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fgtn T g W SR R ERGE D - il B SR - ol oS g i LB g TSV 1 I T I B T TA A S R m sy SR S W s T rr THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, MONDAY, JUNE 13, 1932. TT POLLY AND HER PALS / SHH SHH - DE SULLBIAN CABINET By CLIFF STERRE % : ARRNED! (T 7 LOOKS LAKE DEV 2 Wu2 GOMNA EE RS N ‘KNSouepe: == Brilliant Ybfing Wife of in London Crowds Diplomacy, Writing Into Her Busy Da:ys, e NS 7 A& S IR 2 Soviet Ambassad BOY SCOUTS " WASHED OUT, or Motherhood, She Also Sings By EDWARD STANLEY LCONDON, June 13.—Taling Sok- 51mkufl gives you an idea of Rus- sia’s post-revolution woman. | She is the wife of the Soviet| [Ambassador . to Great Britain and ] ! | If Clear Weather Prevails, Boys May Return to Camp Tomorrow RETURN HOME ( MR. GOOGLE -T HAVE ST 5\ LEARNED THAT My DEAR SUBRCTS JAN oBIECT Yo ME AND MY WwEs | g[}"\ STAYING HERE 1N AMERICA) | i MY PEOPLE DEMAND i THAT WE RETURN Yo OUR AIATIVE LAND AT oneg ) HAVE You EVER STHOUGHT AgouT BECOMING A SULUBIAN CITizen, MR GodGLE 2 e e e DOUGLAS NEWS BIG DOINGS TONIGHT AT EAGLES' HALL OVER IN JUNEAU ) River Boat Jeanne Arrives' to Service Mitchell Parly The annual installation of offi- \cets of Douglas Aerie No. 117, F. O. E and the Ladies Auxiliary {will be held jointly this evening | | ToM ake Dreams Come True The simplest way we can say why bank- ing your money is advisable is this: The more you save, the more you have, the more money you have saved, the more your desires and dreams can be fulfilled. That is why we say, save to make your dreams come true. Start today. It is the surest way. First National Bank her third book, “Nine Women,” ‘ I 2- H 1 . e Eagles' Hall. While none has just boen published in Enz Did it rain—yes and how! Flying boats of the Mitchell e 1o e o t book is to appear T 3 but ‘members may witness the in lis_h, Another boo! a The Boy Scout camp at Eagle|prospecting party, destined for.‘ch]latlon Eagles' ladies, and hus- this fall e River was practically washed out'Southeast Yukon Territory, hadnot' o "0 ™00 pionas’ of - Auxil Only 30 years old, she has;been | vesterday and the rosult was thatleft Juneau late this afternoon. ! ) e BT % married nine years, and has a | about 24 Scout P {iphs Mive: aircraft ‘afe nob- EEpsbatad jary members, will attend the so . That would g5 aietaie bRdk g Mg 0 b ditiod Rl i B |cial which follows the ceremon- daughter 8 years old seem enough to keep most young to take off until tomorrow for! sequah, B. C., which is expected | neau iast night. 1 jes. There will be cards and re- 4 And then—the weather changed|T" i freshments for entertainment. omen busy. But not this brilliant young Communist. Besides that, she has been a newspaper correspondent abroad. She went through the university in Moscow, specializing in economics. | today—and now—if the weather ;keflps clear and indications are vill continue—those Scouts cturn to. the camp to com- the two weeks there Here is the dope—Scouts are to ok ana suppits o “he" Mk e s larea and for servicing the camps | REFEOAE BELUERENG | that will be established there. : | Tom Mitchell, who is President! | . . ™ this evering from a brief visit to |of the Mitchell Exploration Com-|p .y “wash where he went as delegate from Alaska Lodge No. 1, 'T. O. O. F. to the meeting of the !Grand Lodge. L. W. Kilburn is expected home > oo NOTICE T ZAGLES All Eagles and their ladies arc (invited to attend the annual in- s wri ks and short o 5 & She has written .boo il > one Dr. Robert Simpson this af- | PAnY and who is leading the party | stories. She learned French an erriton; b HhiE! BVeRilr. M . (e | of gold seekers, and J. H. Eastman, | glis supplement her native n .o S g v % _ iyl g.‘l’l:;‘l:l}:] tos;gpt})':elps her hushzm(j care to return to the camp. If yw? Prels)dem of the coxx!par{y‘WhO R o Rare so—and the weather indications |8 In charge of the squadron of Ty Tirr; 1o, Redl e morning, the | Planes, are still in this city. They| B rouial it reas suh |Scouts are requested to assemble [Will “DI:I depart, before the planes. i e b % at the City Hall at 9 o'clock and ost of Others Gone American writers as Whitman, | y 1 I Tt ot e ol b ol Dreiser, Longfellow, Harriet Beech- ltransp: ition will be furnisked out o |stallation of officers of Douglas the party are now at Tulsequah. ler Stowe, Sandburg, Upton Sinclair, 50 -ifhe JIAnORgE TG ahe BOQUW | S v o the' Edstnan Diapes'are [AEAE 1T EO. &, th ipE Ham Jack London and Sinclair Lewis. must indicate thelr pleasure to-| o, o B ok dump of the|Monday at 8 pm. Ceremories for And she found more time to study might so that conveyauces may be|ajpoes Juneau Gold Mining Com.|Members only; card party for music and cultivate her voice. She arranged pany. The remaining one is at the | SUests will follow goes to symphonies and opera, but outmaster Ourtls Shattuck and hangar of the Alaska Southern Air- GUY L. SMITH, doesn’t like jazz. 'I'Ium1 ‘v[l Mw!k*{;. the c )k”und four | ways. The plane at the Airways —adv. Secretary. Born in Kiev, daughter of a pro- o & 2 5 of the larger boys are still in camp ., ama slightly 0 & | EIEGTERP WSSV ) . oisort of donriontios. DR, Bidkaini: Mme. Halina Sokolnikoff, wife of the Russian Ambassador 0 |yaiting to resume if possible or ;:ssn (:,;xntxfi:dca::‘gfi;;umxlzx:r 1{‘?;‘ TR off is almost altogether “post-rev-' Great Britain, is as useful as she is ornamental. She writes, sings, |pack up everything and return 10|weather. Against the plane’s rud-| Mrs. John Feusi will entertain olution.” She went to the civil ts in diplom: and mothers an 8-year-old daughter. Juneau if the rain continues, 'der, as it projected over the water | the Ladies' League with a “silver war with her father, and served a year in the Red Army. Her work 'was in soldiers’ cultural clubs, lec- turing and directing reading. Then she went to Moscow to fin- ish her education and met her husband, who was a professor of public finance in Moscow Univer- sity. “No, I wasn’t his pupil,” she smiles.- Not very tall, she has a hand- some intelligent face, very white teeth which flash often in contrast to her dark eyss and black, wavy bbed hair. \d To Visit U. S. What she wants to do now is to visit the United States from end to end—"“to see capitalism at its cli- max"—to say nothing of her news- paper itch to see people and places. Her new book sketches briefly the careers of nine women who took part in the French revolt. It is written from the Soviet point of view. She lived in Paris while thaking her research, and found that women of the French and Russian revolutions had little in common. Talks on History “Women who became known dur-! ing the French revolution were no-: torious mainly not by their assist- ance to the revolution,” she ex- plains. “The French revolution passed without giving women political equality. Even now the French woman remains without electoral rights and s Trelegated by the French civil code to an humiliating position “The contrary Russian revolution, on the established women's po- litical, ci and economic equali- ty with men, and reconstructed family relations on the basis of full =quality of rights. “Within recent years have made their mark not only in the affairs of the government, but arts and sciences, and many of them are genuine heroincs of the civil war, the reconstruction and the five year plan.” “And how have you found time for all this?” was asked. “Oh, in Russia now we do in one year what others need five for,” she replied. e Turks Fight Red Tenets But Nurse Soviet Amity women The boys returned Friday even- ing from their overnighf hike to Eagle River Glacier, under the su- pervision of E. C. Guerin, looking a bit tived and drawn and with | her wolfish appctites, but they| ,der pressed hard, bending the air- craft’s rudder. The damage was not serious; Carried by Tide Red-Handed, had also the satistied look of him'cd at,a float near the hangar Exl()rl PIOt who has fought a hard fight and and when puiling out for Hawk / 2 won. 1t as a tough trip through |Injet was carried by a strong tide the slush and rain on rice and|against the plane’s rudder. bacon for two days and sleeping | the best they could, but they stood neau to Tulsequah for up to it like little men and We pecting party, are pround of them. powered river boat Jeanne, owned Visitors Day Surprises by the; United Transportation Com- The Scouts on Sunday enjoyed bany and operated by Capt, Will- two unusual tres There was a'iam Strong, arrived in this city free bottle of Coca-Cola for each|yesterday from Wrangell. She has donated by the Alaska Agent. Also been running on th: Stikine River Mr. Smith of the Juneau Dairy belween Wrangell and Telegraph filled their stomachs with joy by iCreek. Supplies for the prospect- sending out his largest freezer full ing party’ come from Canada in of ice cream with the compliments bond through Juneau for Tulse- of his company. iqunh. A large quantity is expected Yesterday afternoon members on the next trip of the Princess of the Scout Council and parents Norah. of some of the boys at the camp,| The Jeanne is 63.6 feet long, 18.4 after some formal cussion, de-{feet wide and 25 feet deep. She cided it would be safer if the is equipped with two 150-horse- camp was suspended in view of power engines. She has four cabins the rainy weather prevailing. |and accommodations for 16 pas- During the life of Boy-Scouting sengers. Her skipper is Edward E. in Juneau no such wet June has|Kalkins; her purser, George Rob- before been experienced. Bvery bins. Negro and White Youth Under Arrest—Tor- ture Threatened the pros- the gasoline-engine- NEW YORK, June 13.—William | Buff, aged 18, a negro, and Arthur John Gaynor, white youth, also aged 18, are under arrest accused of a plot to extort $30,000 from James Moffett, Vice-President of the Standard Oil Company of New Jersey, by threats to kidnap and torture his debuanted daughter and her fiance. The two young men were caught (in a telephone booth while phon- ing instructions as to where to lcave the money. Great Gold Hunt Brings Heirlooms from the hangar, the cannery ten- | The Fairweather had been moor- | | To transport supplies from Ju- night. The others were of distributing Communtic accusea tracts. Dining Room First Class Home Cooking Mrs Hilja Johnson, Mgr. ance, but rather by their resist-, ISTANBUL, June 13.—The Turk- day has had some rain and samc‘; ——— ish Nationalist Government's solid T, A days have had a lot of it. Ewvery-| = 8 an ; . ° friendship with Soviet Ru: wax- 10 l"'k 0/ If(ll_) thing was getting soggy and it | Y <} es stronger every year, but its was decided that, while no sick- o CARL EJ’:%S‘BSEN | fight agains: Communism within ROME June 13—A gold hunt|ness had arisen, it would be safer| | JEW] L its own territory, does not wane unprecedented in many years'is go- [ty send the boys home and take | WATCH REPAIRING | 2 5 ing on in Italy. ¥ When a red flag was hoisted on y no chances. i ! SNAS}? ngffiEszain's j a minaret of the Suieimaniemosque , 1 “Fcks not so much hidden Suggestions ! ) | Opposite ‘:‘S_ 0] o here, it came down in a hurry and tr : ure as I?rgotlen ueasur.e_ There have been many sugges-| P | o R 3 "— the hoister was hustled to jail ..n"‘consequ-ince old gold watches,|gions as to the improvement of UUT - — ® | He was but one of 20 Turkish Ly 'y, €aUTInGS, battered coinsline camp so that another season | Bergmann Hotel Communists arrested within a fort- Shauns and brooches have come to|guch gs this could be overcome. I e gl iy B Some have sugested that the boys — | A A LG R | : LUMBER Spruce and Hemlock 2x4 No. 1 Common S4S .. $18.00 Mft.B.M. 2x4 No. 2 Common S48 .. 12,00 Mft.B.M. 1x10 No. 1 Common Shiplap 16,00 M{it.B.M. 1x6 No. 1 Common Shiplap 15.00 Mft.B.M. 1x6 No. 2 Common Shiplap 12.00 Mft.B.M. All Random Lengths—6 to 20 Feet Juneau Lumber Mils PHONE 358 | Lumber For Every Purpose tea” at her home Wednesday after- All friends are cordially in- ady. | noon. |vited to attend. —— E — || You Can SBave Money at | | Our Store | ;‘ SEE US FIRST i !| Harris Hardware Co. | il Lower Front Street | o -. “Tomorrow’s Styles Today” Mercerized Mesh Hose Special Values Offered at 50¢ Pair All are flowing in a growing stream to the Bank of Italy. This Government bank is offer- | ing the high rate of $300 a pound for the precious metal. All the gold | have an instructor in camp mnext year in the use of the axe and scme small cabins be built ¢hat woul daccommodate from four- to received will be' added to Ltaly's|yn . e S ,‘:Z“fuw::: She ‘:fowmk::;nf ‘:p p;;c';e::r:;"l‘cf_‘ they would take considerable pride i ©r-|in houses of their own construc- tion. . . T bunk house be thrown Blmd Justlce fl““ted g;e:}x;x:;\:n battens and tar pa(:e? By Paris Court 'of about sixteen by twenty. foot y Thehw:- e, Wi tiers of bunks that ! p about thirty boys and um stove in the center h “O‘Jld 5l PARIS, June 13.—Justice, being big blindfolded, has lost a timepiece. While a case was being heard in the law courts a man entered with a ladder and took down the wall clock. “It needs fixing,” he told present cabin and a new cgok- ge , house be built adjoining which the Judge, but it hasn't been seen oy po puilt even cheaper -fban b I'the bunk-house. Hardly a day passes without a| § This last suggestion has consid- complaint of depredations by sneaklcrahle in its favor as the shed: in HEPEY Do poas LA courbs"rmm is a natural assembly plac: il hutiging: land in addition the present chim- |ney in the cabin would not:have Old Spanish Trail Paving |2 chneed = To Be Fim':h—e'ld Thi’ Y‘earl If the present king place i when needed. Tt has also been suggested that bunks be put in the !retained the eight-inch concrete | chimney must be changed for a | twelve-inch chimney, as this chim- BAY ST. LOUIS, Mo., June 13.— ney refiises to draw the new large Pavement of the Old Spanish Trail jrange satisfactorily. The new cook east of the Mississipi River willihouse could be built on the other be completed this summer. jend of the shed very reasonably The unpaved part of the old road ,with a proper twelve-inch chim- on this side of the river is only 18 ney. All of this does not mean miles and J. S. Thomas, head of that tents would be abandoned. the Mississippi Highway Commis—} sion, said machinery for the work icr, neater and happier when the ¢|will be placed in ‘operation this weather permits. The inside bunks month, jwould be a place of retreat when 4 Another suggestfon is that a/ that wculd make ‘plenty of heat| Two man tents are much health- | Daring Feat Performed in Firepit of Kilauea { Volcano ; HILO, H. 1, June 13—A daring |Jdapanese contractor, Rikan Kun- |#hia, gambled with death when he was lowered into the firepit of Kilauea volcans and returned eighi |hours later with the bodies of Syl- vester Nunes and*Taargaret Enos, €chool girl, whom Nunes killed and (then jumped to his death into the |erater. | Kunshi claims ’I r the job. The descent was made in a tiny, cage suspended perilously from a cable acryss the gaping pit 1200 {fect above the molten lava. Kunshi strapped the bodxcs,| found on a ledge 800 feet down, to the cage and brought them up. the $1,000 feee SERIES 222 THE NEW Hupmobile 8 IN TRUTH A CAR FOR A NEW AGE! wet and cold threatens to get the | best of them, and that is always! | possible here as this season pmves.l This matter will have to be threshed out before next season | and the Scout Counfil will wel-| ! come and advice from those m:md especially for | volunteers for labor or other help. | This is a community enterprise of ' |considerable merit and everybody | is expected to lend his hand and counsal.” l ————— | Long rides on a pony given her | on her sixth birthday recently 151 one of the favorite pastimes of - Princess.. Blizabeth of England. JAMES CARLSON Juneau Distributor ELECTRIC WASHING MACHINES JENERAL ELECTRIC and VOSS All Are Regular Standard Guaranteed Articles You can trade in your old washer no matter how old and decrepit it may be — Credit allowance made on request Alaska Electric Light and Power Co. Juneau—Phone 6 Douglas—Phone 18 EDISON MAZDA LAMPS _— CALIFORNJA GROCERY ALASKA MEAT CO. QUALITY AND SERVICE TO YOUR LIKING Meadowbrook Butter Austin Fresh Tamales PHONE 39 Deliveries—10:80, 2:30, 4:30 Frye-Bruhn Company PACKERS—FRESH MEATS, FISH AND POULTRY Frye’s Delicious Hams and Bacon Three Deliveries Daily UNITED FOOD CO. “CASH IS KING” QUICK STEP—The best. floor paint for wood work and for boats inside and ou Juneau Paint Store Second Street, Near Main THE CHAS. W. CARTER MORTUARY “The Last Service Is the Greatesi Tribufé®: Corner 4th and Franklin Sts. Phone 136-2