The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, February 23, 1934, Page 2

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N & THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, FRIDAY, FEB. 23, 1934. = = - L 1 S “; Seae = = = = = 3 3 = = = We are clearing all odd and soiled stock before chandise priced for quick disposal. for quick selling. NO EXCHANGES 10 Men’s Suits and Overcoats 36 ONLY at low price In size A good buy Bib Overalls and Jumpers Broken sizes. last at ¢ each Men’s All wool pullover. Broken sizes. Real values $3.95 each While they 220 denim s Sweaters POCVI009000000000000000000000000090000009000000¢ Men’s Khaki Pants 3roken Sizes $1.00 pair | | | | | = Novelties, Dishes and Glassware, etc. Warm and serviceable. 14 to 18 years. % = Men’s Shoes 0 SaNTION $1.95 each = == = = Broken lines. Button and lace EEEEE——— = = s P REMNANTS Women’s Shoes = = 50¢ pair Half Price 10¢ pair = % 00090009000 00000000000000000000000000000 & o 4 Y g = Visit Our 10-Cent Bargain Department = ~B.M. BEHRENDS CO,, Inc, —= &De & s9 ®= = JUNEAU'S LEADING DEPARTMENT STORE = = NO REFUNDS Some Odd Lots Too Smdll to Advertise. onoonooo»n“ounonnnmnonunno«omm C00000006000000008044 Medium weight pullover style. new Hprmg UD()(lb dll‘l\i‘ Boys’ Sweaters Sizes 30, 32, 34. at $1.25 each colors. Mickey Mouse Sweat Shirts Sizes 24 to 32 65¢ each Blazers Broken sizes. Boy 0dd lines. $1.95 each 25-Cent Bargain Table Women’s Print Dresses Children’s Pajamas 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, Fancy Hundreds of dollars w Odd lots, small quantities, remnants, counter samples and discontinued lines marked NO APPROVALS SHOP EARLY ? 20 BQ the very Suits With one and two pair pants. Sizes 14 to 18 years. The coats alone are worth $1.95 orth of desirable mer- NO ALTERATIONS 0000000000000000000 Short Pant low price of Boys’ Chinchilla Overcoats Ages $2.95 each Men’ All Sizes—Fancy 3 pair for $1.00 Men’s Shoes line men’s lace shoes. Broken and their chapters or their Congress- men to attend the dinner by ‘the first of February and at the rate that tickets are coming in every day it is evident that the confer- ence will be the largest ever held in the Moose fraternity. Gertie Olsen, Recorder of the Juneau, Alaska chapter, sent along! the best wishes of her chapter| with the check for a dinner ticket | for Anthony J. Dimond, the Dele- gate from Alaska, to whom an | invitation in the name of the Ju-: neau chapter has been extended. The program for the midwinter meeting started yesterday morning, ,and will continue through today " men of the Moose will be repre |and tomorrow. The conference on ——sented at the Moose] t Alumni|chapter development of the Wo- T”Astociation dinner, to at|men of the Moose will be held| =—the Willard Hotel in W: 1,lall day tomorrow end will be pre-| =D. 'O, which will be the climax over by Miss Katharine <of the midwinter meciing of the ), Grand Recorder, Women ==Supreme Council of the Loval Or-iof the Moose, of Mooseheart, IIli- ““der of Moose. A check for ticket| nois ——was sent by the lac hapter to! ““John C. Meikle, relary of . committee in chaige the flrflm in Washington. JUNEAU TO BE =REPRESENTED AT MOOSE DINNER Q)degate Anthony J. Di- — mond to Attend Alumni = Banquet 1nWashmglo.) = *Bhe Juneau Chapter of the Wc- lded n e h” MR. AND MRS. H.H. HOLLMANN 'ARE PARENTS OF BABY GIRL |B()RN AT ST. ANN'S' FEB. 22 of T Much interest has becn aroused ~-over the program that wil be| Mr and Mrs. H. H. Hollmann ~giyen by members of 1 visory| are’ receiving congratulations to- ~=gotincil of the Mooseheart Laboli-/day on the birth of a baby daugh- tory for Child Research |ter at St. Ann's Hospital at 10:30 Mrs. Margaret E. Johnson, of gclock last night. Little Miss ~+Chicago, Senior Regent of Greater| Hollmann, who has been named "Chicago No. 120 will be conference | Evelyn Claire, weighs eight pounds |in the Territory during the coming | summer, and a seventh, R. J. Kin- | A.R. C. CHIEFS * HERE FOR TALK ON 1934 WORKS Conferences to Last About Two Weeks—Nome Man Leaves for Juneau Six Alaska Road Commission executives arrived on the Wictoria this morning for a series of con- | ferences with Chief Engineer Tke !P. Taylor on the work to ke domeé ney, superintendent of the Nome district, left Nome yesterday by airplane to0 join the others in the | discussion. Mr. Kinney is expeft- ed to arrive in Juneaw om the Alaska, March 2. The conferences are expected to last about two weeks. Those who arrived this morning are: Frank Nash, Superintendent for the Fairbanks district; M. C. Ed- munds, Superintendent at Anchor- SJeader and Mrs. Jane Debus, of|and two ounces and both she and Co ia, Pa., president of the ner mother are getting along nice- ship Degree, will preside at 1y. he meeting when those who have| called to receive this honor,MnS initiated. Chairmen of ‘and local committees will ' the discussion on committee R GELLES SOUTHBOUND ACCOMPANIED BY CHILDREN Mrs. Gus Gelles, of Anchorage, is a passenger aboard the Victoria in twenty-two|for the south. She is accompan- had sent inlijed by her three children, Bobby, m{c members of Kathryn and “Happy.” age; Fred Spach, Assistant Su- perintendent, who comes from the Kuskokwim area; T. D. Huddles- ton, Superintendent of the Valdez district; R. J. Shepard, Superin- tendent at Chitina, and John Coats, Master Mechanic of the Commission with headquarters at :EHI!IIIIIIIIIIIllllIIIIIIIIIIIINIHIIIIIII!IlIIIIMIIIHIIIIIIIIlllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIUIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIJII!I“IIIIIIIHIIHHHHIllllfllILIII!IIIIIIIIIHWIWIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHI Aqnon, Motion and Momentum Explains F. D. R.s First Year| (Continued from Page One) which Mr. Roosevelt has been able to 'fasten national attention on the problems at home and di- worce national thought from the distractions abroad. Yoy 'could Msten to the table- talk of present-day official Wash- ington for a week and never sus- peck ‘that an earthquake is rock- ing Burope, or that there is a rumble of war in the Far East. The French disturbances catied hardly a' ripple of con- versation. Always excepting the State Department and the dip- lomatic . corps—and they are véry ‘muck on ‘the sidelines— those who showed any inter- ést ‘wefe as likely as not to ask: " Do you suppose this Paris rumpus will help us in the end by driving France off Significant words about America, spoken in Tokyo a little earlier, simply fafled to register. ‘The new monetary program has become the absorbing topic, just as ‘What i NRA was six months ago. will be next? ‘Washington does not know, but it is sure there will be something. for in-* ’ it already has—a new one will be If the farm experiment, stante, falls—and some think Chitina. — e Daily Empire Want Ads Pay tried. ‘We are on our way. L e Shop In Juneau $1.95 pair Boys’ Lined Coats 2to 7 at IIIII_IIIH!IIIHIIIIIMHIII}IIIIIIIIIIIHII s Hose i 1 Black brown. uuuuumwlmlmunuumummm’fi' e AT THE HOTELS ® & 0 0 0 000 000 00 Zynda A. B. Chapman, Juneau; J. H. | Sawyer, Windham; E. M. Axelson, Yakutat. Gastineau | Mr. and Mrs. D. M. Morris, Ju- neau; Marion and Elnore Jahnke; Mr. and Mrs. J. K. Jackson; T. H. Huddleston, Valdez; John Coats, Frank Nash, Fairbanks; E. C. Edmunds, Anchorage; R. J. Shep- ard, Chitina; Fred J. Spach, An- | chorage; N. A. McEachran, Se- | attle; L. W. Baker, Seattle. Alaskan [ Axel Axelson, Chatham; E. Gilligan, Salmon Creek; J. Smith, City. — ., FIRE DAMAGES HOME i Fire starting from a furnace in the basement of the home of Jos- eph Raats of Fairbanks, recently seriously damaged the home. The {fire was fought for an hour by |'the Pairbanks department. = Mr, (both she and her husband have| | gret their departure. | |Raats is a former Juneau resident. IIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlllllIIII|I|IIIIIIHIIIIIlIlIIIHNlIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIllllllllllllllllllIIIIHHII!IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlllllllmlllllllllllllllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIHIIII!IIIIEI n M M 0 R R I s UN Annual Rummage Sale Clearing Away for Smmng Goods ON THE THIRD FLOOR TRANSFERRED T0. MOBILEALABAMA J. 8. DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE, WEATHEK BURIAU The W eather /By the U. 5. Weather Bureau) LOCAL DATA Forecast for Juneaw and vicinity, beginning at 4 p.m., Feb. 23: Cloudy, possibly snow or rain, tonight and Saturday moderate easterly winds. Time Barometer Temp. Humidity Wind Velocity = Wesather by 4 pm. yest'y 30.11 34 53 E 5 Cldy Coast Guard Officer and| % am. today 3007 31 48 E 10 Cldy 1 Noon today 3009 28 49 NE 12 cldy Wife Leave for South CABLE AND EADrO REPORTS on S. S. Victoria TEsTERDAY | s L - Ensign D. M. Morrison, Unit- - Highest 4pm. | Lowest4am. sam. Precip. 4am. 1 States Coast Guard, who has Station temp. temp. ! temp. temp. velocity 24hrs. Weather been attached to the cuttér Tal-| Barrow -2 4 T e . 6 0 “Cldy lapoosa since September, 1931, has| Nome 32 32 |+ 790 30 12 0 cldy been transferred to the cutter! Bethel “ a2 28 28 0 0 Clear Gresham, based at Mobile, AJa-| PFairbanks 18 18 4. 4 0 Clear bama, and with Mrs. Morrison, Teft| Dawson 18 14 -6 =2 0 01 Clear for the south on the steamer Vic-| St.Paul 34 3 30" % 4 Trace Clear toria this morning. Dutch Harbor 4 a2 B e 0 01 Clear Before procéeding to Mobile to] Kodiak 38 38 | 34 36 6 4 ‘Rain také over his new duty, Ensign| Cordova 36 36 | 34 34 0 0 Cidy Morrison will have thirty five, Juneaw 3 34 | 28 31 10 0 Cldy days leave which "he will spend| Sitka R O e | BaOE 0 12 Misting with Mrs. Morrison with the lat-| Ketchikan 48 44 I 30 34 4 0 Cldy ter's family in Dayton, Washing-| Prince Rupert 4 42 | 32 32 4 0 Clear ton. Mrs. Morrison expects to re-| Edmonton 2 32 =20 -20 4 0 Clear main in Dayton until early in the| Seattle 54 52 | -3 38 4 0 Pt.Cldy fall when she will join her hus-| Portland 60 58 { o AR R 4 0 Clear Band™ih" Moptle: San Franciseo 60 58 § sz 8 44 Cldy Ensign Morrison was attached to} the cutter Haida, based at Seat-} The barometric pressure is lov over the northeastern Pacific tle previous to his transfer to Al- aska three years ago. In De- cember, 1932, he was married to| 2 the former Miss Betty Israel, at| o Dayton, and they have since made| ¢! their home in Juneau. 'Mrs. Mor- rison i5 ‘a ‘niece of Mrs. H. C.| Perkins, wife of Lieut. Commander| T Ocean and moderately Tow in the Pacific States and southern Bering Sea, with moderate rain in the wastern portion of the Gulf of Al- ska and light snow in southern Boring Sea. The pressure is high ver the remainder of Alaska and highest in Interior Canada with lear weather in the Interior ani southern Bering Sea and cloudy weather in the Gulf and Southeast and on the Arctic' coast. Tem- peratures have fallen in the Interior, Aleutians and Arctic ‘and have isen elsewhere. Perkins, of the Tallapoosa, and| many friends in Juneau who re- Ensign Warren Davis has been iransferred from, ‘the Destroyer: Wilkes, based at Boston, Massa- | chuset!s to replace Ensign Mor-| ‘rison aboard the Tallapoosa, andl | will arrive here at an early date.| DOUGLAS NEWS | REBEKAH CARD PARTY J‘ Seven 'tables of cards were en-| joyed at the second event in the; Rebekah card party series in Doug- | las last night. Bridge and whist| were played, prizes for the whist| going to Mrs. Inga Dickenson and Mrs. | man, | . Guy| hig Al Riedi for high scores and Hans Loken and C. H. Bo M low scores; at bridge, Gray Dance Music TONIGHT Capital Beer Parlors BEER LUNCHES DANCING ® Pull with us and we win! B . J. R. Guerin “nd‘ Joe Rmdx consolation winners. Re- freshments following the cards. With two finished and two mo; to go the series is now half ove The third event will be held in| two weeks from last night. | e e DOG ORDINANCE ENFORCED | As a result of a number of chil- ( dren in Fairbanks being molested | by dogs, the ordinance provided for | the impounding of dogs running at large on the streets is being rigidly enforced. [ U BOWLING Nothing' like the thrill of a ten-strike! Develop your game on the finest alleys you evér played on. Brunswick Bowling Alleys Pool Billiards Bowli.g Cigars Tobacco Soft Drinks | Barber Shop in connection | Lower Front Street, opposite i Winter and Pond JUNEAU—Phone 6 40 OUT OF 100 An investigation shows that 40 college students out of one hundred have defective vision. Among people over college age the condition is even worse. Don’t gamble with YOUR eyes! Assist them with plenty of good light—from Edison Mazda Lamps. Come in and let us show you what lamps will solve your lighting needs. 25, 40, 50, 60, 75 watt size 100 watt size ... ® Alaska Electric Light & Power Co. 20¢ 25¢ DOUGLAS—Phone 18 IR &7 W hitman’s Sam pler Candies A FRESH SHIPMENT in 1 and 2-pound boxes Butler Mauro Drug Co. “Express Money Orders Anytime” | Fruits and | TELEPHONE 478 | ALWA YS CAlIfORNIA GROCERY Store Closed Washington’s Birthday Vegetables PROMPT DELIVERY FRYE’S BABY BEEF “DELICIOUS” HAMS and BACON Frye-Bruhn Company Telephone 38 Prompt Delivery ass Meeting e The Laborers’ Association of Gastineau Channel will hold an open mass meeting at the L 0. 0. F. Hall TONIGHT, FEBRUARY 23 at 8 o’clock. All workers are invited to attend

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