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CHICHAGOF ISLAND PROPERTY SHOWING EXCELLENT PROGRESS Chichagof Island, near the Chicha- TUESDAY NIGHT goff Mine, consisting of 20 claims is making an excellent showing, Chfll“bel’ according to Elliott Fremming who returned to Juneau today after do- ing survey work on the property With Fremming party’s were Ray McCormick and John Laughlin, all working out of the office of Frank Annual Seattle Of (‘OI"IH(‘IC&‘ Gi'O\l]) to Be Welcomed ly all of the work done solely by Mr. McKallick, to Fremming, although t > looks like several been working have of tunnel has McKallick is mak- s to pick up neces- to expedite the g to Fremming. the ore were brought 60 feet >me 0! Good Will ‘When the A rvey party. Operations side the dock head at the Admiralty the south, the Mining property at will be pl Inlet, according to Frem- the visitor: ; and 40 claims were surveyed |Steamer Aleutian. be offi ska Empire Gold .\‘(nmmz ing member pointed Juneau (' merce committee at Funter Bay. PAA ELECTRA IN HERE SUNDAY ON FAIRBANKS TRIP Weekly Schedule Trips to Interior and Sitka Post- | poned Until Wednesday Promptly at 3 o'clock Sunday af- ternoon, its scheduled time of arriv- al, the big Pacific Alaska Airways Lockheed Electra plane cgme to a landing on the Juneau PAA land field. Joe Crosson, chief pilot of PAA, brought the big plane down and Walter Hall made the trip as co-pilot. Passengers here from Fairbanks were Clifford Smith and J. O. Ring, of Fairbanks, and Ome Daiber, from Whitehorse. The plane is expected to leave for the return trip to the Interior on Wednesday morning due to the late arirval here of the Stearman Leaves At 10:30 .o'clogk . this morning, pilot Murray Stuart and PAA con- struction foreman Carl Stolberg left THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, 'HARRY WILLIAMS, WELL| |KNOWN INDIAN, DIES 'FROM PNEUMONIA SUN. Wllhams lndxan resident of Hoonnh for many years, passed away at the Government Hospital |last night from the effects of pneu- | monia. Williams was 55 years of age |at the time of his death and had | been in the hospital only four days Funeral services will be held in | Hoonah where burial will also take Place and arrangements have bee n | made to take the body to Hoomh aboard the gas b of Péter John- son, long time nd of the deceas- ed. The remains ‘are at the C. W.| Carter Mortuary. ———.——— EXPLORATION PARTY MAN VISITS JUNEAU| Ome Daiber, Seattle winter sport and out-door equipment establish- ment proprietor and & member of Bradford Washburn's current Na- | tional Geographic Society explora- | tion party in the Yukon Territory, arrived in Juneau on a Pacific Al- aska Airways plane from White- horse, Y. T., Sunday. Daiber, who will leave for Van- couver, B. C.,-on the Princess Lou- B. M. Behrends, H. L. Faulkner John Jones, J. C. Thomas, W. S George, G. F. Freeburg W. A Holzheimer, W. S. Pul T. A Morgan, W. B. Kirk, R. J. Mec- Kanna, Charles Naghel, F. A. Boyle, Allen Shattuck, H. R. Shepard and M Whittier Foster McGovern, head of the Seattle Chamber's Alaska Bureau has written Juneau officials that no formal entertainment be held That wish will be respected while the Aleutian is in ‘port for its seven-hour stay tomorrow night “This Good Will Tour of the Seattle Chamber is its way ‘of show- ing its friendship for Alaska,” President R said E. Robertson today. “The least that we here in Juneau can do is turn out in full force to welcome the visitors tomorrow night.” Following the exchange of greet- ings at the dock, the visitors will be taken off in small groups by Juneauites for entertainment or business discussions. The Juneau City Band will be heard in a half- hour concert at Triangle Place fol- lowing the ship's arrival > MRS. ASLAUG DEMASI DIES SUDDENLY AT ST. ANN’S HOSPITAL Mrs. A.slduz Demasi, aged years, died suddenly at St. Anr Hospital Saturday afternoon a o'clock from embolism followir major operation performed weeks ago Born in Norway in 1909, Mrs. De- masi had lived in Juneau for last four years during whi she was emp! d at Cafe as a waitress. She by a small son, Philip, Herc, a cousin, Mrs. radt, al<o of Juneau; a sister, Mrs. Pete Knutsen, of Petersburg, an- other sister, Mrs. Anna Anderson of Sitka, and other relatives who make their homes in Norway Gust Demasi, whom Mrs. Demasi had sued for divorce recently, is now living in Seattle, and has been notified of her sudden death. This afternoon he wired Grover C. Winn attorney, to attend to arrangements, Funeral arrangements have not been completed pending word from Mrs. Demasi's sisters, though it is believed services will be held here. The remains are at the C. W. Car- ter Mortuary. LS P BIG GAME HUNTERS TAKING TROPHIES HOME FROM KODIAK Three big game hunters are bound southward on the Yukon af- ter successful bear hunts on Ko- diak in which each bagged a fine trophy. They are Frederick Hol- lander of New York and Dr. B. De- Vries and W. W. Glaefke of the Twin Cities. Mr. Hollander, who has hunted in Alaska before and is a real en- thusiast, said in passing through Juneau that he was hurrying home to-attend to business matters with the aim of coming back in the fall Dr. DeVries and Mr. Glaefke both were well satisfied with their hunt at Kodiak and are anxious to ge back. NO HALIBUT SALES; MUCH FISH SHIPPED ‘While there were no halibut sales reported over the week-end at the Juneau Cold Storage plant, large shipments of both halibut and sal- mon were taken aboard the steam ukon when that ship was in port early this morning. The st nents are billed for Seattle. The Sebastian-Stuart iny had 17 boxes of fresh packed salmon taken aboard Yukon, in addition to 20 tierces of mild-cured salmon. The Alaska Coast Fisheries had 56 boxes of ffozen halibut in the Yukon's hold when she sailed. (ke 250 RN ABBOTT TO SEATTLE ®Paul Abbott, DuPont Powder Company representative who re- cently completed a business trip to the Westward, is traveling on the Yukon for Seattle from Juneau 2% 30 a two the who lives Ida Wilden- Fish Com- ice- the ' | liant, Juneau in the PAA Stearman two-|ise Friday, said the Society’s expe- T HALIBUTERS | SELL, SEATTLE | Kluane, to supervise construction of SEATTLE, June 10.— Halibutes arriving today, catches and s price, follows: From the | vestern banks—aAkutan | 82000 paunds, 7% and 6% cents; | Nordic 24,000 pounds, 7% and 6% | cent:; Resolute 35000 pounds, 7' d 6 ents. From the local bar pounds, T ar 10,000 pounds, National 15,000 pounds, 7% an: cents; Husky L 6,000 pounds, and 6': cents. D BRITISH CGLUMBIA MAN ARRESTED IN HYDER SHOOTING B.C Thomas Cromie of Stewart has been arrested and is bei at Hyder on a charge of with intent kill Charles resident of Hy , with a cording to wor GEORGE ARLISS IS SUPERB IN ‘THE IRON DUKE’ AT UPTOWN | Fresh from s screen t London and its recent ccessful miere at New York's famed Rad- io City Music Hall, “The Iron Duke,” George Arliss' latest starring vehicle produced ish, duplicated its when it opened Uptown Theatre Produced on a vast scale, the expert direction of Victor Sa- ville, the feature's far-flung sphere of activity includes in its range the battlefield of Waterloo; the restless, feverish social of Paris in court, palace, drawing room and opera, during the occupa- tion of the French capital by the Allied Armies of 1815; and the Eng- lish House of Lords, where Mr. Arliss, as the grimly determined Duke of Wellington, hurls back stately defiance at his critics on the Government Opposition benches in a speech that brings the film to a splendidly dramatic climax. Mr, Arliss as Wellington, gives one of the greatest performan of his stage and screen c As always, in his starring v a perfectly chosen sug - D MRS. DONALD M’KINNON AND ARRIVE TO VISIT HERE / Gaumont Brit- liant success yesterday at the under Donald MacKinnon and Donald MacKinnon, Jr, arrived here aboard the Gorst Air Trans- port plane from Craig last Friday evening to visit relatives in Juneau for some time. Mrs. MacKinnon Is staying with her sister-in-law, Mrs. Simpson MacKinnon while in Mrs. the city and is also visiting her sister, Mrs. Hugh J. Wade. Mr MacKinnon is representative of the s d Oil ompany in Craig. .o TRANSPORT GORST AIR PLANE BACK FROM CRAIG 45 o'clock this aft oon the Air Transport Comy Boe- ig plane, Frank Knight, pilot, and Eric Schutte ht mech C, re- turned to its Juneau base from Craig where went on a charter flight yes Ray Pet actor for the new being con- structed at was a returning passenger today and E. C. Walker and helper made 1 t down yesterday - - COOLIDGE HERE The hali schoones lidge, of Seattle Storage Dox morning. &| Molver, the and bait berthed at Cold 8:30 o'clock this d by Capt. Ben took aboard ice pper ship - JUNEAU FX SHOP IN bril- life place open cockpit seaplane for Whitehorse, Burwash Landing and Fairbanks. Stolberg is to leave the plane at Burwash Landing, on Lake dition had met with much success. | Mapping and photography work was | done in the St. Elias Range and many new peaks were discovered he said. Meanwhile, Washburn is in Car- cross, Y. T., winding up details of the expedition. The leader was here tecently for a one-day wvisit, but returned to the Canadian eity. Oth- er members of the party already have gone south. SRR P BINGHAM ARRIVES V. C. Bingham, associated with E. L. Graves, Jr., in the building | supply business, arrived here from Cordova. He joined his partner on Sitka Trip Delayed the ship, Graves having taken pas- late arrival of the |sage at Seward. leutian tomorrow evening, | SNSRI NTGLEY S Tuesday flight of the| HAS MAJOR OPERATION to Sitka and way| R. C. Grimstad, employee of the n postponed until|p E. Harris cannery at Hawk Inlet, according to local|{ynderwent a major operation at St company. However it| ann's Hospital this morning. hat a special flight to| ———e—-————— be made tomorrow after- WARRACK ENROUTE said J. B. Warrack, president of the (h-“'“ Flight Warrack Construction Company, is rnoon or tomorrow 'enrauw to Seattle on the Yukon., . | Fairchild, pi lex | PUEEFRFPRS S it ot sing t mechanic Lloyd Jar- | WILL MARRY SOON make a charter flight to Mary Hepburn, who will marry y with D. C. Sharp- | soon in Kodiak, left the Northwest- | n at Petersburg. She is visiting here for a few weeks with her fu- husband’s family, before board- a PAA landing field there and Stu- art will continue on to Fairbanks. |He expected to reach the Interior | metropolis some time this evening. Ketchikan Plane Tomorrow morning the PAA Lockheed Vega seaplane, pilot R. E. flight mechanic Paul Brewer, ue here from its regular Tues- ip m h with passengers and scheduled to return City tomorrow after- B MR. AND MRS. G. TURGEON, MRS. M. J. GUIRY, LEAVE |; vessel for the Westward, FOR HOME ON STEAMER| - e,ee — ! - [ CAPTAIN RETURNS Mrs. George Turgeon| Capt. W. C. Dibrell, connected M. J. Guiry, who have|w the U. 8. Lighthouse Service, 1 the latter's niece ed to that ageney’s headquar- | W. B. Kimball, Jr, for the|ters at Ketchikan as a passenger on week, left for their homes in|the Northws stern from Seattle, 1 B | COURT RETURNING | Di Judge George F. Alexan- | | ler, who has been holding court in Ketchikan, is expected to return | jto Juneau tomorrow on, the Aleu-| [tian with members of the court| staff ddle West aboard the steam vestern to go south by w - oline, are travelling to Seattle on the Yu- for years, has been a Alaska airplane pilot | been associated with the Alaska Airways, He has re- his position, and, with his| reside on a ranch in te of Washington. - | R A g WAKELIN TO SITKA Richard Wakelin left for Sitka on | | the Northland. He is a mcrc‘undlse' | - | | broker. SISTERS LEAVE ters Mary Martin, Mary WRIGHT ARRIVES | {reda and Mary Mark left Juh(..]u C.R. W contractor with the|on the Northwestern for Skagway. n t and Stock, arrived e >>e om Seward on the Yu-| TO PIONEERS'’ HOME E. Grigwire was a passenger on| ———te———— the Northland from Wrangell to| Chet J Nawzonal Grocery | Sitka. He will reside in the Pio-| Compar sentative, travelled | neers’ Home there. the Northwestern from DT DAILY EMPIRE WANT ADS PAY! e DU . FOSS Construction Co. OLD FIRST NATIONAL BANK BUILDING ALASKA it JUNEALU, PHONE NO. 107 e e ) All Women IN SYMPATHY WITH THE Alaska Mine Workers’ Union WILL MEET AT THE Miners’ Union Hall AT 2:00 P. M. TUESDAY, JUN OUR ORIGINAL PSSl RADIO [pIId¥ed The one you hear broadcast over the radio | | HERE'S OUR PLAN 10,000 Rexall Drug Stores hold this sale to make new friends. On special occasions we offer some of these items at less than regular list es but at no time at th rock bottom prices. Candy and Pure Food items are NOT sold on One Cent Sale basis. TOILET GOODS 10¢ Rexall ToiletSoap 2 for 11¢ 35¢ ‘{o];tu‘llfrem of 2 for 360 2 tor §lc 2t 5l 2 tor 26¢ 2 1o 26¢ 2 tor 26¢ 2 tor 5lc 2 tor 36¢ 2!01'“.01 2tor 5lc 2 tor 76¢ 2 tor 26¢ 25¢ size MEDFORD WRITING . PAPER 2 for 26¢ Shaving Cream Rich soft lather gives a smooth shave. 50c size tube TOOTH PASTE Neutralizes ‘acid that “often causes decay. 25c¢ size tube COLD CREAM Give your skin a réal cleansing. Quick safe re- lief for aches and pains. =) 25¢size boxof 24 50c¢ size JONTEEL BEAUTY CREAMS 100 ¢ 50¢ Klenzo Cocoanut 0il Shampoo 50c Ilasol 25c Jonteel Talcum 25¢ Bay Rum Shaving Cream 25¢ After Shave Powder 50¢ After Shave Lotion 35¢ Jasmine Creams $1.00 Jasmine Face owder 50c Jasmine Perfume 7S¢ Lavender Bath Salts Symbol Fountai Syringe or Hot + Water Bottle Molded in one piece. o0 $1.19 full 2 gt 2+-$1.20 50¢ size JONTEEL FACE POWDER $1.50 Size Belmont Pen 2for$],51 40c Size Cascade Pound 25c Lavender Talcum 2 ’ 50c Rexall Shaving for $1.39 Victoria Water Bot- 91, 40 P Eao- for 25 Stag Powder g s tleor Syringe 2 qt. 2torg], velopes. 21 4c 21t 26¢ 15¢ g;:%r::kh, Blue or 2 for Isc Another Rexoll Record Breaking Value \A \1f_t g DEN m=—<_'t DENTA = KEME {CLEAN WHITE STROUS TH ! 3 regular 39¢ tubes of Klenzo Dental Creme for only 40¢ . . . with the attached coupon. Ordinarily you pay $1.17. During this sale Good at any time during the four days of our you save 77¢! Klenzo Dental Creme gives you sparkling white teeth you've always wanted ~—without scrubbing—without scratching. I This coupon allows me the right to purchase 3 regular 39¢ tubes of Klenzo Dental Creme for only 40c at any time during the 4 THIS days of the Rexall Original One-Cent Sale. i 1 1 1 1 : H : ; H i Address Ml 3] As;!'é:::‘l:stes MEDICINES full pint 25¢ size Puidlodt CASTOR OIL $1.00 Rexall for 01 POUND SIZE il 2 1 P &t SOLUTION Assorted old 3 and new favor- 25¢ Purtest Mer- 2 for 2 6c Compare Mi31 ites in deli- curcchrome Antiseptic Solu- ciouschocolate. 50c Rexall Anal- 2for 51c 2 for 51c 2" 5I 50¢ size Pyretest” Milk of Magnesia PINT 2 for51c gelsic Balm 50c Denture Ad- hesive Powder 50c Laxative tion with any other mouth- wash for econ- omy and effec- 49c¢ size Puwietest tiveness. Pleas- ASPIRIN Salt $1.00 Beef, Wine ¢) for 0 o —_— TABLETS | "™ 2" S oo et A marvelous sav- 25¢ Epcom for ¢ inz.h'z dependable céaufy 16 oz 2 26 ORDERLIES 50c Purtc.. Rub- ¢) for ¢ 51 Dbing Alcohol 2 51 for; g . "STARTING SATURDAY 2 P.M. L SHARI FACE POWDER for ONE HOUR ONLY [} THURSDAY 10011 A.M. FINE TOILET SOAP How often s 01 Six cakes of finest yo?l ek admn'ed this powder. WHILE 'I'H!Y LAST soap in beautiful box. Reg. $1.00 Value. [ BOX OF 6 CAKES 50c¢ size Mi 31 Dental Paste For sparkling teeth and a clean ‘sweet brea 35c size STAG Latherless SHAVING " Candy and Pure Food items ‘ e for : are NOT sold on the One: Cent Sale basis. | MINERAL OIL _ RUSSIAN TYPE JONTEEL READYMADE CANDY BANDAGE Mercurochrome or plain. Sterile. ) 25¢ size 7 2&»2 You can always shop to advaniage at the Texall Drug Store Butler-Mauro Drug Co. '