The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, June 8, 1931, Page 2

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Pretty Summer “For Those Who S are ihe 1a weaves, rnlurinj_u ana patt RAYON Priced from 65¢ io § ND COTTON The Jezuit c"l‘cJe in the Gran Via, A #ntiveligious moks in Madrid. The rioting spread to the larger cities ings were deslroyed. l’lt’ splendid variety including all the wante’ Priced at $1.95, $2.25, $2.50 per yard PRINTED SILK SHANTUNG Priced at $2.50 per yard 1.25 per yard B. M. Behrends Co., Inc. “Juneau’s Leading Department Store” WHEN MADRID MOBS RURNED JESUIT " COLLEGE rid, is shoswn burning ofter it had béen looted and fired by o e e . R B S A L Ty WS v SIS bt s~ e o, o e & THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRh MC‘\JDAY JUNE 8, 1931. Fabrics worite fabrie of fashion this season, for morning frocks, [ tuh frocks, sporis wear, ensembles, street ! a afternoon dresses, evening gowns, | children’s wear, ete. We have here a erns. PRINTS of Spain and many Catholic bullv‘- WHO'S WHO AND WHERE Claude Ericson, and his aaughter | Miss Lucille, left this morning on | the steamer Alaska for their home | in Seattle after a visit of three SRR RS s —— TAKES LEAP, | STILL LIVES KANSAS CITY, June 8—FEd-| ks with local friends. ward Cummins, ed 26, lives after | Miss Grace Meggitt, who recently a leap to the ement from a|graduated from Juncau High School window on the cighth floor of anfieft today for Seattle where she apartment house. His condition at|ywill enroll in a business college. the hospital is reported to be seri-| Mrs. Lockie MacKinnon, who has ous. H: refused to disclose the |peen visiting relatives in - Seattle reason for his act. |for some time, returned home Sun- S 8 TG |day morning on the steamer Ad- THOMAS HALL GOES [ waim ™ “"" ** TO MASONIC SESSION uvc ot o seatic eictront supph [tive of a Scattle electrical supply | — |house, arrived Sunday on his first Thomas E. Hall, of the Capital trip to the Territory this summer. Laundry, left on the Northland for | Mrs. Henry Roden returned home - the South to attend the Masonic Sunday after a brief visit to Seattle Grand Lodge session at Bellingham, |and vicinity. as representative of Gz\stmtaux\ E. J. White, resident engineer of | Lodge No. 124, of Douglas. south he will also visit his son Mrs. ‘George, in Seattle, returning home Loren Sisson, assistants to Mr. June 24, During Mr. Hall's|White, left on the Admiral Watson pe the Capital Laundry will Sunday for Yakutat. | W. K. Keller, Commissioner of - \Education, left Sunday for Kodiak S. MERRITT AND SON GO on the Admiral Watson and will be nlurnxou SHORT TRIP absent for a month inspecting school buildings and looking after W, L. mn-m. wife of the matters connected with the De- and their partment of Education. % ————————— b 30 days.| Mrs. ¥ Tielonthe and daughter AT U SR RN AR g 4 MINISTER 1S SHOT, KILLED OKLAHOMA CITY, June 8.—The Rev. W. J. Brown, Baptist, who took up the minisiry three years ago after being crippléd .in an ac- cident, was shot to death Satur- day night as he and his wife ap- proached the front door of their home. Sam Rittenberry, Brown's brother-in-law, is held for ques- tioning. Four Year Old Boy Is Traffic Victim; SFEATTLE, June 8—Sanwell Sa- dis, aged 4 years, atraffie victim, While |the U. 8. Bureau of Public Roads, died in a- hospital here Saturday. White, and Harold Miller and |In a room nearby, was his mother with her five-day-old baby. She has not been told of her son’s death. Mrs. in the path of her auto and she was unable to avoid him. —— ‘Ketchlhm attorney, and his daugh- ter Jane arrived here today for a few days visit. Mr. Grigsby is here |looking after legal and other busi- to ob- lare passengers for Juneau aboard Ithe Yukon from Seattle, the Gastineau, 'FISHING BOATS Mother Not Informed| Katsman said Sanwell ran| George B. Grigsby, prominent ness interests. They are guests at| ! BRING SALMON AND HALIBYT Kings Sell for 10 and 6 and 3 and Halibut for 72 ‘and 4-3 Almost 20,000 pounds of king sal- mon and more than 8,000 pounds of halibut were unloaded from fish- ing “boats at this port over the week cnd. The salmon was bought by the Juneau Cold Storage Com- | pany, Wallis S. George, president and manager, at the current prices of 10 cents a pound for large, 6 for medium and 3 for small sized | fish. The halibut was purchased| Elected Mayor e ! at auction by the Cold Storag: Company and the Lakeside PFish| and Oyster Company of Chicago, | E. E. Engstrom, representative, fm~‘ 7 and 6 cents a pound first grado! and 3 and 4 second. All the fish | was put into freezers and will be held for marketing next fall, wm- ter and spring. Salmcn Beats and Hailings The salmon boats, captains and ! hailings were. } T 3380, John Pademeister, 700, pcunds; T 336, Richard Harris, 500; T 27, Andrew Palmer, 500; Sadie; Sandy Stevens, 3,000; Erma, Ed| Doyle, 3,000; T 3768, Jomes Yuu'l",i 4,500; Beulah, Henry Moy, 5,000; Robin Hood, I Kvande, 300, and T 3118, Charles Albert, 200. The halibut boats, captains anl hailings were: ‘ The EIf, Ernie Swanson, 2000 pounds, bought by the Lakasidd Company for 6 and 3, and the Ida 11, John Sunderland, 6200, bouzhj by the Cold Storage for 7 and 4 cents. | Fish Shipped Socuth About 20,000 pounds of iro'mn halibut were shipped to Seattl2 to- day on the steamship Alaska by the San Juan Fishing and Pack- ing Company. Seven tierces of mild-cured 511- mon were sent to Seattle Saturday ( on the motorship Northland by the | Juneau Cold Storag> Company. HQURIRIR R S PLANES, AUTOS ARE USED FOR B, C. STAMPEDE Placer Strlke Is Reporleth in Northern British | Columbia VANCOUVER, B. C., June 8— Attracted by reports of rich placer gold properties on Nation River, tributary to the Stikine, near Fin- lay Forks, a group of ' Vancouver men, headed by W. C. Shelley, is enroute to Northern British Co- lumbia by plane and auto. The find is reported made by two prospectors who are using the crud- est methods ‘and are extracting $80 per day from the diggings. B Great Britain in 1929 imported $120,000,000 worth of eggs and poul- try. i Assocsated Press Phote | George D. Begole, former city | auditor, has been chosen mayor of | Denver, Colo. | DRY FORCES INSTRUCTED | 'Speakeasies, 2 ¢ Salddiis Lol Commercial Violators To Be Hunted WASHINGTON, D. C., June 8— crmk»wn and saloons ‘along with large commercial violators were de- finad by Prohibition Directer Waod< cock as the “obvious objective” the forces. He has informed all agents they should exert cvary | effort against cuch offenders and| bring them to justice. B WAILING WALL RULING MADE LONDON, cane 8.—The Govern- meni Comu: on appointed to ad- ! Jjudicate differences between the Moslems and Jews over the Wailing Wall rights in Jerusalem for de- voticngl purpeses, ruled the sole ownership ©of the walls is vested to lh(‘ Moslems but the Jews have' iree cess to the wall for devo- tional purpuws at all times. D +JONES GOING on FAIRBANKS TRlP w Jchn C. Jo MJnR;‘l of Lh, | Juncau-Ya Hardware. Company, isleaving merning ports. pects to he for abeut four or five wecks. terier, Car Acting Manager of store he: ngion will b GO TO THREE TRE Mrs. Eva Bourgette and her daughter, Vi Bourgette, who is a member of the teaching staff of the Juneau public schools, were passengers on the southbound Northland last Saturday. They| will spend the summer at Thre“’ Tree Point, near Seattle. ‘SEE US FIRST USE ALASKA MATERIALS : SHINGLES and LUMBER | day, it was revealed tha coastwise HERRING UIL the Yukon tomorrow industry is preparing itself for the Fairbanks and way introduction of television in homes absent by next fall or winter. art should be in preliminary stages trip to the In- by then according to the opinion | ‘cxpressed by Boyd P. Geddes, Ex- the Company's ecutive Vice-President and Show Manager of the seventh annual 'convention and trade show of the P{)N’r Radio Manufacturers Association. building materials at lowest prices in many seasons is a good rea- son why work'should now be started. 'LINER HARVARD SPED T0 ROCKS - THEN PILED UP ‘lfLmer Was Off Course| \ When Wrecked on Me- f morial Day Morning LOS ANGELES, Cal, June 8— At the Federal inquiry last Satur- steamer Harvard sped full speed ahead on Memorial Day morning | into ths graveyard shoals of Point | ‘Aguello after Capt. L. H. Hillsinger | was called hastily to- the bridgs, after finding the liner way off its He had the wheel spun to starboard to run to sea for ty but the attempt was made | teo late, ho“evcr The ship ground- ed immadia said there was no fog time. hearing was continued to- is fast on the rocks efforts have been liner salvage The and abandoned. * BIG AMOUINTS Steamer 'C 4 wéio’ 1 Be Shifted from South to Alaska Route SEATTLE, June 8.—The demand hewring oil and other herring for prod cr Cu the crn aid the Curacao As\ been scheduled to make eight (nnsl |erately in ‘the Interior. U. S. DEPARTMENT OF Aemdui:im. WEATHER BUREAU The Weather . (By the U. S. Weather Bureau) Forecast for Juneau and vicinity, beginning at 4 p.m. June 8. Fair ‘tonight and Tuesday, warmer Tuesday ;gentle, variable winds. LOCAL DATA. Time Barometer Temp. ‘Humidity Wind Velocity Weather 4 pm. yest'y 3006 56 63 NW 10 Cldy. 4 am. today . . 2097 44 89 W 2 Clear 12/ noon today . 2987 - 62 4“4 w 6 cléar vABLE AND RADIO REPORTS | Highest 4pm. | Lowest 4.m. 4a.m. Precip, 4a.m. Station— temp. “temp. | emp eemp veloclty 24 hrs Weather Nome 50 - 88 | 8%, | [y 04 Cldy Bethel 48 48 | 32 42 4 04 Cldy Fort Yukon 66 64 | 52 52 i 0 Clear Tanana 64 62 | 38 38 - 0 Pt. ‘Cldy Fairbanks 66 64 | 44 44 4 Trace Clear Eagle: i1 Lo . 88 60 | 32 42 4 02 Cldy St. Paul .. . 38 38 [ 36 38 2 0 Cldy Dutch Harbor,.. 50 50 |5 28 38 — Trace Pt. Cldy Kodiak 50 50 | 43 44 0 0 Clear Cordova 54 54 | 38 42 4 10 Clear Juneau 58 56 | 43 44 2 Trace Clear Sitka ... 58 —_ | 44 50 0 0 Clear Ketchikan S 62 | 44 46 b [ Cldy Prince Rupert ... 56 56 | 42 48 [} .02 Pt. Cldy Edmonton 76 6 | B4 56 8 26 Rain Seattle ... 6 6 | 54 54 10 0 Cldy Portland . 86 86 . 56 56 o 0 Cldy San Francisco ... 62 60 | 56 58 b 0 Cldy *—Tess than 10 miles. The- pressure is about normal throughout Alaska and rising mod- It is moderately low north of Hawaii, in the North Pacific States and western Canada. Showers -yesterday in extreme Western and extreme Eastern Alaska were followed last night by clearing." * Temperatures fell -in the westérn Interior and sdutheasfiern Alaska last night but were considerably higher at noon today thun yesterday from Seattle to Chatham Straits, Special oil tanks with a | of £5,000 gallons y n installed. The Curacas also enzage in the pa: | ice Letween Puget Sound and | Chatham Straits. TELEVISION IN HOMES COMING CHICAGO, m., June 8.—The radio The new VRGeS Foreign banks in Paris draw much French trade because they keap open during the lunch hour, unlike French banks. e There is one car to every eight families in Bri 1 Hlighest quality JUNEAU LUMBER MILLS, INC. Phone 358 stthnuninminmmmn WHEN THINGS WAKE UP Spring—hanging np another worn-out Winter— unlocks the sunshine, flowers and bumnnies. 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 | & VNI s (TEUHTT T T SINGER ELECTRIC SEWING MACHINES PORTABLE AND CABINET MODELS Sold and Rented Alaska Electric Light & Power Co. JUNEAU AND DOUGLAS, ALASKA Phone No. 6 Phone 18 = g 8 PRINTING AND STATIONERY Desk Supplies—Ink—Desk Sets— motters—-Ofi’iee Supplies Geo. M. Simpkins Co. ——— cnuuunumunununnunnmnmnmmlmmunuuuulunmm|muuuuu|ummmm S rre s | g WALL PAPER Frye-Bruhn Company upnn—mymnmmmnt fiyfimflmlflm DAY AND NIGHT TAXI SERVICE . «

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