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-t THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, MONDAY, AUG. 5, 1929. GUS JOHNSON DROWNSWHILE | - IN SWIMMING. Employee of Cold Storage Company Loses Life at Tee Harbor Gus Johnson, employees of the Juneau Cold Storage Company, W Music Dowacer and Her Proteges drowned Sunday evening at Tee { Harbor while in swimming The body was recovered by Holgar Lar-| sen, engineer on the tugboat Driv but efforts at resuscitation were| futile | Johnson and a [ y of friends,| 3 including J. A. Davis, Harley Ruth- erford, Matt Nordness, Oliver| Drange and Mr. Larsen, left town shortly after 6 p. m. and with| them was swimming on the beach ! i at Tee Harbor. Telling of the accident to(lfl}'.‘ Mr. Davis said all of them had left the water except Johnson. When | Davis last saw the latter he was| swimming about 100 yards from | shore. Apperently he was seized by cramps and went down before anyone knew what was happening. ] Mr. Larsen recovered the body | within a few minutes after the accident. Fi aid methods were | used by Davis and others in the party but without avail. An in- , quest was called for 4:30 pp m today. Johnson had been employed the cold storage company for Madame Schumann-Heink refurning to Europe with three left to right, Miss Ellen Weekes ol New York, Miss Grace Ellen Hopkins of Kansas City, Mo, and Miss Mary Rose Barrons of Kansas City, Mo. She wil! launch them on their careers in German opera houses. Twi¢ of the diva’s grandchildren, Charlotte Guy, left inset, and Bar bara Schumann-Heink, right inset, accompanied the group, (nternational Newsreel) f‘fl!)Lil?il(}\\lllfll( 1;\?1 E;ll';:r‘xx;‘l;{‘:lll;‘:;j.'.‘DOROTHY ALEXANDER Tkl Eve Ehein doh Hoh SOUTHBOUND SUNDAY Dukelow and their son Robert A.| Dukelow. young American singers, by sev- cral years. He was unmarried and r ; nothing was known of his relatives,| H. J. Neubarth, prominent attor-| With 245 round-trip tourists, the |ney of San Francisco, and his Dorothy Alexander, Capt. C. C. jmother, Mrs. R. Neubarth. Graham, docked in Juneau south- W. J. Conrad, Mrs. .lh(‘ir children, Miss Vir \Master Roger, of Marsh Conrad and |bound yesterday morning at 8:30 nia and |o’clock. It was delayed a short eld, Ore. [time by making a stop at Funter Dr. Frank Forman, physician of |Bay to load salmon on the way to Waco, Tevas, Mrs. Forman. |Juneau. Arriving in Juneau on A‘ Errol W. Pin of the U. S. S.|the Dorothy Alexander were: Miss | California, who is spending his an- | Ruth Chase and Miss Susan Yeats, nual leave by making the round trip] The steamer sailed at 1 o'clock M any ROundtllpPClS AIC on the steamer. | for Seattle with the following pas- Aboard Steamer Making { n. R. webb, clerk for the North- |sengers from Juneau 5 lern Pacific Railway, at Secattle,| For Wrangell—J. P. Morgan. S. E. Alaska Voyage |l nrve. webb | For Ketchikan—C. M. Jones, Mrs. X 1 | Mrs, Ida R. Wootton, clerk for 'N. S. Haugen, N. S. Haugen, and ThChA:m"“l Rogers, Capt. J. IE' the Southern Pacific Company at[J. W. Gucker. Kolseth, docked in Juneau from the, g, prapcisco, | For Seattle—L. H. Place, James south at 7 o'clock this morning fln'l‘ salled for Haines, Skagway and|, . Miss Esther Fredrickson, clerk for | Connors, M. M. Richardson, Bea- Northern Pacific Railway in|trice Hancock. ;’;;k“ md ltli Ofloc?t 1;7““3 :‘]““Soul(]r. and her mother, Mrs. An-| Among the prominent s ro\:n' dr ]t)l O‘i"l‘; Sv_“ rmr- 1€ na Nelson. enjoying the round trip on cteamer and the following passen-| wgigs Thora Babulits, Dorothy Alexander are: f;‘:“ ;"‘dy"";:“‘“ g""L“"‘;( If;s'k‘,'i\le\'o Babulits and Mi: W. A. Holmes, travelling passen- QRCNEE . T8 eithahlint, for 105 Angeles, Cal. ger agent for the Southern Pacific Miss Yvonne Keithahn, and Capt. 5. Railway at Fresno, Calif., and Mrs, George H. Whitney. 1 0 es. Leaving for the triangle trip from ‘ADMIRAL WATSO! H(&;m; Bock and Mrs here were: Herbert McLean and| HERE ON WAY John Kearney Jr., who are making ADM. ROGERS IN tourists the Miss Gene- | Pattie Nuff.{‘ . | tourists the trip in care of the Rev. Gabriel TO WESTWARD 0]:,1 nl ’Harrv Meyer, wife of Harry Menager. 8 The Admiral Watson, Capt. Einar | Meyer, President of the Meyer Mil- Leaving for Haines—Mrs. John Thompsen, arrived in Juneau from|ler Company of Portland, Ore. W. Swets. the south late Saturday night and| wMorris Sollimon, owner of the For Skagway—John March and ;. . sailed yesterday morning for the Lillian Oja. Westward. There were nine round For Sitka—Mrs. Lucy Gage. trip tourists . making the trip to For Wrangell—A. Van Mavern. |Kodiak and return, and the follow- Among the prominent tourists'ing for Juneau: aboard the steamer were: Miss Ruth) M. K. McCash, Miss N. Boland, 1. Carleton, daughter of R. H.|Dr. D. C. Hardy, Mr. and Mrs. Carleton, Assistant General Audi-|Hugh Harvey, N. G. Nelson, A. tor for the C. R. I. & P. Rallway, |Shyman, J. B. Brennan, Mrs, J. F. of Chicago, IIL Brennan, Mr. d 5 - | , Mr. and Mrs. 8. P. Saun- Mrs. F. H. Webster with her ders, Frank Preuschoff, Mr. and cw "'I"n()’"’t daughter, Miss Isabelle Webster and |\ Mrs. C. J. Sullivan, Edna Kane and her son, Frank Webster. Mrs. | three third class. f Webster is the wife of F. E. Web: Taking passage for the Westward 9 ter, General Freight Agent of the | were: Chicago and Eastern Illinois Rail-!| For Yakutat—W. Klaney, W. H.‘ NAT" INAL BISCUIT CO. COOKIES Thrifty Chain Stores, in Seattle. The steamer is due in Ketchikan tonight where a tourist dance will be given by the Dorothy's excellent orchestra. way, of Chicago, Il Dougdell, and B. Steles. J. B. New, scale inspector fore-| For Seward—F. L. Moffett. man for the A. T. & 8. F. Railway,| For Kodiak—W. Johnson, C. W.| of Los Angeles, Calif. lWright and R. C. Mize. Mrs. B. W. Robbins, wife of the| The steamer had passengers from General Traffic Manager of the|the south for Yakutat, Cordova, D. and R. G. Railway, of DCHVUF-‘SCW:U'(I. Port Graham, Uzinki, Sel- Colo. |dovia, Kodiak and Three Saints C. M. Fowler, General Agent for Bay. the Missouri Pacific Railway, e Seattle, and Mrs. Fowler. This =g P 5 is the first trip made to Alaska by | | LUDWIG NELSON | Mr. and Mrs. Fowler and they are I > Jeweler most enthusiastic about the scenic ¥ « grandeur of the Inside Passage. The | | EXpert watch and jewelry re- | Missour! Pacific Rallway is the|| Pairing. Agent for Brunswick || only raliroad, hot operating | Portable and Cabinet Panatrope | into | i iyl | Phonographs, Records and | Seattle, that advertises Alaska ex-| pogioc | | bl oL o s CALIFORNIA GROCERY Phone 478 Free Delivery tensively in their folders and x\d-” vertisements. {5 T. H. Dukelow, Attorney for thel L e s e e ] | MELBA TOAST WHOLE WHEAT ; VEGETIZED 30 cents Do not miss the concert by the Alaska Nightingale MISS MARYE BURNS at Coliseum Theatre, Monday, Aug. 6th TICKETS AT GEORGE BROTHERS PHONES 92—-95 FREE DELIVERY 2 TRUCKS AT YOUR SERVICE Phone 25 Free Delivery PHONE 83-85 “The Store That Pleases” THE SANITARY GROCERY | Alaska voyage. | Bock, who |are heading a party of twenty-five | CONGRESSIONAL: PARTY LEAVES ONTRIP WEST A p p ropriations Subcom-L mittee Sailed Sunday for Sitka and Westward The Congressional party visiting | Juneau since last Friday afternoon, | finished its investigations here| Sunday and sailed for Sitka last| night at 8 o'clock on the Coast Guard Cutter Tahoe that is as- signed to the committee for its| Members of the | |party in conversation with local citizens expressed themselves as well pleased with conditions here. A change in its itinerary was an- | nounced shortly before the party | sailed. It will call at Cordova| bound and has abandoned plans for coming out from the in-| terior over the Richardson High-| way. It will proceed from Sitka to Cor- | dova, thence to Seward, over the| Alaska Railroad as far as Fair-| banks and return via the same| route. It will sail from Seward direct to Seattle, reaching there| about August 17. The party, which includes Rep-| resentatives Dickenson, Chairman, | and Summers, Buchanan and Sand- lin, of the Subcommittee for Ag-| | riculture of the powerful House Committee on Appropriations, Mrs. | Dickinson, Mrs. Summers, Miss Jean | Summers, James P. Buchanan, Jr,| and Maj. R. Y. Stuart, Chief For- ester, were guests of honor Satur- day evening at a public reception | given by Gov. George A. Parks.| |Many people, including Territorial | officials and their wives, and lead- e 3 WILHELMINA || Chocolate Covered CHERRIES I One Pound Boxes : 75 CENTS BUTLER-MAURO | | DRUG CO. Free Delivery Phone 134 WHEN WE SELL IT IT'S RIGHT MARYE BURNS “Alaska’s Nightingale” IN CONCERT At Coliseum Theatre Aug. 5, 1929 Tickets on Sale Here Juneau Drug Company H. M. HOLLMANN ; R. R. HERMANN Free Delivery Phone 33 Post Office Substation No. 1 P+ FINAL CLEAN ing citizens of the community, greeted the visitors there. Yesterday, the entire party was It taken over Glacier Highway. visited many of the enterprises on that road and several took time to walk from the road to the face of Mendenhall Glacier. The farm, dairies, produce farms and other developments on the highway, as well as the scenery drew words | of praise from the visitors. The party was accompanied from | here by Commissioner Charles H. Flory, of the Department of Agri- culture. He will remain with it until it returns to Seattle. PRINCESS CHARLOTTE HERE ON FIRST TRIP On its first trip to Southeast Alaska this summer, the Canadian Pacific steamer, Princess Charlotte, Capt. C. C. Sainty, arrived in Ju- neau at 8 o'clock Saturday evening and sailed for Skagway at 11:30 o’'clock. The steamer had a ca- | pacity list of tourists aboard and the following passengers for Ju- neau: H. VanderLeest, Mrs. H. Van- derLee: Mrs. R. J. White and three children, and Mrs. S. Hyde. The Princess Charlotte has been undergoing repairs to one engine, which was completely rebuilt, dur- ing the last three months. It will make three trips after this one to complete its schedule. fur- | Charlotte was undergoing repairs|Davidson and Richard Neville. its schedule was maintained by the| From Petersburg—John Erickson. Princess Adelaide, and with the ex-l Taking passage for Haines on the|only mild form in a few remote ception of the engineering depart- | Northwestern were: C. J. Woofter, | villages and there has been no ment the officer personnel is the John W. Swets and Miss F, E.lauthenticsted case of cannibalism press and public as mere fantasy. Voodooism, they assert, exists in i in the island since the early 60's. laids. Robert Moffat is chief en-| For Skagway — M. E. Merrell,; One of the most efficacious gineer of the Charlotte, George|Morris Berneskz, J. A. Stratton, | methods of overcoming the cult was is Purser and Thomas Brown is| R D T or “witch doctors,” dressing them Chief Steward. HAITI DRIVES OUT {in convict clothes and putting them southbound tomorrow morning at |of the humiliation of these form- 5 o'clock and will sail south at 7| PORT AU PRINCE, Haiti, Aug.|erly dreaded persons, laboring made to the State Department at|quickly reassured the poor coun- NORTHWESTERN NORTH\Washingwn, backed by endorse-!try people. Ve 35 | foreigners resident in Haiti, against| Have you trtea the Fve o'Clock ESUNDAY’ SOUTH P‘ M tales of voodistic cannibalism in | Dinner Speciais at Mabry's Cafe? | | With 95 round-trip fourists and, nese stories have been de-| LET Amqus, rress Four Sult. |a number of passengers for Juneau, | nounced by Government officials, | We call and deliver. Phone 526. | ingstone, docked in Juneau from |the south at 7:45 am. yesterday Haines at noon after unloading ma- -4 TR 2 Bie ?ch‘mery at the Alaska Juneau dock. 2 picce Glass Mlx"lg Bowl Sct’ 95¢ ’S, Phonel were: Laina Aalto, T. J. Fromm, GARNICK - one 74’ |H. E. Fromm, Hulda Hamersley, 2 son, Mrs. H. Scott, Mrs nurdon" S - |Winn, and six steerage from Se- | e g B ! \ MEN’S FANCY SOCKS—50c¢ a pair Locals arriving from southeast| John Sargent. i | From Wrangell—Frederick A.] same as was on the Princess Ade- IClm’ke. Forbes is First Officer, A. G. Barker Iw. P. Allis and Miss Zoe Porter. |the system of arresting the “bocors* The steamer is due in Juneau! VOODOOISTIC CULTS to work in chain gangs. The sight olalock. 5. — Representations have beenlunder the eye of an armed Garde, ments from Americans and other —e,—— this republic. |the Northwestern, Capt. Jock Liv- e {and sailed for Skagway, Sitka and | IF IT IS WORTH HAVING—WE HAVE IT | Arriving here on the steamer | Pauline Peterson, Charles T. Peter- |- e s e 7 i attle. ‘Aln.sku points were: i | ™ From Ketchikan—T. E. Flint ani! J, M, SALOUM Removal Sale HARDWARE AND HOUSEHOLD STARTING TODAY Big Cut in Prices For Cash This Will Be Y our Chance to Save Money On FURNISHINGS y! All Second Hand Goods I ncluded While This Sale Is On Our Cash Store On Lower Front Street Will Be Closed HARRIS Hardware Co. We Have Been Requested to V acate this Building by September First UPINO 000 A UR READY-TO-WEAR DEPARTMENT WOMEN’S WEAR SILK COMBINATIONS RAINHATS Remaining group at 20c each. PAJAMA TWO PIECE Values to $9.75. Sizes 35,37. Now $3.00, $2.00. oy Values to $11.75. Sizes 36-38- o SUITS Faly Bads 40. Clean up prices—$3.00 MILLINERY FOR TINY Values to $2.25 — Now $1 . —2.00, # A alues to $2.25 — Now $1.00 i }’,‘;,gt Pl e $2.00, $1.50. Tots each. SWEATERS X Values to $5.25. Now 85¢, Group I,7$71‘.50, Group II, 50¢ C&’g}{%lfna%%fiqm?; i 50c, 3:5:3 M AN-OF-W{\R MIDDIES GIRDILIERES NAINSOOK | INFANTS* WHITE SERGE Blue and White. Reg. $1.65 i Val4uses to $10.50. Sizes 44- $1.00, T5c¢, 35c. COATS ? and $1.35. All 85c each. 46-48. Now $: \u»\$i$36(())0, $2.00 and COTTON SLIPS Values to $5.75—Now $1.00 GYM. BLOOMERS B 75c—65¢ BRASSIERES Reg. $1.50, Now 65c. GIRDLES Values to $3.25. Group I— 30-34- SANITARY SKIRTS STEP-INS 3bc. Reg. values to $1.60.—Now BLACK RAYON VESTS Reg. $1,35, Now 50c. BOYS’ WAS¥ SUITS In Values to $3.75—Now 75c¢ 75 cents; Group II—50 cents. NURSES' UNIFORMS AND : NAINSOO&(];%ETIES IN atil! Edo AND fl I Y WAITRESS' APRONS Sizes 4 to 6 years. Regular TINY TOTS KUTE CUTS Values to 7$62;:7;,tsN0w $1.00, ., 60c—Now 25c. Reg. $1.50, Clean up, 50c, GOWNS WASH DRESSES T Black, Flesh and White. 95c—Now 45¢. SATEEN BLOOMERS SILK STEP-IN Were | yalues to $10.95. 42. All go at $3.00. VEST AND PANTIES SETS OF Values to $3.50. Sizes 8-10- 12-14 years. Clean up price of $1.00, 75 cents. Crepe and Flannel—50c each. RAIN CAPES AND COATS Real values at $1.00, 50 cents. Sizes 38-40- P [T GOLDSTEIN’'S EMPORIUM Illllllllllllll“lllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlIIII!lIIIIlIIIIIIIII}IIIIIII!IIIIl||||IIllIllllllllllllllllllllllllllIIIIIIIlIIIllIIIlIIIIIIIIIllIIlllllmlllllllIIIIIIIllllllllllllllllflllllIIIIlIIlIIlIiIIllIIIllIlIlIIIllllllllllllllli!llllllfll LY