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Spend Your Summer in BOUCLE KNITS—$12. 50 Shades Pastel $8.75 $1.00 $1.95 COTTON BLOUSES—$1.00 COTTON PAJAMAS for Beaching WASH SUITS for Boys—sizes 2 to 6 Glass Towels Glass Toweling Sl Aot Terry Cloth ', '§',;v Barber Towels Di:li Towels Dish Cloths Wash Cloths B. M. Behrends Co., Inc. “Juneau’s Leading Department Store” COUNCIL OF BIG LEAGUE BELEGATES T0 CONFERENCE AT SITKA RETURN v Young People’s Meeting Suspension “of War Penal| Clearance on SUMMER COATS and SUITS—Your Choice—$17.95 Sale of SILK DRESSES for All Occasions CLEARANCE COTTON DRESSES ® HOUSE APRONS—S50c each ® SILK and GEORGETTE BLOUSES $2.50 for Sleeping Turkish Towels, 22x44 THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, FRIDAY. JUNE 12, 1936 COLONEL KNOX IS GHOSEN FUR Daily Cross-word Puzzle ACROSS Scluticn of Yesterday's Puzzle i Mjke ito | Bull Moose_ days. B TAX MEASURES UNDER ATTACK OF U.S.C. OF €, Levy on Undistributed Corporation Profits Issue Fought $1.00 WASHINGTON, June 12.—Offic- ials of the Chamber of Commerce of the United States has directed sharp attacks on both the House and Senate tax bills as the confe meet again President Harper Sibley eritic $1.00 to $2.50 1 obstruct indu srowth.” BACK IN NORTH AGAIN particularly the House measure & 5 the graduated tax levy up to 42 1-2 Sibley furtner the tlat seven| Ed Larson, of Berkeley, Cali percent on the undistributed co percent levy in the Senate bill is| is a roundtrip passenger on poration profits saying: “This will preferred but even this imposed North Sea. Mr. Larson made same trip last ‘year. 6 for $1.00 yard 25¢ 3 for $1.00 yard 25¢ dozen $1.00 dozen $1.50 each 10c each 10c penalties. PEANUT BUTTER Sunny Jim—LARGE 2 POUND JAR LEMONS 39(: BUTTE !{ ! dozen 93 SCORE SWEET CREAM LARGE SUNKIST Ansolu;ely the Finest! SWEET CHOCOLATE 24C Guittard’'s—LARGE POUND BAR o BANANAS 33° NOT INJURED, PI.ANE CRASH Is To MEET W. E. Dunkle’s Pontooned Craft Hits Trees at Takeoff Jo O forni S, Reported to Have Been Great Success (Continued from Page One) Smith, Miss Minnie Brown, Mrs. iazel Peterson, Mr, and Mrs. James enett, the Rev. Waggoner, .mm Rev. and Mrs. Glasse. | Webster remained at visit and will return to| s of the Shel- on J 200l who came to| abo: Juneau d the Princeton with is understood the French govern- the convention delegates and plan ment is inclined to view the sus- to visit here for a few days are|pension of war penalties against|” Anna Bayers, Kathryn Jackson, and | Italy as the “only practical course Katy Haines. The young people are 'and is “anxious for British collab- t uests of Mrs. Seward Kunz, oration.” and will go to their homes at Val-| Sir George, Clerk of the British dez on the next beat enroute there. Ambs or in Paris, is reported .- GOVERNMENT CLOSES TILL HOME LOANS HOLC to Spend Next Fif- teen Years Collecting Three Billion WASHINGTON, June 12. — The| Government closes the till today on further loans on homes with the Home Owners Loan Corporation to| spend the next 15 years getting its three billion dollars back again. The lending books close officially at midnight tonight. The officials of the HOLC said the “emergency” demand for home mortgage and refinancing is over. More than one million home own- ‘ers have been aided, officials said. | Leon Blum regarding | RARE FOSSIL O SENTTOU.S. ties Agamst ltalv to | Be Taken Up | GENEVA, June 12—The League of Nation’s Council has been for- \mally convoked to meet June 26 One of the four questions officially announced on the agenda will be the | conquest of Ethiopia. Great Britain and France have moved toward a common “sanctions front,” which informed sources said will be made known at Geneva. It Socialist Premier nctions. confe with ing | | BERKELEY, Cal, June 12— A rare collection of fossil reptiles has | been sent to the University of Cal- ifornia from the Karoo formation lin South Africa . The remains are estimated to be 200,000,000 years old and to constitute a link between reptile and mammal life. They were discovered by Dr. Charles L. Camp of the university staff -es | M'KINLEY DUE SATURDAY | Ste er Mount McKinley is due in port in 1 o'clock tomorrow after- lno(m and sails for the Westward an |4 o'clock in the afternoon. L e Lode and placer location notices for sale at The Empire office, ANCHORAGE, Alaska, June 12.— W. E. Dunkle, manager of the Lucky Shot gold mine, escaped without a scratch when his pontooned plane crashed in trees near Lake Spenard and gave his wife the scare of her life. Mrs. Dunkle witnessed the erash shortly after the takeoff and drove her auto frantically through the woods to the scene. When she arrived her husband walked toward her smiling and not hurt, but she was “somewhat up- set.” The engine sputtered when 200 feet up and tall trees prevented him 1rom glndmg (o the water. Women Going Blind Account Redu_c'mg Drug Health Officer of Los An- angeles Orders In- vestigation LOS ANGELES, Cal, June 12— Dr. J. L. Pomeroy, City Health Of- ficer, has ordered an investigation whether sixty cases of total or par- tial blindness among women has been caused by drugs in reducing preparations. The sixty women have been strick- en during the past two weeks, Dr. Pomeroy said. Last fall many women in the vic- inity of San Francisco suffered eye trouble because of a reducing com- ! pound but the drug has since been outlawed by the Legislature, 3 pounds z@c GOLDEN RIPE Mediums or extra (| EGGS large, both direct from ranch to vou . . Packed in our own cartonsi CRAB CAN Pound 29°¢ ¥ i ALASKAPACK 3 cans zgc Cantaloupes 29(: TWO FOR . LARGE—FANCY ....MEAT DEPARTMENT.... PICNIC CHICKENS | PUROLA HAMS 31 lb. average | COMPOUND POUND POUND 1 Ib. pkg. 25¢ | 30°¢ 16° LETTUCE TWO FOR zsc ‘ LARGE SOLID HEADS SARDINES, large oval cans In Mustard or Tomato Sauce. PICNIC ITEMS! Plates, Napkins, Cups—Larg- est, finest assortment in town! U. S. DEPARTMEN7 Oy AGRICULTURE, WEATHER BUREAU THE WEATHER lenther (By the U. S. Weather Bureau) 4 Forecast for Juneau and vicinity, beginning at 4 p.m., June SN Rain tonight and Saturday; moderate southeast winds. SECUND PI- St LOCAL DATA 2 1Y teo Time Barometer Temp. Humidity Wind Veiocity ~ Weathea g o - 1:»:“- 5 g;; 72 34 w 12 Cldy - L L 4 am. today 29 54 7 y Convention Unanlmous for e T Noon: today 2093 52 5(1; lv5v 2 mclladmn Chlca % Publlsh b 18. Salad olant CABLE AND BADIO REPORTS g er tor 19 5\“\5:(:11 YESTERDAY i TODAY e s 14 to 44 S gk Highest 4p.m. | Lowest4am. 4am. Precip. sam. OlZes 14 % l'u(rv;;r‘:‘” NEsavion temp. temp. | temp. temp. velocity 24hrs. Weathcs (Continyed from Page One) Qut of Anchorage 90 = | 42 — - 0 s ® i Type me: Barrow 40 38 |30 %07 1k 0 he Senate during the Landon Ad-, 21 i Nome 60 56 48 54 8 .06 ministration,” 3% DR of the q),x ";m card game | Bethel 68 68 52 52 0 0 S olsle of Man DOWN U EfWis o1t | Fairbanks 78 70 54 54 6 0 KNOX NOTIFIED e L In Norse by bit Dawson 72 72 2 4 0 0 MICHIGAN CITY, Indiana, June 33 De dded hent gl K g?flffl?.nn:‘m St. Paul R ol P e RS 0 |12—Driving back to Chicago, Col. > ““Sding ¢ i g L Buppositions | Dutch Harbor 52 50 | 40 4 12 0 ® |Frank Knox was nofified ‘here of | 3. Barthy devosit G SINEIISH 2 Cloyip Brashi | éa News comb, Kodiak 54 6 46 8 0 his nomination and said: “I am fortilizer 53 condtions.. TR Cordova, . 58 48 48 0 0 ful at this mark | 38 Hebrew e 0. Draw after Juncau 2 54 54 3 0 e that the unanimous| go. Well-beir il TN Sltka = T el = 0 $14.50 $19.75 vote of the convention discloses { A Ketchikan 58 50 52 4 0 Col. Knox is now 62 years old Prince Rupert 54 54 43 52 0 108 ° the publisher of the Chicago Dail Edmonton 80 76 52 62 6 .02 |News. He has been on the war- | Seattle 72 72 54 54 8 0 [path against the New Deal for Portland e 58 58 19 0 cldy months, He was a rough rider in San Francisco 8 66 58 R | 0 Cldy 52.95 $3,95 |the Spanish-American War and New York .78 66 64 66 18 36 cldy worked for Teddy Roosevelt in the Washington 90 68 66 70 4 20 Pt. Cldy Ketchikan, cloudy, temperaturz, 56; Craig. v, 52; Wrangell, loudy, 53; Sitka, clou Radioville, cloudy ay, cloudy, 53; Soapstone Po tat, cloudy, dova, cloudy, £ Chitina, p: arthy, clear, 5 Portage, partly | cloudy, 56; Anchorage, anks, partly cloudy, 66; Hot Sprir partly cloudy, 64; Tanana, y cloudy, 66; Ruby, clear, 62; ) Nulato, clear, 70; Kaltag, clear, 60; lakleet, partly cloudy, ‘30. | Crooked Creek, clear, 50; Flat, clear, 65. WEATHER SYNOPSIS Low barometric pressure pre this mo aska, the lowest reported presst ing 29.10 ir cm portion of the Aleutian Islands. This pressure distr been attended by unsettled wea r along the coastal regions from the Aleutians southeast to Califernia, with light rains reported over portions of Southy Alaska, and by fair weather over the interior of Alaska. INVENTS GANNED iYL SERVICE MILK DISPENSER ~ EXAMINATIONS Invention of a canned milk dis penser is credited to James A. Hall| The of Hyder, who has just been grant- | Commission ed a patent for manufacture of a|competitive device described in the patent of- | lows: official gazette as foll : Assistant geologist (stratigraphy), device comprising a container | $2,600 a year, Geological Survey, United States Civil Service has announced open examinations as fol- the the or receiving a can of liquid, ‘the | Department of the Interior. container being of less th than| Junior park archeologist, $2,000 the length of the can, a a year, junior park his ian, $2.- ber forming an upper ‘e C00 a year, National Park Service, the container, latch | Department of the Interior. holding the ring mem Park historian, various grades, container, a plate forming a cover |$2,600 to $3,800 a year, National for the ring member, means for de- | Park Service, Department of the tachably connecting the plate t terior the ring member, a of hollow Prinaipal biochemist, $6,600 punches depending from the plate Bureau of Chemistry and and adapted to penetrate the top! , Department of Agricultur of the can when the plate and ring| Senior $4,600 insect pathologist, E cjate entomologis member ar sh downw dly ;a over the upper end con omy), $2.600 a- year, Bureau er, a spout member formed on of Entomology and Plant Quaran- part of the plate, said plate hav-|tine, Department of Agriculture. ing a port therein leading from one Full information may be obtain- of the punches to the and said piate having a second port therein extending from the other punch through a part of the plate, a valve controlling each port, | means for connecting the valves| County, Kas., dug up a nearlyfull together and a manually operated | 10 gallon keg of whiskey, believed for operating the valve of to have been buried before the ond mentioned port vighteenth amendment was passed. spout pari|ed at Room 311, Federal and Ter- ritorial Building. TGk Pt S 10 Sheriff James Davis of Osborney ANNOUNCING Professor Frederick Fleming Beale Six-week classes in Harmony, Per- formance and Interpretation, Piano Technique and Ear Training . .. Also private lessons on piano, organ and harmony. Reservations are now being made at the Studio of Lola Mae Alexander or you may telephone 306. FOR SALE One 16 H. P. JOHNSON . OUTBOARD MOTOR JUST OVERHAULED WITH NEW CYLINDERS AND COIL Juneau Lumber Mills PHONE 358