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

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{ E § | ACROSS Solution of Yesterday's Puzzle 10. Born | | 1 Source of light ~ 11. Printer’s mease | | and hent I ures 4. Came wp 19. Religlons fear | & Not eonrse 21. Beauty por- | 12 United oy R seale | 15 Fasten 25, Lizard ¥ | 16 Mine entranco 26. Canal S T nkes use ‘o Natlate ~ b Doors Open at 1:30 P. M. |1 Fimetof rose Chiness maney | Signs of Prospecting Found b % . 2 petals Spanish pof ‘ S 20. Gaelie form of o —Gov. Parks to Open | [ in Vicinity of New - H = | (] Formaliy at 8 - Lifting s nicks Lake on Taku £ | 25, ity ' Onlo 89. obhed out At 1:30 p. m. Wednesday the |*! [nU, one 40. Spread for Discovery of a ruined cabin near Fichth Annual Southeastern Alaska 32, Epoeh v, i * anat- the shores of Lake Dorothy, and Fair will open its doors in the s LTI indications of activities along the Fair Building near the ball park. il Notein i ridges nearby indicated that a past s e c uldo’s seale , 8 7. Policeman’s cenerati X pr % The formal opening is {m(l for |y Father : :l:!nl'l:“thlu 4 llmt;(“lml"l .\J.muo'n :1 vplospectors knew of 8 p. m. tomorrow, Gov. George A. :; |"..“ I-.»luz 4. Ralsed 48, Girl's name that body of water. This was made Parks officiating, it was announced 4! [URPCH 4'.'...1':.( b :- i""" . 49, Wat llltl place known today by A. J. Ela, engineer today by Ralph B. Martin, man- | 4z y i g 30 Attentlor o in charge of the waterpower de- L roek 7. Allure single spot clopment program of the Cam- ager. 45, Baked elay 61 Girei R 8. Animal . Expression of s The Fair will run for four con- 49. Billaws e Ahmaiiiterot 1. Expression of - cronsGhandlar inferests, secutive days, closing Saturday, 5% Fills out L Low seat 9. Small fish 84, Lalr He has just returned from an night. Efforts this year have been | —T-—T=—] initial survey of the lake and drain- directed toward educational rather | [! |% |3 9 |10 | age area. While he has not com- than entertainment features, al- though an excellent program has been prepared for each afternvon and evening. Children Free Temorrow Children of school age will be admitted free of charge Wednesday afternoon. And Saturday has been aside as Children’s Day eral unusual entertainment featur have been planned for the kiddies. afternoon’s program will m. Fi orks dis- h evening will be staged at 7 o'clock in the Ball Park under the direction of the Fire Dx rt- ment. No children w ted in the park while these are in at 7:30 o'clock y of the Alaska Scenic exhibit motion pictures, omedies and local news | | showing reels. In addition to Snyder Harmony will appear in This company the steamer Yukon tomorrow. | Program of Fair ' The program of the Fair, as an- nounced today by Manager Martin | follows: these the Tiny Trio, of Seattle, special programs. will arrive here on WEDNESDA Y 1:30 pm—Doors of Fair Build- ing open. 2:00 p.m.—Musical W. P. Rice, U. 8. Shepard and others. selections. Dr., Unalga, Fred | 3:00 p.m—Miss Mildred Kendler|® | o will be a vis e eastern Alaska Fair that opens |® here on Wedngsday at noon. |® She will come as Mi and her trained pony “Peanuts” | 2 ireworks. | ovies, Fred Ordway. 8:00 pm. — Formal opening by Gov. George A. Parks. Concert,| Tiny Snyder Harmony Trio. THURSDAY—-LADIES' DAY 2:00 p.m.—Concert. 2:30 p.m.—Baby Show. 3:00 p.m.—Native Baby Show. vening 7:00 p.m.—Fireworks. 7:30 p.m.~—Movies, Fred Ordway. Concert, Tiny Snyder Harmony ‘Trio. FRIDAY AFTERNOON Douglas and Thane Day. 2:00 pm—Program of children| under direction of Mrs. Rose Davis. | Concert. Dance. Evening 7:00 p.m.—Fireworks, 7:30 p.m.—Movies, Fred Ordway. Concert. Dance, SATURDAY: AFTERNOON Children’s Day Mildred Kendler and “Peanuts.” Children’s Pageant. Bicycle Races. Tricycle Races. Kiddie Kar Races. Evening 7:00 p.m.—Fireworks. 7:30 p.m.—Movies, Fred Ordway. Concert. Dance. Decorators Are Busy Decorators were busy today put- ting the final touches on the ad- vertising and concession booths. Virtually all of the booth space had been applied for and in keep- ing with the educational policy of the Association the display booths | outnumber the concessions. Two new concessions were added today to the previously announced list. These went to the Seattle Fruit and Produce Company and Harry Sabin. Exhibits were being arranged by those in charge. The Skagway, Haines and Strawberry Point dis- pl night and would be ready in time EIGHTH ANNUAL “. youngest ays were expected to arrive to-! e | Daily Cross-word Puzzle RUINED CABIN piled his field notes, and, therefore, iz is still without absolute figures, he said that the power sources ther /5 were apparently as favorable as the aerial survey had indicated. Lake Is Deep "he lake’s depth still remains u known. With a line 275 feet long 49 150 [51- Mr. Ela undertook to make some soundings. His line, however, was too short, as he found bottom at no point in the lake. The surface area is being 800 and 900 acres, and the drainage area sufficiently large for all purposes. Stream flow investigations will be necessary before a final determ- ination is reached as to the avail- ] 7 |velopraent for the California syndi- ES cate. A guage station has been installed by Wendell Dawson on the creek at the beach. A measurement section was also put in by him about one and one-quarter miles 56 B [ above the creek mouth. i Finds Old Cabin 59 | In his survey of the surround- ing land area, Mr. Ela discovered an old prospectors’ cabin near the .V.IV...’....... ‘Miss Sitka Will Be !Five Tons of Books [Visitor to Fair, |Opening Wednesday e Miss Florence Peterson, daughter of Capt George Peterson, itor to the South- and Mrs s Sitka. e Miss Peterson is swimming champion of Sitka and winner of the bathing beauty contest there. She will have chaige of an exhibit of wooden carvir made by Southeastern Alaska Indians, and will also display some of her own paintings. She is an art student and has e shown marked ability in that e| ©c0o0000cr200000000 o line, it is said. b . . eeecccccsoc0e — - | Attorney’s Daughter Bids for Legal Fame TULSA, Okla., Sept. 1u. — The daughter of Charles West, Tulsa lawyer and former Oklahoma attor- ney-general, may endanger her| father's legal laurels. | Evelyn West has won the first| scholarship ever issued to a woman | by the Columbia University’s law school. It was awarded following| her completion of a short post-| graduate course in public law. | Since she finished high school| in 1924 Miss West has won three | scholarships. She chose to nttend‘ Barnard College after gaining :\‘ scholarship offered by the Tulsa | Univer- | | Association of American sity women. High marks in en-| trance tests at Barnard brought another, and at the end of her first year, she won a third. ., NOTICE After September 10 no telephone rentals for the month of September will be accepted at a discount. All remittances by mail must bear postmark of not later than last discount day. for the opening at 1:30 p. m. to- morrow. JUNEAU AND DOUGLAS adv. TELEPHONE CO. Please be prompt.| e e e oo 0000 0o e e e lowerlake on the outlet creek. It |was apparently about 20 years old |He discovered traces of prospecting work in a ravine leading into the lower lake. A trail, in fairly good {shape, was also found leading from ® the cabin down toward the beach. Five tons of books, musty ® Log ladders used in negotiating covered with years accumula- e cliffs along the route are still in tion of dust, were received ® place. The logs were from 18 in- at the Historical Library to- @ ches to two feet in diameter and day. They are the remaining ® had steps notched in them. Mr. volumes of the Library, left ® 'Ela and his party used the trail Are Received By Alaska Library removed from there to Ju- e and firmly in place. neau. . The basin is heavily popuiated For years they were stored e Wwith mountain goats. Evidences of in the building occupied at e hunting parties were found. Under Sitka by the Deputy United @ big flat rock campfire debris was States Marshal. Later they e found, probably five years old, and were moved to the Pioneers’ @ on the ridges above Lake Dorothy Home. Demands there for e discharged rifle cartridges were more space made it necessary e Picked up. to remove them so they were ® | Many mountain goats were seen. brought to Juneau. Most of @ the books are government re-eo GGG ports, many of real value, ® while others have no particu- o Important American Le- lar worth. It will take weeks ® | . S 8 o’clock to sort out the wheat from e glOn meeting & o clock to- the chaff, to separate the rare ® night in Dugom. volumes from those that mere- ® | Iy occupy so much shelf space. © | o T— 'ability of the lake for power de-| at Sitka when the capital was o and ladders which are still sound THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, TUESDAY, SEPT. 10, 1929. :Thcst‘ |fear of the men in the crew. Mr. | Dawson and Bill Fromm approach- led a monster billy almost close |enough to have touched it with a ;pole, Fromm lunged at it and it ;rmreatcd in its dignified manner |but a short distance then turned |and looked at the intruders. The |goats are extremely fat, so much |so, Mr. Ela declared, that they |move with a pronounced waddle. ., ttle HECTOR M'WEIL WANTED i | Chief of Police George Getchell |has received an inquiry from Mrs. |Ella Long, 20 Dwight Street, Bos- 'ton, Mass., for information of her Inephew, Hector McWeil. Mrs. Long says that about two years ago she received information he was hurt in an accident on a wharf and was in a Seattle hospital. Since that time she has received word that he shipped to Alaska and she enclosed a camera snap shot show- ing her nephew with the engineer on the boat John L. C. McWeil is a cook, according to information contained in the in- quiry. RABSUSER. 47 LEWIS GOES SOUTH R. F. Lewis, who is the owaer | of the Juneau Water System and who has been a visitor in Juneau INSTALLATION OF NEW PLANT MAKESHEADWAY {Most of Equipment Ready at Funter Bay—Ball Mill Is Expected Shortly | Installation of mining and mill- iing equipment at the Admiralty | Alaska Mining Company’s property at Funter Bay is progressing rap- idly, according to W. S. Pekovich, general manager who was a busi- | ness visitor in town Monday. He| is hopeful that the new mill will | {be in operation by October 1, or | very shortly thereafter. All of the equipment except the | ball mill is on the ground, Mr. Pekovich sald. This was shipped | from New York August 6, and| should arrive from Seattle on one | jof the first steamers north. The | foundations for it are all prepared and it will not take long to put it into operation condition. | The flotation plant is all ready to be connected up with a line shaft. The power plant has been | for the past two weeks, sailed from |completed, new diesel engines be- here this morning on the Princess Louise. Mr. Lewis will arrive in vancouver, B. C, in time to meet | Mrs. R. F. Lewis, who is| wrning from Europe. Later, the: will return to their home in Pied- mont, Cal. | | S ee—— | Bill Casey Is still at No. 8 Wil- loughby Ave. with the best TO- BACCO and SNUFF CURE. Hours (2 p.m to7p m Cal and we | will demonstrate. P.O. Box 327. adv e —— OFFICIAL CHECKER AND PIANIST Mrs. Max Pitshmann has kindly | consented to act as official checker | and pianist during the days of the| Fair. —ady. | £ | Buck Skein Shirts and Blazers A good wool shirt that’s || a real value for the money; the blazer is windproof and water repellant. Both priced at $5.50 each SABIN’S The Store for Men ESKRIDGE COMING BACK WING FOOT AND PANCO Word from Seattle says that R. S. Eskridge, mining engineer and geologist, will leave shortly for Cor- dova, and will go immediately to Katalla to work .on the Alaska Consolidated Oil Co., properties next to the Chilkat producnig RUBBER fields. Mr. Eskridge was among the original pioneers of the Klon- HEELS dike.—(Seward Gateway.) —_———— i 50¢ WILL INSPECT TAKU Phil Horan and E. J. Eberhard, (members of the Gastineau Hotel HALF SOLES .. LADIES’ AND GENT’Ss-l go |staff, have formed a partnership |and will prospect for a month or {more in the Taku country. They |left for the Taku on the Jazz last Sunday, and immediately proceeded {up the river. | R BACCO and SNUFF CURE. Hours {2 p. m. to 7 p. m. Call and we !will demonstrate. P.O. Box 327. adv | See BIG VAN aerraemeel the GUN MAN STEEL TRAPS AND AMMUNITION IIIIII=IIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHlIIIIiIIIiliI‘IIIifllllllliilIIlIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlIIII||IIIIl|l|l|II|l|IIIlIIlIl|IIIIHTIIWI“WIITIIII“II“IIHIIIIlIIIIIIIIlII|IIIIIIII||lIIIl|IIIIII||III|||I|||I|||||||IIIIIIIIIIIlIIIIlIlIllIIIIIIIlIlII T T T LT LT LT L Pete Says! IT NOW; CANNING PEACHES, PEARS, PLUMS, TOMATOES Don’t Fail to See My Wond erful Display at THE FAIR | Telephone 486 i .MilIflmlmmmlllfllllllflmm"|||||l|||II|||IIII|||l|||||||llll|||||||||||l|||IIII|lIIIIINHIIIIIIIIHWIHBlllllllllllllllll||||IllIIIIIIIIIIIIII|||||||||||l|||IIIIIIIIIII|||||||||l|||||||||||||||||Il||lll|||||| Free Deli very |of milling ing installed. The tramway is prac- tically finished. | Percy Wright, Tacoma engineer, and Mrs. Wright left_ here early' Monday for the plant. He will have charge of final installation equipment and be in charge of test runs of ore frora the mine. | PR 1 R B Dell E. Sherirr, I tuner. Juiteau's plano | Hotel Gastineau. —adv | PHONE 478 $1.25 CALIFORNIA GROCERY Men’s Dress Shirts NOTICE I am grateful to George Bros. Rev. Henry Young pastor of the [for the splendid work they did in Methadist Epicopal Church in Ju-|collecting and now that another neau, left here this morning on‘momh has rolled by won't you the Princess Louise for Seattle. please drop into their store and The Rev. Young will attend the |pay that little aceount due me. OFF TO CONFERE! annual Methodist conference in|—adv. D. B. FEMMER Spokane, Wash., and later he will ————t e also attend the Oregon conference | GORDON'S which will be held in Portland,| For your accommodation, this Ore. He will return to Juneau i store will be open the evening of about October 1. Sept. 10 until 9 p. m. —adv. CANNING SEASON IS HERE Canning Peaches, large, best grade, box, $1.35 E. Z. Seal Jars, quarts, $1.85 E. Z. Seal Jars, pints, $1.65 Sugar, best cane, 100 pound sack, $6.65 Brown Sugar, 100 pound sack, $6.60 We Lead in Quality and Reasonable Prices GARNICK’S PHONE 174 The Home of Better Groceries ). M. Saloum Next to Gastineau Hotel PHONE 83 THE SANITARY GROCERY OR 85 “The Store That Pleases” LARGE We are not s BE SURE TO GET YOUR FREE SAMPLES AND GEORGE BROTHERS PHONES 92 and 95 DISPLAY OF FOODS NEW RECIPE BOOKS elling anything; just giving things away OPEN EVE MEN’S TWO-PIECE MEDLICOT SHIRTS Pay Day Specials UNDERWEAR and Drawers Cooper’s Part Wool Shirts Regular $2.75 garment, now $1.75 AND DRAWERS Weight Medium, Light and Heavy Regular $7.00 values,now $4.15 suit MEN'S WOOL WORK SOX—Regular 75¢ and 85¢ values, now 50c BIG BARGAINS IN MEN’S SUITS All men’ s wear moved to Shoe Department GOLDSTEIN'S EMPORIUM r e rroee. - Y

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