LIFE ON RIM OF THE ARCTIC CapitaT Journal. Salem, Ore., Thursday, Oatoner 27, 194919 Gold Found! Here's what an Alaskan fishwheel (above) looks like. Gold was reportedly discovered in the axle of wheel similar to this on Discovery Island, near Fairbanks, Alaska, Net revolves with the current and scoops up fish which fall in boxes at side. The prospec tors' tent village which sprung up on the Yukon river is aptly named Fishwheel. (AP Wire fell t, mi Alaskan Prospectors' Camp Natives help prospectors set up camp on Discovery Island, near Fairbanks, Alaska, where gold was recently reported discovered in a fishwheel. (Left to right) Solomon Flitt, Joe Peters, Earl Hirst and Sam Gambling, all of Fairbanks. Hirst and Gambling, with gold pan, are veteran Alaskan prospectors. At right is a Yukon stove, stand ard camp equipment. (AP Wirephoto) TENDERFOOT FINDS 'COLOR' Four Prospectors, Back From Diggin's, Cold to Gold Rush By JOHN J. RYAN : Anchorage, Alaska, Oct. 27 u.ra Four Cheechako prospectors returned from their diggin's at Fishwheel last night and vowed the Yukon Gold rush of 1949 was for somebody else not them. The four men, all employes of local aircraft concerns, were Bill Lund, R. C. Stevenson, Dave Crawford and Ted Rasmussen. While they found two nuggets' during their stampede to Fish- wheel, they hadn't managed to take a single claim. Lund and Stevenson left An chorage in a chartered plane when the first reports of the gold strike hit town. They paid a "fancy sum" to reach Fair banks. (Present prices quoted by bush pilots here are $300 round trip to Fishwheel, $150 one way). "We wasted an afternoon be fore we could find a pilot who would take us on to Fishwheel at any price," said Lund. "Right after we landed on the banks of the Yukon, we broke a hole in the ice and quickly found two nuggets slightly larger than a pin head." "That drove us wild," Steven son said. "We chopped up about an acre of ice in a few hours. But we never managed to find another sign of gold." The two Cheechako (tender foot) gold seekers tramped down the river to find some unclaim ed land. "Every foot of land for seven miles upstream and six miles downstream from Fish wheel was staked," Stevenson said. "Furthermore the claims were eight deep from the south bank of the river." "There's no claim jumping or wrangling at the scene," said Lund. "Everyone is friendly. In fact, most of the men there's about a hundred who have staked claims are just sitting around gabbing about how they are going to spend their money." "People are constantly com ing and going." said Stevenson. "Some people fly in and out on the same plane. Monday the first two women arrived but just looked the place over and left." Both men agreed that there Is tome gold at Fishwheel. LAST CHANCE BEFORE WINTER 0LDSM0BILE FACTORY DELIVERY SAVE $31800 Freight Accepting Orders Until November 1 See Us Today LODER BROS. 465 renter Phone 1411 "During our hike along the river, we saw eight nuggets in the possession of prospectors," Lund said. "The nuggets are very coarse indicating that they are of local origin and haven't been rolled down a river bed. Crawford and Rasmussen flew to Fishwheel in their own plane "All we got out of the trip was wet feet and cold hands, Crawford said. "Rumors were flying through the camp that women and gamblers would soon be doing business there," said Rasmussen. "The camp followers were re ported standing by at Fort Yu kon, Circle and many more at Fairbanks awaiting more opti mistic reports before moving out onto the flats." The four men were the first Anchorage stampeders to return here from the gold strike scene. An Anchorage Daily News sur vey revealed that when the first lAdvertUemrnli Worry of FALSE TEETH Slipping or Irritating? Don't bff em barr aimed by looie f tfeth slippirm, dropping or wobbling when you eat, talk or laugh. Just uprtnkle a little FA8TEETH on your plates. Thin plpnsant powder ftlvrs i remarkable ttenne of added comfort and security by holdinf platea more firmly. No gummy. Eooejfc, panty taste or feellnir. It's alka line (non-acldl. Oct FASTEETH tit any drm store. (Advertuiementt SUffIRiftS FIND CURB FOR MISMY DUE TO ASTHMA ATTACKS. IUSHI0 HIM j new nop ior reiivi tram aathma paro yama is in today in report of succesa with palliative formula which art to relieve ennrMtion. Man and woman who formerly tiffrd with drend rough In, chnkinv, whwinr athma attar-V rrnw tell of hleased relief after uftitif it. MOMITIN eoato 13. but eonsldrrins remlte, this ia not expertise, at..ounU to only a few nennlaa wr done. (Caution use only as dirrtd.t PtOMITtN ia sold with strist monty-back suarsnUo by Perry Drag. Itt Bo. Commercial. Mall Orders Filled. wild reports of the strike hit here, 17 planes and seven taxi- cabs loaded with prospectors, gamblers and prostitutes who were too eager to wait for the weekly train, headed for Fair banks. Of the four men who returned last night, only Bill Lund, an Alaska airline pilot, expressed a desire to return. "When the ice on the river freezes solid," he said, "I'm going to return by plane and land down the river from Fish wheel to stake my claim." With tractors so big a factor in agriculture these days, the raising of horse feed has been sharply reduced. KAILES MONTH END Speciol Groups of Broken Month-End Special. COATS One Group Values to 44.50 Now All wool Fleeces and Needle Point Fabric. Broken sizes 8 to 18. WOMEN'S SHORTIES, Wool Month-End Special SUITS One Group Reg. to 39.95 Now Quality All Wool. 144 to 244. WOMEN'S RAINCOATS, in Month-End Special DRESSES One Group Values to 22.50 Now Mostly dressy sizes 9 to 44. itylcs, greatly 100 Wool SWEATERS, Slipover & Cordigon. Month-End Special Two Women, Coffee Shop Come to Gold-Happy Camp By JACK DAUM Filrbinkj Ntwa-Mtner Staff Wrltrr iwmten for th AaJocUted Preul Fishwheel, Alaska, Oct. 27 M Two women and a coffee shop have come to Alaska's latest gold-happy community. This booming tent town, extending for nine miles along both sides of the cold and sluggish Yukon river, blinked today at the arrival of the women. One of them is Evelyn Grin nell, the wife of a Fort Yukon trapper and the second of her sex to arrive. She immediately set up a coffee shop in her tent equipped with only a Yukon stove, a coffeepot, a box of cups, doughnuts and some sandwiches. Evelyn is doing a thriving business. Coffee 25 cents a cup. Cof fee with doughnuts or sand wiches 50 cents. First woman to arrive was the wife of a Fort Yukon native who brought her along with him to share the frigid life of this gold mining camp on the rim of the arctic. They walked over the tun dra for two days to get here. The woman, a rather attractive Indian with jet black hair, smiled shyly as she walked by with a large pack on her back. Her husband, thin and impas sive, twisted his wrinkled fea tures into a large grin when somebody yelled "Hi, Joe." He carried a rifle, an incon gruous instrument where man's most precious tool is a pick or shovel. The first showing of gold in this area was made 12 days ago by Clifton Carroll, who spotted pea-sized nuggets in the muck on his Fishwheel axle. Claims since have spread up and down from what is now as the "Dis covery Claim." Colors" have been found con sistently along a two mile stretch of river shore adjoining Carroll s claim and there have been a few nuggets found in the frigid pans. I have not been to the far thest claims upstream, but re ports keep coming down of colors" and a few rice-sized nuggets being panned. Colors" are minute specks of flake gold, commercially worth less but often indicative of more gold somewhere nearby. borne gold seekers now are living in the lap of arctic lux ury. Those whose claims are ad jacent to a landing field have fixed their tents in the best Statler fashion, with stoves, sit ting facilities and improvised tables. In the true traditin of the Northland, anyone is welcome to come in and share the warmth and swap tales. Prospectors al ready are eager for news from home. The tent where I am now sit ting belongs to Charlie Bieder- man, F. H. Alexander, Robert Alexander, C. V. Johnson and Robert Barenz. Biederman is now here alone, his partners having returned to Fairbanks Sunday after staking claims. Biederman, a trapper from Eagle, Alaska, now is finishing the job of blazing boundary lines and sinking prospect holes. The tent is about 8x10 feet and very warm. In the middle of the earth floor is a Yukon stove, which resembles a gasc- SPECIALS lines Greatly reduced for a 29 95 Fleeces . , 16 95 29 95 Beautifully tailored in Half-Sizes Gob, Twill 19 75 $10 reduced to clear. Broken WlfS I MIT UTAH UNVMCTlia i uoiu ep4c?u Television Pics Of Gold Strike Seattle, Oct. 26 (PI Televis ion pictures have been taken of the gold strike at Fishwheel, Alaska, and are en route to San Francisco for processing. William J. Wagner, president of the Alas ka Broadcasting Co., said today. Wagner said he believed the pictures were the first for tele vision taken at the site of the strike on the rim of the Arctic and among the first pictures ever taken for television in Alaska. Jim Fletcher, manager of KFRB, Fairbanks, flew in a chartered plane to Fishwheel on October 24 after an attempt to get in the previous day had failed because of bad weather He took with him a 16 mm cam era, a wire recorder and a port- able power plant to operate the recording machine. Besides taking pictures. Fletcher also made an on-the- spot broadcast which will be re leased through the Columbia Broadcasting system. J Chicago Man Draws 5 Years in Prison Oregon City, Oct. 27 Wi Les lie Allen Jacobson, 19, Chicago, was sentenced yesterday to five years in prison for burglary of an ice cream parlor near here Sept. 12. He was caught in the act and arrested with Dean A. Culver. 18, also of Chicago. Culver had drawn a similar sentence but was paroled to his father. Judge E. C. Latourette sen tenced Jacobson. Court aides said the Chicago youth was wanted in Florida but Gov. Mc Kay had refused to grant extra dition. line drum with a vent cut near the bottom to supply air to the burning wood. There's a plenti ful supply of wood within 15 feet of the tent. A stovepipe extends through tne tent roof. Cardboard car tons are laid flat on the ground to provide insulation for our sleeping bags. Our food locker contains eggs. bacon bread, flour, powdered miik and dehydrated vegetables Biederman s partners keep him supplied with food. The temperature rose sharply me last two aays and now touches five degrees above zero But we know it will drop to 15 or ii Deiow tonight. ' 'H -. . ... The most useful dish of all from ALEXANDER'S JEWELRY It can serve as: ASHTRAY COASTER CANDY DISH NUT DISH (even handy near the sewing machine) Crystal base . . . sterling band Designed to be useful . priced WAY low $25 1 feueon r j 'fCOUR Lighthouse Mailbox Mailbox Elmer Warren, Greater Miami, has milk and package com partment, phone to call house, and lighthouse illumination. Four Corners Church Work Is Pushed by Volunteers Four Corners, Oct. 27 Mr. and at dinner complimenting their her birthday anniversary. Guests Mr. and Mrs. John Phillips, Linda and John, Jr., Hardie and Janis Phillips, Miss Ruth Deckard and Miss Ginny Shewfelt of Chieaeo. Mr. and Mrs. Newell Sanders, 60 E. State st., had as their house guest Mr. and Mrs. George Borders of Bethesda, Md. The women are sisters and hadn't seen eacn otner ior several years. The visitors flew from Washington, D.C., where he is with the U.S. Agricultural de partment. Mrs. Borders is em ployed by the Veterans Admin istration. They returned by way of San Francisco and Dallas, Texas. House guest of the Albert Brant family, 4050 Beck ave.J Mrs. Brants brother, Com mander J. H. Norwood, U.S.N, retired. Work on the Four Corners Bantist church by a volunteer crew of members of the local church and the First Baptist church of Salem is progressing nicely. They meet each Mon day evening. Two Sunday school rooms in the church building have new ceiling. The plumbing and an electric stove have been installed in the church annex. Recently the an nex received two coats of paint on the outside. Members of the Four Corners Baptist church will sponsor a Halloween party at the church annex on Saturday evening at 7:30 o'clock for all young peo ple of the community. The chil dren are reminded that Monday evening is the "treat or trick" time and not on the Sabbath. deft at home of Mr. and Mrs. Mrs. P. T. Deckard were hosts daughter Mrs. Hardie Phillips on invited for the occasion were Freddie Slack Freddie Slack's Band To Play Here Friday Freddie "Cow Cow Boogie" Slack and his musicians and en tertainers will bow in at the Glenwood Ballroom Friday for a one-night dance engagement. Slack, considered the greatest boogie woogie pianist in Amcr- H wTPW Like Burled y Trtosurol PI oEWELRY : v ' fascinoting eld Coin lTr-?" I (mintad a lw hun- i ff oj jrVt drecf years tote, of ( 2 (i ' r'i -v3ri coursa) 8iv a cKorming touch o J 10 Your t0,,um- You'll be d- ' VWwWffBfi I'flhted with lhs brocslelj, I VS ' earrings, necklacts, pins, etc. that I 'iS "w ' WiV i'n9' P'ce ol gold from a WM1 pi0,', ,r,a,ur" Q JEWELRY DEPT. Japs Want U.S. Troops to Stay j Portland, Oct. 27 ) The Ja panese people want United Stat es troops to remain even after a peace treaty is signed, the con fidential secretary to Premlejf Yoshida said here today. -The secretary, Takafuml HU shikari, said withdrawal of troops would be a threat to Ja panese security. Only "a few foreign elements" want th troops to leave, he said. He minimized the influence of red-indoctrinated war prisoners' returned by the soviet union re cently. About 90 per cent of them, Hishikari said, lost their enthusiasm for communism af ter a couple of months in their homeland observing "the work being done by the occupation forces." The people of Japan have been largely anti-Russian sine the Russo-Japanese war and art "irrevocably opposed" to comi munism, he said, adding that Japanese communists have suf fered in popularity in the past year "because of the unrest and strikes they have caused." Hishikari was here today vis iting Willis E. Mahoney, a pros ecutor in the Japanese war crimes trials. He will leave for Tokyo tomorrow via Seattle. He said he had been in Washington on a confidential mission. Linn Rural School Immunization Due Albany With pupils of elev en Linn county rural schools al ready processed, the Linn coun ty public health department is well into its 1949-50 school im munization program, according to the report of Dr. John Guepe, Linn county health officer. i Clinics have been held thus far at the Clover Ridge, Conner, Dever, East Knox Butte, Lake view, Knox Butte, Millersburg, Scravelhill and Santiam Central schools in the northwestern por tion of the county and the Fox Valley, Lourdes, and Lyons in the northern area. The clinic has scheduled 78 more schools of the county to start in Albany on January 3, Hopewell Mrs. Richmond Horton, Mrs. Ross Rogers, Mrs. Owen Pearse of the Hopewell United Brethren church were among those going from here to attend the all day rally at thf First Evangelical church In Sa lem. ica today, can boast of more hit records than any piano stylist lii the music world. The band is the first in a series of big names that will play the Glenwood Ballroom this fall and winter.' ITOftli AliO IN PCTLANDAllANTIUOINI H E GIVE GREEN STAMPS