The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, September 3, 1936, Page 8

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BALLPLAYERS T0 MAKE TRIP TO KETCHIKAN a pleasure of the Drug Corps, rep- resenting The American Legion, toj honor American labor by partici- pating in the Labor Day parade. “We feel singularly honored and are more than glad to help labor 1 showing its colors on its holiday,” he declared. “We wholeheartedly for American La-| bor, but not Communistic princi-| | ples which some times have become | | confused with American Labor. We | Al ; et Labor Day Turnout Spon-|of the Legion are working men our-|Already Over $20J Raised| : —Roedda Is to Be < ; W selves, but we frown upon those| sored l’-‘ -]}”";a}l Car forces which attempt to corrupt | Chivtered ! penters Union 2 ady in the chest | PARADE TO BE HELD HERE ON NEXT MONDAY at | stand | American Labor into un-American 1 thought.” With $209.50 alr Hickey, who I ¥ e i Juneau will have a Labor Day : il parade next Monday according to 08 T IEE R 2 the , Tund) st sl L nearly in sight, Juneaws baseball e e s ; players are preparing for their in- n placed in full g ot he Ak vasion of Ketchikan this week-| B i B o by e GUES UUT ON end for a three game series against Carpenters and Jobbers Union, Lo- he pick of opponents from Ket chikan and Prince Rupert cal No. 1944, membx of which met The committee in charge last | home town every five years to re- {to their number the family traveled THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, THflRSDAY, SEPT. 3, 1936. "Twas a Grefil Day 43 Years Ago, for Juneau, Winn Family B. M. BEHRENDS Juneau, 43 years ago, according to| Grover C. Winn, prominent Juneau attorney and member of the City School Board Because it was on September 3, 1893, that the Winn family landed | on Gastineau Channel | Eulogy at Local Meet- The family, then consisted of Mr i ~ and Mrs. Willlam Winn and their | ing of Elks three little bo John, Milt and T, Grover Cleveland. Burdette, young-| A memorial to a most beloved est son in the family, was born in member was held by the Juneau Juneau in 1896. | Elks at the lodge session last night When the family left Wisconsin|when H. L. Faulkner delivered a they planned to return to their|eulogy to the late B. M. Behrends. | “It is impossible to add anything by way of tribute to what has al- ready been said and written about | Mr. Behrends,” said Mr. Faulkner. tain old associations there. In 1898, with two-year old Burdette added S BT 8 i the Motorship Roedda which will|2nd last of their previously-planned | might with profit to themselves con- Charge be chartered from the Davis Trans-|journeys. By the time 1903 came|sider not so muchthe character Every umon in Juneau, all other portation Company. The exact time 4round, Juneau was so thoroughly and worth of Mr. Behrends while local organizations, fraternal or | Juneau Man Will Enter the business, as well presentatives | Veterans' Hos‘pital of outside organizations now visit- P ing or residing in Juneau or other | in Portland of departure is not as yet decided but it is expected to be early Satur- day morning. The first game in Ketchikan is to be played Sunday as Te their permanent home that noth-|he lived, but the influence he ex- ing was said about going back to|erted over the lives of the thou- Wi or the first few |sands of men and women who were | privileged to know him—an influ- arrival in Juneau of yea astineau Channel points, are r afternocn, followed by a double-| ly, Anna Winn kept|ence which will abide with them quested to join in the parade, ac-| Tom Shearer left this morning on|header Labor Day. It is requested : home informed, about | to the end of the; s.” cording to Hickey, the invitation the AAT Bellanca plane enroute to|that all players who are free to|Al® a strange, far-away fron-| The supreme quality in Mr. Beh- being extended by the sponsors Portland where he will enter thelmake the trip turn in their names|ter in those days—as correspond-|rend’s character, said Mr. Faulk- Floats are also asked to be made | Veterans' Hospital for treatment for ent for the Darlington Democrat. |ner, was his intense humanity. up for the parade. a According to present arrang wounds received during the World ment Marshal-of-the-Day Hickey | War. Mr. Shearer’s condition be- said, the parade will form ready to|came aggravated during the past 1ecurring condition induced b.‘/"nmmr——m facilitate the selection of the traveling squad. Fourteen ball players will make up the squad The lineup of players making the | move from South Franklin SL](‘L‘L\N-V(‘\'.\I days, and it was decided;invasion will be announced in to- at 10 o'clock next Monday fore- |that he go south for surgical at-|morrow’s Empire. i noon Floats will be assembled on|tention, It has been announced by the! the strect south of the City Dock,| The numerous Juneau friends of|committee that there will be addi- down to the Juneau Lumber Mills. | Mr. Shearer and buddies attendingltional room on the Rhoedda for |to Stanley Grummett by tomorrow|® - SURPLUS NOW "+’ the youthful King Solo- riches and f all the Lord - 1 “Like hear, Mr. { Behrends in his ad chos- len the part of wisdom and an un- | derstanding heart; and to those | qualities may be attributed all his | succe in life.” The parade, perhaps headed by|(the American Legion Convention few fans who wish to make the ank Foster delivered a eulogy the Cordova Drum and Bugle { made up a fund yesterday to enable| trip. Anyone wanting to go should| William Mahoney, an- Corps, now attending the American |the trip south to be made by air |other member who died last communicate with Stanley G im- Legion Convention, according to!Fred Henning, a longtime friend | mett to make arrangement M: Hickey, will move up South'of the Juneau business man, was - - o - Franklin Street to Front Street, to |in charge of arrangements for the JACK CASE JZ™PONED month. Mahoney, born in St. Louis “Olk”“.-l Balance Announc-‘,“ 1896, graduated from Stanford 1 1918 and came to Alaska shortly ed—New Loan Also | Seward Street, up Seward to Third | flight | i X | 3¢ Solici S L Drolession B g The case of Albert Jack, accused Is to Be Solicited | : y ;‘;t‘lml. to Main, down Main to| Mr. Shearer, a resident of Juncal or glieged Tarcony in 8 dwellin,| = P e :.h:,r s ront, to Franklin and south to|for 25 years, has conducted a tail-{ wo ™ nicnoned foday until next| wASHINGTON Sept. 8~Disclos- | health forced b % th. by the starting point where it will {or business here since 1926, Before! ey 600 PO TOFRY MR Hewt i ook SC A C [ health, ERORL IR o g0 south, I sda a on. gt e | i B W cek @ I red | p, be disbanded i that time he ran a fox farm on the anley Nichols of Valdez, who |G er Highway. He is a member tried before U. S. Commissioner J ¢ never gave. up his membership : F. Mullen has charge of the Cordova Drum|of Alford John Bradford Post of £ and Bugle Corps said that it was|the American Legion. During Mr. Shearer’s absence from town, his shop will be kept lopen by Mrs. Shearer. | | - - ENJOY LABOR DAY n enjoyable Labor Weck, Twin Glacier Lodge, on T River offers the ideal recreation. | Boat leaves Juneau Saturday after- nocn. Contact Mary Joyce, clerks, at the Gastineau Hotel for -ee—— WHEN YOU FLY — FLY — Fly with Gene Meyring. Phone 626. adv — “Sor Tfiner 7551/(1)17 Schilling or $4.00 ! details, —adv. DR SR 9 Men’s Dress NOTICE Baklng Oxfords || on and atter this date T will Powder B l G V A N not be responsible for any debts Phone 479 South Franklin St ||eontracted for by other than myself '—adv. OLE KUANDE. An Auxiliary Member Greets You Members of The American Legion Auxiliary | | | | YOU SHALL HAVE BEAUTY wherever yougo... If you put yourself under the care of our Expert Operators. OPERATORS: Expert Eyebrow and Lash Dyeing—Clairols—False Eyelashes | Peter Pan Beauty Sheppe PHONE Jan Cashel Frances Peacock Pat Shirk MARGARET LINDSAY e = LR My Program The Greatest Good for the Greatest Number of Our People from— KETCHIKAN TO KOTZEBUE HENRY RODEN for ATTORNEY GENERAL Qi i lIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlllllllllllllllllllllll|IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII|IIIIIIIIIIllIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIllHflmIiIIIIIIIIII illion dollar loan in new cash in the Juneau Lodge ugh he the Tr mber financ- been away more than ten years, |ing, Secretary of sury Morgen- | He died in Arizona on August 10, | thau said planned to keep &| The meeting adjourned early for | working balance of around one bil-|a Dutch lunch to which Legion del- {lion dollars Lecause of the threat-|egates and members of the EIK's | ening conditions abroad. basehall team were invited In making this announcement, re-| 17.xt Wednes the first garding a working balance, Secre-|in 2 will Morgenthau said: “This is the |, st insurance we can carry for ! people should anything un-| rowing figures are one of the les s assumed th 1 ELECTRA 1 PASSENGERS MOVE ON IRUN —Armored cars hine guns, moved the Spanish LONDON with spitting ma lay on Irun in els’ supreme assault to capture the important stronghold. Infantrymen also ed toward the Spanish advices received here. | Batteries at Fuenterrabia are . | booming a desperate defiance. PAA Plane Leaves for Fair- report, broadcast, says an- s in Irun have seized c¢ banks at 9 o'Clock This Morning s of the defending militia because went to surrender. RINEHART LEAVES ON TRIP, PRINCE RUPERT Jimmy Rinehart, in the Alaska Air Transport Patco, left the AAT float here this morning at 6 o'clock on a charter flight to Prince Rup- ert with Izaac Mathews, mining man from Atlin. Mr. Mathews flew to Juneau from Atlin Tuesday with L. F. Barr in the North Can- ada Air Express Pilgrim plane. It was uncertain whether Mr. Mathews would return with the plane or would come back by steamer. C. Brown 'made the flight with —adv. Rinehart as far as Ketchikan. The PAA Electra after several days caused by late arrival of boats and weather conditions, took off from the PAA airport on the glacier highway at 9 o'clock this morning with the following pas- ngers aboard bound for Fair- banks: J. D. Harlan, J. E. Most, H. W. Parmalee, K. Smith, W. D. Beyers, W. D. Nutley, P. A. Robbins. Piloting the ship are Jerry Jones and Bill Knox. The Electra will make the return trip from Fairbanks to Juneau on Sunday, arriving here at 3 o'clock in the afternoon. a delay of T - NOTICE: If you want to go hunt- ing or fishing Phone 626. We ar- ! range parties. WELCOME LEGIONNAIRES! TRIBUTE IS PAID Father of Mrs. | | Ride With PHONES Bertha Knight Diesfl Tacoma H. L. Faulkner Delivers Onetime City Harbormast- er, Civil War Veteran, Passes Away TACOMA, Wash., Sept. 3.—Henry Gothard Hoflin, aged 94, resident of this city for 46 years, is dead at his| home here. He was at one time City Harbormaster. Mr. Hoflin was a Civil War Veteran. Survivors MRS, BN DUKE PASSES AWAY Widow of Tobacco Capital- ist Dies After Illness of Two Years BLOWING ROCK, North Caro- lina, Sept. 3. - Mrs. Benjamin Newton Duke, aged 80, B. N. Duke, tobacco and powar cap- italist, died last night ut her home here after an illness of two years Mrs. Duke was an aunt of Mrs. James Crowell, the former Doris Duke | BRI g SIMMONS OFF ON FLIGHT TO SEATTLE Alaska Air Transport Bel- monoplane piloted by Shel- don Simmons, left Juneau for Seat- tle this morning with Tom Shearer, J. M. Mitchell and J. C. Fields as passengers. John H. Mulkey flew as far as Ketchikan. Bud Bodding| went as flight mechanic. | 11 will probably return with | ane, which is expected here Saturday evening. D The ca DAIRIES PRAISED The Extension News, edited by the Territorial extension service of the Univer of Alaska, of which| Lorin Oldroyd is director recent- ly commented, “Alaska has some| of the most modern and best-| »quipped dairies to be found any-! where. 1,000 head of well-bred dairy stock n the Ter ory. Many of them registered and are from some f the best dairy herds in Amer- The article continued: “Our / herds are practically free losis.” ica.’ Aid has been asked of residents! of Fairbanks by the University of| Alaska to help provide living quar- ters for the overflow who will enter the institution this month. Although additions are be ing made to both the men's an women'’s living quarters on the cam- pus, advance requests for room res ervations far exceed accommoda- tions, - D DEPARTMENT ANSWERS ALARM The Juneau Fire Department an- swered an alarm at the home of Edgar Tarr on Ninth Street yes- terday afternoon at 4:50 o'clock. The blaze was a small one, destroy- ing a mattress. > ENJOY LABOR DAY “For an enjoyable Labor Day Week, Twin Glacier Lodge, on Taku River offers the ideal recreation. Boat leaves Juneau Saturday after- noen. Conta clerks, at the Gastineau Holel for details, 14 or 444 include a daughter, | Mrs. Bertha Knight, of Juneau, Al-| widow of | ¢ There are between 750 and| of students| ct Mary Joyce, or| e St TR T AR s Legionnaires Have Warm Praise For Chilkoot Men Expression of appreciation to the officers and soldiers of Chilkoot Barracks for coming to Juneau to help make the American Legion Convention a success was made by both Department Commander An- thony E. Karnes and Stanley J. Nichols, Grand Chef de Gare of the 40 and 8. “We certainly appreciate the soldiers coming to the convention,” STOCK PRICES “AGAIN ADVANCE ON 600D NEWS [Profit Takers Hit Recent Leaders—Special- ties in Lead NEW YORK, Sept. 3.—Special- said Cpmmander Karnes “Without | ties substantially advanced at the them it would not have been half |gpock session today while profit the success it is. They are an €X-|takers took pot-shots at recent cellent appearing group of men and leaders, we want to express our appreciation ! to Col. Ralph Dusenbury and his men for coming here.” “They are making the conven- tion,” said Chef de Gare Nichols. Sodiers add just what it takés to| a gathering like this. I think Ju- neau and all of us in the conven- CLOSING PRICES TODAY tion are mighty fortunate to have| NEw YORK, Sept. 3.—Closing such a fine group of men to take|quotation of Alaska Juneau mine part in our convention. stock today is 15, American Can b g 124%, American Power and Light MARRIED |13, Anaconda 39, Bethlehem Steel Miss Stella Inez Smith, of Terra 66%, Calumet and Hecla 11'%, Co- Haute, Indiana, a recent arrival in lumbia Gas and Electric 21%, Com= Fairbanks from her home, was monwealth and Southern 3%, Cur wed to Wayne Coakley Smith of tiss-Wright 6%, International Ha: that city recently by the Rev. John vester 78, Kennecott 47%, Simmo: E. Youel. Mr. Smith was a resi- 38%, United States Steel 70%, Uni dent of Terra Haute before coming ed Corporation 7%, Cities Service to Fairbanks to attend the Univer- Pound $5.03 13/16. ; of Alaska. The young couple will live at Chatham Creek where Mr. Smith is employed at the Cha- them mine, S PR e R of Mr. and The business and industrial news was inspiring for the most part but (the buying vigor was lacking in a majority of instances. Today's close was irregular, Transfers totaled 1,100,00 shares, { | | DOW, JONES AVERA The following Jones averages: Industrials 16t down .41; rails 54.88, down .08; util- ities 34.83, down .05. e Buddie Koslosky, scr mrs. 1. Koslosky o Anchorage, left recently for the south where he CAMP COOK WANTED will attend the Culver Military For logging camp. Apply Juneau adv. Academy in southern California. Lumber Mills. Whein do you pzzssYom* ' PHYSICAL PEAK? After you pass your physical peak it pays to watch | if you drink, choose a whiskey that agrees with yon OST men the world over pass the peak of their physical powers around thirty. Yet, because you live in America, a recent study of world-wide averages shows that you can ex- pect more years after 30 than the people in all but two other coun- tries...if you will observe simple rules of moderation. One important rule is: “avoid drinks that disagree with you”. ©Seagram-Distillers Corp.—Executive Offices: New York Choose your whiskey with an eye to the future. Our recent research proves that Seagram’s Five and Seven Crown Whiskies are “a most wholesome form of whiskey”. men with fine-tasting whiskey in a form that agrees with them. This means that, taken in mod- eration, they are easy on the average man, considerate, kind. Seagram’s Five Crown Blended Whiskey. The s(mifi[‘u whiskies_in this product are 5 years or more old, 257, straight whiskey and 75% neutral spirits_distilled from American grain, Bottled under this formula since May 1936. 90 Proof. Seagram’s Seven Crown Blended Whiskey. The straight whiskies in this p: arc 5 years or more old, 37149 straight whiskics and 621/ neutral spirits distilled from American grain. Bottled under | this formula since May 1936. 90 Proof. Seagram's (rown | WHISKEY are today's Dow, . your diet, conserve your energy, be moderate...and, They are blended to provide % 4 » o

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