The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, September 10, 1936, Page 8

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GRADE SCHOOL TEACHERS ARE C. OF C. GUESTS Superintendent Phillips Re- ports Enrollment 512, Largest in History Juneau grade school teachers v guests of the Chamber of Com- merce today at the weekly luncheon of that body in the Terminal Cafe at noon. Floyd Dryden, Principal of the Grade School, introduced the instructors including Cynthia Batson, Dalma Hanson, Iva Tilden, Mabel Monson, Velma Bloom, Ann Rohw Clara B. Snyder, excha teacher from Hawaii; Margaret McFadden, Marian Edwards, Ker neth Ferguson, Walter Haut Helen Webster, Mary Webster Olson, Helen Parrott and Mrs R. Garster, school nurse The teaches, some of them in the Juneau system, expressed pleasure and appreciation for the courtesy extended A. B. Phillips, Superintendent of s, pointed out to the the enroliment this t 5§12, the gest and compared with in 461 Communication from Capt. Luc D. Clay, of the U. S. Engineers Corps, Washington, D. C, to the Chamber pointed out that v of Dry Pass was being made the District Engineer's office in Seattle with the aim of incorporat- ing the dredging of that pass be- tween El Capitan Passage andj Shakan Strait into a program which may be undertaken in the spring if funds are made available -+ BISHOP ROWE, DOGTORBURKE | VISIT STATES Ploneel Alaska Clergymen Say Alaskans Better Mor- | imm\ known around here as ally than Gold Rushers NEW YORK, Sept. 10. — Two Americans who have spent much of| ), ¢ e U their lives ministering to the spir-| itual and physical needs of Alas- kans have arrived here on the Grace liner Santa Rosa. Bishop P. T. Rowe, of the Epis- copal diocese of Alaska, has spent 40 years in the north. Dr. Graf- ton Burke, who supervises a 45 bed hospital at Fort Yukon, to which patients are brought from two or three hundred miles, has been in Alaska 30 years. The Bishop said he thinks Al- askans today are better morally than the gold rushers, but they haven't the stamina of the men of '98. He will stay here several weeks and then attend the Chicago meet- ing of the American House of Bish- ops. Dr. Burke will remain here dur- ing the winter studying the various clinics. He is accompanied by his son, Grafton Burke, Jr, who will enter Dunmoulh - (Dl'I‘LlL MARRInD The marriage of Jack Westfall, of Juneau and Mary L. Mooles, of Fresno, was performed Saturday evening by the Rev. John A. Glasse at the home of Mr. and Mrs. V. H Cuff on Willoughby Avenue. The couple will make their home in Ju- neau. e — Lode ana piacer :scation notloes for sale at The Empire office. THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, THURSDAY, SEPT. 1 0, 1936. UNOFFICIAL 'ELECTION RESULTS—FIBST DIVISION Delegate 10 Q e BLIGERE puow (I) Aqs3! No. No. No. Creek eau Juneau Juneau Salmon Jualpa Sheep Creek Lynn C Mend Stikine Chichagof Kirr Port Gravi rd Cove Wrangell Kake Sitka Petersburg West Petersburg ow Bay Craig Pennock Island Douglas Bric Jamestown Goddard Totals 3248 1571, 80 1 FLORENCE LAKE §GABIN WILL BE Set by Vienna BUILT BY CCC ll"(’d l’]fihlng SL(.“O” on Admiralty Island to Have Shelter Sportsmen familiar with Florence .ake on Admiralty Island, some- “Patco Lake” due to the many sports fish- ing flights made there by the local seaplane, will be interested to hear . S. Forest Service has ordered materials shipped in to build an overnight cabin and fire- place, near the lower end of the lake. Work on the cabin, and on a trail from Chatham Straits to the lake, will be started about Septem- ber 20. A CCC party under charge of John Maurstad will build the trail. Both the cabin and the trail will be completed in about 35 days. Materials for the cabin will be cent out from Juneau in the Forest| Bureau'’s tender Forester, which will | contact the Ranger No. 9, on which | { Ranger W. A. Chipperfield left Ju- neau this morning, on the 20th. The supplies will then be translerred-‘ ot Pavlov Harbor to an airplane and | flown to the lake. Lake Florence is recognized ne of the finest fishing spots Southeast Alaska. - U FISH MARKET as| in| | JUN - | the Brothers, Henden, taking bait and| ice for Area threc; three trollers, taking ice, and no sales were the xtent of the business on the Ju- neau fish market today. The trollers! icing up were: the 31A641, S. Jor-! gensen; the 31A860, Carl Graves; | and the Deutz, Capt. Al Womhors.l - B One halibuter, Capt. A. Lode and placer focation notices for sale at The Empire oftice. Auditor @ Atty.-Gen. ’d = 2 & g Engineer (D) ureooW (@ pmag, B (q) Kau018 (@) I3[EM (I) ISNIUIP[Z (@) uosiapuy (@) sueq (d) uaain 19/| 398| 462 8 8 16 NoomrmoOrooo L = wr =8 Elrvovocmal - VW WO VO RO WO~ O WN O WA NN WH OO 58 % Representatives (@) suuap (I) e (9) 2oud (D) 1orem (9) uospIm | REBELS REJECT ARMISTIGE PLAN FOR CIVIL WAR 'Spanish Government Re- ported Ready to Accept Proposal—Deny Bombing LONDON, Sept. 10.—Spanish reb- |els have rejected a proposal for a it | proposal was credited to a | 500 23/ 21/ 37 548 1158 1999 2395 2144‘ 2439 Bombs Rumored 2237|2284 POOR FISHING REPORTED BY Redsin Train S.E, TROLLERS Explosions Occur in West Fishermen Hope that King Station andin Carat | Run Will Make Up Semmering for Loss on Cohos VIENNA, Scpt. 10.—Two bombs Salmon trollers along the west exploded today in traveling bags COBst of Southeast Alaska have not in Vienna's west station and in a been doing too well this season, ac- railway coach r Semmering. | cording to word brought here by Officials scoffed at rumors that Clarence Rhode, who returned yes-| terday from a patrol in that section on the Seal. ©On the outside trip from Port Al- exander to Soapstone Point Rhode| | says the weather was bad all the | time, | were trying to do any trolling re-| port they have done very poorly on‘ cohoes thi PASoN, Practically the same story was told by all others that Rhode talked | ’wvm They are hoping to average {up for the season on kings, however. Mr. Rhode says that while he was | | going through Lisianski straits he| | saw three bears on the beach. He| | went ashore to study them, and suc- | ceeded in getting within sixty feet' Robert S. ]ames Sentenced | of them, watching them for some | time. There was one large one and to Gallows for Snakebite o e Death of His Wife | 10 CELEBHATE "lows for the murder of his seventh LOS ANGELES‘ Cal, Sept. 10.— Judge James Frick ‘oday sentenced | 'wife, Mary James. | BANGOR, Maine, Sept. 10.—Six James is accused of trying to kill| thousand persons in this center of er by holding her in a box of the reviving slate industry are pre- poisonous snakes and then drown- paring to celebrate the 100th anni- ing her in a bathtub. He later versary of the discovery of great removed the body to a fish pond to veins of the gray rock in Pennsyl- make death look accidental. | vania. The festival will be held BRI September 30 to October 3. i ! 3 In Connecticut where deer are| AfL€r 20 lean vears the rip of the 5 wire saw and the shout of the der- under protection of the state game e |rickman again rises from the deep laws, a tight and high garden fence\quarrles in the Northampto: often is required to keep out un- pronoours | |ty foothil wanted foliage feasters in the night. g R Ve L they were set off by Communists as a demonstration against the pres- ence in Vienna of King Edward of En;,lund MURDERER WILL DIE FOR WEIRD KILLING PLOT | Robert S. James to die on the gal-| iPadflc Boman Supply Company Name Your Brand! WHITE HORSE For a Long Cool Drink! POUR a jigger of White Horse into a tall glass, add ice and soda. Sip it slowly. Note how smooth and soft it is, how pleas- antly it sets, a palate. heat, fatigue ness cares. Al for White Horse. Half bottles and pints on sal Chi You forget the Distributors for AIOSkC! | skilled workers again are cutting {away the crude blocks to be fash- ioned into sheets and shingles for ‘Amerlca's blackboards and roof | tops. | | e | \RINEHART IS BUSY | " MAKING LOCAL HOPS| | | | Jimmy Rinehart, piloting the Al-! aska Air Transport Stinson, after spending last night in Petersburg, hopped this morning for Sitka with the three passengers who left here with him yesterday afternoon. Leaving his three passengers in Sit- ka, Rinehart hopped from Sitka to Juneau this afternoon at 2:45, with two passengers. Immediately after arriving here, he took the air again on a return flight with one passen- ger to Sitka. Tomorrow morning, Rinehart will fly to Juneau with N. W. Dennis, Jerry Reiland, and A. Van Mavern, the original three roundtrip passengers who left with him yesterday for Sitka and way points. e . ‘U. S. Ship Is Reported Fired Upon LONDON, Sept. 10.—An Ex- change Telegraph dispatch from Gibraltar late this afternoon said the United States warship Oklahoma is racing to the res- cue of a United States merchant ship reported fried upon by a Spanish Government submar- ine, joy to the and busi- Iways call e 0go ~—Los Angeles —————— and the few fishermen that ~ ‘Try a classified—Empire. £ 1800 2032| 41117762175 712 1777 ‘Rll'LE MEN PLANNING ON SHCOT SUNDAY Administrative Assistant Charles G. Burdick of the U. 8. Forest Serv- ice, whe is also range officer of the cau Rifle and Pistol Club, at the boys have been so encour- eed at the sight of a little sunshine that they are anxious to hold an impromptu shoot on the Mendenhall range next Sunday. | T.e shoot will be held if the wea- ther permits, and anyc e interested should phone Mr. Burdick or Roy Hotfman for last minute arrange- ments—if the weather looks - suit-| able. — .- HERE FROM FOX FARM [ Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Kohlh-ue\ are in Juneau from their fox farm] at Harbor Island and are house | guests at the home of Mr. and| rs. John Pastl. R Lode and placer location notices| for sale at The Empire office. 15-day armistice in the Civil War, was reported here today. The “diplo- matic great influence” which en- visaged a change in the radical Spanish constitution to make it more acceptable to the Rightists. Madrid's acceptance was said to be counted upon. Rebels today formally announced a rebel plane was not responsible for the atttmpted bombing of the U. S. destroyer Kane recently. POPE TO SPEAK ROME, Sept. 10.—Pope Pius is reported to have prepared a speech to broadcast to the world on Mon- day, probably denouncing the com- munistic influences in the Spanish government defense. DEFY GOVERNMENT MADRID, Sept. 10.—A blindfold- ed Government officer walked into shell-battered Alacazar where 1,700 rebel families have defied capture for two months and returned with a flat refusal of the Government demand for surrender, it was re- ported here. D VART BOYS LEAVE John Stewart, son of Mines Com- missioner and Mrs. B. D. Stewart of Juneau, left on the west-bound Yukon this week to take up a con- struction job at Anchorage. He flew to Juneau from Seattle last wek with Sheldon Simmons. He recent- ly completed his pre-medical course at the University of Washington. The youngest of the Stewart sons, Tom, who graduated from the Ju- “For Tiner Bakinf Schilling Baking Powder Fifteenth Annual Southeastern Alaska Fair FRIDAY AFTERNOON EXHIBITS AWARD OF EXHIBIT PRIZES 8:00 9:30 ——EVENING TO TO 10:30 PM.—Floor High Miéau ‘High Sétiool” last ‘Jurie, wil| leave tomorrow on the Baranof to| attend the University of Washing-i ton. He will take a pre-legal course. TRAINHITS marksmen of the film colony. One | 1 of his favorite stunts is to “draw” the picture of an Indian on n[ LITTLE ROCK, Arkansas, Sept. square of tin with bullets from a 10—A Missouri Pacific’s north- small calibre rifle. | bound Sunshine Special crashed in- ——.— to a stalled automobile early today Empire aas are read. {and was derailed, 11 miles south- 3 ;west of here, killing one and injur- ing fcfr unidentified whites. They | were :/jushed to death getween two {deralled coaches. ST S BEACH IS SAVED The Cordova City Council recent~ ly voted to accept the offer of the | Highway Engineef to allot $1,000 | toward a revetment for preserving | the Nirvana Park bathing beach at !Lhat point. The town also said it | would pay the balance of an amount “over $1,000 to bring the preject to | conclusion, FAIR'! MINNIE FIELDS will be on hand as usual with the best in Cakes, Dough- nuts and Hot Dogs—with FAIRMONT COFFEE Donated by H. B. Crewson —and—— DON'T FORGET THE ELECTRIC RANGE Donated by Alaska Electric Light and Power Co. PROGRAM—— 9:30 P.M.—Juneau City Band. and Stage Show — Juneau School Talent. 10:30 TO MIDNIGHT—Dancing, Krane's Orchestra. DOORS OPEN: 1 to 5—Afternoons. 7:30 to Midnight—Thursday and Friday. 7:30 to 2 AM.—Saturday. Admissions: Adults, afternoons Adults, evenings High School Students: Anytime .. Children under 12: Afternoons Evenings (3

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