The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, August 4, 1931, Page 8

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ZELLER TAKES NEW POSITION IN MINNESOTA Is Tendered and Accepts Position as Supervisor of Superior Forest R. A. Zeller ine years Sup- | ervi ional For- Ketchi- nd has ac- on in Super- the north- announced today by As gional Forester B. F. Heintzleman. | No date has been fixed for him | to assume his new duties, but {t| probably will be about the end of August. The Superior Forest is one of | the most important in the nation’s system of national forests, Mr. Heintzleman said It is especially | noted for its recreational features, great lake chains, hunting and fishing, and is visited annually by | thousands of sportsmen, Zeller will | make his headquarters at Ely, Minn. Makes Splendid Record Mr. Zeller has made a splendid record as head of the Tongass For- est, Mr. Heintzleman said “We | regret very much to have him| Jeave Alaska, but we are highly| pleased that he has been selected for this unusually fine assignment. Undoubtedly the record for effi- ciency he has made here was a major factor in his selection for his new position,” Mr. Heintzleman declared. Fourteen years ago, Mr. Zeller entered the United States Forest Service. He came fresh from Penn- sylvania State College of Forestry | to the same forest that he now goes to as Supervisor, starting as Forest Assistant. Shortly after- ward, he took a furlough from the Service and entered the Army serv- | ing one and one-half years during the World War. Re-Enters the Service On the termination of his mili- tary service, he re-entered the Forest Service and was assigned to Oregon where he remained until 1920. In that year he obtained a transfer to Alaska. When Alaska was created as a separate district, he was designated as Forest Supervisor in charge of the Tongass, and has functioned in that capacity ever since Under the present re-adjustment | of personnel in the local district, | Mr. Zeller had been detached from his old position and transferred to Juneau as Chief of Projects in both the Tongass and Chugach forests. This position will be left vacant for a time until a suitable man can be obtained, Mr. Heint- zleman said. Mr. Zeller is leaving Ketchikan today to appear as a witness in the California State courts in an alleged bogus stock sale in con- nection with the promotion of a frrrr ey Latest Showing of Ladies’ 3 Eye Tie Spike Heel Slippers in black and brown kid SEE THEM at SALOUM’S S e ] MOONES EMERALD OIL . For External Use Antiseptic Germicide ‘Deodorant New Price, 85¢c ‘cmkan Assistant Regional Forester | Associated Press photo showing where at least 60 persons lost their lives and scores injured as flames destroyed the Little Sisters of the Poor Home for the Aged in meburgh Pa. HEINTZLEMAN TO/SALMON BOATS jREDINGTUN BACK MEETSECRETARY | BRING TO PORT FROM TRIP WEST sy, M for Ket| 58,050 PUUNDS Called South by Confer chikan to Meet A 1 ence — Will Remain Sec'y Agncuhure ngs and Silvers Are Sold! Until End of Week to Cold Storage | . | After a month's trip to South- for Freezing | western and Central Alaska dist- | | ricts, Paul Redington, Chief of the Fifty-eight thousand and fifty | United States Bureau of Biologi- | pounds of fish have been received cal Survey, returned here last night | in Juneau in the last 24 hours. All'on the steamer Aleutian and will consisted of either king or silver remain here until the end of the salmon, and was purchased by the Week. Today he was salmon trol- [Juneau Cold Storage Company for|ling at Tee Harbor. freezing. King salmon command-| Mr. Redington accompanied the ed 12 cents a pound for large, 6 members of the Special S‘-nme' S * cents a pound for medium and 3 Committee on Wild Life Conserva- g?sthl.:laul:é }1{: tt;\];ll rsl;e;d MOSt cents a pound of small sizes. Silvers tion on the Penguin to the Pribi- | et A s e AN | brought 30 cents each. lofs, Bristrol Bay, Alaska Penin- | Boats, captains and cargoes fol- Sula, Kodiak, Kenai Peninsula andl To meet Assistant Secretary ot Agriculture R. W. Dunlap at Ket- | B. F. Heintzleman will leave here tomorrow on the steamer Alaska for the First City. He and Mr. Dunlap, who is accompanied by his 14-year old daughter, will ar- rive here on August 16. Mr. Dunlap is making the Alaska trip to observe Forest Service and | other department activities in South 000 pounds; Hyperien, Oscar Oberg, NeXt week in Seattle with his as- 16,500 pounds; T 3768, James Young, ' \sistants. The others in the party 3,100 pounds. (are scheduled to return here next Mr. Dunlap will spend few days here at local Forest Service head- quarters. He will go back to Seattle from here. | —————— | week. SEENBRONLT W Syl A T E R St i MISS YURMAN ENTERTAINS ‘JUNEAU PROPERTY OWNER fur farm project In Alaska. He| — | ON FUR BUYING TRIP will return here before he goes to| Miss Bessle Yurman entertained | Lewis Levy, of San Francisco, Minnesota to take his new posi- iflt bridge and dancing Saturday Juneau pioneer and still Juneau tion. \evenlng at the Zynda Hotel. Four property owner, passed through - leuch luncheon was served. Then Princess The British Isles have more than danclng was enjoyed L 5,000 motion picture houses, with | England accounting for nearly 4,- | Dawson and |other Interior points in search of T R e ) {furs. Mr. Levy will remain over Old papers tor sale at the Bm-‘ln Juneau for a visit on his way pire office. home. fllllliilIIiIlIIIIIIIIlIIIllllllIllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlllIIIIIIHII|IIIIIIIIII"IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlIII|l||IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII IGNITION TROUBLE. (T EIIIIIIII ; 6000 WEATHER |tables at cards were in play, after| Juneau Saturday evening on the| FAGII.ITATED BY Motion Pictures to Be Taken of Glaciers in ’ Glacier Bay Airplane activities yesterday after- noon and today were facilitated by delightful weather. Yesterday the Petersburg, Pilot Robert Ellis and Mechanic Brian Harland, took R. E. Legg, mining engineer, and H. Fraser to Tulse- quah, B. C. Soon after having returned here, | the plane made a flight over Men- | denhall and Taku Glaciers with Charles W. Wright, Assistant Di-i rector of the Bureau of Mlnes;l Fred D. Wright, son of Charles W.| | Wright; Russell Williams, student | at Johns Hopkins University; John | Dunstan, Harvard student, and | Joseph Repik. Mr. Williams, Mr.' Wright, Sr, and Mr. Wright, Jr., and Mr. Dunstan are members of the party that has been studying glaciers in Glacier Bay. i Late yesterday, the Petersburg {went to Funter Bay and brought |'W. 8. Pekovich, mining operator, here. i | This morning, the plane was i chartered by M. J. O'Connor, of the |Bureau of Fisheries, for a fish pntrol flight. This afternoon, the aircraft car- ried Dr. Harry Fielding Reid, fa- {mous glaciaist; Charles W. Wright, ' |E. P. Pond, Juneau photographer, nnd Richard Surratt, cameraman r a motion picture news com- pany. on a flight over the glacmrs in Glacler Bay. Pictures were to| be taken of the glacial phenomena VANDERBILTS ARE DIVORCED RENO, Nevada, Aug. Weir Vanderbilt has secured a |divorce from Cornelius Vanderbilt, | | jr. She charged cruelty. Her; jhusband did not take the trouble | to go to the court. It is reliably | learned he agreed to pay her ali-| imony in excess of $500 a month. ; The couple separated last June when Vanderbilt threatened 4—Mary | day, after a brief stop a -1 ; “to | kan, accompanied bv]Mrt }:iftx?:; Jow: |Cook Inlet. He left it. at. Angi- |gey” Peter Arno, artist. leman, he will go aboard the Rang- | Elfin, E. O. Swanson, 8,000 (?xage and came south while the| Pyl R { er X, a new F / boat, and 1"’”“:-* :«'5’“; id Doyle, 4,100 ‘\;’;““(‘)‘r‘]‘erw “{hc‘hing?gfiy contin- | «MAYOR OF SUM DUM” IS ! s ' pounds; Sadie, Sandy Stevens, 1,800 . HERE FOR SHORT VISIT ranches, waterpower projects, etc, |POUnds; Eagle, H. Yrians, 150 f’air*’;"ki with the party but was| sGene Owens, popularly known throughout the district. The party POUDds; Alms, A. Bartnes, 400 orcfe to return on account of a g5 the “Mayor of Sum Dum,” and will arrive here on August 16, and Pounds; Emma, Thomas Ness, 22,- conference which he will hold|pioneer mining man of that dis-, trict ,arrived here Monday for a/ and plesaure. ———— CORDOVA JEWELER HERE | Paul Bloednorn, jeweler at Cor- dova, is a Juneau visitor. He will remain several days. He arrived ' lon the steamship Aleutian laa',‘ night. { AR S L W ! Wisconsin produces more than | 30 percent of the nation's con«| densed milk products. The state manufactured 758,681,000 pounds 1n 1929, ;N visit of several days on business Mr. and Mrs. Winfield Daniels ' CALIFORNIA BEAUTY MARRIED Associated Press Photo who were married in Carson City Nev. Mrs. Daniels was the former Fay Lanphier of Oakland and “Miss America” in 1925, They were childhood sweethearts TWO HUNDRED FOREST FIRES RAGING TODAY Flames Rushing Through Kaniksu Park—Peo- ple Are Fleeing SPOKANE, Wash., Aug. 4—More than 200 forest fires in Montana, eastern’ Washington and Northern Idaho are raging today. Several of the fires are reported to be of incendiary origin. A 20~ mne an hour wind drove | the Deer Creek fire into Idaho and | spread it to a 90-mile line. A fire is rushing through he | Kaniksu National Forest and men ‘hnve been warned to fight or run \usxng their own judgment, One hundred familles are packing their belongings and fleeing. R The famous Royal Mall train, which runs between London and Edinburgh, will be exhibited at the 1933 fair in Chicago. NIGHT CALL OF 5 HOURS MADE BY ALEUTIAN Vessel Takes on Gold Con- centrates for Seat- tle Discharge With' a considerable quantity of canned salmon and 127 passengers, the steamship Aleutian, Capt. C. A. Glasscock and Purser Joseph Large, bound from Seward ‘to Seattle, called at Juneau last night, arriving at 11 p.m. and departing at 4 a.m. The vessel loaded most of her fish at Cordova. After disembark- ing passengers at the City Wharf here, she shifted to the dock of the Alaska Juneau Gold Mining com- pany and took on gold ore concen- trates. Both fish and concen- trates are for Seattle discharge. Thirty-three of the ship's pas- sengers were round trip tourists. From Westward ports 12 persons were booked for Juneau: They were: Prom Seward—Edna Brantra, Lucy M. Brantner, J. G. Bennett, C. J. Baldwin. From Cordova—Mrs. Gertrude Banler, Mrs. W. G. Watson, Bastine J. Luyat. Persons who engaged passage at Juneau for ports south were: For Ketchikan—Miss Vera Pear- son, Fay Wademan, Robert E. Hurley, Joseph Campbell, Michael Paulley, Carl Freiland, W. M. Wood. For Seattle—Mr. and Mrs. A. H. Ellis, Mrs. Sarah’ Ober, G. N. Nos- trand; H. A. Sabin, Nels Osnes. AR 2 THOSE NCH N W 3 & LADIES’ SHLK BLOOMERS AND PANTS-2 for $1.25 Latest styles—none-run—heavy weight KOTEX--3 packages for $1.00 Regular 45-cent package Y rmra el KLEENEX-—Package 19 cents All colors—Regular 25 cents Tne Leader Dep’t Store STORE OPEN TILL 9 P. M. lIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIH AT LAST--0il Burner Without a SPARK THE NEW AUTOMATIC RAY BURNER NO SPARK COIL....NO HIGH TENSION CURRENT......NO SPARK POINTS......NO .Will Not Interfere With RADIO. .. PRICE “MONEY BACK GUARANTEE” $550:00 COMPLETE INSTALLATION WITH TANK PLUMBING ik i vance HEATING PLANTS s T;llme;:bl';Vg;l SHEET METAL b Cost” Illlfl!lllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII|IIIIIIlllllllllIIIIlllllllllllllllllllIll|IlllIIllllIlIlIlIlllIlllllllllllllllllllllllll||IIlllllllIWIImlmmlllIlIIlMWIHll“IIIIIIlllllllll,mllljfllllmllllllllllllllll|||H|l|l|l||||||llllHllllmllllmllllllllllllllmllIllUIllllllmlll|llmlmmlllml’Illmllm IllIIIIIIIllIlIlIlllIlIIllIIlllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII:I EHIWIHHIIIIHIIImlllIIIIIIllIIIIIIIlllllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIllIllIIIlIlHIIIIIIIIIIIIlllllllllllllHIlllllllllllllli fe "

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