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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, SATURDAY, AUGUST 13, 1932. Daily Alaska Empire JOHN W. TROY PRESIDENT AND EDITOR ROBERT W. BENDER - - GENERAL MANAGER except Sunday by the NY Et Second and Main Published every evening EMPIRE_PRINTING COMPA! Streets, Juneau, Alaska. Entered in the Post Office in Juneau as Second Class matter. SUBSCRIPTION RATES. Dellvered by carrier in Juneau, Douglas, Treadwell and Thane for $1.25 per month, By mall, postage paid, at the following rates: One year, fn advance $1%.00; slx months, in advance, .00; month, in advance, .26, B o ers "will confer & favor if they will promptly notify the Business hOFlcn of any fallure or irregularity deliv of their papers. e eahone Yor Editorial and Business Offices, 374. MEM!ERP?: AaSOCIATED PRESS, Associate 88 excl u:hlaor republication of all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited in this paper and also the tocal news published herein. ALASKA CIRCULATION GUARANTEED TO BE LARGER THAN THAT OF ANY OTHER PUBLICATION G. 0. P. CONVENTION A FUTILE AFFAIR. The complete futility of the Republican Na- tional Convention was exposed by President Hoover’s speech of acceptance. After forcing a wet National Convention to adopt a half-dry, half-wet platform he has abandoned the position of the party plat- form on Prohibition and declared for State rights. He says each State should handle the problem within its borders as it wishes. It is evident that the plain and unequivical Democratic plank not only carried the country away from Prohibition but it swept the former dry Mr. Hoover off his feet. At least the acclaim with which it was received made it evident to him that it would be necessary for him to switch in order to make any sort of a showing in the National election, and his great appetite for votes did the rest. He ghandoned his party's position on the question, & position that was dictated by the Administration, and plainly bid for wet votes—votes that he has been known to spurn in the days when he thought the country was dry. It is not now apparent since the speech why the Republican Convention adopted a platform at all. ADVICE TO THE DRYS. Dry leaders are urging the supporters of Pro- hibition to concentrate on candidates for Congress to the exclusion of party considerations and ignore all others issues except Prohibition. To Democrats and Republicans alike they say: “Vote for candi- dates for Congress who believe in the Prohibition .1 amendment and who will sustain it in all needed legislation.” In other words, these men who seek to dom- inate the nation's temperance policies, would require but a single qualification from a candidate for Senator or Representative—that he vote dry. Per- sonally he may be as wet as the ocean but as long as he will vote for any measure demanded by the Prohibition fanatics vote for him. To follow that advice would be to make out of Congress a rubber stamp, and put the country wholly in the hands of men absolutely incapable by temperament, experience and tradition to conduct the people’s legislative business. The Prohibition problem, deeply rooted as it is, is not as vital as economic issues that must be solved satisfactorily before the country can make any lasting progress toward recovery and stabiliza- tion. Dry strategists cannot be unaware of that fact. Yet they would turn thumbs down on able men, 3 - ] B 1 ] 1 ' i 1 i r any other bill demanded by the Dry czars. SEVEN “THIRD PARTIES.” Seven “third parties” field before the balloting next November. [-1.%-2 e i d hundreds of thousands. educated at Princeton for the Presbyterian ministry. heads the Socialist ticket. James Munroe, Pennsylvania labor leader. agency to head its ticket. its Vice-Presidential candidate. candidate for Vice-President until later. Andrea Nordskog, another Californian. * second place on that ticket. h had declined it. n of Illinois is the second man on the ticket. opposed to continuance of the present Prohibition farce, to raise to power in their stead incompetents who can be depended on to vote against repeal or resubmission of the question to a popular vote, or have already nominated tickets for this year's national campaign and an eighth ticket is regarded as certain to be in the ‘While the vote cast for any one of these groups will not bulk large, in the aggregate it probably will run into the Norman Thomas, New York Socialist who was His running mate is Another branch of the Marxian followers, the Socialist-Labor Party, has nominated Vern L. Rey- nolds, head of a New York newspaper advertising J. W. Aiken, Boston, is “Gen,” James Coxey, who led his army to Wash- ington in the early '90s and is now Mayor of Massilon, Ohio, was nominated for President by the Farmer-Labor group which deferred nomination of a A newcomer, the Liberty Party, picked Frank Webb, San Francisco, who has for his runningmate John Zahnd, Indianapolis, was nominated for the second successive time by the National Party. Miss Plorence Garvin, daughter of former Governor Lucius . Garvin of Rhode Island, was named for the The Communist Party offers William Z. Foster, notorious American agitator, to the country as its t, and James W. Ford, an Alabama Negro, e William D. Upshaw, Georgia, after Senator Upshaw has announced he relinquish the nomination to any other promin- leader Who is acceptable to the party. Frank S. " The new Jobless-Liberty Party convention wil held on Labor Day. Its Executive Committee recommended the nomination of Father James _Cox, Pennsylvania churchman who led the jobless ‘army on Washirigton several months ago to present represented in a national election was in 1900 when there were ten tickets in the field. It is not im- possible that a new record will be set this vear as other minority groups have indicated they will organize and launch their ships upon the troubled political seas now carrying a fleet of seven. There is little chance for any of them to break into the electoral vote as is indicated by past records. Since 1832 there have been 25 Presidential elections during the course of which 43 different minor parties were formed. Only seven times has such a thing occurred and on several of these occasions the achievement resulted from splits in the major political organizations. No such split is going to occur this year. Some Democrats will vote with the Republicans and more Republicans will vote for the Democratic ticket. Of the minority 8. idates by atvsly ontitled to '_hflcandxdm,e: running this year, most. will be forgotten |/in a few years and their candidacies recalled only |by a search of the record books or back files of the l‘newspapers. None of them is liable to exert |enough influence on the current campaign and (election to be credited with having made political | nistory. That was rather a mean trick the President |played on those wet delegates whom he for ote dry in the National Convention only to come |out wet himself. MBack for Battle. (New York World-Telegram.) It will be quite futile for any candidate in the hope of conciliating any element of the population to attempt to subordinate the repeal of the Eighteenth Amendment to the solution of the economic problems which press upon us all. The two are inextricably intertwined. Dr. Nicholas Murray Butler returns from Europe with the above characteristic, clear insistence upon the most genuine, irrepressible issue that has stirred the people of the United States in this generation. Dr. Butler at once and vigorously takes up the great fight he carried to the Republican Convention at Chicago and stuck to until he sailed. The “merriment and sarcasm” he heard in Eng- land regarding the Republican Prohibition plank he will find increasingly duplicated in this country. President Hoover and the Republican strategists can show scant profit from the Chicago straddle. Nor will they have an easy job from now till November convincing voters that a straddle is really a stride. ‘When Dr. Butler says repeal is an essential step toward the revival of prosperity in the United States he also says why: Should not more than fifteen States adopt an effective system of State liquor control such as prevails in the Province of Quebec or in Sweden, and should a rate of taxation be established not greater than that which now prevails in Great Britain, the lowest estimate is that $1,500,000,000 would be available for the public treasury. That's brass tacks meaning dollars. Tt spells reduced deficits, tax relief, speeding up of a big group of interrelated indutsriess It may easily prove the impetus that will start us toward recovery. On international finance, war debts and tariffs a considerable part of the American people still need educating. But on Prohibition the country is already well educated—by eleven years of bitter, costly experience. We are ready for repeal. It is the indicated first step, the natural home action by which this natior. can move while it considers the larger international programs of prosperity building. We should be blind to our own interests to hesitate and fumble longer with a well-defined issue ripe for settle- ment. “This is a case,” Dr. Butler points out, “in which the moral issue and the economic issue are two sides of one and the same shield.” Exactly. That makes it the more dangerous for parties or candidates to try old juggling tricks. The day will come, we think, when President Hoov- er will wish he'd listened a little more to Dr. Butler and a little less to the Anti-Saloon League. Kind of Men Needed. (Seward Gateway.) The advent of H. S. Graves, Peter Brevik and Lars Hylen, who have initiated steps for launching big developments at Goodnews Bay, which promises to take its place among the platinum producing regions of the world, marks a forward step in the march of progress setting in for Alaska. Despite its distance from Seward and many settled points, whatever happens at Goodnews Bay is bound to reflect itself in the influence it will have upon the Territory as a whole, and attraction of attention to the fact that this great storehouse of precious metals is the one best bet on the American continent. Like a little trickle down a mountain, the min- ing era of Alaska is gaining volume and momentum until the near future promises a flood of pros- pectors and capital with which to develop their finds. front. experience to wrest success from anything of merit. accordingly. higher commercial, industrial and social plane others to act. platinum deposit every success. phia Inquirer.) Prohibition act for granted—(New York Sun.) to keep the mosquitoes off. turns the hdse on them.—(Dallas News.) You can’t get some candidates to answer a ques- enough for you?"—(Dayton, Ohio, News.) Break it gently to the Sheppard of the drys that Texas is flocking with Aunty Volstead's wet pack.—(Washington Post.) A political orator asks what this country stands for. Too much—(Atlanta Constitution.) A statesman is a member of Congress who be- comes a politician as the campaign for reelection approaches.—(Toledo Blade.) The presence of Messrs. Graves and associates is the second step in bringing Goodnews Bay to the Thus Alaska needs many men of this kind, who are possessed of vision and courage and the Such men do not act upon the suggestion of others. They consider a problem from its various angles, arrive at a decision and map their course It is such men who lift a country from its primitive thralldom and elevate it to a They come as a tonic to stimulate activities and by their energies create a contagion which emboldens Thus we welcome this expression of faith and confidence in the lode and placer possibilities of the Territory and wish the owners of the big A political leader today is a man who is con- stantly looking back over his shoulder to see what his faithful following has in its hands—(Philadel- Canada is in the throes of a major conference on how to improve business. This would seem to indicate that she has taken repeal of the American ‘They are selling chemically treated stockings So now milady just tion yes or no, even when you ask them “Is it hot Kent has been sure that she could depend upon John Anderson’s SYNOPSIS: Sondra friendship — and is startled when Anderson’s friend Cas- sidy tells her that John is getting back from Europe, since he hkas not cabled her as he usually does. She has been wondering whether John sus- pects anything about her sec- ret marriage to Mark Merri- man. She never intended to marry Mark unless he made a large amount of money, and in fact she is herself responsi- ble for his absence since she asked John to give him a po- cition in the Congo. Just be- fore Mark sailed, she realized how she would miss him, and agreed suddenly to marry him. only to rcalize now that she dots not love him as she The FaZl (haar AYRES Y M. % mation of her absence. Flosa came into the room wrap- ped in an elaborate lounging robe and smoking a cigarette. “I've had a row with Ben,” she announced briefly. Sondra said nothing; she knew of what these ‘“rows” consisted. They were usually a burst of storming and nagging on Flora's part because she could not im- mediately get something she want- ed, until in sheer deseperation, Ben gave way. Flora sat down on the side of the bed and looked at her sister. “No, it's not the usual sort of row,” she said, reading Sondra’s thoughts. “It's serious this time. In fact. ... I'm going away.” “Alone?” Sondra asked wi‘iout much interest, and she wondered whose hospitality she herself could ask, seeing that Ben did thought. She lives with her sister Flora, who has married for money as her father ad- vised her to do herself. Son- dra thus is dependent upon the money of her brother-in- law, Ben. CHAPTER 15. A SERIOUS “ROW” Cass stared at her. “Didn't you know John was getting in today?” he asked blankly. Sne shook her head. No—" then she laughed. “Why should I know? Anyway.... I can't go to meet him. I've got an en- gagement.” It was not the truth, but not for apything in the world would she huve allowed him to know it. Jokn, on his way home—almost home—and she knew nothing at all about it. Theve seemed to be a queer lit- tle space in her mind, and as she stood, starring at Cass's be- wildered face, into that space crept o picture of a gil's face— a pretty face with a saucy pro- viking smile—Nathalie Symons. Cass was fumbling with his ‘waten. “Weil. . . . Better be off then—" he mumbled. “Don't want to miss him.'" He looked around the room as if for Inspiration. “Give him your love; 1 suppose,” he queried vaguely. “Oh, yes, give him my love, of course,” said Sondra lightly. She went down to the door with| him and waved him goodbye, but her stebs dragged as she moumedi the sisirs again, and there was 8 heavy feeling in her heart. | John was home, and he had| not let her know. As a rule, if he had been in Europs, he cabled her when he| sailed. Well, it was mo concern of hers, but she would take very good care| to be out not only tonight, but all' day tomorrow, and unable to see| him if he called or rang up. She went to her own room and shut her door. There was a photograph of John | Anderson on the mantlepiece, and she went across to it and looked | at it with curious eyes. { He had gone away three days after Mark sailed. { Mark had not forgotten her she| knew, Mark would never forget| her, but John— | Supposing she had friendship—for ever. Then she laughed at herself for the tkcught. How absurd! They had only to meet and everything would be as it had always been. | Still, it was strange he had not| told ber that he was coming on| home. lost his Sondra was going to bed that night when Flora came knocking at her door. “Can I come in?” “Oh, yes—" Sondra said wear- ly. She was feeling bored and dis- spirited; she had spent the even- ing with some dull people in or- der o0 be out of the house if John Anderson called, and after all she need mnot have troubled for he had neither called nor rung up. Of course he had only been in town a few hours; she tried hard to make excuses for him even while she could only remember that the last time he returned ly to her to find out why she had not met him at the pier Apparently this time he was not care for her to stay in the house when his wife was not there. “Alone—and for ever,” Flora said quietly. Sondra turned around. “Nonsense,” she said sharply. TEFER T s b ¥ e e " i@ go any place any s quite true” Flora laughed. | o0 concams the most| | S time. A tank for Diesel i “I'm fed up, fed-up, fed-up,” she j Dr. A. W. Stewart Tt e | said with a fierce note in her northerly point in continental Uni- DENTMST a b-ulrulbh save \ voice. “So fed-up in fact that 1|%ed States. 2 Hourspa.m to 6D M | PHGRE IS, Nt s lost my temper tonight and told SEWARD BUILDING = Ben exactly what I thought of Citice Phone 409, Wes. | RELIABLE TRANSFER him. b Phone 276 . — “pAad what do you think of SABIN,Q him?’ Sondra asked. " She had so often wondered; Flora never discussed her husband though she treated him so cal- ously. Flora flung her cigarette into the empty grate. ! I've got to be free, know.” Sondra stared at her sister. She jhad never believed Flora capable of so much feeling. For some time she had guessed that Flora and |Jooe1yn Farr liked one another, but then as Flora had just said— Jocelyn had puritanical ideas. Yes, he was like Mark—Mark who had insisted that they get married. Flo.a went on half apologetical- that's all I ly. “The only thing that worries me is—wiai will you d6* You can't{ stay rere with Ben, of course, even, if he wanted you to, and he won't,! you know that I'm afraid it means cutting off your allowance I shan't have any too much money of my own, and generosity Wwas never Ben's long suit, as you sure- ly know. You've got the little bit moth r left, of course, but that won't be much use. What will you ¢o? Sondra?” Sondra did not answer but her heart began to beat in a quick, frightened way. What could she do? (Copyright 1932 by Ruby M. Ayres) Flora tells Sondra what she really thinks of Ben in the next instaflment. Everything in Furnishings for Men “I think he's a ... said. worm,” he There was on eloquent silence. Serial f,‘;}{,g”' G —_— adio Tub?—nnd FARp e “0n, I know he's kind—" FlOTa| NOTICE is hereby given that the [ a——— el went on Wwith a sort of weary|ajaska Juneau Gold Mining Co, & Dr. C. L. Fenton JUNEAU MELODY resignetion. “But kindness is re-|corporation, whose postoffice ad- CRIROPRACTOR & volting when i# comes from the|dress is Juneau, Alaska, has filed Electric Treatments HOUSE wrong kind of person. I'd rather have my eyes blacked by a man |I cared for, than a diamond neck- lace from.... Well, from Ben.’| Sondra took up a brush and be-I gan mechanically to smooth her hair, “Well — and so — what?” she asked. Flora shrugged her slim shoul-| ders. “One word led to another, of cour:2, and in the end the worm turn-d. He accused me of not caring foh him—which is true— and of caring for.... for some- one else. ... which is also true.” “Mesning Jocelyn Farr?” Sondra | asked. “¥es, T've often wondered if you guess:d. T care for him all right, jand he knows it, but it’s no use; the's got puritanical ideas — your friend Mark Merriman reminds me of him a little” She broke off tc ask for a moment, “Well, what do you think about it?” “I think it's a mistake to have quarreled with Ben if you can't have anything better,” Sondra said slowly. Flora laughed bitterly. “You would! Youre a thousand times more worldly than I am. I had zpolaéea B::u.besl:mlnz. SUaMIIng McCAUL MOTOR those sort of ideas once, t00, bul| pejiet No. 3 lode. Survey No. COMP. ANY not now—" She started up and|j589 A. Beginning at Cor. No. 1, THE JUNE AU LAUNDRY began pacing the room restlessly. whence U.SLM. No. 1589 bears Clothes, and jewelry, and boring |Thence S 69° 0’ E 1500 ft. to Cor.|to Cor. No. 1; containing 20658 £ a8 Bavsnut 8 No. 3, Thence 8 20° 0" W 600 ft.jacres. PHONE 359 dinner parties and masses of bor- ing f:1ends, and nothing better to look forward too, ever! I shall get old and fat, and Ben will get older and fatter, and then some day I shall die—never hav- ing krcwn what it means to be happy, or to have done anything worth while. I can't go on with it, Sondra; I simply can't.” “What are you going to do, then?” “I'm going away. round and begged and implored—’ she gave a little shiver of dis- taste. ‘And where are you going?” “I den't know. I've got a little money put away—not & great deal, of course, but I've got to get out somewhere—where I can breathe, I sup- and belong to myself. . . pose you think I'm mad?” Sondra shook her head. “I think Il be sorry—if you from Europe he had come direct-|do this.” G y “I shan't be any more sorry It's like living |Thence N 20° 0’ E 600 ft. to than I am now. in a cage to live in this house not interested to know the expla- Large or small, we individuals and corporations, promising the utmost liberality of tre prudent business methods. B. M. Behrends Bank ‘' Oldest Bank in Alaska a stfling cage. I'm still young and [0’ E 1500 ft. to true point Commerce We are equipped with ample facilities for the transaction of all branches of legitimate banking. invite the accounts of atment, consistent with I told Ben so, and then of course he came ONITED STATES LAND OFFICE CHORAGE, ALASKA £ an application for patent for the Relief No. 1, Relief No. 2, Relief No. 3; Eva No. 1, Eva No. 2; West- ern Relief No. 1, Western Relief No. 2; Chester No. 1, Chester No. 2 lode claims, and the Chester No. 1 millsite, situate near Taku River, in the Harris Mining District, Ju- neau Recording District, Territory of Alaska, and designated by the field notes and official plat cn file in this office as U. S. Minzral Sur- vey No. 1589 A & B which said claims are described with magnetic declination at all corners of 31° 0 E, as follows: Relief No. 1 lode. Survey No. 1589A. Beginning at Cor. No. p & whence U.S.LM. No. 1589 bears S. 49° 30° E. 665.80 ft.; Thence N 69° 0’ W 1500 ft. to Cor. No. 2, Thence N 20° 0’ E 60G ft. to true point for Cor. No. 3, Thence S 69° 0’ E 1500 ft. to true point for Cor. No. 4, No. 1, the place of beginning, con- taining 20.658 acres. Relief No. 2 lode. Survey No. 1589 A. Beginning at Cor. No. 1, whence U.SLM. No. 1589 bears S 49° 30' E 66580 ft.; Thence N 20° 0’ E 600 ft. to true point for Cor. No. 2; thence 8 69° 0' E 1500 ft. to Cor. No. 3, Thence S 20° 0’ W 600 ft. to Cor. No. 4, Thence N 69° 0° W 1500 ft. to Cor. No. 1, the to Cor. No. 4, Thence N 69° 0' W 1500 ft. to Cor. No. 1 containing 20.658 acres. Eva No. 1 lode. Survey No. 1589 A. Beginning at Cor. No. 1, whence U.S.LM. No. 1580 bears S 67° 21’ W 119117 ft.; Thence N 20° 0’ E 600 ft. to Cor, No. 2; Thence S 69° ¢’ E 1500 1t. to Cor. No. 3; Thence S 20° 0 W 600 ft. to Cor. No. 4; Thence N 68° 0’ W 1500 ft. to Cor. No. 1; containing 20.658 acres. Eva No. 2 lode. Survey No. 1589 A. Beginning at a true point for Cor. No. 1, whence USLM. 1589 bears S 16° 49’ E 1040.71 ft.; Thence from true point for Cor. No. 1 N 20° 0° E. 600 ft. to true point for Cor. No. 2; Thence 8 59° 0’ E 1500 ft. to Cor. No. 3; Thence S 20° 0 W 600 ft. to Cor. No. 4; ‘Thence N 69° 0' W 1500 ft. to true point for Cor. No. 1; containing 20.658 acres. Western Relier No. 1 lode. Sur- vey No. 1589 A. Beginning at Cor. No. 1, whence U.S.LM. No. 1589 bears 8 63° 2" E 2139.17 ft.; Thence N 69° 0" W 1500 ft. to Cor. No. 2; true 3 |point for Cor. No. 3; Thence S 69° for Cor. No. 4; Thence S 20° 0*'W 600 ft. — SAVE H4I;F WO0O0D CLEAN HEMLOCK 14 in., 16 in., 24 in. Single Load, $4.25 Double Load, $8.00 A discount of 50 cents per load s made for CASH LEAVE ORDERS WITH ‘GEORGE BROTHERS Telephones §2 or 05 e s e *—DE E. E. SOUTHWELY. S i s R Oy DE. S. B. JORDAN — 0 Thence S 20° 0’ W 600 ff. to Cor.|e. vey No. 1589 A. Beginning at Cor. No. 1, whence US.LM. No. 15689 bears S 65° Thence N 69° 0’ W 1500 ft. to Cor. No. to Cor. No. 3; Thence S 69° 0' E 1500 ft. to point for Cor. No. 4; Thence S 20° ' W 600 ft. to Cor. No. Fraternal Soclem or Gastineau Channel B. P. 0. ELKS Meets second and fourth W e d nesdays at 8 pm. Visiting bro thers welcome. | PROFESSIONAL e R Helene W. L. Albrecht PRYSIOTHERAPY Massage, Electricity, Infra Red Ray, Medical Gymnastics. 410 Goldsteln Building Phone Office, 216 ¢ GEORGE MESSERSCHMIDT, Exalted Ruler. M. H. SIDES, Secretary. LOYA LORDER OF MOOSE, NO. 700 Meets Monday 8 p. m. C. H. MacSpadden, Dic- tator. Legion of Moose No. 25 meets first and third Tues- days. G. A. Baldwin, Secretary and Herder, P. O. Box 273. KNIGHTS OF COLUMBZC Seghers Council No. 1760, Meetings second and last Monday at 7:30 p. m Transient brothers urg ed to attend. Couna Chambers, Fifth Streew JOHN F. MULLEN, G. K. H. J. TURNER, Becretary. Eiours 9 an. to § p.m. o Dr. Charles P. Jenne DENTIST Romns 8 and 9 Valentine f Bullding Telephone 176 " Dr. ). W. l;'na DENTIST Rooms 5-6 Triangle Bidg. Office hours, 8 am. to 5 pm. Evenings by appointment Phone 321 NEW RECORDS NEW SHEET MUSIC RADIO SERVICE Expert Radio Repairing ‘ Robert Simpsoa ' Hellentbal Building FOOT CORRECTION Hours: 10-13, 1-5, 7-8 - JUNEAU TRANSFER COMPANY Optometrist—Optician Eyes Examined—Glasses Fitted Room 7, Valentine Bldg. Office Phone 484; Restdence Phone 338. Office Hours: 9:30 to 12; 1:00 to 5: TSR § o S AR DRUGLESS PHYSICIAN Behrends Bank Building Phone 259 Hours: 9:30-12; 1-8 Moves, Packs and Stores Freight and Baggage Prompt Delivery of ALL KINDS OF COAL PHONE 438 DR. E. MALIN CHIROPRACTOR Treatment for Rheumatism and Nervous Diseases Russian Steam Bath House PHONE 349 PLAY BILLIARDS BURFORD’S | | Western Relief No. 2 lode. Sur- 30 E 363438 ft.; W.P. Johnson FRIGIDAIRE DELCO LIGHT PRODUCT3 MAYTAG WASHING MACHINES GENERAL MOTORS RADIOS Thence N 20° 0° E 600 ft. ; containing 20.658 acres. Chester No. 1 lode Survey No. 1589 A. Beginning at a true point for Cor. No. 1, whence USLM. No. 1589 bears S 87° 57" W 567.72 ft.; Thence S.69° 0’ E 1500 1t. to Cor. No. 2; Thence S 20° 0' W 500 Phone 17 ft. to Cor. No. 3; Thence N 69° 0’ W 1500 ft. to Cor. No. 4; Thence N Front Street Juneam 20° 0’ E 500 ft. to Cor. No. 1; con- taining 17.215 acres. Chester No. 2 ioae. Survey No. 1589 A. Beginning at true point for Cor. N. 1, whence U.S.L.M. No. 1589 bears 8 87° 577 W 567.72 ft.; Thence 8 20° 0 W 500 ft. to Cor. No. 2; Thence N 69° 0’ W 1150 ft. to Cor. No. 3; Thence N 20° 0’ E 500 ft. to Cor. No. 4; Thence S. 69° 0’ E 1150 ft. to Cor. No. 1; containing 13.198 acres. Chester No. 1 Millsite. Survey at Cor, No. whence U.SLM. No. 1389 bears N 43° 14’ 30”7 W 384073 ft. and whence Cor. No. 3, Chester No. 1 lode bears N 24° 44’ 30” W 1993.76 ft.; Thence S 54° 11’ W 430 ft. to Cor. No. 2; Thence S 35° 49" E 506 ft. to Cor. No. 3; Thence N:54° 11’ the meander line of Taku FINE Watch and Jewelry REPAIRING at very reasonable rates WRIGHT SHOPPE PAUL BLOEDHORN 1, east by the Western Relief No. 1 claim unsurveyed; the Relief No. 1 is adjoined on the northeast by