The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, July 22, 1930, Page 2

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

Time limited. must be sold. It isn’t a ques! on o -All Summer Top 'Couts f profit. It is a maiter of good businss principles not to carry over Top Coats from one séason to another. To do this successfully, pices must be reduced to a point that will 'maké each purchase worth while in the arilonnt of money saved. actual savings to be made now— o3 £ $32.50 Coats Now $2»g $35.00 Coats Now $26.25 Here are some of the - ¥ poly $37.50 Coats Now $27,15 $50.00 Coats Now $37.50 $55.00 Coats Now $41,25 B. M. Behrends Co., Inc. | yosterday from Petersburg. TUESDAY JULY 22 I93 ILOW CEILING STOPS PLANE FROM FLYING Taku at Aarran’d Wran-| gell at Ketchikan Await | Better Weather | Awaiting favorable weather con ditions, the seaplane Taku is Atlin, B. C. Dense clouds maké tho ceiling of the sky so low that the | aircraft cannot come over the| | mountains. She went to A\‘,llnl yesterday, with Joseph Hill, minlng[ man, and Dr. Forrest A. Kerr, pas- sengers. She was to have returned to Juneau last evening with Ernest ‘W. Sawyer, assistant to the Secre- tary of the Interior; Mrs. Sawyer and their son so as to enable them to board the steamship Aleutian for Seward. Inability of the plane to make its return flight to Juneau as planned has disarranged MxJ Sawyer's schedule. The Taku came back to Juneau She | had intended to fly to Ketchikan before returning, but disagreeable weather in the Ketchikan area pre- vented the proposed flight to um | city. The seaplane Wrangell is rq- bound at Ketchikan. As soon weather conditions permit, sheF gcheduled to make a trip to Ju- | neau. RAIN AGAIN WASHES ! OUT BASEBALL GAME For tne fourth successive day, rain yesterday forced cancellation | of the ball games scheduled by the | City League. The Moose and the | American Legion clubs, slated to | play last night a game postponed | from last week, were kept idle when rain fell so steadily that the dia- | mond resembled a water polo field. If weather conditions improve, | and it seemed not altogether likely | | Juneau Lumber ks are billed to play tonight. s also a game postponed m last week. e ——— VIRGINIA 1V. BRINGS 1.0GS Towing a raft of logs that had en cut in the Peril Straits dis- t, the Virginia IV, owned by the Mills and com- inded by Capi. Matt Nordness, ed to the wharf of the milling mpany last evening. She - will we this evening with box shooks r Tenakee: IR P 0 L Ola papers Icr sale at The Em- re office. Final Cledrqnce Smart Straws Values up to " $12.50 FINAL CLEARANCE PRICE $2.95 Juneau’s Leading Department Store SAYS [;[]VERN[]R Suipected Tagoms: S Arrested in San Francisco ourteen Persons Embark| at Juneau for Ports to Westward Nine Dredg g es Operating ) Near Fairbanks—Con- SAN l"RI\NCISCO. Cal., July -Tacoma detectives have left s x |the north with Claude H. Ry dl[]ons l:.xct‘“cnl | suspected yer of John M. True, | e |on Ju - He ‘was arrested here.| with a fair passenger list and} (Continuea irom Page One) ‘1\ o others are held | considerable freight, the steamship True w Special Agent for the|aleutian arrived in Juncau from town and nearby creek communities, | NOrth Pacific i“."‘:“‘ Seaftle at 5 o'clock thls morning and departed at 11 am. for Seward and way po The vessel brought Ibut few passengers to this city. She was boarded here by 14 for the Westward. They. were: Miss Lizzie Williams for Port Al- thorp; Mr. and Mrs. Harry Wat- Son and Miss I. Wilson for Valdez Other Communities | Other towns visited by the Gov- crnor included Anchorage, Seward and Cordova. Conditions in them were good. The salmon run in Cook Walter Wisen Inlet was improving and late last | per, was arrested early this month week, the first big catches were|a¢ Naknek by Game Warden Homer brought in for the Anchorage can- | jewell for trapping without an alien | > GAME LAW VIOL FINED IN WE TORS ARE ERN ARE/ S an alien trap- {that would happen, the Moose and‘ | SSPISIS SHP SR SPECIAL FEATURES that make the NEW INTERNATIONAL (Dodd. Mead & Co.) The Standard Encyclopaedia of America Nearly 75,000 separate articles, similar work. Technical words avolded. Articles given space according to " thelr importance. Well edited and carefully balanced, “International” from an American point of view on every subject, but gives other nations fair and unbiased treatment. More and better biographics than any other encyclopaedia. Reading and Study Courses included, covering 34 important fields of learning, based on the text. Wonderful maps printed in colors and especially mounted to open flat. Terms so liberal that the Encyclopaedia may be secured at once and payments divided over one or two years. No interest charges. For your FREE copy of the 56-page beautifully illustrated descriptive book ENLIGHTENING THE WORLD, and for full information regarding the Special Introductory Offer, communi- cate with many more than any other ROSS A. ELLIS, Publishers' Representative, Now at The Gastineau B DRI § Arthur Geschke and Earl nery. some building was in license. He ples iit 1 was l‘laug-X gress ai both Anchorage and Se fined §125 by United States Com- |Mann for Cordova; Mrs. Alicel ard. | missioner Reagan. Woodcock, Henry W. Woodcock, F | There was no indication of busi- | Ay Scward, Herman Swerdloff | M- Carrigan, G. H. Fitzgarrald, c.| ness depression at Cordova, GOV. | pleaded guilty to taking grouse out |F- Rhind, P. Langenfeld, B. Steif- | vater and Donald Frasier for Sew- ard. 5 Passengers for Juneau were MTr. Parks said. Merchants appeared 1o | ¢ be doing a normal trade. While United pink salmon run was v in show- on and was fined $50 by States Commissioner Mor- s on the two cases w ing up, he was told the fish Were | coeiveq today at local headquar-|nd Mrs. Edwin V. Cooper, the beginning to show in large quan- of the Alaska -Game Commis- Rev. and Mrs. A. W. Shamel, Miss tities at the end of last we sion. Mary Shamel, Missg Nona Rogus; Farmers Are Prosperous 5 5 Francis Field, W. R. Jackson, Van The agricultural industry in the Ola pupwa ro. sae Al The Em- | Marcus, R E Robertsun and L L. Tanana and Matanuska valleys is Payne. | Fire. Money Saving Bargains Genuine Wood’s Arctic Sleeping Bags, size 90x90, regular price $67.50, Now ..... ..... .....$49.50 Genuine Wood’s Arctic Sleeping Bags, size 78x84, regular price $58.50, Now ..... ..... ......$44.50 HEAD NETS--chiffon, each, $1.25, Black Net, B T .$1.00 .$6.95 $4.75 .$3.95 Men’s Goodrich Kingfisher [ oots, Hip Boys’ Goodrich Storm King Boots Youths’ Goodrich Storm l\mg Boots Men’s Bib Overalls, sizes 34 to 40 ..............$145 Men’s Canvas (xl()\c 15 cents pair; dozen ...:.$1.75 MEN'’S SUITS AND HATS AT HALF PRICE Arnold’s Bootery GOLDSTEIN BLDG. PHONE 45 THIS MAY HAPPEN TO YOU— TOMORROW! Bumpers may protect your car against minor dents, BUT ; PROPER INSURANCE can PREVENT ALL your LOSSES If you can’t afford a loss, DON'T GAMBLE—INSURE! ALLEN SHATTUCK, Ine. INSURANCE DOUGLAS NEWS et COUNCIL MEETINGS This. week will be a busy one for the Douglas City Council as four| evenings have been set aside for as many meetings to attend to the business affairs of the city. Starting tonight, with the regular monthly business session, the next three cvenings will be devoted to adjustment of taxes. Notices of as-| sessment levies have been sent out and any complaints regarding them must go before the Council when it sits as a Board of Equalization. | - HOME FROM TROLLING Weather Condmonu As Recorded by the b s. Weather Bureau = Foreonst for Junemw and victnity, brg~ning 4 p, m. todnyr ‘:‘i Occasional rain tonight and W:(nesday; gentle variable winds.’ i Mrs. L. W. Kilburn and son| Dickie, who have been sojourning at Port Alexander for the past] three weeks, returned home on the Pacific, Sunday. Tyra Wahto, who | was spending the summer there; with her mother, accompanied Mrs. | | Kilburn home. e ALEUTIAN BRINGS CANS The steamer Aleutian docked here ! during the early morning hours to- day to unload a shipment of some- { thing like 4,000 cases of empties for | Ithe Douglas Island Packing Com- pany. e 1T S IMPRO G HOME { Pelix Gray is having the front| {porch of his home enclosed with glass and panels as a protection ' |against the weather. Contractor Al Lundstrom is in charge of the work. 4; — ee—— | NOTICE The “Work to Win” Sewing Cir-| cle will meet Thursday night ai |the home of Mrs. Waltonen. adi.i — ol Try the Five oClock Dinner| —aav | Speeials at Mubrvs The Modern " Cinderella! Cinderella dried her tears, called us on the phone and said, “My sisters are going to the Ball. I haven't a thing to wear. My only par- ty dress is soiled. Can you call for it at once and cleanse it beautifully by to- morrow evening? You will? I knew you could.” Phone 15 Alaska Laundry Why buy ordinary printing when you can get Quality Printing at the same identical 5 cost. Before you give out that next print- : ing job you have in mind, get our esti- '3 mate — Be convinced that you can buy H { Quality Printing from us at the cost of ordi- H nary printing. f We can print anything from an ordi- e - 8 . nary post card to a large Broadside. 3 Empiré Printing Co TOCAL PATA Time Barometer Temp. Humidity Wicd Velocity Wntfl 4.p. m. yest'y 3013 57 20 s 6 4 a. m. today 3041 52 00 w 1 Noon today ....3010 53 9% s 6 CABLE. AND RADIO REPORTS ~ YESTERDAY | ODAY e Highest 4pm. | Low 4am. 4am. Precip. 4 s Statlons~ t:emp. tgmn. | emp. temp. Velocity 24 hrs. Wes 1% Barrow 42 40 (R (B ST e Oy Nome 50 50 |98 %0 .. 23 10 R; Bethel 58 54 88560 . m 0 ofi; Fort Yukon 66 60 |t R ] Clea: Tanana . . 68 62 b2 56 — | Fairbanks 61 62 ’; 7 b |Fagle sl Tee Y A ady St. PAul . sl | THaTES R % Rain Dutch Harbor — — 46 52 -~ 02 Cidy Kodiak 58 58 50 B2 0 06 r iCordova 60 56 | 46 48 4 32 &1 Junean. . TAE 57 RaE | g 1 46 Rafn Ketchikan . .62 62 | 54 b4 4 22 Cldv Prince Rupert 62 62 | 58 B4 0 28 Cldv {Edmonton 80 80 | &8 - b8 ’ 0 Pt Qv Seattle . 8 8 [ s b . 0 Clear Portland .. 86 86 | 60 80 » 0 Clgar San Francisco ... 66 62 | b4 56 o 0 (,:g: Spekane . 90 88 | 58 58 ot 0 Clear Vancouver, B. C. 8 6 | &8 58 0 0 Cléar *—Less than 10 miles. wh NOTE.—Observations at Alaskan mainlana statlons, except 'du- |nean, Cordova and Fairbanks are made at 8 a. m. and 8 py'm {Juneau time. S The pressure is low in Nortnwestern Alaska ald high ovoxfie Northeastern Pacific Ocean and the coast from the Gulf of A to Oregon. Light rain has fallen in nearly all portions of the TE tory. Temperatures have risen in the Aleutian Islands and on dhe {Arctic Coast with little change elsewhere, :: — - — PHONE 102 Second Floor, Goldstein Bldg." Entrance Thru Arnold’s Booterg: A. MALACKY EXPERT FURRIER Cleaning, Repairing and Remodeling. New Coats mnd!‘ to order. Let us make your Old Furs look like Ncw.» Reduced Summer Rates now effective. EXPERT WORKMANSHIP GUARANTEED TRAVEL BY AIR FLIGHTS TO ANY POINT DESIRED KAWASHIN[ T (‘N AIRWAY ¢ FOR RESERVATIONS—Hangar Phone, 29; Gas- tineau, Phone 10. A. B. HAYES, Agent. Old Papers for sale at Empire Office ity Printing Phone 374 v gy e

Other pages from this issue: