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Girls’ Print Scheol Frocks Children’s Long Lisle Hose, 3 pair Girls’ Cotton l{lumes Men’s Combed Cotton Union Suits, each Boys' Caps, each EXTRA SPECIAL Summer Dresses $1.00 Children’s 1 Suits, 2 Children’s H Suits, Children’s $1.00 $1.00 Al $1.00 § $1.00 % Values $7.50 to $19.75, NOW $1.00 $1.00 $1.00 Print Houses Pajamas, each Kitchen Tie Aprons, 1 for Dawn-a-Day Heuse Frocks House Lining, 20 yards Bleached Muslin, 1() vards Drapery Da k Ruffled Curtains, Panel Curtai each 1 yards $1.00 $1.00 $1.00 1 yards REMN/ each Mu. in I\lghlgnwns, ed('h Canvas, 8 oz, 10 oz, 11 oz, Non-Run Shirts and Si\drib._s Jight Weight Ur for 8 cavy Weight Union E $1.00 $1.00 Sl 00 nklets, 4 pair . and Scrim, $1.00 ns, Lace Burlap—green, brewn, natural, $1.00 $1.00 S—HALF PRICE B. M. Behrends Co., Inc. Juneau’s Leading Department St | the Prince Rupert on a flight over, Mendenhall Glacier, BARANOF ON. SITKA AND TODD FLIGHTS =~ rnis moming at 10 o'clock, the _ Baranoi went to Sitka, with Nick ! Bez for Todd, and Thomas B. Wil-| son and C. A. Winckelman, round, trip for Sitka. >oe The seaplane Baranof returned t0 Juneau last night after taking an injured man from Fish Bay to| the hospital at Sitka. The plane then took off with six tourists from Daily Empire Want Ads Pay REAL drip coffee at last! Specially prepared for DRIP. Schilling DRIP Coffee is specially blended, specially roasted, and specially ground for the immediate extraction of all its rich, fra- grant flavor. Coffee intended for a percolator is not adapted for the drip process in which the water drips through the coffee but once. Filter papers in each thn. Crystal-clear Real Drip Coffee can be made only by using a filter paper. For your convenience, filter papers are packed in cach Schilling tin. Introductory Offer? Specialmodel Drip Coffee Maker S 20 and 1 1b. Schilling Drip Coffee, l . @l your grocer*s. If he cannot supply you, send his name and $1.20 to A Schilling & Company, San Francisca, ”.....-ck in cither case if you are not satisficd. use Standard Schilling Coffec sas ore AIR INDEMNITY INSURANGE AGT | UNDER ATTAGK 'So-Called lndependents Seek to Enjoin Officers from Enforcing It tContinued Irom Page One) 'Such Act is not within the. scope of the rightful subjects of legisla- tien conferred upon the said. Leg~ islature of the Territory of Alagka by the Organic Act * * and that the same is null and void and cannot lawfully be used to re- quire the plaintiffs.* * * * to. efs fect. and maintain the security aforesaid, or to warrant the prose- cution of the plaintiffs * * * * for failure to do so. A temporary injunction . is asde to be made permanent upon a.final hearing -of the the Territory, it officers, and servants and the Federal Dis~ trict Attorneys from prosecution of the plaintiffs, and that the Terri- | torial statutes. be declared. invalid. Eight Companies Jcined | Eight of the so-called independ- !ents joined {n. the suit, which was | filed by Harry F. Morton, promin- lent Anchorage attorney. Those at- | tacking the law. are: Wein Air- ways, Inc;, Edward I. Lerdahl, Nat Browne Flying Service, Giliam Air- ways, Inc, Reeve Airways, Star Air Service, Inc, McGee Airways and Arctic Airways. Two companies have filed with Auditor Boyle signifying their com- pliance with the law. These are the Alaska Southern Airways - of this city, and the Pacific Alaska Airways, with headquarters at Fair- banks. | Mr. Morton, whose appointment as attorney for the Reconstruction | Finance Corporation with head- quarters at Washington was re- cently announced, has wired -Gov. Troy asking' that the hearing.-be | expedited. He said he had been | instructed to proceed to Washing- [ton at the earliest possible mo- ment. —————e The death rate from auto acci- dents within the eity of Des Moines Iowa, increased from 25 to 81 per 100,000 of population in 1932 over 11931, cause, restraining | agents | PUT RIGHT UP- T0 HIS SOUAD Grid Trammg Rules Are‘j id Before Bo ys in Spear’s System MADISON, Wis, up to the boys.” In that one terse pronounce- ment Dr. Clarence 'W. Spears, Uni- versity of Wisconsin football coach, condenses the training and disci- plinary formula which has made his teams recognized as models of “condition.” “I never have tried to stand over my: feotball players to se2 to it that théy did those things which were hpst for them,” says Spears, who. has ccached successfully . at West Virginia, Minnesota and Ore- gon before comjing hens in 1932 Responsibility is Theirs “I've told them what they ought to, have in food, .sleep, rest and Aug. 25~—It’s exercise, but the responsibility has o always , bezn. . solely upon. them. And. they never fool me—not that sometimes they haven't tried! “Let sthem smoke if they wish during . the summer months. I mean, really smoke. Let them keep | 1ate, hours or bum around. That's ‘their) business, but I don't think they'll get by ve'The way we work from the very first day of practice, a hoy who hasn't built at least a good | foundation for hard work con't take it—and he can’t hide it. You ‘ua. it’s all up. to him,” ) (1:The. jovial, doctir, while, he lets thg boys' showing take care of the enforcement end, nevertheless has complete and definite ideas on how | to live through ths summer vaca- {tion with a football season in the offing. | . Candidates he classifies into two groups—firs those who work at | manual labor, those who make it a real vacation. | For those who work he outlines a diet ‘“‘that agrees with them” and contains plenty of fresh fruit and; vegetables, with the heaviesT meal in the evening and positively no eating between meals. Eight hours sleep every night— “and I mean at night,” he, inter- poses—and frequent recreation per- jods for golf, tennis, swimming or hiking, are other suggestions. And the summer should be topped off by .two weeks of rest with only light exercise, For the lads having a real va- cation, Spears recommends like- wise the full eight-hour sleeping schedule, diet containing a mlm-‘ mum of fats, plenty of tennis or| golf—particularly the former, for| co-ordination—and a six weeks’ build-up pregram of informal foot- | ball tessing and sprint starts. | “Contrary to the popular idea,”| Spears says, “it's not wind we| want in footballers so much as it | |is stamina, leg stamina. A foot- | ball player, like a fighter, is only as good as his legs.” | ——————— NATURE GIVES OKAY WHEN FISH FAMILY | DECIDES TO SINK WASHINGTON, . Aug. 24.That' old showman, mother nature, has given the Smithsonian Institution | a freak;fish as strange in its way | }as a bird without wings. | 3 | has no air bladder, | | This fish | something which most fish can't| | get along without. The bladder | | | enables a flsh to float without ef- fort. Other it would either have .to keep swimming or sink, like a man But in the heauwaters of the| James River, in Virginia, a family | of suckers have violated the rules | and dispensed with the bladder. | They did so because the water there is so swift that they must either stay on the bottom or be | washed away. Floating is out of | the question. { Bvolution, alert to eet rid of use-l 1688 organs, did away with the axrl 34 My Beauty Hmt | | UANE AUBERT | | “Be . feminine” is my beauty hint. Many women are £0 anx- ious to bz modern, t th lose their feminity and, with it, muc! of their charm | In my opinion, a thin boyish fi-| gure is’ not feminine. I find a few feminine curves much prett and much more attra too, I believe a soft voice, tle manner and fluttering cl add much to a woman's charm Out he goes —old man depreciation — when the Rasmussen painter-man comes in. The two can’t stay in the same house — not for a minute or a month. The Rasmussen painter- man is the man to trust with your paint problem— he’s the fellow who uses nothing but Rasmussen Paints and Varnishes. ; Ask your painter or your dealer. RASMUSSEN & COMPANY Portland - Seattle ang PAINTS VARNISHES Ideal Paint Shop WENDT & GARSTER WEHI! AN'BRING MEA STEIN OF LEEn If Cap'n, Jack Smith had reqembpnd to bring along a case of Beer he'd be singing the SCHNITZELBANK with Powhatah instead of waiting ETHEL BORDEN’S PHONE 569 DINING ROOM hawk. Our beers good full flavor goes far today to turn frowns into chuckles—and its careful ageing makes a clear head the only after-effect. MERCHANTS LUNCH—40 cents 25 cents per order | CAPITAL BEER PARLORS to be shaved with a toma- FISH AND CHIPS PRIVATE BOOTHS FOR PARTIES | fer | son T T SHORT PROGRAM | ' BEING SELECTED Big Card for Next | Winter ‘ still | o past m- MIAMI, Fla, Aug chuckling over its suc season, Miami is b mer drawing plans and better sports winter. Topping the program of activi- ties will be the $10,000 Miami Bilt- more open golf tournament, in which the ante may be rai and the $10,000 added Florida derby that will the racing season at Hialzah Along with d the Miami i international am tournaments, the at Tropical P ng at three trac an tennis tournam onal Miami B: h cayne Bay regatta, a host of tournaments for amateurs and 1 men and a wide selection of nor sports. Talk of Title Fight | Plans ar: und discussion for a p ly of title sig- nificance. A large arena is avail- able here, the open air bow! which Jack Sharkey, past hea weizht champion, fought Phil Sc of E and Young Stribli of Ge a, and where Primo Car-| necra bafiled Jimmy Maloney of Boston. Leading resort hotels are mak- ing plans to open their doors ear- lier than they did last season. The first probably will be rea guests October 1, and others will follow closely. i Spirit of Optimism for the v e not been arra for program close be of- and the four -ball sea- hound Pan- these will open cl large at ates sports events The in regatta prokably | be held lnm Capt. John wdelphia is in eign drivers rd mot craft her France, y have en- Wannamal Eurcpe outbo: bring the y and Spain d represents A general that the wint optimism of 1933-4 will be an even great season than the one just closed is evident in all qu r's, The past was Cons! the best old “boom” s A A HABIT ST. LOUIS, Aug. 25—It's get-! ting to be a hibit with Dizzy Dean —this business of ruling the roost in strikeou His record-breaking performance against the Cubs, in which he fan- ned 17 batters, boosted his total] for the season to 143 and put him far ahead of any other 'Major League hurler. Last year he also led both the leagues in strikeouts, and in 1931 led the Texas League with the re- markable tctal of 303. In 1930, his first year in professional base- ball, he struck out 23¢ men in three different leagues. Dizzy’s batting average, around 200, doesn’t come up to his ad- vance predictions of .300. How- ever, he has two triples and a home run to his credit and is one of the few hurlers cradited with a stolen base this season. ered since the da; New FALL VELVET | Noon today | st. Paul J. 8. DEPARTMENT OF Adaldmm WEATHER BUREAU The Weather By the U. 8. Weather Burean) LOCAL DATA Forecast for Junean and vicinity. beginning at 4 p.m., August 25: Partly cloudy tonight and. Saturday; anml A.llcad) Planning for S ‘4 p.m. yest'y 30.16 30.15 30.12 68 49 64 4 am. today Barometer Temp. Humidity Wind Velocity 48 gentle variable winds Weathe: Clear Clear Clear w Calm SwW 12 0 2 88 59 CAELE AND RADIO REPORTS TR G B o S e YESTERDAY Higheést 4p.m. temp, temp. 48 40 48 46 52 50 56 56 58 58 56 48 54 50 58 68 Statlon Barrow Nome Bethel Fort Yukon Tanana Fairbanks Eagle | ‘Il ! | | | Dutch Harbor Lodiak Cordova Juneau Sitka Ketchikan Prince Rupert Edmonton Seattle Portland San Francisco TODAY Loweést 4a.m. 4atm. Prectp. 4a.m. m;xsn. temp. veloeity 24hrs. Weather 4 12 30 28 4 12 Gy Pt. Cldy Cldy Clear Cldy Clear Clear Cldy Cldy Cldy Cldy Clear Clear Clear Clear Clear Clear Clear Cldy Trace 26" 14 14 0 .08 0 Trace 0 0 Trace 0 0 0 0 0 0 [ A moderate storm is central near Northwestern Alaska and the barometric pressure is moderately high in other portions of the Ter- It is falling in the Interior Showers have fallen nea: ritory. States. the Bering Sea coast. ior and the Southeast. eastern Interior. and rising in the North Pacific Cordova and moderate rain on Clear weather prevails in the eastern Inter- Temperatires have fallen decidedly in the WILSON TAKES ,‘ PLANE TO SITKA | Thomas B. Wilson, Vice-Presi-| dent and General Manager of the Alaska Steamship Company, and . C. A. Winckelman, Chief ln- spector for the State Board of Pharmacy of California, were pas- sengers on the Baranof this morn- ing on a round trip to Sitka, plan-| ning to spend a few hours at Todd as the guests of Nick Bez, can- | | g SHOE REPAIRIN AII Rubber Hccls G 35¢ ole: $1.00 up FRONT STREET SHOE SHOP See “BIG VAN” A FINE Watch and Jewelry Repairing at very reasonable rates WRIGHT SHOPPE PAUL BLOEDHORN ! | nery superintendent there. | SRS MEMBERS OF WASHEURN PARTY RETURNING SOUTH W. 8. Child and A. Cflrwr.{ members of the Washburn-Mt.| Fairweather party, left for the south today aboard the stearfér Princess Louise. LRSI Five hundred blind psvsons m1 Ohio are gainfully employed in their own homes. FORD AGENCY (Authorized Dealers) GAS OILS GREASES Juneau Motors FOOT OF MAIN ST. BUILDERS SUPPLIES It is our business to know how your home can be made fioré comfortable. We have many exclusive lines and can supply Firtex, Celotex, Sheetrock, Plywood and all of the Johns-Manvillé products. Lumber, Lath, Shingles, Millwork Mouldings Columbia Lumber Co. TELEPHONE 587 Successors Builders Supply Co. Wool crepe with smart stitching. New visor effect., HATS SATIN WOOL FABRICS Which Shall Your New Hat Be? J oneS' Stevens Velvet still queens Shop it over every aother hat fa In new high tur- ban. ... Corduroy is new . . . and perfectly grand to wedr with sport togs. Novelties persist, and knits are the best of these. In turban fashion. . * SEWARD STREET NEAR THIRD