The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, June 10, 1937, Page 8

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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, THURSDAY, JUNE 10, 1937. MARIE N|[}H[]|_s mer Burnml to Iio‘u tvh iri fi'/reck bf Bus ori Calif;)rnia Highway 3 E 7 "~ % " TOP HUNTRESS, ARMY BARRACKS Capt. Nichols and Family| Bag Three Out of 32 | Brownies on Hunt brownies out of 32| A. R. Nichols, from Army post at Haines, his daughter, and three soldier come to the precipitate i on, on weeks Admiralt Scoring three sight the U wife aides end whicl ar v Marie is the 16-year-old daughter first big game hunt in our ht down the biggest be that measured ¢ unstretched,” de hols. Of our 1 bagged one and W. Farrington er. His was 2 measuring about a my daughter’s.” modest about hi: par Ser- foot Capt own bear also, than was hol One Shot Nichols and the Se brownies at Chaik Nichols bagged hers “She drilled it thre the heart with one shot,” Capt ed, “It ran about into the brush be pping. It was her first st rear, but she is a marksman! has captured several honors in pnst post shooting competi- is y and now has proved m as a live target, Mrs. Nichols ioesn’t shoot, she just went along to pilot the boat.” Trouble Arises while Miss Pybus Bay 100 Eight the flames with little effect. and the driver lcst their liv miles north of Redding, California, early on the merning cf June 4. y The bus was enrcute from Sacramento (o Pertland, O s, the bodies burned bey cnd iden ticn, when a passenger s from a nearby CCC eamn raced cn, at the time. Tk bus cracked up unaccountably 48 tc the scene and threw water on he victims included a weman and C.of C. Touriss | From Los Anggles Visitiyuneau Party Is Due Back Aboard Prince Robert from Skag- way Tomorrow Morning Expressing more enthusiasm for Juneaus warm weather than for Los Angeless conspicious place in the sun, 158 Southern Califor- aboard the Prince Robert and sailed for Skagway aboard the vessel late last evening. Eighth annual tour to be spon- sored by the Los Angeles Chamber of Commerce, the excursion brought scores of prominent Q;liformans to visit in the Capital City. Mem- [bers of the group spent their hours !to be entertained as a group by the The Prince Robert returns here; at 8 a. m. tomorrow morning and will remain in port until 3 p. m. offering additional opportunity for the travelers to visit in Juneau. Prominent Tourists Among prominent members of the Chamber of Gommerce party are: Byron Hanna, President, Los Angeles Chamber of Commerce,' attorney; Charles P. Bayer, Field Secretary, Los Angeles Chamber of Commerce, in charge of the tour; George Beekman, Vice-President of the People’s Finance and Thrift; Thomas W. Bell, district sales man- ager, Jones and Laughlin Steel Cor- poration; Henry G. Bodkin, attor-, ney; J. A. Bush, Industrial Lumber Company; Robert L. Burns, Presi- nians arrived in Juneau yesterday| in Juneau visiting the glacier and | traveling about town, prefering w: make individual parties rather than! Juneau Chamber of - Commerce. | YOLO GOING TO WEST ON SEAL FOR PICTURES Joseph Yolo, wild life photograph- er who has been taking pictures in (the Freshwater Bay and adjacent |regions, is coming into Juneau in time to catch the Game Commission vessel Seal when it leaves from {here Saturday night for the West- ward. Yolo is going to take pictures in the Interfor until about the mld-‘t dle of July and then will return to| the Southeast for further “shots” in this section, Also aboard the Seal when she leaves here will be Clarence Rhode, Assistant Executive Officer, who is making a swipg patrol - which proby TP An e syt Tans 5 ably will carry him as far as Nome, and Warden Harold Gallwas, who is returning to his station at Seward. R Exclude Russia In s@ish Talk LONDON, June 10.—Soviet Rus- sia is definitely excluded from the four power Conservations as to how safety of warships off the Spanish ’ .|Coast can be secured and also a “hands off policy” Spanish civil -war. S Today’s News Today—Empire. regarding the | * * * Ok Ok % % %k % % % % % % % % O A Also in cans trade-marked ok ok ok ok ok ok ok ok ok ok kk kkok ok ok n - always GOOD! | cne year old child. The others were men passengers. \ | & el yie 2 - LA dent of the Los Angeles City Coun-| % \cil; T, J. Fleming, transmission en-: gineer, Associated Telephone Com-| * Ipany; Burt A. Heinly, President of' * |the High Way communities Cor-| poration; Miss Mary Morrison, Field ,Service Department of the Los An-| EXPERT IN TERRITORY IS TO STUDY DISEASES AMONG ANIMALS, BIRD3 Capt. Nichols, his wife and daugh- ter, Sergeant Farrington and Cor- Is Sanders and McGilbra mal Ross, i[made. But an end came to the was 'cruise before intended. Stripped re- - = — | duction gears disabled the craft 4 yesterday in Hawk Inlet, and Capt Nichols brought the broken parts The unmatched flavor of Miller Beer is not the result of chance. The same can be said of its clear brilliance. Its tingling, invigorating good- ness. Its inevitable vitality. Miller knows how up the party aboard the Bett te pora on which the hunting into Juneau last evening by Marine plane, for repairs. Repairs will be impossible without sending for parts, however, so the group is to desert the Betty Ross at Hawk Inlet. Capt. Nichols this morning char- tered J. J. Meherin’s yacht Triton, and this noon put out with Capt. Hayes for Hawk Inlet to pick up his family and the others on the broken-down vessel. They will then return to Haines on the Triton. Stopping here last night at the Gastineau Hotel, Capt. Nichols told of the mistake of the brownie who mistook their boat for a rock. “Bear, Captain, Bear” “We were lying near the head of Hawk Inlet the other night when {in the early morning hours, Ser- ant Farrington was awakened by a scratching. He looked out the door, but ducked right back in and yelled, ‘Bear, Captain, Bear. He had seen the head and forepaws of a yearling brownie han over the rail. Half asleep, I grabb imy movie camera and took shots of the bear as he, scared aw by the racket we made, swam once around the boat, then made his way back to shore. I don’t know yet just how good the shots will be, because of the conditions under which they were filmed. We did however get about fifty feet of pictures of a black bear that we ran up and down the beach a couple of times at one spot. We put into .nearly every cove and inlet on Admiralty Island, except at |the Seymour Canal end, on our |three weeks' trip,” Capt. Nichols ANNUAL Douglas Fire Department DANCE Saturday June 12 at the Douglas Natatorium ip MUSIC by Rands’ Orchestra Admission-—Gentlemen, $1.00 ,Todd, Klawock, Craig and Hoonah. g L B S NGNTE 2 PITAL NOTES Don*t iegaiisfie;l! Unless It’s Perfect! If your home or business refrigeration isn't working 1009« perfectly, if it is too noisy, or doesn’t freeze properly phone our New Refrigeration Service Department Ask for John Houk, the Refrigeration Man PHONE 34 | Rice & Ahlers Compan Percy Lockwood, who was brought by plane from Admiralty Cove yesterday ,underwent a ma- Jor operation at St. Ann's Hospital yesterday afternoon and is report- ed to be in a favorable condition. Chester Johnson, a surgical pa- tient, s dismissed from St. Ann's Hospital today. for medical care. pital. FULLER’S PAINT THE PAINT THAT LASTS New homes as well as old ones, need protection from the weather and only Good Paint can give all year satisfaction. When you specity FULLER'S PURE PREPARED house paint you can rest assured you are getting the BEST. It spreads easier, covers better and lasts longer. FULLER'S DURABLE BOAT—the standard of the Fishing Fleet for years. Only a boat owner knows why service is demand- ed of boat paint and that is why 90% of the fishermen use DURABLE BOAT. For Walls and Woodwork in your home use FULLERGLO. . JUNEAU-YOUNG HARDWARE CO. ST T A | | A nine pound son was born to Mrs, rangemetns to leave Fairbanks ont |George Lewis, of Sitka at 6:10 p. m, 2D extensive fur buying trip, using a, |yesterday at the Government Hos- chartered plane, with two pilots. | Goldstein will visit trading; ‘the Yukon, BY TORNADOES One Woman Killed When Farm Home Flattened— Sixteen Others Injured OKLAHOMA CITY, Okla., June 10.—Four tornadoes roared over scattered sections of the state late yesterday and during the night, kill- ing Mrs. Fannie Thornton, 68, a Aboard the steamer Aleutian geles Chamber of Commerce. Other Officials traveling to the Westward is Dr. C. B. Philip of the U. S. Publici Health Service at Hamilton, Mont., who is going to the Kenai to make a study of insect borne diseases,’ paying especial attend to ticks. He' will examine various animals and, birds to determine how and if dis-| eases are caried mang them making inroads which may possibly President of the Los Angeles Brew-, % % % % % %k % % * * X ®* ¥ ¥ ¥ * ¥ % spread to humans. Dr. Philips reported that in Mon- D. W. Pontius, Chaitman of the Board of the Pacific Electric Rail-| way Company; H. D. Priest, man-k ager of the Pacific Electric Build-| ings; George W. Heitman, Bureau! of Engineering, Los Angeles City Hall; A. H. Van Cott, Deputy Dis-| trict Attorney; John G. Zoblein, ing Company; E. A .Talbot, Vice- President, McKeeson and Robbins, Wwidow, when the gale flattened Rer tany moose have been stricken with Inc.; E. C. Hoffman, District Mar- farm home near Mustang. Sixteen other pers are report- ed to have been injured by the fer-! rific force of the tornadoes. The damage runs into Lnoi of dollars in counties in the cen- ter of the state. e e — BOB ELLIS HERE 1 OVERNIGHT WITH = | UNION ORGANIZERS, Making a circuit of Southeastl Alaska cann points with three union officia organizers for the Alaska Purse Seiners Union, Pilot Beb Ellis brought his red Waco! seaplane into Juneau last evening! 1 hopped again this morning, at| 7 o'clock. i The three union heads making| the flight are: T. M. Dunlap, Charles Moore, and John A. Sever- scn. On the flight north yesterday, Ellis touched at Hydaburg, Kake, On the flight back to his Ketchi- kan headquarters today, Ellis was to land at Petersburg and Wran- gell. Ellis landed his plane here at the Marine Airways float, and his pas- sengers and he stayed last night at the Gastineau Hotel. GOLDSTEIN LEAVING, ON FUR BUYING TRIP; IS TO USE AIRPLANES Char Goldstein, of Charles James Goenett was admitied last Goldstein, Inc., Furriers, will leave| night to the Government Hosuital Juneau Saturday on a PAA Electra for Fairbanks. The same day he has made ar- e a disease, believed to be carried by ticks, which drives them into the water where they swim around un- | til they are drowned. What the disease is or what causes it has not yet been determined, he said, but studies are being made to that end. There is not believed to be any wide spread of disease among nimals in the north, he explained, ut study is being made to guard against sudh outbreaks as have occurred in the States. SAVE YOUR TICKETS They are good for the whole month! MRS. GEORGE SHAW 39795 | Was the number for Last Night Mr. posts and trappers up and down then into the Kisko- kwim country and probably to Point Barrow. Although Mr. Goldstein will travel thousands of miles, flying from 12 to 18 hours a day, he anticipates the trip will take only a week or ten days. ELKS’ FLAG DAY SERVICE 8 P. M. MONDAY IN HALL Flag Day services by the Juneau Lodge of Elks, No. 420, will be held at 8 o'clock Monday evening in the Elks’ Hall, it was announced today by Exalted Ruler Norman C. Ban- field. The usual ceremony for the occasion will be presented. FIRST BRUSH FIRE OF SEASON IS REPORTED First brush fire of the season was reported to the U. S. Forest Service today near Fish Creek on Douglas Island. It is reported to have been extinguished in a short time MORE CHANCES— one each week in June for ® Set of Silver- ware ® Set of Dishes ® Set of Glasses [ ] BUTLER MAURO DRUG CO. 159 S. Franklin ager of the Motor pany. i Schilling Baking Powder biscuits Discount Com- | CHARTER THE CRUISER |18 VIDA | BUSINESS OR PLEASURE | PHONE S 4 to make fine beer of * * * * * * W. J. LAKE Seattle, That's why it has been the first choice of the connoisseur for more than 80 years. Miller Brewing Company, Milwaukee, Wisconsin. FOR SALE AT YOUR FAVORITE DEALER Alaska Distributor unvarying excellence. & CO0., INC. ‘Wash. P D b R R R R S R N R b SR O R e S ST S S IR T BRSO 2R R 2t 2B 2 We are grateful for sunny our eyes suffer from glare. protection against glare. tion ground in SOFT-LITE ! l | Clean—Speedy—Comfortable | MARINE AIRWAYS FLOAT PROTECT YOUR EYES AGAINST GLARE weather, But sometimes If this beautiful weather makes your eyes uncomfortable, have them fitted with SOFT-LITE lenses, which will give you safe If you are already wearing glasses, your prescrip- lenses will give you maxi- mum comfort without sacrificing elear vision We are equipped to give scientific eye examinations. Dr. Rae Lillian Carlson OPTOMETRIST uno Street Phone 134 S All types*of in COTTONS and SILKS They are Sample 247 8. Franklin : $7.50t081 650 JUST ARRIVED! ¥ COOL SUMMERY FROCKS REASONABLY PRICED. . .. . ... UNUSUALLY SMART Shop Phone 133

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