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B e Lt Bl et Do rn gm s A M I YR oo | r — = s, ¢ PR'SUNWGRKER FR ANK DORBAN]” AND HI\ FAIRCHILD CABIN MONOPLANE Dail C Ie | y Cross-word Puzz RITISH SHIP 4 a I W Eate g g@lfl. “g e Enaioh ing ' 13, Ascended % 38 Automovile Ending a nine-day visit in this FRENGH I_EAVE BY LUGALBAND 1. Gaudy orne gmmg gm [NIA[s o et T port, 11, M. &' Diuritises, Capt. H. i (HOIMEIRIS) 28 Ln | R. Moore, sailed at 12:15 pm. to- el | Ny [AlS A8 oIm/A NN 2 T |day for Sitka by | P [slels|s] Gmnm [[INTIER| 80. M. | day y the way of Icy Harry Goldberg Escapes |Presentation It Mads Dur- PIATCBI L‘l o, Lckneme | Strait. “It was a wonderful experi- | from Volunteer Prisoner | inotls ki . [UVARNT/o/NIADIE M [EIN :t Sober ence, one we shall long remember,” 7 Sk | ing Concert Last Night - ey TENIREINGIEIND RIS I Atmastomcu | CAPL, Moore said, expressing. te rew at Skagway 4 3 [ 4t 0 : 3. What e- |appreciation of both officers and at Okagway for Good Fellowship | ., porkine paey nmggnggm ESTIE| | e . o ooy, and Goldberg, serving a 10-| When the H. M. 8 Deuntless [SITIOlA[T[S] = mufimnn “ ;'n Bhsinins zh;y were received here, h term in the Federal jail at Jled Ay fromaitie. € i 5 ers | Every day while the steamer was o SSERers T Shhile | i U ylo:og‘lckae St";emm:“t . reite 'I‘Bllgfi gg E Dmu ar |in port some form of entertainment cape from a rvad s- | cre of ozer one week, 22 :a:daz‘ 35 Fartes <" R (€] 5 gl [ Was on.tap for the visitors. Every day afternoon, acc to a tele- | ;n aboard were playing joyously | ' jclence of i Yowturea " |officer and man aboard ship was gram received today the United land they had a reason. . Rins o 4 !i :::m" i \taken to Mendenhall Glacier and ] States Marshal's Office from Dep- |" Last night, just before the two ! 53, Pllots . other points on Glacier Highway, tv Marshal Frank Nef |1ast selections of the open air con- | . Cnnvu-u % fi:ln::ly"n“’ to the Alaska Juneau gold mill, and Goldberg was working In a volun- [cert were played, J. J. Fargher,| §h FeE.dlsn g::;; o of 48 Mother of Pees b:"’ °;’“°‘“ and men were guests teer labllu pu(ll; ];H‘- is fl‘hl.fl?;;!- L ) —_’«____\ irector oIEdthe Juneau City Band, | P 114 ! i [ ’:nenlt’: ic and private entertain- tating the ol rackett road be- Tan! rbandt, veteran Alaska | jaccompanied by five other members | 7 Shoy i J2EN) Tesidenes | 5 tween Skagway and Denver Gla-|aviator and flying comrade of the | il}l,ih;n:;u;ttz;thahtop“;t’e 0 To- | the local organization, left the | ¢ Worships tggfi‘ The final day was spent largely cler. About 3:30 p.m. yesterday he|late Col. Carl Ben Eielson, is back | 0 toARoin. peie Py flight | wd of spectators and approachsd [in exchange of visits between ship disappeared. Officers are watching |in Alaska again after a trip to the ey g advantage of the o cruiser bandsmen forces, Mr, | 75 jand shore. Many of the visitors all exits from Skagway and Cana- |States to pu e a new plane Tukt Betore lndvidg: BAAG | Fargher handed -a small parcel to ////f.nn. | were guests in private homes yes- dian officers at the boundary have|to meet the ily growing de- | inberadian s "“° e, Dor-|; Cartland, band master of the ! terday. been notified. mand upon aviation in the Terri- i P fen ki‘su cally of & ruiser band, and asked him ‘o -...-//.. | A final concert was given last Goldbergh was indieted at Ket- new type of ski-wheel, designec |qistribute the contents to the boys ' it | night by the band of the Dauntless hikan several months ago. While out on bond he left and went to tory Dorbandt, who helped to| make aviation history in the North, has by his mechanic, Cope, which he|as a remembrance from the local | will use in the North this winter. .mndsmen in appreciation of the The combination landing gear per-|good fellowship and also tne ex- | accompanied by | § nt Triangle Corner, which was at- | tended by a large crowd. Following- Scattle, jumping his bond. He was|returned with a speedy Fairchild | Ithe concert the members of the picked up by Seattle officers and|cabin monoplane, mits the plane to alight on snow or|ccllent concerts given at various lband were invited to be guests of brought back to Ketchikan where|his wife, and mechanic Alonso| dirt. When the skils are not needed, |times during the Dauntless's visi:. | | #he. Chamber “of Oommerce at s he was convicted of robbery and|Cope. The three, aboard the plane, | Dorbandt explained, they may bc| Cartland could not wait until! show, but only a few could accept sentenced to 10 months imprison-|w in Juneau last Saturday eve-‘; raised by means of a control in the the concert was over but opened las arrangements had been made ment at Skagway, and was taken|ning and left Sunday morning for cockpit, so tney are out of the way. |the package immediately. He gave {for them to be guests of the local ”‘m‘\ 1ast June o Anchorage, arriving there Sunday In taking off from crusted snow. |an exclamation of delight and then ' City Band. g i SRTHooR Al & "mgm et e | the landing bear is so constructed |distributed the Juneau band tok- | I The cruiser was scheduled to sail FANS 23 IN NIGHT TILT attle. The flying time, with | that the skiis are below the wheels|cns, Alaska carved ivory Billikens. lat 9 o'clock this morning, but ow- atops at Alert e chmk'an By and the tires cause no drag. | It was 'explained by Fargher - |ing to tide conditions this was im- AUGUSTA, Ga., Aug. 6. — Jim|Juneau, was 18% hours, | In addition to the trips he in-that the Billikens could be trusted .%/ | possible. ~ At 12:15 p.mn. she was Mooney, hurling fce for Charlotte| One trip he intends to make this tends to make in Alaska, Dorband: |0 keep good luck surrounding the | warped out from Government dock of the Sally league, struck out 23|winter, Dorbandt said, is to Point plans four round trips 0 fBEAIY. wearers bub jevery sugrping ihpir 7// % |by the motarship Estebethi and : | it Rloht SRR B before spring. One of them, he said, |!'ttle tummies must be rubbed and led for Sitka. A I wd batsmen in his first night game. |Barrow, which has not been visit- | Wil be made in the middie ‘af the |if perchance, the smile faded from / { headed for 8 arge crow —_— - — ed by an airplane in two years. e the Mk E | was on the dock to bid the visitors RI VE THE DATE Moose Cafeteria Dance — Augus: 16th. —ady. o bl e S Try the Five oClock Dinner Speeials at Mabry’s ~-adv | TR S THE NEW IDEAL SHOPPE | 218 Front Street | | MARY HAMMER i | | | Alaskan Novelties—Swedish and | Finnish Copperware — Knives | and Linens SEE BIG VAN | The Gun Man You will be surprised at what you save on Guns and Ammunition | Always Open 208 Front St. | | ° Among his early flights after reach- ing Anchorage, Dorbandt said, will be trips to McGrath, Takotna and | Bethel. He also will drop in fre- | quently at Falrbanks and Nome, both of which places he formerly o |called home. Accompanied by Mrs. Dorbandt, |the Alaska flier arrived at Seattle April 18 by boat and proceeded to San Francisco, where he pur- |} chased the Fairchild. The Dplane, which has accommodations for four passengers, was designed for | high altitude mapping work and | has a camera hatch in the floor of the cabin. It cruises at 105 miles an hour with pontoons, or 110 miles with wheels, and has a top speed of 145 miles an hour I'.s‘ range is 700 miles without refuel- ing. The motor is a 300-horsepower Wright J-6-9. The plane was equipped with landing wheels when Dorbandt took it over and flew it up to Sea arriving there June 19. He wa | The | regarding conditions Bromley might forced to wait there for the arrival ) T I R ey AMERICAN BEAUTY PARLOR [ Under New Management Specializing in Mme. Mayme Hussey Facials MRS. RUTH HAYES Phone for appointment r— RUBBER GLOVES Assorted Colors (Lady Dainty) Good Value 50¢ BUTLER-MAURO DRUG CO. free Delivery WHEN WE SELL IT IT'S RIGHT Express Money Ordery Phone 134 — AN A(-RLEABLE LAXATIVE Also an aid for re- ducing weight. , 85¢ bottle Juneau Drug Company Free Delivery Phone 33 Post 0fl§e Slubstatlon of pontoons from the Fairchild factory at Farmingdale, N. Y. Thcxn“ were installed at the shops of the ! Northwest Air Service at Bryn Mawr Field, on Lake Washington. A Department of Commerce in-| spector, L. J. Holoubek, of Los An-! geles, came up from California, and, after Dorbandt put the plane to a series of tests, gave his approval to its performance on pontoons. While he was detained in Seattle, Dorbandt was called into consulta-| tion, along with A. A. Bennett, an-| other veteran Alaska flyer, by the | backers of Lieut. Harold Bromley.| two Northerners were asked expect to find in the Aleutian Is- lands on his proposed trans-Pa- cific flight. Dorbandt was asked by the backers to take Bromley's ship aloft and see what he thought of its performance. It was largely upon Dorbandt’s recommendation | following this test that Bromley de- cided not to attempt a westward From the moment your laundry, sweet-smelling fully hand-ironed and ready to be worn. CLE until it is returned to you, and clean, quickly but with the utmost care. Each family’s laundry is washed by gent- ly sousing in soft, sudsy water and then thoroughly rinsed flevcral times. ing, it is starched when necessary, PHONE 15 ALASKA LAUNDRY ANING and PRESSING our driver picks up it is handled After dry- care- promptly returned all LADIES Collar and Cuft Sets Priced at $1.50 and up These Are Positively New and Ultra Modern Leader Dep't. Store PHONE 454 GEORGE BROS. “The Style Center of Juneau” Jvinter as a test flight to determine the feasibility of all-year air serv- ice between Seattle and the North — e PIONEER OF 1884 IS AFTER GAME INSTEAD OF GOLD Mount Juneau isn't a hole in the ground now, but it looked con- siderably higher than it seems at present to T. L. Moffett when first came to Alaska. He qualifies as a sourdough. He helped to run the first tunnel into the first producing mine in the district, and when he startec o invade the Yukon, the pioneer ore reduction mill of this district had just start- ed dropping its stamps. Mr. Moffett, with Mrs. Moffett, is making his annual visit to Al- aska. He hunts wild game now in= stead of gold as of yore. Mrs. Moffett seeks and finds relief here from the oppresive heat that ob- tains in summer time in Texas. Hunting in Cook Inlet Since May, Mr. Moffett has been hunting in the Cook Inlet cauntgy ith considerable success. Now he in Juneau intent on organizing a bear hunt before his return home next month. Mr. Moffett scaled the Chilkoot on his way to the Interior in 1885. From Stewart River bars that year he mined $5,000. In the summers of 1886 and 1887, he prospected creeks along the Yukon as far as the Koyukuk, going up that river several miles, but the gold he found those two seasons no more than paid his expenses. He re=- turned from the Koyukuk to the Fortymile in the summer of 1887, and then with Gus Brown of this city poled up the Yukon. He went to the States late that fall. Wanted to Come Back “For thirty-six years after I left Alaska in 1887, I had the urge every Spring to return,” he said, today, “but I became engaged in Lusiness and a man of family in the States, and could not make the trip until seven years ago, Since then, I have been Nortn cvery year but one. My sons are worrying about our business enter- prises now. For the rest of my life I don’t intend to miss any more annual visits to the Territory. “Hunting is my chief occupation at present. I like to indulge in it in Alaska better than anywhere else. I meet some of my early acquaintances occasionally, but they are not numerous. In my yearly sojourns along the Yukon and in various othef parts of the North, I have made many new ocquaintances, am still making them and hope to continue to make them. The faces I see are new, but the spirit of adventure and helpfulness is the same as of old.” LT T T T T We Suggest— DILLARDS —the New CHOCOLATE CREATION 118 Seward St. Phone 25 lll!IIIIll||Illllllllllllllllllllllllllll [0 turn the Billiken over and administer an old-fashioned \paddling until the smile reap- peared. | When the Dauntless left the Channel today, every bandsmen was wearing his Billiken, attached |as a watch chain fob, and the musicians were the envy of all aboard. Followlng the concert last night, he Dauntless bandsmen were en- tcrtained at the home of Mr. and Mrs. J. J. Fargher by the Juneau |musicians and midnight came ail |too suddenly when the cruiser boys’ leave expired and they were re- quired to gb aboard ship. The cruiser musicians, during the stay of the Dauntless, were guests of the local band on a trip Mendenhall Glacier and at im- local boys were shown many favors and entertainment aboard the Brit- ish navy craft. “PANSY” PASSES Dies at Her Home in Palo Alto (Continued from Page One) competition. It was awarded the prize and the author received a re- quest for more stories. After her pupil-teacher days at Oneida Seminary she went to the Auburn Collegiate Institute for fur- ther work as a pupil teacher. Marries Minister In 1866 she was married at Glov- ersville, N. Y., to the Rev. Gus- tavus R. Alden of Auburn, N. Y. ‘Their first pastorate was at Al- °1the family home since that time. promptu affairs and in turn the! AWAY;WRITER OF OVER 120 BOOKS Isabella M;D—onald Alden' HI BmEE mond N. Y. At Utica in 1813{ their only child, Raymond Mac- donald Alden, was born. His ill- health, during his youth, led them to Florida where they lived for a {number of years. From Pennsyl- vania, where their son attended the ' State University and later was a member of the faculty, they moved | to California, settling at Palo Alto, Among “Pansy’s” best known books are the Chautauqua Series, the Ester Ried series and the Life lof Christ series. For a number of |years, 1873 to 1896, she edited the) !juvenile periodical, “Pansy.” She| .was, throughout her long life, an| active church worker. The material | for most of her stories was drawn from her experiences as a pastor’s wife. “Whenever,” as she expresed it, “things went wrong, I went home and wrote a book to make them come out right.” Mrs. Alden's husband died Marchv {29, 1894, at Swarthmore, Pa., and| her son September 27 of the same year at Philadelphia. Undaunted, |she returned to the Palo Alto home, which she shared with her daugh- ter-in-law and grandchildren, and continued her writing. From 1926 the aged writer had been confined ito her room most of the time be- cause of injuries suffered in that year. First she was hurt in an au- tomoble accident and later her hip| was fractured in a fall. She contin- | ued to write, however, and among her last works was an autobiogra- phical volume, “Memories of Yes-i terday.” —————————— RESERVE THE DATE Moose Cafeteria Dnnce—Augu*" 16th. —adv. | i (alifornia Grocery Phone 478 GRAN MARBLE CAKES, ea MILK CHOCOLATE CAKES, each WALNUT or CHOCOLATE BAR CAKES, each _................. TS B 35¢ CUP CAKES (they are delicious) 6 for....25¢ ASSORTED COOKIES, in bulk, per - pound .ot s FRESH SHIPMENT DMA'’S CAKES and COOKIES "R e T Bl 35¢ LARGE DISPLAY FRESH FRUITS and /VEGETABLES Home-grown Radishes, Beets, Turnips, ; Swiss Chard—Fresh Daily : ZELLER AND HENRY O’'MALLEY WILL BE GUESTS OF CHAMBER Henry O'Malley, United States Commissioner of Fisheries, R. A. |a final farewell. e | IS OPERATED UPON HERE Mrs. C. M. Archbold, of Peters- !burg, who grrived here last Friday, | was taken Suddenly ill and operat- ‘ed upon at 8t. Ann's Hospital on | Saturday for appendicitis. She is ~ | recovering in fine shape. Mr. Arch- {bold is Forest Ranger in the {on official business accompanied by !his wife. She is wellknown here, formerly being Honorah Kelly. {Zeller, ‘Supervisor of Tongass Na- | tional Forest, and other visitors are |expected to be present tomorrow at the weekly luncheon meeting of the Chamber of Commerce at Ar- cade Cafe. Commissioner O'Malley is due this evening from a trip to Ketchikan and other points in the southern end of the district. Mr. Zeller ar-, rived early this week from his head- quarters in Ketchikan. Plans for obtaining an air mail service for Alaska will be revealed to the Chamber tomorrow by A. B. Hayes, district manager for the Alaska Washington Airways. He {will suggest means of co-operation for the Chamber to support the company in the movement. ————.——— RESERVE THE DATE Moose Cafeteria Dance — August 16th. —adv. e LODE CLAIN NOTICES American or Canadian at The Empire. i For Your Week-End Vacation Trip! Slip-Over Sweaters and SWEATER COATS In Pure Wool SABIN’S DENNISON’S Tender Chicken Fricassee 26-ounce jars $1. 95 GEORGE BROTHERS PHONES 92—95 Five Fast Deliveries . FIG Fresh and Delicious, BARS pound GARNICK’S—Phone 174 Men’s Packard Shoes You don’t pay any more for the PACKARD name—a name famed for fine shoes since 1876. $7.50, $8.50 and $10.00 J.M. SALOUM FRONT STREET Petersburg District, and came here ,