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THE DAJl ,Y ALASKA EMPIRE, MONDAY, SEPT. 15, 1930. Wpather Condmons As Weather Charming ew Frocks A MOST IMPRESSIVE COL.- LECTION OF AUTUMN and WINTER DRESSES We have selected these dresses for THE FABRICS their superiority of styling and Frisca Cloth their unusualness of fabric. If you Satins want something for street, sport or Cantons business wear, here is your oppor- Flat Crepes tunity. . Jerseys THE COLORS Black Browns Greens fGrOUP, 1— Blues Reds $13.50 Mixtures GROUP 2 $21.50 B. M. Behrends Co., Inc. Junear’s Leading Department Store WOMAN'S bI.UB 3 Mrs. 1 ENTERTAINS AT gram a success. Duncan, son of and Mrs. R. E. Robertson, and ccal high' school student, received 1y compliments on his ability y .md Mrs. Charles | Hawkesworth Mrs. Harold - h ? An naing feature of the gf“”‘il(, lm.lK \Ilr‘ k R[“,M 1 7;”;‘;;;‘)‘1‘ afternoon was the rendition of four TEA SA e o M € groups of songs by Mrs. W. C. 16 refreshmen commiiiee con: Elly Among these e SAlL ¢ | i """ d of: Mesdames Scott, Wat-| You PY Bc"““db::‘:.; Alt : . 0 kins, Blomgren and Chase, who were f“‘gl"‘kmse;h b{lm 5 ) Club Womcn Entertain at , : oy |by Clarke; “The House : YOUDBET | o¢ the Road,” by Mrs.F. H. Gulé- Tea in Church Parlors Saturday Afternoon |sian; and “At Dawning,” by Wake- field Cadman. Mrs. Ellis is a re- cent arrival here and is the wife i dec- ul green and < xa oo white; ferns and white phlox pre- of W. C. Ellis, Deputy Fiscal Agent At a nic appoint tea given |dominating iue decoration was| o mé U‘mted'stnr.ea Forest Servige. last Saturday rnoon in the par- under the supervision of Mesdnmm‘,rm beauty of her voice and gra- * lors of the ! rn Light Presby- | Redlingshafer, Kendler and C. D. | ctousness ard. generoslty of her pre- terian Church, the Juncau Woman's | Coats. i 5 Club was to the women of| Music was furnished by a trm};;;?:;";:;“‘““"ly impressea all wiig the community. A musical program composed of Mrs. Stella Jones, cello, l of unusual excellence featured the Duncan Robertson, violin, and Mrs. BT occasion Trevor M. Davis, piano. Thrnu;,l\, FOR EXPERT PIANO 'flymua A large attendance was greeted |the courtesy of Mrs. George An- by the President of the Club, Mrs. |ders Kohler and Camphell | Telephone 143, AI*BHOH. Am::— piano heil ped to make the 'son Muslc Bhnppe - Mae \Vxllnm~ and her fellow offi- Pr931dmt of France Dccorates Net Star gran with the Legion of Honor. The scene occulrdld at ghe Rola‘r‘;d Garros Stadium uring e Davis Cup match. At the righte 1 th idenit: i Dixon of e rS! '°§’¢'“ at the left is Capt. illon of fl“ o “«‘::rnlluhl l(uuxnxé Jean !&fioll of France I BREAK IN PIPE FORCES FLIERS Bad ‘Weather Also Report-| ed as Another Reason For = Decision (Continyed irom Pdge One) night from Tokyo said Bromley) passed segward of Etorofy. Island] lin the Kuriles chain at 4 o'clock and later passed over Nemurop Strait near Cape Shiretoko, emst- ernmost point of Hokkaido, flying]| low over the watér &nd with an average speed of 113}¢ miles ian, hour with a strong tail wind. | Dispatches received from Tacoma ' said that the field where Bromleyi was scheduled to arrive early Mon- day morning wa#in complete readi- ness and preparations were made for handling thousands expected be at the field to. greet the fliers. One dispateh also stated m planes meet. the fliers. signal Corps stations in Alaska were instructed to tune in and give all information nbnqt the progress of the flight. In Juneau yestérday radio Op- erators were on the alert to cateh any information of ‘the progress of the merq WOMEN INVITED T0 AIR ADDRESS Mrs. Ulysses ‘Grant Me- Queent to Stress Aerial Mail Benefits Mts., Ulysses arnlu. MeQuosn, of | Bevprjey itls, Cal, who 1 lern {to arganize tlie Wonon's Acrosautic | Assoclablon of Alaslta, will glve aa addross at 7:30 o'clook this cvoning in the room of Mry. John H. Biggs, in thd Gastineau Hotel. Onc phasc of the address will re- late to air mail. As ah Instarce {of the efficiency of air mall, Mr3. 'McQueen cites the fact that on her arrival here last Friday by air- plane frdm Seabtle, she brought to Mrs. B. D. Stewart, of this city, an enswer to a message that the lattor had sent to the Puget Sound me: tropelis by airplane only two days préviously. l Mrs. McQueen extends a general invitation to women of Juneau to hear her address this evening. .. — Mrs. F. Krsul successfully under- went a surgical operation at St. Ann’s Hospital yesterday. B Siceere v o France and Italy are now jockey- lnz for predominant influence in cotnth; (b | “Tomorrou's Styles BACK T0 JAPAN ..., Were ready to. take-off t, ¥ 'flval is a son, the baby will become |to the couple in August, 1921, but Recnrdcd by the U S Bureau Forecast for Juneam and vicinity, bew~ning 4 p. m. today: Rain tonight and Tuesday; moderate southeasterly winds. The Paramount Monarch SUPERHEATED GAS RANGES In Nile G Built ENAMEL FINISHES % Your Inspection Invited Green and Sunshine Yellow 1y Juneau-Y oung Hardware Co. LOCAL DATA rarometer Temp. Humidity Wind Velocity \Veathe 29.84 52 88 S 7 Sprinkling 2908 48 93 E 3 Rain Ncon (ndgy 29.96 4 97 SE 20 Rain CABLE AND BADIO REPORTS T VESTERDAY: TODAY Highest 4pm. | Low 4a.m. 4am. Precip, 4am. Stations- temp. temp. | emp. temp. Velocity 24 hrs. Weather Nome » 50 48 | 32 34 ” 0 Pt Cldy Bethel 54 54 | 42 42 16 0 Pt. Cldy Fort Yukon 50 50 32 32 - 0 Pt Cldy Tanana 54 50 42 42 —_ 16 Cldy Fairbanks 56 56 34 38 4 Trace Cldy Bagle 46 46 36 46 4 Trace Cldy St. Paul 46 46 40 40 16 08 Cldy Dutch Harbor 52 46 [ 46 46 - 10 Cldy Kodiak 56 52 44 46 14 0 Pt. Cldy Cordova 60 58 44 46 4 22 Pt. Cldy Juneau 53 52 16 48 3 03 Rain Ketchikan .. 62 60 {5 . 48 o 48 4 Trace Rain Prince Rupert 58 56 48 48 0 18 Clear Edmonton 58 52 44 44 14 0% Pt. Cldy Beattle 2 70 Portland 74 72 56 56 o e 0 Clear San Prancisco €8 64 | &8 . &8 s 0 - Cldy Spckane 6 4 52 52 ¥ 0 Clear Yancouver, B. C. T4 68 54 56 0 .01 Cldy '—-Less than 10 miles. The pressure is moderately lov the Gulf of Alaska. from British Columbia southward. fallen in Eastern Alaska and in southern Bering Sea and the weath- er has been fair over most of Western Alaska and the Gulf of Al- aska. Temperatures have fallen in Southeast. It is high near in the Interior and lowest in the Aleutian Islands and Light to moderate arins have the Northwest and extreme By GLENN BABB | (A. P. Correspondent) TOKYO.—An heir to what little glory and prestige the Japanese have left to the one-time imperial | house of Korea may make his ap- | pearance here about the end of| September. It is officiauy announced that the stork is hovering over the English- Style mansion recently completed in 'okyo for Prince Yi Gin and his Japanese wife, and if the new ar- an “Mmperial Highness” and heir to the house of Yi. A son was born dled the following May. When Japan annexed Korea in 1010 she sought to prevent the dis- possessed ruling family from be- Department Featuring DRESSES in both wash and wool ma- terials in sizes 4 to 14 years, COATS for the young Miss ih a vatiety of clev- er styles and materials, Sizes 4 to 18 years. ALSO—-Somethmg dif- ferent in children’s hats. “Juneau's Oun Store” 'to the plans for their absorption § ax this second Prince Yi is the pres- coming the rallying point for pos- sible Korean revolts. The Korean royal family, decadent and impov- erished, lent itself without protest —so far as the world ever knew— into the ruling family of Japan just as their domains were being ab- sorbed into the Japanese Empire. The Korean emperor was given the status of a prince of the Blood rial of Japan. He was also ven a yearly allowance of $750,000 was later increased to $900,- , and permitted to consider him- BBIf a descendant of the sun god- déss, Amaterasu. The feebls first Prince Yi died ln 1919 and was succeeded by an ually futile nephew who joined his ancestors in 1926. The brother | ent head of the house. Now 33 years old, he has become! more Japanicized than his prede- eessors and, in the process, has ac- quired an energy unknown to his immediate forbears. He was mar- of the Nashimoto collateral branch ried in 1920 to Princess Masako of the Japanese royal line, was edu-| cated in Japan and holds a com- mission as captain in the Japanese army. Prince Yi is a dumpy little man, with a mild, ingratiating manner, and is said to regard his brief and| infrequent, visits to Scoul, capital of | his forefathers, as unpleasant inter- ludes. The dignity and wealth that are his as a prince of the blood in Japan appear to satisfy him. 8o far, in fact, has he drifted .being a possible rallying point for Korean revolt that he is exe- ted as traitor by the scattere and feeble band of workers whi preach Korean independence. These EX-ROYAL EOUSE OF KOREA EXPECTS HEIR e - -, Ptince ¥i Gin, head of the Korean royal family, and his wife on the verandah of their new westein-style mansion in Tokyo. {most beautiful woman of the im-{ |inherited her mother’s charm and | |tricia Kane, Hoonah; Miss Anna |Host, Tenakee; A. H. Kuettner and {Ketchikan; A. E. Johnson, Douglas; |and R. McCombe, members of the (salvaging party that has been en- ;son, Excursion Inlet; Charles L. \Parker, Skagway; E. M. Healy, Funter Bay. to Seattle. ADOLPH D. SCHMIDT Managing® Director ANNOUNCING “Ip the Heart of Everything” K New Washington Hotel SEATTLE WINDOW. SHADES —at— Juneau Paint Store 1 ==t o ———— Weekly and monthly winter rates to all visiting Alaska people Where every employee takes an interest in you. i JAMES HAR’I& Asst, Manngfi Northern Sales A genéy Pioncer Pool Hall Felephone 182 EMPLOYMENT OFFICE Chas. Evaporated Apricots, 1930 crop, at... Evaporated Black Fizs Imported Fish Balls, 1 Ib. can Junepu, Alaska Out of High Rent District Pool—DBilliards Miller, Prop. 20c 1b. e Princess Yi's mother, Princess | Itsuko Nashimoto, is considered the | perial family and the daughter has' classic features. She is thoroughly Japanese and does not even speak | the language of her husband’s na- tive land. If she presents the House of Yi with an heir, he will be half Japa- nese. In due course he will prob- ably wed a Japanese princess and his heir will be three-quarters Japanese. So goes the absorption of the ouce proud rcyal house of Korea. FOUR DIE. IN INFERNO OF FLAMING GAS ENID, Oklahoma, Sept. 15.—Five men, four unidentified itinerants, were killed when trapped in an in- ferno of blazing gasoline when 15 oil cars in a freight train left the track near Kremlin, 10 miles north of here, and caught fire. The identified’ man, I. L. Lock- hart, aged 55 years, died in a hos- pital suffering from broken legs and internal injuries. The flames shot hundreds of feet intqg the air and drove citizens of Kremlin from their homes. Three residences were destroyed by the resulting fire and an automobile and a garage were also burned as the result of an explosion of gaso- line caused by heat from the fire. AT THE HOTELS Gastineau Mrs. T. R. Shotter, and Miss Pa- Donald Mackinnon, Killisnoo; Wen- dell Dawson and Mildred Smith, T. W. Lind, Seattle; J. Monahan, N. Lindley, R. Clithero, E. Heedly gaged during the summer in recov- ering treasure from the wrecked steamship Islander. Alaskan William LaMar, Craig; A. -Iver- émbryonic rebels, therefore, now envisage a republic rather than a: 'monarchy for their country. i ers and C. J. Sullivan, Haines. l SPRUCE—HEMLOCK—CEDAR PHONE 358 JUNEAU LUMBER MILLS DIAMOND BRIQUETS - THE. ALL-PURPOSE COAL Quick Starting — Long. Lasting PACIFIC COAST COAL CO. PHONE 412 PIONEER AIRWAYS - NORTHBIRD and SEA PIGEON OPERATING SEAPLANES PASSENGERS AND CHARTER $40.00 per hour. Special Charter Bntgs on Application, SEE JERRY SMITH—Gastineau Hotel Zynda § i TS “ Lee Atkinson, Chichagof; J. Rog- Old Papers for sale at Emhiré Oflice y R. F. JONES, Manager Four-Place Stinson Cabin Monoplanes v