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HELLO--M\ss KIPPER 4 TTELL SULLY BARNEY GOOGLE AND SPARK PLUG YOU GET FAMILY REUNION! 1/ LL BR\NG HER OVER SOON AS T CANY YflUNG WB’MAN HERE WHO. HIKED FROM NEW YORK Thea Fru:is Was Lost Five Days on Old | Telegraph Trail ’Contlnued m)ux Page One.) logs by straddling them and mak- ing progress that way from bank to bank. | “Strange to relate, the only large wild animals that I saw were on the road a -considerable distance on the south side of Hazelton. I first saw a cow mogse with twin | calves. They evinced some curios- 1ty in me, as I did in them. Later | the same day, I was close to a bull moose, which gave-me a cur- | sory glance and continued on his way. Three Cub Bears ! “I next met three cub bears. They were directly in front of me | in the road. I kept walking toward them. Two ran from the road in- to the brush. The third climbed several feet up a tree, and clung to it by hugging it with his paws. | He was cute and quite close to | me. I stopped to look at h)m‘ Forthwith the mother bear — a| black bear—came toward us from | out of the brush. The cub slid | down from the tree, joined the mother and they both went away.} “At another time, I saw an adult | black bear a short distance off the road. The animal paid no atten- tion to me. “In the wildest part of th@‘ route, namely, from Hazelton w‘ Telegraph Creek I saw mno . wild lklc at all. after having lost my way, I no- ticed 4resh. bear tracks one morn- ing. Scmehow they didm't fright- en me. Although the time was August, my chief concern was keeping warm nights and adhering %0’ .my self-imposed food rations. Getting lost was my worst exper- lence. T got off the trail between Lineman's Cabin No. 9 and Echo Lake on the Dominion Telegraph | Line, not recover the tsail,"I made my way t¢hrough dense underbrush and small 4imber to a river, which proved. to ke the Bell-Irving. I waded to my waist to a bar. I de- termined to establish it as my | headquarters from which to make | expeditionary - efforts to find the When I realized I could trail or to remain until I was | discovered by telegraph lingmen, who, T was convinced, would search | for me. Resources Were Meagre “My resources consisted of six matehes, a box and a haif of rais- | ins, a-«pound of dates—emergency 1 ! arately searching for me rations that I always carried ‘with |side of the trail for me—and the clothes I wore. The took to the river, onec matches provided me fires until|and the other down, N RIGHT BACK \N 7, SEE ME - YOU WOU! WA T e NS HER TO THINW e > 1932, King Fesnures Syndicate Ine., Great Batain aghts feiery miles apart. At various places in between these home cabins are shelter cabins, which are used as places of refuge during winter storms. “I was m[mmed I was .he sec- Telegraph Line trail. ie home vcabins whenever possible. Virtually all of them are tenanted by field mice. They cuddle in the beds. The little creatures worried me the first night I spent in a home cabin, but afterwards T paid no attention to them.. Consideraticn and Courtesy “I was treated with oconsidera- tion and courtesy by the Royal| Canadian Mounted Police and Do- are sourdoughs. T have a mind tu see the break-up. Whaz" No freeze-up; no break- jup of the harber here? Disap- pointing, indeed. Well, then, the streams on the hillsides will serve. = |If I could stay to see wniter lock them and spring release them, I could qualify as a sourdough, could I not?” ORI AT W ATTENTION RAINBOW GIRLS! Important business meeting Fri- day at 7:30-P. M. Full attend- ance urged. —adv. o REGISTERED AT ALASKAN A, J. Martin, Juneau is among |the ‘guests registered at. the Al- minion Telegraph linemen. Th2 agkan Hotel, police and the linemen kept track | A |of my progress, so as to be awar? |that T was making my appointed goals in safety. After T had left Home Cabin No. 9 and did nct reach Echo Iake two started to look for me. A u; and thus the might of my fifth day on the |came across me. bar. My last match was used to I had no fire that night. the cold. My food T carefully ra- |light afire that I planned to keep | animals in summer. |burning. The wind blew it out I felt T carried and my food on the ds “The linemen use dogs for pack The men |very kindly put the extra clothes |which favor I greatly appreciate i tioned so that I had some' left|you may be sure. when I was found the morning I reached the bar. to my waist to the bank of the| river and made unavailing reach for the trail. The evening of th fifth day, when I returned to the bar, T decided I would not try such quests any more, continuously at my improvised headquarters, marked only by the| dead embers of fives. Cabins For Linemen “Linemen are employed by thc Canadian government to keep the Dominion Telegraph Line in work- |ing order. They have what they |call home cabins, which are. firs but would remain | “The only compamions I had on \“ the sixth day. Every day after| |any parts of my journey 'from 1 had waded Ne'w York to Skagway were the Telegraph Trail linemen. In the veraged 25 miles a day; Columbia from Hazel- so much. ton, not Merely Tock a Walk “I didn't undertake my 6,000 mile trip to win a wager or to restore my health. I had money to pay my way, and was well and strong when I started, just as I am mow. T left home in New York ke a walk for pleasure, and 2 delightful pleasure it proved to be. “I am. told that persons arriving “On the bar of the Bell-Irving nished with beds, stoves and cock- in Alaska before the freeze- up and River, where I remained five days mg utensils, at points about 40 “nymg until after L‘)e break-up BROS COFFEE, YOU’LL REALIZE THE IMPORTANCE OF PERFECT ROASTING Hills Bros’ patented process insures a per- fect flavor for .evesy pound, by preventing under-roasting and over-roasting ", [ ] . ® 2 “A little at. .a . time” —Instead of In GROUND HiGHT TO TASTE ‘R‘ifi‘lg‘r ros, Lyl correctly grow Q” best re:u“w lzy dnp process or any other method. If coffee is whderrossted or bver-roisted, much of its charmis lost. " Taste Hills Bros. Coffee, and you’ll know what perfect roasting does. For Hills Bros, is always roasted to the degree that develops the finest flavor! Instead of the ordimary, balk method, Hills Bros. use their patented Controlled Roasting process, The coffee flows through the roasters in an even, continuous stream ..alittle at a time.’ | Batches of several hundred pgunds natu- rally make accurate roasting difficult. But alittle at a time, continuougly ~~ removes all HILLS BROS COFFEE WHEN YOU TASTE HILLS chances of error! The brought to the state of perfeetion! Hills Bros. Coffee is packed in vacuum | cans, and can’t go stale, The vacuum process || of packing coffee is the only method that fully preserves coffee freshness — the air is || removed from the can and kept out. It was || originated by Hills Bros. over thirty years ago. There js no magic about a vacuum can — it will not make poor coffec good, but it will keep good eoffee fresh. | Order Hills Bros. Coffee by name, and look for the:Arab trade-mark on the can. | PACIFI(‘ LEAVES ON B S GERMAN PAPER QUITS MILWAUKEE, Wis., Oct. T. By BILLE DE BECK Jap Hart is to be given a try| at quarterback for Georgia Tech’s | PORT ALEXANDER TRIP - e On regular schedule, the mabor-‘ YURM |ship Pacific, Capt. Paul Kegel, N§§Ep‘, Glmené.’!- Ilert June: 1\1 yesterday for Port| | New Styles Alexander. She carried a fairly Rem | large cargo destined for various| Bt i il Fietn of ceri | | Yurman, the Furrier l Triangle Bullding PURPLE BUBBLE \ DANCE At Elks’ B;zllroom SATURDAY 1 NIGHT | | I New York’s Sensational The Milwaukee Herald, the oldest German language daily in .the| United States, has ceased publi-| Americanization of younger Ger- mans of late years have reduced cation. Declining immigration and | its circulation. Re) Dishaw Bldg. UPHOLSTERING MADE TO ORDER Also Recoverinng and ing PHONE 419 Balloon Dance ‘ : }" WILL, BE FEATURED ' S & W COFFEE, 2- pound can '. EGGS (sthmgt')n s Best) Large Extras, 2 SNOWDRIFT (Pure Ve«rcmblc Sh()rtcnmg Bull\) per p()und = SAVINES 75c do7 C()l D ME DAI CAKE FLOUR (Free--1 Cake Ceolmg Rack FREE L) Llrge pdd\dgc ......... 35¢ | CENTURY RIPE OLIVES (large size oliv es) medium can ... . CLOROX; quart bottle ... ... MARSHMALLOWS; Purltdn Brand - lb pkg SEARCHLIGHT MATCHES, carton SODA CRACKERS, 2-pound package WHEATIES (the wholewheat flake) 1 package 1 cent with 1 pckge at the regular price ee-berries are © B Bros. 2902 v CAMPBELL’S TOMATO SOUP, 3 cans .. All Other Flavors, can .. ve e Admission $1.50, including tax INSURANCE FIRE AUTOMOBILE MARINE ' CASUALTY SURETY Juneau Insurance Agency JOHN H, (‘AFF}?EY Manage GOLDSTEIN BLDG., S ORI A r now 253 o | SPECIAL COMBINATION OFFER _ NEW GEM MICROMATIC RAZOR—with 5 BLADES—and ONE 35¢ TUBE COLGATE’S or PALM- OLIVE SHAVING CREAM - $1.35 Value All for 50 cents s 57, S i JUNEAU DRUG CO "ALASKA MEAT CO. 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