The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, November 19, 1936, Page 2

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Bl selection Men'; Look your best days. COME IN Juneau's B e o B B S FINER IN Fi longer . . ageing vats! by brew.m:o who 1 WAY! EFHRENDS has a complete latest styles. JAVOR because it’s aged in the R Clothing holi- r the ODAY! Dress Up For Thanksgiving MICHAELS STERN SUIT In plain and fancy patterns Prices as low as $2 5.00 MEN’S OVERCOATS Medium and heavy weights—single and double breasted—all wool As low as $l 7.50 Large assortment of SHIRTS, TIES, HOSIERY, PAJAMAS, SHIRTS AND SHORTS, SWEAT- ERS, HANDKERCHIEFS, GLOVES. HATS FOR MEN-—Stetson and Hardeman. All colors, Priced $4.00, $5.00, $7.50 MEN’'S OXFORD—All leather—Star Brand—as low as $4.50 pair B. M. Behrends Co. Inc. Leading Department BEER Northwest’s largest And beeause it’s brewed of long experience, d VIENNA The Uniformly Perfect Beer Popular throughout the West from Alaska to Hawaii and California! Brewed slowly, naturally, healthfully. On Draught, in “Stubbies,” or the famous “Keglined” Cans. Ask YOUR DISPENSER for Horluek’s VIENNA! (Also brescers o) IMPERIAL ALE—= Brewed vspeeiclly for #laskans) THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, THURSDAY, NOV. 19, 1936. e ‘VETER AN M'N‘EB U. S. DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE, WEATHER BUREAU 2t JATHER | THE WE { FRUM KflYUKUK (By the U. S. Weather Bureau, | " Forecast for Juneau and vicinity, beginning at 4 p.m., Nov. 19: | | THHU“BH Cloudy tonight and Friday, probably rain; moderate southerly winds. | LOCAL DATA | ‘Iime Barometer Temp. Humidity Wind Velocity Weathur | J 5 \m . | 4 pm. yesty 2045 4 72 SE 12 Lt. Rain Martin Slisco on First'Trip| i am today . 207 39 & v s Cldy in'29 Years — To Visit | Noon today 3017 40 8 s 5 Cldy : 0 CABLE AND RADIO REPORTS Parents in. Yuoslavia it ol by At Highest 4p.m. Lowestda.m. 4a.m. Piacip. 4am. 1 29 conti s i No‘:,;find &;fl,‘,‘o“snsyc?r;x’;offlf Station temp. temp. | temp. temp. velocity 24hrs. Weather | Outside. Fer ‘years he ‘has been| Atk® 38 34 Ve e 18 118 Snow promising his father and mother,| Anchorage Ny ‘: g g e whom he saw last in 1903, that he| Nome - % . 5o ’ g e would make a {rip to the old coun-| Bethel & =2 B ot < 4 R try to visit them and the presen T;”\“'zg:“s "; 'g V‘ i ol A e pv :,r,'fmi‘:;u bR | oy, Paul 8 28 24 24 26 ‘Trace Snow | Mr. Slisco, a prominent character| Dutch Harbor 36 34 1 28 8 30 Snow in the book “Arctic Village,” arrived | Kodiak 18 LI e e B |in Juneau late yesterday afternoon| Cordova e | s & from his home in Wiseman, via| Juneau 50 45 L 6 Bl Y. | Fairbanks, in the tri-motored Ford| Sitka o o ii o g;’ i | plane of Noel Wien, flew to Prince! Ketchikan 52 50 | o e P o | Rupert this morning with Alex Hol-! Prince Rupert B 08 | 5 eas il dis.. trem wbese Do il Shiiin,.i Edmonten - 58 48 38 44 6 [ Clear | south by steamer, He hopes to be| Seattle 6 64 | B4 S M 0 Pt Cldy | i i | Portland 52 48 40 40 4 0 Cldy with his parents in Yugoslavia by| X 0 cl Christmas, but he is traveling a| San Francisco ... 76 74 . ) | month behind schedule now and| New York R S 0 %‘fg’ }| doubts whether he can be there by| Washington 2. 82 |+ EROM W \/ i) y : S e e | WEATEER CONDITION AT 8 A. M. TODAY lizys - sev;ml twe;t e Ketchikan, partly cloudy, temperature, 43; Craig, cloudy, 43; et bt i ;mpe" Wrangell, cloudy, 42; Petersburg, cloudy, 40; Sitka, cloudy, 36; Soap- M s;‘:“‘ h do::l':,l :‘ue"h big| Stone Point, partly cloudy, 48; Juneau, raining and snowing, 38; nugget found 1ast spring on Lit, Skagwas, cloudy, 38; Cordova, snowing, 28; Chitina, snownig, 22; M- e Oreckt & thibatary of tne| Carthy, cloudy, 22; St. Elias, partly clody, 3¢; Portage, snowing, 16; Nolan, b; PetevDow and }fis it- Anchorage, cloudy; Fairbanks, cloudy, -12; Nenana, cloudy, -8; Hot ey 'Alr}r'wsl ire - GOM: it w‘; he| Springs, clear, -12; Tanana, partly cloudy, -15; Ruby, cloudy, -15; | oraintse oo o ot i €| Nulato, clear, -36; Kaltag, clear, -36; . Flat, -clear, -26; Ohagamute, |1t is far from the biggest nugget| Cl¢Ar -10; Crooked Crp%i;fi:fi:éfi&uorsxs |Mr. Slisco has seen during his 26 o | years in the Kokukuk. i The storm area that was centered over the Gulf of Alaska yes- | Roadhouse Stays Open | terday morning has moved inland during the past 12 hours and has |( The roadhouse which Mr. Slisco| d€ se in intensity. Another storm area prevailed over the North | operates at Wiseman—the only one there—and his store, which is one of three in the community, will be operated until his return by Ed | Marchand, an old-timer of Wise-, been attended by precipitatoin along the coastal regions from the man. Pacific Ocean in the vicinity of the Aleutians, the lowest reported pressure being 2890 inches above 200 miles south of Dutch Harbor. High pressure prevailed over the West Coast States westward to the Hawaiian and Midway Isalnds. This general pressure distribution has Aleutians southeastward to British Columbia, followed by clearing weather early this morning in the vicinity of Kodiak and Cordova, -»x<~r-4-~:<4<+++H-;l—l+l—H4—0-l.—tH-x+H—,.;+ ' DEPUTY WARDEN | Sees Yoyukuk Future | ! There is a big future ahead for |the Koyukuk, declared Mr. Slisco. also by snow over the Tanana an fair weather over western and northern Alaska. d upper Yukon valleys, and by Mrs. Cauthorne Back in Juneau |“We've been the only self-support- |ing camp I know of,” he said. “All our money has gone out—little has come in. What we've needed was | capital, together with new and | younger men. The men are coming {in now. Over 30 landed there this |year and are out in the hills. They |are bound to find something. Now |if we only had some capital yowd Has Been in Attendance at ‘sae more gold come out of the Koy- A l C f |ukuk than from any other camp in nnual Lonierence of A.P.H. A | Alaska.” .- Mrs. M. K. Cauthorne, advisory material and child health nurse, ls CONVICTED OF returned to her work in the GAME VIOLATION rtervitorial Department of Health the States on the Princess Norah. | office in the Goldstein BBuilding. He has been employed in Juneau | .J. F. Krause, 49, registered guide She has been to New Orleans to at- for several months as linotype land deputy game warden, was given tend the annual conference of the | operator. |a 30-day suspended sentence in American Public Health Associa- | - { issioner’s court in Ketchikan tion and returned to Juneau Tues- | OFF FOR MATANUSKA if,:ms licenses :n: deputy warden’s day on the Princess Norah. | Mrs. V. Garrison and son, Who padge taken away fram him for - The convention lasted from Oc- arrived aboard the Princess Norah |five years on a charge of posses- tober 20-24 inclusive. Sessions were from the south, left on the PAA sing a doe deer, according to As- held every morning and covered all ‘Plleclm for Fairbanks, enroute to |sistant Executive Officer Clarence phases of public health, and in the | Matanuska. | Rhode of the Alaska Game Commis- afternoon there were special meet- « | Sion who returned to Juneau on the ings for public health doctors, en- S.ore il gz | WHITES RETURN SOUTH | Mr. and Mrs. Leo White left for | i o s " | Alert. Krause said he found a wolf girgers, library technicians, and O. B. Williams Co. | eating the deer and drove it away public health nurses. SASH and DOORS and brought the meat into town. There we ives from Special Sash for Enclosing the THe Judge 'din’t believe the story. the States, Territories and Canada, Sun Porch . bringing the number in attendance ; (1% inches thick) RAY HURLEY COM.ES to nearly 2,000. Dr. Atwater, from ] Size of Outside Price. |! New York, president of the Ameri- | Glass Measure Glazed || HOME BY AIRPLANE can Public Health Association, pre-; 1| 8x10 20x35 $1.14 = ! sided. 10x12 24x41 134 Ray Hurley arrived home yester- Pl e I] ox14 24x47 * 147 ||day by PAA Electra from Fair-| ! | 10x16 24,&53 1.65 banpks. - The young Juneau man has |been absent from Juneau for the | past seven months, during which “|i time he has been employed in the STORM SASH (4-light, 1% inches thick) Demonstration ide M Pri N { piaide Measire ¢ || Interior, principally in the Jack i of Sash Glazed 3 R AT" Wade Creek district. i 18"x4/7 i | 20 =4y MRS. HUFIESEN RETURNS | o 24"x4'1” Mrs. C. W. Hufiesen with herf we" Attended child, returned to Juneau from thei | jGX:; States on the Princess Norah. Mr. 218"x4'7" .. Hufiesen went south about a month | S ! || 2107xe2- ago, after spending the summer in | Large Number at Both Ses- 3'0"x4'7” .. Other sizes made to order at proportionate prices. Sash, Doors and Mill Work at Attractive Prices. Write for' FREEcatalog. O. B. Willicms Co. 1933 1st Ave. So. Sesitle, Wash. Anchorage, where he was in charge | 1 Y of the erection of the new City | S108 .Yesterday | Hall and hotel addition for the| Prizes Awarded ! Gastineau Construction Co. ! | Mrs. Huflesen will soon leave to! The Church parlors of the North- make her home in Sitka, where her |ern Light Presbyterian Church were husband is now employed. Mr. and | crowded Wednesday afternoon and Mrs. Hufiesen are registered at the | evening by those who went to watch &) pda Hotel. Vena L. Crone, from the Depart-' jment of Vocational Education, pre- |pare and demonstrate recipes, ° | | After the cooking lessons the| women were served with cinnamon' cake and coffee. Mrs. Crone wishes | to acknowledge Schilling & Co., Piggly Wiggly, Alaska Elictric Light ! & Power Co, and Butler<Mnum: Drug Co. for supplies and prizes, Those ladies who were luckily to! have their names drawn for prizes' at both sessions were: ! Mrs. O. C. Olson, Mrs. J. Hellen- thal, Mrs. Walter B. Heisel, Mrs, . Paul Hudon, Mrs, G. Nostrand, Mrs, ' b ke b es 3 ou EUR For FATHER Shoes and Hose. Devlin's. Ham. Beach Mixers. Melody House. m ‘500 Swanson Bros. “Alaska” by Lester D. Henderson. Christmas Cards at The Empire. For MOTHER Hot Point Elec. Irons. Melody House. Silex Coffee Mixers. Melody House. John Lewell, Mrs. Joe Kendler, Mrs. | J. C. Thomas, Mrs. J. C. Saloum,! Mzrs. W. O. Carlson, Mrs. Hector MeLean, Mrs. F. McDermott, Mrs.| Charles Sabin, Mrs, Walter Hellan,| For SISTER Electric Teaster. Melody House, For BROTHER .| Shoes and Hose. * Deviin's. .| Skis, $6.00° up. Swansen‘ Bros:' Shoes and Hose. Devlin's, Shoes and Hose. Devlin’s. Mrs. John Newman, Mrs. Alex Kiloh, | Waoolen Jacket, $5.00. Bwanson Bros. | Twin Sweaters, Needlecraft Shop. | Mrs. D. Dull, Mrs. B. P. Nelson ‘and | Per Sofa Pillows. Needlecraft Shop. Potted Plant. The Juneau Florists. 1 | Studio Couch. The For “HER"” nanent Wave. Edson Wave Shop. Mrs. James Lyman. Mrs. Edward Crowe, Mrs. Glen Abraham, Mrs. C. A. Fox, Mrs. How-l ard Stabler, Mrs. Frank Rouze,| Mys. W. P. Scott, Mrs, Jack Guerin,’ Mzs. J. E. Neate, Mrs. J. Popjoy,' “Alaska” by Lester D. Henderson. Permanent Wave. Eds;x-lw«\:é"sho; t m' Flowers from the Juneau Florists. Christmas Cards | s, | o iar Chests, The Colfanite Store. - - [l ) " Colfanite Store. For “FRIENDS' R |8i0s. Eruest Johnson, Mrs, Edwin Sutton, Mrs. Ray G. Day, Mrs. D,| Ross, Mrs. O. Floberson, Mrs. John' A. Larson, Mrs. L. J. Jewett, Mrs.| | Flowers by telegraph. Juneau Florists F“ "SWEETHEART" |Christmas Cards- et The Empire!|Flowers from the Juneau Florists. Alvin Anderson, Misses Isabell lquhen. E. Scheibal and L. Moryis. ‘Alaska” by Lester D. Henderson.|Christmas Cards at The Empire. REV. OLAFSON HOLDS SERVICES TONIGHT In keeping with the program of the Preaching Missions for this week, the Rev. Erling K. Olafsor will hold a special service tonight at 7:30 o'clock in the Resurrection Lutheran Church. “Ju: cation by Faith,” is to be his subject for| the evening, and all members of | the community are cordially invited | to attend. e IS ABOARD NORAH Miss C. Polet, popular waitress, is a passenger aboard the Princess Norah enroute to Seattle on a vacation trip. MISSWOODIS ~ MAB CARRYING GIVEN SURPRISE Bride-to-Be Is Honored by Friends at After- noon Affair on and linen the engagement of Miss Ione Wood, was given for her yesterday afternoon by Mus. f Larson. Those attending the party wer E. A. Johnson, Mrs. A. Crosby, Mrs. E. Klinke, Mrs. H. Stabler, Mrs. L. Weiss, Mrs. H. L. Wood, Mrs. A, Anderson, Mrs. G. Rice, Mfs, S. Johnison, Miss L. Rolfe and Miss H. Ostberg. Miss Wood- attended the Auburn Academy in Washington, studied nursing at Portland, Oregon, and was Qn the staff of St. Ann Hospital. She is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. H. L. Wood of Juneau. Her fiance is Dr. G. Lee Stagg of Nashville, Tennes of Medical Evangelists at Los An- geles. - e GAULTS GO SOUTH Mr. and Mrs. R. E. Gault, of Skagway, are aboard the Princess Norah for Los Holinos, Cal., where they will spend the. winter. R - TRIMBLE SOUTHBOUND L. L. Trimble, of the American Express Company, is a passenger southbound to Seattle aboard the Princess Norah. BN L0 iy, LEAVES HOSPITAL John T. Olaff, from Tenakee, was dismissed from St. Ann’s Hospital EDISON MAZDA LAMPS They Stay Brighter Longer 10-15-25-40-50-60 Watt inside frost ....15¢ 75-100 watt inside frost . 100 watt clear ..... 150 watt clear or frosted . 200 watt clear 200 watt frosted ... 300 watt clear medium base 300 watt clear mogul base Ask about the Light Meter MAKE SURE THE LIGHT YOU ARE USING IS CORRECT Alaska Electric Light & Power Co, Juneau a member of the College | INTERIOR MEN T0 PR. RUPERT Holden LeE;e: Here This Morning with Five for Prince Ship With a load of five passengers from the Interior, who were unable o secure passage south on the Prin- cess Norah after flying here from Fairbanks with the PAA and Noel Wien, .the Marine Airways Bellan- seaplane, piloted by Alex Holden, took off from Juneau this morn- ing at 8:30 o'clock, for Prince Ru- pert. Holden is returning to Juneau this afternoon. Passengers flying to Prince Rupert with Holden were: rtin Slisco, Fred Parker, ‘Eu- ‘obson, J. J, Dunn, Frank B ¥ T Today’s News Today-—Empire. E Douglas 86.8° PROOF g;ride of Prestige o NOED anp 9OTTLED AIG & H S s Ly TLAN 2*86ucr or sco ! w,“l 7D N = The recognition of Haig & Haig’s su- preme quality is elearly reflected in the pride wiQ.ll 3 which it is ordered. No other Scotch will do~for that ever-enlarging class to whom integrity of reputation is everything! The “Five Star” is 8 years old; the “Pinch Bottle” over 12 years old. Haig:Haig BLENDED SCOTS WHISKY SOMERSET IMPORTERS, LTD. + NEW YORK s CHICAGO s SAN FRANCISCO. ——— —— 'd 3 o

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