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R —— JUNEAU HAS TS REAL SNOW FOR WINTER SEASON Two Inches Falls Here with Forecast for More, Turning to Rain Juneau had its first real snow of the winter season today, a total fall of two inches being reported by the U. S. Weather Bureau. Due | % the rising temperature it was melting rapidly and at moon only an inch and a half was officially | visited all Pan American Airways | ‘mp to South America where he}anw STUPSI stations in the interest of his posi- tion in the traffic department of Pan American Airways. For Mrs. Hayes, Mrs. Alec B Holden entertained fourteen guests at luncheon today at the Juneau Coffee Shoppe. Miss Bess Anderson | will be luncheon hostess at a par- | ty for Mrs. Hayes Saturday noon. | ELECTRAS ON JUNEAU HOPS MEYRINGTAKES OFF FOR SOUTH CARRYING FOUR Mrs. Helen Cass is entertaining in | Tywo Planes Reach White- Marine Plane Will Stop at honor of Mrs. Hayes at tea Sat- urday afternoon and Sunday, Mrs. Nelson Naylor, sister of Mrs. Hayes, will be at home to her friends. horse This Morning— Cne Turns Back Getting as far as Whitehorse on | |an attempted Fairbanks to Juneau SIKORSKY DlSABLED flight today, two PAA Electra planes DURING TAKEOFF IN |arrived there 10:30 this morning, with twenty passengers for Juneau. wRANGELL;NOT BAD The two planes were prevented | from coming to Juneau: by local WRANGELL, Alaska, Nov. 6. — | weather conditions, and after wait- -FIRE HALL TO GET measured, although it continued to lightly fall during the afternoon. Meteorologist Howard J. Thomp- son reported the forecast for more The Sikorsky twin-motor amphibian | jng until noon, one Electra left its | plane of the Glass Flying Service | ryl] load of ten passengers at White- with Don Glass as pilot and Gor- | horse, took off for a return to Fair- snow, turning to rain tomorrow. | don McKenzie, co-pilot, enroute to |banks, at noon today. It is planned The first trace of snow this fall | Seattle from Anchorage, stopped |that the other Electra will come to was on October 20, but it was just overnight here with seven passen- | Juneau as soon as weather permits, GoLR: |and then return to Whitehorse for flurry and soon vanished. The g :resem} ;11 began at 3:15 this The plane was disabled this morn- | the passengers that were left there morning, and covered only the ing when taking off when it struck by the plane that returned to Fair- Y Y a rock on Shakes Island in Wran- | banks. The Electra in Fairbanks will i f heast Al- i ngethern portion of Southeas gell Harbor. Repairs were expected |bring another load of passengers aska, SO“Fh of Taku River the /,'po finiched tomorrow. Passengers | from that city to Juneau as soon as Wedther was falr. 4 are H. E. Havenstrite and Avery possible. . The first snow last year was OB |wright of the Iniskin Oil Company, | The first of the two Electras, pil- October 23. It stayed on untll p w Kerby of Takota, A. G. Wood- oted by Jerry Jones and Walt Hall, November 5. : _yley, S. J. Hermanson and Al Jones (left Fairbanks this morning at 6:25 It was a slippery, sliding day of Anchorage, and the Rev. M. followed by the second plane, pilot- on the streets and some motorists prank of Bristol Bay. ed by Al Monson and Murray Stu- resorted to chains while pedestrians RSN TR RS art, at 6:35 o'clock. i dug out the rubbers and galooshes, | yyNEAU HIGH SCHOOL Passengers with the first section but then footing was precarious. BASKETBALL SCHEDULE were: George S. Laiklin, Clayton Some minor trouble was reported ANNOUNCED BY COACH | Homdn, J. Patkavich, M. R. Halli- in telephone service due to the day, S. W. Mestel, A. McAllister, J. snow on the lines. Forty high school boys turned out Irving, Gus Asplund, S. M. Fenton Snowballing, the first of the sea- | for hasketball practice last week, and Ann Dwyer. son, was in order and the school | according to a statement made by | Bound for Juneau on the second grounds resembled the battle of coach W. P. Hautala. section were: H. Trice, G. Larson, the Marneeincluding the noise. It is planned to have a contest R. A.Isaacson,J. A. Strand, Mr. and T with a city league team at a fu- Mrs. F. Moss, A. Larson, H. Gunn, F. ture date and also to meet a team Kolkman, and E. V. Townsley. from Hill Military Academy, Port- —_————— NEW RADIO; VOTED |iand, ore, December 1s. SALMON SOLD HERE AT REGULAR MEET The first game between the Douglas High Huskies and Juneau | Selling to the Alaska Coast Fish- High School Crimson Bears for eries late yesterday afternoon at Purchase of a new radio receiving | st for the Fire Hall, was voted last | N¢_Channel school basketball | prevailing: prices of 20, 10 and 8 cents, the boat Emerald, Capt. night, at the regular monthly meet- i ing of the Juneau Volunteer Fire De- i Otto Wilde, Jr., brought in 1,600 pertment. A representative turnout DOUNGEL My pounds of king salmon as the only f The regular meeting of the City | delivery on the Juneau fish mar- of members was present, and rou- o . Senve f Council will be held at 8 o'clock to- | ket up to press time today. ile business was disposed of. night in the City Council chambers.| The Emerald took ice this morn- BTG It is the first session in three weeks ing and the Co-op pagker Nakat, MRS. l:lAYES HONORED |and considerable business is sched- | capt. Frank Thomas, took ice yes- BY SEVERAL PARTIES |“*¢come™, terday afternoon. PRIOR TO DEPARTURE daughter of NOTICE SERVICES FOR INFANT Mrs. A. B. Hayes, is leaving on officials of Juneau Services for the infant son of To the citizens, business men and | Mrs. J. J. Gleason were held today Mrs. R. P. Nelson, the Princess Norah Tuesday morn- |the way matters were handled con- Ve appreciate lat 2 o'clock at the Charles W Carter Mortuary. The requiem was ing to join her husband in Seattle. cerning the motorship Northland, said by the Rev. W. G LaVasseur Mr. Hayes will return about the over which we had no control. middle of November from an air dv I L. A 38-104 championship will be on January 8 and interment was in the Catholic Plot in Evergreen Cemetery. | Ketchikan Overnight on Seattle Hop Taking off from Gastineau Chan- | nel in the midst of this afternoon’s snowstorm, at 1:30 o'clock, Pilot | Gene Meyring in the Marine Air- | ways Fairchild, hopped for Seat- | tle, via Petersburg and Ketchikan. Although it was snowing quite | | heavily here, weather reports from | Ketchikan said, “Clear an unlim- |ited ceiling.”” Meyring planned to |7ly to Ketchika this afternoon and leave there tomorrow morning Passengers from Juneau with | Meyring were: For Seattle— Wal- ter Nord and William Aley, who came from Fairbanks on the Electra yesterday. For Ketchikan — Percy | Charles, and for Petersburg — H. Oyama. In Ketchikan, Meyring will pick up C. F. Sanborn for Seattle. San- born was a passenger to Ketchikan from Seattle with Meyring on his | northbound flight the first of this week. ' e ,————— WINTHER DONE FISHING After selling his last halibut catch in Prince Rupert,.Capt. Olaf | Winther, of the Fremont, brought his boat into Juneau from that| port this morning, to lay.her up for the winter. e { Mr. Winther is to sail on thel | next southbound trip of..the. Prin- ¢ cess Norah, for Vancouver, fromi where he plans to make a trip to| Europe. - e | LEAVE HOSPITAL ! Three patients were dismissed to- | |day from St. Ann’s Hospital. They | were: Harold Grimstad, surgical | patient, attended by Dr. L. P. Dawes; George Ramstad, medical patient, attended by Dr. W. M Whitehead; and P. Delgard, a medical patient. - e————— EICHEL RECOVERING Eric Eichel, who entered St. Ann’s Hospital on September 9, is recov- happy people it has been his pleas- | plaints had reached his office from | ering very nicely. Friends may| now see him at the hospital during i visiting hours. .- Martin Jorgensey, Standard Oil representative in Alaska, is & pas- senger to the States on the North- land. He is on his way to report to the home office of his g any. | !a typewriter and a good supply of | The clerk said that if the practice Lewis Taylor was unanimously elected business manager of The wILL A END J Bird at the Juneau High School I l student body meeting October 29. | CREEDS TO KETCHIKAN A.N.B. SESSIoN Mr. and Mrs. E. C. Creed, and| their child, are passengers to Ket-| e chikan on the Northland. Mr. Oreed,| Five [ndian Department Of- Signal Gorps, nas neen transferred| ficials to Take Sea Ot- from the radio station here to the ter to Metlakatla Ketchikan station. — - Five officials of the Bureau of Indian Affairs will attend the con- LEWIS TAYLOR.IS ELECTED | | PUBLICITY . BUSINESS 'MGR.}BUREAU HEADS | | | .- who is employed by the U. S. Army | ANDERSON GOES SOUTH | George Anderson, Juneau piano|yeniion of the Alaska Native Broth- man, s a passenger to Ketchikan on | o.;.00q4 in Metlakatla next week, the Northlandy |according to C. M, Hirst, Director YGRZ D B |of Education. The bufeau vessel MISS STEVENS QAILS | Sea Otter is coming from Wran- Miss Rae Stevens, who came Dorth | ge)) 45 take the delegation to the to Juneau on the Northland for @ o nvention and is expected in to- visit here with her:parents, Mr. an | night or tomorrow. Mrs. Ray Stevens, is a passeriger| 1, the party will be Mr. Hirst, southbound on that ship on her re-| .~ 5 p van Ackeren, Medical turn to Portland. Director; George Penny, Welfare Superintendent; O. H. Lipp, Field SITHA GORS ROUTH | Representative of Commissioner Carrying courtesy mail, Capt. Wil-| jopn Collier, and William Paul, liam Doucett took the halibut meiq Representative in connection schooner Sitka, owned by Mayor L ity the administration of the Goldstein, out of port this morning | ywyeeler-Howard act. Mr. Lipp and Seattle bound. | Paul returned to Juneau yester- B O Gay on a plane from the interior RICH TO KETCHIKAN and Nome district where they Gil Rich, representative for the have been for several weeks mak- Black Manufacturing Co., in Alas- ing a survey in connection with ka, is a passenger to his home in|pringing the Indian reorganization Ketchikan on the Northland. program into effect in the Terri- T B ‘tory under the act. They visited OPERATE ON KNOX most of the villages in the Nome Wwilliam Knox entered St. Ann's|and Norton Sound district and Mr. Hospital Thursday afternoon. He‘L,pp said he was especially im- was operated on by Dr. C. C. Carter | presed with the initiative of the at 9 o'clock this morning. Eskimos in the north. e o A Principal business of the con- NEVADA ATTORNEY vention, Paul reported, will be the WILL LIVE THE LIFE OF |amendment fo the A. N. B. con- RILEY AT MOOSE PASS |stitution which was asked drawn |up by the Executive Committee For 16 years T. L. Smith worked | and which has been submitted to diligently at his profession, an at- all the camps. The Indian Bureau, torney in the grand old state of Ne- 'he explained, was taking no part vada. Now, however, he is going in the discussion over the consti- to take a vacation. tution. Arriving at Seward a short time| ago the young lawyer left by train for Moose Pass where he will try to| secure a cabin in which to hole up over the winter. Prominent in Reno circles for many years, Attorney Smith said this country reminds him of home, because of the wide ex-| Federal panses of nature and the genial,| Coughlin — - —— TRANSFER FIRMS COMPLAIN TO CLERK OF TAXI OPERATIONS Clerk of Court Robert said today that com- ure to meet since arriving in the|transfer companies that taxicabs North. in Juneau were doing virtually a He will have*his books with him, | transfer business in some things. tions have been successful recen ly and that taxpayers are respond- ing satisfactorily under the call for payment from his office. More than $2,000 have been collected thus far, he said, and there are several thousand dollars more to be paid, he said. DEATH TAKES SON OF MR. AND MRS. RAMSAY AT ST. ANN’SHOSPITAL The sympathy of their many friends in Juneau goes out to Mr. and Mrs. David' Ramsay, whose of Mr. and Mrs. Ramsay, both well-known young Jeuneau people. Mrs. Ramsay is the daughter of ‘captA James V. Davis. Mr. Ramsay, | who went through school in Juneau and is the son of Mr. and Mrs, |James Ramsay, Sr., is purser on | the Estebeth. R o A HIGHWAY TO SITKA The Bureau of Public Roads ves- |sel Highway sailed for Sitka yes: terday, with District Engineer M. D. Williams and A. H. Cohn aboard. Mr. Willlams is on an inspection trip and Mr. Cohn will relieve E. J. White, Resident Engineer at Sitka. infant son died at St. Ann’s Hos- | —————— pital last night, | Lode and piacer :dcatlun notices The bapy w#s the first child for sale at The Empire office. One for Percolator paper, and' thus. equipped will be is continued it will be necessary for content for Arctic days and nights.|the cab companies to pay the $50 ->>o—— annual tax levied under the Fed- Lode and placer location notices eral business tax law. | Cover Ch for sale at The Empire office. | Coughlin erort.ed that qollec-' B.P. 0. Fragrance and flavor should blend like a solgin a cup gcoffee. Wien o the aroma from your cup is as rich as the flavor - - it’s Schilling. \ Schilling Coffee Another one for Drip ELKS’ CABARET DANCE MEMBERS ONLY Saturday Night, Nov. 7 Music Starts at 10:00 P. M. Make reservations with the Steward. arge $1.50 Connoisseur of Fine Liqueurs 100 Year0ld * WINES] 0 Fifth Fifth zoo Year Old WINE ‘15 TEACHER’S Highland Cream WHISKEY 122 Year Old BRANDY FiftllSls.flo 0 Year Old BRANDY Fifth $6.50 Fifth $2 99 SATURDAY SPECIAL Teacher's Highland Cream N PAY'N TAKIT WHISKEY,gallon PAY’N TAKIT WHVISKEY,quart GEORGE BROTHERS BRANDY Pint $4 .85 PHONES 92 and 95 REGAL AMBER BEER Case $2.85 C e S450 ceov $ga FREE DELIVERY Pay'n Ta kit GEORGE BROTHERS . i’ ur ¢S i3 Hurry! Hurry! The First 12 Ladies Making a Purchase of ss.oo Will Receivea BABY BLANKET FREE! s~ uroav ano vonoar QNLY! ADDED ATTRACTION! SHEET BLANKET 66x76 Two Days Only. Ladies’ COAT and SKIRT Combination 4 Only Styled by Caloha—Arrived via Parcel Post FREDDIE BARTHOLOMEW UTILITY JACKET 8545 All New Stock—All Sizes WE SET THE PACE! Buy Here! Don't Pay for Charge Accounts. MEN’S O’COATS 15 ONLY—ALL SIZES Your Choice $ l 9.75 Leader Store Values Can’t Be Beat! MEN’S SHEEP SKIN COATS All Sizes 3745 Only Leader Can Give These Values! QUI LTS 295 OUTING FLANNEL Ya'd L] (] LEADER Department Store k&