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created Dy our mast skilled milliners $3.50 to $7.50 Top off your Fall costume with the indi- vidual smartness of these new fashions! Beautifully executed in satin or velvet, they sponsor such style news as the fitted back, the dashing berets, the softly drap- ed crowns. 5 ENGLISHMEN MAKING TRIP, ALASKA COAST |Are Enroute Now Japan tg Engqud in Ketfh | Rxgged Yacht DUTCH HARBOR, Alaska, Aug. 22— Five Enallsh ndval cmcers‘ Llcutenaht Commander Sherwodd, | Licutenants Ryder-Salt, Francis, Ommany and Davis, who left Hong- kong on May 30 in the specially | built ketch rigged yacht Tal Mo |Shdn, have arrived here. The men are on leave of duty| |from the Asiatic Fleet and are to |report at the home of the squadron |in England, completmg a crilise via Japar, Aleutians,” Canada, Uhited States, ?qnama and British West Indles. 2 4 s The fiye officers will Jeave here | for Kodiak tomorrow. Thé “yécht' {s equipped with & short wave' set but no' auxiliary| engine. 1 S OLSONS [EAVE "FOR SOUTHLAND Pioneer Besxdents of Dayg- | las Island Given Fare- well by Friends } “Should Auld Acquaintance Be| Forgot” was the thought that ac- | tuated members of the Altar So- |clety of St. Aloysius Church ‘ot | Douglas all the old-time friends |of Mrs. August Olson, who assem- ibled at the home of Mrs. Jerry Cashen to tendér her a farewel| reception last Saturday evening. | Mr. and Mrs. Olson have been | respected residents of Douglas for 134 years. In that long time they | have besn closely identiffed with| its progress, and have seen and| | watched with interest every phase ' Our _pr Sparo sze --How Wzll We Spend It"} Professor Urges Play for Play’s Sake as Opposed to Mere “Dollar Fun” A erica’s new Iem:r e “spare time” cnmmg tc millicn. des enrcll under the pro;run of the NRA—has an element of r l?flllam‘ Prul’cflsor ol‘ }’hyfl Education at Columbia Unive by a \vldc‘p a thing fo sce—commercialized ‘amusement or “dollar fun.” he'd have cerycre'fake' part actively in all kinds of play. , in the cpinien of Dr. Jesse F. s That risk he cays should be counter- education’ in the virtue of play fer its cwn enjcyment and not merely as some- When the clock hand peints to.play time, 38 DIPAR ,TURE, WEATHER BUREAU The‘qfi/eather By the U. 8. Weatner Burceu) wcu DATA Forecast for Juneau and vlclnlh. beglnning at 4 p.m., August 22: Generally fair tonight and Wednesday, warmer Wednesday; gen- tle northwessterly winds. Time Barometer Temp. Humdity Wind Veloclty ~ Weather 4 pm. yest'y 30.06 58 6 sSW 3 Cidy 4 am. today 30.26 49 94 Calm 0 Cldy Noon today ....30.36 59 63 w 13 Cldy T TR ' " YESTERDAY TODAY —_— Highest 4p.m. | Lowest4a.m. 4a.m. Precip. 4a.n. Station temp. temp. | umu !enp‘ velocity 24hrs. Weather Barrow 32 32 4 ‘Trace Cldy Nome ... ... .. 50 48 40 40 10 .04 Cldy ‘Bethel 54 52 46 46 20 0 Pt. Cldy. Fort Yukon 56 56 46 46 8 04 Clear Tanana . 54 54 | 46 46 0 12 Rain Fairbanks e 56 54 | 48 48 6 26 Rain Eagle 58 52 | 40 40 3 .04 Cldy St. Paul . 46 46 | 44 46 24 34 Rain Dutch Harbor 58 54 | 48 52 28 92 Sain Kodiak 58 56 | 4 4«4 0 0 Clear B Cordova s Y 56 | 50 50 4 0 Pt. Cldy | .n_.mcau oo S 58 | 48 19 0 A8 Cldy | Eitka ; s i - | 48 AE 0 10 Pt. Cldy | Ketchikan 56 56 { 50 52 6 130 Clear i Prince Rupert 60 58 | 54 56 0 1.26 Cldy Edmonton 6 72 1 44 46 6 0 Clear | Seattle 6 6 | 60 60 16 [} Clear - | Portland 84 82 | 60 60 6 0 Clear workers as varlons crafts ana. | D00 Francisco .. 64 60 | 54 b8 4 0 Cldy* -A moderate storm is central near the middle Aleutian Islands: with rain over Alaska except in the Gulf of Alaska. 'The pressure is high from the central Interior to Oregon and rising rapidly 1n: | the Interior and the eastern portion of the Gulf of Alaska with generally fair weather this morning in the Gulf and Southeast. Tem- hne‘s health—a horrible use for | such a noble game—is about on a | ”‘hat use is to be made of the new hours of “cpare time” matics and the peratures were lower yesterday over most of the Interior. like. ::':ke:: ”Minfi"‘r‘m";':?:: | par with dancing for health L ‘s_“d“n”lb sy promole - acyey ORDINANCE NO. 212 | become due and payable. der'the NRA and its 4 “With the growth of leisure time | the idea thal play belongs in a | 'Section 2. This ordinance shall i 7 it he | e Wil be the victims of com-|good life. Education must com-| AN ORDINANGE PROVIDING FOR| . puplisheq once ‘in the Daily _rucllmn progra:n Will it'be |, 00000 exploitation through var-| bat the notion ‘that wo is a| THE ALLOWANCE OF A CASH| Alaska Empire and shall be and Hea® ':,;". '??r}cs T:,is a':":,:: {ious forms of amusement if we|great virtue. The average person’s| DISCOUNT ON THE PAYMENT | become effective immediately from Vitiniky the' alsstbitics” of .mo'w a ‘gvnnr:u'mn‘ to lgww up ?:.Lou ?r ‘f‘“k 1\ ..u:rnurm.y de: OF TAXES IN FULL BY THE | and after the date of its passage. h quite uneducated in wholesome generate. The docirines of modern | 'Passed and approved by the Com- this new leisure and suggest- | lcisure time practices. business lead not to happiness ‘but FIRST MONDAY IN OCTOBER, | P ing ways to capitalize it for to more factories, t the widest benefits. %o but to mor: mill but to more whe: to’ beauty ot to health, and cotton. Play Education Necded | “Teo much time badly used is By HOWARD W. BLAKESLEE |bad for both the individual and | he achievements of business NO. 201:° Ccuncil of (Asscciated Press Science ~Ediior) | society. People have always Spet | | their leisure time in the old:st|are | forms of play—gambling, drinking |the are unde- | set lauded as signs of progressand | NEW YORK, Aug. 22.—The new success of financial enterprise | deal—shorter working hours—more | and sex. All soeially amended as follows: Section 1. AND AMENDING ORDINANCE Be it ordained by the Common the City of Juneau,| Alaska, that Ordinance No. 201 be| pgtest: A cash discount of | 933. w‘ A. W. HENNING, mon Council of the City of Juneau, ‘Alaska. this 18th day of August, 1. GOLDSTEIN, Mayor. City Clerk. up as a goal for youth to aim | | of its development. When the Therefore, education must | at, while all the time the increass|two (2) per cént shall he alls—2d ? B. M. Behrends Co., Inc. Juneau’s Leading Department Store “Glacier Priest” Changes on Peninsula) una unite itselt fo. the | born rivers that coursed the valleys below. On the opposite side of the ‘crater, 4 second 1lake, mmr* two miles long, presented a “In no ‘timie my thrée’ compan- | SLFange site. The greater portion ions, Levin," Peterson, Chisholm |©Of it was frozen solid, but neaf- and our three pack dogs, Katmai,|€r the central part“of the crafer, Mageik and Wolf, were all blown | volcanic heat made the water luke off their feet in swirls of snow.|Wamm. The boys had the strange The wind picked up the snow ‘and | eXperience ‘of diving' from 'snow- ice crystals and drove them at us| banks into warm water ‘and en- with a force that made them cut|Joying a refreshing swim. A large like glass. There was no’ shelter, | cinder cone, several hundred feet so Levin managed to get a small in’ eltvation, is building up from tent tarp out’ of the pack sack the center of the exploded cratér and by sheer weight forced it down |and its top is now level ‘with the into the snow by lying on it gx(‘aler part of thé cratér rim. It The rest of us crawled in and even |15 Very active and while Ed Le- the terror-stricken dogs tried to| vine was picking up some ‘fumar- get out''of the stingt blast HHQIL incrustations to take back to that érowded space where we re- | the University as specimens,'a jet mained flat on our faces for over | Of escaping steam painfully scald- an hour. When a momentary lull | ed his hand.” came we started back' down the Valuable Photographs mountain. 'Fortunately ‘the gale| Several hundred valuable photo- was blowing in the direction of | &aphs and 20,000 feet of remark- camp; so, sliding, floundering and | @ble motion 'pictures were takén tumbling along, icéd up like ‘so|On the recent \‘,rip. The film has many Santa Clauses, every move been sent on 16 the Fox' Film brought us down closer to sea| Corporation, New York City, wherée level, where at least the tempera-)it 15 to be used ‘in ‘world-wide wure was higher. Shishaldin took | distribution. its toll on our strenzth that time.| It s through tlie courtesy of the Fox Film Corporation that Fathér Hubbard is crater rim and dashed down Noles it snow- through (Continued rrom Blewn Off Feet Page One) Battle Storm “It was latér on the t of| show at the Capital theatre to- July that in a third attemy we\night his private copy of the great successfully elimbed 'through a few| film Aniakchak, which has been minor 'storms ' and thawed our| receivihg “wide acclaim = in ‘the clothes out by sitting on the hot|great capitals 'of Europe: The film steaming lava that ~completely| is entirely 'Alaska ‘and has re- plugs up the top of this great markable souhd eftects and inci- { torch of the Bering. Professor| dental music. Chisholm's duties necessitated his| The American premiere will be return to San Francisco after the|held in the States this fall, but Fa- Shishaldin climib.” Petersoh, Le-|{her Hubbard is giving Juneau ‘a vin and a néw member, George | first preview of the great Alaskd Getty, then accompanicd me 10| feature.” There will be two shows Akutan Island further down in the|tonight at “the Capitol ' ‘Theatre Aleutians, where we had the most|at tHe regular times and at the gratifying trip of the summer. Ov-| regular prices, and it will Be the ercoming the few storms that be-)only appearance in Alaska, as Fa- set" s we were finally blessed |ther Hubbard leaves tomorrow for with two days of perfect weather | the States and gained ‘the top of the ;zroa" Akutan crater. This remarkable, }lolcam;o xs‘e :ihe‘ 1ax']ge& A/lrater n;u;lllATTQMRlE.As%E TiignA. M [ar repori in the eutian t"" T lands. It is larger than the widely known Katmai crater, and | Matt McLade, 75, who died at Ann's Hospital August 17, was very similar to huge Aniakchak.| We descended to the bottom of (St the crater and inside its spacious buried this ‘morning from the depths we found many vokamc‘cathohc Church. Funeral services wonders. Two or three dozen areas, Were at 9 o'clock. duneau-Young were bulging out and emitting| funeral parlors had chnrse of the great clouds of steam, vividly col- interment. ored sulphur streaks were send- Mr. McLade was a pioneer of Al- ing out their noxious gases, and aska, and of late years was em- most beautiful of all was a lake ployed by the Alaska Road Com- of boiling water, hot enough to|mission. He was born in Ire- cook our canned food set in one land in 1858. So far as is known, corner of the crater. | there are no surviying relatives. — e — | g 2 L “From it 4" Boi river with' ' great clouds of escéping steam,! . ‘ rising from it, & few hufidred feet| Willard Robinson, diver, arrived into the air mhed in ‘4 series of{in Junaeu on the Norco and will cascades out through a crack in be employed on the Islander wreck. W oy - e the sides of the volcano to eool off | being permitted ‘to ,,{ town was at the zenith of its pros-| perity, prestige and population,! through the operation of the fa- mous Treadwell mines, they were | interested property ownersand res- |dents ‘and 'continued’ ‘as such | throughout the less prosperous | years. | Mr. and Mrs. Olson came from | Dubuque, Iowa, a city now re- celving national publicity “through | the celebration the Past week of 'its| Centénnial. ‘The Rév. Ryan, pas-| tor at Douglas, the same city. Tribute Paid Mrs. Jerry’ Casheh, President| of the Alfar Society, an 'intimate friend 6f Mrs.” Olson’ for ' years, and who has been closely ‘associat- | ed with her in thurch and“civic| work, in a’ brief ‘address, ‘paid a triblite to Mrs. Olson’s yedrs of tn- selfish dévotion nnd service to the Church. As a token of their affection and esteeri’ Mrs!' Olson was"™ prée- sefited with an’ ‘elegant’ bed spread by ‘the Altar'Socléty. Present at the pleasant gathéring weré' Mrs. Thomas Cashen, Mrs. Esthér Goss, Mfs! " Joseph® Wilson, “Mrs. Rina Stragiet, Mrs. Anton’ Africh, Mrs. Ted Doogdh “and'thé hbstess, Mrs. Jerty Cashen!’ Mr. and Mrs. Olson left today for an“exteided fay ' Wash-| ington ' State!” “Mr.” Olsons health has beefi' por 161 sdte ‘time) and it is hoped ‘that ‘a “"¢hange br el mate may’ prove 'be'nehclh The Olsofi havé "fiu friehids ‘on’’both*sides of "Gastin= eau’ Chatinel,"afld thfoughout’ ‘Alas- ka, who ektend” them ™ for a biens:ml trlp,"l §] complete réovery " fof and 'that they ‘will sdon mdfn‘u also hales from | | for most Americans. Once we were | [2stivals, | rédidft’ trom operation of the NRA ! {can time be Wwisely Douglns whéfe they K!i\/e !Petlt 80 any user\fi ycar KEY RITES 70 BE TOMORROW: Fuperal Se ill Al 1) e day. Aftgrpogn Funeral services for #o,m Al- den Key wm Tom the uthy ure g:ur;;fi&ng qinl;an g(glclnqng af 2:30 o'clack ' tomorrow affer- noon. Pall-bearers glll be Thomas Ru- dolph, Victor Rue, "Robert’ Brown, Leon Ronaitl Lister, and James Orme. The casket will ngt be opgpeq at the church, but any {ri;p 50 desire may call at the Ol gr es W. Carter Mortuary benyeen 7 and 9! qo oclock lonlgp r. Key was the victim of the first accidental shootmg at }ge. opening of the deer season Lpst Sunday. HILLS LEAYE FOR SPUTH 1. Hill and his wife took passage on’ the Norco for Seattle. Mr. Hill has been operating the barber shop and pool room at Douglas for some time. Dally Empire Want Ads Pay lelsure time. | sirable. Of these, the | teach children, young people und risks. adults how to engage in gnmcs. outdoor sports, camping, called money-mad. But now it ,umuucal organizations, amatcur dra- said wé' $hall léarn that too much | idle time is as ‘bad ds too much money, if the leisure expected to| the third packs It is a new mode of life program and other recovery meas- ures' 1§ spent unwisely. Danger Pointed Out What are the dangers and how | spent? The | first answer to this question i\‘ ‘.m organism is an nervous and mental dlscases‘un real and personal proporly tax| s aloud that ability to live as|accounts if paid in full on or be- essential in|fore the first Monday in Octeber | each year, when they shall first JONES-STEVENS SHOP While I. Farncis of Mills, Cal, was away from home, thieves car- ried away his windmill and tower. diaby Y from Jésse F. Williams, M. D.| pror ssor of physical 2ducation at| Columbia University. i The first ri: as he sees it, is comthercial exp! tion of amuse-| ménts—-dollar fun.” Ahother is| blind belief that work is always a virtué, play alwdys childish. A third i§ being the all-round dub. “The ability to play,” he says, “Is largely an attitude of mind. Tt is pSythological rather ‘than psy- cho!oglca‘l Those who have never | experienced 'the satisfaction that comes through well performed mo- tor play—the dubs- or novices— fail generally to appreciate the fun | others” enjoy and consequently comiprise in the main the crities of play and other sports. “Arm Chair” Attitude Scored | “One reason for the tremendous lag in the use of play in schools and communities is the fact that comitrol of educational policy hasl beén largely in the hands of those who lack a kinsethetic apprecia- tiorl of play. Play can neyer be evaluated in an arm chair. “Since play is an attitude and| articipation relates to proficiency, . he’ business of education in this | function is twofold. First, there must be developed the notion that | play belongs in any plan for bet- ter living in the world and hénce | that all persons unable to play are, badly or partly cducated Puhinx “Enjoyment vel” | seocmqu every "boy and glrl‘ ust ' be ‘educated in at least qev-1 eral forms of motor play b(w:)nd‘ e novige or dub class and hence ito ‘the enjoyment level. | "“The essence of good play is| its ‘néglect of ulterior ends. Ifs, pprpoee atises and matures with- | in itself. ' Thus, playing golf, for | . == : 2 ": '; Jupegu lce Cream I | " "Parlors | : a Giw. ER J i Exclus} ealers HORLUCK'S 'R*;:’ H ICE CREAM ‘FORD . AGENCY {Authorized Dealers) dits GREASES uneau . Mators FOOT OF MAIN ST. fashion commencing Wednesday, Jones-Stevens Shap We cordially invite the people of Juneau to attend our Aun expasition of quality and August 23,1933 Near Third and Seward v