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The *Lelong original of this stunning coat took Longchamps by storm! Now made available to Miss and Mrs. America by Kirstemoor This dress coat is ex- quisitely fashioned of Tan Marina Cloth . . . yoke and top of sleeve finished with brown braid. ] © Graceful new silbouette. ©® Stunning New Sleeves. ©® ‘Beautifully tailored. There are many occasions when you * AUTHENTIC COPY OF IMPORT BY LELONG will be at your best in this distinctively styled dress coat ¢ [0 X B. M. Behrends Co., Inc. Juneaw's Leading Department Store TANKER BOSSE ASKED TO MEET TODAYINS. F 'FASHION DISPLAY HERALDS SPRING, BEHRENDS WINDOWS The approaching Spring is her- g dlded in the refreshing display of fashions for the new season ar- ‘ranged in the new B. M. Behrends Rt Co., Inc, show windows. Of the Albl{lallon Bo al’d Hears 5.0 andue, Mrs. Felix Gray, head Sailor Leader Wish for of the women's wear department, FRe ated that the model on the mid- War with Japan dle we is the center of at- : S _ tention, and is said to be leading SAN FRANCISCO, Cal, March tha style parade in fashion circles 19.—Jecseph Myers, Labor Depart- thig s ment’s Labor Conciliator, has call- The dress ed the tanker operators for 2 piece af meeting this afternoon to settle the shaped neckiine strike affecting 30 vessels from San jacket that i Pedro to Alaska. both si The Arbitration Board heard Paul jn o ason. is a slim-fitting, one a new heart- and a reversible s tailored perfectly on he jacket revers end rf which may be Scharrenberg, of the Sailors Union yworp sevoral different ways, and a Stale Labor Federation of- compistely changing the character ficial, assert that “I wish we woulil of the costume. The reversible belt have war with Japan. We had g with a tortoise-shell cart- evervthing our own way during the wnee) © are mist grey with last war and in that case we could p, get everything we want.” P WARRACK TO SEATTLE B. Warrack, Juneau contrac- whose principal interest here ent are the Juneau-Doug- ize and his new apartment- ouse near the Pacific Coast travelling to Seattle on 5 PASSENGERS [ ABOARD NORCO tor FOR THIS PORT ;' SEATTLE, March 19— Motor- ship Norco sailed for Southeast Alaska at.11:40 o'clock last night with 14 passengers aboard includ- 5 3 ",’ T ing the following booked for Ju- o -* EMPIRE W neau: Edward Hiback, C. Baker P L J. E. Brooks, E. Grubble, Jack Reilly. - e TARGETS COMPLETED FOR NEW RIFLE RANGE ATMENDENHALL LAKE Targets for the new rifle range being constructed at Mendenhall Lake by the ECW crews under the direction of the United States For- est Service, have been completed by Gorman and Jensen, who were awarded the contract, and final delivery was made to the range this morning, it was announced to- day by Wellman Holbrook, As- sistant Regional Forester. Pouring of the concrete for the target butts will be completed as soon as the weather moderates suf- ficiently and upon their completion the targets will be placed in po-| sition, Mr. Holbrook said. ———-— BACK TO FIRST CITY Returning to the First City on| the Yukon is W. C. Flewcher, Ket- | chikan representative of the Pilse- mer Brewing Company. He had been | @ visitor here for a few days, took passage on the southbound | Wukon. % PHONE 478 —————r | SHOP IN JUNEAU FIRST! DAILY VGERMANDYE | - TRUST CHIEF PASSES AWAY [ Carl Duisberg Dies in Ber- lin—Figured in Rearm- ament Scheme (Continued from CARL DUISBERG lem of synthetic dye production. . For a while he worked with Pro- ,fessor Hans von Pechmann, the Munich chemist who researches were arousing the interest of Ger- man scientists. Here, Duisberg’s brilliance soon attracted attention. The head of a dye-manufacturing concern in Elberfeld heard about the young chemist, and in 1834 Duisberg was on the payroll, de-| voting his talents to the practical problems of the plant. | He had not been, there a year tefore he found the formula for a new red dye, Benzopurpurin, whien, turned out to be a bonanza for his| company. Through further resarch| he developed Azo-blue, Benzoagur- in, Sulfonazurin and a. host of other new coal-tar derivatives which helped to establish the popu- larity of German dyes throughout the world. & i The prosperity of the undertak- ing with which Duisberg was asso- ciated (Farbenfakriken, formerly, Friedrich Bayer & Company). grew correspondingly, In 1912 hebecame General Manager of the coneern: which by this time had estaplished its great plant at Leverkusen on the Rhine. Visited All Countries Duisbergs sphere (pf action had been vastly enlarged. His laboratory now was the world. Deyelopment of his company's forcign interests, tock him on journeys. to all coun- tries. From the juggling of in- finitestimal atoms in his color lab- oratory he had tutned to the mani- pulation of a world trade in color. During the war it was Duisberg | who began welding the principa dye-producers of Germany into one ! gigantic undertaking. In 1916 the nization was a close associa- tion of the various producers. In 1925 the final fusion took place and Duisberg was placed at the helm of I. G. Farbenindustrie, the biggest capitalistic undertaking in Germany. General Euthuveiasm No industry, however, was big cnough to monopolize all of Duh-J berg’s enthusiasm. As head of the | Federal League of German Indus- | try his activities touched ajl branches of the nation's economic organization. Secientific bodles such as the German Academy of Nat- urdl Seienices and the Kdiser Wil- helm Society for the Advancement of Science were accustcimed to his active cooperation and support. His particular philanthropic terest was student-wellare’ and th advancement of education. A collector’s erdthusiasm for things Japanese, awakened by his numerous journcys to the Orient, found expression in Dulsberg’s Rhineland home. His collection of Japanese art objects’ wcre orfst of the finest in Germany. 1 in- vitiia Czfiiiomia . Wine GALLON—ZINFANDEL and SAUTERNE, bring your jug ............ PORT WINE—GALLON, B e TS USSR California Gr Nty - o with alll the necessary equipment . Special! = PLANTRIPS TO NORTH, SPRING Capt. MadwT of Kodiak Guides Brings Word of Busy ‘Season MANY HUN Numerous big game hunters are | planning trips to Alaska this spring, next fall and in the spring of 1936, according to Capt. Charles Mad- sen. head of the Kodiak Guides As- scciation, who with his 22-year-old daughter,’ Miss Elizabeth Madsen, is returning north on the steamer Alacka after a three months’ trip through the middle Western and Pacific Coast States: ¢ While he was south Capt. Mad- sen gave numerous lectures and preséntéd’ many Treels. of Alaskan wild' life which he has’ taken on his- trips- through .Kodiak;, Island. “There was a much greater inter- b est iy hunting and travel in Alas- - ka this year than ih 1033 when I made my last trip through the States. I believe that the improve- ment_cf busincss will result in a big increaze im ,lgux‘-lvsy. ivel and hunting parties in Ala ka” Capt Madsen said. . o w0 Extended. Trip Capt. Madsen and his. attractive daughter visited in ;St. Paul, Des ' Mcines, St. Douis, Kansas City, Salt Lake City, Chicago. Los Angeles, S~n. Froncisco .and several other of the Jarger eities in the middle West and Western States and con- tacted thousands of pzople to whom they taliked of, Alaska. ‘‘Everywhere we found, great . inigrest in the .ountry and were treated royally by both those' whom I have taken on big game hunts in the past and others whom we mat,” Capt. Mad- cen sald. § The first party Capl. Mad-en has booked for a hunt .on Kodiak Island, this spring, is that of Cole- man Jonas, well knpwn taxidermist of Denver, Colorado, who plans to leave Septile April, 13 with a party of twelve. friends for .a Kodiak bear huat, Mg To Take Moyie Party Follawing the. Jopas party, Capt. Madsen , will, take over the party of Dary}, Zanuck, of the 20th Cen- | tury . metion . picturs, oompanvahpi is coming north with a party of Hollywood friends which is: to in- clude Ronald Coleman and Rich- ard Barthelmess, well known ac- tars, he said. There will he four or six in’the party which will fly to Secattle ang take the steaer to Seward where it will be mem planes fo continue to Kodiak, This party is scheduled to leave Seattle on May 11 and will hunt from May 17 to June 10, Scveral, camps were constructed | in the Interior of Kodiak Island| By the Kodiak Guides Association during the last winter to take caral :of hunting parties booked for this| spring and next fall. Thrilled Over Visit | Miss Madsen, while anxious to get back to her birthplace and | honte, Kodiak, is still thrilled over | the events of her first trip to the States. In addition to seeing the| cities for the first time, she look I her first airplane trip when she | flew with her father from Chicagoy back to the Pacific Coast with steps at the various cities along | the way. “So much happened all! at once that I cannot possibly say what' was the greatest thrill. I | loved Southern California and:the palm trees, sunshine and beaches, |but T liked all tre rest of the trip,| tog,” she said. ‘While she was away, however, all’ wag not pleasure for this Alaskan | girl for she took a course in beauty {work and is returning to Kodiak | | te open a beauty parlor. | g i MAHONEY RETURNS | After taKing a prisoner as far &s Ketchikan, United States Marshal Wiliiam T. Mahoney arrived in"Ji neau aboard the Alaska from the First City. 4 Grocery . $1.50 & T oSN oceery PROM'PT DELIVERY o PROMINENT ‘DAIRYMAN OF SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA TO VISIT HERE WITH LINGO H. R. Orme, President of the Fosselman Creamery Company and also head of the California Dairy pasadena and Los Angeles, and Products Institute of Los Angeleg County, an association of dairies and creameries of that section, ar- rived in Juneau oOn the steamer Alaska to visit George A. Lingo for several weeks, before the latter re- turns to Fairbanks. Mr. Orme and Mr. Lingo have been friends since childhood .and the former declared he has long wanted to make a trip te Alaska and could not resist the opportun- ity to take a short vacation to do s0. , ~. SALESMAN HERE R. T. McCullock, an agent of the W. T. Lake Company, arrived in Juneau as a passenger aboard the Alaska from Seattle. - TIPPETTS ON BOAT M. E. Tippetts, employed at the Pioneer Barber Shop, returned on the Alaska from a trip to Seattle. - - BROKER TRAVELS C. A. Shonacker, merchandise broker, came to Juneau on the Alaska from a Southeast Alaska port ->-es GOLDSTEIN RETURNS After a few weeks' business trip to Seattle, Charles Goldstein, well- own Juneau business man, re- ned to the city as a passenger n the Alaska. R MEACHRANS ARRIVE Arriving here aboard the Alaska from Ketchikan were Mr. and Mrs. N. A. McEachran. Mr. McEachran is a Schwabacher Brothers repre- sentative. - NERY MAN TRAVELS Mr. and Mrs. E. A. Edwards are traveling to Cordova aboard the Alaska from Seattle. Edwards is perintendent of the Pioneer Can- nery at Cordova. STYLISTS BIVE 0. K, T0 SHORTS CHICAGO, March 19.—Girls who took to shorts for sports wear last year will wear them during the coming summer everywhere except to dinners and to formal dances. This was indicated when Vern R. McMillan of Fort Wayne, Ind., vice president of the National Sporting Goods Distributors’ Asso- ciation, outlined current trends be- fore the annual convention of the lealers. He said: “Our experience with costumes like this leads us to believe that shorts will be the accepted mode for bedch, picnics, golfing, tennis, cycling and even for the home. “The girl with sporting blood in her veins has found that she has more freedom, feels better and looks more attractive in shorts, and she’s going'to. wear them this summer or know the reason why.” a3 - ally large and complete. in the semi-porcelain. '32-piece sets can be h $17.50 or you can make ience. IN GLASSWARE we en, respectively. TUESDAY, MARCH 19, 1935. Why Worry OVER A FEW BROKEN DISHES? Our stock of dishes and table glassware is exception- your own needs and fill in later on at your conven- and Barbara designs—Goblets, Cocktails, Sherbets, . Wines and Champaigns—at $9.00 and $5.00 per doz- ; IT’S A PLEASURE TO ENTERTAIN WITH FINE DISHES AND GLASSWARE SOUND DISTRICT ;‘Open Seaso—r;;; Prince Wil- liam Sound Area by Gov- ernor’s Proclamation Doer in the Prince Willlam Sound regon, with the exception of those oh Hawkins 'Island and Knight Ieland, have been turned over to the public and an open Season will | be’ provided for the legal taking of |deer in that region,' through a {prociamation to that'effect ijsued today by Gov. John W. Troy and effe immediately. | Tais district was stocked with gam> from appropriations made by the Territorial Legislature through an act approved on April 29, 1925, and at a recent meeting of the Alaska Game Commission it was recommended that an open season be provided to permit the legal !taking of deer in the Prince Will- jam Sound area because of the fact that the deer have increased remarkably until they are now found in plentiful numbers on the several large islands of the Sound end there are sufficient deer in this territory to permit the killing of th animals as permitted by the ' Alaska * Game Commission’s reguiaticns for open seascn, AR 97 2 ANCHGRAGE MERCHANT RETURNS NORTH FROM EXTENDED VISIT SOUTH After visiting in California, Se- attle and many-cities of the Midd'e West since the middle of January, Ike Bayle:s, prominent merchant of Anchorage, is returning to his home cn the steamer Alaska. While Mr. Bayless was south he visited with Mrs. Bayless and their daughters who are in Seattle while the latter attend school, and also with relatives in Kansas City whom he had not seen for twenty-seven years. He also spent some time in Chicago, Salt Lake City, Los An- geles, Bakersville and San Fran- cisco. USR5 55 2 ECKMAN RETURNS N. Eckman, Anchorage merchant, | is bound for Seward aboard the Alaska from Seattle. o2 M S e JOE SNOW RETURNS Joe Snow, son of Mohte Snow, returned t> Juneau from Seattle aboard the Alaska. Wise to Call 18 Juneau Transfer Co. when in need of MOVING or STORAGE Fuel Oil Transfer R et Y Coal You have a choice of ten different : patterns, all open stock, to select from, including TWO lovely imported English patterns ad for as little as $5.50. 54-piese set, service for eight, Dogwood pattern, up the composition to suit show the charming Vogue Hdwe. < g s ava B i TO HUNT DEER IN "0. 8. DEPARTMENTIOP AGRICULTURE, WEATHER BUREAU S, The Weather ; (By the U. S. Weather Bureau) Forecast for junenu and vielnity, peginning at 4 p.m., March 19: Fair tonight and Wednesday; moderate to fresh north and north- easterly winds. LOCAL DATA Time Barcmeter Temp. Humidity Wind Velocity Weather 4 pm. yest'y .....2961 37 61 w 6 Lt. Snow 4 am. today . 29.66 30 6 NW 16 Cldy Noon today 29.85 31 39 NW 12 Cldy RADIO 2EPOR’ YESTERDAY TODAY 3 Highest 4pm. | Lowest4a.m. 4a.m. Precip. 4a.L. Station temp. temp. | temp. temp. velocity 24hrs. Wesatlier 36 b d 11 b - 0 — -6 -8 -8 6 o Clear 10 | 8 16 24 04 Snow 34 | 28 30 4 0 ¢ 'pt.Cldy 1S e 4 Trace Pt Cldy 28 | 12 14 20 [ Pt. Cldy 3. 40 | 34 36 20 0 Pt.Cldy Dutch Harbor ... 42 40 38 38 6 Trace Rain Kodiak 40 40 | 36 38 12 0 Pt. Cldy Cordova 40 40 | 32 32 8 0 Clear Juneau . . 38 37 | 29 30 16 a5 Cldy. Sitka ... 41 - | 30 — — 06 Eesy Ketchikan . 42 36 28 28 4 .18 Clear Prince Rupert .. 40 40 32 32 4 A0 Snow Edmonton . 42 38 | 22 26 6 0 Cldy Seattle . 50 48 40 42 24 Trace Cldy Portland e 48 48 44 40 10 o Cldy San Francisco ... 54 52 | 44 44 4 Trace Pt.Cldy AN WEATHER CONDITIONS AT 8 A. M. Anchorage, clear, temperature, 18; Nenana, clear, 8; Fairbanks, clear, -12; Hot Springs, cloudy, 2; Tanana, cloudy, -10; Ruby, cloudy, 3; Nulato, cloudy, 10; Kaltag, cloudy, 15; Unalakleet, cloudy, 18; Flat, cloudy, 26. i WEATHER S YNOPSIS' Storm areas were charted on this morning’s weather map over the Dixon Entrance, Alberta, and in the vicinity of -Midway Island, elsewhere over the field of cbservation abnormally high barometric presgure prevailed, the crest being 30.64 inches at Fairbanks. This general pressure distribution has been attended by precipitation over Southeastern Alaska, the Yukon Valley, and the Seward Peninsula, and by fair weather over the Susitna Valley and the Gulf of Alaska. Six inches of snow has fallen at Ruby during the past 24 hours. It was cooler last night over Southeast Alaska and much cold- er over the Tanana Valley. New and Vastly Different ! SUPERIOR METHOD Permanent Waving Technique “Helicone-Realistic” World’s Fastest Hair Dryers RUTH CARLSON PHONE 532 Pigg Building A Bank by Its Usefulness! The true measure of a bank's value is its use- fulness. It must provide a range of services to meet the needs of customers and community; 1t must offer complete facilities for the convenience of depositors; it must be prepared to act as a source of reliable information on matters of business and finance; it must be in a position to extend credit for legitimate purposes; and, last bui not least, it must provide absolute safety for depositors’ funds at all times. Many people in this Territory have judged this pank by its usefulness and selected it as their financial headquartérs. May we serve you, too? THE First National Bank Tuneau, Alaska Chevrolet and Pontiac Dealers [CpXO) CONNORS MOTOR (CO. AGENTS