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} NSy — B L o oo o ot SR el Sale And a glad day for the woman who enjoys being thrifty in her good house- QOur annual White Sales are famous for their marvelous values. keeping—for now what a grand op; to replenish the linen h closet at small cost. WHITE HUCK TOWELS, 5 for _$1.00 HUCK TOWELS with colored borders, colored Huck Towels, plain white Turkish Towels .4 for'$1.00 colored with WHITE TURKISH TOWELS border, size 24x46, 2 for WHITE TURKISH TOWELS, 22x44, Turk- :Is with colered borders, colored h Towels, 3 for ... $1.00 LARGE TURKISH BATH TOWEL, plain white, 26x52, each aoe B. M. Behrends Co., Inc. Juneaw's Leading Department Store Elonfmmenflomenrmmenfmemed 1 = TWO DEAD IN RILLO, Texas, Jan. 13.— Myers, pilot, and L. P. aeroplane salesman, both | rillo, were killed yesterday | | afterncon when their plane crashed | | from an unknown cause. The ship | |was one of six giving flying exhi- | | bitions over the city. ) ——te——— o9 9> ee ® o e e 0 . TODAY'S STOCK o QUOTATIONS - . e 00 0o ean 0] NEW YORK, Jan. 13. — Alaska | {Juneau mine stock is quoted today | |at 8, American Ice 36%, Bethle- (tem Stecl 86'2, General Motors 387, Combustion 5%, Kennecott | |57, Magma 49, Montgomery-Ward 447, National Acme 19%, Standard {Oil of California 61, Standard Oil lof New Jersey 64%, Texas Corpora- |tion 55%, Radio 42%, U. S. Steel 1171, MiSS M'LAUGHLIN GOES SOUTH FOR VACATION | | Miss Catherine McLaughlin, sec- |retary to Karl Theile, Secretary of | Alaska, will leave Tuesday morning {ca the steamer Princess Norah en- route to Seattle. £he will spend 30 days there on vacation visitiag | her mother, Mrs. Ann McLaughlin {and family. { PARABESEIE 1L [ BOWLERS KETURN The Juneau Elks' bowling team, jcomposed of the Tollowing members, |raturned from Ketchikan on the {Queen this morning: W. B. Kirk, . M. Sabin, Ed, Radde, and M. Hirs. ia @ dask of Vela oeboulaugens Maded tame Aresd ) i p ; butordi. 2 —fi.onppa[’@w, 50, 11 5 |Lavenik. Frank Metcalf and Sam OnES s PR . i s He fa‘“‘“ {Guyot remalned in Ketchikan. da T g HOSPITAL NOTES i};} a de v’.&ufi f Mrs. Ed. Orowe entered St. Ann's hospital Saturday for a major oper- ation which was performed this In such event, Elelson would stillj mOrning, § alive and in good condition but! Mrs. Donald Ialey, of the nurs- be A B fl UT E'ELSUN it would take two months for a dog ;i€ Staff of St. Ann's, is being treat- 5EING LUGATED team to get out with communlc:x—:fld for a severe aitack of influenza. tions Edith Miller, age nine, daughter oo |ef Mrs. J. Miller of Juneau, entered {the hospital Sunday morning to be Radio Statement Is Made from Nanuk—Dog Team Driver Has Information the Kolkoa River at 1, or even heyond to the Lena ttlement de River. i e SRS |HEAVY SMOKE IN CHIMNEY ; TODEATH, AUTO. ..veemcecr 5 5 - s PITTSBURGH, Jan. 13, — Now { Ithere is a smoke detector that PHOENIX, rings a bell in the engineer's room (Continued from Page One) Az, Jan. 13—Tim-! THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, MONDAY, JAN. | guests at the testimonial dinner PLANE CRASH 13, 1930. Wili a Nat -nai Murder irust Ge Revealed ) by New York Inquiry: | Inspector Donovan Magistrate Vitale. Arthur C. Johnson. Frankie Marlow. Above scene shows Frankie Yale’s body sprawled beside car after slaying in Brooklyn, which comes to foreground anew through the holdup at a dinner given in honor of Magistrale Vitals, of New York. ! JENSATIONAL developments are ments if you wish. The execu- | O expected in connection with i“"li"m?-'&],lé“s $2,500, the trust restisad “ » of zets $5,000 cash and the rest in | vestigqeli e oE ofivnstallments, The motive behind sensational facts the Vitale dinner holdup is alleged recently to Magistrate Albert H.|to have been the secu: of a Vitale in New York. Police murder contract in the po: on ja guc Commissioner Grover Whalen is in | of a Chicago gangster who was a|who d Chicago seeking to link the under-|guest at the dinner. The dinner|his gun to the holdlp men at that world sla{ings of Frankie Marlow |was arranged, the unknowingflimo, Detective John J. Don tective at the Vitale dinner and and Frankie Yale with the undcrw(}h an was “put on the spet,” |of the New York Police De world “murder trust,” where kill-|and en the holdup men went|ment, int d, when qu s are contracted for at s0 much |[through the pockets of the guests n hearing, t} tract was among the loot. | r holdup was ract called for $20,00( ieved to have } head. | the A man may be put on the spot | hy of the guest or taken for a ride for as little a | of the impending sum g5 $20,000, payable in install- |referc 1 and robbe Automobile Indusiry Has Largest Y ear T Asum B P ‘MOTOR CAR OR ALLIED | dhconpo sosaemse 76% OF MOTOR aithaags B 5.65H000 S5 AEONES* VEHICLES IN THE WORL'D k ‘ WERE REGISTERED N (av increase oF aBour 22%) 13 u UCAN-MADE 710 VEHICLES INTHE US. MWL WERE SOLD wz'gsmrzo OUTSIDE THE US.IN 1929 N 1929 in the United States, By DAVID J. WILKIE ipr ted, i 249, | that the World P ° industry and the /be given tonight used 287,000,000 p. m., at the Grad inz for the year, torium. No admi automobile industry in 1929 %, Progean, wi produced 5,651,000 cars and trucks, having a wholesale val- ue of $3,483,900,000, according to preliminary figures announced today by Alfred Reeves, general {19290 brought the 1 of surfa Yale in Brooklyn more than a year were d from evidence presented artmental trial of De- rthur C. Johnson, who was comipelled to surrender | | | { g Weather Conditions As Recorded by the U. S. Weather Bureau Forecast for Junean-and viclnity, bey~uing 4 p. m. todey: ally fair tonight and Tuesday; moderate winds, mostiy LOCAL Humidity Wind Velocl{y Weather Time Barometer Temp. DATA 4 p.my 30.49 29 40 NW 4 Clear 4 2. m. today 30.53 25 46 N 3 Clear 30.47 30 38 SE 5 Clear Noon today CABLE AND RADIO REPOETS { YESTERDAV: S~ 5. k.ot » g :0BODAY, Highest 4pm. | Low lfim, 4am. Precip. 4a.m. temp. te{x:p. | - emp. temp. Vel_oclty 24 hrs. Weather 4 . [ N 18 w0 0 Cidy Nome 32 28 | 26 28 26 i Cldy Bethel 44 34 34 40 22 .06 Cldy Fort Yukon -8 -18 -20 12 2 [ Clear 14 6 | 4 6 * 0 Pt. Cldy 4 -4 -14 -14 2 0 Clear . 38 38 32 32 - 0 Pt Cldy 38 36 34 34 —_— 48 Rain 40 40 | 36 36 8 .01 Rain R RS 0 Cldy 35 29 18 25 > 0 Clear Eetchikan 36 34 24 28 - 0 Clear ince \Rupert 30 30 24 28 — 0 Clear monton 0 0 | 0 4 10 .04 Cldy Seattle . 32 30 20 2 = 0 Clear Portland . e 30 28 fe 18 TR — 0 Clear San Francisco 50 46 50 40 40 .02 Pt. Cldy *Less t'.an 10 miles. NOTE—Observations at Barrow, Fort Yukon. Tanana and Eagle are fiade at 8 a. m. and 8 p. m, Juneau time. Pressure was high over most of Alagka this morning except in Western part where the jnfluence of a low centered souht of the ans was predominating, giving precipitation and rather high along the coast. Elsewhere over the Terrifory generally fair prevailed. Temperatures for the night except at Kodiak, n were somewhat lower. Cold clear weather r the Pacific Northwest. £ National M’azda Lamps For General Lighting Service 25 Watt Lamps .......20c each 40 Watt Lamps .......20c each 50 Watt Lamps .......20c each 60 Watt Lamps .......20c each 75 Watt Lamps .......35¢c each 100 Watt Lamps .......35¢c each THE Thomas Hardware Co. An artist’s portrayal of figures in 1929 antomodile productien, showing largest totals ever reached | 2 | # ding assembled JUNEAU WOMEN'S CLUB (A. P. Staff Correspondent) |ebroad of American-made parts. e NEW YORK, Jan. 13.—The |With parts and t they had a! Notifies the public as a reminder 1 promptly at 8| School Audi- on will be charg- work in ed. Come and bring your friends. | —adv. {highway 'in the 1660,000 miles, ed Siat al miles of forrmerr e manager of the Nztional Auto- mobile Chamber of Commerce, |, ° That_is the largest production'?i;l};‘;:;] Al ever achieved in a single year, and ™ X comparés with a total production |, aionne oo of 4601130 units in 1928 with a ;0 Do wholesale value of $3162,798880, | =~ Ph ‘World registration of motor ve- L hicles. at the close of 1929 reached TWO CRIMES CHARGED 84,700,000, of which 26,400,000, or ! 76 per cent, were registered in thei AGAINST E.R. JOHNSON United States. | — -The world registration in 1928 was | ‘When he was arr 81,778,203, of which 24,493,124 werc €es Birch Satu night at a| registered in the United States. {local rooming h on a warraut) The world registration in 1923 charging them with contributing to was 31,778,203, of which 24,493,124 the delinquéncy of a minor child, | were registered within the United E. R. Johnson fell afoul of the| |Alaska Bone Dry Law. Deputy| Marshals Garster, Brown and Nefsy average of $812 for his car, accord- |Wwere the arresting officers. | s aggregated | o cmployment to her directly or January 4 with Fran- Sale ‘The motorist last year paid an WILL 2 whenever his smokestack fumes Kirkpatrick, aged 35 years,|even approach violation of city David King, aged 82, Were!gratnances. : nd frozen to death thrée miles| It is described to the American alled automoblle | gosety of Mechanical Engineers ott highway,|py v, p. Griffin and J. V. Brelsky storm in the ¢ Pittsburgh. i County. | 'The device uses a photo-electric ) left Jerome Satur-{eye to watch the smoke inside the cott. Workers of A stack, and it works equally well 1 camp at Mount|gay or night. The report says the |device is in successful operation on |commercial smokestacks. ——————— — |othy nd bad just returned from a direction south of the Nanuk, that he had traveled many square miles of ter- ritory that took him back to rein- deer camps and in other d tricts where natives had heard Eiel- son’s plane, 25 miles distance. i Plane Was Seen; Heard B. Berdielf, who drove the dog team, left the Nanuk on January 2. He visited reindeer camps and returned to the Nanuk Frid including Mr. and Mrs. Browning, are reported missing. night. He said Eielson’s plane was T ST MISS MBRIDE RETURNS over one camp and heard AT TiHE HOTELS Gastineau I and Mrs. Charles G. Bur-'on the Princess North after sév- Warren Tobey, Miss M. Pad- cral weeks visiting in Seattle, prin- k. Bam C. Saunders, T. R.'cipally with Mr. and Mrs. Hawy another, which was about 25 ,El south of North Caps, along foothills. This would indicatc that Eifelson did not go over into dc the high mountain range region Lynch, G. F. Beets, L. Berlin, L.'Pisher and daughter, former resi-|lisbed in export business in 1929, .g: kept his course westward along A. Dauphiny, T. George, D. B. dents of Junedu. Jones, J. Clauson, Daniel Howard. | e o DR IR ¥ By order of the W. M. speed traveling 110 miles | Alaskan | FERR: -OTICE motor vehicles were sold outside W. R. SPAIN, ind lightened by cases of gaso-| Mr. and Mrs. John J. Brown, . A special ferry will leave Juneau|the United States last year and | _agy. Secretary. | ne, continuous flying was pos- Ieter Lewton, C. Lee, Ed. King, for the Island Tucsday evening at they, with parts and tires, had a o TS " gible untll he ran out of the fog Jerry Blandy. {7:18 p. m. for the accommodation|value of $757400000. "Only TI0| Texas technological coilege at nfo better weather which might Zynda |ot those attending the Masonic in-|vehicles were imported in 1029, Lupbock, first opened in 1925, now ave taken him to the next largest, V. Ruth Creveling, Emma Obon.lmtwn. —adv.| In 1928 825113 units were ex-lhas more than 2,000 students. J .| hicles. Miss Mirlam McBride returned |Amounted to: $807867967, including ing to Mr. Reeves' figures. They went to Johnson's room to 1In addition to the unprecedented |Serve the warrant on the couple preduction of new cars, the indus- |Who were accused of having con- try manufactured parts and acces- |tributed to the delinquency of a sorles for replacements as well as little girl, daughter of the Birch service equipment having a whole- ) Woman. They found there sev- sale value of $920,000,000 and turned |eral bottles of mosnshine liquor | out rubber tires for replacement &nd an additional charge of break- | valued at $600,000,000. {ing the Alaska licuor law was filed | The motoring public, according against Johnson. to. the statistics paid a total of —————— . $025,000000 in texes on motor ve- bt e Included in the levy was $415,000,000 on gasoline consump- | Tuesday even:u— at 8 m. in tin. In 1928 the total taxation |yo “64i pellows Han, pDouglas,l }there Will be a'joint installation of officers of Gastineaux Lodge No.| 124, F. & A. M., and Nugget Chap- ter No. 2, O. E. S. All Masons, their ladies and members of the astern Star are invited to nttend,' CONTINUE ALL WEEK MASONS 1,766 on gasoline consump- tton. A new high mark also was estab< Mr. Reeves reports. His figure: show that 1,015,000 American-made OUR i { i Clearance [ i - By ! Juneau Lumber Mills, lng. ilure io Receive Credit 2 Is no proof that a bill has been paid but a cancelled check that has been accepted and paid is positive proof. This convenience and protection is yours for the asking. Pay your bills the modern and safe way. OPEN A CHECKING ACCOUNT AT THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK OF JUNEAU LUMBER SPRUCE HEMLOCK CEDAR - FIR MAHOGANY 0AK BOAT LUMBER, FLOORING, FINISH, MOULDINGS and SHOP PHONE 358 D e e Frye-Bruhn Company Featuring Frye’s De- . licious Hams aud Baeon Fresh EASTERN and OLYMPIA OYSTERS PHONE 38 ol . | R !