The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, October 6, 1936, Page 7

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STANFORD WILL Steanshiy Man PLAY SCHEDULE, 1o See Alaska SAYS MASTERS After 18 Years Déclare smke Rumors ; Chief Clel‘kj\i/ho Fooled THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, TUESDAY, OCT. 6, 1936. BARNEY GOOGLE AND SPARK PLUG WHERE'S THAT NEPHEW OF YOURS, LOW(ZIE 222 (M GOING To THE CITY * BN' SEE WHAT'S HAPPENED TO MARCELLY AN' HER PAPPY--- T THOUGHT MAYBE WEAZY M(GHT HAVE A MESSAGE OR S@#PN MARCY SAKES ! L YOU SARTINLY TAKE TH RAG OFF'N TH' BUSH, MISTOFER GOOGLE--ALLUS R TRAIPSIN' EROUND --~ . Y & MAKE (T SNAPPY, L LOW(ZIE -+ TIME'S A-WASTIN'- Against Referee Are Ridiculous SAN FRANISCO, Cal., Oct. Graduate Manager A. L. Mast said Stanford will play out the reg- ular football schedule despite re- sentment of the players against ers said reports that the team would | strike as a protest against Morris, who officiated at the Washington State College and Stan- ford game last Saturday, were “ri- diculous.” Commissioner Herb Dana said he would take no action until an of- ficial protest is made against Mor-| ris who is accused of ‘“coaching” Ed Goddard, Washington State College quarterback. In the game last Saturday, Wash- ington State College defeated Stan- ford by the close score of i4 to 13 Edmonton s Ninth Largest Canadian Gity EDMONTOW, Alta., Oct. 6.—Ed: monton recently became the largest city in Alberta, and the ninth larg- est in Canada. Change in population standing, with Edmonton passing Calga came when the Ottawa census bu- _ | Hopgood. Travelers, Making First Trip to Territory SEATTLE, 0;:> been employed as Chief Clerk of the Alaska Steamship Company at Pier 2, travelers have marveled at his intimate knowledge of routes and cannery and saltery ports off the beaten path followeéd by ships. They took it for granted that Mec-~ Lean had spent much time in the | morth. Today McLean left on his first trip to Alaska aboard the Yukon accompanied by his wife. The vessel is calling at Ketchi- kan, Wrangell, Petersburg, Juneau, Haines, Skagway, Cordova, Valdez |and Seward, giving McLean an opportunity to inspect the South- cast Alaska ports. 'TEACHERS ARRIVING | TO TAKE POSITIONS IN INDIAN BUREAU James L. Hopgood, who is the new teacher for the Bureau of In- |dian Affairs at Cape Prince of | Wales, is a passenger coming north on the Yukon, accompanied by Mrs. Also on the Yukon are {E. S. Steuart, who will go to Non- |dalton for the Bureau, and Dr. Mid- {dleton, who will be the doctor in jcharge of the Government hospital | here. { | { | | ') Other changes announced by C. M. Hirst, Education Director, to- o¢ the past| rs 18 years that A. J. McLean has| FOR MARCELLY-- Puzzle CHARGES MADE BY GOV.LANDON TOPEKA, Kansas, Oct. 6. — Gov,.: Alfred M. Landon today said the New Deal is employing a ‘“cen-| |sorship of source of news” which |he said was “just as bad as a cen- |sorship of news” itself. | Landon accused WPA Adminis- trator Hopkins of shutitng off WPA‘ records from publicity. Ddily Cross-word ACl/0SS Fame . Finish Melodies Disputed Solution of Yesterday's Puzzie WINEZAILIAITIEFZAIP AVTIEIN O V. | | . Son T TOIN 6. Pin_against which an G Al T ain 12. Room In & harem . So may it be . Horse of a cer- tain color . City in Maine . To an Inner Z|O| O, T oar puils . Garment . Italian guess- ing game . Declare . Cutting iz ipiement . Musical instrument (o] R point [TIO . Either of two islands_in S Lake Chem- n charges officer Pronoun ¥ —HIOION<|Z|O|— . Pack . In this place . English statesman . Gas of the alr . Clever . Respond . Momoranda Legal cfaims Genus of trees . Mohammedan noble; variant Span of horses . Health resort Pigpen Be obligated Conking vessel New Highway . - inNorthland - IsNow Open {Caravan Travels Over 80- Mile Stretch, Fair- R0IZ— 0T MM Z |4 E N > Rl A Commotton Leave out . Tropical American FPPNRPO >N T Weapons However DOWN Cut oft Artificial language Oriental dwelling More pallia Persian poet superfority That girl Late Refreshed by repose Noah's boat . Pertaining to the dawn Nothing more than . Apprehended as true Londed Eaw 0 | 54 65 tree Biography Song of joy: variant Smallest even number 1 2 3. 4 God of war 5. N neer YURe SHUT-TAIL (N, MISTOFER G. T BEEN . A-TALKW' TiLL (61 BLUE (N TH' EACE AN’ THEY DONT PAY ME NO MIND-- i — By BILLIE DE BECK BUSINESS PROFESSIONAL DIRECTORY DON'T_FPOKE OUT YORE NECK TO SEE WHAR TH' TH' IDEE (S TO H(T (T FUST-- FRATERNAL SOCIETIES GASTINEAU CHANNEL PROFESSIONAL : When in Need of DIESEL OIL—UTAH COAL GENERAL HAULING STORAGE and CRATING CALL US JUNEAU TRANSFER Phone 48 Night Phone 4703 307 GOLDSTEIN BLDG. Phone Office, i DRS. KASER & FREEBURGER DENTISTS Blomgrer Building PHONE 56 Hours 9 am. to 9 pm. FRED MATTSON WATCHMAKER and JEWELER Watches, Clocks and Jewelry EYE GLASSES SOLD | || AND REPAIRED Dr. C. P. jenne Rooms 8 and § Valentine Building W. LEIVERS, Secretary. * e 2 — | Fraternal Societies of Gastineau Channel ‘ I | : | | * L ] B. P. 0. E. ELKS meets every Wednesday at 8 p. m. Visiting brothers welcome. WALTER P. SCOTT, Exalted Ruler, M. H. SIDES, Secretary, NT JUINEAU LODGE NO. 1 Second and fourth Monday of each month in Scottish Rite Temple, beginning at 7:30 p. m. MARTIN S. JORGEN-~ EN, worshipful Master; JAMES REBEKAHS 127 SEWARD STREET TELEPHONE 176 reau announced Calgary’s popula-igay are Mrs. Minerva C. Starritt,| tion as 33.304. Three weeks ago!teacher at Petersburg, who arrived Edmonton’s population, according|recently from California, and Miss to 1936 federal S Wwas an-|gunie Logan, who will arrive on the ngunced at 85,676, _ |North Sea to become teacher at Edmonton’s i ase in the five-lgake. year period was 6479, while Calgary| Miss Fortuna Hunter, of Mar- showed a decrease of 457. |¢hall, who has been with the Bu- veau here after coming from Ek- WINGARD RETURNS ilutna, is leaving for Ssame where HERE ABOARD BRANT| !she will enter business college. > L. G. Wingard, Alaska Agent for| the Bureau of Fisheries, returned| to Juneau last night aboard the flagship Brant after stream workl! in the Southeast and reported that only one salmon cannery is en- gaged in fishing during the pres- ent fall season, namely the plant of | the Sebastian Stuart Fish Company | at Tyee. The Red Salmon Packers Association also is operating at Sit-) ka but is packing only trolled caught lish incidental to mild curing op- | erations there, Wingard said. The two Lndenberger plants on the West | Coast of Prince of Wales are not operating. Early advice was re- ceived by the Bureau prior to the opening of the fall season indicat- LOp A Bt ed that the two plants on the West| Hearing of Floyd Cromwell, charg- Coast owned by Mr. Lindenberger ed with larceny in connection with would operate shortly before the the alleged theft of goods from the opening of the fall fishing season.|Pablo del Rosa home, will be held This concern announced they would Thursday morning in the U, 8. Com- not do any fall fishing. missioner’s Court. Lepers Escape, Parade Streets, Demonstration MANILA, Oct. 6. — Hundreds of lepers paraded the streets teday after escaping from the San Lazaro Hospital and cli- maxed the ‘demonstration with a march on the Presidential Palace. The lepers permitted the po- lice to herd them back to the hospital but only after the Presidential Secretary received the protest against being im- | prisoned while tuberculosis suf- ferers were not quarantined. U. S. DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE, WEATHER BUREAU THE WEATHER (By the U. S. Weather Bureaun) Forecast for Juneau and vicinity, beginning at 4 p.m. Oct. 6: Rain and cooler tonight and Wednesday; moderate to fresh southeast winds. 2 LOCAL DATA Temp. Humidity Wind Velocity 54 92 SE 16 2943 54 83 SE 20 ...20.68 51 92 s 6 CABLE AND RADIO REPORTS YESTERDAY { TODAY Highest 4p.m. Lowest4a.m. 4a.m. Precip. 4a.m. temp. temp. velocity 24hrs. Weather 40 04 Clear - 24 12 28 30 26 28 42 44 50 48 54 52 54 42 50 52 54 Weather Rain Rain Rain Barometer 29.39 Time 4 p.m. yest'y 4 a.m. today Noon today Station Atka Anchorade Barrow Nome Bethel Fairbanks Dawson St. Paul . Dutch Harbor ... Kodiak Cordova Juneau Sitka Ketchikan Prince Rupert Edmonton Seattle Portland San Francisco New York ‘Washington 48 18 40 Cldy Clear Pt. Cldy Snow Pt. Cldy Cldy Cldy Rain | Bawo Rain | Clear Clear Clear Clear Pt. Cldy Cldy N chprammBa 54 64 68 | 62 60 | 60 64 56 58 WEATHER CONDITION AT 8 A. M. TODAY ' Ketchikan, raining, temperature, 53; Craig, raining, 56; Wrangell, cloudy, 56; Sitka,"Cloudy, 55; Radioville, showers, 56; Juneau, rain- ing, 54; Skagway, cloudy, 54; Soapstone Point, showers, 51; Cordova, raining, 48; Chitina, cloudy, 38; McCarthy, cloudy, 38; Anchorage, cloudy, 40; Portage, missing; Fairbanks, cloudy, 24; Nenana, partly cloudy, 20; Hot Springs, clear, 22; Tanana, clear, 19; Ruby, clear, 22; 68 2 Nulato, clear, 22; Kaltag, clear, 24; Unalakleet, missing; Crooked ® Creek, clear, 20; Flat, clear, 19. WEATHER SYNOPSIS ¥ Low barometric pressure prevailed this mroning -throughout Al- aska and the MacKenzie River Valley, the storm area being centered a short distance south of Montague Island where a reading of 28,70 inches was reported. This storm area was decreasing in intensity. High pressure prevailed from the Pacific Northwest States southwest- ward to the Hawaiian Islands. This general pressure distribution has peen attended by precipitation along the coastal regions from the Aleutians souteastward to British Columbia, being excessive between Cordova and XKetchikan. Fairbanks and Dawson reported snow. Else- where over the field of observation fair weather prevailed. Cold weather prevailed over the Arctic coast and Yukon Valley. Ruby reported ice running from the Melozi River and Tanana and Hot Springs reported ice running in the Tanana River. 4 Cldy i! banks to Livengood LIVENGOOD, Alaska, Oct. 6.— The Fairbanks-Livengood Highway, 80 miles long, was formally opened yesterday by a motor caravan from Fairbanks. The citizens of this town extended the members of the caravan a reception on arrival. | Livengood is the main trading base for numerous gold fields. — e Toys from Old Tinfoil Aid Crippled Children , LOUISVILLE, Ky. October 6.— |John Marrilla, union station mas- ter, has contributed $1,107 during the last 10 years to the Kosiar crip- pled children's hospital from the sale of toy dogs. Instead of throwing away tinfoil, Marilla’s friends bring it all to the station master, who melts it and moulds it into toys In baskets kept by Marrilla in the lobby of the station and in all local |offices of the railroad are placed some 25 pounds of foil a day. — e LARGE VEGETABLES GROWN Turnips weighing 17 pounds, po- tatoes 31 to the hill, enormous cabbages, a choice selection of car- rots and beets are being shown in a store window in Seward. The turnips and potatoes were grown /by A. F. Davis and the other vegetables by Capt. Andrew Horton. e Can you imagine getting three full-size tubes of Rexall Milk of Magnesia Tooth Paste for only 26c? It’s only one of the many bargains at the Rexall QRIGINAL One Cent | Sale, Wednesday, Thursday, Friday | and Saturday, October 14, 15, 16, and 17, at Butler-Mauro Drug Co., The Rexall Drug Store. —adv. R S S Members of the West Yorkshire regiment held an “at home” in the Tower of London, first function of its kind. Tourist Records Badly Shattered VICTORIA, B. C., Oct. 6.—Figures released by Customs officials from Jan. 1 to August 31 show that a total of 17,501 cars passed through Victoria and Sidney, the points of entry from the United States. This is an increase of 58 per cent in the same period a year ago. The total passengers were 49,000, an increase of 17,806. | PR s Dr. John D. Moore, Knoxville city | physician, says children appear not ,to mind being vaccinated when they are in groups. el s Richard Haddon, Jr., four, was crushed to death at his San Pedro, Calif. home when caught in a clothes wringer. Has '(:nj_l[t Climax LONDON, Oct. 6. — A (wo-year “war” between neighbors over their gardens ended in court. Mrs. Rosa Street was fined £ 11 shillings (about $7.50) for throwing salt water over her neighbor’s cle- matis “with intention to destroy it.” She accused the owners of the plant, Mr. and Mrs. J. H. King, of throwing water over her lilac trees “This sort of ining nas been ¢ ing on for two years” King told the court. - Maxwell Field, home of Uncle Sam’s $5,000,000 tactical school near Montgomery, Ala., once was used by the Wright Brothers in their early airplane experiments. g New Cab Service In Douglas . ... JOHN MARIN announces that he has taken over the Douglas Cab and will operate 24 hours daily. RATES: 25¢ within Douglas city limits. @ 75¢ to Juneau. “SCOTTY” NELSON, Driver PHONE g Q—Stand at fhe DOUGLAS INN [ Opposite Goldstein Bldg. P.O. Box 1648, Juneau, Alaska A (s S SR B Dr. Richard Willian-l;_:v DENTIST OFFICE AND RESIDENCE GOLDSTEIN BUILDING e “THE REXALL STORE” é % compound ‘vf! /‘ prm‘:ptluns. Butler Mauro Drug Co. your Reliable pharmacists Dr. A. W. Stewart DENTIST Hours 9 am. to 6 pm. CEWARD BUILDING Office Phone 469 TELEPHONE 663 | Office Hours—9 a.m. to 10 p.m. Dr. W. A. Rystrom DENTIST Qver First Nationsl Bank X-ruY SPECIALIZING in French | and CARLSON | Optometrist ! Eyes Examined, Glasses Fitted Office in Ludwig Nelson’s Jewelry Store —_— Dinners DR. RAE LILLIAN Gastineau Cafe Short Orders at All Hours - frrrr e et | ) ! ) ) ) ) < Graduate Los Angeles Col. lege of Optometry and g Opthalmology Ammunition Glasses batted Lenses Ground See—BIG Van e SOUTH FRANKLIN Phone 479 Jeones-Stevens Shop LADIES—MISSES' READY-TO-WEAR || Seward Street Near Third FORD AGENCY (Authorized Pqnlers) GREASES GAS — OILS JUNEAU MOTORS Foot of Main Streev DR. H. VANCE OSTEOPATH | Consuitation and examination | free. Hours 10’ to 12; 1 to 5, \' 7 to 9:30 by ' appeintment. Gastinean Hotel Annéx South Frankhn St. —i¥ TYPEWRI"ERS RENTED $5.00 per month J. B, Burford & Co. “Our doorstep is wurn by satisfied customers” -——t Stratton & Beers MUNICIPAL ENGINEERS SURVEYORS VALENTINE BLDG. ‘Telephone 502 If you're out to please the man of the family . .* let us help ou! A grand selection of good food . . . vegetables and all the things that men like best. — Keep in mind . . . Caroline Todd Studio PHONE 83 or 85 Piano—Harmony—Public Sanitary Grocery “The Store That Pleases” NN = Speaking 326 SECOND STREET + | GARLAND BOGGAN Hardwood Floors Waxing Polishing . Sanding PHONE 582" ) o3 CASHEN, Secretary. /"Robert Simpson, Opt. D. || Phone 177 | Perseverance Lodge No. 2 A meets every second and fourth Wednes- tday, I. O. O. F. Hall. EDNA M. BUTTS, Noble Grand; MILDRED = Juneau Ice Cream Parlors Ice Oream, Soft Drinks, Candy | COFFEE SHOP ¢ Percy Reynolds, Manager l "RELIABLE TRANSFER | Our trucks go any place any | time. A tank for Diesel Oil ] and a tank for Crude Oil save bwgier trouble. I PHONE 10): NIGHT 148 WHEN IN A HURRY ' Ez CALL COLE FOR OIL! 84 plus or 27 gravity, in any ’ amount . . . QUICK! COLE TRANSFER Phone 3441 or Night 1803 v If It's Paint We Have It! 1 IDEAL PAINT SHOP : | FRED W. WENDT : PHONE 549 FINE Watch and Jewelry Repairing PAUL BLOEDHORN ! at very reasonable rates | FRONT STREETS - DG WL AT PR | L e e T H. S. GRAVES “The Clothing Man” Home of Hart Schaffner and | Marx Clothing $ | GARBAGE HAULED ! Reasonable Monthly Rates E. 0. DAVIS TELEPHONE 212 Phonr V753 1 ‘New York Life INSURANCE KEITH G. WILDES PHONES Office 601—Residence 601-2 Juneau Coffee Shop MRS. T. J. JACOBSON Home Cooked Meals Served from 6:30 am. to 8:30 p.m. :‘. Catering to Dinner Parties JUNFAU-YOUNG | Hardware Company i PAINTS—OIL—GLASS $ | a Shelf and Heavy Hardware Guns and Ammunitien McCAUL MOTOR COMPANY —— 8 WARRACK | Construction Co. Juneau Phone 487| Sl RO AT o Rice & Ahlers Co. HEATING PLUMBING SHEET METAL WORK PHONE 34 If you enjoy indoor sports—- Here's one of the best—TRY BOWLING! BRUNSWICK BOWLING ALLEYS Rheinlander and Alt Heidelberg BEER ON TAP | i | | PAINTS — OILS Builders’ and Shelf HARDWARE ; | Thotas Hardware Co. Today’s News Today—Empire. b |y ye—— | i Franklin Street between 1 Fron. and Second Streets

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