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pro ' H —~PAL ENTIRE CHANGE TONIGHT ( Park ACE - Taking Reporter Sunny Jim Comedy \ \ \W‘\h“l""l‘"fl,fl” with BETTY COMPSON Henry B. Walthall, Frankie Darro A Rousing All-Talking, Singing and Dancing, Musical Drama 1 (:real Songs by Cartoon Comdey ]AS. F. HANLEY 10—25—50—Loges 75 cents NEWS GATHERED FROM ALL PARTS OF NORTHLAND Wi BRI R R T} whey. Briet Items of Interest Concerning Persons and Occurences To provide shelter for hunters on the Stikint Flats, a scow house has been towed to Farm Island. Alaska hunters who contributed to the fund for obtaining and maintaining the shelter Olsen, P. L. Stump, Harry Coulter, Fred Hanford, Art Myers, Charles Benjamin, George The rule is similar in| making chocolates to that in Tue rinest chocolate creams are | dipped one at a time by hand. The | finest coffee ever—Hills Bros. Cof- fee—is roasted @ few pounds at @ ! time by the patented, continuous process—Controlled Roasting. No i other coffec has.the same delicious flavor that Hills Bros. Coffce has because none is roasted the same | way. Fresh from *he original vacwurs pack. Easily gnml with the Laok for the Arab o8 the can. ©1930 are L. Bob Hurley, | —_— Hatton, J. C. McBride, E. M. Campbell, George Fabricius, C. C. Mundy, Art Sorset, John Coulter |and B. Bruger. William L. - Paul's power boat was badly damaged when it caught afire 'at Petersburg. | Clam packing nas been started by the Alaska Glacier Sea Food Company, Earl N. Ohmer, owner, |at Petersburg. After an absence of 10 years, Mr. and Mrs. Sigurd Hadland have re- turned to Petersburg to make their home. They have been living at Ketchikan. They borught their ,three children, a cow and a radio, ‘together with a lot of household furniture. | New street lights have been in-| stalled at Petersburg. Lights on jcorners are 500 watts and those in ‘the middle of blocks, 300 watts. After entering Revilla Channel (near Ketchikan, the Paul L, a large seiner from the Westward, hit a rock on Rosa Reef. The value nf {the craft is put at $20,000. Unusually heavy rainfalls recent- ly at Hyder proved the efficacy of the drainage channel built by the Territorial Government two years ago. The channel prevented floods by taking care of the high water {in Salmon River. | Children of Hyder and Stewart {will be guests at an entertainment and supper to be given by the Moose at the Stewart Opera House | October 27—Mooseheart Day, which commemorates the founding by the Moose order of its institution for children at Mooseheart, Ind. The Parent-Teacher Association {at Wrangéll Has ‘given notice of its inability to continue in exist- ence. It has asked that its debts, otaling $950, be paid by the Wran- {gell City Council. The Wrangell Narrows Packing Company of Petersburg has made |& voluntary assignment for the benefit of creditors. One hundred and fifty barrels of live herring impounded by the icrew of the fishing boat Lincoln CLOSING OUT MOCCASINS, DOLLS, TOTEMS, CURIOS, AT COST IVORY THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIR[: WEDNESDAY OCT 15, I930 inside the breakwater m.‘ Wrangell eloped with the.tide the| other day, &nd all got out to sea again. They were favored by a strong wind. Roy Schoeb, blg game hunlcr, of Augusta, Kansas, returned to| Wrangell from Level Mountain in |, the Cassiar with the antlers of an| Osborne caribou having a spread of 55% inches, which tops the rec- \ ord. . According to statistics com- piled by Jonas Brothers, taxidér- mists of Denver, Colo, the larg- | est spread heretofore was 55 in-; ches, Miss Marjorie Johnson, daugh- ter of Mr. and Mrs. M. O. Johnson of Wrangell, a sophomore at Whit- man College in Washington State, has been selected to sing soprano | in the college glee club, and will| be with the club on its Pacific Northwest tour. | | The Premier Gold Mining Com- | pany, whose property is near Hy der, this month paid its third quartedly dividend of the year, the | rate being 6 cents a share on its| capitalization of $5,000,000, making | the total quarterly dividend 5300.-1 000. The distribution of this divi- dend brings the grand total paid by the Premier Mine in the 10 years of its bperation to $15,150,000. On the freight run between Healy and Fairbanks, the Alaska Railroad is operating its alrgest locomotive, No. 701. Its first appearance; in the Fairbanks yards was with 40 freight cars, half of them loaded | with coal. William N. Bmch New York sportsman, who has hunted in Al- aska a dozen or more years, took a moving picture of a brown bear while it was charging toward him in the Rainy Pass country this year, When Mr. Beach first began |cranking his camera, the &nimal was 200 feet distant. Pictures were taken until it came within 50 feet. Then guides shot it dead. The Freshmen bonfire at the Alaska Agricultural College and School of Mines was touched off by President Chatles E. Bunnell f the institution. The bonfire was succeeded by a dance in the college gymnasium. Toot! Toot! That will be a signal | grand march ‘at the| to start. the Railroad Ball” to be given by airbanks Elks November 1. Several pairs of mink will be taken to Portland, Ore, by W. T. Murry of the Anchorage Fur Farms for exhibition at the Pacific In- ternational Exposition. While feeding off the carcass of, a moose, a brown bear, measuring 10 feet, 3 inches from tip to tip,! was killed by John and Fred Hed- ,berg near Russian Lake on the di-, vide from the head of Resurrection River, reports the Seward (-n!c- way. Carcasses of several moose calves, which evidently had been killed by bears, were seen by the iters. Kinley Park has the stent radio reception of place in Alaska except Point Bar- row. most Between 12 and 14 moose have been killed in the neighborhood lof Seward this scason, declares the {Seward Gateway. Moose this year jare said to be less wary than usual. ! Arlo Fulk, Chief ineer of {the Burezu of Fisheries sl er, was initiated into |Lodge at Anchorage early month. RBEETE U e 'PUBLIC IS INVITED At a meeting r[ the Martha So- | ciety next Friday, Mrs. Lydia Fohn- Hansen, tant director of Home | Economics of the Extension Depart- ment of the Alaska Agricultural| College and School of Mines, will [give a free demonstration of rug |making. The meeting wijl be at 2 o'cleck in the afternoon in the parlors of the Northern Light Pres- byterian Church. The public gener- ‘ally is urged to be present. —_———a——— Dsfly Empire w-m Ads Pay. any | TO RUG MAKING ' N. C. PRIMARY | ASHEVILLE, North Carolina, Oct. |15—The Senate Campaign Funds | Investigating Committee slapped the stamp of acquittal against the North Carolina Primary sums of meney from outs °s were used. la ide s¢ —_—l o BEACH HOTEL | VICTORIA, B. C, Oct. 15.—Fire |destroyed the Beach Hotel and | contents at Oak Bay near here y: terda The loss is estimated at $150,000. > {Six Narcotic Smugglers g Indicted by Grand Jury | | LEAVENWORTH, 15.—Six members of a gang allegad {in a conspiracy to smuggle nar- cotics into the Federal Penitentiary Ihere, have been indicted by the grand jury. The alleged ring includ- ed 15 or more members but the \olhcr, are not mentioned in the indictments. Kansas, Oct IT’s As EASY and natural to enjoy the fragrant mildness of a Camel Cigarette as it is to admire beauty when you see it. . Camels are made, and always have been made, for discriminating smokers—the people whose keen judgment unerringly selects the best. But that doesn’t mean you have to be an expert to enjoy Camels! The delicate, mellow fragrance of those choice sun-ripened tobaccos is some- thing that anybody can appreciate. Camels are naturally smooth and mild — never parched'nof insipid. Why is there such a swing to Camels?P Becatise more and more smok- ers'dre léarning the difference between trie mildnéss and*mere flatness. Give yourself the luxury of a cigarctte that’s always pleasant smoking. 1) 1, o Sa]c Starts Monday, Octobe;' 20th WINTER & POND CO. “Everything in Photography” ©1930, R. J. Rejnolds Tobseco Co., Winston-Salem, N. C ~NOT CORRUPT IS DESTROYED |place last Sunday {Metropolitan Platon of New {neau for a brief stay. [GREEK CHURCH PRIEST AT SITKA IS MADE BISHOP ey . Angobis Poprovsky | Chosen Head of New Southern Diocese Magnitude and importance of the| work of the Greek Catholic Church in Alaska have necessitated the dividing of the territory into two| dioceses, the Southern and the| Northern, and the Rev. Antonin| Poprovsky, archimandrite, who was| pastor at Sitka has been elevated to the bishophric of the Southern Diocese. His consecration took in San Francis-{ t a conclave of Bishops.of the! Greek Church from Canada and| |the United States, according to an| Associated Press dispatch to The| Empire today. At his consecration, York, l head of the Church in North Amer- ica, officiated. Bishop Poprovsky left Sitka and passed through Juneau late last‘ month on his way to the S8an Fran- cisco conclave. His elevation was| expected by Greek Catholic clergy | in Alaska. The new bishop’s dio- cese includes all of Southeast Al(\s-l ka and all the coastal territory to Anchorage to the Westward, as well as some of the Interior. His seat will be at Sitka. Bishop Amphilohy, who was bish- op of all of Alaska, is in charge of the Northern Diocese, which in- cludes the area north of the Yu- kon and Kuskokwim rivers and the Aleutian Islands. His seat will be at Unualaska, where he made his headquarters when at the head of the church throughout the terri- tory. Rev. Father N. Case of .the Greek Catholic Church, is in Ju- He is on a tour of virtually all the Greek Catholic parishes in Alaska. NAVY ECONOMY PLAN STARTED Eighteen Destroyers to Be Withdrawn from Battle Fleets WASHINGTON, D. C., Oct. 15— ¥ | Eighteen destroyers will be with- drawn from the battle Fleet and also four from the scouting fleet under the Navy economy plans. The Pacific Battle Fleet will be reduced from 42 to 30 and the At- lantic Battle fleet irom 39 to 29. e ee- Mrs. A. H. McDonald, wife of the agent of the Alaska Steam- ship Company at Anchorage, is returning home from a visit to the States. She is on the Northwestern. UNITED STATES LAND OFFICE JUNEAU LAND DISTRICT ANCHORAGE, ALASKA. U. S. NON-MINERAL SURVEY No. 1929 Serial No. 07234 Y NOTICE OF APPLICATION IN THE MATTER OF THE AP- PLICATION OF FRANK SHOT- TER, for leave to enter and pur= chase a tract of Jland, consisting of 1266 acres, as a trade and manufacturing site, located on Chicagoff Island, Territory of Al- aska. Notice is hereby given that Frank Shotter, a citizen of the United States, whose post office address Is Hoonah, Alaska, has filed his ap- plication in the United States Land Office in Anchorage, Alaska, to purchase and enter upon asa Trade and Manufacturing Site the lands embraced in U. S. Non-Mineral Survey No. 1929, which are situated on the Easterly shore of Port Fred- erick, Chichagoff Island,-in the Ter- Titory of Alaska, in Latitude 58 de- grees and .07 minutes; N; Longi- tude 135 degrees and 27 minutes West, contalning 12.66 acres, and more particularly described as fol- lows, to-wit:— Beginning at Cor. No. 1, from which U.S.LLM. No. 1472, bears N. 26 degrees, 27 minutes W. 4627 chains; thence N. 42 de- grees, 19 minutes E. 136 chains to Cor. No. 2; thence N. 51 de- grees, 00 minutes E. 1153 chains to Cor. No. 3; thence S. 46 de- grees, 36 minutes E. 10 chains to Cor. No. 4; thence S. 57 de- grees 00 minutes W. 1294 chains to Cor. No. 5; thence mean- dering the shore of Port Fred- erick at mean high tide: 1. N. 46 degrees, 06 minutes W. 588 chalns; 2. No. 36 degrees 46 minutes W. 297 chains; 3. N. 75 degrees 12 minutes W. 112 chains to Corner No. 1, the place of begin- ning. Declination 31 de- grees 30 minutes E. And any and all persons claim- ing any portion of the above de- scribed tract are required to file in the United States Land Office at Anchorage, Alaska, their adverse claim or claims during the period ALL-TALKING —THRILLING! NOW AT COLISEUM 7:30—9:30 The Studio Murder Mystery HOLLYWOOD’S most popuar star murdered: Five persons suspect- ed. The actor’s compli- cated love life bared! A lovely girl convicted, sentenced to death! While love fights to discover the real kill- er! Baffling clues! Thrilling episodes! Gripping drama! On the intriguing back- ground of a great mov- ing picture studio! Vitaphone Acts Sound" Newbs A Ounality You Would Insist Upon If You Knew Al of the Facts lovy Compare aspoonful of Schilling Ground Cloves with any other; The difference is marked. Schilling is a dark brown in color. The other will be a red or yel« Jow brown. Schilling is so rich with oil that the tiny granules cling together in clots. The other will look dry and loose. Most ground cloves come in a sifter-top tin. But Schilling’s is packed in a tin with a large opening. It is.sc heavy with frafrant oil that it will not shake through a sifter. Fact No. 33. Schilting Lemon Ex. tract contains 3. times the amount of Jemon oil required by the United States Government Pure Food Department—3 times as much — and more than most any other you can buy. That is why it goes further — why it imparts a richer lemon flavor. Schlllm ¢ ¢+ + There are 41 other hcu equally illuminating about Schilling Products + + Coffee - + Tea + + Baking Powder ¢ « 42 Spices r + 31 Extracts. » v ¢ 4 R ) Kers NOTICE OF APPLICATION FOR PATENT Serial No. 07204 In the United States Land Office for the Juneau Land District, at Anchorage, Alaska. In the Matter of the Application of ALASKA ELECTRIC LIGHT AND POWER COMPANY, a cor- poration for a' seldiers’ addi- tional homestead. NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN That the Alaska Electric Light and Power Company, a corporation or- ganized -under the laws of Alaska and doing business in Alaska, has filed application, Serial No. 07294, for patent, under sections 2306 and 2307 Revised Statutes of the United States, to a tract of land embraced within U. 8. Official Survey No. 1953, and situated vne-quarter mile northwest from Juneau, Alaska, in latitude 58 deg. 18 min. 08 see. N., and longitude 134 deg. 25 min. 33 sec. W, and more particularly de- scribed in the fleld notes and plat thereof, and containing an area of 438 acres. Corner No. 1 -‘of said survey and sald tract is situated at a point’from whence U. 8. L. M. No. 3 bears south 67 deg. 51 min. 40 sec. west 41.21 chains distant. Any and all persons ciaiming adversely any of the above describ- ed land should file their adverse claims with the Register of the United States Land Office at An- chorage, Alaska, within the period of publication or thirty days there- after, or they will ‘be barred by the provisions of the statute. J. LINDLEY GREEN, Register. First publication, Sept. 24, 1930. Last publication, Nov. 26, 1930. Cost of harvesting wheat with of publication, or within thirty (30) days thereafter. Dated at Anchorage, Alaska, this 16th day of September, 1930. J. LINDLEY GREEN, Register, U. S. Land Office, Pirst publication, Sept. 24, 1930. Last publication, Nov. 19, 1930. \ combines in Nebraska was from $1.06 to $5.04 an acre. e ® The Florence Shep | “Naivette” Croquignole Perm- anent Wave BEAUTY SPECIALISTS Phone 427 for Appointment ——_, | l