The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, August 5, 1936, Page 8

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D(uly (,ross-u ord Puzzle Strode Withdraw MANY NOTABLES ON NORTH SEA DUE IN FRIDAY Stanley \'ann Returning to Barrow—Wolf Con- trol Expert Aboard Indian Bureau ves due in Juneau Fr route to the Charles W. Hawkesworth Director of the Bure v at Wran fter makin; The Star ere some rsons going to du north Circle are aboard. Amor them are geant Stanley Morgan of the U. S. Signal Corps station at Point Barrow and his family geant Morgan, the man who sent first word of the Will Rogers- w v Post crash at Barrow, turning to his post after a year Jeave in the States. Harlan H. Gubser, who is enroute to Kotzebue where he will have charge of trapping predatory ani- mals, particularly wolve h have been killing reindeer that « comin 0 confer k Dufresne, Executive Of- Game Comir Bureau and Territor- relative to campaign the wolves. He was for- merly engaged in similar work in the Territory for three years and the last four has been doing the same kind of work in Idaho Another aboard the North Star is Dr. Raymond W. Maurer, Indian Bureau physician from Metlakatla who is being transferred to Point Barrow to take charge of the for- mer Presbyterian Mission hospital which has been taken over by Indian Bure He takes t of Dr. Henry Griest, the known Presbyterian missionary. Dr Maurer, who formerly lived in De- troit, is accompanied by his wife - - - MARY SPERLING TURNS Mary Sperling, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Harry Sperling, returned to her home in Juneau on the Yukon after an extended visit in Lawing with Mr. and Mrs. William M is District area and rling is Administrative As- in e Fol the headquarters office Jr has the been camp young at the near Saturday \' M eatt enroute son who C. A is leaving home, eattle - Ambergris, used in perfumery a concretion formed in the tines of whales. is intes- Men and wamnen “who know” |mo beer as refreshi lander — especially say they ean drink !feeling “logey.” |light - Bodied the | ACROSS Solution of Yesterday's Puzzle THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 5, 1936. ©ma PTAIRIA 8. A a.A.RA S_ufi; TEEY: W ARE| i r [PIAIRIO 1 A i ARIO HIO o P R UD ame back \ y DS 2 comes trom DIAR TIo] ¥l Le ed o 12. Pass through a sieve 43. Point of the arth's axls 44 ain 2 46 of the 2. Departed iger delta 3. Dillseed 47. Long narrow 4. Distant board 5 In this place Went first III%II/ l OLD TILLICUM 50 153 Couldn’t See It, There Alright SAIL WESTWARD - Yo 1t ¥er ABOARD ALASKA Gen. Steese and Hawley Sterling Together Again After Many Years | Friends of many years standing | were joined here when the Alaska arrived in port last night and today they probably are having a good old-fashioned reunion as the steam- er carries them to the Westward. say there is ng as golden Rhein- after exercise. They, Rheinlander without They say Rheinlander’s “round” flavor reminds ,them of the finest European beers. Some say Rheinlander is Order even better., a case today and find out for yourself! (In Bottles, regular and stubby, or in Cans) SEATTLE BREWING & MALTING CO Swce TRIAL CErl NTURY BREWERY 1876 HHTUTION - wasyn, CHAUTAUQUA, N. Y., Aug. ~While more than 7,000 per- cons were listening to George Britton, operatic singer, last night, a skunk walked onto the stage in the open air audi- torium and soon after there was a peculiar but strong odor. Britton, who was singing a spiritual, suddenly stopped, then broke into: “I Got Plenty of Nothin’.” The skunk scurried for the woods. They are Gen. James G, Steese, former head of the Alaska Road Commission, and Hawley Sterling, Assistant Chief Engineer of the commission. The General is bound for the Interior to look over mining op- tions in the Nabesna region and Mr. Sterling is returning to the Interior to carry on field work for the commission the balance of the summer. Sterling and Gen. Steese were associated in road commission man- agement years ago and later spent several years in Colombia, South America, together in mining ven- tures. The General now lives in Texas where he is interested, pri- marily, in oil. While the Alaska was in port last night he was a guest at the home of Chief Engineer Ike P. Taylor of the Alaska Road Com- mission, and Mrs. Taylor. 3 VICTIMS OF BOAT DISASTER ‘ STILL MISSING| ((,onumu‘d rrom Pnge orej ment, he had been First Sergeant of the Medical detachment at Chil- | koot Barracks since April, 1935. Mrs. Stone was from Washington, the Stones having been in Alaska for a little more than a year. Ser- geant McWain leaves relatives in entucky, he was serving for his third term in Alaska. | It is believed the accident oc- curred about an party left the post. seen by no one after leaving. reason for the accident is known, | the best guess being that the boat | overturned somehow, for | unquestionably an overloaded boat. The boat was owned.by Sergeant Lawliss. They were hour after the it was DUFRESNE BACK FROM INTERIOR GAME SURVEY ‘P resent Regulatlons Appear . to Be Meeting General | Approval, He Says After a several weeks' ing which he looked over game matters in the Interior and the Westward, contacting game war- dens and others interested in wilc life in the Territory, Frank Du fresne, Executive Officer of the Al- aska Game Commission, returned to Juneau this morning on the ¥Yukon The present program is working out well, he reported, and appears to be meeting with general approv- al. Several suggestions were made in various communities for adjust- ‘ment in regulations to suit the particular needs of those commun- | ities, he said, and much informa- tion which will be of value to the Commission in its future activi- ties was obtained, the official said Mr. Dufresne was n Fairbanks dur- ing the Senatorial hearing th and heard the various witnesses give their views on game and trap- ping conditions. It was brought out, he reported, that trapping is about | the only industry that the Indians trip dur- | can turn too for a livelihood in | many parts of the Interior. e ;PAA ELECTRA & LEAVES HERE - THIS MORNING ‘Plane l'nroute to Fairbanks | Has Aboard Nine Pas- sengers from _]unea u | The PAA Fl('(‘lld took off for Fairbanks from the PAA airport at {11:30 o'clock ths forenoon with a full load. Passengers were Charles | E. Bunnell Mrs. Wiley Post, Mrs | 3. E. Crosson, Ira Joralman, W. G | King, H. J. Mesta, James Truitt and Mr. and Mrs. Murray Stuart. The flight had been postponegdyfrom | yesterday - affernoon to await the arrival of the Alaska with pilot Joe Crosson and several of the passen- gers. Co-pilot on the trip s Jerry Jones. Former Police Chief Charged in Kidnap Case Ordered Dismissed from Department—Allega- tions Made Public ST. PAUL, Minn, Aug. 5—Thom- as Brown, former St. Paul Chief of Police, is charged in a Police De- partment order dismissing him as a detective, with actual participa- tion in the conspiracy to kidnap William Hamm, Jr., and Edward G. Bremer, both wealthy St Paul citizens, SHEPARD BACK John G. Shepard, Assistant En- gineer-Inspector for PWA, returned |to Juneau on the Yukon after an inspection trip to Valdez and Cor- {dova: where public works projects are under way. .. MISS GAULT LEAVES Miss Elizabeth Gault, who has been visiting her parents in Skag- way, left for Seward on the Alaska enroute to Palmer, where she will teach during the coming school term. 5th Annual Fair SOUTHEASTERN ALASKA FAIR ASSOCIATION No Recovery of the bodies is hardly expected unless they float 3 in ten days or so. | e ’ MISS GRAY HOME Miss Iris Gray, teacher of music in Oregon State College, arrived September 10, 11, 12 | on the Alaska for a brief visit with Mr. and Mrs. Gray. R RETURNS HOME 1 | ‘ her parents, { Juneau States. e MARY SPERLING RETURNS on the Yukon from the west- ing with friends. B e Empire ads are read. J. L. Mrs. W, P. Scott returned to her home aboard the Alaska after several months visiting in the Mary Sperling, daughter of Mr. ,and Mrs. Harry Sperling, returned ward, where she has been vacation- FAIR BUILDING JUNEAU For Premium Books Write WS, PULLEN, Secretary Prettiest Peach 1 b ! | | Clementine Bowen, 16, was named | ‘Miss Eastern Arkansas” at a bath- | ng beauty contest conducted at the | annual Peach Festival at Forest | Citv. Ark. (Aneclaled Press Photo) | HEAVY LOSSES ARE SUSTAINED CHINA FIGHTING Kwangsi and Yunnan Troops Clash at Yanlam | —Revolters Seek Bribe | HONGKONG, Aug. 5. — Reports from Canton said hea ua]l)es have occurred in a battle between | Kwangsi and Yunnan troops at Yanlam. The artillery of the Central gov-| ernment is also reported to have brought down a Kwangsi military | cirplane near Kiyang in South | Ionan, One Kwangsi regiment is reported | to have deserted to the Nanking, cause at Chuenchow in the north- ern part of the province Leaders of the Kwangsi sporadie | revolts against the Nanking Gov-| ernment are reported to” be orter. ing to leave the country for a bribe | of five million dollars. { e e | FUNERAL RITES HELD FOR TOM M’MULLEN| Thomas Phillip McMullen, pion-i eer Juneau restauranteur and old- | time Alaskan who passed away at | St. Ann's Hospital Monday morning | was buried this morning after ser-| vices at the Church of the Nativ- | | i { ity, Rev. W. G. LaVasseur offic- iating., Pallbrearers were: J. J. Connors, Sr., Lockie MacKinnon, Jack Me- | Closkey, John Reck, John Pastl and J. L. Gray. Interment was ini the Pioneers' plot in Evergreen Cemetary. Mr. McMullen leaves his widow, a step-daughter, Mrs. Otto Ander- son, and a step-son, William Al-| exander, in Juneau, as well as three | sons and two daughters in ‘h” States. e COMING TO JUNEAU | Frances Hanson and two | Mrs. children are enroute to Juneau from Seatle aboard the steamer Victoria. e p—————————————————————— | | Hudon, Mrs. Esther Gullafson, Mrs. | chosen: Mrs. Ethel Anderson, 'Kames i Shapeliest Legs AUXILIARY OF LEGION HOLDS DEL. ELECTION Representatives Are Chos- en for Big Convention Here Next Month ! At a busmass meeting held last {evening in the Dugout, the Am- erican Leglion Auxiliary elected delegates to the convention to be held here on September 2, 3, 4 and 5. | Delegates elected were: Mrs, Allj Newman, Mrs. E. M. Polley, Mrs. | Luella Betts, Mrs. Edith Bavard, Mrs. Edith Sheelor, Miss Paul Florence Manville, Mrs. Helen Bern- hofer, Mrs. Oscar Olson, and Mrs. Fred Sabey. For alternates the following were Mrs. Bess Reeder, Mrs. Lucille Stones house, Mrs. Sybil Bacon, Mrs. Dave Davenporz Mrs. J. R. Elliott, Mrs. DoHy Kaufmann, Mrs. Betty Mc-| Cormick Mrs. A. Zenger, Mrs. Lor- raine Johnson, and Mrs. A. E.| Dorothy McCarthy of Boston dis plays the trophy awarded her at SERVICE OFFICIAL | it i Bah €3t et TO LAKE HASSELBORG | fect. (Asloclaked Press Photo) With District Ranger W. A. Chip- | perfield of the U. S. Forest Service and a quantity of supplies aboard, ‘DEMG WUMEN the Pateo hopped off from Juneau this morning for Lake Hasselborg. ARE TO START 4,400 pounds of freight. After drop- | MEETINGS Nflw ping Chipperfield at Hasselborg, | |he Patco was to ferry the sup-| \n]l return aboard the plane while | Ranger Chipperfield will continue | with his field trip. Ye.s&erday the Ranger IX, with Sxd»i ney Dennison of the Forest Service 'lboard left for Mole Harbor with plies from Mole Harbor to the![First Sessxon of Present lgke where the Forest Service is carrymg on operations. Dennison Year to Be Held at | Douglas Monday | 'SYKES RETURN, i l | lwood, N. J,, | I | | | | | | The Democratic Women's Club A plant at Salinas, Calif. plans will hold their next meeting in| : Douglas Monday evening at 8:30 to produce a million pounds | guayule rubber before January 1937. It is manufactured from California grown shrub. Schlllmg toasted % of | 1,| O'clock in the City Hall, according !|to an announcement made today by Mrs. Emil Krause, president of | the Club. a | This is the first meeting | year to be held in Douglas accord- ing to Mrs. Krause and a large, | turn out of the members and friends| | is expected. | For those who do not have cars [ to drive to Douglas the regular bus leaves Juneau at 8:15 o'clock giving| ample time for the opening of the | meeting. A talk relative to the procedure at National conventions will be part of the program e | ARE ENROUTE HERE N. K. Jensen and wife are com- |ing to Juneau, passengers aboard the steamer Victoria. e eee— MARTHA KITE COMING Miss Martha Kite is a. passenger from Seattle for Juneau aboard the 1 Victoria. | | i Toasting releases extra flavor-more of the delicious flavor with which a tea leaf was blest by nature. of the 1wmorrow on the Leota, Capt. | ing cruise | it HUNTING TRIP Party of Four Arrive on Alaska for Second Visit to North H. C. Sykes, broker from Engle- accompanied by Mrs, Sykes, H. C. Sykes, Jr., and Wal- ’Ler H. Sykes, III, arrived in Ju- neau last evening on the steamer | Alaska and are now registered at the Zynda Hotel. This is Mr, Sykes second yisit to Alaska,” having been' here before on a big game hunting and fishing expedition. The party will leave T. M. Bixby, on a fishing and hunt- in nearby waters and to the Westward. They expece { to return about the middle of Sep- tember. e e A. E. Housman, who died recent- | ly, becdme a “classic” with his first book of poems, “A Shropshire Lad. B Try an Empire ad. for vou when vou com ) ‘There's one for every Model THE WORLD'S MOST BEAUTIFUL REFRIGERATOR THOMAS Hardware Co. “RPM" RAISES THE STANDARD Engine speeds have leaped ahead 900 Revolutions per Minute* over 1930 Motors! *Averages of three largest-selling cass. ODAY'’S motor cars give you much better perform- ance than those of five years ago—and you pay less for it! Exactly the same thing happened in the making of R PM Motor Oil Unsurpassed. Standard Oil engineering skill gives you a truly luxury product—equal in perform- ance to any motor oil. For every car, “R P M” is a great oil. It is trustworthy. It is economical. It will give you outstanding mileage and luhundon—-nm:e quality per dollar.

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