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ALASKAJUNEAU MINE WORKERS HOLD ELECTION Members Are Chosen to Various Committees— Min(‘ COUI'S(‘ Announced Election of members t various com Juneau was held Workers’ the regular e J. M, M men were ¢ next six months; Committee Gene Lewis, Walter But is Jones, Cary Donald Lister, Mooratoff, Al- f nest Robinson James Edmiston, Catalino Barril, Elmer Lindstrom, Blil Martin. Membership Committee—Ed Kir- choffer, Pat Doyle, Nels Lee, Dan| Douglas, Ray Richardson. Sports Committee—Kinky Bayers, Sam Nelson, Bruce Smith, Daniel Livie, Joe Snow. Entertainment thur Ficken, Tom Bennett, Gordon, Morris Richardson, follow rve Grie Smith, Joe Tubbs. 2d McCorm Glove Terry Wilsa Alex Gair y N bert Committee— Ar- Doc Ted PERMITTED TO ENTER COUNTRY Although English law says a person seeking divorce can prevent his mate from entering another country, United States immigration authorities ruled otherwise at New York. They permitted the wife of Capt. Guy M. Liddell and her children to enter America, where Captain Liddell also is visiting. Mrs. Liddell, daughter of the late Lord Revel- stoke, is shown above with her children. (Associated Press Photo) Adams. Educational Committee — Fred Story, John Mutter, Joe Campbell, The election officers in ch of the balloting were Jack Smith, Paul Lucas, Walt Bemmer and Bill Bale President Ted Danielson is again at the helm of the association and ded at his first regula eting | @ ce returning from the south The Alaska Juneau Mine Work A-t-t-e-n-shun! Coffec’s right! M-a-r-c-h! Everything's right when Schilling Coffee gives the macching orders. Try Schilling Coffee. 1t's a sturdy Coffee. ers' extension course in practical min- Association is sponsoring an NAME CONTEST IS NEAR CLOSE Deadline Hour Approaches —Pusich $10 Award Announced Thursday ng from the University of Alaska rbanks. course J will last six weeks M. W. hall will be ssToom. free of charge and and around Juneau ed to attend these twice which wiil be F icn regarding this acquired at the Gov- the Association form, The midnight deadline nears and still the new night club in Doug- las is without a name. Each mail brings dozens of letters with scores of suggestions, for there is also a prize of $10 to be given by Mike Pusich, owner, for the best name submitted. The name for the elab- night spot now being built Pusich property in Douglas announced in tomorrow’s te of class ¢ ete, will announced lat ning - - NRA Future Rests With Industry on the will be Empire. The wood dance novel and spacious hard- floor was completed |this week by Garland Boggan and 3 * !the Krafft Cabinet Shop is now at W})al Happ(‘ns De pends 0/ installing booths, tables, the Upon Activity of Chiselers |deckea orchestra pit, and iixtures. ’ I SOV An orchestra consisting of piano, Says Pres. Roosevelt drums, imbaphone, trumpet, = violins, clarinets and saxaphones is arranging the smartest in late dance music for the big opening. it 15 B e HINGTON, Sept itself, President D. elt sought to p! basic responsibility for of the NRA ’ happ —Upon industr Franklin R MRS. KASHEVAROFF TO JOIN HUSBAND || COVERED AGAIN Ethiopia’s Terrain Its Be HUFFMAN BODY st Defense Nation Confident of Victory in Event of War with Italy By CHARLES NORMAN BY HIGH TIDE} (Associated Press Staff Writer) | | Aland with an area greater than —_— England, France and Italy combined | | listens for the beat of the war lO‘ drums it feels will sound soon from | o~ | over its borders. 1t listens—and feels confident of the issue. Ethiopia’s terrain has provided the empire of Haile Selassie with a natural stronghold. It contains the- greatest mountain area on the Af- rican continent, steep, inaccessible ranges that hem the Abyssinian tableland, giving that fertile por- tion of the country the appearance of a turreted castle surrounded by - moats that are mountains. | A race that has fought against | foreign aggression and as conquer- ors for centuries has produced, like the country’s abundant crops, a | superabundance of redoubtable war-| riors. | Authorities Altempting Relocate Spot Where neer’s Remains Buried James C. Huffman, pioneer rancher whose body was found on the Eagle River flats last Sunday, has disappeared again. When authorities, headed by De- puty Marshal John McCormick, went out yesterday to bring the remains into Juneau they found the tide had moved the sand in the area, leaving no sign of where the body !mlgh! be. The day before McCor- mick had set stakes to mark the spot but the tide which washes with great strength at that point |had removed all marks and covered lup the remains, Charles Jenne and John Krug-| ness, who found the remains last| |Sunday, will be taken out again|Present day, no foreigner ltoday in an effort to relocate the(the ancient empire has fai !place where they found the foot|remark on the warlike attributes of‘ protruding from the sand. | the population. ) " In a letter to Robert Coughlin| It has been said that every Ethi- Every Man A Soldier From the earliest times portant part of the army. long spears, is scen departing for The Ethiopians are great horsemen and their cavalry is an im- A cavalry troop, pennone flying from “the front.” |Clerk of Court, James W. Huff-|oplan is a potential scldier with a man, a nephew of the dead man,|rifle an indispensable piace. of civil-| and an attorney in Columbus, Ohio, | ian equipment. ;EC-;AJP‘BH attaches himself to the had asked about his uncle as a re-| The men are great horsemen, and | fétinue cf higher personages whose 'sult of mail being returned from ' Ethiopia’s cavalry, whether armed | mark of rank can be gauged by the 'Douglas marked “deceased.” Attor- | With spears of the nineteenth cen-|richness of their chammas and the ney Huffman, Who is ‘8 Son-in-law | tury, or ‘the rifles of the present,|number of their-horses and follow: I- of former Governor Victor Dohaney | present an awesome spectacle as ers. of Ohio, was here himself in 1919|they wheel through mancuvers.| The Ethiopian, with his splendid |and is a close friend of Coughlin's.| They ride with only the big toe in | Physique, is said to be unexcelled In the interesting letter the nephicw ! the stirrup. as a courier. Obscrvers in the dark refers to his “Uncle Jim” as the| They ave of consistently tall stat- | Cmpire of Hal'e Selassic report some last “prototye of rugged individual- | ure and splendid physiques. In|Of them have been known. to run lism” and a “real sourdough.” Be- | northeastern Abyssinia theg arc al-|24 hours at a streich bearing im- |sside the nephew, Huffman also has| most white ned, but toward the | PO-tant news to almost inaccessible a niece, Mrs. Howard Keener in south this color gives place to h]a:k.i points. Zanesville, Ohio. with the prevailing skin tone of| The Ethiopians are a racs of ————————— the country described as copper- highlander§ who do not like to gel colored. into the lowlands. 4 PASSENGERS Many of them are at present| equipped with rifles taken from the Rockwell Kent, wellknown artist Italians, Egyptians and Sudaneze, | whom they have defeated. “Kind to children — cruel to beasts” has been applied to the men of Etblopia. and author; Mrs. Harry Watson and Robert J. Gleason ,PAA Superinten- dent of Communications, were pas- sengers on the PAA Lockheed Elec- tra this morning for Fairbanks. Few Ethiopians Work Half of the ab'e-bodied men have Mrs. Watson is the wife of the secretary to John W. Troy. She no productive nccupation. Attireld went north to visit friends in Fair- in picturesque +hammas, standard garb of the cor ntry, they are tu be banks where she lived for many years, ceen always with a rifle slung over the shoulder and. colorful cartridge { belts around the waist. Now they | Joe Crosson is piloting the Elec- tra on the trip to the Interior. President Makes Appeal Direct To Clergymen WASHINGTON, Sept. 25—A nation-wide appeal to clergy- men for “counsel and advice” cn how “our government might better serve its people” was launched by Roosevelt by let- ‘ter. He said he was trying to lexrn from non-government of- ficizls what conditions are. CHADWICK GOES WEST W. H. Chadwick, representing the are being mustered into a righ:inu} force as Italy’s modern legions mass | on their borders. *An ample fcod supply leaves lit- tle ambition for commerce a trade, which is chiefly carried Bt ! by foreigners. In times of peace the| guop yN J senger to Seward on the Yukon. - UNEAU, FIRST! 7|U. S. Rubber Company, is a pas- | pends upon the acti in industry and industry wants d It was his last hefore startin Coast He 1t's dependable—not fickle. Make it with reasonable care, and it “comes through™ with delicious regularity. Schilling Coffee There are two Schilling Coffees. One for percolator. One for drip. about them.” for the was that optimistic major own, T , that tempt now is to find out he chiseling extends zed his survey must the future policy | outlined. the NRA s conferance Pacific He t the resu't of e obtained before AT LIGHIHOUSE Mrs. Nicholas Kashevaroff ar- rived on the Yukon to join her husband, who has recently been appeinted keeper of a lighthouse in the Juneau vicinity. Nicholas Kash- evaroff is a nephew of the Rev. A. P. Kashevaroff, Curator of the - Territorial Museum, and the son of the Rev. N. Kashevaroff of Ko- diak Island, at whose home Father Kachevarolf is now vacationing. >r——— SHOP IN JUNEAU, FIRST! ;; he leaves of Turkish to- bacco are strung one by one :oooowmmoonoo“moomm“o 0009000000009 0000050060000000000000¢ ANNUAL D. F. D. - Card Party Dance mner D Douglas--Saturday Night Hold the Date! Get Your Tickets! AN EVENT FOR EV[SRY CHANNEL RESIDENT 0000000000000000000000600000000000000000000 like beads (see how it is done in the picture). After the leavves are strung they are packed in bales (see picture) — sometimes .as many as 80,000 leaves to the bale. W. have on hand at all times Sfor CHESTERFIELD cigarettes upwards of 350,000 bales . of Turkish tobacco... The pleasing aroma and flavor of Turk- ish tobacco is almost necessary if you want a good cigarette. g ; Turkish tobacco is more costly’ when you take into account that you have to pay '35¢c a pound duty, but we have to have it to blend with our mild ripe home- grown tobaccos. ) i** It helps make Chesterfields milder, it - - helps give them better taste. Just.sry them. i © 1933, LiceatT & Myass 'rm;w, . Peck, Nunan Will Speak at Cham ber PAA Chief, Fish Company Manager Will Be Guests i of Commercial Group Lyman S. Fock, Vice President .and General Manager of .the Pa- lcific Alaska Airways. and H. | Nunan, Resident Manager at Ket- chikan for the New England: Fish Company, will be guests at ' the rezuiar weekly luncheon of ‘the Chamber of Commorce at Bailey(s Caf~ tomorrow. Y Curtis Shattuck, Secretary of the Chamber of Commerce, said today that an announcement will be made at the luncheon tomorrow relative to the public hearinz which will be |held in Washington, D.C., next win- ter, to consider abolishment of fish | traps in Alaska. Other business will include reading of the written re- | port submitied by Miss Caroline | Toad, attendant at the Chamber of | Ccmmerce information desk in the au Hotel during the tour- e —— ire Want Ads Pay! . 10 .. for '8 HUNTERS GET S — i THIRTEEN DEER lmely Has Successful Trip ! Although Southeaster & Blows Hard A very successful hunting party | | has returned here aboard the Wan- derer, Each of the eight members gthe party got a deer and most ' them two. . %Poug Babcock, Norris Richard- sbr%, Wally Bergstrand, Ray Mac- Dowell, ‘Art Weston, Bob Dupreeé, Ralph Ritter and Kenneth Lee left® » ,Juneau for False Bay shortly after midnight Friday on the Wanderer owied by Kell Larson, and skip- fered by Kinky Bayers. The Wanderer was anchored at False Bay and eight deer were killed in that locality by members of the party before the -boat was driven from her moorings at about 5 pm. Saturday by a violent south- easter. The Wanderer cruised froth, , False Bay to} Bluff ‘and an- chorad’ there at 7 pm. Saturday night and Sunday was cpent at Marble Bluff where five me:2 deer wercibagged, making a tctal of thirteen for the eight hunt- crs. The Wandefer was anchored in a cove and three tenders— fwo of them equipped with out- beards—eruised the neighboring ‘shore; A During the absence of the ten-* ders, another northeaster blew up. 'The tenders, which had been beach- ed, could not be launched as the heavy swell resulting from the high ' wind would have stashed the light boats. The party, most of whom work gt the A:J. mine, had intend~ ed to rcturn to Juneau Sunday night. However, Capt. Bayers did not wish to abandon the beached boats so'the Wanderer went toy Tenakee, where a report was ra- dioed to Juneau, and then returnad _ to Marble Bluff, At gbout 2 o'clock Monday af- ternoon the storm subsided enough to_allow launching of the tenders, which were loaded aboard the Wan- derer, and the party returned ‘to ,Juncau, . arriving at 2 o'clock yes- ‘terday morning. .On the return trip from Marhje Bluff the Wanderer encauntered :a" gale from the north and heavy seas between Funter Bay and Point Re- treats “It was throwing them clegr over the house,” Capt. Bayers said.* By e —— " REPRESENTS CREAMERY F. E. Pauli, Washington Cream- ery representative, is registered at the Gastineau Hotel. He atrived on the Yukon from Wrangell. e ——— SHOP IN JUNEAU, FIRST! r mildness. (L ¢ better taste-=-={