The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, July 8, 1935, Page 2

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In keeping with our policy . . this week we at the reduced price of RO SR ALV ERR AL NOW, these dresses wmc to for.. Values up to $16.50 for: ;.. SILK DRESSES FOR GIRLS . . . Here is vour opportunity. We have carefully grouped a selection. SI 95 Your Choice = = = = = = = E = g MAHAN MAY HAVE HID OUT IN CABIN In this cabin, tucked remotely in the mounhlnu near Butte, Mont, William Mahan, kidnap suspect in the Tacoma, Wash., Weyerhausser case, is believed to have found refuge. A man fled fron, lha place when a neighbor entered. In it were found newspapers with accounts of the kldnap chase. (Associated Press Photo) ALASKA PENINSULA | Douglas to Get FISH PACK IS LESS | Work Relief Funds THAN HALF, 1935‘1‘or W ater System WASHINGTON, July 8 — President Roosevelt has alloted $25,515 to Douglas for the pur- pose cf buying the privately- owned water system and ex- tending it. The allotment will be from the Work Relief funds and covers about 45 percent of the cost. e NEWMARKER, CLARK RETURN John Newmarker, local inspéctar e MBS F of boilers, and Capt. ‘John b:fl - Clark, local inspector of hulls, ft uT:{;:dE Ej:n ngw:o;RAggjigsilhe Bureau of Navigation, returned {to their Juneau headquarters .on! months—longer than any domestic | q |the Yukon after an extended in- :’;fiéng':de :S’E“y;li‘: ;:Zne:rl °uf spection tour of Westward points.| show you. —ady. TR BENDER ON TRIP Robert W. Bender, Editor and Manager of The Daily Alaska Em- pire, is a passenger for the south on the Yukon on a business trip. Reports from the Alaska Penin- sula area indicate that the fish pack | this year is less than half of last | year, according to figures of the| Bureau of Fisheries. Through June 29 the pack on the south side of the Peninsula totaled 77,518 cases and the north side 2,587 against ap- proximately 180,000 cases for the south side and 77,031 on the north side during the same period last year, HARRI MACHINE SHOP “ELECTROL {for Dr, W.: 3. JB. McAuliffe; -well- noon in' the. Skottish ‘Rite” Temple | (147, conducted the Masohit titual | services and Rev. O. L. Kendall de- THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, MONDAY, JULY 8, 1935 ING: ot o 4 Coats-Suits-Dtésses A GROUP OF COATS AND SUITS th 1 antee vou values at original retail price$ up. o $59.50. This week we offer you a choice A GROUP OF WOMEN’S DRESSES that wete. marked to sell up to $22.50 \ ou CHILDREN’S COATS AND DRESSES . We offer vou a choice in these lines, ¥ roats £ RGNS 2 B 2 R MILLINE,RY NO MORE . We offér you ¢he choite of any hat in our stock NO APPROVALS—NO EXCHANGES—NO ALTERATIONS CAN BE MADE DURING THIS SALE B. M. Behrends Co. Fry® “Juneau’s Leading Department Store” §|III|II||IIIlmllllllIIlllIIIIMlII|IIIIl|HIIIImIIIIIIHHIIII|U|HIII|H1IHIIIIHIIIIII m||munmlmmumunnmmu||||||uummmmmmmmummn MEARS VOI%IEC FUNERAL S DR. W. J. g %3’% Very impressive faneral, semees known and highly reSpected Sdheau Iphysicta, who! ‘died on- Juily & were [held at 2/ o'clock yesterday iafter- under the Auspices df the Mnémm | Ordez, Howard D. S8tabler, Wou‘hip{u! Master of Mount Juneau Lodge No. iivered the eulogy. Mrs. Lold Mae Aléxander sang “Ob Tears,” (Relgl) and “A sell) ncwmpaméd on h:; ddughter, Miss Liltiah di The Masonic services hLl!h in— tluded the symbolic apon.: ever- green céremony, Were exel the sdme lodge room ih MeAulitfe was rafsed as a 5 Thierment, was in the' Masohic| plot ‘at Evergrebn Cemetery. - FROM HOLLYWOOD - Mr. ahd Mis. D, J:. Cdrty -and son Dohal of , Cal, ar- ¥ived here' on thé Notthwestern for & briel visit, guests dt the homk of Mr. and Mrs Frank A. Boyle. They até leaving tomoétrow on fhe Alaska for the Westward, While at we guar- , Inc. Duzl:‘nmu- | i mekflf‘ IlIII|II|||I|IIIlIIIIHIIIIIIllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII!IIINIIIIIIIIIIIIIIINIlIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIlIIIHIIlllIIIHIIIIIIIIlllIIIIIIIIIIIIIlllllllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIllIIIII"IIIIII'IIHIIIIIIIIIIIII!IIIIB Mid-Summer Sale of Ready-to-Wear! . The B. M. Behrends Store is offering outstanding values in this Anmul Mid-Summges Clearance Salel All > are offering the most unusual, values, = ummmumlmmmm(mumuummmmlmmmllmnmmuumumlmumml|u|||mnnn|r||t||nmvmmflimtmnmmmmnmnnnnnmnmmm||unnmmmmumitiilmflu_mmu L NO LESS! $1.50 ; New-Coohdge Bob | hére they enjoyed sonfe enellem tishing. Mr. Carty is a member of the firm of Carty and Carty, chain| grocery store opérators, in Holly- | wood. | —————— | BEZ ARRIVES | Nick Be#, ‘owner of the Peril Straits Packing Company plant, atf Todd, arrived here on the Yukon from Sewatd. “The ‘populat canhery | man is returning ‘from a, visit to his floating packing plant i tbal Westward. He was met’ at Roew Point by a gasboat. ———————— LUCKY HERE J. L. Lucky, representative the Garlock ‘Packing Company, ar- rived here on the Yukon, huvlfu taken passage at Cadnvn ——————— of | | Are: Grganwed in Ohio; Geprgg l_}et'u.ler, Chairman CLEVFLAJND Ohio, July 8~—The, Republican Crusaders” at a con- rgég%ué elfctéd Gedrge Bender, of Clevelind,’ spomor of the gathering, as permnnent chairman. Inv accepting the post, the rormer Ohio State Senator asserted the “Republican Party. can offer Am- erica a‘plan for recovery in keep- ing with the sacred principles of a constitutional American govern- ment: The Democratic Party has aflopted the principles of Fascist Italy with a capitalistic society con- trolled by centralized state. — e Empire Clastiried Ads Pa). DAILY EMFIRE WANT ADS PAY! PAA LOCKHEED MAKES FLIGHTS OVER GLACIERS Two scenic flights at special \tes | were - made yesterday after- noon by the PAA Leckheed Electra| yloted by S. E. Robbins and Jer- | Jones. On the scenic flights, the 1 transport follows a - regular —from Juneau to Taku In- up the Taku River to Taku jer, Lemon Glacier, theé Twin Glaciers and Norris Glacier, across | the ice eap 'to the head' of Men- denhall Glacier and over the entire |length of Mendenhall Glacier to Juneau, where a short flight over points of interest concludes trip. The entire flight covers a nce of about 70 miley over some of the most spectacular and interesting scenery in the world On the first trip yesterday John K. Marshall, Lester Linehan, Mabel Linehan, Howard K. Yorke, Frank Karabelnikoff, Sybil Bacon, E. Mc- Clain and H. Gorman were passen- In the segond flight the Elec- tra carried H. L. Faulkner, Vance F. Sutter, N. C. Banfield, Ben Phil- lips, Louise Jahota, Helen Jennings, Mrs. Jack Davis, C. J. Davis, Mrs. W. H. Wilson and W. H. Wilson. The scenic flights of the Electra, ituted on July 4, have proved pular that PAA officials expect to make them a regular feature luring the summer season IS GPERATED UPON Mrs. John McCormick, who was tted to the hospital on, July 4, was operated upon today, and is ported to be recovering nicel he Betty Mac Beauty Parlor will in charge of Miss Helvi Paulson ile Mrs. McCormick is in the hospital VACATION BOUND Mrs. W. J. Bourreau, wife of an Anchorage merchant, and her son, y, are enroute to Seattle for a t vacation. They are passengers on the Yukon from Seward. MRG0 ot TO SEATTLE After siting with her husband who is cannery foreman for the |Pioneer Packing Company [ at C va, Mrs. E. A. Edwards barked from that port on the Yu- kon for Seattle. e, — LEAVE KODIAK Mrs. Albert Kraft and a child are travelling from Cordova to Se- |attle on the Yukon. Mrs. Kraft's husband is a prominent Kodiak merchant. e — TO OREGON Dunegan, who has been {attending school in Anchorage, is travelling to Seattle from Seward on the Yukon. She will visit in |Oregon this summer. e, — WRESTLER WINS, LOSES Angelo Cistoldi, professional iwrestler, lost one match and won Alberta age’s big Fourth of July celebration. Cistoldi, from the States, is return- mg on the Yukon to Seattle. another in exhibitions at Anchor- | | Gets Mov1c Contract | wodtak Marsha Hunt Although she objected to signing a movie contract on grounds that | she lacked training and experi- ence, Marsha Hunt, 17, of New | York, was given a seven-year con- tract after a studio test convinced | producers of her talent, CHINA RIVER BREAKS DIKES Idand City Is Inundated, by Worst Disaster in Years CHANTEH, China. July 8—The dik of the Yuen River yielded lo thz flood pressure The W eather ‘\ i ¢ (By. the ©. §. Weather Burcan) ‘ i Forecast for lmfimm beginnlnl at 4 pm, July 8: Partly cloudy tonight and Tuesday;i gentle variable winds.| LOCAL DATA Time 4 pm. yest'y 4 am. today Noon today Weathe: Clear Clear Clear Barometer Temp. Humidity Wind Veloeity 29.99 64 63 s 12 30.04 52 94 Calm Calm 20.99 68 54 ) 4 RADIO REPORTS YESTERDAY | Highest 4p.m. temp. temp. | 40 54 54 8 8 rooa= Lowest d4am. 4am. Preelp, temn temp velocity 24hrs 4. Weatlior Clear Clear Pt.2Cldy * Rain Pt. Cldy Clear Cldy Cldy Cldy Cldy Clear Pt. Cidy Cldy Cldy Clear Cldy cldy Clear Cldy Pt, Cldy Sration | Anchorage Barrow Nome Bethel Fairbanks Dawson St. Paul | Dutch Harbor 16 2cceBooco Cordova Juneau Sitka Ketchikan Prince Rupert .. Edmonton Seattle Portland San Francisco g 5 New York | 2 24 Washington | 10 |ccomoooc0a8c | i WEATHER CONDITIONS AT 8§ A, M. Ketchikan, cloudy, temperature, 55; Craig, cloudy, "7; Wrangell, cloudy, 58; Sitka, cloudy, 56; Soapstone, misting; Port Althorp, cloudy; Skagway, clear, 52; Radioville, part cloudy; Cordova, cloudy, 53; Anchorage, clear, 61; Fairbanks, clear, 70; Nenana, clear, 70; | Hot Springs, clear, 72; Tanana, clear, 73; Nulato, part cloudy, 67; Kaltag, cloudy, 62; Unalakleet, raining, 54; Ruby, foggy, 58; Flat, - foggy, 53. WEATHER SYNOPSIS A low pressure area centered south of the Alaska Peninsula ex- tends north over the Interior and Western: Alaska with the barometer high over the Northern and Southcast parts of the Territory. Light 1ain has fallen during the last twenty-four hours from the Seward Peninsulato Unalaska and around Cordova. Except in the extreme north and the Interior temperatures this morning are somewhat cooler this morning. The Pacific Northwest experieneed light rain over the week-end. WINDOW CLEANING and let loose a; torrent in which many have been| drowned in this inland city. the worst disaster in years. Although the number of cannot be determined immediately, all members of the foreign colony, including twelve American mission- aries, are reported safe Ten feet .of water gushed mout are continuing SR S Man Has 2 Hearts TOKYO — Dr. Shigeyoshi Ka- wakami, head of a local hospital, has discovered a man with two hearts box lunches at a railway station. k. SRR S LARON Ray Larson, TO CLINIC Minn., for medical treatment. e T Walter Jchnson was never d out of the box in his pitch- EU will be ac least $50 ahead selecting your General c reftigerator mow instead 1 of waiti until next spring or summer. ou will save on food elimination, on “left- overs” that can be used at other meals, and on quantity food pur- chases at bargain-day prices— savings that will run from S8 %0 $12'3 month. Thete's a G-E that will exactly suit your needs—and your bud, —including Monitor Top, Flat. mlnd Liftop models. They you a choice of refriger- ators that are first in dependable performance, first in modern styling, and lowess in cost. ia today and see them. GENERAL $128.00 and up @ ELECTRIC ALL-STEEL REFRIGERATORS Sold on Easy Pay Plan Alaska Electric Light and Power Co. JUNEAU—Phone 6 DOUGLAS—Phone 18 It was| dead The man is a ‘vendor of Anchorage lumber | executive, is enroute to Seattle on | !the Yukon. He plans to visit the Mayo Brothers Clinic at Rochester, PHONE 485 LUMBER i Juneau Lumber Mills, Inc. ) { Rice'and Ahlers Company | AND | € H. Metcalfe Company JUST PHONE 34 or 101 Juneau Cash Grocery CASH GROCERS Corner Second and Seward Free Delivery - —— THE HOTEL OF ALASKAN HOTELS The Gastineau Qur. Services to You Begin and End at the Gang Plink of Every Pmm-(‘m ‘Boat “Stem to Stern” Call 411 Now! CONNORS MQTOR CO let, Pontuc, M& Aznh oA INSURANCE Allen Shattuck, Inc. Juneau, Alaska Established 1898 { CAPITOL BEER PARLORS ; " AND BALL ROOM Lunches . Dancing Every Night F || Private Booths 'Old papers for sale at Empire Office

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