The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, June 4, 1929, Page 8

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h 5 REPRESENTATIVE OF HOOVER TO VISIT ALASKA Col. D. P. Quinlan Plans Alaska Trip Shortly, Says Marshal White A personal President Hoover, Col. D. P. Quin- lan, is expected to visit Alaska this summer, according to United States Marshal Albert White who with| Mrs. White returned home this morning after an absence of 30| representative of | THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, TUESDAY, JUNE 1929 nak Lake Highway, 4.55 miles for $68,450. = STEWART GOES . STUDENT CAMP | Boyle, on account of her serious | illness, returned home today on the steamer Aleutian. Mrs. Boyle's Director of Predatory Ani- mal Control Leaves S | Today for Interior | death ocurred in Los Angeles on ! April 26. Judge Boyle took her back {to her old home in Milwaukee for interment. | R | NICK NOVAK FINED ; | R. K. Stewart, director of preda- Nick Novak, Ketchikan, arrested|y,y gnima) control for the Terri- late last week charged with vio- tory, 1 o ating the prohibition laws, yester- | (CrY: left on the Yukon for Cordova day entered a plea of guiity and was fined $1,000 by United States he will spend several months, going Commissioner Arnold, according to|°'°F ame ranges and training a information received by U. S. Mar- force of student hunters in methods days. He spent eight days in Wash- ington and four in New York City, | the remainder the spent in traveling. [ Col. Quinlan is Special Assistant of to the Chief Co-Ordinator of [hc.FLOYD CARLSON EMPLOYED United States. The main object | of his visit is to bring about a| closer union of Federal activities in the Territory. He will visit Juneau, ard, Anchorage, Fairbanks, Nome and points in the Aleutian Islands and other places. He is expected to sail from Seattle late this o "0 (e Meldrum timber | Zarembo. month. | In Washington, Marshal White called on Vice-President Curtis and had lunch with Senator Thomas and members of the Idaho House delegation. He met a number of| other members of Cong: He| took up a number of matters re-| lating to his own administration here with the Department of Jus-| tice and was accorded every Ppos-| sible assistance. Among other things | he obtained raises in salary for| some of the deputies and authority | for 10-day vacations for matrons employed in Federal jails. Mrs.: ‘White met President Hoover, and; later with Marshal White was shown through the White House. If Congress recesses this summer, Marshal White said, a number of | members from both Houses plan Alaskan trips. Senator Thomas and) Representative Addison T. Smith,! of Idaho, are among those who! have such a visit in mind. | The Marshal went to Washing-| ton to take a 1l4-year-old Indian boy, Zenas Williams, from Haines to the National Training School| there. The lad was indicted by the| local Grand Jury and sentenced | to a reform school to be designated by the Attorney General, who nam- ed the Washington institution. Wil- liams is the first Alaskan to go there. e CONTRACTS AWARDED | ON THREE PROJECTS IN WESTERN AREAS Contracts have been awarded in three Forest Service road projects| KEENEY GIVEN C ¢ time being | sitka, Sew- |V shal Albert White. He was arrest-|°f taking wolves and coyotes. «d by Federal deputics aid| Mr. Stewart has been in South- in which it was reported a large|castern Alaska for several months quantity of liquor was seized. (past. During that Ume he has i e | worked five islands and has taken 33 wolves. That is the number AT SAWMILL | he actually recovered but he esti- | mates that his operations accounted AS SCALE oyd Carlson, University of for at least 100 of the animals. hington Forestry School grad-| The most intensive work was uate, has accepted a position with!done on Kupreanof Island where the local U. S. Forest Service and|18 were taken. Three were taken gned to the Juneau Lumber on Kuiu Island, one on Mitkof, six scaler. Carlson was|on Prince of Wales and five on He spent considerable as log survey party in this district last|time in the field trying to find a season. method adaptible to conditions = - - | which could be taught to individual |trappers by means of which the REAT warfere on wolves could be more ffectively waged than at present. The Rev. B. R. Hubbard is giv-|In this, he was not successful, he ing the Sisters of St. Ann’s Hos- |said. pital their annual eight day Re-| Wolves can be greatly reduced in treat. They went into the Retreat|this section, however, he said. It last evening and will be Iinis)md‘“m require the entire time of a next Wednesday morning. During|trained man in the field, and his that time they spend practically | work must be carried on for an all of their time in meditation, | indefinite period of time. prayer and listening to the talks of | Mr. Stewart left today for Chiti- Father _Hubbard. :vpgaklxlg as little na. He expects to visit the upper as possible and doing only what| .4 of the reindeer range in the is ac!pally necessary. ‘Father H"b',Yukan River Valley and the An- bard is also making his annual Re- | chorage district in the next few treat at this time. weeks. About the middle of July E jhe will proceed to Gulkana and WILL VISIT HERE take a party of student hunters to - the upper Nabesna. There camp Mrs. William Gray, of Seattle,|will be established in the heart arrived on the Yukon to visit her |of a region abounding in game and daughter, Mrs. Wilbur Burford dur- | predatory animals and the force ing the summer. Mr. and Mrs. |will be instructed in methods of Gray formerly lived in Juneau. taking the predators. OFF TO FAIRBANKS Fred Orme, 29 graduate of melNEw STRIKE UN Juneau High School, left on the| Yukon for Seward enroute to Fair- banks then to College where he h: a position with the Alaska Agri- cultural College and School of Mines. ! James Orme, who will attend the College next Fall, also left for the interior and expects to land in |some position. J. Janeksela is an- other Juneau young man bound for Fairbanks and work. e TRACT FATHER HUBBARD GIVES THE SISTERS' I Manville Strikes Surface Lead Carrying 25 Per , Cent Zinc, Report A new strike that gives promise development now in progress in enroute to Interior Alaska where | TAKU REPORTED of adding materially to the mining | in Western Alaska, it was announc-| FOR STRAWBERRY PT. DOCK ed today by M. D. Williams, Dis- trict Engineer, United States Bu- R. M. Keeney, local contractor, |the Taku River section, has been made by Victor Manville, well known local prospector, it was re- seau of Public Roads. They are:/ Seward Highway, radio section; Crow Creek Highway, and Afognak Lake highway. The first job calls for recon- struction of one and one-quarter| miles of Seward Highway, between | Seward and the radio station, It was awarded to Seims, Helmers and Schaffner for 12,130. The sec- ond is for one and three-quarter miles of new grading and six miles of surfacing on Crow Creek High- way near Girdwood. It was | awarded to Johnson Gardner for $57,860. The same firm was award- CARROTS, 2 bunches . CAULIFLOWER, WAX ONIONS, 3 pounds ASPARAGUS, 2 pounds | FIELD TOMATOES . . HOT HOUSE TOMATOE! * SPINACH, pound .. | CUCUMBERS, large PEAS, pound ... ... . STRING BEANS, pound . CABBAGE, pound FRESH BANANAS, 2 pounds ... CANTALOUPES, each PHONE 478 ed the construction of the Afog- |furrier. Goldstein’s Emporium. adv FRESH VEGETABLES RADISHES, GREEN ONIONS, LOCAL RHUBARB, 1 pounds .. STRA WBERRIES, 2 boxes CALIFORNIA GROCERY has been awarded the contract for constructing a small boat dock at Strawberry Point, it was announc- ed today at Alaska Road Commis- sion headquarters. He bid $2,775 for the job. The dock to be built ported today. Samples taken from surface outcroppings assayed 25 copper, silver and gold values. The discovery was made on the per cent in zinc, and showed some | Taku RWer proper about one mile above the Tulsequah River where development work is now in pro- gress on claims bonded recently to California interests by Eaton and Williams and associates. Mr. Man- ville brought several hundred | pounds of samples in Monday and is having additional assays made. The discovery is purely a pros- pect, he emphasized. All of the samples were taken from the sur- face and no work has been done to determine the size of the deposits. He is leaving today with two men, supplies, powder, tools, etc., to start explorations. He is confident these | will lead to the development of a | big. body of rich ore that can be | profitably developed. - e CORST PLANE "~ GOING SOUTH KRAUSE LOWEST | BIDDER ON NEW STREET PAVING Council Awards Him Con- tract for Front Street —Starts at Once A contract for paving lower Front Strect south from the Alaskan Ho- tel, was awarded by the City Coun- cil last night to G. E. Krause. The bids were opened by the Council at a special meeting called for that purpose. Mr. Krause was lowest of three! bidders, his tender being 31 cents’ per foot for the work. The job will be started without delay and pushed as rapidly as possible. Two‘ concrete mixers wiil be used. ‘ The other bidders were: Morris Construction Company, 32 cents,| and Alfred Dishaw, 33 cents per| foot. i e The Gorst plane Alaskan, pilot| gENRY PASELLAS DIED C. L. Scott, landed here from Cor- AT ST. ANN'S THIS A. M. dova at 4:35 o'clock yesterday af- g X ternoon, making the trip in four hours and ten minutes flying time. |1t left Cordova at 10:55 a.m. and | Arrived Here Late Yester- | day from Cordova—3 | Passengers Aboard Henry Pasellas, who entered St. % Ann's Hospital § from ptomaine poisoning, died this made a stop of an hour and a half morning at 6:30 o'clock. He told ' g tat. J. Ibach, fur farmer|pjs physician that he had eaten |from Middleton Island, was a Ju-|canned tomatoes that had been in neau passenger from Cordova, and |gn open can for three days. The Charles M. Daniels, big game hunt- | W. Carter Mortuary has chargs jer from New York City, and H.|of the funeral arrangements. | Seidenberg continued on the plane JEHREE S to Seattle. " 1 terday suffering .< WHO'S WHO | AND WHERE | L o Mrs. H. E. Peterson, accompanied by her daughter, Miss Margaret Lindstrom, left this morning on the Princess Louise on her way to her home in Sweden. This is Mrs. Peterson’s first visit to Sweden since she came to Alaska several years ago. G. M. Sandberg, who taught The plane left for Ketchikan at 7:30 last evening and arrived there at 10 o'clock Juneau time, planning to take off for Seattle at four o'clock this morning with two stops yon the way to refuel. | Pilot Scott and Gordon Graham, | mechanic, were indefinite about |when they would return north as itheir plans will not be made until | they reach Seattle. Vern C. Gorst, \head of the company, is now in | Washington, D. C, at the Loening | factory and they may wait in Seat- !tle until his return. The Gorst|" Company has renewed its contract J ) [for the Seattle-Victoria mail route | with the government for two years, | Mr. Scott said. The plane has been to the westward since May 9. Mr. Daniels was more than pleas- red with his bear hunt on the Ke- inai Peninsula where he bagged two brown bear and two black bear. He |said that he saw 57 bears during| | his hunt. 50¢ . R ANN’S HOSPITAL | AT BE. | K. D. McLean underwent an {operation for the removal of a {cataract on his eye, at the hos- Ipital this morning. James McCloskey, who has been |receiving treatment at the hospital {since June 1, left the hospital for this home today. Mrs. Robert Cockburn entered ithe hospital for medical treatment ithis morning. Mrs. Louise Norton entered the |hospital this morning to receive treatment for a crushed left arm. Juneau Drug Company H. M. HOLLMANN R. R. Free Delivery Phone 33 is 30 by 40 feet. It will replace the old landing scow installed there | B0 g i by the Territory several years ago.| BY GIVING US A Funds for construction were made SEE IT PAYS available from the First Division al- | lotment of the Territorial Road | fund. e Our Fur Manufacturing Depart- GARNICK’S, Phone 174 | | i | HERMANN | | in the Juneau schools during the last year, left on the Princess Lou- ise on her way to her home in Virginia City, Minn.,, to spend the summer. Mrs. L. M. Fry and her daughter Miss Audrey Fry left on the Prin- cess Louise for the south on their way to Santa Cruz for Mrs. Fry's health. Philip Wiseman and R. W. Moore, prominent mining men from Los Angeles, whose company is inter- ested in the Tulsequah Mining property up the Taku River, ac- companied by Mrs., Wiseman and Mrs. Moore, left for the south on |the Princess Louise. H. J. Thompson, of the U. S. Weather Bureau Service, and Murs. Thompson, left on the Yukon on their way to Fairbanks where Mr. Thompson will have charge of the new airway service to be organized there. Capt. George Morgan, Capt. John Newmarker and Leroy Vestal of the U. 8. Steamboat Inspection Service, left on the Yukon on their annual trip of inspection to the West- ward. They will be away several months. W. F. Rosswag, representative .of the Seattle News, and Alexander Mayer, representative of the Mayer jewelry company of Seattle ‘were Westbound passengers on the Yu- kon, J. P. Ibach, who has fox farms a¢ both Middleton Island, in the Gulf of Alaska, and Lemesurier Island, arrived here from Cordova on the Gorst plane, Alaskan, y N. G. Nelson, property owner and businessman of Ketchikan and Ju- neau, who went south for a visit several weeks ago, returned to Ju- neau on the steamer Queen. Mrs. Roy T. Leddingham, a bride on the steamer Queen on her way of a month, passed through Juneau to join her husband in Atlin. Mr. Leddingham was formerly purser on the Dorothy Alexander and is now agent for the White Pass and Yu- kon at Atlin. A. L. Atherton, whe will have charge of the construction of the School in Sitka, was a passel addition to the Sheldon Jacks on the Queen for Sitka. Mrs. M. L. nierritt, accompanied by her children, Alice, Melvin, jr., and Morris Merritt, left on the Princess Louise on the way to Des Moines, Towa, where they will visit with relatives for the summer. on printing at The Just Arrived! FRESH HUCKLEBERRIES, pound ........ STRAWBERRIES, full basket STRAWBERRIES, Vashon Island ....... RADISHES, bunch, full bunches ......... GREEN ONIONS, bunch, full bunches .. .. BABY BEETS, bunch ........... PARSNIPS, 3 pounds .. & il SPINACH, 2 pounds ............ CUCUMBERS, large ............ GREEN PEAS, pound .......... GREEN BEANS, pound ......... PARSLEN: bunch ... . o000 TURNIPS, 2 bunches ........... ..10c .2he Asparagus, Lettuce, Cauliflower, Celery, Cantaloupes, Hot House Tomatoes Bunch Greens and Strawberries are not made over. We sell them as they arrive FULL MEASURE George Brothers PHON 92 and 95 TRIAL YOU WILL TO TRADE AT ment is in charge of an expert Oil B FRUITS j PLUMBING FREE DELIVERY WE SELL “CRANE” AND “STANDARD” Plumbing Fixtures “BIRCHFIELD” AND American Radiator Co. Heating Boilers HART and RAY RICE & AHLERS CO. HEATING Juneau, Alaska “We tell you in advance what job will cost” urners SHEET METAL BE SURE TO SEE THIS BARGAIN TABLE FULL OF Printed Charmeuse, Printed Voiles, Rayons, and ete. Several of these are also suitable for coat linings. Values up to $1.25 a yard. Now, 55¢ a yard LADIES’ SHOE SALE STILL CONTINUES P e/ | A— GOLDSTEIN’S EMPORIUM Juneaw’s Style Center e — e ————

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