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Bridge of Land Across Bering NO PARDON FOR g . . ] e lease of the theatre \nh sx;,nnd ACROSS Solution of Yesterday’s Puzzle T ¢ to the announcement oOf| ent (o) D 1] ] WAS ICT J n Y0 12, ent ol p e Ol Y ¢ WASHINGTON D. C. Dec. ®|jonn Reck, representing the owners| ' Scxient of & p N§ T ?‘e;w“ Eaia . of the Carne- @ |, the building in which the the-| 13 Vae Emeratd (E Go g = 3 21 an Keauetions 1 DEGISIUN MADE . said slabs of ®|.tar s located. Erick Paulson has| B E ok . shale brought @ |g. T Ecatohike P 24, Persia S TiGd e arrived from Ketchikan and he a I ! (8 o ke be . ce Isla nounced the theatr be closed| ix. t<iana or St [P [R] " siave ° cutter e 5 i will be on Foul's exite [E Al 26. Swiss moun. Rl g Sty t Judges at once and % L i guiss dupreme Court “‘]H s of . sved beyond a @ [ihe job of gener: erhauling and Metul R T 02 fiindu spirit of California Act on . bridge 3 "‘:“ o |retitting of the Pa 2 g 36, Seute of helsg st ° ss Bering o . ; . o Pt antecedent It is understood many changes E I o . N >3 > 20, Une who tests Application . o | will be made in the theatre and 3L A dnughter of e : i 4 o |new machines and apparatus will L T U R SAN FRANCISCO, "h el ¢ e installed in the operating room El " At L—Denial of Warren e ¢! When the Palace reopens, which| i I de- D] 38. Iutervenings S .I(r|Hl(].l\Ijll|\ I(‘ ".I l):. k: ”( i % . roba be about Christmas, 3 :3. n)“'l“‘"“ | recommened by Gov. . cing uppar- the theatre will present an entirely At 1 ng, has be . 3 r of “ine DOWN atus T OunE been ‘made by the' e = ce. [ Rubalyatr 1. Stinging fnseet 41 City in State Supreme Court which in- | ° | AdE tont Open court =, Pennsyivania v ated the circumstances | o been found Mr. Kubley is also opening a new b e Strewed 3 Q‘.:slmel";ulli sh | under which Billings and Tom | o sia and e in Ketch and the two ? Little drink odoftove 4% Steal | J. Mooney wer nvicted of | g 4 1l be during the holi-| dx pulicd 7. Fodder stored vessel | the 1916 Preparedness Day Pa- o once stinuous be- @ g | in n silo 45. Covered wagon R hombing H. \Gup Feakis 2 | 42, Weammerous 58, Serien ot 5 Surface & 46, New: comb. rhes s % o tween the ¢ nts ® | Mr. Kubley, for man | ek games street torm cisco : e e 0060 o0 o o o o crated the Dream Theatre in Ket- | The decision against grant- |® © © e e ing the application for a par- chikan and is recognized as & thor | ough showman, always on his toes | don was by a vote of 6 to 1. L i T The formal decision will be |and working to please the ge public in ~u\nm;; and oxh' ven cut later when revamped. - Temperature Dropping ir release | Mr BY KUBLEY WHO In Midwest Area Today ! CHICAGO, i1, Dec. 1.—Tempera- | to make. the Midwest | The Palace has been b2 yort T srees ar di | Show Man to Open : Theatre Soon [local theatre man, Milwaukee g of 4 in the final would that management today effective | their re goes ' night terms of a lease, the Palace Tk By today, > the The Emplre. Quality Foods at Economy Prices .u'“"’u) FRESH BUTTER CATSUP 8 Prints, 1b., 42¢ 8 oz. bottle—15¢ Crosse and Blackwell per case, $4.20 ] MILK CORN FLAKES 2 for 25¢ ‘ Red and W hite Brand | l | 1 can Raspberries, No. 2 can Ruby Beets, No. 2 1 can Loganberries, No. 2 1 can Spinach, No. 25 $1.00 Bordens or Carnation 11 cans for $1.00 e SPICED HERRING Quart jars—65¢ FRESH EGGS Mediums, per doz., 40c LARGE FRESH EGGS Dozen—>50¢ SOLID PACK TOMA- TOES—Libby No. 1 tin—14¢ SALTED CRACKERS Refills—45¢ PICKLED HERRING Bismarck Style Per dozen—45¢ AMOCAT SLICED PINEAPPLE Large tins—30c AMOCAT DEAL 1 1 can NO. 1 9 can Peas, No. No. 2 Tomatoes, No. 21/ ALL FOR 68¢ can Corn, 1 AMOCAT DEAL NO. 3 1 can Cut Beans, No. 2 AMOCAT DEAL NO. 2 ' can Strawberries, No. 2 ) ALL FOR 68c ALL FOR A e e George Brothers PHONES 92—95 he management of La , wellknown theatre man prominent Kubley is expected to arrive in Juneau within a few days and announcements operated 0 for about 15 months by J. B. Dal- b |Well Known Ketchikan|ion ana Max pitschmann, who toois | it over from J. T. Spickett, veteran who had oper- | |mod it for years. Mr. Dalton s’m‘l] show under to- | be FIVE FAST DELIVERIES renc Elk. THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, MONDAY, DEC. 1, 1930. Daily ( Cross-uord Puzzle GUMMISSIUN IS - MAKING CHANGE iRevision ofandaries Be- ingMade—-Annual Din- ner Held Saturday With its public hearings out of the Alaska Game Commis- | the way, |to be the final week of its annual session. Unless by special request, uhu re will be no more public hear- | ings. The Commission is deep in “the | intricacies of redistricting the fur | districts. This is proving to be a |trying task, with a thorough | knowledge of geographic features |such as mountaih ranges, rivers, | etc,, essential. Most of this week will be devoted to completing the | job. Saturday evening at the Ooffee | Shop, the Commission held its an- |nual dinner, invitations being is- {sued for 20, including members f the organization, office and field employees and families. After din- ner, the entire group were Commis- sion guests at a theatre party at the Coliseum. In the list of hosts and guests were: Dr. W. E. Chase, President, and Commissioners W. R. Self- ridge, Irving McK. Reed, Frank P. | Williams, H. W. Terhune, Exccutive | Secretary and Mrs. Terhune, Assist- | ant Executive Secretary and Mrs. |E. M. Goddard, Warden and Mrs. | Frank Dufresne, Warden Oddie | Hallson, Capt. and Mrs. K. C. Tal- madge, Misses Nell McCloskey, Schiebel, Victoria Spaulding and Margaret Kiloh, L. E. Iverson and Mrs. J. O. Sellevold. "Two Priests Reported Murdered, Found Alive HANKOW, China, | Irish priests, Fathers Laffan and Lineham, captured by bandits at | Sientao-Chen have been released | Dec. 1.—Two OF FUR AREAS sion today began what is expected | | and are aboard a British gunboat | | | | | | | been murdered. | { War, on the Upper Yangtze. The priests were previously reported to have LOCAL PEOPLE WILL GO TO WALLA WALLA IN INSURANCE CASE To appear on behalf of Edward | Thompson, who has filed a claim against the Government for a to- tal disability allowance growing out of military service during the World J. A. Davis, of the Juneau; Lumber Mills, and T. A. Hellenthal of the Alaska Juneau Gold Mining]| Company, and other local peopie will leave tonight for Seattle en- route to Walla Walla where the hearing will be held. Thompson, it was said, lived here several years up to 1929, when he was sent south to a Veterans' Hos- pital in Walla Walla. The Govern- ment, it was said, is not. contesting his claim, and is merely calling wit- nesses here to establish the facts. Mr. ana Mrs. W. T. Batcheller and O. E. Ericksen of Seattle are i among the guests at the Gastineau. ————— POR THE owizzasoa EATON STATIONERY in attractive packages—the practical gift and for every day use. 60c to $4.00 per box Juneau Drug Company Free Delivery Phone 33 Post Office Substation No. 1 SUGAR SUGAR | es, THAN USUAL PAST 30 DAYS; November Warner, Snow and Much Less Sunshine, Summary | November was considerably er than the average and unusually times snowfall less than half the average amount wet, with about three average amount of of sunshine, monthly according weather summary today by R. C. Mize, Meteoro in Charge of the local U. S. Weat er Bureau Station. The mean temperature was 37.0 or 16 degrees above the normal. The warmest November of | record was that of 1905 with a mean of 41.6 degrees and the cold-‘ est was hat of 1883 with a mean| The highest tem-| degrees, of 229 degrees. temperature was 52 degrees {1st and the lowest was 30 degrees on the 13th. Previous extremes were 64 degrees and -1 degree, respec- tively. The total precipitation was 13.20] or 4.64 inches above normal. The wettest November was that of 1890 with a total of 1846 inches and the driest was that of | 1896 with a total of 0.58 inch. The total for November, 1929, was 17.56 | inches, inches. The greatest amount 24-hour period was 2.13 inches on the 1st-2nd. There were 27 days measurable precipitation as compared with a previous average with of 19 days. The total snowfall was 21.4 inch- as compared with a previous Measurable average of 6.8 inches quantities fell on 11 days. amount remaining on the ground |at the end of the month inches. The mean relative humidity at 4 a.m. was 88 per cent, at noon 84 per cent and at 4 p.m., 86 per cent. prevailing wind direction with an The was from the southeast, average velocity of 7.8 mil hour. The maximum velocity miles per hour from the east on the 7th. There was one clear day. SNOW HEAVIER Q\) F {:‘ Vv 'TOFLY TO IN | BERLIN, Dec. 1 | Samollowiteh of Comma Soviet the | Nobile Expedition, is preparing to reach Pole next year, | planes. | }Scorestxr'e Injured in announces the More. 4 i d : warm- | the BERLIN, Dec. and | | were injured, { many cal riots | Germany. 1.—Fifty to the' and led in Berlin jured and 34 arrested One Fascist | handled four Fascists. Numerous other places | rioting. .. Jackson Rice has retur from a visit of several “There’s one place in the Arc’m every thorough tourist sees,” | Says Puffy as he gets to work to fit his plane with skiis. “It can't be missed because the cess Norah. | on the| weeks " NORTH POLE | breaker Krassin which rescued the North taking three air- | Political Riots, Germany persons one was killed and arrested in week-end politi- brawls throughout Twelve minor clashes were quel- Six persons were in-) was killed at Lue- {breck when 100 Communists man- reported home Coast cities. He came on the Pr] he < to saws and hammers make such noise. | “Why, yes, my dears, you've gues- sed it—it's where Santa makes his toys.” the | KNITTED :days were partly cloudy and 25 days cloudy. There were 27.2 hours of| \;sunshme. or 11 per cent of the pos-' | in any sible amount as compared with a previous average of 25 per cent. e e—— — TODAY'S STOCK . | QUOTATIONS | . 3 ) | . | NEW YORK CITY, N. Y., Dec. 1.{ —Closing quotation of Alaska Ju- neau mine stock today is 6%, Amer- tican Can 117%, Anaconda Copper ' 36%, Bethlehem Steel 62%, Fox| Films 32, General Motors 35%, Granby Corporation 187, Inter- national Harvester 60%, Kennecott Copper 28, Montgomery-Ward | 23%, National Acme 7%, Packard | Motors 9%, Simmons Beds 187%, | Standard Brands 16%, Standard | °Q Oil of California 49%, Standard Oil | SA BIN '5 of New Jersey 50%, Umted Aireraft | 30, U. S. Steel 144%. ‘The was 4 Pull-Over and Coat Styles . . . some per without sleeves was 32 Four 50 POUND BAG sl $3.15 BEAUTIFUL DISPLAY OF SHEAFFER’S PENS, PENCILS AND PEN SETS Butler-Mauro Drug Co. The Always propnate | GIFT | FOR MOTHER, SISTER, SWEETHEART, FATHER, BROTHER, BEAU Come in and see this remarkable display of gift stockings for every member of the family. Never before have we had such a beautiful collec- tion of hosiery of such extra fine quality to offer at such a sharp price reduction. Complete stock of Munsingwear and Holeproof Hosiery to select from. LEADER Department Store GEORGE BROTHERS, Props. PHONE 454