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‘:-!"IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIllIIHHIIIIIII||IIIII|I"IIIIII|IlllllYIIIIIIIHIIIlllllllllllllllllllllllllIlmllll"hllIIIIlllllllllllllllll.hl'_- Knit Sportswear Now is the time to consider what you nhnmhmnm will wear this summer. Warm weather is coming on now. Soon the Capital-to-Capital Yacht Race will be on. outfit. minute to Then you will need a good sport But—do not wait until the last buy your outfit. Now is the time while the stock is complete. Knit dresses and two-piece sportswear, many attractive color combinations in zes 14, 16, 18 and 20. Priced from $7.50 to $19.75. in SWEATERS and SKIRTS To one smart flannel skirt, priced $5.00 add one adorable sweater to match, priced $7.25. The total is one complete sports costume for $12.25. RRERERLRLAR LR AR LR L L D DR L Smart skirts and sweaters for school, business, active and spectator sports, mod- erately priced. MEN'S AND BOYS' SUITS May is the time to buy a new spring ichaels Sterns or Fadeproof Middishade i Priced as low as $35.00 with two pair pants. IO ouUT NOW'! of WOOLWEAR Boys low as $13.50 with two :mnnmmummmmun;nmmm!mu||||||uammunnmnmmmhnntmhanMmm The new Clothes. Priced a pair pants. B. M. Behrends Co., Inc. Juneau’s Leading Department Store HEHEIN i Illlllllllljllllllll“llllllIllljlll!lIIIl_!lIIIIIl!l!vlIJI"I|II!lIlll!llll!l_ll_l!lllllllvllllIlllillllllllllll!lfil_!l_ll!"milmlll SRANIMAALARRARRANEAEARRERRRRRRR R RRRRRRRERRRRDRRRRERRRARRRRNARRERY i - HAIRDRESS MEANS OF ENHANCING BEAUTY¥¢ o e R N circular bob and wave with the sides pushed back slightly to show the cars. Greta Nissen, blonde, fragile and drcamy eyed, uses a long wavy boh curled in a long loose curl on the sides and straight on top. 0 (International Newsresl) i Much depends on your hairdress, girls, as to how your particular type of beauty is heightened or | defeated. Dolores Del Rio advises this Russian ¢ ¥pe of dressing for broad faces, large eyes and wide forchead. Now for heart-shaped faces and derfect ears. Lois Moran recommends a semi- TEACHERS FOR |school Boara include the tollow [imes: Miss Louise Cates, kindergar {ten, who has been here for two and has had 'six.years experience |years; Mrs. John Noyes, vocal|teaching im. ‘schools | of* ‘North {and art, who has taught in the |Dakota and Mohtana, | < . Juncau schools for gne and one- | . Y half years; Miss Mary Kolasa, | th . Miss Bunnie White, | Hanson. s . 10gy ‘ ; p third Miss Grace \\'xlku.\j Fifth grade—Miss | mathematic and Miss Janice (lor. : d {Lowe. commercial, all of whom| Fifth and" Sixth ghades-Miss !II POSlllOnS Bul One Fi“_;.m- teaching now for the first|Thelma Jones, téacher in 'Phoen- vear. h . A 5 o Inix, Arizona, who is a graduate : ed—Six Resignations | 110vine |of the State Teachers College of Are Accepted bat s, ted |Tempe, Arizona, has had post |exception of the unfilled |zraduate work at the University of ftiof of teAuhar for |California, and eight years ex- and girls’ athleties: aduate of the State /Teachers ‘ollege of Minot, North Dakota, Fourth grade — Miss Dalma Dofriie. Tay- ing a complete staff, with list, the pasi- (All positions in tne teaching commercial [t of the Juneau Publc ools, with the exception of| Kindergarten — m jal imstructor have been sandper; led according to an announce-!gipjs, pt made today by Supt. W. K. geate er. |perience in Leyden, Mass, and | Phoenix. Miss Gertrude | Sixth grade—DMiss Ruth Hen- now teaching in Vir-|derson of the Crowley Consolidat- Minn.; a graduate of the|ed Schoels in Crowley, Colorade, J Normal School, Superior,| who has bhed nine yedrs exper- . | Wisconsin; five years experience,|ience and i8 a graduate of the b school hudget presented ‘“1(\10 at Buhl, Minn, and three Colorado State Teachers College . City ©euncil recently made |, Minn. |of Greeley, Colorade. ;ance for two new additions | 3 the teaching staff in the| Supcrintendent of Schools 'I.";e;""m grade—Miss Josephine because of the rapidly in-|K. Keller. 0.:.,‘;1 t:' students eng-i First grade—Mrs. 1va Tilden. ui:;hi::‘. - e of lese new posi- First ana Second grades—Miss rumen et - a teacher for the fifth and|nildred Ahr.hams:n,“dd”— o \un::s;‘uhcr.“] el b grades, has been filled,| Second grade—Miss V. Bour-| Vocal amd art — Miss Derthy the other ,am instructor|getie. |Chisholm, graduate of the Uni- ‘the first and second grades,| Third Ann versity of Washington, who is m left opem until the|Rowher. now atteriding the University of mext fall for| ~Third and Fourth grades—Miss Oregon, majoring im art and Hedvig Samuelson, now teaching |musie. She Ras had four ; 3 years ns accepted by thelin Whitchall, Montana. She js u‘rxperlem, two in Ketchikan, i 4 Virginia, W, Mrs. Grace grade Miss LT T T T THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, FRIDAY, MAY 4, 1928. Alamni Social Life Common Interest of New Senators’ Wives PARIS — A white satin dress designed by Cyber is an example of broken line. The decollete is cut in a diagonal line and trim- med with bretelles of strass. The corsage drapes to the right side where it ties with a large bow. | Two irregular panels on the skirt are cut in semi-circular form. ——— GAIN 1S MADE RACE NARROWS {Hoonah Vote Cuts Down | Lathrop's Lead for Com- mitteman to 152 Votes A gain of 60 votes was mada by jor G. W. Albrecht in the vote reporting from three precincts in | this Division while Capt. A. E. | Lathrop gained three in late re {turns in the Fourth Division in | the race for Republican National Committeeman. Hoonah, the larg unreported Indian precinet, | gave Albrecht votes to eight I {for Lathrop. The latter’s lead now stands at 1562. There are four precincts’in In Mrs. Arthur H. Vandenburg (left), whose husband is Sen- ater-designate from Michigan, and Mrs, Cyrus Locher (right) wife of the newly appeinted Senator from Ohio, Washington society will| gain two new members who have been active in affairs in their home States. CHICAGO, May 1—Wives of the midwest's two new United States | senators have one thing in com- | mon—a love for the social affairs of their alma mater. | The interests of Mrs. Arthur H. | Vandenberg of Grand Rapids, | Mich., wife of the senator-desig-| nate from Mjchigan, lie chiefly in! her home and the welf: University of Michi, regarded tive alumui of the instituticn and it was largely through her inter-| est and efforts that the women's' building on the campus at Ann| Arbor became a reality. Mrs. Cyrus Locher of Cleveland, whose husband has been named Ohio's junior senator by Gov. Vi Donahey, is president of Kappa Kappa Gamma Alumifae Associa- | tion, and unusually active in all Cleveland social and women’s civic affairs. She is a member of the Cleve land Women's Civic league, of the Pan-Hellenic council, active in the | Colonial Study Cihcle, and is a, { this Division not reported—Yaku- member of the board of trustecs| The Virginia IV, Capt. Matt| iyt Myers Chuck, Cape Fanshaw of the Cleveland Maternity Hos- | Nordness, arrived in port fx-nm(‘mm Funter Bay* pital. .| Sitka and wayports early this| Fourteen precincts in the Fourth Mr. Vandenberg is publisher of | morning, and is to leave this eve-! piyision are elther wholly are the Grand Rapids Herald and his |DIng for Port Alexander and way-| partially not reportéd. (n the wife, too, at one time was a news-|POrts. She is taking 15,000 feet!Thipd Division between 200 and papér’ woman. After her gradua-|Of lumber for Port Alexander and!scy votes in far western areas tion from the University of Michi-| 2000 box shooks for Sunny Point haye to be heard from. No late gan, she worked for a time in the Packing Company at Funter Bay.| reports have been received from Local Business Men Members of the Chamber of Commerce tod were giv- en a test of their knowledge of Alaska's geography and industrial structure. A set of questions, compiled by the Territorial Department of | Education for p of Al- | | askan schools, W given i each member of the Chamber at today’s meeting | The answered were turned over fenderson, Commissioner Education, to be graded sults w next ¥ | | Re- be announced at 3 s meeting. 69 | s | VIRGINIA IV RETURNS advertising department of the | B ol T DRASOR the Second Division. Chicago Tribune. | Dld papera for sate at Toe Empire.] The standings in Born in Bloomington, Ill, Mrs. —— i Locher is a graduate of the Illi- nois Wesleyan university, and it was there that she met Mr. Loch- er, who came west with a debat- ing team from Ohlo Wesleyan university. Mr. Locher was one of two of the Ohio boys who remained over- night In the home of his wife's parents. That was in 1903, and tive years later, the girl he had met by chance was his wife. the National =) and her parents are residents of Wrangell. i High School Principal—R. S.| Raven. | Home economies — Helen E. Gray. Commgreial—open. English — Miss Theodora Bud- | win, Languages—Miss Ardena Leer. | Mathematics Miss Gladys Buehler, graduate of the Univer- sity of Oregon, who has been| teaching at the University of} Oregon fer the past year, h:m; had two years experience, and is finishing work for a Masters De-| gree at the end of this school torm. ‘She .was recently awarded a scholarship. Manual training and athletics —H. B. Wald. All,of the new instructors for the ‘coming year are above the average aceording to recommen- dation from the schools in which they ‘have been employed, Supt. Keller sald today, amd most of thefi are considered amoug the bést in the schools in which they are teaching at the present. —l Luscious, golden halves of H“ BRANDOME‘ _PEACHES ~the ch_dp_inn gro:an—finzéd at &5 0o .- for immediate hciest e yeaw, cid maperior & the fresh fruis LUTHER DUNBAR MADE SCHOOL HEAD AT NOME Luther Dunbar, who held a po- sition as teacher im the Nome Public Schools last year, has been ' appointed Superintendent of Schools in that city for the com- ing year, it was announced today by L. D. Henderson, Territoria Commissioner of Education. Mr.| Dunbar fs a gradwate of the Uni- versity of shington and hnlli several years experience teaching. in the States before coming to Alaska. He is taking the place of L, % Breuer, who, after serv-, ing as superintendent at Nome for || two years, was recently made su- of Mother’s perintendenit of schools as Cor- dova, ool ¢ ALIFORNIA GROCERY £} regular ting t onight at l m" P *‘ = W JUST RECEIVED A Shipment of Box Candy for MOTHER’S DAY Bemember Mother May 18th with a box tes o'clock the Oouneil CI mberx' in the Hall. Routine mat-|§ ters will be taken up. [ Il;md 1; Rustgard 4, Waller 1; Ald- Complete stock of House Furnishings, Furniture, Hardware and Paints | Juneau-Y oung Hardware Co. HARDWARE and UNDERTAKING Committeeman r: are: Lathrop 1,240 122 1,003 462 2,827 Albrecht 1,469 125 760 First Division Second Division Third Division Fourth Division.... Totals 4,675 Returns received vision today were: Chichagof: Howard 3, Suther land 11; Rustgard 11, Waller 3; Albrecht 4, Aldrich 6, Lathrop 3; Caswell 6, Chase 6, Gelles 2, Pratt 0, Wickersham 11; Gottstein 10, Grant 13; Benjamin 3, Gardner 6, Hunt 4; Darwell 5, Gildea 1, Johnson 3, McCormack 8, Noland 9, Olts 3, Paul 4, Wacker 2, Winn 11; Adkins 7, Gilmore 11. Hoonah: Howard 9, Sutherland 75; Rustgard 74, Waller 8; Al brecht 69, Aldrich 6, Lathrop 8; Caswell 79, Chase 10, Gelles 4, Pratt 1, Wickersham 68; Gottstein 75, Grant 73; Benjamin 7, Gard- ner 11, Hunt 2; 9, Johnson 5, McCormack 71, No- land 11, Olts 67, Paul 71, Wacker 3, Winn 69; Adkins 11, Gilmore 1. Gustavus: irom this Di- Howard 5, Suther- rich 3, Lathrop 2; Caswell 1, Chase 1, Gelles 2, Pratt 4, Wicker- sham 2; Gottstein 2, Grant 4; Ben jamin 2, Gardner 3, Hunt 1; Dar- well 3, Gildea 1, Johnson 3, Mec- Cormack 2, Noland 2, Olts 1, Paul Darwell 9, Gildea | 3, Wacker 1, Winn 2; more 5. Kimsham (Hirst - Chichagof) : Howard 1, Sutherland 1; Aldrich 2; Caswell 1, Gelles 1, Wicker- sham 2; Gottstein 2, Grant 2; | Gardner 2; McCormack 2, Noland |2, Wacker 2, Winn 2; Adkins 2, Gilmore 2. JUDGE LOMEN HERE TUESDAY Judge G. J. Lomen, who has been ealled from the east to take the place of the late Judge T. M. Reed on the bench to finish the jpresent term of the U. S. District { Court, will arrive in Juneau on Tuesday, according to a wire re- ceived from him this morning by 'u. 8. Clerk of Court Johm H. Dunn, sent from Spokane, Wash. The petit jury will convene on Monday as ordered by the Court. e ————— EATON IN TOWN Adkins 5, W. A. Eaton, who has been mining engineer, in the Chichagof mining distriet for the past few weeks, returned here today and expecis to leave within a short time on another prospecting voy- age in this vicinity. e 2 | RED, WHITE AND - SIGNS AND FRESCOING BLUE PAINT SHOP HOUSE PAINTING, INTERIOR DECORATING 34¢ FRONT STREET PHONE 182 PICTORIAL ADVERTISING SIGNS KANN’S $5.00 STORE 223 SEWARD STREET J. J. NEWMAN PLUMBING Lower Front Street Phone 154 A. M. GEYER SHEET METAL If its PLUMBING we do it If its made of SHEET METAL we make it Our rates are more reasonable as we do not carry heavy overke Juneau, Alaska Full line of Fancy BELMONT SILK and G polka which here leadin and Staple Groceries We deliver anytime—Phone 29 GROCERY EORGETTE FROCKS - $16.75 Pleated georgettes, prints, dots and flat erepes—- ever your 'preference, you are certain to find a frock to satisfy your needs, g in cleverness, and are the latest modes. | | Hl Sizes 16 to 46