The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, June 7, 1937, Page 2

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wg <emp, Roeven o THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, MONDAY, JUNE, 7, 1937, SALMON TRIPS BROUGHT HERE Sunday Is B;J>y Day on Ju- neau Fish Market—3 Halibuters Today TECoals Into the Fashion Parade $14.50 $1850 $2250 Swaggers Jiggers Reefers Considerable halibut and salmon business was done on the Juneau market over the week-end, with four halibut boats selling Sunday and three today, while seven sal- mon boats were in Halibuters selling today were B-175, Capt. John Hadland, 3,000 pounk and 31-B-477, Capt. M Lopp. 500 pounds, both selling to the ka Coast Fisheries at 7 and 5 cents; and the Vivian, Capt. Charles Larson, with 9,500 pounds, selling to the Sebastian-Stuart Fish Com- pany at 7 and 5.05 cents per pound. All halibut sold " here yesterday 31- ‘The ACF took the 12,000 pounds off the Margaret T, Capt. Peter Hildre, and 13,500 pounds off the Louhelen, Capt. Knute Hildre, while Sebas- tian-Stuart, purchg:d the 4,000 pounds off the Helen H., Capt. Frank Paul, and the Marlyn Fish Com- pany bid in tae 6,500 pounds brought the Ida 11, Capt. John Son- derland. F. Engstrqm, Sebastian-Stuart ived 6,000 pounds of sal- in by the materials HOMESPUN FLEECE BASKETWEAVE » smart Herbert Savikke, 600 pounds. & Shipments of fish south from here ew Snowy Just unpacked from York these lovely this morning were: 84 boxes of fresh-iced salmon by the ACF and 15 boxes of fresh-iced kings by E. E Engstrom wvhite coats! Every style is a fashion success, already. New horter lengths new col- —ee ( lar detail new stitching all make these coats Fire Underwrite Official Here On Visit fo Alask “Alaska fills all the anticipations ES ceitingly N different from last 3 season (] B.M. Belirenids Co., Inc. Juneau's Leading Department Store e R T T Mys. G. Jensen Falls in Well; Suffers Shock and Chills A well had been in the yard of | the Gudman Jensen home in th June 7—Ed Seatter Tract for so long that the killed and family had almost forgotten about | ted the |it until Saturday afternoon when resulting from Mrs. Jensen, while working in her| » Chemical garden, fell through the boards cov- this after- ering the well i declaration of Joseph T. Thomas, district secretary for the Board of Fire Underwriters of the Pacific, who is now in Juneau as a break in his long desired trip to this sec- tion. y occupation entails consid- ible correspondence with fire in- urance companies in Alaska, arous- ing in me a desire to see the coun- |try I had heard so often described,” | e continued. Mr. Thomas arrived in Juneau ast week, and plans to sail back tiana, mer Bananof nex{ Friday. While here he intends to make a brief trip to Sitka and return. “My trip is mainly one of busi- ness,” he siated, “but while I am 3 |here T am meeting all the fire in- Mrs. Jensen clung to the top of fsyrance writers in the section that the well, her head just out of wa-|1 can, Before coming north the ter for about an hour before neigh- cnly one I had met was Curtis Shat- bors heard her calls for help and|tuck, whom I saw in my home of- she was rescued by Larry McKech- |fice at San Franeisco last fall.” Mr. nie and Mrs. J .M. Chase. | Thomas is stopping here at the Gas- JACOBS BABY TODAY o Today she Is feeling better after | lineau Hotel, at 1 baby her experience and nearly recovered | The from the shock and chill she suf-| Ann's fered adn to Srospital v urie $a carbide explosion in Corporation plant h noon. 1 i - - FUNERAL HELD FO Funeral services were held o'cloek this afternoon for the daughter of Mrs. John Jacobs ild died yesterday at St Hospital Services were held at the Charle W. Carter Mortuary, with interment in the Evergreen Ceme- -s o VACATION BIBLE : OPENS HERE TODAY of | The Bethel Vaeation Bible ‘School the National Federation of Federal |[opened this morning with an en- Employees will be held at Percy Irollment of 60. The school will con- Cafe Wednesday noon, according to tmue for two weeks with sessions every morning except Saturday, from 9 to 12 4 summer, There will be interesting lessons after attending sehool in the States, |irom the books of the Bible, also n- Danicl W. Mahoney, son of - U. S. missionary and object talks and a top- Marshal William T. Mahoney, ar- closing program on Friday, June Gas- rived here aboard the steamer|18 atl 7:45 p. m. All children from Northwestern. 4 to 18 years are invited. .- FEDERAL PLOYEES MEET The regular monthly meetin lowin, - IRVINE IS HERE Coming from Tenakee aboard the orship Estebeth, which arrived lock Sunday morn United States Tenakee, is now few days at the Hotel announcement today. - Com north for the missioner at Army’; Flying Battleships Return Home Three of the United States A iny*s four 15-ton Boeing 4.motored bombers are shown flying in formation over Washington when the, returne om a ten-hour non-stop flight that took them over the metropolitan cen- ters of the east. The flyi s forticsses covered 1,855 miles, the first formation flight they have taken part in, BOTH HALIBUT, | brought 7.10 and 5.10 cents a pound. | 'Buster Anderson L] {Fairbanks Man Expects to i Thomas, 900 pounds; and Ace, Capt. ! i %) | ing Position teel Strike Riot F ive; Die in l | Five steel strike demonstrators were Killed or injured fataliy and at least 105 other persons suffered head and bedy bruises in a short-lived clash between 200 policemen and more than 1,000 demonstrators in a prairie near the South Chicago plant of Repu This pie taken during the b t of the fighting, shows some of the thousand men and ) club-swinging while others sprawl on the ground nt. flecing before poii su nder, Tear as clubs, were used in th TRANSFERRED gas and guns, as well HOSPITAL NOTES lce Pool Winner, Enroute South pital this morning WASHINGTON, Jur Army MeNeil 1 G Jox und €1 |orders ivmp ude N oper | Ralph Jurtz morning Ann's H Plattsburg Barra Barracks, Alaska, - o SUPERINTENDENT OF | ANCHORAGE SCHOOLS Bob Huntoon, who recen derwent a | Ann's Hospital terday major oper dismis Hospital. tion Return to Bus Driv- | ed from I to Seattle on the steamer Yukon | |who despite scores of proposals Juneau abo | from | dreds of l!m] financial investments, has madc | | Arriving here aboard the PAA mMorning he | Electra yesterday and staying over- !night at the Gastineau Hot which T had held for it,” was the E buyer, r mon off the Sadie, Capt. S. A. Ste- vens yesterday, and 12,000 pounds of kings off the Fern, Capt. John Lowell. Salmon brought in to the Alaska Coast Fisheries included: Elfin I, Capt. E. O. Swanson, 24,000 pounds:l Alms, Capt. A. Bartness, 1100 pounds; Owl, Capt. George Harju, 200 pounds; Nakat, Capt. Frank ,new suggestions. | “I am going to have a good time outh aboard the southbound stea-' T | He is winner of the Nenana| HERE FOR MEETING ice pool fortune, but even the re-| ceipt of $56,000 is not to change| the occupation of Buster Anderson, Mrs. June St. Ann surgical care, Gibson W 5 to Hospital ye W. K. Keller, Superintendent of chool at Anchorage, arrived in the Yukon today to the se: n of the erritorial Text Commission, meeting from June 10 to 19. He a!is stopping at the Gatsineau Hotel Shertly after h arrival this was eted by one of his former pupils, Buster Anderson | winner of the Nenena ice pool, who Yukon | is now enroute to the States for a to | brief vacati Harry Williams w medical care at the Hospital today. dmitted hun never- beautiful blondes and opportunities for be present for 300! ‘up his mind to continue as | Fairbanks bus driver. Amy James at the Gove pital. DED ON WAY TO SEWARD Enroute to her city ard, where she is chant, Maud V through Juneau the steamer Anderson left aboard the for ‘the south this morning spend several weeks vacationing be- fore returning to Fairbanks. Tall, dark and handsome heroes go, Anderson has been de- luged with fan mail since winning " the ice pool last month, but pre- fers his present position to all the! o — Dorothy Stevens was dismissed |from the Government Hospital day following medical care. Cooper Saturday Baranof Se to- “Shore” - It’s Funny in the States,” he said this morn- ing, taking a taxi down to the boat, “but I won't be gone long, and I don't expect to do anything elaborate.” He is not sure where he will go after arriving in Seattle, but is leaving most of his de- | cisions up to chance. { m D for Gay Times on Beach . OCEAN SPEEDWAY dod There is a 4 possibility of a trip abroad, he| says, but the plans are indefinite. | Skeptical—Never Lucky Anderson has become justly skep- | tical of the law of averages, ever {since winning both the Chena and 'Nenana ice pools last month. “I| didn't believe it when they told me I had won the Nenana pool,” he said. “It didn’t seem possible that after winning once, I could win again, twice in succession—espec- jally when I have never been lucky, even at poker.” While in the south, Anderson is planning to buy a new bus for (Bill Root, manager of the bus company in which Anderson is a driver, He and Root shared the winning ticket in the Chena pool,| and it is on the proceeds of this winning that he is making l.hc' trip to the States. The $56,000 {from the Nenana iee pool will be sent to Fairbanks in a few weeks, where, until he makes a change| in plans, the entire amount will| remain in safekeeping in the bank.| MRS. DEWEY BAKER | LUNCHEON HOSTESS| Mrs. Dewey Baker was hostess to a large circle of friends at a luncheon | |Saturday at Percy’s. The affair hcnored women of the re Fisheries staff, who have ret for the summer, and other friends| who have returned to the City or| !flre on visits here. Mis. Baker's guests included: Mrs. Ralph Mize, Miss Es her Sell, Mrs. Irving Ail, Mrs. Darold Gallwas, Mrs. Samuel Moyer, Miss {Bess E. O'Neill, Mrs. Georgia Gal- lagher, Mrs. Baird French, Miss | Jean Gallagher, Mrs. Vance Bluck-i well, Mrs. Harry Sperling, Mrs. Carl Hahn, Miss Magnhild Oygard, |Mrs. Henrietta Eiott, Mrs. Arn-| old Karo, Mrs. James Orme, Mrs. H. M. Hollmann, Mrs. Tom Moyer, | Mrs. Arthur Judson, Mrs. W. L. Grisham, Mrs. Leonard Holmquist, Mrs. Mildred Cashen, Mrs. L. C. Pratt, Miss Gretchen De Leo, Mrs. Sally Shafer, Mrs. Roger Steven- ;son, Mrs. Stan Grummett, Mrs, W.| M. Whitethead, Mrs. E. J. Blake, Mrs. Kenyon MacLean. | N - TOM OSBO GOES SOUTH Tom Osbo, one of Seward's busi- | ness men, who operates an electric | shop in the Resurrection Bay me-| tropolis, is a southbound )J.nq»ngel'} on the Yukon to the States. He ex-| pects to return in about three weeks. DICE always have been popu- guhr with summer visifors, on ; . porches or in backrooms. But 7 this year debbie beach-comb- i ers are taking their cubes with = & | them out in the open and, if necessary, into the ocean. Oth- ers race rabbits along the soft sand, as in the picture above; or, like the isolationist below, | kick and bend in splendid aban- I s admitted terday for for Government A baby son, weigning nine pound was born at 1:45 a. m. today to Mrs. | e HAGRIISY PAY | Visitine Seot a prominent mer- passed | 1board Summer Darlings Don't Have to Get Soaked | | With Mrs. W. Storms, for Hoonah, * | yeste ¢ |yacht Westward had received an eye / |cut while firing a pistol. Pilot Mc- | Mrs. * |to their yacht. Walter Bacon made © |of salt Lake City, a recent law| ¢ | school U. 8. DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE, WEATHKR BUREAD THE WEATHER Forecast for Juneau and vicinity, beginning at 4 pam. today. Fair tonight and Tuesday; gentle variable winds, LOCAL DATA sarom ter Telap. Humidity Wind Veloclty Weather 30,04 kL 33 SW 4 Clear ' 30.06 40 8 Calm 0 Clear 30.04 n 31 S 3 Clear CABLE AND RADIO REPOXTS YESTERDAY TODAY Highest 4p.m. Lowestda.m. 4am. Precip. 4am. temp. temp. temp. temy. veloeity 24hrs. Weather 46 44 B 4 08 Clear 52 43 4 40 40 49 38 28 50 42 60 Time $ p.u. yest'y n. {oc 2 moon today Station Barrov Nome Bethel Fairbanks Dawson St. Paul Dutch Harbor Kodiak Cordov Junecau Sitka Ketchikan Prince Rupert Edmonton ESeattle Portland |8an Francisco |New York Washington Cloudy Clear Rain Pt. Cldy Pt. Cldy Cloud; Rain Cloudy Cloudy Clear CR N RN WP 2 4 60 8 80 62 2 90 86 WEATHER CONDITION AT 8§ A. M. TODAY Seattle (airport), cloudy, temperature, 53 Blaine, partly cloudy, 50; Ketchikan, clear, 6 gell, clear, 64; Petersburg, clear, 64; Sitka, cle ; Soapstone Point, Radioville, clear, 58; Juneau, clear, 60; Skagway, clear, 56; pe St. Elias, clear, 48; Cordov: partly cloudy, 48; Anchorage, cloudy, 50; Portage, cloudy, 40; Fairbanks, partly cloudy, 60; Nenana, cloudy, 60; Hot Springs, cloudy, 60; Tanana, cloudy, 54; Ruby, partly Nulato, cloudy, 54; Flak, cloudy, 47; Ohogamute, raini (3 - Sunrise, 2:57 a.m.; sunset, 9:01 p.m, WEATHER SYNOPSIS Paromelric pr ure was low this morning over northern Alaska and from the Aleutian Islands south over the mid-Pacific while the barometer was moderately high from the Interior of Alaska eastward and southeastward over Canada, coutheastern Alaska and the Pacific Coast states. With light showers over the lower Kuskokwim River this morning and light to moderate rain from Atka to Kodiak, the rest of the Territory has experienced generally fair weather during the last twenty four hours. Temperatures over southeastérn Alaska yes- |terday reached well above seventy degrees. Juneau recorded a maxi- mum temperature of 74 degrees, the warmest so far this year MARINE PLANE Clear Clear Cloudy Cloudy Clear Clear Clear Clear Victoria, clear, 50; clear, 60; Wran- Juneau, June 8. Escalator “De-Kilts” | LONDON, June 7.—More than ~ OUT OF 8ITX Pilot Holden Carries 25 Over Mt. Edgecumbe— McLean on Emergency 29,000,000 people rede London’s un- derground railways during corona- tion week—and the best story is of the jaunty Highlander who lost his kilt. Highlander rode on an es- calator while sitting on one of the !steps. There was a loud ripping necise. The kilt went up while the Scot continued down. It was all very embarrasing until someone loaned the Seot a coat, inasmuch as crowds before and be- hind made it impossible to retrieve the kilt. Twenty-five pleasure hoppers, carried on five flights over Mt. Edgecumbe yesterday afternoon, was the record for Pilot Alex Holden and the Marine Airways Bellanca seaplane while at Sitka. Sitka resi dents couldn’t resist the glear skies and bright sunshine. PRSI O S CUNNINGHAM THROUGH Passing through here enroute to Seward from Seattle aboard the steamer Baranof was J. T. Cunnix ham, superintendent of the Alaska Railroad, who has been south for several weeks for his health. CANNERYMEN THROUGH Cannery officials passing through heré to Westward points aboard the steamer Baranof from Seattle werc: Capt. Swenson, of Libby, McNeiil and Libby, bound for Yakutat; Bert O'Brien, of the San Juan Fishing and Packing Company, bound for Port San Juan; and Amos G. Gren- land, bound for Thumb Bay. AR R The first soil survey of an Okla- homa county was finished in 1906 Will Evans of Goodwater, Ala., owns a pig with eight feet. L. GIVES OLYMPIA ITS RARE FLAVOR? * “It's the Water” A rare and special type of natural brew- and R. D. McKenzie, for Port Al- therp, Pilot Holden took off from here yesterday forenoon. Picking up H. L. Stavin at Hoonah Pilot Hol- den carried him to Sitka by way of Chichagof and Kimshan Cove, then came the series of pleasure hops that kept the pilot and plane bus until their return here last eve- ning at 8:45 o'clock with A. W. Guizler from Sitka. ‘The company’s other pilot, Chet |McLean, and the Fairchild 71 sea- plane, had their time in the air yes- also. Pilot McLean took off ay morning on a flight to' ary Joyce's Taku Lodge, returning with B. B. Neiding. Then, in the afternoon, he answered an emer- geney ecall from Todd. Mrs. W. J. Peters, of Chicago, member of the hunting and fishing |party aboard the Campbell-Church flew to Todd to return with Peters, accompanied by her husband, for treatment, Her wound dressed and pronounced not seri- | ous by Dr. L. P. Dawes, Mr. and Mrs. Peters re-chartered Pilot Mc- |Lean and the Fairchild to return Lean |the second flight to Tedd as pas- senger. i Lloyd Jarman accompanied Pilot. Holden as flight mechanic on the | bops yesterday, while Don Shoe- | maker was in the same capacity for ing water, combined with skill and fine | Pilot McLean. | ingredients, has made certain European | RS | beers world famous for quality . . . ; ikewise, i i terranean Among the arrivals in Juneau | Beer internationally | from the south aboard the slpamcrl recognized for fine | Northwestern was J. L. McCarrey, | BB flavor, clean taste, con- stant purity and re- freshing goodness. LYMP BEER “lts the Water™ graduate. While enroute | |north Mr. McCarrey assayed passing a law examination, with Purser | Paul Coe in the role of examiner. | While here he is to be further ex- |amained by H. L. Faulkner. R SO R “Alaska” by Lester D. Henderson. TAILOR MADE SUIT from $55 ALL HAND WORK SHOP FROM OUR NEW PATTERNS BEFORE JULY 4! SAM THE TAILOR PHONE 642 SAM SHABALDAK

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