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SAVE ON COATS SAVE ALL REMAINING ON SUITS COATS and SUITS Half-Price ONE GROUP 1938 SUMMER DRESSES Suitable for High School Girls $3.95 ONE GROUP DRESSES Values to $25.00 Clearance $5.00 B. M. EEHRENDS CO., Inc. “Juneau's Leadi~z ROSTESS TODAY Mrs. Charics Sab is ente-tain- ing this afternoor at hor hom= on W.' Seventh Stree. with a bridge- luncheon horori bold, who is v.siting here from Kei- chikan as house guest of Mr. and Mrs. R. L. Bernard A variety of garden flowers dec- orate each teble, with ticive guests being’ presen. ‘¢ the afternoon. 2 - — GENE MURRAY VISITS JUNEAU DURING DAY Gene Murray, formerly superin- tendent of the Alaska Pacific . 2l- mon Company cannery at Kake and now Division Manager for Pacific American Fisheries in the Western division, arrived in Juncau with Marine Airways from Kake today. Stopping briefly in Jurieau this i ; Mrs. C. M. Arch-| Department Store” was to fly to and return to s. !afternoon, Murray Funter this evening Juneau in a few da He made his headquarters in Squaw Harbor this summer and reports a “normal pack.” He caught the North Coast out of Chignik and left the vessel at Wrangell. NATIONAL OFFICER TO ATTEND ALASKA LEGION CONVENTION James Maha of Honolulu, Na- | tional Vice-Commarider of the Am- | crican Legion, will attend the Al- aska Department Convention in Zetchikan September 7, 8 and 9, ccording to a message received we from Commander Mahaffy by Fi-st Vice-Commander E. M. |Policy of the Alaska Department. D - WITTALMS TO KETCHIKAN D) 't Engineer M. D. Williams of the Bureau of Public Roads salled on the Aleutian for Ketchi- an and Hyder in connection with »d matters. 1ling TEXRS, ALASKA ELKS 10 HOLD BOWLING MATCH Houston arid' Juneau Ate to Start Series'of Events September 6 The Houston, Tex., lodge of Elks, has accepted the' challenge of the Juneau lodge to’'a bowling tourna- ment and play will start on Sep- tember 6, with five games to be played: each night.through: Septems. ber 7 and 8, according' to’ Chalrman Leonard Holmquist of the local bowling committee. Bowling begins at 7 pam. to exactly coineide with Houston time where it will be 9 p.m. Score of each game will be ex- changed immediately after gamé is played. In both Houston and Juneau the first string will bowl against a second team so as to make the play more interesting and slower. A trophy or loving cup will be played for, the Houston and Juneau teams getting a donor each to put || up $1250 for a cup. The Juneaw Drug Company of Juneau has al- ready expressed willingness' td be the sponsor for theé Juneau half . of sors will be engraved on theicup. “It is the first telegraphic tour- nameént ever held by the Houston lodge and tHey are very entHustastic about it,” Holmquist said, “and are: [| ziving the proposed tournament a sreat deal of publitity and they are trying to arrange to broadcast a portion of the match by one of the local broadcasting stations with Sec. E. H. Baumgarten of the American Bowling Congress doing - the ' ans nouncing. at their alleys and place upen it their scores as they are rolled and Juneau's: scores as they ard re-| eived. Under this arrangement esch team will' receive .reports of the scores of the other as the matches [ are in progress which will add to| the interest of: players. and:specta- tors.” i i Thefirst team lineups ard second | team for Juneau follow: Houston, Tex., B.P.O.E. No.151 Lineup: Avel Leonard 195 Thorpe 190 Showalter 185 Arlla - 190 Turnham 195 Jutieau B:P.O.E. No. 420 Lineup: Ave. Radde F. Henning J. Barragar Metcalf Stevenson - Sécorid Team Stewart Holmquist Iffert Lavenik Pullen s tbincos RED, The Elks alleys have béeri com- pletely reconditioned and are in first class shape. Bowling will com- mence within a day or so when the alleys will be opén to EIks ahd' their ladies. It is requested by the bowling committee that all' the above men- tioned teami' members get in a lot of practice. The above teams were last year's bowlin e Hell-Raising American Doctor Shouts Down Oné General of Japan Army (Continued rrom- Page One) cided the doctor mght be a spy for the Chinese. “This made me mad,” the doctor told an Associated Press reporter. “I got up out of my chair and, shouting my indignation in the Chi- nese language, banged my fist on a table. The officer banged his fist and shouted, then stopped. Final- ly, we laughted mbgr e ly, we laughéd and sHook hands. But theéy wouldn't give me back my Hospital.” g y LEGION AUXILFARY * - ' HEAD' ou_rs_mxsnn Mrs: George A Cole, of Reno, Ne- vada, accompanied by her husband, will arrive in Juneauw Thursday on the steamer Prince Rupert; - Mrs. Cole is president of the Western division of the American Legion Auxiliary, and during her| sojourn in Alaska, will visit the vari- the county. Mrs. Cole is to be met at the boat the eosts. The names. of both spon- f “Houston will have a° blackboard | picked from'the final averages from |~ i | Near AKlavik, and near Loon Lake ous Auxiliary units in- this part of|’ THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, TUESDAY, AUGUST 23, | New York, Paris Display Colors for Fall | By ADELAIDE KERR AP Fashion Editor Colors and ‘fabrics are headline news in 938 fall fashions. | Black rémaihs a prothihent cos- jtume hue, but a number of new \intriguing shades have come to townt for the winter mode. Those launched by Fremnch designors made their debut in New York this yeaf . on the day’ when they were revealed to Buyers: in: Paris. This was matle péssible by an arrangement, whereby nine Paris designers (Schiaparelli, Mbélyneaux, Paton, Chahiel, Lelong, Lanvin, Maggy Rouff, Creed and Marcel Dormoy) furnished a New York dve with samples of -their colors in ad- vance. Among hues were the. rich rusts terra cottas and ‘auburns to which Paris gave unexpected prominence. 'the greenish blue Mallard duck tones and the: lichen, almond, vivid and dark greens uséd by some of “Paris® bést.” One of the most strik- | ing notes in the newly imported col- lection, from which many of Am- erica’s fall fashion colors will be chosen; was the violent influence on'reds and blues. Many red-violets blue-violets and purple~violets, as i well as mauvish roses and orchid pigks were among them. Browns [Avchutologists' Seek Trace of Human Migrations Via Interior | | After hundreas or miles of canoe! travel- down the Mackenzie River and across the Rat River portage tothe Yukon River and thence to Fairbanks, W. L. Bliss, instructor from the University of New Mexico, with a_ party of archaeologists, an- nounces he has discovered two vir- gin areas in the field of archaeology. Bliss and five in his party arrived in Juneau yesterday morning on the steamer. Baranof,: three continuing on sodth, one stopping off here for ,work in the Juneau area‘and Bliss himself leaving this morning on the Prineess’ Charlotte. Last spring the went by wagon, train and airplane from' Edmonton to Fort St. John, 160 miiles, then went down the Si- kanny River by canoe, down the Nelson into the Liard, and thence into the McKenzie and on down to its mouth. Bliss said his party was 'studying early human migrations, especially with refererice t6 man's movenients in relation to glaciation and physi- cal geography.” It 14 Bliss' theory that human migrations took place at the time mastadons and other prehistoric ‘ariimals wereé presumed to have ‘cofte over a'lahd bridge from Asia, ‘aritl that those milgrations followed the eastern slope of the Rocky Mountains rather than the coast. Certain cultures of human exis~ tenicés were found' far north by the party, “almost precisely limited by the Rockies on the western limits jof: that culture.” ' Little excavatlon work was done by the party, with most studies being made with reference to geo- logy: and physiography to determine likely areas fof excavation work. on’ thé Rat River portage, and on the Nahanni' River, a little excava- tion work was done and evidences 'féund of cultures as yet unstudied: Neéxt year' the party hopes to re-| turn and df éxteénsive excavation. Bliss took the Charlotte to Prince jcompany (United Piece Dye Works) | }Lady on you set it in motion archaeologists 1 1 without any strain. Save nil Ways! The beautifu! ~evw 1938 General Elecici - Triple- Thrift Reéfrigérators are now -on display. See theém?’ Clhicck die G-E for lov_current cost, keep, long life, wvipg food, for fast freezing.ar.d releasc Thiple. RPEFRIGERATOR Thrifty in PRICE! Thrifty in CURRENT! of.ice cubes, for conve- Thirifty in' UPKEEP! nience, etc. Avd we be- Look at the price tags! Compare values! lieve you will choc-e Check the multiple savings of a new 1938 a Geoeral Li~ctvic. G-Ewith any other refrigerator atany price. st ‘.v » SOLD ON. EASY PAYMENT PLAN . B E - Maska Electic Licht & Power Co. - , Whiias ! 1 NEAD ALASKA. DOUGLAS by members of the local Legion | Rupert where he will go to Edmon- Auxiliary, and will be taken for a| ton for research work. His assistant, trip to the Mendenhall Glacier, fol-|Joe Maloney, from Leland Stanford lowing, a reception and short meet- | Jr., University, will seek archaeolo- ing will be held in the banquet room['gical areas fot a time in the Juneau of Percy’s Cafe. It was anndunced ‘that no 'din-| Other members of the party were ner, as originally. scheduled; will] Thonigs Cain, University of Wash- honor Mrs.-Cole, due to the- lateness| ington, Aldon' Hayes, University of of time of arrivalof the:steamer. ['New Mexico, Dotiglas Osborne, Uni- ——————— versity df New Mexico, and Richard KARNES IN VICTORIA Hayes, Hillsdale College. A. E: Karnes, ‘Comniissioner - of TN A Education, is now attending: the Ini- | WILE VISIT SISTER ternational Conference on Corves-| — pondence Bducation-in Victoria; B.| Miss Rose M. Matthews, of Vie- ©.; gccording tp word to his office | toria, is arriving on the Princess here. The Commissioner, expects to| Louise tHis evening to visit with come north in time to the American|Hef sister and brother-in-law, Mr. Legion Departient.: convention in|and Mrs. J! L. Dolenc: - e e —— J. ©. Vernon and Mrs; Vernon are| ~Miss' Charlotté Rhode; of Spring-! in Juneau: from Sumdum and are|field, Illinots, is visiting her brother, ! 1938. ‘ U. 8. DEPARTMENT OF AORlClml‘UBE WEATHER BUREAU included “Rembrandt” [ ly suggestive of petitpoint. New-day tones and’ reddish shad 1 tel Y e o e ) ;¢ ish’ shades rocks appear in matelasse cre I ey i Lo ~ B Forecast for Juncau and vicinity, beginning at 3:30 p.m., Aug. 23: To that colored tale New York or cloque crepes woven in small dis-| . g designers have added a lively lik-|creet patterns or in suave mossy Fm{' "’":g"“ !W“““"“‘“‘ HTIIEY OUNIN. TWHU W ing for grayed “mist” or “stone” crepes. Fine wool crepes and jersey SCUtawest winds g 3 blues wm”\w are see mo' d Weather forecast for Southeast Alaska: Fair tonight, Wednesday i y Abs B A e flndithe : increasing cloudiness; light to moderate southwest winds. Many of the new fabrics show| The vogue for surface interest 4 . Forecast of winds along the Coast of the Gulf of Alaska: Moderate some kind of surface iriterest. Coat |is reflected even in the frocks| .- o"eetst e o Do wools are woven with a compact|made of plain fabrics which are H"‘u;“""r‘l’;m"’k“"‘\ WAL Shd VPRGN SN SO e s ok, “smooth-rough” boucle finish raised | sometimes quilted, braided or em- plateau patterns or an effect faint- broidered. both dark LOCAL. DATA Barometer Temp. Fumidity Wind Velocity 30.20 69 42 s 6 30.21 50 91 0 0 30.17 67 51 S 2 RADIO REPORTS TODAY Lowest 4a.m. 4am. Precip. temp. temp. velocity 24 hrs, 44 Time . 13:30 pm. yest'y 3:30 a.m. today Noon today Weathes Clear Clear Clear 4am Weather Cloudy Max. temp. Station last 24 hours | Atka | Anchotage 63 | Barrow 44 | Nome 50 Bethel 52 Pairbanks 68 Dawson ¥ | St.' Paul | Duteh Harbor Kodiak Cordova Juneau Sitka Ketchikan | Prince Rupert | Edmonton | Seattle | Portland | | | Cloudy Rain Cloudy Rain Pt Cldy Cloudy Cloudy Clear Clear Clear 42 48 46 0 0 .09 01 06 Clear Clear Pt. Cdy Clear Clear Cloudy Clear Clear 52 36 52 52 58 68 2 WEATHER CONDITIONS AT 8 AiM. TODAY Seattle (airport), clear, temperature, 47; Blaine, partly cloudy, 44; Victoria, clear, 53; Alert Bay, clear, 45; Bull Harbor, foggy, 46; Triple Island, clear; Prince Rupert, partly cloudy, 51; Ketchikan, cloudy, 57; Craig, clear, 60; Wrangell, partly cloudy, 54; Petersburg, cloudy, 55; Hoo- nah, clear; Hawk Inlet, clear, 58; Tenakee, clear, 50; Hood Bay, clear, 56; Port Althorp, clear; Sitka, clear, 57; Radioville, foggy, 54; Juneau, clear, 50; Skagway, clear, 47; Haines, clear; Tulsequah, clear, 54; Yaku-~ tat, clear, 51; Cape Hinchinbrook, clear, 67; Cordova, clear, 68; Chit- ina, clear, 56; McCarthy, clear, 44; Anchorage, cloudy, 57; Portage, partly cloudy, 52; Fairbanks, cloudy, 55; Hot Springs, cloudy, 50; Tan- ana, cloudy, 49; Ruby, cloudy, 45; Nulato, partly cloudy, 50; Kaltag, + cloudy, 48; McGrath, cloudy, 48; Flat, cloudy, 46; Crooked Creek, clou- dy, 48; Bethel, cloudy, 48; Safety, cloudy; Nome, raining, 47. Juneau, Aug. 24.—Sunrise, 4:40 a.m.; sunset, 7:23 p.m. WEATHER SYNOPSIS i The barometric pressure distribution over Alaska, northwestern / Canada, and over the northeastern portion of the North Pacific Ocean has changed but little during the past 24 hours, being low over the Al- askan Arctic Coast and high from the Tanana and Kuskokwim valleys southward over the Pacific Ocean to latitude 30 degrees, with a crest - of 3052 inches over the Pacific Ocean at latitude 46 degrees and longi- cll’l" tude 154 degrees. This general pressure distribution has been attended & by fair weather from Kodiak and the Prince William Sound region ——— | to the Pacific Coast states and by precipitation over the interior and western portions of Alaska. ——— e —————— killed at Beirut, Syria, by an en-| MARRIED AT WHITEHORSE | santa Barbara, Cal, where they raged applicant for a passport. Mildred Elizabeth Louise Gordon | Will reside. Rooert W. Imbrie became the bride of the Rev. Gor- | B onlo was assassinated at Teheran, Per- don Alfred Cros at a ceremuny per-| Prof. John E. Coleman, of the sia. Imbrie had had a large por-| formed in the Christ Church at! Valdez Public School, wife and This advice came from Joseph|tion of the tougher variety of for-| Whitehorse on August 17, the Right | baby, will leave McMinnville, Ore- Aug, who's been renting bicycles eign service before that. He was Rev. W. A. Geddes, D. D., Bishop | gon, for Seattle in time to catch and teaching bicycle-riding in New the first representative of the U. 5. of Yukon, offciating. Following lhe“tho August 27 steamer for the York since 1914. | to Kemal's Turkish Nationalist gov-|wedding the newlyweds left for | north. Mr. Aug augments that advice | ernment at the desert city of An-|3 - - | with these observations: When you|kara. get going, stay on the right of the| Imbrie went to Ankara with his TERRITORIAL and DIVISIONAL road. Bicycles are vehicles. As such | bride of a few weeks and main- | San Francisco © | New York * Washington 1 ocHoococococoocecoioo e thé Handlebar Bad Form, in Bi | By JOAN DURHAM | AP Feature Service Writer Within the last year Theodore Marriner, consular general, was Be astride your bicycle before Don't take a running start and trust to luck you will hop it properly. Earlier still, they should be operated according tained the consulate for several to automobile rules—travel with the months in the Asian equivalent of traffic. If they go against it, as pe- | a railroad caboose. After his transfer to Teheran, Persia, as consular representative, Imbrie and a companion were at- tacked in the streets by a fanatic mob. Badly injured, he was taken to a hospital but the mob followed, | broke in and hacked him to death, July 18, 1924. Four days later Mrs. Imbrie® also was injured in an at- | tack. . TEXAN TAKES IT destrians are advised to do, they Indemnity was demanded for Im- are likely to collide head-on with brie’s death. The sum of $60,000 was autos if they swerve. paid by Persia to the Treasury for Ten Feet Apart Mrs. Imbrie and $10,000 was paid When bicyclists travel in groups, also as expense of a cruiser in re- not more than two should travel| turning the body to the U. S. abreast. If those two are a man and Later, Congress awarded Mns. a girl, the man should be next to Imbrie $30,000 from the $110,000 as the traffic. Bicycles should keep compensation for her own injuries.| about 10 feet apart. The State Department had recom- | Additional advice: mended use of the cruiser expense Don't start a long trip without money to finance Persian students | a repair kit. You need a wrerch and in the U. 8. but Congress declmod.t tire-patching equipment. A han-|and the balance remains in: the dlebar-basket will come in handy, Treasury. | too, for carrying lunches, guide-| Even for hardy souls the life of books or notebooks. the foreign service officer in the Don't let anyone ride on the|tropics often is a harrowing one.! handlebars. Handlebar-riders are | Walter Foote, consular general at“ likely to get their feet tangled in|Batavia, Java, lately hove into the| the spokes. Then everybody takes|Department to report that during a spill. Even if you escape spills,|his six-year stay in the Dutch East the extra weight makes the bicy-|Indies he had typhoid repeatédly, cle swerve — so it's difficult to malaria at least once each year guide. |and sometimes oftener, amoebic Put Comfort First | and bacterial dysentery repeatedly, Girls shouldn’t wear skirts that| and no end of annoyance from vici- are too tight. Shorts, culottes or|ous leeches. slacks are good—or a skirt that is| But he is a stout Texan and sur- wide enough to give you a little vived while two of his aides had| freedom. | to be transferred or perish. But Ride in the most comfortable|gad you should see the man sweat. position. You should be able to| He is a tropic waterfall. reach the pedals with your heels/ ——e* Your hands BURFORD TRAVELS E should rest lightly on the handle- q bars. The ball of your foot—mot Wilbur Burford went to Ketchi- your instep—should press on the kan aboard the Baranof to meet his pedals. Your ankles should do wife and daughter who came north | JAMES V. DAVIS, Juneau e b i | on the North Sea. The Burfords will A P w R4 . T visit relatives and friends in the [ 3 Don’t Say Spats 6, pofax 'y | First City for about one week, then ' To Secretary Hull cotay sz | 3, P, ANDERSON, Juneau a €| Posteards received from Everett| ‘ y ¥ | JOHN McCORMICK, Juneau e ERICKSON TRAVELS | Erickson, who at the writing was | over the equator enroute to British The Democratic Ticket Is Interested in the Welfare of Both Business charge of the consulate at Buena-| Guiana via Pan American plane, | ventura, Colombia, deserves more|S3id he expected to greet his friends | VOTE IT STRAIGHT! notice than it has received,” Huli inJuneau early next month, return- ON 13. Candidate for Re-election as TERRITORIAL TREASURER Anthony I. (Tény) DIMOND For Delegate to Congress For Territorial Senator: HENRY RODEN, Juneau For Territorial (Continued from Pagr One) tieles which appear in the press Versity of Alaska. from’ time to time ard which rep- - resent the foreign service as com-| H. C. DUDLEY HERE poséd exclusively of persons of _H. O. Dudley, mining engineer of ‘the be-spatted and stuffed - shirt| Duluth, Minnesota, .arrived in Ju- variety. |neau on the Yukon: accompanied “Vite Consul O'Keefe died of|by his wife and son. He and his goests during their visit at the Hos| Wildlite Agent Clarence Rhode, at tel Jutieau, Cordova, | the performance of his duties.” wrote, “particularly in view of ar-| I8 to his professorship at-the Uni- | (Paid Advertisement) malignant malaria contracted in|family have just returned from lthelr first trip into the Klondike.