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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, SATURDAY, JULY 24, 1937. ‘Selfrrritilgre Arrives | Here on Bear Patrol; | Still Getting Fish SOPRANGTOSING KETCHIKAN TO IN CONCERT HERE PLAY 3 GAMES Warden William Selfridge of the The heaviest rain in Juneau since | 1 Game Commission at Ket- as Dm(mbhr lnx rallon here yes- DAY NICHT - HERE AUG, 7-8 25 wrsmnr et BY ADVENTISTS iiormias e e i "l IO ' mon, arrived in Juneau iast night U. S. Weather Bureau. aboard the Ranger 5 on which he is | e Between 8 am. yesterday and conduciing the annual bear patrol of | pastor €. J. Goodman, of the|100D today the total rainfall was Marye [ pilnlw] by Frances Jerne to Be Accom- Arrangements Comp leted Also II:II' f\)‘ R( turn Bd?‘(‘!)d“ l,ll' iboard was land in Music Event counter Next Month [ - encines on the Ranger. The M the Acceptance from Ketchika to is conducting jointly by the casi at which Mi threc-game baseball serles Gommissicn and the Forest Berne, accomplishec Juneau At P Was re- | yice, s & e et Grummett,| geifridge who e this and inch ends how it's be ome tolerable w luck, 25 inches and ete. n't explain the and so - .- CARCROSS PLANE Secretar eball Association, that the Ji eau | o, d been a chikan p; s that city on August 6, in time to play a game 7 and a , August 8. and President William Gastineau e announc-| ying l\nl[]) from Vancou alian art of bel can- ecd that be sold imme- ¢ yesterday, George Simmons’ hlz & day’s is house-conscious, [ a dollar a plece for|yellow and green North Canada Air- | POLAR]S TAKU MINE ".“T:r(h‘:w l:gh“vcvxma:nur; CJohnsDn.i tickets have beer ames to defray the cost ways Fokker seaplane, piloted by L.| CHIEFS TO ARRIVE |real estate editor of the Philadelphia cert, which will be ¢ the Ketchikan team A, Vines, landed at the Marine | | Record, who points out in an article ical event of the - north, with the understanding of 'ways float here last evening at ’l HERE, PRIN. LOUlSE'mm homes must have modern con- e rain checks” as the guaranteeoclock and was still held here to-| | veniences, be substantially built, and | at the concert Monday must be met or shine, bad weather preventing the| p, ¢, Sharpstone, consulting geo-|be wisely financed if they are to Jenne, Miss Last Ketchikan was host to| confinuation of the flight to the ogist fon the Polaris-Taku Mine, |find a market. : Carlson, the Jur players in a series in|company’s base at Carcross, Y. T. |pear Tulsequah, accompanied by| Ten years ago, the article says,| iss that city George T. Simmons g the North Canada Airws WILL SAIL SOUTH |overhaul in Vancouver since AFTER SHORT TRI flown south more than a - FUNERAL SERVICES FOR JUDGE IRVINE HELD HERE TODAY {ago. Other passengers for Ca lm\( ling «in the Fokker are: who has been L. nu»‘uno Helen Young, ited with the office of and other islands in the rest Service machinist who is checking the | {omorrow spring | hesies.” lhead in Pet- k just to show some of LANDS HERE ON NORTHWARD HOP“ operator of a general month . Simmons, Mr. Simmons mothvr also made the flight south; |Heaviest Rain | Since December Falls in Juneau LECTURES WILL BE GIVEN HERE 4 inches, the heaviest since last December 9. Rain is universal | throughout the Southeast with the exception of the extreme southern portion and heavy rains are report- ed at Cordova and Kodiak. Forecast for tonight and tomor- row is rain with a possibility of it slacking off a little tomorrow, wea- ther officials said. D Seventh Day Adventist Church at Ketchikan will lecture in this city. every night for one week starting night at the Adventist patrol | Church at the corner of Maine and Game |Second to which the public is in- Ser- | vited. He will speak on the “Present {Day Events in the Light of Prop- Clay Pastor Goodman arrived here to- with Pastor H. L. Wood aboard mission yacht Messenger. Pas- Wood, accompanied by his zhter Wanda and Pastor Good- (man has been making a good-will |tour of Southeast Alaska ports and Meets Demands Pastor Wood reports attention was given to 20 medical cases. AT 5 | Pastor Wood will leav week . (trom next. Tuesaay for the wese. Modern Public Is Home- Conscious—Buys with | Practiced Mind done, rain- He forth. he rd and Interior on Mission work, iting all places, perhaps as far ‘nmm at Point Barrow. er, Mrs. Sharpstone, is due to arrive mm schoolboy could sell a house and| Juneau this evening from the South!there were so many financing aboard the Canadian Pacific steam- |schemes of one kind or another in was 0 the VS. RED. “White” Russians, or members of the Russian National Revolutionary party i | yh.l':llszEeks the overthrow of the Stalin regime, are shown at a meeting at Thompson, Conn., on the estate of its president, Anastase A. Vonsiatsky (in riding breeches, hand on hip), president ‘and co- founder of the party. .er Princess Louise. |existence that rarely would a pur-| being| my, Sharpstone was at Tulsequah |chaser have trouble financing his earlier this summer to supervise the home. The laymen knew little commencing of work on the new!about building practices and houses ore mill being erected at the mine.|were bought largely on outward iz He has been south for the past few | .fippr\amncm with little thought to 1S,y reross s [ B seeing to the selection of ad- |the soundness of construction and Fun rvice held Alaska-Juneau mine, is scheduled Vines, wife of the pilot; and Mrs. | djtional equipment for the new|the trend of the neighborhood. | k t afternoon for Judge to leave by PAA Electra this after- Alrick Johnson and Mrs. Florence mjj] The modern home buyer, Mr. L. Trvine, former U. 8. Commis- noon for Whitehorse on a brief|D. Er of Colorado Springs.| G. G. Griswold, Jr., accompanied | Johnson writes, wants to know that kee, who pessed away yacation trip north before leaving Colorado. day in Tenak 3 o make her home. The party has been entertained ervice were held in the following a short;Wwhile held here by Mr. and of Charles W. Carter tehorse, is to go to|Harold R. Brown. The ary Wood 1 will travel to Seattle|of the flight to Carcross wi Pastor H. L N followed in soon as weather per: While in the South, Mr. Sin Aleutian by ay of Sit- Upon remainder by his wife, is also enroute in com- | the house he is considering is well pany with the Sharpstone's. Mr. built of the best materials and is in Griswold is head of a mining equip- |a neighborhood that will not de- ment firm and has been in charge | teriorate and wants to know that of installation of milling machinery.|he will not be faced with expensive The party will fly to Polaris-Taku mortgage renewals that bring him tomorrow from here with Pilot Alex|no nearer actual ownership. He Mrs. 11 be ‘mits. umons r arrival in Seattle she will ualified for his private pilot's li- | Holden, \wants a long-term amortized mort- H n McCormick X|take over her former position of | cense. 5 Ul AR g o ace gage with monthly payments that Gr bert,. Coughlin, M. E. Mon- .., v to the manager of the Se BB are within the limits of his income. wle ond E. W. Nostrand it Awostion of reait Mon.| ELIZABETH TERHUNE 'MISS MARTY KEMPER it i i The body was brought to Juneau pyring her residence in Jur for | ON WAY TO JUNEAU SISTER OF LOU[SE, | from Tenakee aboard the Vachi iy pust several months, she has| TO ARRIVE TONIGHT Tflfl Tired to Dlg by Pastor-M. L. Wood, maode” many friends, all of whom| S e | afternoon, Ivegret her departure for Seattle.|. Miss Elizabeth Terhune is a - while here she stayed at the Gas-|Dorthbound passenger aboard the: Miss Marty Kcmpvr. sister of Miss | SORENSON FLIES OUT tinea * Hobel Yukon enroute to Juneau, return- Louise Kemper, accompanied by nr u u u S {ing nere following attendance at Miss Renata Walther, will arrive Following a stay in Juncau of a | It is necessary to have males m‘lnmm 5 college in Seaitle. in Juneau aboard the Princess Lou- fow days.on: business. Paul M. Sor- |a poultry flo 1 week or more| A large group of friends from ise this evening. CRAWFORD, Neb, July 24—Karl Shion cunetinlendnt At the Hirst: ' befors . saving ’ the University of Washington, where Coming here from Minneapolis,'Spence, ecditor 0. the Crawford Chichagof C Mine, returned to says D. C. Warren Miss Terhune formerly studied, will the two girls will stay with Miss News, doesn’t believe in fairy tales. Mils ritn ot rters at Kimshan bandry expert at Kansas State Col-‘be at the dock to meet her upon ar- wper for a visit of several days That's why he deliberately drove Cove this afternoon by AAT plane. lege. rival here. here, before returning south. on when he discovered he was — — within a few feet of the end of a "“mlllmIHIHHMHIHHHHIMHIIIIHIHHHHMHIIIIllllllllilllllllhII:IIHIIIIIIIIII'IIIIIIIIIIIIIllIIIIIHIIIIllllllllllllllllllllfl A Genuine 18-Quart “HEALTH"” COOKER Every housewife Needs a Pressure Cooker to cut the work and cost of making meals and to increase healthfulness, flavor and digestibil- ity of foods. It is the only safe way to can vegetables, meat and fish. This large, high grade Pressuce Cooker given FREE with every OLYMPIC Full Enameled or Enameled Front RANGCGE A thoroughly modern range in every respect. Beautifully designed, - Tastefully finished in pastel shades of enamel, - Stur- dily constructed,- Generous in size - Scien- tifically designed to burn Western fuels efficiently. This new Olympic Range is proudly backed by the reputation of three generations of good stove builders. To celebrate their 61st Anniversary the Wash- ington Stove Works is making poseible this generous Free offer of a “Health” pressure cooker to every buyer of a new Olympic Enameled Range at 0o advange in prices, Thomas Hardware Co. 0000000000000 Pl rainbow the other day. SISTER OF MRS. iy A. E. KARNES TO | onine out o crwlord! e BE HERE BRIEFLY near some clouds over the buttes. Then came the strange part of the whole thng—the rainbow’s end, stretching down the west side of Mrs. Mae Schenk of Portland, ter of Mrs. A. E. Karnes, has ar- rived in Juneau to be a guest at the Karnes residence until Monday en she will sail for the like a carpet of grass ending right south by the side of the road.” aboard the Aleutian. | A “tired feeling” kept him from Accompanying Mrs. Schenk is digging for the pot of gold, Spence Miss CGrace Sherman of Portland, said. who will also be in Juneau until, Monday. | From 1880 to 1930 the number of ——————— farm tenants in the U. S. more than by Lester D. Hendcrson doubled. ., “‘Alaska” E MARYE BERNE SOPRANO IN CONCERT MONDAY EVENING —— JULY 26 Scottish Rite Temple—Sponsored by Trinity Cathedral Choir TICKETS—50c ! PERSONALITY in Clothes IS ACHIEVED SEE MRS. STERLING MODISTE TO WOMEN OF BETTER TASTE Phone 553 Room 300—Goldstein Bldg. TN the buttes was a strip of green — AT JOHN MARIN'S NEW DOUGLAS INN Dining and Dancing Every Night FREE Entertain- PE TR prrmenflonnerflomrneaflppmmenfprraenlipe oA fiprsrn S e n e mne Yo et Ty S R T..M;..%fimw;-‘ - EVERYONE ¢6 o- V2 PURE LIKES JUN mm ICE CREAM Because It Is Expertly Made From the Finest Ingredients! : In Alaska’s Most Modern DAIRY PLANT. It's fresh . . . it's delicious . . . it's healthful. It's made from the finest ingredients; rich cream from Juneau's surrounding country . . . fine cane sugar from the south . .. fruits and flavorings from all parts of the world. It is all blended and frozen into the rich, smooth good- ness that is found in every spoonful of “JUNO-MAID" ice cream. For health, as well as pleasure, order your ice cream on a QUALITY BASIS by insisting on “JUNO-MAID” Ice Cream. PRODUCED BY Juneau Dairies, Inc. || 4 And Served by Your Local Cafes and Stores.