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i I — { ! ; 1 i THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, SATURDAY, JUNE 4, 1932 K, 0. SCRIBNER T0 BE HONORED SPECIAL SHOOT Remington Arms Co. Rep-|Officers Elected Last Night| 1% resentative Be ““Trim- med” by Locals Repre- s of the ‘em, are tomorrow right 10 o'clock and come to attend e fun. and under shotgun Nazi Journals Campaign for 15,000,000 Readers FRLIN, June 4.—Adolf Hitler's zation is starting a cam- n to hold the sentiments of i ticket in the elections. pepers in the country, one pub- lished here and one in Munich, the latter rating as Hitler's official organ Both papers are trying mightily to enroll all the 15,000,000 on their subscription lists. .- —— LISBON POLICE POLYGLOT BON—Lisbon claims the most policemen in the world. of the force already speak ish, French and Spanish. and v they are studying Esperanto. Ball Room Saturday Night LRAETRZ2EHIT® Dance Band ROY OXMAN “Philosopher of Song” Radio Artist appearing with the Serenaders tonight. This is an added attraction you are sure to enjoy. THE ELKS BALL ROOM « and THE SERENADERS an ideal combination for an evening of FUN INTHIS €Ty 00,000 German who voted |, There are only two major Fascist | y |members the use of the baseball |Council Members to Assist |Bagle River campsite at noon to-| SPORTS CLUB IS ORGANIZED —Plans for Future Are Outlined Juneau The general plans outlined 1 Moose Hall and going awhooping. fficers of the club are as Pedersen. esident—Ernest E. Stender Roy Anderson The composed of Al man; Roy And ip committee is n Nixon, Chair- rson, Jack Dawson son and President n compose the 5 Committee and water sports t races will be in charge t and Phil Jolie. p fees were put le in whole Iments. |of Harry Ebert The membe: at $15 a year or in monthly inst Club Pl purpose of the organiza- by Theo. Peder- attending the meet- The club is the developments of played here last The tion was stal sen to tho: ling last n |outcome of he, and” which was | During the summer, , hand ball and var- ts will be indulged | |in by the members. In the win- ter months basketball, wrestling, ! |boxing, @nd general gymnastics | {will be enj with the possibil- |ity of ice-skating, tobagganing and skiing being taken up. The club has already started plans for events for Sunday, July| 3, the day before the Fourth. | Active Work | Teams will start active work |next Sunday, June 12. The Fire Department has promised the club park for training purposes and| scheduled events. Hunting and fishing will not be ! overlooked by the club and cabins may be erected for the members. | — e —— | | | SCOUTERS TO WORK SUNDAY in Preparing for Open- ing of Encampment All members of the Juneau Scout Council are expected to be at the morrow to assist in preparations | for the opening of the annual Scout Camp, it was announced to- | day by Dr. Robert Simpson, pres- ident. Kenneth Keller, Walter Scotk, | LeRoy West, Robert Simpson, Brice | Howard and John Stewart are in camp this weekend and working un- der the direction of Curtis Shat- tuck. Supplies were taken out and unloaded today but there is considerable work to be done in addition and help will be necded. All Scouts in town whe are to attend the encampment are to be at the City Hall, corner of Fourth and Main Streets, at 9 a. m. Mon- day, where they will be loaded into cars and driven to the end| of the highway. From there they | will ‘walk to the campsite. | e - CAT BACK AFTER TWO YEARS ST. LOUIS—A Persian cat be- longing to Mrs. Kathryn L. Stull of St. Louis returned, bedraggled thin and footsore, after being ab- sent from its home two years. e BROTHER ACT IN RING SAGINAW, Mich., June 4—This town, which gave boxing one of its great lightweights, Kid Lavigne, has a brother act in the Frankie, | |Joe and Mike Miskok. JACK OF ALL TRADES or SPECIALIST? Do you believe a “Jack of All Trades” will do as good work as a Specialist? The Nugget Shop offers you the services of a specialist in all branches of the jewelry and kindred lines. Four men, each a competent practicioner of his craft. Consider this when in need of Watch Repairing, Jew- elry Manufacturing, Repairing or Engraving, Ivory Carving, ete. Your work should be done better and the cost no more, and often less. THE Nugget Shop Athletic and { - Daily Cross-word Puzzle AGROSS 1. Not kept g- High cards . Period of light [PTAILIE 12, Scent Solution of Yesterday's Puzzle cordi- . Sea i . Planted 13. Angry: slang L 9. Protectors State positively 14. Preceding night || . Evergreen trees 15. Means of com- munication Author of “An Animal encased Sternity Nobleman in an armor 27. Old oath 80. Accomplished 83. Mecasurable as- pect of dura- tion AP, Girl: flf:l. . 34. Large tub Personal: comb 85. Last name of & George Eliot c!flm officlal ollege offici: Chld’o‘d character Highest rank- 36. Town In Ohlo 87, Fodder pit 28. Silkworm 89. Immerse 49. Entertaining 4L Individual 64. Sick human belng 55. 43. Common Sl City In Penne sylvania soldier 56. Ipécac plant | 47. Cooled lava: 67. Sign of the Hawallan zodiac 48. Be the matter 68. Barter for ith money w PRISONER IN | DARING ESCAPE DURING STORM {Overpowers Guard at Wal- la Walla and Makes Safe Getaway WALLA WALLA, Wazh,, June 4 —Joseph Lander, aged 26 years, under sentence from 7 to 12 years from King Counfy for robbery, escaped from the State prison here “OF after overpowering the guard. Lander went over the prison wall during a high wind storm,| carrying the guard's pistol and| shot gun, and also a rifle he ob- il Alas HN/JdEEN HEE dEE H dEEE JEEN ddll dEEEEE ing it brigge Four 69. Coloring mat- 42 Attention ex: DOWN 45. Welrym 4 1. Fortune 46, Wicked 4. Viaduet B Bop w0 6 Kind of wood 63. Aeriform fluld 0 7 1 | N dEEE tained from the guard's tower Lander told the guard, D.Schoon- over, whom he overpowered, he had been waiting for just such a to escape. The Assistant Superintendent of ison said Lander is a dan- ous man and would shoot it with anyone who tried ta cap- e him, | The prisoner let himself to free-| dom by an improvised rope eets. It is believed he i and was unaided. S e CANNIBALS SELL GIRLS alia, June “4— Solomon Islands are selling | 1 $40 as” the drawback is that | to traders ice. The girls come from cannibal tribes and are regarded as dangerous companions. ———————— Daily Empire Want Ads Pay Warm Air | FURNACE | REGISTER IN s1°7 And up—Complete, Installed Guaranteed not to smoke your walls. Guar- anteed to heat your h zero weather, Guaranteed to Satisfy NOTE :—Mr. Metealfe, in charge of our Sheet Metal Shop, is not only competent but right up to date on the best and latest practice in warm air heating and ventilating and will gladly out obligation or cost. RICE & AHLERS CO. PLUMBING HEATING SHEET METAL “We tell you in advance what job will cost” FREE—ALUMINUM EVERY ROOM | 5§00 | ome to 70 degrees in || give you estimates with- of small bony | POPPY SALE RECORD ONE FOR JUNEAU |Over Four Hundred Dollars Will Go to Vets and Their Families Approximately $400 was received [from the sale of wreaths and pop- |pies in Juneau on Poppy Day ac- cording to a report made at the monthly meeting of the American | Legion Auxiliary last night by Mrs, M. E. Monagle, Chairman of the Poppy Committee. . Full reports |have not been received from some tof the outlying towns to which she had sent poppies. | This is the largest sale of poppies that the Juneau Unit has ever had, and the committee expressed its eciation for the support and A — e mimeei ittt i S ol e e d f herirg | i ifl d b et alongside their men comrad merchants, newspapers, Rainbow jew of the whispers and rumors of gatherir.g)ing rifle and bayon Y the e, Girls and all vf’hg aided in the g‘arncelqudx on the Russian-Manchurian frontier, it | Inset is Klementi Voroshilov, Soviet Commisar for War, who in a May Day speech to the Red Army made several allusions to possible trouble in the Far East. He intimated that enemies of the Soviet are trying to provoke war and that if it does come to a show-down, Russia will show how she can resist, is interesting to note that the Soviet will not have to depend on its gigantic Red Army alone 1f it is called upon to fight again. These young girls, now undergoing intensive military training, will proba- bly find themselves in the front line trenches wield- sale of the poppies. Every cent of s money will be spent to aid| erans and their families. The following delegates and al- ternates to the Fairbanks Conven- tion, August 22, 23 and 24, were elected last might. Delegates — Mrs. Edith Bavard, Mrs. Dolly Kaufmann, Mrs. Hazel | Petrich, Mrs. Ruby Cole, Mrs. Helen Bernhofer, Mrs. Claud Helgesen, Mrs. Harry Stonehouse, Mrs. Eliza- o B oty | nas changed from the “best friend Alternates — Mrs. Charles P.|of man” to a “luxury” Berlin’s ca- Seelye, Mrs. Edna E. Polley, Mrs. |hine population decreased from George Getchell, Mrs. H. Watkins, 300,000 in 1927 to 155543, and a Mrs. H. C. Williamson, Mrs. Albert |Similar decline is noted in other Tucker, Mrs. Howard Thompson, | cities. Mrs. A. B. Clark, Mrs. John H.| Dog licenses range from $10 to Newman and Mrs. L. H. Smith. $22, but watch-dogs are exempt The Juneau Unit will take a va- |from tax. cation during the summer and will| The fact that there are only 12,- not hold another meeting until the |355 of these in Berlin indicates first Thursday in September. that most owners want pets rather PR s = than guardians. e HOLDS OFFICE FOR 40 YEARS WELLINGTON, Tex. — Justice | stick together. The trouble can|P. W. Myers of Collingsworth, who | v Germany’s High Dog TI{X 1 Halves Canine Population | AGAIN We Come Forth with Something NEW | TOASTED SALTED HAZEL NUTS 8-ounce Tins—20 cents BERLIN, June 3.—Dogs are being | |taxed out of existence in Germany. | Statistics show that their status | GEORGE BROTHERS i - ——— T'he Leader Department Store CEORGE BROTHERS Playing cards, after being used for some time, have a tendency to | be remedied by sifting a small came to this section as a cow- =2 quantity of talcum powder between ‘boy, has served in public office | . . the cards and shuffling them. continuously for 40 years. lOld Papers fOI‘ sale at Emplre Ofilcfi I Dont Be Backward About Telling Us When You Think Were Wrong! OFTEN TIMES, some mistake or misunderstanding causes a customer to become angry with a merchant, and frequently the person will tell everyone else his difficulties except the proprietor. If such a condition arises tell the pro- prietor and nine times out of ten th> difficulty will be settled to the complete satisfaction of everyone. TR EVERY MEMBER of the Juneau Commercial Association wants to give you the best in service, merchandise and price. If you think you have been mis- treated by a clerk, or that the goods weren’t right or the prices are not in line, by telling us we will do everything to correct the situation. SEE YOUR LOCAL MERCHANT FIRST. Give him the opportunity to either serve or advise you. He will receive ¢ mpliments or complaints ‘in the same appreciative spirit. Earn, Live and Buy in Juneau Juneau Commercial Association Cash Bazaar B. M. Behrends Co., Inc. Winter & Pond Co. Juneau Lumber Mills Alaska Meat Co. Rice and Ahlers Co. Harris Hardware Co. Halvorsen’s Daily Alaska Empire Juneau Motors Juneau Frock Shop g;ri.og:u ki California Grocery George Brothers Connors Motor Co., Inc. Thomas Hardware Co. Juneau Drug Co. Butler Mauro Drug Co. Nelson Jewelry Store Harri Machine Shop Dr. L. P. Dawes Dr. H. C. DeVighne Garnick’s Grocery Juneau-Young Hardware Co. Sanitary Meat Co. Pacific Coast Coal Co. Dr. W. W. Council JELLO MOULD with . 3 packages JELLO—30 cents GARNICK’S—Phone 174 H T A @1Il|||IIIIIIIIIlllllIIIIIIIIIIIII!!IIIIIIIIIIIIlllIIlIIIIIIlIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII!IIIIIIIIIllIIIIIIIIlIIIIIIIHlIIHIIIIIllllllllll!llllllllllll G IIIIIIIIIIIIlIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlllII|lllllllllIIllllllllllllllllllillIllllIIIllllIlHIIlll"fllIIIIIIIIIllIlIIIIHIIIIIIiIlIIfilllllllll!lflflllfllflliflllllllllll%