The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, June 15, 1936, Page 7

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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, MONDAY, JUNE 15, 1936 HOLD ON, SENATOR ('M NOT TRY(NG TO BLACKMAIL DON'T YoU REMEMBER SAYING YOU'D CHEERFULLY GIVE HALF YOUR FORTUNE (€ YOU COULD LOOK TEN YEARS YOUNGER-- DON'TCHA 22 WELL, (VE GOT THE SECRET=- _/ — You-- YOU-Xx ! DEMENTED WHI(PPER- SNAPPER — L --- TEN YEARS YOONGER 2? JUST A MINUTE,GOOGLE~ AHEM--PERHAPS T WAS A BIT HEY, SNUFFY--- NEVER MIND UNWRAPPING THAT PACKAGE-TH' SENATOR WAS TALKIN' THROUGH HIS HAT WHEN HE SAID HE WANTED * TO LOOK. TEN YEARS YOUNGER- /ANOTHE BABY BUGGY FIRED | office, NEW YORK detectives sought pyromaniac carriage he is credited with in baby buggies. BACK F William Fri retur |after a vac; |at Chilke 1 at tl June 15.—While 500 him, New York's fired another baby 1e week-end. So far starting 25 fires - ROM VACATION end, of the locii ned on : fon of one week arracks. Employées ‘of 'Civil Service to Be Careful WASHINGTON, Sendte has pa: vent seek political promotions. June 15 - The ed the bill to pre- employees to influence to obtain R LUCAS RETURNS HOME H. I Luéas, lecal busin man, returned from A trip to Skagway on the Alaska oo AD ON ALASKA Efstad Tom & E Bert refurned Alaska insurance \ broker, on the “Prlde” Is Spurrmg Max to His Comeback Effort MAX S('HMEI ING By CHARLES GRUMICH NAPANOCH, N. Y., June 15. faint chance of becoming the rlrsl man ever to come back into the heavyweight fistic championship moved Max. Schmeling to tackle the all but hopeless task of trying to stop Joe Louis. A triumph over the Brown Bomb- er from Detroit would win him a shot at Jim Braddock's heavyweight ' crown—and the experts rather like Schmeling’s chances against the reigning champion if they ever| should happen to meet, which is extremely unlikely. Schmeling has plenty of money | and a movie-actress wife who un- doubtedly has a fortune also. What caused him, then, to under-I take the fight with Louis at a time of life when a fistic career is sup-| posed to be ended? It's His Pride | “Pride,” answer the men up here in the Catskills who have watched Schmeling’s totally serious tune-up for his bout with Joe Louis in Yankee Stadium on the night of June 18, “Max wants to be the first ever to regain the heavyweight title. He is concentrating intensely on his training.” And he seems intent on the busi- | ness as he waltzes and trades real wallops with sparring partners in the outdoor ring. In striking contrast to the bally- hzoey atmosphere of the Louis camp dewn at Lakewood, there is little foldercl as Max goes through his paces. He smiles and does, the old Dempsey weave—learned from the Manassa Mauler himself — for the patrons. Trade Real Wallops They trade real wallops and Max has a genuine respect and regard for the fellows who are serving as targets for the righ uppercut that is being groomed for Joe Louis. ccuse it,” smiles Max when he a mate a bit harder than is sigered cricket in a tune-up match. At other times, Schmeling makes friendly remarks in a gut- teral undertone Both his serious manner about it and the brisk workout win ap- use from the visitors who have aid 55 cents — just half what it costs to see Louis The action is quick and rather convincing. Max’s stomach is flat in coentrast to Louis’; he mixes it up with his mates and he got awuy] to an earlier start on training than the Brown Bomber did [ All in all, Max Schmeling looks | pretty fair—but he won't on the night of June 18. - D DR. ROSEBURY COMING HERE Dr. Theodor Rosebury, Columbia University scientist, is a passenger on the Yukon for Juneau. Dr. Rosebury is coming north to join Dr. L. M. Waugh, who passed through here recently enroute to the Interior to carry on scientific work. Dr. Rosebury will take a plane from here to Fairbanks. e, Lode -.ml placer location n tices [the Princess Louise for a vacation arrived on the Estebeth from Ten- for sale at The Empire offic.. / {the elbow, { D. bpevklr - SHOT DOWN BY UNKNOWN MAN Noted Electrical Enyneel and Inventor Found | Murdered ORANGE, N. J., June 15 —D. Mc- Farlan Moore, aged 67, electrical en- | gineer and inventor, was found \hol' to death early this morning io]]u\\-( . ing an argument with an unidenti- fied man, Two bullets from a small calibre | revolver, fired at close range were | { found in vital spots of his body. | Mdbre was a former associate of | Thomas Edison and he had devised | an important gaseous conduction lamp and other inventions in the| electrical, radio and television fields. | He held more than 100 patents. .- | BE'FHEL VACATION SCHOOL OL IS OPENED started this morning with an en- rollmen of 42 and more are expect- | ed to join tomorrow. Geed interest was shown durm;.' the school hours, frém 9 to noon The Bethel Vacation Bible School :WE STw A RD I_IGHT ‘ One interesting theme is the study | of the tabernacle of the wilderness of which a model is being made in the higher grades. A fine assortment of awards will be given at the closing program on Friday evening, June zn A picnic will be enjoyed later *y all those attending the school. All boys and girls in Juneau and vicinity are invited to attend the school - MRS. MORGAN HAS PARTY FOR HER SON é Honcring her whose birthday Saturday, Mrs. a birthday party at Kendler's Dairy in the afternoon Sixteen young guests were 1n- vited to the affair and enjoyed playing games, riding the shetland pony, and refreshments consisting of ice cream and cake .o lVDl\N BOY DIES Raymond Jackson, seven-year-old Indian boy from Haines, died this | morning at the Government Hos- pital. The remains are at the C. W. Carter Mortuary. No funeral | arrangements have yel been madc was an event of MRS. FOSS GOEs SOUTH Mrs. Helen Foss of the Public Survey office left on the North Sea | for a vacation trip to Seattle. She | expects to return about July 1. — - Daniel Ross, Chief Draftsman for’ the Public Survey office, left on' trip to the States. RUNAWAY BOAT Auto Insurance { Wealthy Sportsinan Is {Green Lake beach, | down. The boat leaped onward into| Strike Is Over; two-year-old son | T. A. Morgan held | | E. J. Rieland, Schillings ‘on the Alaska. CAUSES INJURY | Racket Exposed; TO SPRECKLES Aness Ordere Se }Five Long Beach, Cal., Men | Already in Custody— riously Hurt in Out 1 Ringleader Next board Race, Seattle SEATTLE, June 15—Victim of a runaway outboard race Sunday which injured 15 persons at a Adolph B.| 28, wealthy driver from San Francisco, is unconscious to- | day at the hospital where physi- cians worked to save his left arm.) Spreckles was hurled from the boat as it struck the shore, and his arm was impaneled on a tele- phone pole climbing spike. Spreckles hung there until spectators got him | LOS ANGELES, Cal., June 15. Prosecuting Attorney Buran Fitts| has'asked the Minneapolis police to arrest Nathan Kasatsky and his wife Eva, in a probe Fitts terms a Na- tional automobile insurance racket. Five Long Beach residents have already been arrested i Fitts said Kasatsky's method was practically foolproof except for the| | human element. He said members| resorted to self-mutilation to collect traffic accident damages at insur- ance companies at a cost of at least | one million gollars annually - BARR PLANE FOR ATLIN Sperckels, the crowd and stopped against the truck of Ord Lockhart, Seattle. A spectator watching the races from | a wheelchair was hurt seriously but | it is believed he will recover. | The Friends said physicians believed | plane they can save Spreckles’ arm which | Juneau was lacerated from the shoulder to |l for unless infection sets in.|pounds wife witnessed the ac-|senger, North Canada piloted by I at 6 o'cloc! Atlin, B of freight Art Nyquist Air Express F. Barr left aturday even- C., with 1,000 and one “pas- preckles’ | cident Spreckles is the grandson of Jolm' I, sugar king ; | -e e - — Both Sides Win, CARACAS, Venezuela, This nation’s five-day ended with both the strikers and | the government claiming victories over Labor’s demands to erase the law suppm sing Leftist movements. ) D | BISHOP ROWE IS IN JUNEAU Bishop P. T. Rowe, head of the| Episcopal churches of Alaska, ar- rived on the North Sea from Sitka and will leave Juneau tomorrow for the westward on the steamer Yu- June 15 strike has | Bishop Rowe plans an official | tour of towns as far as Fort Yu- kon and will return to Juneau 'y | the first of August. you read this . . . SALMON PACK IN | Salmon packs to the Westward continue light, according to reports to the Bureau of Fisheries office | here. | Through June 13, Alaska Penin- sula had packed a total of 22,014 |cases; 1888 kings; 7.906, reds; 5.- 564 pinks, and 7,356 chums. Repor? | from Chignik for the same date | gave: Reds, 10,134; kings, 24; pinks, ‘16 and chums, 77, or a total of 10,251, The red run was reported fair in that area. | Copper River production was re- ;portcd light with a total pack of 53,506 cases, 51,711 reds and 1,795 | kings. [ zine —and “The S Post)’ - - RETURNS TO SEATTLE * Mrs. George Clithero, who has |been visiting with her son, Russell Clithero, clerk at the Gastineau |Hotel, sailed for her home in Se- jattle on the North Sea .. VISIT ENDED Virginia Shattuck, daughter of Allen Shattuck, local insurance | broker, sailed for Seattle on the {North Sea after a brief visit here. D GOES TO SEATTLE Mrs. Martha B. Refsland, Asso- | ciate Superintendent of the Bureau | of Indian Affairs, sailed for Seattle on the North Sea. | D e - Housekeeping)’ cessful Farming,” and Farmer and Southern America is learning BACK FROM SKAGWAY | food . . . and economical to serve, Such advertising is true. It is helpful prod- | ucts representative, and A. Van Mavern, West Coast Grocery Com- pany agent, arrived from Skagway e | HERE FROM TENAKEE | Salmon at fair prices. Henry Moses, veteran fur buyer, I akee, He is registered at the Zynda. ) velt, U. S. magazine advertising pages. . housewives in the reading in their favorite magazines how “Sea Meals”—made with Can- ned Salmon'——tcmpt appetites, pro- tect health, and save on food budgets. And with addition of June full- color pagesin‘“The American Weekly” Saturday Evening over half of all the families in the entire 48 states will receive a selling message on salmon in June, These are extra selling pages. To- they bring the total of magazine messages on Canned Salmon 15,479,732 during June alone. salmon as a great Jm/uiuing food, a great protective food, a great energy to American housewives. T‘lete_forc it can keep readers buying'Canned Every Alaskan family has'a stake James Roosevelt May Seek Office in Massachusetts | June 15.—James Roose- the President’s eldest son, has refused to comment on the published report he might seek the Congres- sional seat in the Massachusetts BOSTON, Ninth District held by the Former | Cambridge Mayor, sell Richard M. Rus- Strike Vialence Spreads, Madrid Five Deaths Bring Total, Number to More than Two Hundred MADRID, June 15.— civil guard was slain and beheaded and four other persons were killed in fresh outbursts of violence here. Deaths were brought to a more than 200 total, killed since the Leftist section victory last month. The guard was seized as he walked along the fromt of the Sncialist headquarte ‘s in Paleteiana. A spectator ~said a detachment of guards stormed the building and found the body U. S. Learns Why Alaska’s Salmon is Today’s Low-cost | ! Food for Nourishing Meals millions of States are Youcanh in your own directly you better place Socialist Govt, ~ of Sweden Out STOCKHOLM, June 15.—The So- cialist Government of Premier Al- bin Hanson has resigned following Parliament’s rejection last week of the Government bill to increase old | l:mv pensions to meet the inurc.'\s(‘d: | cost of living ‘}Alaska Ra‘ilroad to Have Chaperon with Parties of Tourists| ANCHORAGE, Alaska, June 15 Col. Otto F. Ohlson, Manager of the { Alaska Railroad, announces the ap- pointment of Theodore Feldman, | local teacher, as tourist agent | Feldman will ride on the steam- ers from Cordova to Seward, train from Seward to Palmer, accom- panying the tour parties and in- forming them relative to the Mat- anuska colony and other import- ant features in development of west- ern Alaska. - DIVORCES GRANTED Divorces were granted in Federal Court Saturday to Bertha from Al-| |bert Garn, Edna from Sergius| Sheakley and Annette Ide from | Harvey Wildenradt. Salmon Industry helps make possible more stable employment, more income dollars here, by pro- moting consumption of Canned Salmon with 15,479,732 . during June alone in this big advertising campaign. For if the Canned Salmon Industry of Alaska prospers, all Alaska prospers. elp.Serve Canned Salmon home. By doing so, very help make our Alaska a in which to live. —world’s largest-circulation maga- gether with advertisements in"Good “McCall’s}* “Suc- 2 l’rogrcssi\'c It will seek against the products in - Tt will seek uralist)” workers. to What Canned Salmon advertising will accomplish for Alaska Canned Salmon advertising to U. S. women is paid for entitely by the Canned Salmon Indus- try. Its purposes include the following: 10 safeguard this Alaska industry competition from other food America. to stabilize America’s demand for this Alaska produet at fair prices—so that good wages may be paid to Alaskd It will, if successful, help make it possible for the Industry to continue its support of the Territorial government through tax pay- ments. The Canned Salmon Industry in 1933 of Alaska’s pal sources and Territory. people who rectly from b Aw LK (last year for which records are complete) 77% of all taxes collected by the Terri« torial government. It will ¢reate interest in Alaska and its re- help to bring more people to the It will guard the future of the Industry — protect the future of the thousands of Alaska derive income directly and indi- . the canning of Alaska salmion. Canned Salmon Industry W& WIEHAD) o e THE Ry, 77 % \\‘ ALASKANS! Enjoy all these advantages on Iow ‘A FREE TICKET THRU CALIFORNIA! That, literally, is what Southern Pacific gives you on reduced summer round- trips to most eastern cities. From Seattle or Vancouver, you can swing down thra San Francisco and Los Angeles on your way East; then circle back on your choice of northern lines for not Ic more rail fare than the lowest rounditrip directly East and back. SUMMER EXCURSION FARES, on sale May 15 to Ocr. 13 (return limit Oct. 31), are extremely low. For example, from Seattle or Vancouver to Chicago and back: $57.35 in coaches and chair cars, $68.80 in tourist sleeping cars (plus berth), and $86 in standard Pullmans (plus berth). AIR-CONDITIONED COMFORT all the way. F,ver{):ar on Southern Pacific’s principal trains is cool and clean. st and dirt are eliminated. Low-cost meals in diners. Tray Service for coach and tourist passengers; coffee or milk 5¢, sandwiches 10¢. TWO GREAT EXPOSITIONS on our lines. Both the Pacific International at San Diego and the Texas Centennial at Dallas can be included on your trip East. MEXICO CITY A $50 SIDETRIP on your way Fast. Go down our West Coast Route from Tucson via Mazatlan and Guad tinue ¢ )n your eastern journey. alajara. Return from Mexico City to El Paso and cone MANY OTHER ADVANTAGES are provided Alaskan travelers to the States this summer. If you are planning a trip East or to Culifornia st will pay you to invesig Southern Pacific l'nr folder ! OURM what we have to offer. tion write B. C 1308 GG ALTOR couver, B.C; 5 Paciic Blday Po JUNEAU CASH GROCERY CASH GROCERS Corner Second and Seward Streets Free Delivery PHONE 58 FOR SALE Ore 16 K. P. JOHNSON OUTBOARD MOTOR JUST OVERHAULED WITH NEW CYLINDERS AND COIL Juneau Lumber Mills PHONE 358 co AL—For Every Purpose—-co AL PACIFIC COAST COAL COMPANY ALASKA MEAT CO FEATURING CARSTEN'S RABY BEEF —DIAMOND TC HAMS FOR INSURANCE See H. R. SHEPARD & SON Te lephone 409 B. M. Behrends Bank Bldg. Phone 412 AND BACON—U. S. Government Inspected | : D e INS U RA N CE Allen Shattuck Establishéd' 189§

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