The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, August 6, 1937, Page 2

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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, FRIDAY, AUGUST 6, 1937. KA S ) Already this vogue is ading like wild lire here, and we prove our foshion-alertness by present- ing HIGGH HATS to you, now. PRICED FiOM $d,00 to 87 50 HIGH SAN SEBASTIAN TIRED OF STRAWS? It's not too early to think of a Fall Hat! A magic in their dramatic de- | ELECTRA BOUND | 'HERE TODAY WITH 8 ABOARD Immediately after arriving there | from Nome, one of the PAA Elec- tra transports, piloted by Jerry| Jones and Bill Knox, took off from (Fairbanks this afterneon at 2:20 lo'clock and headed for the Juneau Charlotte Docks ALEUTIANBRINGS|)? Today with 203 27 TO JUNEAU ON Special Cruisers GURRENTVUYAGE Bearing 203 round-trip pu&scmzms‘ on a special cruise tour touching | Southeast Alaska ports, the Prin- Bringing 27 p ns to Juneau of whom 14 are from the States and 13 from Southeast Alaska, the | cess Charlotte, Captain William @. Palmer and Purser Arthur H. Bird, berthed here today at 1:30 p.m. airport, where the big plane is due|{On its next-to-last voyage to arrive at 7 o'clock this evening. ISU&OH Coming through from Nome toi No passengers were to remain if [Juneau on the plane are: John|the Capital City. s, member of the Territorial| A Texas Tour party, 3 under the nautics Commission; Floyd Me- |direction of Mr. and Mrs. Burral k]llll!)l\. from Tin City; G. B. Ken- |W. Jones of Wichita Falls, Tax., was nedy, C. L. Stevens and M. Wright, the only organized group aboard {who have been covering Alaska by fthe vessel. air with the PAA this past week,| The Charlotte, which brought ap- and Manager Castleton, of the Sun-|proximately 100 tons of freight, is set Creek Gold Dredging Company. |scheduled to sail for Skagway at Coming to Juneau from Fairbanks midnight. She will not return to on the plane are: Mrs. C. I. Paul-|Juneau on this voyage and goes sen, Miss Helen Peterson, and Fred |south from Skagway via Sitka. Higgin, a passenger from Fairbanks A o ehorse, - toyara suneas| RELAPSE CHANGES BIRTHDAY PLANS today is making the regular Thurs- day PAA flight, and will return to Fairbanks on schedule tomorrow. FINDS MOTHER, | | | Plans for the birthday party ih(.noung Herman T. Tripp, who| today is T8 years old, wrrgchanfled {1a askan, suffered a relapse, neces tating rest for a few days. Mr. Tripp, who has been a prominent resident of Juneau for |many years, came to Alaska in TWO SISTERS, {1897. He lives here at the family | jhome with his wife and son, Ches- ter Tripp, and has had his daugh- {Four Are Shot by Rifle at|ter, Mrs. Gladys Austin of Lin- | coln, Cal, as a guest for the past | Home—Note of Youth |montn. Another daughter, Mrs. Eva 1 1 | Johnston, lives in Fairbanks. Explams Shootmgs ; During his stay in the Territory, | he has been a leading mining en- gineer and is prominent in the; PITTSBURGH, Aug. 5. — Frank| ’(-ug,ur today found the this | FOR H T TRIPP)out at sea from Seattle. steamship Aleutian arrived at 1 p. m. for a stay until 10 o'clock to- | night,. | Coming here were: From Seattle ~—Mrs. V. L. Arnold, Ed M. Bren- nan, C. C. Chartrand, W. A. Del- valle, Mrs. Goldie Dodds, Eileen De | Mers, Edith Farrar, J. W. Henrick- |son and wife, Lillian Henrickson, | Emily Pegall, S. A. Ross and wife Andrew Sandegren. From Southeast Alaska — Harry Hooper and wife, A. H. Ziegler, George Bambrick, Mrs. R. B. Brad- ley, P. H. Casey, M. E. Wilcox, Mrs. M. McDonald, W. W. Roff, W. N Beach, J. P. Lovett, Baxter Felch, Lisa Smith. Among the 300 passengers aboard the Aleutian today are eleven who | were carried to the vessel by plane after the steamer was three hours Included in these are George S. Gould, Mr. and Mrs. C. T. Knapp, L. W. Mc- | Cormick, Irene Rosshirt, and C. | D. Whalen, Two tour parties are aboard. The Farmer-Stockman Alaska tour, led “|by Clarence Roberts of Oklahoma, City, Okla., consisting of 116 persons. The other tour, includes nine per- sons, led by Prof. W. C. Fischer |of Whitewater, Wis. {B. D. Stewart Is Grandfather; It’s a Boy There was a wide smile of vir-| tual grin proportions on the l‘a.ce of Mining Commissioner B. D signing that will transform you from the casual Summer girl of today into a glamorous, excit- ing woman of tomerrow! phued bodies of his mother, two| sisters and a brother in the bed-| |room of their home. Homicide detectives said they {found a note signed by Bernard |Gregor, 20, reading, “If there was |some way other than this out of our bullet- | y [ Stewart this morning. The reason {may be found in the fact that the Commissioner had just received a 'DAN LIVIES WILL | radiogram from Anchorage that a ARR]VE TOMOI}ROW son had been born to Mr. and ON MT. MKINLEY s p. B Stewart, Jr, at that | city, the young man to be named Irvings’ Market Shoulder of LAMB for Roasting 2 s'c Ib. Link Sausage for Sunday Breakfast 35: Ib. Frye's Delicious Sliced Bacon 49c Ib. PORK SHQULDER B. M. Behrends Co., Inc. HOBO FLIER IS BOUND NflRTHr Is Paying Way by Giving/ Rides — Enroute from N. Y. to Bombay LOS ANGELES, Cal, Aug. 6. — Major Merrill K. Riddick. who de- scribes himself as an aerial hobo, stopped here enroute to Tlombay, after leaving Cornell, Nc York, | a month ago in his small plane, vith only $2 in his pockeis. When he arrived here he lLac earned in riding passengers. Riddock expects to fly soon ov Bering Strait (o Asia but admitted he must earn enough money be- tween Los Angeles and Seattle to install extra fuel tanks. $08 E—— John Ed Franklin, 46, of Hugo, Okla., is the younget probation of- ficer in the U. S. In addition, he supervises more cases than any other such of - - Try an, Tn plc ad lof a gall bladder JUNEAU'S LEADING DEPARTMENT STORE Dr. Showalter | Dies Suddenly SEATTLE, Aug. 6. — Dr. N. D.| Showalter, 68, former State Super- intendent of Public Instruction,| died suddenly in a hospital here as a result of an attack of the heart. He had been ill three weeks. Dr. Showalter was the only Re-| publican state official to survive the Democratic landslide of four years ago, | Tom Mooney I Seriously Ml SAN RAFAEL, Cal, Aug. 6.—Tom Mooney is seriously ill as the result infection. He is in the prisor lhospital here. Sur- geons belisve hie will recover satis- factorily without an operation. | coast of northern Korea. 130 KILLED N TYPHOON |Eighteen Injured — Prop- erty Damage Reported to Large KEIPWO, Aug. 6.—One hundred and thirty persons were killed and 18 injured in a typhoon along thc{ ‘The prop-; erty damage is said to be large. BASEBALL TODAY The following are scores of early| games played in the two major| leagues this afternoon: National League Boston 6; Chicago 12, first game.! New York 6; Pittsburgh 3. American League Chicago 3; Boston 7. e R - B Tembership in tl The camel's long eyelashes pro- " Try an Emplre aa. iational Geo- |tect his eyes from blown sand and, Mrs. Dan Livie, accompanied by |B. D. Stewart, III. her son and daughter, is return-|{ The Commissioner's son is in ing to Juneau aboard the Mount charge of engineer work for the McKinley, following a visit of four |Alaska Road Commission in Me- and one-half months in Seattle. |Kinley National Park. While in the south Mrs. Livie| Young B. D, III joins a little visited with her mother, Mrs. Anna | sister in the family circle. |clothing sprawled together with|Larson. An employee of the Al-| bullet wounds in their heads and|aska Juneau mine, Mr. Livie isi o LY LT LI bodies. The mother, Mrs. Anna|the son of John Livie of Juneau. | Gregor was crumpled at the foot of | e , (the bed. The Island of Guam it adminis- t vmc s Herman Schutte, a neighbor, said | tered by an American naval gov- he heard shots about 5 a. m. today.| ernor with almost unlimited powers. EAT OUR SPECIAL At one time or other I" ard all these something e |actly like they wished they were dead.” Bernard lay near the bed with a rifle beside him. The sisters, Mar- | |rvian, 13; Betty, 17, lay in night ROAST 26c Ib. Loin Pork Chops 40c Ib. T-Bone or Sirloin Steak Bert’s Cash Grocery YOU CAN DO BETTER AT BERT'S TODAY! and every day. the prices are right, the quality supreme, the service unex- celled, TRY US NOW! Style Shoestring Potatoes Toasted Bun and Coffee All for 504: ORDERS PUT UP TO GO OuT HAM Armour’s Star—Pound ... ¢ | EGGS 9 doz. ¢ 38 A BIG B%WN or WHI’1‘7E3 CARROTS, Fancy, New, Bunch, Each ___ Sc CANTALOUPES, Ripe, Sweet__z for 2 5¢ 45c Ib. STEWING HENS 3 1b. average HALF or WHOLE viely exceeds 1,100,000 graphic 8 sun glare of the desert. gmmuummm'l'mulinir WORLD LEADERS ave MEAT SPRING LEG O | LAMS 3§c Ik, EATERS = ROASTERS | Hence tiie necessity = BROILERS {for the choicest g ZABBITS | meat is an asset to E Prime 23 E Rolied Ribs | Only the g and Rolled Rumps | ALASKA MEAT = | COMPANY % UNFROZEN - ofiers tixde e hoicest Meat = ¥ O PORK = ifg O vEAL | Consistently “ALISKA MEAT co. FOR BETTER MEATS” 5 SPEEDY DELIVERIES TR ”!IIIIIIIIIMHIIIHIIH'lllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII"IIIIII‘IIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIJIIIIIIIIIIQ MEA T —— —— THE STAPLE FOOD OF NATIONS= SUGAR-CURED PICNIC HAM 5(: Ib. Alaska Smoked Salmon Strips are delicious. TRY THEM! Heinz Bulk Pickle Products Cottage Cheese FRESH DAILY SNO-CAP SHORTENING = = = = s =| = £ == = = = = = = £ Is Guaranteed g = = B FRESH NEW PEAS Tender—Sweet - APPLES Gravensteifi Tart—Juicy—Dozen SALAD CAMPBELL’S ¢ | Tomato Juice 3 large tins cusco sno_wnmn' 69c 5138 “SCHILLINGS COFFEES < — Ib. 29c 0nfl_c When better coffee is made Schilling will make it! and m mm'r JARS FINDINGS COMPLETE FRESH STOCK ALL BRANDS PURITAN DUTCH OVEN BEANS Delicious—Tasty—Fancy Cooking Jfll’—-eil‘_'.l.‘_;;;________..;.z.__.g_ T T e e v erwity CORN FLAKES Red and White—Tasty—Delicious—Pack age Five Faster 211 Seward Deliveries Street 50 You don't have to wait for this service. It is ready from 11 a. m. to 10 p. m. If you are home and hungry JUST PHONE 376 and ask about our chicken! [ —ALSO— Remember Qur SOFT ICE CREAM To Take Home! Pint 25¢ Quart 50¢ WE ARE CLOSED SUNDAYS 26c Ib. examination or work in union shops. WE CAN SELL MEAT FOR LESS because— ————————————————————————————————————— ——————————————————————————————————————————————————————————————————— ——————————————————————————————————————————— ——————— ———————————————— ——————————————— —————————————————————————————————————————eeee ettt WE DO NOT EMPLOY A BUTCHER! i TSRS " .

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