Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
ED ANDREWS FOUND DEAD IN HIS HOME Resident of Douglas, Pion-| eer Photograper, Suffers Sudden Heart Attack Edmund Andrews, pioneer photo- grapher of Alasl most beloved resident of Douglas Island for forty vears ago, is dead as the result of apparent sudden heart failure. His body was diseovered in his ‘dwelling ! on St. Ann's Avenue, Douglas, about 6 o'clock lagt evenimg after some of his close friends became alarmed . g EDMUND (ED) ANDREWS THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, THURSDAY, DEC. APEX-EL NIDO IS SHUT DOWN AFTER FREEZE | Lisianski Mine Will Become 1 Producer Believes ; Clothier l The Apex-El Nido g&:é¢ mine at | Lisianski Inlet on Chichagef Island |will be a real mine, according to |George Clothier, Vancouver mining 'man who is developing the prop- erty. Clothier, with C. C, Camp, metal- !urgist for the mine, flew to Juneau yesterday from the mine with a Farm Leader | 2,193 DEATH CLAIMS STAKES;YOUTH .~ LOSES GAMBLE LOGAN, Utah, Dec. 2—A teen-year-old college student gam- bled with death at the turn of a revolver cylinder, and lost Officers said Charles F. Stein- bach of Ruth, Nev., student at Utah Agricultural College, took all but one cartridge out of the revolver,| then spun the cylinder, pointed the | weapon at his' temple and pulled the | trigger. The hammer fell on an' lempty chamber. | But, officers reported, the youth tried the stunt again and a bullet| tore inte his brain killing him. nine- 7. New NBC Radio Studios Constructed on Coast | ~ s = A $7000 gold brick. The ingot of gold, day night, notified City Marshal to get some new negatives during although pock-marked and dirty, amaker, who with E. E. Eng- next summer as the rain of last ““'!approximalely 10 inches long, four | strom broke into his house, which|son had defeated that purpose. Not i hes wide and almost an inch | not having seen him since Mon- Steinbach was said to have taken the same chance before and had joked about “five to one” chances against death | was locked from the inside, and only an artist with the camera,iy,.p {5 heavy with promise of P 2 \ . ‘ihas » o er Poncher made the discovery. From the po- but a noble character has been 1o>t!bx“er things to be at Lisianski In-| N il S sition of the body death must have by his passing, friends say Net If”« head of the Future Farmers | ‘ come to him instantaneously, and My Andrews belonged to the Al»‘} The Apex-El Nido, discovered and | .1 "c‘;;l\?:-m(’o!:claeld ’:‘; lheu'catn | the time must have been shortly aska Pioneers and was a 32nd de- opened in 1923, has up to now been | nsas City, \ feeth In line with the increasing importance of Holly- wood as a broadcasting center, the National Broad- casting company is building an ultra-modern radio headquarters in the heart of the film capital. Dur- ing the past two years, the trend toward programs featuring guest stars from the movie ranks has made the west coast a serious rival of New York for top honors cu the airwaves., IoastGuard Safer after he reached his home Monday|gree Mason, a member of Gastin- 1t when he was last seen alive, eaux Lodge No 124, F. & A. M. His an infrequent producer, through in- adequate management and opera- or about 12 o'clock midnight { L. P. Dawes was called to pronounce Dr. lodge has wired relatives in se“mf,non, but George Clothier feels that advising them of his death |the past season’s work on both the is J. Lester Poncher of Larso, Fla. Norah next week. C. C. Camp will také the North Sea out tomorrow.| - For Fuqrm Time Among the survivors are three!apex ore body and the El Nido body {Both are registered at the Gastineau Kill - Men Get Medals I 4ir m CHICAGO, Ill, Dec. 2. — Hiram WASHINGTON, Dec. 2—A gold W. Sheridan, thirty-five, Oak Park him dead and the remains were then removed to the Charles W. Carter sisters, Miss Jenny Andrews, and nas proven the value of the mim-;flmel. | Mortuary, to be prepared for inter- Mrs. Michelson in Seattle, Mrs.!for future development in increased ment as soon as advices from rela- Lida Stephens at Alki Point; lwo‘mmmg capacity and production. H the and each CHICAGO, Dec. 2. — For fourth time, Carl Hageman Doris Hahn were married—to gl g flm [}a“ses Pamc i it | They have been marrying tives are received Inieces also in Seattle, Mrs. Nina! The mine itself is in two bodies| Ed, as Mr. Andrews was known Butterfield and Mrs. Mable Com- several hundred feet above thej and by practically everyone in Douglas, best |beach. Aerial trams carry the orei . divorcing each other at intervals as well as hundreds of friends - - 11200 feet from the lower tunnel of | I" Chlca fl Thea"’a since 1930, Doris said, and each of throughout the Territory, was 65 FORMER JUNEAUITE the. Apex body to the :pph‘ abov(e‘l them has been married to one - the ore is {the mine whence DIES lN Evm"gtrlmmed to a ten fon stamp mill.] |Another aerial tram from the EI Word has been received here of |Nido claims runs approximately 1000/, (he death in Everett, Wash., on No-!feet to the tipple. P % = 3 | Around 1000 tons of ore were nm!mmch blew a door off a boiler doused ;1.\ G Krost performed the cere- S soot upon the audience through an 4 through the mill during the sum-|. .. ... ,mony. Passers-by saw a jet of soot shoot! {out of the building’s chimney and| The government is trying years old. He was born in Norway in 1872, on November 4, and went as a young lad with his folks to South Dokota, being a farmer dur- ing his earlier life. | He came to Douglas about 1897, vember 16 of Harry J. Noble, for-| Jis first occupation then being in merly of Juneau who was for a time| the Treadwell store as clerk. Fol- associated with the National Gro- mer's operations which were dis- lowing that he went into the res- cery Company. For the last nine rupted for a number of weeks fol- taurant business here, later sold years he had resided in Everett lowing a compressor nreakdown..nmwd an alnrol 46 the tire dibar 2 . . 4 g Al . 4 L1 elay ala ¢ 3 part- |termine whether “redcaps” and sim- qut and opened his photograph stu- where he was employed as a sales ;:9 E°1dm‘:‘d'-h; ’:::o\::'le]:]gmq;&;:,"fi ment. The audience spread cries (y ilar employees of railway stations dio. As his business grew and pros- man. | being mi 3 | fire. |are subject to the railroad labor act | Both sajd that this is positively CHICAGO, Dec. 2. — More than eir jast marriage. Carl pointed out 150 patrons of a theater here dashed . (he marriage and divorce fees P N an explosion ', e piling up. Justice of the Peace| |other mate. | R to de- SALEM, Mass., Dec. 2. — False teeth and an automobile crash prov- ed fatal for William Gills, sixty- five, of Marblehead. He choked to death when the molars jumped into his throat from the impact. Leaping Manhold Cover Does Damage BOZEMAN, Mont,, Dec. 2—Ima- gine the surprise of Virginia Willson when the street flew up and de- molished the front fender of her car! It wasn't really the street,” ex- plained Miss Willson. “It was a man- hole cover. When the front wheel ran over it, the cover flew upward life saving medal has been award- ed Boatswain's Mate Albert Lees and silver medals to Seamen An- thony S. De Vito and Eugene E. Dailey, all of the U. S. Coast Guard cutter Pontcartrain, Secretary of the Treasury Morgenthau announced. They rescued Seamen Andrew J. Donaldson last summer when he fell into the Hudson River off Pough- keepsie, N. Y. .- ‘Leg Band Was His ‘ Safe Deposit Vault DENVER, Colo., Dec. 2.—Baldwin Gertz, 68, objected when attendants at a hospital attempted to remove an elastic appliance around his left American Air Lines pilot, ran against the side of an automobile while crossing Harlem Ave., in Oak Park. At the Oak Park Hospital, physicians found that he left shoui- der had been dislocated. - - ‘ ! by Empire classifieds pay. {F&[DIP Beller Biscuils Schilling ered, his knowl and his effic-| He is curvived by his widow, X bl i o A el of 3028 Hayt AveRe:!vacoverd, Ul €hecpding to:Clothier, | F0. TORals, Tanagen EERCEC . 3 = wed the explosion. He Everett; a brother, Roy Noble of there are possibilities a larger mill| oiy o yoiior “backfired.” Bellingham, a step father, Harvey will be installed next season. . mv_'_ |tural ez hor § L Smith of Bellingham and three, Twenty men have been employed| T8 SN "“',I"””“"( ZECIOANY brothers and three sisters in the gt the camp since Clothier Bros, be-| The greatest distance traveled hy‘.\li.nt‘luu-d synthetically in Germany east. gan operating and testing the values la shrimp on the South A ihakc | D the Unlied SRteter: Funeral services were held on No-|of the ore last May. Lack of water |coast was 300 miles, the journey be- | 7 Green | has caused the mill to be shut down |ing made in three months. | iency in photography expanded un- til it became recegnized as second to none all over Alaska. | Particularly notable of his work were his 12 by 20-inch reproduc- tions of Alaska scemes which he made and distributed in large quan-| Mrs.|amalgamation, with a fairly high| .o Lopatka, | While Japan has almost a mon- iopoly of the world’s supply of na- Tagging ties through -dealers ip most parts vember 20 with burial at of the Territory during the past 25, Acres Memorial Park at Belling- vears, A serious calamity to Mr. ham. Andrews was the last big fire which not only burned him out of home‘ and business, but destroyed bhis p: valuable collection of negatives. He in had hoped and planned to be able cla - — the last year traveled third IT’S HERE by the SHIPLOAD The Finest THE NEW du feine AT Premium Pale EXPORT BEER i 2 Witk ] 'ALASKA DISTRIBUTORS Ninety-nine out of every 100 assengers on the Austrian railways Alt Hetdelbery Produced by Columbia Breweries, Inc. AKEWAY DISTRIBUTING CO., Inc. llor the winter until water starts!of shrimp by the Bureau of Fishpr-‘ | running again next April. During the course of next year’s operations, a new power line and new water system will be built. Clo- {thier will sail south to his icouver, B. C,, home ies made possible for calculation. | Louis XV of France gave Louis- Jmnu to Charles IIT of Spain, his ORDER YOUR CASE — TODAY — Table LEADIN Beer Ever Offered Anywhere---- Extra Pale and Extra Fine NOW IN STOCK AT ALL G LIQUOR STORES and DISPENSARIES i Alt Heibelberg Van- | cousin, in 1762 and Napoleon lurc»\ on the Princess |ed Charles IV to give it back in 1802. | leg, but the doctors insisted because and after tearing the fender to the leg had been fractured in an pieces rolled down the street.” automobile accident. Nurses soon City employees welded the heavy discovered why Gertz protested top hack in place to prevent a repe- Under the elastic was $880 in cur- tition. rency. Baking Powder . . . that refreshing mildness . . . agreeable taste ...and delightful aroma that smokers find in Chesterfields is making new friends at every tfxrn. y afi f/ .. millions