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4 B and S e e +++-§++H+—|—PH—!—-!—I-H+1—K—++1-¥'I"-{—FH+H—I-+' 3 CHILDEEN'S Summer Clearance Sale! MILLINERY SUMMER COATS and SUITS $19.75 One Group STREET DRESSES and Pastel PARTY $8.75 WHITE COTTON COTTON DRESSES, suitable for Tennis treet Wear Priced from $1.85 to $3.95 GIRLS’ COTTON WASH DRESSES 14—Price $1.00 COTTON PARTY DRESSES 75¢ and $1.00 BOYS' WASH SUITS—$1.00 to $2.50 it gt oo e 1Z4€ es 1 to 6 for the Whole at the Most Reasonable Prices! S VISIT THE UPSTAIRS DEPART- THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, TUESDAY, JUNE 16, 1936. CAPTAIN LANE BOES TO NOME FROM JUNEAU Famous Wh;];;and Trader Visits Here Briefly After 10 Years Capt. L. L. (Louie) Lane, accom- panied by his son, Allen K. Lane arrived on the Yukon, and left Ju- 1-3 OFF neau for Faitbauks, enroute to Nome, aboard the PAA Lockheed FROCKS Electra plane this afternoon Capt. Lane, famous whaling skip- per and trader along the Arctic coast of Alaska and Siberia, is re- visiting Alaska for the first time since he commanded the auxiliary schooner Nanuk, used by the MGM motion picture company to provide local color for a film depicting old- time whaling operations in the Arc- tic regions three years ago. fapt. Lane is enrouie to Nome to “straighten out” the affairs of the Big Hurrah mine in that dis- trict, which has not been worked since 1907 as a result of legal diffi- ‘tulnes. The mine is at present owned by the Lane Investment Com- pany, t. Lane's parents’ estate The mine is a large-scale quartz operation and contains high-grade ore, Capt. Lane i4.id. It Nas been worked to a depth of 265 feet SUIT5—$6.95 | New Equipment Old, useless equipment, which ha | been in the mine since it was last worked, nearly 20 years ago, will be replaced with new modern equip- Iment. Capt. Lane said. The mine | has been allowed to fill with water he reported, but pumping it out will be a simple operation. Capt. Lane expects to return to the States within a few weeks, leav- ing his son, Allen K. Lane, i charge of operations at the mine First Trip Here o His first trip to Juneau, Capt Famlly Lane said, was in 1891, when he came here to visit a friend of hi father who was engaged in mining in Silver Bow Basin. He was in command of the steamer Buford carrying a tour party from the States which visited Southeast Al- aska enroute to Nome and the Arc- tic Ocean about 10 years ago. Hi: son Allen has accompanied him on most of his trips in recent year and was with him on the Nanuk Capt. Lane has been for the last FourRoomsfor ~ HECETAISLAND | **™"“FHE WEATHER - (By the U. 8. Weather Bureau) y a“" Forecast for Juneau and vicinity, beginning at 4 p.m., June 16: Partly cloudy tonight and Wednesday; moderate easterly winds. H | LOCAL DATA l" fln e | Time Barometer Temp. Humidity Wind Velocity Weathes | 4 p.m. yest'y 29.65 68 48 S 10 Cldy el 4 am. today 29.58 67 36 E 18 Cidy WASHINGTON, June 16.—In the S » - -| Noon today 29.56 70 36 SE 10 Cld Federal Housing Administration’s 70 Acres Burned OvellNea\ CABLE AND KADIO REPORTS v Techrios! Bl Ul 8 el Juneau Lumber Mills | YESTERDAY | TODAY ciples .0! anning ma. omes, S o i Highest 4p.m. m. .m. b House B, with four rooms, repre- Logging Operations $rafion l:mp. l:mp. :'::f";'mn; v:;‘oclxllnym: w:'_":(‘= sents one step above the minimum : i A fStarage Peaatl ol (e o T : ;T in accommodations consistent with | After burning over 70 acres of| L | . i sreen | BArrow 48 48 34 36 6 0 Clear decent living. It has one more room |0ld slashing and spots of green 56 54 “ i i than House A, which represents |timber, the forest fire near the:& Nome s 24 5 6 0 Clear about the minimum. It can be built |Juneau Lumber Mills logging op-| Bethel - o : ot 20 4 Ahear at a cost ranging between $1650 erations on Heceta Island is re-| Fairbanks L 89 ree 8 L Glehr nd $2,000, according to estimates ported under control. Forest Ranger| Dawson a8 1t o 0 0 Pt Cldy of the Housing Administration, de-|Roger Robinson and a crew of 20| St- Paul ‘32 0w 6 0 Pt Cldy pending upon conditions in the la- men are on the job and are re-| Dutch Harbor ... 52 42 44 16 Trace Ft, Cldy bor and material markets in a ported to have the conflagration in | Kodiak o0 50 s 4 0 Pt Cldy given locality. check, according to word to Assist-| Cordova 12 B ian 4 0°° Pt. Cldy Using the ordinary methods of ant Regional Forester Wellman Hol- | Juneau 6 L LT B B construction, a four-room house is brook Sitka 65 ?4 - - Trace Cldy about the largest that can be ecu- While the Forester with Assistant| Ketchikan L Bi W g Rain nomically built on one floor. This U, S. Forester C. M. Granger and| Frince Rupert 2 52 ?4 4 .30 Rain is particularly true when a cellar Regional Forester Charles H. Flory| Edmonotn 62 50 50 8 3 Rain is to be installed. alodie! was Faslg Dowiie e seeny| Seattie 68 60 60 6 Trace Cldy R following information of the fire,| Fortland i €.0 R airplane Pilot Munter of Ketchikan| San Francisco 68 W 2 Clear picked up the report while in the| New York 72 .8 P 2 Glear air and flew to Craig where he got| Washington 84 62 72 10 0 Clear GUARD FLIERS Ranger Robinson and hopped him WEA'THER CONPSTIONS AT 8 A. M. to the scene of the blaze. The XKetchikan, cloudy, temperature, 60; Wrangell, misting, 68; Sitka, plane and the Forester arrived| ¢loudy, 50; Radioville, clear, 69; Juneau, cloudy, 68; Skagway, partly about the same time. | cloudy, 68; Soapstone Point, partly cloudy, Craig, cloudy, 60; Yaku- LUST IN GALE The Forester with the two of-| tat, cloudy, 72; Cordova, clear, 62; Chitina, clear, 58; MoCarthy, clear, ficials is now on the way north| 60; Portage, clear, 56; Anchorage, clear, 64; Fairbanks, partly cloudy, 5 and is expected in Juneau Saturday | 70; Hot Springs, clear, 68; Tanana, clear, 66; Ruby, partly cloudy, i lam‘ Plu nges Inlo Bay or Sund | 65; Nulato, clear, 70; Kaltag, clear, 60; Unalakleet, cloudy, 50; Crook- X ed Creek, partly cloudy, 62; Flat, clear, 61. During Tropical Storm Men on Duty JACKSONVILLE, Florida, June 16 —Three Coast Guard fliers on storm patrol duty were lost Monday in a blustery tropical disturbance ROTARY CLUB MEN HOLD REGULAR MEET| Members of the Rotary Club held | their regular meeting today at noon in the Terminal Cafe. The meet- which isolated several South Flor- ing was under the charge of HOW-‘ ida communities . 1 S | The fliers were Lieut. Charles = yigiiors who attended the lunch- M. Perrot, pilot; Walter O. Morris, eon were Prof. F. F. Beale and radioman and William D. Eubanks, &' - Douglas, Superintendent o B g Sales for the Standard Oil Com- The plane plunged into Tampa pany. Mr. Beale gave a short talk | ];‘I')‘:_;"m“r St. Petersburg, in the|p.rore the club, and community The [Bdle “Ruseed Wekt 4 ¢ | Singing with Miss Ruth Coffin at | ge pascey W © €ast the piano was included on the| across the southern tip of the Pen- insula and went out over the At- lantic The program. G. H. Walmsley was elected as a member of the club. Following a| decision to change:the regular| meeting day through the months| of June, July and August, from| Tuesday to Monday, the members | adjourned. bodies of Perrott and Morris been recovered DR. ROSENBUKY ON WAY TO INTERIOR TO JOIN DR. WAUGH >-ee $1,500 WORTH OF FUR JUNEAUDIVER William Lindley Designs| WEATHER SYNOPSIS The distribution of barometric pressure this morning shows lit- tle change since yesterday with the barometer moderately high over the Bering Sea and northern Canada and a trough of low pressure from the Alaskan interior to the central Pacific centered several hun- dred miles west of Vancouver Island. During the last twenty-four hours light rain has fallen at Un alaska and moderate to heavy rains from Ketchikan to the Columbia River. Over the rest of the Terri- tory generally fair weather has pr evailed with temperatures mostly warmer this morning. FRANK METZGAR ENROUTE Frank Metzgar, son of Mr. and Mrs. L. H. Metzgar, is a passenger | aboard the Princess Charlotte to Juneau where he will spend the summer vacation with his parents. Young Metzgar has compléted his freshman year at the University of Washington in Seattle. He is tak- ing a mining engineering course. e CHET JOHNSON HERE | Chet Johnson, National Grocery LOS ANGELws, Cal, Juhe 16— |Company representative, arrived on William Lindley, 29, Los Angeles|the Yukon from Ketchikan. inventor and deep sea diver who fi- A 1S INVENTOR Bell to Be Used in | Hunt for Pearls f “Bar Pilot” gured in raising the sunken Islander | seven years a at San o, sodor Rosebury ssistant ; SRy : Pttiaie” Al Yaghteres RiRs on-| prorsoocr. Rosetury, Assistant) TOBE SOLD SATURDAY | F05 0ot e oars aeo tus de-|] NORTHERN LIFE =3 MENT FOR BARGAINS IN tering San Francisca Bay are re- fedical School at Columbia Univer- BY GAME COMMISSION | siened a new type of submarine / el % - quired to take a pilot aboard out- gty arrived on the Yukon and diving bell for a pearl hunt off "3 in 1” “pulled his shingle” and took a leavegsiom which point he will proceed Game Commission will be held at| The bell weighs almost a ton, is Life—Accident—Health of absence from his duties as pilo™, Beihel where he will join Dr. 11 o'clock Saturday morning in the | cylindrical and nearly 61 feet long.| B. M. Behrends Co., Inc. “Juneau’s Leading Department Store” B A I e BATHING SUITS i PETERSBURG NEWS ITEMS PET SBURG, Alaska, June 14 —(Special Correspondence)—Friday evening, June 12, Esther Peterson became the bride White. The ceremony was perform- ed at the home of Mr. and Mrs Willie John: Mr. White's part- ner in business. Miss Peterson ar rived on the Alaska Friday morning accompanied by her mother, from heir former home in Vancouver, Washington. Saturday evening the young couple held “open house” in their home. During the evening many friends called to extend best wishes to the newlyweds. Z. M. Bradford ni for andard Oil Company at Wran arrived in Petersburg on Alask: Friday morning to confer with W.!u« E. Moultray and R. M Douglas officials of the same couipany who arrived here also Friday, comin from Ketchikan by plane Saturday morr the Campbe Church yacht Westward moorec the Citizex Wh for a few hours while the party of aboard took in the d Petersburg. To date the party ha bagged six bears. BY JEEPERS !! I'LL L'ARN YE TO BRING VARMINTS (NTER TH' of Ule (Hack)| BARNEY GOOG Wright and Stock Construction |Company plan on moving their road camp to town this week where work on the paving and filling of Front Street has started i | The P. A. F. cannery boat cath-! |erine D. arrived in Petersburg Sat- {urday morning with a shipment of jcans and other supplies. She sailed |Sunday morning for the westward. |R. Amundson, Alaska Superintend- ent, who had been in Petersburg |the past week boarded the ship the new Fall Creek bridge. A crew of men from the road camp check- SCOTCH BOTANIST ON WAY WESTWARD basement of the Federal and Terri- torial Building, it was announced to- day by Acting Executive Officer Frank Dulresne. A total of 182 skins valued at about $1,500 will go on the block. They may be inspect- ed from 10 to 12 a. m. Thursday, it| was announced. i In the lot which Auctioneer Wil- liam Garster will cry Saturday morning are 109 beaver, 38 mink, | 18 marten, 9 muskrats, 5 blue fox, 2 ermine and one land otter. | e 'Former Juneau Man at San Francisco to make the pres- | ent trip to Nome. ILL - LUCK HITS RHODE PARTY ON M. Waugh, Professor of Dentist- ry at Columbia. The two men in conjunction with the U. S. Public *Health Service are making a study of the teeth of Eskimos and gen- eral health conditions. Dr. Rosebury will set up a tem- porary laboratory at Bethel where /he will carry on bacteriology work while the chemistry work will be {sent to Columbia. Dr. Rosenbury {said it has been found that the | Kuskokwim country offered the best i | ; O example of the primitive Eskimo | Similar to the misfortune which|With perfect teeth, and also the Two shatterproof bulletproof glass portholes, estimated capable of | withstanding a pressure at 2,500 feet depth, with a five to one safety fac- | tor at 500 feet maximum depth, is | expected to be used. INSURANCE Manley E. Sweazey, C. L. U. Resident Supervisor Territory of Alaska S e HOTEL ZYNDA . . | AT THE HOTELS i o Gastineau 3! Ada J. Zorn, Seattle; O. J. Erik- son; O. J. Matheson; Ben Mazer; B. M. Douglas, Seattle; W. E. Moul- | try, Seattle; H. B. Hanson, Wash- PHONE | followed many a gold rusher over|oOther extreme in'those who have "the trail of '98, the Rhode party|adopted white man's food and man- | ington, D. C.; Dorothy M. Daily, | Harbor. here for the westward. ! i | A fore fire started Sunday | aftern a short distance from | TO COLLECT PLANT ! which left here recently for a trip | down the Yukon also has met with seum to collect plants, Miss Isobel their expedition this summer W. Hutchison of Carlowrie, Kirk-| AJl the duffle of the Rhode party, | liston, eScotland, is a passenger which included C. J. Rhode, father | aboard the Yukon, bound for Dutch| of Clarence Rhode, Deputy Game | or. The Museum is particu- warden, Gene Rhode, his brother, larly interested in obtaining Alaska and Cecil Rhode, his cousin, was| flora, Miss Hutchison said, and she Lyrned up, including their guns and | feels many fine additions to the ammunition, according to a message British collection may be obtained. to warden Rhode today from Daw- While the vessel was in port, son. The accident happened at Sel- | Miss Hutchison called at the Gover- kirk when the party was camped “nor's office and vi_sited the Museum for the night. A spark from their| in the Federal Building. | fire ignited their baggage when they | | were asleep and destroyed the en-| tire lot, with a loss of about $350, !they reported. All they saved was their boat with which they proceed- ed to Dawson. | BARR PLANE FROM ATLIN; OFF AGAIN r. Wilcox is expecting his family arrive from Seattle in the near {uture. Improvements on the Citizens' | Wharf are underway. The ware- has been covered with tin new fender piles have The piledriver is now the improvements to { house jand many een driven. vorking on e approach. S e i| Lode and placer location notices le at The Empire office. ed the fire after many hours’ work | H. G. Wilcox, engincer on the| PWA work in Petersburg has rent- led one of the Ness Apartments. TOMORROW NIGHT | The North Canada Air Express Then they had climbed up over the | | Pilgrim transport plane flown by embankment a distance of about 20| |Pilot L. F. Barr arrived yesterday or 30 feet to sleep. They awoke to| |from Atlin, B. C, and will leave find themselves with only a hoat. Juneau on a return flight to Atlin It was a tough-luck journey from at 6 p.m. tomorrow. the start. At Lake LeBarge, last —_—————— | month, the party was caught in the Territorial Hignway Engineer Wil- ice and held up for eight and a half liam A. Hesse, who has been on an days. They had believed the ice extended trip in the Interior, plans strong enough to cross and broken The party had made camp and| ! removed their baggage under a cliff. | | Inc., ner of living. — é The two professors will SAN FRANCISCO, Cal., June 16.| be in On a mission for the British Mu- jll-luck, so bad that it may delay the Bethel country all summer, —The marriage of John M. Dunn,| Washington, D. C.; G. M. Johnson, y 3 San Francisco. East Bay editor of the San Fran- | cisco Chronicle, and Sue Walker, | musician, is announced here. Dunn is the son of Mr. and Mrs. John H. Dunn, formerly Clerk of the United States returning to Columbia in the fall. 24,757 CASES OF SALMON PACKED IN KOD[AK DISTRICT‘ Nome and Juneau, and formerly of b vme o Anchorage. The son is a former The salmon pack at Kodiak |Seattle and Pittsburgh newspaper- through June 13 reached a total man and was at one time Circula- of 24,757 cases, according to re- | tion Manager of The Daily Alaska| port to the Bureau of Fisheries Empire at Juneau. office here. Of this number, 38 - cases were' kings, 24,274 reds, 28‘1MARY SPERLING ON VACATION | ( pinks and 417 chums. e | Mary Sperling, 9-year-old daugh- |ter of Mr. and Mrs. Harry Sperling, NOME FIRE INCORPORATES left on the Yukon this morning ror} Articles of incorporation were|Seward where she will spend the filed with the Territorial Auditor lsummer with District Ranger Will- Married in ’Frisco seattie; D. D. Muir, Boston, Mass. District Court at | Zynda Mr. and Mrs. A. E. Demaray, Alaskan Angus Kennedy, Hyder; J. Heath, City; Chet Johnson. FINE T Watch and Jewelry Repairing | PAUL BLOEDHORN at very reasonable rates FRONT STREETS CARDINAL CABS | The Juneas Lasadey Franklin Street between Front and Second Streets PHONE 358 today by L. Seindenverg and Sons.imm Sherman and family. It was to operate a general mer-|the young lady's first trip on al chandise business at Nome. Incor- large vessel and she traveled alone,| porators are Leo Seindenverg of | thrilled to pieces. Nome, W. L. Grill and Percy Bowes, | S eee both of Seattle. Capital stock is| GET JAIL SENTENCE | listed at $50,000. James Thomas, arrested on a| ' - ;chm'ge of taking 500 feet of rope District Ranger W. A. Chipper- from the boat of Roy Rutherford, field of the “U. S. Forest Service pleaded guilty to a charge of petit left today on the Ranger IX for a|larceny in U. S. Commissioner’s | field trip which will take him to Ceurt this morning and was sen- to return to Juneau from Valdez through with a sled they had made, on the return trip of the Yukon and were forced to stay on their from the Westward, according to conveyance until the ice pushed Mole Harbor and other points. He expects to contact the Forester at word received here today. them into the river. Windham Bay Thursday. tenced by Judge J. F. Mullen to serve eight months in the Federal | Jail. LE AND SPARK PLUG SNUFFY ! YoU DOPE !!f A FINE WAY TO SENAToRE BRAND-NEW TOUPEE ' IMMEDIATELY. By BILLIE DE BECK - ‘ uf your Daily Alaske lJn_pln ‘ has not reached you PHONE 226 and a copy will be sent by SPECIAL CARRIER to you