The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, February 16, 1928, Page 2

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

St F oy THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, THURSDAY, FEB. 16, 1928. Active Feet Keep Step With Style in Twi-Tone Heels A graceful blending effect that marks a new trend in smart hosiery fashion.¥ Not t;ip:cololrs'.' But tv\’}o: shades of the same color.! No."724 with Twi-Tone Heels is an all silk chiffon”weight_hose ~ pure_silk to the Very topand full-fashioned, of course! See it today — Ask for it by name or number., $1.95 OUR SPECIAL DOLLAR DAY VALUES CONTINUES TODAY AND TOMORROW PHOENIX HOSIERY [)YS’ BIB OVERALLS Good" quality for after school wear Special at $1.00 Pair and GINGHAMS for this week 25 cents yard REGULAR 65¢ WHITE TURKISH TOWELS 22x40 Special—2 for §1.00 REGULAR 35¢ PERCALEg * WOOL MIXED HEAVY S0X For pacs and boots—a real bargain ‘ 5 Pair for $1.00 DRESSES, ROMPERS and SUITS Girls’ Cotton Dresses in Ginghams and Percales,- with and without Bloomers. Sizes 3 to 15 years. $2.00 VALUES FOR $1.00 BABIES’ COTTON ROMPERS in varied colored prints. Ages 1 to 3 years. Reg. $1.50 NOW $1.00 BOYS® SUITS in Broadcloth and Linen. Ages 4 to 8 years. Rez. $1.75. SALE PRICE $1.00 B. M. Behrends Co., Inc. Juneau’s Leading Department Store Roads, and M. | — IN EAST TEXAS . | WOODLAKE, Texas, A woman the expene tensive agriculture in eastern | 3 { of the Titt a comfor | The source of livin to the mode of livi But raising of poultry, garden dairy products is done on a : tific and busine sis, there be-| g systematie ¢ C eiter for purebred animals. the food consumed by, tomatoes, sorghuimn and cotton vide the income for NEW URLIEL\NS La Tihe mod- huying manufactured articles, ern woman fits as aptly into the| Mrs. Thompson believ: that ¥ business office as she does the | the ; i P drawing room, believes Mrs. 0. ield of opportunity.” H. Simpson, wife of Louislana’ governor, who has been too busy fo move to Haion Rouge (0 on| peee "y s the most desirable block out the timber areas which to constitute the source of | pulpwood supply for the proposed /pulp and paper plants in south- X es us {eastern Alaska, left last night on | teT iduality has|ine Margnita to make the rouni more chal'rip to Sitka amd return. Mr. Meldrum i making the trip in order to observe the snow c | ditions on the mountains and hi' sides in this district with the view for beginning the timber survey. ; place to live, thanks to the auto- are _eupy the execcuiive mansion. ,mobile, which links us with the * A business woman for 1§ years | city 1l also thanks to clectric Mrs. Simys & homestead ussocia with her job hore w * band became governor % occasional visits 1o ¥ [ J S but ‘even mnow, while Goverier! - aflmuun is engaged in a campai.n| PARISIAN CREATICNS v/;or’;eelectlllc]m. she doubts if her{ FOR WORKING WOMEN usiness will permit her to move. ik vhic BRURA A fusbacd be rebarusd|fo b Fashion houses whici _to the capitol, { “Buginess Dbroadens a woman s ciety fnow are designing clothes {'wviewpoint and makes her more for business women as well, adaptable to the exigencies of| Models lite,” she says. to be a of my family such titl retary of a. power, which than e nature.” formerly catered exclusively to an nated exclusively by as “Indolence,” “Ma- downtown with my husband.{Morning in the Woods." | Women are working now be- | occasional brisk name like “At work.” i nesslike” creeps into the list. T—————— “and deliver. Phone 528 ' . Press . Your, Buit. Eugene Permanent Waves, $15,| D, ,of a number of Foreit O on-Chandler interosts cstablishment of pulp and paper | plants in southeastern Alaska. —_——eete ——— small farm Is “a neglected | who is engaged in Alaska by the Camieron-Chandler interests and | On his rel i pects to go to Seattle to engage |idle aristocracy or moneyed no-‘urews for the summer work, plan- {ning to be here next month. Tt 1 is understood he will also emp' ashion showings used |local labor, - Nats g 0 WOMEN ‘OF MOOSEHEART horrified when I began work-| dame Receives,” “Frivolity” or “A|Legion will meet at 8 o'clock to- Now aa night, | tend. »“ have fallen in loye My Desk, “Secretary” or “Busi-| women only, ———— —ady. ——e——— American Beauty Parlor, —ady ]OM papers foF 8Ala 8t The Empire. e Loy WOMAN'S SMALLI S0k 0rms . ISCHOOL PLAY - SZazer. FARM IS MODEL .= » »u | State, district’ en- : U. 8. Bureau of . Merritt and B. Ifmin, assistant district with t ‘Il be the guests of hen Iunih on meeting of the 1imbe: of Commerce to- Tex " ( “lact comedy recently chosen as Four Pines, the Ti-acro form of | bo L1 the annual play to be presented i Idra. J. Lowl 1 13 g fTOM. the ttiles. by the students of the Parochla! ! E040) ot the new. idea.in farmiug | ;o117 Wil Has Doen In Trash | School, will be presented at 8:30 | bavitere . extensi ur : | ing D, cengaged in official| g'clock this evening in the Parish f ires . extensive agric D88 husines: o the Bureau. Mr. Mer-| gal. : vhile in the states took care|l The story 18 woven around | Judy, played by Mary Claire Hei- ‘| lenthal, and Jervis Pendleton, or ed w &l D LT a1 has boe 0 and Eeatlle d with offi “Daddy Long Leg: ent, Jervis = Pendleton, Meldrum, forest engineer, Walters, = Butler, Mamie, Orphan, Robert Tu cal entertalnment. All members urged to at- ES GRIGG, ' Secretary, hostess. M of of to dent in this design. ODIES m% OMEeNT | ming of a graceful after- noon dress from Doucet Paris. The color is < mauve and there is a large rose design in the heavy silk lace. A scarf romain has ends ‘of lace and a lace drapery trails at the left side of the skirt falling below the hem. The tendenc wider sleeves is evi- ARCHITECTURAL ART today is ornamenting her costume with gem-pictures of famou buildings, well known landscape scenes and sundry architect: triumphs, where diamond and en erald studded brooches or barpins used to be. a shipment of diamond-outlined Japanese temples, formal designs of sacred places of worship in the Orient. A long, oblong siab fane, and smaller round ani square cut ones mount in the de- sign to a luminous peak of ih: arch. In the lot on display in an ex- clusive Fifth avenue shop is a sign that has caused constern: tion among the salespersons. Guesses on its identity have va- Church of Notre Dame. But ai least it is a building carried out in jewels. Landscapes of extreme width and length are reported to have found great favor among the London ladies, and now a simple black frock is seldom seen unless it has a pin two inches by three inches depicting a pastoral scenc upon its front expanse. A little house with diamond walls, coral roof, a diamond pali sade, jade shade trees and ai onyx background is a popular model. Others are more rural scenes, with dots of topaz indi- cating the contented herd lowing in the distance: — e WOMAii SPEAKS 1N ENGLISH MOSQUE WOKING, England—Miss Caro! Ringer, a theosophist lecturer fis the first English woman to speak in a Moslem place of worship. Sho addressed a gathering of men and women of both races at the mos- que at Woking. ON TONIGHT with the U. 8. Forest|Parochial Students Will Present Annual Produc- tion in Parish Hall “Daddy Long Legs,” the four by Lloyd Ritter. Rehearsals un- der the direction of Sister Mary A Stella have been held for several o Zcllerbach Paper Company | weeks. Tickets, which have been ittt ad | with reference to the proposcd fon gale for the past few days, arc selling well, and indications are that ‘a good number will be pres || Following is the cast of charac- is produced on “*MELDRU" MAKING tara: ROUND TRIP SITKA Daddy Long- Legs, Lloyd Ritter; Bride, a Yale Student, Forrest:. Cyrus Wykoff, a Trustec, John Hellenthal; Abner Parsons, “A community of small farms,”!the Zellerbach Paper Company, t»|® ‘Trustee, Edwnrd‘k':zoden oTE; Griggs, Secretary, Edward, berg; Judy, Mary Claire - b thal; Miss Pritchard, Mabel Rit- || Mrs. Pendleton, kins; Julia, her daughter, Mar- {garet Monagle; Sallie McBrids, Mary Edith Glovanett{; Mrs. Set ple, Maxine 'Lund; Mrs. Li Marton, Lucile Norton; Kate, Orphan, Lucile Lynch; | fola, Orphan, Barbara Sim| to Juneau he ex- Loretta, Orphan, Ad"n‘“(l}lov leest; Carrie, Orphan, 1 Forrest; Freddie Perkins, Orphan r _and Carrie, Leest. | _‘ 1 | Between acts there will —————— Social afterwards for the|wil meet Friday, Feb. 17, the home of Mrs. W. L. Co Mrs. H. ‘Andre Wil e at ] The congregation consisted of five white men, 14 white women and eight native Moslem men, in- cluding the grave, black-bearded keeper of the mosque who intro- duced her after intoning a few verses of the Koran. Miss Ringer, small and gray haired, lectured on the subject of the religions of Christ and Mc- hammed from the point of view of the theosophist. DIPLOMAT’'S WIFE A WELFARE WORKER THE HAGUE—The wife of the Netherlands foreign minister Van Karnebeek is more profoundly in- terested in domestic communal af- fairs than she is in foreign poli- tics, although she accompanied her husband when he attended thc PARISH HALL ADMISSION GOLD 3 Ib. canm..... 51b. can. ... of flaver’ carefully retained. EE%and pe kgo":g‘g.fu IN GEMS FOR DRESS ORNAMENTS NEW YORK—The woman of London has sent to New York| of diamond forms the pillar of the| ried from Grant's Tomb to the £47 REPRODUCED | | SEES 8O MANY SAIL ! | SHE PLANS VOYAGE ' I I | | NEW YORK, Feb. 16—Miss l! Esther Johnson, passenger | | transport clerk for the United | States army, receives or sees | | off an average of 500 to- 600 | | persons a month on the army ! transports, yet she has never ; | gone on a sea voyage. i | ‘“Sometime I am going on | | one, though,” she declares. “T | am going to take the two- | | month trip to Honolulu, stop- | ping at San Francisco, and | see just what this thing is all | about.” | | L3 — naval conference in Washington, D. C. Mrs. Van Karnebeek, who be- fore her marriage was the Baro- ness Van Wassenaer Van Rosand> takes an active part in welfarc work done for {llegitimate chil- dren. Children abandoned by either rich or poor parents, ‘she believes, should be carefully rear- ed by society and there should be no social stigma attached to them. She herself has four children and is considered the perfect type of Dutch mother. BRITISH ROYAL LADY WRITES TRAVEL BOOK LONDON—Princess Marie Lou- ise, who despite her relationship to the royal family—she is a cousin of King George and grand- daughter of Queen Victoria—trav- els about democratically in for eign hotels. When in England, she sometimes lives at a Dover Street club. Princess Marie Louise is now writing a travel book about Cor- sica to succeed her volume about her travels on the African gold coast. The Princess is president of the Forum Club. Perfectly blended, ground fust'tight GIRL ANIMAL TAMER FEARS OFFICE LIFE FRENCH LICK, Ind.—There isn’t any stenographer with whom Ione Carl would trade jobs, she says, but then there probably isn't any stenographer who would trade jobs with Ione. For this 115 pound girl is ea animal trainer with a circus wia- tering here. Frolicking with lions tigers and leopards has none of the terror for her which she says she would feel if someone sentenc- ed her to a dozen years of mo- notonous office work. ———————— Finger Waving a speclalty at the Fern Beauty Parlors. —adv. FEB. 16 ~TONIGHT—~ DADDY LONG-_LEGS The Juneau Parochial MUSICAL ENTERTAINMEN BETWEEN ACTs | A BEVERAGE WORTHY ey , l“"rigulat‘ 7 'redfiil Pelco BIRD CAGES " BRASS AND WHITE ENAMEL CANARY CAGES In both round and square styles See Solid Brass Round Cage Stands JUNEAU-YOUNG HARDWARE CO. Hardware and Undertaking Sunny-Suds Washer By . $150.c &5id ¢ TRY IT oUT THEN JUDGE FOR YOURSELF The Sunny-Suds or the old style . Killer Wash Board A Clothes Dryer FREE with each Washer—V alue $16.50 Alaska Electric Light & Poiver_Co. Phone 12 USE IT FREE FOR ONE WASH DAY Phone 6 lunnn; Aluh SUN BEA’A; AND iy ¢ g SUNNY SUES , LITCSSES Just vlieceibed-; Both Tight and dark tones floral patterns, small checks, ' fanéy plaids and’ plain radicux Or- gandie trimé, tailored and round collars, , Sizes 16 to 44. Ve W) | 0 Rk, 100 $2.50.t0 $4.95 Just Added to Our Line— SEALPAX UNDERWEAR for Little Sister and Brother PHONE 101 - W. P. JOHNSON i P. O. Box 183

Other pages from this issue: