The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, August 25, 1936, Page 8

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THE | DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, TUESDAY, AUGUST 25, 1936. DIMBNI] WILL EDDIEROBERTS MAKE ADDRESS T0 MEET NELSON ON WEDNESDAY ON LEGION GARD Rally Will Be Held at Coli-1Soldiers Mav Nol Be Able seum—Under Auspices of Women's Club Krause, president of the Democratic Women's Club of Gastineau Channel, and her com- mittee for the Dimond Rally at which Delegate Anthony J. Dimond, will be the speaker tomorrow night at the Coliseum Theatre in Juneau at 8 o'clock, were busy today com- pleting details for the official wel- come to Juneau of Alaska's Dele- gate to Congress for the past four years, and to which all residents of Gastineau Channel are inviteed. Additional stage lighting equip- ment is being installed at the Coli- seum, and Manager C. B. Arnold of KINY is supervising the instal- lation of remote control broad- Mrs. Emil casting equipment and testing it to, insure a perfect broadcast of Dele- gate Dimond's address direct from the theatre through KINY to ra- dio listeners throughout this area who.are unable to attend the rally in person. “Tomorrow night Alaska's Dele- gate to Congress, Anthony J. Di- mond, whose outstanding accom- plishments for the Territory of Al- aska during nearly four years in the National Congress have done so much for this Territory, will speak at the Coliseum, at the request of the Democratic Women's Club of Gastineau Channel,” Mrs. Krause said today. “The meeting will start promptly at 8 o'clock and as all residents of the Channel regardless of party affiliations are invited, we urge that you come early, as we believe Mr. Dimond will have many interesting things to tell you of im- portance to all Alaskans and of his work in Congress relative to and in co-operation with the Adminis- tration’s Alaska development plans.” e FIRST CHARTER FLIGHT IS MADE BY MAB SEAPLANE The Marine Airways Bellanca sea- plane made a flight to Hawk Inlet today, arriving back in Juneau at 2:45. o'clock with Hans Floe, su- perintendent of the P. E. Harris Hawk Inlet cannery, T. Conrad, ac- countant for the plant as passeng- ers. Today's flight was the first reg- ular cbarter flight of the new com- pany of which Capt. James V. Davis, is president, and Alex Hol- den is chief pilot and manager. Mr. Floe and Mr. Conrad came into Juneau to meet their wives who are scheduled to arrive on the Victoria. - e Hermann Reuter has written still another opera around the Faust legend. Meanwhile, Gounod's more famous version approaches its 3000th performance at the Paris opera. | to Altend So Substi- tutes Being Made Due to the announcement of Col. Ralph Dusenbury of Chilkoot Bar- 10 racks that in the event of incle- ment weather it might be impos- sible for the soldier fighters to come hére to appear on the Ameri- can League smoker card Labor Day. Matchmaker Ken Junge announc- ed a change in the card today. Instead of Soldier Rachlewicz go- ing against Sammy Nelson in the top spot, Eddie Roberts, the well known Pacific Coast scrapper, now | in Juneau, will be watched against Nelson. A few years ago Roberts was one of the best boys in the country and still is a capable ring master. In the second spot Junge Wwill have Joe Petry and Vincent Far- rell, and tonight at a workout in the Elks Hall will pick the balance of the card The wrestling card goes on as previously scheduled, he announced —George “Doc” Webb against “Tex- as Jack” Morrison, a couple of the best grunt and groan boys about | this pmv. of the munLr) HELLENTHAL CAMPAIGNING | ANCHORAGE, Alaska, Aug. 25. (Special to The Emire) —At a Dem- ocratic rally held here last evening, | Jack Hellenthal of Juneau made a| “keynote” speech and was enthus- iastically applauded by the large| audience in the Empress Theatre.| He will make a broadcast tonight | from the local station, go to Pal-| mer and make an address there and return and be in Seward Thursday | night. CANDIDATES ARE ARRIVING TONIGHT Scheduled to arrive at 6 o'clock | | | tonight, the steamer Alaska is bringing the spearheads of both| political parties to Juneau tonight Aboard, according to reports, are| Lester O. Gore, Republican candi- date for Delegate, Harry McCain. Republican candidate for Attorney General; Cash Cole, Republican candidate for Auditor; Anthony J. Dimond, Delegate to Cong! and | Democratic candidate for re-elec-! tion; Frank A. Boyle, Territorial Auditor ynd Democratic candidate for re-election, and James S. Truitt, Attorney General and Demeocratic candidate for re-election. e One house, on DeLancey Street, Philadelphia, has a terrapin farm on its roof. ACROSS Solution of Yesterday's Puzzle 1. Pay or dlscharge 7. Buildings . -Ovule made . Hypocritical eun-dried talk brick Malayun 3. Excite to daj activity - Acaulres by 3 a 4 CD;ledl!'lcl one's gf:"‘" . etal as It 15. Gbey comes from 16. Broad flat- the mine bottomed . Favorite boat Resembling Born Stala Head - Old French The Greek T - FEm&l saint 21. Variety abbr, Goes in agaln Mountairs 11 . Goddess of Russia the harvest . Curtain of 28, Knack shell fire Ceremonies 43, Pronoun DOWN 36. Dutch South . Revert 44. Direction 1. Molst African - Divide Into 45, Biblidal king 2. Silkworm . Bimnsne parts 49. Subtle fn- 3. Set of type Wagers 35. Everlasting: visible 4. More dis- IRg-shaped oetic emanation courteous Herring 36. Vat or cistern 50. Wings 5. While Condiment 7. Regret 51. Engaging 6. Pertalning to Thomas 3. Relating to 03. Mallets ot the day last Hardy rural life presiding past: archaic heroine and scenes officers 7. Approximately 4. ‘Insect 41 Pod or 65 Storms mixed 8. Condensed 52. Diminutive capsule of rain and atmospherie ending flax or snow molsture 54. Indian cotton 56. Chooses 9. Exclamation mulberry Pt LT ] FIVE INDIGTED, | BLACK LEGION CASES, DETROIT Two Kllllngs of Officials| Plotted—Arrests ; Are Pending { DETROIT, Mich,, Aug. 25.—Five| men have been indicted by the| State Grand Jury for pamc)patm;,‘ in the Black Legion plot to kill Martin Zink, City Commissioner of | suburban Highland Park, and Ar- thur L. Kingsleye, Highland Park| publisher. | The names are withheld pending | arrest. . | Empire classifieds pay. EEN R Wi N T III%III/,-I Ifll.lfl%%% I-I /ad I,’//WI | IIIIII Judge, Teeth False, Shifts |Tooth Case SAN ANTONIO, Tex., Aug. 25.—A judge with false teeth, in' Justice of the Peace John Onion's opinion, | has no business tangling with law- | suits involving them. When a suit brought by dentists against patients for paymeént of manufactured molars came up in his court, he disqualified himself. His own teeth had been replaced recently. The case was tried by an- other judge. Likeness of’l{ing lsr % to Appear on Coins LONDON, Aug. 25.—New British coinage bearing a likeness' 'of King | Edward VIII probably will be is- sued early next year, according to| officials of the royal mint. Designs for silver and copper| | are now bemg worked out. LIST OF NEW TEACHERS 1S GIVEN TODAY ) Dk e | rour New Instructors, | Three Returning Ones | Announced by Phillips Superintendent of Schools A. B. | Phillips today announced the new |teachers who will be added to the | |1ist of Juneau teachers during the | coming year. | Clara Snyder, exchange teacher | from Honolulu, will teach the third | grade, taking Miss Donie Taylor's {place. Miss Snyder comes from | Paia, Maui, and is a graduate of the Ohio Northern Teachers Col- ‘lege, Ada, Ohio, and also of the | Kent State Normal School at Kent, Ohio. 4 Marian Edwards will replace Dor- | othy Bourne Taylor, who was mar- | jried \in Juneau early this month. |Miss Edwards, a graduate of the | State Normal School at Lewiston, Idaho, has had six years experience | lin the schools of Lewiston. Mary Kolasa is returning to teach | ‘dep&rtmenlal work in the grade school after a year's leave of ab- sence during which she attended and obtained an AB. degree from { | Kolasa is also a graduate of the | State Normal School at Lewiston, | Edna Harpole will replace Mr. | Robert Marcum, who is now at- |tending the University of Oregon | Medical School, as teacher of Chemistry and Physics. Miss Har- |pole has had nine years of teach- ing experience. During the past | three years she has been principal |of the high school at |a degree of pharmaceutical chem- |itsry from Washington State Col- {lege and is a registered pharma- |cist in the State of Washington. | She is also a talented pianist and violinist. Pauline Monroe is taking the | position formerly occupied by Esther | Lundsetter, who is married and [living in Minnesota. Miss Monroe, |who will teach Freshman and | Sophomore English, is a graduate |of Washington State College and |has had five years of teaching ex- perience. She will also fill position of school librarian. Long, exchange teachers who have taught for the past year at New- port News, Virginia, are returning | to Juneau. Harriet Cutler and Lucy Sirrclair, who taught here last year, are returning to Newport News. Mrs. Emma Connors, school nurse, successor has as yet. not been selected - | Distance tuners-in once | with glee when a far-away Ameri- 4can broadcaster was heard. Today | there isn't much of a thrill unless lit's South Afnca or Australia. Here's what we WOMEN like about cans trade-marked kEGLl NED We can throw out the empties instead of lugging them back to the store ...we can save half the refrigerator space, and stack the same amount of beer. .. these cans weigh half as much, too, and there’s no deposit to pay any more. We're glad the flavor made such a_ hit, for we women certainly like the conveniences, too. | the University of Washington. Miss | Nachez, | | Washington. She holds a B.S. and | the | ‘ Marjorie Tillotsen and Kathryn | shouted eral F. E and | Hides, plorer axes.” today, HONOLULU, An isolated people who live in the |interior of Papua and are still in the stone age are as far as their implements go, anthropoligsts Papua, the South Pacific. williams recently section of mandated New the which explorers three years ago dis- | covered a group previously unknown to the outside ! It is a beautiful country of great! valleys and rolling open land lightly timbered, Williams said. The people |live princiually on sweet | cultivating them in neatly laid out little gardens, and make their homes in scattered farmsteads. Williams made the trip with Jack people ex- studies this year in the far-away district. Hides “typical Smiles For Prize Little Joyce Matsumoto, 11 months old, won first prize in the smiling baby class at the third annual Nisei restival at Los Angele: dred American-born babies of Japa- nese parents competed in the sev- (Associated baby contests. Press Photo) STONE AGE RAGE FOUND People of l;ap—ue Are Dis-! cussed — Cultivate Sweet Potatoes T. H, Aug were discussed Williams, U. of the arrived territory on his flew of territory Papna. world who discovered the with Ivan Champion, another who plans further described the people Papuans—dark, R QUIET IN FISH CIRCLES All was quiet on the waterfront | the | 31A865, Capt. Oscar Niemi, takmg‘ ice before leaying grounds. No other movements were | recorded. | with only one boat, The prevailing price on salmon was announced as 16, 7, 5 and cents. $ 4.00 Oxfords BIG VAN Phone 479 South Franklin St. One hun- 25— S. Government here from | over the Guineau potatoes, fine-look- | | ing fellows who carry excellent stone will not return this year, but her | for the fishing | Men’s Dress iwnnnfu FOILS ~ CONVICT PLOT INCOLORADD | Plotting Escape by Kidnaping Official | CANON CITY, Colo., Aug. 25— |Warden Roy Best said he had frustrated a plot of five desperate Colorado prisoners planning to es- cape by kidnaping him ‘and hold- | |ing him as hostage. : The Warden confiscated auto- matics and ammunition. The quin- tet is today in solitary confine- ment. ‘Held Up Twice; Second | Robber Gets All that BOSTON, Mass, Aug. 25.—Being held up twice in the same day is Desmond H. Fitzgerald's contribu- tion to what constitutes news. Fitz- gerald reported to police that a man engaged him in conversation and picked his pocket in the Mar- j ket district. The robber $2 and a watch. The second rob- South End cleaned up what the first robber left behind. |Gas Masks Are Wom 10 Days in Experiment MOSCOW, Aug. 25.—Four Rus-| | sian workmen lived in gas masks for 10 consecutive days any ill effects. During this time they carried on their every day activities and removed their masks py| only for four half-hour of One of the workers made a daily | speech describing his experience. il Empire classifieds pay. in as| [ 5 Prlsoners Apprehended | First Robber Overlooks missed | ber, who held Fitzgerald up in the without | penods;’ daily—for washing and eating. Ev- | ery night they slept in the masks. | .‘-_ flavor)] Nothing takes the place of fi’a%ygo’ CORN FLAKES Cowboys Go Sissy GUYMON, Okla, Aug. 25—Art Mians, grizzled cook who handled {a chuck wagon in the Oklahoma Panhflnd]e when it was known a$ "NO Man’s Land,” believes the cow= hands of this hardy area are grow- ing effete. “I used to feed the boys on jerked beef, beans and sour- dough,” said Mians. “But now, I'll be darned if they don’t have to have potatoes, -steaks, corn, stewed tomatoes and even pie.” -—ee— - Filipino Homestead Plan Opens Land to Setttlers . MANILA, Aug. 25—Acting under |a new homesteading law, President Manuel Quezon of the Philippine commonwealth has opened two res- ervations embracing 22,230 acres in Lanao and Davao to settlement, Poor people in the cities are being urged to take up homesteads in this rich farming belt. Another program has been started in Mindanao where $500,000 is being spent on roads and bridges so as to open up other lands. The department of public works is handling the’ bridges and roads while the department of labor is trying to persuade city dwellers to hecome pioneer farmers. e TONSILECTOMY | Helen Jackson underwent a ton= | silectomy this morning at the ‘Government Hospital. N - | | & Schilling | . pepper i WHY 15 ITKELLOGG'S - TASTE BETTER THAN ANY OTHER CORN - Many people ask us why Kellogg’s taste better. One of the most important reasons is that they’re always crisp and oven-fresh. They’re protected by the patented WAXTITE inner bag. Another reason is their delicious flavor. It’s never been equaled. Then — we've been making them for 30 years, and making them constantly better. Kellogg’s are made only from the finest ingredients. Don’t be satisfied with any other brand. Ask for Kellogg’s by name. Mt. Juneau Lodge No. 147F. 8 A. M. TUESDAY EVENING, AUGUST 25, 1936, AT 7:30 P. M. IN THE MASONIC TEMPLE AT JUNEAU FOR THE PURPOSE OF RECEIVIN OFFICIAL VISITATION OF M. W.Bro. RALPHE. TIEJE, G. M. AND HIS OFFICIAL PARTY This meeting is contingent upon the arrival of the S. S If the steamer arrives too late for Mon- day, the meeting will be held on Tuesday evening. ALL MASONS ON GASTINEAU CHANNEL INVITED TO ATTEND - REFRESHMENTS VICTORIA. Attention Masons THERE WILL BE A CALLED COMMUNICATION OF Gastineaux Lodge No. 124 F. 8 A. M. and G THE ]

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