Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
MEET THE HUSBAND:— Lady Astor Gefs Viscount Pian This is the fourth of a s of pen and camera Portraiis little known buskands of wel Krown women, By WILLIAM GAIFIN Write AP Feature Service LONDON gy m fabulo patriarch « merely “1 sometime ance at the not correct true that inla-born Nancy surpassed her handsome in the public eye since ceeded him in » House of ( mons 19 yes go. But she there with his help and at hi ding. A(C record pepi Astor | she m- 20t bid- Pattern Reversed The custgmary domestic patiern— wife remaining in backgrotind, pro- viding ipspiration for husband puccess—is ‘exactly reversed in thelr case This 10 ejther abont by the tri- in in their lives was not but was brought umph of the vil the family title The Hon. Waldorf Asto; was launched on a pro litical career when hi in 1919, leaving him viscount. He had an int main plain Waldo: cepting a title would kicked upstairs froin Commons to the de ous House of Lord sacrilege in the eye gasted compa attributed this erent his American birth) dodge the title. Convinced, finaily of his battle, he start by talking into having his car MNP po- | father died| the title of desire to re-| Astor AC- mean being | hé “House of | d-end, i u- ! ), commiiting f ‘his' flabber- | (whe probabl, ‘tion” to | tried tc riots Tutility world a Nanc; gave (he Leautitul oy nn. A Teetotaler, Too She became e fir nwmbm of the House of C¢ r astule guidance. made herself one oi the most inent women of her age Ever in the background of her brilliant speeches, her election vic- | tories, her widespread philanthro- pies, have been the hrains and money of the spaic ntle- man of slightly more ti.i. medium height, who has a shy smile, a mili tary moustache and close-croppe hair, now graying Although his wife's carees first consideration, he has time for other things woman n. prom- is his | found | Racehorses His Pride He has taken an active the House of Lords where his ord is punctuated by for liguor restrictions to which teetotaler N him), health reform, cicauc and better milk supply He fought for equal franchise for women, and for the right of hcredi- tary peeresses to sit in the upper house. role He has found time, minor cabinet posts. But—next to| his wife’s triumphs—the most sat- isfying compensatio: r his lost political career” Uie success he has achieved as a 1acchorse owner The “luckiest ‘man on the turf,” as he is known, has added able fortune his ancestors a You don't have to be a b know ft is a remarkable achieve- ment to consistently make big money out of racing especially when, Tike AStor, you never But even in this activity the horsey lord has not been without frustration. He has won every ma- Jjor English race except the most coveted—the derby. too, to hold | to American editors nearly devel- oped apoplexy in print when Wal- dorf, with his father and brother John Jacob, turned British in 1899. The presses trembled with vitu- perative adjectives when she - womah—dared io slanda ior Com- mons, More Tons of Ink And in' recent months, tons of ink have been spilled over the so- called “Cliveden Set"—a pro-fas- cist band, ‘according to the gossips, influencing British p Walidort and Nancy' pooh-pooh the talk which started after the Prime Min- ister attended week-énd parties at Cliveden, their stately cotintry home on the Thames. Whatever the effeci of their end tete-a-tetes, been able to eke: fluence through ! Times and its influential complement, the Sunday Observer Waldorf controls| the Observer, brothér John Jacob| the Times. A husband with a a handy asset for a Of even greater as might say, Is a hosh play nursemaid (o five while mama ¢ from house to house” as Nancy puts it “Owing to the fact (hat my wife is an M.P.", Lord Astor once said, “I've spent more time in iy nurs- ery than I otherwise would have week- new spaper lady politician, ance, same. 1d who will our réod of | the the Spetlight; ned I thai Way LADY ASTOR’'S WALDORF troduced as “the husband of Lady Astor.” “1 work qite of her be such he, satisfied with an admirer “that I would that.” Next article: Joseph Losey, Elizabetii. Hawes' husband. R SEWARD HIGHWAY LAND USE PLAN IS 10 BE OUIlINED‘ Forest Service Sends For- ward to Westward fo Make Study pmeit adjoining | rd Highway will be out- in a land use plan to be pre- Charles H. Forward, i ative Assistant Forest Service, who is leaving on the Aleutian for the Westward to- | night The highw area under consid- eration extends from Seward to| Hope on Cook Inlet. Forward will o form a land use plan for areas adjoining Kenai Lake. - BIRCH FORESTS AT MATANUSKA T0 BE STUDIED Junior Forester fo Probe| Commercial Useful- ness of Big Stands Commercial possibilities of the birch forests in the Matanuska and Susitna valleys will be studied for the next two months by Junior For- ester Roger R. Robinson of the U. S. Forest Service who is leaving for the Westwarc { on the Aleu- tian, Robinson will work in cooperation with Dr. W. A. Rockie of the Soil Conservation Service and Dr. H. A. Bauer of the Alaska Planning Coun- cil. There is a possibility, Forest Service men here say, that the birch wood might play an important part in the economic development of the district. Deve Sew of pared by R BRITISH SHIPS RUSHING HOME RIGA, Aug. 25.—All British ships now in port in Latvia received or- ders l'ate today to get back to Great Britain as rapidly as pos- sible, One steamer had only half finished unloading when she sud- denly left. - - - FORMER JUNEAU HIGH TEACHER ON ALEUTIAN former Ju- angd of LEverett R. Erickson, neau High School instructer now professor at the Univel dene.” But he did not mind. “1 got, to know my children T as a recompense,” he ex; d i Astor children are now all grovm.) | Nor does he mind when he is iu Alaskg, is visiting Juneau f today while the steamer Aleutian is In port. Erickson has spent the aveling in the States. summer Ad- | in the U. 8.| THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, TUESDAY, AUGUST 29, SLATTERY REPORT IS [Points fo BAarémof Island, Kenai, Matanuska for Development sland, the Keni insula and ¢he ‘Matanuska-5S Valley area are regions In Alaska under special consideration for set- tlement and development by Euro- pean refugees, it is disclosed in copies received here of “The Prob- lem of Alaskan Development,” Un- 8 ary Harry Slattery’s report to Secretary of the Interior Harold Ickes. The 94-page report includes a careful summary of Alaska’s knowh rand probable resources and states i flatly that settlement in the Terri- {tory cannot be successful on an agricultural basis, The expected advantages to derived from the development natural resources are | scribed in detail, and there is out- !lined the organization of privately | financed corpofations which, in partnership with the government, | would undertake to utilize the dor- Boranof be of de- | mant wealth of the Territory. Precedent; Noted In support of a partnership of government and capital in such a venture the report points to the operations of the London, Plymouth and Duteh East India Company, the special charters granted by Con- gress for the deyelopment of the ‘West and the “pubitc purpose cof- poramon s “Legislation modeled in part on the China Trade Act of 1922 might provide for the organization of Alaska development corporations, privately financed, but bouhd by the terms of their charters of in- | corporation to conform to such con- ditions as Congress might prescribe with reference to the type of in- dustry to be developed in Alaska and the 'type of settler to be ad- mitted,” the" report states. | The charters, 1t is also suggested, might likewise . contain limitations upon the amount of income return- ‘ablv to stockholders and bondhold- |ers, “so as to insure that the cor- ! poration will sefve its original pur- | pose of aiding in the development oi Alaska and not become, as so muny industrial corporations in Al- aska have become, merely a means ul dramm" its wea]m to the pockets of absentee owners." Non-Competitive Resources “Fortunately,” " the report ' sets forth, “the resources of Alaska are |very different from those of the United States and these resources can be developed along lines that 1wa] not compete with products of ;the United States. On the contrary, the products of Alaska are, in large part, products which we now im- | port from Asia and Europe, and their | development will help to make the United ‘States economically inde- pendent in the event of war.” | This condition is applied particu- |larly to tin,” of which the United States imported in'"1937 approxi- | mately 999 percent of its con- sumption; newsprint, 773 percent | imported; herring, 94.4 percent im- ported; canned crab meat, 94.4 per- cent imported, and Vvdrious types of fur, leather, paper antl wood pro- | ducts. Newsprint Emphasized As to newsprint,’ of Which the United States is' the world’s great- est user, its consumption for 1930 totaling 3,700,000 tons, the report states that the amount of timber |available for cutting on a sustained- |yield basis éach year in Sofith- east Alaska is enough to supply one-fourth of the nation's needs. [ “In the Alaska of the fuhu-e ! there is room for American techni- clans, displaced by the contracdnn of our foreign trade and me slow- | ing down of our’ populanon growth for boat bulilders ‘and 'fishermen from the shores of the Mediterra- fiean; for trained toy makers and machinists, skillei leather workers and cabinet makers from Central Europe and workers in wood from North Europe who can transplant to Alaska the industries of their native rands "the report concludes SHARE MAH(H 15 RISING Up NEW YORK, Aug. 29, SLOcks opéned fractions:to ‘more thAn a point higher today and closed at. about the same level. The market bulged upward in midday but eased off fractionally toward the close. Trading was dull Lhroughout The war crises 'was' the ru]i.ng, factor in the market. ‘Hope ° that | Chancéllor Hitler would neeem pro- pasals for negotiation induced trad-| ers to take a more nptlmm{c attb tude. Belief in the improved prospects for peace was demonstratéd by an improvement in the bond list and a slump in grain prices. Stocks rose to confirm to commodities ‘and, bonds on the hope that’ war would be ave.ted in Europe. Curb stocks were strong today in, moderate trading. The recovery wis based entirely ‘on what were con- sidered prospects for peace in L\xr- ope. The list opened higher and closed at about the opening level. 1 vantage of the situation would in- || Webster, HoponJapan Now,IsUrged By Newspaper WASHINGTON, Aug. 29.. ashington Times-Herald, puhli-hvt ed by Mrs. Eleanor Cissy Patterson urgéed the United States Govern- | ment to take advantage of the pres ent erfses and hop on Japan. The paper asked: “Why don't we block- ade Japan?” | It added that failure to take ad- | - The | dicate a weakness of which the | United States is always accused by | dictatorshi] s MILITARY MANEUVER BY NALIS, German Troops Swarm Info Slovakia Ready for Attack on Poland BRATISLAVIA, Aug. 29.—German troops bégait marching into Slovakia yesterday in another military man- euver to facilitate an attack on Po- land’s southern frontier. Announce- ment that the German troops were moving into Slovakia in large num- bers was made to the Slovak people by Premier Tieso. The Premier said that the movement was neces- sary to defend the independence of the Slovak state Nazi military forces had moved into Slovakia a week ago to take up their assigned positions along the northern Slovak frontier facing Poland. The massing of equipment and German soldiers along the frontier of Poland would enable Germany to strike swiftly at the strategic Polish city of Krakow, directly south of Warsaw. In his proclamation Premier Tieso also asked the Slovak people to give | every assistance to the German troops. He declared that the Nazi soldiers were the friends tof the Slo- vaks and entered the country only | to assure the state that its inde- pendence would not be violated. Earlier, the way was paved for the official announcement. Spokesmen had already addressed huge crowds in Bratislavia. Government offic- ials promised that Slovak soldiers were ready. to fight side by side with the Germans. - e NATIVE HELD AS ASSAILANT OF WHITE WOMAN John Collins Under Arrest at Craig - Identified from 14 Suspedts “Positively” identified by Mrs Lillian “ Ewen of Klawock as the man who brutally beat her on Aug- ust 20, John Collins has been placed under arrest by Deputy U. S. Mar- shal Arthur Bogue of Craig, accord- ing to word received by the Mar- shal's office here. Bogue said he expected a con- fession momentarily from Collins, a Klawock Native. Mrs. Ewen, wife of Marion Ewen, night watchman at the Peratovich cannery, was assaulted at 2:30 o'- clock in the morning at her home across the bay from Klawock. Following a quiet investigation, Deputy Bogue rounded up 14 sus- pects last Saturday. From this line- up Mrs. Ewen identified Collins. The Na!.ive had an argument with Mr. Ewen' the day before the at- tack and was heard to say he would “get even,” MANY DISEMBARK FROM ALEUTIAN, ARRIVING JODAY Over two score passéngers disem- barked from the steamer Aleutian on a crowded Alaska Dock and Stor- age 00 wharf this afternoon, E;o_m Juneau, passengers wers Mrs. R Brown, Marilyn Burke, Patricia Burke, Mrs. W. Burke, Ray Cavanaugh, Paul Coke, Bishop J. R. Crimont, David DeLong, Mrs. S. C. DeLong, Maydelle George, Mrs. Wallis George. Donnld Hagerty, Jr., Mrs. Don mm‘ty. Sharon Hagerty, Bunnie Hansen, Leonard Harju, Jean Hayes, J. A, Higgins, Mrs. J. A. Higgins, Judith Jensen, Walter W. Johnson, Lanore Kaufmann. Mildred Kendler, Mrs. Grant Lo~ gan, Mrs. J. J, Meherin, Betty Nordling, Mrs. H. G. Nordling, Helen Pirfott, Wanda Peterkin, Ed G. Ross, Mrs. Ed G. Ross, Virginia Ross! Mrs. George Schmidt, Sam Sidell, Clyde Smith, Iva Tilden, Helen Don Williams, Edward Cogper, M. J. Pugent, Donald Vutin, From Ketchikan—F. W. Allaback, Donald Armour, H. R. Casebeer, “Edithi Casebeer, Alice Case- beer Mrs. Helen Weaver, Pastor H, L. Wood, Hal ‘Sayers. WESTWARD FINAL PACK 3,176,268 Tofal for Season About Three-fourths that for Last Year The salmon pack Alaska for 1939 was tourth below that ing to the total and final p: port announced today by t reau of Fisheries. This year the pack was cases; year it wa. cases Bristol Bay accounted for mosi of the loss, though the season wa very poo. Gains o Chignik, Kodiak. The total report, by districts ecies, w as follows Chignik 2 kings, 140 cohoe 12,197 chums, 150,210 total year, in Wes almost one of accord he 3,176,2 L 1939 were reported by Resurrection Bay and 131,651 pix reds, 6,070 53,84 last Peninsula Hold: Own Peninsula (South Side) ags, 149,238 reds, 9,807 co 292,200 pinks, 120,090 ci 515,793 total, 574,006 las Alaska Peninsula (North 443 kings, 56,066 red: 006 chums, 62516 total year Ccok Inlet reds, 13,982 21,565 chums, last year Prince Wiiliam £ | 10,781 red 3,059 cohor pinks, 27180 chums, 168,693 508,870 year S ka e yeay side) one pink, 6,- 79,923 last 1815 ,mu 15,573 cohoe 248 kings, 15517 24 total, 288 246 king 127,427 total last Summer Copper River reds, 54,276 total Resurrection Bay pinks, 1,893 total Kodiak-—-544 king 1,647 cohol 602,112 chums, 780,711 (otal year. Bristol 184 reds, 1,133,952 Totals reds, 31,636 cohoes 322,232 chums, 3,176,268 026,847 last yi SUBVERSIVE ACTS ARE BRANDED BY POLES AS "LIES” 1182 Jas 118,171 pinks, 640,341 “red 4 kings, 1,043~ coho, 86,085 chums, 1,811,985 last year kings, 1,744,296 1,049,721 pink total, 4,- Bay one total, 28,383 |Germans Are Arrested for Bombing-Soldiers Oc- cupying Border WARSAW, Aug. 29.~The Poic blamed Germans today for the new series of subversive acts while th branded Hitler's de- of a t persons Uvrm:‘.n.» were ‘IL“IH‘ rorism in which seven were reported killed by an explo- sion at a railroad station in south- ern Poland, it is said. Two 3 mans were arrested at the the bomb was found on the road track before it exploded. Sea traffic out of Gdynia, Po- land's only seaport, was imperiled and communicatio) with other ports were cul off by German blockade tonight. Railways linking Poland with th» outside world through tion are at a standstill. German soldiers have occupied the Hunpm'ian -Slovakia border. SIMMONS MAKES TRIP T0 SITKA time rail- WITH 5 ABOARD Shell Simmons_ flew to Sitka_to- | day with five passengers aboard the Alaska Air Transport Lackheed, Those making the trip to the Historic City were J. C. Black, C. H. Black, B. M. Auvil, Louise Ar- ney, Phyllis Coe. Johnny Amundsen flew FPolaris-Taku mine with Jones and Joc¢ McLean rine Airways plane. BASEBALL TODAY The following are stores of games played’ il the two Major Leagues this afternoon: National League St. Louis 1] Boston 2. American League Boston T7; Cleveland 4. New York 6; Detroit 7 - oo TO JOIN HUSBAND Mrs. Frank Kammer, of Ever- ett Wash., is an Aleutian passen- ger in Juneau today, heading to Fairbanks to join her husband, in- dependent flier who was to have started a Juneau-Atlin run tt summer, but has since located l‘ahbanls to tho Winston in a Ma- e E!npire Want Ads Bring Results. tward | r on Prince William Soun. | and | last transport..- | 1939, JUNEAY INVITES . LEGION TO MEET HERE NEXT YEAR Delegates of Local Post Leaving Tonight for Fairbanks arty and cordial invitation to| | the American Legion to hold its 1940 ‘AI“ ka Department Convention in! | Juneau will be carried w Fairbanks ates of 'the Alford John | Bradford Post, most of whom ar leaving on the steamer Aleutian lo- day. Juneau last had the convention in 1936. It was held at Anchorage {in 18 at Ketchikan. in 1938 and o % KA by deles 7!is to meet at Fairbanks next week has heen to alternate it between an Interior and a jeast Cit 5 was considering | making a bid for the 1940 meeting not believed to have backing 50 large a The practice | but 1 or accommodations for {'"meeting | Two local delegates, [and E. M. Polle {route to Fairbanks | Aleutian tonight Karnes and Steve Vukovich of the | Bradford Post and Tom Petrich, | Department Adjutant. John H. New- ! man, leaving to allend CAA hear- ings at Anchorag official | porter, expects 1o attend the vention later Trevor Davis already Leaving on the re Anth E. en- re- con- “NO VISITORS ~ ARE ALLOWED, BATTLESHIPS U. S Navyfiicials Take Sudden Action at Two Coast Porls Au official 29 ha 100 San Diego any rea- SAN DikGo, United States navy banned all visitors from the ips anchored at the basé ut declined to give 0. for the action. Cperatots of the (: which had canied visitors to the ships report- cd i at armed guards are posted on all the vessels, Naval guards carried arms. At San Francisco all visitors were barred from two battleships and a cruiser anchored in the harbor. Naval officials gave the rather vnusual and unsatisfying explana- tion that visitors’ launches might interfere with supply lighters are loading the ships - FIRE IN HEALY COAL MINE I EXTINGUISHED Fire in the Healy River Coal Com- pany mine has been extinguished have' not usually by an earthen bulkhead built under | nstructions of Territorial Commis- oner of Mines B. D. Stewart was reported here t by Harry H. Townsend who recently arrived " from the Westward. Townsend, field scout for the Se- |attle office of the Anaconda Copper Company, talked with Stewart about three weeks ago at the Healy mine, it PAUL-BEL CASE ! William Paul and Nick Bez went into the District Court again at 13:30 o'clock this afternoon for a | continuation of their lawsuit over | ownership of a fish trap at Fishery | Point. e LUNCHEON FIRE A roof fire in a residence on Wil- loughby Avenue, ‘opposite " 'Cole's garage during the noon.hour today, called firemen from their lunch tables for twenty minutes. The residence is owned by Robert Keeny. Damage by Lhe blaze, ap- parently caused by chimney sparks, wa sslight D REV. KASHEVAROFF IS SOON REFURNING FROM SITKA VISIT Rev. A. P. Kashevaroff, reported completely recovered from his' re- cent serious illness, is returning to Juneau Saturday on the steamer North Sea from Sitka. Father Kashevaroff has been v iting his son=in-law and daughte: Mr. and Mrs. Jack Calvin. He will resums his work here as Curator of the Territorial Museum. D NORTH COAST AT 5 AM. A radiogram received late this afternoon slated the North Coast is scheduled to arrive in port from the south at 5 o'clock tomorrow 1 morning. that in it RESUMED TODAY CALLS FIREMEN| ’l"lb‘ or [‘i’ilfizni:;;i};?n BUREAU (By the U. S; Weather Bureau) Forecast for Juneau and vicini Cloudy with showers tonight and outherly winds. Forecast for Southeast Alaska: Wednesda gentle to moderate southe: ty, beginning at 3:30 p.m., Aug. 29: Wednesday; gentle to moderate : Cloudy with showers tonight and v winds except moderate to fresh over Dixon Entrance and over northern portion of Lynn Canal. Forecast of winds Moder on Entrance from aSlisbury Salisbury Sound to Cape to along the ¢ to fresh southeast winds tonight and Wednesday from Dix- Sound and moderate to fresh easterly winds Hinchinbrook. @oast of the Gulf of Alaska: LOCAL DATA Time 3:30 pm 3:30 am Noon Barometer Temn. yest'y today today RADIO 1 Max, tempt. Station last 24 hours Anchorage | Barrow Nome Bethel Fairbanks Dawson Dutch Harbor Kodiak Cordova Juncau Sitka Ketchikan Prince Rupert Edmonton Seattle Portland San Francisco Low barometric pi ure aska, northwestern Canada, North Pacific Ocean dova tates westward and nds, the being latitude 36 and sure distribution ‘has been ers, over most of Alaska and by Coast, States. Juneau, August 30.—Sunrise, 4 JOHN NEWMAN 10 REPORT AT CAA HEARINGS Leaving for Andwrage on Aleutian-Going lat- " er to Fairbanks John H. Newman, Juneau Court Reporter, is leaving on the Aleu- tian tonight to serve as official re- porter for the Civil Aeronautics Au- chority b ) which will be held Anchorage beginning September 1. After a week at Anchorage, the CAA officials will go to Fairbanks fo continue hearing While at Fairbanks, Newman may be able to attend the American Legion Con- vention. Newman accepted the CAA report o job in preference to one offered with the Congressional Fisher, ~ub(0nmu|lv(- outhwesiwa 30.40 - ROBT MARSHALL " DRINTS BOOKLET ON LATEST TRIP A thin supplement to Robert Mar- shall’'s book “Arctic Villa been written by, the autho: - ant Forester in the Division of Re- creation and Lands of the U, S. | Forest Service, concerning his re- | turn to the Arctic several months ago. ‘The neatly-printed account is Marshall’s diary for the 25 days he in a vain attempt to climb Mount Doonerak, which he believes to be | the highest in North America north \ul the Arcti¢ Circle. The diary is| | entitled, “North Doonerak, Amawk and Apoon.” - 10 VISIT MASKA AKLAVIK, Northwost( Territory, Aug. 29— Premier Patullo of Brit- ish Columbia and an official party embarked today on an aerial tour of the northland. The British Co- lumbia officials plan to visit Fort Yukon and Fairbanks. They are |aboard a Canadian Airways plane, piloted by Walter Gilbert. e EIGHT TAKE PAA ELECTRA NORTH Alaska Airways this afternoon io Fairbanks. Trose flying were W. House, J. E. Scrugham, B. Jacobs, Don Graham, [R. J. Gleason, Mrs. R. J. Gleason, Danny Gleason, R. Gleason, Clyde Smith, Dcm Armour ALL WORK HAIJED 29.—All work vas ‘ordered halted in England tonlght so that all roads could be kept clear and not blocked in case of emer- gency. Another order, affecting the entire country, causéd all names of towns appearing on public buildings for airplane mmrkers be covered or obliterated. Lowest temp. THER \VNOP\I\ prevaiiled this morning throughout Al- and over lawest réporied pressure High harometric pressure p evailed inches longitude 158 degrees. atten generally spent at Wiseman in June and July | Eight ndu]l.s and two children | were to be flown north with Pacific | Humidity winu Velocity 47 w 14 93 Calm 0 70 SSE 12 REPORTS Weather Pt. Cldy Clear Cloudy TODAY 8:30a.m. Precip. temp. 24 hours 48 08 36 .01 45 0 46 41 41 52 51 51 48 3:30am Weather Clear Cloudy Cloudy Pt. Cldy Pt. Cldy Goudy Cloudy Clear Cloudy Clear 42 36 45 43 41 38 48 Cloudy Rain Cloudy Clear Clear Clear northeastern 29.70 portion of the inches at Cor- the Pacific Coast an and Midway Pacific Ocean at This general pres weather, with show- fair weather over the West from Haw: the d the over to ed by cloudy 53 am.; sunset, 7:07 p.m. Swiss Are Mobilized One Hundred Thousand Men Called Out-Food Is fo Be Rationed BERNE, Switzerland, Aug. 29. The Government has mobilized 100,- 000 men and placed them under arms 3 The Government also plans food rationing Border stations are being manned - 'SQUALUS SLIPS BACK AGAIN IN - TOWT0 SHORE 'Sunken Subm_ar_in,e Now in 90 Feet of Water- Raise Tomorrow PORTSMOUTH, N. H, Aug. 29. | —Navy salvagers again got the bow ‘ur the sunken Squalus briefly above the water late yesterday but it set- tled back into only 90 feet of water, | delaying final beaching which is now planned for tomorrow. Yesterday's accident was not seri- | ous except for the delay in gettine | the sunken;submarine with the 2; | dead, to the beach. D ALASKA UNIVERSITY | PROFESSOR ON BOAT 1 Professor and Mrs. W E. Ducker- | ing, of the University of Alaska, are passengers aboard the steamer Aleu- tian, which arrived in Juneau this | nnnrnoon Westward bound. The Duckerings have been spend- ing the summer months in the vi- cinity of Seattle. e, CANNERY MAN BEZ | IS SEWARD BOUND Nick Bez is a passenger aboard the steamer Aleutian, which. arrived | in Juneau this afternoon. Bez, owner of the Peril Straits Packing Com- pany, also has cannery interests in |the Westward. He is booked for Seward. .t ‘ L KNOWN MINING | MAN A’I’LIN HEADED Walter Johnson, dredge builder and mine operator well known in northern placer diggings, arrived on the Aleutian on his way to Atlin. | Johnson expects to fly to the In- terior British Columbia mining camp either tonight or tomorrow morning in connection with mining interests '$599 Value Placed On Kinks of Sonja LOS ANGELES, Aug. 29.. — The ’m:w,nuse who rubbed out' Sonju | Henie’s kinks after her ice skating | sessions sued the skater today to | collect $599 salary allegedly due her. | Marianne Gyhl, claiming Miss | Henie broke a contract by discharg- ing her in Houston, Tex., last Nov- | ember, brought the acucn in muni- (clpfll court. ‘