The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, October 14, 1936, Page 8

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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, WEDNESDAY, OCT. 14, 1936. e —— §.Q |in the water north of the Govern- ju N E A u MA N s‘mpnt dock. The discovery was made ¢ (by L. W. Botheil, a sailor of the Mystery of Disappearance of Sam Sanness Solved with Discovery Today The body of Sam Sanness, Juneau last carpenter who disappeared August 15, was found today floating {Tallapoosa. The body was badly decomposed and positive identity | was not made until U. S. Deputy | Marshals found in one of the pock- ets of the dead man’s clothing a| made out to him on last! | August 8. Sanness dropped completely from sight on the night of last August 15 after helping a neighbor do some carpenter work on his house. Search at that time revealed, he had gone home, but no clue extended far-| ther than that. It was thought| that he might have been working | on his boat at the lower City Float and fallen overboard. | No evidence of foul play has thus | CLOTHES ARE CLEANED The L5 Way 1 Each garment carefully inspected for spots, stains, perspiration marks, ete. All knitted garments and stretchy crepes are carefully measured. 2 Each garment thorough- ly cleaned in fresh, clean, crystal clear sol- vent in the new and most modern fully auto- matic prosperity enclos- ed dry cleaning unit. 3 Each garment thorough- ly deodorized — leaving no dust-catching film. 4 Missing buttons sewed on and small repairs made without any ex- tra cost. 5 All garments whenever possible finished on the new “Prosperity” form press with dry steam. 6 Absolutely no shrink- age. 7 All hangers are provid- ed with a special guard holding the trousers from slipping and be- coming wrinkled. 8§ 4 A prompt Ifld ;:ourteous pick sup andl‘dglivery serviee, ¢ £ U THE [ TRIANGLE CLEANERS HOW YOUR far been revealed, itw as reported S DAIRY HEADS ARRIVE HERE ON PRINGESS T Shipment of Cows Coming to Juneau on Oduna Leaving Tonight | L. H. Smith, director of the |newly consolidated Juneau Dairies, {Inc., returned to Juneau aboard the J‘steamer Princess Louise after a |business trip to Seattle. While in the south, Mr. Smith purchased |equipment for the new central |creamery plant now being erected | here. | Accompanying Mr. Smith on the Princess Louise was J. A. Hall, who will be connected with the Juneau Dairies’ central plant. Mr. Hall was formerly with the Mutual |Creameries of Seattle for 22 years, rand is regarded in the industry as a very valuable and well ex- |perienced man. | As another outcome of Mr. | Smith’s trip to the States, twelve {head of new dairy cattle will soon arrive in Juneau. The cattle, most- ly Guernseys and Holsteins, are being shipped from Seattle tonight on the freighter Oduna. Mr. Smith says that getting the cattle ship- iped here was perhaps the major | problem that occupied his time | while in Seattle, as shipping ac- commodations were very hard to| arrange, the steamers being all! well loaded. | Game Warden Has His Big Moment ,Wi(ll Alaska Bear Warden David Wood of the Alaska |Game Commission has been grad- (uated from that great fraternity of “What I would do if I met a bear.” He is now a member of “What I Did When I Met a Bear.” inity of the E. H. Kaser fox farm on the Loop Road. He was walk- ing through the woods intent on away from him he saw a bear. The {time, and “probably was just as startled as I was,” the Warden re- ported. The big black bear reared up on his haunches, and, just as Wood was about to ‘“rare” out of there, the bear had a similar idea and scampered. The warden was unarmed at the time. There was some supposition today that the animal is the same one which has been stealing the Kaser ox feed for the past several months, and sometimes has to be shooed away with a stick. e | AL WEATHERS TAKING OUT HUNTING PARTY Capt. Al Weathers, owner of the with a hunting party, under char- ter, to Everett Nowell, Elroy Nin- | nis, Russ Hermann and “Doc” Holl- mann, for a four-day trip, putting |in to various favorite hunting spots in Southeast Alaska. Warden Wood was out on beaver | censes. patrol work yesterday in the vic- | generally throughout the city. | duty when suddenly about six feetvarous card gambling games and animal saw Wood about the same | M. S. Deutz, is leaving tonight | | surface. (Associated Press Photo) | Alfred M. Fraser, New York Tep- 1} 99 resentative of the international fur }flrm of C. M. Lampson and Com- pany of London and New York, will leave tonight on a tour of What Action, If Any, Will | southeast Alaska aboard the Roed- Py 5 da, with Capt. James V. Davis. Be Taken in Seizure |“ir rraser e | Mr. Fraser flew here from Skag- Not Yet Determined way yesterday morning, following What action, if any, |a trip into Whitehorse. will be! The large fur dealers whom Mr. taken against operators machines in Juneau had not been of slot Fraser represents use many Alas- kan furs, and today Mr. Fraser N id that marked improvement in determined by officials today, it|S? ; was reported. U, §. Marshal Will-|the quality of pen-raised Alaskan iam T. Mahoney, who conducted-"“‘:’Vl;1 e t;k;nhplace'1 3 raids on eight places here yester-| e eaked his 'OPHIESS (O day and confiscated as many slot|'N® help experimental fur-farm machines, was to turn his evidence |Stations had on commercial fur, over to District Attorney William |MT- Fraser sald that in many A. Holzhelmer today and that of- Places they had proved valuable ficial said he had not yet gone aids to fur farmers, the value into the matter thoroughly. | largely dex?endent on the ability of those in charge of the ex- FUR FIRM, IS HERE It was reported the machines = p: were being operated under a pin- Perimental stations. board license issued by the city,! EBTRRE R B ST T 'under its ordinance passed last, Dinko, or Denka, is a negro na- | November, the fee for each license, tion on the banks of the Bahr-el- being $50. One operator, said to!Abiad in East Sudan. have had the concession on the s machines from a Seattle syndicate, |was reported at the City Hall to have taken out five pin-board li- The latter are operated The slot machines, it was stated, ! actually come under the old anti- gambling ordinance which prohibits mentions “other gambling devices.” It was said at the City Hall today that the /Police Department had Jjust been ordered to make an in- vestigation to see if the slot ma- | |chines paid money, and officers were going out to do so yesterday ! when they discovered the Marshal's ' office had been ahead of them | and seized the machines. i “I've issued plenty of warnings| about this business before,” de- | clared Marshal Mahoney today., “The next time we'll do more than | just take machines.” —_———— (HUNTING PARTY | . BACK FROM ROCKY | 1 PASS COUNTRY; | After a 10-day hunting trip in| Southeast Alaska, a group of prom- | inent Juneau men returned on Lhe) gasboat Pal, owned by Louis Frary, | |last evening, reporting a fine trip and some good hunting. In the Ten miners were killed in the shaft of a mine at Mullan, Idaho, when the cable of the elevator in which they were riding snapped and plunged them 900 feet to the bottem. This picture shows fel- *rernaseiranve or HAIR PULLED, .‘ | The Deutz which Weather had {party were Dr. Robert Simpson, Ed| f|built in Seattle this spring and |Jones, Judge George F. Alexander, | {with which he has been trolling |R. L. Bernard, Tom McCaul and during the summer, is 46 feet in |[Curtis Shattuck. {length and is powered with a| The hunters visited Tenakee In-i |Deutz diesel engine built in the |let, Warm Springs Bay, Hamilton | |Deutz plant in Seattle. |and Big John’s bays in the Rocky | —-—o——— Pass region and Gambier Bay.| THREE SPEAKERS AT _ 7 12 o 1 outing. Judge *James wmufimm Ww. C.| Luella Robinson, Scottsboro, Ala., Arnold, ‘atterney from’ Ketchikan,|negress, gave birth to three sets of {and C, D. Beale, Manager of the|triplets in eight years. [ Capitpl and Coliseum ‘Theatres, will| ~ N 2 be speakers: tomotroW at the reg- ular weekly meeting of the Chamber | of Commerce. Both Judge Wicker- {4 » sham and Mr. Beale have just re-| turned from trips Outside, and Mr.| c l ln Arnold came back this week from| /the First City. l | TOASTED |Pennsylvania Town Has 2 Model Homes i ALLENTOWN, Pa,, Oct. 14.—Two| |model homes are under construc- | |tion here. Earl Kester is building 1n house in cooperation with a na- |tional woman's magazine's program and a General Electric home, fi- nanced with an insured mortgage, | is also being erected. ‘\ ——-e— It is estimated that the average} ljman shaves twenty square miles of face during a life time Ten Miners Killed in 900-F oot Elevator Fall low workers, some of them relatives, crowded around the ore trains which brought®the bodies to the GIRLS' RALLY Rival Political Factions at Smith College Get Into Action NORTHAMPTON, Mass.,, Oct. 14. —Covered with bruises, several Smith College girls are today nurs- ing their injuries as the result of a clash last night between rival po- litical groups. Hair pulling and nail scratching resulted before a rally for Repub- |lican state candidates held on the campus. — ., AMBULANCE CALL Eino Johnson was taken to St. Ann’s Hospital at 2:30 o'clock this afternoon by ambulance. He is a medical patient. - Alabama’s Legislature is compos- ed of 141 member 5 in the Senate and 106 in the House of Represen- tatives. FATHERS, SONS’ - NIGHT AT ELKS THIS EVENING Get-together Is Announced by Antlered Tribe— Eats 'neverything It is going to be a big night at | the Elks for it is Fathers and Sons’ night. This means, according to Nor-|{] man Banfield, who is the head of | the committee in charge of the affair, that Elks are asked to take their sons, or sons of other Elks‘ to the event tonight. |2 The regular lodge session will be held and during its progress a com- mittee will see that the sons are entertained and following the lodge ' session the big get-together will take place. There will be games for the younger sons and bowling, etc., for the older ones. Refreshments—certainly, that is DESOLATE LANDFALL FROM STORM always the custom of the Elks— reach them with eats. The sons are those from 11 years up. This picture shows Armand Gicquel, so-yeir-old fisherman, and the dory in which he and Axel Olson, another member of the San Fran. | cisco cod-fishing schooner Louise, drifted d battled Bering sea storms for three weeks before making this desolate landfall on Akutan Island. Olson died from the exposure, but Gicquel survived and found shelter. Quartermaster H. J. Bourg of the coast guard cutter Chelan, which brought Gicquel to Seattle, made this picture. (Associated Press GERALDINE BEZ DIES |Pret IN SEATTLE HOSPITAL | AFTER SHORT ILLNESS, C.D.A, cumplgte o len of} e bl & T 0 g an | 72 t | on, Announce Plans October 5 of Geraldine Marie Bez, 11-year-old daughter of Mr. and| Mrs. Nick Bez, wellknown in Ju- . . * Meeting of Catholic Daugh- ters at Parish Hall Starts Busy Winter Program neau. { According ot the Seattle Times of October 6, Geraldine: died at' the Maynard Hospital after a short illness. Her father is president of the Peril Straits Packing Com-! pany. -Both Mr. and Mrs. Bez haye many friends in Juneau. Geraldine, with her mother, visited at the| Governor's House for a short time Members of the Court of the Little two years ago. Though only ll,‘Flower. No. 1243, of the Catholic years old Geraldine was an ac-|Daughters of America, met last complished pianist who frequently night in the Parish Hall, adopted appeared on programs in Seattle a constitution and by-laws and made and Tacoma. | plans for winter activities. Besides her parents, a brother,| A meeting of the Study Club was John Bez, a student at St. Mar- announced for the evening of Oc- tin'’s College, Lacey, survives. | tober 20, at the home of Mrs. Helen e ————— 1 Brown, of Thane. All interested in M. A. B. FROM WHITEWATER the Study Club are invited to at- Pilot Alex Holden, who flew pas-|tend and may call Mrs. Walter G. sengers to the Whitewater mine in Hellan regarding transportation to| the Marine Airways Bellanca yes-fThanc. Mrs. John Wenzel is chair- terday afternoon, returned to Ju-!man of the Study Club committee neau at 5 o'clock last evening. Hol- and other members are Mrs. Helen den made no flights today. McAlister, Mrs. Mary Isobel Good- ———--——— mean and Mrs. Frances H. Smith. ' Lode and placer location notices' A hostess committee appointed in- for sale at The Empire office. cludes Mrs. Doris Keaton, chairman, vacation tomorrow. and Mrs. Mary Edith Giovanetti |and Rosalia Thibodeau. . | A social meeting was scheduled for October 27 in the Parish Hall (and prospective members will be |guests of honor. Mrs. Mary Reit- |en was appointed chairman of the committee in charge of the meet- ing and Mrs. Helen Brown, Mrs. Mary Troy and Mrs. Mary Doogan her associates. All members are urged to be present, and .invited guests to be at the Parish Hall at 8:30. Mrs. Katherine Shaw was appoint- ed chairman of the campaign com- mittee to have charge of the mem- 'bership drive which will be made during the month of November. Mrs. Gertrude Naylor and Mrs. R. P. Nelson are other members of the campaign committee. | There was a large attendance at the meeting last night' which was presided over by Mrs. Hellan, grand < | regent. WARDEN ARRIVES HERE ,Warden J. Steele Culbertson of the U. S. Bureau of Fisheries has arrived here from Petersburg and will be in charge of the local office of the Bureau during the winter. Mrs. Dorothy Baker who has been in Juneau, is starting an extended .. theyre milder ! ; @ more pleasing taste and aroma ——— -

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