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SEPTEMBER ~SALE BLANKET COTTON SHEET BLANKETS 90c — $1.45 — S$L.75 ? | tions. i This studio is sumptuously ap-| DOUBLE COTTON BLANKETS ! | pointed, with an extrordinarily ap- ° 2. |pealing bar for the convenience of Twin Full Size {|thirsty guests. As a gay throng ‘|crowded about this bar, a news sl 75 sz oo i | photographer asked Miss Bennett if : . . she would -pose. H r:‘ “Don't take my picture with a H#lglass in my hand,” she instructed PART-WOOL SINGLE BLANKETS & him, hurriedly setting down a glass i of champagne. a| However, later the photographer $3500 ss.oo : \caught her in a convival pose and, { {being under orders from a hard- < |boiled city editor, shot the scene “ |without giving it a thought. In this ‘ PART-WOOL DOUBLE BLANKETS ene Miss Bennett had a glass of | 2| water or something. s3095 ss:so i| She set the glass down. She ad- : vanced upon our now slighly alarm- % ed lensman. ive me that plate,” i |she cried. ALL-WOOL SINGLE BLANKETS £ Hearing this, watter Wanger | interceded for his guest. “This is( 8 50 slz 50 ] _give me that plate at) - e, e, he demanded il To the surprise of the onlookers Elthe photographer drew out the ALL-WOOL DOUBLE BLANKETS *|plate and handed it to ‘Wanger H| “You are getting soft,” a colleague = jeered later. “I would never have slo 95 slz So % igiven him the plate. . ® il “I didn’t,” he explained, “but - = |why create a stir and ruin the party : +|when evedybody should be having ® Z|fun? All T did was hand him an : % lempty plate.” ] 131 Broadwa currently successful I3 & |producers have not inspired such : B. M. Behrends CO.’ lnc. fanciful legends and tag-lines as Iz |the late Ziegfeld and Belasco com- 5 Um(mdul yet the theatre is rocking| Juneau's Leading Department Store £ aiong in accepted_ fashion. | In the old days no one mentioned g wenzs 5 ¥ ¥ |Flo without calling him the “Great Glorifier” or the “Czar of Show and 9%, Helgeland 40,000 pounds,|Girls” and sentimental, white- FOUR HALIBUTERS 124 and 9 cents haired Belisco was always “the 4 : Ihigh priest of the theatre. The Reliance brought in 15,000 : SELEE SEATTLE pounds of sable, Lane 2,000 pounds,| NOW We have the Gilbert Mil- o y .| both selling for 5 cents and Lively|!ers. the Guthrie McClintics, the SEATTLE, Sept. 21. — Halibuters |, o\ " ‘0 " a0 cents * |sam Harrises and a quorum of oth- selling here today include the Ne- PO A 3 lers just as suecessful, but no pute with 39,000 pounds, Seymour s {wreathes of superlatives are hung 40,000 pounds, both disposing of Approximately 10,000 coyotes and around their necks. They are men their catches for 11% and 9 cents 177 m in lions were trapped in|of the common sense variety who Alten 45,000 pounds, 11 |California in 1936 HERE IT 1S! THE a pound; For the past FORTY YEARS the name MONARCH has stood for PERFECTION in range construction. Since your grandmother’s day every woman has wanted a MONARCH in her kitchen and NOW you can have all the good features of the MONARCH such as Malleable construction, vitrifused lining and Mirco processed top, exclusive MONARCH features, together with a NOISELESS, EFFICIENT and ECONOMICAL OIL BURNER for NO MORE than you would have to pay for an ORDINARY oil burn- ing range. EXAMINE THE PERFECT OIL BURNING RANGE ON OUR FLOOR @ Juneau-Young Hardware Co. [ feels the | which THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE TUESDAY, SEPT. 2 1930 JOAN BENNETT GETS ANNOYED AT N. Y, PARTY Picture TalEe‘nfi~ She De- mands Plate, It Is Given Her, But It's ‘Empty’ By GEORGE TUCKER NEW YORK, Sept. 21.—Joan Ben- nett is a fragile young woman with innocent eyes and a school-girl complexion, yet she doesn't hesitate to lash out at her tormentors if she occasion demands it I have in mind a t party Walter Wanger in the studio apartment So many celebrities attended that fashion editors had their phtograph- lers on hand to get some pictures gave atop Radio City ilof the stars in their new fall crea- J { | | { J I I i ! - wad\ (feel that |checking a correct balance in the account is as important to success in the theatre as a lead- |ing lady's figure, Anyway, they produce hits, and that’s. what this ‘Luwn asks. PR The place where Georges Car- '| pentier used to play indoor golf in |upper Manhattan is now a Cuban Inight club. Before that it was a |Chinese restaurant. To please the vanity of temper- amental celebrities most press ag- ents have their charges met at the train by a staff of photographers. |The others are |empty cameras. | That funny gesture which Dave Chasen uses had an unpremediated |beginning. He was touring Wales and seeing a friend, waved shyly at /him from the balcony. The gesture provoked such laughter sjat he has used it ever since. - ATTENTiON 3COUTS | All scouts of Troop 613 and boys |interested in being scouts are urged |to attend meeting in Dugout Wed- ‘nesday 7:30 p.m, GENE RHODE, Scoutmaster e York City's burlesque the- atres, closed down by an edict against the strip-tease, reopened |with a combination of vaudeville and revue. flashing bulbs on | New But only one is actually shooting.| 'WCTU Group Discusses Drink Several mwm.stmg articlés on the influence of drink were read yt'.s» terlay at a meeting of the Wum(-xn Christian Temperence Union the Council Chambers. Mrs. J. E. Click, president, presided at the ses- sion. of Mrs. Wood. “Drink and America” was the title of an unusual article read by Mrs. Anna Clark. The story showed how drink is the great deceiver of America. Mrs. L. Personeus added to the meeting with an article by Dr. H Kress, Neurologist of the Washing- ton Sanitarium and Hospital, Ta- coma Park, D. C, called “Is the Cigarette Destroydg Our Young {People”? This article dealt at length |with the number of school children who are smoking cigarettes and the large group of delinquents who are found to be cigarette smokers. A letter from Sherman A. Noyes of Fairbanks in regard to the Unit- ed State law prohibiting the sale of intoxicants to Indians was read by Mrs. Harold Smith. The Iletter stated that Alaskans should know more of the law. Mrs. Bloxham suggested that Mrs. Anna Clark and Mrs. J. E. Click attend the Ladies’ Aid and Martha Society and other church guild to tell the li\(ht' ;|h4lll| the W.C.T.U ALASKA UNIT AT HEAD OF A.L.PARADE 'March Slalted at 8 This Morning—To End at 10 Tonight NEW YORK, Sept. 21.—Two hun- 'dred thousand veteraXs of the World War are today marching down Fifth Avenue in the greatest parade the city has ever known. The parade started at 8 o'clock this morning and is expected to last until 10 o'clock tonight. Policp Commissioner Valentine estimates that 1,000,000 persons are witnessing the parade in which ev- ery conceivable kind of costume is being worn by the various state delegations of the American Legion and Auxiliary. The Alaska unit, headed by Jim Colmer and Sidney Rainer, follow- ed National Commander Colmer in the pamde FLINGS HAT, ALA. SENATORIALRING LAFAYETTE, Sept. 21.—J. Thom- as Heflin, 68-year-old former Sen- ator, today formally declared his candidacy for the January Demo- cratic primary in which the succes- sor to U. S. Senator Dixie Graves will be named. Picturesque “Tom-Tom” whose booming voice droned familiarly in |the Senate for years prior to his defeat several years ago, has been known to have had his eye on the Senatorial seat since Hugo L. Black was named to the Supreme Court. HATCHET SLASHING AT PETERSBURG An indian named Phillips is the hospital in Petersburg suffering from nife hatchet wounds in his ed in jail there charged with the slashing according to a message to U. 8. Marshal William T. Mahon- ey today. -, — The President’s flag consists of the President's seal in bronze upon la blue blackground, with a large white star in each corner. Mrs. Charles Bloxham led in pray- | er, while Mrs. Florence L. Person-| eus acted as secretary in the absence | TOM-TOM HEFLIN - in head and a Filipino is being detain- | CARTER REPums'Escunrakes ALASKA TRAVEL! Body of Poulsen HEAVY OVER 6. N.| To Alaska Today A military escort this 10 o'clock accompanied the body of Chester O. Poulsen, Chief Yeoman of the United States Coast Guard cutter Haida, to the steamer Alaska for shipment to Tacoma, Wash. A firing squad composed of Jo- ‘Creat Vorthcl n Carries | Many to West Coast for Trip to N Nmthland H. F. “Nick” Carter, Alaska rep- resentative of the Great Northern seph Scull, H. D. Bennet, George Railway, arrived in Juneau lastlGap jack Hussey, Frank Reed, J. night on the Northland and willl 7 Roberts, Jack Reeves, comman- be e about a week before PIo-igeq by Sheldon N. Parmley, Chief cecc on this semi-annual trip 0l Gunners' Mate, fired a salute of the Westward and Interior three rounds as the body reached Travel has been particularly heavy, he ship, this season, Mr. Carter said and his. chief Carpenter Chedsey left on to escort the body to Ta- company brought more people “A‘HJn.‘ Alaski who were to make an Alaska triplcoma, where the widow resides. than ever hulow On one occas-) pallbearers were Lyle Keune, L. son the G. N. brought three syecial| o Johnson, Delbert Raines, Dun- trains into Rumn all those .|lmu(11“.“ Herr, Albert R. Wall, John Ras- coming north. Travel all over the mussen, Mike Mitchell, Otto Reitz. country has been heavy, he said,| Escorts were Thomas J. Gibba and much of it is attributable to the |Louis Rieffenberger, Robert Byrd new air conditioned cars, particu-!Arthur La Borde, Roy Chadsey, Ro: larly in the East and Middle Westibert Ayres, Thomas Hunter, Les- where they have extremes of heat.|ter G. Hooper. Another service for Poulsen will| ‘ho held in Tacoma, after which the widow will take the body to Arling- jton Cemetery for a military burial. | Poulsen apparently slipped on the |guard rail of the Government dock ‘\\l]lll‘ boarding the Haida shmny after midnight on September 15. The body was recovered after more than mgm hours of (lw;un;, PARKS REPORTS, INTERIOR HAVING EXCELLENT YEAR AAT Abandons Italian Plane For leghtmg HIHIUH\ Sflvb, I[ R(‘qllll(‘\ rOO Mu(h Wolk"*f 2 Tries Fizzle Sheldon Simmons, chief pilot of | the Alaska Air Transport, said today | that he had abandoned all hope nfi utilizing the large Savoia-! M.u(l'l‘t- ti plane for transporting freight into w Atlin. (Camps and Towns Busy The announcement came after| . h M- . L J. Simmons for the second day had| WIE ining Leading failed in an effort to lift the plane out of Gastineau Channel with a load of a ton and a half of oil for| Atlin its best seasons in years, according The Savoia-Marcheti is owned by 'y, pigty Cadastral Engineer the Alaska Airways of Petersbure.|George A, Parks of the Publig Sur It has been resting in the channel vey office, and former Governor, for the past week since TONYViyn, yeturned to his Juneau head- Schwamm, pilot, brought her here quarters on the Alaska today after from Petersburg. a six weeks field trip through the “The plane could be used for the Interior and Westward. BUH """"‘“f' ':“: _“”“f“”“ S"“l' New mining equipment has caus: mons said, “but it requires 00 much o4 many old operations to be re- Parade of Activities Interior Alaska is having one of ‘“‘i'k I?Af.‘ definitely will 1ot con-|haneq and the established proper- sider i ties are producing at a greater rate Late yesterday afternoon Sim-' s £ ¥ resulting in a marked activity all over the Territory, he said. Towns; of the Interior reflect the condi- (tion as they are humming with bus- |iness, and there are no idle men around town. They are all out on, | the creeks and various opcratmm HOSPITAL NOTES | rolline up a grubstake T R kY McKinley Park had an especial-| Ned Albright of Hoonah was dis- 1y good year and Supt. Harry Liek missed today from St. Ann’s Hos- told him that attendance this sea- pital after receiving medical care. ‘son was about 25 per cent over mons failed to get the plane out of tlie water after several long runs. This morning the plane was unable to achieve sufficient altitude. - eee 'l- morning at | U. S. DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE, WEATHER BUREAU THE WEATHER (By the U. S. Weather Bureau) Forecast for Juneau and vicinity, beginning at 4 p.m., Sept. 21. Cloudy tonight and Wednesday; probably showers; gentle to mod- erate variable winds becoming southeast Wednesday. LOCAL DATA ‘Time Barometer Temp. Humidity Wind Velocity Weathet |4 pm. yest'y 30.00 50 4 s 3 Pt, Cldy 4 a.m. toda 30.09 46 92 S 6 Cloudy |Noon today 30.16 49 9 £ 4 Lt. Rain RADIO REPORTS TODAY Max. temp. Lowest 4a.m. 4am. Precip. 4am. Station last 24 hours temp. temp. veloeity 24 hrs. Weather Anchorage 59 ] 31 - — ' Trace 3 Barrow 30 24 24 14 0 Clear | Nome 46 | 30 32 4 0 Clear | Bethel 50 | 32 34 4 0 Cloudy Fairbanks 54 | 30 30 4 0 Clear | Dawson 44 26 28 o 02 Pt. Cldy ‘St Paul 50 | i - - - s Dutch Harbor 54 38 54 14 60 Cloudy Kodiak 54 | 40 42 4 0 Cloudy [Cordova 52 | 40 40 4 04 Clear {Juneau 2 | 4 46 6 ) 4 Cloudy Sitka 57 | 43 — — ] Ketchikan 56 | 48 48 4 16 Cloudy Prince Rupert 58 | 46 48 6 22 Pt.Cldy " Edmonton 64 44 44 4 14 Rain | Seattle 62 54 54 8 01 Cloudy 1 Portland 68 ) 46 46 6 0 Clear |San Francisco 6 | 54 56 0 0 Clear New York 64 | 50 54 14 0 Clear Washington 70 3 | 46 50 4 0 Clear WEATHER CONDITIONS AT 8 A.M. TODAY Seattle (airport), cloudy, temperature 52; Blaine, cloudy, 44; Vic- | toria, partly cloudy, 50; Alert Bay, cloudy, 44; Bull Harbor, cloudy, 46; Prince Rupert, raining; Triple Island, cloudy; Langara Island; clou- idy, 44; Ketchikan, cloudy, 48; Craig, cloudy, 47; Wrangell, cloudy, 46; Petersburg, raining, 45; Sitka, cloudy, 47; Radioville, raining, 44; Skag- way, cloudy, 46; Juneau, cloudy, 46; Hawk Inlet, cloudy; Hoonah, fog- gy; Soapstone Point, partly cloudy, 40; Cordova, clear, 44; Chitina, cloudy, 36; McCarthy, clear, 2 Portage, clear, 30; Anchorage, partly cloudy, 44; Fairbanks, cloudy, 32; Hot Springs, cloudy, 38; Tanana, clou- dy, 38; Ruby, cloudy; Nulato, part'y cloudy, 30; Flat, partly cloudy, 38; Ohogamute, cloudy, 38. Juneau, September 22. — Sunrise, 5:43 a.m.; sunset, 6:01 p.m. WEATHER SYNOPSTS High barometric pressure prevailed this morning from the interior of Alaska southward over the Gulf of Alaska and Southeast Alaska to Oregon, the crest being 30.40 inches over the Pacific Ocean at lati- tude 40 degrees and longitude 150 degrees. A storm area of marked in- tensity was centered over the south°rn Bering Sea, the lowest reported pressure being 29.00 inches a short distance north of Atka. This gen- eral pressure distribution has been attended by rain over the Aleu- tians, and by unsettled weather with scattered showers over Southeast- ern Alaska and Dixon Entrance with snow over the upper Yukon Val- ley, and by generally fair weather over the remainder of Alaska and wgstern Canada. Temperatures were below freezing last night over the interior and {western portions of Alaska. last year, Mr. Parks said. The hotel |least another month, the Engineer m the park is underway and it isjexpects. Floyd Betts and his crew 'expected to have it under coverlare in the Goldstream region near before cold weather comes. | Fairbanks and L. M. Berlin is run- ning a school land survey near Point Barrow. The particularly wet season has hampered field work, |the Interior and Westward having an unusuelly large amount of rain as the Southeast did. e AC CHARMAN'S AUNT LEAVES |, Pairbanks is having an especially| Mrs. J. P. Keating, aunt of Fred |good year as a result of much min- ‘Charman who has been visiting in ing activity, he reported. The wo-|Juneau for the past week, left for men’s dormitory at the University | Sitka today on the Northland. She is nearly completed and Capt. A. E.|will return to Seattle via Sitka. ‘Ldthl(‘pa new publishing plant | F-ttlp-a- bout finished. There are also se 1 Alfred Mollner of Eklutna arrived eral homes going up, giving Fair- on the Alaska this morning and en- banks a thriving appearance. tered the Government Hospital for Surveying will continue for at medical care. Considerable interest is reflected this year in requests for homestead |surveys, the oddicial said. From | |the number of these requests it |evident that there are quite a few {new people coming into the coun- Just ‘trv with the intention of establish- /in gtheir homes, Robert Fraser, a medical patient, was dismissed yesterday afternoon from St. Ann’s Hospital. ‘ Richard Jackson was dismissed | from St. Ann's Hospital today after medical care. Lynn Flesher, a surgical patient, was dismissed today from St. Am\\‘ Hospital. | Mrs. Ed Boese and infant daugh- ter, born September 10, were dis- missed today from St. Ann's Hos-| pital. | Mrs. J. Bockmore, a sur ‘ patient, was dismissed yeste! from St. Ann's Hospital A. 4 | f | | Luther Patrick underwent a ton-| | i silectomy this- morning at the Ju- Medis Surgical Clinic Harriet Qunk of Sitka was dis- missed today following a tonsilec-| tomy several days ago. e eee | An improved type of de-icer for aircraft to be used by commercial planes during the coming winter season, has been approved by the! United States Bureau of Air Com-| merce. | neau cal and gure e Lode and placer location notices for sale at The Empire Office. in and learn the facts WINTER | IS JUST | AHEAD JUNEAU Connors Motor Co., InC.phone 411 Don’t take our word for it...Come G-E Washers—find out how much they can save you each week. . .| The moment a General Electric starts working for you — then you start to save and by doing your laun- dry at home you can save more than See the New Model AW101 '55 Alaska Electric Light & Power Co. JUNEAU—DOUGLAS, ALASKA it out YOURSELF lllll“ enough to pay for the Washer... and in such a short time, too. You'll find all the modern conveniences oa these * Washers and, of course, every General Electric is guaranteed. Come in fora free demonstration or callus | and we’ll bring one to your home. No obligation at all. about the new .oo No more on our Easy Pay Plan. . % *