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- THE DAILY “ALL THE NEWS ALL THE TIME” ALASKA EMPIRE 'VOL. XLIV., NO. 6726. JUNEAU, ALASKA, SATURDAY, AUGUST 11, 1934. MEMBER OF ASSOCIATED PRESS PRICE TEN CENTS BRL COLUMBIA FOREST FIRES RAGE UNCONTROLLED SILVER MONEY CERTIFICATES ARE PRINTED Paper Based on Monetary Value of $1.29 Per Ounce—Exceeds Cost WASHINGTON, Aug. 11.—The ¢ Treasury has disclosed that cer- tificates are being printed against silver held in the general fund on the basis of the full monetary value of $1.29 per ounce. Approximately 62,000,000 ounces, acquired in various ways at a cost of $46,900,000, are affected by the program. The face value of the certifi- *cates to be issued against them will be around $80,000,000 instead | * of the actual cost price of the metal. Silver certificates will also be issued against metal acquired under the Silver Purchase Act, in- cluding the nationalization of sil- ver, at $1.29 per ounce, although for the present they are being is- sued only in an amount equal to the metal’s cost. 77 SILVER TO ADVANCE WASHINGTON, Aug. 11.—The theory that nationalization of sil- ver is basically a step toward na- ‘ Haste Makes W aste, Says Dana DeVighne; But She’s Here Anyway Impatient to reach her home, Miss Dana DeVighne, daugh- | ter of Dr. and Mrs. H. C. DeVighne, left the steamer Al- | aska at, Petersburg last even- ing to fly to Juneau in the seaplane Patco. After a trip to Wrangell, the plane turned north, and all went well until reaching the vicinity of Sumdum, where the gas line broke, forcing Pi- lot McLean to make a dead landing on the sea. All night long they sat there, keeping the plane off the rocks, until morning, when the Ran- ger came along to tow them into Juneau, where they ar- rived a little more than an hour before the steamer. Miss DeVighne has been in | nurse’s training at the Virginia Mason Hospital in Seattle, and has just completed her first year. >oo—— MID-CONTINENT 1S SWELTERING; FIFTY ARE DEAD NEW ORLEANS ARMED CAMP; THINGS BOIL Thirteenth Day of Strife Between Senator Long, Mayor Walmsley NEW ORLEANS, La., Aug. 11— The political situation in New Or- leans is tense as the conflict be- tween United States Senator Huey Long aided by the partial martial Jaw order by Gov. O. K. Allen, and Mayor T. Semmes Walmsley entered the thirteenth day of arm- ed strife. Interest is turning from bullets to ballots. Troops have disregarded court orders. ‘Wild bullets have given place to libelous invectives. For Show Down It is a “show down fight” be- tween the two “parties” amid the rattle of arms such as the city has not heard since the Civil War.| Interest this morning turned to the Registration office where citi- zens had to qualify before noon in order to vote at the Septem-} ber Congressional primary elec-| tion. | Troops vs. Police 3 i the registration office are| Empire Comics Again Tonight; Lots of Laughs FACULTY FOR SCHOOLS THIS Meet the gang again tonight! Mutt and Jeff, Toonerville Folks, Tailspin Tommy and the inimitable Nebbs family, are all in the four page comic supplement again tonight and will be every Saturday night regularly from now on. Grownups as well as the younger youngers have express- ed enthusiastic appreciation appreciation over this new ad- over this new addition to the Saturday Empire, and have started following the humorous aitics of the nationally known funny characters with real in- terest. It's a new Saturday night habit with lots of fun and laughs and no headaches! NINE BOMBERS EXPECTED HERE DURINGMONDAY Air Photographing Expect- ed Be Finished at Fairbanks Today Only One Vacancy Remains to Be Filled in Juneau School System. Teaching positions for the Ju- neau Public Schools for the com- ing year have all been filled with the exception of the vacancy caus- ed by the resignation of Maurine Herbig, High School Faculty, and several applications for this posi- tion are now under consideration, it was announced today by the Juneau School Board. According to the announcement of the board the following will comprise the faculty of the High School for the year 1934-1935: High School Superintendent of Schools, A. B. Phillips. Principal High School - Manual Training, A. S. Dunham. Mathematics, Marjorie Tillotson. Home Economics, Helen Gray. Commercial, Margaret Yeakey. English, Everett Erickson. Science-Athletics, Harold E. Re- gele. History, Kathyrine Long. Languages, Etta Schwamm. YEAR CHOSEN Juneau Welcomes Those Aboard H.M.S. Cruiser | Juneau citizens extended the glad, |welcoming hands to their British ‘cousins this afternoon with the arrival of the H.M.S. Danae which dropped anchor in Gastineau Chan- nel to remain here until Thursday The Danae, which has been cruis ing in Pacific waters and visiting ports in the United States and Canada, has a tonnage of 4,800 and shaft horsepower of 40,000, carries 6 6-inch guns, 3 4-inch AA missioned at Devonport on March 9, 1933. Entertainment Entertainment for the Danae's personnel will start tonight with a dance in the Mandarin Ball Rcom to which all members of the per- sonnel of the ship will be admitted free, according to an announcement made today by Winn Goddard, Chairman of the Chamber of Com- merce Entertainment Committee. Tomorrow, those of the visitors desiring to play tennis or golf, will be guests of the local clubs, the Juneau Women's Club will en- tertain a group at their picnic at Kendler’s Dairy; officers and men are all invited guests to the base- ball game in the afternoon at 5:30, and numerous trips to the glacier Here for Stay of Several Days and 4 3-inch Pr. and was re-com- | FLAMES ROAR; Danae Which Is: CREWS UNABLE - 10 SIQP FIRES Fighting Forces Are With- game with the visitors, and p! will be set for this after the ar- rival of the Danae, as well as other plans. for next week contingent d D upon arrangements to be made rawn—~Uisastrous over the week-end | Blaze in Oregon The City of Douglas is also com- pleting plans for a big Douglas | | Night for the visitors, details of which will be announced in Mon- day’s Empire. SPOKANE, Wash., Aug. 11.—Brit- ish Columbia forest fires have been abandoned to the elements and the crews withdrawn after efforts Captain C. Hi Knox-Little 15\&0 check them proved hopeless. commanding officer of HMS.| Canadian officials said, “Why ?;01“}(‘1 bt Comardroom OFICers | spend money fighting fires we can- | gyl = 5 ~|not put out?” | chy; Lieut. Commander A. H.| gy % ¥ 4 Fires are raging over thousands ::lmd‘;‘xfxlllz;nxLl“‘l&xeuct::::?“lt;r g‘ol acres and Canadian officials | Goodenough; Lieutenant Q. P, | PUopect NAREHI R, Whitfort; Lieutenant A. V. Lyle; | e Commander A. J. W. Wallis; PR N OANOON Lieutenant R. G. Parsons; Lieu-| THE DALLES, Oregon, Aug. 11.— tenant A. E. Hargraves; Lieutenant | Believed to be of incendiary origin, J. S. Shiffner; Captain E. I, Sv.n_brusl? m_'ui grass fire in a five- Martini, Royal Marines; Instructor |Mile district south of here de- Lieut. Commander C. Young; Pay- Stroved two groups of farm build- master Commander W. R. Tucker: iings five miles apart, then burned Surgeon Lieut. Commander C. B,|OVer 4000 acres, rapidly neared Fox. Mount Hood National Forest. Warrant Officers More than 500 men battled the Commissioned officers from the |0!a2¢ and 300 more were sent from Warrant rank and warrant offi- the Civilian Conservation Camps. | sioned Gunner A. C. Boddie; Gun-| ner C. W. Forter; . 3 | tional and world moretaryi stab- i = L 3 In Instrumental Music, Pauline|and fishing expeditions are con-|yga, < Warrant Engf‘]';’;:eé v}V{ Q" diation has' been privaely ad-|Rain Gives Little Reiisf in s the. sireet, in the City| FAIRBANKS, Alasks, Aug. 11— TOecn Srviki-ac ek uth Vot | seums it beT(::)eenzlen.‘;o“'fl iy for | D¥Vls; Warrant. Shipuright . F.| d b well known Govern- s CTOSS » ) i § d |5 W ed especially for | o porter chool v r:é:]ctc ccoim‘:nist Drough SCCIIOH—COOI ESH thehMyar. s ot the Sia :é:zbg:;ne:ccsoiz‘iisg A:;)mgla:: g)g?;'s L d e i Sy St Chan?tlzzi el PRuPEHTlEs IN n i : e i \ ) Grade School nours Y atten J | Contrary to views that nation- on Path Coast 1,100 extra police and the regularlwm hop. for Juncan next MondAB| metngipai ooy ém A hours of 2 and 4 in the afternoon. Gunroom Officers alization has further disturbed the force at his command. The.» photogsaphic sirvey. .ol aiNe ncipal-Eight rade, Marle Public Reception Gunroom officers aboard the| monetary situation, this economist| CHICAGO, T, Aug. 11. — The| No Man’s Land is between the| ° ~" expected to be completed Shaw. A public- reception for both the | British cruiser Danae are: Sub-| \says it inevitably will lead 10 mid-continent counted more than |Ie8istration office and the C“y‘m'day D:‘Ag]};:hGGrade. second division, officers of the Danae and the'Ljeutenant G, V. Corbett; Sub-| Beii order o tie SRR St 05 TR e eet o ihe e sl When the planes hop from Jus | Doubds OF8Y. rls E. Cranby,| i SLATY fliers s scheduled at| Lieutenant H. C. Fox; Faymaster| sections. Eruption Expected the Governor’s House, the exact. sub-Lieutenant R. N. Ashby; Mid- date contingent upon the arrivalj shipman J. F. B. Féarr’wl«i: M;d. of the fliers. |shipman A. A. W. Bake + uation. cessive heat in many In the first place the silver price Some relief has come from rains has been set by nationalization,|put the greater part of the drought according to his opinion, and wili Both sides are awiiting the out- come of the election in which both are supporting rival candi- neau for Seattle it will be the| giyih seventh Grades, Elma Ol- longest non-stop flight ever made |gon . [by an Army Air Corps unit, a| gixth Grade, Ann Easton. |Gaadian, Contolidatesiblis = Mid-| Spent Five Days in i advance the world price of eilver and it may easily lead other na- tions to monetize silver. |area is still sweltering today. Temperatures ranged as high as 118 degrees. Some San Francisco residents are reportéed wearing their over- dates. On the surface, calm. Below the surface things boiled and seethed and threatened an explosion which would show everything is| distance of about 1,000 miles. Fifth Grade, Mrs. Helen R. Webster. — e Fourth-Fifth Grades, Mary Ko- 1 | lasa. O urth Grade, Ann Rohwer, *} Theatre, tentatively scheduled for early next week. A local team is eager for a soccer A committee is also working on shipman G. R. A. Don; Midship-| 144, ¥ . 7 4 hip- a British Night at the Coliseum | ol man C. P. Mils; Midshipman J., Lagle River Region E. Manners; Midshipman G. W.| Vavasour and paymaster Midship- man D. E. Jenkins, | After a five-day stay at the old Eagle River Mine, at Arthur WHEELER'S VIEWS t : late S Vg n iy e L T R it . ¢ GLACIER PARK, Montana, Aug. :(:at:lgllx‘\" th;::rl;;;fix:@;:: is_ once and for all whether Long or s o | Third Grade, Donle Taylor. Y ’r{hmws camp, J. K. Cram, en- 11.—United States Senator Burtor: pecially in the Northwest, con- | WAlmsley is master of the Southis| YlELn Third Grade, Margaret McFad- H sl s g3 N e e samevit oy ant oot [V T ] ecood Grads, Masel 36 of Caxihaks patied o tomis Roosevelt's nationalization of silver |with sunshine at midday. S, { on rade, Mabel onson. v Wi L5t b as a set-up toward remonetization - Second Grade, Velma J. Bloom. X yes ay. e inspec e » and should result in a mild ex- o GERMANY Al.su | First Grade, Iva Tilden. ! ADVANGE. Eagle River and Yankee Basin pansion of “our currency and raise WASHBURN-CRILLO First Grade, Dalma Hansen.. § |properties. the world price.” - e, NEW BALL MILL NOW INSTALLED » | PARTY MEMBERS ARE LEAVING FOR SOUTH| Robert L. Stix, of the Washburn- Crillon party, who has been re- ceiving medical care at St. Ann's Hospital for a few days, left the hospital today and will leave for Seattle on the Haleakala on his SHORT, GRAINS BERLIN, Aug. 11.—Foreign agri- cultural observers touring the Prov- inces report a definite shortage of feed grains in Germany. | Kindergarten, Dorothy Batson. e ———e————— Corn Forecast Half Billion| Bushels Under July 180 EXPELLED Estimates ’ | d WASHINGTON, Aug. 11.—The| FRUM FHANGE smallest yield of grain in more than 30 years is predicted by Fed- IS NEARING END SAN FRANCISCO, Cal, Aug. 11. —With seven of its members al- ready back on three meals daily, the hunger strike started by the Communists in the City Jail ap- peared today to be near the end, | Mr. Cram sampled the properties iextensively and these will be sent {to Trail, B. C, for tests. He plan- ned to sail from here today on the steamer Alaska for Skagway. He will go from there to Atlin where he is in charge of placer operations for the Consolidated. Mr. Cram was accompanied here by Mr. Thane who has had a small crew opening the tunnel at the NEW YORK, Aug. 11.—Fresh| buying of nonferous metals gave the stocks a little firmer appear- ance at the short session today,| but the rest of the list was all but neglected and virtually unchanged. | . i eral reporters, but Secretary o!, LE FOREST, France, Aug. 11— | f AT HAWK INLET wggt;:er?uore a:kirnp:xzr;e}emainlng Hoover Qelebrales . | Agriculture Wallace has reiterated Weeping and wailing women and |©!8ht days after it started. Today’s close was steady. |old Eagle River Mine for several 5 b in Juneau, who will leave for His 60th B"thdfly that there is no danger of a food children were loaded with their| The members of the Emergency| Weakness in the government list |months. This work is practically Prince Rupert as soon as trans- shortage. | meagre worldly possessions aboard Committee of Defense of Civil|unsettled bonds. completed. Will Start Operations at Once—Expect to Mill 50 Tons Daily The installation of a new 25- ton ball mill on the Hawk Inlet the Alaska Empire portation is available are, David Putnam, Adams Carter, Henry S. PALO ALTO, Cal,, Aug. 11.—Sun- burned and smiling, Herbert Hoov- er celebrated his sixtieth birthday. ‘Woods, Russell Dow and Howard Kellogg. Edward C. Streeter and Lincoln Washburn, both of whom are patients in St. Ann's Hospital now, will remain there until first class steamer accommodations are ford Washburn Jr., He declined to discuss national issues. ——————— — HOLZHEIMER’'S DAUGHTER AND ,FAMILY TO ARRIVE The ravages of drought affected a special train this morning as 89 Workers’ Rights, said they have not only” grain, but also the Na-;Polish miners and their families tion’s entire food crop. {were expelled from France for their 1t is forecast that corn will yield | recent “hostage strike” at Lens. only 1,600,000,000 bushels, which| AT represents a decline of mote than | half a billion from the July esn‘STARHEMBERG mate. Y ! | advised the 24 still on a hunger strike to join their comrades in eating. * et ALASKA BRINGS »»»»» >-ee BREAKDOWN IS NOW LOOMING ‘Wheat and rye dropped the full five cents a bushel allowed. Corn was off four cents and barley and oats three cents. CLOSING PRICES TODAY | NEW YORK, Aug. 11.—Closing quotation of Alaska Juneau ming i l’%r.?lfi“iymfifg Company has been|available to Seattle. IN SEATTLE FROM CHINA| Dry weather is rapidly paring stock today is 21, American Can| completed and production will be; The party, made up of students g the nation’s meat supply. The 94%, AmerlcanAPow-r and Lxg}qt IN DEBT DE AL & started at once, it -was announced |of eastern colieges, has been morth| Lieut. Samuel Gregory, USN.|Government is buying millions of | | !5, Anaconda 12%, Armour B 587, A today by W. S. Pekovich, head of |since June 15, and has spent prac- Mrs. Gregory and their two chil-|cattle and sheep because they are ‘Bendlx Aviation 12':, Bcthh‘hcm1 i the organization. This gives the|tically all of that time in the Li-|dren are to arrive in Seattle on|starving for lack of feed. { PR Steel 27%, Calumet and Hecla . .. 4 i company two mills, as one was|tuya Bay region and Lake Crillon. the President Grant from China| Secretary of Agriculture Wallace VIENNA, Aug. 11—Prince von ‘3‘»(, Curtiss-Wright 2%, Generalicnhcal Stage Reporled ;. erected there some time ago. Five of the party, under Brad-|Where Lieut. Gregory has been said farm prices will be higher giarhemberg, Vice-Chancellor of | The steamer Alaska Capt. C. V. Motors 29%, International Har-| Reached U. S.-Soviet il succeeded . in | Stationed for the last three years,ibut he doubted if the farmer will|sustria left by plane today for|Westerlund, commander, and Dave vester, no sale; Kennecott 19%, . D The original plant, Mr. Pekovich said, will be used as a coarse crusher to furnish ore for the scaling Mt. Crillon, 12,750 foot peak in the St. Elias range in addition according to word received here by Mrs. William A. Holzheimer, receive more for his products than pome, It is generally believed he he did in 1914. |will discuss with Premier Mus- Doran, purser, arrived in Juneau at 2:30 o'clock this afternoon, and United States Steel tures 4, Pound $5.10 , Warner Pic- | Negotiations new mill. This, it is believed,|to photographing nearly the entire|Mrs. Gregory's mother. MRy - TR |solini the question of Austria’s in- |15 scheduled to sail for Skagway S R WASHINGTON, Aug. 11.—A pos- 3 j will enable the reduction of 50|coast along the St. Elias range, | Mrs. Holzheimer expects to leave | dependence. at 11:30 oclock this evening. sible breakdown in negotiations for " or more tons daily. and measuring the depth and|Juneau for Seattle in time to meet | - Among the 231 passengers aboard MGM cUNGER settlement of the Soviet-American ’ Twelve men are now employed | movement of Crillon Glacier. Hun- the steamer upon its arrival in ‘ the ship leaving Seattle, six were debts and claims, totalling $500,- | on the property. The major de-|dreds of still pictures and countless the Puget Sound port. DUANE BUSH SOUTH for Juneau, Jelen Griffin, Beat- 000,000, loomed today as the result . velopment work now in progress|feet of, motion pictures were ta- RIS e, AHE Tu M AP ! BOUND ON ALEUTIAN|rice Rodgers, Mr. and Mrs. Gust {of a conference between Secretary ] is the driving of a new tunnel on|ken by the students, practically| JACK BURFORD HAS | Btudebaker, ELIW. S0all and. Miss of State Hull and Soviet Ambas- a lower level. Ore from that and|all of wham hail from the New TONSILECTOMY TODAY | Duane Bush, representative of|V. Wood, and 203 round trippers. e M andaks: ; from three stopes has been put|England States. K DI HEA‘EM Clarence J. Berry Estate, of| TWwo tour parties are on the Al-} | The State Department said nego- 4§ through the old mill for several e Jack Burford Jr, young son of San Francises, is returning south aska, one of 44 members from the tiations are at a critical stage. ks weeks past with satisfactory re- MEETING OF WOMEN;S Mr. and Mrs. J. B. Burford, un- |on the Aleutian. Mr. Bush is ac-|College of the Pacific, at Stock- sk o i ol sults. derwent a tonsilectomy this morn- | companied by his small son Joe, ton, Cal, and another of 58 mem- ‘ e Mr. Pekovich came here eary] DEMOCRATIC CLUB IS |ire at st Ann's Hospital. He| SEWARD, Alaska, Aug. 11—SiX|ang nag spens the past 60 days|bers from Kansas. ‘R % Pri Wi ‘IS TAKEN FUR this week to consult with associates TAKE PLACELATER is getting along nicely according|Navy planes will leave here some- | inspecting the placer mining prop-| According to 8. Duryea, Irelghcl ussian rincess mns ) and was due to have returned to TO to hospital authorities. time today for Kodiak to make | ertiag of the estate on Mastodon,|clerk, who is acting as purser dur-| $| 27 000 on BaSiS Of o * the plant by plane late this af- g s A surveys of the area primarily f0f|ngependence and Eagle Creeks,|ing the illness of D&Ve Doran, who | ot 3R " s ternoon. The meeting of the Women's| BREWER IS TOURIST, obtaining information necessary 10 |in the Circle mining district. is aboard ship but unable to be on| Rasputln leel [ § 3 ? e Democratic Club of Gastineau STEAMER HALEAKALA future seaplane operations in thal| while' the shortage of water|duty, it is not likely that enough| e b CHICAGO ATTORNEY HERE |Channel scheduled for next Mon- Aisgriet. has ‘serlously hampered their op-|accommodations will be available; LONDON, Aug. 11.—The Meiro- ey s Mr. and Mrs, Thurlow G. Es-|98Y evening has been postponed Mr. and Mrs. Ofto Berg, of ———————— erations, Mr. Bush said, they hope|for all applicants for passage Goldwyn-Mayer Picture Corpora- Constable Shol 5 Times— ] sington, of Chicago, are making until later in the month, it was|Portland, Ore., are roundtrippers| MISS MAURINE HERBIG to have a normal season, due to|South. ition has settled the libel suit of @ the Totem Land cruise on the|&nnounced today by Mrs. G. Ejon the steamer Haleakaia. Mr.| AND JAMES PELLEY ARE |ihe increased price of gold. Passengers from Southeast Al- princess Irina Youssoupoff, insti-| Foils Attempt to Bury steamer -Haleakala, Mr. Essington|Xrause, President. Notice of an|Berg is owner of the Ross City MARRIED ON AUGUST 4 B aska ports were arry Smith and tyted by her on the basis of their Him Dead or Alive X is a prominent attorney of Chi- 20, BACK TO WORK ANACORTES, Wash., Aug. 11— Purse seiners will resume fishing , Yomorrow after an agreement with # the cannery men on sockeye sal- important meeting to take place this month will be made in a UPPER CITY FLOAT Repairs are to be made next week on the upper city float, next to the Juneau Cold Storage, ac- cording to an announcement made today by Mayor I. Goldstein. The improvements planned are said to be quite extensive, and will necessitate the removal from the Brewing Company at that city. — e ——— HALEAKALA TOURISTS granddaughter, Miss Patricia An- derson, also of Berkeley, are round trip passengers on the Haleakala. e e S VISITS JUNEAU, FIRST TIME P. J. Deller, Ketchikan repre- sentative of the E. H. Edwards Company, wire rope manufactur- ers, visited in Juneau for the first Miss Maurine Herbig, English and married a week ago today, August 4, according to word received here by Mr. and Mrs. Ray G. Day. Mr. Pelley has accepted a posi- tion as principal im the schools of Camas, Washington, located on the Columbia River, the letter stated. Mrs. Pelley does not in- tend to teach. | WILL MAKE LONG TRIP .| chikan; Charles Howard, Mr. and William A. Holzheimer from Ket- gepiction of her in the moving! picture “Rasputin.” CHICAGO, I, Aug. 11.—Con- sons, Edward and Billie, is a pas- W senger on the Aleutian for a vaca- RANGER IX., RETURNS HERE tion trip Outside. Mrs. Corey will FROM ECHO COVE YOYA(;I-:I visit the family of J. J. Corey, oz 19 former Anchorage business man, at Sunnyside, Wash., for a short time, and then proceed by steamer through the Panama Canal to New York, enroute for Maine, where l The Ranger IX., Capt. George Sarvela, returned to port today from a trip to Echo Cove where it landed the BNl Fromholz trail, crew and camp equipment. The started suit in every country in which it was shown. S eee— NEW YORK DENTIST VACATIONS IN ALASKA Dr. and Mrs. Charles Fleischer, vacationing on the Haleakala, are caped from his would-be assassins as two left for spades with which® to dig a grave in which he was - [to have been buried alive or dead. ' | @fiffin drove a car zigzagging down the road, was rescued and taken to a hospital. 2 Revenge is believed to have been them ctive for the attack as one mon prices. The new price is 45 |float of all boats tied up there.|time while the Haleakala was in ——————— shé will visit in several towns.|crew will spend the remainder of from New York City, where Dr.|of the four, »mmed by Griffin, * cents unless the catch becomes|As the work is to start Tuesday,)port. Mr. Deller is making the| A wolf seen recently in Pitts-|Mr. Corey is associated with the|the current season constructing a Fleischer is one of the leading|was plmked in gm_ng false in- heavy then a new price will be|the boats will have to be moved|round trip from Ketéhikan in the|field, Mass, is the first spotted|Lathrop-Healy River Coal Corpor- dentists. Also in their party is fomation when seeking an auto ., negotiated. by Monday night. interests of his company. since 1904, trail from the Cove into Yankee ntlfin l.t Suntrana. Basin. | Mrs. Jameson Cotting of New York.license, "ca 4 short time, Mrs. Krause declared. General Science teacher in the DURING VACATION TIME| Mrs, J. 8. Jefferies and H. B.| The amount paid is reported to . s g5 - Mrs. Robert S. Atkins, widow of | Juneau High School last year, and Crewson from Petersburg, and J. pe far in excess of $127,000. siable Jonn G, of Delinoll S ¢ PURSE EINERS WILL MAKE REPAIRS a prominent San Francisco mer-|James Pelley, eighth grade teach-| Mrs. Edward Corey of Suntrana,|K. Brown from Pillar Bay. | “she charged that the film rep-|™.outt: ¥AS Snot five dmes by § . " chant, of Berkeley, Cal, and her|er in the Juneau schools, were|Alaska, accompanied by her small T T |resented her as immoral, anq/GUartét of gunmen and then o8 3