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e e ———————— ————— e LT ] oA Rd 'ANCY CREPE PAPER LUNCHEON T cloths and 16 napkins, % $1.00 1600 ¥ CRI ’ER NAI 1.00 PAIN 17D MODERNISTIC 1.00 £ ART PILLOWS 100 /= and PRIDGE E iES 1.00 £ LADIES’ SILX HOSE 1100 2 LADIES” AND CHILDREN'S WOOL E AND | C GLOVES 1.00 E GIRL'S BLUE AND KHAKI E MIDDIES 1.00 £ MANHATTAN SHEI 81x90 11003 S KAPOR 1-pound packages 1.60 STRIPED OUTING FLANNEL, 1 yards 1.00 RAYON TUPRING, 3 yards 1.00 LADIES’ HANDKERCHIEFS, 4 for 1.00 LADIES’ HANDBAGS 1.00 FIGURED VOILE and ORGANDIE, 2 yards for 1.00 FAST COLOR CRETONNES, regular $1.25 for 1.00 LADIES” AND CHILDREN'S RAYON UNDERGARMENTS 1.00 KNIT WOOLEN TURBANS and CHINCHILLA CAPS, cach 1.00 CHILDREN’S PRINT DRESSES, 2 for 1.00 LADIES” SMOCKS AND HOUSE DRESSES 1.00 RUMMAGI ON B. M. Behrends Co., Inc. “Jun-auw’s Leading Departinent Store” !I|I|II|IIIIIIIII||I||llIIIIIIHIIIIIHIHlIIII|I"llllllllllllllll!Illllllll!l!!ll||||iii|!|lllf| SIAMESE TWINS IN COURT | SALE STILL CONTINUES THIRD FLOOR . Assgciated Fress hoto The Hilton twins, Daisy and Violet, 23, are shown in court in San Antonio, Tex., during their recciverchip suit against their former guardians. They asked for an accounting of about $200,000 reccived from vaudevnll: and exhibition contracts. CITY WORKERS WITH SUBURB HOMES TURNING “HALF-WAY BACK TO FARM’ TTSA, Okl Feb. 12 » of the times has given birth to a new economic movement in this section, retary It's being called “half-way back c: to the farm.” | part City workers, many of whom have e before in th seen their wages or salaries drop, h at the number is are turning to small-scale farmingcreasing rapidly. as a means of supplementing their| e ipcomes. Still keeping their i NOTICE J0bs, they are becoming rural dwell-| oging to increase in price of ers to produce {rom the soil & Partiepa), prices delivered on and after of whag they consume, !this date will be as follows: screen- Real estate men, who say they eq coal, family trade, $18; restau- have not pushed suburban acreages.’ rants $17. D. B. FEMMER, report increasing transfers of small| —ady. Phone 114. tracts, usually about 10 acres, 1 NSRS SR Be LT ing the urban centers to city w« LEGIONNAIRES ATTENTION l The regular ing of The Am- | erican Legion scheduled for tonight y, agricultural sec- the Tulsa chamber of d 18 counties in this a have more farm- of Gt AR L Ao €rs, ‘fhe Tulsa office of | Women F liers' Made 1930 T heir Year Like Young Fledglings with ngs Poised for thht Above the Clouds—These Women from All Walks of Life, in Quest of Adventure Set New Records During the Past Year. wod Mes Kerrs MILLER. \3 ik Mrs GLaoYs O'DONNELY WITH LUSBAND asnd CHILDREN. NEW YORK, Feb. 12.—WOman j4nq'5 crack pilots. She covered the ! igma is rapldly and most ei- |50 mile course at an average speed iciently ridding herself of the title | |0f 102 miles per hour. This is t¥ wng upon her by our chxvakuus\hrst time that the historic trop: dfathers. One finds it 1mms- | has been won by a woman. to even think of our present| August, Mrs. Gladys Q(Don- of Amazons as “My. Lady nqji of California, won the Wom- | en’s Air Derby. She madz the cross- does mere man Set|country flight from Long Beac a pinnacle by SOme i, Chicago at an average speed of feat of 150 miles an hour. In the sam month, Mrs. L. Barnes, of Los An- ing circuses She flew into the public eye completed a coast to rop ail.” ) sooner Hm\fwer this record was er. int nsecutive barrel rolls, which men's record—held bv was them still hirty—most of by flying over Le Bourget for 38 Brown, an English girl praneh ace, Mauri competed for the King’s Cup, | pacame inte: 1 ion classic, and WOD 2 | 4qre_devil. against many of Eng- 23-year- old Sunday l!|!IIIIII|||l!IIIIIIIIIIIIllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII|IIlIIIIIIHIIIIllIIIlIIfltIIIIIIIIIIIHIIHIIIIIIIHIIIIIHIIIIIIIIHIlIIlIlIlIIHlIIIIIIIIIlIII ITS QUIET IN OPERATION ITS INEXPENSIVE ITS DURARBLE ITS GUARANTEED WE WILL MAKE YOU A REASONABLE TRADE- IN CREDIT FOR YOUR OLD WASHER Alaska Electric Light & Power Co. Juneau and Douglas, Alaska Juneau Telephone No. 6 _ woctern Bell Telep! 715 postponed to next Monday, Feb- yeports that 63 por cont of the can- ruary 16th, account of the AN- cellations of city phones over a/NUAL FIREMEN'S BALL. adv. * RthAmNosp. AT DRI b Derssy PARIOR > bznma LABALTA. ; Another lady stuntist was Laura Ingalls, who used to feature in fly-| all over the country. t in 30 hours and 27 minute \gar Tarr, Davil Tewkesbury, Hen-, broke: o weeks later by Mrs. J. M. Keith!George Whyte gnd Hi Miss Ingalls' outstanding| the completion of ’714[ breaking all| t records for| school ll'lIIlIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIHHIIIIIIIIIIHWNIMIMIHHIIIHIIMHIIIHHIIIH uumun PROM WILL BE HELD FRIDAY, MARCH 6 Committees Named to Take| Care of Various De- | tails of Dance | i Mnrr:;. or Prom, is the date for| the dance that| of the| ce fol-| Committees to take cai jous details of the dan: on. jitation—Robert Simps irman; Lawrence Sprir ish and Thomas Redlir Publicity—Thomas Judson man; Alvin Blomquist and | Pet n. | Decorations—TIona Messer, man; Matilda Holst and Powell. Music—Tyra Baldwin, chairman;{ chair- | Lillian chalr- Elmer { | Peter Melscth and Elmer Lind- | strom. Refreshments—Francis Riendcau, !chairman; George Whyte and Hil- dred Whitely. | Members of the class are Tyra Baldwin, Ethel Bayers, Alvin Blom- | quist, Valentine Gartley, Carl Hag- erup, Walter Holmquist, Matilda James Johnson, Thomas Eimer Lindstrom, Peter| esser, Billy Nikish, | on, Elmer Powell, Redlingshafer, Francis when | mendeau Mary Schramen, Robert! coast | | Simpson, Lawrence Springer, Ed- Iona eth, dllia: Weschenfelder, idred W‘ntely I Iry Weir, Ernest i LOUD SPEAKER beat | Dale | set” hops right up be- geles, established a new speed rec- n—fo ne stu { him—or goes even higher. |4 for women Ruth Nichols wrote mm to] vear to which we recently | on sept. 4, Mile. Maryse Bastl hievements b». PURGHASED FuR i odbye stands out as one Of ganeq the world's most beautifu ember, when ! i levement,* for Womsn -n the ayiatrix, broke the women’s endur- completed journey from | I 1 of aviation. No less than.ten gnee record—previously held by Los Angeles to Yo in 13| HosPlTALRAD'u records were set by WOMIED \yeng Bernstein, another beauty— B\aE s e aa amfli‘f)::‘f' x:;ig: Thk:azxg?;': ‘?"1’1’0,\ N $98 1 Jees ”‘ ‘ ord aj the age of 18. Miss | [i0} brought her into the Mme.| By far the most outstanding feat [Patients on Second or the “baby 1:‘ :;:‘e Ig:z‘;]p gi‘lizht : v.E< Ihcr i the year, or for L'In‘fl:d,(!;' of Men's Fl.OOL‘, Can ‘Hear o Douskseptsg 43| jo 43 “,"(‘;”;'L? : = Lol Afi'\“{ Receiving Machine Marie Skuse for the purchase of a {radio receiving machine for St. | Ann’s Hospital, a loud speaker also has been hought. It is installed {on the second, or men's floor. As |soon as ad nal money is ob- tained, a loud speaker will placed on i:e iaird, or women's, floor. The radio machine is in the nurses’ music, reading and rest room on the first floor. Donors to the radio purchasing fund are:| Mrs. ‘Vera Kaser, Miss Stella| Jones, Alaska Meat Company, Ju- | neau Drug Company, Thomas| |Hardware, James McNaughton, B. M. Behrends, E. J. White, Mr. Meier | and child, Mrs. M. Monagle, H. R. Shepard, Juneau Florists, Juneau| Young Hardware, James Wicker-| |sham, James McCloskey, J. J. Con- |nors, L. Kann, Fred Henning, T. |G. George, Bavard Brothers, Rob- ert Simpson, Al Lundgren, L, Nel- son, J. M. Saloum, Butler Mauro !Company, B. F. McDowell, Mrs. David Housel, Mrs. Jarman, Harry 3. Watson, H. L. Faulkner, Charles W. Hawkesworth, Blanche Kelly, Donie Taylor, George B. Rice, Alma Olsen, Josephine Tupper, Etta Shaw, Iva Tilden, Dalma Hansen, | V. Bourgette, Mildred Abrahamson, W. K. Keller, Juneau Chamber of Commerce, Mrs. M. J. Sabin, Mrs. McAllister, Charles E. Harland, Walstein G. Smith, Mr, Raven, Dorothy Israel, C. C. Rudolph, J. | | | Wilson, Mrs. Radolich, Mrs. A. Cleveland, Mr. Blomgren, Mr. Fick- en, T. J. McCaul, Emil Gastonguay, Dr. A. W. Stewart, Mr. Rustgard, Mrs. Rose Davis, Cash Cole, Mrs. Dolly Krause, Mrs. Jno. T. Spickett, Alaska Laundry Company, William Britt and Mrs. Marie Skuse. lcnger flight than 150 miles pre- vious to her take-off on the long jaunt, and not only was she handi- |capped by her inexperience, but ac- cording to the aviation experts, her plane was totally unsuited and inadequate for the severity of the test to which it was about to be subjected. It is now a matter of history how she confounded the experts and her case does not stand alone. Women | will continue to do the impossible despite all that may be said or writ- ten to discourage them. They will continue to win records that have hitherto been a masculine monopoly and in timc may even remove his supremacy in everything. —— LEGIONNAIRES ATTENTION :EE; E ke £ = = The regular neeting of The Am- bel- ( G. Morrison, M. J. Sullivan, Frank = U. S. DEPARTMENT OF AGRIQULTURE, WEATHER BUREAU The W eather (By the U. S. Weather Bureau) Forecast for Janeau ana vicinity, beginning at 4 pm., February 12: Rain tonight and Friday; moderate southeasterly winds. ‘ LOCAL DATA Time Barometer Temp. Humidity Wind Velocity Weather 4 pm. yest'y .29.72 44 n 8 16 Rain 4 am. today . 29.76 41 90 S 10 Rain Noon today ..29.61 44 84 s 12 Rain CABLE AND RADIO REPORTS i T ¥ESTERDAY | TODAY Highest 4pm. | Lowest4a.m. 4a.m. Precip. 4a.m. Astauon— temp. temp. | emp. temp velocity 24 hrs. Weather Barrow po e S .| N PR IR A T Nome 30 28 16 16 - .02 Pt. Cldy Bethel 18 18 16 18 o [ Cldy Fort Yukon ... 4 2 | 2 10 . 06 Snow Tanana 10 10 Fairbanks 14 14 | 16 22 * o Cldy Bagle 18 4 18 'R . 0 Pt.Cldy St, Paul ... i 30 | 26 26 14 .04 Snow Dutch Harbor 34 32 | 26 30 —_ 04 Pt. Cldy Kodiak 40 38 32 36 Calm .58 Cldy Cordova 52 40 34 36 26 9% Rain Juncau . 45 “ | 38 11 10 85 Rain Sitka 49 e | L =~ .88 Pt.Cldy Ketchikan 46 44 42 42 b 154 Rain Prince Rupert 46 46 | 40 44 g 22. Clear Edmonton 32 30 | 24 26 b 0 Clear Seattle 48 48 | 28 40 . [ Clear Portland 54 52 | 42 42 * 0 Clear San Francisco ... 62 60 | 52 % 0 Clear 52 *—Less than 10 miles. The pressure is lowest near Bristol Bay and moderately low throughout the remainder of Aliska and is moderately high near Hawaii. It is about normal in th> vicinity of Puget Sound. Rain and snow have fallen in Southern Alaska and there is considerable cloudiness in other portions of tha Trritory, Temperatures have risen in the Interior and in the extreme North, with little change in other districts. We Are Members of THE SUPREME SERVICE LEAGUE Which INSURES YOU EFFICIENT RADIO SERVICE When you buy a radio from us, the installation will be made by skilled radiotricians using the Supreme Radio Diagnometer, an instrument that quickly and scientifically locates all radio ills and enables us to make finer and more accurate adjustments. Thus, you are assured the maximum results and pleasure from your set in the beginning, and an occasional examination by the same advanced sys- tem insures the perpetual enjoyment of your radio. Our highly modernized, thorough and scientific methods enable us to offer you the very best that can be obtained in radio, whether it is the purchase of a new set or obtaining for you the best possible reception from your old one. You don’t know how good a radio can be until you have used our service. Juneau Melody House S SR e = e e s Overhauling Season During the winter months is a good time to have your automobile thoroughly inspected and put in good repair. l We are equipped to make any repair whether it is a general overhauling or a minor ad- justment and will be pleased to give you a flat-rate on any job. Connors Motor Company, Inc. Service Rendered by Experts UNITED FOOD COMPANY l ECONOMY CASH STGRE " Featuring Trupak and H. B. Brands Front at Mam St. Telephone 91 WHAT REGULARITY DOES A little water now and then keeps ife in & flower, but if watered regularly it abounds in living strength with great- er beauty and fragnnce. It is the regular additions to one’s erican Legion scheduled for tonight is postponed to next Monday, Feb- ruary 16th, account of the AN- NUAL FIREMEN'S BALL. adv. —————— . | = saving fund that make it grow. First National Bank "