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! b i i Uiedarance T AL AR TR Slioe | Clearance in smart ium heels, low he styles and delightft in a style to please Ties, Pumps an Here you gentle this group of zood I hoes in blacks and the finest valu 2IMS HOPE FOR BRIT, TAX OUT Surplus Will Prove No Re- lief — Redemption of Debt Comes Up By OSCAR LEIDING LONDON, Jan. 23.—The shadow of ' disarmament troubics i3 ting gloom on a picture othe ed with rays of sunshine Bull pores over the est next year's budget. The taxpayers' hopes for at least a small cut in his heavy burden, on mates the strength of a substantil sur- t plus built up in the current finan- v eial year, are lield from soaring by t! in th ble. the feeling that an incre defense estimates is ine Surplus Ne Relief That there will be a surplus already been announced by Nevill Chamberlain, Chancellor of the Ex cheguer. Revenue is running ab $56.000,000 more than at the s fime last year, while ordinary penditure shows a decrease equiva- f Jent to more than $250,000,000. ~Under the existing law, however, surplus realized by the end of : = on March 31 : she ey ye: the redemption must be applied of debt. The surplus that intimately the taxpayer and the economy victim, therefore, is not the realized surplus of the current B SENSATIONAL VALUES Styles galore in this group . without end . . 82.95 Marvelous Values $3.95 =~ VEN! HERE’S YOUR OPPORTUNITY TO SAVE ON FINE FOOTWEAR = - you've ever seen . . . RS PROBLEM Sale of Seasonable Footwear! Itis necessary for us to sacrifice good-looking shoes of excellent quality at these low prices in order to provide space for the hundreds of new styles that are on the way here from the factory. : Unquestionably these shoe values will cause a riot of enthusiasm so you had better plan to be here early and get your share of these fine bargains . . . good looking, fine fitting shoes for men, women and children are going at prices that will amaze you. So great are the values, you'll want to choose for the entire season and you would certainly be wise to do so while these good shoes are obtaniable at such substantial savings. . .'. It’s a grand opportunity to save on footwear for yourself and fam- ily. Come early and take full advantage of it. Enjoy these tremendous savings on shoes for Boys and Girls of every age REAL BARGAINS in a variety of styles for women Jootwear for women You'll want to fill your footwear needs for months to come when you see these beautiful models at these low prices . . . there are numet- ous patterns in all sizes from which you can make your selection. . . high heels, med- els in a variety of charming 1l materials. Your fit is here : ... and look at the prices! d Straps in variety almost . at extreme Savings! Good looking shoes that can take a thousand or more abuses every day in the year. A splendid assortment of styles for boys and girls of every age. All the sizes in all the popular leathers. Your opportunity to fit the children in good shoes at remarkably low prices. It is genuine esonomy to choose now . . at such sub- stantial Savings! Infants’ and Babies® Sizes 99¢ to $1.29 Visses” and Children’s Si 49 to $1.98 - And for your bigger Boys and Girls $1.28 10 $2.98 ey $3.95t0 $4.95 while the Jot lasts :men. Take your pick from Consider this! They're good-looking, comfortable, long-wearing shoes offered at prices that would be unheard of except for this sale—you’ll be tempted to choose several pair for the sake of style and economy. yoking, fine fitting serviceable browns, priced to make them Work Shoe Value Just to tep it off and make (he sale complete we’re put- {ing in this splendid work | shee in sizes for men and ! 1 corking good rd miles of comfortable service—and the price is only $2.95 A Whale of a Value You won’t be able to dup- licate our low prices on rubber galoshes for a long itme to come . . . if ever! SEE THEM! I S S All Reduced to $2.95, $3.95, $4.95 B | B. M. Behrends Co., Inc. Juneau’s Leading Department Store | Alcohol Still Worth B s e T think the club can well be con-'transplamed to his in two opera- : following 3 e 3 A WED cBAsT Moculs | tinued this season.” | tions and specialists said he would g?p;‘ndl'.;“pizzdn(‘;} 3520.000 Is beued; Six | . FOOBALL CO CO { [ Temit B3t AN “\m)k i n:tlmthse_ “?rl{;n now heing ) M 3 { X % & B 3 <o Bl el b b Men Are Under Arrest : es will not be ready for t until the end of this rly in February. Adjustments in Spring 1t is considerca prooable that the ates will be framed on the as- iption of a continuance in the VANCOUVER, Wash., Jan. 22— An alcohol still, which officers said was the most complete they ewer rsaw, and which is estimated to Lave cest $20,000, was seized north of here. yesterday and six men ar- rested in a raid on a barn, The | . S s | The moguls set aside the league’s| Mother Will suffer no permanrit . iron clad ruling against spitballers | injury. | Ie - to permit Jack Quinn, fifty-year- * i T8 P UM A solution ‘was adopted ordering the uniform numbering of players, old veteran, who knows no ball ! b but the spit-ball, 1o negotiate witn RAMBLER COACH GETS TWO GOOD {Uniform Admission Voted, after the style of footban players, , any member of the league. BREAKS, ONE GAME fiscal year of the ecomomy |federal officers said the still plant . tn all Coast League clubs. MINNEAPOLIS , Jan. | — . the courtry by the had a huge capacity. Upon by Directors | Boland, new Nozr-anD:ile x‘{;: gency in 1931. S 7 / “breaks” i 4 Wb : of League U. S. Fleet Will coach, got two “breaks—one bad and one good—in the football game here. It was, it proved, Joe's last game as a Notre Dame tackle, for in it, in making adjustments mates have been in- Parliament if, next outlook should unity for restor- f the “cuts:” in the estimates are m several departments, 147,000 Americans Wear “False” Limbs | Go to Atlantic OAKLAND, Cal, Jan. 23.—Direc- g . . tors of the Pacific Coast League, in | Coast in Sp””g their annual meeting here, voted a | early in the 1026 season he broke uniform admission price for all| SAN PEDRO, Osl, Jan: 23—Ad- | - aif |8 leg. That was the bad break. iral David ¥. Seflers, commander | cents 1 |- . | [ :*g;’t:’“b: ,:5’ ::m:“m ge"gl::zg_ in chief of the United States fleet, | :2:: Irish were playing Minno- o returning from Washington, D. C., s - ofab], said the fleet definitely will make| But while he was laid up in a Price of box seats was left . js projected cruise to the North CHICAGO, Jan. 23—Some 147,000 Americans use artificial limbs. This information eame from the Navy and the Air |Association of “Limb Mamufacturers dition of four avia- | Whose members said such appii- Doptel Mre 3 2 eoad ey, is considered likely, |ances have been so perfected that construction in | handicapped persons forget their ) pensive. | misfortunes. oti Grow A seamless limb of aluminum was warned last |alloy was exhibited. rrent estir | Of 3,000 engaged in the industry, of na ‘\1‘2,000 wear artificial limbs. was to e isting stand- | however, is believed to be more . Now the clouded | than equal to the sum total of the tion has led to|increases in the departmental esti- five in many quarters | mates. But that balance won't help ing up the Navy and the|‘he taxpayer. o S S Some of the civil departments| expected to require larger | JAMES WILSON HAS MINOR OPERATION AT ST. ANN’S opriations because of the nat- | ural growth of their services. No| large economies are in sight; me‘i James Wilson, employee of the financial emergency c ed all| United States Forest Service, em- those long ago. |tered St. Ann's Hospital and this The general revenue situation, ' morning underwent a tonsilectomy. . gement of Vi Gruenther, daughter of Mrs. C. M. Gruenther o":):mn'u..;h :rz.uwt Garrison (Gar) Davidson, head coach of the Army football team, was announced at Omaha. Miss Gruenther. a senior at Duchesne college in Omaha,’is a sister of Lieut. Alfred M. Gruenther, bridge authority and referee. The wedding is set for June. (Associsted Press Photos) the option of the individual club. The directors also voted to adopt the standard major league base- ball. Use of the regulation ball they pointed out, will end dis- putes as to the comparative bat- ting abillty of major and Coast League hitters. One ball used on the Coast for the past two seasons was the “liveliest” ball used in any league. Baggerly Repor:s The pennant’ for last séason was officially awarded to the Los An- geles club at today's meeting. President Hyland Baggerly re- ported the results of his investi- gation into the affairs of the Se- attle club. “Conditions in the Northern city are fairly favorable,” ke said, “and then Margaret Limburg, called to interview him and ‘Preddie' Col- lins, Irish fullback, who 'received a broken jaw in the same game, for the studsnt paper. The co-ed reporter is now Mrs. Atlantic next spring, sailing from San Pedro April 9. While the itinerary has not yet been approved, it was unofficially reported in Nevy circles that the squadrons will not return to the San Diego area until about Novem. | J0¢ Boland. ber 15, 1934%as against previously planned date of September 1. 17 Is the Lucky Number This Time Mother’s Leg Bones == ’ MEDFORD, Ore, Jan. 23.—The figure seventeen for a time con- founded police. Seventeen loeks ROCHESTER, Minn., Jan. 23— |held seventeen gratings on seven- Crippled tor seven years because |teen basement windows on a South of two broken legs suffered in boy- | Medford school just seventeen hood games, Carl Seals, eighteen, | months. Seventeen smail boys, po- of Madison, Wis., is looking for- |lice found, had taken the locks, 50 ward to happy days again. there were just seventeen different Bones from his mother’s legs were | spankings in seventeen homes, 3 Aid of Crippled So. . S L u} « 3 1 ! ‘ @ - 4 L . L) i « 8 3 ) [ « \ « + B s ’ ] | o