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— L e PROSPECTUS Everyone Should be McF ADDE] BEUROOM As one-third of a man'ls life is spent in lnu, we have given particular 111"ntiun to e the bedr, ipment of our flats. Instead of the orthedox » installed our patented REST- AS : GARMENT. s over the clothing both as mattress and blankets. No beds ez necessary. Simply lay,the sleepi ¢ floor, crawl into it and X g in time and trouble \u or undressing nece innov ations anc Information, ROOMS—10-2 CHARLES MURRAY, CHESTER CONKLIN, McFadden's Happi Have ¥ ne: Ever K DANCING co / um hi medy 1 that fun-n is full ¢ comedy This « cd by Anlin to dat aughs, th one night o kings both att s such that it will be in to hola them M’FADDEN'S FLATS” i TONIGHT AT PALACE npanyin the and eps arc products of day, hasn't ith phy, Dorothy and o ty princ s Palace > of the opinion t z a quarter day base th ate Jfll\u s that h bheen e on the “McFa 's F ¢ tings during the filmi ure. Such lilting “The Sidewalks “Sweet Rosie 0'C ers of the same period we by the orchestra on the nd | Director Richard Wallace permit ted his to spend their leis- ure time improviéing new danees to them “Why, there more jazz i éfa,lthful and If your past experience with | sheet metal has been sad and costly --- if you have becn pay- ing too much tribute to King Rust --- if you are looking for a sheet metal which will grow » old slowly --- Then demand Toncan for your next sheet metal job. An iron of guaranteed purity, Toncan is further fortified against rust by scientific alloying. Let us tell you how we can save money for you on your sheet metal work. Shop AL WORKS —————in nces to be found only MeFadden’s Flats 5 and Enjoyment Than Yeu red | Harri Machine| Whne But Alwnys Prevnih THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE THURSDAY JULY 12, 1928. in Juneau Interested ’S FLATS unusual in— ne of the many ete., apply Saturday at Sal Friday s Plans, at or 7 0 and GO President. \'4 Pres. and Janitor. Il Give You Greater | Before they sailed from Southampton for the United States, Miss Amelia Earhart, Wilmer Stultz and Lou Gordon, the crew of the mono- pfunc I:x'iundshir). paid tribute to the memory TWO MEMBERS newn Before, a songs than in many of t Murray RESCUED TODAY He Must Sail Right red parts | Co in have in Sracas Back to U. S. e lemn Ice Breaker Foncesr S i “GOOD AS GOLD” AT i OUTHAMPTON, Eng. (IIN).— O 8k 9c Way Through Floes HQ Waen Vors the” Countizn SATURDAY ( to Camp Catheart, was donied the right | to enter the United States two Huest Bl Tovar Hotel, ¢ ! | years ago on the broad, general rim of the Grand Canyon | grounds of “moral turpitude,” there zona, had ten entertaining g | were persons who prophesied that when Buck Jone id hi wis the body of Dr. Malm-\ yopn gyt would, some time in the pany of fortyfour were ma ader ¥ future, make things interesting for scencs d as_Gold, | Body Carried Absard | certain Americans addicted to front lat ¥ Films starr Of as the Russiane were tol page notori the Coliscum Satur-|minister to the needs of the lv- gy B0 0 | nen, they did not forget the o0 hre two “four-dollar” words hotel was full of tourists|dead. While all stood at salute, | yefined clearly by Immigration and ecach was insis@nt upon {the body of Dr. Malmgren Was| go.e and finally got an admission ing Jones perform his daring ncts|carricd aboard the Krassin and ! _ o oeiaily, of sourse—thet I on the perpendicular sides of |)u.!lhu icebreaker then turned her! o lvocauee of their client's advens | inisi&fep bwould have Dow to further rescue work. tures as @ divorce co-respondent || of almost a mile The two italians were bathed, | hat she was deemed ineligible to "Scott Dunlap, director, found it |Eiven foud and fresh clothes. snter. But—she could land tem- [necessary to establish guards to| mr porarily, 6o the titied p s and pre-| CHUKHNOSKKY STRANDED ashore long enough to to dengerous| MOSCOW, July 12— Another | play based upon certain interesting ironical tv been given! phases of her own life and to attend to the Nobile ue With news| the now ecelobrated Earl Carroll | SRR o zithat Aviator Chukhnosky and his| pathtub party. | “THE SILENT LOVER" four companions are SEranded] | /Twalk :be: raiethvkrreli e Hie COMING TO PALACE | near the north of Bast Land| swn English countryeide, but not aft havin discovered the | before paying a parting tribute to Malm} en direc-| the United States that was 8o hot Si com.|tions for the rescue of the three| |t smoked. to the P and | Men sighted on the ice from their But Harry K. Thaw had no such nother tremendous hit r ot [Plans 4 luck upon his arrival here aboard that registcred hy the popuiar Fog kept Chukhnovsky from| the liner Aquitania, As the million- ; National .star 46 “The_ Sea returning to the Krassin, He ra-| aire playboy, after distributing Hawk® and “Men of Steol” js|diced that he was forced to land largesse to stewards who were ce- | s00n to he made. t of Cape Palten.| Ing bis baggage over the side, | y ew tikida 5 suppli started down the gangplank, he was Sills will win munition. | met by an official, polite and sym- {teod, weapons vith his daring ¥ anshin and| Bt e e ,,.“15 %|The under ca Jis planc| pathetie, yet inflexibly firm, who e eh Lowion. "8 as damaged when he came| 014 bim that he must remain o &y o thi m:,',-l s i (34 um""” and he asked assistance| sboard the vessel and return with ki dase A ‘o S " lbe sent to him. her to the United States. The cus- s l;‘h' “‘ ']l - l:m rl “,’h' ———ao— toms man would glve no explana- r ¢ the camera, together wit b |the m hlimp: of the B T AQ /4 5 Honsty. Motgcoan outpost. - whens| GANN. IS PLEASED WITH| [ “Borey, st b seld, sbut cur I8is and his Legionnaires ke nHARKR_ADER OUTLOCK,| 1ana~ | watch, assist materially in making| Thaw was thunderstruck at the Tt .tfi'i!z'lvl Loy " a particularly COAL ls EXCELLENT order and asked petulantly it he ybeautiful presentation. - | . I The coal mir property be-j — RESALUC Y ing developed Harkrader ny the Tents H tatsk: tonlght or to- 'Brazil Imports Admiralty Island Coal company|leave for Lisiansi: tonis | was deszcribed today as a onder-| . | | Much Dried Fish | prospect,” by J. i1. cann, presi- fdent of the Apex El Nido Gold min- } RIO DE J ANEIRO, July 12— ing company, wh) returned yester- I““‘ more than 4,000 miles of|day from a urief irip there He Gastineau { coastline washed by waters which|was highly enthusiastic over the W. L. Philpott, Scattle; Mrs. S | teem with every varlety of fish, to|outlook for the development of alF. Thompson, Bellingham; C | nothing of hundreds of miles|first elass coal mine Homes, Toronto; D. S. H. Pier, tof rivers also well stocked, Bra-| Everything indicates the pres-! Toronto; H., L. Rust; D. H. Mc- zil imports yearly nearly $10,000-!lence of a fine body of excellent;Donald, Pcriland Island. 000 of dried fish. Besides, ths|coal, he said, and added: “If 1 Alaskan |imports of canned fish come to ajowned it I certainly wowld "not| L. M. Jones, Avk Lake: Jim jconsiderable figure. \ | nesitate to spend whatever inoney, Donahoe, Douglas; M. Warner, | Brazil's own fishing industry is|was required for exploration and Funter Bay; Perry Spencer, Alsia.| in itz infancy. 'Thers are no re-|development wor He said the Qre.; John Peterson, Te B ;. | frigerating trawlers of consequence |Work in progres: under the -direc.} Carl Sales, Tenakee; Gust 11 ;most of the fishing being done by |tion of Superintendent Evan Jones; fenakee; Mike Iusich, Funter {=mall boats, even from bamboojis being intelligently and well per. ‘3ay. | ts. Fishermen supply only|formed. Zynda | immediate locality. Many| Mr. Cann announced, also, that! Robert D. Wise, Anchorage; W. {gash the sides of their catch andjhe had sold the Apex II, the mine A, MeKenzie, Seattle. rub in salt to preserve the fish|tender owned by the Lisianski .- —— |until they get ashore to market.| ompany, to the coal company.| About all the rising generation | TR Transfer of owncrzhip was madelis willing to go without is sleep !Olrl papers for sate at The Emnpn're. today. He and Mrs. Cann will and advice. _NOTICE OF SALE Divizion, Territory of Alaska, dated May 21, 1928, in the matter of the application of the City of uneau, Alaska, a municipal corporation, for an order authorizing the sale of certain real ])ru|wrl) {for delinquent taxes for the year 1927 Cause Number 2835-A., A sale at public auction will be neld! lat the City Hall on Fourth St., in the City of Juneau, Alaska, on Aug: 15, 1928, at ten o’clock of| |mentioned on which the amount of taxes due on each tract, including penalty and interest up to date of sale and costs as below tabulated, will be sold as provided by law. TO WHOM ASSESSED BLOCK, LOT, DESCRIPTION . Tax Penalty Int. Costs Total {L. Hensler .. 203, Lot 10, Casey-Shat- . tuck Addition . --$10.00 $1.00 $1.00 $18.62 $30.62 0. E. Schombel ..... -...Lot and Foundation, N. side W. Seventh Street ... 2.00 .20 .10 9.30 1150 'Robt. Johnson .. Blk. 31, Lot 3, Lot 14x25 ft 4.00 .40 .30 9.30 14.00 Mnry Chamberlain Blk 107, Lot 1, Lot Only 20.00 2.00 1.60 9.30 32.90 H. R. SHEPARD, City Clerk. , this 10th day of July, 1928. Publish July 12, 18, 25, Aug. 1 and 8. of Britain’s dead in the late war. ture Stultz is shown laying a wreath on the ceuotaph while Miss Earhart looks on, one said Miss vk‘\! .ll'::] ST TAUNS GREW| Bars Thaw DN G e ReRit] Millionaire Playboy Told AT THE HOTELS | " | my sling the foienoon cf said day, at which sale the following descrjbed property assessed to the individu x.ul«' In the pic nternational Newsreel) Dlpiomatlc Tlt for Tat from England ARRY K, THAW (International Illustrated News) would be imprisoned In his quarters aboard the ship. In a few minutes he recovered his composure suffi- clently to explain that he Intended to remaln only a few =ik In Eu- rope. He wanted, he said, to “have a look™ around Paris and Vlenna, tut denled that he was a secker after sensatlons, Instead he de- sired only to revisit some of the scenes of his boyhood travels. The graying, elderly slayer of Stanford White, asked about a ru- mor that he intended to re-marry Evelyn Nesbit, his divorced wife and the woman over whom he shot White, sald simply: othing is farther from my mind just at present.” ‘The refusal of British authorities to admit Thaw is taken by English papers 10 be retaliation for the re- fusal of Washington to allow the Countess Cathcart to enter the United States; and now that the business of “getting even” has finally started, many of them spece ulate just where it will end. Archbishop of Canterbury Is Preparing to Retire LONDON, July 12.—The 80-year- old Archbishop of Canterbury is soon to retire, according to his {own announcement to the Canter- bury diocesan conference, whic ymet in Lambeth pala { “When in 1930 the hops gath- heré for the seventh Lambeth Conference,” he “it will be under another chairmanship than own, though I am privileged to take part next month in form- the initial plans for the great |gathering.” | Dr. Randall Davidson has com- pleted 25 years as primatz of the Established Church of England. {He has held that office for a long- er period than any of his prede- cessors in the past 400 years. ———eeeo —— | 01d paners for sale at The Empire | | 1 NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that pursuant to an order of the District Court for the First | DISHAW & : PETERSON | [ ‘I General Contractors ‘ : il Plans and Estimates [l Furnished Fres ¥l ELLIOTTOFF | ON TRIP OF INSPECTION Leaves Tomorrow for Dif-| ferent Localities to Inspect Work Elictt, | | lhr'{ Major Presidgent of Alaska Road Commissio will leave tomorrow on the U. S. Bu reau of Fisherie boat, Wigeon, for a short trip of inspection to Heiney, Skagway and Sitka. Lieut KI' L. Cummings will accompany nim as far Chilkoot Barracks where Major Elliott will inspect Hn\ I work around Haines and the r1epair work on the rescivoil for the Ch ot Ba £ water suprly Licut Cammingg will remain there for about two weeks, to supcrintend the repair work, which consists of stopping a number of leaks in the reservoir due to settlement of the ground From Chilkoot s, Major Elliott will go to Skagway to in- spect the trail system being d veloped towards Dyea and Smug. glers Cove. | He will make a short trip to Sitka to look over the road work, irail system and other government work in that locality before ro turning to Juneau in about a week. e BEAUTY SHUP STUDENTS ON | with uneven waves. And the manicurists prick and cut in learning their trade until the patient, although well paid, soon prvrcm lnuu,n ‘ iverybody Agrees vice here, tion for Ketchikan where ne will[for about three weeks, mako and rangers to look over the field | O1a napers ror saic n: Tha Cmplre Tonight Only C OH LOOK HAVE OLISEU 7:30 9:25 WHO WE WITH US FREDDIE BROWN C BUDDY “The Boys ]n INTRODUCING Varsit nd MARION ym Hollywood™ i, LATEST y I)m o Shuffle Tap Craze And a Car Load o/ Luufllmr TONIGHT——ONLY And the Las Missin A warner BgUJ‘- -Illlarlous ! The jungle adventures of a timid young man. TONIGHT t Showings of l.mk’, Production left today on tho Ah»u trips with the superviso | All the lhnlls of an African hunt! the 9 laughs you've got! ! — PARIS, July 12-~The poor young ORIl = mother who in tearful melodramas| PRICES—10-20-50, Loges 60 cnts s her tresses to buy bread for her starving children now has two| s more mealtickets. offered her Dy| feeweeerreorrercotooooscorscrcecsc corrrcrrre cone Fashion | When her head of long hair is l l v I (‘l , s s oot e, e || Ol Carpet and Clothing rent the use of her bobbed head - for the practice of future hair MADE INTO dressers and can allow student manicurists to file her nails. . 1 1 These are new professions of Beuutlful Neu) [{uas the poor and the courageous. s There is no hardship now in the 4 ; gale of the braided pigtall, but Our representative will call at your home there is pain and humiliation in the frequent marcels and the oft-| FRESNO RUG MFG. CO. repeated manicur: The youngj hairdresser, too unskilled to be T TN DR, 2 e L trusted with a customer, experi - . e e S D ““"f‘(:"r:;: M. L. MERRITT LEAVES |conditions. lie expeets to stop e hair th ow days e Assists i in P is_ way ba t is burned and ragged and ugly| M. I Merritt, Assistant Di A Eelorshug gn.h neatiAael Yorester of the U, Forest Ser-|Juneau, to make field trips in tha vicinity. He éxpeels to be awsy — e s Ensemble Suits 1 -— One lovely goose green in kasha cloth, with contrasting silk dress. Size 16. Regular $35.00. July clearance $16.75 Grey ensemble tweed coat with polka dot dress. Size 16. One black kasha . cloth, with raspberry dress. Size 36. One tan kasha cloth with tan silk dress of flat crepe. Size 38. One tweed coat and novelty print dress. Size 38. Al coats are full lined $35.00. FOR FRIDAY AND SATURDAY—$16.75 Many more than what is mentioned to choose from. and all regular value| JULY CLEARANCE SALE ONLY TWO DAYS MORE LEFT IN WHICH TO PURCHASE SEA- SONABLE MERCHANDISE AT LYSS THAN CC Friday, 13 and Saturday You will find many more bargains added to the splendid assortment which is all ready on hand with pric e Coats and Suits In tweed and novelty mixtures, some are fur trimmed, others are strictly tailored. Values up to. $16.75. JULY CLEARANCE $8.75 Don’t forget to look over our $6.75 rack of dresses in prints, stripes and flat crepe. Values up to $14.75. $6.75 Vests, Special 75¢ Teddies, Special 95¢ T PRICE. 1 still greater. Hats Must Go ANOTHER DROP All $14.50 hats redue- ed to $5.00 FOR FRIT\\Y \Nli SATURDAY, $3.95 ALL $8.7%CBATS REDUCED $2.95 FOR FRIDAY AND SATU Rl)’\\ Ql.‘).') | GOTHAM GOLD STRIP HOSE In all the newest shades in all sizes. Regular $1.75. i JULY CLEARANCE $1.45 i RAYON UNDIES Bloomers, Special $1.25