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DOLIAR DAY SPLECIAL _LADIES’ KAYSER AND VAN RAALTE GLOVE SILK VESTS Ladies’ Phoenix Silk ‘ Hese, $1.00 Girl's Fancy Sport Hose, 2 for $1.00 Boys’ Heavy Cotton Hose, 3 for $1.00 fen’s Wool Hose - 2. for Children’s Sateen BLOOMERS in Pink, Black and W hite 2 pair for $1.00 Ladies’ Rayon Vests, large sizes $ 2 for— Ladies’ Alpaca Slips “ Ladies’ Rayon Undergarinents Ladies’ and Misses’ Woely Caps Ecru Panel Lace Curtains Each—$1.00 BLUE ROSE DRUG SUNDRIES Talcum Powder Bath Salts 36 in. wide Baronette Vanishing Cream Faée' Powder Satin | | 6 yds. for $1.00 Linenized Toweling R f Perfume e X 27 H](:ll Fugi Rr-fi" for Conipact 4 yds..for $1.00 Silk Any Turkish Towels 33 inch Silk % o $ i 122x44—2 fo.r $1.00 Pongee i " " | Colored Turkish 36 inch g = Towels $ Art Silk $ New Spring Wash | Lo yard— Fabrics Lot T AN Guaranteed’ fast colors | Yard wide Percale 4 yards'for $1.00 | Yard Wide Cambric | 3 yards for $1.00 | ‘Yard wide Printed | 36 in. Lingette {3 yds. for $1.00 | Colored Sateen 2 yds. for $1.00 36 in. Colored Curtain Marquiseite 3 yards for $1.00 33 in. Cretonne Crash 3 yards for $1.00 27 in. and 36 in. Todian Hewl Rayon Drapitie $ 2 yards $ 2 yards $ yard— for for February Rummage Sale still continues on the second floor of the store. There are many real bargains to be taken advantage of. A few good Suits for men, values to $48.50, now listed at $19.75. Another group of Men’s Suits, values to $35.00, now $15.00. Men’s Khaki Wool Shirts, ~ cach, $1.95.° Men’s Silk and Fancy Dress Shirts, walues to $9.50, now $3.95. Still a few pair of out-of-style shoes for women—25 cents pair. A great many more outstanding values too numerous to mention. ATTEND THE FIREMEN'S DANCE TONIGHT o — ! . 1B. M. Behrends Co., Inc. i Juntauw’s Leading Department Store INDEPENDENTS "ORGANIZE FOR C0-OPERATION 'Small Companies Unite to Aid in Stabilizing the Salmon Industry (Cont!nuea 1rom Page One) i { Fisheries, Max Kreilsheimer; Ugan- | | k Fisheries Company, H. O. Rob- erts; Cook Inlet Packing Company, | W. A. Estes, | ‘Western Flsheries Company, Jas. W. Parks; Everett Packing Com-| pany, S. P. McGhie; Douglas Island ‘IPacking Company, E. B. Dudden; Glacier Packing Company, William J. Crooker; Emil Packing Company, |J. M. Emil; Copper River Packing ioompnny, E. B. Hanley; 8an Juan {Pishine and Packing Company, Wil- liam Calvert; Pyramid Packing Company, William C. Freeburn; Hood Bay Canning Company, A. P. \Wll!; Sebastian Stuart Fish Com- pany, C. J. Sebastion; Shepard | Paint Packing Company, A. W. | Wittie: The Stuart Corporation, M. E. Stuart; North Ooast Packing |Company; H. J. Emard and Com- pany, H. J. Emard; North Pacific Pisheries, O. Hofstad; Wrangell Packing Corporation, W. T. Hale; ‘Wards Cove Packing Company, A. ,W. Brindle; Trinity Packing Com- pany, L. R. Ellson; and Snug Har- bor Packing Company, L. J. Hull evidence your _buim progress THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, ‘Long Skirts Not |than th:y were last fall. ilion waged by women who liked chort as women c .short skirts because they looked at the knee or higher. \rish, “weather man,” of style, who !lankie length at one or more places. WEDNESDAY, FEB. 12, Fleeting Fad; The descent of the skirt continues. Here is a f retzsie of photograph for day street wear, and (above) the desiined spring skirt —er—ah—limbs show the cause of skirts since 1923. Lk Rv DEMING SEYMOUR were “upper calf 1 (A. P. Feature Service Writer) By spring, fashi s show NEW YORK, Feb. 12.—Skirts are|dresses most in will be growing still icnger. |abe two inches than last | They will be longer next spring |October. 8ix hs have ven different s in fashion . Four-fifths cof the dre re of ankle length in 1923. Five ars later skirts were about ld wear tiem last Hemlines. are moving gradually down in spite of the stubbornest rebellion the fashion world has known in many seasons—a rebel- younger in them, and had more | Then they bege freedom of motion. {and Mr. Parr The forecast that skirts will keeo |themselves br on growing longer is not the guess change. of a designer, nor is it the inter- plain stral ested prophecy of a merchant who gan to add bo has long skirts to sell. |other details. 1t is the conclusion of Amos Par- [ d 1 se balance with short dresses. D women are agents watch what = X wearing in every representative sec- y tor of American life and who un~vYUKON AER'AL dertakes by determining trends, to| g tell department store buy and | exegutives throughout the land, 4 vl twice-a-year clinics, what the mod o x of the moment will be six months| hence. ! Bkirts weren't as long last fall ar | they. were alleged to be, Mr. Parrish | X ge o8 pojnts out. They were just ting longer.. They have been get- D 3 2 A" ting longer, slowly but certainly,| irector of Yukon f_m’ways {&five 1958, Enroute to St. Louis | Next spring, he says, the skirt ‘most in fashion for daytime street wear will be of middle calf length, | five or six inches below the knece |and 13 to 14 inches above the ground, depending on the height of |the wearer. Most s and ensembles street wear and most daytime dre jes and coals will be of the same |middle calf lenzgth. | ,Three other lengths will be in fashion, if Mr. Parrish’s: censuses and charts are indicative of ten- dericies: For active sports w to Buy Airplane The Yukon Airways had a disastrous career during past two years in its airplar tions in Y ¥ - fdiscouraged 5 loss of planes 'in as many years and ‘maintain an ac i the current y jknown today by G Whitehorse, one of directors. He is enroute on Mary to the not two K: Stewart, the company’s the Princes r, dresses of to purchase a 'be of this length. and purchase a Ryan monoplane For formal afterncon wear, the|similar to the one lost last Fall— longer calf length, 10 to 11 inches|the Queen of the Yukon. It will below the knee. t, !Ibe equipped with a 300-horsepower jalso will be a few v {Wright whirlwind motor. It will and ensembles for sireet wear andjbe flown on wheels from St. Louis most of the formal afternoon dress-|te the coast. There pontoons will es. be nied and it will fly up the For dresses - of coast® to Skagway, stopping heve enroute. A few eveninz wraps will be ankle| The plane will maintain a regu- length and a few will be hip length. | lar schedule between Whitehorse, . Many women believe that skirtsiMayo and Da were arbitrarily dropped last fall|will handle pr evening wear, pectors and their 4from the knee to the ankle, but the joutfits from these towns to the tendency to longer dresses goes back rivers &nd crecks all over Yukon two years. By April, 1920, most|Territory. The company has the dresses were two inches below the airmail contracts for that territory. knee, and last Octtober most drcss:s} Residents of the territory are | .seck the vast powerful nati ] claims to have knowledge of the where- Jeft to right: Robert Q. Jackson, of De- troit, Mich. ; Albert V. Rosell,-a descendant tite Incas of Peru, and Gideon A. Lasley, alea of Detroit. The men were photo- graphed on the steamship Santa Maria, when they sailed for Peru, where they will abouts of the >oing Down Further in Spring ring fa " ITERHUNE AND LUCAS ' LUNCH OF CHAMBER “uBper calf length,” three to four{new plane for 5 work. It is inches below the knee, 15 to 15/expected to h the plane at) inches above the ground. A few |Whitehorse be: the spring break- suits and ensembles for street wear [up. .and most evening wraps will alsoj Mr. Stewart will go ty St. Louis 0. In addition it | Search for Hidden Inca Treasure during the cont%ueith é)y tsl?yam in the venteenth Century. 1930. Weather Conditions As Recorded by the U. S. f l Weather Burean | | Forecast for Jumean and vielnity, bes—~uine 4 p m. today: Fair and colder tonight, Thurslay f sentle varicble winds. LUCAL DATA Barometer Temp. Humidity Wind Veloely Weathe 4 yost'y 30.01 6 53 E 13 Clear 1 a. m. today 1 4 30 NE 12 Clear |Newn todny 30.23 10 el 8 Clear 4 ! CABLE ANT» RADIO REFORTS = ! TESTERDAY | TODAT 1 Highest 4dpm. | Low 4am. 4am. Precip. 4am. I'ort Yukon Tanana . Eagle X | St. Paul 2 Dutch Harbor 1 = 4 | Kodiak 16 24 0 0 Clear | Cordova -8 -4 * 0 Clear | Junean 3 4 12 L Clear Keétchikan 22 22 4 02 Cldy Prince Rupert 28 30 4 20 Cldy | Edmonton -4 13 12 10 ‘ ldy | Seattle | 33 38 6 .06 Snow Portland 45 46 4 4 4 03 Rain San Francisco Gt 58, 48 50 ¢ e 0 Fozgy ! “—Less than 10 miles. NOTE—Observations at Bsrrow, Fort Yukon, Tanana and Eagle |are made at 8 a. m. and 8 p. m., Juneau time. o The pressure has failen in Northern Alaska and the Eastern Interior and is slightly below normal in the extremé North. Tt remains moderately high in the remainder of the Terrijory and to the southward exeept for a slight débressiénr in British Columbia. ! Precipitation has ceased in extreme Southeastern Alaska and the | Western Interior. Fairly heavy sniw ‘fell last night at Tanana. FALL ~ 1929 Upper Call’ SPRING ~1930 Middle Calf Cloudy weather prevails in the upper Yukon Valley and clear weath- ler in other districts. have fallen elsewhere. from Cordova. Temperature; have risen over ‘the “Interior but A minimun of & degrees beélow is reported LINOLEUM and RUGS len, NEW 1930 I: : PATTERNS OF ARMSTRONG’S The Yukca - ays is a local com- T ) Q pany and is owned by trappers and LINOLLUMS prospectors as well as mining men. Its s ably more widely held 11, any other company | JUST RECEIVED Also New Patterns of Congoleum Rugs Juneau-Youn g Hardware Company Reserve the date for the Firemen’s Ball—Feb. 12th the north, t was said. RN WILL TALK AT NOON Talks on Alas] in Wash- !ber of Commerce, 1 from those places, wt | ber ho OWN YOUR OWN HOME mo | Hw A Place Where You Don’t Have to Make 2 : Reservations in Advance x 1w supply the LUMBER,; DOORS, WIN- e CEDAR SHINGLES, CEMENT DO YOUR PLAN {tle, will , Engi- . A Alaska Road g transfer- ! | i § ’ and INTERIOR FINISH ! Juneau Lumber M iils, Inc. Lumber for Every Rurpose ¢ (the last meeting 15 he sails for the south, | PHONE 358 { ‘There are a number of communi ?_ 5 W to be read by cretary H. = e — one or to be taken up for m act! >+ CARPENTER’S TOOLS P}él;é:s;géa&es;niston' Saws - Maydole and Estwing Hammers Swedish: Chisels—Aluminum Rules Carborundum Stones—Grinders . Tinner’s Snips /ORLD DAY OF PRAYER, MARCH 7 1d Day of Prayer comes this year on March 7. It is ob- | |served all over the world interde-{ nominationally and will be observed in Juneau by morning and after- | noon sessions held at the Presby- j terian church. Luncheon will be J served at noon. Committees com- ‘posed of women of the various local /| .churches have charge of the pro- gram and the luncheon. i |* The women of Juneau are asked to set aside March 7 for the ob-| !servance of the World Day of Prayer. 1 ek ewiiom | Thomas Hardware Co. | e ) reoR S R s Reservé the date for the Firemen’s THE T. L. George, of the George Brothers Departiment Store, is a| passenger on the Princess Mary, | bound for Pacific Coast cities and | New York on a business trip. ¢ wint L Ball—Feb. 12th Frye-Bruhn Company Featuring Frye’s De. licious Hams and Bacon PHONE 38 Reserve the date for lflé Flrei men’s Ball—Feb, 12th “Typewriter ‘Supplies' and Commercial Printing - Exclusive Dealers Underwood Typewriters Geo. M. Simpkins Co. hidden wealth of the once- on of Inca Indians. Rossell | " STATIONERY, OFFICE EQUIPMENT, ! | | wealth buried by the Incas ¢ 4 Old Paperé for sale at Empire Offic e