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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, TUESDAY, MARCH f7, 1936. = = g g £ = = = = s £ = = S E = = = = = = = = = 00000 ] KRAFFT VS. UNEEDA for dancing and daytime wear $8.75 NEW SPRING KNITS— $13.50 NEW BLOUSES— $1.25 and $2.50 NEW SKIRTS— $2.50 and $3.50 NEW NECKWEAR— 65¢ and $1.25 NEW MILLINERY— $3.25 to $6.95 NEW VEILS— 25¢ and 50c FLOWERS— 50c and 65¢ NEW GLOVES— $1.25 NEW HOUSE DRESSES AND SMOCKS— $1.00 to $3.50 “Juneau’s Leading Department Store” | one of their most popular drivers. | He expects to return north in about B. M. Behrends Co., Inc, b 1O A AR E 4 A e i | ; T OGS | e ASSN. AR O - SESSIONON - | HELD MENAGED 1 LAEr ‘MGHT‘Park Service Would Ex-| tend Boundary of Glac- {New Insurance ExPlained% ier Monument —Soldiers Are to Be | Contrary to the move now on; |foot to open Glacier Bay Nununul‘ Provided- Space —_— . | Monument to prospecting, the Na- Insurance, the Labor Relations tional Park Service has recommend- | Board hearing, and free barracks ed the extension of the monument | ! for soldiers, were among the matters and its subsequent restrictions, ac-| discussed at the meeting of the cording to the annual report of Juneau Mine Workers Association|the Department of Interior. held in the A. B. Hall last night. The park service recommends Bert Elstad, local ln}'l‘!tnnce bro- | that the closed section, which now ker, gave a detatled Téport and a|embraces only the immediate drain- complete explanation of the insur-{age area of Glacier May, be ex-| ance policies which the members |tended west to the ocean and south of the association are' contemplat-|fo Cross Sound and Icy Strait. ing accepting. The type of insur-| “The present boundaries of the| ance choflen, it is said, Will include!monument enclose mineral lands of | | complete accident and illness cov-|xnown value” Commissioner of' erage, both on and off shift. Mines B. D. Stewart said today,! Bopck iy, Ted Darilélsen andi«and if this extension should be| tee, reported on the hearing now|, . r 3 : are several active prospects at taking place. s To House Soldiers Dundas Bay, for example, which, would be included in the closure.”! Chikor Barsacks i Admamiie. | 1% Wove o open Glacer Bay tive Assistant Charles G. Burdick|>tional Monument 1o prospecting| of the Forest Service, was ‘referred S been backed by Delegate Di- to Ed Kirehoffer, President of the Mond. Mr. Stewart and others, and dssociation. "The letter stated that, ¥2S advocated in the press by 25 enlisted men will be chosen from | Rex Beach. i the various compamies at the army | T o post ‘as “honor “men” each month, and will be given a trip to Juneau from the first and fifth of each 5 0 barracks space is, available i Juneau the use of the JMWA hall was offered by unani- mous vote of the JMWA to men from Chilkoot Barracks, who' will brinz their own equipment, including cots, blankets, cogking equipment, ete. BN Member of FERA Staff to Head Railroad Hostel- s e ry at Curry PET! URG LOOKS A. F. Raynor, pioneer Alaskan, FOR coon SEASON, has been named Manager of the| SAYS DAN NGONAN Alaska Railroad's hotel at Curry, o3 it was announced today The announcement was made fol-| lowing a conference this morning| |between Raynor and Col. Otto F. aska, reported a flurry of activity Ohlson, General Manager of the| in Petersburg the last few days as road, who passed through enroute| the halibut fleet prepared to sail !0 Seward on the Alaska for the banks. Petersburg antic-| Mr. Raynor has been ipates & good season this year, Mr. Worker on the staff of the loc Noonan said, with no labor troubles' FERA Administration since last, appdrent. | October. During the summer of| ‘Mr. Noonan reported that during' 1935 he was connected with the| a recent cold snap in Petersburg, Alaska exhibit at the San Diegc water pipes beneath the home of | Exposition. Eric Carlson were frozen, and when|{ He formerly resided in Fairbanki | Carlson crawled under his home to/and Dawson, and was at one time | thake repairs he discovered that a|manager of the Tanana Club at} two-year-old black bear had es-|Fairbanks. He was also chief stew-| tablished winter quarters beneath ard on the N-N Company steam-| | the structure. The bear was re- ers Susie and Sarah on the Yukon ! moved and placed in a cage in Mr.|for many years, and at other times | Carlson’s yard,” where he has since | was chief steward of the Fam | emerged from the lethargic sleep iclub of hibernation. Dan A. Noonan, Barlin and Sil- ver representative, who arrived from Petersburg this morning on the Al- a case| in San Francisco and the| | Seattle Yacht Club. He will sail on the next north- c“w TO BUILD NEW ‘l;(o)lsx:d steamer to assume his newi ON NEXT TRIP NORTH The Bureau of Fisheries boat | Eider will leave for Pavlof Harbor at 1888 o'clock tomorrow morning, with a crew of workers who will start construction of a fish ladder at the| Motorship Zapora, sailing from Seattle on March 19, will not call| at Sitka, Chichagof, and Hirst- Chichagof on the voyage as prev- | to have traded him for some value- | prisoners from the Interior. MINERAL LANDS [RICE SEEKS TO |HIGHWAY CRASH GAIN PROPERTY OF DEAD WOMAN Former Husband Claims Right to Cottage of Wom- an Murdered by Selz S o e il DELGARD ON NORTH SEA REDWOOD CITY, Cal., A bid tof Pete Delgard, who has been south secure the Woodside Glens property | for some time, is returning to his of Mrs. Ada French Rice, slain by!Juneau home aboard the North Ralph Jerome Selz, was made to-|Sea. day by her third husband, Charles Rice, through a Seattle attorney,| MRS. Earl Phillips. Rice, former mayor of Nome, divorced her in February, 1935. Coroner William Crosby said Phil- lips is here contesting ownership of 1e cottage and surrounding acre- age. He announced a deed trans- ferring the ownership to Selz and| signed by Mrs. Rice had been found. « L. L. Trimble, route agent for Crosby said there was a chance that, ;o Railway Express Agency, with the slayer, serving a life term inj 4 s headquar ive San Quentin may retain the oo janclU¥e® L SALCE 80t T tage title, which Mrs. Rice is sald{,itenq to official business at the local office for the next week. PSR« K LAMBERT TO FAIRBANKS FATAL TO FOUR MERCED, Cal, March 17.—Four | persons were killed almost instantly fznd two others were injured seri- | ously when an automobile collided headon with a truck early this | morning on the highway near Li ingston, north of here. — . — BRUMBERB IS ABOARD NORTH SEA Mrs. Jennie Brumberg of the Ju- neau Frock Shop, south on a buy- North Sea. . ROUTE AGENT HERE less mining stock Officers theorized she may have been slain when she learned she had been duped and protested. Selz| Ted Lambert, wellknown artist said the killing was accidental,|0f the Interior, left Juneau on the though he pleaded guilty to first|Alaska, bound for Fairbanks. While degree murder. |here, he has been living in the Ray Day cabin at Fritz Cove. IDENTIFICATION SURE ————— SAN FRANCISCO, March 17. =<} LA GASA RETURNS HERE Identification of the body of Mrs.; A. J. LaGasa, deep sea diver Rice has been established definite-!who went to Seattle several days 1 sion of Dr. Hans Sorenson, who said ment to replace gear lost when the teeth coresponded to the chart his boat the Alaskan sank in of Mrs. Rice’s dentifrice filed in his, Stephens Passage a few weeks ago, office. |returned to Juneau aboard the N e ' | Alaska. . MANAGER EARLING IS G e o ENROUTE TO FAIRBANKS| [ Chadwick, proprietor of {Cordova Liquor Store, is R. R. Earling, Manager of the senger aboard the Alaska Feirbanks Exploration Company, iS from Seattle to his home a passenger aboard the Alaska re- gova, urning from a trip to Boston the a pas- enroute in Cor- ing trip, is a passenger aboard the| y from dental charts in the posses- |ago to purchase new diving equip- | PONY RESCUED AFTER 19 DAYS, - MINE CAVE-IN Cwner and me Sons Fin- ally Reach Pet Animal During Night CROOKSVILLE, Ohio, March 17 —Guy Brown and his three husky sons have rescued their pet pony Fannie from the family mine where sh was trapped 19 days ago by a e-in. The pony was none the Avorse for the experience. The four men spent all last night digging through the remaining 20 feet of coal to effect the rescue. ———.—— CARPENTERS’ UNION TO ELECT OFFICERS Installation of officers for local 1944, United Brotherhood of Car- penters and Joiners of America, will be held Monday, March 30, in the Iocal hall, according to decision at last night's meeting, at which time the recently-granted A. F. of L. charter was presented the Local, Nominations for officers will be closed next Monday evening at a special meeting to be held in the hall at 73:0 o’clocck. ——————— LAVERY RETURNING TO FAIRBANKS POST William Lavery, Fairbanks avia- tor, who has been in Seattle for sev- eral weeks taking advanced aviation | training, is a passenger on the Alas- ka enroute to his home in Fairbanks. | Lavery was decorated for services in | connection with the rescuing of | members of a Russian expedition | from floating ice in Bering Sea by plane two years ago. | | | | | | where he conferred with officials of his company -oe CHISEL TO HAINES J. H. Chisel, Haines merchant, ! is a passenger aboard the Alaska| WINDOW o CLEANING enroute from Seattle to Haines. | ENROUTE TGO YAKUTAT ! Mrs. C. Palmquist, wife of the cannery watchman for Libby, Mc- Neill and Libby at Yakutat, is a assenger ahoard the Alaska en- ute from Seattle to Yakutat for a short visit. e BUCKLEY ON ALASKA Deputy U. S. Marshal J. J. Buck- ley of Fairbanks is a passenger on the Alaska enroute to Fairbanks from a trip to the States with - L Dave Housel, Prop. J. Ensley, A’aska Road Commis- == o s OPEN ALL NIGHT Alaskan Hotel Liquor Store Phone Single 0-2 rings sion foreman at Fairbanks, is a passenger aboard the Alaska re- turning to the Interior from a va- cation in the States. e - Six hospits are maintained for Alaska Indians, with full-time phy-| sicians, assisted by gualified nurses, in charge. | Telephone 409 Sy FOR INSURANCE b See H. R. SHEPARD & SON | B. M. Behrends Bank Bldg. | Still Coughing? THE TERMINAL * . site. No matter how many medicines you have tried for your cough, chest cold or bronchial irritation, you can et relief now with Creomulsion. rious trouble may be brewing and | you cannot afford to take a chance lN ELKS’ BOWLING two weeks. — e Warden Donald $. Haley will _»l‘fll- GOLDSTEIN LEAVES TASHURGTON U worten Bonaid 8, Hatey v o ON FUR BUYING TRIP| Marion Foster, Juneau giri and) Am‘,ss | Junior in the University of Wash- be | lously scheduled, but will sail south direct from Juneau. - e PRIEST TO KODIAK “Deliciously Different Foods” The Kraffts will play the Uneedas 3 play Catering to Banquets and Private Dinner Parties for the Grocers’ League Champion- ship tonight in the Elks’ bowling alleys at 7:30 o'clock. Winner of the playoff will clash | with the Hop the Brewers' night for the Elks winter title. | which city he will embark on a two- ON VACATION Paul Johnson, referee of the City is vacationing in Pacific League, Coast cities. by the Royal Charles Goldstein, veteran Golds, champions of | trader of the North, left on the| League, tomorrow I travel g mostly by airplane. ‘course_ - e Johnson is employed Blue Cab Co. and is nurses. HEALTH INS Developed the Way That Nature Intended! GOOD HEALTH is a matter of preventing illness. Pre- vention requires resistance. Resistance comes from the body building elements that nature provides in PEERLESS BREAD. It's as simple as fur | ington, has been named on the pub- licity committee for the forthcom- Alaska enroute to Seward, from |ing all-University vodvil scheduled for May 2. Miss Foster is enrolled | months buying tour of the Interior, !0 the University College, a general| "y oy ‘for a month under Game| tinuing to his Acts for the Vodyil, which is tak- Regular service in other settle- | INg the _place of the formerly popu- | ments is rendered by 12 traveling lar Junior Girls' Vodvil, are being | previewed and chosen now. Deputy Game Warden Grenold | The Rev. Theodosius Kulchighy, | | Collins, formerly with the Juneg“‘Ru&slan Orthodox priest to Kodiak, | headquarters of the Alaska Game Passed through Juneau today, en- | Commission, will leave Cordoya for route to Cordova, where he will | Anchorage on the Alaska, where he|stop over for a week before con-! recently - assumed | Warden Jack O'Connor. After the parish. Yukon ice break-up Collins will be stationed at Marshall, where he | will be in charge of sealing be“e"j | skins. During the past fiscal year, reindeer herd enumeration on the lhei with anything less' than Creomul- sion, which gees right to the seat | of the trouble to aid nature to | soothe and heal the inflamed mem- branes as the germ-laden phlegm is loosened and ex] ; “fi‘ven i 10%!:: remedies have don’ discouraged, your drug is authorized to guarantee Creomulsion and to refund your money if you are not satisfled with | results from the very first bot ranges totaled 550,000. ABC's . . . PEER LESS every day is the easy way to winter health! And the children will enjoy. it!: “Ask Your Grocer For” PEERLESS BREAD You can have a different kind of bread for almost every meal! . . . . The only thing that’s hard about it is trying to chogse the one that you like best! But F've solved that . . . 1 serye a variety with every meal . . . and does my family love it! for Better Sandwiches! . « - PEERLESS! ery tle. Get Creomulsion right now. (Adv.) Juneau INSURANCE Allen Shattuck Established 1898 Juneau Cash Free Delivery Grocery CASH GROCERS Cerner Second and Seward Private Booths CAPITOL CAFE AND, BALL ROOM Lunches::+: Dancing Every Night MIDGET LUNCH Featuring Home-Cooked Meals and a choice of Beer, Wine or any 10c drink with meals or sandwiches Open daily from 8 a.m. to 8 p.m. including Sundays ~ TOM and MARIE STURGE