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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, FRIDAY, NOV. 1, ingerice practical and a love for their beauty ? Then these are the undies you're going to buy. Nighties and slips that are really bits of loveliness. Yet, because they're pure dye sitk, because they've been made with extra care . . also built for wear. Tailored Slips with adjustable Tea rose or white. With an eye to the yvou'll find they're or lace- trimmed styles. strap: Lock-stitch seams. All sizes. $1.25, $2.50, $3.75 DANCE SETS Tea Rose'.. $2. 50' ss 75! PAJAMAS . . Small, Medium and Large Blue, Tea Rose, Dusty Rose (a new-shade) $3.75, $6.50, $9.50 White and GOWNS . . . Blue, Tea Rose, Dusty Rose and White $2.50, $4.75, $6.50, $9.50 Small, Medium, Large and Extra Large e Gur Remnant Counter All Remnants HALF PRICE B.M. Behrends Co., Inc. Juneauw’s Leading Department Store ELLIOTT LEAVES FOR MATANUSKA | J. A. Elliott, disbursing clerk for | the Bureau of Disbursements of the United States Treasury, is leaving | on the Alaska for Matanuska, where | Board Tuesday, with Col. Gtto Ohl- sbursing systenr at the valiey pro- to conform with the recent ange in the administrative control of Matanuska. Five new members were chosen to the colony's control EXPEDI!‘ION HAS RETURNED FROM LAWRENCE ISLE sident nnd Ross | (Fairbanks News-Miner).: | After digging three months for son wr\dng as Pr ._and . interior. THREE FOUND DEAD, POISON 6AS IN'AUTO Man, Woman and -Boy Be- lieved to Have Execut- ed Sux:lde M CLEVELAND, Noy l.—~A parking Jot attendant this morping found three persons dead in an automo bile from poison gas. The police expressed the belief that the. three {died as the result of & smicide pact. {The dead are a man, woman and boy, about 15 years old. The man has been tentatively iden- tifiled as L. E. Davis, of Phoenix, Arizona. /GRIDLEY RETURNS FROM INSPECTION OVER TERRITORY | Ross A, Gridley, PWA englhieer in- spector, .returned to Juneau aboard the Yukon this morning after an ex- tended survey tour of the westward Gridley visited Cor- dova, Seward, Anchorage, Fairbanks and several other Jocalities on his trip. Chief purpose of the tuur was _to | view present PWA projects and study sites and plans for proposed works aldministration jobs. The engine has been confined to his home with a slight illness following his arrival here, but is expected to be back at his desk within a few days. EOM ARRWiB TO REMAIN FOR WINTER R, Boyer, who arrived on the Y- kon, expects to spend the winter in Juneau, and Tenzkee. Boyer, who has been employed for the last ten years by the Alaska Road Commis- sion in the Fairbanks district, drove & caterpillar tractor on the Liven- good road last summer. He reported.that about half of the 6) miles of road from Fairbanks to Livengood, construction of which was started three years age, has been gravelled and the entire distance is passable to cars except during wet weather. D FIRE DOES DAMAGE TO DINING ROOMS A fire in the Bergmann Dining Room on Harris Street between Third and Fourth, resulted in Ham- ages to roof and walls estimated by Fire Chief Mulvihill at $76. cost of a new chimney will also be included in the resultant expense. The Juneau Fire Department an- swered an alarm turned in from the Bergmann® property .at 12 olclock foon and reported the fire tlnxulshed ab 12:30. GOODMAN HERE FOR MINERS’ DEFENSE | Irwin Goodman, Portland attorney, arrived in Juneau aboard the Alaska to start defense plans for the 33 men believed to have been secretly indicted by the Federal grand jury in connection with the street rioting of last June. , Goodman spent the afternoon con- | ferring with Al Nygren, President of the Alaska Mine Workers Union.' The g 1935 TRAIL FROM MINE ENTRANCE BEING REPAIRED BY A.J. Work of erecting a covered walk and steps on the hillside from the| Alaska Juneau Mine entrance down | the hill to Gastineau Avenue has been started by A. J. workmen. It is reported that the trail at that point has proved dangerous in previous years, several men having been in-| jured by falls on the slippery foot- ing. The Grievance Commitiee of the Juneau, Mine Workers Association callléd uppn L. H. Metzgar, General ! Superintendent of the mine, about a week ago, and requested a con- tinuation of the snow shed from No.| 3 entrdnce to the mine down the hill. MRS. GEORGE BACK FROM TRIP SOUTH! Mrs. Wallis George arrived on the Alaska after an enjoysble vaca- tion in Seattle and Portland for the past month. Mrs. George was accompanied on | her trip south by der son, Wallis George, Jr., who is now attending Behnke-Walker Business College in| Portland. Reporting a fine trip and a memor- able visit, Mrs. George nevertheless | expressed herself today as “glad to| be home again.” [T S SR, MUSICAL REVUE TO BE GIVEN TONIGHT . “The Gypsy: Rendezvous,” musical revue by the Juneau Grade and High Schools, assisted by the School |; Band, will be presented in the Grade School Auditorium at 8 o'clock to- night. Over 100 students are included in the brilliant cast, which is under the direction of Miss Ruth Coffin, glee club instructor. - o MORRISON RETURNS FROM ANCHORAGE TRIP Don G. Morrison, representative of various insurance companies, re- turned on the Yukon after a trip (o| Anchorage, where he adjusted fire loss on the Loussac Drug Company building, which was owned by the late Mrs. Herbert Beebe, wife of an| , who burn- | Alaska Railroad engincer, ed to death in the fire. Mr. Morrison reports business con- ditions in Anchorage as "very good.” FATHER OF (‘ROSSOV IS ON WAY SOU 'lH E. E. Crosson, tather of Joe Cms- sen, Facific Alaska Chief Pilot, is a | ard the Yukon enroute . Crosson has been e mine at Cleary near Fair- WALTER SMITH NOT TO LOSE RIGHT EYE The ! condition of Walter Smith,| | Dupont Powder Company agent who | was taken to Seattle last week for| medical treatment after a dyn::mi.c | | blast had de d the sight of ene jeye and s y endangered the |other, is constanily improving, ac- |cording to statement received by Dr. Wm. P. Blanton from physicians 01 the Swedish Hospital, where Smith ‘ls now undergoing treatment, { | Messages received by Dr Blanton { tate that, Smith will retain sight of hisvight e that plast | | | | Smith was injured when spouedl 4dynamite caps which he was bury- ‘mg in a hillside exploded, throwing | |him several feet away. He was | forced to crawl almost three e-quar- | ters of a mile before aid was :nvafl- 1 i Sm!th was accompanied south by ihls wife and two nurses, ! | ———.———- | | MINING MEN STOP HERE ON WAY SOUTH! C. Bartholf and Walter Bartholf, | | mining men from the Willow Creek | | distriet, arrived today on the Yukon. | Unable to engage accommodanom on the Yukon from Seward beyond Juneau on the trip south because an unusually large passenger list, | e Bartholf brothers left the ship | here and will sail for Seattle on the rst ship offering ac"ommodations | BB i N R R PILOT RANDALL RETURNS NORTH |Cne of Twm Sons Suffers ‘Broken Collar Bone in Vancouver | Rokert. C. R Northern Airways at Carcross, who ed for Vancouver on the last| of the Princess Norah, re- | furned on the same vessel, arriving lact night enroute to Carcross, his family-——Mrs. Randall and ~#nd-a-half-year-old twins, Bob- | e all, pilot for the| U. 8; DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE, WEATHER BUREAU THE WEATHER (By, the U. 8. Weather Bureau) Forecast for Juneau and vicinity. beginning at 4 p.m., November 1: Partly cloudy tonight, Saturday cloudy; moderate easterly winds. LOCAL DATA Barometer Temp. Humidity Wina Velocity 38 b1 sw 2 26 kt:] w 2 4 Time 4 pm. yesty 4 a.m. today Noon t,odfl} Weather Pt.Cldy Clear 3047 Pt.Cldy 34 69 SwW (‘ABI,E AND KADIO REPORTS YFSTERDAY | TODAY Highest 4pm. | Lowestéam. 4am. Precip. 4am. temp. temp. | temp. temp. veloeity 24hrs. Weather .38 — 28 ¢+ 0 .16 10 4 01 38 38 36 1.52 48 48 44 s 2 a2 12 12 46 44 52 52 42 38 34 Station Anchorage Barrow Nome BEethel Fairbanks Dawson .. St. Paul Dutch Harbor Kodiak Cordova Juneau Sitka Ketchikan Prince Rupert Edmonton Seattle Portland San Francisco New York ‘Washington 8 16 a8 1 Snow Rain Cldy Cldy Clear, Cldy Cldy Cldy Cldy Clear Clear Clear Clear Clear Clear Clear¢ Rain i = WEATHER CONDITIONS AT 8 A. M. Ketchikan, partly cloudy, temp:rature, 28; Wrangell, partly cloudy, 28; Skagway, claudy, 20; Soapstone Point, misting, 37; Sitka, cloudy, 33; Radioville, raining, 36; Cordova, clo idy, 37; Cliting, cloudy, 15; Mc Carthy, cloudy, 14; Anchorage, clou ly, 35; Nenana, cloudy, 34; F: banks, cloudy, 30; Hot Springs, cl:udy, 32; Tanana, raining, 36; Rul raining, 34; Nulato, raining, 34; Kal .ak, raining, 38; Flat, raining, 43. WEATHER SYNOPSIS 4 High baromteric pressure preva'led this morning from western Al- aska eastward to the MacKenzie R ver Valley and southward to Cali- fornia, while low pressure was reported over the Pacific Ocean from Midway Island northward to the A'cutian Islands. This general pres- sure distribution has been attended by generally fair weather from the upper Yukon Valley southward to C lifornia and by precipitation over the interior of Alaska and the Ber ng Sea region. Heavy precipitation has been falling at Nome for the p st few days. Cold weather continued over th: Pacific Coast States, Seattle hav- ing reported a temperature of 28 d .grees at 5 a.m. Portland 30, and San Francisco 48. w | in the lobby of a hotel in Vancouver Randall spent the summer |shortly before the Princess Norah visiting her parents, Mr. and Mrs.| -2iled and suffered a broken collar- F. Bard, at Regina, Sask., and her bone, but, aside from a well-bandaged husband'’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. A.| appearance, seemed none the worse J. Randall, at Saskatoon, Sas, for his accident upon his arrival ¢ Twin Teddy fell while at play ! here. 'LEADER DEPT. STORE JOE GEORGE and GU: banks, owned by his son, for the lasz; o Offers . . . . | two years. | sl - RADOVICH TO FLY Chris Radovich, proprietor of the Ex"lmemanonnl Hotel in FairBanks, ' arrived on the Alaska from Seattle today and will be a passenger on the PAA Lockheed Electra to Fair- | banks tomorrow. <o JOllN SISUL ILL John Sisul, former owner of the Old U & I Lunch, is seriously ill Outfit GEORGE, Proprietors Your Complete Winter Sports ! at prices that as- sure you.a very fair saving . in Seattle, according to word re-| ceived by Juneau friends. Sisul len[ here some time ago for Tenakee and | proceeded to Scattle from that polnt.: Lake‘.md Fl&., nas declared a| | “Write-a-Letter Week” during which T citizens are to write to out-of- | Tomorrow State friends. he will reorganize the colony's fi- | "The Treacury official will return | Eskimo relics of historical value on and others affiliated with the o.- naneial set-up. | to duneau within two weeks. | St. Lawrence Island in the Bering 8anization. He was retained by the Eliott will organize the F.,-de.-m‘ e | Sea, Otto Wm, ‘Geist, archaeologist International Labor Defense to rep- l |for the Bureau of Indian Affairs, MRS. ELLIOTT BETTER and the, six other members of the Henrietta Elliot t,'3 resent the accused men. Goodman paid a brief visit to Ju- chool teach- Interior Department-Alaska College Neau last summer to represent the ‘el in Chichagof who was brought to | Ezpedition have returned to Fair- 8lleged rioters at the United States Ann’s Hospital by airplane in banks from Neme in a lLockheed Commissioner’s hearings. {2 “merc; ! was di | proved cendition. She will refurn t j Chichagol. | IS . M PRIDE TO LEAVE Mrs. J. L. Pride, of Sitka, and her Aart and customs of the ancient Es- the States. will be passengers on the PAA Lock- | flight” of some weeks ago, | Blectra plane of the Pacific Alaska harged today in a much im- Airways piloted by Jerry Jones and 0| Walter Hall. | Their excavations have been car- vied on at the site of the old vil- 1lage of Kukulik where much .of the ‘;nn“ baby girl, left St. Ann's Hos- | kimos has been learned. { pital late today and will return t | their Sitka home on the North 8e. ,Lux . mote KENTUCKY STRAIGHT WHISKEY | GLENMORE DISTILLERIES €0. § B0R0 LEAVES ST. ANN'S | v.a | fined in St. Ann’s Hospital for sev days, wred. LOUISVILLE “owens Mr. L. Bresleck You are invited to present this coupor at the box office of the Capitol Theatre and receive tickets for yourself and a friend or relative to see @ “Lovein Bloom” As a paid-up subscriber guest of The Daily Alaska Empire Good only for current offering Your Name May Appear Tomorrow Newell, who has been con- Members of the Expedition were: Otto Wm. Geist, archaeologist in charge; Mary Mikami, accountant; | Roland . Snodgrass, Ivar Skarland and Percy Lucha, field assistants; | Clavi Kukkola, surveyor; and Ches- - ter Bryant, radio operator. With 0 a has been discharged as|the exception of Mr. Bryant, all of | Mr. Geist's party are either gradu- {ates or students of the Alaska Coj- i lege. | - e —— MRS. BREWSTER IS ON YUKON, HELENA BOUND o M:s. Lyman 8. !Brewster, wife of the Superintendent'of Reindeer Sof- vice in Alaska, satled Jor Scattle gn the Yukon. Mrs. Brewster travelled by plane from Nome to Juneau, ar- riving here on the PAA d |Electra from Pairbanks last Wed- |nesday, and is envoute. to Helena, Montana. ——————— i LOURING FOR WRANGELL | Kaj Louring, Pacific Bottlers Sup- ply, representajive, cailed for Wran- ‘uell on the Yukon. B g IT WON'T BE LONG NOW! Phone 374-2 rings and a represen- tative will show you samples of the latest creations in beautiful Christ- mas Cards at painless prices for any ! e ROBBINS IN JUNEAU | S E. Robbins, PAA Pilot, Mrs. Robbins, and daughters Diana and Sharon, arrived on the Alaska today from a three-months’ vacation .In The Robbins family heed Electra to Fairbanks tomorrow. ' -DANCE— You are cordially mvited to ATTEND A DANCE Sponisored by the Juneau ‘Mine Workers at the A.B. HALL ‘Saturday ‘November 2 GOOD MUSIC Dancing 9:30 Admission Gentlemen, 50c Schlllmg’ Pure Vamlla e],ca" l f 0’“7 thefla“’o Sweaters CASHME RE, plain, and brushed wools. A specialty with us . .. in sunset and all natural shade Consider- ably reduced . TWIN SETS . . at $4.25 SINGLES at $1.85 and $2.25 For Ladies ALL WOOL, in delightful styles, and colors, new . . . $6.50 o . Ski Suits All wool . . all colors. Sizes 14, 16, and 18 $12.50 CHILDS® SKI SUITS, $8.00 Sizes 4 to 10 Skirts . . Fourteen-off is the new sports length for skirts. $3.50 and $4.00 All sizes and colors An Abiartment of Siriictive Shoes, any pair, $1.50 (For Ladies and Children) Each pair of shoes on this Sale Counter is a really attractive bargain. A variety of sizes, styles, colors.