The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, January 8, 1929, Page 2

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4 . i RS = Every day this week is Dollar Day-- Fver have more cents! » dav this week your Dollars will Here are a few of the Sp:'l'i,ul Values---- Men’s Canvas Gloves—5 pair for $1.00. Men’s Cotton Sox—>5 pair for $1.00. Men’s Lisle Sox—3 pair for $1.00. Men's vy Sox, grey and white—3 pair for $1.00. Men'’s Meckties, good assortment—$1.00 each. Men’s Blue § $1.00 e Boys’ Bi., Boys™ Bil Ladies hambary Shirts, Sizes 1414 to 17— stume Slips Drapery ones—A41 Linen Deft ling : E{“.\“: .’,I’]il('(: Ladic layon ' ests Ladi cteeced Coit Ladies’ Chil Ladies’ P s Rompers Outing Flanne faney patterns venix Silk Hose—$1.00 pair. / 4 yards for Wool Knit Gloves tie Dressc Children’s part-wool Hoese » 6 to 12—51.00 , sizes 6 to 16 nel Nightgowns—$1.00 each. 6 yards for sach. $1.00 pair. .00. $1.00. $1.00 each. $1.00 each. on Union Suits 1.00 each. $1.00 pair. 2 for $1.00. 2 for $1.00. ddy Blouses—$1.00 each. rn’s Flannel Pajamas—$1.00 pair. 1 yards $1.00. $1.00 pair. Children’s Cotton Hose—3 pair 'for $1.00. Ladies’ Heavy Sport Hese—§1.00 pair. size 18x36—4 for $1.00. Huck B. M. Behrends Co., Inc. Towels, Juncai's Leading Department Store {LAMED FOR TRAIN WRECK ~ Three of the five derailed ca injurcd which two pacsengers were mer employes who are allcged to EDITH LUNDGREN OBSERVES BIRTHDAY Edith Lundgren celebrated eighth birthday yesterday at party given at the home of h parents, Mr. and Mrs. Al Lun gren. The diningroom was at tively decorated with long serpe tine streamers in two shades of pink.. The table decorations car- ried out the color scheme, and a surprise package was placed at| the plate of each guest. i afternoon was spent in in playing games. ‘Among those present were: June | Lynch, Dolores Smith, Onita Por-| of the S The wr have remc 4 line Mc. SLAVERY CHARGE \ Ruth ( and Olga Tor.| — o Eatad | John Novobel, receutly, arrested Mrs. Lund was a n a White Blavery charge by U. M Helen selson and Deputy Marshal Willlam , Cas- Marion Lee | well, of Ketchikan, has been hound e |over to the Grhnd Jury, His fofmar n it NER. adv. | heen reduced to, $1500, all. parts. of the country, while S i — ———-——— commercial activity is greatly on _ WAIT WAIT WAIT ATTENTION. . |the increase, due to_the expected Save the dale—-Pebruary 9th, for| For Carpenter Work . of Bbylincreased tance of the eity. the Annual F. 0. E. DANCE | kind—shop or city—Call Handy[Real estate, values are elmbing adv. in JUNEAU Andy,” Phone 498, 7 " |steadity, & 3 — B i L - 'BOB TURNE 1t t R'S AUTO SEBVXCEEIMM of flu for six weeks|io $1500. e W at Stand at Arcade Ruth Torkel-|1S HELD ON WHITE your service 1 Fe “Micsionary” Los Angeles to Chicago tralh, in’ attributed by railroad officials to revengeful for < §2500 has been. rediced Pear! Slater, of Ketchi- kan, is being held as a’material witness and her bend "hag ‘alsp|ployes are being drawn there from THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, TUESDAY, JAN. 8 ARMY PLANE | Wealllerr Co;ndihons As Recorded by the U. S. Weather Bureau Forecast for Junean and vicinity, beginnmg 4 v m. today: AIR RECORDS = LOCAL e Barom. Temp. Hupudity Wird Velocity Weather 99 1929. gentle variable winds. DATA may be made, saying: “After this| feat, so ambitious an experiment as a nonstop flight around the glohe is now well within the realm of possibility. D th vi ftighting planes in flight over bat. tle arcas with special cargo planes|” serving them fresh fuel and am-| munition during an engagemont It emphasizes tremendous potential | value to merchant craft fitted with | flight decks and operating ordi-| haty commercial planes as fuel| carriers in time of national emer- gency.” ELKS LODGE BE VISITED —_— | A formal visit to the Biks’ lodge| of Juneau will be made tomorrow night. by District Deputy Grana Exalted member of the local organizat Bxalted Ruler Henry Messer-| schinidt anmounces tha: the com- mittee is, making special efforts to handle a large attendance. A buf- fet luncheon will be served fol-| lowing the business session. Distriet Deputy Sperling vigited the lodges to the wes and to the interior, and w vigit the local lodge and later go to Skagway and Ketchikan. — MASONIC LODGE "AND EASTERN STAR INSTALL OFFICERS Ruler Harry Sperling, n ha ;! The joint’ fnstallation of of i fot 1929 of the Masonjc Lodge an2 | the Bastern Star, was held last ‘ight, - in ' ihe. ‘Masonic Templé | Waltér” P. Scott was insfalled as| ‘Worshipful Master of the Masonic! Lodge, succeeding Harry I. Lucas Redlingschafer, Senior Deacon: | Jobn J.. Fargher, Junior Deaco: William Keller, Senior Steward;| M, L. Merritt, Junior Steward; J.| W. Leivers, Organist; A. F. Zim.| merman, Tyler. ¥ Eastern Star Officers | Eastern: Star . officers installed | were: Maybelle George as Worthy Matron, succeeding Mrs. Ralph Martin; Evans L. Gruber, Worthy Patron; Lilie Burford, Associate! Matron; Eckley Guerin, Associate| Patron; d%anny Robinson, Secre. tary; Mary Lutton, Treasurer; Jes. sle Keller, Conductress; Edith Howard, Associate Conductress; Eva Tripp, 'Chaplain; Ruth Whit- tier, Marshal; Pearl Burford, Or- ganist; Hazel Petrich, Adele; Elizabeth Nordling, Ruth, Ella Smith, Esther; Adelaide Holbrock, Martha; Ruth Hawksworth, Elec- t Lottie Spickett, Warden; Don. ald McKinnon, Sentinel. Officers officiating at the in- stallation were: M. S. Whittier. Past /Master, as_installing officer and Wallis: George, Past Master as Grand Marshal for the Masonic ceremony and for the Eastern Star the following: Mildred Morten, ‘Worthy Matron, as installing offi- cer; -Mrs. Charles Naghel, Past Worthy Matron, as Marshal, After the instaliation members of both bodies enjoyed a luncheon in the banquet room. b ———--— NANKING GROWS RAPIDLY a AS CAPITAL OF ' CHINA SHANGHAIL Jan. 8.—~The popu- lation of the city of Nanking, now the capital of China, is reported by the Nationalist government to be 455,697. = Due to the removal of the national capital to Nanking the, population of the city is in. creasing rapidiy. Thousands of goverament em- Kay, those veteran Alaskan nro pectors, are becoming a bit ried. covered a promising vein of gold- bearing quartz. camp nearby and for the past threc |,y years they have been prosn & this ground. months they work for wages and|g,.), thus accumulate sufficient funds to,, |, carry their prospecting operations| 1 t < HoRh e rwintar, ith back end of the tunnel two winters they have been drlv.] ing & tunnel on their vein. They have advanced this drift 300 feet| and the vein has averaged from| twe to four feet in thickness. A?J“‘ times it widened out until the en-| tire face of the drift was in ore,| rowing down and for the last 40| feet they have had only a narrow! in . their which clings perilously to the side of @ steen granite, cliff. The Water|curved pack and forth on its trend is simmering on a bed of coals {through the country rock. i experience the forge. The pressure is low in South int in the ocean scuth of e Pacific -States, British Columbia ng moderately throughout “The flight brings to attention|ucd from the Gulf of Alaska to tiew possibilities of retaining mayal|have fallen slightly in all portian ex treme southwest the Alaska Peninsula. Eastern Alaska. to British Columbja. western Alaska with its lowest It is high in Northern Alaska and is Rain "has contin- Tcmp!mlurw: ! Territory except the and Always t Lettuce the ? Celery s of The following other . Masonic The rose colored taffeta dress which Worth belts at a nearly |jshed. However, they kept right offivers were installed: E. L. Gru-| normal waistline with a girdle of taffeta ending in a cabbage size |ahead with the sinking operation {ber, Senior Warden; W. B. King,|tafteta rose would have been called a robe de style six monthsland about a hundred feet father o e e0r8® | ago. Now it s a simple dancing dress. . It just clears the heels|down the shatt, hat seam began to retary; Ralph C. Mize, Chaplain: behind amll barely covers the knee cn the left side of the n-}nn_ widen t:)\.lt and in a e\\'r.mu_u‘.. H..G. N | But Paris has educated us to the point.of accepting such things[the entire shaft bottom was rich L . G. Nordling, Marshal; H. L.| g @as not extraordinary and quite all right | This model is for a slender figure, not too short. i Brussels Sprouts { Bunch Carrots Spinach Cabbage Best Yakima Potatoes, qualit FREE DELIVERY gently curving line through tha| cardboard to represent the fault line—then by sliding one side of the cardboard along the fissure to simulate the faulting, a ies of) leticular openings, alternating with | constriction, developed Jack picked up the ecardboard| original width. Here is another way of looking at it—if this fault {had moved down the dip of the} { vein, rather than along the strike, we would encounter a series of pinches and swells when w art-| ed,to sink on the vein. I remem- ber a shaft sinking job which I worked on down in the Couer d’Alene District. When we firs started that shaft we had a good vein of galena buf with depth it pinched down to a seam and we all believed that the mine was fin- PARIS. for a young girl's frock. RITA. “Well Larry I don’t know wheth-| er it was your theory or the hot Tales From the Hills (A" Seffes dt Populdr Articles on Prospecting) By ERNEST Dean of the Coilege and He: Alaska Agricultural Colle; WHY VEINS PINCH AND SWELL Larry O’'Sullivan and Jack Mc- wor- iSeveral years ago thay dis- They built 2 ng During the. summer For the past | ut lately the vein has been nar.’ uarts stringer showing in the face of the drift. Jack and Larry are eating lunch little blacksmith Ahop[ | 1 The Question Jack broke the gloomy silence: “Larry, I.don’t like the way that vein is pinching down, If it dcesn’t strengthen up rather soon I am afraid it will quit us entirely. You don't think it possble, do you, that we have gotten off the main vein and are following a branch string- "rr!d"mne for that J‘ck—-—W&‘- S lunch which makes me feel en-| couraged, anyway,,let's get backj |in the mine and finish that round }xhis afternoofi, “Right you are, Jack, my motto] on this prospect is ‘never give upj until we have put in another |round.” N. PATTY ad of the Sehool of Mines, ge and Scheol of Mines. { Will Larry and Jack strike gobd |ore on ahead or will thejr yein Ipinch out? Watch for “the next installment. have kept the vein square in the face of the drift from day to day and there wasn't a single round that caused us-any doubt about fol- lowing the vein.” “l agree win you on that Lar. but look at the curves we have in the tunnel. I remember that Kellogg Ceremony Cost " “France About $10,000! PARIS, Jan. 8.—Signing the Bri- and-Kellogg Peace Pact cost the French government about $10,000 FEGETABLES Our money back guarantee insures produc | CALIFORNIA GROCERY p. m. yest'y. 29.63 , 38 SE 5 Rain Tt i i L Was Aloft & & B today 3002 38 o - 8§ 3 Rain Everything Queshon Mark Was Aloft noon today, .....80.22 41 82 E 8 Cldy | in the Line. of for Over One Hundred CABLE AND BALIO KEFORTS Winter 3 ———YESTERDAY. ~ ¥ TODAY and Flhy Hours Highest 8 p,m,.‘l low 8a m. Sam. Preclp, 8am. Hardware %, J stations— _temp, temp, ¢ Jemp. temp. Velogity 34 hra. w..un;:_r s (Continwen ITom Tage ON.) |Darrow . R ¥ |8 14 10 0 pt. Cldy 3 5 e | Nome 8¢ 7 38 | @m0 22771l 04 Cldy : . 87 it was all over. The three engines|Bethel - 32 28 |- 22 ; o ‘: e ::';z’ | JUNEAU-YOUNG lost their power on account of{Fort Yukon ... 6 10 1.-80 B ¢ S ; Wi {fouled spark plugs. We were al.|Tanana 10 10 | . n‘: ((l“l“l“' W A |ready to end the flight then but|Fagle .. 10,10 = 8 LB e it S - we finally cleaned that trouble up.”|St. Paul . 32 82 ¢ . g d | Four Army surgeons examined :""“"kn““’”r ::: Q,? ! b5 10 o1 kR y \ {the crew and reported all in ex-|Kodia o2 £ ' : . F I{UITb cellent - physical condition except ‘J"“""" 4‘; ;; | 26 :; 13; Ba(i; ;'Ufrf-”“;"‘*mH“;:“‘;(}i‘:;( from ope|sINERE - o S A 4 a8 PvTly Oranges, dozen ... ... ... 40¢, 60¢ and 80c o five pound veight, " i i o ik id Frinke R E: ’ 2 4 e Apples,idosbn - g ont He e 40¢, 50¢ Edmonto! 2 ¥ AROUND WORLD FLIGHT |t 42 T * 0 cuy || Jap Oranzes, dozen ............ N YORK, Jum. S—Adiniral| T 0y k0 i 30 . o Clear | : $1.35 hox Motfett, Chiel of the Buraw ot/ (' !(I0 oo (0 it v L ey (($1.35 per hox) Aeronautics, commenting on the| . ®__Less than 10 miles. 5 & ? 3 150-hour flight tho Quastion| NOTE:—observations at St. Paul, Dutch Harbar, Kodiak, Ju- Extra Large Grapefruit ..........0......... 15¢ \ Mark, visualized day when aly ..y Prince Rupert, Edmonton, Sattle, Portland amd San Fran 223 ark ik 8 25¢ nonstop flight avound the world| ico are made at 4 a.m., Juneau time. Y Bananas, 2 p”““db """""" €PL he Best Tomatoes Parsley Rutabagas Parsnips Turnips per sack _. you the highest TELEPHONE 478 in extra expenses. This sum in- cluded housing, transportation and entertainment of visiting delegatos and diplemats, according to sup- plementary expenses filed by the ministry of foreign affairs for its 1928 budgst. More than $3,000 was spent for and experimented by sliding one|lodging the diplomats and trans- {half to varying positions against|porting them about Paris. Docu- the remaining half iments and work connected with “That certainly duplicates our|the actual ing cost $2,800, and conditions here Larry; it your|a luncheon, reception and dinner theory is correct we should soon|the rest. - {drive through the pinched area and T G e AT then the vein should regain Peculiar 'Casée Is Revealed In Salt Lake SALT LAKE CITY, Utah, Jan. 8.—A man staggered into a serv- ice station yesterday, handcuyffed, blindfolded and gagged, 'declared he was J. C. Price and that he had been kidnapped by two men from a ranch near Big Timber, Montana, 19 days ago. He was brought to Salt Lake and is held in | solitary confinement in . the city jail. The police are awaiting the arrival from Billings, Montana, of Sheriff Brannin before pro- ceeding with an investigation. Information received from the Big Timber authorities said the body of a man found on the Price homestead had been identi- fied as Price and buried at Boze- man. A telegram to the local police said o $14,600 lifc ir- ance policy, witich Price carried, {has been paid to Price’s father. ———— DISSCLUTIGN OF PARTNER- LHIP The partnersiip heretofore sub- sisting betwecn Theod F. Hey- der and Henry Meier in conduct- ing the business of the Peerless Bakery, at Juneau, Alaska, is this day dissclved, Theodor Hey- der retiring and Henry Meier continuing the business as sole owner, assuming all indebtedness and owning all accounts due or aceruing. January 7, 1929, THEODOR HENRY F. HEYDER, adv. MEIER. after the first 150 feet we made a Bent in the tunnel that you nger could see daylight from FIND PART OF HI . How e do you account for 'that?” e g s i L _“First of all, jack, our vein, & - like 8 out of 10 cther veins, is following a fault fissure. We have a layer of fault gouge on both alls of the vein; then, too, we have both noticed how the granite walls are . grooved and polished by fault movements. These grooves run with the direction of the tun- nel which indicates that the fault movement was - parallel to the strike of the fissure. Now as 1 see it, this fault fissure into which the vein was injected was not as straight as a die but was a fissure My in other mining dis- tricts causes me to believe that this is the rule rather than the exception for fissures of this type. The vein which later. filled this fault would naturally conform to its trend. = This is the key to our present problem. It is like this Jack:"” Fault Line Larry took a piece of cardoard and with his pocket knife cut a attempting 8 fight o America. NCHLIFFE PLANE undercarriage of an -lrpfufi Mnd g iation officials believe it is part of the plane WX!;M. iffe lost thelr lives o

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