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oo — tices at The Empire. og LW $1.00 1.00 1.00 1.00 UNBLEACHED MUSLIN, 45 in. PILLOW TUBING, BLEACHED SHEETING, 36 in. DRILL, 3 yards . RED AND BLUE TABLECLOTH, I yard RESTAURANT NAPKINS, LADIES’ HOUSE SLIPPERS, pair _. BATH MATS, KIDDIES® CAPS LADIES’ COTTON VESTS, 3 for ...... CHILDREN’S UNION SUITS, each RAYON PRINTS, 2 yards COTTON CREPE, 4 yards yards yards yards 1.00 1.00 1.00 1.00 1.00 1.00 1.00 dozen ... each each .. e e e e Ladies’ Silk and Wool Union Suits High neck, long sleeves, ankle lex Regular $3.50 value for $2.00 e e e ] B.M. BEHRENDS CO., Inc. Juneau’s Leading Department Store gth. s { HUNTER LOSES ONE FOOT IN BETTING GOAT Vanilla FOR COOKING Does not lose its sirength or flavor 16 oz. bottle for $1.00 Chifina” Hermld D scribes Incident ‘2‘ < Juneau Dru Company Phone 33 Post Office Substation No. Yancey went up the mountain near {McCarthy to get a goat, nai The Chitina Herald, publi |edited at Chitina, which |of Cordova, by Adrian N |years old. Yancy rat a bl |and started bac | cold. When he !down the mountain, he |bered he had left his gun |80 he decided he had bet s ey | DACK and get it Fails Over Clff I k him so gun that it was pretty he started back to hi |he was going back he fel |cliff. It knocked him. uncon {for so long that when he rev he thought that start back to his cabin right e then. He had to cross a creek goi back and he got his ‘53 the time he got both of his feet were ¢ to start a fire arm but he couldn’t. Wants Feet Fixed The next day Pete Brenes was passing and found him. took him to McCarthy and him up to Kennecoit to get Free Delivery he sen hi doc or decided they were d he would have to cut hi ¢ off at the 'instep and al on the right foot. | It will be hard for an old mar like him to get around with ]UNEAU MOTOR CO. ||na feet. e e WE CURE MOTOR ILLS Jeannie Muleahy, Petersburg. The to Wrangell L ent | > those of her hus! .:md vy once resided in Ju her husband were 1885 in Juneau. u Mar; Quartz und piaceT 0callon No- | | sam Eleven-Year-Old Editor of ¢ CHITINA—A few days ago Lee THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, WEDNESDAY, JAN. 13 1932 Bridge Hands Are Secondary to Babios’ L] " . * * * * * * Mrs. Ely Culbertson, Recently Engaged in the Card Game of the Century, Is Wife and Mother Before Bridge Expert ORSECT OSTURE FOR BRIDGE Mas QuueerTson WearinG BRIDGE Gown Mis CULBERTSON WITH JJOVCE and BRUCE. Since the famous bridge battle between the Lenz and Culbertson teams at New York, for the pur-| pose of testing the relative merits of the opposing systems of bidding, much speculation has arisen as fo| the domestic life of Mr. Ely Culbertson and his partner and wife. Some psychc s with the aid of a| lot of olegies and isms, tell us that a husband and wife combination as a bridge team is anything but de- able. That if they don't bicker over the card table, then they will surely do at home. But in the e of the Culbertscns this is pure balderdash; for t. are not only experis of a bridge system, but are also experts in the ideal system of married life. Their smooth teamwork, both in the card game and the of matrimony, is attributed by Mrs. Culberison to each’s recognition of the other as a human | being, endowed with reason, intelligence and freedom of thought and aetion. In the field of motherhood,' co, Mrs. Culberson is an expert. The two Culbertson children, Joyce Nadja, aged 4, and Ely Bruce, 2%, 1g brought up on a carefully mapped-out plan, the girl receiving the exact treatment meted out! o t boy, thus obviating the possibility of sex-inferiority. Besides English, the children can do a rairly good job at speaking French and German. Mr:. Culbertson’s favoritz bridge costume consists of a uit of black velvet pajamas and her pet aversion is agalmt Jewelry that jangles. 'Co-Eds Face Dlsclplme for Smoking on Campus ar2 EPUBLICANS OF TEIRD BIVISION HOLD MEETING Acts on Auditor Candidacy but Disagrees on Legislators tor, demanded two Representatives; the Seward district, which includes Kodiak and other Westward points, | wanted tofill the Senator vacancy ! and to have one Representative, and the Cordova district, which in- cludes the Copper River and Val- dez areas, asked for two Represen- tatives. Attitude cn Senatorship Anchorage and Seward deleg favored L. V. Ray, ati Seward, for the Senatorial vacancy. Cordova delegates were committed | to Dr. W. H. Chase of Cordova|women's Self Government associa- for the Senatorial vacancy, and 10 ltjon, arbiter of campus problems of Kent G. Robinson and Willlam B.|tne co-ods. Phinn of Cordova for Represen: It will provide the court andthe tives, these three having been in-) amazons, a disciplinary organt dorsed at a meeting ‘of the Cor-|tjon of uppsrclass women, will pro- dova Republican Club. {vide the police. | Anchorage was severely critic! gl s by one of the delegates for de- siring “one-half of the entire rep- resentation from the Third Div i Indorsement of the platform, adopted at the meeting, was urged on tie Republican clubs cf Anch-/ orage, Seward and -Cordova. Planks In Platform LOS ANGELES, Cal, Jan. 12— | Women at the University of South- ern California are determinad stamp out co-ed smoking on the campus. They have issued an ul- |timatum and viclations will be dealt with ummons {ro; where penaltics was taken by the SEWARD—What nad been pian- ned as a Third Division Republican convention at Seward January 5, turned out to be only “ a round- table conferenc accarding to the Seward Gateway. Affirmative re- 1lts of the meeting were adoption on indorsing the can- didacy of Harry I. Lucas of Juneau for Territorial Audilor, the state- ment of Capt. A. E, Lathrop, Re- w- National Committeeman a, that he favored E. A. nusson, banker of Skagway, for oF & AT THE HOTELS SR - Alaskan | Magxine Oole, Sitka; Norris Mi- chael, J. B. Harrington, Juneau. | Zynda John Winkie, Kimsham. INDIAN DANCES DELICHT MANY ‘Reulistic—Ef.fects, Good Voices, Pretty Girls Applauded No fewer than 300 persons, of| whom 200 were adulis and more than half of them Whites, occu- pied all the seats and some of the nding room- in the Alaska Na- tive Brotherhood Hall on Willough by Avenue last evening to witness a program of Indian tribal dances. Spectators were delighted with the { | | entertainment, and enthusiastically | applauded all numbers. The participants in the dances were members of the Alaska Na- !tive Brotherhood and the Al | Native Sisterhood. They evidenced \excellent training. Thelr costumes, always appropriate, were frequently | elaborate. | Well Managed and Explained | The affair was managed by | James Clark, assisted by David | Willard. Rev. Seward Kunz was master of ceremonies. His expla- inations and interpretations of the dances were illuminating and made {them fully appreciated by all the | White persons present. | Particularly interesting were tht | herring dance and tne chief's funeral dance. | In the hering dance, the Shaman i d the spirits to drive schools ng into the shallow waters n front of the hungry village. In onse to his plea, a group of oung men and women dancers appeared on the scene. Decorated With Heiring Their tall head-dresses were dec- corated with herring. A man in a canoe symbolized the taking of herring out of the water rake. The number was T |and its patomine well acted. The singing was excellent. The young men and young women wsare ai- ve in the tribal costumes, and mmy of the young women were eptional in grace and good 1 dance was In the chief's funer most interesting fe inging of the young women as ey circled around the chief’s widow, seated, moaning, on a stone. the Attractive indian Girvls The dance of the princesses wa by ettractive Indian girls| good voices. Other numbers of more than erit were the Tsimpsear L sign’fied the curi of an ailing prince by an Ind doctor and a Stick Indian wa: dace. The proceeds derived from the entertainment will go toward pay- ing for the extension and improve- ments recently made to the Bro- therhood Haill. el SUGAR FROM ARTICHOKES ST. PAUL, Minn. — Levulose, a o “left-handed sugar” twice as sweet can as the dextrose cane sugar, ! b> produced by farmers from the Jerusalem artichoke, says Dr. Wil- liam J. Mayo, noted surgeon. The Jerusalem artichokes can be grown in the coldest climates, Dr. Mayo Republican National Committee- mention of Rev. E. L. Win- and John Moore of An- ge and Cordova each thought rdova as candidates for dele- to the Republican National Convention in Chicago next June,| and the adoption of a platform. The chief planks in the platform favor exclusion of Federal officers from participation in strictly Ter- ritorial affairs and. from member- ship on boards having to do with the administration of Territorial) business, insists that taxes and profits accruing from the resources e rfix:;“';ug”‘:‘?‘”; co on |OF Alaska be covered into the Ter- } t agree on | o, el one Senator and Four Represenia- |y ative legislation given by the to be elected to the Alaska|guanic et of August 24, 1912 slature, because Sev:'ard, AD- | yroes the bestowal on Alaska of ge an dCordova each thought | aipe came autonomous. government should have the lion’s share of| ¢ has peen given other Territorie: Tegislative positions. and opposes the “ii i imperialism fos- “inally a motion on the subject, | oreq p;’y );ureau oompwe:ol central- ch was made by Dr. W. A. RV~ |jzeq in the National capital.” sirom of Cordova, was adopted. In Delegates from Anchorage, Sew- U"’rrln’)tal‘ftrs :.;g\{‘:lalfi‘:::cand'da(e Bl and OGS at afie 5] i 5 | th 3 1 % the Third Division had made|poo Seciils. AMBCE the Anehor primary filings early in Feb- |y g g, Ketchum, J. N: McCain, v, the Republican Clubs of |gert Wennerstrom and Rev. E ard, Anchorage and Cordova|\yiniernerger. Among the Seward | indorse the four strongest candi-|gelegates were L. V. Ray and C. M. dates regardless of where they|prosius Among the Cordova dele- might belfwm. i gates were Dr. W. H. Chase, Dr. Cluiss/ Usged. 16, .| W. A. Rystrom and Frank A. Han- In favoring the Teritorial Audi- andidacy of Mr. Lucas, the e ting urged the Republican clubs of Anchorage, Seward and Cordova to indorse him. Capt. Lathrop, in his talk rela- ve to the National Committeeman said that Mr. Rasmusson ‘A. B. Hall SATURDAY NIGHT Music by the ARCTIC PLAYERS Harry Brandt, Director Escorted Gentlemen, 75¢ Unescorted Gentlemen, $1.00 Students, 50c Kodiak Not Kodiak was not represented, but a message was recelved from W. J. Erskine, secretary of the Kodiak Republican Club expressing confi- dence in the Seward meeting and | pledging to it the support of the‘ Kodiak organization. | The Seward meeting convened late in the forenoon of January 5 and did not adjourn until 2:30 the | morning of January 6, the futile | effort to apportion Legislative can- didates among. the different parts of the, Division being responsible | for the protracted session. and that it should be given! The speaker refused to commit himself asto any candidate f Delegate to Congress, saying he had not given the matter any thought. In connection with the Legisla- ns, the Anchorage dis- , which has a holdover Sena- AUSPICES NO. 700 WHITE PERSONS |Janeau .. U. 8. DEPFARTMENT OF AGRIOULTURE, WEATHER BUREAU The W eather (By the U, 8. Weather Bureau) Forecast for Juneau and vieinity, beginning at 4 p.m., Jan. 13: Probably snow and warmer tonight and Thursday; moderate |3ou\he:‘]3 winds. LOCAL DATA: Baromeler Temp. Humidity Wind Velocity 30.16 20 89 NW 4 29.99 20 69 SE 7 29.79 23 84 s 6 CABLE AND RADIO REPORTS Time 4 pm. yest'y 4 am. today Noon today Wealner Clear Cldy Snow Lowest 4a.m. 4am, Precip. 4dam. emp. temp. velocity 24 hrs Weather -4 22 Cldy -2 6 Cles 24 12 Clay -10 0" clay 4 4 Clear 10 4 Cldy 4 12 Clay 26 18 Cldy 32 20 Cldy 34 Pt. Cldy 32 Snow 20 Cldy - Cldy 18 Clear 20 Clear -12 Clear 30 Cldy 34 .04 Cldy 44 .08 Clear “—Less than 10' railes. The pressure is moderately low in the Pacific States and throughout Alaska txcept the Southeast. Snow has fallen at scat- tered points in Westzrn Alaska and the eastern portion of the Guilf of Alaska. Pressure is lowest west of the Aleutian'Islands. It is hig hin middle latitudes in the Nprth Pacific Oceagy, and in South- western Canada with clear and coldsr weather in the latter region. Temperatures have continue dto iise in the Interfor and Gulf, and are again ralung on the western and northern: coasts. NEW OWNERS TAKE |2 OVER BLUEBIRD CAFE‘ Miss Ora Turner has been en- aged to take charge of the kit- chen Clean, well-cooked food and prompt, efficient service will be of- | statton— Barrew . Nome Bethel Fort Yukon Tanana . "airbanks agle St. Paul Duteh Harbor ... Kodiak Cordova 26 32 22 18 27 18 18 -12 28 34 40 a2 0 .10 0 0 02 .06 Sitka Ketchikan ... Prince Rupert . Edmonton Stattle . Portland ... San Francisco 38 38 | 4| 46 ‘Lcdbe tter. The latter will be man- Under new ownership and new management, the Bluebird Cafe, which is on the east side of Front Street south of the Alaskan hotel, will be opened for business tomor- row. The restaurant was bought early .| this week from Samuel Leppstict by Miss Stella Jones and Jerry fered at moderate prices. — e One branch of the military serv- ice of India is the Royal Elephant Artillery, which is trained like dis- ciplined soldiers. Pounds — Friends Whe “My wife is woman now,” said Robert B. Staw- ., a well known farmer of Kerr- e, Tennessee, when he called at a Memphis drug store the other day for another bottle of Sargon. “She has actually gained fifteen pounds since she started taking it, end 4 number of her friends who saw the wonderful improvement in my wife have started taking Sargon and the pills. “My wife was a strong and healthy woman up until about six months ago, when she was taken with what we thought was an at- sack of acute indigestion, and she | has been losing ground ever since until she began taking Sargon. Everything she ate disagreed with her, and the spells of indizestion became more frequent and seemed to get worse every time. “Gas formed on her stomach and rressed up around her heart, caus- ing palpitation and shortness ' of breath. She complained of sharp pains in her side and shoulder blades. Her tongue was badly coat- ed, her breath was disagrecable and her skin was yocllowish. She was very nervous all the time. “She lost weight and become so weak she- could hardly do her like a different TENNESSEE FARMER'S WIFE FEELS LIKE DIFFERENT WOMAN Robert B. Stewart, of Kerrville, Says Wife Has Gained 15 Saw Wonderful Improve- ment Are Also Taking Sargon and Pills. housework. She didn't know what |it was to get a good night's sleep, and she would get up mornings fecling more tired than on going to bed the night before. I bought all kinds of medicines for her, but {nothing semed to do her any | good. “Then, my mother told me to get Sergon for her, so I got a bottle | of Sargon and a bottle of Sargon Soft Mass Pills, and I'm mighty glad now that I took my mother's advice, for the treatment has made her like a new woman. She can | now eat and enjoy her meals with- out the slightest signs of indiges- \t‘on or other bad after effects. “Her tongue is clear, she no long- <r has a disagreeable breath, and | the pains in her side and: should- ers have disappeared. She sleeps like a child and awakens mornings fecling fine and- ready to'do her nousework. “I tell you it’s wonderful the way Sargon and. Sargon Soft Mass Pills toock hold of my wife’'s case and built up her health, and we are both prais- ing it every chance we have” For sale at Butler Mauro Drug Co. —adv. 3 Here’s the New Way to Build Sturdy Inexpensive WALLS SCHUMACHER w4 You need no longer waste time; labor and. money « in bullding walls. Now the new, approved way Is to get your walls ready prepared—Schu- macher Plaster Wall Board. Comes In convenient strips easy to apply. A few nails and your walls are up. Joints can be sealed quickly, giving a PLAs'rmt LL BOARD one piece wall. Takes any fin- ish perfectly — wall- pupw, paint,_tint or calcimine. . sure to use: Schul WflI Board as it ls manufacturéd under patented processes that make it different from any other wall board. Durable, permanent;. economical. For exterior and Interior walls. Thomas Hardware Co,