Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
INDAY, FEB. 1, 1937. WORK DEASE CR. o ol STATES FISHER s Eq}”pmel'lt il i TANKS symbolize the modern war ma- % m Spl‘lng — Boulder chine Hitler has built for Germany. Per- Creek Does Well mitted by the treaty of Versailles to | E maintain an army of only 100,000, the That the Consolidated Mining and| [ Reich has some 800,000 men under arms. Smelting Company has taken hold | s ings in Dease Creek region of North- ern British Columbia and is plan- ning exploration and deveicpmen | work next spring, is the statement | mara hy Norman Fisher, superin- tendent of the compan; placer workings on Boulder Creek, near Atlin. Mr. Fisher is in Juneau for a few days, enjoying a rest and receiving | dental attention. He stated that the Boulder Creek hydraulic workings! reported an improved season last) summer, despite the fact water was' unusually scarce during the early| summer, and in the fall, when there | was plenty of water available, they g A A : & were unable to use it because th 2 ¥ 5 i : U————— e were replacing the dam up the! h 3 4 k i 2 Ay . GERMANY'S FIGHTING SHIPS, like her tanks and i ;5 ) 5 cr:;‘;’rk on, the new dam has mad’) % Lk % G S R airplanes, bear eloquent witness to Hitler's shredding of : S Fllehl'el' S Faces good progress and should be ready : § i . 8 & e & y post-War arms prescriptions. Outlawed by the treaty of Off G.fard for use soon after the start of nexu 4 A S s B 3 Fp S ko % » Versailles. her floahnq power, "c°9"i!°d officially °"‘Y bY P y season, he declared. Mr. Fisher re- Britain 15 soaring toward 250,000 tons. : ported that all properties in the ' Atlin district seem to have enjoyed good last seasons. “From all re- ports, Spruce Creek did well, and of- ficials of the company on Otter Creek believe they have discovered' e new lead, which should work out far better than their old proposi- | tion,” he declared. There is a fair amount of undar- ground work being done on both Spruce and Otter Creeks, now, Mr. Fisher said, apparently with profit- nble results. Referring to his own company's new property in the Dease section, | Mr. Fisher said that McCloud White, | general superintendent of the com- pany’s workings in northern British Celumbia, is now there, looking ovar the ground, and it is planned to ship | some equipment there in the spring. - Reich's ace - in - the - hole. Germany 7,000 planes. Renews Pledge of Organi-| YOUTH UNDER THE SWASTIKA is dedi- zation to Dcvelopment | ; cated to the glory of the state. Hitler's program f Northland . envisages enroliment of every boy and girl from ot Northlan 10 to 18 in Nazi youth organizations. At 18 the boys become subject to military service; the girls are encouraged to marry and produce future manpower for the Reich. e of the continuin? in- the Seattle Chamber of merce in the development of Al- | ka, was afforded by the inaugural : ess of the new President ¢f the Chamber, George K. Comstock. Al- though the address dealt principally | with the new Labor Relations Pro- gram of the Chamber, President Comstock took occasion to renew the pledge of the organization to the development of Alaska. Alaska has had a particular friend the past year in retiring President T. A. Davies of the Seattle Cham- Ler. Of the fifty radio broadcasts curing his tenure of office, sixtean were devoted largely to Alaska and steps in its development. Mr. Dayies, who first went mto ihe Territory during the gold rush of 1897, treated the progress in the, Territory from that time for y in a series of radio programs. In virtually all of his talks ne loid stress on the fact that in his cpin- ion only the surface has been touched in mining development in| the Territory. { He showed the vast progress that 3 . has been made in methods of trans-| in s ’ 4 g v “ VI.OMAN - portation and exhibited special en-| 4 o . 4 oday's Germany thusiasm for the growth of aviation |EE v ; 5 ’ . ’ . . must be ready fo, in the Territory. 3 i s A ’ ; : | serve the Father- His predecessor as president of o 4 s Ry ; land in war. Train- the Seattle Chamber, Alfred H. : o ! Al G / ng for that day Lundin, also was keenly interested 5 L /i i includes_anti-gas in Alaska and was a member of 2 ” i L the Chamber’s biennial goed willl- trip in 1933. President Comstock, who is a na- tive son of Seattle, as was his father ?:sf::.er;—u:}:;fi heavzras:(::: ,,P,:u(‘:: ; Jask the German skies as Hitler purged his Reich of visit there as a boy of ten. ¥ non-Aryan dnfluences. Nearly all Jews are ex- SRSt AP T st RN cluded ‘rom the professions, arts and public " | service—even from the chess league. Hunt from Planes ATKINSON, Neb., Feb. 1.—Shocot- ing coyotes from an airplane is a new method A. A. Risser and Earl Coxbill have adopted to rid the| James Back ranch of these preda- | tory animals. They shot seven c0y~‘ otes during their first week and intend to continue the hunts. D Ofiicer_ ] Demoted; | Failed to Kill Dog | DETROIT, Mich., Feb. 1—Ser-! Alex Kennedy was without' pes because he failed to apply coup de grace” to a wounded mongrel dog. | The dog had taken a piece ont of | Kennedy's trousers. Kennedy shot it, but ignored a woman's plea to sas i o : o / v ; . ONTHERHINE, put the dog out of its misery with § S : 3 though Versailles another bullet. | +e g5 3 9 7 5 bs % The veteran police officer was de- | .3 B 2 i 4 ‘°'I'b":’ hl'lF ‘:h""' moted to a patrolman when Mrs.| - 4 / nels of the .l er- Sophia Lake, owner of the dog, com- | ; 1 o ik ; 24 land again_ piained before the police board. 7 3 ’ { ol el _ Today's News Today—Empire.