids, who with Mrs. Chamberlin, and thence to Point Barrow where | operates a chain of trading posts at the Bureau is planning to take over Deering, Kotzebue, Candle, Selevik, the hospitals being operated at the Kiana and Shishres, has just re- latter place turned from his annual trip to the - states to purchase merchandise. HALIBUT IS SOLD 1 and Patric in the State: Mrs. Chambe spent the w IN JUNEAU TODAY Mr. Chamberlin, former member of Three halibut boats sold their the Ter al Legi in catch ineau today. The Fre- Washington. D. C 1l remain to mont 5 teh, sold 14.- attend the Democratic convention Coast Fish- Plans for the mining enterp E cents and include transportation of prospect- 5 cen New English Fish Com- ors to promising locations in the Pany bought 6500 pounds from the northwestern area aboard the tri- Capt. John Sonderland, at motor plane, which has a capac prices if 6% cents and 4 cents of three tons of freight or passeng- and E. E. Engstrom purchased 10,- ers. The plane will carry in addi- 000 pounds from the Ford, Capt tion to necessary supplies a portable Ole Brensdal, at prices of 6': cents airplane drill, owned by Magids and 4.40 cents and Mrs. Chamberlin, which weighs The 31-B-969, Capt.Ji one and one-half tcn 1d 2,100 pounds of king salmon Another plane, a ten-place am- 0 ka Coast Fisheries phibian, flown by an associate The halibut schooner Sitka, Capt Pilot Brown, and [ wsed William Doucett, owned by 1. Gold- at Nome, will leave Seaitl hin loaded ice and bait today —— —— preparatory to sailing for the fish- ng bank <> ANYWHERE T You LAND - HA CZDAR I WRIGLEY'S 1S THE Four 1 na‘u cedar STANDARD booths are now b nstruct ) add to the ccnvenier and cor fort of patrons of the Triangle Inn Harry Ellingen, local sman, is n c 4 [ the insta n of the nooks, which are expected to be ready for use in a very few days, according to Wilbur Burford and Emmett Botelho Triangle Inn. proprietors of the 203 Our Fountain EXCELS at ANYTHING YOU DESIRE Sundaes, Sodas, Malts or Shakes TRY THEM! EXCLUSIVELY AT THE TERMINAL ; by Mr. McGee. (east Alaska has been +Armstrong during the period from neau office of the U. S. Bureau ! G. ‘Wingard, | A% every activity. Choose your m\ontv *‘ SEATTLEG‘ Mlll’gel‘, s::'f,'d: model from the most suitable price June 11. — ichar | \ 5 : group . . they're all complete in models | Otemiraeff, 40, a taxicab driver,| and sizes! Three-piece suits in tweeds ]lhi» afternoon shot and killed Mrs. ENROUTE NOME TO NUNIVAK ISLE tive st na s Rouse and Jack Warwick, Cha W who have had charge of the ani- (n \]otmed Fond B] ings Plan to Build Up Herd will make the trek from irbank: Nunivak with the Her(= \esterday Arctic Coast Country 2000 miles. They will be taken by | — e — train to Nenana, thence down river A tri-motor Ford plane, piloted by | Starting about July. 1, the 27 by boat to Marshall, transferred to | the owner, Chester G. Brown of the head of muskox which tae Alaska MOLOF vessel to go to St.A ichaels, Arctic Airw at Nome, and car- and then by ocean vessel to Nun- - % Game Commission has on a farm ¥ eight passengers from the » ivak tes. arrived here from Prince Near Fairbanks will be transferred > orge late yesterday afternoon and to Nunivak Island. according to CHARGED BY BEAR took off this morning for Fairbanks, | Acting Executive Officer Prank Bl g enroute to Nome, with three passen= 5o oo © o oo o e S L With only: a light rifle for de- {gers from Juneau, Boris Magids, fense. Ivar Peterson, well known [ Mrs. Art Chamberlin, and her 1as received autnorlzation'to pro- pper of the Fort Yukon and wughter, Patricia Ann Chamberlin, ¢¢ed with the undertaking Beaver' areas, now in Fairbanks, who arrived here Tuesday on the Four of the animals were taken defended himself successfully from | Aleutian. One passenger aboard the to Nunivak last summer and have a big grizzly which attacked him | plane from Seattle to Juneau, Pilot been doing well there. The island is on Mascot Creek while he was Estol Call of Anchorage, remained eSPecially adapted for the muskox, hunting sheep. Peterson, who car- here to board the next westbound 8ame officials have found, and it is ried a 25-20, killed the bear with steamer. planned to protect them and as eight shots the herd grows move some of the animals to places along the Arctic coast where they once ranged in Daily Cross-word Puzsle e Lode and placer location notices for sale at The Emplre office. Passengers aboard the plane from Seattle to Juneau, in addition to Pilot Brown, his flight mechanic, Henry G. Miller, and Pilot Call were: O. D. Cochran, W. H. Frost and A. V. Cordovado of Nome, Miss Peggy Landon of Deering, Pilot Dan Glass of Anchorage, and Richard Carrigan ACROSS Solution of Yesterday's Puzzle 7. Snakes of Seattle, formerly of Juneau L i SOV S Rk 4 ; ADIDEEN 9. Inclosure The Ford plane left Seattle at 6. Edible sub- for birds noon Tuesday, spent that night in LT A 10. Above Prince George and took off for Ju- Ceylon moss |S|C|R|AM 1L Not so much neau at 10:30 a. m. yesterday, ar- 9. Depression LIAIDIE 1. Kind of 16th riving here about 3 p. m 54 ST @OID clock s peaks 19. Lines which Call's New Job 12 Souts Amert- |QIVIEIR! approach a Pilot Estol Call, who will fly for . o can rodent [DI) [VIEIR S pit L. McGee of Anchorage this sum-| 14 Hail ana ATIERZ | never meet | mer, is returning from a trip to, g , farewell SIYINIOID i Soal the States. Pilot Call flew the Bel- with & sense T]1[E 23, Small orna- n lane o] v B of e mental ball lanca plane, purchased by M. Me Sabancent (DI Wy Gee in the States and shipped to 16. Encroaches |UN D E R 28. One Indefinitely Anchorage aboard a freighter, fi i3 Balt 29. Having little Anchorage aboard a freighter, from 20, Expresses [DIYIEEEU Velosity san Francisco to Seattle, and the n Dcomflempt 20. Particle s 8 uli . Degrades g nson plane, also purchased in 3 hesia 41. Entranceway 67, Antmal h Biem aty the States and brought north aboard 2; E“hb i gm e 11433‘5’5333. 39. Fruit a passenger steamer, from Los An- oot * 4% TIEEma'®5%d &5 Where the & Faihe spote geles to Seattle for Mr. McGee. The | 29. Term of 47. Masculine Pl 43. Any of vari- Bellanca will be sold in Anchorage 33. Meadow @ s 1. Watering place 44 Pury’ "o and the Stinson, which will be pilot- 33. New Englana 48 Things 2. Statute 45. Metal state yalued for =~ 3 Card with one 46. Terrible ed this summer by Call, will be used 15, old ‘eard game thelr scarcity ™ ™ gpo¢ 49. Inhabitant of: ane . P s 36. ish 50.'Catches sud- 4. American suffix to transport passengers and supplies 37 Kind ot denly: collog. college 51. Wing to mining ground at Indian Creek 28 Pm(ulr{ daat 64. Past 5. Nimble 62. Public con- o > o . Parts of plants 65. Gaelle 6. Exudation of veyance north of Fairbanks, being developed 40. And: French Adheslve certain trees 53. Harden Pilot Call, it will be recalled, re- ceived a spreined ankle, and a pas- senger aboard his plane, Stanley Hermansen of Anchorage, suffered a fractured hip, when a plane crashed last November on the Nu- shagak river, enroute from Nak- nek to Dillingham on Bristol Bay The accident was caused by forma- tion of ice on the wings of the plane in a storm, and struck the ground while traveling at a speed of 115 miles an hour. Pilot Call and Mr. Hermanscn spent eight days at the scene of the crash before being dis- ecavered bv a search plane piloted Kenneth Neese. Pilot Don Glass, of Anchorage, is returning from Seattle where he ar- ranged for repairs to his plane, a Waco 4-place cabin ship, which was damaged in a minor crash sev- eral weeks ago and was shipped to Seattle CHANGE MADE IN HERRING FISHING REGULATIONS, § E. Change in the regulations per: taining to herring fishing in South made 'to permit bait fishing along the south coast of Baranof Island from Red- fish Cape to the light at Pori p-,- = T all/ I///ill= Ll 1 1 7 fllll// 2 dil JEEE JENE June 1 to July 15, inclusive, ac- cording to information to the Ju- of Fisheries from Alaska Agent L. now in Seattle. R ! Jealousy Is Cause SUITS for every hour, every occasion, and worsteds. London stripes, sporty plaids and plain solid zes, all styles for men and | Mary Zelky, housekeeper, in a| {truck in the downtown business !district, and killed himself in his own home nearby a few minutes colors. All s young men. later. Police reported that she had| . hired a truck driver to remove| NGhOnally Known her things to his home. He ap- peared as they were leaving, fol- |lowed in his taxicab, forced the |truck to the curb and fired several MICHAELS-STERN and “TIMELY CLOTHING" $25 $30 shots. i Vera, 15, one of his three chil- dren, said that he was jealous jof Mrs. Zelky GETS FIVE HOMERS, | SCORES SIX RUNS, ALL IN ONE GAME ALEXANDRIA, La., June 11.— "'Dyn‘.\ml!e Dan” Dunn has the range on the ball park fences in the l Evangeline league. The Alexandria first baseman has clouted the *“ol rock” out of parks all over the loop. In a re- cent game with St. Charles, in that city, he hit five home runs, four of which sailed over the fence 420 feet from home plate. | That was one of Dunn’s busy days. He was up seven times, secured six lhns and crossed home plate six Stetson and Hardeman Hats times. He drove in 12 .runs and played “jam up” ball afield. Dunn is the property of the De- troit Americans and was shted to lplay this season with Beaumont' in his IIIIHIIIIIIlIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII||IIIIIIIIIIIIiIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlIIIII|||IIIIIIIIIIII‘IIIII||lIIIIIIII|||||IIIII|IIIIIlIIIIIIIIlIIIlIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlIIII the Texas league. A flaw in contract, however, prevented this. S MEN'’S SUITS A Wave of Values Presented in Three Outstanding Price Groups B. M. Behrends Co. Inc. Juneau's Leading Department Store Elll||||||||||fl||||||||l||llflllumIlIIIIlllllllmllIIIIIIIIIIIIlllllllllll||||||||||l||||IlIIIIIIIlIIlllllll“lllllllIlmllllfllfillllllllllllfllllllllllllllllllllllllllllIIlIIIIllIIIIll||||llllllflllll||IIIIflHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII NEW MILL SOON FINISHED | Mosquito swarms which at times Work of replacing the building | plague San Francisco and nearby and mill plant of the Cleary Hill | communities have been traced to a gold quartz mine, located near Fair- | large marsh 50 miles to the north, banks, is progressing rapidly, ac- cording to report of Don Gustafson, | Manager, who say® the foundation | work is well under way, with 15 men employed on the project. - HAIRLESS SOUP FOR HUNGARIANS BUDAPEST, June 11.—No longer will Hungarian restaurant patrons ind a hair in their soup, unless it is their own. INDIAN RUNS AMUCK | | | Tiner Zakinf "Schilling The government has decreed that every waiter and cook must shave every hair off his head. Indian of Fort | Yukon, ran amuck in the Indian village there recently, breaking in windows with an ax and invading the Government teacher’s quarters. | Ginnis had been crazed 'by drink- | ing vanilla extract. He:is ch,arged‘[ with assault to kill and destruc- tion of Government property | Frank Ginnis, A storm of protests iollowed this measure of the health ministry, but as compensation it was ruled, wait- | ers may substitute white coats and aprons for the previously required tuxedos or “tails.” AGmeTRL woToRs vALE e~ PoR Econouic:L TRANSPORTATIO | More and more people are huying the w 1936 CHEVROLET People today want a car that's absolutely safe. And the 1936 Chevrolet is the safest car that money can buy, for it's the only low-priced car with New Perfected Hydraulic Brakes. And when you're riding, you naturally want the smoothest and most comfortable ride known. That means the Knee-Action Ride*! Only Chevrolet rings it to 'you at low cost. Wise buyers also want complete overhead protection . . . a Solid Steel one-piece Turret '] the strongest top made. T’Efil‘ea- ture also is exclusive to Chevrolet in the lower price range. T's sensible to save money, par- ticularly when you can get the finest performance along with the saving. Chevrolet’s High- Compression Valve-in-Head Engine —exclusive to Chevrolet in its price range—gives un- equaled performance with Genuine Fisher No Draft Venti- [ation is"another comfort and safety feature which is found only on this one low-priced car. It scoops in breezes on warm days, and prevents drafts on cold days. Drivers prrfer it for still another reason . . . Shock hteerm * . .. a feature which mn:ea Snvmg effortless, Follow America’s Judgment—buy a new 1936 Chevrolet—the only ‘complete low-priced car! ALL THESE FEATURES AT CHEVROLET'S tOW PRICES ; 9 5 AND UP. List price of New Standard Coups at Flint, Mich. With bumpers, spare tire and tire lock, nhd list price is $20 additional. *Knee- Action on Master Models only, $20 additional. Prices quoted in this advertisement are list at Flint, Mieh., and subject to chan ge without notice. CHEVROLET MOTOR COMPANY, DETROIT, MICHIGAN CONNORS MOTOR CO., Inc. Juneau, Alaska GENERAL MOTORS INSTALLMENT PLAN=— MONTHLY PAYMENTS TO SUIT YOUR PURSE % T Here are a few real, honest-to-goodness bargains for your consideration . . . and we invite your inspection! SPORT JACKETS Be smart and cool in one of these $ fancy baek jackets COTTON UNION SUITS Good value for rougl\ wear— All sizes 51.00 SHIRTS AND SHORTS Rugged Cotton in several soc 4 sl .00 " an colors ... WORK SHIRTS & sscand $1.00 PAJAMAS Sl .00 Blue Chambray Pullover or Button Styles CANV AS GLOVES Monkey Face— 6 Pairs WORK SOCKS Heavy—Part Wool 5 Pairs .. Sk Extra Grade Cotton— $¢q.00 6 Pairs HUMMER 220 DENIM OVERALLS $q.50 All sizes JUMPERS All sizes STAR BRAND ALL-LEATHER SHOES _For Every Member of the Family! _'u'liummmmmmmnnmlmmmmmmunummu|mm|mummmnmnm||unmumllmmmm|n|m|||uumu||m|||||ummm|||m||

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