The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, September 1, 1937, Page 8

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HOONAH SICK FLURRY FOUND NOT SERIOUS Stomach Ailments Unrelat- ed to Child's _[)mlh. Medicos Find rry of some 20 stomach ail- armed Hoonah resi- was found to be but not serious” by Vollert and James owing an investi- Dr. J. F. Worley, the Bureau of announced today Iments were found unrelated to the death of an Indian child, who had died suddenly the same day. The child had apparent- ly contracted tuberculosis meningi- tis, after erir rom losis summer. This form of n ingitis is no iemic. Dr. Worley said Since all stomach cases were mild Dr. Worley said, it will be difficul trace the underlying causes. though it was believed to have re- sulted from food or water impuri- ties. Dr. Carswell took specimens of water and blood for analysis in the laboratory in Juneau. All cases are showing nice recovery, although most of them were left weak by the mild intestinal affliction. Majority of the cases were Indians, although several were white residents - SAVOLAINEN SOUGHT NOW Where is Yrjo Savolainen? Postmaster Albert Wile has re- crived an inquiry from the Lt. Col- onal A. Layman, of the Men's Social Service, Salvation Army, n Fran- cisco, making an ingu as to the present whereabouts of Savolainen The man's mother in Finland is anxious. He was last heard of in 1918, at which time bis address was the Home Boarding House, Box 185 Juncon (Juneau) He is about 45 years old, born in Nonginkangas Finland, dark hair, and miner. D LABOR DEPT. MAN HERE TO ASSIST NEW COMMISSION R. Justice, representative of the Department of Labor, arrived in Juneau on the steamer Alas last night to assist the Alaska Un- employment Commission in open- ing up employment offices in the Terricory as provided for under the new law. The work will be carried on under the direction of Walter P. Sharpe, Executive Director of the Comm ts yesterday e in pain Ed d F. Carswell fol gation yester Medical Officer India Affairs The stomach for an H +* tubercu- for THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, WEDNESDAY, SEPT. 1, 1937 Former Juneau Residents Announce Birth of Son F. Fellows, first Medical Director the Bureau of Indian Affairs and Mrs. Fellows are an- \wcing the birth of a 6% pound John Hammer Fellows, born 11, in cards received here Mr. and Mrs. Fellows at Wake Forest, N. C. - - ELECTRAFLIE 5TO INTERIOR The PAA Electra left the local air port yesterday at 5:30 p. m. on its northern flight toward Fairbanks with five passengers aboard and Pilots Jerry Jones and Fred Hall for here mn August b; at the cor avin; AN to Ruby Mr. and Mrs uerch, to s delayed pe stear DUDIDN LEGION FUNERAL FOR ANGELO DEMOS SUNDAY AT 2 P. M. were: Mrs. Tom J. Alaska; arl Clif- D. F. Boyer and Fairbanks. The ding the ar- ka Funeral services for Angelo Demos las, who was drowned y will be held at 2 o'clock Sunday afternoon at Carter’s Mor- tuary under the auspices of the Alford John Bradford Post, Amer- ican Légion, of which he was a mem- ber. Burial will be in the Legion plot at Evergreen cemetery. A complete Legion funeral is planned with firing squad and color guard and Legionnaires are urged to report to the Dugout in ample time before the funeral to be out- fitted. Twenty or 30 men are need- ed. - MOOSE TO FETE DIAMOND STARS FRIDAY EVENING Celebrating their second straight Gastineau Channel League baseball pennant, Moose Lodgemen will en- tertain their champion diamond squad, also all other players taking part in the second half of the league !season, both Islanders and E and 11 » officials at a banquet Friday evening at 7 o'clock in the 1.O.O.F. Hall Moose fans will be out in force congratulate their ball squad and to recount old tales of former diamond glories. Invitations have been sent out to the ball players, managers and officials (even ump! vited) and a big atte cipated. to Coffee is harvested in Mexico from October to February. In Cen- tral America two or three pickings are required because of the un- equal maturity of the crop. You Can Have Complete CONFIDENCE ina Prescription Filled By Us REMEMBER—Your HEALTH depends upon the accuracy with which your prescription is com- pounded—Prescriptions filled by HOLLMANN’S are sure to be just what your doctor ordered. No substituting of inferior grades of drugs. Safe, accurate measurements by registered pharmacists. DON'T YOU NEED BRUSHES Prophylatic Hair Brushes . .. 50c to $2.50 Bath Brushes Eveready Shaving Br'ushes'—Spééialfl,. 1.00 McKesson’s Tooth Brushes—Special Hand Brushes i o e e e B R R R R R R R R SCHOOL That Mean SPECIAL OFFER Webster’'s D with each purchase of a bottle of PARKER’S QUINK INK HOLLMANN’S PHARMACY | 201 Seward St. COL, TURNER IS GROUNDED IDESEVERSKY IN CRACK UP Racing Monoplane Wreck- ed at Landing—Major Limps Away, Fire iEngine Trouble of Plane ! May Keep Him Out of | Bendix Trophy Race { | ALBUQUERQUE, N. M., Sept. 1.— | Col. Roscoe Turner is grounded here|exander Deseversky, speed, war and on account of engine trouble on his|stunt flier, head of the company plane and expressed the belief hel!bearing his name, was shaken up |would be forced out of the Bendix(when a racing monoplane was Transcontinental Trophy race|wrecked in landing at Floyd Ben- which stars from Los Angeles on|nett flying field. Friday The Major said he believed Turner is bound there for entry|wheel of his ship locked } lin the air event The Major was able to limp a § RATREFAR S from the wreckage but the plane FIVE K"_LED |N soon caught fire and was badly | [ damaged One Woman Victim Trap- A United States Navy ground crew extinguished the flames ped in Blazing Wreck- . CHICAGO, ill, Sept. 1. — City,| age, Burns to Death Health authorities today faced the ! |largest number of infantile paralysis| | MINCO, Oklahoma, Sept. 1. —{ 8¢ - X Three young women and two men| ... ue reonening of schools f were killed and another young man 619,000 childven, i is near death as the result of a col- lision of their automobile and truck last night NEW YORK, Sept. 1.—Major Al- the! VR A Infantile Paralysi ! Prevents Schools in Chicago Opening & lreached,” said Health officials, but| , i the paro al and public schoo! One woman was trapped i the’ .,oqu16q to reopen next week, will blazing wreckage and burned tofjo€C T Mo TN L ases Te- death &l | ported last month and the previous AT e g S peak was 99. Sixieen deaths have GOVERNOR INVITE loceurred LANTIC CITY s T ‘DINNER GOV. CONFERENCE PARTY FETES | .| JOHN DUNNS TUESDAY of Governors at Atlantic City Sep-' A small group of members of t he tember 14 to 16 has been received 'Eastern Star convened yesterda by Gov. John W. Troy. The con- evening at the Charles' W. Hawkes- ference assembles Governors of the worth home for a dinner party in respective States and Territory and honor of Mr. and Mrs. John Dunn, in connection with the gathering former Juneauites who have been a Constitution Day celebration will|visiting here. * | be held. \ The dinner was in the form of a . AT !farewell for the Dunns, who are NEW MEMBER OF Isailing tomorrow on the North Sea for Ketchikan ALASKA INDIAN e | SERVICE IS HERE SALVOR TO TOW SCOW Miss Christinna Olatson, who nas, DOWN TO KETCHIKAN been with the Bureau of Indian —_— Affairs at Potawatome, Kansas,ar-/ The Salvor, Capt. T. H. Jennings, rived in Juneau on the steamer Al- berthed at Femmer's dock overnight aska and will spend a week in the to tow a skow purchased from'the Juneau office of the Bureau before Warrack Construction Company to proceeding to Nulato where she will Ketchikan for the Ketchikan Sal- succeed Mrs, Golden O. Brady, who vage Company. went south recently. | Capt. Jennings is a well-known - skipper in this vicinity, having pil- PEGUES RETURNS oted the Bellingham, with a large John E. Pegues, Administrator for circus coterie, to Juneau last year. the Federal Housing Administrs Bt R T Moot vtk on. sttisal. sines | 100,000 DREDGE resumed o Juneas st gt on IS IN OPERATION, DEADWOOD CREEK the steamship Alaska. | T AT Now in smooth “.iy order, th _Jean Francois de Rozier made in ;. 510‘0.;::; Od:eézleu‘fl'; lo)rc-n:;w';o‘s 1783 the first balloon ascent. 5 Church and State in France have oot 15 expected to produce its baen sireratid Ditias nr‘_t cleanup next week, says the b * Fairbanks News-Miner. Operated by the Deadwood Min- ing Co. the dredge provides em- ployment for 25 men. An all-steel pontoon type boat, the dredge was manufactured by the Walter W. Johnson Co., San Francisco, and set up on Deadwood creek this summer. It has a bucket capacity of four cubic feet, and is diecel powered. Tony Lindstrom, vice president of the mining company, also is gen- eral manager in charge of opera- tions. Emil Wickstrom is dredge- master. Besides the dredge, the company also operates a North- west dragline on Deadwood. It was put in last year when the company started operations on the creek. Bucket capacity of the machine is one and one quarter cubic yards. Fifteen men are employed on the dragline crew. Andrew Olson is president of the Deadwood Mining Co. In charge of the company’s Fairbanks office are Joe Ramstad and Adolph Ramstad. PIONEER FAIRBANKS NURSE PASSES AWAY Mrs. Theodoer Van Bibber, 72, pioneer nurse of Fairbanks and other interior sections, died recently at Fairbanks as the result of heart| trouble. | She is survived by Mr. Van Bibber who has been for many years :\} guide and trapper in the inierior | country. The Van Bibbers have been residents of Fairbanks ce 1909. Mrs. Van Bibber was a nurse on the staff of St. Joseph’s hospital for 10 years. | ., i MANVILLE GOES WEST i M. Vic Manville, local carpenter contractor, left on the Alaska for Seward on his way to Mount Mc- |Kinley Park where he will be con- |nected with the construction of the’ new hotel there. | ————————— | HEBERT BACK IN TOWN ' { L. F. Hebert, broker, who makes his headquarters in Juneau, arrived ' on the Alaska after calling on thei trade in Southeast Alaska towns. | i ? ° 1.00 .30 35 SUPPLIES Better Grades! NOW ictionary—FREE ——— MRS. M. EDWARDS . HERE ON NORTH S8 Mrs. Marian Edwards, who Wl]lI teach the fourth grade here this winter, arrived on the North Sea | Monday evening. She taught fnr[ six years in Lewiston, Idaho, before coming to Alaska. Telephone 45 ieties Channel Apparel Shop Opens Its Doors Tomorrow MI'S‘ BI'{]L‘I\:("I],’ Nll Gl'(’l' ! ham to Welcome Friends, sengers on the Princess Charlotte. Patrons with Souvenirs Following up their success in their Bargain Shop location on Willough- by Avere, where they have been operating a !adies’ clothing store for the past teh months, Mrs. Martha Bracken and Mrs. Jean aham will tomorrow greet their friends and patrons with a souvenir opening in their new establishment, the Channel Apparel Shop, located at the corner of Front and Main Stre The Channel Apparel Shop is in the former location of the Venetian Shop, in the building on which dl- C | Iterations have just been completed An en- ed and by owner Nick Rocovich tire new store front with er display windows, new floors redecorations throughout } Juneau M: Graham and Mrs. Bracken | “The peak of the disease has beeniwill open their new shop tomorrow tences for being drunk and disor- offering appealing var- merchandise morning of new millinery } tions, and dry goods. They plan to add several new departments and rvices in the near future, rons visiting the new shop orrow will be given an attractive souvenir of the occasion - - Actress, Daughter of Bank[uggd, Weds , no- JASPER, Alaban: h Bankhead, of House . Sept. 1 ss and daugh- Speaker William B. Iu ter 2 | Barkhead, was married last night to John Emory, New York actor - Lode and placer location not for sale at The Empire Office. s THURSDAY— 28c¢ Pound POT ROAST OF BABY BEEF HARD W FLOUR . . including '¢ | Aw Hell, What’s This Wor-ruld | Coming To, Anyhow U, S. Advised to Alaska’s a long distance from Hell,! s0 Hell, disguised In the persons of a couple of comely misses, came to. PORTLAND, Ore., Sept. 1.—As- Alaska last night, serting that “all the investments we They are the Misses Ruby and have in the Orient aren’t worth the | virginia Hell of St. Louis and Rolla, life of one American soldier or sail- Mo., respectively, and they are pas- or,” William Priestly, Seattle fire- | importer, told a civic club works | here that the sooner the United ORI T R MARH'ED |States gets out of the Oriental | |“mess” the better. | | “When the American flag is hauled |down in the Philippines in 1946, FAIRBANKS, Alaska, Sept. 1. _!Japan will have hers up by sunset Ted Lambert, famed painter of Al-[if Great Britain is not there by a aska outdoor scenes and rugged|noon,” Priestly said. life, and Lovet A. Gusky, were mar- SR i R o ) . 5 e . ried at Copper Center, or.x Lluj Rich 3Sacramento RlVel’ Record ardson Highway last Friday. The Rev. Joy tied the knot For Royal The bride taught school ati Bethel Chinook salmon Broken | the last three years. T | SACRAMENTO, cal, Sept. 1.— | lNDIANS BROUGHT ;Commm-cm] dm_ders today u-port'ed HERE TO SERVE |a record-breaking yield of Royal Chinook salmon from the Sacra- | JAIL SENTENCES mento River More than 70,000 pounds were de- Mark Williams and Ed Lindoff, |livered yesterday to one company. in the city’s history and post-|the shop one of the most attractive the Federal Jail here yesterday by |man caught 1900. pounds inh less Ipiane by Deputy Marshal Waiter than four hours. Hellan where they will serve se R |derly. williams, who was out under| Mother Here Seeking 1spended sentence so that he might | Son Last Heard from ! , was given six months in jail and a $50 fine by Commissioner Seven Years Ago Brown at Hoonah and Lindoff, also lout to fish with a burglary count| Mrs. Elizabeth Smith, who is now over his head, must do three months in Juneau, seeking her son, Vic- and pay a fine of $25. who was last heard R 'DR. Cl:llEFETZ LEAVES |cording to the U. S. Marshal's of- fice. Erickson is supposed to have | FGR PROLONGED TRIP |merried the postmaster's daughter | TO WESTERN ALASKA at Valdez, according to the shal information, but it known when Mar- is not Dr. Sonia Maternal Health Officer for the Territorial | Cheifetz, ifli)flrfl of Health, left Juneau last - MARTHAS TO MEET Resuming its regular meetings for Tal- hight on the steamship Alaska for|the winter season, the Martha So-| a trip to the Westward that is ex- ciety will hold a dessert luncheon pected to last several months. Friday at the Northern Light Pres- She is scheduled to visit various byterian Church points enroute distributing know- - {ledge and explaining modern meth-| The borough of Manhattan {ods of health and sanitation. York, contains 27000000 tons - steel, of which 23,000,000 Lester D. Henderson, in New of by “Alaska” FRIDAY Where CASH —is KING-—- There is no better than OUR BEST— Why pay more for NO MORE—or FOR LESS? KING CASH HAS DECREED VALUES AT CASH SAVINGS HEAT z.zs 49 Ib. sack — CASTLE BRAND Concord BASKET FRESH DAILY 25¢ Pound Hamburger Pa Grapes 5¢C $1.25 Chesterfields, Luckies, Old Gold, - Camels, Raleighs EVERY DAY PRICE! CIGARETTES GEORGE BROTHERS - Quit China ‘Mess" tons a e yscrapers and other buildings. Rir Tests at Fairbanks to Begin Sept. 10 FAIRBANKS, Alaska, Sept. 1.— W. R. Drawbraugh, of the Washing- ton, D. C. Airological Division of the United States Weather Bureau, and in charge of structure of the | Polar-Continental air cold condi- |ditions, said tests with balloons and planes will not start until Septem- Iber 10. JUDGE ALEXANDER IS DUE ON BARANOF Judge George F. Alexander, who has been attending a conference of Alaska Judges at Fairbanks, is ex- | pected to arrive in Juneau on the | Baranof. He was unable to secure {passage on an earlier steamer when (he arrived at Seward. | Judge J. H. Morrison left for his headquarters at Nome by PAA plai.e following the conclusion of the ses- wve made Hoonah Indians, were brought to|Fishermen are using gill nets. One sions. Judge Simon Hellenthal and his jchief clerk, Derrick Lane, left over [the Richardson Highway for their 'homes in Valdez. . Lode and placer location notices for sale at The Empire Office. 1 of seven years ago ut Cordova, ac-| i Schilling Tea has more flavor because | its toasted Fresh Fruits Vegetables Everything the market affords you will find at PAY'N TAKIT! GRAPES 2 Ibs. 25c Seedless TOMATOES Ibs. ¢ LETTUCE - 10¢ Large Solid Heads 49° 5 pounds POTATOES Best Yakima Gems COTTAGE CHEESE 20¢ Full Pint Kristofferson’s mTakit CLOSED LABOR DAY—MONDAY SEPTEMBER 6 FREE CASH AWARD EVERY FRIDAY NIGHT AT 7:30 O'CLOCK

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