The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, January 7, 1927, Page 2

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P A DRESSES--- \ January is clearance time—an opportun- \ ity for you. ,)l‘l'\\l‘.‘. il}l'l'(';l‘l“l \\ll(‘l] you c Two worthy groups of pretty i The importance of these offerings is i onsider that every dress is from our regular stock and were intended | to sell at much high choice of these dresses l('fib. Exceptional Coats, in style, but in quality silk linings and of a good workmanship. Now is the time to get that much-wanted Coat less | than the original price. NDERW EAR--- the (/1 Just time to select your Every Underwear. A wonderful needs in assortment odd garments and Nemo, Pink, W univn suits in cotton and wool. long and short sleeves, high and low neck. knee and ankle length. $1.00 to $6.00 B. M. Behrends Co.,* Juneauw’s Leading Department S Tho much-| llmonckcd-nbmll King of Sn.ml is shown in his ! royal robes on his throne at Baokok inthis, his latest coust | picture, — k (International Newweel.) SECT OF SHAKERS IS FAST NEARING DEATH| LEBANON, Ohio, Jan. 7. Only CORSETS a reduced price. L 00 to $3. 75 er prices. Take your at one half price and every one not only of fabries, fur, trimmed i Corset in the house Redfern’s and Warner's hite and Orchid. i >_A"; sizes, (e, 413 ' 8 YELLOWSTONE PARK, Wyoming, | fT0m ";fi“'lu““f Uik e “”‘“s ": Jan. 7.-The American (5 b, QST e e Yellowstone National Park arc a|dHomh 4 2 i J ; cotittict ot (Me . avil ,spirits in the versation »ll\lxm, mealtime !1» Store" ) {deep recesses of the earth, and con-|(he din of modern dance music. sequently he dag shunned the pack| And then over on {at ail times within the earliest know.| the “Charleston knee® is l]""K" of the western white pionesr ment occupying the attention of D b s RN VR L The IZastern tourist who cxpected | : 3 vefts trom other denomindtions or|(o combine Western atmosphere witn!| Numbers of Do sIOW /EOILE “from the world” ta keep up their|the wonderland of nature, was dis-|about with bandaged knees because | | membership, But they. offered the ! appointed during the summer if he|of lisan rined doing the 'umveu Httie Heyond: a dife of pes xpected to see any redskins rk ! dance for periods when un-| | and quiét,” Wien a4 man and his|officials recorded only ix e intricate and un-! | wite joiried the ‘wect, all thelr ma-|visitors for the scason wae terlal possessions passed into the Entered Park at Sacrifice oo nds of the chureh, and the con- During the early days of expl 1 CHANGES DRINKS jugal ties were abolished in the West, the white man encor A Lives Almost Monastic Jtered a complete lack of knowled DOORN. Jan The former | Shakers made their life almostjof the park among the India L e T :nmnamlv in color. Like monks and| Three tribes the hoshone: theil oa s 3 patronized a famous nuns they toiled for their church,|Crows and the Blackfeet lived on | prand champagne, is now drink i;,:\ve succor to the needy, and main-|every side of the park, according to| in the interest of econ | tained the relationship of brothers|their legendary history, but avoided | ists that his staff do 8o | and sisters. The “pooling” of landsentering the geyser region, When | - 4 2 iand all resources in the hands of|Indians went with the white explor | ST LS | the church made it a communistic!ers or military forces throuzh the| FINDS MUSIC JOINING | enterprise. Ipark, they offered up sacrifices be-| LIST OF GAINFUL TRADES | There was little intellectual life,jfore entering the sgeyser | and education was not encouraged|usually thro the “calu f | CINCINNATI, O., Jan. ¥ Music |‘\|1|H| the later years of the church.)peace,” the | pipe | has taken its place in the category | The Shakers bélieved that Adam and) The Yellowstone gey ¢ of useful trad bolicves Miss Ber- Iive were the physical progenitors of | definitely associated by S| tha Baur, director of the Cincinnati man, but that man's spiritual nature | with their idea of hell, accordin Conservalory sprang from the mythical union oflthe legends of the Wyomi | Bneh ves she said, men in in | Jesus and Ann Lee. Montana tribes. The rumble ! ing numbers are taking up mu- ! But the church and communistic|the earth that herald the g 2 means of livlihood. Strides colonies founded on these beliefs|oruptions, the redskin 1 rded as! iy the popularity ;,, music since the and practices did not prosper. There|the forging of warlike weapons by Victorian era. when men musicians were desortions; schisms broke out.|the spirite and cach eruption be-! oo Tonl: ke i WG Ger e Within comparatively few years the{gpoke a victory or defeal of onelpipe pLuve been rapid but the | membership in Ohio dropped from|pand of spirits ady o s come in the more than a thousand to the one{ A living Sho chioftaint Sofl B SnEanE or 80, il Gaid ilone Shaker still in Lebanon, and{more than 80 ye und A ToURI of s Aludt eI racds the total membership in all the colo-|the opinion whund Hlioe] inetii W o wes in America fgom miore than|geysers & R HIRGIMEBHE 1o 6,000 to lpss than half a thousand. - SRR are: men, aatorlingsioptiy e i CHARLESTON KNEE AND R L that U. S MAY HEAR OPERA! JALZAIRRAT NEW SULES) an important part of our FROM_:C!!. 8Y: RADIO LONDON, “an. 1—Mony hablunt \r 24 ,Imv .'v'vmx I}r has s]ln'mu.l 1.I.| dinets in public places in the West oM the church and the drawing | { SR "““é i "“{;"‘fi.":““s Te | pnd are suffering from an atteck of 'O T siding in ll::e.-bi‘:r?n |:l-t:|‘| ":“M “jazz throat™, and :»@ © s0 badiy | Ola pxpers ror saie s The Empire juay koeonl on the performances’ of thé Paris Ope- (ra, Comedie- Francaise dr other cn- | tertafnment. el 3 | .The association .ofs French Wire- | less Manufacturers will erect al { broudcasting station of 60,000 watis| | capacity. Following closely the lines lof the British station at Daventry, it will be situated away from Paris in order to avoid intereference with| i wireless communications. e IRISH FOX HUNTING IS POPULAR DESPITE CHANGE the epilogue remains to be told ‘of !lu- mlhou»mv or the story of the Shakers, once pow- erful religious sect. Less than a half century ago the Shakers owned and farmed thou- sands of acres of the best lands. 'in Ohio, as well as. rich’ tracts in the eust. Today, all their Ohio "lands are in the hands of others, and the; to Shakers have gone. The few colo- nies remaining in the East, at East Canterbury, N. H., Pittsfield, Mass., ond \West Albany, and Mount Leba- non ting hundreds. region Founded 150 Years Ago . | pious and honest. More . than a century‘and a-half ‘marriage and 480, Lee" ind established the first tshakers in New York State. Meachan, min 8. Youhgs, new faith, came over the Aleghenie: Lebanon, Ohio, where they wilderness. Despite opposition, grew and became the new wealthy. see depended upon Molln'r Ann | (came .to America from England, colony of Nearly | a_century and ‘a quarter agg Johnl Issachar Bates and Benja- missionarfes of the sot |memhbérs . of up the bamner of the Shakers in the et {county The number but a few dwind- Shakers bought the best land in the 4 They were sober, industrious, They abolished con- | DUBLIN, Jan. 7.—Fox hunting in |Ireland has been unaffected by the change in Irvish government. 1 The transfer of the /Jand to the lownership of the farmers has not interfered with the sport, and: the g [relations between the people®and the the hunts *which use' lands is more cordial than landlordism existed. has " its -hunt elub, and the! office: of -Master:. of Foxhounds is | much: coveted: their while w -—-—m__‘. Let Almquist ¥ gas your Suit. W call and deliver Phone 538, adv.| T | ‘mth a stu !Ladd Rockwell prflcnted to a state commission the claims of his neighboring city of |Kent as the site of a proposed !ulte normal college. His argument THE DAlLY ALASKA I:VIPIRE FRIDAY JAN. 7,:1926. , WOMMW Sixteen years a {won. Now, be the Inrgest of of Ravenna, the college, |opened in 1913 and has grown to ent body of 2,500, is to Judge David Ladd Rockwell. go, Judge David O., | library in_his honor, Judge Rockwell, campaign of 1924, name its new quarter-million dollar who was cam- &'ugr manager for William Gibbs cAdoo in the presidential primary is chairman of board of trustees of the college. which was its kind in Chio and probate judze when INDIANS SHUN GEYSER AS SIGN OF 24, SI’IRITQ He formerlv lived in Kent. While there he established two records by being elected mayor when cnly 21 Each '} SATURD/Y NIGHT - Hot Stuff GEE! GET HOT, THERE BOW! JUST WAIT 'TILL YOU HEAR “THE ALASKANS” STRUT THEIR STUFF HOT JAZZ A. B. HALL | —— r—-—— See our window display of BASSINETTES BABY CARRIAGES SULKIES HIGH CHAIRS BABY WALKERS BABY CRIBS Juneau-Young Hardware Co. It it’s Hardware “WE HAVE IT” Juneau Lumber Mills, Inc. VERTICAL GRAIN HEMLOCK FLOORIN VERTICAL GRAIN SPRUCE BOAT LUMBER LUMBER—MOULDINGS—LIME-—CEMENT FIRE CLAY--SHINGLE SEE US FOR YOUR---- Loose Leaf Supplies Office Supplies Printing and Stationery GEO. M. SIMPKINS CO. Front Street Phone 244 Juneaun, Alaska ALASKAN HOTEL MODERN REASONABLE RATES Dave HouskL, rrop. = A THE ALASKA RAILROAD throughout the year operates reguixr passenger and freight train service from Seward on the Coast to Fairbanks in the Interior, and over the Chickaloon and Chatanika branches. During the winter months there are two passenger trains each way, weekly, betweer Seward and Fairbanks. For timetables and other in- formation inquire of any steamship or raflroad agent, or write Dept. of the Interior ! THE ALASKA RAILROAD (Mt. McKinley Park Route) 4Aachorage Y = Bt Alaska | SPECIAL SALE OF SHOES Continued until stock exhausted entirely Closing out old stock at popular pfiul, to make room for new stock FLORSHEIM, Regular $12.00, Now .. -+ ....$7.00 €PECIAL SALE OF “BLAZER” SHIRTS—10 PER CENT OFF MIKE AVIAON LOWER FRONT STREET “NORTHERN HOTEL ROOMS—50 cents per night and up; $3.00 per week and up. Pablic shower and tub baths 50 cents. Ray Oil Burner in opera- tion—Hot water day and night. up—steam heated. Rooms $12.00 per month and CONFECTIONS ’Y ° Candies, Ice Creams, Sherbets, Punch. Made In Juneau, Alaska. Elmer H. Smith Factory, Phone No. 16. Candy SWEET—FRESE Maker, T. E. Hall, Phone No. 537. e Handy Andy’s Carpenter Shop A. P. LAGERGREN, Proprietor PHONE 498 BAND-SAWING, WOOD-TURNING, CABINET AND ALL XINDS OF W00D WORK -3 = e S e S Eat, Sleep and Be Happy AT THE GASTINEAU “Alaska’s Ldrgest Privately-Owned Hotel"” FRYE’S “DELICIOUS” HAMS AND BACON ] “EVERYTHING THE NAME IMPLIES” ! v HENRY BAMAN, Manager FRYE - BRUHN 00, “wasiis= | Phone 38 Resideios Phome 029 1 Old Papers for sale at The Empire Office ; 4 i 1

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