The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, June 29, 1940, Page 8

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w2 O R Y RIS e 'KIRTLAND TO PAY OFFICIAL VISIT T0 MASONS MONDAY Mrs. Sam Rubley Picks Iris in Bear Patch | U.S.SHIP FishingDerby TORPEDOED On Tomorrow Tris picking in a bear patch— Monday evening at 7:30 o'clock in this was the thrill Mrs. Sam 'the Masonic Temple a joint com- . bley experienced Thursday | munication of Mt. Juneau Lodge No.| NEW YORK, June 20.—A umblo ' ernoon while she ard her | 147 and Gastineaux Lodge No. 124 Of contradictory infm‘mnl,mn this armlon ushand, Dr. Sam Rubley, were | of Douglas will be held to receive ing clouded the first report of | enjoying a day at Eagle River. an official visitation from Charles tack on an American merchant| Mrs A lover of wild flow P. Kirtland, Immediate Past Grand Rubley was busy gathe ing to a message intercept- | SPOTS Clubbers fo Hold Master of the Grand Lodge of Ma- sons of Washington. self a boucuet in the ed here, the American steamer [‘d;vc- FlrS' of '”"ee Blg hill was struck by a torpedo while CAA PROGRAM REVAMPED AS YEAR CLOSES Taken fo Yakufat by Rowley Soon Aeronautics Authority ol-; Civil Twenty-fiTeMentoBe' MOOSE MEET | ELKS SUNDAY Moose and Elks will play ball again tomorrow evening in Firemen's Park | starting at 6 o'clock, it was announc- ed today. Meanwhile, Douglas games are being postponed pending decision on the question of Joe Snow’s re-| cent home rum, decision awaiting| | major leagues: Baseball Today The following are scores of games played this afternoon in the two National League New York 5; Philadelphia 0. Boston 4; Brooklyn 10. American League Cleveland 7; Chicago 3. Philadelphia 9; New York 12, Washington 9; Boston 7. THREE BECOME (ITIZENS HERE Citizenship was granted in Dis- trict Court today to three who com- pleted the naturalization process. They were Phyllis Sunderland, a native of Britain; Thomas Saari, native of Finland, and Kristtian Kjelstadli, native of Norway. The | latter's name was changed to Chris Lee. ————— - |on word from the Seattle Baseball | Giui BOOKKEEPER IN A. C. Adams, bookkeeper from Ex- rsion Inlet, came in last night and is at the Gastineau. Detroit 9; St. Louis 5, first game. B i gu— BERPBSIES S Empire Classifieds Pa; Try a classified ad in The Empire. IRVING'S | lIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIllIIIIIIIIIlIIiIIIIIIIII Did You Know that the road end, while the doctor i : o fs <at waiting in the car. Suddenly |U(§i“f‘~”:‘\ldlh::\.~|;13l\‘:|‘lm‘x~v‘p‘v‘il~!'l/1\llx;ll;}\\':“ southwest of the British Isles Sal Confest Hotals 1 the ‘constrietion; division | Dr. Rublev let out a series of [ 199E £ whe APECR Tebrsc ont | Liovd's registry does not list the almon Lonitesis of that department, are busy in| lond exclamations and st Grabi Basths Who Voas ihatallea-an | Coarenill, i B their offices here with detail of peinting to the “stump” beside ho 621106 &t the recent cominHie A ship formerly bearing the name| Tomorrow morning at 9 o'clock, | corganizing the big Southeast Al- which his wife was busy pluck Hbe ‘ot the Jodes hold b Bellis Edgehill is now at a dock in Balti- | the waters off Marmion Island will [aska construction program in align- ing iri The “stump” at this | Jam. which communication Ralph more i be dotted with boatloads of strip- |ment with the new fiscal year, be- particular moment “got up and | B. Martin Master of the Juneau If the ship really was an {\mrn» fishermen setting out to lure into |ginning Monday. slowly walked away,” turned | oo Ty h Siabler, a Past | oD CTaft it was well within the| their little vessels a heavy enough Construction Engineer V. E| rfter a distance of approximate- | o B Lo 0 AL this communi- '”'""-" zone from which ships car- | king or coho salmon to win a prize| Rowley received a number of bids| Iy 100 yards, and stood up on its e abter was the | Grang | TV the American flag have been | in the first 1940 Salmon Derby of |today relative to construction work‘ hind ley then bounded into Orator excluded by the Neutrality laws. |the Juneau Sports Fishing Club. at Ralston Island and Yakutat,and the woods. The “stump,’ which ] cig BT 7 | The official club boat Wanderer|yas awaiting return of still more turned out 46 be four-legged, | During ihe meeting the official | will leave the Upper City Float at|pids Hnge black beax (L m“,’.‘v-xl\‘l” htl f““"nypt-‘r! il.-u‘l“;‘fvvd REAT (HANGE |8 o'clock tomorrow morning. | For a charter boat contract ser-| G | oAt Tt Servad i Tehe Fishing begins at 9 oclock and | yieing Ralston Island, bids have | \bscribe for The Empire | temple dining room |ends at 5 p.m. Butry fee is 1 and| peen received from J. J. Connors| | participants must be club members | 5 with the Betty Ross and from| BY ROAD CHIEF Norcross of Forest Service Back in Alaska After Here's Refrigerator Luxury at Low Prite the NEWEST Py Filledd FRIGIDAIRE Check this list of fittings Juneau has changed so greatly ln physical appearance since his last | visit in 1924 that T. W. Norcross, | Chief Engineer of the U. S. Forest | Service, expressed dismay today at| net being able to find a familiar | landmark. Ketchikan tc Sitka and on Tuesday leave on the steamer Aleutian for the W(wr-] ward to investigate road and trail| development on Prince William Sound and the Kenai Peninsula. They will return here the middle of July, with Norcross due to be ba(‘k' n Washington by August 1 During his 20 years as Chief En-| gineer, Norcross has superintended the construction of 50,000 miles of roads and several times that dis-| tance of trails. | Norcross is particularly interested in forest development roads to op!'n‘ up new areas for use in Alaska, he| ube Tray with Automatic Tray Release ¥ Instant Cube Release in every tray...no twist- ing, hacking, or melting to remove ice ¥ Double-width dessert tray with 2 Instant Cube Release grids { Sliding, glass-topped Hydrator { One-piece, all-steel cabinet ¥ Newest 1940 styling ¥ Meter-Miser—sim- plest cold-making mech- anism ever built—quiet, and never has to be oiled said. ‘These roads serve as feeders V 10-pointColdControl | to the regular forest highways| V Automatic Reset De- system. | froster 5 e V Frigidaire Fast-Action BANKER RETURNE | Super-Freezer S Large Frozen Storage H. 5. Balderston, banker of Sew- Compartment ard, who has been vacationing in | the south for several weeks, passed | through Juneau on the Mount Mc- | ~nley enroute to the Westward. | He is accompanied by Mrs. Balder- ston. ¥ New Chromium life- out shelf F-114 Exclusive, Safe Low-Pressure Refriger- ant Also See Another Great Bargain | Lowest price 6 cu. ft. Frigidaire ever offered Model SVS-6 ... has Meter-Miscrandother fa- 5 Rer ¢ Buik #ad backed by oS mous Frigidaire features. mo. Ganeral Motors GOING OVER HIGHWAY | Temms tomityou. Only Aboard the Mount McKinley are cver 25 passengers booked for Val- dez who go to Fairbanks by bus the Richardson Highway. SEE OUR PROOF-OF-VALUE DEMONSTRATION igrer W. P. JOINSON PHONE 17 i PR S8 0 T BOUND FOR FAIRBANKS Mrs. Donald N. Hardwick is a | passenger on the McKinley for Val- dez from where she will go to her| Fairbanks home by bus over the Highway. | ALASKA FEDERAL avings Are 4% Earning s 1 or more will start youon a savings program that will put you on the high road to financial independence! 16 Years fer |and cease fishing gun at 5 pm., a | family. ‘Mrs. Noble Goes- | | August. | '\‘,',‘;‘,""f’ Bl ’"“”,”"‘"“d foan area pajpn Treffers with the Janie K.| ;f!xuf«yl l‘lllni‘l‘( \:;:;; ';‘\]’1 ‘ml\)lf' “\;0 Juneau-Young and Thomas| | weighed in not later than iy oo | Maduwase Sve bid for camp'equip- | A | ment orders for the coming Yaku-| tat job. | Edward P. Madsen and D. B.| Femmer entered bids for rent of | reat d,] of fishing tackle and|? dump truck for use on Ralston cash, with a “pot” going to “m‘l.siunu" and Service, Rellablevnnd [holder of the biggest fish taken | Bodding transfer companies bid for With promise of good Wen”m.‘lruckum work between Juneau and | for tomorrow and prospects of Bay. good fishing, a large number of| Bids are still out for a towboat boats with fishermen and their, @nid scow and for lumber and hard- families, and the U.S.C.G. Haida| Ware, while bids will be called soon to give the starting gun at 9 am,, | for vessel to carry powder to Yakutat. The radio range station at Ral- { clock. In this, the first of a series of three derbies to be held by the club this year, the prize list includes or rrive oy s very successful Derby Day is an- nd features that onl Norcross arrived here last night | Ver ¥ 1- | :Rl’:l;:ll! offers auyl with Regional B. Frank Heintz ticipated. |ston Island will be completed in 4 ¥ man on the vessel Forester ¥ A novice in the fishing sport|@bout three weeks. Rowley smzl,j ¥ Ereryice tray a Quick- Tomorrow they will fly | With the proverbial beginner’s luck |and the Haines project, a com-| could profit by watching expen;fmumcauom and weather reporting | baiting their lines with herring.|Station at Chilkoot Barracks, will] When one fishes it's luck and skill| bé completed in about sixty days.| against the other fellow, to lure the| Rowley will leave here July 9| salmon. for Yakutat to complete construc-! Free bait and hot coffee will|tion of living quarters there at be available . that range station. | Twenty-five men will be Lakvn‘ from here with Rowley, and will| | be hired through the Territorial | Employmem Offices. Rowley alsoi declared there is. a shortage of car- onters, plumbers. and painters. | On leaving for Yakutat, Rowley | will leave his assistant, Glenn Neit- PETERSBURG TODA | zert, in charge of the Ralston Is-, S sday -‘ e tally struck by the propeller of a plane, are to be shipped to Petersburg for burial on the hali-| but boat Vesta, owned by the Lco‘ > ALLEN LEE REMAINS TAKEN BY VESTA 10 DIES; RITES MONDAY Mary The Vesta was brought to Ju-| neau today by Capt. Martin Enge| services for Mrs, Funeral and Mrs. Enge, close friends of the Willlams will be held Monday af-| | ternoon at 2 o'clock from the | Chapel of the Charles W. Carter | Mortuary. Mrs, Williams was brought from Hoonah to the Government Hos- pllal for treatment. She To Kodiak Today == s | HAGERTY RETURNS | Donald W. Hagerty, Senior Or- | ganization Field Agent for the Of- | fice of Indian Affairs, returned on | the steamer Mount McKinley today after temporary assignment to Seat- | tle and Chemawa, Oregon. He also The Nobles have been visiting in |enjoyed two weeks of leave in Mon- Juneau for the past several days!tana. Mrs. with friends, | who remained in Seattle, will return A — | here in August. % 415 B A TRAVELING MAN HERE family. - D Mrs. J Ilvmc Nohln and two children sailed for Kodiak on the steamer Mount- McKinley where they will join Mr. Noble, who is doing construction work on the Air Base, MISS KEARNEY RETURNING Miss Claudia Kearney, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Jack Kearney, is|dise broker, is at the Gastineau returning to Juneau on the North|Hotel, coming to town on the Mount Sea. She has spent the past three‘McKinley. weeks in Seattle visiting herbrother and sister-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. CUMMINS MAN Jack Kearney Jr. | H. F. Schaub, Cummins d\ese] D | man, accompanied by R. H. Wills, VISITING COUSIN arrived in town last night and are Miss Marian Ryan of Centralia, |guests at the Baranof Hotel, Washington, has arrived to visit her M it it 5 cousin, Mrs. Alva Blackerby, until | FROM KETCHIKAN Mrs. S. C. Willard of Ketchikan, is a guest at the Baranof Hotel. - - DUNZLOP IN TOWX Herb Dun. p registared at the , having come in this e, DIVORCE GRANTED A divorce was granted today in District Court to Alice Gray from Barney Gray of Petersburg on grounds of non-support. JUNEAU SPORTS FISHING CLUB JUNE SALMON DERB’’ YOUR SAVINGS ARE INSURED, ARE | INSTANTLY AVAILABLE AND EARN GREATER RETURNS WITH THE ALASKA FEDERAL SAVINGS AND LOAN ASSOCIATION OF JUNEAU Telephone 3 Chartered and Supervised by the U. S. Government SUNDAY JUNE 30 ROUND TRIP ON WANDERER LEAVES UPPER CITY FLOAT AT 8:00 A. M. Pot Money Goes to the Owner of the Largest Fish on the Baof! FIRST PRIZE SECOND PRIZE THiD PRIZE . FOURTH PRIZE . FIFTH PRIZE ... SIXTH PRIZE . Various Other Prizes Will Be Announced Tomorrow! MRS. MARY WIllIAMS | passed | | Hagerty and children | F. E. Walker, traveling merchan- | YouCan LEARNTO FLY Right Here in JUNEAU? with the ALASKA SCHOOL OF AERONAUTICS, INC. MARKET LIQUOR STORE | WILL BE | OPEN o FROM iy 5 T UNITED STATES. \ ‘ THAT WE OPERATE ONLY\U S. Govem- 2 » ment licensed instructors and planes. ‘ THAT COURSES OR FLYING TIME taken here is good anywhere in the U. S, or its Possessions. 7P.M. | \ (TOMORROW) j THAT WE GIVE ALL TYPES OF COURSES [ ] whether you wish to fly pflvately or commercially. THAT ALL COURSES are sold either for cash | or on the monthly payment plan. I i WHY DON'T YOU QUIT putting till to- morrow that which you want to do today? \ | DROP OUT TO THE AIRPORT and lodk over ! the various courses, You will be obli- gated in no way. Alaska School of Aeronautics, Inc. Box 2187 Juneau, Alaska A AT This is your last chance o S VE ON LIQUOR be- fore prices ADVANCE! & sizes of “CATERPILLAR” REG. U.S. PAT. OFF. Marine Diesel Engines D 3400 — 4 CYLINDER — 1500 RPM — BORE AND STROKE — 3% X5 — 25 HP. D 4400 — 4 CYLINDER — 1500 RPM — BORE AND STROKE — 4% X §%2— 35 H.P. D 4800 — 6 CYLINDER — 1500 RPM — BORE AND STROKE — 4% X 5%— 55 H.P. D 11000 — 6 CYLINDER — 900 RPM — BORE AND STROKE — 5% X8 — 80 HP. | D 13000 — 6 CYLINDER — 900 RPM — BORE AND STROKE — §% X8 —100 HP. | . . D 17000 — 8 CYLINDER — 900 RPM — BORE AND STROKE — 5% X8 —I35 H.P. Slandard Equipment on all “Caterpillar” Engines F Air intake silencer Lubricating o\l sump pump Closed system heat exchanger Fuel transfer pump Starting engine, gasoline Lubricating oil filter Lubricating oil cooler Fuel oil filter Temperature indicators Tachometer drive Oil vressure gauge Hour meter Water cooled exhaust manifold Thermostat Jacket water pump Mounting brackets Tools Raw water pump FOR FULL INFORBMATION WRITE TO THE NORTHERN (OMMER(IM 0. ALASKA DISTRIBUTORS

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