Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
JUNEAU PIONEER, HARRY E. BROWN DIES YESTERDAY WIFE'S “LOVER” moue. ascniaiy ot Early Day R(‘sinlent of At-| lin and This City Suc- 000 cumbs ,Long Illness | b in the morning and she, Mrs, i Zinck, had taken care of Mrs 5, Brown, 65 Continued trom fage One) ; ekt e e _ ‘Smith's small daughter during the years a resident of Junes v pioneer of Atlin, B. C I asked her why and she wouldn’t i : heart attac ast night |say any more.” Describes Tragedy Brown reside at Auk Cause for Divorce Describing yesterday's tragedy. lowing several months ¢ ng| The 1 id he made some Mrs. Smith said that the reason fliness e found out, he de. Colling came,to her home dated He passed quic hortly after|mo man on the Ton. back to a jar of cookies. On the retiring for the night. His C es" W wse of the request September trip north, she said, | nith Bond Fixed at $10,- had_ the adjoining stateroom to THE was in port. It was signed “Red | On further questioning, Mrs. admitted she had north in September and had re ashore with him until when.she returned to the ship. Mrs. Christine Zinck of Juneau, who Mrs. Smith on that trip, had testi- After Coroner’s Jury in Verdict ring drunk with Colling about 5 o'clock Colling and she had talked about ice R i his wife had married in Atlir s with \greement regarding the Jar and she mentioned how time ich the he explained. The she “3‘.‘1‘1. like t-ochiil"m it l;ur) A Loco €miths have a 15-month-old daugh- |salad dressing Jar. Golling: tald her Besides his widow, Brown & 1o to take it along with her, she ex- vived by an only sor p i . plained, but she forgot to do so. Brown, of Juneau, and four 1 asserted, he wanted gpo caiq Colling brought the jar up in Nova Scotia and on ward Island the man,” d himself in his home ut. On question- more about 1 yesterday after the arriva to find gone Smith on the last trip of the Tonga: fied that Mrs. Smith came @ m:lr(l{ of the Tongass on this trip and DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, THURSDAY, OCT. 13, 1938 Lumber. Or rather, mahogany. We | |uled flights, and drop it into a | NEEDED THINGS lagoon. But our contract provides that no consignment may be dropped from a height of more E than 100 feet. If you drop mahog- lany higher than that it impairs the grain. Our pilots swoop low over the waters of the lagoon and let ‘er fall. We move thousands of Broker Unfolds Just What teet daily. m this trade you charge Service Is Doing in Coun- | the pound, instead of by fee. try, Including Alaska BE TAUGHT IN " FLORIDA UNIV. Purpose [s to Combat Pres- ent Wave of Anti-Am- erican Trends 08GO W,COR T ) PO R e )¢ Perense AND oBT N7 TUN HIM-CAME. Back )( SeR 5 LAKELAND, Florida, Oct, 13 Dr. Ludd M. Spivey, President of the Florida Southern College, an- nounced today that a Chair of |Democracy will be established in |the institution. This is for the Ipurpose of combatting anti-Amer- ican trends. SEERE P My informant, being pressed, told By GEORGE TUCKER us many things about airplanes NEW YORK, Oct, 12—We were Which, considered not the best for sitting in the dimly lit confines of ‘DS modern, highly mechanized our favorite tavern, mooning over |COUNtry, were still first-rate for a spot of oolong, when this man forelen sectors came in. His name is Charles H.| When the curtain fell on the u Babb. He is one of the world's most | fulness of those big tri-moto successful airplane brokers. isnes, for instance, iMfte Sere “What in the world are you do- of them in this country. Now ing in New York?” I asked him, | there oniy eight. The others? which was a silly question in the|Thevre sl great ool s irst place, as it s W s at | Say: hey're cargoing supplies UESTION: What are the first place as it Is el kaiown that | ., edicines over the impassable methods of going down un- o " " Lo as one in California, Mountain barriers of Alaska, Cen- | . " Sit-Down Strike | der passes? and cummuting to Manhattan is |8l and South America. In those Answer: There are five. They just a casual chore with him. countries the automobile isn't much | are outrinning the defensive m getting ready to go home,” £00d. But the plane, on skis, pon- AMARILLO, Tex. Oct. 13—1f o S0inoaway from the de- ne replied, easing himself into a | oons. wheels, adopts i to any ber out of the jungle. That's right.| | zation. fly it out of the jungle on sched-| He thinks he has a fine organi- So do I. | It certainly was interesting talk- 4 ing to a man who does things like this. B ‘Snow Sneaks Down, “Cap” Can’t Tell Son the Whyfor Yesterday, keen observers were able to peer through the low hang- ing blanket of clouds and see trace: of the awful truth on surrounding mountains, but today Juneau awoke 1id realized suddenly that winter her its nearness accentuated y new fallen snow on the peaks. ymy Davis, 2, son of Capt. V. Davis, beat his father to the before-breckfast window and look- i out 2t the whitened mountains. i Davis shouted, Who did that, quick-on-the-trigger answer fi hat 1 to figure instead of the certain to climb fuel bills, - - dog town that covered apt. I S om Folta, he said, T kind of |Aqod "¢ et hink the sit-down strike is a g/ "ok Stopping to catch; chair. ‘T take an early morning|(erTain and is often a godsehd {0 several square miles of range land 7 pid f | modern Snvention b e U1t ine back toward the passer; plane for Glendale. Want to come Vleaguered miners, hemmed in bY|recently was discovered by WPA AU et s| Emiih denlsd be led to ki | “T took the cookies to the pantry.” Bousman of Waurlka, Okla.. old SOMMI8 B30 T s | mountainous barriers, facing star- roden poisoning crews in Weid ool o Gt Sl ted 1o Kill | e continued, “and took one to time Texas cowboy and deputy CPange of pace. ke, T wanben 0. 6 albig, byt | TBROR) county. CORGE i Atlin 4 e i AR e Al the steward €at. 1 asked Mr. Colling if he sheriff: (Copyright, 1933) I couldn't, and so we sat and talked| And providing planes for these 6 il ] = = : B e 0t ai all I the SR Gaited one and he said no he| “The first sit-down that T can _ . e e this man and vour cor | ssignments is Babb's business. He's| Cheese puffs make a hit with m‘: 150 had the post office ‘u’ Di chs 1 preferred to smoke. So I was eat- remember was at the old cow town 1'(*5])011de;1.! and from this talk I|® Plane broker. He buys and sells. soups of any kind. Mix one-half a ‘C:“!f(‘m“ s t _ Caught ing my cookie standing by the of Tascosa on the Canadian Rive SEEK OWNER OF BOAT ciineq many fascinating ti‘ix‘g&‘}le“geLs a great kick out of ji.|cup of pimiento cheese, one egg, a In 1916, Brown a the door, my radio and Mr. Colling was sitting when the cowboys sat around strik- about airplanes and the part they He's .Lhe man who bought all of speck of salt and a little minced . v lap in the chair smoking when Jack ing for higher pay. ying in commerce in re- Byrd's antarctie equipment. onions, parsley and a few grains moved to Ska year he was with ship Company before comi Juneau in November of 1917 ol ng to Juneau, he wi First National Bank for six following which, he became - SUNK AT FUNTER BAY e » mote sectors of the world. Babb's New York office is head- ! of celery salt. Spread on buttered ed by Ed Lund, who went around | toast fingers or crackers and bake delicious ein; he said. | (she referred to her husband as Z Mrs. Jack) opened the door. He just ord has 2w " nd Colling came |burst in shoooting.” She said Col- The boat of Ge uted to him to stop or her husband and that her husband abouts is being sought by officials ferry coffee off the high slopes of illed, but when he had shouted, “I've caught you this following report from John Westby Southern Mexico to more accessible ear r“ gm of Juneau. points. The airplane has become the trade in outposts the world with Howard Hughes on 'until well puffed and a Some of his planes, for instance, |his recent record-shattering trip. !brown color. " he woul Last April he took leave ciated with the Bureau of Public ¢ o grabbed me around |time, or something like that and Roads and the Alaska Road Com- (he iegs I shot. He then pushed me started shooting.” vy to Westby's report of a boon to k over @ table and I shot again| She denied she had been sitting Deputy Marshal Walter Hellan, like that. Formerly the coffee bags, ENEFIT nce because of his illness. but .‘I): ; H,\](\‘\ '\_l;x “.}(” 4 1\,,1:::;::(: on Colling's lap as her husband CURRAN, Mich.,, Dct. 13.—Feed- r')[:dbn]d\ have gone to the 1,“)?1 two at a time, were lu:s§d over a He was a ¢ er member of ‘the UP on the floor Ub. PUEES, johianged ookie g Michigan’s big deer herd in Unity Conference in Ketchikan with burro’s back and dispatched on a Atlinto Lodge of the Masonic order % he was dead, called the ambul- | I “was just eating my cookie” ./ ooion"ic hecoming a very dear | Fred Patrick as Patrick and John journey that required six or seven Pentilla were supposed to go there days to get it out of the rough. on their respective boats. The Mar-| “But that isn't anything really,” shal's office is contacting Ketchi- | Babb explained. “Down in Yuca- kan in an effort to locate him ltan we have planes carrying lum- at Atlin and was prominent in Ma- ance and then the authorities.” she reiterated. sonic work in Juneau. He was for! Dr. Willlam P. Blanton, who ex-| Eric O. Swordmaker, purser on many years with the Eastern Star amined Colling, said the bullet the Tongass, testified that on the and was a Past Patron and Secre- Went through the top of his heart trip of the Tongass when Mrs tary of that order. on a downward course as if fired Smith was aboard, he had seen her Masonic services will be held Sun- from above. coming out of Colling’s room at day and interment will be in the Smith said he had no shell in the 11 o'clock at night. Masonic Plot in Evergreen Ceme- barrel of the .22 caliber automatic | hey acted as if they had known tery. Dean C. E. Rice will deliver Pistol when he entered the room each other for a long time, and I the eulog) where the couple were but that supposed they had,” he o 2 In the course of his many years when Colling charged him, he thought that was kind of unusual problem to northeastern Michigan farmers, particularly land owners in northeastern Alcona County where the deer population is the greatest of any place in the State.! Deer damage is becoming so gre in some sections that Alcona County farmers declare it is time . the State considered either leasing or purchasing good farms where deer are damaging and even de- DANCE : Sponsored by the Douglas Volunteer Fire in Juneau and in Atlin, Harry pumped a shell from the loaded but I didn't say anything about it.” D o i KNt o FeRAUHY Whn inghsine " info (€he LAtTe] Ha had| Ateatir he:knew anytiing jof SCOYUIE FHOPS i Telephone (’I)urtment will sincerely sorrow in this pio- rented the pistol from Adolph Colling in Seattle, the purser said 723 Purpose—To Buy Equipment Saturday October 15 Douglas Nat Music by Wes Barrett's Royal Alaskans ADMISSION $1.00 -oe neer’s passing Lepisto the day before. he thought he had been married . . > 3 . : but he didn’t think that he lived Gues 12 flfl[] I Bs Woman's Denial b s Drosent bime, 3 with his wife at WIFE GnNFEssEs Mrs. Smith, a woman of 30, wear- “byt it is just from what I've heard g ing horned rimmed glasses, a large him say around,” the purser said, Tu Eet Hls De?r 5 “RED BAT" NUTE her husband had cause to shoot Mrs Smith said, when questioned Colling. On being questioned, she fyrther, that she “just couldn’t put B denied any intimate relations with Al sl g s GLAMOUR AT YOUR FINGERTIPS Manicures that red hat and visibly shaken, denied T qon’t krow much about him.” coax your nails R ety into health and beauty — then the beautiful La Cross polish in new shades —— at Colling and said she knew him only e told her husband she was get- eight years Kenneth S. Smith of SENT TU VIBTIM as a friend. At one time she said ting a divorce and be had begged Oakland hunted without success for she hardly knew his name. her to wait until October 15. a deer. Finally he shot one in “Then you don't think your nus- | The coroner’s jury was made up Mendocino County. Smith estimates band had any cause to shoot tn:s of Guy McNaughton, Stanley Nor- he traveled more than 12,000 miles man?” Prosecutor Folta asked wicka, Lloyd V. Winter, John Mc- and that the ninety-pound animal Th ROY AL Beauty Salon Endearing Letter Written ANN EARLY BARR: Owner-Operator by Juneau Matron to Tongass Steward (Continued trom Page One) “No, he had none yesterday,” < Closkey, James Monagle and T. A. cost him $14 a pound. - -ee — Today’s News Todav.—Empire. replied. | At this point the prosecutor in- e o e addressed on (e JDAHO GIRL IS BRIDE | OF T. REDLINGSHAFER ' Smith if she had written it. After a silent moment or two, on your shoulder but Tom I need Mrs. Smith replied: “Yes, I wrote| of interest to his many friends you so imuch as I've gone thru so ihat letter.” She then explained she j, this city comes the news of the much since T've seen you, and the hired Vernon O. Rollins, a cab marriage of Tom Redlingshafer, son old fight I was going to muster up driver, to take it to Colling at the of Mr and Mrs. H. L. Redlingsha- has just about been swallowed up Tongass yesterday morning, and fer, I(;x-nxex'lv of Juneau, to Miss n tears. I guess I'm a coward or Thomas Harris, night utility man praneis Eldf‘idgu daughter of Mr. vellow or whatever you want to on the Tongass, said he received it Ira Eldridge, of Cary, call it; anyhow if I didn't have Lou- from the cab driver at 4:45 yester- | Idaho. e & you to look forward to . .. day morning and delivered it to The marriage took place at the I‘m afraid there just wouldn’t be 2 Cojling at 5:30 when he went to home of Mr. Redlingshafer’s parents Te” but T've hung on and that’s gwaken the latter. in Washington, D. C., September why T want to see you as soon as That Letter 12 I can as I feel I'll go stark mad if | e letter, which appears else-| Both Mr. Redlingshafer, who is al 1 can't .rmd someone who doesn’t ddressed | former Juneau High School boy, and | tell me I'm everything from the lo and ex- his bride attended the University | :-:'m:‘:;‘flletd;’:;“kn%l lf“‘”*‘m"“ ‘ pressed a desire to see him soon of Idaho, at Moscow. | el be’;‘;‘;cm:"snfi't and outlining the movements of her | The young couple is at pres By ethdows at‘ the old TonuaEc 7 husband, pointing out the latter making their home in Baltimore, paivd ve would be gone while the Tongass Md imagining just what you are doing e i Love, ! RED BAT — e — { Dr. STEVES says: “Comfortable feet are the key to happiness.” Room 301, Goldstein Bldg. adv. RO o A Morgan. “Tomorrow'’s Styles Today” and LOOKING FORWARD to gay times, now till the Holidays? then . 1% LOOK INTO our selection of smart where in today's Empire, Colling as “Dearest Tom, Health News! things to wear for them. We want you to see the grand array of ALASKANA, by Marle Drake, 50c. <A SR g 2 HEAR afternoon, street en- ‘ i sembles, accessories, D A N c l N G ‘ Stanford KlngSIey hats and evening | CLAUNCH wear that we have . to show. WE KNOW YOU'LL NOT WANT TO MISS THEM! Internationally Known Food Scientist, Psychologist and Health Educator Founder of the Famous Claunch “ENERGY DIET” System St FOUR FREE Lectures THESE TALKS MAY SAVE YOUR LIFE | STOP DYING BEFORE YOUR TIME! Refuse to be a victim of Heart Disease, Rheumatism, High Blood Pressure, Constipation, Stomach Trouble, In- fluenza, Pneumonia or any other Ailment. COME EVERY NIGHT! LEARN HOW TO LIVE IN HEALTH! EVERY NIGHT ALL NIGHT | to the music of RUTH WOOD | At the Piano « « » while you eat and drink your fill! DANCING AND ENTERTAINMENT We Invite You— to Our Store to shop with us be- fore you buy. D MASONIC TEMPLE BALLROOM suf)‘;:cgin:” Fourth and Seward Sts. R October 17, 18,19,20 8:00 P. M. Admi “Juneau’s Own Store” GLAS INN | ion Charge—Welcome to All l