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o THE CHRISTMAS ~ STORE SUPREME ever have we been able to show such a wonderful showing of Practicable Gifts . .*. . Our buying facilities enables us to give values in keeping with the new low prices on merchan- dise. A visit to our store will convince you. S GLOVES OUR GLOVE LINE IS COMPLETE " *Pigskin gloves, Kayser chamoisette and WHE L fabric for sport year. All the new fall _shades to choose from. : $1.25 to $5.75 French Kid Gloves ig all $3.50 to $3.95 shades Pure Silk Hose at $1.00 A special purchase makes it possible to %,/ sell these lovely hose for $1.00. In all the new winter shades— Special—$1.00 RAYON RUN-PROOF BLOOMERS, PANTIES and STEP-INS— Yoke bands, daintily trimmed in Tace, contrasting colors and embroidered. Peach, Spray, Orchid, Ivory, Pink and Coral. Special—$1.00 KAYSER MARVELRY GOWNS Tailored styles — fine tucks and ribbon trim—peach, pink, shrimp and spray. Special—$2.50 Crepe de Chine Princess Slips — Peach and Pink. Sizes 36 to 42, Special—$2.50 CARNEY DISPLAY Bath Salt, Sachet Burning Perfume, In- cense and Torpedoes. Sachet Bags in rose leaves and violets. 35 cents to $2.00 Torpedoes—10c¢ to 50¢ HANDKERCHIEF DEPARTMENT Showing the daintiest hand embroidered linen to the very sheer batiste—in pure white and colors. 10 cents to $1.25 Dance handkerchiefs in dainty georgettes, ham;li rolled hems, hemstitched and scal- loped. $1.00, $1.25 and $1.95 BOXED STATIONERY A splendid showing of Writing Paper. Special Prices— 95 cents to $1.25 DAINTY TEA APRONS In white and pastel shades. Special—65 cents s | | | | «~ NEW DRESSES Just Un packed IN CHIFFON AND VELVET with lay collars of chiffon and lace . . . lovely flowers . . . rhine- ornaments and buckles finish these lovely dresses. Sizes 16 $16.75 to $29.50 Some stone to 44. LEATHER GOODS BEADS and COSTUME JEWELRY An beads and costume jewelry shown in all the latest colors from the choker style to the long string. assortment of the most wonderful An extraordinary showing of hand bags, bill folds and purses—featuring the zip- per closing. Dark moire and kid linings matehing the color of purse. Black, brown, tan, navy and combinations. Very spec- 1ally priced. $2.85 to $14.50 Specially Priced—$§1.25 to $6.75 BAXLEY DRESSES Every dress an outstanding number— daintily trimmed and finished in organ- die lace and binding. HOSIERY Always an appropriate gift. Ka Gotham Gold Stripe in very shee fon to the heavy service weight. er and chif- Sizes 150 19—36 to 44 $2.50 $1.5 $2.25 Speci 51.95 $1.50 to & > Special—$1.95 Regular ! { ' EW SHIPMENT OF BETTY At a price that will more than double your budget - ery coat in our large stock must be disposed of to make way for new merchandise. Distinctively styled coats, tailored with precision of the newest fabrics, are offered at unus- ual savings. Tweeds, woolens and broadcloth coats with deep collars of fox, caracul, north- . ern rat, skunk and wolf. Regular $19.50 to $79.50 Clearance, $14.50 to $59.50 TR R TR I FARM FEDERATION TO URGE REVISION OF TAXATION SYSTE By FRANK I. WELLER (A. P. Farm Editor) WASHINGTON, D. C., Dec. 5. Mecting in Bos December 8 for its 12th annual convention, American farm bureau federation undertake to memorial for a spectacular and reaching revision of the national tax system. In essence, the plan is to real estate on the basis of its ear ing capacity rather than on its capital value. By making the income from per- sonal ser including salarie land professional fees, equally e with property for the support of the government the plan would distribute the tax) & "C burden equitably and directly 0| . o." ¢o, | every household in America | E Sam H. Thompson, president of | the foderation, says state systems ‘ v i foposat Aofwe of taxation, with their emphasis on e e o locks when tr ¥ OSAKIDPE X 88 the main SOUrce| mayeg enlargement necessary re responsible for o, Burgess said. “I do not think a portion of prevailing 1awlessness| gt necessity will arise before 1960 and, indifference to good gOVErN-fpyjiding of the ~additional locks i Iwould take about ten years and Dependence on the general Prob-fpe oost would be about $135,000,- " he says, “almost wholly! oo . exempts the majority of rect taxatia It i PANAMA CANAL BIG ENOUGH FOR WHILE, SAYS COL. BURGESS YORK, Dec. 5 tax conditions, Colon governor ald on h r Santa Maria Colonel Burgess, who is on y to Washington to discuss ¢ | problems with Prosident Ho 1 committee the ca icated the 1930 would be about lower than in and con j trattic one 1929 tons ess | said there had about changing Colonel Burge k il " " {been “some talk el m}’fl ”{v\“\vx.\ff ';::m‘l“"“]‘;”(lll\‘o1h<, level of the Panama canal to L irect taxes Saon ¢ 0¢ V=" 1sea.: level and commented B Sl L publiclignie it is theoretically possible, it ,“i“{“}:“}" I"f““]"‘ he administration {45 no¢ economically practicable.” {of their fisca ems. | g | “Equal opportunity to enjoy the| 4 R | benefits and privileges of stable . ;j‘,(r\‘(‘l nment requires the ]lil!‘ll('lpfl-“ESklmo Paddles Days {tion in the costs of government in| | some proportion to ability to con- (i tribute to such costs.” POINT BARROW, Alaska, Dec. 5. Roughly, the farmer pays in taxes| —Marooned on a small island of labout $28 out of each $100 of gross|ice while hunting a polar bear four |income whereas persons in other|days ago, Joe, an Eskimo, fashion- | kinds of business pay only about|ed a rough raft from the ice and I$7. [uxmu a rifle butt paddled steadily { Agriculture is less able to pay|for forty-two hours, finally reaching taxes on the same values than anyshore ice and safety a short dis- other great industr; Tllwnpsnn‘\ tance east of here. says, because it gives the farmer| lower average retu [ ties consumed, for his labor and!peratures ranged erty than any other business.|degrees below zero. he federation has declared itself | 3 oo 3 {opposed to special favors for any| ATTENTION ELKS irL in national, state and local| L taxation ’ All local and visiting Eiks are [ > urged to be in the Elks Club Room | Play mevor Golf at The Alaskan fat 1:30 Sunday afternoon to attend | Hotel. (adv.) | Memorial services. | i RALPH MARTIN, Exalted Ruler. e, Daily Empire want Ads Pay. ' —adv. .+ |complained -l the " | year, has that | On Ice Raft to Safety| He was in an exhausted condition, | both in mon-! hungry and with frost-bitten fin-| ley and money value of commodi-|gers. While he was on the ice tem-| from 20 to 30, o JAPANMAY ASK "FOR REVISION - OF SEAL PACT Prince Rupert Newspaper Hears Japanese Prepare to Re-open Treaty (Prince Rupert News) ions are being made by | the anese goverrment for re- mmption of negotiations looking to ion of the four-nation seal nder which certain islands nor rn areas belonging to . United States, Japan and permanently closed to fleets. The Japanese have for several years that are the heaviest losers under pact made because one of the [ umptions under which it was |made, namely, that the same seals |return to the same islands each been disproved. It is con- tended that seals from the Japan- |ese island in the Pribilof group, ta which the treaty applies, have re- cently been found in the Hokkaide p. Fishermen in northern wat- | € have been notified to report | whenever they find foreign seals in | the vieinity of the Japanese island. has also been contegded that the seals have increased to such an extent under protection of the |treaty that they are destroying ‘A h which Japanese Fishermen [ catch in these waters. The four na- entered into be- { was feared that the slaugh- |ter of the seals in that maritime sealing they. |area was so great as to threaten |the sspecies with extinction. The | Pribilof Tslands, belonging to the | United States, certain islands be- |longing ‘to Japan and the Com- andorski Islands, belonging to Rus- sia, all of which are breeding plac- les for is, were declared perma- |nently closed to sealing. All na- ! tions are declared to be in favor qf | reopening the treaty but negotia- tions have been complicated by the refusal of the United States to ree- ognize the Soviet Government of 'Russia. The treaty was made with |the Czarist government but has | been accepted and observed by the | Soviet y e A branch office of the National Pecan Growers exchange has been | opened at Mobile, Ala. From 2,500,000 to 3,000,000 acres of oats are grown annually from fall seeding in the south. | | -~ - - He’s a Terror to Men Who Cheat —-but to Women? HE tries cheating them him- self, for love. But they heap love and riches upon him in this gripping tale of a badlands villain who turns hero in an amazing series of hard-riding, quick-shooting adventures. Based on O. Henry’s classic story, with GARY COOPER, as the “Llano Kid,” Fay Wray Consuelo. There’s a big all - outdoors thrill for you in @ Garamount Qicture 1% COLISEUM 7:30 ———— TONIGHT —— 9:30 A Ordway’s Photo Shop 2 % In the latest styles, make an appropriate gift for any occasion. . ALASKA SCENIC VIEWS AT