Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
| SEPT. PRICES The Finest Values We've Ever Offered! Record-breaking values, for a record-setting September selling! This great annual floor covering event never offered finer op portunities for effective savings! Beautiful Colors and Glorious Patterns in 9 x 12 Axminster Rugs \ A dramatic story of Value, Looks and Low Price! Interesting small designs. Cushiony, all-wool sur- 7.6x9 and 8.3x10.6 Axminster Rugs in Selected Patterns And each rug is seamless! Noted for high quality, rich depth of color and wear-resistant contruction! . faces 27x52 inch Axminster $3.75 $2.00 $1.50 ' $1.75 Rugs, now at only in. Stair Carpeting at sq. yard Inlaid Linoleum 8q. yd. Behrends Co., Inc.} “Juneau’s Leading Department Store” B. M. The Woman I Love.” He is not| known especially for that one. But he like dthe French film, “L'Equip- on which “The Woman I Love” Director Says “Lous y” With Stag Horn W histle = s i | In Hollywood’s inner circles where memories go back farther Litvak |is known as director of “Be Mine By ROBBIN COONS HOLLWOOD, Cal., Sept fused to divulge what he did or 92— |which side he was on, the whites or most directors, He owns a whistle, |he may not have fought at ail. (JR% S ePURE PEECE L EIEC Pl Maybe one or two other directors Dates Miram Hopkins [as sotat <ot el i Sovieh Tei own whistles but this is a stag horn| He is medium-sized with a large|gymo’ i Russia, and it was called whistle and he keeps the ct ist- [crop of hair. At 13 he began his|irearts an Dollars.” But he thinks| ened to his lapel. He blow n- dramatic career as a student in the “Mayerling” his finest picture was state dramatic school at Petrograd.|in which Charles Boyer was starred. It's Leningrad now, but he still] Likes Unuival Etiste calls it Petrograd. At 24 he was a| stead of yelling “Cut” or a daisy” or “Stinko, let’s try He is a young man as di go. Going on 36. They say he is a bit standoffish but mellows with acquaintance and has been known to give his assistant or publicity man a friendly pat on the shoulder Besides bl Mr 2| A nervous man he seldom stands character actor of note. Directed |ctil) on the set but keeps walking plays and wrote Lh_em. too. His|around between scenes. He is strong plays were the kind in which life is or rehearsals and his players do real, earnest, and not a little tragic. |y gooq bit of it before a scene is In Hollywood generally he i8|taren. He seldom takes a Scene le known first, as the fellow Who goes|than ten times and he out-Vonned 1l indeed. He wa in the revolution but so i up ar has re- | her ing Mirlam while he was directing|angq she didn't in his fir Hollywood picture, understand about cues. | He keeps his camera running forth —-=< and back on tracks. He likes the “ o T E L G A s T l N E A u |effect of motion achieved. He likes et crane shots almost as well and sits up there with his cameraman. EVOFY E‘{fllt I\/Idde fOf the He dhhkns_ noise and everyone ~ ‘f ; f («4 satal is quiet on his sets. Noise annoys Comiort or Guesis! him, gives him the jitters. He GASTINEAU CAFE can’t concentrate when folks are chewing the fat. So when he wants in connection |quiet he blows that little shrill- itined stag horn whistle. AIR SERVICE INFORMATION ‘ p it e s e e USSR ” | JOHNNY HARRIS BACK; : = GUIDED MELLON PARTY The First National Bank | ON BIG GAME SHOOTING Johnny Harris, Juneau’s veteran IUNEA(Y guide, is back in the city again after @ guiding the Mellon party to the big game haunts in this section. CP-PXTA— ssoom “And did we get the brownies, Pl {just ask me,” said Harris. “Never saw such big bruins and were the Mellon group pleased, I'll say so. The SURPLUS—$100,000 [ ] brownies were the largest I ever brought down, five of them, the| NONMTROTET KT g 3 : COMMERCIAL AND SAVINGS smallest. being 9 feet, 5 inches.” ACCOUNTS z SAILING PUT OVER SAFE DEPOSIT BOXES Sailing of the motorship Estebeth for Sitka and way ports has been delayed until Thursday evening at 6 o'clock to wait for freight and 2% Paid on mail off the northbound steamer & Yukon. adv. Savings e Chillicothe, Ohio, is not the only Accounts Chillicothe in the United States. Chillicothe, Mo., is situated on the Grand River, northeast of Kansas iCity, in 2 Jake Ln a" whu other jobs on the side, I made plent; 5 of money. Money was free and eas | the piano. He h Miriam Hopkins, and, second,|Sternberg on one scene by making s five, in Russia as the fellow who's directing “To-|40 takes. But that was because born and he plays night’s Our Night.” He started dat-lthere was a Pekingese in the scene| | Salvage crews are pictured as they recently raised a wrecked naval the imed The huge amphibian plane was making a i »d hull of an old schooner. ! were believed to have been hurled | lives of six fliers. landing when it struck the subme of the occupants, beth survivor through the fuselage by the terrific imnact when the 14-ton patrol ilessly had gone off and left I U. S. DEPARTMENT OF AGRICUUTURE, WEATHER BUREAU,, THE WEATHER HITLER WHAT o s Forecast for Juneau and vicinity, beginning at 4 p.m., Sept. 22. : HE BELIE Showers tonight and Thursday; moderate southeast winds. i LOCAL DATA Time Barometer Temp. Humidity Wind Velocity ~Weathet S 7 I4 p.m. yest'y 30.19 50 ki s 4 Cloudy Mussolini Going to Carry|s am. today 3025 45 9% ol B Cloudy Sl Noon today 3030 46 91 s g Lt. Rain Note to Berlin—It's RADIO REPORTS i on Religion TODAY Max. temp. Lowest 4am. 4am. Precip. 4am. CASTLE GANDOLFO, Ttaly, Sept.| Station ' 1last 24 hours temp. temp. velocity 24 hrs. Weather 282 —Pope Pius has approved of a|Anchorage . .. 61 32 -~ - 16, Jong memorandum on his position | Barrow L 36, 32 32 18 02 Cloudy regarding the church in Germany, Nome 80 40 42 4 T Cloudy it is learned. The memorandum has | Bethel B 36 38 10 0y} Clear been handed to Premier Mussolini|Faitbanks ‘', ... . 52 36 36 + 03 Clear and will be brought to Adolf Hit-|Ddwson 46 34 34 0 0 Cloudy ler's attention at Il Duce's forth-(St Paul 50 | - — - BT coming visit to Germany. Dutch Harbor 62 — 54 6 0 Cloudy 11 Duce may thus zct as the Pope's|Kodiak . 50 44 50 10 0 Rain intermediary to bring about a bet- Cordova 52 46 6 6 08 Rain terment in the religious situation in Juneau ... . 50 | 45 a4 0 02 Cloudy Germany which the Pope has said Sitka 55 45 SBR R 0 is “deplorable.” Ketchikan 58 42 44 4 .16 ' Pt. Cldy A Prince Rupert .. 58 42 42 4 0 Clear Y X : | Edmonton : 50 33 40 4 28 Cloudy It’s a Long Swim {Seattle 64 48 48 6 0 Pt.Cldy | Portland 66 | 46 48 6 0 Cloudy To Seattle San Francisco ... 68 | 56 56 6 0 Cloudy Says Miss Harland (W R sl 52 58 8:5v710 Clear | Washington ... 72 50 54 4 i Clear WEATHER CONDITIONS AT 8 A.M. TODAY to Seattle, thought Miss Paticnoe| Seattle (airport), cloudy, temperature 44; Blaine, cloudy, 48; Vic- Harland last Friday. toria, cloudy, 50; Alert Bay, cloudy, 44; Bull Harbor, clear, 49; Prince For the Princess Louise heart- Rupert, cloudy, 45; Triple Island, partly cloudy; Langara Island, partly \er,cm"dy' 50; Ketchikan, clear, 40; Craig, cloudy, 49; Wrangell, cloudy; high and dry and very disappoint-|Petersburg, cloudy, 43; Sitka, cloudy, 48; Radioville, cloudy, 43; Juritau, ed. Miss Harland, on her way to cloudy, 45; Skagway, cloudy, 43; Hawk Inlet, cloudy; Hoonah, raining; the University of Washington, spent Soapstone Point, cloudy, 42; Cordova, sprinkling, 46; Chitina, cloudy, It’'s a long swim from Ketchikan plane struck the hull restaurant and, with several! lin those days and there were dol- camp mr Gflm Jark then whre: there &t 6y pé-! o § |nics now,” Logan said | But gosh nhow things have ) who left Juneau :andful of men who were here at the time I left. And the Occidental Diminutive Sourdough, Now | Hotel is about the only landmark still standing. All the rest is new. of Cordova, Is to |1 feel almost like a stranger—as if R Bl [T had never been here before.” | Start Farm | Logan has worked and prospected Hitie' changes and so do “hen,|to the ward, but the only gold says Jake Logan, diminutive Alas-(he found is in his teeth, which are Kkan sourdough who came to Juneau |!WO complete sections of gold teeth. in 1898 for gold and came back to| He stayed with Victor Johnson on this city recently to buy m |the Glacier Highway and only to- Logan has completed the purchase|day moved to the Gastineau Hotel ! of 30 female and 10 male mink from |to await the arrival of the Alaska Victor Johnson, local mink raiser,|Several men are busy constructing and will return to Cordova on the|kennels for the mink in Cordova. next voyage of the steamship Alas I - i ka to the Westward | He will launch a mink farm on Ex C,omn!and"’ | a large scale, he said Russian Navy, Logan, who has lived in the West- ward for the past three decades, has studied fox farms and fe that | mink farms require less work and | offer greater financial promise. He 3 is backed in his venture by three' the Imperial Russian Navy is just Cordova men, he declared. |Private A. A. P. White of the Capi- The mink business is far differ-|tal police force but likes it. i ent from the attraction of Alaska| White joined the force last spring a decade in | I . { {Is Now Private i WASHINGTON, Sept. 22.—Com- mander Alexander Pokrov: of before the turn of the century which after spending almost, lured Logan from his Astoria, Ore, Alaska assist his father, Anton- home. in, Bishop of the Russian Ortho- “I came up to go prospecting for|dox church. He hopes some day to gold, but I told my sister I'd wait|return to his favorite work of ship in Juneau for her. So I got a job | design. €5 MOMENT e 0/( .?/7[2 CORSELET WAISTLINE The corselet waistline, molding the diaphragm to a concave fitted line, was one of the most talked of features in recent Paris fall fashion displays. Here you see it in an evening gown of Madeira wine lace, designed with an off-the-shoulder decolletage and molded bustline. The handkerchief matches it, too long a time sightseeipg in Ket- 44 McCarthy, cloudy, 36; Portage, cloudy, 44; Anchorage, cloudy, 44; chikan. .‘Falrbanks, partly cloudy, 38; Nenana, clear, 36; Hot Springs, clear, 33; Being a resourceful Miss, she did Tanana, clear, 36; Ruby, foggy, 35; Nulato, clear, 30; Flat, cleat, 30; not give up. Rather, she hired a)Ohogamute partly cloudy, 40. 4 skiff and went bounding over the ! Juneau, September 23. — Sunrise, 5:45 a.m.; sunset, 5:58 p.m. water. The Princess Louise turned! WEATHER SYNOPSIs back twelve miles and picked her High barometric pressure prevailed this morning over the eastern up. and southern portions of Alaska and low pressure over the western The moral is—alw listen for portion of the Territory, the pressure extremes being 30.32 inches at the boat whistle in a strange town. Aklavik and 29.20 inches over the Aleutians. Rains were reported >o——— along the coastal region from the Aleutians southeastward to the north- ern portion of Southeast Alaska and by generally fair weather over MI'S. Sager Bumed by | the remainder of the field of obseivation. Falling ! Can of Grease Today INTERNAL REVENUE | OFFICERS GOING A can of grease by which Mrs.| Edward Sager, wife of the captain of the Ourluck, berthed at the Ma rine Airways float, was cooking this' The Internal Revenue office in morning, tipped over and painfully the Federal Building will be closed REBEKAHS ATTENTION Meeting Wednesday night at 8 o'clock, Odd Fellows Hall. Visitors SOUTH NEXT WEEK |weicome. adv. | I BETTY McDOWELL, N.G burned her left hand and shoul- next week and probably will re- der main closed until around Thanks- When Mrs. Sager became un- giving while Deputy Collector O. S. conscious, her husband sent a taxi Sullivan and W. O. Overby are in for Dr. W. M. Whitehead, who the south, it was announced today. dressed the wounds. The mishap Those having business with the of- occurred shortly after 11 o'clock. fice are urged to transact their — et business before the officers sail THREE HALIBUTE 'south the first of the week. | Deputy Sullivan is now in the In- SELL AT SEATTLE terior and expects to return here either by plane Sunday or on the SEATTLE, Sept. 22—Three hali- Yukon the first of the week. Deputy buters brought their catches in from Overby will join him here and the the western banks today. The Reso- two will go to the headquarters lute had 38,000 pounds, Doric 39,000 office in Tacoma. En route home | pour’\;, both selling for 12 and 9 they will Make stops at all points | cents a pound; Spray 25,000 pounds, in Southeast Alaska before coming | 117% and 9 cents. to Juneau. The Irene J came in from the lo- cal banks with 9,000 pounds of sable and sold for 5 cents a pound. Schilling Tea #as more flaver because its toasted # L e “Dick’s Folly” is an abandoned, | half-finished mansion across the| Hudson River from West Point. | CleUrmenflrsenflyprmmenfipmenflrenfip~ igure it out YOURSELF Don't take our word for it... Come in and learn the facts about the new G-E Washers—find out how much enough to pay for the Washer in such a short time, too. You'll find all the modern conveniences on 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, _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 $55:00 Nomere on our —_—— " Alaska Electric Light & Power Co. JUNEAU—DOUGLAS, ALASKA - e ‘s -k | | ‘S