The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, June 10, 1929, Page 8

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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, MONDAY, JUNE 10 1929. MARK REED'S Aleutian Off Course When SONTOSAL " 1® SEATTLE, June 10—The e ® investigation into the wreck e IN Bls RAGE e of the steamer Aleutian re- e e cently in Westward Alaska, ® Seaatin e disclosed that the steamer e e . e was off of the regular course William G. Reed, Univer-|e wuen she struck a rock in e . 7 5 e Uyak Bay. The rock is e sity Student, to Enter |® shown on the chart as one e Yacht Race o quarter of a mile south of e oL ¢ Amook Island where the e William G Rr‘rd son of Mark!|e Aleutian was at the time of e Reed, prominent Was gton busi- |® the disaster. Reports at that e nessman and Republican leader,|® time said Uyak Bay charts e and a nephew of the late Judge failed to disclose the rock. e T. M. Reed, of this city, has (-n-“ . tered his 32-foot boat, Klosh, in [hrl ” e Capital-to-Capital yacht race, ac- TKA MAN ARRESTED ON cording to word received by lhc‘ ALASKA BONE DRY CHARGE Juneau Yacht Club. He is a| WX University of Washington student.| Charley Young, Sitka, was ar- Reed's boat will fly the colors of |rested there Saturds by Deput the Seatle Yacht Club. He listed |United States Marshal William as his crew: Reed Ingraham, Olym- |Schnabel, charged with violation of pia; R. E. Briggs, Shelton; S. H.|the Alaska Bone Dry Law, accord- Griffin, Sr., Los Angeles, and H.|ing to reports received by Marshal W. Yenawine, Seattle. | Albert White He was to.have Richard Froboese, of Seatle, has|had a hearing today before United | also entered his litle cruiser, the|States Commissioner R. W. DeAr- Bolinder. mond. Numbers 1 and 2 in the race will | — B P - be borne by Seattle yachts. Thc‘ STORE HOURS Maidie, owned by Jack Power, of | This store will be open Monday the Queen City Yacht Club, of Se-|evening, June 10, for the accommo- atle, was assigned No. 1 some time |dation of the trade. ago, and the No. 2 will go to‘ad\ GORDON'S. Reed, whose handicap rating is vir- | ETRRBIOR ™~ 5 tually the same as the Maidie. Is Seventh Entry With six boats already rm(-red‘ in the event that last year captured | the interest of the entire yachting | world and is again this year being ment is in charge of an expert furrier. Goldstein’s Emporium. adv - D - CAPITAL DYE WORKS Very latesu methods in I'rencn iy 01 ec|Dry Cleaning and Dyeing, See; watched atentively, the commitee r 0] Aeldner, Professional Cleaser and| for ten or s in charge is looking for | 4 !Dyer Phone 177. more crulsers to make the long trek into Northern waters. Women this year are not content to make the trip as passengers, but are being listed as members of th: | i crew. Mrs. Walter H. Draham,| A W | )k_E I whose husband last week entered | ee T his boat, the Kitiwake, of the| Olympia Yacht Club, was the first woman to be listed as a crew mem- ber. Frank J. Seidelhuber of the Se- atle Yacht Club owner of the Mary- Mar-Ann, already officially entered | in the race, has sent in to B. F. Hume, secretary of the commit- ee of the local Chamber of Com-| merce, one of the sponsors of the! KELLOGG’S event, his crew list which shows| PEACHE five men and five women, will make | % i b Ay the trip. They are the owner. |f/ ]dl‘g(, Ze cans ... Frank J. Seidelhuber, Mrs. F. V. Seidelhuber, Miss Anna Seidelhuber, | Mrs. R. Brown and daughter, and | Mrs. Ray Erjckson. M CEOLOGICAL SURVEY| PARTY ENROUTE WEST FOR SUMMER’S WORK 8. L. Capps, of the U. S. Geologi- cal Survey, passed through Juneau Saturday night on the steamer Ad- miral Evans enroute to Illiamna | with a party of three. They wnll spend the summer in that district | making geological investigaticus. With Mr. Capps were Gerald Every Day with Us Day, Worthy of Our Fur Manufacturing DepanA; for Wide Awake Shoppers NOWFLAKE CRACKERS, reg S CORN FLAKES, O’HENRY CANDY BARS, reg. 5¢, 3 for .10 Canned in heavy syrup, | FISHER BLEND FLOUR—S50 1b. sack 2.50 { GARNICK’S PHONE 174 LONG TRIP TO HAX\NIBAL. M June 10 Tfim‘ ARGTIG RETURN Sawyer's band of adventurers all ] have gone on to the great adven- ture. | Those who now would learn of | - them must take their lore from the {Leave Edmonton for North imprint that Mark Twain and his to Come Out on Yukon !|boyhood playmates left in this cor-{ | " ner of Missouri. | | River at Fort The last of those, who, with| | ‘Sam’l” Clemens fought the im-! | SEATTLE, Junn 10.—Beginning | aginary pirates of the Mississippi, | at Ithabaska Landing, 60 miles|pasced with the death of “Guil" |above Edmonton on next Wednes-|praqdy. |day, Mos Berg and Dean George| Qthers identified with the Twain | Rebee, aged 60 years, both of Ore- group were S. H. Honeyman, Jim! McDaniel, B. O. Farthing, Ed Pierce | and, of course, Laura Frazier, whom the humorist immortalized as “Becky Thatcher.” Young Clemens, Brady recalled, | was a bashful boy, with a fondness | for pretty girls. { “He had to do his ‘sparkin’’ byf gon, plan to make a 3,500-mile |canoe trip through the Northivest territories to the Arctic Ocean via |the Athabaska and Mackenzie Riv- |ers, across the Arctic tundra into ‘Cn(m A 12-pound rubber boat will be used for the last 500 miles on the Bell and Porcupine Rivers into Fort | Yukon. | While Berg has a record of 25 000 miles of canoe travel, this is |Rebec's first attempt. proxy,” he once said. “Once I heard him say to his school desk- mate ‘John, if you will go and tell Laura at recess that I like her, and The two men will gather writing [think she’s the prettiest girl in data as well as moving and still[School, T'l give you the next ap- | pictures. ple I get'.” The “Laura” was Laura Frazie They expect to return by Sep- tember 1. She preceeded “Gull” to the grave by a few weeks. And so has passed the “old Twain gang,” but the years only etch deeper its mark on Hannibal. And the dirty faced, pantalooned leader left the adventurers’ impress - | PETER ALLARD IS WITH A Ul | Peter Allard was arrested at Sit- |ka Saturday on a charge of as-|on jiterature's shelves for succeed- sault by William Schnabel, Deputy | ine gencrations to read—and chuc-| United States Marshal. Allard 5 kle over. Twain’s mark is deeply etched in the communities that knew him first, if not best. The two room house at Florida, Mo., where Clemens was born, is a shrine. On its walls are commen- | datory letters from three presidents | —~Wilson, who “greatly admir | was to have been tried today be- | !fore Commissioner R. W. DeAr- |mond. ARE PLANNING |TOM SAWYER’S GANG DISBANDED BY DEATH | birth of !neau Ice Cream Parlors. |fied to present them, duly verified | ‘Empire. WHO'S WHC | AND WHERE ! - A 3 SR Buddy Martin, son of Mrs. Howe | the writer; Harding, who classed|Vance, arrived Saturday night on him as “foremost among men of |the steamer Northwestern from Se- letters,” and Coolidge who called | attle to spend the summer with his him “distinctly American. mother. A memorial bust in Florida’s|. Fred C. Jones, who has been on; square is ir ibed: “He cheered(a vacation in and near Portland, and comforted a tired world.” Ore., for several weeks, returned Twain's Hannibal home is a mu-; home Saturday. J. W. Jones, well known Ketchi- seum kan traveling salesman, arrived on 'lhe Northwestern on a business trip. H. C. Bracken, veteran Alaska Juneau employee, returned home Saturday after spending several weeks visiting friends and relatives in Oregon and Washington. o PROSPECTORS LIKE e er———— BABY BOY BORN SUNDAY Mr. and Mrs. F. E. McDermott are receiving congratulations on the a baby boy weighing five and one-half pounds, at St. Ann’s Hospital yesterday afternoon. - .- We are now serving SANDWICHES and SALADS. The best yet.. Ju- —adv, - Have you tried tne Five o'Clock Dinner Spr‘cl’hs at Mabry's Cafe? e — Prospectors in the vicinity of Hy- der are enthusiastizlly air-minded, Anscel Eckmann, pilot of the Alas- ka-Washington Airways plane Ju- neau, said. On one of the trips he made out from Hyder, last the Commissioner for the Ter-|Thursflay, he flew 50 miles into the -y of Alaska, sitting in probate Interior, with several mining men Juneau Precinct, in the First|as passengers. During the trip, NOTICE TO CREDITORS ing been appointed adminis~‘ with the will annexed of the| gitate of Sigurd Bentsen, deceased, | Judicial Division thereof, by order‘“hxch took about 45 minutes, they issued May 21st, 1929, all persuns;p\ssed over 25 lakes all of which having claims against the cstatei\\'ere large enough of said decedent are hereby noti-|plane. Though a number of prospectors as required by law, to the under-iand mining men expressed their signed administrator, at his omce.desue to fly into the mining dis- at 183% South Front Street, in|tricts back of Hyder, customs au- Juneau, Alaska, within six mnnth;:qmn“es at Hyder refused to allow from said 21st day of May, 1929. Eckmann to land in Canadian H. B. LE FEVRE, \Tcrncory where there was no cus- Administrator with the Will An-|toms office, so the trips were pure- nexed of the estate of Sigurd Bent- |iy observatory. son, deceased. { First publication, May 25, 1929. ] st publication, June 22, 1929. 1 | > LET Amnquist #ress Your Suit We call and deliver. Phone 526. - Try the Tive o'Clock Dinner | Specials at Mabry's. D Cn'nmt‘uml Job pxmtmg at Zhe Bargain Tip . T0c.. 2 pkgs. 25 Is the Same, Your Confidence ery PATTERNS Fitzgerald another oldtimer in the bureau’s Alaska force, and F. M. Bullard and L. Ouls. MISS DONOVAN AND FLOYD CARLSON WED HERE SATURDAY P.M. Saturday evening at 8:30 o'clock Miss Marie Anne Donovan became the bride of Mr. Floyd G. Carlson, the ceremony taking place at the residence of Rev. Ghbrielle Mena- oo e ger. Rev. R. R. Hubbard of Snmai Clara University, performed the; ceremony. Miss Donovan was attended by Miss Mildred Anderson, and Mr, Carlson by Lieut. W. B. Scaife, U 8. Coast and Geodetic Surve Washington, D. C. Mr. and Mrs. Carlson left on the sicamer North- western for a short trip and plan- boa ned to return on the same vessel and will make their home here for | the present. Mrs. Katherine Hook- er, who was a guest at the cere- mony, served a dainty wedding sup- per immediately afterward. Mrs. Carlson has been Fiscal Agent in local headquarters of the U. S. Bureau of Fisheries for sev- eral years and has many friends in this city. Her home is in Seattle Corrre MAC GEISERT WILL BE AT GEORGE BROTHERS Monday—Tuesday—Wednesday Demonstrating an Unusually Good Cofiee FOLGLERS 7 | NEXT TO GAST OF LATEST W Cost THEY MUST GO! . ALL WOOL SUITS $15.00—$24.50—$26.50—§27.50 | $29.50—$37.50—$47.50 Former prices up to $75.00 THESE SUITS GUARANTEED | -No Alterations ~ J. M. SALOUM | 1 5 “The Store of Value Leadershlp” Rhodes KRISS KROSS RAZORS—$6.00 suaranteed 10 years against mechanical defects _WM Phone 25 ¥ree Delivery N \ Y EAVES D CUT TO. INEAU HOTEL F resh Large Petersburg CRABS--35 Cents where her parents reside. Mr. Carlson is a graduate of the School of Forestry of the Umvemty‘ of Washington. Last year he was connected with the Meldrum tim- ber survey party in this district. He | is at present attached to the U. S.| Forest Service and stationed at the Juneau Lumber Mills as log-scaler. - ST. ANN’S HOSPITAL 4 \_fi AT Mrs. Louise Norton, who has been in the hospital for several days | with an injured arm, left the hos- pital for her home today. E. E. Ninnis underwent a goitre operation at the hospital this ~ morning. He is employed at the Juneau Motor Company. Tke O'Mara underwent a major “operation at the hospital this morn- ing. Mr. O'Mara has been a pa- tient at St. Ann’s for nearly a year. ———————— STORE HOURS '.fllls store ‘will be open Monday , June 10, for the accommo- OOR-DOR"S FREE COFFEE Folger’s Coffee Demonstration by Mac Geisert Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday 10-Cent package Folger’s Tea FREE with every I pound tin Folger’s Coffee, 55 cents, 1 pound tin GEORGE BROTHERS TRAVELING BY AIR| for landing aj —adv. | GETS BIBLE, LASS! LOST ON BATTLEFIELD Togda ) ¢ - FOUND — Pair of r'lasses without case. Owner may have same by proving property and paying for this ad. Call at Empi GLASSES ready to wear. Over 75 of the Optical Lenses or spe tacles that are being purchased by the general public are known as simple convex magnifying or reading and distance glasses glasses with first class lenses and a fine finish can be purchased here June tenth and eleventh, TWO DAYS ONLY for $3.45 each pair. WHY PAY FIFTEEN DOL- LARS? DAY OPTICAL CO. on Willoughby Avenue at Grandma's Kitchen. : WASHINGTON, June 10.—Johan- nes Meyer of Dortmund, Germany, lost a prayer book more than 18 ‘years ago on the battlefield at \Epleds, France, during the Marne Istruggle. Capt. Walter J. Reed, attached to the office of the Chief of the Air Corps, while rummaging among his war relics, recently, picked up the prayer book which he had found and forgotten. He noted the owner’s name was on the fly leaf, and sent it to Meyer in Dortmund. | And Meyer has thanked Captain |Reed effusively. He said the book a Christmas present from his |sisters, ey Old papers av tne Empirs. SRR TR RTINS 1Y WE SELL | (‘CRANE” AND “STANDARD” Plumbing Fixtures “BIRCHFIELD” AND | American Radiator Co. ’ H eating Boilers ; HART and RAY Oil Burners RICE & AHLERS CO. PLUMBING HEATING SHEET METAL Juneau, Alaska “We tell you in advance what job will cost” (3 We Are Headquarters for VACATION SUPPLIES THE BEST OF Luggage, Sweaters, Knickers, Bathing Suits and Caps, Head Nets, Bed Tents And other useful articles to make a successful vacation can be had here. GOLDSTEIN’S EMOPRIUM Juneau’s Style Center | ] i | |

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