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H g g : H : 5 S e MOTHER'S WILL SAVE MONEY—by buying a éomplete Layette. 45 pieces—$20.00—Best quality. Pink or Blue. 1 3 This is a yearly event throughout the nation. set aside especially for the babies, when unusual oppor- tunities are provided for supplying “baby” with new out- nd clothing for Summer. these fits be agreeably surprised at throughout this week. White Nainsook Dress. Em- broidered yoke. White Nainsook Underskirt. Embroidered Skirt. White flannel Underskirts, shell stitched edge. Hem- stitched edge. 2 - button houlder. Fine quality flannel Night- gowns. Shell stitched edge. Contrasting frogs and trim. Tiny Tot Knit Wrappers. A FEW SUGGESTIONS Brushed Wool Sweaters, good weight, pink and blue Esmond Baby Blankets, shell stitched, scalloped or whipped edge 3-Piece Knit Suits, all wool, white with cont Hand Quilted Japanese Silk trim Sidley Diaper Garters, white, pink or blue Cloths Dress Hangers—Necesary for Bab Wee tHHENHITHTH sides waterproof, strong eyelets cemented in corners for fastening to mattress. pink or white sheet, in individual box, for $1.00. Tot Crib Sheets Because of its smooth, soft and pliable Rubber Sheet is chosen by most mothers. texture, this pure Gum Can be used on both will not wrinkle. 1Is washable and has and One Robe, about ik Hand Crocheted All-Wool Booties, white with contrasting color White Flannelette Baby Wrapper, pink or blue trim WE CARRY MANY OTHER NECESSITIES FOR THE BABY THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, WEDNESDAY, MAY 'JlllllllIII||IIIllllIIIIIIIIIIII|II|II|I||I|IIllllllllllllllll"lll!lll“llllllll"llllIllII|IIIlIllilll.lIIHIIIllll|i|l|lllllllIIIIIIIIIIII‘fiII'g‘ A week Mothers of little tots will good values we offer White flannelette Sleeping Bags with draw string. Cream white flannel Bands. pair all-wool Hose. Silk _“sel and toe. Fine quality Robe. Shell stitched. Contrasting trim collar and cuff. 32x43 Baby Blankets. Absorbent Red Star Birdseye Diapers, hemmed ready for use about 18x36 in. e | $1.75 $1.25 to $3.95 $3.50 to $5.50 ting trim i -$5.50 60 cents pair " 35 cents pair Enameled or Silk Covered. 75 ¢ents each Crescent Comfy Baby Pants, Waterproof and washable white Gum- Rubber Pants. Made with '~ - ventilator at sides which instires baby’s comfort. Fanecy & Bl elastic waist and Kknee wrinkle or crack. Trimi or pink. PR b L o fo Small, medidum and large ‘sipes. ¢ at 50 cents. S i Extra large size, 60 cents:, B. M. Behrends Co., Ine. Juneau’s Leading Department Store (TR T D REPAIRING HOLE IN §-4 THAT MEANT DEATH TO 44 Dnly one week is required to repair the phy- cal damage done to the submariné S-4, which rik with all _fammed hands after the U. S. S. Pauld- it, Workmen in Charlectown B EH TG R U T B LTI DT LA LT 1 VMR RO M T RN Y ‘| ning. | were shown by younger sisters or NEWPORT, R. I, May 2-lda Lewis “Rock in Newport Harbor, scene of the thrilling deeds of one of America’s greatest hero- ines, is to be sold by the govern- ment. ‘Where lighthouse keepers tend- ed their lamps for many years an dispense with all the property on the island except the ground on which the light is actually 1c- cated. Bid$ are to be openéd in Jurie, Ida Lewis, after whom the rock is_nmamed, is generally known the Grace Darling of America. Orfginally “the lighthbuse was known as Lime Rock Light, but thé fiame wa§ changed i Horor of Miss Lewis, who, after her fa- thér's death, kept the light burn- ing for 33 years. She was made keeper by specidl act of chiigréss in 1869. From her childhood Idé Lewis loved the sea. The grizzled tars who sailed from this old port taught her the locations of the gafety lanes for ships and the hazards. She was an adept at Trowing. When shé was 17 years old she eftected her first rescue, saving four men whose boat had been cépsized by a rough &éa. In the years that followed shé was cred- ftéd with snatching 17 more men from death in the swells of the Harbor—most of them soldiers who' were going to or from Fort Adams. Medals and decorations for eox treme bravery were showered up on her. But she sought no fame or favor other than to remain on the Iittle island until death. She died at the age of 70, and a threng pressed into the Old Cemetery to stand with bared heads at burial. Thé Newpori mistorical society wag made custodian of her many decorations and medals. Now that the little rock isle, with its short frontage, keeper’s house and boat sheds, is to be sold, suggestion has been made by Newporters that the property be- purchased as a reservation dedicated to Miss Lewis’ memory. FASHION SHOW MAKES BIG HIT “JUNEAU P-T, A Many Attractive Costumes _,Ai'e Shown by Students Last Evening More than 200 persons were present in the High School Audi- toritm last night to enjoy the last meeting of the Parent-Teach- er Association during the present school year. It was the largest crowd to attend any of the meet- ings of the year. Over 70 attrac- tive dresses made by the girls of the Domestic Science department under the direction of Miss Helen Grey, were modeled by the girls themselves in the Fashion Show which was the feature of the eve- Frocks for small kiddies friends of the girls in the depart- ment. Music was furnished dur. ing the Fashion Show by a three| piece orchestra made up of Gladys Naghel, John Meggitt and William Herriman, Helen Woods received quite an ition when she recited “The Lot Word,” by Henry Van Dyke, the reading which won her first place in the declamatory contest recently held in Petersburg. Fashion Show The fashion show was divided into six groups, silk afterncon and | evening dresses by the Sophomore girlg; ligen and gingham wash }trocks - made by the Freshman | Genevié Navy Yard, Boston, “are shown fastening great steel plate on the crushed sideé of thd submersible. The one plate sufficed. (fnterrationdl Newsreel) MY OF §—Paris of style j8trp the fule of French fashion, | the newspaper Paris-Midi papér complains that buyer is “king” and that not be long before he willfor Freuch culture has been found American ideas of style oujed by an American by birth, the designers. Then when Paris | Princess p gowns on American lines|who was Winnaretta Singer. will take the mannequins | first endow the Atlantic, hire “Frenchbe followed by others. A, P rs and run the world of! bt Fhir 253 v STYLE | needs or America an ac will | mortals the | PARIS | AMERICAN PRINCESS GIVES' CULTURE FUND TO FRANCE An annual money prize Edmond Premier Poincare newspaper pmphuslefl.'presido over the “Singer-Polignac mewspaper would have this’ Foundation,” which is to be under new academy, like the renowned [the supérvision of the ministry of SUGGESTED IN PARIS | Academie Francaise, support the | traditions of style just as the {m- 1 the fine arts. Any selentific or artistlc en- | deavor, & book, an experiment, ail exploration, or the purchasé of ab. Jjects fot French museams, mdy be financed under the broad charter given the foundation by an act of parligment. — language. | de Polignac ; Her | 1t ment of $120,000 is :u'phong’fi.'"!ch: Afi:;"‘:.g? ‘omgfl N, A — et Eugetié Perminent Waves, $165. Anericall Bésity Parlor. —1«'. himself will girla, with children’s dresses made by, the same- class; a group of wool " dresses miade and shown by the Sophomores; pajamas model: y ‘the Frosi girls who had 3 them; & mumber of wa:fi which wére made a girls . of ‘the eighth' mobt attractive mide . of. cottad, by, the girls of thef} todp nine charming shown by Dagny Meggitt, Win: . Liouise Froland, Saldum, Amey Batés Elsie Jensen, Viola thy Perk Among thosé ISLAND NAMED FOR HEROIC WOMEN OFFERED FOR SALE BY GOVERNMENT aufomatic light now burns. There-| fore theé lighthouse service is to! her | Riendeau and | 'turned and threw a kiss to the crowd in front Other small girls who modeled and astonished the audience with their poise, or charmed with their shyness we the Berthall sis- ters, three and eight years, the tirst in a yellow wash frock made by Evelyn Jacobson and the lat- ter wearing a pink dress made by | Mildred Arnold; Mary Margaret | Femmer, one and a half years, in la cunning yellow frock e by !her sister, Rosetta Femmer; two- year-old Sylvia Anderson wearing a little yellow and black dress made by Muriel Jarman; Beverly Lievers, about two, in a dainty | blue voile made by Verna Hurley; | Susan Winn, two, was charming in a little white frock trimmed in blue, made by Mary Simpkins, and Doris Stanyard, four, in an attrac [tive tan and blue dress with black |tie made by her sister Efleen Stanyard. Among the smaller i children of school age who assist led the Freshman girls were Alice |'Sully, who wore a blue and white |flowered frock made by Grace | Meggitt, Minnie Rogers, who mod- leled a flowered voile in pink and | blue, made by her sister, Maisic {Rogers, and Olga Paul, wearing a tigured gingham wash dress which her sister, Xenia Paul, had made. The wool dresses shown just {before the intermission by the | Sophomore girls, who appeared in {the first group, were most attrac Among those which stood was a rose wool modeled by Genevieve Saloum; a red flannel worn by Dorothy Perkins, and a green wool dress which Louise Froland made and wore charmingly. i tive. | out Pajamas Shown Following the intermission the following Freshman girls had the stage once more wearing bright colored pajamas made by them- 1 : Verna Hurley, Muriel Jarman, Edna Riendeau, Alice Merritt, Eileen Stanyar, Bakke, Kathleen Mock, Xenia Paul, Jeannette Stewart and Mary Simpkins. The eighth graders wno hibit ed their ability in dressmaking by modeling wash frocks they made during the school year, were Mary Jeannette Whittier, Mary Elizabeth Schramen and Peterson, the latter two we {dresses just alike, Edith Be Matilda Holst, Leona Elaine Radelet and Oberg. As a burst of summer came at the last a colorful collection of summer frocks and sport cos- tumes, by the Sophomore girls. Young Harry Sperling, Jr, who came on the stage with Alice Mer- ritt wearing a tiny rose linen suit made by her, was quite the out- standing hit of the whole delight- ful group, though there were many attractive costumes shown. Nota- ble among them was a white silk frock with large blue figures on it and a blue tie collar, the crea- tion of Betty Barragar, a white organdy with rose and yellow fig- ures, full skirt with rose inset, made by Dannie Meggitt, and a charming green silk dress trim- med with yellow, tight bodice and full gkirt made by Muriel Jarman. Teachers Serve After the Fashion Show the audlence went down the right stairway and to the domestic sci- ence room where the teachers served luncheon, and through the | ing 1, Messer, Winnifred made and lend of the hall. Dorothy | Lillian | s | PARIS—Although it looks like a collar the trimming lineé around the neck of a model from Loulse- boulanger is formed by an inset |yoke. The jabot, and stripes on the skirt aré obtained in the same manner by bands of diag- onally woven jérsey sét into plain beige jersey. | gymnasium where the art exhibii was displayed. The brilliantly | colored posters were tacked to the walls of the gymnasium and com- pletely filled three sides giving the large room a most attractive appearance. A display of dogs done in plastecene by the fourth grade was on a small table at one The posters con- tained art work from the first grade to the eighth and some ex- cellent original sketching, design ing, cutting and painting was in- cluded, Many of the designs car- ried out particular ideas, such as bowls of fruit or cereals for the health posters, a number of bright hued designs made for the ob- rvation of Forest Week, spring designs of flowers, birds and chickens and attractive houses and rooms made for bettér homes weck. A few bloc prints made by the eighth grade were among the most intéresting exhibits. They had been made by the students themselves by cutting the design carefully out of linoleum with a jackknife, inking them and mak- ing the prints. Several of them were Christmas card designs and would do credit to much older and more experienced artists. RO o HOUSEWIVES HEAD PATIENTS HARTFORD, Conn. — Figures compiléd from the records of the hospitals heré show that in 1927 more patienis were treated for in- juries and 1i'laess who classed themselves as housewives than| in any other occupation. On the other hand, patients who said they had no occupation made up the second group while school workers came third. e Fada Radio Sets and acceasor- fes, Columbia Phonographs and {ruord-. Radio Electric Co., Mar tin Lynch. Phone 429. adv. o BELMONT Full kine of Fancy and Staple Groceries We deliver anytime—Phone 29 GROCERY MOST IMPORTANT OF COSTUMES (COLORFUL ENSEMBLES) Striking indeed are these three- n{ i /A j prints; piece ensembles — some have Complete stock of House Furmishings, Furniture, Hardware and Paints Juneau-Young Hardware Co. HARDWARE and UNDERTAKING RED, WHITE AND BLUE PAINT SHOP SIGNS ™ s ™ DECORATING AND FRESCOING 346 FRONT STREET PHONE 182 PICTORIAL ADVERTISING SIGNS KANN’S STORE 223 SEWARD STREET SPECIAL THIS WEEK CARD TABLES to $5.00 FOR ONLY $2.50 GOOD QUALITY ELECTRIC STOVE FOR ONLY $1.25 the two-piece dress of colorful with the coat of tweed | or Kasha, others sliow the skirt whieh were ticularly chic wad! - 9 Y a yt?lov ge‘#::wa bouffant frock! = Kasha modehg‘ by Dagny Hagerup an made by hér, Genevieve Saloum recelved applause for her stral black velyét éveming dress ai Elsie Jensen wore & simple ros charming: velvet dress which was mi [ Oresses wash @resses of In showing the f ; which made lines and up the secohd an girls "lirl ry . by a younger who model tor thie children also made by thé . Adrian Gl three yefirs old, mads & part lar hit by the delight she pressed to - the sho trock Her dog i ahe. dliched & ginshart Bee, W | W Yot v she/| e, S’ rrebill accompan r mdtching the coat of tweed or with a blouse to match Mast Diteresting Values Rebuilding Sale CEREALS H. O. Oats, 1 Ib. package $ .20 each 3 for $ .55 Mother’s Ooats Aluminum Premium ........each .45 Quaker Rolled Oats, 3 Ib., 7 oz. packages .. .35 each 8 for 1.00 Albers Minute Oats, 1 1b., 4 oz. packages.._each .15 Carnation Premium Oats, 2 Ib., 870z. pack= ages .. 3 each Post Toasties . Muffets . 2 Shredded Wheat ... Kellogg’s Krumbles Pearls of Wheat .. Malto Meal ... Albers Flapjack Flour . Albers Buckwheat Flour Pillsbury’s Paneake Flour ... Pillsbury’s Buckwheat Flour.. Red Label Karo Syrup, 5 lb. cans Blue Labe]l Karo Syrup, 5 Ib. cans Red Label ro Syrup, 1% Ib, cans Blue Label Karo Syrup, 114 Ib. cans . Rogers Golden Syrup, 2 lb. cans Rogers Golden Syrup, 10 Ib. cans Liberty Bell Syrup, gallon eans . Schillings Black Tea, 1 lb. tins . Schillings Black Tea, 1% Ib. tins Sehillings Green Tea, 1 Ib. tins Schillings Green “Tea, 1, Ib. tins Maxwell House Tea 14 lb. tins ... Gold Shield Coffee in 3 pound cans . ¢ Canada Dry Ginger Ale...$ .25 each or $2.75 per S & W Prunes in 2 lb. pkgs..$ .35 each 3 for $1. S & W Currants, 1 lb. pkg. ... .25 each 4 for Bdgemont Graham Crackers. .30 each 8 for Heinz Beef Steak Sauce .25 each 8 for H. P. Sauce .35 éach 3 for ! A. 1. Sauee . '40 each 2 for o Shzasaiagosigiabi ik ahaREzY CALIFORNIA GROCERY PHONE 478 “Best in Everything” J. J. NEWMAN A. M. GEYER PLUMBING SHEET METAL # {ts PLUMBING we do it If its made of SHEET METAL we make it Lower Front Street = Phone 164 Juneau, Alaska -.' ’ y"W’ fpr sale at ENpire m b &%