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A B R e A ety | [— ey 1 OGO OO0 AARAAI O A _THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, THURSDAY, MARCH 30, 1933 AR R PST.L - SRS AT, L AR L R TRE TR TR TR, | AR AION S SR 1s 4 BIlllllllllllllllllllllIllllllIII||IIIlIIIlIlHIlIIIlIIlH!IHIlIIillllIllllllIlllllllllllllllIIIII{IIIIIIIHIHIIIIIIIIIIIIlIIIIIIl!IlIl|lllllllllllllIllllIIIIIIlflIlIl"lulllllflflIlllIIlIE Men’s l 'nderwear | Men’s Sox short{ Black, blue, Cordovan, grey. weight, | Sizes 10 to 12— 9 pairs for $1.00 and season Part-wool. long sleeyes, three Al ' Y o B ,.,.--ifi’ 1"0()..?,1,'.5{,,-.., Men’s Pants IM()'",,S Shirts For ra-:ll_‘li:luln_l‘ service. Blue. tan, white broadeloth. 2‘50 Pair Real value at— huy-— $1.25 Men’s Oxfords All leather. Every pair will give satisfaction at— $2.95 and $3.9 Tennis Shoes Famous Ked brand. New Low I rices— Sizes 11 to 2 8%0 Sizes 25 to 6 95e e s T P H § § { N { ! H N ll § ) { Juneau’s Leading Department Store IHIIIIIHHIIIIIHHIIllflfllllfllllmmllIIIlmIHIHIHuHIHflIIIHIIIIIIIII T day to send a similar cummxssmn‘llETUm\S NORTH AFTER to Germany. : THREE MONTHS' VACATION The committee will be composed z of prominent Protestant, Call\uilc! M. 8. ‘Watson, storekeeper for th? and Jewish clergymen and .lay- \Wh“e Pass and Yukon Route at | men. | Whithorse, accompanied my his | wife, returned north on the Prin- \cess Norah. They have been visit- |ing in Eastern Canada for the PERSECUTION OF JEWS T0 BE “INVESTIBATED 55555 will be announced 1'1'.,(‘1 diplomatic representa-| three months. tives will be asked ds to Hitler's| o U i | attitude on such a commission. bR NEW YORK, March 30.—An Am-\ GAUDIN GUEs TO POST J. R, Gaudin®Port Enginger for the White Pass and Yukon Route, River Division, af ‘Whitghorse, was a passenger northbound- on the Princess Norah. He was accompan- 'ied by Mrs. Gaudin. erican Committee on Religious| Rights" and Minorities which sent’ TFour members of South Caro- a commission ‘to Rumania several| |lina’s Southern conference cham- years ago to investigate reports of Pionship basketball team will play religious perscutions, voted yester-|baseball this spring—the Tompkins £ iy bruthe)s Henderson and Wolf. A NEW REC()RD FOR QUALITY AND PRICF' { Men’s Dress Sox Extra Quality. to 12— 25¢, 35¢ Pair Handkerchwfs Full size, Al Tiden: 2 for 25¢ Menr’s Hats New ‘Spring’ shades!’ A" won- derful value at— $3.50 each fm?"?#"m‘“'"“ Boys Caps ' Rubher Wisor.” A Cflpa for real $I 00 each oiish.c e BT o AT S0 CHILDREN’S House Slippers Oxfords Felt Slipiers in assorted Tan oxfords,” eomposition colors— $31L25 $1 65 $1 05 spryvice at— 75¢ and $1.00 pai g The Home of Dr. Scholl’s Foot Coqurt A p}ilim@ces B. M. Behrends Co., Inc. e 4 Sizes 1014 MEN’S ‘A réal Lo iy IiIlIllIIIII|IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlllllllllllllllllllIlllllllllllllllllllllfl ' TENCIEH TO REOPEN PIONEER POOL ROOM Rudolph Hencich, of Douglas, has Rurchased the fixtures of the Pio- | neer Pool Room {rom' Charles Miller \and will reopen it in a’ few days under an entirely new management. The. pool room is being redeco- rated and renovated and will be placed in first class shape. Mr. Tencich will teature pool and billiards and will carry in stock the best grades of cigars, tobaccos, etc., and furnish soft drinks of all des- criptions. see some of the resulls of the unprecedented orgy of trad- m selling that kept the baseball marts humming all winter. to believe, but there on the left are Al Simmons and, Georg? a m former big guns of the Philadelphia Athletics, leaping at the idea of playing with a chronic second division &n Wlflte Sox. They're not second division ball players, to rejuvenate the Sox. In the panel above Who comptise’ Washington's revamped outfield. Schulte, right, were with the St. !.ouls rlghtlp!; E mrmz Heine Mnnush welnomu his lu' tl i i ln.Yone can They re Hailing the “New Deal” in Baseball Circles years, paw b T'S big Francis (Shanty) Hogan, at left in the lower circle, with his, new manager, Bill lgcxpchnie of the Boston Braves, dbulwark of the Giants' calching staff, Shanty went to the Braves in an outright sale that is expected to bolster the Boston entry. is the popular Donie Bush, back In the hig show as manager of the Cincinnati Reds after a year’s exile in. the American Association, the Reds off the National League bottom, Donie m:.k. Bllf. he doem't look too c!wei‘ml about it. The one across tha_plce is R..y Benge, star of 4 :‘rg) rp‘dy 10 do or die for the Lon; S b h E = = E = £ = £ i lmmmmmmfinmmmmflmmmmmuflflnnnnmnmn|mmnuflul|||_l THHHEH A Next I SROYAL SHEPARD =I5 ORTIMISTIC OVER PROPERTY Mine Inspectlon Trip to B. C. Is Encouraging to: ! n . JUNIOR RN OCIAL EVENT OF H. S, YEAR .. Public Invxted to Big Dance|xog todes P in Schonl Gym, To- morrow ( nght io Optimistic over the Sugcess of his| Everything ls ready for the Jun- J. 8. DEPARTMENT, OF AGBICULFURE, WEATHER BUREAU The'Weather /By the U. 8. Weather Buream) Forecast for Juneam apd vicinity, be‘;rpni“ . 4 pm., March 30: Rain tonight and Frirday; moderate southeasterly winds. Barometer Temp. Humiity W; Veiocit; Weather 4 pm yest'y .....20.11 40 0 é‘: 18 : Cldy am. today ..29.20 38 80 E 16 Rain 293¢ 39 ki SE 18 Rain CABLE AND :Amo"urunts ) AY * | SRR " TODAY mgtdu om. | Lowestdam. i e tam. i' ip into his mining property inlior Prom, most important formal _t;é"p ! u?; t‘ml Q§‘§H'~! 3{hrp Weathsr { British Columbia, Royal M. Sh-ep-[dance of the schoo] year, and u? . iR h CI‘egr |ard returngd to Juneau on the only School party which is latgely 10 8 H o 0 Clear Princess Norah, after an absence attended by the public of Juneau. Pt i, T i A '6 4 0 Cldy of seven weeks. The Prom will be given in ithe T"“’ g 3 raiing 4 0 Cldy The property, controlled by Mr. High School Gymnasium tompr- | 2nana 7 b Al 4 0 Clear Shepard &nd ' Juneau associates, | row night. Juniors have been at 16 1” 6 [ 4 Trace Ccldy | was reached by boat, airplane nnd‘nork on their party for days and 13 15 o0 4 04 Snow dog ‘team. The trip from Prince the active committees have trans- iy H & - 0 6 6 12 Trace Cldy corge to Takla Landing was made |formed the Gym into a little bit of b arbor ..... | 28 30 10 06 Snow by plane in two hours. A dog team Holland. A garden, with a ‘white Corcgt o :0 ; 30 30, 0 42 Sy was secured at Takla Landing and |picket fence and a border of tulips | Fereov® ik LR 4 0 Cidy the trip to Vital Creek took five|has been arranged as a background smm“ - 41 6 8 16 4 Rain The' trip out from Vital for the Serenaders, the popular or-| i o At B - 0, .50 Pt.guay eck to Smithers on the rallroad|chestra managed by Earle Hunter R e o gg 38 12, 98 Rain ok another nine days. 1and Wilbur Burford, which will fur- i pert ..... 40 0 { 38 18 42 Cldy “Work aécomplished during op- nish the music. A on :6 I 43: 32 6 0 Cldy crations this winter consisted of Punch will be served from a| o4 i 4 18 0 Rain a shaft which struck the left rim Dutch windmill in the center of | FHERY - & 4 &8 8.-n Rain and ‘then a cross-cut drift trying the ballrcom. Baskets of tulips ar-|S38 Francisco ... 58 54 | 8% 50 4 0 Pt.Cldy tistically conceal the lights around the hall, A large crowd is anticipated by the committee in charge of the Prom. Spectators will be admitted to the balcony and a small sum to locate the right rim,” Shepard said. “The pay ‘stréak Which was e object of the operations was located without any trodble, the only thing remaining to be de-, termined ‘is its width. The drift at the present time is 48 feet wide charged them at the door. with nd right rim' yet in sight.| People dancing have been askad Water seeping into the drift to- U0 enter the school by the front The barometric pressure Is moderately high on the Arcuc Coast with clear weather over Northwestern Alask and lower temperatures near Bering Sea. Territory and southward to Washington, inches, in the Gulf of Alaska, 2nd, 28.70 inches, in the eastern Aleu- tian Islands accompanied by snow or rain from Scuthern Alaska o | Oregon. cific Ocean. The pressure is low over the remainder of tne It is unusually low, 2850 Southerly gales prevail over much of the Northcastern Pa- gether with the extreme cold weath- |door and spectatars requested to use er have forced a cessation of opera-|the Sixth street entrance, tions until the middle of May or, All parents of High School stu- the first of June when a crew will dents are invited to the Prom with- be tak:n in again and a bedrock Out invifation. drain driven to take care of the' Xhe Juniors, t6 whom R.'S. water. At the present time only a Ra¥en, School Superiniendent gives watchman is at the property. ‘grzat credip for_dance pxepzrntwns, an Prospecting Active | “This particular section will be m:}"i;;‘fg‘;r:“};:‘:‘:nwg?hth;;. the scene of much activity during o i the coming year,” Shepard mid.\ml' Use Alaska Lumber .IUNEAU LUMBER MILLS PHONE 358 “Prospectors are drifting in by twos' D_scorations: Theodore Kukkola, and threes already although it is hairman; Edward Shaeffer, Doro- || three months too early. On the ‘hY Rubherford Helen Torkelson, way out I passed one party of Jim Cole. three men going into Jim May _ Wiring: Jim Cole, chairman; Creek on the Osilinka. There was Duncan Robertson, Hilding Hag- another party of two men going to nd: Quartz Creek and one man going _Refreshments: alone to McConnel Creek. These Chairman; people were waiting at Babine for DOuglas. % the weather to moderate. Kelly The Prom committee members Creek which was the scene of the 7¢ especially —anxious that the small stampede last September is PEOPle on the Channel, to whom going to he prospected quite thor- they have sent mvuaugns. unQer- oughly ‘this summer. There are nd that the Prom is not just three men attempting to get bed- 2 school dance—that ‘“grown-ups” rock this winter. In all there were 3¢ Dot only welcome—but their thirty-thres locations on Kelly Presence is very much desired. Creek and seventy-five per cent of - them will be actively prospected. while .we knew, what we had all Jim Warren and the two Gibbons the time we were never in a posi- brothers, formerly on the Taku tion to say definitely what we had River, are operating on Tom Creek. until now. I hope that the other They are in pay but are bothered creeks develop as well as ours. I Gene Carlson, Grace Nelson, Elsbeth — An attractive dish crystal FRE cover and royal blue base colonial pattern 50c value FREE with a pur- chase of 3 packazes BLUE MOON CHEESE SPREAD—Assorted Calfornia Groce Telephone 478 Prompt Delivery with water. | feel certam that other creks have Winter Severe pay but it just happens that ours “Winter has been severe in the is the only one on which bedrock- back country. 'Thers '{s much more has been found.” snow than normal, and about ten ieet deep at Vifal Creek. It was MRS. SIDES RECQVERS 1|28 degrees below zero when I left FROM OPERATION; IS HOME camp for the return trip.” | - > Shepard will Jeave on the Prin-| Mrs. M. H. Sides, who under- cess Norah on April 13 for a hur- ‘went a major operation at St. ried trip to the district. “Things Ann's Hospital two weeks ago, left are perfectly satisfactory as far as the hospital todxy for her home in we are concerned,” he said, “and the Assembly apartments. THERE IS LIFE 1 IN THE OLD FURS YET! ‘Frebhenmg down:at-the-mouth furs to look like new is one of the best things we do. Sometimes just a good cleaning is all that's needed to bring luster to the eye and pelt. We're good at re- pairing and reblocking, too, and we charge very little. H. J. YURMAN o TRIANGLE BLDG. FURRIER AND BE'ITTER of Flour and Floating GOLD RECOVERED, Ai.nlyy Centrifu ugal Gald Sepd;'&tdrs & ad i | Proven by use. Capacity '3 to 100 yards per hour. Make your low grade ground produce big ‘pay' by using AINLAY Machines. *“No quick or' similar processes used—simply Centrifugal force. For full particulars see A. J. NELSON, Agent 117 Third Street ; " Phone 538 . and reap the mvestn'fent advnntages of large capx- tal Now, throuy h Indepgndence Fund you can have the same safety. "trusteeship, a dvantases of diver- sification, compounding of earnings, qpnqttum‘t)y for growth of ‘principal formerly en,lbyed only Reople of wealth, . Let us tell you today, how you can start a per- sonalh trust from. income, ‘with as little as $10 a mont| . Send for hooklet “35 Qpptkns—-:is Aulm's { Established 1898 UNITED FOOD (0, CASH GROCERS We Deliver Phone 403 INSURANCE Allen Shattuck, Inc. BEIECRY o us Iunean. Aluh ad i Bz Farid shacisc BAILEY’S S ECIAL iivery N}ght ‘from 8 P.’ M. CHICKEN NOODLES * i IR .n“du - A CHOP SUE¥ Pl ol iy Lasst BAILEY’S cAFE : BDTEL OF ALASKAH HQI‘ELS e at u=e Office R N