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f81 HARDING RULES FOR PACKER IN PACK TAX SUIT for $58,000 Against Bristol Bay Co. endered orally Federal Judge Justin in the local United the Terri- e Bristol Bay i Company for alleged un- paid salmon taxes was dismissed h prejudice. Costs and disburse- of the defendant were order- ed to be reimbursed by the Terri- tory. The suit involved approximately $58,000 in taxes claimed due over a period of some nine yes The T ory claimed the Company in salmon had paid on the basis of a JACK RYAN IS HERE TUESDAY FOR MAT BOUT Dismisses Territory’s Case|Wrestler Coming to Meet Roy Anderson Next Saturday Night Jack Ryan, 200 pound wrestler who will meet Ray Anderson, for- mer world's champion in the 185 pound class, will arrive in Juneau next Tuesday, according to word received today by Anderson, who is promoting the smoker, sched- uled for Arrang May 21 and sponsored by |the local American Legion post. gements have been made for Ryan to work out in the A. tenstvely 'B. Hall every afiternoon at 4 o'clock. Anderson has been training in- in Juneau for the past two weeks and is working out daily paying its graduated pack tax on|in the A. B. Hall at 3 o'clock, with Frank Mulherrin, heavy- pack from two canneries when in|weight grappler of Cakland, Cali- fact it had only one plant The Company, in the trial here, contended that it does operate two canneries, although both are lo- caced at the same point. The Court held with this contention which it added, was apparently the view en by the Territory over the ntervening between beginn- ing of the alleged underpayments and the date of filing the suit. COMMITTEE FOR POPPY SALE IS NAMED BY UNIT Mrs. M. E. Monagle Heads Committee for Auxil- iary Poppy Sale The appointment of Mrs. M. E. Monagle as general chairman of the 1932 memorial poppy sale in Juneau has been announced by Mrs. H. G. Nordling, president of the local unit of the American Legion Auxiliary. The sale will be conducted here May 26, the Satur- day before Memorial Day, which has been designed as P“oppy Day"” throughout the country. On that day every person in the city will be asked to pay tribute to the memory cof the World War dead wearing one of the Auxiliary's veteran-made poppies. Mrs. Monagle will be aided in planning and conducting the poppy sale by a commitiee of prominent Auxiliary women including Mrs. John H. Newman, Mrs. R. A. Rei-| schel and Mrs. Helen Bernhofer A number of other committees will be appointed soon to conduct special activities in connection with the sale. Because of the increased need for the rellef work among disabled veterans and their famil- ies which the poppy sale makes possible, the 'Auxiliary is planning to extend great efforts to make the sale this year larger than ever before. Mrs. Nordling said: “The sale is one of the largest Auxiliary pro- jects of the year and on its suc- cess hinges the success of the ex- tensive welfare program which the Auxiliary carries out for the needy fimilies of veterans. All the wo- men who take part in the sale work are unpaid volunteers. The veterans who make the poppies re- ceive one cent for each flower and the balance of the money received is all expended in the Auxiliary rehabiliation and welfare activi- ties.” ———————— NOTICE Parking signs have been posted on Willoughby Avenue to the en- trance of the Baseball Park. Park- ing will be allowed on one side of the street only. Those not observ- ing the traffic signs will be prose- cuted. By order of the adv. POLICE DEPARTMENT. Waffle Set Special Fine, Modern Electric W affle Iron 6 China Plates 6 Coffee Cups and Saucers Waffle Batter Pitcher Syrup Pitcher Large Tray —21 Pieces $15.00 Nugget The fornia. | the on o 4 = - ™ T ® Surprise DANCE Ball Reom TONIGHT You can always de- pend on the best dancing crowd at Serenaders’ Dance Band Dancing 9 °till 1 Admission, $1.00 Oeeeecssoo SPOT E L K S’ Elks’ Ball Room Saturday Nights Daily Cross-word Puzzle DOWN Solution of Yesterday's Puzzle 14 Lairs L Japanese 19. Taking up » anjo-11ke Instrument 22, Expenge - 8. Slandered IAINIA] 24. Noah' 15. Windflower AINIAM P 18. Descendant of 26. Halr on an the firsi man (23 animal's 11 Break sudden- [ i 1y 21. Provide food 18 Mountain in Laolb - 17 Palestine 29. Clonpaon 20. Male child 3L Metal 2L Domestio fowl B2 fasteners 22. Central [ 32. Eat away P Mblru 83, Bchoaul . z‘:u);mm 85. Foot covering 25, akes 38 Word used in . Not 50 good college 26, Nothing more cheers . han 89. French river . Cherry color 4L Direct 30, Scintiliates roceedings 34. Vigilant @ K&k a 35. Rotates rapld- footbail 1y 40. Shelters for ACROSS 44. Before small anl- L @Girdle 45. Precious stone mals 2. Bnglish gueen 48, chrmflu 51. Force air 3. Inten carol | 38. Gleamed nolsily & Young devll 49. Contemptible 39, American through the . Thus ons : Indian : nose 6. Added number collog, 40, Selt 62. Australian 1. Approaches 60. 8-shaped mold- 4L. Devout bird 8. Barriers In ing H 42. Old French 65. Wone by streams 6L Covers with | edsures of 56, Character In 9. City in turf ength “Cymbeline" olland 62. ireland 43. Tyrns end for 58 The ralnbow 10. Hesitates or 63. Intellect | en 69 Laughed to wavers 54. Utilfzes | 45 Small_triangu- scorn 11 Bxlst 57. Came together lar plece of 6L Lionlike 12. Narrates 68. Feminine clot! 63. Siz-line erroneously name 46. God of war stanzas 13. Bnglish 60. Pronoun 47. Silly 64. Runs aground school 62. Alternative wll B il b Ba W7/ GRAFT GHARGES ARE WIPED OUT, PORTLANDTRIAL Directed V;rgcl for Ac- quittal Returned in Case of Mayor and Others PORTLAND, Oregon, May 14.—| Graft charges against high city | officials based on accusations they agreed to pay $200,000 too much for a municipal market site to- day stood wiped out through a directed verdict for qauittal ordered by the Oircuit Court. The defense motion for a directed verdict was argued two and one half days by the defense and pros- ecution. The defendants in the case were Mayor George L. Baker, two Port- land city commissioners, Earl Riley and John M. Mann; the city engineer, Olaf Laugaard, and C. Lee Wilson, contractor. The recall movement egainst Mayor Baker and ‘Commissioner Mann, invoked for alleged inef- ficlency and negligence, will be voted upon in the May 20 primary. e —— Old papers for sale at Empire Office. BROMLEY GIVEN PERMISSION TO | LAND IN JAPAN {Certain Restrictions, Are’ Laid Down for Aviat- or on Flight ' TOKYO, Japan, May 14—iThe Ministry of Communications thas granted permission to Harold Brom- ley, who plans a flight from Segttle {to Tckyo this month, to land in Japan. Tt is specified that he mwust land between Sendai and Mito at Haneda, Ithe International air- | port on the southern outskirts of Tokyo. Bromley must laso avold |the Kurile Islands. ! ———————— AIR SERVICE TO VOLCANOES SEWARD, Alaska, May 14. regular tourist airplane service over the Valley of Ten Thousand Smokes and to other volcanic areas was announced here yesterday. Three air services will be operated from Beward. oo 2 Free Tickets to Seattle or Trade AWARD MAY 17 at 8 P.M. at GEORGE BROS. {: A1l accounts paid before May 17 will receive tickets. We challenge mail' order prices and quality. George Brothers Grocery Leader Department Store ) it kit 2 REAL BARGAINS COCOA, good grade, G SUGAR, 10 pounds 1-pound can 18¢ NUT, best butter substitute, pound. 20, Sde GARNICK’S—Phone 174 20T AND DASH 1S GELEBRATED, ENTIRE WORLD Pure Alaska Nugget Key Is Touched by Presi- dent Hoover DOUGLAS WINS The Douglas High School defeated the Juneau High School this afternoon in @& baseball game at Douglas by a score of 11 to 8. This is the first game of a possible series of three games to be played. WASHINGTON, May 14.—Touch- ing the historic Alaska-Yukon-Pa- cific Exposition telegraph key, stud- ded with pure Alaska gold nuggets, President Hoover this morning op- 97 PASSENGERS EOR THIS PORT STOCK PRICES SHOW LOSSES, * SHORT SESSI0 Market Rallied Early but Heavy Undertone Pre- vailed at Close NEW YORK, May 14. — There {of the 1last two sessions at the | short session today of the Stock | Market but net losses of fractions to one point or more embraced ened the world-wide centennial ! celebration of the conception of| SEATTLE, M-y 1i — Steamer most of the list. that ticking little instrument by!Alaska sailed at 9 o'clock this | i " g 4, After showing a rather pro- Samuel F. B. Morse. morning for Alaska ports with 131 e ot htinass 4aFTy,” $He MBD first class and 43 MESSAGE CAUGHT HERE |78 P, the steamer The following message was pick- bo‘o;;e’}gi"‘mzs e prevailed at the close. ed up this morning, sent from| "y Dora Bow Mrs. J. C.| Today's turnover was half a mil-| WAR, Washington, D. C., by the Hnyssl S0k Ryan G. Shepard |lion shares. Juneau radio station: {and ‘wife, B. D. art, W. L.| Washington continued to hold the | “To All Army Radio Stations— . 3 p Reinhardt, In cooperation with the Nuuonal'vEn Wold, mon, ta Wilson, J. Mc Lor steerage pas- recovered a little. Some issues ral- lied a point but a heavy undertone Carlos | attention of financial quarters. Dan Week-end reports from industry celebration today of the first in-|Geppar ang wite, G. F. Gebhart, and trade failed to clarify the sage by Army Radio to all stations of the Army from Point Barrow, Alaska, to Panama and from New England to Hawaii, Philippines and ‘What Hath Got China and by the Army Amateur| The message Radio System to the thousands of ng Carr, Chief S Army amateur radio operatoss the Army. | steerage. 1ght?” Compare our CASH PRICES with those of the Mail Order Houses. We handle the very best grade of Fixtures, and further more we are one of the large taxpayers and help to support the different organizations of the town. Qur pay- roll is large and we employ local labor for over 95 per cent of our work. CHINA TANK CLOSET COMBINATION .... .... ..... 4 inch. STANDARD SOIL PIPE, per S-foot length ............. 2-Part Cement LAUNDRY TRAY, Stand, Swing Spout Faucets, and Trap 5% RECESS TUB, Complete with BlENEs 0. ... v ........ BATH ROOM OUTFIT, Complete with AR Fittings ................... 30-GALLON RANGE 40-GALLON RANGE But we guarantee our range boilers for 5 years 18-inch PIPE FURNACE— with Casing .. 20-inch. PIPE FURNACE— sev o with Casing .. a5 e be. 0L GILL Rice £ Ahlers Co. SHEET METAL PLUMBING We handle “Kohler,” “Standard,” or “Crane” Fixtures—“They Are Better” HEATING “We tell you in advance what: job will cost” stantaneous transmission of mes- | | - # |'T. C. Walker, J. Danielson, John | outlook. ls;&\i overxthe wh‘ed})) S&r:mel F"Hellenthnl. Robert Hurley, Kendsll_ - Morse, I am sending this mes-|yy;iams miorence Bair, and eight | American Telephone &nd Tele- | graph, United States Steel, Ameri- {can Can, General Motors closed virtually unchanged. | Woolworth lost more than two signed by Irv- | points. al Officer of | Some quarters of Wall Street | heard rumors of fresh constructive MAIL ORDER HOUSE CASH PRICE F.0.B. Seattle with developments impending in Wash- ington. Standard Oil of New Jersey and New Haven preferred lost three points. | | CLOSING PRICES TOD. Y 1 NEW YORK, May 14.— Closing |quotation of Alaska Juneau mine |stock today is 10, American Can |36%, Anaconda 47%, Bethlehem Steel 12%, Curtiss-Wright 14, Fox Films 2%, General Motors 10%, Interna- tonal Harvester 16'%, Kennecott 6%, Packard Motors 2, United States | steel 27. MR. AND MRS. GOWEY SHEPARD TO MAKE THEIR HOME HERE Gowey Shepard, son of Mr. and Mrs. H. R. Shepard of this city, accompanied by Mrs. Shepard and the latter’s sister, left Seattle today on the steamer Alaska for Juneau They will reside here for the pres- ent, making their home at ths Shepard place on Glacier Highway. Mr. Shepard is interested in a mining property in the Moose Pass region that is now under examina- tion by one of the large mining corporations of the country. He also has taken an option on some Chichagof Island ground in which H. 1. Lucas is interested. Hes will examine the latter pros- pect in the near future it is under- stood. e —e——— - Old papers for sale at Empire RICE & AHLERS CO. CASH PRICE F.0.B. Seattle - ol . - o ] (L o 1 ] 4