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glmmmmmlmlmmmnmumummmnmnmnmummnmmmmu|m|m|lm|mlmum1mmmnmm|mm||mu'mmm| AR THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, FRIDAY, DEC. 4, 1931. I IIIIIIIIII|lllIIII|||IIIIIIIIII|I|I|IIIlII|I!IIIIIIIIII|I||IIlIIIIIIII|IIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII i Always makes a Silk Hosiery The always welcome gift. can’t have too many of, therefore alw ;‘ltl. 'vl'i('(':-. A Fine Silk U Gloves— to wear. Novelty Jewelry-- From Europe—Expert workmanship piece, and insures thorough satisfactio ness. Boxed for gift giving. LT Hosiery is a dress aceessory one A complete range of new shades at the new low Kid, fabric or wool gloves prove a ple: afimw lp wear make DPACTICAL GIFTS A New Handbag— desirable gift and will be more than wel- come if you select one of these latest style bags. $2.95 to $13.50 ays appreciated as a mbrella-—- Cannot fail to please for it is a gift of service that gives protection and pleasant usefulness throughout the year. ng and useful gift is evident in every n and lasting smart- B. M. Behrends Co., Inc. “Juneau's Leading Department Store” lIIIIIIIIllIlIIII|IIIII|||IIIIII|IIIIIIIlllI||||IIIIIII|IIIHIIlllllIIIIIlll!lllllfllllllIHIHHIIIII“IIIIIIIIIIIII|||IIIIIIIIII||||IIIIIIIIIIIIIfl ALASE A MEAT CO. QUALITY AND SERVICE TO YOUR LIKING Meadowbrook Butter Austin Fresh Tamales PHONE 39 Deliveries—10:30, 2:30, 4:3 | Frye-Bruhn Company PACKERS—FRESH MEATS, FISH AND POULTRY Frye's Delicious Hams and Bacon Three Deliveries Daily D e e Sy | Qi Phone 38 [ e 2 e Select an Electric Gift NOW Don’t wait until Christmas, when selection will be limited. Sel'ct your gift now from our well-filled stocks of new electric tablewares. Such a gift is a welecome addition .to a well-ordered househald, or to just a room and Kitchenette. Alaska Electric Light and Power Co. JUNEAU and DOUGLAS, ALASKA Phone No. 6 Phone No. 18 EDISON MAZDA LAMPS - ——— BiEL T TR CHILDREN HELD AT ST, ANTHONY GET XMAS FUND |Tom White, W. C. White, Mrs. Local People Send Dona- Jossie Harmon, Mrs. Edna Haley, . 1 | Reed Seavers, Miss Minnie Field, | ‘ton to Ala§kar'ls IN | Frank D. Price, Pete Jelish, G. ‘ Idaho Institution Paul, Cash Cole, H. G. Watson, | J. H. Newman, W. E. Feero, For distribution among Alaskan | {children in the Idaho State In-| \dusmal School at Si. Anthony, a| . |fund of $51 has been donated by ‘German Dad Defiant | various local peopls and forwarded | |to the institution through United | States Marshal Albert White. De- | | puty Marshal Frank Price BRRL: | ey SR & Ble-hard | ed the list upon which subscriptions | were made. | There are 44 children from t T:rritory in the St. Anthony school. | \A letter recently received by Mar- !shal White from Superintendent, Cook said: “Times are very hard with everyone so our children as well as the grownups are going to be satisfled with fewer presents this Christmas.” The Alaskans in the school are: David Andrews, Robert Barker, | forms in Germany. | addition to his family | Corps-Zeitung, a students’ thus: in too many, said Clemenceau. “Born: Horst Richard, child and fourth son of “We'll yet!” e Anna Collins, Simeon Dirks, Harry Sanborn, 17, looks forward to Gordon, Bessie Johnson, Wm. Jones, Paul Kazabaya, Archie Kleney, Clarence Lewis, Paul Liberty, Thos. | Long, John Lund, Clarence Marsh, with interest. for his ability to fly. Gertie O'Dell, Abraham Price, Al-| bert Ptarmigan, Debs Richardson, Daniel Stanworth, John Tolemie, | Mark Williams, Abram Wilson, Matthew Wilson, Frances Adamson, | Vear-oid sister. Christopher Coffey, George Coffin,| Tis father, and yes, even Thos. Hanson, Elizabeth Jackson, ‘moLher, have flown with him, aloft. wuuimuiiiiimnmnim||||mmm|mmmmmmuumnungRsl SECREST Rudolph, $2 each; D. E. Martin, Mrs. F. M. Doolin, Judge Charles Sey, Elizabeth Sey, Dorothy Nunan, United States Attorney H. D. Stab- ler, Mirlam McBride, J. W. Leiv- ers, N. B. Cook, Venetia M. Pugh, | John W. Dunn, George B. Grigsby, Gov. George A. Parks, Charles W. Hawkesworth, G. W. Folta, George Jones, J. W. Wilson, Frank Wilson, {John G. Morrison, T. L. Allen, Dr. H. C. DeVighne, all $1 each. of Clemenceau’s Mot triotism sometimes assumes queer! A hmpy‘ b | father in Duesseldorf announces an organ, | “There are 20000000 Germans eighth { beat those Frenchmen BOY REBUILDS AIRPLANE, Patrick Bell, Annie Brown, Pearl 2 Brown, Jacob Carpenter, James NOW SEEKING LICENSE Carpenter, Arthur Charles, Clar- ence Coffin, Anna Louise Cohns,| ASHVILLE, N. C., Dec. 4 —Briag eighteenth birthday, December 28, ‘That's the day he'll be examined He thinks Robert Muller, Peter Mokeferoff, | hell pass, too, for he has had 250 flights alone, and about 25 hours All these were taken in a planc | he rebuilt, with the help of his 15- and Mr. Secrest were married in U. 8. DEPARTMENT OF AGRIOULTURE. WEATHER BUREAU 1911. 4 b A In addition to her husband and The W eather = son, she is survived by her parents, & Mr. and Mrs. Gravrock, who live (By the U. B. Wealner Barean) in Ketchikan; two sisters, Mrs, Forecast for mn_n and vicinity, beginning at 4 p.m., Dec. 4: = Martin of Juneau and Mrs. Ethel Probably rain tonight and Saturday; gentle variable winds. = Smith of Ketchikan, and two bro- LOCAL DATA E\ SEATTL ME{mers’ Carl and Lawrence Etfick- Time Barometer Temp. Humidlty Wind Veloclty Wel?her son, both of Ketchikan. 4 pm. yesty .26 43 e SE 13 Rain E s 4 am. today 29.91 38 92 sSwW 3 Rain 2= ! Ncon today 2999 40 §8 Em < Rain = 'Sister of Mrs. Ralph B. France Warns Students “ABLE AND RADIO REPORTS = to Bring Lots of Cash YESTERDAY | —TOBAY, = Martin Was ‘Well Known } b o | D e e e § n ThIS Clly PARIS, Dec. 4—American stud- Station— temv. temp. | emp. temp. veloclty 24 hrs. Weather =/ —_— ents who plan a year's work in| Barrow . -4 -10 -16 -12 [ Clear & Paris must have at least from #1,-| Nome 18 16 16 20 0 04 Cldy =| Mrs. Mabel H. Secrest, wife of 300 to $1500—and a ticket home| Bethel . ORI R e e Clear == Cassie B. Secrest, well-known dla-|__when they arrive here, or they| Fort Yukon CTERN e [ 0 Cldy E‘mond drill operator in this Terri- |may face misery, eductional au-| Tanana 2 | 2 4 4 0 Cldy == |tory, and sister of Mrs. Ralph B.|¢tnorities agree. Fairbanks . -6 | -8 4 0 0 Cldy == Martin of Juneau, died yesterday| gudents who hope to work their| Eagle 0 -4 -14 4 0 Pt.Cldy = |in Seattle. Word of the demite|yay through a French university,! St. Paul .. 88 | B R Clear == | was received by cable by Mrs. Mar- | a5 many do in America, will findit| Dutch Ha TR R S 8 0 Clear = un | impossible. New teeth in the Jaws| Kodiak 36 32 3 0 - gk Cldy == Mrs. Secrest suffered a paralytic | against alien workers and the gen- Cordova ... 34 | 30 32 0 06 Pt. Cldy §. stroke in Seattle a year ago when |eral difficulty in finding employ- Juncau 43 | 38 38 3 65 Rain == Mr. Secrest was engaged in dia- |ment make it out of the question Sitka ... - | B — 0 67 Cldy ==/mond drill operations in the Taku|for students to be self-sustaining.| Ketchikan . 4 | 36 38 0 42 Clear == jistrict. She recovered sufficiently| Yet despite these difficulties the| Prince Rupert ... 46 4“4 | 34 36 0 64 Pt.Cldy E‘ to visit Mrs. Martin here this' Sorbonne, bulwark of French cul-| Edmonton . 28 22 | 22 22 4 06 Cldy == spring and then went to Cordova | ture, has a hundred more foreign Seattle . 48 | 40 42 6 .02 Rain == where she spent the summer while|students than last year. Portland 38 38 3¢ 36 4 40 Cldy == Mr. Secrest and her son John were | —_—— San Francisco ... 54 54 A 6 0 Cldy =| work on a contract. She re- QUEEN MARY IS ILL *—Less than 10 mies. E rned to Seattle in the fall. b A moderate low pressure area hase moved from southern Bering Ei Mrs. Secrest, wiio was 38 years| SANDRINGHAM PALACE, Dec.|* Sea to the Gulf of Alaska accomnanied by rain or snow over most == o0ld, was born in Republic, Mlchl-:4_—Queen Mary is ill with a slight| of Southern Alaska and the Bering Sea coast and higher tem- == gan. When four years old she was cold in the head. She is pro- peratures on the Bering Sea coas: and western and central Interior. == prought by her parents to Douglas, gressing favorably but is remaining A high pressure area south of tae Aleutian Islands is extending E where she grew to womanhood. She indoors. northward attended by clear wea her and lower temperatures in s s - southern Bering Sea. The pressire is high in extreme Northern Alaska and clear weather and low:r temperatures prevail on the Arctic coast and in the eastern Interior. | SHEAFFER PENS, PENCILS and DESK SETS They carry a lifetime guarantee SKRIP—“The Successor to Ink” Wright Shoppe PAUL BLOEDHORN, Proprietor SPECIAL REDUCTIONS ON ALL CHRISTMAS CARDS I | p— THE CHAS. W. CARTER MORTUARY “The Last Service Is the Greatest Tribute” Corner 4th and Franklin Sts. Phone 136-2 These cards are by Syd- II||IIIllIIIIII|IIIIII|IIII|IIllllllIIIIIIIIllIIIIIII|IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII!IIIIIHIHI R ney Laurence and others. They cover a wide range of Alaska subjects, Regular price; 25¢ ‘each NOW 2 for 25 cents Let your gift be Alaskan. WHY send something they can buy in their own home town? R The Nugget and Hnnnnmn pa-| T O L L L L VT the! BASKETBAL TONIGHT-—-Tripleheader Juneau High School vs. Douglas F iremen B. P. R. vs. Alumni Juneau Hi School Freshmen vs. Eighth Grade his Opposite Alaskan Hotel T T T T T his STORE OPEN EVENINGS Henry King, Luba Malachoff, P:ul Malachoff, Mamie Malachoff, Mabel Powers, Nancy Watson. Contributors to the special Christmas fund for them included: | George Bros, $10; Judge Justin W. Harding, Marshal White, C. C. Efiikfi IN HIGH SCHOOL GYMNASIUM IIIIlllllllllllllllllllllllfllllllllllllllllllllllIllllllflllllllllllfllllllflllnmlllllllllllll 7:30 P. M. Admission—10¢, 25¢, 50c A ¢ Old Papers for sale at Empire Office i ————