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Style Diversity THE FASHION THEME IN PHOE SILK HOSIERY The Square Heel The Frencl: Heel The Pointed and The Twin Spire Each presented in a wide range of fascinating shading indica- tive of the charming woman’s mood and evey hour of the day fashion correctnes or evening . . Individua dividual colorings . . . individual preferences . . . find unpreced- ented gratification in this “Height of the Mode” pres- entation of PHOENIX hosiery. types . . . Slections from $1.00 to —0 B. M. Behrends Co., Inc. The Home of Ph wn EX TOMORROW’S MOST IMPORT OF THE Mary Catherine Campbell, M los Reyes y Ongsiaco, Miss Phili each other when Miss Camplell vi MALE MOSQUITOES APPEAR HENPECKED EDENTON, N. C., April 8—~In family .2 among anopheles mos- quitoes, the kind that spread ma- laria germs, the wives and daught- ers have much the best of the bargain | When cozy resting places in| houses and sheds are available, its | the female of the species who docs | her resting there, and most of the| males are left to shift for them- selves in less desirable nooks. Conducting an investigation along | the Roanoke River in Bertie Coun- | ty, during which more than 5500 mosquitoes were captured, Dr. Hen- | ry W. Kumm of the Rockefeller ! Foundation’s international health | .@ivision station here made this ob- servation: “Of anophelines captured inside | houses all were female; of anophe- lines captured in mule sheds about| 99 per cent were females; of ano-| phelines captured under houses, 717 per cent were females and 23.3 pe cent males; of anophelines captur ed in hollow trees, 204 per cent| A number of the mosquitoes were | and set in an effort ‘out how far these pests can | poison within of their brief lives. ones were re- Other |ing with indignation. oenix Hosiery PAPER FOR THE ANT EVENT MONTH (Rl hast. suddonly s wancs. Admined o diesds Andanoe’ shews with an | efi'ffia peplum atep a fl‘a/wi okint= Tpofum, hem enal fand onthe frontof the Bonce are dank flue. Mo | tenial is grayy and Bhue wool mixtuns, - Rt 3 fack 15 prom—, dapiiton and ‘\‘VILD RABBITS SPREAD i TERROR IN SARDINIA CAGLIARI, Sardinia, Italy, April Delegates to Meet Tuesday Night THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, MONDAY, APRIL 8, 1929. ‘Nell Brinkley Sees Big Style Change: | Famous Artist Predicts 1930 Girl Will Be Mod- i | ern in Daytime, Old Fashioned in Eve l | By COZETTE DOUGLASS | (Special Staff Writer for 1IN) ‘ ELL BRINKLEY, the N foremost of all delinea- tors of charming girl types—a woman who is known to miilions and whose name is a household word—predicts that the 1930 miss will be a “fifty- fifty” girl. “In the daytime she. will be strictly modern,” declares Miss | 3rinkley, who is just as charm- ing and popular as the flappers she creates. “Yes, the daytime will be given to sports clothes and o the abbreviated attire that as here to stay. ooks as if it wa WHAT A CHANGE! “But in the evenings! That will »e different. That is when the 1 drl will become mid-Victo fcs, she'll be positively old oned in her varia of crinolines —only she will probably prefer or gandies and taffetas. hioned u may | liss America | ce that she “And while she'll t ander the moonli depend upon it that N will take good care to Is very ‘new-fashioned’ in her ad- aptations of the ereations her great- grandmother wore.” Miss Brinkley is now in Holly- wood, where she is renewing ac- quaintances with movie stars, many | of whom are close friends of hers. BIG RECEPTION Her arrival in Los Angeles was as it the whole city station to welcome the popular art- ist, and Hollywood was deserted for | the day. of a convention of NELL BRINKLEY was at the Aiss Brinkley made her predic- tion about 1930 styles at the request Pacific Coast 0 9 0006600000600 86 0| f——————— Juneau, Phone 6 NEW TURKEY'S PUPILS PORE OVER CLASSICS ANGORA, Turkey, April 8. —Exempt in ages past from the laborious pursuit of a little Latin and less Greek, Turkish boys and girls are henceforth, by order of the Turkish Government, to be drilled in those classic lan- guages. Latin and ancient Greek are to be added to the cur- riculum of the new State schools as the foundation of that Western culture with which the present regime aspires to replace the ori- entalism of old Turkey. 0000000000000 ‘ Old papers at tne Emplre. IT’S A Royal Electric Cleaner Alaska Electric Light & Power Co. Douglas, Phone 18 AT THE HOTELS & Gastineau Hans Flos, Hawk Inlet; George Miller, Anchorage; Welma Claveau, Fred Fiedt, Petersburg; C. R. Houtz, R. F. Myatt, Ketchikan; J. Lach- man, Mrs. Adam Beeler, F. E. Flint, A. F. Willlams, Seattle; Charles W. Cadman, Hollywood; Pete Movsci; J. P. Morgan; Charles W. Wilson, Alaskan W. J. Church; Harry Mackey; Frank Africh; E. Berg, Kenai. Zynda E. H. Sherman, Mrs. E. H. Red- ding, Haines. L iy NOTICE Until further notice the Sanitary | Grocery will be open evenings until 10 o'clock. —adv. B S Commercial job priuting at The Empire. | “YOUR ALASKA LAUNDRY SERVICE” ‘ol Dry C leaningr r and Pressing . ALASKA LAUNDRY- | 8—Sardinia, liks Augralia some 10 Perfect Program ‘he signal for such a rcception as|modistes. She 1s in Los Angeles 5 he sig |years ago, is now waging fierce|® o iven to few people. It looked |for an indefinite stay. is g peop combat ageinst wild and predat i To X!wlrfrct tk_m organiza- rabbits. ion of the Territorial Cham- e o 22 i3 Sty ey | The long-cared and long-toothed {® Der ot Commerce, delegates @ animals have already wrought grave ‘: ;eiplr(l‘scx]mng b ste.vcml ool | havoc among the wheat fields and |3 SUual organtzations wil vineyards, and the island’s farm- | B p s S ers' federation has earnestly be- €7 s e "3(:0:‘_" mb‘v I;‘_r:’:; : sought the minister of national|y : Cheurym'm o ‘Lhe al economy, Signor Martelli, either|q tamp, y mmm,;gm‘ . to send over experts from the Ital- | EEvonste I BaYe hiat, o R : ® Responses have been re- | gy HERBERT C. PLUMMER |sion were to the kitchen, for ian mainland to aid in the de-|q v " 4 3 | z i ceived from the Chambers e o r od 2O a v struction of the pests or else to re- : + 5 | 4 like other ed good and happy i R e 5 8 i. of Commerce of Cordova, e| WASHINGTON, April 8~The ., ks she a little too much to |lex the hunting laws so the suffer- e Valdez. Ketchikan, Seward, lowly ham omelet may take Y carry ups h_"'! _peasantry may apply its ownje Tairbanks, Nome and other place among the breakfast dishes| gpe oy, t she has been pho- | justice to the unwelcome visitors. |e . towns as well as from the @ |in the land during the next four ‘t*n"/uhcrl g . ki | e - e local Chamber. It is under- o!vcflrs' Tt is one of the favorite f‘f"r‘l‘ Aarh J,‘ :]N ,(,.nfv e ulm‘ ENGLISH WOMAN CLIMBS |® stood that most of them | 7o0ds of President Herbert Hoover '_"‘fy Way: R A < oD SuRt NEW ZEALAND MOUNTAIN|e have approved the Consti- ® | o says Mrs, Mary E, Rattley, and| oo vy x {® tution and by-laws adopted o |0 .shz).ul-d B my % pu"itiofi to Next to her pride in having WELLINGTON, New Zcaland [ and are applying for mem- @ | 0" mo cioht yvears "he)pvesided pleased the President with her April B—A notable mountaineering |® bership in the Territorial e T i e, g, | codiig, ehe . 18 iapineel Over e |feat has been accomplished by|® body. quer the culingry.’ Ieglons. O 2 fact that she once prepared a meal | s S Cliatiner of - L ot B ol o | Hoover home in Washington. And ¢, ool Charles Lindbergh. g i i FerpOs’, | while she did not follow the Hoo- | America of 1926, and Miss Paz de 5 of 1929, were introduced to |lation of the prohibition laws, was | Ketchikan, it was learned today at England, who with a guide, ascend- ed Mount Cook in 15 hours 45 min- utes, a record for a woman climber. - - EETCHIKAN COURT NEWS { Jack Johanson, charged with vio-{ sentenced to serve 60 days in jail | and pay a fine of $200 by U. S.| Commissioner W. C. Arnold of the U. 8. Marshal’s office. Walter Heinbach was fined $50 and costs by U. S. Commissioner W. C. Arnold, for alleged violation |of the prohibition laws. | Fiorence Sullivan, charged with | violation of the Alaska Bone Dry Law, was fined $35 and costs by U. 8. Commissioner W. C. Arnold J. Barrington was fined $25 anc ‘costs by U. 8. Commissioner W. C. | Arnold for alleged violation of the | Alaska Bone Dry Taw. ———.—— he islands as a tou-ist, investigators, Dr. Kumm points out, have measured mosquito flights by the same method and showed they were capable of traveling as much as a mile. - - > - Former President Is Glad that He Is Deaf PARIS, April 8—An intense dislike for oratory and flowery per- |iods, strange as it may seem in a| been :\}‘ Frenchman, has always characteristic of Emile Loubet, for- mer president 6f France, who cele- brated his 00th birthday recently “The strokes of fol and ten have just beerl pealed over the magnificent career of our l!lus»} trious compatriot.” That wa tee which waited upon the ex- president began. The little wizened old man, cock- ed up an ear over which he had cupped a thinned, wrinkled hand. nd after the remark had been shouted to him, exclaimed: “Thank goodness I am deaf; didn’t hear all those strokes.” e, — The motorship Prince of Wales is being rebuilt and refitted at the Wick boat yard, Ketchikan. S, What many a husband would like to see invented is a fite extinguish- er to use when friend wife is burn- I score years | s the way the speech of | {the chairman heading the commit- ! INMIGRATION MAN HERE Inspector R. F. Wyatt, of the U. S. Immigration Service arrived on the Admiral Evans from Ketchikan, | to investigate geveral cases for de- | portation in the city. | ——te— | ROME—The first native Javan- |ese ever to be ordained in the Ro- {man Catholic priesthood has taken |gratification to the advocates of his final vows. He is Father Fran- |cesco Saverio Satiman, taking his Ttalian name from St. Francis Xavier. e v ecevos 00000 Two Missouri Farmers Profit from Muskrats GREENVILLE, Mo., April 8— Missouri’'s - first muskrat farmers, Frank and Ellsworth Barrow, have found the business profitable. Last August they fenced an aecre >f ground, which included a lake, caught a few muskrats and started in. They have more than a hun- dred hegd now. Their fence was built of galvan- ized steel, sunk 36 inches in the sround, with a three-foot extension above and barbed wire on top. The muskrats have been fed po- tatoes, pond plants, cabbage, cel- ery, clams crawfish and corn. French Tobacco Profit Reaches $162,000,000 PARIS, April 8—French smokers contributed more than $126,000,000 to the expenses of government in 1928. Since the introduction of mod- ern industrial methods the profits of the state tobacco monopoly have mounted steadily, a source 'of deep the government in business. —— v at The Empire. d actlvities court, the has brought impeachment char, (left) and Justice J. W. Clark. ges against Justice Fletcher Riler’ In connection with cases a ppealed Oklahoma house of npreuntpauvu New, select line ot visiucg cards vers to the white house as she had hoped, nevertheless she did advise the kitchen force at the executive mansion what the President does and does not like in the way of! food, and how he wants it pre- pared. For she is happy to state, Mr. Hoover never once complained of her cooking in the eight years of her service at the S street home. Only once in that time did he make a request, and then he asked to have his eggs cooked a little harder. a Presidential Recipe Ham omelet a la Hoover, as pre- pared by Mrs. Rattley, is as fol- | lows: “Take six eggs and beat them all| together. You need not salt for| the ham does that. Add three! tablespoons of cream and cook slow- ly in a well buttered pan. When cooked on the bottom, pul under toaster flame about three minutes. Then lay the ground ham already heated in a line across the omelet's | diameter, and roll up without too| much handling, as you would a jelly roll. Surround it with a taste- | ful fringe of the remaining ham. | “you must be artistic about lay- | ing the ham in and rolling the omelet,” she warns. | On Sunday mornings Presidenti Hoover likes sausage and scrambled | eggs and fried hominy. «“] was always very particular| about the hominy,” Mrs. Rattley | continued. “I would insist on; whole grains, washed and drained | and rolled in cream and sprinkled with a little flour and browned in butter.” l The President is fond of many | other things. In fact, Mrs. Rattley 1 says be likes everything that is good and good for him. Berries with cream, vaniila ice cream and watermelon appeal to his taste. And pie of any kind. Cold sliced lamb surrounded by parsley with jelly in the center is a luncheon dish that finds favor with him. i . Cooked for Lindy At first Mrs. Rattley thought she couldn’t give any of Hoover's pet dishes, for she is not like many other cooks. She does not say three teaspoons of this or a cup of that. ‘When we suggested that perhaps she cooked intuitionally, she was quick with the reply: “No, scientifically. I have studied it all my life and I love to cook.” Her chief assistant is her son. Herl ‘umwmutmflwvermn- {Juneau mine stock 104 {Cudahy 54'4. General Motors 844, Gold Dust 617, M: Missouri Light 49, Postum 65, U. letem Steel 109 ;T Company 217%, Continental Mot- | iors 20%, Mathieson 188, Interna- tional Paper A 34!, International | Paper 13: California 77%, ner 134. R 0000060000606 00 TODAY'S STOCK . QUOTATIONS . ee00ece00000 00 NEW YORK, :-pril 8. — Alaska is quoted to- at , American Smelting Chesapeake Corporation 88, eck Trucks 1027 78, National Power and Packard Motors 1277%, Steel 185%, Beth- , American T and B 21%, Goodyear Rubber %, Standard Oil Company of and Stewart-War- - eee - ATTENTION! For Carpenver Work of any kind —shop or city—Call Handy Andy. Phone 498. | | i | | In New Building on Shattack Way ‘THE LAUNDRY DOES IT BEST” Py ash Dreeses $2.50 Colorful and gay for the springtime! Attractive and serviceable house dresses show- ing the new colors and prints. Sizes 14 to 50 There’s only way to learn the exact condition of your eyes—have them examined by an expert! You can safely entrust your vision to-our register- ed optometrists. If glasses are needed, they will be ac- curately prescribed, and your eyesight troubles will be a thing of the past. Dr. R. E. Southwell Room 16, Valentine Building PHONE 484 Evenings by Appointment