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B o S PR THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE MONDAY SEPT 16, 1929. KING CARNIVAL | PREVAILEDLAST Wf-ather Conditions As Rccorded by the U. S : Weather Bureau | ¥orecast for Juneau and vicinity, beginning 4 p. m. today: Wonderful Opportunity Sale!. .. 50—mch }'u,d it was difficult to move from one concession to another. The | dance floor was filled during each |dance and even then there was very little room left in the arena. The announcement of the winning of the three big prizes of the eve- ning was made at 1:00 a. m.,, and it was several hours later in the morning before the Fair building ~ | became quiet. ~ RUN IS HEAVY | |Bureau of Fisheries Gets Fine Reports on Run’ of { Fish in District Unofficial reports coming to the Bureau of Fisheries on the Fall | cohoe salmon run are highly en- couraging, according to Dennis | Winn, Alaska agent, who -returned | | here today from a two week’s trip to Ketchikan and vicinity. The| ne ception has been on thej geast st of Prince of Wales Is-| yland where the run was light for | zevera1 days but it is reported m, be materially better now. § | An official survey of the di 4 2 g 4 § |trict will be made within a few | Aerial Equipment. List, even dating, | days by wardens of the Bureau of | > 1 « | Fisheries, Mr. Winn said. How- | $125.00 | cver, the Bureau is highly encou | OUR PRICE FOR THE WORKS—$§75.00 | Pessibly showers tonight and Tuesday; light variable winds G 0 R D 0 N 9 S B - o ’llm't i Bursnr;neter Temp, Humidity Wind Velocity Weather { 1 a. m. today 0.11 51 9 E 1 Rain ” N I!JEFAIT(QWRI §a. m. today 3010 49 10 SE 4 Rain o Fall Sh . f W ’ R Noon taday 080 57 87 SE 6 Rain @ Ouflng 0 omen's v y With King Carnival as absolute g ? CABLE AND RADIO REFORTS <cvereign, the Eighth Annual South- 1 A ’ YESTERDAY ~ “TODAY castern Alaska Fair came to a suc- nd C’ l l D) W ! Highest 4p.m. Low 4cm. 4am. Precip. 4am, [cessful end about 2 2. m. Sundgy an uidaren’s ear ‘ | Stations— temp. temp. | emp. temp. Velocity 24 hrs. Weather |morning. According to officials, ‘Pu w 34 32 Jieso - 52 14 0 Cldy |the Fair was the most successful Nome yeeeeee D0 50 4 44 12 16 Cldy |and thn largest in the history of e " Bethel 56 .50 }‘ 42 42 8 20 Pt Cldy |the organization and was appar-| OPENS WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 18 }Fm'l Yukon .. 60 50 | 36 36 e 0 Pt. Cldy |ently enjoyed by all its - patrons 3 £ Tanana 4B0. . BOS. L) 40 44— 08 Rain |and visitors. B IN OUR NEW.LY RENOV ATED Eagle o 56 | 28 46 — [ Clear The Dempsey-Tunney fight pic- St..Paul il A6 46 | 42 42 10 04 Cldy |tures loaned to the Fair Associa- AND ENLARGED STORE TRO h ich Dutch Harbor ... 562 50 | 44 44 — 06 Pt Cldy |tion by Fred Sorri and run off by ENLARGED STOR USTROUS, heavy, ric Kodiak .5 5 | 4 50 6 0 Clear |Fred Ordway; and the bear plc- 2 H Cordova areeee 0 52 50 52 6 40 Rair tures loaned to the Fair through | damasks wovenin solid £ 1 | i Juneau .62 81 | 49 49 4 17 Rain |the courtesy of Mr. Holsworth SR “l color all-ever dGSignsi also !chhnk;’n A ] - . | 80 — 4 Trace Cldy |were immensely interesting and A full page descrlpllon of the Fall Styles e i Prince Rupert ... 64 64 | 50 52 0 0 Clear |very much enjoyed by the large . i 4 in ombre striped effects Edmonton ... 64 6 | 44 44 0 Cldy | audience attending Carnival Night will appear in tomorrow’s, September 17, . | Seattle e 74 | 60 60 . 0 Clear !at the Fair building. e tlfm are f.ound only in the {Portland ... 76 % | 6 6 . 0 Smoky | A record crowd of 3,000 people | Empire. higher priced damasks. San Francisco .....64 60 5 56 0 Cldy |attended the last night of the Fair *Less than 10 miles. The softsheen and warm colors -of .these handsome drapery damasks will-add a flattering glow to your NOTE—Observations at Barrow, Fort Yukon, Tanana and Eagle are made at 8 a. m. and 8 p. m, Juneau time. The . pressure remains moderately low in southern Bering Sea jbut is rising in Western Alaska and is moderately high and falling in- British Columbia. Showers hav: fallen over moct of Western and Southern Alaska and in the lower Tanana Valley. Temperature changes have been slight during the past zuenn'—fom hours. T HREE FAMOUS AVIATORS POSE This is a Combina- tion XX Plan Selling in cooperation with thousands of other mer- chants and Marshall Field & Company, Wholesale — an event of extraordinary economy. B. M. Behrends Co., Inc. Pete Says: CANNING GOODS ARE e i ) ] . ALASKAN HOTEL MODERN REASONABLE RATES Dave Housel, Proprietor Radio Bargain No. 3 Ine Bosch Six-Tube Set, equipped with Batteries and Loud Speaker, Tubes and i aged over the uniformity of favo able reports it is receiving. Mr, Winn arrived Sunday night lon the Brant which has just re- | turned from Seattle. It brought Field Superintendent J. H. Ru isell from Seattle to inspect the Y(‘s |Bay hatchery. Mr. Winn leaves| tomorrow morning for an inspection of the district north of Yakutat. | ALL THE HERE, Green including Damson Plums, Set Guaranteed to Work OK or money back’ Alaska Electric Light | WHO'S WHO I & Power Co. 1 AND WHERE || se0e 000 sc 0000000 Tomatoes, Crabapples, Pears, Peaches, Prunes, Pickling Onions. | Come and get them now. Don’t allow these goods to go to waste. Prices are ! the best you’ll get this year. | Juneau—Phone 6 Douglas—Piione 18 John Rustgard, attorney General . of Alaska, left here Saturday night for Seward on an official business Assoclated Press Photo trip Left to right: Lleut. Al Williams, the navy ace; Col. Charles A. - i ke h tri s Lindbergh, the famous civilian flier, and Lieut. James Doolittle, the th?;‘:;’;':g M;zmS;]:n°;;e]1;$h:T ¢ th i Yty o i i ace of the army, posed for the cameraman at the national air races in and- son; Aehnigoame;north. on the leve| . Wievela Admiral Watson. 1 Traveling men arriving on the 1927 Chevrolet Truck PHONE 486 F E\ hik: vill also land at Lake Cres- i : ,mm BVEATHER 1" pick o o vilapa, ol A e ncluce W . GOOD RUNNING ORDER Personal Delivery STATION IS TO BE |7om Donahue, prospectors, who vy jenee’ ] OPENED KETCHIKAN\WN to be brought back nearly a ’ i\\’eek ago had the weather per- s mitted. R e s T e A R the United States Weather Bu- SRR e reau for the, establishment of an| aircraft weather station of the!KETCHIKr\\ MAN CONVICTED second class at Ketchikan, it was | UNDER JONES ACT TERMS announced -today by R. C. Mize,| Meteoralogist in charge of the Al-| gska district. He will go there in 1y at Ketchikan for violation of ;|the near future and make ar- the National Prohibition Aet and rangements for .opening the sta- |tried in the Federal District Court tion. there under the provisions of the ;| This is the first of the stations|Jones's Act, was found guilty by |of .this class to be opened in Alaska (the jury, according to a telegram and probably will be followed by received today by United States othm The _station established (M@rshal Albert White. He had uvll‘ll ,months ago at Fairbanks not been sentenced. is 0‘ the first class and more com-| Mitehell was arrested by Deputy & | | plete._than, the -one to be opened Marshals _Springer and Caswell, J1|at Ketchikan. The maximum sentence possible In New Building on Shattuck Way The latter will haye wind meas- under the Jones's Act is $10,000|broker, is making the Triangle uring instruments, barometer and |fi€ and five years penal term. |Tour on the Admiral Rogers and “THE LAUNDRY DOES IT BEST” barograph and other equipment nec ——————— will travel aboard the steamer as — essary for its work. A part time o ¥ far south as Wrangell. ‘|observer will be employed. NORTHWESTERN SAILS A. J. Ficken, local meat market Two co-operative stations will proprietor, sailed for Sitka on the ilalso be established in the Ketchi- Admiral Rogers. kan district by Mr. Mize. One will Commissioner of Education Leo be at.Belle Jsland and the other Ww. Brewer sailed from Juneau FRUIT ARS . Sunday on the Northwestern on an at. Tree Point on Cape Fox. A weste! ;|rain guage may clso be put in at inspeetion trip. He will visit Skag- . way, Haines, Chilkoot and Sitka. $125.00 . Round trip tourists on the Ad- miral Rogers include Mr. and Mrs. C. E. Flye. Mr. Flye is general traffic manager of the Pacific Steamship Company in Seattle. «~Hugo Heidorn, oldtime Juneauite, tock passage on the Admiral Rogers today for Sitka, for the Pioneer’s Home. Arthur Watkins and Ivan Camp- bell, both connected with the War- xack Construction company, are bound for Sitka on the Admiral Rogers. After spending several days in Juneau in the interest of the Sitka Experimental Station at the Fair, E. A. Eggersgluess is returning to his home in Sitka on the Admiral Rogers. A Van Mavern, local merchandise Saivice TOMATOES, plenty of them, 10c per y pound, perbox . . . . . . . $1.40 COOKING APPLES, perdozen . . CRABAPPLES, per pound . . . . 10c RIPE TOMATOES, to can, 19 pound box for . . . . CANTALOUPES, car lomls of ’em, at 5 cents, 10 cents, extra lur'r(* ab o HAINES POTATES, new arirvals, 22 pounds for . . . . . . . McCaul Motor Company Charles M\Lchell mdxcbed recent- “YOUR ALASKA LAUNDRY SERVICE” for Dry Cleaning and Pressin g ALASKA LAUNDRY The steamer Northwestern re- turned to Juneau at 12:30 p. m. today after making the trip to Skagway ‘and Haines. No passen- igers were aboard for Juneau. Thirty-five boxes of fresh hali- but, twenty-six shipped by San Juan 45106‘ Kuann. Mr. Mize said. YAKIMA POTATOES, 23 pounds far $1 00 FLORIDA GRAPEFRUIT left the over from cents to $1.00 PETE SAYS-BUY NOW! . : Grapes, Ghinese Cabbage, Celery, Steing Beans, Hubbard Squash, plenty | of Cucumbers, Ground Cherries, in fact everything ' today, ‘i Nice selection of POTTED PLANTS, that’s on the market Fair at 40 . ; KETCHIKAN MAKES ‘| Baton, Taku District, ‘|Hill, Buck Sparling and Mr. Smiley *lto unfavorable weather. i|since August 14. Enroute they will :|Eaton with Dr. Robert Simpson and the remainder by the Alaska Fish Brokerage, were taken aboard at the Jundau Cold Storage Com- TWO TAKU TRIPS !pany dock. The Northwestern also loaded concentrates at the Alaska Juneau wharf, and sailed for the south at 3 p. m. with the following from Juneau: George A. Roundsefell, Mrs. Hulda Hornsday, Edwin H. Dahlgren, Mrs. The seaplane Ketchikan, Pilot Anscel Eckmann, of the Alaska- Washington Airways, took off for with Joe Saturday afternoon after an en- forced layup for several days due |for Seattle; H. C. McGregor for Cunningham for Wrangell; Mr. and Mrs. James Sewall and three third iclass for Petersburg. PSB! This -afternoon the plane is to go to an unnemed Canadian lake to bring out Phil McKenna and Mr. Dickinson who have been there stop at the Manville property at|loughby Ave. with the best TO- who s to spend a few days there. |2 P. m. to 7 p. m. Call and we If the visibility permits the Ket-lflflu demoustrate. P.O, Box 327. adv O.E. Schombel and one third class | Ketchikan; H. B. Crewson and Mrs. | | Bill Casey is still at No. 8 Wil-|, BACCO and SNUFF CURE. Hours |, George A. Roundsefell and Ed- win H. Dahlgren, who have been in Alaska since early in June doing field work for the U. S. Bureau of Fisheries in its herring investiga- tion, left today for Seattle on the Northwestern. Mrs. O. E. Schombel took passage for’ Seattle on the Northwestern. PR R AN coolet us show you why Goobp and JELLY GLASSES Phone 12 N Juneau-Y oung Hardware Co.