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E., ; ¥ - ek cecnaid THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, THURSDAY, FEB. 22, I il for quick selling. NO EXCHANGES chandise priced for quick disposal. 990900090 00““000000‘000“00“’0‘““ 10 Men’s Suits and Overcoats In size 3( A good buy at low price 1934. NO REFUNDS Some Odd Lots Too Small to Advertise. 90000000008000005000004 0000000000 00000 3 ONLY We are clearing all odd and soiled stock before new spring goods arrive. Boy_s’ Sweaters ium weight pullover style. F: colors. Sizes 30, 32, at $1.25 each 34. IIIHIIIlIIIIIIIIIIIIII||||I|llllIIlIlI||IIIIIIIII||III||HlllmllmmllllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlllIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHINIIIImlllIIIflmIIIIIHIHHIIIIIIIIlIlIIIIIIIIIIIIIImllflIIIIIIIIIllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIII! Annual Rummage Sale Clearing Away for Spring Goods ON THE THIRD FLOOR Hundreds of dollars worth of desirable mer- Odd lots, small quantities, remnants, counter samples and disc -ontinued lines marked NO APPROVALS SHOP EARLY ; ancy 95 Bib Overalls and All wool pullover. Real v $3.95 Broken sizes. alues each «Breken .7'51 00 Mvn s Khaki Panl.s Sizes p(ur Men’s Broken lines. [ style | : | | fil'lllll|IIIllllIIIIlIIIIIHIIlIIIIHllllIlIIIIIIIIIIIIINlIIIIIIII|||IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIllmIlll_llmllllllllllll Shoes Jutton and lace 5 at 50¢ pair MWOOOO““QM“WOW““O Shirts Sizes 24 to 32 25-Cent Bargain Table Women’s Print Dresses Children’s Pajamas Medi Mickey Mouse Sweat : Women’s and Children’s Winter Undergarments Maids’ and Nurses’ White Uniforms Children’s Kahki Play Suits Women’s Shoes Children’s Crepe Nightgowns Ribbons ODDS AND ENDS of Jewelry, Novelties, Dishes and Glassware, cte. ITEMS TOO NUMEROUS TO MENTION REMNANTS Half Price Jumpers 65c¢ each Qvercoats e e e e == ful that suspension of the anti- Ages 2 to 7 at = Pt o " {220 denim. Broken s While they . d vcivsoidgsier B By B oy v == sequences for the small business last at Boy Blazers $2.05 each = man. N I Borah says that since last Octo- '/,5,;(' eacn ines. Broken sizes. _— 8 ! - 0 XM e e ber he has received more than JC 0Odd lines. Broken size . : $1.95 each Men’s Hose S of (e w80, st 2 . eac : £ s of how the code was either em- All Sizes—Fancy = barrassing them or driving them, Men’s Sweaters o of husinaes. 6 desmids That | Men’s Broken line men’s 20 Boys’ Sh(,b;“t Pant Suits With one and two pair pants. Sizes 14 to 18 years. The coats alone are worth the very low price of Boys’ Chinchilla 5 pair for $1.00 and brown. $1.95 pair 2 SEEK TO GET GEN. ;UHNSON FOR HEARING Recover ):“/;dministrator' Says He's Ready but Hasn't Been Called HERBERT PLUMMER | E By WASHINGTON, Feb. 22.—An e{- fort to get General Hugh Johnson before a Congressional committee | long has been regarded by Wash- ‘ inglon observers as inevitable. | The surprising thing is that it| wasn't inaugurated at the very of the session. Three munZhSE 0 the odds were about even that the General would be on his way to Capitol Hill for a personal ap-| pearance and a lot of explaining| as soon as the preliminaries of the | ““s§fon were over. o side from President Roosevelt' tiguan in the sdministration has | . #cd so prominently in national | £Fairs since last March 4. His colorful personality almost completely dominated the Washing- | ton seéne during the summer and| early fall months. His work was | law and criticism leveled at him| from both high and low places was\ dismisséd in peremptory ‘fashion. NO ALTERATIONS » IIIII‘:HIHIHIIII||NHIH1MH!HHHNI|I|IIIIIIINIHHHIIIIIIIII[IHIHII CRITICS WANT HEARING | Senator Dickinson ‘of Towa, a Republican, perhaps has been the most persistent eritic of NRA and is back of the proposal io get the General before a Senate Commit- ee. Borah of Idaho and Nye of North Dakota have opened attacks on the NRA and its Administrator as 95 ‘‘des *ucLlon of small business Glass of Virginia, a Democrat, | has allied himself with Borah and Nye in this demand. Shoes lace shoes. | | WOULD BE A BATTLE | Black If Johnson is called before a| Congressional committee, and he has intimated that he is ready to face the.music any time, it will ba Visit Our 10-Cent Barggin Dgpartment » JUNEAU 9 LEADINC DEPARTME(VT STORE COLONIAL TRADE FRANGE'S HOPE FOR PROSPERITY (Continued !mm 2age Ome) Algerian Farmers Lose Of every dollar's worth of goods France exports, 19 cents’ worth are taken by her colonies. Of every dollars’ worth France buys abroad, 30 cents’ worth comes from the col- onies. The colonies naturally want more of France’s business too. But the Algerian wheat raiser, hit by low prices and a bumper crop. finds a scant market in a homeland that already has a wheat curplus in it own granaries. The problem, there fore, is to develop i colonies production of commodities which France now buys r foreign| countries. | France, consequently, is euncour- aging' the raising of coiion ban-| anas, coffee and rubber among other products. Professor to Supervise Farm Home Architecture MANHATTAN, Kas., Feb. 22.—If the farm home architecture of the near future manifests important changes, something of the handi- work of Prof. H. E. Wiches of Kan- sas State college may show up. Professor Wichers has been bor- . rowed by the federal government " for the job of national supervising architect, co-ordinating the work of 16 district architectural offloes in drawing farm housing plans adapted to the needs of the vari- ous sections. Turkey Exploltmg ; Her Own Sulphur ANKARA, Feb. 22—As part of {its five-year industrial plan, the | government has handed over Tur- | key's chief sulphur mine to the official Sumer bank and thé semi- official Ish bank. The banks will exploit rich deposits at Kechiburlu, province of Isparta, as a means of halting importation of sulphur. ST NS MR. AND MRS. GEORGE BEDNAR ARE PARENTS OF BABY GIRL Mr, and Mrs, George Bednar, of | 'Tee Harbor, are parents of a baby girl born at St. Ann’s Hospital yes- rday. The little girl weighed sev- n and one-half pounds and both‘ she and her mother are doing nice- I}' S eea— MR. AND MRS. SESSIONS | ON WAY HOME FROM SOUTH ‘rc!urnmg from a vacation trip {south to their home In Anchor- |age, where Mr. Sessions is secre- |tary to J. T. Cunningham, Super- intendent of Transportation, for |The Alaska Railroad. ——ee CARD PARTY i Fourth of series sponsored by Women of Moose, Thursday even- ing at 7:45 o'clock, Moose Hall. Door prize. Refreshments and good prizes. Admission 50c. Public in- | © | Mr. and Mrs. A. R. Sessions are AMERICANS MAY == ABANDON POSTS Compromise Plan Is Being Discussed to Speed In- dependence of Islands WASHINGTON, Feb. 22.—Ameri- can abandonment of all military and naval bases in the Philippine Islands is contemplated in a new Administration compromise plan to gain acceptance of the Dawes-Cut- ting independence law as the final settlement of the thirty-six-year- old dispute. United States' capitulation to ob- | jections raised by Filipino leaders | against U. 8. retention of these bases is proposed in a plan now Washington and Manila. Early an- IN PHILIPPINES being discussed by cable between | Wmuunmmmlmuuuuummuumuummuuumm nouncement of developments is ex- ! propesed. surrender of territorial control of the islands but reten- ! tion by the United States of naval |and military bases. —,—— EVERETT NOWELL MAKES * FIRST TRIP NORTH SINCE Everett Nowell, son of Mr. and Mgrs. Willis E. Nowell, who was' recently appointed Alaska repre@en-i tative of Blake Moffitt and Towne, Ppaper manufacturers, and Ballou and Wright, manufacturers of au- | tomobile accessories, was a Ketchi- | kan bound passenger on the steam- ! er Alaska on his first trip to the | Territory since taking over the position. ———— MR. AND MRS. W. K. YOUNG ON WAY TO CORDOVA | W. K. Young, Superintendent of | the Pioneer Cannery, and Mrs.' | Young are on their way to Cor-| |dova aboard the steamer Alml ————— Dally Eanpire Want Ads Pay FRYE'’S “DELICIOUS” ! Telephone 38 HAMS and BacoN Frye-Bruhn Company Prompt Delivery P e e vited. —adv. Free Delivery e ov Junean Cash Grocery - CASH GROCERS Corner Second and Seward Phone 58 Boys’ Lined Coats Warm and serviceable. $1.95 each deen’s Shoes 10c pair | Thz Dawes -Cutting bill onglmulyf i | | TAKING NEW POSITION |——- an occasion perhaps unrivaled “on the hill” in many years. The General already has ex- pressed himself in the choicest Johnsonesque language on what he thinks of certain type of Senatorial criticism. . I am free,” he said recent- 1y, “to close the window, whistle to the dog and finally walk out the private door of my office any day, that this kind of despicable thing (Senatorial criticism) becomes too much for my self respect to bear.” ! 14 to 18 years. Daily Empire Want Ads Pay | : | HAND LAUNDRY 1 Lace Curtains Our Specialty Gastlneau Ave, Phone 2252 | A. J. GILLIS, Prop. | ———ga gt | Jones-Stevens Shop ‘ i LADIES'—CHILDREN'S il EADY-TO-WEAR | Seward Street Near Third | BB 1 s oo o RN i 13 | \ [§1 i | = Lora MAE ALEXANDER SOPRANO | \ Vocal Culture-Coaching-Diction | | Studio opens March 1, Gold- | | stein Bldg. For appoinments | see Mrs. J. C. Stapleton. ke “The Clothing Man” Home of Hart, Schaffner and Marx Clothing | | i H. S. GRAVES | | Daily Empire Want Ads Pay The Laborers’ Association of Gastineau Channel will hold an open mass meeting at the L. 0. 0. F. Hall FRIDAY EVENING, February 23 at 8§ | o’clock. | All workers are invited to attend | My Beauty HI—I‘:I (than ever before. 18 DIPAEMNT OF AGRICULTURE, wn'xm BUREAU The Weather By the U. 8. Weather Bureau) LOCAL DATA Forecast for Juneas »nd vicinity. beginning at 4 p.m., Feb. 22: Fair tonigh tand Friday; moderate to fresh easterly winds. Time Barometer Temp. Humidity Wind Velvcity Weather 4 pm. yest'y ...30.13 40 41 s 5 Clear 4 am .today 30.15 28 83 E 2 Clear Noon today 30.14 36 50 E 8 Clear CABLE AND RADYO REPORTS YESTERDAY | TODAY Highest 4pm. | Lowest4am. iam. Precip. ~4am. Station temp. temp. ! temp. temp. nlodty 24hrs. Weather Barrow 0 <2 | -4 4 ‘0 Clear Nome 34 30 ] 26 26 12 10 Clear | Bethel 44 42 | 24 26 [ 0 Clear Fairbanks 20 20 | -4 0 4 0 Clear Dawson 22 20 | 12 12 0 0 Cldy St. Paul 34 34 32 32 18 .02 Cldy Dutch Harbor 40 38 | 36 38 4 1.26 Clear Kodiak 38 38 30 34 4 o Pt. Cldy % Cordova 42 42 32 32 0 0 Cldy ? Juneau 2 40 21 28 2 L Clear Sitka 48 = 28 - 0 0 Clear Ketchikan 50 46 28 28 0 0 Clear 4 Prince Rupert . 46 44 | 28 30 4 0 Clear _ Edmonton 8 4 | -12 -10 0 0 Clear | Seattle 58 52 | 42 42 4 06 Cldy Portland 58 54 46 46 4 0 Clear San Francisco 62 60 50 52 6 .06 Rain Barometric pressure continues high over Alaska except in the southwest with an area of low barometer in the Bering Sea and = a high area over Northern Canadi. over the Seward Peninsula and the Pribilofs and heavy rain Dutch Harbor during the last tweity-four: MWours. ' Nearly all ing. Light precipitation has fallen por- tions of the Territory show slightly lower temperatures this morn- at b BERGMANN DINING ROOMS Transient Meals 50c FORD AGENCY (Authorized Dealers) GAS OILS GREASES ' Shop in Juneau e ELEANOR KING If you like a lot of natw |in your cheeks, ride a bi an hour every morninz, the weather | you should d to kecp warm. 1 nde every day in sun or shade, rain or snow, and my complexion is clearer and has more natural color Juneau Motors Denmark Flea Proof el So Last Circus Flops PR | Table Board by Week or Month Mr. and Mrs. Mike Daniloff | i COPENHAGEN, Feb. 22.— Tne last “flea circus” in Denmark has closed. Modern hygiene is blamed for its disappearance. “For several years we have ex- perienced growing difficulty in finding new artists,” said the man- ager. “Even advertising in the news- papers gave no result. There just don’'t seem to be any more fleas left. So when my leading lady died she had no successor and I was forced to quit.” P R Daily Empire Want Ads Pay i COAL | Time To Eat AT ANY time—break- WHOLESALE * fast, lunch or dinner— yow'll' find af Bailey's and a great variety of tasty dishes. You'll like our IETAIL special bw mfll’! Tunch. Pacific Coast Coal Co. BAILEY’S BEER—If Desired Phone 412 Daily Empwe Want Ads Pay [ ;) | ANNOUNCING The Alaska Assaying and Engineering Co. Quick Assay—Any Ore. Economical price basis. Properties examined. Engineering reports. Mining costs estimated. Assistance rendered owners in financing mining properties. G. T. OIEN ENGINEER IN CHARGE Office—Near Third and Main <)