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NU DIFHGULTY | Incén\\ cight Comcndexs Aw;ut Bell in Chxcago jUNEAUlTEs Tfl HAD UNLOADING A. ). SHIPMENT Mine Freight Handled Here by Company Employees Yesterday Afternoon For the first timz sini he em- ployee walkcut of the Alaska Ju- neau Gold Mining Company w called ) mine s freight from Seattle was unloaded without difficul at the Alaska Juneau Dock yesterday afternoon A previous recent attempt to un- load mine freight here over the ob- Jjection of the Juneau local of th International Longshoremen's As- sociation was successful, but onl after the steamer had unloaded the cargo on to an A. J. Barge south of Marmion Island However, yesterday, af Pacific Coast Dock for t the steamer Alaska moved to the A. J. Dock at 4:30 o'clock. A ship ment, described by Alaska Steam- ship Company of here as “a comparatively sm was un- loaded An Alaska Juneau longshore crew handled the freight on fthe dock surface, although M. J. Wilcox, Al- aska Line agent, said that he had offered the work to Juneau el oot e difa. fhe Waiting for the belll Joe Louis, Detroit coloved JEE =S o afips Ne sk, sensation, and Kingfish Levinsky, the reformed Their delegate, G 3 Chicago fish ler, are all s pav meanwhile remains in Scattlo, 05 go peddler, are all set to cross heavy tensibly to obtain backing for the nbg akey . local longshoremen nd cf the “Brown Bomber” who knocked out Primo Carnera in his last fight, is favored to win over Levinsky who hasn’t fought for several months. If Louis wins, he will be in line for a shot at one weight gloves at Comiskey park in Chicago. Louis, of the big three, Max Schmeling, Maxie Baer, or James J. Braddock, the present hcaVywelght kmg. assing through )n.k“l lines forme.l 5t ARG T Workors: Taion, i on & waneon. BANDON BERTHS LAST RITES FOR AFTER TRIP TO | ARMY BARRACKS HELD TOMORROWJ = | After bringing a large shipment| The remains of Martin Holst, Jr., - -+ M'CLAIN MAKES Early this morning she moved t0 The remains were accompanied on Banker Cross Hot Sands at Government Dock,. there to unload|the journey north by the mother,| the balance of the Juneau-Doug- Mrs. Martin Holst, and a sister, Shrine Ceremonial Held las bridge lumber before leaving for Matilda Holst. | by Nile Tem pl e Seattle. | Funeral services will be held at| Four passengers arrived here on 2 pm. tomorrow, August 8, in the the Bandon, two men from Haines| chapel of the C. W. Carter Mortu-| Elwood McClain, cashier of the and Mr. and Mrs. Carl Floridan ' ary. Rev. David Waggoner will of-| First National Bank, crossed the from Scattle. She took no south-|ficiate and interment will be in aie WAL at Shrine core- bound passengers. Capt. George the Pioncers’ Plot in Evergreen| monial held in tr Lt Rite Swenson commanded the ship. Cemetery. Monte Snow will sing | Temple terday during the visit Mea e, the Zapora is sched-| Martin Hclst, Jr., is survived by of the Imperial Potentate and the uled to arrive at Juneau Commer- | his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Martin Nile Temple, 1 . ial Dock at 10 o'clock tonight| Holst, a brother, Royal Holst, and tives here. The Shrine party went frc attle. She is due to sail for | three sisters, Matilda Holst, Mrs, C on to the Westward on the 2 hichagof, Hoonah and Seattle at| Zuboff and Mrs. Lillian Jipilo and is taking the rai ock tomorrow morning - e+ e A FUNERAL SERVICES plete ceremoinal will be put on. FOR SIMPS ON BOY PROBABLY SATURDAY Local Shrine officers said today Iiertort Hammond of Brosk- that about ten others will make the lyn York, is registered trip to Mecca at the gust ce I iastineau Hotel Ho arrived 3 for Ciifford Wil- | r-cid sen of . Jame: Lynam, wa | monijal. akoard the Princes rowned at the upper city floa | july 81, havz been tentatively | urday. afternoson at | r Mortuary, pend- | al of th2 Victoria. Mrs | % Kvernvik, the boy's grandmother | cnroute from her home in Ta-| ma to Juneau abcard the steam- WON'T YOou SIT DOWN ? THINK NOTHING OF IT! YOU AIN'T HALF AS TOUGH AS THESE LEVI'S 1m WEARING ! EILER HANSEN HERE | | | IN CONNECTION WITH ! 'HOME CONSTRUCTION | Eiler Hunsrn. Superintendent of | |the Ploneers’ Home at Sitka, ar- | | rived in Juncau by plane last eve- | i ning on business in connection witt | the construction of the nurses’ hom ;nnd Superintendent’s residence af | | that place. Foundations are com- | pleted on the buildings and work i now gressing on the first floors. | Hansen is a past department com- mander of the American Legion, | Department of Alaska, serving in| that pest in 1925, He is past post| commander at Sitka and has always | been active in Legion afafirs. ; |, Beforz bec oming Superintendent { | 6f the Pioncers' Home he was Ad- | ministrative Officer for the Agri-| ! ultural Experiment Staticn at Sit- {%a and al:0 after its removal here | {until its closing in 1933, - We make them from extra-heavy denim, loomed {HOONAH CALLS FOR | especially for LEVI'S. We copper-rivet them at CANNERY SUPPUES\ every point of strain. And we stitch them so strongly that you get . Hie to ta ko aboard coal m\J |other supplics, t annery tender | A NEW PAIR FREE IF THEY RIP ! | Hoonah berthed at Juncau Cold 3 Storage Dock a 5 ' k this That’s one reason why LEVI'S are the overwhelm- : morning. frem toria and ing choice of farmers, ranchers, miners, cattlemen | Fuget Sound Canning Company plant at Excursion Inlet. and sportsmen. | ~The tender, which is commanded Butthere’sanother reason, too. The famous tailored bYrtC“:'} h:‘”‘»‘ Iverson, will leave A ! s i fit of LEVI'S . . . comfortable as an old shoe. No |” T Flo-wln | - matter how you bend over, squat down, or ride, HAUBUT CATCH LEVI'S never pull or bind. Demand genuine i GOES TO SAN JUAN. | T3380 for prices of 505 and 4.10 | ‘ The sale of 2000 pounds of hali- but provided practically all of the | [fish trading activity at the Cold | cents per pound. Capt. John Pade- | meister made the sale. | e L, O s o 45 S 1amis chaThay i 108 ANGEIB | Kentueky's death rate increased | swrage plant this morning, The San Juan Fish Company from 108 per 1,000 population in i1913 to 11.3 in 1934, i LEVI STRAUSS puthas.:-d that amount from the | dent, MARTIN HOLST, JR., ! BARBERS ELEGT C. P Brown was elected Presi- and Mrs. Amy Lynch was f coal to the Chilkoot Army Bar- |23, who died in Seattle on July 29, | €lected Treasurer and Secretary of racks near Haines, the Banden|after a long illness, arrived in Ju-| the Gastineau Barbers Association rthed at Juneau Commercial Dock | neau aboard the Alaska and were| 3t 8 meeting held in Light's barbe at 6 o'clock last night from Seattle.|taken to the C. W. Carter Mortuary. ‘shop‘The newly (-lf\m,_o.l omcurs.vu | remain in office until next July 1 - .- SIOP IN JUNEAU! SPEAK BEFORE CHAMBER LUNCH Whittier, Rev. Glasse and Anderson Return from Travels Ihree prominent Juneau citizens returned to the city this. week extensive trips either to the rior or lo the States will be of honor and speakers at the luncheon meeting of the r of Commerce at Bailey’s Cafe at noon tOMOrrow. M. S. Whittier, assistant Collector Customs; the Rev. John A. cf the Northern Light Pres- ian Church; and J. P. Ander- proprietor of the Juneau Fior-| 1ave been invited to attend the ! reon. Whittier has returned from an in- ion tour of the Interior; An- 1 also is returned from 2 havinz gathered 1,000 boi- specimens; and the Rev, > is returncd m a v 1 Seattle where he and his wife ended the summer school session he University of Washington. hough the migratory bird sea- ich caused a strong argu- nt at the last Chamber luncheon ! 1as been settled by the Biolo, ¥'s announcement of hunting for the Territory, nev that subject is due for i:ration tomorrow. T Wrangell Chamber has re- quested Juneau’s okeh to a measure petitioning euthorities for a longer n. Wkile this petition probably aimed at next year's hunting now, r is expected to go on her opposing or favoring tomorrow. D CRUISER ARRIVES Lucius E. Burch, Jr, of N Tenn., who has been cruisin ters in a small outboard- 1f, arrived in Juneau kel registered at the Gas- Hotel. lNQUlRY MADE | ABOUT FORMER | JUNEAU NURSE Inquiry has been made of the local staff of the Salvation Army regarding Miss Amy Hill, missing for the past 18 months, Miss Hill's last address was at Aklavik where she was stationed| (as a nurse and missionary for five or six years. At one time she was a nurse in Juneau. The inquiry comes from Richard Hill, 67 Hast- |ings Street, East, Vancouver, B. C. Miss Hill is about 40 or 42 years of age. 3ISHOP ROWE MAY HEAD FOR MICHIGAN The Rt. Rev. Peter Trimble Rowe, Episcopal Bishop for Alaska, is en- route to Michigan, Dean C. E. Rice of the Trinity Episcopal Cathedral here believes. Bishop Rowe passed through Ju- neau Monday night on the steamer Yukon from the Westward. He is bound for Seattle and is returning from his annual visit to Interior cities and settlements. i Dean Rice said today that he be- ()11/ l;lllll["l(ll"\ |coNprTion oF omALLEY IS STLL UNCHANGED Coming Down; [ A ("“rufl(_ Razed The condition of Henry O'Malley, R former Commissioner of ' FisTheries, One of the oldest landmarks in| ¥PO Wwas taken to St. Ann's' Hos- Juneau is falling to the sledge|Pit8l Sunday night, still remains and crowbar of a razing crew this, Unchanged, according to hospital week as the old Pacific Coast Dock 2uthorities. warehouse is torn down R 5 AT T Y, According to “old-timers,” the TEST RADIOPHONE building which has been used as| TO test the new radiophone re- an automobile storage garage Te- cently installed, the Forester, For- cently, was built 42 or 43 years ©S0 Service vessel, went to Taku ago, It connected with the present|HAarbor this morning and after Juneau Commercial Dock across| '¢SHng there will go to ‘Skagway Willoughby Avenue. to carry on similar work. William The Morris Construction Com-|S:, Claypool, of Portland, radio pany holds the contract for tne ®XPeért for the Forest Service, is razing of the structure; now owned |20°2d and making the tests, Taku by Frank McCafferty, and Skagway are being visited be- McCafferty is razing the build-| °2use of the difficulty experienced ing in. comnection with the con- |} the 'Past with radiophones in struction “next door” of: the new | thogs: placss, Juneau Motors Compan; e. He| £, A ADA TRAP e had no announcement {ogfig,fie 3’- The balance of the planking :for day relative to future plans for the Douglas Island bridge arrived the space. on the Bandon this morning” and AL b T8 the work of Iaying the flooring on CALHOUN AVENUE the new structure was iminediately |resumed. OPENED TOMORROW 0 i FIREL, A. E. Karnes, Commission of Calhoun Avenue ' between Fifch Fducation, is leaving next Tuesday and Sixth Streets, after being clos- °% & School inspection trip to var- lieved' Bishop Rowe would attend €d for weeks because of the con- ious points in the Territory. the ceremony in his ‘honor in Michigan before returning to the Pacitic Coast. S e GOV. TROY’S SlSTER COMING FOR VISIT Seymecur I. Stone of Long Cal,, sister of Gov. John < y, i3 coming north for a visit, leaving Seattle next Saturday on the Yuken. It will be the first time she has been in Alaska since 1906 when she visited in Skagway | where Gov. Troy lived at that time, Hor husband, Dr. Slone, is As- sistant Superintendent of Schools at Long Beach. - - RETURN FROM GODDARD Tom Morgan, Mrs. Percy Yn0iCs yilliams re- urned from Goddard Hot Springs vestorday aboard the Alaska Air Transport Stinston seaplane piloted Iby Sheldon Simmons. NE that’s Milder announcement this afternoon indi- cated. ey . L. E. Tucker, of Mounrovia, Cal., who arrived on the Alaska yesterday, are guests at the Gastineau Hotel. struction of a modern concrete trestle to replace the former r row dirt roadway, will be open to . traffic tomorrow, a City Hall Althcugh automobile traffic has been passing over one-half of the T]mlfd“l, rich new structure, built by Lewis Dyr- (‘TSM 7L il inyflmr dahl, the full width of the.im- §, prevement will be opened tomor- 8 \Those who know their tea, know that rich fragrant flavor that cornes from just one thing .. . .TOASTING! %\‘ + + by Schilling! Schilling LRITE Toa.;fed e fl ———-——— AMDC DANCE TONIGHT With the members of the Alask: Miners’ Defense Committee inj charge of the ticket sale, a public dance will be held tonight in th Moose Hall. ——————— MISSING MEN SArE Jack Haw 5 M. MvGipnis. re a trip to Killisnoo, are safe in Ju- neaa, Mr. Hawkes reported to au-| % here. He said the report | cf there b2ingz missing was a mix- up as ‘wo really en't overduf:."l