The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, February 22, 1927, Page 2

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(S8 IHE DAILY ALASKA EMPIR 00 AND CHILDREN’S LLINERY T LADIES FROM 86.00 TO $12.00 Fashion’s Laiest Introduction--- ‘THE HAORI €OAT” Wade of the famows lapanese Kinsha Crepe. The outer in Dlack. wi'le W hite Crests on Sleeves and Back. reverse awear) of /:.'.w inating patterns and colorings. Japan. the Linin From sectioi with of Lgarment the B. M. Behmnds Co., lnc Juneaw's Leading Department Store (for bttt Candy Eating Workers Called Steadier and More Dependable is a division of educational res headed by Philip A. Boyer. It 15t completed @ survey of the L metic course and found that, as Mi Boyer words it, “a lesson which con cerns the measurements of a dre on which a givl is working, the surements the ingredients or some‘hing else concret familiar, I < the monoto which deal. ext book fignie unfamiliar situations.” TESTIMUNY OF SHIRMEYER 1S ALL PRESENTED' :Gevernment Wllness in Mail Robbery Case at Fair- banks, Is Excused. FAIRBANKS, A Leaving the wiine days' griiling cros s of in atter (wo Wil examination, d - with b “The in a (mm niail vits ]m y sed provions ol ool en '1Il)l| ation only a neies developed mted o nervousness. Barlier 1 s told by the govern nwent's witncss showed that taleum vwder and tobacco cans were usod » conceal the currency stolen and I these cans were taped over at the itop. Shirmeyer used a flashlight, {with one cell removed, for the cu |rency he used daily during his to the States. SWEET 5 WorKs CHICAGO—1If your stenogra- pher insists on eating bonbons be- | tween rounds on the typewriter, ‘don't reprimand ber. She s | simply making herself more nt' ! ent, according to Harry R. representative of A Confectioners’ Association. | address here. | “Tests of office emplcyes factory workers proved that ing candy increased the tei productivity to a marked deg: said Mr. Wilson. “Candy ea workers, it was found. were like- 1y to be steadier and more depend- among bus s people to keep candy in thewr desks. When tuey feel efficiency lagging a piece of candy freshens the brain. Exer- tion of any kind depletes the sup- plv of sugar in the blood. Candy will replace it. “Mental fatigue is usually a sign that the human system is run- virg low. Candy supplies the nec- ary energ: to stimulate the v. This is not an artificial -nul:mun. sincc cundy is a whole- i ther elements high in vita- ent. including eggs. but- CITY ELEGTION ble. “Thara {8 a growing tendency -— —_— - S | . o to unburden itself to why it has' CHICAGO,. Feb, 22.—NuMerous ar- Lymg Cluldren toid a falsehood r vation is ts all for minor outbreaks of HIVC a Champlon th commonesi v Dr. Hntehin- | Violence, contiscations of 12 pistols at Bedford College for wom- |[and marked ear cn said d firing guns, addresses, voting in the Chicago City Electi LONDON, Feb. 22 —Fibbiug chil >ee |today. Three of 10 men were mid- dren .-_lmuhl not be “despised, Says | pun ADELPHIA SCHOOLS unn-d and one was heaten with fists Dr. Alice Hutchinson, because when HAVE STUDY “VOLTMETER" DY three men but there have been no a child tells a lie it has a reason threats of gun play. One gunms for so doing | PHILADELPHIA, Feb. 22—Public|picked up near a polling place w “Instead of tnrning away askance school efficiency is now tested in{lete Fierito, wanted for a murder when @ child fibs let us rather find | Philadelphia as a radio battery| It is reported all ballots have -t @ promnt the action, and|is teste dwith voltmete been stolen from one polling place. :ad the ¢! 1 we can frequently Ud ] The voltmeter of the public schoocis IR o N\ SEVE Y-FIVE NEW SPRING HATS to o\ \ choese from: beauty stamps them all! Hieh erowns. tucked. folded and draped 1 \, / e narrow brime or brimless turbans with ral front. The shapes are alluring nd \mong the many are satin trave combinations, taffeta and all (l /] iin well as the ever popular felt— 141 ‘ . 3 i 1] in all shiades for Spring wear. | | = CHILDREN'S HATS PRICED FROM $2.00 TO E Iflll!llllllllmllmII!HIlIlillllIlllllllllllllmlllllllIIIlllllI!IIIIHIIIIIH!IHH hus arith- | L, TUESDAY, BEB. 22, 1927, In the News of the Day» { PRINCE LOUIS DE BOURBON GANNA WALSKA t Nagler, twelve, rince I,nlm l)« Bourbo ments for the visit of ¢ singer, and Harold F. lllnl‘lllL husl The up chess | | { mm“ ne e Mantin, hits ].lh nt | players fou 1"1”;\\ Nicid P ‘In ich fath | reference b of a centur NI i charch i . y raine, fs crediteg with un y the fact so lonz known | The new family tree, constructed from the town records, shows —as do encyclopacdias —that Chopin's | father, Nicolus, was born in ¥ went to Poland, where ha mur ied and where the composer wa horn 1for i} tory of the ad ims to cuiine ha i oof news pape apenily recalling in spent most of his ! 4 died; W ™ and that h French parentas. is undisputed The Bigo the work primitive instrament phonis ment to the lo ‘nml the delesatos returned 1o their country homes with “wellexorcized |lungs and new enthusiasm The Bigopho: is claimed as French, but it also is said to be the same sort of air as were the trampets that hiow down the walls of Jericho. The Bigophone iy the log tion of the American child's with a piece of paper folded over it it is a sort of cardboard megaphor.e that s a4 nasal twang to; and magnifies, the air hummed into the small end is of all shapes, from 1 pocket-s to the dimensions ol a bass horn, several feet long. It i molded in t image of snails, fish, corncopies, < vthing else. Bi m eties have existed in France for arations. They:meet regtinly i tit and con- (l th o them- selves oot ric drill |h(-'m-’ selves inty gocd tune-makers and | get as a member, one musician with From hmnn Having Hai T:mv' l old HAROLD F MCORMICK entered the University of Wisconsin, rrived in New York to make ar- German prince. ( McCormick, nd, denied that they were 1o s¢ parate, inna Wals her harvester mils i F: 3 oiv the locai officers that the MORRIS CONSTRUCTION €O, ALL KINDS OF CABINET 1L WORK Plaze and Window GLASS MORRIS " TRUCTION CO. BUILDING CONT:ACTORS 1 ( All avallable officers are on duty.|a regular horn, preferably a trom- ’L ’I D — HEYWOOD-WAKEFIELD BABY CARRIACGES Sell Wicker ( for $27.00 DROP IN AND ASK TO SEE B We Can Now arriages EFORE BUYING ELSEWHERE Juneau-Young Hardware Co. It Tts Hardware “We Have It” Y 15 MILLION FEET Of Good Saw Logs Wanted JUNEAU LUMBER MILLS SEE US FOR YOUR---- Loose Leaf Supplics Office Supplies Printing and Stationery GEQ. M. SIMPKINS CO. Front Street Phone 244 Juneau, Alaska — PS— ALASKAN HOTEL MODERN REASONABLE RATES Dave HouseL., prop. RHODES ;i b v A CAFE FORMERLY CGASTINEAU CAFE Gastineau Hotel Building B. H. “DUSTY"” RHODES, Proprietor JUNEAU'S NEWEST AND MOST THOROUGHLY EQUIPPED CAFE TLECTRIC STEAK BROILERS Private Boxes Bootls Open from 6 a. m. to Lunch Counter Z a. m < A, THE ALASKA RAILROAD throughout the year operates regutar pascenger and freight traln service from Seward on the Coast to Falrbanks In the Interior, and over the Chickaloon and Chatanika branches. During ihe winter months there are two passenger trains each way, weekly, between Seward and Fairbanks. For timetables -and other in- formation inquire of any steamship or railroad agent, or write Dept. of the Interior 1 Alaska ' THE ALASKA RAILROAD (Mt. McKinley Park Route) Anchorage THE HOME OF AMOCAT BRAND None better than the Amocat Brand—Every Can guaranfeed. You get the BEST for LESS—GET OUR PRICES GEORGE BROTHERS Phones 92 ax 95 Open Evenings 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. Rooms $12.00 per month and up—steam heated. CONFECTIONS Candles, Ice Creams, Sherbets, Punch. Made in Juneau, Alaska. Elmer . Smith Factory, Phone No. 18. C Maker, T. B. Hall, Phone No. One of Life’s Biggest Necessities—REST INVEST IN REST—at THE GASTINEAU “Alas| Largest Privately-Owned Hotel” ol Papers for sale at The Empire Office

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