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ALL WHITE AND COLORED NOVELTY SHOES MUST GO TO MAKE ROOM FOR NEW FALL STOCK WOMEN’S and MISSES’ STYLES $6.95 values NOW $4.95 $4.95 values NOW 33-95 $5.95 values NOW $4.25 Only slightly sc , Men’s Part 1000 OFFICERS AND MEN COMING ON NAVAL SHIPS Admiral Woodward Expect- ed to Lead His Division Into Juneau Tomorrow (Continued froi: Page On. Governor's Aide, who with arrangemetns for the party Qther entertainment for cers to Juneau will inc bile rides to the glacier be provided by the Chamber Commerce, according to Norm Banfield, and private parties ar ranged by friends in town. Man of those on the officers’ roster ceived -here bave been in Juneau before and will find a w me from old friends here. The big Jfeature for.the enlisted men is a free dance Friday night in the Fair building, which has been arranged through the efforts of Mayor ‘Goldstein and city of-7worked € ficials. Lode and placer location notices for sale at The Empire office, HARDEMAN HATS All Sizes—Many Colors and Brims s.&oo values NOW 33 ss.oo values NOW $3 Men’s Pgadcloth Shirts White, Tan, Blue One Lot Men’s Dress Shirts Sizes 164, 1714 and 18—FOR QUICK SELLING B. M. Behrends Co. Inc. “Juneau’s Leading Depariment Store” ' THE DAILY ALASKA INTOUR PARTY - ARE YOUTHFUL ‘Manager Praises Nine-Year- Old for Wage Earn- ing Activities R. A. Waugh, Manager of the | Buchanan Alarka Tours, didn't have to be urged to talk about hi i.uhn; charges last night becau | he thinks they are just about the finest bunch young people in | the world, and he'd like to share | this knowledge with the rest of us | Sitting in the salon of the Prin- | cess Charlotte after putting the | young tourists to bed promptly at 10 o'clock, ships’ time, he talked mostyy of personalities. He thinks | the methods by which the boys | and girls earn the money to pay | their third of the travelling ex- i penses is of special interest. Duncan Del Toto, 15-year-old | from Santurce, Puerto Rico, earned i the money to pay a third of his ;cxpenswe fare' by carving long graceful herons from cattle horns and fabricating figures from dif- | ferent types of sea shells. Waugh | believes the lad is a real artist { 9-year-old Farmer Leonard Jackson is the youngest I member’ of the party, being just nine years old, but overseer Waug : insists that the Indiana farm boy |15 “quite a little man nevertheles Young Jackson earned his ticket by caring for the chickens, weeding the garden, and raising a huil ! which he sold for $30. Jack McAdams, totally blind De- { troit 13-year-old, who according to Mr. Waugh sees as much of Al as any one else on the cruise, earncd his share of the passage fare i weaving baskets. | The boys haven't by any means ' forgotten -their business tendencies | while on'this vacation, though. They |all carry a pocketful of pencils | which they sell along the way for pocket money. Other Grown-ups Other grown-ups along with party are George Buchanan, De- troit man who is responsible for ibringing 14 of these parties to Al- aska and paying part of each young tourists fare, and G. G. Spries and Mrs. Ella Kubn. The party left at midnight for Skagway without Mr. Buchanan who was removed from the boat earier in the day to St. Ann Hospital suffering from pleurisy After a brief rest it is believed that ne Detroit philanthropist will be able to rejoin his group as they | come here southboynd, on . Friday | morning. NEW MYSTERY YACHT, THREAT - FOR U.$. CUP ;Sopwith's Craft Shows Sen- | sational Display of i Speed Is Report of by MEN’S SHOES th .00 95 $1.50 iled, values up to $6.00, NOW Wool Shirts $ 7 23 Very 19 LONDON, July 2%.—zsritish hopes of finally capturing the America’s |cup, held by the United States |since the first race in 1851, rocket- ed sharply here following a sensa- {tional display of speed by T. O. M. {Sopwith's new challenger, Endeav=~ our IIL In one of her first performances, the new “mystery” craft, equipped with numerous secret gadgets, ran far afield of Britain's front-rank “J" class yachts after a had start: | The sleek new boat, which is ex= |pected to challenge for the cup in 11937, trailed all the way on the first lap of a triangular course against Astra, Endeavour I and and Pittsburgh, the movie makers | yelsheda. Then, with an astonish- {igure, will amuse people every-|ing burst of speed she shot ahead where. Things that seem funny inlto win by six minutes over the the writing but leave those audi-|nearest competitor, Astra ences cold will be deleted. The original Endeavour I Sop- | which lost | cities the of sthers { to | ! Man Flown to Seattle from | | 22 tour Day titue they says Al Bo different ! Cusi COONS |the picture is before a scene is pict; A Day at the| ;. giateroom, scene modif} ity, indicating fans|length of time. Reluctantly, they tage production of “A movie. Havenstrite is getting along fine. Boa writer of comedy, member the tune. That settled that. | tient should be able to leave the Movie Patrons . age 5 jon the road from audience reaction | o Rainbow in four racse out ol x Plct"res is not new to the theatre, but it is{six, finished nearly 11 minutes be- as applied to film scripts. More-|hind the new Endeavour 1 jover, says Boasberg, it is so ef- - | eyt |fective they will know how good By ROBB HOLLYWOOD, ouiy 22—Movie shot. ;H A VE N STRITE 15 of five and maybe more AM-| o tons of the birth of the most| C will be asked to re- rious scene in “A Night at the ript the next MarX|ona., » The stage script included in ified Rages. |form, but at Salt Lake City they | Last year, when Groucho, ChiCo | e.igeq it was not “going over.” N nd Harpo submitted thelr script in | | rson several Western cities’| Make-Shift Becomes Wow { 150 changes were made| The theatre manager, however, | t at the Opera.” protested its omission because his | picture revived the goofy program had to' run a definite Anchorage to Be Dis- 2 about movie-edit- |retained the scene, began kidding missed This Week the boys are taking advan-|it by having more and more of the | N audience blue-pencil | c crowd into the stateroom SEATTLE, July Dr. P. A.| | Audiences began howling with| Rohler, Virginia Mason Hospital ks @ full company will |mirth—and it was a cinch for the physician said today that Homer | R3 And by the| 1In the completed film Allan! Mr Havenstrite was flown here et back to Hollywood, Jones sang the hit song, Alone."{last week from Anchorage by Al z, they may have a | On tour another sSong was used. Horning. He is suffering with a | After hearing it four times daily kidney infection, but an operation mers Always Right | for six weeks, Boasberg couldn't Te- has not proved necessary. The pa-! Marxes on their People remembered “Alonie.” hospital in a week if his condition re and will| “Gags® are revised on' tour until | continues to improve, Dr. Rohler| ac: y The gags' they click or are thrown out en- said |and situations that amuse Duluth,|tierly. Audiences are the only end —o— ,Minneapolis, Chicago, cleveland‘lunal word on that score, ! BUY AT HOME! i Apparently enjoying the pre-tige EMPIRE, WEDNESDAY, JULY 22, 1936. IBUS'NESSME& “Cuclus. Jack” Masks His ./Lght Behind Bufmn_uf[y 7 of his office, ‘Vice-President Garner, though butt of his own jokes about the job, is accounted a potent Administration force behind the scenes. 22.—While Garner de- WASHINGTON, July Vice-President John N. cribes himself the “spare tire of the government,”. the bushy- browed, ruddy-faced Texan with the big grin and twinkling eyes s regarded in Washington as one f the most powerful figures in the Roosevelt administration. “Cactus Jack” would be the last to admit such a distinction. He would probably laugh at the sug- gestion as he did once when a cir- cus clown greeted him in the Sen- ite office building I am head clown of the Hagen- beck circus,” said the And I am Vice President of the United States,” Garner replied sol- emnly—then added: “Stick around « while. You might pick up some ideas.” as visitor. new Again on Ticket A loyal supported of the admin- istration but a “silent critic” of some New Deal policies, he was sel- ected without opposition as Roose- teammate for remomination Garner ntially the same homespun statesman” who came up through the ranks as a member of the House to become his party's leader and speaker in that body on his way to the Vice Presidency He still goes to bed at 9 o'clock and rises with the dawn, refuses to don a dress suit except on formal state occasions and enjoys fishing and baseball games Kink Cramps Fishing A kink in his right shoulder now prevents him from tossing plugs with his old accuracy at bass in the rivers around his home at Uvalde “I just row the boat now,” he says He has salving his the Senate for the “1 always take and one so that if any votes come up while I'm away, we Democrats have a little the best of it.” He admits he saw the hilarious travesty on Washington politics, the prize-winning play, “Of Thee I Sing,” as many times as he could He particularly liked the part where Vietor Moore, as Vice Pre: Throttlebottom, had to join a seeing party to get into I offices He and Mcore a way of his own for conscience for leaving ball park two Republicans own became Democrat along with me,| great friends and autographs. Entering public life as a county judge, he served two terms in the Texas Legislature before he came to Washington in 1903 as a mem- ber of the House When I first came to Congress, says, “the autocratic leaders of party thought I wa other cow thief from Texas. They rolled me on the committees, g ng me minor assignments. When I kicked, they put me on the for- eign affairs committee and I was forced to sit beside worth “We tried to outsmart each other ars after that.’ 3 when he became Vice- President, Garner lives at/a Wash- ingtor hotel with his wife, for years his secretary and political ally. Until his death, Will Rogers always was a guest at their an- nual dinners for the President The Garner's only son, Tully, lives Texas exchanged pctures he the in > o -Lunatic Can’t Wed, Decision Of Judge MONTREAL, July riage contracted while the bride is out on probation from the local lunatic asylum is no marriage at all in the opinion of Justice For- est. He struck the chains of matri- mony from Adelard Goyette. Goyette told the court that when he married Frances Lalonde he was unaware that she was just en- Jjoying conditional liberty from a mental institution. Shortly after the wedding, this liberty terminat- ed, and she is now back in the asylum Both 21.—A mar- parties must consent to a marriage and an insane person is incapable .of giving consent, the judge ruled in annulling the union. D Nine tons of powder and a case and a half of dynamite biasted the top off Dog Mountain, Hawaii, to make rcom for a military road. EE FEMMER Fpr nice, fresh, dressed chickens. —ady. GOODNESS ANOWS /VE NOYGH T0 DO.THATS WY ONE of the best things about Kellogg’s Corn Flakes . — from a woman’s standpoint — is that they save hours of work. All you have to do is put those ready-to-eat flakes in a bowl, pour on milk or cream, and add some fruit or honey. The most delicious breakfast you can set before your family — and it takes no time at all! Look for the familiar package at your grocer’s, with the big red “Kel- logg’s” on the front. One of the greatest values in food today. Made hy Kellogg in Battle Creek. FLAKES | OVEN-FRESH - FLAVOR PERFECT Nothing takes the place of #elleygs CORN FLAKES just an-{ Nick Long- U. 8. DEPARTMENY OF AGRICULTURE, WEATHER BUREAM THE WEATHER (By the U. 3. Weather Bureau) Forecast for Juneau and vicinity, beginning at 4 p.m., July 22: Showers tonight and Thursday; light to moderate southerly winds, LOCAL DATA Temp. Humidity Wind Veloeity 1 32 w 8 52 83 SW 2 52 95 S 6 Time 4 pm 4 am Noon Barometer 30.04 2991 30.00 Weatheq Pt. Cldy Cldy Rain yest'y today today CABLE AND KADIO REPORTS YESTERDAY | TODAY Highest 4pm. | Lowest4am. 4am. Precip. ¢am temp. temp. | temp. temp. velocity 24hrs, Weath: 73 - 56 2 [ 38 28 54 48 68 50 74 56 8 50 62 45 62 50 64 54 62 71 64 station Anchorage Barrow Nome Bethel Fairbanks Dawson St. Paul Dutch Harbor Kodiak Cordova Juneau Sitka Ketchikan Prince Rupert Edmonton Seattle Portland San Francisco New York Washington | 38 52 68 72 30 50 50 56 50 48 52 56 54 52 56 54 (1) 58 56 54 0 68 5 L R e WEATHER CONP*TIONS AT 8 A. M Ketchikan, raining, temperature, 58; Craig, raining, 55; Wrangell, cloudy, 58; Sitka, cloudy, 56; Radioville, cloudy, 58; Soapstone Point, partly cloudy, 58; Juneau, raining, Sk cloudy, 52; Yakutat, cloudy, 53; Cordova, cloudy, 60; Chitina, cloudy McCarthy, part- ly cloudy, 54; Anchorage, partly cloudy, 63; Fairbanks, raining, 56; Nenana, raining, 56; Hot Spring raining ; Tanana, cloudy, 56; Ruby, cloudy, 57; Nulato, cloudy, 54; Kaltag, cloudy, 54; Flat, rain- ing, 53. WEATHER SYNOPSIS A minor barometric depression has developed off the coast of Southeast Alaska during the past 12 hours, the lowest reported pres- sure being 29.86 inches a short distance west of Ketchikan. The barometric pressure was also low over the lower MacKenzie Valley, elsewhere over the field of observation high f re prevailed. This general pressure distribution has been attended by cloudy and un- settled weather with rains over the greater portion of Alaska. | | | BEERS ON M’KINLEY R. MacGinnis and wife are sengers aboard the Mount Kinley for Juneau. They are pa ents of Mrs. Nelson I. Beers and are returning here after nearly a year’s visi® in the east. — e eeo PIONEER BARBER ¢ pas- Mc- HOP | Now uncder tne management of | Bill Haynes. Your -atronage is ap- ! preciated —adv. All 3 types with "Ageless Sealed-in- Steel” mechanism — any style, any size, any price. SEE GE BEFORE YOU BUY! EASY PAY PLAN Rlaska Electric Light & Power Co. JUNEAU 6 DOUGLAS 18 LUMBER Juneau Lumber Mills, Inc. The First National Bank JUNEAU & CAPITAL—$50.,000 SURPLUS—$50,000 [ J COMMERCIAL AND SAVINGS ACCOUNTS SAFE DEPOSIT BOXES 2% % Paid on Savings Accounts