The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, August 4, 1930, Page 6

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6 - POLL \ \\l) HP]{ PALS . THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, MONDAY, AUGUST 4, 1930. : By CLIFF STERRETT ARE You GONNA ORDER THAT DAWG-BEATER OFF THE PLACE. JUST A MOMENT MAW. | DONT START NuT»-l N GOBBLE, ‘ WOow |GOBBLE, ? NO SuUH, BoSS NEVA MESS FIUH-AH “y SYNOPSIS: Dagger Marley, 16-ycar-cld niece of a Texas 5. Xe ine Howard, ican from e Mexican. insurgen She falls in love with him, but How- ard is alrsady married, though unhappily. Later he is reported probably dead on the Western Front in France, and Dagger is heartbroken. She Captain Jack Vahee flying ace, and when he is ordcered back to France. In New York, at Va- neering’s home, his mother meets Dagger with iy diss proval, but his father and s ter Kitty like her they are marricd cuddenly at onge. Meanwhile Vaneering is wound- ed in France. Dagger meets Dick Welling, now Lord Wen- lock, a eclf-exiled Englishman who ilved at her uncle’s ranch. He reveals he is to marry How- ard’s widow, whom he has al- ways loved, and who was forced to marry Howard by a fortunc- hunting mother. Captain Va- ncering is ordered home and the family gees to meet him at the pier. Chapter A WRECK OF y regarded 18 A MAN ing on the lower-deck rail “Pasting the be commented inelega 28 Gamuling and drimking @ere Jack cared abouk ness medicir 1 suppose.” Jack glowered down at them. He had a cane, they could see, and cne leg was strapped into an iror framewo and-span, hut this distance his face, showed blo: gpotty. There was a /strained look around his eye nd his Iders stooped as if they supported some weight tco heavy for them A hint of desperation in his bearing wrung Dagger's h but what was the hurt her most evidence of dissipation written broad across his feature No war-shock, alone, there. He had been drinking heav- fly in defiance of his promise to her. “He looks very unwell,” hi"[ Vaneering said thoughtf | “How could he look well, after| what he's gone through?” hl)luv:t‘tl‘ Mrs. Vaneering. “Poor, dear boy!| He must have suffered agonies. We | must all §ry to make him com- fortable, Alexandra.” If he'll let us.” Dagger answer- ed mechanic “Let us! Of co Kitty mutt cluded the word “spoiled” in it Mr. Vancering fluttered conci ingly. Dagger took no further p: in the conversation. Her m pecupied by a series of bit tions du the interval of m the steamship fast. A pr s her, was a promise, not to be li 1y given, never to be evaded, muc less broken; and she couldn't resi the conviction that she ywohe'll let us.” d wa His uniform was spick- IDAGGER bv Mary Dahlberg s you! How don good girl on me to n on me, They've put this ep my leg mother?” and toward the | hoped nobody saw | es. But if Jack| d been perfunctory with her, he was equ. so with his family. But he actually wanted, as| | Dagger suspected, what was at the |back of his moodiness, was an op- |pertunity to drink unwatched. He 1id as much as soon as they were ‘alone. That promise I made you, Dag- Yes?” she prompted. “Well, why dc you ask me about it?” he barked Why should I, Jack? I'm your | wife, not your persecutor. I don't ntend to question you about any- askance the wan!'l figure of Captain Vaneering slouch- ! e shis sick- | been dead.” | “You might not have been | wounded,” che pointed out i| “Blind luck—machine-gun bullet and |I'm good for. \(IO" rt She patted his cheek, mother- at- would be got of thing—above yourself. ' |tered. W roughly, that temporarily soothed her grief. {this {hell, {fellows T've seen go West, and this | knee, ing like this got me. ered a phrase that in-lother ng you've done or not done.” It was a crazy idea,” he explod- “Silly! A man had “Happler,” he snecered. m one tim it the ground—doesn't happen million tries. But other I couldn't have done if I'd to fly cold! You've to be boiled up for that sort in She said nothing, and after a while he remarked: “Not very glad to see me, are you? Disappointed, eh?” “What would you say, Jack?” “Guess I'm no good,” he mut- ere married. Maybe I shouldn’t thave asked you.” “Is that all I mean to you?” He scized her by both arms but with an earnestness “You mean everything to me. You're the one human soul I care about. But don't try to ride me on drinking. T've been through Dagger—the fighting and the and—and— just the war end- I wanted an- the Boche. It's all What am T going to shot at wise, his offense We'll fly tog forgiven. her, Jack, dear. 2 \Let’s organize a transportation Oh, there are lots of k to do. We might travel. I'd like to see the world, and if we flew it would be doubly fascinating, wouMln't it? g unable to respect a husband whose| “Maybe not. Not a bad scheme. code was different. (But I don't know—can't fix my But when she glimpsed Jack'smind on anything yet.” He moved ghambling bulk at the end of the restless! gangplank, she managed to ba T such thoughts from her mind, and mustered a cherry, smiling face Her arms were open for him as h ?lanud a wobbly foot on the pier.| “‘Let's have a drink. Let's g0 out and see the‘town after din- ner. People over here are forgetting e war; they can be gay, and en- themselves. That's what I'd like to do.” “Dn.ungl" She pretended hrave- J For a time Dagger clung to the AR AH wWID e — A LIL OLE KFTLE OF BOILIN' WATUH'S MAH WEAPgN! hope that Jack’s condition was ¢ such as was common among the ! returning soldiers, so suddenly re- : the war; but as the weeks pa d he became no better. int and couldn’t be | He had no| | serious | | persuaded to adopt any; his injured knee precluded him from active Hydloplane Mooring Ports‘ sports; all he cared about was| Are Comple[ed at Wran- | gambling and drinking, two crav- gell and Petersburg ings it was impossible for him to| ou'd | :md transferring stock Sunday, A ‘nlflco here for a week or ten days. gressively. irink to stand the gaff of com- bat flying. Have you any concep-| tion of what it meant?” erhaps I haven't,” Dagger ad- mitted. “I asked you only b 5e 2 that is, I thought happier in the long run if mu BE. stayed sober.” T'd have |store room, which was formerly (h(“nnd landing fields as far north as \nml finished in excel | crete foundation and | with concrete floor. One of the f | tures of the store in the new toca-| COMPANY VISITS HERE [tion is the Frigidaire show case| # < # | which is being installed today. | N. P. Seyerin, original ‘foundyl The O'Connor building “.hm.{.‘nnd director of N. P. Severin Com- Goetz was formerly located, and |Pany, now engaged in the construc- | “I was a drinker when we | | DOUGLAS |with his family will reoccupy building upstairs as a residence and aboard the steamer Prince Henry. | Dr. \making chocolates satisfy. o ’ Jack’s parents suffered as much! TWO additional hydroplane ports | as she, and in the spring when My, have been added to Southeast Alas- ka’s airplane landing facilities, mak- ing three now in operation, it was! made known today by Highway En- gineer R. J. Sommers, who has Just returned from a trip ccvcnng the southern end of the Division. ! He made the trip with M. D. Wil-, iams, District Engineer, United' States Bureau of Public Roads, and Vaneering died suddenly of a heart lattack, Dagger knew that grief had hastened his end. Meanwhile Kitty 2ad married an old lover back from |the war and had gone to Detroit to live. (Copyright 1930, Duffield and Co.) Can Dagger persuade her hus- band to pull himself together |7 S. Bright, Asst. Regional Engi- and be once more the man she | N€er ! loved in as? | The ports at Wrangell and Pe- |tersburg have been completed and accepted, Mr. Sommers said. Both | are first class jobs and designed‘ to serve any seaplanes landing in the two ports A hangar is being constructed at the Ketchikan port by the Ploneeri Airways of Alaska, a local operat-} ing company. It has two planes in service at Ketchikan. j Two other landing fields are being |constructed in Southeast Alaska this IN NEW LOC. \TlO‘\T‘sg.}sonfn hydroplane port at Sitka, {and a land field at Skagway. After a day of moving fixutures| Mr. Sommers will remain at his - eee NEWS GOETZ GROCERY Goetz opened his | new location this morning. store in its|After that he will leave for an ex- The new | |tended trip covering roads, trails | Gallwas garage, has been remedeled | Seward Peninsula. ent shape for a grocery store, It h new co FOUNDER OF SEVERIN which has housed a grocery store|tion of the Alaska capital in this for about thirty years, has been‘f“‘v was an interested visitor here purchased by F. A. J. Gallwas who |Sunday night. - He and Mrs. Se the |erin are roundtrip passen While here Mr. and Mrs. Sev! use the store-room for closing out|® the dry goods stock. |were guests of Gov. George A.| e Parks for a short time. They visited | ] |Mendenhall Glacier. Mr. Severin DR. AND MRS KUHN ARE MAKING ALASKA TRIP and Mrs. C. F. Kuhn, |time residents of Treadwell, {Douglas visitors Sunday morning, while the Northwestern on which they are making a round trip of S. E. Alaska, was in port. It is fif- teen years since the Kuhns left the | Island, during which time they have {made their home in Port Townsend, h the capital and interest in the | was shown thro displayed an & old-|work and its progr were| M. and Mrs. Severin make their jhome in Evanston, Ill, a suburb | of Chicago. Their son, A. N. Sev- | erin is now active head of the com- pany's operations. — .o | France is seeking to develop touring by airplane, through a Gov- ernment committee. Wash. Dr. Kuhn was for many ~ iyears the Treadwell Company phy- G At sieian. NOTICE OF APPLICATION —————— FOR PATENT BIG LOAD OF FISH IN The Virginla IV came in Sunday | with about 35000 salmon for the Douglas Island Packing Company. e s RESERVE THE DATE Moose Cafeteria Dance — August |16th. —adv. SERIAL NO. 07547 for the Juneau Land District at|’ Anchorage, Alaska. In the Matter of the Application of CHICHAGOFF POWER COM- PANY, a corporation organized under the laws of Alaska, for patént to the AURUM NO. 1,| AURUM NO. 2, AURUM NO. 3,| AURUM NO. 4, AURUM NO. 5, URUM NO. 6, AURUM NO. 7, AURUM NO. 8, AURUM NO. 9 AURUM NO: 10, AURUM NO. 11, AURUM NO. 12, and AURUM| FRACTION NO. 1, lode mining claims, embraced in U. S. Min- eral Survey No. 1574, situated on Chichagoff Island, in Chichagoff Mining District, Sitka Recording Precinct, First Judieial Division, Alaska, and forming one contigu- ous group. NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN That the Chichagoff Power Com- pany, a corporation organized und- er the laws of Alaska, whose post office address is 424 Goldstein Building, Juneau, Alaska, has filed its application in the U. S. Lawc Office at Anchorage, Alaska, for patent for the Aurum No. 1, Auc- um No. 2, Aurum No. 3, Aurum No. 4, Aurum No. 5, Aurum No. ¢, Aurum No. 7. Aurum No. 8. Aurum No. 9, Aurum No. 10, Aurum No 11, Aurum No. 12, and Aurum Fraction No. 1, lode mining claims, forming one contiguous group ¢ iode mining claims and included within' U. S. Mineral Survey N- 1574, situated in the Chichagoif Mining District, Territory of Al aska, Sitka Recording Precinct, First Judicial Division at Chichago:f Fost Office on Chichagoff Island, Alaska, and more particularly de- LET Almquist Press Your Suit. We call and deliver. Phone 528 The rule is similar in to that in roasting H771LS BROS CoFFEE Tne minest chocolate creams are dipped one at @ time by hand. The finest coffee ever—Hills Bros. Cof- fee—is roasted @ few pounds at a time by the patented, continuous | proccss—Controllcd Roasting. No other coffee has the same delicious flavor shat Hills Bros. Coffee has | because none is roasted the same way. Fresh from the original vacusm pack. Easily scribed as follows: opened with the AURUM NO. 1 LODE key. Lack for the ‘d“Bseixlmmgm at corner No. 1, Arab on the can. entical with location corner, G, whence U. 8. L. M. No. 7 on | ©1930 A the shore of Klag Bay bears 8 . conficts and excluded from this appli- In the United States Land Office | deg. 48’ E. 210245 ft. distant n latitude 57 deg. 39° 40” N. 1d longitude 136 deg. 05’ 45” W. Thence north 46 deg. 00" W. along line 4-3 of Aurum No. ; lode, this survey, 1500 ft. to corner No.-2. Thence N. 48 deg. 0" E. 340.65 ft. to corner No. 3. hence S. 46 deg. 00’ E. 1500 to corner No. 4. Thence S. deg. 00° W. 340.65 ft. to corner No: nning, con'taming an area of 10.554 acres.” AURUM NO. 2 LODE Beginning at corner No. 1, ical with location corner, hence U.S.L.M. No. 7, prev- usly described, bears S. 21 12’ E. 3367.86 ft. Thence N. 46 deg. 00° W. 1409.60 ft. to orner No. 2. Thence N. 48 deg. 00" E. 34065 ft. to corner No. 3. Thence S. 46 deg. 00’ E 1409.60 ft. to corner No. 4. Thence S. 48 deg. 00° W. 340.65 ft. to corner No. 1, the place »f beginning, containing an area of 10.997 acres.” AURUM NO. 3 LODE “Beginning at corner No. 1, identical with location corner, whence U.S.L.M. No. 7 bears S. 19 deg. 02’ E. 1794.43 ft. Thence N. 46 deg. 00° W. 1500 ft. to orner No. 2. Thence N. 48 deg. 00" E. 600 ft. to corner No. 3. Thence S. 46 deg. 00° E. 1500 ft. to corner No. 4. Thence S. 48 deg. 00° W. 600 ft. to corner No. 1, the place of beginning, containing an area of 20.611 >s. Conflicting with Big Four Lode, Survey No. 1047, owned / applicant, 0.190 acres. Con- claimed by appficant and uded from this application.” AURUM NO. 4 LODE “Beginning at corner No. 1, identical with location corner, whence U.S.L.M. No.'7 bears S. 31 deg. 17" E. 3204.3 ft. Thence N. 46 deg. 00° W. 1409.60 ft. to corner No. 2. Thence N. 48 deg. 00" E. 600 ft. to corner No. 3. Thence S. 46 deg. 00° E. 1409.60 ft. to corner No. 4 Thence S. 48 deg. 00° W. 600 ft. to corner No. 1, the place of beginning, containing an area of 19.369 acres, conflicting with Golden Horn Lode, owned by applicant, survey No. 936, to the extent of 0.203 acres and with Golden Gate Lode, same survey, owned by applicant, 1.312 acres. Con- » flicts excluded from this appli- cation.” AURUM NC. 5 LODE “Beginning at corner No. 1, identical with location corner, whence USLM. No. 7 bears S. 38 deg. 13’ E. 231733 ft. Thence N. 46 deg. 00° W. 1500 ft. to corner No. 2. Thence N. 42 deg. 38" 00 ft. to corner No. 3. Thence S. 46 deg. 00’ E. 1500 ft. to corner No. 4. Thence S. 42 deg. 38’ W. 500 ft. to corner No. 1, the place of beginning, containing an area of 17.213 acres. Conflicting with Golden Horn lode, survey No. 936, to the extent of 7.187 acres and Golden Run Fraction lode. same survey, 2.469 acres. Young No. 3 lode, Survey No. 864, to the extent of 1622 acres. All owned by applicant AURUM NO. 6 LODE “Beginning at corner No. 1, identical with location corner, whence U.SLM. No. 7 bears S. 40 deg. 22’ 30" W. 120880 ft. Thence N. 51 deg. 58 W. 108 t. to corner No. 2. Thence N. 23 deg. 200 W. 7220 ft. to corner No. 3 on line mean high tide of Klag Bay. Thence north along line mean high tide of Klag Bay 55.80 ft. 'to corner No. 4 on line mean high tide identical with corner No. 4, Sitka Millsite, Survey No. 956B. mce N. 14 deg. 54' E. 8110 ft. to corner No. 5. Thence N. 63 deg. 10' W. 6360 ft. to cor- ner No. 6. Thence S. 56 deg. 11’ W. 76.00 ft. to corner No. 7 on line mean high tide of Klag Bay. Thence N. 50 deg. 82" W. 1170.75 ft. to corner No. 8. Thence N. 48 deg. 00’ E. 600 ft. to corner No. 9. Thence S. 47 deg. 44' E. 1499.20 ft. to corner No. 10. Thence S. 48 deg. 00° W. 592.60 ft. to corner No. 1, the place of beginning, containing an area of 19.371 acres. Conflicting with survey © No. 956B, Sitka Millsite 1.220 acres and survey No. 1461, Young Millsite 0.647 acres. Both sconflicts owned by applicant and excluded from this appli- cation.” AURUM NO. 7 LODE “Beginning at corner No. 1, whence US.LM. No, 7 bears S. 11 deg. 36" W. 2784.12 ft. Thence N. 46 deg. 00' W. 1500 ft. to corner No. 2. Thence N. 48 deg. 00' E. 600 ft. to corner No. 3. Thence S. 46 deg. 00’ *E. 1500 ft. to corner No. 4. Thence S. 48 deg. 00" W. 600 ft. to corner No. 1, the place of beginning, _containing an area of 20611 acres. Conflicting with Rose K. Lode, unsurveyed, 5519 acres and with Daniel J. Lode, un- surveyed, .7.938 ‘acres and Slim Lode, unsurveyed, 5376 acres, Conflicts claimea by applicant.* 1, the place of be- . taining an AURUM NO. 8 LODE “Beginning at corner No. 1, whence U. 8. L. M. No. 17, previously described, bears 8. 7 deg. 51’ E. 3804.85 ft. Thence N. 46 deg. 00° W. 1409.60 ft. to corner No. 2. Thence N. 48 deg. 00" E. 680 ft. to corner No. 3. Thence S. 46 deg. 00’ E. 1409.60 ft. to corner No. 4. Thence S. 48 deg. 00’ W. 600 ft. to corner No. 1, the place of beginning, containing an area of 19.309 acres. Conflicting with Daniel J Lode, unsurveyed, 2497 acres, Slim Lode, unsur- veyed, 6.312 acres, Pillsmont Lode, unsurveyed, 1340 acres, Mountain View Lode, unsurvgy- ed, 9.211 acres. Conflicts claim- ed by applicant.” AURUM NO. 9 LODE “Beginning at corner No. 1, identical with location corner, whence USLM. No. 7 bears S. 39 deg. 00" 30” E. 4560.80 ft. Thence N. 46 deg. 00" W. 1500 t. to corner No. 2. Thence N. 48 deg. 00" E. 600 ft. to corner No. 3. Thence S. 46 deg. 00 E. 1500 ft. to corner No. 4. Thence S. 48 deg. 00 W. 600 ft. to corner No. 1, the place of beginning, containing an area of 20.611 acres. Conflict- ing with Golden Gate lode, survey No. 936, owned by ap- plicant, 1.081 acres, with Over the Hill Lode, Survey No. 1046, to the extent of 4.658 acres and with Rising Sun Lode, sur- vey No. 1046, to the extent of 5054 acres. All conflicts excluded from this applica- tion.” AURUM NO. 10 LODE “Beginning at corner No. 1, whence U.S.L.M. No. 7 bears S. 31 deg. 34’ 30” E. 4631.07 ft. Thence N. 46 deg. 00° W. 1500 ft. to corner No. 2. Thence N. 48 deg. 00" E. €00 ft. to corner No. 3. Thence S. 46 deg. 00’ E. 1500 ft. to corner No. 4. Thence S. 48 deg. 00° W. 600 ft. to corner No. 1, the place of be- ginning, containing an area of 20611, acres.” AURUM NO. 11 LODE “Beginning at corner No. 1, identical with location corner, whence U. S. L. M. No. 7 bears S. 24 deg. 29’ E. 4776.23 ft. Thence N. 46 deg. 00’ W. 1500 ft. to corner No. 2. Thence N. 48 deg. 00" E. 600 ft. tp corner No. 3. Thence S. 46 deg. 00" E. 1500 ft. to corner No. 4. Thence S. 48 deg. 00° W. 600 ft. to corner No. 1, the place of beginning, containing an area of 20.611 acres.” AURUM 1™ 12 LODE “Beginning at corner No, 1, identical with location corner, whence US.LM. No. 7 bears S. 17 deg. 5¢ min. E. 4989.72 ft. Thence N. 46 deg. 00° W. 1500 ft. to corner No. 2. Thence N. 48 deg. 00’ E. 600 feet to corner No. 3. Thence S. 46 deg. 00" E. 1500 ft. to corner No. 4. Thence S. 48 deg. 00’ W. 600 ft. to corner No. 1, the place of beginning, containing an area of 20.611 acres. Con- flicting with Mountain View Lode, unsurveyed, 9.466 acres. Conflict claimed by applicant.” AURUM FRACTION NO, 1 LODE “Beginning at corner No. 1, identical with_location corner, whence US.LM. No. 7 bears S. 0 deg. 42 E. 121212 ft. Thence N. 49 deg. 40° W. 748.30 ft. to corner No. 2. Thence 48 deg. 00’ E. corner No. 3. deg. 32" E. 749.90 ft. to mmer No. 4. Thence S, 48 deg. 00’ W. 35210 ft. to corner No. 1. the place of beginning, con- nrefilot 5.908 acres. Conflicting- with Young Mill- site, Survey No. 1461, to the extent of 0.099 acres and with survey No. 1047 of Big Four Lode, 0.199 acres. Both con- flicts owned by applicant and excluded from this applica- tion.” United States Location Monu- ment No. 7, to which this surve, is tied, consists of a cross on ex- rosed out-crop of bedrock 10x8x3 ft. on the shore of Klag Bay, Chi- chagoff Island and chiseled U. S, L. M. No. 7 in latitude 57 dez 39’ 40”7 N. and longitude 136 deg 05’ 45” W. Magnetic variation 30 deg. 30’ E, The names of the owners of con- flicting claims are not known to the applicant except as hereinabove set forth. The total area embraced in the survey and claimed by the applicant is 200.486 acres. Any and all persons claiming ad- versely any of the above described veins, lodes or premises, are re- quired, to file notice of their ad- verse. cllinu with the Register of the United States Land Office at Alaska, within the per- Anchorage, iod of publication, or eight months thereafter, or they will be barred by virtue of the provisions of ths statutes. J. LINDLEY GREEN, Register. First publication, July 13, 1930. Last publication, Sept. 24, 1930. MID-SUMMER LAMP SHADE SALE PAFCHMENT AND SILK MODEI S New Stock—Priced Right MAKE YOUR SELECTION EARLY Alaska Electric Light . and Power Co. Y Juneau—Phone 6 Douglas—Phone 18 \ e JARMAN’S Boygfv Navy Tréu,sers, 3-8—Shirts, 3-1414 \ . Kaynee Brand THE HOTEL OF ALASKAN HOTELS THE GASTINEAU Our Servkes to You Begin and End at the Gang Plank of Every Passenger-Casrying Boat [ ALASKA MEAT CO. QUALITY AND SERVICE TO YOUR LIKING Meadowbrook Butter Austin Fresh Tamales PHONES 39 Deliveries—10:30, 2:30, 4:30 ——d B e e FURNITURE DRESSERS—VANITIES—CHESTS HIGH CHAIRS—STOOLS . SIMMONS BEDS—SPRINGS and MATTRESSES Call and see the Simmons Deep Sleep Mattress Thomas Hardware Co. Pioneer Pool Hall Telephone 183 Pool—Billiards EMPLOYMENT OFFICE Chas.: Millex, Prop. DOORS and WINDOWS FIR VENEER We Carry a Good Assortment of Sizes'and Invite Inspection LAMINEX DOORS—Guaranteed not to Shrink, Swell or Warp % " Juneau Lumber Mills, Inc. % | PHONE 358 : QUALITY and SERVICE NOTICE! Beginning September 1st, 1930 MURESCO will advance in price to 65c per package. OIld prices will prevail until that date only. We have the exclusive agency in Juneau for Muresco, wholesale "and retail JUNEAU PAINT STORE SECOND STREET PHONE 407

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