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LAST 3 DAYS OF JONES - STEVENS Clearance Sale LARGE GROUP—Fcrmerly $24.75 Values DRESSES-j---5$4 95 and $6.95 | $1.95 TABLE ® Beach Wear ® Stlk Pajamas and Gowns ® (Organdy and Silk Blouses @ Satin Slips $1TABLES1 I Group at $13 Only 2 Suits at $5 Beity Baxiey House Dresses EACH --- 8$1.G5 NOTICE? A New 25¢ Table BARGAINS! BARGAINS! NO APPROVALS—REFUNDS or JONES-STE VFNS All Summer Hats 1 group Sweaters repe Gowns JEWELRY 4 Passengers " Aboard Taku HERE’'S THE SECRET OF FAST, LOW COST ELECTRIC COOKING | SEATTLE, July 24—Steamer Ta- ku, now northbound to Juneau and vayports, has the following passen- New G-E 5-Heat Clean- Speed Calmd Cooking Units heat faster and use less f current than ever! New lower price aboard for Juneau: makes the General Electric Range even Olive Gillis R | ‘ Hos?1iTaL Non:s Priced from $95.00 Model illustrated 129.50 | Mrs. F. G wu on was admitted ~~~~~ | to St. Ann's Hospital this morning Gmmu/"}tmm- | for surgical care G. Schaffer was a medical admis- Al sk El L h &P c sion today at St. Ann’s Hospital aska Electric Light & Power Co. S After receiving medical atten- PHONE 616 toin, Elma Johnson was dismissed today from the Government Hos- / pital, 0O Get Real Bargains — Starting Tomorrow at LEOTAS Pay Day Specials | You cannot afford to miss these drastic MARK-DOWN BARGAINS at LEOTA'S. Prices that are very seldom offered the Juneau pub- ic. LOOK THESE PRICES OVER, THEN HURRY TO US! DRESSES racu $2.99 For STREET, SPORT and AFTERNOON wear. Includes sizes 12 1020. If your size is here, you can't go wrong. DRESSES r1cn $4.99 This group includes SPORT DRESES and AFTERNOON FROCKS and FORMALS. Insizes121042. DON'T MISS THIS! COATS, SUITS $9.90 WE PLAN TO CLEAR OUT OUR COATS. This means every coat in the store will sell at $9.95. You know the high quality apparel we have, so don’t hestitate to buy. In this sale of Suits, values to $24.50 are included. SOME DRESSES are included in this lot. lBOta’S Special 50¢ Table INCLUDES IN THE i GLOVES—SLIPS—HOSIERY Baranof Hotel SKIRTS and BLOUSES q i £d For This Port Mrs. Ward McAlister, Mrs. Louis | C. Lemieux, Mrs. E. C. Kunesh, Mrs. | 1llm Juneau Htoel. GREENHOUSES OF JUNEAU FLORISTS RECONSTRUCTED Carnegie Going South fo| See About Bulbs for Next Season ‘ Some 4,100 sqauare feet of glass| jand 23,300 feet of pipe recently went |into reconstruction of the green-| houses of Juneau Florists on Gla- cier Highway, giving the busy local | concern the largest and most mod- ern plant in Alas | The two reconstructed green- houses measure 20 by 100 feet and 21 by 100 feet, respectively. Hot water is piped through 2,600 | | feet of one and one-half inch pipe and 700 feet of-four-inch pipe to keep the temperature in the green- houses a constant 65 degrees win- | ter and summer. Last winter, be- fore the houses were rebuilt, it required approximately 1,000 gal- lons of oil per month to maintain | | that temperature, Grown Locally Almost every flower and plant | that grows can be raised in Alaska | under glass, Claude Carnegie, own- | ler of Juneau Florists, says. The | concern now grows about 80 per- |cent of the flowers it sells through| | its Juneau: store, importing only a | | | Bulb Trouble Carnegie is going south Friday m place an order for bulbs. The nuln‘ | market was upset by he German| |invasion of the Netherlands, so |that Holland bulbs can no longer | be imported. As a result, the price! |of domestic bulbs has soared, Car- 1 u Florists handle more lhm\ | 30,000 bulbs a | Among plants now thriving in the new greenhouses are some 2,000 chrysanthemums, which will be in | bloom for the October and Novem- ber trade. | D Visitors Are Complimented At Luncheon e | A number of out-of-town r\wqts‘ | were honored yesterday afternoon |at a luncheon given by Mrs. Olaf | Bodding at Mrs, Fred Newman's summer home on Lena Beach lhmpu- was played with thonors to Mrs. Alma Hendrickson, nn(l Miss Marie Lineberger, ond. Those invited were Mrs, John J. | Keyser and her guest, Miss Mar- garet Hoflin of Henriette, Minn.; Miss Marie Lineberger of meo‘n- ‘lou North Carolina, and her cousin Mrs. John Cauble, with whom Qw |is visiting; Miss Aileen Sherrill, | | Mrs. Mildred Rice and her daugh- | | ter Betty, all visitors from Indian- | head, Maryland, Mrs. John Akin of Bellingham, Wash, Mrs. Alma Hendrickson and Mrs. Jack Tor- | vinen, | AR s ‘McCollum Returns Here with Bride| E. W. McCollum, Observer in the| | Weather Bureau Office here, re-| l.umed on the steamer Columbia | last night after a %hree months’ vacation in the States, bringing with him his bride of three months.| They were married in May nt Portland and later traveled to Den- | ver, Reno and San Francisco. At | Reno they visited Mr. and Mrs. Gil | Prucha, formerly of Juncau. The McCollums are staying at ( | ot M S VISITING SON Mrs, Cora Holt, of Toppenish, Wash., the mother of W. O, John- | son, is visiting Mr. Johnson aud‘ family for three weeks. She is| stopping at the home of Lorraine Johnson on Gold Street, N o | The Dnlly Alaska tmpire guaran- | | 1 |tees the largest daily circulation of |any Alaska nrewspaper {robbed of his | apartment, |guarding the office refused them THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, WEDNESDAY JULY 24, 1940 SITKA SEEKING 'SOURDOUGH' FOR PIONEERS' HOME Campaign Beglns fo Have | Lewis Statue Sef Up on Lawn Residents of Sitka have \deud a campaign to place the Alonzo Vic- tor Lewis statue, “The Sourdough,” in front of the Pioneers’ Home, ac- cording to a news item in a Seattle paper The 12 years ago and Alaskans who spon- sored it planned to erect it in Se- attle. Since shen various sourdough groups have undertaken campaigns to raise the nec y funds. About $30,000 would be required to cast and install it. .o atue was designed nearly /ANTI-AMERICAN SENTIMENT 1S GROWING, JAPAN Newsmen Wire Roosevell| . Demandmg Retaliatory | Action Be Taken SHANGHAI, July 24—The Jap-| anese Embassy Spokesman described | a series of incidents involving Unit- led States citizens since July 7 as “unfortunate coincidences which (xnx\(L be concluded that Japan is adopting any anti-American at- titude.” The declaration was made at a conference with newsmen today. The Spokesman also said that it is the “duty of newspapermen to keep calm and cool.” He said that telegrams sent wlm Gettysburg, Pennsylvania, | President Roosevelt bv five Amer- ican newsmen, who urged retaliatory | acls against Japan, unless Tokyo| |acted to restrain the Japanese els-) {ments, give a false impression nrw Hhe anti-American sentiment grow- | guaranteed circula |ing among the Japanese. Hallett Abend, New York Times correspondent, Abend declared that a tall Jap. anese, accompanied by a heavy Chiraman, also tried to enter hi office this morning under pretex that he phoned them to fix hi typewriter. He said the policema: |entry, therefore the men left thi | building. NINA SOLOVIEVA WILL LEAVE FOR NEW YORK CITY Mrs. V. V. Solovieff (Nina Solo- vieva), well known soprano, will sai for the states Friday on the steamer | Baranof enroute to New York City. She will spend a few days in Se- attle in connection with her vocal | work and will then go to New York to take up contracts which she re- cently accepted. Well known throughout Europe | | and the United States for her charm | and talent, Mrs. Solovieff rrcontly was heard in concert in this city. - FOR GlBRiL'l'AR DEFENSE was beaten Anrl‘_ manuscripts in th‘ Receptlon Is Held After Baptism of Donohue Infant ‘ STOCK QUOTATIONS TRACT OF LAND IS SET ASIDE FOR PORTAGE CUTOFF NEW *YORK, July 24. — Closing | uotation of Alaska Juneau mine sto(k today is 4%, American Can 94, Anaconda 18'%, Bethlehem Steel |75, Commonwealth and Southern' PRk 1%, Curtiss Wright 6 7/8, General . . Motors 435, Toternational sarvee- | EX@CUTive Order of Presi-| misabetn ann pononue, intant |ter 43'w, Kennecott 24 3/4, New daughter of Mr. and Mrs, Jack Vork - centrat 11, nortnern pa| denf Excludes Are@ | Dononue, was baptiaed tnis”aiter- cific 6, United States Steel 50, noon at 2:30 o'clock in St. Ann's Pound $3.87. i from Forest Chapel by Bishop J. R, Criniont. g ¥ | George M. Simpkins was present DOW, JONES AVERAGES Land situated at the point on the | as Godfather, and Mrs. Peter Reilly The following are tos Dow,' Alaska Raflroad at which the pro- | stood as proxy for the Godmother, Jones averages: industr 121.64, rails 26.24, utilities 21.93, - - REV. CAUBLE IS TO MAKE SURVEY FOR CHURCH AT SITKA' Juneau Church Serwces fo Be Conducted by the Rev. M. W. Boyer The Rev. John L. Cauvle of Res- urrection Lutheran Church, will sail for Sitka on the motorship North- land to make a two months’ survey in regard to the possibility of the ction of a Lutheran Church in that city. From Sitka, Rev. Cauble will go to | the states for a month .to join his family who plan to leave for the | south in a few weeks. f During his absence, the Rew. Merle William Boyer, Assistant Pas- tor of the Wicker Park Lutheran Church in Chicago, who arrived here on the steamer Columbia, will officiate at the local church. The Rev. Boyer for the past sev- eral months had been doing post oraduate work at the University of | Chicago and expects to return there in the fall to continue studies for a | doctor’s degree. He received his | Bachelor of Divinity Degree in 1935 and Mrs. A. D. Gilson of Boston, Mass After the ceremony a reception was held in room 316 at St. Ann’s Hospital, where friends called for tea and pieces of Elizabeth Ann's baptism cake, which was the ton tier of her mother's wedding that had been especially preserved for the occasion. posed Portage Bay cutoff would leave the present main line has been set aside by an executive order of President Roosevelt., The executive order, published in | the Federal Register, excludes from the Chugach National Forest the | tract of public land on Turnagain | Arm. cake Announcing the Opening of RAVENHORST GOAT DAIRY R AT SN R GRADE A RAW MILK DELICIOUS FLAVOR — SANITARY l Visitors Appreciated Fresh Daily to Distributing Place No. 1 GARNICK'S — Phone 174 DELIVERY FREE Give It a Trial! was orained in 1936. Subscripe to ‘The Daily Alaska F.m<1 pire—the paper with the largest tior: O SRR CHANNEL APPAREL SALE KiMOVAL JULY 235¢h BEGINS TOMORROW 1 LOT OF Dresses EAtH $3.95 (Formerly Sold up to $14.50) 1 LOT OF (Formerly Scld up to $21.50) DRESSES, each §5, 95 Evenmg Formals ONLY $1 10 $2.50 (Formerly Snld up t to $lB 50) LALINEA, Spain, July 24—Can- adian and Australian reinforcements disembarked from military trans-' ports today to guard the British key | to the Mediterranean, the Gibraltar | Fortress. Quantities of foodstuffs, war sup- I plies and all kinds of anti-aircraft |guns, nlanes and heavy armlery were glso landz-d a — s Flyiny Insiracti lym 3 nsiraction by the hour or in courses from SOLO to COMMERCIAL. See Us at the Airport! Alaska School of Acronauties, Ine., Box 2187, Juneau, Alaska > SPECIAL Juneau A.F.of ALL DELEGATES MEETING Central Labor Counecil THURSDAY, July 25, 7:30 P.M. L.Hall ARE REQUESTED TO BE PRESENT! HATS EACH 50c 50 GLOVES C |{EACH 50c LADIES' SUITS and COATS (Formerly Sold at 521 50) CHILDREN'S COATS - (Formerly Sold up to $11.. 50) HOUSE DRESSES Only a Few at mminmnu«mmm||uum|||||||||iu|m|uu|‘m|| 85.00 - $3.50 (S1TABLEST | IIlllflllfllllflIIIIiIIIIIIIIllfllllmflflllllmlNIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIHIIIIWHIII House Coafs $2 50 PLAY SUITS ® SLACKS ; s m 0c(C k $ - l 9 o SWEATERS ~® PAJAMAS 1 o NIGHTIES ® HAND BAGS (Silk-Rayon) : NO APPROVALS—NO REFUNDS! ALL SALES FINAL g Channel A pparel Shop Phone 203 Sale Starts Tomorrow ||IIIIIIIIIII||IIIIIIIIIIIII|IIIllIIIIIIIIlIIIIIIIllIIIlIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlllIIIIIIIIIllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII|IIIII|I|h =