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937. THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, SATURDAY, OCT. 23, 1 Brud\ (;dng Is Wlpfll Out in St LARRY PALMER 'BACK HOME' ON WILD LIFE JOB Increasing Supply for More Extensive Use Ambitious | Program of Survey | reet Gun Battlo in Maine notion of wild life in Alaska aim of increasing the sup- more extensive use is the nent of L. J. Palmer (Larry to| who has just arrived here from the States as agent of the Survey. The plan, Mr stated, is to work out a am for wild life in the Terri- which will assure adequate at the same time permitting extensive use both for the an and commercial use Larry, as he is known from the Arctic to the Southeast, has had wide training in the problem to \\hl(‘h hP has been assigned. F Pre kans) Palm pre tory suppls mc; Spo! in reindeer survey, a work which is said to be the most thorough on that subjes yet made, and 10 years in general wild life study. “Like coming home,” Mr. Palmer ed his return to the north and he and Mrs. Palmer were get- ting settled In the Assembly Apart- ments. Working in conjunction with the Alaska Game Commission he will be in the Juneau office for some time going over the general plan with Executive Officer Frank ~— Dufresne of the Commission, who sister.” See how it works? Half of is principal representative of the each word. Blological Survey in the Territory,' The Germans and Scandinavians end then expects to spend much of have a word for it, but the English Al Brady, notorious Midwest gang leader, and Clarence Shaffer, Jr., vn e of his henchmen are shown dead on the Main s t of Bangor, Maine, after G-men and police shot them in a trap at a gun store. A third com panion was wounded and captured and one G-man was shot in the shoulder. Bnllgur citizens are shown looking on in horrnr after ihe fi ve-minute battle. Brady's body in foreground.—Associated Press Photo. DYNAMITE USED Three Alaskans TWO KETCHIKAN \lhe Bar Association, called upon lof the Norwegian consul, discussion | sideration during the luncheon. “UPSETS" ARE Faulkner, Host Not Sofry Over Mate's _Cz;i;mre At Luncheon of | Bar Association lV!ce consul of Norway En- tertains at Percy’s Cafe H. L. Faulkner, in his capacity as Vice Consul of Norway for Alaska, entertained members of the Juneau Bar Association and court officials at luncheon in Percy's Cafe today. Judge George F. Alexander, Mar- shal William T. Mahoney, District Attorney William A. Holzheimer, Chief Clerk Robert Coughlin, Com- missioner Felix Gray and all mem- bers of their office staffs, also At- torney General James E. Truitt and D. S. Hostetter of the Federal Bu- reau of Investigation, were among those present. The room was decorated with Am- erican and Norwegion flags, and a large map of Norway, made in Oslo by the Norwegian Government, was hung on the wall. Judge H. B. LeFevre, President of , Apparently “relieved” and “not sorry”, Mrs.’ Mary Schwartz, left, expressed little coneern when notified that her husband James Dal- hover, member of the Brady gang, had been captured at Bangor, Me., in the same G-man coup that ended in death of Brady and his lieutenant, Lee Shaffer. She is shown here with her sister, Josephine Economidis, right, at their Baltimore homse. Josephine Enconomidis Mr. Faulkner to explain the work of which formed the principal con- e e - Commercial and private alrports! The fastest mile in horse wace decreased from 564 in 1930 to 552 records is Equipoise’s one minute in 1935 in this country whiles mu- 24 2-5 seconds, raced at Arington nicipal airports increased from 550 Park, Illinois, in 1932 under 128 to 739. pounds. TO DISAPPEAR FOR FOOTBALL Iis time in the field. He will be language is devoid of a single word permanently located in the Terri- t0 express the meaning tory An “s” cn the € 1ve ters,” one brother and | st Two or mc one sister has to be from that easily com two or more brothers more sisters. ONDEBRIS JAM SaveLiveshy MEN, JUNEAUITE ABUVE SKAGWAY Clinging toBuoy INDICTED HERE |rl<r”h rs and ster Anrx spros and two or Heaviest Raln on Recon(] Roy Sl\mnel Party Rescued Tt Causes Skagway River ’\ Off Kake by Dart After | \ to Rise Danoeloulsy 17 Hours’ Exposure e Ever Hear of “Broster?”’” Here’s what lt Means “I'm going home to see the folks and spros It tells everything, ST. PAUL, Minn., Oct. 28.—TWist |oxcent” their names your tongue around and get ready LA for a new word—"broster.” Prof. F. Earl Ward of the Mac- \ Under best conditions, not more alester college English department than 6,000 stars are visible to hu- says a former student suggests it man eyes, only half of these at any as a word to represent “brother and one time iree Held for: Trial by| Grand Jury Which Is | Continuing Work ters. ! additionai :ndictments Dynamite was used yesterday to; How three men ciung lenaciously were returned by the Federal grand k up a jam of debris in the to the Kake bell buoy for 17 hours jury here today as they continued iy river that threatened to in the face of severe weather after tneir deliberations, involving two inundation of the town as the their boat had swamp s told men from Ketchikan and one from. heaviest 24 wour rainfall ever re- in a m\sage receive today by Juneau. | corded in Skagway raised the river th S. Customs office from Capt Ludvik Meidahl was indicted for to a dangerous height. M. Reaber of the mail boat Dart. burglary of a private home in Ket- At 11 o'clock this morning, 421| Reaber reported that when pass- | chikan and bail is fixed at $2,500. inches of rain had f-’llh'l{ in a twel ng /e Kake buoy yesterday Reuben Robillard, also of Ketchi- ty-four hour period. Weather rec- morning enroute to Port Alexander kan, was indicted for contributing ords were begun in Skagway iN he found the men who has been to the delinquency of a minor girl 1898 and never, sinc AV€ hanging to the buoy since 17 hours'in that city with bail fixed at $2,- rains been so he arlier when the engine of their 500. | heavy rain repre 5 il boat had failed on them and' Two counts were brought against, s annual 3 boat had started to fill with Vernon sllred of Juneau, one of | e age er. They had been able to get contributing to the delinquency of a | plndmg of the debris dam be-the craft alongside the buoy, got-|minor and another statutory of- came necessary when logs anditen on the channel bell as th choat|fense, one allegedly committed at brush collected at the railroad bridge 'qrised away |Ketchikan and one in Juneau, His| l“l;‘l’“ ”[‘““' ]}}“d f"l‘)‘“(“l“tk“’“‘ Suffering from the long expos fixed at $5,000 A3 (B8 4L WBS, (G WALRrS Of BEAE: lure in'the face of death, the: TRl Snyder, indicted yester- way river would have gone directly |were taken into Kake by the Dart day on four counts of theft in con- lhl'fl:gh l?\e b\lfln‘easldlsn'wl‘ _|for medical attention. |nection with the alleged theft of tov;rr:mz;l‘i‘e‘:():]o:c}r u!);tl{d‘t::lo;‘]nfl‘ i; Names of the men were not given, 8malgam from the Chichagoff Min- e L e e i‘\‘f‘e‘bm Capt. Reaber said the boat was|ing Company, pleaded not_guilty that has kept the river on the east|ne: oL A-3%5 owned by Roy SkinneriWhen &rraigned before ~Federal side of town for many years {0 Beginaw, Bay. - T6 J5 4990 BREMCEIREQECIEe. X Alexanaory o g il (U e A okl [vessel of 7-foot beam and s believed | €ase 15 Set to come up Wednesday, Waters a to be drifting around Eliza Harbor.| Phillip C. Grimm, former Juneau e - |cab driver, was arraigned this Immigrants entering Argentina morning after indictment yesterday must show they either have a job| The National Resources Commit-for polygamy and will pload Mons there or property worth 1,500. Au‘ informed the President in 1936 |day. Also scheduled to plead Mon- - e ‘lh(m were more than 175,000 !L‘d- y are John and Frank McKinley The c¥il population of the Pan- |eral, state and local government (‘l‘dlgt’d with the slaying of Albert‘ ama Canal Zone is 29,190, of whom junits in the United States. Mills of Excursion Inlet. 8,417 are Americans. br Douglas Fire Department DANCE SATURDAY OCTOBER TWENTY-THIRD ADMISSION $1.00 Rands’ Orchestra Douglas Natatorium | - | llIIIIINIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlllllIIIIIIIIIIIIIlIlllllllllIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIl NOTICE L+ T T BIG TIME AFTER FIREMEN’S DANCE AT MIKE'’S PLACE SPECIALS — Roast Turkey Sandwiches Hot or Cold The Juneau Ladies' Auxiliary, No. 34, meet on Tuesday, October 26, at 2 o'clock P. M. in the Union Hall. ARG All ladies interested in unions, and the welfare of the workingman, are cordially invited. JUNEAU LADIES' AUXILIARY, NO. 34. IIIIIIIIIHIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIllllIIII|IlIIIIIlllllllllllllllllllllIIllllllllllllIIIIIIIIIIlllllll B EIEEI SRR RSN RN RN R RTNNENNENINNSERTIERITNNET RN AR FOR HOME OR BUSINESS REFRIGERATION SERVICE and REPAIRS Phone 34 Our Refrigeration Expert, JOHN HOUK, is equipped to give you Quick, Efficient Service at reasonable cost. —MUSIC by CASHEN and NIEME— - Rice & Ahlers Company i T et i EAST LANSING, Mich,, Oct. 23. —The “upset” to football will get so plentiful there soon will be no upsets. That's what Coach Charley Bach- man of Michigan State says. Sur- prne scores will get to be matter- of-fact news, he predicts. The reason? The smaller colleges are getting better players from well coached high school teams. Be- cause the small colleges get the players, they are leaving the push- over class. ——————— i Women Rule Roost | ISTEN to a symphony. stand before a painting in a gallery — and instinctively you recognize the mas- terpiece. And so it is with the Baldwin. You sense instinctively that inspired hands created it, that crafts- men put their hearts as well as wood and felt and steel into it. for your own. %M ot /flfn 1tz vt @ flalhmi“ Instinctively — you choose the Baldwin HUTTENRODE, Germany.—Once a year, at the hay harvest festival, women rule the roost in this Harz Mountains village. They run the feast, choose the hay queen and march through the village. Then there is dancing—the women doing the choosing of partners and re- warding them with chocolate hearts and free beer ALASKA MUSIC SUPPLY Second Street ——— Juneau, Alaska A CABARET DANCE TONIGHT ELKS HALL FLOOR SHOW REFRESHMENTS GOOD MUSIC OCTOBER 23 STARTING AT 10 P. M. FOR ELKS AND THEIR LADIES ONLY PHONE 76 FOR RESERVATIONS "ADMISSION §$1.50 PER COUPLE IIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIllIIIIIIIIIIIlIIIIIlIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII|IIIIIIIIIIII|IIIIIIIIIIIIIII|||I|l|lIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII