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te to in ex ti a8 8- vedsnRe DOMD B e R R ] BRADLEY MAKES ANNUAL ALASKA JUNEAU REPORT President Indicates A. J! Mine Will Be on Divi- dent Basis Next Year Chicago J urist Rules (Continued from Page One) of these groups, known as the Man- ville group, was discovered in May ' of last year and from surface indi- | cations gives promise of becoming a | large and important property. A camp was established on this group last fall and active development work is now under way." Included in the annual rep the report of P. R. Bradlej sulting Engineer, which claims acquired in the Taku in ad dition to the Manville Group, as follows: “Hill Group of eight claims 70% interest Sparkling Group of seven | claims 75% inte Walker Group of seven | claims 90% ‘interest | b Woodman Claim, 100% in- Ruby Dogert, who, with her tere and ° Peter, ” was ' awarded 3 1 5 y a Chicago_ju when Moose Group of four claims | 4% )h)lu!:l}x'ht petid i et el Lo anverRel agement of a Chicago motion pic- Bonanza Group of six claims | ture house after they were ejected 75% interest, from the theatre because they and in addition the Ashby Group of were “necking.” five claims was purchased out- " (nternational Newarsel) right.” @ Work on North Half 78.96 per cent of the gold content The Consulting Engineer's report in the rock t med, and 85.38 describes in detail the nature of the werk carried on in both mine and of the ore f correspondir Necking Is Legal i |Annual St. 120,000 MARCH " INN.Y. PARADE . Patrick’s Day Event Is Held Along Fifth Avenue YCF Mar Para 00k pa 1 ook T thousand composed large 1 )¢ i and groups in ful attire, predominately green w' The parade was reviewed as it {passed St. Patrick’s Cathedral by }C\rduml Hayes and other members of the Clcrgy SCORES BURNED | T0 DEATH; SHIP CATCHES AFIRE {Many Passengers, Members of Crew, Including Captaln Perish BOGOTA Columbn March 18 More th core of pa: and ma of the crew of the amer Pucammamm lost lives when the bo cargo o troleum, caught fire at at Ladorada’ on the Magdal River. i The ship was destroyed. H mill last year. In underground Ten of the 30 pa 3} i work, there was put in 5590 feet of rescued. drifts and crosscuts, 1 feet of flotati Most of the crew, including Capt raises, 50 feet of intermediate drifts, ment ¢ Antonia Velez, perished 1,532, of powder drifts, 42 feet of I Other steamers stood helplessly bulldozing chambers, or a total of to by, afraid to make rescuc because| 12,257 feet of lincal development of the explosive nature of the car- work. There was also 81,635 square g0, feet of stope area cut out durin ther the year, an increase of more than o 20,000 square feet over that don2 y in 1928. The report said: “The work of ov of $10.01 per r preparing the south half of the day mine is now so far advanced that Much Powder Used a portion of the crew can be trans- The Alaska Juneau used t forred to the north half of the mendous a unt of powder in its mine, where they will do mine pre-operations last ye The t paratory work and also prospect consumption was 2,150 pounds, those areas where this character of averaging .34 pounds for e ton werk is not yet complete. of ore trammed. Twenty-one pow- “Work on the property of the der ft blasts used 118,850 pounds; Ebner Gold Mining Company, un- |t balanc 300 pou ads, was der our agreement with that com-)used in bulldozing pany, was confined to raising and| Of the total ore trammed to the crosscutting, for the purpose of as- mill—3,836440 tons, 98 per certaining the extent of the ore came from the south ore body body. When the desired information |compared to 92.4 per cent in 1928. is gained stoping will be resumed.”| The average gold assay value for Increase in Recovery | this tonnage was $1.12, which was Referring to milling operations, 21 cents above the average for all the report said jore trammed to the mill since “For the first time since sorting|the value over the entire was started in ns present scale, the | 1914 1919, bemg $.90. " BY HUSTON IS LOOKED INTO Senate Lobby Committee | Issues 'Subpoena for Records of Firm go]d recovered was Spring Styles in ‘WASHINGTON, March 18.—Aft- er a heated exchange with Chair- man Huston, of the Republ N National Committee and a row among its own members, the Sen- ate Lobby Committee issued a sub- poena to obtain from the New York brokerage firm of Blythe and Bonner, records of a $31,000 deposit made last year by Huston. Huston objected strenuously at the committee’s action and char- acterized it as unwarranted inter- ference in his personal affairs. He said the money had been coll ted from the Union Carbide Company Children’s Coats Sizes 6 to 14 years In novelty cloths and which was to get part of the tweeds— Muscle Shoals power if the bid of the Americans Cyanamid Company was accepted. JUDSON REQUESTS PEOPLE KEEP OFF CITY DOCK FRONT Because of the unusually large ount of freight stored at the present time on the City Wharf, those who meet the steamers Yu- kon and Alaska are requested to remain inside the warehouse, T. B With the very new cape and throw effects. $4.95 to Judson, Mayor, said today. Approximately 2,000 tons of freight $16 50 are in the warehouses mow, and » there are a number of tons of building stone on the face of the |wharf. In order to insure safety visitors - will not be allowed past the warehouse entrance to the face of the dock. ———-e— NOTICE M. S. Northland sailing from Se- attle, March 20th, at 9 p. m. For freight and passenger reservations see D. B. Femmer, Juneau agent Telephone 114. —adv. PHONES 83 OR 85 ‘quwk objection from sheep owners “The Store That Pleases” THE SANITARY GROCERY The captain refused to le hip and was burn-’-(l with i BIG BROADCAST IS MADE TODAY = INNEWZEALAND Rear Admiral Byrd Ad‘ dresses Approximately | 400,000 Children | DUNEDIN, New Zealand 18.—Rear Admiral Richard E. Byrd today addressed approximately 400,- ve the 1 Mar 'h“ 1914, 000 school children telling them of [ka fliers, period, | his experiences during his year of | exploration in the Antarctic. It | was perhaps the most extensive broadcast ever attempted in New JZealand. The two Islands of New Zealand were linked up by cable| ucms~ Cook Strait. ! The address was made at the Town Hall, here, before 7,000 chil- en and sent by land lines to| ChnsL Church, Wellington, and | Auckland. Suggestions of the members of I the Byrd Expedition that some of their dogs used in the Antarctic be domiciled in this country, met declared |of Cook County. They AR N Sush tles you bave” ‘never seen before = stripesy) 60114 colors, figured de- 81gns « they all have *I1%,) mu you see this smart you'll realise ot ve Just the tiee youtrs Deen looking for = » and/ | coulda't find, 4nd « besides = they! w11 cost you oo more than ordinary ties, OOME IN 20-DATS SABIN’S . 0. SABIN, Prop. |to be at the Legion Dugout s | pire office. ! .Dazl;.y Cross-word Puzzle ACROSS Container Transgression lmulmnans Solution of Yesterday's Puzzle AN A ST 5 R Anoint » Musleal char acters Fine driying 1 . Metal-bearing iy particles Legume rocks 15. Attempt . Photographle chemlieal . Animal flesh Long narrow inlet Dog’s name Stutter Indite Account of . Fish eggs oods sold . Cylindrieal oward the sheltered slde Simpleton Kitchen utens sl Flow Confederate general A weight of India Portable bed Muslcal com- ositions agans Alr: comb, in a row Title of & form Necessity. knight Thrice: prefix Goddess of 27. Nuisance posed Golf term 53, Parent The holly 54. Debased Irish . Ocean coln . Type of Greek architecture Gaelle sea god Torture 55, Drink slowly 56. solamn prom- spn.-.d loosely Scotch river 60. Gone up 2. Abate 62. Disfigure | & Nove slowly 63, Withered and steadlly: 64, Lake In New collog. York state 45. Additional 65. Insect . Spouts oratory 68, Vocal solo 18 Not hollow 67. Builds 49. Eple poem 68. Affirmation Black liguld Former ruler awn Naval dlstress DOWN el call 1. Lake in Italy 45, Swab £ Surface 47. Faucet . Travelers by 45, Carpenter’s sea 00 4. Superlative 49. Obliterate ending 50, Peeler 5. Husks of 51, Think grain 58, Havens 6. Press 85. Religious de- 7. Amerlean nomination humorist 58, Weathercock 8 Coming back 58, Sllkworm 9. Famous 59, Precious garden &L Dry, as wine 10. Directors 2, abbr. 5. Took'n seat the dogs are too fierce for s of their stock and urged (hm dogs either be back to America - e - LEGIONNAIRES TO HONOR AVIATORS All members 0{ the local post of the American Legion are requeste be ly before the sailing of the Alaska tomorrow morning to pay silent tribute to the memory of Col Ben Eielson and Earl Borland, Alas- taken south on the steamer; Commander Helgesen said Legionnaires will march from the the {Dugout to the wharf just before | the steamer leaves for the south, She is due in port at 2 or 3 o'clock in the morning and will re- main in port for about four or five hours. - e NOTICE Our store will be closed Wed- nesday, March 19th, from 2 p. m. to 4 p. m. in memory of the late Robert Blomgren. adv. GEORGE BROTHERS. D Old pavers ror sale at The Em- destroyed or seal, ri! whose bodies are being JAPANESE SURVEY FLASK, TWO YEARS | AFLOAT, PICKED UP Drifting ror aimost after being “planted” of Northern Japan, Japanese Geodetis ed up recently two years in the waters a bottle of the Survey was pick- on the shores of Trail Island at the entrance to |Cross Sound by Swan Swanson, fox farmer, and brought to Juneau on the Margnita. The' bottle had been set adrift tightly sealed, with dry sand in {the bottom to keep the neck above ithe water. Within the bottle was |a single sheet of heavy paper bearing Japanese printing. j This was brought here by Capt. |Severin Swanson of the Margnita ,and was partially translated in Ju- jneau today. It was set ashore in |Northern Japan eraly in May, 1928, by the Geodetic Survey, in an at- tempt to check the currents of the Pacific, especially those of the Japanese coast. The card also bears the request that the finder please return it to the Survey. This Capt. Swanson will do. The message was picked ,up at Tr: ’ul Island March 12, last MIXTURE OF WOOL AND COTTON 5 pair for . i 51.00 G 1 T MEN’S DRESS SOX 5 pair-for $1.00 LEADER Department Store GEORGE BROTHERS OUT OF For our friends, Gunnar their hour of sorrow our RESPECT Blomgren and family, in store will be closed during the services at the church. GARNICK’S, Phone 174 ‘lat 2:30 o'clock tomorrow afternoon | | H | Juneau went to bed last night in the “Banana Belt” and got up . today at the North Pole. Those . ioptimists who spent the Monday evening enjoyable delving into seed catalogs in an effort to be up to date on what the best gardens will grow this year, this morning sadly dug out their earworn copies of |When Winter Comes. A sudden drop in the tempera- ture here early this morning car- | ried the mercury down to five de-| . grees above zero. And it was hov-| Boiler Explodes, ering around that point almost . . lall day long, the cold being ac- Freight Train Is Blown from Track ARGTIG Bl. AST .Flying Camera Men Are to STRIKE JUNEAY > Ectee ERKELEY, Cal March |® 18,-——Umver.my of California A ® astronomers will use air- 1 - planes to obtain photographs i 0 of the sun's total eclipse on i 3 April 28, iMercury DYOPS to Five § |® One plane will fly at 10- Above—Coldest March \- 0100 feet, while another will . {® fly lower and take motion Dfly Here in 28 Years !‘- pictures as well as stills. |® The university’s base will be at Camptonville, in the mountains near the Nevada boundary line. The sun will be in eclipse less than a min- ® ute, and for this reason Dr. ® J. H. Moore, head of the ex- ® Dpedition, seeks to obtain un- ® clouded views while the sun ® is obscured. ° ° e e e 0000000 companied by fresh wind that had {more than a touch of ice in it blasts! Continued cold is the of-, |ficial weather forecast for tonight EVANSVILLE, Ind, March 18.— morning. That was also the cold- | wrecked by a boiler explosion that | ‘(n‘ weather experienced in Juneau |threw the freight train from the jon any March day in a few days|rails and set fire to the cars. more than 28 years. On March 13, {1902, according to records of the|train, one near the engine, blew up, local station of the United States|scattering wreckage some distance. Weather Bureau, the mercy drop with warmer temperature for Wed- | Three men were killed and at least | | nesday. |one other man seriously injured | The minimum of five degrees|when a freight train of the Louis- | | reached about 9 o'clock this|ville and Nashville Railroad was Several tank cars of a gasoline | GRAND JURY IS FORMED TODAY Twenty-two Qualified This Afternoon — John Helps Is Foreman Twelve women and ten compose the Grand Jury, as d and qualified today before Judg> Justin W. Harding in the Dist Court, which convened for its neau term yesterday. John D. Helps was named fore- man of the groud, which is com- posed of - the following persor r | Helps, Mrs. R. H. Beistline, M | F. Cashel, Carrie L. Dunn, L. Fr: |lander, Mamie H. Goddard, George Getchell, Pearl Helps, Mar! |Jacobs, Mrs. G. E. Krause, Mrs. J, P. McNeil, Mrs. Hector McLean, Vivian Morrison, Stanley Norwicka, {H. 8. Sokaloff, A. F. Zimmerman. Marie Skuse, Olaf Bodding, C. M. | Jorgensen, Douglas Meade, Thor E. Hall and Mrs. Sam Feldon. | AL QRN | AT THE HOTELS Gasiineau G. L. Rich, Ketchikan; Vern L. | Dysert; Jack Kelly. Alaskan Pete Cvorovich, Funter; J. [ Hall, Tenakee. | Zynda John B. Marshall s i 5 Try the Five uClock [Dinner Bpecials at Mabry's. —adv ped to three degrees above zero. And on March 7, 1900 the lowest point ever registered officially in March was attained—five degrees | below zero. | Many motorists were caught b) today’s unexpected change in tem- perature. Commercial garages were l HARD m the upper Yukon River, exper- = ——— TIMES l DANCE kept busy towing in frozen cars, E {and thawing out their ice-cased | i |brakes and other parts. In the { ‘dm\mv:wn streets, where yesterday 5 | Sedestrirls HAR Cs exbrcidy conlion Auspices Alaska Native Sisterl:ood in navigating channels of water by rain and melting snow, A.N.B. HALL e . ! s of ice lay in wait for the o ® . | v tchikan was today the only /EDNESDAY—MARCH 19Ti town in. Alaska, according to the official report of the Weather FOUR DANDY PRIZES Buerau, which could to > lin the “Banana Be S el \ N % _ {temperature was 34 above, Everybody Welcome :4 a. m. it reported 36 above. Eagle, | i ienced the coldest reported, with 48 degrees below zero. St. Paul, 4 in the Pribilof group had 8 above, Kodiak 10 above, Cordova four above. Point Barrow, farthest north station, “reported a minimum of 38 below. FUNERAL OF ROBERT BLOM:GREN TOMORROW Funeral services for Robert Blom- gren, the 13-year-old son of Mr. | and Mrs. Gunnar Blomgren, who | died Sunday morning, will be held] Plumbin at the Presbyterian Church, the; Rev. C. C. Saunders officiating. | Burijal will be in the Masonic plot at Evergreen Cemetery. The Sanitary Grocery, of which' Mr. Blomgren is proprietor, will be closed all afternoon tomorrow be- | ginning at the noon hour. | ——————— | SHAWS HAVE BOY ! A baby boy was born at St. Anns‘ hospital at 2:50 o'clock this morn-' ing to Mr. and Mrs. George Shaw | of Juneau. Mother and son are |\ reported doing nicely today. PLUMBING BEATI NOTICE [ Our store will be closed Wed- F h M arch 19th, from 2 p. m. res ont to 4 p. m. in memory of the late! Robert Blomgren. dv. CALIFO'{NIA GROCERY [t “Tomorrow’s Styles | Today” Pajama ' Suits Broadcloth in plain and | fancy patterns— Priced at $2.40 and $2.65 Rayon in novelty trim fea- tured in all of the new PHONES 92 and 95 WE -SELL “CRANE” “STANDARD” “KOHLER” Fixtures RICE & AHLERS CO. NG SHEET METAL “We Tell You in Advance What Job Will Cost” erey Cheese 60c¢ pound Gorgonzola Cheese 80c pound 2 TRUCKS—S5 FAST DELIVERIES 10 am., 11 am., 2 p.m., 3:30 and 4:30 p.m. GEORGE BROTHERS N EVENINGS shades— Priced at $3.25 Pure Silk—Per : “Juneau’s Own Store” . ——— - lIlllllllIIIIIIIIIIIlIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlIIlIIlIIIIIllIllI i PHONE 478 The Home of Be llllllllllIllllllllllilllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll(lflll|llIlllllllllllllllll“llnllll l ANKLETS For Ladies and Young Ladies Pair—50 cents J.M. SALOUM [Ty CALIFORNIA GROCERY tter Groceries llIlllllllll"lllllll||!I|li|lllll“lllllfllll