The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, June 26, 1934, Page 2

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B A o R NS P ] COATS Attractive groups of tweeds, sport and dressy coats— Values to $25.00, NOW $16.50 Values to $37.50, NOW $22.50 CHILDREN'S COATS AT BARGAIN PRICES [T IIII|“WII|HI“III Wi i HATS All this Spring's models—rough straws, pana- mas, stitched fabrics— $1.95 and $2.95 DRESSES SPECIAL GROUP AT $4.95 for women and growing girls. Sizes 121/ to 20 PRINTED SHEERS AND PLAIN COLORS Sizes to 44—$9.95 lllmlllllmlllflIllllIlmllmllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll|II|IIIIIII|I|IIIIIIIIIIII!IIIHIIWIIIIIIIIII ACCESSORIES GLOVES—T75¢ up SCARFS—$1.00 SILK HOSIERY—50c and $1.00 HANDBAGS—$1.00 up COSTUME JEWELRY—Popular Prices New Shipment of Shoes All Sizes and Stylé- e “Juneau’s Leading 0 0 A M whael Sfern uils For ,men and young men mixtures—all wool— _fns,s $35. 00 fllllllII||III|I|IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII||IIIIlIIIIIIIIIIII|I||II|IIIII|||IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIllllflI||IIIIIIH""IIIIIIII“I% FUR SALE NETS Before the Fourth Take Advantage of this Exceptional Opportumty ! ® ree S m plam and fancy colors— Michael-Stern Fancy Mixtures. NOW $21. Men’s Hats All the new shapes Stetson and Hardeman. and colors— Prlced $4 00 lnd $6. 50 Values. up to $35.00. Tb’p Coats 75 RO OO O R M en ’s Shtrts PLAIN AND, FANCY SHIRTS $1.25$1. 301, 95 SILK TIES—Nonwri $1. 25 eacll and Tws § = nkable lining £ = E‘ Piio'emx H ose 35¢, S0¢, 655, for the Whole F amtl,y The Famoul Shr liH-'i«'i M‘ cat i B. M. Behrends Co., lnt Departmem Store 75: pair o - §595,476, FROM SEALS AND FOX Fouke Fur Company Sale Last Apnl Shows Ad- vances in Fox and Heal Furs sold on April 30, last, by the Fouke Fur Company, for the | account of the Government, | brought ~$595,476.25, according to information received at local head- quarters of the United States Bu- == reau of Fisheries. There were sub- &= | stantial increases of both fur seal and blue fox prices from the last S | preceding sale of “August, 1933. U. 5. DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE, WEATHER BUREAU The Weather : (By the U. S. Weather Bureau) Forecast for Juneau and vicinity, beginning at 4 p.m., June 26: Fair tonight, Wednesday fair and warmer; gentle variabls winds. BAND CONCERT ON JULY THIRD The Juneau City Band is hold- The sale embraced 28,101 fur- &= | seal skins taken on the Pribilof g | Islands, 170 Japanese fur-seal skins, and 559 blue fox skins. The Japanese seal-skins were the = | United States' share of such skins taken by the Japanese Government on Robben Island in 1933, in ac- cordance with the provisions of the North Pacific Sealing ©onven- tion of July 7, 1911. The fox skins were taken on the Pribilof Islands = in the 1932-33 season. Of the Pribilof Islands fur-seal skins, 17,617 dyed black sold for = $332,598, or an average price of == $18.88 per skin; = logwood brown sold for $241337.50, lor an average of $24.04 per skin. | This is an advance of approvi- ! mately 3 per cent on blacks and 8 and 10.039 dyed per cent on browns as compared with average prices at the last preceding sale on August 28, 1933. Upon the busis of the different sizes and grades of skins sold,j«, however, the figures for April sale represent increases of about 6 per cent on black dyed and 14 per cent on logwood brown skins, as compared with prices received at| the August sale. Two hundred and two fur-seal skins, unhaired and dressed, were sold for $881.50, and| 243, raw, were sold for $224.25. The 170 Japanese fur-seal skins, raw salted, brought $467.50. The 559 blue fox skins brought $19967.50, an average of $35.72 per skin, or an increase of 22 per, cent over the last preceding sale on August 28, for blue fox skins averaged $29,16 per skin. ing interest was ' taken. Deputy! Commissioner Charles' E. Jackson represented the Department at the sale. ———————— WOOD FOR SALE Block wood and klindlir.g. Phone 38, —adv. —————————— Shop in Juneau 1933, when prices' The sale was well attended, about | 100 buyers being present, and buy-, i morning after a few days of med- | ical care. ing two rehearsals a week in pre-| LOCAL DATA paration for @ jaszy open-alr oon-| =~ ime Barometer Temp. Humidity Wind Velocity ~Weather oart o b fven on IheVANMENS(|' 4 by, gy .o WM 04 (S W) Pt.Cldy Jaly 3, tededing the blg Fourth| 4 gm. itoday ... B 52 8% .cam 0 cdy of Uhly SHeaon. : | Noon today 2088 63 @ 8 10 Clear b o Skt M CABLE AND RADIO REPORTS usual on Triangle Place from| 2 1! to 9 o'clock next Tuesday even-| YESTERDAY | TODAY ng i kbbbl ‘ Highest 4pm. | Lowest4am. 4am. Precip. 4am. ! Station temp. temp. | temp. temp. velocity 24hrs. Weather JUNEAU GIRL GIVEN | sarow 52 52 43 4 16 [ Cler HIGH HONORS ON HER ‘ Nome 62 62 5¢ 58 10 Trace Cldy Bethel 62 60 | 50 50 4 0 Clear BALLARD GRADUATION\ Fairbanks T8 58 58 4 0 Clear Dawson 2 70 40 40 0 [ Clear Helen Torkelsen, daughter of| St. Paul ... 44 42 | 40 0 4 16 Cldy Olaf Torkelson, Street Commis-, Dutch Harbor . 52 46 | 4 48 0 Trace Cldy sioner of Juneau, was graduated{ Kodiak ... 48 48 I 46 46 4 120 Rain from the Ballard (Seattle) High| Cordova 58 54 48 4% 4 Trace Cldy School - June 13, and is leaving| Juneau 67 64 | 52 52 L 0 Clay Vancouver for Juneau on the; Sitka 58 - | 48" == (4 0 Pt.Cldy Alaska. She took part in me! Ketchikan 68 64 48 50 4 0 Cldy graduation program as accompan-| Prince Rupert 58 58 48 - 46 0 [ Cldy ist to a selected chorus of Seniors.| Edmonton 68 64 2 « 4 12 Clear Scholastically, she received four| Seattle e 74 56 56 16 0 Cldy A’s in her last term, higher than| Portland - 4 | 56 56 6 .06 Cldy the Salutatorian of the class, but| San Francisco 64 62 | 54 56 4 04 Clear could mnot be considered for that| honor on account of having b:en[ in attendance at the school for The barometric pressure is slightly below normal in Western Alaska and rising moderately over nearly all of the Territory. It only one year. She was a memmer! is lowest south of the Gulf with rain from Kodlak westward, and of the Scholastic Honor Society of| is slightly above normal in Northwestern Canada ‘with- clear weather the Juneau High School and Bal-| and higher temperatures in Nerthern and Middle Alaska. lard High School. She was known here for her outstanding work in scholarship and in ‘music. I LW ) g8 4 Radishes and Onions FRESH DAILY CALIFORNIA GROCERY TELEPHONE 478 Prompt Dehvery HENRY J. HUFF DIES IN HOTEL LOBBY SEAT AT DAWSON RECENTLY I I Henry J. Huff, better known as “Jerry,” resident of Yukon Terri- tory for a quarter-century, recently died while seated in a chair in| Principal Hotel lobby in Dawson, at the age of 55. For many years he held positions in various Daw- son hotels, and of recent years was employed by the Treadwell-Yukon = Company at Mayo. He was a| member of the A. F. & A M and | ¥ e 4 P : | Edson-Oil Permanent W aves $5.00 and $7.50 FINGER WAVES, 50c and 75¢ MAJOR OPERATON Mrs. G. Barton underwen major ojeration this morning St. Ann's Hospital. LEAVES ST. ANN'S Twenty Years in Permanent Waving Most Modern Equipment All Waves Guaranteed Capt. Tom Smith, operator of the charter boat Yakobi, was re- leased from St. Ann’s Hospital this TR VS ' MAJOR OPERATION Room 5, Valentine Building PHONE 241 Miss Jean Miller underwent a ! major operation at St. Ann’s Hos- pital. yesterday morning. 8 llllllllllllllll_f 0 u|||||||ummm|||ummlm|||||mmmmm"mm“mmng SCANDINAVIAN - W Gapit()l Beer AMERICAN arlfi“’t“s" = = £ = E £ OOP TONIGHT AT THE QllllIl_llllllllllllll|||_lll|||||l| lijGLAs NEWS - -MNNERY AT DOUBLAS IS . UPERATlNGT First Salmon Brought in her daughter in Seattle, for a couple of months. — HOME FKUm HOSPITAL Mrs. Robert DuPree returned home last night from St. Ann's| Hospital where she was under the j care of her physician for the past 'few days. T S TR i PARTY LEAVES FOR, | YAKOBI ISLAND TO. . SEE NlCKEL MINE S. H. Vevelstad, Morton Good- man, Thomas H. Fisher and Ruth' Page Fisher, all of Chicago, left! on the yacht Leota late yesterday | with Mr, and Mrs. Al Bixby for a short trip to Yakobi Island to look over a nickel property m‘ Early This Morning v from Fxshlng Banks which they are interested. | The party, which has been regis- P tered at the Zynda Hotel for sev-| With 250 salmon, mostly Teds.! .5 gays expects to return about the m‘m Tonic °?:‘°I;';1 Wednesday or Thursday. from the fishing banks P mwlyth!lmmflnx'fifl"! the Douglas cannery its first fish _Jof the ‘season. “The Tullp Queen oft last evening for the banks\ pusu; 50 attended the joint pic- she is expected In LOMOITOW| nic held Sunday by the Rainbow ning with & load. Girls and the DeMolays at A. J. s rppmereelnryrrec . Picken's cabin at Point Louisa. A n 'lll'l' N lul'l'l-l present, who spent the day in LAl 50 ATTEND PICNIC HELD LAST SUNDAY on thelpeing a baseball game on the good lunch was enjoyed by those | l | ALLYN DRAKE If your nails are inclined to brittleness, olive oil baths for them will be helpful. Pour enough oil into a bowl to cover the tips of| the fingers, and soak them about 10 minutes. Then take an orange stick and push back the cuticle. B s o S Mining Location Notices at Em- pire office. | LUDWIG NELSO? ‘Watch Eepalrifip i - Jobn fim has}games of various kinds, one feature passage mmwmmhflterMfidewemout s "wommnu ‘Block wood and klindling. Phone —aav. To Eat BAILEY’S Albert Peterson Knox on the and : Piano zs Accordian! Aces! 1001 00000 AR R R Y BO!I&S. | mm|uufimmmmmmuunmmmlmmmnmmnumunmmmmfimm @ ALSO FEATURING—The famous famous KNX Radio Star in new @ ADDED ATTRACTION — Prize 1 Fox Trot. ' Two bottles of wine to. A be awarded. “l'l'l'lll" i P

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