The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, January 11, 1928, Page 2

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’ THE DAILY AIASKA F.MPIRE WEDNESDAY JAN. 11, 1928. $332,000 SET UP FOR S, E. ALAS Ai ROAD PROJECTS| Forest Serv:ce Projects Approved—$75,000 for Glacier Highway Spur (Contfnuea rrom Page One.) NEWHOUSE TRAPS TRAPPERS SUPPLIES OF ALL KINDS —ALSO— TENTS CAMP STOVES SNOW SHOES™ - - Sale | Juneau-Young Hardlgare Co. Hardware and Undertaking Phone 12 Petersburg Highway, Scow Bay- Cannery section, 2.76 miles, § 000. Point Agassiz Highway, Agassiz to Muddy River, miles of grading, $60,000. Tongass Highway, . Mountain | Point to Power Plant section, sur; facing only, $35,000. Maintenance on all routes, ap proximately 220 miles, $39,000. Location surveys, $48,000. These projects do mot comprise the entire “program for the year. Other work has been recommen:l ed to the Department of Agricul- ture and it is believed all of the recommendations will receive the approval of the secretary. Continue Trail Study A continuation of the prograin initiated last season of surveying routes into mineralized regions at the headwaters of streams having their sources along the interna- tional boundary is assured -by the allocation of $48,000 for such work. Last season surveys were made up the Chickamin and Endi- Frulvt and V gew cott Rivers and another on Chi- i3 § #75 vd gl chagof Island. During the cur- ARRIVED ON ALAMEDA CALIFORNIA GRQCER¥ Ends Starts § January January Poiat ] 12th 21st PACKERS and PROVISIONERS QUALITY MEATS Featuring Fry" fl.llexou Hams and Bacon and Frye’s Baby Beef - FRYE-BRUHN COMPANY PHONE 38 M Two Deliwrln blfly A ¢learance event that is waited for by the shrewdest buyers in Juneau who realize that Behrends Sale prices are by far the lowest. The sale of the present year will surpass in assortment and values any previous event we had run. A GREAT SALE OF OVERCOATS There are lots of men who received money gifts. Can you think of a better way to spend it than in outfitting yourself with a smart new Overcoat or Suit. $17.50 Overcoats at $13.13 $25.00 Overcoats at $18.75 $30.00 Overcoats at 22 50 BOYS’ SUITS REDUCED MEN’S HEAVY COTTON 20 PER CENT : UNION SUITS A well known standard make, very special priced Suits with one and two trousers, single and double for this sale—2 suits for $3.35. FRESH SHIPMENT OF Farragut and Unuk rivers. In addition, a detailed recon- naissance survey will be made of two previously completed loca- tions in the Skagway district. ‘One of these surveys is from Skagway ‘to a point above the Nye power site on Skagway River, just above East Point. The other runs from ‘Skagway to a point near Denyer Glacier, going along the east bank of the, river as far as East Point and then along East Fork and Denver Creek to the glacier. Be- tween Skagway and the mouth of East Fork, the two surveys fur- nish® alternative locations in the general route to the summit. In order to determine which of the two is the more feasible ‘n the development of the White Pass system, it is held desirable that a detailed reconnaissance sur- 7 vey connecting both routes to the ‘summit be made. This will .m- clude a thorough study of indus- | trial, timber, -power and recrea- < tu%:il features So that it will be ble to select a route which will serve the community and A2- velopment purposes equally and at as small a cost to the govern- ment as possible, it was stated. Open New Area . The comstruction of the Auk Bay-Fritza Cove spur to Glacier Highway, advocated locally for several years, will serve a double purpose, it was pointed out. There are -mow nine ranchers settled along the proposed route, mainly adjacent. to Fritz Cove. At pres- ent their. only means of tranmsit between their homes and Juneaua, where they find a ready market for their products, is by small boat across Menidenhall Bar, cross- /ing only on high tides. This ne- cessitates from 12 to 15 hours for similar surveys up the Le Duc, ‘PHORE m 3 FINE !'Al!l’.Y !Iln for those wise malr coal ‘and Kin m-’ Have us deljver, !w address and note how better heat and cleaner you have. ° Wonldn't ask you to do tlfl it 1 cost more. It doess’s. It really costs less and the: will prove it. We carry a full ine ot breasted models, 8 years to 16 years Many Stein-Bloch High Grade Hand Tailored Suits i ‘a great sale ‘at $39.75—Suits up to $65.00. Another group of odds and ends in small suc to close out at this sale for $12.75. ' Another group of men and young men’s Bilt- moere Suiis. The Bilimore tailored suits in the spaart styles that have been produced this season. $45.00. It will pay to look at the many bargams in Sale price $23.75—suits up to $ working men’s wearmg apparel I B.M. BEHRE Juneau’s Leading Depnrlment Store | Clearms , Sale STILL A BIG SELECTION OF 3 % o o SKETS-REST IN OHIO ME M()RIAL b s _r_ ortal will not take place unnl|glvan the privilege of pmmuofi summer, probably in June.. 1t The system has brought praise was erected at a cost of $500,000, after an $800,000 public fund had been raised. The remainder will be used for upkeep. The Memorial takes HARDING from English lawyers. Only say- en per cent of those placed on probation have been made to ap- pear for judgment. The Northern The of President and Mrs. Warren G. llat(lmgw have been laid memorial (above) in the Marion, Ohio, cemetery. 5 Below is the vault where the two caskets lay while the mmoml vn being, made MARION, O, Jan. Blase, the $300,000 ll—WlthmI & a native son who became imposing columns in the gentlePresident of the United States. ; last It is.to be dedicated sized knoll" and ither trees other memorials in the umrv Harding its place with two others to Ohlo- ans who were president® and whose last resting places within the state are patriotic shrines. The graves of two more Ohio presidents are unmarked by mem- orials. The tomb of William McKinley at Niles ranks in imposing gran- deur with the Harding memorial. In Lakeview cemetery, Cleveland, is the tomb of James A. Garfield, dedicated in 1890 and erected at a cost of $190,000. William Henry Harrison, ninth president of the United Statss, was buried at North Bend, but no tomb marks his grave. The home and grounds of Ruth- erford Birchard Hayes, nineteemtli; chief executive, at Fremont, have ‘been turned into 8 memorial gtate park, but there is no memorial tomb, Pnhhon Sysh- (canunui mm Fage One) yers declare that the probationary system worked admirably. Thousands of convicted .persons were prevenmted by it, they say, from becoming confirmed crim- When the Probation of OF fenders act was put into effect Recorder reported recently that of 50 persons he had placed on probation only one had lapsed. s e cavand - ENGLISH CONDUCTOR DETESTS JAZZ TUNES SHEFFIELD, England, Jan. 11—If words could kill, Sir Henry Coward, the conducter, would have annihilated jazz music completely. “The essence of vulggrity,” and “a low type of primitive music,” he calls it, asserting that it has “led to a lowering of the prestige of the white races.” “The, noble trombone,” said Sir Henry, “is made to bray like an ass, guffaw like a vil- | lage idiot, and moan like a cow in distress; = the sflver- tomed trumpet, assoclated in | poetry with the seraphim, is | made to screech, - produce sounds like drawing a nail on | | a plate, tearing calico, or like | & nocturnal tom-cat.” WOMAN SEES VOTE COMIN mculumgo ; nnot wind| clocks properly, nyl the g postoffice department, It is held that the vlhdfll clocks i3 to be done hy als of the department, but “if jfl any reason, such as the fact ti only female officlals are em; :- and it s not winding to, be dome :fil : mlu staff, then a wil a round trip, although the dis- tance in number of miles does Dot equal the number of hougs. The opening up of . road will give || them _ continuous communjcation with Juneau and its . markets. There are also a number ‘of tracts of land on the spur. route capable of development as home sites and truck farms. Several inquiries "r"s- lgarding them have ‘already received by the Forest :Service oftjces here and, when the. road is completed, it in certain to sthn- ulate settlement around Fritz Cove, it was said. Violation of Oath TCHATALDJA, Turkey, Jan. 11 in is Ready;tq-flggg $ TO cfioosz Fn(m SILK 75, $12. Aizwr‘- Py Py ,$675' of Marion Cemetery, the| The Harding memorial, in full Memorial has received | #ight of the federal highway that twin caskets containing thg|skirts the cemetery, dominatos ot Warren Glnullal Hard: | the view. of pedéstrian or auty ng { mobilist as ke nears the ceme- m«m-memnml hide the gleaming white of thw marble. .~ The ecolumns, of the unmity of heavy ecoping. - where the bodles rest is TRERS e "“"'"x-u-i

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