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"'THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, THURSDAY, MAY 21, 1031. Summery Dresses at S pecial Prices [he fabries. the making, the models, the trim- ming—every feature of these dresses recom- mends them as desirable for spring and sum- mer wear. They include many of the newer This and styles in neckline and sleeve treatments. is a dress opportunity for all women misses, Group One Values to $19.75 2 Dresses for $9.75 Group Two Values to $32.50 2 Dresses for $14.75 No Refunds No Approvals No Exchang B. M. Behrends Co., Inc. “Juneaw’s Leading Department Store” : Tujoi Whe.Braved FA Vr(.'li,c; T(;;g;ziiu?r 7 Join for Round-Trip Ocean Flight By OSCAR L (A. P. Aviation Editor) BC3TCN, May 2l.—Plans for 3 1ound-trip flizht the nor Atlant unite friendship grew over gether they proy to fly back and forth between Boston and Lo den this summer, charting their ccurse by way of Labrador, Grean-, land, Iceland and the Farce islands, Their friendship dates back to 1925 when MacMillan led his ninth expzdition in northland wastes. A naval aviation cection of th plancs, headed by the then I Comdr. R d E. Byrd, was in- cluded with Rochaville as mechanic ©of the plane acMillan was to navigate. ! | { 'For his work on ‘the cxpedition | Rocheville received a good conduct | ‘% medal and a letter of recommenda- | ticn from the Secretary of Navy for | = meritorious serv; ! The projected venturz, s to start June 21 from Bosio " @& triple goali the first round-trip | erossing of the nor Atlantic by * airplane; search for traces of Capt. Charles Nungesser and Frane ~Cpli, who disappeared in 1927 on B is-New York flig and dem- | " bpstration f the feasibility of reg-| Commander Donald B. MacMillan (right) and Charles F. Roche- * ular airplane travel over the route. | ville, former Navy enlisted men, who once braved the Arctic together, Rocheyille, who will pilot, is 36, are now preparing for a round-trip flight from Boston to London and “born in Colorado Springs, Col,, and+ return, mew living in California. He holds a faderal transport license and| Atlantic has more than 4000 hours of flying Planes to be used by John Henry time to his credit. * |Mears and Vance Bresse and Wiley Well-built, he weighs 187 pounds | P03t and Harold Gatty in project- and stands five feet, eight and one- M8 l'Oufld-thv-‘warm flights. _half inches. He has blue eyes and - dark brown hair. His early ex- FIRE IN ROOMING HOUSE ‘perience with aviation came during CALLS OUT DEPARTMENT vy service ‘during enlistments ' unning from 1914 through 1927. Fire in the rear wall of a room- Besides being an experienced air- 1N8 house adjoining the Ol 3 plane mechanic and pilot, he has Rooms on lower Front Sirest call *ga'ved a8 an aircraft designer en-|d out the department at 1 a. m ' gineer. {today. It was confined to a small " MacMillan, gray-haired exploger,|‘Pace and w. inguished with §8°86. His first visit fo the Arc-)¢hemicals. The cause was unde- #ie was made in 1908-1909 with the|ic:mined. Damage was only nom- % Peary expedition, and he has made il " mumerous scientific trips into the " north " Pamiliar with Labrador and the i ‘weather along the north Atlantic. Gastineau /he long has entertained the the Wendell Dawson, Ketchikan; Mr. and Coli may have and Mrs. W. B. Angell, Seattle. in the barren land and| Alaskan | traces of their venture may' E. A Dundy, Juneau; remain. Johpson, Seatt! ‘fast , a Lockheed ga, will be used. It is of the| tame make as the one being groom- e, SO 9 Ruth Nichols for a solo flight| Quarzz and placer loca er the north Atlantic and the tices at The Empire, e HAVANA, Cuba, May 21. — The Government announces the authori- ties have suppressed revolutionary attempts at Manzanillo and Jigu- ani. There has been some excite- ment manifested at Shaparra and Solouin but this has been squel- ched, e Plunges Off Dock in Automobile; Is Drowned OLYMPIA, Wash.,, May 21.—Lin- wood Lillard, aged 38, a grocers clerk, was drowned in the bay to- day when his automobile plunged off a dock. The body has been recovered by Chief of Police Frank Cushman who said he believed Lil- lard was stunned and could not fight his way to shore, A R AT =St THE HOTELS | Harry st Lillian E tion no- THREE TRAILS ' ARE ADDED TO {by Koski 3, by Osborn: 8; wild piteh, Lowe 1; batters hit by| | pitched balls, by Koski 1, by Lows | ~@1. Umpires, Davis behind bat, Nos- VETERANS BEAT 4 YEiTERDA- | i1 2 3 Legion 0 0 2 3 0 0 *—5 8 6 Mooc2 .0 0 0 1 0 0 3—4 2 4 (*) Legion did net bat last half Worth Homers Wth Two Men on to Sew Up Game for Legion of Tth. Tae Vets outhit the Moose in last night's City League game, and won by a 5-4 score. Worth's homar {in the fourth inning, coming with two men on base, sewed up the game for the Legion. SETTLEMEIER VISITS HERE ENROUTE NORTH ! Charles R. Settlemeier, Mayo min- | ihg man and veteran newspaper ; “publisher and editor of Yukon Tn--‘bmlb and a third, started last s ritory, visited briefly herz today |€0 have just been completed while the steamer - Princess crew under the direction was in port. He. has spent Ranger Harcld Smith, ! announced today by M. y ssistant Regional in Mendenhall Valley, One at Salmon Lake borne for eight safet Worth's homer and his two-bagger. |'The Moose got but two safeties, one |off Lowe and another off Koski. Keaton held the Paps hitless and scoreless for the first two frames, Knockout for Kilpatrick g 4 | et Kilpatrick started for the Moose and got by in fine shape in the Mother of Owen Young first two frames. 1In the third inn-| Dies. Result lniuries ing, the Vets drove him out of the ’ box, scoring two runs and filling! ypw yoRK, May 21—Mrs. Ida the bases. Osborne, who succeeded b1y, aged 93, mother of Owen him, retired the side on strikeouts, 1 "o (o Gied today as the re- leaving the three runners stranded. .. -~ oo m]unés banbaab By vt el Worth's homer in the fourth inn- seven weoks. ago, . Young Fvn\s e ing with two men on gave the Vets enly son at her bedside. \- three more scores. After that Os-, borne held them runless. The Moose scored their initial tally in the fourth off Lowe. Koski, ettlemeier is en route to ester. Mayo to look after his mining in-| One terests in that field. He will spend | T the summer in the district, re- cr turning to the coast about next October. of these trails starts n2 glacial moraine ew lake cn Mendenhall Glacier. A sccond trail tana Crock up tance of m. one-quarter of At Salmon Dam La! a trail e north shore —— e — last ceason, has becen complet “A' compilation by the California !¢ automobile association shows thereytance to s are more than 35,000,000 motor ve- |lake (o who replaced Lowe in the sixth, hicles in the world, 76 per cent of | filled the bags in that frame then . o . o United State settled down and forced the next three men to hit to the infield for outs. In the seventh, a hit, a walk, an infield error and a drop- ped fly ball in centerfield gave the Moose three runs. The tying run was on third when Koski fanned Henning and Little Mac’ rolled out to retire the side and end the game. ad, and opens up - .o Old Papt ihe Emplre. ers & The Legion Bag The game: LEGION AB Worth, 2b,¢f..3 Ellis, rf .. 2 T. Keaton, ss. Haines, 1b Kearney, 3b Blake, ¢ Holman, ef, 3b B. Keaton, rf Heinkie, 1f Koski, p Hedges, ss Sabin, 2b Brodie, rf Lowe, p R.Keat'n,p,1b1 Hayes, r{ 0 Total 26 | MOOSE' AB ;F.Schmitz,zb 3 | Nello, 1f 3 J.Schmitz,ss .2 | MMSpdn, of 3 Henning, 3b .3 c.M'sp'd'n,c .3 G.Schmitz, 1b 1 Murray, rf Kip'trk, p, 1b Csborne, p Ramsay, rf PrTiorooo o n H FO BT T T TUITI il o o TTie LTI TI Tl L et dd cowoco~ocooooomooo=N Headquarters for CAMPERS SUPPLIES and | oororBrorrol®|l soovoocoonoBnnome 1 2 2 o | hococoreccccomnl covcorcocorrosmroce Total 24 2 18 | t of all d Summary: Home run, Worth; twa | HARRIS base hits, Worth; base on balls, off | Hardware Co. Keaton 1, off Lowe 1, of Koski 3;/ Lower Front Street wlroroccoccovwocotul ocrccoccocomoccoomny ol cococonvoccorupul cococoroconorconp sl cooowococoroma iptions struck out by Keaton 2; by Lowe 6, | [ | | | DAVE’S SHOP READY-TO-WEAR LADIES AND M1ssES LOCAL SYSTEM Forest Service Builds Two Two ncw trails have just been For- k, in Mend2nhall ‘Valley, there and has its othér terminus at the the northwest . face Recession |of the ice has created a lake that is ncw about the size of Auk Lake. was constructed from thz cld shelter cabin on Mon- hat stream a dis- 2 to two new home sites which havz been occupied for sometime. that was. started parcllels the lake the entire dis- hing and outing partics. Fishing Tackle U. 5. DEPARTMENT OF AGRIOULTURE. WEATHER BUREAU The W eather (By the U. 8. Weather Burean) Forecast for Juneau and vicinlty’ beginning at 4 p.m., May 21 Fair tonight and Friday; moderate northwesterly winds. LOCAL DATA Barometer Temp., Humidity Wind Velocity ...-30.08 6 24 8 4 30.20 48 64 w 4 S ||} b ] 62 35 s 8 Time 4 pm. yest'y 4 am. today Noon today Weather Py Cldy Clear Pt. Cldy CABLE AND RADIO REPORTS —‘vmmv_}-w———— i | | Highest 4 pm. temp. temp, 42 40 34 34 40 40 66 62 56 66 . 66 . A0 50 58 64 67 65 54 54 66 P | . 86 Lowest 4a.m. 4a.m. Precip. 4am. emp. temp. velocity 24 hrs Weatfler 32 4 14 0 Clear 30 30 14 .16 Snow 38 18 .86 Rain 42 [ Cldy 38 14 Rain 42 02 Rain 40 0 Cldy 36 126 Rain 38 0 Pt. Cldy eSS 0 Pt. Cldy 38 0 Pt. Cldy 47 L Clear 39 0 Clear 46 40 Clear 44 Trace Clear 30 20 Cldy 52 .01 Rain 56 56 0 Cldy 54 56 0 Clear *—Less than 10 wmlles. The pressure is low in the Pacific States and in extreme North- ern Alaska and is high over the remainder of the Territory - and most of Western Canada. It is highest south of the Alaska Penin- sula. Rain has fallen over most of Western Alaska with snow at Nome. Showers in extreme Southcastern Alaska have been followed by clear weather. Fair weather i general in Southern Alaska and on the Arctic Coast. Temperatures have risen in the eastern por- tion of the Territory. ea- by of it L. ab St Paul ... Dutch Harbor Kodiak Cordova Juneau Sitka ... Ketchikan Prince Rupert ... Edmonton Seattle ... Portland San Francisco ERLRE858S888E 32 54 a v prete e R G on ed. he WHEN THINGS WAKE UP Spring—hanging up another worn-out Winter— unlocks the sunshine, flowers and bunnies. Mankind seems to begin again with new hope, new ambition, and new determination to be prudent, learning what to seek and what to shun. . A bank account of your own is a thing worth striv. ing to have. Make this your Bank. First National Bank | LU LT T LT e | SINGER ELECTRIC SEWING MACHINES PORTABLE AND CABINET gfiflfi|mhiifmmumim'lmu|i|fi|u'luuimllmu|mm|m| T Expert Motor Repair No Job Too Large or Too Small Work Guaranteed i There ‘are good watch makers . . . and there are poor watch makers. There are good motor mechanies and net so good motor mechanics. . . . The engine in your automobile requires as expert workmanship as your watch. ‘When repairs and over- hauling is done by experts—then you get full power from your motor—and there is no wear and tear and strain upon expensive paris. Whether it be engine, generator, timer, starter, valves or_cylinders—we know motors and it will pay you to have your work done here. Now is the time to overhaul that motor for a full season of motor pleasure. T T T T e T e R T T L T e e e T L L L Connors Motor Co. nnumlmmmfinnmnmlmnmnfifiifimmymmmmmlmmlmmu AT S g MODELS Sold and Rented Alaska Electric Light & Power Co. JUNEAU AND DOUGLAS, ALASKA Phone No. 6 L T L T T T T T T Phone No. 18 H ST PRINTING AND STATIONERY Desk Supplies—Ink—Desk Sets— Blotters—Office Supplies Geo. M. Simpkins Co. WALL PAP! —_—t— Juneau Paint Store ‘ \ ¥ Sanaaaaaaaa BE LT T T LT G T T T T T T PHONE 487 - MARKOE STUDIO PHOTOGRAPHS OF QUALITY PORTRAITURE, PHOTO FINISHING, CAMERAS, ALASKA VIEWS, ETC. First National Bank Bldg. Juneau, Alaska e e e T T T T O T O T ui|Old Papers for sale at Empire Office