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» TEACHERS' ARK, STEAMER YUKON HEADING SOUTH marms” and * k:hml f‘nm Westward and In- over-running the !‘\4* southbound steamer Yu- C. A. Glasscock, arrived | 5 o'clock this morn=~ aboard 53 more several more she continued way 5 school rt at After ding cchool teachers here, southward morning y-five passengers came to 1 the Yukon from the bound throu her were 105 pas- of the through from Seward, sev- aldez, from Cordova, four were transfers from the amer Curacao at Cordova, and about 5 s were on 27 12 were roundtrippers. Coming to Juneau were: From 1. G. Anderson, Barbara Frank hel, William C. Dunlop, Gust Fro- Oscar R. Hart, H. W. Looff, fann, Henry Mead, W. L. A. F. Sadler, C. A. Shon- M. J. Sullivan, Ruby Sum- ers, Bill Sweeney, Arvo M. Wah- d Vieno Wahto. From Valdez to Juneau was Har- and coming here John Brand- R. Lawton Cordova were: Dr. J. B. Loftus, Dr. and Mrs R. W. Maurer, Fio Mehers, and T. Sando Ihe 53 passengers sailing south from here aboard the Yukon in- i Ketchikan Mrs. J. Charles Kimbrough, A. Van O. S. Shallerer. Townse F. Deurnen. For rg—Lawrence Mulver, 1r J. Mulver, Breta Ask, Dor- Bertholl, Ruby tad, Rod- Elstad, Roborta Elstad, B £ ng for le were: Hallie Rice, Helen Parrott, Jim Wilcox, Marjorie Tilletson, Dalma Hansen, n Rohwer, Margaret McFadden, Tilden, Marion Edwards, Mrs. E. Goetz, Lucille and y Goetz, Mrs. A. 8now, G. Rut- B Kolasa, Helen Ellen Sorri, Mr. and Mrs. . P. C. Archer, Rena Kolasa. Be: « Waugh, en L. Grimes, S. E. Robbins, M Wiilam J. Ende:slee, Dick Sut- ton, A. Jeldness, Bresll, L. Dav- George Sharkf, Mrs. M. J. and son John, Martin Ped- J. Turner. - - ESTEBETH BACK FROM FINE TRIP TO ISLAND POINTS Bringing five pas.engers o Ju- ncau, the Davis Transportation Company motership Estebeth, Capt. J. V. Davi 7:30 o’'clock Sunday morning after 2 smooth voyage to Sitka and way ports. She brought in as cargo, 400 tons of gold concentrates from the Hirst-Chichagof gold mine at Kim- shan Cove. Passengers booked for Juneau with Purser Dave Ramsay were: From Tenakee—Louls Stich, Mrs. Charles Wilcox crson Hull, Leo E. Young. From Hoonah, Liiwe Wasyluk: from Funter, Mrs. Clarles Ottesen. » S(}/!lllllng 4 anilla " deicage flavo" % wsfié Juneau THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, MONDAY, MAY 24, 1937. Miss Baldwin, Mr. | Larsson Married Saturday Evening gown of white lace, made in Princess style, with which she carried a bridal bouquet of lilies of the valley and sweet peas, Miss | Dolly Baldwin became the bride of | I Mr. George Larsson at an evening ceremony, Saturday. The service was performed at the home of the bride’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. Grant Baldwin, by Rev. In a of the family and close friends were in attendance. Mrs. Jack Gould, the matron of honor, was dressed in a print gown with a background of| oyster white, and carried a bouquet | of snap dragons, contrasting with | the shades of flowers carried by the bride. In addition to the flowers in her bouquet, the bride wore a wreath | of baby rose buds in her hair, and her only piece of jewelry was an heirloom cameo given her by the bridegroom Mrs. Baldwin was dressed in gown of mauve lace for her daugh- ter’s wedding. Mrs. H. M. Hollman | sang “Oh, Promise Me,” and Miss Helen Torkelson played the piano accompaniment and the wedding march. | Following the service, a reception | was held assembling close to 100! friends of the couple. Mr. and Mrs. Larsson are making their home in the Snow White apartments. Mr. Larsson, son of Mr. Olans Larsson, is employed by the Snow White Laundry. - LEGIONNAIRES ASKED | TO CLEAN UP CEMETER In order to get the Legion plot in shapz before Memorial Day mem- bers of Alford John Bradford Post, American Legion, are planning a working ty tonight and all mem- bers are asked by Commander Wil-| liam O. Johinscn to be at the Dug-| out prcmptly at 8 o'clock so the can be completed this even- Pluns are going forward for the| Memorial Day exercises which will be held at 10 o'clock next Sunday morning in the Elks' Hall. Fol- lowing the ceremony at the hall, the Legion, in customs manner, will| parade to the waterfront where| brief ceremonies will be held in hon-| er of the sailor dead and thence the column will move to the cemetery for the final observances. | - GOVERNOR’S NEPHEW SMITH TROY, COMING NORTH ON ALEUTIAN Smith Troy, erm-umn,, Attorney | of Tbhurston County, Washmgmn{ his’ wife and her moiher, Mrs. Mor- | an, whose husband is sales mana- | ger for Libby, McNeill and Libby, arrived back here ab wil arrive in Juneau on the Aleu-|turned here today by plane. tion. Mr. Troy is a son of the late! Preston Troy of Olympia and a nep- hew of Gov. John W. Troy. They will be guests of Governor Troy while in the city. { - | | B. P. W. C. DINNER IS TO BE HEI.D TONIGHT Members of the Business and Pro- fessional Women'’s Club will meet this evening at 6:30 o'clock for their installation dinner at Percy’s Cafe. Miss Caroline Todd is to be in- stalled as president at the occasion, succeeding Mrs. Frances Paul. Mrs. Estelle Hebert is to be the toast- mistress, and presented on the pro- gram will be Mrs. L. P. Dawes, Mrs, Ruth Allen, Mrs. Ray G. Day, and Mrs. Lola Mae Alexander. e Attorney General James S. Truitt, who has been confined to the hos pital for several days, is reported | much improved today and expecLs‘ | to be able to return to his home by[ | Thursday of this week. That’s g00 GUT ST, STEEL to REELS John | A. Glasse, for which only members | 'the Channel mill being erected near Tulsequah GEE! But He’s a We have TACKLE for the HOOK and Sinkers An excellent variety of TROUT TACKLE BAMBOO RODS — Priced from $3.00 to $15.00. 3 | DOUGLAS | NEWS | ARRIVALS FROM WESTWARD Among the arrivals on the Yu- kon from the Westward were Vieno | and Arvo Wahto, and William Cash- en, University of Alaska students, who will spend the summer with | their parents in Douglas, and Miss |Ruby Summers, former Douglas | teacher, who has been teaching at Palmer, Alaska. Frank Cashel, Douglas School graduate and also a student at the U. of A, was also a passen- |ger on the Yukon. Cashel will visit |with his parents in Juneau e e LEAVE ON YUKON Mrs. A. E. Goetz and two children, Lucille and Billy, left this morning on the Yukon for Vancouver, Wash- |ington, where they will spend the summer with Mrs. Goetz' parents. Also a southbound passenger on the Yukon was Martin Pedersen, superintendent of the Douglas Pub- lic School. Mr. Pedersen is enroute | Mrs. to East Stanwood, Washington. i —_——-—- I CYCLE CLUB RACE | Members of the Alaska Gastineau Motorcycle Club sponsored a hill- climping race yesterday afternoon; on St. Ann’s Avenue. | Those competing were Howard York, Vince Anderson, Bery Whit-| field, and Albert Fleek; with York jand Anderson capturing first and| second 1luces respectively. \ e TO VISIT IN DOUGLAS | Miss Margaret Pimperton and\ Miss Lee Thoma, former Douglas | teachers, will Be southbound passen- which is due here next Monday, May 31. | The young ladies are expected to| spend some days in Douglas before continuing to Seattle. They are en- route from Palmer, Alaska, where they have been teaching the past!| school term. - eee— TO EXCURSION | Mrs. Ralph Wilcoxon and two| children who have been visiting on for the past three| weeks, left yesterday afternoon for Excursion Inlet where they will join Mr. Wilcoxon. Mrs. Wilcoxon is the former Em- ma Uberti. e —— AUXILIARY MEETING Contrary to the notices sent out by the secretary, the meeting of the | Ladies Auxiliary to the F.O.E. will| be held this evening at the Labor Union Hall instead of at the home LET ! lof Mrs. Mamie Jensen. S e iNJOY PICNIC Children of the Catholic Sunday Echool classes enjoyed a picnic yes- |terday afternoon at the Treadwell | beach. D FROM ANNEX CBEEK Gust Wahto, who has been at An- nex Creek for the past four days re- Mr. Wahto will spend a few days at home before returning to Annex | Creek where the construction of a! dam is in progress. — e TO LEAVE Miss Florence Ryan, teacher in 'the Douglas high school, will leave early tomorrow morning on the| | Northwestern for her home in Seat- Itle. JEANNE IN PORT FOR LUMBER LOAD Making her regular weekly trlp4 into Juneau from Tulsequah, the ! Taku Trading Company river boat Jeanne, Capt. Al Kaska, arrived here this morning and is to leave again tomorrow morning with a barge load of lumber and other| building materials for the new ore by the Polaris-Taku Mine. Lode and placer location notices | 'for sale at The Empire Office. Dandy! right, he is and it took d tackle to land him. Big Ones. LINE and LEADER RIPPING RODS, High | | Brewis, DR. R. W. MAURER IS NAMED ASSISTANT AT | |GOVERNMENT HOSPITAL | | fie e | Announcement was made today of {the appointment of Dr. R. W. Mau- |rer as assistant to Dr. Edward F. * |Vollert at the I pital. Dr. Maurer, who arrived from {Point Barrow, aboard the Yukon,| |is stopping at the Gastineau Hotel. e, NO-HOST PARTY AT | PERCY’S - HELD ON | SATURDAY EVENING A no-hosi inrormal party was heid at Percy’s Cafe, Saturday evening, |assembling 17 couples, many of whom were teachers leaving for the south today for the summer vaca- tion. Present for the occasion were Dr. and Mrs. W. M. Whitehead, Mr. and Mrs. Monte Grisham, Mr. and Mrs. | Louis Delebecque, Mr. and Mrs. Ro- | bert Brown, Mr. and Mrs. Howard Simmons, Mr. and Mrs. Harold Gall- was, Mr. and Mrs. Wes Overby, Mr. and Mrs, J. B. Burford, Miss Gret- chen DeLeo, Miss Velma Bloom, Venetia Hahn, Miss Pauline | Monroe, Miss Marion Foster, Mrs. | Helen Smith Cass, Miss Gladys Miss Helen Parrott, Miss Bobbie Barton, Mr. Alex Dunham, Mr. James McNaughton, Mr. Nor- |man Banfield, Mr. Everett Erick-| |son, Mr. Ed Richey, Mr. Fred Welch, | Mr. Wilbur Wester, Mr. Fred Ax- iford, and Mr. John Keyser. i Louis Stich, Partner |Of “Two-Step Jake” in Town, 1st Time, 10 Years Louie Such, partner of “Two-Step Jake” Hirsh on their holdings at the head of Tenakee Inlet, arrived in ror wran- TO BE ON HAD TONIGHT cers trom Seward on the Aleudian juneau on the Estebeth, his first |Visit here in 10 years. “First time I've been to town since 1927 so I guess I'll stay around a while,” he commented. “Juneau looks like a different town. Surely has grown in the last 10 years” Stich reports that Jake spent part of the winter in the Pioneers’ Home at Sitka, but now is back at the Hirsh-Stich property taking care of things while his partner Louie is away. Henry Harmon " Lands Big Salmon ' At Auk Bay _ Henry Harmon, high school teacher, is reported to have cap- | | tured fishing honors over the week end. The instructor caught a couple | better than 40 pounds Saturday | in Auk Bay and yesterday brought | in a 63-pound salmon. Report was that an “expert”| showed Harmon how to bait his ' hook. The te~cher caught fish. The “expert” gathering more ex- perience. Government Hos- | | Toronto, Don Skuse Sails to Wed Niece of Charles Carter l Lillian Hawson on | June 12 in Toronto | Don Skuse left for the south onj board the Yukon this morning en- route to Toronto, Canada, where |he is to married on June 12 to Miss, Lillian Coraline Hawson, niece of | |Charles W. Carter. Mr. Skuse met Miss Hawson {thraugh a letter of introduction |given him by Mr. Carter last year, land stopped in Toronto to see her and her family while in the East on a business trip in 1936. Formal announcement of their |engagement was made on May 17 in where Miss Hawson has been a nurse at the Toronto Gen-| eral Hospital for the past five years.; The ceremony will be a church wed-| |ding in Toronto, following which| !Mr. and Mrs. Skuse will leave for| the west. They will stdp in Vancouver, Wash. where he is to attend the grand, lodge of the Independent Order orw 10dd Fellows, of which he is a con-| vention representative. Later theyw will travel down the Redwood High- (way to Old Mexico on their wed- ding trip. They are sailinz from | Vancouver on July 10, and will make their home in Juneau. Although Mr. Skuse was able to remain in Toronto only a week last year when he met Miss Hawson, he has been acquainted with her longer than her uncle, Mr. Carter, who has never seen her. He and Mrs. Carter are locking forward to their arrival in Juneau this sum- mer. Mr. Skuse, who was born in Ju- neau and who has made his home here for many years, is an assist- ant at the Charles W. Carter Mor- tuary. it SRl g BERNICE WAUGH LEAVES Miss Bernice Waugh is a passen- ger south aboard the Yukon for Se- atile where she will spend the sum- |mer visiting her grandmother, Mrs. C. R. Leeper. She will return to Juneau in time for school next Sep- tember. | - B e MARSHAL TO HAINES { U. 8. Marshal William T. Ma- honey sent to Haines on the North- | |western to return to the Federal ijail here Johnny Jackson, Indian, sentenced to four months and a fine of $100 for assault and battery. - | - Jackie Burford, son of “Mr. and Mrs. tonsilectomy at the Juneau Medical 'and Surgical Clinic today. | DO YOU SEE THE AUTOMATIC DI NEW KNOW? RAY DIESEL and FUEL OIL BURNERS are leaders throughout the WOR 1937 FULL ESEL BURNER FOR HOMES AT Rice & Ahlers Company DIESE 1600 to 6000 Wa For informati P, O. Box 422 ELECTRIC OPERATING COST ONE-SIXTH THAT OF GASOLINE PLANTS. write R. M. LAUGHLIN PLANTS tts—D.C. or A.C. on and prices Juneau RODS—Priced from $2.50 $35.00. as low as 75¢. LEFT WATCHES MY LATE BROTHER FRED MATTSON FOR REPAIR WITH 'Will Be Marrled to Miss| J. B. Burford, underwent a @ }American Cash Grocery —AND— [he Home Grocery Offer These Savings to the Juneau Public AMERICAN| TUESDAY | HoME CASH | WEDNESDAY | cROCERY GROCERY | THURSDAY | . FRONT STREET | Pay Cash—Pay Less AMERICAN Phone 152 | wpAT CO. Free Delivery Phone 38 IF IT SHOULD BE IN A MARKET YOU WILL FIND IT HERE! Pt S i s s S e FLOUR BAKING POWDER $2.10 8 TAMARAC by PILLSBURY ROYAL i TOMATOES SALMON, Pink 3 ‘e 58° 3 ir 43¢ LARGE TINS—SOLID PACK HAPPY HOME SHRIMP l WET or DRY PA(?c CELERY, Fallcy c PLUMS 10 28 Lux FLAKES GOLD SHIELD—SILEX or PERCOLATOR 25°¢ TOMATO JUICE 3 for zsc PEACHES 2 ()¢ e , ¥ CROSSE & BLACKWELL LARGE TIN—FERNBROOK IN LIGHT SYRUP S0 ups’ Pllflli ASPARAGUS 3 for 2312 2 Pflmlds 25‘ TOMATO or VEGETABLE = TISSUE, Bathroom 3germmi | 3025 JELLO FRESH CREAMERY 3 for 20¢ MATCHES CATSUP 9c carton 20° WILLOUGHBY AVENUE Phone 146 Free Delivery 'SEARCH LIGHT CORNED BEEF LINES from 15¢ to $7.50. LEATHER-BOUND BASKETS— Priced from $4.50 to $12.00. Spinners, Flies, Artificial Lures EVERYTHING THE FISHER- MAN NEEDS TO CATCH FISH Young Hdwe. Co. Please call for within a few days at New Ideal Curio Shop. ALL OF HIS WATCH STOCK FOR SALE HALF PRICE C. MATTSSON, Administrator 3 for 68c NO. 1 TINS~ MIRACLE WHIP Sc quart HAPPY HOME CARROTS 3 bunches 22:: FRESH CALIFORNIA