The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, September 8, 1938, Page 8

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ey o THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, THURSDAY, SEPT. 8, 1938. ! ; with the growing air travel and a G EARLY GUSTS Furced Dflwn un BB Extended uul‘ commitice of Phillips, Whittier and | Y ) H. R. VanderLeest was authorized |2 to follow up the suggestion to see | eSs . . | ve ) W what could be done. elve: making progress 1 g | Agriculture Problems | oo operating. Some ore has been mined | 266 years but even though they all running as high as $12 per ton and in advance what the report W. A. Rockie of the Soil Cnn-l thing tha servation Service of the Depari- measures Coffman, Chief Forester of the Na- |po . Woman of Husband's | Miles when ‘Duck Pond’ in Carrying Line to butcher who eath Found Untrue Landing Is Made Auk Bay Mr. Rockie said he was looking A s the ) D Li 2 Y % Eohisfie Sh A |onitg, now job, s discovered thas - p lin the 18th century it got many a KETCHIKAN, Alaska, Sept. 8 a UB MEETS ice aska, particularly the Matanuska Mrs. Ann Berg, who was taken Art Burtt, Carcross flier for Nor-| Possibility that telephone s from the Columbia here on August thern Airwa was in Juneau to-|will be extended out the C 24, after it was alleg he attempt- day laughing over one of those rare Highway as far as Auk Bay loomed mistakes in handling soil such as ed to take her own life, sailed yes-| morth country flying experiences |today, according to a report made have resulted in the States. terday on the same vessel to con- | that look so much better in retr at the weekly luncheon meeting of “The principal part of our func-| weigh accurs short weighed tinue her trip to Kodiak from Se-|spect than at the time of occur-|the Chamber of Commerce by A. B. tion,” he said, “is to undo what| i attle, aware that her husband 15 rence Phillips, Chairman of the Civic Im- man has been doing in the States| e l"' s a c es 1 |ardson Highway be rescinded, en § | dorsing the International Highway, still alive but the mystery of a tele- Burlt flew into Juneau last night|provements Committee which has|during the years which has laid) gram she received reporting his with Ge When taken into custody here by Rodoman and Chairman reported |Matanuska and said he expected | Simmons, of Northern had the matter under considera-millions of acres in waste.” | 5 : e death yet unsolved Airways, and two passengers, John | tion | He forecast a bright future in ut from émployment in Alaskan in- William Swanson Phillips that stries, secking adequate defense deputy marshals on the previous Today Burtt was walking Juneau the Forest Service is considering |to see the colony prosper during N trip of the Columbia, Mrs. Berg streets and remarking “it feels 2ood improvements at Auk Bay and that |the next few years “more than GG aGo | Sdbts Suberioe| kan forests, a trust fund for hll/.fl} 5 she was going to Kodiak in to walk on pavement.” ervice o cter s far ¥ g 2 - 30, Sey - Pioneers and home protection for > l Tesponse to telegram she had te-( And the story came out If service could be extended s far|many of us suspect.” . |judge Oscar F. Nelson granted a Alasian Fisheries. evening pleasant... i ; Y et A Is possible| Mr. Coffman gave a brief ac-|giyorce to Mrs. Stella Pulaskis after| kot el - ceived in Seattle telling of her hus-| Last weck Burtt was flying the the Forest Service might carry on fcount of his travels over the Ter-{gpo testified that her husband, Wil-| z igntea matehes at her| WILCOX RETURNIN band’s death. Deputy Marshal Hel-| big Northern Airways Fokker into the line from there to Auk Bay ritory during the last six weeks. 1 1 thr lan got in touch with Kodiak and|the Lake ncis country mear the| Region Forester B. F. Heintzle- ¥ No (Olinhige, Barfatks -;‘::\ m‘ ’ e 92 Y x and gave J found that the husband, Halger Jennings River at the south end of man said the Forest Service was| A letter to the Chamber from|wms fu the bath tub . Off his course over | considering small boat harbor im-|Major Gen. A. J. Bowley, Com-| Ak i U [ CHAIR AT U. OF A. { Berg, was very much alive and that, Lake Te he had left the L m('nu heavy fc .‘H“uv i S 10% | provements at Auk Bay and that manding General of the Ninti| SHEARER Wa.shlnz;m F‘M;} and _\\u;‘( .Jnn:\— (mvu‘ and ldnnu(mkn to look forif iy went through with the plans| corps Area, said there was a little! Maj. D. M pany at Port Wi fams, near :xl‘ il it ),[ o B f0lit probably would be necessary (o|hope of the Army moving Chilkoot | gineer, inspecte where he had been working, to go|“sit down” on a lake only seven hun- | yage a telephone connection. He Bar Berg left Seattle in answer to the|relief plane and gas. On the death message. A further check in|fourth day he started walking forty Seattle revealed that Berg had ar-|miles to Teslin. He pounded grav rived there. bars hour after hour and bun rge number of residents along the can't offer much hope for moving ute as it was not in the public the Barracks at this time.” utilities business, but that it might| Action on the city bond issue see its way clear to carry the line question of September 20 was de- ) :he (eleglmm \xl;u(lva M]l. )R». dc wn - night :\1I\I‘l\ .(“h]l et °'lon from Vanderbilt Hill if service ferred by the cutive Board had receiv fr carried 1“- Bipariet bd, He ineteen bear” and|yas established to that point. until next week while a committee signature of John Neilson, cannery|“all kinds of moose GioWilig Dogilation ettty superintendent, Hellan, said, but On t ixth day, pilots George when Neilson went through here re-| Simmons and Bud Cook located cently on a boat for the south he| Burtt, picked him up and flew ba said he never heard of such a tele-| to the lake near the stranded Fok-|p o1 Smajeonone Company with MRS HAZEL KlRNiSE ram and further stated no deaths c i up again, Burtt lool e the thought there might be suf- had occurred at the cannery. Uis at the tre-tenced shoreline of the| iU lribers atong b route HONORED WITH DINNER Chairman Phillips was instructed Rober n and Tom Dyer is making to conduct his survey further, tak- her study of the question. ing the matter up with the Juneau- -~ summer. | “duck pond” and said “nix. I won't e ; { < Mrs. Berg, officers concluded, had | bust a goad ship up. You can't fly |0 Warrant extension of ithe lines, to get your new | BLENDED 5 been the victim of a cruel hoax, one it out of here.” * |Mr. Phillips said that approximate-| gonoring Mrs. Hazel Kirmse, who | h which almost cost her life. Despon| Bud Cook got in, circléd for|ly 150 children come in to school i at present in the city, Mrs. John : \ permanent for | . dent on the vessel coming north|speed, pulled up, cleared the trees|'TOM out the road now, indicating|yangerbilt will entertain with a L over the sad news she had received|and a feat had been accomplished|® 8YOWing population along the ginner party this evening at her she had taken poison and attempt- | that would be headline news Out-|M8DWay. | reside BCD Haals) oveRbouTd. side, but s just a fine example of| IN connection with. the school | ments P8 | . . |time, it was pointed out. ]tn resume his work at the Univer- DAX T arcrnss Ier flne I"e a | M. S. Whittier suggested a bea- Bllt(?h(’,rs { | sity. felons, thieves, miscreants and other |con light for the city in connection | i [ During the summer, Mr. Wilcox criminals held their annual meet- | TULSA, Okla., Sept. 8—The last J. W. Holinsworth, Tul- AN ' PR fi Telegram Sent Kodiak Art Burlt Walks Out 40 Forest Service May Assist|ment of Agriculture and John D.| 25 PV "":';’"‘"('("d o ‘:i;'yfl’”;v_lf"f:3Kelchikan Convention Fav- 0 - ) i : i e S 3 The society, Britain’s only pri- gave his customers| orably Acts on Roads, ANTI-GRIME R o0 el e tional Park Service, were guests.|io, myuch weight. But, setting out| over agriculture problems in. Al- [y ) o0 by ; ey gave the acier with the aim of trying to avoid |y, much weight; the other { today adopted resolutions favoring country. Sie Dl a road connecting the Matanuska 0} - % SR Ha n atanuska | ARUNDEL, England, Sept. 8. - T ley with the Richardson High-|The fifty members of the 150-year- Today's News Today.—Empire. racks to Juneau. Gen. Bowley'gat Fairbanks and then left by plane|the University of Alaska, returned r snder Ruth dred feet long ; . ey 2 at Fairbanks and ti t ¥ v : g Sl‘:l(le‘]::b:;x:b;:::[:;(‘ time M1 [»nlnf‘( y.l,(,‘\‘ Burtt waited for a| M4 the Forest Service was not inlsaid a great deal of money had for Nome where he will inspect to Juneau on the Columbia and i g left Seatt! Iitise| e b ' |position to provide a line for the /peen spent at Chilkoot and "*I the Snake River Jetties project leaving in a few days for Fairbanks ce in the Marshall Apart- OPEN EVENINGS old Arundel Society for prosecuting has been serving as mining engineer ing recently. The secretary got up | E AcTIflN for the Flagstaff Mining Company and announced that no criminals at Kasaan Bay on Prince of Wales had been caught, no rewards paid— Island. He reported the company as usual. and the new mill It's been like that for the past know prospects for the future are bright.| will be they still like to hang to- B L R gether. Alien Employment | dormant. When it was organized scales that didn't ’ o real workout from the highwaymen and cattle rustlers who overran the ke haif | The American Legion Convention asking that tolls on the Rich- calling for a law to prevent aliens dust for Alaska, fire protection of Alas- 1o make your Simply keep yours a short Johnnie Walker before dinner and a long, tall Johnnie Walker after dinner. beating when she| TO IN s TR U CTOR’S | TO NOME —_— ok H. G. Wilcox, mining instructor | with the extension department of OFF Shearer, Army flood control | 5 i NOW 11’S SENSIBLE T is the time to visit The ROYAL ] OHNNI BEA?JTY SALON %4 LKE R ovCH WHISKY FALL! RED LABEL, 8 YEARS OLD; BLACK LABEL, 12 YEARS OLD Mrs. Berg told officers she wmm} the North's pilots '“h_flml ml‘n-r m\Yol n\\r‘:' the high- Mrs. Kirmse arrived in Juneau 115-2nd Street Your fall Earotatin dbtinitely 86.8 PROOF I g0 on to Kodiak, the Berg home,| Seven hundred feet is smai|Way, the Chamber decided to make by plane Tuesday evening, and is Telephone 723 incomplete without a new fail ok 2 ; ! 182 4 . | 1 further effort to see if better safe- spending b AT ey = Ble. £ E Start with, stick BORN 1820 .. and that she expected her husband|enough a spot to land in. It is 8 # spending a few days in this city coiffure to complement it. Don't i S e Tikeais Vidi e ok north later. She went Outside four|smaller when it has to be big enough |1¥ Provisions could not be made at on business before returning to her ANN EARLY-BARR eyl gn ol aan. . lea bl 7 A e [ months ago on a vacation trip. for a plane as big as a Fokker to|the temporary Salmon Creek bridge. home and business in Skagway. e B i Bz style parade! with a Nestle i iy e | take off from el Ll EA AT G Owner-Operator. AL CANADA DRY GINGER ALE INC., NEW YORK, N. Y.; SOLE DISTRIBUTOR | without adequate quard rail is y The Empire classifieds for | e ———— L RuBERT AYNE Isjlin’cdmlincd Elephant 2“""1“”" s et TAKEN BY DEATH | IN VANCOUVER Prominent Fishing Industry Official Passes After Long Illness Robert W. Payne, 43, production manager of the New England Fish Company at Vancouver, B. C., and widely known to Alaskans through his many visits north, died this morning in Vancouver, following a lingering illness. Word of his passing was received here by H. L. Faulkner, a close friend. When Mr. Faulkner was in Vancouver recently, Mr. Payne was seriously ill. He had suffered for some years from Bright's disease. The fisheries official was well- known in Juneau and throughout the Territory. He had often come north in connection with the busi- ness of his company and had made a wide circle of friends. | Mr. Payne is survived by a wife and two sons in Vancouver. — . BASEBALL BANQUET | Joha - M Reinon FOR THIS EVENING| ... shows streamlined elephant l / The banquet and entertalnment iz:’ub;;lifsgl;::t;e:' :;gg:n?l‘;ntehde | for the members of the (Jflsun«-au‘ trumpeting elephx;m was pmmt: Channel Baseball League, given an-| oq to National Chairman John nually by the Juneau Volunteer Fire| p, M. Hamilton at the midsum- Department, takes place at 7 o'clock | mer get-together of the G. O. P. i) tonight in Percy’s Cafe. Awards| national platform committee in for the season’s play will also be| Chicago. When he noted the ele- made. phant bore the legend, “Let’s G. | - - ———— O. Places”, Hamilton sald: ‘“That €1.30 Fountain Syringe— = Today's News Today.—Empire. is exactly what we propose to do.” i . | One piece bag, extra | ; rapid flow tube, full quart capacity . . . . 2 for $i.51 $1500in CASH PREMIUMS iy $2.00 Combination Foun- To Exhibitors of tain Syringe. Two quart capacity . . . . 2 for $2.01 ALASKAN PRODUCTS Southeastern Alaska’s 17th Annual AIR Juneau Fair Building September 15, 16,17 Premium Books may be obtained from || . "' R.B. MARTIN, Juneau, Alaska 0 E c E NT : Rl N Gs DON'T FORGET! The Cold Season Is Right at Hand Now! RUBBER ITEMS Customers will be permitied to select a Water Bottle and a Fountain Syringe as a purchase. Pound air tight cans. jent antacic: mlun effici } Druggist Brand Epsom Salt Highest quality recrystallized U. S. P. Salt. Full Bl CORR T | BIG DAYS THURSDAY —FRIDAY— SATURDAY " This opportunity to buy at these prices xtends over a four-day period only. 1 After that the regular prices will prevail as usual. Now is an opportunity to make attractive savings and to stock up your med "z ¢ .- inet at these four-day bargain prices. ’ AT THIS SALE YOU GET b TWO FOR THE PRICE OF i ONE—PLUS 1¢ o Be prepared for Winter and all its rigors with a FULL ' MEDICINE and FIRST AID CHEST. Prices are lower ’ MILK OF o than ever before DURING THIS SALE on HOME Magr- \ REMEDIES and NECESSITIES. H UsP, 4 ighest EXTRA VALUES STATIONERY [ty Neba—Woven Linen Fin- lonm penslar Milk of . | ish—24 sheets and en- a g o velopes in box . . 2 for 76 ol Penslar Pound Paper " 2 for 40¢ 2 for 51 | T T O e S T Envelopes Nelson’s Magnesia Ponslar " ’2 for .21 i Double Stren, b, Lafayette Stationery — Mongn' ensth ‘ For relief of digestive distress. 2 for B1¢ linen or vellum finish, 60 sheets and envelopes jnbox...... 2 for .9 Penslar Aspirin Syrup Hypophosphites Comp. m;l;:!l’.&t::hg"&? '“ N. F. V1. General tonic for rundown conditions. Boxes of 12 tablets 2 for 11¢ . < dl HOME THE EXTRA PACKAGE 4

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