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§ § i : } i I —— — THE DAILY A LASKA EMPIRE. , THURSDAY. JULY 12, 1934. MEN’S GVERALLS BIB or WAIST Full Cut 220 Denim A Real Buy at MEN’S JUMPERS Full Cut 220 Denim EACH $1.25 e ol ot WOMEN’S HOUSE PAJAMAS Fast color printed percale Regular $1.95 Spgcial——fl.‘)fl : Assortment of SILK LINGERIE, SLIP CHEMISE, DANCE SETS, PANTIES $1.00 ‘Garment WOMEN’S RAYON KNIT VESTS and PANTIES Assorted colors and sizes 25¢ each SWIMMING SUITS SHOES CAPS ONE-FOURTH OFF REGULAR PRICE Mid-Summer Cl of Seasonable earan erchahtlise — " . ceSale { MEN’S DRESS BOYS’ CAPS MANSFIELD JERSEY ‘COAT { SOX RUBBER VISOR Pullover Sleeveless SWEATERS i Good Quality Complete range of sizes{”- © SWEATERS . - In the popular dark ! All Sizes Many patterns ‘and | Colors ‘GréénTan, Red" heather mixtures | 3 Pair for colors. | or; White 100% All* Wool MEN’S WORK MEN'SWORK - WOOLEN SHIRTS ®A complete show- PANTS SHOES 'Heavy—Fully ing of Men’s Furnish- Good—Durable STAR BRAND i{eyilaGuaranteed #0758 ings is being shown and a marvelous Composition Sole | Regulae:valuesita $6.50 in the value An Unbeatable: Value ClosesOut:Price MEN'S WEAR $1.75 Pair $3.75 Pair L L YL DEPARTMENT PRINTED PIQUE PRINTED CHIFFONS { EXTRA SPECIAL'IN PURSES Striped Seersucker and Plain Georgettes LACE CURTAINS | Ladies” Purses and Boys’ Shirting 39 inches wide - 2V/; yards long Handbags in Chiffon Voile * Regular *valué :$2.25 | "~:36 inches'Wide 2 lots Printed Dimity Clearance Price Regular °$1.00 Panel Lot 1—$1.00 each 25 cents yard $1.45 ‘ygda 0 Clsqqnpe—ri(),cif’iwl Lot 2—$2.00 each SWISS VOILE SOLID COLOR'AND | RUFFLED CURTAINS UMBRELLAS S Plain colors PRINTED SUMMER GREEN' and 16-rib Gloria Cloth : in SILKS ' ' "GOLD Umbrellas Pastel shades Values' to $1.75 DESIGNS # Al colors—Latest Regular 75¢ NOW:: 214 yards ‘long models Clearance—25¢ yard $1.00 yard . $1.00 Pair Special—$2.95 STANDARD PERCALE { PRINTED RAYON COTTON LUNCHEON SETS Prints and plain DRESS SHEET LINEN SETS Colors FABRICS BLANKETS 36 in. square with 4 12- GUARANTEED 85¢ values Size in. napkins. Colors blue, WASHABLE NOW 60 x 90 gold, red and ‘green 20c yard 4 yards for $1.00 . $1.00 each $1.00 set NOVELTY CRETCNNES WOOLENS PART ‘WOOL VISIT THE {Suitable for drapes, cov-{Novelty woolen fabrics SINGLE er slips, and many other] for suits and dresses BLANKET 10-CENT {household uses 36 in. wide SPECIAL DEPARTMENT ‘ SPECIAL $4.50 values $1.35 each UPSTAIRS i 25¢ yard Now $2.50 yard 72 x 84 SUSUUUE SRS ARPIS AR Ses .M. Behreiids Co., Inc. “Juneau’s Leading Depurtment Store” ‘surance business in San Francisco,)e ¢ ¢ ¢ @ ¢ ¢ e ¢ @ ¢ ¢ 1 UNION LABUR | Annapolis in the class of 1004 and lremuwd in the U. 8. Navy until 11919 when he retired with the rank {of Lieutenant-Commander to enter| business. This is Commander Wickersham's second visit to Juneau, his only previous trip to Alaska being in 11927 when he visited his father ' here for two days while the steam- er on which he came north made the Skagway trip. Many social events are being planned for the Wickershams' en- tertaiiment while they are in Ju- neau, including luncheons, dinners and outihgs. —————————— |GILLAM PLANE TAKES ELKS’ OFFICIALS BY i INTERIOR TO EAST i 2 BAY CITIES TAKING VOTE Truck Drivers Refuse to Take Their Cars Out of Garages Today (Continuea Trom Page One) tion of Labor, in annual conven- tion at Bverett, voted to boycott all California products as & pro- test against calling out of the Na- tional Guard at San Francisco and Oakland. Violence Flares At Bellingham, Wash., violence flared on the waterfront yester- day for the first time since the! longshoremen's strike was called on May 9. Bellingham strikers attacked an automobile of Hugh and Willlam Galbraith, logging camp operators, whose loggers are alding in load- ing ships. The two brothers were beaten by an unidentified nonunion man. Thomas Stone, aged 17 years, a bystander, was injured on the head and eyes. Today, in Bellingham clashes re- sulted between strikers and non- union stevedores as the first at- tempt was made to open the port which has been turned into an armed camp by the police and sheriff’s officers. COMMANDER, MRS. - WICKERSHAM ARRIVE - FOR TEN-DAY VISI Judge Wickersham, ss Get your dog license from City n- To visit Judge and Mrs. James ham, Commander and Mrs. California, was graduated from Instead of coming by way of Ju- neau as was reported the Gillam| Airways plane in which Thomas M. Donohue, of Valdez, and |Charles O. Fowler, of Fairbanks, jwill fly to Kansas City ,to attend /the EIlks' convention, is making the trip 'by the overland route through Canada, according to word received from Valdez by The Em- pire today. ‘The plane, equipped with wheels |left Valdez on Wednesday bound for Kansas City with the two of- ficials of the lodge. — ,,——— l NOTICE TO DOG OWNERS Kenneth Corliss has been ap- pointed City Dog Catcher and Poundmaster. Description of dogs picked up and taken to pound for not carrying a 1934 license tag is posted each day on City Hall bul- letin board. Dogs unclaimed by owners, within three days will be disposed of. License fee for male |dogs, $2.00; for female dogs, $4.00. |Charge for reclaiming dog from pound, $1.00, plus 25 cents per day for board. Poundmaster at pound (Cjty Wharf) from 4 to 5 pm. daily. Clerk at once and save expense and trouble. C. J. DAVIS, Chief of Police. Mr. neau. Omley, Seattle. JOHN H. DUNN HERE . AT THE MOTELS e 0 000000080080 Zynda ) Marvin O. Hall; Comstock; Mieh:; John H. Dunn, Juneau; Mr. and Mrs. C. E. Druley, Kimshan Gove, Gastinean 4 Mrs. J. Sterling, 8an Francisco; and Mrs, D. Armstrong, Ju-| Alaskan ; F. Shepherd, Juneau; W. L.} FOR SEVERAL:DAYS :: 0K WY WESTWARD, .l y John H. Dunn, formerly Clerk-of | the United States District Courki| in Juneau, arrived bere this morn-, ing on the motorship Northland from the South, andeafter a few days stay in Juneau plans to cons| tinue to the Westwaxd.aboard the Aleutian, He will proceed -inside to Fairbanks and expects :to. ve-| weeks. The trip ds te combine ¢ Dunn was busily greeting: his many ; Juneau {riends today. ¢ Since leaving here last summer, Mr. and Mrs, Dunn. have. spenk most of their time in Galifornia and sinte January have been ‘in Pasadena, where their son Clar- ence, is teaching and studying for a doctor's degree at the Oalifors nia Institute of Technology. . Mrs. Dunn left, Los. Angeles on July 3 on her way to Maine where she will spend the remainder -of the summer visiting her .family, Mr. Dunn_ said. e it C S s AMP SCENE SHOWN IN JUNEAU - YOUNG ATTRACTS NOTICE Much astention "hes been paid today, to. the eorner window of Lhe‘ JunedusYoung Hardware Company ih whish & typleal and intriguing eamping seene is depieted showing & commedious sent and every camping -accessory. needed to make a hunting .or fishing trip perfects ‘With greens and stuffed birds lending realism to the scene, the window has a tent with the front flaps opened showing the. .interior, in which is a comfortable looking camp bed, on which a man is sit- {ting, a camp stool, guns, fishing tackle, - {iash iight and all of the dear . to .the heart other things of: needed: olut stove and ing knives, aud, £00d SUppltes, SUCCEEDS GAFFNEY AS INSURANCE MAN Stanley Grummett; resident o Jynieau for the past two years, and of the Alaska-Juneau, een . appointed to succeed H, Gaffney as manager o will embark upon his new duties immediately, as Mr. Gafiney plans o leave for Seattle soon, where he “It 15 good to be in Juneau again|is to be Alaska .Agent for Frank and see our old friends,” he af- Byrns, Inc. firmed. —_—te——— ARG i WOMAN CHECKING oo GRAVEL TRUCKS ON BRIDGE APPROACH Mrs. W. H. Robinson, wife. of:& local. earpenter and fisherman, has entered the construction game, and is employed as night checkdr. on the fill now being made for the Douglas Island bridge by the Road Commission. ™ AND LARSEN BOHM 4 wfl.l. BE ASSOCIATES 1 . W. J. Bohm, recent arrival xrom! 4 i, contractor 'and build- will be associated with James Larsen in local contract work, ac-' to Mr. Larsen. Work in . &t present consists of the n. Outside of the tent other things in camp are arranged in- ding the latest type of camp oeookihg - utensils, hunt- Axes, h&lx‘:.d a‘xhohn. various |types of gutis, shells, flshing bait, turn south in a month,.or six Mosquito nets and, in fact, Every_'su:emer Yukon bound for Kenai thing the well equipped hunter or business with. pleasure and Mr. fsherman would need on a trip with theexception . of the gamc FINISH ORGANIZING RESTAURANT UNION 'The Restaurant Employees’ Union; ,Local No. 1, met last evening in 'the Labor Temple and perfected their permanent organization. Officers elgcted were Nan Lemieux, President; Peggie Gehler, Vice=President; Vera Gilligan, Sec- tetary- Treasurer; and Joe Miller, Sergeant-at-Arms. Delegates to the Central Labor | Council ' will be Billie Armstrong, Vera Gilligan, and Mabel Nichol- son. The next meeting of the organi- | zation s set for July 18, at 8 o'clock in the evening. At 6 a'clock this evening, the Beer Dispensers and Liquor Store | Clerks will meet in the Labor Temple. | |sired. LANDING FIELD WILL SOON BE IN 600D SHAPE Expected in Juneau Early in August Work on the landing field beinz prepared for the expected visit of 10 Martin bombing planes of the United States Army early in Aug- | ust, is progressing rapidly. Rolling of the field was begun last Monday, and nearly all of the field has been flattened out suf- ficiently to show what portions of it will need excavating or filling. 8o smooth is the site that no more than a foot will have to be cut off at any place, and filling Ishallow ditches and places where i pools of water have collected. According to the latest informa- tion received, the planes will leave ‘Washington, D. C., July 23 or 24, and will proceed by way of Cana- | dian cities to Fairbanks. A non-| \stop flight from Fairbanks to Ju- neau is planned, and another from Juneau to Seattle.. . Possibility of a permanent land'mzl | field at the location, which is back | jof the Mendenhall Dairy, is said/ {to be precluded by the proposed erection of an antenna station U.S. Army Ec;lbing Planes‘ will be limited to a few inches in: LOCAL DATA Time Barometer Temp. Humidity Wind Velocity ~Weatter |4 pm. yesty 2093 ‘54 57 s 6 Cldy |4 am. today 29.97 44 95 S 2 Clear 'Noon today 29.94 59 52 5 5 Clear CABLE AND RADIO REPORTS € YESTERDAY TODAY Highest 4pm. | Lowest4am. 4am. Precip. 4am. Station temp. temp. | temp. temp. velocity 24hrs. Weather Barrow 34 34 34 38 12 0 ‘i1 Cldy Nome e 5% 52 46 48 8 0 i clay Bethel 54 54 48 48 4 02 Clear Fairbanks ... 56 54 36 36 6 (3 Pt. Cldy Dawson 56 54 | e 4 0 0 Cldy | st. Paul 50 48 44 44 2 32 Cldy Dutch Harbor 62 60 | 48 54 2 02 Cldy | Kodiak 60 60 48 48 4 0 | Cldy | cordova 64 60 | 42 42 0 0 Glear Juneau 56 54 “ 4“4 2 01 Clear Sitka e — fo 2 SUNRE v .50 Clear Ketchikan ... 58 52 | 2 4« 4 4 Clear Prince Rupert 52 52 4 46 % 30 Rain Edmonton 70 70 | 52 52 - 0 Clear Seattle . 4 4 [ 52 52 8 0 Cldy Portland . 80 8 54 54 4 [ Pt. Cldy san Francisco ... T8 64 52 52 6 0 Clear U. S. DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE, WEATHER BUREAU The W eather (By the U. S. Weather Bureau) Forecast for Juneau and vicinity, beginning at 4 p.m., July 12: Fair and warmer tonight and Friday; gentle variable winds. The barometric pressure is slightly below normal south of the Gulf of Alaska and in Alberta and is comparatively low on the Arctic coast, with showers in Southeast Alaska and southern Bering Sea followed by clearing weather. The pressure is moderately high in extreme Southwestern Alaska. Temperatures were higher last night in Northwestern Alaska. WAYNE SUMMERS IS | NOTICE iwhich would cut across the fleld. With favorable weather during| | the next few days, the field should! soon be in shape suitable for land- | |ing any type of plane, according to' Charles E. Smith, Operator-ii- Charge of the Signal Corps hers,' under whose direction, the work |is being performed by the Burcau! of Public Roads. SHARP TO BE TAKEN | TO TACOMA TO FACE ' { FEDERAL INDICTMENT | An order for removal of Dewey Sharp from Alaska to Tacoma, Wash., to stand trial in the Fed- cral courts on charges of forgery and violation of the narcotics act has been signed in the local Fed- eral court by Judge G. F. Alex- ander. | Sharp is now serving a 42-day sentence in the local Federal jail for habitual use of narcotics. As soon as that term is finished he will be taken to Tacoma. | He is accused of having stoien' prescription forms from a Tacoma physician and forged his name to them in order to obtain nar-| cotics from druggists. It is al-| leged he used the same prucedurc‘ to obtain drugs here. Sharp did not fight removal D NEW YORKERS VISIT | | ALASKA AS PART OF | LONG VACATION TRIP, | Mr. and Mrs. Arthur F. Guthrie, | of Mount Vernon, N. Y., registered at the Gastineau Hotel, are mak- ing a short visit in Juneau as part of a vacation trip which began | with the World’s Fair in Chicago. From Chicago, they went to | Banff and Lake Louise, taking in | the Canadian Rockies. Upon ar- riving at Seattle, they decided to come to Alaska. | Mr. Guthrie is an attorney with offices in New York City. | From Juneau, they plan to go to Skagway, make a trip over the White Pass and Yukon Route, and | possibly down the river for the | Yukon Circle Tour. | — e NOTICE SCOTTISH RITE MASONS Regular meeting Priday evening, 7:30 o'clock. Full attendance de- Refreshments. —ad — e CANNERY MAN LEAVES Oapt. F. Svensson, General Su- | perintendent for Libby, McNeill |and Libby, in Alaska, left on the to make @h inspection of the com- pany canneries in that district. He | expects to return to Juneau on the | next southbound sailing of tie, steamer Aleutian. -~ 1 LADIES’ HEEL, . LIFTS A . Leather—35e—Cemposition The Best Shine in Town HOLLYWOOD SHOE PARLOR FRED LEHTO f f ¥ Fise S SALES 1934 Auction Sales Dates August 15 September 12 October 10 November 14 December 12 Special Sales Held on Request of Shippers. Advances will be made as tsual when reguiested. Transferred by telegraph if desired. ® EXCHANGE 1008 Western Avenue Seattle, U. 8. A, MARRIED IN IDAHQ | To Whom Is May Coricera: Since ON FOURTH OF JULY s M3k e sesnoies oo | —adv. PAUL BROWN. Wayne M. Summers was married oh July 4 to Miss Elda Pratt, | daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Frank M. Pratt of Idaho Falls, Idaho,‘l PRESCRIPTION according to anmouncements re-| WORK ceived in Juneau on the last steamer. The ceremony took place at Idaho Falls and the newly mar- ried couple will make their home at Rexbury, Tdaho, where the groom is associated with the J. C. Penney Company. Mr. Summers is well known in Juneau and for many years at- tended the Juneau Public Schools | while his father, M. B. Summers, as that time head of the U. S.| Weather Bureau in Juncau, and # Mrs. Summers made their home | here. The family left here in 1923 for Seattle where Mr. Summers assumed the head of the same de- partment in that city while Waynci and his sister, Marian, attended the University of Washington. Is Our Specialty | Guy L. Smith Drug Store Front St. Phone 97 “Tomorrow’s Styles WARRACK Construction Co. Juneau Phone 487 | “Juneaw’s Qwn Store” P s Thirteenth Annual South Eastern Alaska Fair JUNEAU, ALASKA September 12,13, 14 and 15 PREMIUM LISTS Write W. S. PULLEN, Secretary We catry a complete line of "WINES LIQUORS BEERS OPEN ALL NIGHT FREE DELIVERY : ® Alaskan Hotel Liquor Store