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8 HIRST PLANS NEW SCHOOLS FOR INDIANS | T | Buildings, Both Hospilahé PLAYING A DIFFERENT TUNE and Schools, Badly Need- ed, Director Reports “Our greatest need this time | ! is better buildings, both schools and | 3 hospitals | This is the belief of C. M. Hirst, | Director of Educ ion for the Bureau of Indians Affairs here : who returned to h unes pad - : is me on the Yu 3 any with Dr J. G 1th Director for the Bure in Washington; Dr. J. F. Van / Medical Director for Alaska; eren D. E. Thomas of the Washington Indian O id Dr. Taylor J | Pyle, Field Dentist Dr. Townsend cor ued on south { on the Yukon, returning to hi | office in Washington, D. C 1 Many of the school building nd hospitals i the Inte and in i O e e pgrey T These members of the Tacoma, Wash., Shrine band had to have their fun when they went to the station | adequate, Director Hirst said, in| S "¢0 e "Wach., to welcome incoming Shriners to the order’s international convention. They struck | weliing, of extended trip which Up adifferent kind of a tune on the big drum, playing a bit of penny ante to while the time away. (Asso- | far north ciated Press Photo) the Indiar R PAA ELECTRA d tt I pe of " PILOT HUBBARD Four Milln being abandoned as the Indians are moving into the Nus where their supply of plentiful i" MUVielan[l‘chen Pass;s_;r Flown ln‘ s uneau from Fairbanks BREWSTERSAYS ict Paramount Asks Large Sum There is need for schools at Col- [l Who Cracked Up at ville and Barter Is east of er who Lracked Up a . e 4 Point Barrow on the Fairbanks Still in Dazed from Goldwyn—Gary The PAA Flectra, pilots Al Mon- he reported, as the Cooper Involved sen and S. E. Robbins, arrived at ndition, Report |the Pacific Alaska Alrways airport at 3 o'clock Sunday afternoon with the following passengers from Fair- children living alo 400 miles of coas in the two major LOS ANGELES, Cal., July 02 A four million dollar damage suit tioned s o . banks: J. B. Chamberlain, Mrs. J i as been filed by Paramount Pic-, 7 S5bhs The Indian Office rty cov >AA Elec- |, 4942 A 3t ;| Okerlund, Sophie Petersen, Milton ures Corporation against Samuel tually all the northe we ! n-{ o Odoin, Hugh Brewster, Mrs. Joe A Goldwyn, film producer and the film | hp . rn coastal India ! e Pilot Peroy | - roies B | Crosson, Bradford, Washington ot : - company bearing his name. The| q °n SR S , Hirst repor atier -'H week. W c it : e ; ie Electra will return to Fair- F suit is for allegedly ‘“raising” the|, .. é e andon ) the e ad otan. banks tomorrow afternoon EOW BuG oh o Paramount’s contract price list in- | 3 b siny ferences with. the & T T : ducing Gary Cooper to leave mittee aboard the O s s K o b amount and sign with Goldwyn ard last Friday W pector wster S s - 1 vas fully under ere - MRS. PROCTOR, TYLER ALEUTIANIN® 5 5 s FOR MOONEY IS ARRIVING TOMORROW oo il Mrs. Marie A. Proctor of Seattle 1 o ] % tion and Naturalization, and Geo g W. Tyler, Assistant District Direc- nd Miss Betty njured in in Juneau tomorrow according to tor, will arrive on the Alaska Official Has Two Suitcases d to FROM SOUTH - expected to recover PPt T sederal C ) T Mrs, Nos, | FOPert Coughlin, Federal Clerk of of Records to Use NOra | coure, While here the officials will ; o The flagship Aleutian of the Al- accident ¢4 p o yp naturalization matter .r'\t.;amst Prisoner aska Steamship Company arrived was flying | with Mr. Coughlin * | in port at 1 o'clock this afternoon from 1,500 i+ = S T ! 5 with a full passenger list, including al R e AN FRANCISCO, Cal., July 20. b s poaah i e BOAT TRIP TO TAK A | balifad cowus 5 members of the Beneficial Life Ryussen 73 i o abeag) hedipld B : is back in the opén court Jusicance OSmpany pary of Baltgiown 1 to Seattle| Miss Gladys Forrest of the Gov- S Lake City. round-trippers, anc p tomot notored ship, has |ernor's office 3 TRy g 8 a yea o Shr o sowna in utomobile motored ship, has | ernor's office ¢ ined_her par-| Gaptain Charles Goff, special aid returr Seattle, Brewster re-|ents, Mr. and Mrs. N. J. Forrest of | (0 the Attorney General's office Chas. Gregg, Chicago: Effie R - ; J {|to the Attorney General's office 2 : icag % the plane is still at|Portland, Ore, who are here for| tectified today that he has two suit. LADD, (Bugens, Ore.; Mrs, Oat Owen, who was report- | the summer, with a boat trip 0| cococ i of records which p;.“‘“, e M‘i’]“_‘"- d&‘”/”-" Be B "‘:&”1 ed to have no pilot's license and no|Taku Glacier and the cannery at|poo T FEOES THCH PV - -S‘“L s Marjorle L. Wil- | jicense for the ship, was denied a Taku Sunday. They went aboard et S0 S WS O GO ”": parang, 34 ’1“? S _ mit by the Department of Com- |the Cordelia D. with Trevor Davis, | .out" later for identification by Warcack B S Oalhoun. I G. Mo. | Brewster had grounded him on his Pearl Peterson, Mrs. Josephine e N s Py i g et 3 arrival at Anchorage, but the flier |White and Mr. and Mrs. James ‘ain, Fred J. Hotes, James L. Len- 4 . Drake Indians of the Kiowa reservation % 0. | t00K off once on his projected - X non, Wm. Ransom, Mrs. Shirley $light' in faos of trestrictions, B8] X i 2 near Anadarko, Okla., are organiz- George, Mrs. Melvin George 8 & 8 3 .- o an alicTrdte s T The Al in George. . |was forced to turn back, however,| _ MUSKOX AT NUNIVAK |Ing an all-Indian American Legion e Aleutian sails for Skagway at ’ : 3 Ry b | The 2 74 ‘hich _lpost with a prospective member- 10:30 o'elock tonight due to bad weather. Owen is a he 27 muskox which were re- PRt WL § veteran flier but his license was re- |cently transferred from Fairbanks SMP Of 108. i - - o PLEADS GUILTY Carl Neilspn, charged with petit larceny in connection with the al- leged theft of several pairs of shoes from the Forest Service warehouse,|! pleaded guilty in U. S. Commission- er’s court today and was given a suspended sentence of 30 days S e voked some time ago for infraction|to Nunivak Island arrived at the YRR | of regulations i]auer place July 16 in good shape,| Sixty passengers fly daily between according to word to the Alaska islands of the Hawaiian group flying From here Inspector Brewster ex- pects to go to Skagway in connec- )n with his work and probably will en go on to the Westward and to his headquarters at Anchorage. Game Commission from Game | Commissioner Frank P. Williams.| A Kansas law prohibits the din- Charles H. Rouse, who handled ing on snakes, lizards, centipedes, | the transfer, will remain on the | scorpions or other reptiles in public island for a month at least to see | e - - Title to nearly a million and a how the animals get along | Mccanney, Tex. Lode and placer location notices half acres of land still remains with ————r————— rattlesnake derby for sale at The Empire office. ithe United States government. |, BUY AT HOME! | the tenth birthda, § held Texas’ first | as a feature of of the oil town. | i [ J. B. BURFORD & CO. Presents PAUL BROWN | AT 8:00 O'CLOCK TONIGHT In a concluding half-hour program OVER STATION KINY Completing a 52-Week Contract with J. B. BURFORD & CO. THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, MO! | kon IM MILDRED KEATON T0 BE STATIONED AT PT. BARROW Dr. Raymond Maurer of Metlakatla to Have Charge | of Outpost Hospital | = | Dr. Raymond W. Maurer, who | as been stationed at Metlakatla, have charge of the Indian Bu- reau Hospital at Point Barrow which has just been transferred from Dr. Henry Griest, Presbyterian Missionary, to the Indian Service, according to Dr. J. F. VanAckeren Bureau Medical Director, who re- | turned to Juneau today on the Yu- with Educational Director C Hirst, after flying to Barrow in onnection with the transfer reau of Indian Affairs Pyle worked with Dr. Waugh for two months making a survey of diets| and the effect on the teeth and| health of the Indians. The study | revealed, he said, that absence of | sweets is conducive to good teeth | and Indians, who used no mvms.“ were found with virtually perfect| | teeth. It is hoped through the NDAY, JULY 20, 1936. which is being financed by the Bu-| Dr. study to determine diets which will best preserve the health of the In- dian and Eskimo in the war against tuberculosis and other diseases. | Dr. Waugh will be in the Bethel | area until September, Dr. Pyle re- ported, and next'year it is planned | to have a man stay in the region all winter | Contract System | A contract system of dentistry is being established by thé Indian Of- | fice, Dr. Pyle said Private den- tists in various communities will do the work under contract with | the Bureau. The high cost of | transportation, especially in the In- terior, prompted the action, he re- ported, as it is expected thus to Show Nazi Play On German Farms BERLIN, July 20—To familiarize isolated German rural communities with Nazi trends in dramatic art, traveling theatrical companies have been sent to shed educational light in the corners of the reich. These touring companies are not to be confused with the barnstorm- ers of old nor are they ‘“guest: from large city casts. Their purpose is to place the German drama in a| worthy manner before country aud- iences who live too far away from towns to see good acting. The latest mechnical and light- ing devices for staging a play cred- i | [ | | | itably in a barn or villgae hall have; been adapted, in miniature or sim- Traveling Stages |Canneryman's Death Learned in Washington SR Steve!?l)ies of At- tack While Visiting Alaska Properties VASHON, Wash., July 20.—Roy Wise, said here today that he had recelyed word that his uncle, S. P. Stevens, 71, had died suddenly Sat- urday evening in Melly, Alaska from a heart attack while inspecting his cannery properties. Stevens was formerly the Vice- | President of Murdock Reid and | Company in Chicago. He 'relin- quished this post many years ago to devote his entire time to his plied form. A few touches, and a|Northwest and Alaska cannery bus- Miss Mildred Keaton, former Ju-| 1, ije better service for the In-|OTeek landscape changes into an |iness. neau girl, will be field nurse at the Aland at it Bt |interior scene, and vice versa. Mov-| No funeral plans have been made Arctic outpuost and two other nurs- {able revolving stages are being|as vet. es will be employed, he reported Enlarge Hospital TRUITT TO KETCHIKAN |built. Attorney General James S. Truitt | The program includes Nazi prod- left on the Yukon for Ketchikan ucts, folklore dramas and classical {WINGARD’S BROTHER The institution, now an eight- bed hospital, will be enlarged to 16 |in connection with official busi- WOrks by Goethe, Schiller and Les- FLOWN HERE THIS P.M. beds, Dr. Van Ackeren said, and | ness. He expects to be gone about | SIP8- The Irving Airways Lockheed material for the work is on the a week T RN T |Vega seaplane made an emergency North Star, now bound for the Arc- - > » . Dr. Griest is going Outside on WARRACK RETURNS L. C. Pratt, Regional Fiscal Agent, the North o o1 |U- S. Forest Service, left tor Ket- J. B. Warrack, of the wa"‘ukichikan on the Yukon in connec- flight to Hawk Inlet this after- |noon to bring Lester Wingard, brother of L. G. Wingard of the | i PRATT TO KETCHIKAN tic the sbuthbound trip of Star. SHalies e % Bureau of Fisheries, to St. Ann’ Construction Company, returned to " z 2 n’s Dr. Taylor J. Pyle, Field Dentist, | juneau aboard l,i, f\mmfln after |Lion With Forest Service matters.|for hospitalization. The plane left who returned with the party from o pusiness trip to Ketchikan |He expects to be gone about a|here at 1:40 and returned in half the Westward, reported excellent HSIE P | week an hour bringing the man who had work being done by the Dr. L. M | S P been working on one of the fish near Bethel SHOP IN JUNEAU FIRST. BUY AT HOME! patrol speedboats at Hawk Inlet. Wards New Catal'og Ovrder Office NOW OPEN ORDERING MADE EASY: Now you can profit by Wards low prices on quality merchandise without writing letters or even making out an order. Our Juneau Catalog Order Office located in Behrends Bank Building at 127 Third Street will handle all details—assist you in making selections from the Catalog, write out your order, and even mail it for you. Come in and let our personal representative in Juneau tell you all about our new service for Alaska customers. See how con- venient it is to deal with us right in Juneau. Phone 654, if you like, for any article in Wards Catalogs. . MORE GOOD NEWS! When you order from Wards you now pay freight ONLY FROM SEATTLE. Transportation cost on small parcels is less than you would pay by any other method. Quick service—our overnight trucking service carries all orders from our Portland House to the Seattle docks FREE. There is no post- age nor money order fee, and there is no C. 0. D. fee if you want to pay when the goods arrive. SATISFACTION OR YOUR MONEY BACK: If any purchase isn’t satisfactory you can get ysur money back right here in Juneau. TRY THIS NEW SERVICE..PROFIT BY WARDS LOW PRICES Call for a copy of Wards Large Spring and Summer Catalog if you haven’t one. oM WARD rder 1ce MISS RUTH LUNDELL, Manager 4 Typewriters Stationery Office Supplies l Behrends Bank Building—127 Third Street Phone 654 Iunéau; ‘Alaska