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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, TUESDAY, APRIL 26, 1932. By CLIFF STERRETT TO WIN MY WIFES AFFECTION, I YOoU TELL MUST FIRST WIN HER, SAMBO. MY DARLING Y I'M TOO DON'T. KEEP ME: IN SUSPENSE, - PAW! WOT’S THE P STER =y | COUNCIL TO MEET TONIGHT |Frolic to be held soon, Such special o . i : |favors have never. been, accorded BrltlSh U nempl()yed F i ght The first regular meeting of the | heretofore and the student body D ZOV%%;S hlli‘cfm(;‘, ‘Zfi"?‘}fiafié‘% Dot Sehol B 830 o, Despair;Jobless Beat Satan; . s'. FOR c UES in the ity £ rganization ol anks to at of the others. | a ; oyl S GO t Flnd Tas’fs for Idle Hands uN DEBT PARLEY this meeting. # H s D. H. 8. BOYS AND GIRLS business 1;7!_0_ be mwf‘f‘i to. RECEIVE THEIR LETTERS ) BRADUATION GAS STATION INSTALLED; | Yesterday morning basketbal let- FIRST ONE IN DOUGLAS |ters were awarded to members of T . lthe boys' and girls' squads. Miss A brand new gas and oil station,; pepoon gave out the girls' awards Ithe first one for Douglas, has been i, the _following: Rosie _Africh, | installed by William Fleek at his stephanie Africh, Elsa Lundell, | Hbnt ahd Wat Debts Is Envisaged Scaling: Down of Repara-} (Continued 1rom Page One) | plete automobile supply service. | following boys were given |For two years or more, Mr. Fleek |jetters by Mr. Rinden: Harry Lun- ‘h&s supplied free air at his shop. Angus Gair, Rex Fox, Albert Bac ermon at| The station is equipped With a wijson, Tauno Niemi and George ! qalaureqte Ser Wayne pump for gas supplied from | Guerin. | Congregational Church— |an “underground tank of over 500| o { machine shop on Front Street. He |phyllis Lundell, Helen Pusich and |is now prepared to furnish com-|Margaret Pearce. ! ments are urging the government |to make the Lausanne decision contingent upon American action o° else merely renew the Hoover moratorium for enother year, thus gal! capacity. | ! postponing permanent German we- Commencement May 21 | RO fiMachinery Companies | lief until after the Presidential | Slect o HIGH SCHOOL STUDENTS | Bart ith |F (’(Lélgzl:,n:nnlfi? S‘Lla..s. 2% The Baccaluaureate Sermon will | EXPRESS APPRECIATION | arier wi armers‘ nmental quartess m sight of a swing in Great Britain and Italy from a demand for to- val cancellation of both repara- tions and ivar debts to one more agrecable to the French view. of reduction and preservation of the yprinciple of reparations. he press claims that this. evo- n in British and Ttalian opin- as een caused over-night blication here of figures| er capita public debt. hnmental obligations These figures were by Sir Walter Layton, be preached at the Congregational | Church, Rev. J. W. Cadwell of-| jynior and Freshmen classes wish| AMARILLO, Texas, April 26— ficating. This was the decision of |5 thank the local Coliseum Thea- |Farm machinery companies have the Seniors at a special meeling itre and Zalmain Gross, the man-|shown a marked willingness to bar- yesterday mnoon. |ager, for his cooperation during'ter with farmers in the Pan- Commencement will take place recent student activities. During handle. | the evening of May 21 at the Doug- |the rehearsal of the Junior play,| They have offered up to 80 cents las Coliseum. Mr. John Dunn of |“A Suspended Honeymoon,” Mr. a bushel for wheat, 50 cents for Juneau will deliver the Commence- | Gross moved the machinery and!corn, and from 8 to 10 cents a ment oration. The Boys' and Girls’' |sound equipment for a dress re-|pound for cotton in exchange for Glee Clubs will sing numbers and | hearsal Friday before the final per- | machinery. Albert Goetz will render a yocal |formance and permitted the stu-! In many instances the purchasers §0l0. There are eleven graduating|dents the use of the theatre all|are not asked to make down pay- Senlors this year, including eight |day. ments, and no mortgages are re- boys and three girls. Two years| Special appreciation is due for quired except on the machinery ago_thére tere twelve graduated |the matinee given after the Junior ! itself. from the Douglas school, this yearJPmm. the - funds. going . to the| ST RS il falling one short of that number. ' Fréshman Class to finance ‘their Daily Empire Want Ads Pay Plan Your Buying First READ Good Ad - News, TODAY! dvisory committee which sat in Basil last Degember.. Sees Great Profit His calculations gave a per cap- ita public debt of $40 o Germany, while Groat Britain would have | $750, France $280, and the United States $135. The Prince of Wales is boosting a campaign to keep England’s un- | Numerous political writers de- cmployed from stagnating, or werse, breaking into open riots. In the |chice that fhese fgures have con- background are wageless workers idling around a clesed factory. The vinced the abolitionists that Ger- young Londoner in the hands.ef the two “bobbies” was one of those niany should continue to pay some- who could not restrain themselves when the dole was cit. thing. 4 b ol (By EDWARD STANLEY) lv groups of four or five men who 4 p LCNDON, April 26. — B I's |found a Toom some one would let . @ e g ta and jthem use for a workshop, fitted it P s busy in- |[for the: own work and pooled stead of blankly looking to the | their tools. grey hopelessness of a jobless fu- “You can have no idea how glad | ture. many of these men are simply to They make their own jobs, but [have a tool in their hands again” | get no pay for them. one social worker said.. “It saves All over the kingdom scores of |them from physical deterioration, | unemployed co-operatives, believing fand if a job does turn up ‘they are that “the devil finds tasks for idle [rot only mentally alert and ready | hands,” are " arranging work for {to handle it, but they i men who have been unemployed |ical condition s * for months, sometimes for years. PRI TR SRS 'With the personal influence of & % ’ : ELEVEN O’CLOCK CLUB the 102 Wales boos 1 i 5 s - i spopmteng . 4 Annual meeting April 27 at Elks’ | menis of recent years. S, 3 Secretm"y Queer Situation 3 ¢ The true meaning of the move- ment is deeper than mere im-| ADDITICMN AND ALTERATION provement in the physical com- TO MORTUARY fort of the unemployed. Thou- For CHARLES W. CARTER sands of workers were losing their Juneau, Alaska. technical skill and a generation of ADVERTISEMENT | boys has grown up seeing their fa- SEALED BIDS, in triplicate, sub- ! thers out of work and with no ex- | ject to the conditions contained pectation of jobs for themselves. |herein, will be received until 1:30 Resentment of this 1ot has fared | P.M. on May 18, 1932, at the office | into protests which in some in-|of Charles W. Carter at Juneau,! stances, have grown into the kind | Alaska, and then publicly opened, of desperate rioting that marks|for furnishing all labor and mater- men in the depths of despair. ials and performing all work for| So jobless cobblers mend the {the erection of an addition for a bocts of other jobless men. Un-|Mutuary at Juneau, Alaska, in ac-| employed dressmakers mend clothes | cordance with plans and specifica- for other idle women. Carpenters|tions prepared by N. Lester Troast, make furniture for their homes. |Architect of Juneau, Alaska. Plans In South Wales there are clubs!and specifications may be had from where unemployed men are learn-|ths Architect or the Owner at' ing occupations as varied as toy-|Juneau, Alaska. ‘making and pig-raising. Where copies of plans and speci- i Grow Vegetables fications are requested, a deposit of | . Up in Sheffield more than §75,- $25, will be required to insure 000 worth of vegetables was grown |their return. on garden plots which cost four| Guarantee will be required . with cents a_week. each bid as follows: Certified check The unemployed cobblers in Eng- | in amount of 5% of the bid. land haye mended more than 5, Performance Bond .will be re-| pairs of shoes for their jobless|quired as follows: The successful| neighbors, bidder will be required to furnish' In many other places the work-|a satisfactory bond in the amount: less are spending their time im.[of 50% of his contract price. proving the .recreation grounds in | Partial payments -will be madc} |their town or building city parks, {upon a certificate of the Architect | None of these “workers” is paid |Who will grant a certificate within | {for his labor. Most of them draw |10 days after receipt of the Con- the dole and remain eligible for |tractor's statement. L paid jobs, should one they can fit| AS far as possible contractor shall| {turn. up. employ local labor and use local Some clubs have a membership | material. Bidding will be Jimited. to of several hundred, others are on- |local bonafide contractors. $ - The owner reserves the right to reject any and all bids. = ‘—adv. THEO. S. PEDERSON Bergmann Hotel il $1.50 to $3.Sb ALASKA HOME DECORATOR Dinihg Room e General Painting Contractor Shop Phone 354—Residence , Phone 37—2 Rings Shop at Third and Seward | | | | | You save both time and money by first shopping in the ecolumns of the Daily Empire, for, there you may choose both the quality you desire and the price you want to- pay. The columns in this paper are always crowded with advertisements of all the alert merchants in Juneau. i is the advertising mer- v oo l l & chant, His volume of sales AS . Ou ave are, your assurance for X3v: 39 quality, fair price and up- P lanned to-the-minute goods! Th en Buy , Th;’ progressive merchant Petticoats New true fit slenderlzing con- forms with new dress vogue True cut bias back and front— flesh and white — LUDWIG NELSO Brunswick Agency ' U. 8 DEPARTMENT GF AGRIOULTORE! wmm — 5 The W eather ; LOCAL DATA ) X (By the U, 8, Weatner Buresw’) . | Forecast for Juneaw.and vioinity, beginning at 4 pam., April 26: Fair tonight, Wednesday cloudy and cooler; gentle variable winds. Time Barometer Temp. Humidity Wind Velocity Weasher % 4 pm. yesty .....30.13 55 i1 s 1 Clear o 4 am. today . 09 35 9t Calm Clear Noon today ......2088 54 43 s 6 Clear VABLE AND BA DO REPORTS v YESTERDAY | - TODAY' 4pm | Lowestdam. 4am. Precip. da.m. Station— temo. temp. | emp. temp. veloudty 24 hrs Weather Barrow g T, | 14 14 8 0 Clear Nome S\ 38 r 34 38 14 0 Cldy Bethel ... .. 8 4 3 34 4 0 Pt.Cldy Fort Yukon SO 48 | 34 34 8 0 Clear Tanana. ... 46 34 34 4 0 Cldy ~Fairbanks 54 52 84 34 4 (] Cldy Eagle . 54 54 3¢ 34 4 [] cridys * St. Paul . 34 34 30 36 24 02 Stiow Dutch Harbor 4“ 40 3 34 12 Raih” * Kodiak 42 3¢ 36 i: 1.‘,82 fln Cordova - 42 8 40 8 Juneau .. 55 i 33 35 Caim ?’ cxg;‘l' ) — 322 — Cam cxe.ng Ketchikan . B0 e | = gz é g Clear Prince Rupert ... 88 5 | R 4 Clear Edmonton . 48 . 2 > Seattle 62 8 a8 Calm ® Clear® Portland,, _.......... 68 50 50 4 0 Cldy 3 san Francisco ... 60 56 48 48 6 0 Clear ' A low pressure area centered west of Kodlak this morning covers ¢ the whole of Alaska with light precipitation over the southwest por- tion and fair weather elsewhere. Temperatures over the Territory are mostly warmer during the last twenty-four hours, éspecially in the Interior where minimum temperatures several degrees above freezing, were reported for the night. 3 . T . 5 SRR Y s | wHO'S wHO | ; | AND WHERE | |{ “Tomorrow's Styles { by 9 Today” ; Dr. George L. Barton left on. the Admiral Rogers on a professional trip to Skagway. . H. B. Crewson, Schillings. Best i Wash repr_e_séntguve went to. Skagway aboard the Admiral Rogers. s et . H. B. Carbray, broker, left on Blouses the Admiral Rogers for Sitka. N. A. McEachran and Gil Rich, traveling men, are registered at the Gastineau. A clever new assort- . H. B, Selby left on the Alaska RS . .t for the South, He expects to re- ment Just rECCIVCd m turn within two wesks, accompan- . v : Jed by his ‘wite. missey sizes suitable & for school or office | «* wear » GET BALLOTS IN BOX . The voters of Gastineau “ Channel have until 7 o'clock this, evening to get their ballots in the ballot boxes. Tt is jmportant that every qualified - voter’ go.to the pells and cast his ballot be- fore that hour. Remember; Registration is not necessary. e v 000 eeenese To Make i Dreams Come Tiue The simplest way we can say why bank- ing your money is advisable is this: The more you save, the more you haye, the more money you have saved, the more your desires and dreams can be fulfilled. That is why we say, sive fo make your dreains comie tiie. It is the strest way. Start today. v 3 . QAN gi% FREE \gmli’ every closet com- > bination sold a high grade brush for ’ ~ Rice & Ahlers Co. PLUMBING—HEATING—SHEET METAL “We il you i advdeics swhat the job will cost” Phoue 34