The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, October 1, 1932, Page 4

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

E;pire Daily Alaska [ER— JOHN W. TROY Sunday by the Published evening except s eve E‘% PRINT’Z‘IG COMPANY at Second and Mal B uneau, Alaska. —_— Entered in the Post Office In Juneau as Second Class matter. SUBSCRIPTION RATES, Dellvered by carrler In Juneau, Douglas, Treadwell and Thane for $1.25 per month the following rates: By mall, postage paid, at One year, in advance, $12.00 .00; one month, in advance, $1.25. Subscribers will confer a favor if they wiii pro notify the Business Office of any fallure or Irregularity in the delivery of their paper:. Telephone for Editorial and Business Offices, 374. MEMBER OF ASSOCIATED PRESS. it or not otherwise credited In this paper an local news published herein. ALASKA CIRCULATION GUARANTEED TO BE LARGER THAN THAT OF ANY OTHER PUBLICATION. THE DIRECT PRIMARY LAW. The sham’s cech at Cordova contains the following: of the points at issue in this cam- P 1 is the controversy over the primary law, Mr. Wickersham explained. The Demo- crats have gone on record favoring its re- ; peal. This would be a decided retrogressive step, the Delegate pointed out if this should come to pass. The primary law was en- acted as an advancement in self-government in Alaska and as a departure from fraud and graft which crept in under the old convention system. ably knowingly misrepresented the facts. commit A bill to repeal the Direct Primary Law was passed | by the last House of Representatives by a vote of | Eight Republicans and three Demo- and one eleven to five crats voted for Four Republicans Democrat voted against it—almost a like among those of both parties. In the Senate the bill dissenting vote by Senator Sundquist, Republican, and seconded by Senator Dimond, Democrat it division was Shattuck the bill. Neither of them opposed tabling The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the| use for republication of all news dispatches L;{od::::dutlu al e Cordova Time's account of Judge Wicker- Again, Delegate Wickersham directly and prob- The Demo- cratic Party in Alaska is not and never has been ed to the repeal of the Direct Primary Law. | tabled without a There were two other | Democrats in the Senate, Senator Hess and Senator ! The Democratic Senators and some, at least, of \the sun is warm. THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, SATURDAY, OCT. 1, 1932. Roosevelt in majority for him. By thle latest fig _ | velt majority applied to the total vote of - PRESIDENT AND EDITOB‘;v\nuId give the Democratie hominee from 7,000,000} ROBERT W. BENDER - - GENERAL MANAGEBISO 8,000,000 or more majority of the popular vote,| |and an overwhelming lead in the Elec! }Thp Hearst poll would not have to res the November. They indicate a landslide Roose- e country | toral College. | be as nearly {near the 95 per cent. correct as its 1928 poll was and still give Gov. Roosevelt at 1 lmajon!y and the election. i In his Cordova speech Judge Wic east 5,000,000 kersham said yacht” in lwhich to make a campaign in Southeast Alaska | The “palatial yacht” was the Estebeth Speaker Garner says Gow. Koosevelt is making his point and will win. There is no doubt but that Mr. Garner fervently hopes so. | = | |the New York Stock Exchange. Autumn. (New York Times.) scape it was once the fashion Summer that was no more of some divine despair . stained the tenderly indoors. of any season. After desuetude,” which is late Summer, begun to recover its character. Natur progress again. symmetry. Every morning new birds land the chickadees and bluejays, wh | as their own. to Winter, when the. stars will be |selves. | Autumn is always -the city's Sprin Summer lassitude the, city fills up a settles back into a state of mercantile their scholars once more. |some of the new in the city’s Autumn For the countryman, who has jus the hayfields, the most arduous of chores, the Autumn is also a season of air rings like a bell. Just when the A pilers of almanac. the instant it happens, as he did wh came out of the north a week ago. {with the rural Idenly a man knows that to be true. T woodshed once more. After the first dawn of Autumn turning back to the last season. For to weep the month of the year has Des: is in visible | to make the room seem immense- the morning are unaccountably full of tonic. The motion to table was made |man lives in his chimney,” they say in the country extravagance of figure, for lines e appear from 0 will remain incomparably g. After the gain, business preparedness, the theatres and orchestra halls remove the Summer ’dust. and the universities rub their students againsl‘ More of the same and| prospect. t finished in his annual action. The utumn begins no one can say, least of all the industrious com- But every country dweller knows hen the wind “A and sud- he flue needs cleaning and the parlor stove is brought out of the there is no many weeks the Republeans thought there ought to be & new |south it pours a heat that produces temperatures was too late to prepare a satisfactory measure to take the place of the clumsy and costly law under session that the bill was disposed of. The Republicans who voted for the repeal of the Direct Primary Law in the House included some of the leading Republicans of the Territory. !accumulated along the margins hold the warmth after sundown. In |night comes it quickly abandons the coming Winter. At first the frosts primary bill passed, but the matter came up whenit of August, and the crisp, aromatic leaves that have of the bushland spite of that which we are working. It was the last day of the it is Autumn heat, both soothing and stirring. When world to the appear only /in the valleys where the chill and dampness settle. |But as the season ripens frosts ador n the entire They jandscape with a grained powdery sediment of were Representatives Allen, Brosius, Burgh, ms‘;whitenes& Being canopled with a cloud of smoke ter, Helerich, Murray, Nylen and Winn. STRAW VOTES AS GUIDES. The New York Times discusses the value of straw votes as guides, and concludes that they are authentic in instances where the trend of senti- ment is pronounced. In a recent editorial it said: Newspaper men are so accustomed to be cited as prime examples of human ignorance, error, haste, superficiality and general worthlessness, that any opinion head- ed in the opposite direction is received in newspapers offices, first, with astonishment, then with curiosity, and only after that land dust the cities are virtually f fresh, minutely textured adornment. of the tingling glories of Autumn. Eve the pigmented foliage it is the ess !season, for Autumn crystalllizes. Those Civil Service Quest! (Cincinnati Enquirer.) The delightful process of reducing of Civil Service questions submitted the County Prosecutor. with a flash of gratitude in soft brown eyes. Journalism is as suspicious of kind words as a dog is of a smiling stranger, until both his hands are in sight and there is no stick in them. When the friendly intention is established, journatsts will readily respond to kindness. In such a mood the press will receive the tribute to the merits of newspaper straw votes contained in a volume on the subject published by the Columbia University a Press. The author, fellow in sociology, finds after a thre r investigation that newspaper polls are more accurate forecasts than straw votes taken by the leisurely publications. First place for all time goes to the Hearst newspapers in the 1928 Presi- dential election. They foretold the Hoover plurality within 5 per cent. of the total vote cast. Second place goes to The New York Herald poll in the 1912 election, with an error rate of 7 per cent. Since 1920 the newspapers in the National field have not done so well. They have shown about the same rate of error as other publications, 12 per cent. The general conclusions to be drawn from this study in straw votes is that they will indicate a landslide but are not to be depended on for the outcome in close elec- tions. The best record made, that of the Hearst forecast in 1928, with an error ratio of 5 per cent., could have conceivably strayed three times as widely and yet have foretold the final outcome—Mr. Hoover's election. In that year there were cast nearly 37,000,000 votes, of which 15 per cent. would be about 5,500,00 votes. But Mr. Hoover's plurality over Smith was 6,000,000. On the other hand, an error of 5 per cent. in the 1916 election could easily. have predicted the wrong result. In that year there were cast 20,000,000 votes, of which 5 per cent would be a million votes, whereas Mr. Wilson’s plurality over Mr. Hughes was’ only half that amount. In a very real sense, then, it might be said that the straw vote fails to serve us when we need it most, and that is, of course, when the future is most uncertain. It foretells, as a rule, what we expect to happen, not in exact pluralities, but i the lump resuit. Measured by the standards set forth by the New York Times the Hearst and other newspaper raphers. and reducing the tax rate. seem a bit extraordinary to except or, of things that must appear in a Sher taxes. And in submitting a list of leg: definition the compiler left out the garnishee and attachment. But why quibble? By and large are good ones, failing of perfection there are not enough of them. Why applicants to write an opinion to be in ballroom dancing, or define a tort a negative? The Towa farmers's strike having peoint where it is interfering with t ners, a settlement is imperative. — Post.) : Race horses do not eat the day be! according to a magazine article. tution.) The refrain of the Democratic ¢ Of course there may be some mistake. possible that the whole story hasn’t been told. may be’that. the compiler of the questions is look- ing forward to the time when there will be no more County Prosecutors and the legal business of the counties will be handled by $25-a-week stenog- ‘Certainly ‘this would be an scheme for saving money, cutting down expenses rostless, and Imany city dwellers have never awakened to this But it is one n more than ence of the ions. things to an absurdity appears to have been completed in the list to applicants for thé position of stenographer in the office of It is It ingenuous Unless, however, such an end is sought it does stenographers, rather, applicants for the position of stenog- rapher, to be able to state in detail the number iff's deed. Or, for that matter, to be able to draw in full the necessary pleadings in a suit to collect delinquent al terms for only ones an applicant for a job might possibly know—to \lvit; the questions only because not ask the handed down by the Supreme Court, demonstrate the latest steps without using reached the he rum run- (Washington fore the race, And often we do not eat for days after the race—(Atlanta Consti- ampaign song begins, “Come on and row, row with Roosevelt,” and the Republican Strategy Board has sent scouts to| find how “row” is to be pronounced. — (Boston| +|Globe.) Wonder why the astronomers go trouble and expense in an effort to so much to study the gases on the sun when there is such a vast sup- ply of the subject available on every the campaign.—(Ohio State Journal) hand during The textile mills of the United States already are feeling the effect of the strike of spinners and| weavers in Lancashire, England, in t orders on unfinished work. It's an he receipt of ill wind that polls this year clearly foretell the election of Gov.|doesn't do good somewhere—(Cincinnati Enquirer.) six months, in advance,|that T. A. Marquam and the independent candidates| mptly | for the Legislature chartered a “palatia For those who dwell in the sun-|the q shine, however, it is difficult to mourn the birth unseen current of air, and a palejthem like colors seen in a dream. “innocuous | luminous streak divided the dark- Nan leaned or the rail and looked The trees are making their last|ly" large gorgeous stand before Winter reveals their interior| the northland on their itinerant course to the south,| all Winter, begin to claim the woods and orchards| Even the skies are yielding Summer briliant, and planets that Have been hiding under | the horizon until most civilians were safely in bed| jare constantly seizing ‘more of the night for them- The night and | In the hollows that face the! SYNOPSIS: Behind the se- curity and wealth of Weare her husband’s country place which she is seeing for the fir:t time, Nan Weare senses cinister movements. Unknown tc her, Robert Leonard and Rosamund Carew, who are ploiting against Jervis’ life and picperty, plan to visit in the ncighborhood. Jervis refuses to believe Nan’s statement that Leonard twice has tried to murder him. CHAPTER 18. HORROR VISITS NAN Nan sat up in bed in the dark. Teeter-totter seems to be the favorite sport of something had awakened her, but | he didn't know what it was. At first the darkness seemed to: fill the room, pressing in upon her so that:tha posts of the bed, the red hangings, which she had' pushed back as far as possible, Then the curtain at far window moved in some! The immediate effect wasi{ A moment before everything had een pressing in upon her; she could have touched the walls with her outstretched hand. And mow,| with a puff of wind, everything was immediately far away. The| suddenness of it made her feel| diz: She watched the streak of | light, and tried to steady herself.! 1t came and went, and came and went again. Nan sat bolt upright, one hand, on the bed and the other at her throat. Se had waked like that, and she had not moved yet. Then, as the curtain was first sucked| in against the window and then| on a veering gust thrown back into | she took a long breath. It was| bright moonlight outside. The| blown curtain let the moonlight in, and filled the rocm with an| uncertain dusk. She could see the| bedposts against it, and the ward- | robe like a black cave. Then ev- erything was dark again as the! curtain fell back into place. She drew another long breath It must have been the wind that| had waked her. She pushed back her hair and relaxed. It was ra-; ther horrid to find yourself sit- ting up in the dark and not know hew you had got there. For a moment she had not known where she was—in what bed, in what room, in what place, She plled. up a pillow behindi her back and watched the moon- light run across the floor like a wave flung up by the tide. Like a wave it ran back again. She could see all the furniture now, mysteriously . soft and large. A pleasant drowsiness began to steal over her. She thought back in the evening before. Jervis had taken her over the housg¢. She had made great friends with Bran. She wished people were as easy to make friends with as dogs. A drowsy warmth flowed over her; she slipped a little further down in the bad. She was slip- ping down into soft flowing wa- ters of sleep, when all of a sud- {den they ebbed away and she was her heart beating starring into ‘the awake again, and her eyes darkness. It wasn't the flapping of the curtain that had waked her be- fore, and it wasn't the flapping of the curtain that had waked her now. It was a sound—not in the room—somewhere else. Now that she heard it, she could remember that she had heard it before. The memory was like ‘an echo just caught on the edge of sound. She did not yet know what it was that she had heard, And then, as she; listened, it came again—a faint whining noise, sounded like a footstep. It was so faint that it puzzled her, to guess why it should have roused her from her sleep. She threw back the bedclothes and sat on the edge of the bed, listening all the while. The sound | Nothing' Venture! by Pauricia Wentworth the room, her hand dropped and followed by what; of knowing why. She slipped down on tre floor, went barefoot to the door, stood with the knob in her hand, summoning up her courage to open it. The knob was cold, and | very smooth with age; it was ma- | hogany like the heavy door. Just | above her hand there was a Dbolt. | She could slip the holt and get | back into bed again. i She turned the knob and coened |the door; and as she did so, tie curtain blew in with ‘the draught and the moonlight ran across the floor. She stepped outside and closed the door behind her, hold- ing to it. There was a soft wooly mat under her feet. > Her room was at the end of a short passage. The passage gave upon the stair head. The dog's whine and the sound of his pad- ding feet came up:the well of the stair. She latched her door and went When Autumn came rustling across the land- and the big wardrobe, which was'along the passage to the head of the somewhere on the opposite side of | the stai Tears from the depths|the room, were all lost in an even T written | velvet dark. It was not dark here e moon siruck through a long ndow set with painted glass, bleaching the colors and making over into the dark hall. The pad- ding and the whining had stopped. |She called softly. “Bran — Bran—" and immed- dtely she heard him take the stair. She saw him for a moment, huge and black against the lighted win- dow, and said his name again, and then he was pressing against her, jerking his head up under her hand and whimpering. “What is it?” asked Nan. is it, Bran?” He nuzzled her hand and whin- od. All at once Nan was twice as frightened as she had been be- fore. She wanted to get back to her room and bolt herself in. She took Bran by the collar, and he ran with her. She was breathing hard as she shot the bolt. When she turned from the door, she saw Bran reared up on his hind legs at the window with the curtaln blowing round him. The moonlight thirew a monstrous shad- ow almost to her feet. His nails scraped on the sill. She ran to him and pulled away the curtain. “What is it? Bran?” He quivered and blew against the glass. With ‘her hand on his neck she could feel his hackles rise. She pressed against him and “Whet What's the matter, looked out. The window looked o the Southwest. It was open at the top. Bran pushed the glass with his nose and whimpered. Tt was a heavy, old-fashicned window,. and Nan strained as she raised it. The wind. flooded the room—a soft, damp wind— and she gnd Bran leaned out togefher. The terrace beneath the window looked like grey, blotting-paper \with §symmetrical . blots of ink in re; intervals. The blots were flower beds full of crimson and scarlet and orange and flame-col- ored snapdragons. They had been brilliant under the grey sweep of the rain; now, under the moon, they were blots of ink. It was queer to think of all those bright colors asleep. The terrace was balustrade guarded grass fell away, shadowy, mys- teriously, to the unseen ravine, ‘whose waters made a deep under- tone to the soughing of the wind. All at once ‘the moonlight drain- ed away. And then under her hand she felt Bran's great throat musclés thrum to a growl too faint to reach her ears. She pressed closer to him and whispered. “What is it?” He flung up his head impatient- ly. The thrumming went on. A gleam of light slipped out between two hurrying clouds. A far off rumble seemed to answer Bran. Nan rubbed her cheek against his ear. “Darling lamb—don't thunder? storm?” He shook himself free and lean- ed forward. She could hear him growling now. A pale violet flare changed the sky, and was gone wide. A low it. Then the ] you like Is there going to be a came again—a long faint whine, and a distant padding step. The| two things but instead of reassufement a wave of fear rushed in. Bran—down- stairs in the hall—padding up and down, and whining. . . . . Tt fright- ened her beyond her own power together said :Bran;l again. Bran quivered and snuff- ed the wind. Nan pulled at his collar, and might just as well ihave pulled 'at the hasp of the | window. ! A second flare lit everything with a sudden brilliance. Nan saw the black shadow of the ravine, the GOOD Finanecial success chance or accident people. ly wealthy. A more one which will not e savings account wit _ Juneau, Don’t therefore depend upon luck to open a bank account or become sudden- should it happen your way, is to open a B. M. Behrem‘ls Bank LUCK or good fortune by come to very few certain method and interfere with luck, h Alasks nd! and,; jink-black trees beyond it, and the curve of the cliff. Tt was when it was gone that she -knew . she had seen. something else—a black shlape on ‘the edge of the dark ra- vine. And the shape was the shape of Robert Leonard. Another flash, and he was gone. (Copyright, 1932, Lippincott) Tuesday at 1:30 o'clock. An inter- esting program is assured. MILDRED LISTER, Sécretary. R R85 B Old papers ror sale at Empire Office. —adv. ONITED' STATES LAND OFFICE L NCHORAGE, ALASKA o0 Jurye23 1823 H Serial P28 NOTICE is hereby given tuav the Alaska Juneau Gold Mining Co., a corporation, whose postoffice ad- idress is Juneau, Alaska, has filed an applitation 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 in this office as U. S. Minzral Sur- vey No. 1580 A & B. which sald 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. 1, whence U.SLM. No. 1589 bears S. 49° 30’ E. 665.80 ft.; Thence N 68° 9’ W 1500 ft. to Cor. No. 2, Thence N 20° 0’ E 600 ft. to true point for Cor. No. 3, Thence S 69° 0' E 1500 ft. to true point for Cor. No. 4, Thence S 20° 0 W 600 ft. to Cor. 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° ¢’ E 600 ft. to true point for Cor. No. 2; thence S 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 place of beginning, containing | 20.658 acres. Relief No. 3 lode. Survey No.| 1589 A. Beginning at Cor. No. 1, whence U.SLM. No. 1589 bears N 83° 17 W 900.30 ft. Thence N 20° 0° E 600 ft. to Cor. No. 2, Thence S 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 containing 20.658 acres. Eva No. 1 lode. Survey No. 1589 A. Beginning at Cor. No. 1,| whence U.SLM. No. 1589 bears S 67° 21’ W 119117 ft.; Thence N 20° 0’ E 600 ft. to Cor. No. 2; Thence S 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; containing 20.658 acres. Eva No. 2 lode. Survey No. 1589 A. Beginning at a true point for Cor. No. 1, whence U.SLM. 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 S 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 S 63° 2' E 2139.17 ft.; Thence N 69° 0° W 1500 ft. to Cor. No. 2; Thence N 20° 0’ E 600 ft. to true point for Cor. No. 3; Thence S 69° 0" E 1500 ft. to true point for Cor. No. 4; Thence S 20° 0' W 600 ft. JUNEAU BUIL1 UPHOLSTERED FURNITURE Made to order at mail order house prices. Also recovering and repair- ing neatly done. R. Riech PHONE 419 H. Smith forrsrrrrrorarcosrossse JUNEAU FROCK SHOPPE Nan and Jervis walk, in Phone Office, 216 Mcnday's installment, under the chadow of tragedy. v e, | DRS. KASER & FREEBURGER JUNEAU WOMAN'S CLUB | DENTISTS | Will hold its regular monthly lunch-| | Blomgren Building | eon at Mrs. Hooker’s Coffe: Shoppe i PHONE 56 . field notes and official plat on file » o | | ° ~ PROFESSIONAL | Helenc W. L. Albrecht PHYSIOTHERAPY Massage, Electricity, Infra Red Ray, Medical Gymnastics. 410 Goldstein Building Hours 9 am. to 9 p.m. 1 . I ] ” i Dr. Charles P. J2nne DENTIST Rooms 8 and 9 Valentine Building R T T ’ W. Bayne /DENTIST : Rooms 5-6 Triangle Bldg. | Office hours, 9 am. to 5 p.m. Evenings by appointment Phone 321 — Dr. A. W. Stewart DENTIST Hours 9 am. to 6 pm, SEWARD BUILDING Office Phone 469, Res. Phone 276 Robert Simpson Opt. D. Graduate Angeles Col- lege of Optometry and Opthalmeiogy Glasses Fiited, Lenacs Ground >~— ‘o - '] Dr. C. L. Fenton | CRIROPRACTOR Electric Treatments Hellentbal Building ( FOOT CORRECTION | | Hours: 10-12, 1-5, 7-8 | . . . DR. R. E. SOUTHWELS: Optometrist—Optician Eyes Examined—Glasses Fitted Room 1, Valentine Bldg. Office Phone 434; Restdence Phone 3238. Office Hours: 9:30 to 12; 1:00 to 5:30 DR. E. MALIN CHIROPRACTOR Treatment for Rheumatism and Nervous Diseases Juneau Rooms, over Piggly et Wiggly Store, Phone 472 \. [ PHONE 48 n Smith Electric Co. ! 7 sewamo mest ||| PLAY BILLIARDS | | ELECTRICAL =—8— Pt b e BURFORD’S ! | McCAUL MOTOR ! COMPANY THE JUN!:::I“‘ LAuUNDRY | Front and Second Streets o o PHONE 359 to Cor. No. 1; containing 20.658 acres. Western Rellef No. 2 lode. vey No. 1589 A. at Cor. No. 1, whence U.S.LM. No. 1589 bears S 65° 30° E 363438 ft.; Thence N 69° 0° W 1500 ft. to Cor. No. 2; Thence N 20° 0’ E 600 ft. to Cor. No. 3; Thence S 69° 0" E 1500 ft. to point for Cor. No. 4; Thence S 20° 0° W 600 ft. to Cor. No. 1; containing 20.658 acres. Chester No. 1 lode Survey No. 1589 A. Beginnihg at a true point for Cor. No. 1, whence USLM. No. 1589 bears S 87° 57 W 567.72 ft.; Thence 8 69° 0’ E 1500 ft. to Cor. No. 2; Thence S 20° 0’ W 500 ft. to Cor. No. 3; Thence N 69° 0’ ‘W 1500 ft. to Cor. No. 4; Thence N 20° 0’ E 500 ft. to Cor. No. 1; con- taining 17.215 acres. Chester No. 2 iode. Survey No. 1589 A. Beginning at true point for “Exclusive but not Expensive” Coats, Dresses, Lingerie Hoslery and Hats HUPMOBILE SERIES 222 THE NEW Hupmobile 8 IN TRUTH A CAR FOR A NEW AGE! JAMES CARLSON southeast’ on Taku River and on First publication, Last publication, Oct. 13, 1932, Cor. N. 1, whence U.S.L.M. No. 1589 bears S 87° 57" W §67.72 ft.; Thence S 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 No. 1589 B. Beginning at Cor. No. 1, whence U.S.LM. No. 1589 bears N 43° 14’ 30" W 384073 ft. and whence Cor. No. 3, Chester No. 1 lode bears N 24° 44' 30”7 W 1993.75 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’ E along the meander line of Taku River 430 ft. to Cor. No. 4; Thence N 35° 49’ W 506 ft, to Cor. No. 1, :l;e” place of beginning, containing acres. The lode clalms above referred to constitute one contiguous group and are surrounded and adjoined by vacant and unoccupied land ex- cept that the Western Relief No. 1 claim is adjoined on the north- east by the Western Relief No. 1 claim unsurveyed; the Relief No. 1 is adjoined on the northeast by the Western Relief No. 3 unsur- veyed, and the Western Relief No. 2 is adjoined on the northeast by the Western Relief No. 5 unsur- veyed. The millsite is adjoined by the all other sides by vacant and un- occupied public land. ¢ J. LINDLEY GREEN, Register. Aug. 8, 1932, No. 25 meets first and third Tues- days. G. A. Baldwin, Secretary {Seghers Council No. 1760, Monday at 7i{30 p. m. ® | Transient brothers urg- ed g Chambers, Fifth- o Our trucks go any place any gllp i Fraternal Societies OF | Gastineau Channel B. P. 0. ELKS meets every Wednesday at 8 p m Visiting brothers welcome. Geo. Messerschmidt, Exalted Ruler. M. Sides, Secretary, —— LOYAL ORDER OF MOOSE, No. 700 Meets Monday, 8 p. m. C. H. MacSpadden, Dic- tator. Legion of Moose and Herder. Dr. W.J. Pigg, Physician, KNIGHTS OF COLUMBUS Meetings second and last o attend. - ncil ewflreefi. JOHN F. 'MULLEN, G. K. H. J. TURNER, Secretary. time. A tank for Diesel Oil and a tank for crude oil save burner trouble. PHONE 149, NIGHT 148 | RELIABLE TRANSFER NEW RECORDS NEW SHEET MUSIC RADIO SERVICE Expert Radio Repairing Radin Tubes and Suppiies JUNEAU MELODY HOUSE Moves, Packs and Stores Freight and Baggage Prompt Delivery of ALL KINDS OF COAL & W.P. Johnson) FRIGIDAIRE DELCO LIGHT PRODUCTS MAYTAG WASHING MACHINES GENERAL MOTORS RADIOS Phone 17 Front Street Juneaw FINE Watch and Jewelry ‘ REPAIRING ' at very reasonable rites WRIGHT SHOPPE PAUL BLOEDHORN Goodyear Tires Full Stock of AUTOMOBILE ACCESSORIES Juneau | - Motors Authorized Ford Agency 4 COMMERCIAL PRINTING BINDERY Geo, M. Smpxn_vs Co.

Other pages from this issue: