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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, WEDNESDAY, JUNE 6, 1934. 18 GIRLS WILL Daily Cross-word Puzzle e d Acnoss Solution of Yesterday's Puzzie 7. riard water 8. Partles | 9. Alr: comb. noble- form \ mln slain by 10. Player of & | E 2 WEEKS Romeo musical én- Philipp! strumen * “3.9" }} Ean e h and v . Cover s e upper wall 4. Be mistaken 17. Pay the cost of Party Left i Morning !¢ Be mist 7 A capital men v by Aulomoblle—Ample Shenicia 19. Not ight | 16. Colored image 3 ey of Staff Accompanies cast by a 22, Clogr Girl Scouts making the trip t0 (s, Vexes: co"doq' 24. M:p'e:l;"o' Eagle River Camp, and who arv‘lfl- Sn’f;l.i':!;“ 8 Fiie mnu: to remain there for the next two i1 urud\:nled( 29, c‘fiéf.‘.:, weeks are from troops 2 and 3 with iy 3. CW.,.,.[‘“ two exceptions, Harriet Sheldon of tones 33. Mother-of- : Chil- 1 Large antelove pearl Haines and Jean Minsch of ‘1 7 & fallan river 0. Mealur: Mbb 51. Baglish con- 2. Gudle | koot Barracks. The former is the 271. High mountaln length: abbr. nant b N 28. Aoy large 8. Conceals 42 Bxtend - daughter of Steve Sheldon, and noymm.:mm :; :::\’v::\‘ly 89, Wateh “w Ha:;flenlx the latter of Major Minsch. The ® lgg:’wn i gl 5.t o . rggw 4. Undioses ’ two girls arrived Monday morning gg CO;“O.IHO‘M :g é’“ n }"s‘“‘.l’ “ ofl::lrlgt 3 5 : law 3 . B e, Eneon 3. Conland . 4. REpld-Orina 3 Baible turtle 50 French The expedition left the Northern ;;nlehllnd :Ifi:ol or t J-:rrnb‘l;a. type ” ’or:’lo:ro::': e o o yeowed by por-| . TEIe B SHEWNGE, oSS e morning in cars provi par-| o 5 ze lor 3 - Pur . ents and friends of the organiza- {‘: E?"'" i 5. Kearw o o “:::d . r Gyn tion. Irginia sound state P)-vrll ending The members of the camping| party are Ruth Allen, Virginia Bardi, Mildred Bryson, Kathleen Carlson, Viola Converse, Alice Cur tis, Maybelle George, Patricia Har-| Jand, Barbara Hermann, Elaine Housel, Lola La Paugh, Frances Newman, Margaret Sanborn, Eliz- abeth Stewart, Mary Elizabeth Stewart and Mildred Webster. Visitors will be permitted only on Sundays, June 10 and 17. Ed Leach will cook for the party, and Mrs. Olga Hunt ®#will have] charge of their health protection as nurse. /3 MREER T ll.//fll.l Members of the Girl Scout Camp Staff ' include: Miss Jeannette Stewart, Lieutenant, Acting-Cap- tain of Troops Two and Three; Mrs. Charles Smith, of Troop Three, one of the Counsellors; Mrs. Milton Lagergren, Handicraft In- structor, who will have charge of camp fire circle; Mrs. John A. Glasse, Instructor in Swimming and and Miss Mary Campbell Rog- ers, Instructor in Dramatics. R SO R GROCER REMODELS Jim Ellen's Cash Grocery on ‘Willoughby Avenue has received a fresh coat of paint and minor al- terations are being made in the interior which greatly improve the appearance of the store. OVERHAUL POWER LINE repa)rlng the power transmission The Alaska Electric Light and lme between Juneau and Douglas, Power Company maintenance crew nccmdmg to W. 8. Pullen, General is now at work overhauling and 'Manager of the company. TEN FROM HERE T0 BE PRESENT Young People Leave on Mission. Boat Princeton to Attend Sitka Meetings Conference to be held in Sitka beginning tomorrow and continuing until June 12 inclusive, a number of junior members of.the Northern from the Native Presbyterian Church left here on the Mission boat Princeton early Monday morn- ing. They are expected to return by May 14. Attending From Juneau Members of the Northern Light Presbyterian Church who will be present at the conference are, Jane Blomgren, Gunnar Blomgren, Louis Taylor, Helen Beistline, Joyce Morrys and Irving Grause and from the Native Presbyterian Church, Maxine Peterson and Stanley Sutton. The Rev. David ‘Waggoner, who will be one of the Instructors at the conference, left here for Sitka on the North Wind yesterday. In addition to the Rev. Waggon- er instructors at the conference will be, the Rev. Jackson L. Web- ster, of Sitka, and Mrs. Webster; Professor Lesley Yaw, head of the Sheldon Jackson School; Miss Ruth Mead, of the Sheldon Jack- son School staff and the Rev. Swogger, of Metlakatla. The con- ference is only for boys and girls who have finished the grade school. Delegates From Other Towns Before coming to Juneau, the Princeton picked up the delegates from Skagway and Haines. Insad- dition to eight young people from Skagway, the Rev. Warren Grif- fiths, pastor of the Presbyterian Church there will attend. From Haines, three delegates will attend and Miss K. Klem, teacher in the Government School at that place will act as chaperone on the trip to Sitka and on the return trip. AT GONFERENCE. To attend the Young People's Light Presbyterian Church and two After leaving Juneau the Prince- WRITE YOUR OWN TICKET We Fill Your Order from a brand spanking new shipmen’t direct from our New York buyers. A complete array of SILK TAFFETA EVENING WRAPS PIQUE SWAGGER COATS PIQUE JACKETS FLANNEL OR CORD OUTING COATS SWAGGER SUITS—SUMMER SUITS (™ DRESSES in voiles, dimities, seersuckers, ging- hams—with or without gloves and caps to match CHILDREN’S COTTON OR SILK DRESSES AND FROCKS » SILK SLIPS—Another lot with lace or tailored tops—$1.25 [ LEADER DEPARTMENT STORE George Brothers \a |TALLAPOOSA MEN TO ton was scheduled to stop and take delegates aboard at Kake, Peters- burg, Wrangell, Ketchikan, Met- lakatla. Craig, Hydaburg, Angoon and proceed to Sitka where it is due to arrive tomorrow morning. Fifty delegates were expcted to be in attendance at the Sitka meet- | ings. In addition to the delegates, those taking passage on the Prince- ton here were, Mrs. W. H. Case for Craig, Miss Wilma Jones and Rob- ert Smith for Klawok and Moses and Daniel Rose for Kake. e, OPEN BEAN AND WEINIE LEAGUE GAMES TONIGHT Cardin als—fiasquerading Under Assumed Name— Open for More Games Grocers and Butchers will open the Bean and Weinie League to- |= HEALTH WORK WILL BE DONE AT KODIAK BY MISS M. MAJOR Miss Marjory Major, who 1is In charge of the health department, ‘Wrangell InStitute, was in. Juneau yesterday aboard the North Star on which she will continue to Kodiak Island where she has been assigned for the summer months by Dr. F. 8. Fellows, Medical Direc- tor of the U. S. Office of Indian Affairs. The work Miss Major will under- take will be mainly to make a sur- conditions and needs of the Na- tives and; to turn in accurate rec- ords of findings in each village. Smallpox vaccination and the immunizing to diphtheria of the people in the villages visited will be included in the health part of the program to be carred out. Her itinerary includes Kodiak, Afognak, Uzinkie, Old Harbor and Alitak. She will spend two or three weeks at each place. —— ROAD CREW WORKING According to L. M. Jones, Main- tenance Foreman of the Bureau vey and investigation of the actual | |Highway at the present time. of Public Roads, he has a crew of 19 men at work on the Glacier TR night at 6:30 o'clock with a base- ball game on the City League dia- jmond, between the United Food Company and the United Meat Company. The United Food team is com- posed of Al Bloomquist, Elmer Lind- strom, Jack Gould, Ervin Hagerup, Buddy Lindstrom, Hilding Haglund, Kinky Bayers, Ed Robinson and Paul Brown. It is hinted that this team is really the doughty Cardinal aggregation masquerading under an alias. The United Meat team is made up of Verne Stedman, Willie Rod- enberg, Milo Peterson, Bob Wold, Stan Hill, Sammy Nelson, Eddie ! Roberts, Howard Day, Toddy Bald- win and Tom Moyer. Either of these teams is open for future games, the former hav- ing already challenged the Capitols who won Monday night from “Pul- len’s Navy.” e THOMAS MAKING EXTENDED TRIP ON NORTH STAR Chief of Alaska Section of Office of Indian Af- fairs Goes North i On an 8,000-mile tour of the coast of Alaska, D. E. Thomas, Chief of the Alaska Section of the Office of Indian Affairs, Washing- ton, D. C, visited here yesterday, conferring with Gov. John W. Troy, Charles W. Hawkesworth, Acting Chief of the Alaska Divi- sion and other officials. He is making the trip on the North Star, supply ship of the Office of Edu- cation which sailed from the Chan- nel last night for western and northern ports. Mr. Thoras is the representative Shoulders are being built up, bould- ers removed, curves straightened, and bridges painted. .- BERG WILL SUPERVISE SCHOOL BUILDING JOBS S. J. Berg, consiruction foreman for the Warrack Construction Com- pany on St. Ann’s Hospital and the Shattuck Building, was a passenger jfor the Westward on the North Wind. Mr. Berg will supervise the build- ing of several school houses for ? which the Warracks Constructior: Company was recently awardec contracts by Commissioner of Edu- cation A. E. Karnes. fllllllIlIIIIlIIIIIIllIIIlIIIIlllI|IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlII||lIIIIllII|lllIIIIIIlIIIIIIIIII!IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIB An Invitation Is Extended You to Visit our shop and see our new showing of Summer Merchandise JUST RECEIVED ON MONDAY’S BOAT * Including lovely dresses for sport, afternoon and dinner wear. In pastels, prints, chiffon and lace. NATTI KNIT SUITS In two and three-piece styles T T T OUR FIRST SHOWING © | e of the Office of Education for Alaska on budgetary matters. He presents the Alaska budget to the Budget Committee and defends the estimates before the Congressional Appropriations Committee. The purpose of the visit is to give him a personal touch with as many as possible of the communi- ties in which the Office of Edu- cation maintains stations, to study its activities and size up the con- ditions in the field. He will have visited 31 ports when he returns to Beattle on the North Star. This is Mr. Thomas' second trip to Alaska. He visited Juneau two years ago, and later went to An- chorage and made a brief trip to the Kuskokwim River Valley. ESTABLISH REGISTER TOP OF MT. JUNEAU Fourteen members of the crew of the U. S. Coast Guard cutter Tallapoosa left town this morning to scale the heights of Mt. Juneau, taking with them equipment to establish a permanent register at the top of the mountain. The equipment consisted of a heavy wooden box, containing a slightly smaller copper box in which is a registration book. They also carried cement with them which ‘will be used to anchor the box permanently to the rocks at the top of the mountain so that those who xeuh that int may sign théir names and _ notes of their, trip. e copper bnx\is inscribed with t] name “Tallapoosa,” and “Ju- neau.” On the first page of the registration book is a brief history of the Tallapoosa since it has been based here, stating the date of its arrival and that of its goming de- parture, September, 1934. In ad- dition to the book, the copper box contains a copy of last night's edition of The Empire, for the interest of mountain climbers of the future. e — NOTICE - Commencing June 10, and there- after, on all Alaska Juneau Mine Pay Days, ‘this bank will, for the New Pique Blouses in stripes and checks New Plaid Outing Shirts NEW SKIRTS in white and colors and pique stripes Lovely New Scarts Also a very complete showing of NEW SLIPS, GOWNS, PANTIES AND DANCE SETS i All very moderately priced to meet all pocketbooks t NES-STEVENS SEWARD STREET—Near Third - —— T e T e m——— O OO 0