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June Sale of Rugs, Dmpery Fabrics and Curtains This is your opportunity to buy Curtains, Drapery Sets and Fab- rics at a generous saving. Every Curtain, every yard of Net of Scrim; and: every piece of Drapery material has been reduced for this event. Here are just a few of the specials. ———MAAAAA¥ TORKINGTON DRAP- BURLINGTON ERY — A heavy weight, NURSERY RUGS— Little feet nor the hardest wear can dim the bright colorings of this nursery rug. It is of imported wool brought to these shores from far-off Per- sia, the mountains of China, and the bonnie hills of Scotland—blend- ed in a rug that may be truly prized by the little boy or girl who can call durable, printed crash with large, gay futurist designs, Specially priced at 65c¢ a yard. RAYON DAMASK— High grade lustrous ray- on, weven on a cotton warp. Will drape beauti- fully and give wonderful service. Priced in three it “mine.” Regular price groups at $1.25, $1.45, $5.75, this weck only $1.7 $4.15. 5 the yard. SPECIAL — Tapestry Brussels Rug. Special, $24.95. yard. JUST ARRIVED On the Admiral Rogers 50 NEW SUMMERY HOUSE FROCKS Printed Voiles, Dimities, Organdies and Soisettes. All sizes 14 to 50. $2.50t0 $3.75 No two alike. Select yours while assortment is complete. B. M. Behrends Co., Inc. RS g & will e il anlT W()MEN PRO]LCT THEATRL DETROIT, owned by and operated for thé people of Detioit is a group of Detroit tual success of the plan, they say result in . : popularly owhed civic theatres in 1 the United States. ¥ Miss Jessie Bonstelle, i and managing Monstelle Playhouse here, gineering the Tlara Clemens, daugliter of Mark ¢\ wain and wife of Ossip Gabrilo witsch, director of symphony orchestra, Is active 3a| ugo: 1, the enterprise. . A fiveyear lease has been ch- 1 on the Playhouse by Miss Bonstelle and is trust until a theatre fund is rais- popular subscription. Sudb-i #cribers will receive reductions| \ prices at ‘the box office and: ‘be granted other privileges. theatre will be managed by ‘board of directors who will without pay, d by TO BE OPERATED AS cwvic (LNTER i tion of the Detroit board of edu cation is counted upon in empl sizing the value of the thsatre as an educational force. June 19-—~A theatré projected by women. Even one of the first AT THE HOTELS actress director of the is en- Madame Gastineau G. Grosser, Tacoma; e and wife, Seattle; K Seattle; Don Meldrom, Se. Della Rapuzzi, Skagwa, Florence Barnett, city; Niel J scheme. one of the Choice living room pattern, size 9x12. B. M Behrends Co.,Inc. Junequ’s Leading Department Store in\!l e ok cellené Q er nght shows worlm lakes. COLONIAL DRAPERY —The well known Colon- ial Town and Country fast color prints. Very colorful; many patterns to choose from. Worth $1.25 the yard. Special 85 cents. Curtain Nets, Scrims and Marquisettes greatly reduced. Some as low as 20 cents the yard. Many Cretonnes as low as 40 cents the yard. Many other surprise values in Rugs during this week. WALL PAPER — Good bed room patterns, 18 in- ches wide, double rolls, special this week, 20c¢ the roll, Amskt'r&ng _l;:‘rin_oleum TUESDAY, JUNE 19, 1928. 150,000 Fish Await Presidential Hook At Wisconsin Lodge Everything for the Fisherman Juneau-Y oung Hardware Co. HARDWARE and UNDERTAKING Troup are rcared in private hatcheries at Cedar Island Wis., ledge where President Coolidge will vacation this summer. cetimates put the number of trout cn the cstate as high as 150,000. Here is one spct in the Brule River in which the President, in his fishing togv will cast his lme this mmmer Some shown | SIX MONTHS OLD ORPHAN BOY IS ABOARL YUKON FOR FAIRBANKS; TO BE GIVEN TO HIS ADOPTED PARENTS ! 1 N 1own | POLICE COMMISSIONER A six- ths-old han, known six-months-old orphan ’)rA OF LOS ANGELES WELL in Seattle as Ichabod Crane, J is aboard the steamer Yukon, in PLEASED, ALASKA TRIP port today, bound for Fairbanks where he will be given to Mr. and Mrs. Peter Grandison, for adop tion. The boy has been raised since birth last January, in the Seattle City Hospital by the staff of that institution and was the pet and pride of the nurses. Miss May Loomis, Superintend- ent of the Seattle City Hospital, arranged for the adoption of the | baby, and Mrs. M. C. Edmonds, of ATTENTIOR | Anchorage, a trained nurse and friend of the Grandisons, is aboard If you neea a good carpenter the Yukon in charge of the boy's|phone 498. Hardy Andy's Shop. cruise to the north. A. P. LAGERGREN, Prop. adv. Police Commissioner N. G. Thorpe, of Los Angeles, making the round trip on the Northwest- ern, is well pleased with his first visit to Alaska and is loud in his praise of the scenic grandeur of the Northland. Mr. Thorpe is ac- companied by his wife and Miss Kate Kramer, the latter also of Les Ang . eee—— LET THE SCREAM LINOLEUM-—The best guality printed linoleum, Armstrong’s Aq‘('o].x(‘ fi'msh. serves the” pdltvrn, insures wear, and solves ‘the cleaning problem., This week only $1.00: a square The finish that pre- ) he late clenry 0. iuuflent Coohm b is Tocated on sin. It has beea with trout, ‘but, fishing is ex- en plldnz lome tront i fingh ng Mpgtrated Nows and Hancte & nen the Detroit { Hornum, P. R. Bradley, San Fran- R. Preston, Olive Raus, Cleveland, Ohio. Alaskan Emil Thompson, city; ler, Warm Springs. Zynda . Bohm, Sentinel Island. being held in H. Ml —_———————— WILL UNDERGO OPERATION Violet Rundquist, 11.year-old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Joha Rundquist of Douglas, entered St st Ann’s Hospital yesterday ana wiil P8X & W‘ undergo an appendectomy tomor- c’“‘ tax row morning. with Miss as director of produc- CASABLANCA, Morocco, i“-!evaflty ‘of French customi 'h yelglnngluns to sell auto- When a French car is takea ack tq !npee. under the remded the owner must ‘duty and 12 per-| , Just as he wnul,l man ((l»:; m's tam lhflfl« much more' mfl this morning. rocco, June | needs of & customer. nt cheaply than do those o! other. I nations, the heavier cost of trans- portation paid from America is offset and the American car is easily sold whenever it fits the Beautiful stock bodics are big. factors in sales by Americans. In- tense heat, however, limits satis- 0se with sur-| that will| structor at the high school, died wholslery that| four years ago. n nnderwen(,_ at St. Amns June 19—If President Cool should remark on particular da this suminar ghat he would I to catch a brook trovt weis about three pounds, $ sland_ host would hav y filling the tumbling B that flows past the Lodge with just that weight fisk ¢ their by ey count to estate they natc of range as Lamberl, Pjerce himself the thousand B. sup of hatcheries, just how the know there many thousrncs sols adjoining the any sportsmen's e fed with a liver prog refully kept. that the work men hesitate to keep one out of the water even long enough to have its picture taken. The townsfolk a: t that when it is kncwn in adv fish are to be “ kept on light ratior days, so that they will be attracted to the bait. It m be pointed out whon the presidential fishing season gets under way that the trout placed in the back lakes are left to their own devices and become “wild.” Or the president may leave the Pierce estate and do his fishing on other parts of the Brule river or neighboring streams and lakes. The Brule is a rambling, er ratic lit river that turns ay through northwest- ern Wisconrin, and it is known as one of the best trout streams in the country. It rises in springs a few miles northeast of Lake St. Croix and flows in a gereral northerly di- rection toward Lake Superior. In places it looks like a puddle, but in others it becomes a rushing, noisy stream, pushing its way over rapids and falls, Tha Brule reaches its height of beauty at the Pierce estate, whern it has been converted into three separate streams, some of them It is nuvxgable only by canoes. Three 'l'lugllt School decades together, will soon retire from service. Miss Elizabeth F. Atwood, now the only living member of the group, has offered her resigna- tion after heing for 32 years a member of the facylty. M. Cole, for 32 years science in ‘redge; for 38 years principal of the achool, died a month ago af- “ a short illness. / 'm‘m.':.'"'nm.’;.’; i CEDAR ISLAND LODGE. Wis | iish on the| doesn’t! in the doz vate hatchery. There theusands back in the s vate lakes on the for and guarded trained men. Others are hatched daily. Soparated according to weight, and size, they are a sight to np(n forming small and beautiful lakes.|Greenland by Dennis| thank all’ C Herbert W Kittl pyectric Light & Power Oonny PARIS Patou favors the godet, or umberlla pleats, par- icularly in his summer models. Oune dress c¢f Capri blue morocain with goet pleats whigh run from neck to hem has the new Patou crossback which cohsists of pieces {from the side-front ef the cor- sage, continued like belts which cross at the waistline behind. Future tor_Ureenland In Shark __S_km Industry COPENHAGEN, June 19—With twists andithe growing scarcity of leather, Denmark i3 entering extensively into manufacture of leather from shark skin, and the latest move was an attempt to establish a shark skin factory in Grecnland, to employ 300 native workers, Althoughsthe 300 workers would have earned more than the whole Greenland community earns today, the Danish trade monopoly in Green’and has forbade establish- ment of the factory. The yearly income of the 13,000 persons liv ing in Greenland is today about $100,000, or less than $10 a head. Sharks 'are mnow caught in ks\mga* one-man canoes called ‘he sharks in many cases, are practically as big as the canoes. One of the officials of the Dan- Together for 30 Years|isn shark skin industry, speaking to fishing and tanning experts, WEST]“U&L]) Mass., June 19—|said that the shark skin industry The last ‘of an unusual trip of|offers a wider scope of possibili- 'sehool teachers who passed three| ties than probably any other mod- instructing the ern industry, tilm and motorcars students in Westfield high school,|included. = Presbyterian Church who assisted in ‘the for the use of jts room and th Snow White Laundry for’ nation in Mfi‘ the linens, Il'l!. l- 8. WHITTIER, its' do- EAGLES’ DANCE SCANDINAVIAN-AMERICAN MUSIC Lindsetl’s Novelty Orchestra EAGLES HALL—JUNE 20 DOUGLAS Special ferry leaves Juneau at 9 o’clock Unrestricted Choice of NEW WEAVES To be au courant one simply must wear sport clothes, whether one is an active participant or .an enthusjastic rooter. The more sweaters a woman owns, the smarter she is. Rayon and Wool m”n\ures in_all the new dunty shades. 3.75 to 12.50 SPORT SKIRTS IN SILK AND WOOL in pleated and plain styles. 3.95 to 9.75