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LADIES’ LEAGUE TO HOLD BAZAAR NOVEMBER 18 Friday, the eighteenth of next| month, is the date set by the| dadles’ Loage for their annual, bazasr, It is planned by the ladies to have the bazaar in the Eagles hall again, and manay Interesting ~ features ‘are bemg arranged for “the aftair. { P et e P Adk 1 “ON STROKE OF THREE" | | AT LIBERTY TONIGHT | [ OGS 1LV R “'Bullt on a stery of more th-fi wordinery appeal, ‘brilliantly direct: ed by ¥F. Harmon Wright, and onacted by a cast of splendid talent, the first Associated Arts production éntitled “On the Stroke """t Three” is one of the best pic:| "7 "tures which Hollywood has turn- ed out in recent months. It will add’ materially to the prestige of the F.B.O studios where it was - produced, and will garner new laurels for Madge Bellamy, Mary Carr and Kenneth Harlan, who are the featured players. ' ‘Th2 waaytstory, which. deals with the homs- Iy life of the simple mountain folk in Ashuluna Valley, as well , B8 the social whirl ot New York's ,oWealthiest set, is an adaptation of 'the novel, “The Man from Mh:' “‘Yuna,” by Henry Payson Dowst. Tn the cast of suppqrting players are KEddie Phillips, John Miljan, ‘Dorothly Dshm, Robert Dudley and Bdward Davis. “On the Stroke of Three” will be at the le-rty tonight, - WISS FALLDINE " MAKES REPORT OF INSPECTION Juneau Public and ‘Paro- ... chial Schools, and Douglas Inspected "Miss Marle Faildime, Red Cross “Nurse attached t6 the Juneau| 5 «Chapter of the American Red fllou. has just completed in- apected in the Public and Paro- #nis1ghial Schools of the city and also ‘ot Douglas, with the following “ pesul ¢ Juneau' Public Schools Number -of pupils inspected. 486; number:of pupils inspected for first time, 104; number of! pils showing no symptoms of lects, 74 (new pupils, 15 not "~ defective); mumber of pupils hav- ing had corrections defects since previous inspection, 111. :‘Symptoms . of defects ' as fol- lows: vision, 116; eyes, 23; ears, teeth, 273; nose, 91; throat, H ds, 126; skin, 14; ; posture, 59; under- “weight, (10 per cent or more) » 2a1'88; overweight, (20 per cent or # v4more) 19; and symptoms of goi- the. 24. : .1 opecCorrections, since previous in- % &:tm: vision, 22; eyes, I;I , 10; teeth, 38; nose, 15;| skin, 4; heart, 11 posture. 11; under- and thyroid (goi- * ! | Judson: Whittier, fred Oberg, Keith Petrich, Lawr- ence Perjue, Alberta Porter, An- ita Porter, Leighton Strauss, Al- bert Swanson, Lorraine Smith, Walter Scott, Tommie Stewart, Elizabeth Stewart, Michael Sa- loum, Jean:Taylor, Lewis Taylor, Helen Torkelson, Louise Tanner, Helen Woods, Robert Waggoner, James Whits man, Barbara Winn, Dean Whit- iams, Willlam Whitman and Peter ‘Warner. Parochial School Number of. pupils inspected, 60; number of pupils defective, $3; mumber of new pupils in- spected for first time, 8 (7 de- fectives) ; number of pupils show- ing no symptoms of defects, 7; and number of pupils having had corrections since previous inspec- tion, 13. Symptoms of defects as fol- lows: 10 per cent underweight, 7; 20 per cent overwsight, 3; vision, 25; eyes, 1; ears, 2; teeth, '41; nose, 19; throat, 22; skin, = 2; heart, 2; glands, (lymph) 20; thyroid gland, 3; nervons symptoms, 5. Corrections since previous in- spection in March, 1927: under- weight, 4; 'vision, 2; teeth, 6; nose, 1; throat, 2; glands, 2; and 2 partial corrections of teeth. Pupils showing no symptoms of defects: Ben Mullen, Wallen Forrest, Leonard Forrest, Mary Vander. lseest, Mary -Hellenthal, Lloyd Ritter and ‘Harley Turner. Dcuglas Public School Number of pupils ' inspected, 123; number of pupils showing symptoms of defects, 118; num- ber of pupils showing no symp- toms, §; and number of pupils having had corrections since pre- vious inspection, 27. Defects as follows: (20 per cent), 8; (10 per cent), 24; thyroid, 33; vision, 43; eyes, 6; ears, 12; teeth (defective), 78; nose (breat- ing) 48; throat, 62; skin, 2; heart, 4; glands, 34; postre, 33; and nervous symptoms, 17. Corrections as follow: hear- ing, 8; visiom, 5; teeth, 11; nose, 2; throat, 2; glands (lymph), 1; thyroid, 1; and posture, 2. Pupils showing no symptoms of defec! Ross Fox, Bernice Ed- wards, Harry Lundell, Helen Pus- ich and Grace Pusich. 22 First Step, Kodiak Cold Storage, Taken SEWARD, Alaska, Oct. 4.— Construction of a dam for the W. J. Erskine cold storage plant at Kodiak has started. The cold storage plant will be the first in Overwelght underweight «xPupils showing no symptoms of defects: Ruth Allen, Billy Al- exander, Hazel Boyce, Jane Blom- itAgmen, Claude Baldwin, Hatriet| lgon, Alvin Blomquist, Inlc‘ inger, Julia Balley, Ann-n ~--Zpmpbell, Clarénce Dunn, scuv- ... Jee Dunn, Ruth Ferguson, —.=Dthy Glass, Renee Guerin, !ybu ~Godfrey, David Helsel, Stanley Meisel, George Hall, Robert Hur-| lay, Willi \H‘rrlmn, Agnes' m«, Jangtte Hildre, Hilding! und, Gordon ingman, Dor-| othy Jones, . Heeli . Jukich, Roy a , Arthur, Judson, Stella Muyriel Jarman, Xenia) ! ml. Virginis Kay, Ruth} . Lagergren, Earl e P e i Lnnon,l Larsen; Rimer Lindstrom, | Melvin westward Alaska. mn?numg!u % Legion u- , October I'I'.h. p 'L BEK‘I‘Y TONIGBT Oq the Stroke of Three We | A THRILLING MELODRAMA three favorites | , | g i fl.@?f% OFFICER of the DAY \ANMMG m OUT OONY 00 ANN GOOD = L GOTTA }\D FoR | SMPATHY (F TM EVER GONNA HE'S W OFF, CHEF = GARY, Ind, Oct. 14. - Steel built Gary, petual memorial to tho whose name is Mnked with the growth of the industry in Am- erica. Twenty-one years ago this fall Judge Elbert H. Gary, head of the mnewly organiznd States Steel Corporation, clamb- ered down a rudé ladder over the side of a sand dume and watched a group of ehginecrs stake a site for a new mill for the corpora- tion. He surveyed a scene of deso- late waste. On all sides was shifting sand, with the pinnacles of wind-blown dunes varying the flat expanse. white tents huddled in flapping ‘]E{:cu"“* ut the sorrowful landscape! faded before the eyes of the mau with the close-clipped mustache. He saw a new world center of stecl-making at this foot of Lake Michigan, with its avenue of water to the iron ore fields. He visioned the rise of a great city. Gary has a population.ef 100,- 000 today. The sloughs and the sand have disappeared and broad boulevards have bsen reared over them. ~And for seven miles along the lake fromt stretch the stacks and Gary is a per-! man United | A group of once: Eteel- City Is Gar;); Monumen;; Is Erected Among Sand Duneg‘ is being ‘' completed, thers will be a vacant dedicatory bangquet this honor of Judge Gary . The 'Gary “work-study play! plan of edacation was deyeloped there and used as a model for hundréds of other citics. The Methodist Church has ‘completed a $1,000,- 000 edlfice downtown. At the stance of Judge Gary, the steel corporation gave $500,000 to- wards the building. In a little uptown negro church a shaft in the vestibule is dedicated Judge Gary, who helped build it. The land for Gary's $3,000,000 civic center .and municipal gate- way along Lake Michigan was donated by the steel corporation, through Judge Gary's interests. A menument will be erected to h]m in the center of the project. include the teel plant in the world, a recently completed $20,- 1000,000 plant of the National I'Tube Company, and the world's largest sheet mill and tin mills. In 1906 the land could be had almost for the asking. The own- ers refused to pay taxes on it, de- claring it worthless. PRSI, I do all kinds of repair work and fall in MEING IS WEad E GOTTA STOP WiMm OR THE HUMANE SQCIETY wWiLL = BUST. N AND’ SHOCYT chair at thepsw Episcopal to, her husband, Arthur G. G Borodin Reaches Borodin, coungelor of the Chinese N of industry ' employing 25,000 men. In its civic, business and re- ligious life, Gary the city bears the impress of Gary the man.| Through the years of expansion of United States Steel, the latei industrial leader guided the growth of the fledgling city, help- ing * ' with counset’ and wlth] such a8 shingling, ' kalsomining, || carpenter, electrical, etc. Phone 2003, Henry Gorham. —adv. ————— Nut Breaas, Uaxes and Ples made to order by Ilrs. Sully.p -—l(.v,l For Those Who Are Losing Weight and Strength— money. A A great deal of the land with- in the city is owned by the in- dustry around which it is built, The United States Steel Corpora- tion opens subdivisions, sells the, land and supervises the “erection EMULSION | The Tonic Rich ln As steel has gfown Gary hn prospered. In 1920 tho city had a population of 50,000. At that time ‘a revolutiomary step waa taken in the steel industry—the' Pittsburgh plus plan was aband-| oned—and ' the industry forged| ahead in an unprecedented man- ner. Gary kept step, doubling its population in seven years. Where early residents once crossed a swamp over a crude foot-bridge, a $2,000,000 hotel FRIDAY, OCT. 14, 1927 TEMND LP SAME - HiM = TREN HE WL QUIT MIOMNING Mrs, Cardl Moore Geissler of New York (left), has gained support of her 15-year-old daughter in separation suit agains r, former phonograph exccutiv al Newsreni) V and Siberia by Plane|ca russian vy it plane, 14, - recently MOSCOW, Oct. Mi"l)‘»‘)‘ until t YOU SAVE M()NEY . In Buying Cement in Cloth the THE PULLENS ARE OX ., ANT THEY' T TG To SseRTAn AN AT L e O s Y e gtorm center of contrn has reach- Far Bast, soil in Sibe ceording to dispate ceived here, or sale at The Bmpire. R RS ID Cume The & Wéuest POLITEST senwce ;. NG OTRER WIND « ALASKA STEAM LAUNDRY Buy = COAL FIRE ALARM CALLS Third and Franklia. Front and Franklin. Front, near Ferry Way. Front, ovp. Film Exchange. Front, opp, City Wharf. Front, near Saw Mill 1 Wilougbby at Totem Gro. Witloughby, opp. Cole Barn. Front and’ Seward. Froot and Main. Second and Main, Fifth and Seward. Fire Hall. Gastinemu and Rawn Way, Second and Gold. Fourth and Harris. Fiftk and €old. Fifth and East. Seventh and Gold. Fifth and Kenneody. Ninth, back of power house Calhoun, opp. Juneau Apts. Distin Ave., and Indian St. Ninth and Calhoum, Seventh and Main. Twellth, at Northern L'dry. Twelfth and Willoughby. ‘ Home Grocery. Keep it With NANAIMO WEL- LINGTON COAL in your | All Winter i bin it is an casy mattor, to maintain a healt even temperature in you home at ell times. Nan-| aimo is prepardd in well screened lumps and the needs of the exacting coal buy- Fill your bin/ now. PACIFIC COAST COAL CO. Phone 418 | | | | | | | | t H meets most er. NIGHT R B T ¢. D. FERGUSON, Agent HA WKS - Sacks, “Less Breakage—Less Waste™ Buy Superior Portland Cement FROM Juneau Lumber Mills, Inc. ~—LUMBER FOR EVERY PURPOSE— Phone 368 —_——— b ELKS’ HALL Saturday Night | THE EMPIRE HAS THE LARG- | a— |EST, MOST ' UP-TO-DATE AND | BEST EQUIPPED JOB PRINTING {PLANT IN ALASKA. Advertising aiways pays. the columns of The Empire. ————— R e e PLUMBING HEATING IMPORTAN The most important thing for you is to get a FIRST CLASS Make no mistake, JOB done for as little money as possible. T! REPAIRING “Let me tell you what job will cost” Call STEVE STANWORTH Phone 215, Res. 505. | Certainteed Roofing Building Papers Tarred Felts Window Glass Shop rear Harris Hardware Co. e Lest You I'o‘rget! A little forethought now will save ycu the embarrassment you suffered last year. I8 TSI T [ § ?RDER YOUR - | Christmas Now from: the itany handsomé fines carricd inmm*andnmv"onflhphy _ OUR PRI %& 25 Cards for 92 n!ub SOCanilfor“.fl&“l. hesitate to' speculate— those who bought German Marks have money to burn : Work Your Money Too Most ‘men work their muscles and their Wren;. ¢ suscessful also make their money work for them. .'”. ? certificates of deposit rovide otherwise idle funds. 4 ;