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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, WEDNESDAY, JUNE 8, 1932. BARNEY GOOGLE AND SPARK PLUG L \KE MIGRATING BIRDS = THE SUH, THE SULTAR'S REMAINIKNG WIUES FLY FROM THEIR NATIVE LAND To e S SIDE OF THEIR AYOBLE HERBERT HOOVER (EDITOR’S NOTE: This is tire sccond of a series of three arlicles on President Herbert Hocver, outlining the problems he haé faced and viewing them in thc light of their possible bearing on his pelitieal future.) By HERBERT PLUMMER WASHINGTON, June 8 —Wash- nxxcn “in truth became the “cap- ‘flwl of the World” when® President Hcover on that June day of 19'}1: made his sudden and dramatic pro- posal for a moratorium on inter- | governmental debts and repara- tions. ; The succeading months were marked by of two of Eur-| ope's foremost statesmen—Premier | . Pierre Laval of France and the ;youshful Foreign Minister Dino Grandi of Italy. And two of Amer- i ¢ica’s statesmen — Secretary Henry | L. Stimson and Andrew W. M*l-‘ FOLLOWING- e NEwsS AND OFFER THER SERVICES T PROVIDE Jf lop—were dispatched abroad to ne- gotiate for the President. | Since 1924 Germany had bor- | rowed some four billions of dol-| lars of which more than two bil-| lion was furnished by the Uni d’ States. Tn 1931 American citi had a larger financial stake Germany than the rest of world combined. Moratorium Proposcd | arly in the summer of 1931 a| “flight from the mark” fegan and | panic threatened. To avert ‘:‘.nsi fand to protect American inv: E’jesnd\,nt Hoover propo: > m atorium as the first of a seri ‘of mtasures to remedy this sit- uation. g ‘ When Congress met in D?cem-‘ ber President Hoover conveyed in a °peunl message to both Houses s on debts and repar 1ol He was quick to point out that “. .. reparations is ily a wholly European Wwith in | the ! problem Independent Druggists INSTANT RELIEF HEMROID LEN OINT TONIC LAXATIVE Treatment for Hemroids Juneau Drug Co. “There Is No Substitute for QUALITY” Post Office Substation No. 1 PHONE 33 Daily Empire tyant Aas Pay. Manhattan Shirts $1.65 . WHITE, TA BLUE, GRAY and GREEN ‘H. S. Graves The Clothing Man | ord | Resift with flour and diluted milk alternately | Conferences between national spotlight on showr: with Dine Italian F . And that he did not u,p— prove “in any remote sense of the ncellation of the de He hinted, ho would e ’ to make flnJ aeco which ne- settlements commission h we have no relation. * Easy Inexpen- sive Boston Cream Pie LAYER cake with custard cream filling (a cake, mnotwith- standing = it is called a pie) a real aristocrat among foods! Its “creamy” fill- ing results from the use of evap- orated milk, which also helps to manke this recipe for “Boston Cream Pie” inexpeusive—within the reach of every homemaker who delights in an artistic “ereation, the kind ily if it is ever to reach the Many women are in the habit of ering “Boston Cream Pie” from caterers and bakers. With recipe they c: have the s tion of maki it themselves. Boston Cream Pie. % cup fat (4 cups cake butter) i cup sugar % cup evaporated mjlk and % cup mixed % tsp. baking powder 3 egg whites 1y tsp. lemon extr % ts Cream butter. Add sugar and cream until sugar granules ar solved, Sift flour, then baking powder. water, Add to the butter-sugar mixture, begin- ning and ending with flnur. Fold in the stiffly beaten egg whites and add the flavorings. Pour into two pie ting that have been lined with waxed paper and bake in a mod- | erate oven (350°F.) minut Spread Cream Filling between la ers and spricikle top with powdered sugar. 25 Cream Fiiling. 21 thbep. sugar % cup water Few grains salt % cup eyape 1 tbsp. cornstarch orated milk 3 egg yolks 3 tsp. vanilla Mix sugar, salt and cornstarch thoroughly. Add egg yolks, com- bine well, then add water and milk. Cook over boiling water until thick- ened, about 5§ minutes, Remove from fire, add vanilla and cool be- fore spreading on cake, You have probably discovered that cake made with evaporated { milk retains itm raoisture longer. &ry it and see Do You Suffer from RHEUMATISM? Use what millions have found to be lthe best cure for it Genuine European GYTJE North Sea Medical Mud Used by Europe's famous baths and nerve specialists. Imported and sold exclusively by A. JACOBSEN 1519 3rd Ave., Seattle, Wash. Price, $5.00 per box Post Paid. T R World Debt Moratorium llmm ”ml(’ o ('mn(mt Business Slump uropean bert Heover concerning world-wide ¢co Washingtor Grandi (center) and Secretary Simpson when the ign Minister was visiting the capital. harp notice to the European « | €rnments not to that must be hidden from the fam- | table! ! LUXVURIES ’3‘ _FoR [~ IREAT LADIES 0 - esmen and President Her- omic ills focused the inter- 1931. President Hoover is st in deat gave gov- only turned a but not this o car ngre: to proposal, reduc- man- mora- ex their debts However, the was approved ot & “in any year's of orium were siden fln'd problems the re: off the Meanwhile new T to haunt Britain went ALASKA NEWS F. E. Smith of Cordova claims| to hav und a promising gold |quartz ledze on. Goat Mountain, | 42 miles up the Copper River and | Northwestern Railway from Cor- dova. He made the discovery a: dently, he says, while hunting bear. Eight vzined hundred tons of marble, some of the feet long and as from the quarries Vermont Marble Comp: keen, Alaska, recently pa ikan en route to Tacoma. IL was on a barge towed by tug, and is the first shipment of the season | from the quarries. | Mathew O'Grady, Alaska miner, being out of work and wanting! exercise, is rowing a 15-foot boat frcm Petersburg to Seattle. He is past Prince Rupert, | pects to b2 in Seattle early in July. J. M. Bennett, caretaker of blue fox farm on Chugach Is- nd, off Seldovia, says ravens jare the greatest ememies of foxes there. Several birds will a fox. One of the birds will seize ithe animal by the side of the head and other birds will flop to! spine | his Then they his back and peck at until he falls helpless. feed on him. uating £chool. Egan, gram Ashley, class of the Valdez high They were William Allen valedictorian. Arne Nicolai Sundt, owner of the | PR Harry Dawson’s Cafe FROM 11 TO 3 We Serve a Special Plate LUNCH for 50c Come an;l get acquainted CAlL ON HIS ROYAL HIGHNESS Is Declared; - {Mr, B. C. He ex-| a attack | Two stpdents comprised the gral-l salutatorian, and Georg2 In-| By BILLE DE BE(‘K WE HA'E SEVERAL SEVENTEEN~ ROOM | APARTVE TS, YouR MAIESTY, AEWLY DECORATED AND READY FOR YouR INSPECTION THE IT ANY WONDER THAT BARMEY, _ DISTRESSED @y - “TRHOLEHT THAT THE ARRNVAL OF 32 MORE WIVES MAY PREVENT THE SULTAN tpom SEEING WM, GIVES WAY Te Wi GRIEF I DIDNT KMe\u LY BEFORE HE WENT. AND GOT HITCHED To ALL THEM DAMES - Bov! WE COULDA KI\BKED public library, the library reported to the council. QINCE : kan's ‘I)A ard | Janice Aiken of Ketchikan >n offered a summer camp hip of $100 by the National High School Orchestra Camp at Ir hen, Mich. She recently returned to Keichikan from Olev- eland, O., where she played with the National High School Ol ML has schola. Japan had entered Man- The export of American had declined sharply. There evidence of hoarding of {currency in the United States. And there were ugly rumors of the solvency of banks 1 standard. Confer eTal Wwas wan- that on Oc- esident issued at the leaders of Leadcrs Attorney Frank Crane, formerly of Fairbanks, recently arrived in Cordova and said that he and E. E. Ritehie, United States d Division now a clicing lawyer in Seattle, will funds to develop the May- Iuld group of gold claims owned by W. A. Taylor and others. Judge ie will come north in the near future for a temporary stay. started resulted in a pro- ™ to mobilize the resources for the fight against the business slump. The Glass-Steagall ban! vas passed with changes eral Reserve law. ngress provides 125 millions the Federal Land Bank sys- moves ng bill in the Having completed research work | {into the tribal laws that governed 2 linget Indians, Kalervo research associate of the Department Anthropology of he Reconstruction Finance Cor- | !h¢ University of Chicago, has left ation Was set up with an initial | Wrangell to return fto the Uni~ operating fund of 500 millions. 1"“"; He ‘P““IL 31")‘:’5_‘ “,‘ year : in Indian research work in Juneau, To propocals the PXesl-|p,ui.c gitka and Wrangell: ' His| adzd the plan of the BOME | afa will be put into book form. scount banks and a nation-wide Pt e mmp‘ngn. against hoarding. Charles D. Garfield, whose An intensive campaign i g A | S exbenkitdnes . in ‘1 was former Assistant of ollect Ci ms in Juneau was put underway _ o and r of the Alaska The cry of “balance ths budge Seaktle’ ChAmber Bureau of 'h" was met by the House by passage Commerc will lve with & * re held suffic- o posac g W‘:x larr'%‘x‘]:l m.(;;\suf .\A~ 7":1“‘- simshian Indian tribe on the risgpe l‘n\‘f-r'{)-l‘lp\:ffifa,-p 3V5 | skeena River in Northern British | s nnuu“'fin: £, isdiLon o \lv\'x Columbia this summer studying % the. origin of th tlal defeated in the House and special o e asi"‘: excise tax substituted. other Indian customs. g e el e spent a summer in Southeast After had “ Alaska studying Indian marriaze| with the bud; cing customs and Indian tribal laws. tion, ano ggle over it in sto for the Senato. for tem of hese or de- govern- finished Rev. Michael J. Kippenbrock, formerly priest-in-charge of S (TOMORROW President Hoo- | Gé0rge’s Episcopal Church n Cor- | ‘,‘.r‘s dealings - with (‘,“gr ) :d:,m, but recently transfe.red to il ba s S ORI —— | St!'Matthew’s Church, in Fairbanks, | M has returned to Alaska from year's sojourn wil brock in the States tes and talked about Alaska lin" 31 states and the District of Columbia tefore churdh congre- gations, Rotary Clubs and Lions ! Clubs. TC house at Gogona, and nra. Margretta Lehm w ied at Cordova. The bride a ‘mm Melbo, Norway, the nigh fore the wedding. The couple me in Melbo, Norway, in 1926 They |will make their home at Gogona. Miss Eleanor Stone, daughter of SR and Mrs. E. R. S:cn: of Metla-|{ The red salmon run on the Cop- | katla, was eles of the!Per River flats is exceptionally bop‘no'nore Class a.t the Univer-|80od with all Cordova canneries ty of Washington for the ensuing;Working to capacity and the Pio- 1xxe=r Packing Company having | |taken 43,000 fish in one day, says | ithe Cordova Times. Sockeye and steel-head salmon being caught in Indian fish wheels in the Copper River below! Seven black wolf pups are amus- Chitina. |ing by their antics the crew of the Coast and Geodetic Survey vessel Explorer. The animals were found in a den at the foot of a | tree in Behm Canal north of Ket- ‘ Thre2 hundred persons attended chikan, ‘Uu E.m Purpl Bubble Ball in Cor-! dov Wild crab apple trees in and near Ketchikan are in bissom. Girls of the Rainbow at Fair- .kanks recently installed officers. year Winnifred MacDonald is Worthy hi- | Advisor, ! en hundred dollars a |is the cost of maintaining Ke! SHERWIN-WILLIAMS fiPAINT HEADQUARTERS = A Rapld-Drymg Auto Ename| for All Outdoor Surfaces For the man who refinishes his own car and for any enamel surface ‘ exposed to the weather. Covers sohdly in one coat any suitable sur- face in fair condition. lts rapid drying is a convenience—you can put your car, boat, or fumiture back into service quicker. Ciush marks level out and the gloss is fich and full <o that your work do2n’t have that l‘.ome-made, amateurish appearance. Auto ‘Enamel USE SHERWIN-TILY. Mar-not Floor Varnish Never Chips You don't have to worry when your floor. ne finished with Mar-not Fast-Dri Floot Vamish. Use mm—m the child m because Marnot is the longest wearing finish for wood and printed ine AQ@ we know of. Thomas Hardware Co. BROTHER OF MRS, DAVIS J. R. McVay, or brother of Mrs. Rose Davis of this arrived--en the ans, to spend the summer in th eity, HERE FROM MILWAUKEE yio had: béen missing sitice Octo- | Milwaukee, Admiral Bv- vicinity and perhaps become He is inter laskan res! ed in the Admiralty Island Asbe: tos company and will have charge of the shipping part of the com- For years Mr connected with Northern Railroad. he expects pany’s McVay was Great his ident. business, sister, to shortly for Admiralty Island. PSR B S R MRS. ENGSTROM Mrs. GOES SOUTH lton Engstrom left on the | Dorothy Alexander today for Seat- tle where she will enroll at Uni versity of Washington summer course of study. L. R. Ellson of the Ellson Pack- ing Company was a passenger leav- ing on the Dorcthy Alexander for a fow days business visit to Wran- |gell. MAKING BUS ] INESS for e TRIP the With | leave | the | ' ALASKA NEWS Seattle prices plus freight charg- es from Seattle to Seward will be paid by Brown and Hawkins, gen- | eral; memhandhsmg Snw ard; for jat Ylekst 15 ' @fi& toes and for all head lettuee, | ' cauliflower, carrots, cabbage, kala, spinach, | cucumbers, turnips < and |other, vegetables grown in the vic- inity of Seward. The firm is. set- | lxmg an example t0 “buy at home.” | | Nicholas Kedendenikoff, fisher- | {man_and trapper at the mouth of | {the Yukon River, was frozen to |death last February in, an old {barge about 12 miles from St. Michael, the Nome Nugget re- 4purt.s. 3 | “Frost! Thats e, heluva pame 'for @ weather map,” wisecracked the Fairbanks News-Miner when L. Frost from Portland, Qre, BSenior QObserver in .the United States| Weather Bureau Service, arrived at Fairbanks to assume his duties as assistant to Observer Howard J. | Thompson. Remains of Wallace J. Wheeler, Assaciated Press Photo Henry Gusman, Boise contractor, wae sent to prison for two and a half years to five years and fined $5000 after conviction of defrauding the of Idaho through non- delivery of contracted equipment. {per. 14, were found May 23 about | three miles from his cabin, which | is several miles up the Chena River from Fairbanks. The body was about 20 feet from the river bank with the arms under the head, as Jf the man, exhausted, had lain down to rest. He had been ill some time. Evidently he was overcome while on a moose hunt, S an ILASOL Miss Frances Marguerite Bur-' K(’(‘[)S Face and bett, born in Alaska and resident | of Fairbanks since a little girl, and | Hands Nathan Jacobs were married at| Fairbanks. Mr. Jacobs arrived in i | Fairbanks about three months ago Soft and Smooth from Reno, Nevada. He is em- | | ployed in Abe Simson’s store. i 25¢, S50e u; After a somewhat pratracted | ‘trml and after having deliberated | all night, a jury in United States | Commissioner M. R. Boyd's Court | |at Fairbanks acquitted Mr. and| | Mrs. Charles Phillips and Carl Ol- sen of the charge of possessing | intoxicating liquor. Of the twelve Jjurors, three were women. —r—ll— | mllv Emopire Want Ads Pay BUTLER MAURO DRUG CO. EXPRESS MONEY ORDERS Phone 134 Free Delivery Comeln.... Drive it Yourself That New IFORD V-8 Seat yourself behind the wheel, start that smooth starter and feel the thrill of driving be- hind those 8 perfectly functioning cylinders. You'll marvel at the way it steers, turns, picks-up, and handles. of price. Then compare it with'any car you ever drove or heard of, and you’ll know that never has there been created such a car regardless Phone or call for demonstration NOW! It will be a pleasure to let you drive it! Juneau Motors Mam at w:uou g -\.u i z S’HONSZ 30