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mart fabries i Navy and Red. Carnial and Sizes SPECIAL Black and colors, Delightfully New Dresses of Spring Smartness ilk Georgette. Colors—Black, Combination colors in Brown Blue and Tan, Rose Beige and Tan, Tan, Plack and Tan. 16 to 50 PRICED FOR QUICK at $13.50 each A few new Coats of early Spring models. Prices ranging to $29.75 each ALE Light Sizes 16-38. White. TO CH)YGSE FROM —— VALUES ¢ 150 NEW LADIES’ HATS i $3.00 TO $5.75 EACH k. SPF NG FOOTWEAR lasts and leathers in a complete variety of models es- Styles for' afternoon and all are included in these new 8.50 a pair : lecigned, for well dressed women. i : les for street and businss i Badong ,I i (), ‘ Priced $5.00 to 3 ’ { Through the great purchasing powe i we co 7 Wffer you larger i vithout saci ing quality or limiting quantity. lay the | future ODIES op 7‘/\ OME \’—ll\_ Redfern places four pointed flying panels on S this youthful evening W, dress of white moire. It ¥ has two erystal orn ments appended to i one just below the V neck with its narrow turnback collar and the other in the center of the shaped girdle. The dress is cut quite low in back. TWO FORCES . FIGHT FIRE blazed since loss already 000 in crude oil. The basin of water, don his a to the crate shot of nitroglycerin. With perfect synchronism Albert, 19, one of the %\0 #irens in the village Wisc., is ready to marry "ot good moral charactel inde pendence by confining B. M. Behrends Co., Inc. Juneau’s Leading Department Store IN BAS WELL' more than $24,000 worth of com- mercial gas daily and which has Januvary 19 with a of more than $500,-| will pe pumped fuilT. Then Thornton will|He stos suit and creep|marriage ceremonies during 1927, s edge with a large |which, and economical operating method savinzs on the things you must have, You can live well and your food glycerin and the with the Ti will snuff out water will cool the crater sufficient ‘speed to prevent spouting gas from again. The blaze has been four times previously, but only yfor a split second, as the fiory ,lwxll in the crater ignites the gas again immediately. Thornton | peered into the secthing depths several times and reports that the des are lined | with glass, the fierce hoat hay- | ing 1“\ d ot nd and carth into i3 has stopped tha well from enlarging ilsell. and hope has| been abandoned that it would choke oif wih falling de- bris t 1 is ubout 100 feet e wal hundred feet | wa'l Nt fire after ft| i 1 and startad a cra ; wi e'in ! ecl nipos g u | that igni 2d the wild i “one-r cirens, v the sk the blazo || catching | quznched | Stevens and 1i Hairdressers’ Assoc Lawrence, Betty Philadelphia NEW YORK—Every day men are trying their wings, essay wo- | ing flights into realms hitherto | dominated by man, with his | strong pinions and confident | sweep. literature and the pioneers found the wings strong. Muteel Howe ter of Ed How lisher and writer | author of a prize-winning fir novel, has a lot of faith in wo men novelists and points to th=> 1927 crop of young women writer Farnham, daugh- the Kansas pub. id herself the even thought that I was a woman novelist, I just considered my. among other novelists am was born in , Kansas, the scene of her mous father's journalistic s, Her childhood in t s small You couldn’t ask for a more char Timorously they tried the air of whose beooks have had warm re ception. | ‘It look: rather as though th women were running circl around the men for accomplish ment, doesn’t it?” suggested the | author with the clozely-cropped | head whose “Rebellion” won la $10,000 pr! last year, | “Ten years ago I would never have had the courage to submit anythin I wrote in competition with men. But last year I never ming quartet than (left to right, o len Weitort, winners in the mar:el ation in (unlwmmn l.ung may they f course) waving wa\'e' Gertrude Lusky, Ada contest held by the | | MATEEL H. FARNHAM western town left a vivid impres. sion of the ideas, thoughts standards of tl community folk l'and her first novel reflected it: | | “1 am convinced that no onol writes a real masterpiece until| aftor e is 40" sald Mrs. Fas Snknpy Reh»arml {as a can -y on. | Viewed {-om ten mile dis- {tance ac thy flat prairie at| Try this on your beach. Peggy night. th» of fire presents| Carthew of New York is doing some A coni eclo and . hepes. fancy steps on the beach piles at a 1 y Palm Beach. The dance is guara B { ne © leap fir ‘nto, teed to supply the dancer with forss {*he sky on to fall back const and grace. Iy changing shape as fantastic g ey and flecting designs are created. | 'Y | Colors rangs from blue to red | AT THE HOTELS and gray as tha qual of the| Gastineau gas changes, and ofiimes a billow| J- P- Morgan, city; F. A. Iver lof smoke rolls heavenward ns a|SOM, MeCarthy; M. Aparton, Sa- | quantity of crude oil is pushea|attle; R. W. Wiley, Seattle; Alvin] up. Nelson; Miss Mable Welsh, Cox- ! The adjacent area long has been ‘klumu f()r its gas pressure. In blew in nna:b\ duzhl ru‘e and burned for several | months Iwiore choking itself off. ——————.— | FIVE SCHOOL CHILDREN TAUGHT IN FOUR CLASSES separately and makes four classes. KEEPS WEDDING SECRET WEBB CITY, March 5.- H Justice Komans can keep a secret. ays that he performed 39 at the reguest of the 39 couples, he kept to himself. the D i — dovy H. | Meheérin, city; tle; Harriett B. Lee, Seattle; J. C. W. Cash, Sei Graham, A. Sutherland;, Chatham; Blenderson, Petersburg; L. Barton, city; | Douglas; Eli Radovich; Mr. CORFUS CHRISTI, Tex., March Mrs. John Borbridge; Jake Batoif.| § Thwarted in four efforts to Alaskan {snuff cut a blazing fire in the LOCHGATR, Scotland, March 5.| Mps, Harry Chambers, Benjamia } Saxet Company gas well near(—This 1ittle Highland village Island; Mike Korussas, Yakutat; bere. Tex Thornton, experienced |lims that the school here is|Mike Wall, Hawk Inle! oil end gas weli five fighter, wiil|attended by fewer pupils than Sing, Hawk Inlet; James Can try his in the hole” jany other in Secotland, if not in Tenakee. mer yeerin and a f |Great Britain, Zynda AR e S BRI 5 i There are only five names on| . B. Bohm, Sentinel Island; I B0 ‘nigh mdq ivo are, the register, but as the children | K. Stewart, city; D: H. Gillette, {is being built as clo ]m sible | ATe of different ages, the teacher|A, R. C.; Mr. and Mrs. W. E | to the Dblazer, which is consuming 1158 Veiteh, has to teach them|Willlams, Whitehorse; Androw | Adams, city. —————————— ENTERS HOSPITAL i Mrs. M. C. Wise entered the Ann’s hospital Saturday for m cal treatment. D S st s coraganl For first class French Cleaning call up Capital Seward; ‘William: Patterson, Seward; Frank Jolha George Frank Suzuke, and Morrison, Sitka; Joe Hill, W. W, She is believed (o’ be suffering from heart tmh&,‘ 'MRS. STOEL DIED { | AT SEATTLE MARCH 1| Mrs, Elizabeth Anthony - Stoel | mother of Mrs. R. G. Stevens of | Juneau, died in Seattle Thursday, | March 1, from the effects of heart trouble. The funeral services| were held Saturday morning at | Seattle. Mrs. Stoel’s two dum.l- ! ters, Mrs. Stevens and Mrs. E. C Russell, at whose home she died, | were with her at the end. H Mrs. Stoel was 70 years of age. | She was born in Minnesota, where she was raiseq ond married. A | number of years ‘ater the family | i{moved to Livingston, where they lived for some time. She was a niece of Susan B. Montana, ' i and | w ——.e —— ! J1a papers tor saie at THe Empire oot oo s oy THINKS WOMEN WRITERS ARE OUTSHINING MEN ham. “Novels of youth are inter- | esting, they are refreshing, but |lwv are a little vague, merely be- cause youth hasn't had the oppor- tunity of living and feeling the experiences he tries to put oa paper. Id | “Of course there are exceptions. | My is one, I think. His first novel, ‘The Story of a Coun- try Town,’ he wrote when he was cnly 29, and I think it is the best thing he has ever written or ever father L will write. Mrs, Farpham believes that she was influenced. only slightly by her fathor, for she left Kansas when ghe was 16 to go to schvol lin Washington and refused to fol- father’s advice that she from writing stories herself to !essays and low her keep away «nid confin omments.” “] was marrled when I was aw fully young, so I feel that the per- son who has influenced me more than any one other is my hus band. He is an amazing person, ! really. He is a business engineor with a public accounting firm and | vet he reads and can understand Farnham is now working on her second novel and yery methodically sets aside four hours a day from her housekeeping du: mu to lock herself in her study. Mrs. Anthony, whose name has become | nationelly known. as the origina- tor of the woman suffrage, moye: ment: in the United States. In the years 1917 and 1918 Mrs Stoel made her home in Junean | with' Mr. and Mrs. Stevens and during the time she Ilved here made a wide e¢ircle of friends who mourn her passing. After leaving Juneau she went |to Seattle where she has since made r home with her sondn- law an dluxhw. Mr. and Mrs. E. C. Russell. 5 She is survived by her two i daughters. Finger Waving a specimiy at the Fern Beauty Parlors. —adv. it g E PHONE 478 Plenty of E gés ” They comprise one of nature’s most valuable foods. Goodly portions of Fat, Protein and Minerals are compactly contained in eggs. PER DOZEN — 45¢ TWO DOZEN—85¢ CALIFORNIA GROCERY T “Best in Everything” ) X i 3 The finest tmng- are' MM'J those who -pecflhahflfifi"* in the bank. One look photo ought to con: ‘she has been floodeé reservoir will be cut near the well and as the flood of water pours in Thornton will hurl in the ex- plosive. S daughter left the St. MRS. DICKINSON HOME Mrs. B. G. Dickinson and babhy Ann’s hos. The theory is that the nitrc- pital for thelr home yesterday. Works, C. Meldner, prote cleaner and dyer. ° We F. WO! WOODWORK: Dries in V3 an Hour ) LR %) ware Co. !'lwlt ll Juneau-Young Har Hardware and Undertaking BUILD FOR 50 PER CENT l!lo twurfln.u.: u.k“ Ih'ed all Gr?ifi lol ow e & and the fuel, oool. in ui&"" ‘&. p— ' CONCRE ciing d ]gqu‘ghnnsed our locatiofi to the, l?‘.'%!fl;i“fi formerly oceupied hy First Nanond Bank our service may still be depended upon as in the past to be the Best. > Jiiifl SHa Tmcx B INSERAN nvsmmt:—?u asun: 21 AN A g AT THANE MARCH 31, Under Amfibel : i Junean Lodge L.0. fi M NO. 700 i m‘\\ \ ) My A Corrccl Ifindmu Is Necoaawy cmsmuru's 0 . ; Two' of tie mmcflfi. y in are Stiped i T o in e styles n DS SEatl tanerts i the oths with _an inner . abdomifial support. '&‘: Tatter materiaj fqn":m the top. § Aumummmdmm i &