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l | Sfie" u':)_‘ml'er IS DROWNED, | GAMBIER BAY Hunting Party Ends in! Tragedy Yesterday Rowboat Capsizes Hency C. Hanna i drowned at Snug Cos i Bay at about 3 afternoon when swim ashore fr rowboat in w geese with Shippey The with and son ert Burn evening Typhoon, trip to G rived at morning E Sla ed to take and outho: North Arm was at anchor Cove to hunt to call at to Juneau and yesterday ittempted to | overturned hunt H three Gec Ludw aboar amb thely € nation 8 nd Hanna decid- from th Typhoon to Snug "yphoon 1 afternoon a roun ard motor where the Snug on in pick them t Boat Turns Over the three men ne t W the hey called to handling the off, as they As ared creek in Shippey motor, to were within some gee ed shooter other fired and the three men hoat to capsize, Shippey knew he said, Snug Cove who shut was it hooti ance of t hand- ck to the shots were up to shoot, guns of the caused the next thing in the other Step up and meet pretty Ruth Hurschler. She captured first prize in the annual back” contest of the National Progressive Chiropractic sociation held at Los Angeles recently. We'll say that Ruth certainly merited the award| (nternational Newsrcel) S had s the s6 ppey his fir b men a Hanna stood recoil of the evidently for the he was with the boat, but declared he not e of the Shippey disuade to 100 be boat clung to the Hanna is said to have aid they would live long hecause of the water gle atte ted from tr t wim a distance cf about feet, and urged that tl thing to do was to | ahead of them to the Howeve ma ed to strike out and removed his which hung from lecting to remove his which was practically shells. He v within a few feet of the he when he sud denly led help and sank from zht Shippey Leaves Boat Shippey and Slagle who mained with the boat immediately tried to kick off their boots coats. Shippey managed to his off first and struck out for| Hanna. He reached the spot where Hanna's cap floating on the water, He dove several times in an unsuccessful attempt to locat Hanr As he was becoming ex- | hausted he went ashore, removed most of his clothes, and then swam out again to try to bring Hanna to the surface His ef-) forts were again without result and he returned to shore when | he became exhausted 3y this time Slagle had beached the boat Once more Shippey went out, this time with a rope around his body, but again unable to h Hanna. He became, so tired e had to drag him by the rope. A few minute the two men emptied the and set out again in search of the missing man time they lo cated the body. Shippey dived, but as the tide was high he w unable to reach the bottom Body Is Recovered The two men then waited un til the tide dropped somewhat,! and then brought Hanna's body to the surface with the aid of car and rope. For 1y hour they worked drowned man but bring back a spark of life Distress arranged fore leaving the Typhoon, were nt out, and when the tide was well out the Typhoon reached the seene. The body and two men were taken aboard and the boat | which left for Juneau, reaching re about The widow deceased i three able coldnes: and him shor to children, aged thre twin y to ng to ! ¢ ar Mrs. Claude Harris, t mother tland brother 4 Home Hr(- bm. Henry Hanna h on Gast.nean and during made a i known one of the t the Americ the heach 1918 W mad for boots his a min- beach, pistol home 1918 her the and belt, ne shell ve: full of was popularly y baseball and player 1 wa 0 on i am Leag be | On p Miss Hilda re-'a sister of Hedrickse Heinke, now Since emplc Company operated Street Godkin No made of inning 14 City here 1924 Hendrickson Eshcen and and M dir ch the ue since for its married he Frank and € n Juneau get has u to 926 H th been Motor that Front Miles nna June previous ed by was and a partner wrage on in with have been 1l arrangemnts for the funers - H. D. STABLER RETURNS U Stabler from for District Attor- returned on the Ketchikan whe 10 days offi- Assistant ney H. D. | Alameda h: had heen on | elal busine | - ee- | On and after OSeptember 1, credit will not be extended on accounts that have been standing on my books for . period longer than thirty da —adv, D. 5. FEMMER. was hore | later | boat a The ratest designs in TALLY CARDS PLACE CARDS GIFT CARDS and > CARDS n nes over unable an were signal be GREET N A S R+ P S S SRR Canning Peaches Are Here Our Canning Peaches arrived on Dorothy Alexander, and we offer them at $1.10 per crate or 2 crates for $2.15 You all know our quality of merchandi and price on Bananas and eyergthing. YOU CAN ALL REST ASSURED That the Happy Home will make your home happy too. SO PLEASE REMEMBER Others Specials Our Regulars—All the Time service, Gastineau Grocery PHONE 37 We thank you for last week’s patronage and please keep on coming “perfect | \\-‘ Waino | + [ by sistdiice, of (he Cohgressional delel gations from Washington and th other Paclfic Coast States, whos s are vitally interested in Alas ka's growth and development.” Mr. Grigsby will campaign in Third nd Fourth divisions may visit Neme, returning here about October 15 to wind up his campaign in Southeastern Alaska HASSELL AND | CRAMER ARE N GREENLAND (of years, and now are struggling for development under a Federal .l,zulng system, which never has been a where, Bureau Control Unsatisfactory “The 1 industry of Ala 1, just the fisheries; from we get of our Territorial ur towns and their from 1 success a | FORTH ISSUE OF CAMPAIGN Nominee for Delegate Fav- Home Rule Including Fish and Game Control ading now, i mg the and revenue; most of mos derive n.” olutely r contr Washir ymme {Fisheries |the represe of our people indirectly we have in it v.»;,uv,.u.\ regulated from | ie Department of | ch the Bureau of| man in Alagka, | of the Depart-| has the pow summarily, community b or industry Ye no voic 1 )y v thro One ive nied from P e One) in the rolice s und v 1o eratie opposed this home rule, for full 1l government, ineludin al of.|control of the fisheries and game. | this | That is the issue in this campaign | in Alaska. We believe that w legalizes| . | should be allowed to control our Bone Dry ! |own resourc that we should |~ |be permitted make our | mistakes and suffer from and profit 'm We believe our including the fisheric ated by general ur territorial legis 1 federal bu control. * The Demo nal Platform has stand needs pia to policy. It Missing for Over Two Weeks, Ocean Fliers Are Rescued rake One.) medic interest als an violate Kot Alaska i A 17O to own!g afternoon 800 mile the same ma the hours. 10 o'clock The aviators flight in seven Hassel and Cramer hopped off from Cochrane at 12:12 o’clock on the afternoon of August 18 for Mt s on their proposed flight to '\\mkh(ll'n Until word was New York Time 1ho were a m boats had been sear missing fliers Alaska off th place: the of Bone Dry statute n Vols Act books. ka a der should be {1aw, made Hature, i reaucratic ratic N rsed our count > by ot Sees feve as oppe to Prosperity Alaska period of unprece and growth. We surance of installa- | aid it er mills | roads, more in the near| more navigat undoubt otk t | buildings, but Joth in the Ln et an all these, divisions Thi nand what 'T€-yad, and what | mendously, The supply of timber|, o 40¢ Wwhat {privea of, su for the paper pulp indus unlimited, SHC Byt “While at present 5 | 30uxces are the greatest source | orial revenue, probably m"‘“ de [has reached its lowes impossible to put is enterinz \ ved by the their wher stery. Many iing for the y all the Federal We want mor improvements aids, more public| more important | want and de. other Territory have been de tha the benefit of| to control our own aska the she can get harbor ion tion in future Southea which will followed by others, First and Third [will increase our v ON UNKNOWN AIRWAY NEW YORK, Sept. 4. —Flying [on an unknown airway and with |inadequate weather information appears to been the chief ¢ of th ced landing of | and Cramer in the opin Dr Kimball of the Weather Bureau here. Kimball said it was another and 5 proof the necessity for com- limit | vits lmited -pomgrs in |} 1 her surveys along the (191 In t we have goneg back |future possibilities. Of coursa| ;i ! line of flight. been | Ward For the past eight years B2 20 the known rich placers have worked owt, but within the past|the policy of Eovernmont ha |inclined more and more toward few years millions of dollars of| |bureaucratic control and paternal outside money have into | the Territory, to develop ox. |1Sm, with no apparent effort mad tReive, low gtkde: placer 1»,\ anybody to combat it. We are 1 bureaucratie rat and Yome and Fairbanks BHLMOS nt There will he produc an | Will stay for the mext fifty enormou scale for many FRAY unle determined “effort | ter I To Gkt aies made Alas them. | Ale ved nsportation ) g thetr: will fnsur new n Congress to L,H out | tuture production in erto unexplored, and greatly quartz development, in its infancy, held back ability. “What I have safd about possibilities in Alaska, |whole lot on the attitude government toward Alaska. |have inexhaustible natural re. |sources, yet our population for the last twenty-five years been stationar in fact sometimos dwindling. ~ Why is this? The| answer is that while we have the| natural resources they have been | withheld from us by mistaken gov i | far we every population we 1hle - ‘ r 2 sell the fis} of herie: ¥ minin ep rorward direction ritorial L-gml Not one in ranted |we |t ebh it very on wed the MRS, KAY AND DAUGHTER RETURN ON ALEUTIAN come the in senior clerk in reau of Public ce here, and her daugh- returned on the from the outh where they have heen for he last three months. Mrs. Kay | will resume her position at the of- to be fice of the Bureau upon the ex- that 'piration of her le of absence. that — e, — as-'01d pape e at the Empire. | HEATING PLANTS $250 to $350 zed homes we will ap Kay, B Mrs. L he office of the Roads of Virginia, n this m on a years | 3 | the im- faciliti ies ani hith stim which by in.| by and and friends is mornin; ) come. ntime discove regions “It 1 am fortunate Delegate to Congre be my fight, and I feel assured of ve elected shall | fight i in the ulate 1s \eces future | v depends a of the We | has ernmental policies, while on the other hand we have the greatest| natural obstacles that ever con-| fronted the pioneers of any terri- tory. If there was ever a land| where the settler should be given | the benefit of every natural 1.‘.; source and told to help himself it aska. But on the contr ry, there never Territory where he has been so hampered | Federal restrictions, in the way of reservations, bureaucratic trol, conservation fads and experi- | ments. The drift toward bureau- : gbvernment in the past de-| ade has been denounced by 1«;.4.} ing men of both parties as a men. ace, even in the states, as baneful | in effects, paralyzing to de-| velopment and leading to favorit- graft and corruption. The bureau-ridden, official in- fested, red tape restricted spot in the United States ,is Alaska. “Abeut the time the cream our gold placers were skimmed, a fever of conservation swept the| country. Pinchotism became ram.! pant and Alas the victim, | Our coal and oil lands were with. | drawn from entry for a long period fs | i For small to medium | . . . | install complete in working order an electric con- welded steel warm air furnace with register in each room and guarantee it to heat your house to 70 degrees in zero weather. its ism, | most Jds GEO. B. RICE Plumbing Sheet Metal “I tell you in advance what job will cost” of | IIcaiing 10¢c Pound FRESH SOLID FIELD TOMATOES WE WILL OFFER YOU Canning Peaches for $1 Box Later Part of This Week GEORGE BROTHERS Deliveries—10:30 a. m., 2:30 p. m. and 4:30 p. m. Phones 92 and 95 Open evenings ssssssssessesassass T sssssssssssisasssd) SEN, ROBINSON CAMPAIGNING TEX Attacks Record fred Enroute to Cis an_ attack Gov. Alfred and religious r eph T. Robin today from Da Vice-Presidenc a prepared ad cratic Party" Labor, in Dall Revie Senator Rob brief review ord in New “He has not ernor. tist Governor Governor, but been an Robinson sai been made tha ard Robinso! then shoute word of truth Repoi of Y by abroad that if he would condu “priest rule” a a government and for Priest Answering the Governor h. two Catholics a Advisory The freight during the we The Hyak, t ka Consolidatec port this morn Special sal 10 cents, time to these. Phone 33 ROBINSON Having opened his campaign with upon E. second address in a He has American Robinson said there w “of '. Council - MONROE HERE Monroe, carrier, ———————— School Tablets regular pri A huge crowd attended the an- nual Labor Day Tance of the !'Loyal Order of Moose at ¢he Al |B. Hall last night. The large ‘Will Soon Make First Ap-'number of Juncau people who pearance on Bat[le iVlll'!li'll out for the festive affair | was supplemented by many pas- Ground of Smith |sengers from the Dorothy Alex- WASHINGTON, ander, as the officers of the steamer called off their usual bert C. Hoover will speak in New- \ark, N. J., on. September 17, the t dance in favor the {first campaign utterance in tho|isheq by the Moonli East which will be made the chief|or, 7The orchestra AS STATE Those Assailing of Gov. Al- E. Smith SPECIAL , Sept Sept hE s furn- Serenad- from the played one which was : for the dance w: it CAR, co, 8, 1. assailing personal ecords, Senator Jos- son moved onward llas to Cisco for drive for the delivering Demo- toward those mith's dance, y, aft dress of position yesterday the | ws Record inson closed with f Gov. Smith's ork State and een a Catholic not been a nor a Democ thank God he Governor.” ement has a drunk-| moment, not one re said: Gov- Bap. the s t Smith is n paused “There in, it.” rt Abroad battleground, since it is the ““"‘"|I)Urnl)n ly with questions affecting labor f— ALEUTIAN IS HERE will be broadcast through a n. of his address and plans to mnm arrived in port from the south apeake Bay on which he is (-xxu'xL;;..nwunuor for Juneau: Idaho, will begin a speaking cam |Crim, Clyde Grainger, Mrs. C. had an éngagement with the Re-|[Jensen, Lillian Kay, Mrs., 8. Kor- S ||\m steerage from Seattle; Wil- pany at Kake, w in Juneau tCarbray. George Kolendick ’lnli of Gov. Alfred E. Smith | complimentary Hoover’s address will deal large-|greatly enjoyed and will probably be delivered in he First Regiment Armory and tion-wide hookup. i RS Hoover has worked out a draft| rhe Aleutian, Capt. Gus Nord plete it by next week, after hislat 9:30 o'clock this morning with Ireturn from a fishing trip on ('hm-.hm.- day’s mail and the following ed to depart Thursday | William B. Allen, W. H. Bren- Senator William E. Borah, of!nan, Blanche Benjamin, Dorothy aign for the Hoover-Curtis titket|Grainger, Robert Grainger, J n Defroit on September 19. He |Heller, Julius Heinaman, Bert publican Standard Bearer for honen, Mrs. Ellen Larsen, Mrs. luncheon at Hoover's home. A. Nelson, Miss Harriet Sey, and Al Minard, superintendent of | Hebert, W. D the Sunny Point cking ('mnri on, Helen Mayette, IL vesterday. Joseph C. Mason from Kete chikan. . report Smith elected net a government of | nd that it would be Priest, by Priest were PP said tants, on his his tobinson ad nine Pro and one Jew A in Capt arrived end Danl, port UNALGA Officers and Crew welcome you to their the Alas- I Canneries, was in ning ender of THIRD ANNUAL COMPLIMENTARY BALL e this week of s for 5e and just 14 of the ce. Now is the stock Given in up on A. B. HALL Tomorrow evening, September 5 HELLAN’S PHARMACY Next to Valentine’s Free Delivery CHOOIL. SHOES WE ARE THE SOLE AGENTS FOR Pied Piper Shoes for Children Now is the time to prepare the children for school with a new pair of Good Strong Shoes Golastein’s Emporium SHOE DEPARTMENT