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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, ACATION (EO and vacation days spent in town Jacket and one- piece styles. $14.50 $19.75 Sheer, cotton formals, to pack and care smart to wear. You'll love them for thel femininity, their coolness on the dance floor. $8.75 $13.50 $19.75 easy for NEW BLOUSES . .. Net, Georgette, Silk Crepe and Organdie. NEW SKIRTS—Silk, Wool and Cotton. Dresses for travelers THES Jantzen All wool swim suits built for action. ny in the new, coarse knits famous for their smooth fit. Gorgeous colors loads of styles . . and of those nice details them look more plenty that make attractive. $4.95 to $6.95 y and light colored, light weight suits and coats for traveling. Box and seven- cighths styles in a variety of colors and fabrics. $17.95 . » « AllPopularly Priced Household Equipment Upstairs Remnants at Half Price! B.M.BEHRENDS CO., Inc. Juneau's Leading Department Store ORE SAMPLING AT SNIPE RAY E. W. Creevy, of the Creevy Trad- ing Company, interested in develop- ment of the nickel mining prop- erty owned by S. H. P. Veve at Snipe Bay on Barnaof Island and Ture Haglund, mining expert from Stockholm, Sweden, arriv here from the property Satur afternoon aboard the PAA Fair- child seaplane piloted by Murr Stuart Accompanied by Capt. E rd E Whiteh advisor to Mr. Creevy who arrived on the Northwestern Saturday, and Henry Roden, local attorney, Mr. Creevy and Mr. Hag- lund were passengers to Funter yes- terday morning aboarc Airways Lockheed Ve flown by Pilot Gene Meyring quantity of assay samples are be- ing processed at the plant owned by Sam Pekovich at Funter assay facilities were not availab) * here. About 1.000 pounds of sample will reach Funter today aboard the gasboat Jazz in the care of Di Eric Hoegbom, who accompanied Mr. Haglund from Sweden to in- vestigate the Snipe Bay property for interests represented by Mr. Creevy. “We are cross sectioning the property, Mr. ©reevy said to- he Irv seaplane A day, “and expect to assay about seven tons of samples. Mr. Roden, Mr. Creevy and Capt. Whitehead returned to Juneau last night aboard the Irving plane. .- HESSE RETURNS FROM INTERIOR 1 A Engineer. Hesse, returned to his ay 1 headquarters on the Yukon after several weeks in the Second and Fourth Divisions in connection with affairs of his of- fice. The official reports seasonal ac- tivity at a peak in the Interior| and things especially bright for a good industrial season. | - o> BUD BODDING GIVEN U 1S AL DUCKING | Bodding, student to escape the administered heir first successful solo flight. He took off for | t solo trip aboard the Gas- ineau Flying Club Aerona seaplane the Alaska Air Transport oat was deserted last Saturday evening. However, upon his return, he was met by a large and en- thusiastic group of spectators who tossed him overboard from the float in accordance with the recognized | custom. pilot, at- traditional to students FISH SHIPPED FROM JUNEAU Twenty-six boxes of salmon, halibut iced fresh and 33 boxes of frozen were shipped by Alaska | Territorial | Coast Fisheries to the San Juan\D Fishing and Packing Company in | Seattie on the Twenty-five boxes of iced fresh | salmon, and 7 tierces of mild cure, | were shipped by E. E. Engstrom to | Sebastian Stuart Fish Company on | the same steamer Yukon. | steamer. Over the weekend Alaska Coast Fisheries bought the following | amounts of king salmon: from the Alms, Capt. A. Bartness, 800 pounds; from the Elfin II, Capt. E. O. Swanson, 7.500 pounds; from the]| Celtic, Capt. Henry Moe, 2,800 | pounds; from the 3[-B-137, Capt.| Nils Schroeder, 200 pounds; and from the 31-B-709, Capt. Ernie West, 900 pounds. GOING SOUTH | Lieut. Donald B. MacDairmid, | formerly in command of the U. S.| Coast Guard vessel Morris, has Feen relieved of duty with instruc- tions to report for medical treat-| ment in the States. Lieut. McDair- mid is a through passenger aboard | the Yukon to Seattle, enroute from Cordova MONDAY, JUNE 22, 19 36. before continuing south. l —_— ; ELKS DEFEAT an GEURGE U. S. DEPARTMENY 0¥ AGRICULTURE, WEATHER BUREAU ' e THE WEATHER [ DUUGLAS 'l B GUES SGUTH (By the U. S. Weather Bureau) - i Forecast for Juneau and vicinity, beginning at 4 p.m., June 2: S el Cloudy tonight and Tuesday; probably showers; moderate east- SUNDAY GAME Plaps Extenm_vc T‘:'P i LOCAL PATA N States Including Visit | Time Barometer Temp. Humidity Wind Velocity ~ Weathes ¢ g 3 S0 4 pm. yest'y 30.16 67 42 s 7 Clear {Costly Errors Piled Up by to ME‘}O Clinic 4 am 3001 50 5 Cam 0 Clear _ : Bqth Teams — Mac- Joseph L. George, of Gieorge Broth- | No°0 é)fli‘;m A[;sn ILADI(?REPO?EI‘S k oy Sl)addcn Ace Hurler ers, accompanied by his nephew YESTERDAY | TODAY Thomas George, Jr., sailed today on o= the steamer Yukon for the States Highest dpm. | Lowestdam. dam. Preclp. ¢am Exemplifying the old adage that| '~ ” o g Station temp. temp. temp. temp. velocity 24hrs. Weath No team is stronger than its catch- | They Will stop first at LeGrande.| = o o 8 2 e e 0 — b i B B b o - | Oregon, where the boy will remain | a8 5 : : Ay | er” Douglas yesterday afternoon was | A - the 1y | BArrow 60 60 38 48 10 0 Cld; tripped up by its first hurdle on| ‘e SPend the summer on the ranch| r' 44 44 2 4 14 Rain the quest to pair up the second half| 9f RS grandparents. Mr. and Mrs.} o) 54 54 50 16 Cldy i , with that of the first half | Harvey Clark. Joe George will then | 2€the % i peie Rair alsads AR the land ball| SPend a few days in Seattle on bus- [ Fairbanks 4 o sl . g sl X '«t\ Tipamgioyer l“‘f !\] ‘tm Dan | 1ness. before proceeding to the Mayo [}““'\“”' & 35 ol b (:%d'y, scknibtifiz. ol one Min, and his| NeSOta. Where he will remain “"“3\;?])( sy 60 58 44 46 0 0 Pt Cldy | teammates made enough boots for|SiX Weeks receiving treatments. e 56 b4 50 50 4 0 Cldy |two ball teams, that run was the| GBI R ledvige Medhbsior, Ml‘ _ym e ;;x 67 50 50 0 0 Clear | margin of the 7 to 6 victory, while| G60rée will spend several weeks ‘”,‘”"‘g"[':“ 6 25 gl R 0 et ! the lack of a throwing threat behiria | NS father. Mike George, and family, KX :l, ¥ 64 64 s 4 Trace Cldy Berdpindist . 1o base run-|i? LOS Angeles, California. While |Ketchikan ... i i 3 e 3 2 |the plate let the Purple base Tun-;, ¢, gtates he will purchase mew Prince Rupert ... 62 62 B G Py b imers go wild for seven steals, which | 6 € " A0 B cloth. | Edmonton 16 78 58 4 02 Clear led u: at least two u(hr-x»lalhvvs ing for The Leader Department Seattle 80 .g .15 njn ; 0 Clear ¢ | Red Frodle, regular Island receiver,| oo "% 4% ne o B oters: | Portland 86 8 64 64 6 0 Clear umf. Deacon” Paine ‘fm(' chl out Pay'n Takit. Mr. George's mail ad- San Francisco % SU ‘,’" .té 4 0 Clear 3 M'r};‘f h,“;m.;;n ‘11\:‘13;.\1\1;\‘?‘«:(33;;) el 0 in Los Angeles will be: 2903 |New York 82 70 % 60 18 0 Cl‘:u‘u: idtear oP bl ik Davine e, (LIGAAREY, Walnity Ba¥E { HE ffx- pMesRion - B0 L B LR o B 0 Oy 3 g °F7° | pects to return to Jumeau early in oo en charged again them, three of | oo o Ketchikan, cloudy, temperature, 58; Craig, rain, 57; Wrangel, which were turned into scores by & e |cloudy, 57; Sitka, cloudy, 61; Radioville, clear, 60; Juneau, cloud the Islanderes. “Big Mac” Mac i s | Skagway, clear, Soapstone Point, cloudy, 60; Yakutat, clear, Spadden, in scoring his hurling vic- | { Cordova, cloudy, 56; Chitina, partly cloudy, 60; McCarthy, partly tory over Claude Erskne to go m'fl‘i cloudy, 56; Por partly cloudy, 54; nchorage, p cloudy, 60; irst pla among the league chuck- DOUGLAS ! Fairbanks, cloudy, 54; Hot Springs, cloudy, 54; Tanana, rain, 50; ers, allowed eleven safe bingles, four Ruby, mist, 54; Nulato, cloudy., 52; Kaltag, cloudy, 50; Unalakleet, more n the Douglas ace, but kept rain, 48; Flat, cloudy, 50. them scattered, one to an inning NE WS % " WEATHER SYNOPSIS i except the seventh when he was! ! Low barometric pressure prevailed this morning off the cdast of nicked for a trio, while the Elks|d ... ——ee— |Southeast Alaska southward to California, the lowest reported pres- hung theirs together and made! ., . o prsns DANCE |sure being 2940 inches about 500 miles west of Vancouver Island them count ) | FOR COMING WEEK-END The air pressure was falling from Kodiak southward to British Co- Costly Error | SR lumbia and rising over Washington and Oregon. High pressure pre- m’}w‘""_l‘m”‘;;"; ‘1‘1‘1" ;?»‘1"‘:;‘(1""]'”112:‘2)‘I":]'1 Final arrangements for the school Vailed over the Aleutians and the southern Bering Sea. This general tying 1up ) benefit dance to be given by the Pressure distribution has been attended by precipitation over most of I:]“f“f‘, \.,l,';x . L‘f,,i:;’,‘ir’,'i :::: Douglas Tsland Women's Club were the interior, Dawson having reported 200 inches during the past 12 rhubarb behind the scoreboard in|Made at & meeting Saturday even- hours, elsewhere over the Ter e il i deep center, he forgat fo Boli hil| 4 Beldiat the higme of Ms, Margus | === 2 base while Jernberg was catching | JeNSeR. president of the club. Defin MBlNGs AIR EXCURSION a Bonner’s fly and was doubled off at- it date of the dance is Saturday, Fourth of July week-end trip to ter the catch. Benson gave the °URe 27; the place Eagles' Hall. A Atlin and return only $35. Fly up count back again in the eighth, !N'e€ plece orchestra, wards 4 biem s > the Taku River, past the Taku though, when, after Balog had dou- Christensen and Swanson, will play. NELSON, B. C., June 22—Quiet | Gjacier and over the most beautiful bled and been advanced to thirq, 10f the affair. The assistance of reigned in the Doukhobor colonies | cenory in the North. See the placer he overlooked the fact that there '€ Scouts will be enlisted to dispose near here following an outburst of | ininc in' Atlin, and fish for trout was only two outs and roiled the bal °f the tickets. bombings and incendarism over the ,n4 whitefish in the lake. Nine- o second after a putout at first in.| COMMittee in charge of the ar- weekend X : passenger transport leaving Juneau tead of throwing to the plate, Ba- | 'ANEements is Mesdames DuPrce,| Three schools, a sawmill and | on™he 3¢d, 4th and 5th. Make e i | Jensen, Devon and Engstrom {community hall were damaged. The | v ar reservations row with L. L TAiE n wes haat e ciacs| - ‘ml);\l loss is estimated ab about ' Barr or Lee Barragar at the G of the Island hitters, getting threc FOURTH JULY MEETING SIL.TK],““,\“ Ha%8 bEon tas tineau Hotel —adv. ¢ 18 ““'l “L‘]”' ““l“ Balog each get-| Tonight at 7:30 o'clock is the Y S gy Lode and placer location notices ting a double and a single, to rank ' scheduled hour for the seco eet-| o PEAT BTHE x : S : next. Bob Jernberg with a double m‘u‘ of the local qum-m of x.ll?n?lm— picicodih ki Sttt B fee e 8 D0 TN O and a ome-bagger led the Purple sociation to hear reports from the clouters, while MacSpadden’s single | various committees on preparations n the fifth drove in two runs— for the celebration. The ultimate l Dow CLE ANING enough to win the ball game uccess of plans for the celebration w N i 3 depends largely on the progress Score by Innings made by the Finance committee pHONE 485 Team 123456789—R nEL e Douglas 0200003106 FIRST FISH PACKED Elks 20003200x_7 The Concord, tender for the Doug- | —— = e Summary | 1as cannery, arrived from Icy Straits DOUGLAS AB R H PO A E carly Sunday morning with the first . . Roller, 5 1 1 0 2 1|days catch of the season, sround a Tll F t N tl al Bank . Jensen. b, ! .l, 2 1| thousand fish. They afford a trial e ll‘S a on Erskine, p. 5 0 0 014 0 runof the plant yesterday and aside IUNEAU ! Andrews, 1b. 5 2 1 9 o o from minor adjustments everything - McDonald, cf 411 0 0 o ls in readiness to handle agood Livie, c. 40 2 9 2 2l pack this summer ® | Bonner, 2b. 40 0290 TS Balog, If. 3 4.2 04 a FROM TENAKEE CAPITAL—$50,000 T. Niemi, rf 401 3 0 1| Mrs A Shudshift with her sons L and Mrs. Erwina Snethen and her s Totals 39 611 24 21 5, daughter arrived home Sunday SURPLU $50.000 | morning from a three weeks' visit ‘ngks AER H PO A E| at Tenakee Hot Springs. ° i uckworth, 2b. 3211 wE - i ’?ardx‘ ss i 421389 DUE HOME FROM SOUTH ZOMMERCIAL AND SAVINGS eernberg, £ 32 110 Mrs. Charles Fox and daughter ]:obcrwm;glb 4 1 1 2 1 1 Lucile, are expected to leave énz\t- ACCOUNTS enson, 1b. 4 0 010 0 0 tle on the North Sea today enroute - ;Mflcslaadden. p. 4 0 1 010 0/ home after a two months visit south SAFE DEPOSIT BOXES | F. Schmitz, cf. g 000 ann - — o Clark, ¢ 4008 40" AT i 3 Rodenburg, rf 300000 | New York Life | 24 % Paid on Baldwin, rf. »1 00000 ‘l INSURANCE l Savinqs Totals 7 7 7! | KEITH G. WILDES b *—Substituted for Rodenberg in ' | Fhope #7l & Accounts seventh. MRS AP O T CSossior oi o Stolen bases: Jensen, Andrews, ¥ = 2 MeDonald, Balog, Duckworth, Bardi [ C. W. “Red” WRIGHT | , Jernberg 2, Robertson; two-base ! \/ hits: Balog, Jernberg, Schmitz; three | PLASTERING base hits: Livie, McDonald: double STUCCO play: Elks (Jernberg, Clark and H “an PASSENGERS CHANGE _|Riicuson: ‘i . nvc| | Telephone 316 | enry sen STEAMERS IN PORT i Dol Booer, Jerners, B You are invited to present this obertson, MacSpadden 2; struck |#+— i * A number of passengers aboard |OUt PY Erskine 10, MacSpaddeen 7 FINE | coupin pl the bog office of, the the Yukon enroute trom the West. | Walked by Erskine 3, MacSpadden 1; | | Watch and Jeweity Repatring | ca itol Theatre ward to Seattle, transterred here | GUURE TONS Off° Erskine 2 Mac-|| Ay BYOEDHORN | P to the Northwestern while the two|SPdden 1; passed ball: Livie; left ¢ . ; ships were In port in order to visit | O% Dases: Douglas 8, Elks 7; time at very reasonable rates and receive tickets for your- sitke of game: 2 hours 5 minutes; um- FRONT STREETS & self and a friend or Albert Lee Stephens, United States | PIFeS: Botelho, Nowell it ieakaflt - relative to see istrict Judge at Los Angeles; Mrs. " g Stephens, and their two sons Albert ' Sieens,and ther two s Abert|\SWEAZEY OFF FOR 1R “Thanks a among the passengers to transfer. \ Judge Stephens, who has never be- SOUTH; INSURANCE Pllom Mi“ion” fore visited Alaska, is on his an- nual vacation trip. His sons are BUSINESS IS GOOD students at the University of South- ——— id-1 eri ern California Law School Manley E. Sweazey, C.L.U. resi- As o _pald up subscribes, of The F. L. Hamon, executive of the|dent supervisor for the Territory o Postal Telegraph Compa at San|for the Northern Life Insurance Daily Alaska Emplre Francisco, also transferred to the [Company, of Seattle, who has been Northwestern. Harriett K. Cutler |in Juneau for some time, sailed on| 2 and Lucy H. Sinclair, Juneau school {the Northwestern bound for the fpoc girdor ctrent offtring teachers, who made the trip to|main office. { Your Name May Appear Tomorrow the interior, also changed ships, Mr. Sweazey, who makes his| A sl il cllas. headquarters in Anchorage, wxllrv-l [ WATCH THIS SPACE main in the Puget Sound metropo- | MARK ANNIVERSARY lis until August, when he will re-| ! e turn north, going into the Interior, | ‘ Mr. and Mrs, Jack Laurie, well|and then to his Anchorage office in | | known Juneau couple, marked|October. | their 25th wedding anniversary Sat-| The insurance official stated thav cmmAL | THE HOTHE OF ALGREAN HOTHLY urday, enjoying a social evening|he enjoyed his short business visit| | with friends and remtives in Juneau, where, he said, a marked | | T n E G A s T l N E A u ———a——— increase in business in comparison | c A B s | g ROBERTSON HOME with most Alaskan cities, was not- | Elliott Robertson, son of Mr. and |iced. He has been contacting North- | Our Services to You Begin and End at the # Mrs. R. E. Robertson, arrived from|ern Life policyholders during this college on the Northland and will|trip and plans a short stop-over in Gang Plank of Every Passenger-Carrying Boat spend Rhis vacation in Juneay, Ketchikan