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B — L o) NF W for SPRING Gracefully Draped Lines Emphasize the Spring Dresses al and belted lengths vary from thiree to six in- ches below the kuee according to type. of skirts is introduced flares, "“””‘ S by means of circular panels and flouneings. Every dress is new, fresh and emart looking. and coloring Favored fabrics for the new season is represented. $12.50, $19.75, $39.75 PRICE $29.75, ‘handise arriving on New m every hoat from the style centers in the east. B. M. Behrends Co., Inc. Juneaw's Leading Department Store [l lmmen el PASSES AWAY; . - ILL TWO WEEKS whom he told and wroke Grover C't‘\ land, Carl Andrew Caf- and Theo ipted his friend 1 to Amer- &bout W d dore Roosevelt. e was Emily James time became interested in publish- iucator, and Barnard College, a lence fit f G iversity, Hanover Prussia, when the Civil War broki out With a handiull of ics as ar | Then he determined to return a1 Civil War ting at the the 176th New He was taken end on> requiring oner, lalions. He saw service, e age of eighteen, with York voluntes ' prisener in Battle of Creck during idan’s drive in the Shenandoah valley, and spent most of the curation of the war {a he t Confederate prisons. es and thoughts Following the war he abandoned in the un- the scientific carcer and at his fath- his request attached himself to Sue T.ne and enthu vy lawyers and C taps. but porsist s7ated belief in i him to success ov protosts of int the She; > can be ¢ nd inie permit his to b e dertakines the strenun who found for vas born in Londin, 1 April 2, 1344, while his father thl in Londcn in the interests of woug ; he firm. While abroad for treatment business of G to his eyes he attended the Bor- ¢ bonne, Paris, and the University of Berlin, lled later &t Got- tingen & younger brother, Bishop, y managed the house afier in 1872, reor- v d P. Putnam ook a hand in public affairs, out h c “hip c figures of the day. he activi his father's death ership and prestige which it en- Joys in its field today. Young Putnam after the war of the leading pub- Among his | G- TOMORROW Remnant Day ATURDAY, MARCH FIRST AND REGULARLY HEREAFTER ON Ist and I5th of Every Month ALL SHORT ENDS AND SOILED YARD GOODS WVILL GO AT HALF PRICE MAKE A REGULAR HABIT OF VISITING THESE MONEY-SAVING EVENTS Leader Store GEORGE BROTHERS _ !dre effective March 1. " |through that passage, which would | ‘K‘ 1 " |tablished in the dis! Cedar | ganized it, and brought it the lead- | D A IR e e LR THE DAILY ALASKA BVIPIRE FRIDAY, FEB. 28, 1930. a Democrat in sentlment, and[ ardent free trade advoeate. His 3, though, that the tariff | ould not be lowered | accompanying rcdu"uo"; = m,fx:l‘:.‘:::’ duty on publishers’ supplies.| g yoqq sofied s idea was subsequently in-| 1’ petate ated in the Underwood Tarifi.| . Aet of shock. Independent in Politics b 15 DEENE Oibes independent in polities, he| gravestone found the New York City| 15 Y258 .0 vures nd the Citizens' Union, two ations devoted to civic wel-! fare. He worked with a group of Democrats to bring about the nom- | on of Woodrow Wilson at the ratic convention in Baltimore and fought Tammany in its| of Champ Clark. Thae work of George Haven Put 1 as a publicist was recognize in life. Bowdoin Coll de him dn honorary Master o s in 1894 and degrees of ho‘-j doctor of letters wete be-| on him by the Uhivetsity o[} tteburgh, 1899, and Cotumbia Uni- | v, 1912, | Major Putnam himsolr ‘The French Government v | i enough to give me after ti. tment of the internation sright law, in recds my parchment states, ‘of servi Franée and literature,’ the cross c the Legion d'Henneur.” e wa ‘ lso accorded a testimonial by a ip of appreciative British au- Solution of Ye abhr. %, Denial ). Peravian ehief- tain m<|m t L Writing Imple« ment Permits In the year of 912 18 Our Lord [olm OB rie[® . Cereal grass Nothing more than Pronoun Young salmon urkish eom. mander Lineal descen- § s | | { | Futnam wrote sevcral : ok; on history and aut obiazr‘—‘ ical works and was a conht to the Encyclopedia Britannica ] —ee | TOWING RULES | Datly Cross-uord Puzzle sterday's Puzzle & Tnh‘nfm s Character of Bulwer-Lyt- ton's 20, Around: prefix i Lumberman’s 1f-hoot Commaotion Fingerless glove Hld musical fastrument Former ruler Venieles Feminine name lngs nowledge ine European city . Hindu ga L Kind of cheese stive cdn- ANNOUNCED FOR HARROWS ROUTE Government Fixes Route and Regulations for Tows inNarrows Regulations just issued by Maj Malcolm Elliott, United States Dis- trict Engineer and approved Secretary of War Patrick J. Hur ley, give a “towing channel” throu Wrangell Narrows and pr e other rules for tows and towboats using that passage of water. They * Sy A ¢ Arrangements No towline, or 5 between tow e p eces, shall e aggregate of tow: and sey 1 150 fect Iuvvs shall not excead 66 feet i idth over: Tows othe: takch alongs! The purpose, said Maj. Elliott, two-fold; cne to facilitate the pas age of log tows through the rows, and two, to obviate difficul in the navigation of large ships ide the t No craft or tow n Wi narrows main h i tg were not the T main channel Given Local Approval f If the pulp indu rout tow. be swing into Disabled craft in . in jcolute necessity are e ted from | |towing through the Narrows. At these regulations. r‘ ipresent, . sawmills obtaining tm-| United States rtment of ber ‘from 5o use the passage Commerce “Pilot R for Inland brifiging ratie here and to Peters-|Waters” apply to all craft passing | burg, It is.aimed to extend to this|through Wrangell Narrows, | class of traffic every possible fa- | e T ility and at the same time pro-|GImy BABY IS BO vide adequate facilities for steam-| |er traffic. | | Before the regulations were, hdopted, Maj. Elliott said, all inter- | A baby gir ested parties, including sawmills |Mr. and M and others, were consulted as weil |Camas, Wash as steamship companies, and the residents, accor regulations are the concensus of jceived by local frie |thelr opinions. They are believed couple. to be satisfactory to all conzernad.! The mother was formerly Dorothy | Reute of Tows Glass, Juneau High School girl, and nze towing chantie! fixed by the !Mf. Hillsbury was connscted with | tegullations for tugboats having a,ths assay office of the Alaska Ju- | drafb of ‘nine feet or less, coming neau Gold Mining company. through the Narrows from the| = oSl | south, is as follows LET Ammquist r,os§ ymic Sult ‘w of Battery Islets. We call and deliver. Phone 328 West of Bpike Rock Beacon. s e West of Burnt Island. l Old papers -or sale at The Em- | ably will be a large increase | RN TO FORMER J COUPLE born recently {2 k Hillsbury, at , former Juneau | to word s of the young re- Bast of South Ledge Beacon. |Pire. Bast of North Ledge Marker. East of Buoy N-6 and Colorado |Reef Beacon. ‘West of Anchor Point Beacon. ‘West of Buoy C-7A. East of Vexation Point White {Baacon (ie. in main ship channel). East of Buoy N-10. West of Green Rocks Bast of all aids on North Flat (whenever tide permits). East of Buoy N-22. + East of Buoy N-24. East of and close to Buoy C-11. ‘West of Topeka Rock Light (com- | monly called Prolewy Light). Maximum Tows Fixed !‘or towboats drawing more than nitie feet of water application should be made to the United| States Engineer's Office, Juneau, for authority to use the ship chan-, nel for each trip made Four classes of towboats are specified and the maximum tows for each fixed by the regulations.| Boats of 26 horsepower or not permitted to take any tows except fuel logs through the Nar- rows, not to exceed 500 feet b.m. iper horsepower with a 10,000-foot maximum. Boats of from 26 to 42 horsepotver, not' to exceed 10,000 b.m. of fuel \logs or. one freighting scow not larger than 30 feet by €0 feet or one raft section (logs or piling). Towboats of 50 to 89 horsepower are permitted to tow not to exceed 10,000 feet b.m. fuel logs in tah- dem, or 15,000 if chained or cabled, onone anchor lifter, one plle driver, “lor two units of other towable equip- ment of two raft sections. Towboats of 90 horsepower or over, not to exceed 10,000 feet b.r: {fuel logs in tandem or 15,000 'if bound together, one anchor lifter, one piledriver, or three units of AND WHERE Depy r, left on th meng those who ‘!"L for Ket W T AN AT TR Re BNA Lvr !zwmflfim W eather Comlmons As Recorded by the U. S. Weather Bureau Juneau and vicinity, beg*~ning 4 p. m. today: ‘mer tonight and Saturday; moderate south winds. LOCAL DATA Time Barometer Temp. Humidity Wlntl Velocl(y Weathe |4 p. m. yesl'y 3 33 2 5 Pt Cudy m. today 2 ) 1 Pt. Cldy ocn today 30. 6 Pt. Cldy Pnrernul fol "CABLE AND RADIO REFORTS YESTERDAY i TODAY Highest 4pm. | Low 4o.m. 4am. Precip. 4am. | | Stations~ Barrow temp. temp. emp. ',emp Velocity 24 hrs. Wenthcr 20 16 10 16 14 Pt. Cid Cldy Nome 30 30 21 28 24 Cldy | Bethel 36 28 | 2 24 8 Cldy | Fort Yulkon . [ -6 -20 -18 Clear | Tanana 16 12 10 38 Pt. Cldy | Eagle 28 24 16 20 Clear (St. Paul 34 34 30 32 Clear | Dutch Harbor 48 38 32 24 Pt. Cldy | Kodtak 38 38 2 M Snow | cordova 38 38 R Cldy | Juneau : 33 {1 85 S Pt. Cldy Ketchikan 42 32 32 Trace Pt. Cldy ce Rupert 42 34 34 0 Pt Cldy nmntou 14 6 6 02 Cldy 46 | 84 s 0 Clear 48 32 [ Clear 56 45 - 0 Pt Cldy *—Less than 10 miles. | csmormac| B | 5afi Francisco NOTE—Observations at Barrow, Fori Yukon, Tanana and Eagle are made at 8 a. m. and 8 p. m., Juneau time. The disturbance noted yesterd:y in northern Bering Sea has ap- arently shiited to the southwestward. The pressure has risen mod- tely in Wqptern Alaska and is falling very rapidly this morning the Aleutian Islands with southerly gales to the southward. The pressure remains moderately high from Eastern Alaska to Cali- fernia :m! highest in Western Canada . Rain and snow have fallen in the Gulf of Alaska and fair weather has prevails in other parts of > Territory. Temperatures have ris in Northern and Eastern Alaska and have fallen nllghlly in t tern portion. Heywood-Wakefield New 1930 Carriages NOW IN STOCK Drop in and see them A Quality Seal on Every Wheet Every carriage sold with a guarantee Juneau-Young Hardware Pro- e Com pany 1 cn the Queen was the Rev e Charles E. Rice, Dean of the hedral in Juneau. TNelson, u and Ketchil the Queen Trin 3 on for J. B. “Datch” Ber for Seattle on the e expects to be wee Albert Wile, here on the M on a nhofe A,snnt for se traveling man, nita for Tenakee short business trip of lefy (P WA S S S T R TA HEMLOCK FLOORING VERTICAL GRAIN— I\I]N DRIED For Beauty and Style— Satisfaétion— Our trucks go any piace nny time. A tank for Diesel Oil and a tank for crude oil save burner trouble. PHONE 149, NIGHT 5103 | RELIABLE TRANSFER s - Coats made to order from FRESH ALASKA SEAL SKINS Sizes up to 38 for $550.00. Select your own lining from novelty silks, just in. Yurman’s A Wonderful Assortment of Cosmetics French Perfumes and Toilet Soaps NOW ON DISPLAY I 4 Juneau Lumber M;l;s, ]nc. Lumber for fl)éry I‘l;r‘zpbsé PHOKE 858 /¢ - H | ‘ Per:;tafiéfice | | I \ | SIMMONS BABY CRIBS FOR SOUND DESIGN—COOD LOGKS ROOMINESS AND SAFETY For Baby’s great convenience, health and mother’s Simmon’s Cribs are easy to keep clean and sweet. THE Thomas Hardware Co. F rye-Bruhn Company Featuring Frye’s De- licious Hams and Baeon PHONE 38 STATIONERY, OFFICE EQUIPMENT, Typewriter Supplies and Commercial Printing 'Exclusive Dealers Underwood Typewriters Geo. M. Simpkins Co.