The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, December 7, 1936, Page 8

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. Survey, is the result of alleged vio- JEWELL NAMED TONEW GAME POST,SEATTLE Veteran Alaska Warden Will Be Stationed in South to Check Violations Game Warden Homer Jewell of the Alaska Game ‘Commission is| being transferred to @ new position in Seattle, it was announced today by Frank Dufresne, Executive Of- ficer of the Commission. Jewell| will continue to serve as Alaska | Game Warden but also will be deputy United Swates Game War- den at Seattle and his principal duties will be checking for trans- port out of the Territory and vio- lations that are reported from time to time on boats operating to andv from Alaska to Puget Sound points. Creation of the new post, recom- | mended by the Commission and now approved by the Biological Stan Laurel, film comedian, and for separate maintenance; Laurel lations by small boats plying to} and from the Territory, particularly LAURELS HAVE MARITAL TROUBLES M AY ABAND[]N his wife, Vi inia, brought their marital troubles into the Los Angeles courts. Mrs.’ Laurel (right) sued (left) countered with a plea for a divorce in 2 cross-complaint. Laurel said he earned about $200,000 a year. (Associated Press Photos) R. Willard of the Seal will be act- ing captain. Executive Officer Dufresne is ac- companying the Seal to Petersburg slip into Seattle without apprehen-' for a conference with Game Com- sion. Most of the alleged violations| missioner Earl N. Ohmer, War- are by non-resident seasonal work- den H. E. Sarber and other game ers, the officers report. men in that district. Jewell, who has been on duty AT o e e o8 with the Commission in the Ter- ritory for the last 12 years, expects| COMPLETE woRK ON to catch the North Star at Peters-| TENAKEE PORTAGE burg and go south on her if ac- The Forest Service launch Chu- in the fall of the year. Complaints have been made to the Commis- sion some crews from the boats go out and slaughter large num-| bers of deer and other game and commodations are available. The Commission vessel Seal, which got| in from patrol Saturday, was ex- gach left for Port Frederick to-|Pred Seaborn, widow, and MrS. lup for the winter. pected to get away today for Pet- ersburg to make the connection with the North Star. K. C. Tal- madge, captain of the Seal, also is expecting to go south on the North Star from Petersburg on his day to take the crew which has been working on the portage be- tween Port Frederick and Tenakee work is to be carried on, it was announced by Forest Service of- annual vacation and enjoy the hol- ficials. The work on the portage idays with his family. During his has now been completed, they re~ absence, Chief Engineer Chancy | ported. Brites Brothers On [r[al Today YREKA, Cal, Dec. 7.—The sel- ection of a jury to hear the evi- dence against John and Coke | Brites, charged with killing two peace officers and a vacationer, w7 started today before a crowd- !ed courtroom of spectaiors, which Iincluded Mrs. Brites and also Mrs. | John Seabord, mother of one of the men killed. Mrs. Martin Lange, | widow of Deputy Sheriff Lange, Inlet to Hoonah where other trail|also a victim of the shooting of Bonnie Bell, |1ast August 30, was also in the | courtroom Lode and placer location notices for sale at The Empire office. . Salmon Seeks Stabilized Markets Industry advertises to induce women to pay fair prices for Alaska product . .« Means more employment, more money spent in Territory ODAY United dtates women are worth Of 1 reading in their magazines how nutritious Alaska salmon is. Pictures in full color show them delicious new ways to serve it. Salmon’s marvelous 1. United “sea flavor,” which comes because the fish are canned while fresh from the sea, is promoted throughout this widespread campaign. One purpose for which the In- ‘What dustry advertises is this: If dmerica understands how nutritious, and how delightful Canned Salmon is, American bousewives will pay a fair price for it at their stores, In competition with cheese, mear, ! umber and piling every year in Alaska. It buys vast amounts of other supplies also. And a better price for salmon in States leads up to better employment, more purchases and more money income—either directly orindirectly—to every Alaskafamily. Canned Salmon advertising will accomplish for Alaska Canned Salmon advertising to U. S. women is paid for emtirely by the Canned Salmon Indus- try. Its purposes include the following : ‘other kinds of fish canned oufide’ . 2. mitgesk to mabiike Aericn’s demand the Territory, Canned Salmon can Ss e weotimer B el 1o Aluike thus win its share of the market ’3 It will, if successful, help make it possible > 7 A s * for the industry to continue its support off without ruinously cutting its prices. the Terrisoril government tax pay- . . . The Canned Salmon Industry in 19! A fair retail price for Canned Salmon s ylimp ey sk b puneg bbuir ey . . . 1 paid 77% of all taxes collected by the Terri- in America is very important to torial government. Alaska people. You can help by serv- 4, It will i tent Iy Ay e i ing Canned Salmon in your own Tareitiye / k 5. It will guard the future of the Industry — bome, protect the future of the thousands of Alaska . m Industry employs more peo- i itpaidover $900,000 in taxes people who derive income directly and indi- “reetly from the eannine of Alssks salman. Canned Salmon - Industry |is that wolves are stampeding the| § |balance of the herd, estimated <FIRST | 30,000 | Chief Asks Car Owners to Move Autos Off Streets ief of Police Roy Hoffman is- ued warning today to all Juneau ' DEER ROUNDUP NEAR BAHRDW notorists not to use the streets for arages. Cars are being left out n the streets for days at a time,| he Chief said, and it hinders the| work, especially the work| learing the streets of snow. If cwners do not remove their| chines to garages, the city w1]liv 0 so and a charge of towing will| be placed against the owner, he| | said {Natives Losing Interest as Wolves Stampede 30, 000 of Big Herd ; POINT BARROW, Alaska : | 7—Report from the round | about 10,000 reindeer now cou D e SHRINE DANGE SUCCESS | With the opening of | ping season December 1, the na-| |tives are losing interest in the {roundup which makes it doubtful| whether it will be completed. The the trap- |roundup is carried on each a1l to|[nitial Party of Winter| |determine the increase in the Qe herds, and for slaughter. | oenes Attracts Large | Game Warden Grenold Col 3 Crowd who is here studying the wolf s i | uation, said he believed the an All who attended the Shrine cient whalebone method of exter ance in the Scottish Rite Temple miniating the wolves is the most|Saturday night pronounced it a effective revealed thus far. The|huge success. natives bend a piece of whalcbone First of the popular Shrine in- and freeze it in tallow as bait for|yitational dances of this season, the wolves. After it is eaten, the|the party Saturday night was well whalebone straightens out and|attended. pierces the animal's stoma Rand's Orchestra furnished the excellenit music. | During the intermission at mid- night, and sandwiches were e coffee ’ | served. | J. Wilfred Leivers is chairman of ( the Shrine dance committee which causing death. | has charge of the winter social \ events. Serving on the committee |with him are Walter P. Scott, | ,Homer Nordling and Simpson Mac- SEATTLE, Dec. 7.—Heine Ber-/Kinnon. ‘gcr's Discoverer and Kasilof have The next Shrine dance, it was arrived here and gone to moorings announced Saturday night, will be at Ballard where they will be tied December 26, the day after Christ- mas, instead of December 19, as it had previously been scheduled. ,ee — LAST RITES FOR MRS. LOTT HELD WEDNESDAY Wil- | The Discoverer brought ten pas- |sengers including Mrs. Berger, Jim guide, and Mrs. Waddell; and Mrs. wife of the Deputy U. 8. Marshal at Kenai. | CRIPPLED CHILDREN | SENT TO SEATTLE BY | TERR.; TREATMENT | Two crippled children have been sent to Seattle for treatment by the ‘Territorial Department of Health. The two are John Katal- Funoral services for Mrs. 'liam Lott, fatally injured in the recent slide, will be held on Wed-| nesday morning at 9 o'clock in the Catholic Church. A sister, | IMrs. Jack Coughlin, of Stewart, B. C, survives her. The Rev. W. G. Le Vasseur will conduct the service and interment will be in the Catholic plot in Ever- nikoff and Nina Knagin, of Kod-'green Cemetery. iak, selected as the most urgent e Tt cases from a ls of cr India’s contribution in cash to- children who are i s the World War amounted to ment g $733,000,000, ‘according to a The Territorial Department of statement by Secretary of Defense Health must limit the number of Tottenham at Simia, roll was 62,000. India's death care of fund was cases it can take its budget. This within made available to the Territory by the Territorial Legislature and the |p& a4 e lF‘edm'a] Government, through the Social Security Act, and it is hoped |that by more active participation of the Territory this fund will be increased to take care of more (children this year, said Dr. W. W. Council, Territorial Commissioner ‘mday, LR S ) \REPORT EXPECTED SOON ON EXPENSES OF SLIDE CLEARING Chairman H. L. Faulkner, of Mayor Goldstein's relief commit- ! tee, said today that early this week the Committee would arrange to | meet the local representatives of |the Red Cross and a joint state- ment relative to the receipts and | expenditures of both agencies would Ibe issued. el S | Top-Notch Homemaker | | LLANO, Tex—Youngest home- | maker among 29,000 Resettlement Administration families in Texas was 12-year-old Marguerite Keng. ‘ D. P. Trent, District R.A. Super- Ivisor, said the girl canned 345 con- |tainers of fruits and vegetables ‘a.nd 75 containers of jellies and relishes while her mother was ill. She also kept house for the family |of three and cared for a flock of | | 200 chickens. Museum Gets Memento SAN FRANCISCO — A four-star epaulet once worn by Admiral ||R | George Dewey was presented the local veterans museum recently by Mrs. Wilmot Williams who, as a girl reporter, “crashed” the Ad- |miral's cabin after the battle of Manila and got an exclusive inter- view. The memento was presented by Dewey, who admired her nerve |in getting through his guard. —————— One of Georgia's rarest botanical | specimens is a big sequoyah, or redwood, from California, which is growing in the city cemetery at ! Milledgeville. Men'’s Dress Oxfords SHOES s 2.95 Work Dress Native Moccasins, Mittens and Gloves BIG VAN'S ' '228 Front St. FOOT OF SNOW . WITH FORECAST [tveim st MORE TONIGHT Clearing Weather Predicted| for Tomorrow with Per- | haps Drop, Temperature | | A total of 128 inches of snow| had fallen in Juneau since 7:05 Saturday night to 1 p. m. today, according to the U. S. Weater an} reau, and continued to fali this al-| ternoon. Meteorologist Howard J.| Thompson said there was about 10} inches on the ground as some had| blown away and melted The temperature stood at 24 de- grees above zero at noon. The lowest last night was 17. Fore-| cast calls for snow tonight, the| weather clearing Tuesday with| moderate to fresh easterly winds. Below freezing temperatures are | predicted to continue with perdaps| a slight drop in the mercury as clearing weather comes. , Traffic was slowed up by the heavy snowfall, streets and roads| being piled high in many places.| A drag was put on the Glacier! Highway by the Bureau of Public Roads and Fred Campen got his| home-made plow into operation be- | tween his home on Auk Lake and the highway., The big B. P. R. snow plow can not be operated due to delay in getting parts as a| result of the maritime strike, of- ficials reported. Chains were the order on most | vehicles to negotiate the hilis. — ., — Registration | for Pensions Is Extended WASHINGTON, ec. 7. — Wlth“ registration of twenty-six mxlliun‘x workers for Federal pension ac- counts falling short, the Govern-| ment decided to extend the dead-| line for applications until mid- night, Tuesday, December 15. Schilling pepper Special! Tonight! at CITY CLUB ' BEER PARLOR IN Chinese and American Dishes SERVED AT THE CITY CAFE Connected with City Club Beer Parlor WE INVITE YOU TO DANCE AND DINE TONIGHT AT THE NEWLY REMODELED CITY CLUB HAROLD KNOX ® One of the best Piano Players ever in the Territory of Alaska, with the NATIVE BROTHERHOOD MELODY BOYS e BOOTH SERVICE FOR PARTIES @ BEST DANCE FLOOR ‘pv. and after the party was over he was in the Ketchikan bastile. Mahoney said he will be returned here to serve his time. It is pos- |sible, he said, that other counts |may be placed against the offen- | der. LEGION MEETS TONIGHT The regular weckly meeting o. the Alford John Bradford Post,| American Legion, will be held in the Dugout tonight. Report on the building repair program is an- ticipated and other matters of in- terest are 'scheduled. —.,— Empire classifieds pay. Apparently Likes Alaska Even If Tom Ryan, who is under su pended sentence here of 18 months n the Federal jail on two counts| of illegal use of firearms, is back n the toils of the law at Ketchi- kan. Ryan was shipped out on the last southbound trip of the North- land, his sentence being suspend- ed on condition he leave the Ter- ritory. At Ketchikan, Ryan left the boat, according to report to| U. S. Marshal William T. Mahon- « Watches in all values from chil- drens at $2.50 to choice Hamiltons at $75.00. We have some special values on last year’s models. i 1 ] If your gift is silver, the years justify your selec- tion. See our presenta- tion before you buy any gift. at the Piano TOWN

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