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Y THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, TUESDAY GALVIN HERE ENROUTE TO NOME CLAIMS Alaska Homestake Mine to Commence Operations During Winter Arriving in Juneau on the Alaska, J, G. Galvin and E. M. Mickaelson, president and vice-president of the Alaska Homestake Gold Mining Co, stopped over in Juneau for a few hours before leaving Monday moir.- ing on the Pacific Alaska Airways Electra for their company’s hold- ings at Bluff, Alaska, on Norton | Sound near Nome. J. M. McDonald, consulting en-, gineer for the company, joined; them here and went on to Nome in the plane. Mr. McDonald had been | in Juneau for the past week, and| will take charge of the Kensington Mine development work, on his re turn here from Nome in about month. Company Prospects In an interview, Mr. Galvin told of the prospects of his company's properties and the work to be done there starting this winter. The Alaska Homestake has 2 working capital of $200,000 and con- « trols 27 claims in the Bluff Region of the Cape Nome mining district. Twelve claims are owned outrighs and 15 more are under option. The claims are located on Daniels Creek, and from prospect shafts that have been sunk at frequent intervals throughout the claims it is conser- vatively estimated that in an area 600 feet by 600 feet by 100 feet deep (the depth to which shafts have been sunk) there is a body of three million tons of ore that will aver- age at least $8.90 to the ton. The mining man said the remain- ler of the preperties have not been thorcughly explored. as yet bus would appear to run but slightly lower in grade, according to sam- ples and surveys made by Mr. Mc- Donald when he was there before Samples taken from the main shaft #veraged $11.10. It is not known how much deeper than 100 feet the ore bodies extend. Company Fix wnced Since leaving the mine properties 2 year ago, Mr. in the East, financing the company, which is now, he said, completely capitalized, with no stock remain- ing for sale. He also purchased equipment for development work this winter, which equipment, amounting to about 100 tons, was landed at the property on the last voyage of the steamer Victoria to the district. It is planned to run three cross-cuts through the main ore body, as soon as possible. Next | summer, the company will install a 500 ton mill on the property, Gal- | vin advised. He pointed out that the ore is highly oxidized and can | be mined by the open-cut method by power shovels, with very little use of powder. It is planned to transport the ore to the mill by truck, and it is thought that it can be mined and de]lvered to the mill 2 !redeemed part of his old imperial Galvin has been | /FREEBURN - SCOTT | WEDDING INTERESTS FRIENDS IN ALASKA On the ru,sl page of the society section, Seattle Times, October 18, is a picture of Mr. and Mrs, Lau- rence Freeburn, who were married October 12, leaving St. John's church after the marriage service. Mr. Freeburn is the son of Mr. |and Mrs. William C. Freeburn and |for many years has spent his sum- mers in Alaska. He is now super-‘ intendent of the Pioneer Packing, ACCUMELATE YORESE'F, MARCELLY--DON'T YE WERRY HOW TH' PRINCE (S GOWN' To LOOK--- HE'LL GIT HERE IN A DAY OR SO AN' YE CAN STARE AT HIW : TiLL YORE BLUE (8 ',; (N TH' FACE-- X8 |Company at Sitka, and left there at the close of the cannery season ! not long ago. He is a nephew of | James Freeburn, manager of the' Chichagoff Mining Company. Mr. Freeburn’s beautiful bride is the former Miss Nancy Scott, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Harry Scott of Seattle. — .- Kaiser Redeems Coin- Palmed on Bus Driver| i AMSTERDAM, Holland, Oct. 27.| —Ex-Kaiser Wilhelm of Germany, now exiled in Doorn, Holland, has 2_ currer five-mark piece, now | valueless. | A Dutch bus driver had the| coin . “palmed” off on him, but| instead of philosophically accept- | ing his loss, he sent the coin to Docrn with a letter addressed to the former emperor. By return post came & personal| leiter from the one-time war lord, | thanking him for his message and | enclosing a Dutch ryksdaalder, a| negotiable Duteh coin equivalent in}l value to the old German five-mark | piece. y—a Engine;rs May Walk Out, Stop Dam Work WASHINGTON, Oct. 27. — A strike on the Grand Coulee Dam is forecast by John P. Coyne, Chair- man of the Board of Trustees of| the International Union of Engin-| cers unless the builders meet the union demands for recognition and pay increase. | Such a walkout would virtually| shut down the sixty million dollar | project, although engineers are| {tew in ccmparison to the other | workers. } z e B Sea | | BUYING ROLLING STOCK [ Al Even as Child Wallis Drew lemnd buving b(-u th % cars rose to 1,750, bringmg the nine L | mnntrhs” totalbto :7 4339;heTklwst for By SIGRID ARNE | any full year back to 1930. The year | - ) & as a whole stands a good chance to ok IMO?E'.M‘X” Ot a0 better very year hack to 1929, Al |Sip has always trailed the glamorous ready 158 locomotives have been M!S Emest Simpson for whose ordered, and in the past week sev- | COmPany the young King of Eng- eral important inquiries appeared. {land is showing such a marked pref-| | erenc Even in her school days,| \Valu‘ Warfield Spencer Simpson | {was the subject of polite whispers. | Slim- dark-eyed with a pig-tail tightly tied with a black bow, she was never a beautiful child but she| uas sij \tor not more than fifty cents a| ton. ‘ Quarters now on the properties | can accommodate fifty men and about forty will be employed there | during !h}e coming %evelopmcn: as the envy of her schoolmates. ‘ work. Mr. Galvin wil return to the| ~She was such a vivid, vivacious, | States about the first of the year|Person.” says Mrs. John Sadler, | to arrange for the purchase and de- |who studied at private school with | 1i l,,y of the mill unit. |her, “She had a taste in dress that | mp the Collapsible Hats for Here is a hat which can travel either D butante in our year with a serious| beau. She always drew up to ourj ideb parties in the long, chauffeur-| ys set her apart from the rest of us. Why, she was the only de-| ‘sh(- had poise that made the rest| {of us look like clumsy children. [Now people are gossiping as usual! .\bout her But I say—more power | \ she ‘came out” at the "Monday‘ Germans’—a series of dances at | which daughters of the best Balti-| | more families make their entrance| | into society. i Her given name was “Bessie,” a name that runs through the Mon-, tague family. But she dropped it! in school days and demanded to be! called “Wallis,” her middle name. Liked the Boys Mrs. Sadler remembers one n\g“t | that might have meant there woul {be no Mrs. Ernest Simpson to at-| tend the King of England’s parties.| She and several other little girls| stole away from school to go buggy~ lridmg Suddenly a guard on a near | by estate shouted at them, “Get out | of here. You're trespassing.” “Seems quegr now,” says Mrs.| Sadler. “But Wallis grew panicky. | She ran screaming to a creek that| Kz;‘ma was going to drown l:{rseif.‘X | But we caught her, and have teased | !her about it ever since.” | Mzs. Sadler also remembers that| Wallis Warfield was.a girl who| cared little for books but enjoyed| designing her own dresses. She pre-| ferred the company of boys, and| was a conversational match for men| much older, | Wed First Husband in 1916 1 When she was married to Lt. E.| Winfield Spencer in 1916, Mrs. Sad- ler said, Wallis designed her wed- ding gown of white velvet, and the! ceremony is still recalled as one of | the loveliest ever held in -the cuy The couple: left the church under; an arch of swords held by friends of, the bridegroom, Apropos of the wedding dress, Dr.| Freddie Taylor, a member of Balti-| more’s inner circle, recalls a story. “It had a train a mile long,” he| commented to Wallis afterward. “What have you done with it?” “The train is an evening wrap now,” laughed Wallis. “I cut it off nnd I still have the dress. Very you think?” ’hgtm failea. Dr. 3 m nt lmon ikt et o BARNEY GOOGLE F YE'LL EXCUSE ME, AUNTIE- T THINK ('LL GIT MYSE'F ONDER TH' KIVER D SPARK PLUG T NEVER SEED TH GAL LOOK SO PALE AN' PEAKED-- RUN OUT YORE TONGUE,CHILE, AN' LET AUNT LOWIZ(E SEE (F YORE THR! GAY ciety and WHERE THE TALK I Wallis Simpson loves (Vi - AR RIS T SR L A 0 VSRR Y A si eI S LS THE AMERICAN GIRL And The King OFf England SRR S T G RN likes to attend parties such as this one with King Edward (left) and Kemal Attaturk (right) on the Turkish dictator’s yacht during British monarch and party. patibility. Spencer was devoted to aviation, and wished to give all his time to his work. His bride loved society. She wanted to be where the tea was flowing, and the talk was gay. “The marriage to Spencer was considered & good match,” recalls aylor. “He came from a wealthy | Hyde Park family in Chicago. And| he was well-liked here. She Wwas in love with him, too. But when she married Simpson several years later, I remember she was just as much| in love. He was also a man of re- puted wealth, and well liked.” Went To Wales' Parties In recent years she began men- ticning the then Prince of Wales to Taylor. She and Simpson had been to parties given by the Prince. “He's the most natural, | mannered, agreeable ]driven car he sent around for her.|| FIRST HUSBAND Her fondness for society is par- tially blamed by friends for the divorce of Wallis and her first husband, Lt. E. Winfield Spen- cer. She wanted to be where the tea was floewing while he was devvled to aviation. imaginable,” she told Taylor. ‘Do you address him as ‘Sir'?” asked Taylor. “Oh, always—in public,” laughed| Wallis. Since then many of her relatives simple- | young man | the recent southern cruise of the seasons ago when Mrs. Simpson a member of the small party ent tdlned'by the King there “THey went here and there to- gether—to the casino, the be: and the gala dinner “But they never appear: gether. They were always { panied by Miss Buchanan Merry- man, of Washington, an aunt of Wallis. They had their own ca- bana on the beach and usually tock |a dip in the morning. But Biarritz is so accustomed to the King’s pres ence there was little curiosity. | Several other Baltimoreans have {met the King at small cocktail | parties in Mrs. Simpson’s London |apartment. He drops in alone, and | chats .gayly, they say. And Wallis —they are pleased over this—is just the same as she was years simple, dignified, witty and gener- ous But Baltimoreans explain that easily. She's so “wellborn.” Tomorrow' Divorce and New Love — e .' Wh(lt No Champa gne? f MELBOURNE, Oct. 27 —Romantic {moonlight adventure will not enter the lives of Australian woman cricketers as they travel to land earlye next summer, Ove of the many | governing their activities decrees ! no girl shall visit the of the liner after dinher Other regulaticns forbid bling, smoking, and writing articles. { No member of the party may be accompanied by husband, or friend. Bed time is 10 o'clock. A list of the equipment which leach girl will be required to take on the tour, 39 articles in all, cludes skipping ropes and hot wat- er bottles. um'r IT COUGHS Quickly ehecked without “dosing” - CKS VAPORUESB PROVED BY 2 GENERATIONS HOTEL ZYNDA | ELEVATOR SERVICE | S. ZYNDA, Prop. and schoolday friends have spent vacations in London, coming back with more stories to add to the Wal-| lis Warfield legend. One cousin remembers her laughing, uproariously to herself in the rain one morning in her luxur- ‘ous London apartment. “What in the world is the matter?” called the cousin through the closed door. “Nothing, nothing,” shouted Wal- lis from her tub. “Just laughing at the exigencies of my old exis- tence in Baltimore—and now look at me.” o Wallis Is “Just the Same” mmnwgg ’ * * Pay’n Takit PHONES 92 or 35 Free Delivery Fresh Meats, Groceries, L rs, Wmel and Beer We ¢ SS Because e Sell_for CASH Loader Dept. Store ‘George Brothers tringent rules | ago,! Eng- | top m- | relative | in-| EVER' SENCE SHE GOT THAT THAR RISTERCRATICAL FAN LETTER SHE'S BEEN (N A STATE OF DUMFOUNDERMENT- BUSINESS PROFESSIONAL [ When in Need of DIESEL GENERAL HAULING OIL—UTAH COAL STORAGE and CRATING CALL US JUNEAU TRANSFER Phone 48 Night Phone 4703 ! Reliable pharmacists compound prescriptions. | SPECIALIZING in French | ana Italian Gastineau Cafe Short Orders at All Hours Ammunition See—BIG Van SOUTH FRANKLIN Phone 479 Ludwig Nelson WATCHMAKER and JEWELER Juneau, Alaska PORE GAL - SHE LOOKS PLume HEART BROKE - By BILLIE DE BECK YE CAN'T ALLLS TELL, MARCELLY - DIRECTORY - THEM PRINCES M(GHT BE REAL NICE--STEDDY AN' (NDUSTROUS AN! DOWN' MIDDOLIN' FRATERNAL SOCIETIES GASTINEAU CHANNEL PROFESSIONAL | Helene W. L. Albrecht | PHYSIOTHERAPY | Masage, Biectricity, Infra Red Ray, Medical Gymnastics 307 GOLDSTEIN BLDG. DENTISTS Blomgren. Building PHONE 56 Hours 9 am. t0 9 pm. Dr. C. P. jenne -Rooms 8 and § Valentine Building TELEPHONE 176 Dr. Richard Wiiliams DENTIST OFFICE AND RESIDENCE GOLDSTEIN BUILDING " Dr. A. W. Stewart DENTIST Hours 9 am. to 6 pm. GEWARD BUILDING Office Phone 469 TELEPHONE 563 Office Hours—9 a.m. to 10 p.m. Dr. W. A, Rystrom DENTIST Over First National Bank X-ruY — RN R et e A DR. RAE LILLIAN (71\]![;5(‘1"'ll Optometrist Eyes Examined, Glaises Fitted Office in Ludwig Nelson’s Jewelry Store o— ; Robert Slmpson, Opt D. i | Graduate Los Angeles Col. | | ; ‘ M. H. SIDES, Secretary, i lege of Optometry and Opthalmology \l Glasses ritted Lenses Ciround [P Guy Smith DRUGS PUROLA REMEDIES PRESCRIPTIONS CARE- FULLY (COMPOUNDED Front Street Next Coliseum PHONE 97—Free Delivery the BEST! If you're out to please the man »f the family . . . let us help rou! A grand selection of good food . . vegetables and all the things that men like best. PHONE 83 or 85 Sanitary Grocery “The Store That Pleases” %? 7'\ If you enjoy indoor sports—- Here’s one of the best—TRY BOWLING! BRUNSWICK BOWLING ALLEYS Rheinlander and Alt Heidelberg BEER ON TAP Keep in mind . . . Caroline Todd Studio Piano—Harmony—Public Speaking 326 SECOND STREET Jones-Stevens Shop \ LADIEE—MISSES' 1 READY-TO-WEAR ! Seward Street Near Third | \ OSTEOPATH Consultation and examination free. Hours 10 to 12; 1 to 5; . 7 to 9:30 by appointment. [ Gastineau Hotel Annex ; South Frankli.. St. Phone 177 TYPEWRI"ERS RENTED | $5.00 per month J. B. Burford & Co. “Our doorstep is wurn by satisfied customers” Stratton & Beers VMUNICIPAL ENGINEERS SURVEYORS VALENTINE BLDG. Telephone 502 GARLAND BOGGAN Hardwood Floors Waxing Polishing Sanding PHONE 582 VR R P NS P R RO Fraternal Societies of Gastineau Channel . P. 0. E. ELKS meets every Wedncsday at 8 p. m, Visiting brothers welcome. . WALTER P. SCOTT, Exalted Ruler. * | i I MOU! N'l' JI'JNEAL' LODGE NO. H Second and fourth Monday of each month in Scottish Rite Temple, beginning at 7:30 p. m. MARTIN S. JORGEN- SEN, worshipful Master; JAMES | |W. LEIVERS, Secretary. ' AT iy : REBEKAHS Perseverance Lodge No. 2 A.meets every second and fourth Wednes- day, I. O. O. F. Hall. EDNA M | BUTTS, Noble Grand; MILDRED LASHEN Secretary. " Juneau lce Cream Parlors Ice Cream, Soft Drinks, Candy COFFEE SHOP Percy Reynolds, Manager RELIABLE TRANSFER | Our trucks go any place any time. A tank for Diesel Oil and a fank for Crude Oil save burner trouble. PHONE 149; NIGHT 148 WHEN IN A HURRY CALL COLE FOR OIL! 34 plus or 27 gravity, in any amount . . . QUICK! COLE TRANSFER Phone 3441 or Night 1803 % Its Paint We Have 1t! IDEAL PAINT SHOP FRED W. WENDT PHONE 549 FINE Watch and Jewelry Repairing PAUL BLOEDHORN at very reasonable rates FRONT STREETS " THS GRAVES “Fhe Clothing Man Home of Hart Schaffner and Marx Clothing "GARBAGE HAULED Recasonable Monthly Rates E. 0. DAVIS TELEPHONE 212 Phonr *753 " New York w York Life INSURANCE KEITH G. WILDES PHONES Office 601—Residence 601-2 Juneau Coffee Shop MRS, T. J. JACOBSON Wome Cooked Meals Served from 6:30 a.m. to 8:30 p.m. Catering to Dinner Parties é TJUNEAU-YOUNG | Hardware Company | PAINTS—ON—GLASS + Shelf and Heavy Hardware l McCAUL MOTOR COMPANY Guns and Ammunition Dodge and Plymouth Dealcrs | L f l | | 1 WARRACK Construction Co. | Juneau = | PAINTS — OILS Builders’ and Shelf HARDWARE Tlmmu Hardware Co. |