The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, July 6, 1936, Page 2

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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE MONDAY, JULY 6, 1936. On Way to Nunivak Island SUTTER WEDNNG — ~HOLDS INTEREST FOR MANY HERE Widely K;;wn Seattle Couple Married at Presby- terian Church Ceremony U. 8. DEPARTMENY’ OF AGRICULTURE, WEATHER BUREAT* THE WEATHER (By the U. 3. Weather Bureau) Forecas* for hmnu and vicinity, beginning at 4 p.m., July 6: t and Tuesday; moderate southeast wnids. LOCAL PATA Barometer Temp. Humidity Wind Velocity Weathe! 29.84 70 48 SE 16 Pt. Cldy 59 79 SE 12 Rain 57 83 SE 10 Rain AND KADIO REPOKTS RDAY | TODAY Highest 4p.m Lowestdam. 4am. Precip. szm temp. temp. temp. temp. velocily 24hrs. Weath 64 - 52 0 40 34 28 .01 56 56 44 .06 64 62 56 20 76 72 54 06 84 78 50 0 52 50 44 28 56 54 46 Trace 66 62 52 62 56 54 70 59 66 64 62 62 62 0 64 70 68 4 0 66 62 8 72 84 8 WEATHER COND‘TIONS AT 8 A M. Ketchikan, cloudy, temperature,56; Craig, cloud; 58; Wrangell, raining, 58; Sitka, raining, 57; Radioville, raining, 52; Juneau, rain- ing, 59; Skagway, cloudy, 57; one Point, raining, 58; Yakutat, raining, 56; Cordova, raining, Chitina, cloudy, 56; McCarthy, raining; Pmtag: cloudy, . 56; Anchorage, cloudy, 56; Fairbanks, rain- aining; Ruby, cloudy, 57; Nulato, raining, 54; Kal- ; Flat, raining, 49. WEATHER SYNOPSIS Low barometric pressure prevailed this morning’ from Juneau northward to the Arctic Ocean and westward to the Bering Sea and itians, while high pressure prevailed from Wrangell and Ket- chikan southwestward to the Hawaiian Islands, the crest being 30.60 inches about midway. This general pressure distribution has been attended by precipitation from Dixon Entrance northward to the in- terior of Alaska and westward to the Bering Sea. The precipita- tion has been heavy at Cordova. Time 4 pm 4 am Noon yest'y tod today station Anchorage Barrow Nome Bethel Fairbanks Dawson St. Paul Dutch Harbor Kodiak Cordova Juneau Sitka Ketchikan Prince Rupert Edmonton Seattle Portland San Francisco New York Washington 14 6 6 4 Calm of the grocm, | and e a few {riend Eleanor Maddi Var Fair Suiter of See were married Friday evening at the Nor- thern Lizht Presbyterian Church by the Rev. John John A. Glasse. They R E n u c E D . ¢ | were attended by Mr. and Mrs. H ; L. Faulkner, friends of the groom's) family. | The couple arrived in Juneau Fri- |day afternoon from Pillar Bay, | where the groom is superintendent | of the Fidalgo Island Packing Com- mn}s cannery, aboard the com- pan tender Mutual completed their plans for their marriage, and, | though they have been friends of lunP standing, believe that their edding in Juneau will surprise | heir Seattle friends. | Ostensibly to visit Mrs. Ralph Rog- .rs, whose husband is bookkeeper at Pillar Bay, the bride came North on the last trip of the North Sea The groom is the son of Carl ?ul»I m president of the Fidalgo Island >acking Company, and prominent in the cannery industry in the Ter- | Cidy Clear Cldy Rain Rain Cldy Cldy Cldy Clear Clear . Cldy Clear Clear | 88 Sport Dresses Very Smart! Clearance $6.75 Cotton Formals WITH SLIPS $6.75 Jacket Dresses Office Dresses Values to $22.50 875 Group Fine Fabric Semi-Formals N\ _____UX Clearance $10.00° Two-Piece Silk Boucles $11.95 Sheer Afterncon Frocks reduced to $12.50 Distinciive Formal and Dinner Dresses $§17.95 TUB FROCKS Dependable, fast color fabrics . . . ample size . . . aumu‘to fit . . . careful WOI]’H]Gthlp $1.00 [RTNEN Q ] Trace 0 0 01 0 RO FEN This big bull muskox is ore of the herd of 27 at Fairbanks which started their big trek dcwn the Yukon Sunday morning from Nenana, enroute to Nunivak Islind where they will be kept in the future. Charles Rouse and J. W. Warwick of the Biological Survey are in charge of the transfer fiom Fairbanks which requires about two weeks,. according to Frank Dufresne, Executive Officer of the Alaska Game Commission. Four of the animals are already on the island. Nunivak was chosen for the new muskox home because they will not be molested by cther animals there. Each of the animals, which were purchased from the Danish Government, valued at from sum to sumr 1 picce. | ) is r Ddlly Cross-word Puzzle ACROSS 10. . Impresses with a sense of grandeur . Furnish a crew for again Go by Ibsen char- Making a display learning On top of Not different of Crowded Courlroom | Startled by Testimony of Former Senator’s Wife SPOKANE, Wash, July 6.—“Ger era]” Rosalie Jones Dill testified ’mdnv that former Senator C. ( IDill once threatened her life s ing: “If I could make up my mi m@ nEEES § >=NOIM0P>) sttlement > allow- |m| A g 00 s gabla 2. Park in the Rocky Mountaing Large dog t Covered with cloth - Understood but in M- M0 H Butler-Mauro to his 2 in competition with One in human bondage A prophetess of Israel Verb forms expressing num- | F Others | turned 1 brawls, amer wild shooting. x‘ulf‘ accidents. Fires | Coast cit till others. | occupied firecracker atalities ngs 99 c H Word of un- known That wh Nortk h busing ern ghtning cl National ~guardsmen Remsen, Towa, where s started a $500,000 blaze that razeed four bl of business buildings and rendered 15 families homeless -oo SCHULTICE BROWN HAVE REUNION HERE Rollin Shultice, of the Army, Chilkoot Barracks, class reunion with an old friend. Paul Brown, when Company E troops of the Seventh Infantry | spent the Fourth holidays here, Brown and Shultice graduated to- gether from high school in Indi- ana, and were teammates on | Hoosier prep school baske 'MAY ADOPT WRANGELL “"* PLAN AT RECREATION Unusual Flag CLUB MEETING at Peak, Inferior ARCTIC an( ‘nnd 0th0r< clutter up the new re- | plays in Juneau over the Fourth of |creation area at Auk Village Beach, | Jul) was at the Charles H. Flory | Ht may prove necessary to employ a | home on Sixth Mr. and Swimming Pool Question Is More Men in Private Em- Catholic _Churqh Plans Air Referred to Commun- | ployment This Summer Service to Isolated ity Service Group than in Y(’ala. He Finds Missions - NAGHEL BUYS Charles Naghel has new Chevrolet special built subur-| ban automobile seating eight pas- | _K,:,‘f[”’.(»(“\':ytuflc i sengers, and the latest type of extra | limestone | passenger cars used in frequent | ‘\':,”‘L': Ah | commuting. The car, purchased | through the Connors Motor Com- pany, arrived on the Northland. . e — MILLER GOES TO SEATTLE Arthur Miller, engineer at the Ju- neau Cold Storage Co. plant, left | Juneau aboard the Northland for Seattle where he will receive medi- cal attention, - MOULTRAY GOES SOUTH W. E. Moultray, Assistant Dis- trict Sales Manager for the Stand- d Oil Company, with headquart- .rs in Seattle, pased through Ju- neau enroute to the home office, after an extensive trip to the In- ter Mr. Moultray arrived in Jum:aul board the PAA Electra from Fair- | nks and caught the southbound zon this morning for Seattle. - GOING TO SITKA Charles Cook, Alaska pioneer, who came to Juneau aboard the Yukon,| at St. Ann’s Hocpital awaiting | 1 boat to Sitka where he will enter | the Picneers’ Home. [ - - MRS. FOX RETURNS Mrs. A. W. Fox, wife of the well- | known attorney, arrived on the| Baranof after an extended visit to the States. iI‘ADIOPHONE STATION AT LIVENGOOD MAY BE DISCONTINUED JUNE 30 Poker stake . Impaired by ed AUTO | purchased a Low haunts Raises {1, Wing 2. Scarcely 3 ment in the Turkish army More rational Was carried 6. Guiding strap of a bridle ather ooth . Chinese secret society tic palm ing ap- ance Portion Butter sub- stitute Reposed Indigo plant Notion Copper coin . Exist 1 Despotic sub- ordinate official 5. Sells in small quantities 6. Mako Into 1. Corn mml 1g e l‘\ por U. s held a ory. In honor of the bridal couple, L. W. Baker, traffic manager of the| | Alaska Steamship Company, and| Saturday night at the Gastineau| Cafe. Their guests at the party were Mr. and Mrs. C. H. Metcalfe, | Mr. and Mrs. Gene Meyring, Mrs.| Robert W. Bender and J. B. War-| and Mrs. Sutter have been friends S WE‘CI(B[](] C(\lel)l-a“ons RC' for many years. Preceding dinner | 2 : . the party gathered at the Metcalfe | sult in 389 Losing Lives |home and atterwara were guests| —Fireworks Kill 6 |at the Governor's House | With Mr. Baker, Mr. and Mrs. NEW YORK, July 6—The nation | listed a total of 389 violent deaths| { fl¢ by Gene Meyring ! hey will spend the summer at| when 483 died, and the second larg- | Pillar Bay and make their home in that you had deceived me I'd kill est in the last nine years | Seattle when they return south in) you—kill you dead.” Her Fireworks re hs, | September. ment came as a surprise to one less tha ye: y > | RS S | crowded courtroom as nothing estimates VANDER LEEST RETU : Dill's divorce complaint hinted that sales incres R. Vander Leest, head of the She sald that she didn't re e A member the year in which th trip to Pacific threat was made, but it was in the morning He called h to hi study and she said: “I've never seen him look that way before. I desk. He looked half crying, his eyes were read and looked terrible I was frightened and he cried, ‘Get out of my house! You've killed my {poor old parents. It's wrong that I ever brought you into my life.” his wife testified. “I talked to him quietly,” she stat- ed, “and mentioned that he had |just received a letter from his mother a few days before. He con- tinued crying and said, ‘I don't | an old friend of Mr. and Mrs. Sut-| ter was host at a wedding supper | calfe attended school in Seattle with the groom, and Mrs. Bender | Sutter left Juneau Sunday after- noon cn the Irving Airways plane, in Independence Day’s week-end celebrations, the largest since 1931 he ever believed that she had de 1(7((». ‘])'\14 CI“"‘:AIV)““}'» "ll; chlvea him 4 ome here on th stayed three feet from the desk with the door between me and the gl 2 o | The Senator kept on in that J Ee L] p L) |vein whenever tears weren't falling |from his eyes, know why I .married you.'” P Sk B. M. Behrends Co. Inc. “Junecu’s Leading Department Store” - - e CHAS. BEALE Taylor Reports | custodian to take care of the prop- | Mrs. Flory unfurl a huge flag, erty, according to Assistant Re- 10 by 18 feet, which was made by ‘nlonnl Forester Wellman Holbrook. | Mr. Floi mother more than 50 | Broken glass and other debris )mx years ago and has but 46 stars. It |been left repeatedly at the beach, | | covered virtually half the side of the {he reported, and one or more in- | house. stances actual damage has been done to the property 5 At Wrangell where a similar re-| creation area was built, a custodian, |Willlam J. Walters, has been ap- pointed at the instance of the Wrangell Women's Civic Club, Mr. Holbrook said. The Wrangell wom- en took it upon themselves to take care of the recreation area, he said, and with their cooperation the { custodian plan is worki t quite satisfactory. is S | CLARK, NEWMARKER {BACK FROM WESTWARD Capt. John M. Clatk and Chief | John Newmarker, steamboat in- | spectors, returned on the Yukon this morning from their annual inspec-! tion trip to the Bristol Bay area | They were gone about a | checking maritime matters -~ o | WINSOR TO SKAGWAY : | | nal activity is at its peak in and several new min-| banks High School in 1933. 2 i Bredlie, who was born in Fairbanks, ; is eémployed by the Northern Air | Transport. He is a brother of S. [ Livengood will probably have no Bredile, chiropractor, who arrived | radiophone station after June 30, here from Fairbanks several weeks | according to information received g0 and is now associated with Dr by Sefgeant William Glasgow, in G. A. Doelker. charge of the Fairbanks station of ST the United States Signal Corps. FAIRBANKS WEDDING Wwilliam R. Edwards, radiophone Emma Frank and William F. Lane \upcxamr at Livengood, has tendered were married recently in Fairbanks his resignation which becomes ef- by the Rev. John E. Youel. The fective the end of this month, and bride has for some time been con- unless his place is taken by another nhected with the Tavern Cafe in operator the station will be discon- Fairbanks. Mr. Lane is employed tinued. The Livengood radiophone by the Fairbanks Exploration Com- station is owned by the community. Pany. Abandonment of the radiophone station will result in abolishment of the weather bureau service at MONTREAL, July 6--The Rev- end Paul Schulte, German Catho- ing enterprises are under way, ac-lic priest, once an Imperial army| cording to Tke P. Taylor, Chief|flier, is here to lay the groundwork Engineer of the Alaska Road Com-|for an aeriai missfon servicé In the mission, who returned to Juneau on|canacdian Arctic. His sociely is send- the Yukon. Not in all the years|ing two six-seater planes to work he has been in Alaska has helthe sparsely settled country stretch- 1 more men in private employ-ing eastward from the Mackenzie | nt than this season, Mr. Taylor! River to Chesterfield Inlet. d. Scores of tractors and other! Father Schulte will take off in equipment for mining are pouring{wo weeks for Edmonton and go to the Interior, he reported, and north from there. His main work the river steamers are loaded down|will be to provide aerial transporta- with machinery for the mines i tion for the priests in desolate dis- Bulk of the road work in the In-|tricts. teior season is maintenance, thvl The flying priest said about his engincer said. Most of the actualplans: “I am flying the first plane | construction work is on the An-|north to meet Bishop Breynat of road which is ex-|the Mackenzie. I expect to be in Club held its this noon at the| with C. D. Beale Vice-President, in The Rotary regular weekly meeting Terminal Cafe recently elected charge. During the lowing the lu a swimming pool referred to the Committee aded by The Vice-Pres plans for the coming year structions were given the to write a letter of thanks R. W. Dusenbury and Capt Castner of Barrack their partic July proegr Fred Henr ves Store was elected a new under the classification of - - LANGSETH RETURNS J. R. Langseth, who was a dele- | gate to the Odd Fellows' conven- tion in Walla Walla, Wash, re- turned home aboard the North- month western. Interior usiness sion fol- 1eon the questic was discussed and Community Service Har ses g MRS. PARSONS HOMF Mrs. Ernie Parsons, accompanied | by her son and daughter, Frank |and Isabel, returned home aboard |the Northwestern. - - DE Ll'(;\Tl'AS SON HERE e |IMPROVEMENTS ARE PLANNED AT FRONT, SEWARD ST. CORNER | The initial step in contemplated improvements in business property {at the southwest corner of Seward and in Secretary to Col. L% for Ivan Winsor, Assistant District Engineer for the Bureau of Public | Roads, is planning to leave tomor- | row aboard the B. P. R. vessel Highway for Skagway to look over | road work in that vicinity. - SCOUT LEADER LEAVES John Dimond, son of Alaska Delegate Anthony J. Dimond, ar- rived on the Baranof and will join the Rev. B. R. Hubbard's expedi- | - eee HOMER IS BOOMING Seventeen homestead filings the past year; home-making on the Clothing i member “Shoes almer the the retail.” Mr. Beale presented new memb with copies constitution and by-laws booklet “Aims 3 The me mmL was closed with com- munity singing led by G. H. Walms ley accompanied on the plano by Miss Edith Young e LICENSED TO WED A marriage license has been is- sued here to Leslie James Reed Juneau miner, and Grace Bender, Salvation Army nurse. The couple expect to be married later of and chorage- t e passable by about Aug- | me work is also being |operations will extend from Alaska the Mt. McKinley National|to Baffin Land.” he surfacing is being done | T s . (A panks-Livenzood road. | - i INCORPORATED | B. L. TRIPP FOUND DEAD B. L. Tripp, former miner, was found dead in bed at the Ferry Way incorporation have Raoms here on the evening of July filed with the Territorial Aud- gourth, Dr. W. W. Council who was by the Chrysler Sales Corpora-|called attributed death to natural of Detroit, Mich. Capital stock |causes resulting from an old heart $10,000 with W. P. Chrysler, W \.ulment Tripp has resided in Ju- »dyard Mitchell and B. E. Hutch- | neau for several years and was for- inson as incorporators. R. E. Rob-|merly an employee of the Alaska- rtson and M. E. Monagle are Al-)Juneau mine. He was about 65 ycors aska agents, een old, the Arctic about three months. Our and Front Streets was taken today .wilh the filing of articles of incor- | poration by the Central Properties, Inc. The incorporators B. M. |Behrends J. B. Warrack and H. L. Faulkner of Juneau and Stock is listed at $100,000. The corporation owns lerty now occupied by {Electric Light and Po and the Juneau Liquor | Warrack said today that ite plans have been c that the owners antic | provements on the site o eee lor sate at The Empire office, e St 10 defm- eted but capital | Miss Alice Palmer, school teacher, who | ducted the Girl Scouts’ Camp at Eagle River, sailed on the Yukon for a trip tc Williston, North Dako where she will spend the summer | with her family. former Juneau | west with a friend. 5 STALEY GOES SOUTH W. F. Staley of Portland, Assi ant to the Solicitor, U. S. Fores Service, left for the south on the | Northwestern after several in the Territory on legal business |for the Forest Service, recently con-| Miss Palmer plans | | to motor from Seattle to the mid- | weeks ! tion to the Taku. e | HURTS HEAD Julius Wiman was being treated t St. Ann’s Hospital for a head |injury. He fell, striking his head lon the pavement and syffered a |severe scalp wound. B BOUND FOR NELLIE JUAN Mrs. J. E. Most, wife of the Sup- lerintendent of the cannery at Nel»; lie Juan, and her son, Joseph Most, were passengers aboard the Banan- of to Nellie Juan. They were ac- companied by a friend, Sidney P. Stevens, who will return to the States on the Mount McKinley. that point, as its operation would | be useless with no means of send- ing messages from Livengood to Fairbanks. B PIONEER OF FORTY MicE IS MARRIED Nancy Traub became the bride of Oscar Steen Bredlie in Fairbanks recently at an impressive ceremony in the Presbyterian Church. The service was read by Rev. John E. Youel. The bride was born in the Forty Mile district, went to Fairbanks in llg” and graduated from the Fair- plateau above the community, here- tofore regarded as inaccessible on account of lack of roads; the ar- |rival of a grader and a caterpillar (for the Alaska Road Commission, together with the assembling of a crew to commence work on a four- mile stretch of road that will tap the fertile acres “up the hill,” are just a few of the signs that point to prosperity in the Homer settle- ment, according to the Seward Gateway. ——— e DISMISSED FROM HOSPITAL L. Lindroos, a surgical patient, was dismissed from St, Ann’s yetserday.

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