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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, TUESDAY, JUNE 21, BARNEY GOOGLE I\ND QP'\RK PLUG PALACE - SULUBIAN CA THE SULTAN WHO 1S AMERICA ¢oF AND URGED HIS RETURI REFOSED To SULUBIAN BONDS 9| POINTS - ©19 Too Bap I REVOLUT(ON lN SULU ‘ _ LAST NIGHT ATZTEN P:M.{ REVOLUTIONISTS BOMBED THE SULTAA'S T HIS NieB! Go BAC HE'S BINET WARNED / NOow N 7 (MPENDING TROUBLE. N WHICH HIS ROYAL HIGHNESS 0o WALL STREET REMAINS CALM QFF. ing Featares Syndicate, Inc., G gone back n around the real ring aotio turn match with Jack Si bout with Max Schmeling, e well dissipated. Demp:zey's barnstorming out a doubt, helped conv through so far as is serious | { champion he flay- s he was D2mp- rior again evening spectacle. on his and 1 flashes before boxing’s He can affor laurels and his income. HAVEN haven champ: ons, al- of m, Gene HEAVYWEIGHT for e thougt d he ard about any mecting weight fistic has, for neig and Jim Jef makes a of or rule which quorum for -time heavy- St the chase, ££a50 slowly in n pennar P has started American 'Assoeia which the but the cl adds t NOW is the time for Allen-A SOCK-LENGTH NO SLEEVE Knit Union Suit for the Summer Months Be Comfortable SABIN’S Everythng in Furnishings For Men R e ied | nings, to do lo the to one hit straigh opposition innings. day cut or run, the Blues to Tt wasn't until the eighth inning got a hit off Van Atta. the two pitchers collaborat- | in pitching 16 2-3 hitless in- shut hit held blow. ou: in Collins Thus may he been what “Mr. Hallowell” such eéxcellent things the day on the cinder path. At our Finfitsh correspond- | | i This in- | spired Hallowell, the mils master Ameriean universities who ! run the stretch in 412, came summer Finland tast He also attéended h championship Mpatches in | ki | When Mr, Hallowell, was asked | t he thought of the matches, | answered unhesitatingly that 5000 metres run would leave | him an ‘unforgettable memory. In this event no less than 18 tough Finnish runners took part, and all of them ran hard. But far hard- €r than any of the others three| men ran. Lehtinen, Virtanen ar Iso-Hollo. | “Lehtinen’s time for the run was 14.36, Iso-Hollo's 1439 and Virta nen’s 1440. ‘After Yie run all three 2 in perfect condition and ready another match if necessary heir splendid physical condition in particular astounded Mr. Hallo- Iso-Holfo and Virt- the men of whom Finland expects much in the 5,000 and 10,000 metres events in Los | Angeles. They are Nurmi’s succes- | rs, and they are even better han him this year. They are still! ung.” | Bri(ish;ers Smokei 45 Million Fags LONDON, June 21. British mokers consume 45,989,982 -cigar- ettes each year, according to the Board of Trade journal. | This is equivalent to 119 528,600 | pounds of tobacco. Assuming that I\A\If of the British population of ,500,000 are cigarette smokers mr‘h individual smokes 2100 cig- arettes yearly. The journal also revealed that from 1924 fo 1930 pipe smoking decreased 'by nearly 20 per ceat, while cigarette smoking increased by over 50 per cent and ciga smoking decreased by 25 per cent BN, CITY AUTOMOBILE LICENSES In order that City and Territor- ial automobile licenses may fall due on the same date hereafter, namely, January 1 of each year, the Common Council of Juneau has resolved that for the year 1932, be- zining June 1 and ending Decem- ser 31, 1932, Five Dollars ($5.00) | only will be charged for City h~‘ ocense. This license is now due and pa}-" able at the office of the City Clerk. Penalty for non-payment is scribed. H. R. SHEPARD, ’ — City Clerk, pre- | Dress Specials Children’s Dresses In fast dye prints, sizes up to 14 85¢ Silk Dresses In pastel shades, sizes 10 to 14 $1.75 JUNEAU Sample Shop “The Little Store With the Big Values” ‘Mauro Drug Co. DUE FOR THE BROMK CHEER !'him, but officially beaten by a low {left hook he thudded into the Ger- | his {and tonight, | Square bowl VERY SAD! A MAN \WITHOUT A COLNTRY - TTHATS THE WAY I EELT THE ANGHT MY MOTHER - Ia- Law CHASED ME. THROULGH | ThE \>Am< ! O BAD HERE 1F S RIES To K T SULy of Harvard | on a tourist trip to| the | QCUN ELING g Mcmeries of a vicious pounding absorbed two years ago, (he effects of wl figure to prove a tremendous mental hazard (¢ Max at left, Jack Sharkey, tenight, in New Y that cost him the championship, Manager Jchnny Buckley NEW YORK, June 21.—For the glory ‘and honor but com- paratively little cash, Max meling and Jack Sharkey clash in a 15-round champion- <hip bout at Long Island City tonight. The cdds are 6 to 5 for Schmeling. NEW YOR June Max Schmeling stepped out of the ring at the Yankee Stadium two years {ago, the new heavyweight ch:\m-‘ pion—with a face that looked | though someone had been bmm.[ ing it with soft rubber hose. Down the opposite steps stalked Jack Sharkey, without a_mark on man’s groin in the fourth round. That foul ended as one-sided a four r?unds as ever opened a heavyweight contest. Grim nd alert, the Boston sailor jabbed ..,‘hmeiin,g"s face with lefts, hooked head, crossed his right. He swept~ the German before him, landing at will, taking but one solid right hand to the head in four rounds. Bui Schmeling won on a u in the mew Madison | cn Long Island, he {meets again the Sharkey who de- spisés him, believes that he can imash that face again. Sharkey |15 two years older, shading 30, and |five pounds heavier, adding weight to his wallop. Apparently he as fast and clever as he ever was. Schmeling, for two years, has been perfecting a defense against | the wallops that swelled his nose {and eyes out of shape: He is dead- ‘1y calm, a steady, punishing punch- ,ex Young Stribling could not hit l‘him solidly. |never will again. | But the mental edge is all with |the challenger. Sharkey still rag- |es at the ‘injustice of losing a fight to a man who showed nothing but is Tability to stand up under a Beat- ! ing. In that mental state he is a tremendous -fighter. ©One or the other will need heavy applications of arnica tomérrow morning. Boy Scouts Plan Wide Expansion’ NEW YORK, June 21.—Expan- sion of the membership of the Boy Scouts of America to 1,300,000, with zation at least four years, is Lhc | object of a ten-year program adopt- ed at the twenty-second annuxl meeting of the organization’s na- tional council. f Dr. James E. West, Chief Scout & Executive, said it was hoped one voter out of every four new male citizens would have four years of Scout training. | ————— IF you want to eat better, sle:p better, work better and feel better begin today taking Sargon. Butler —adv {a steel wire. {at the same time, the | He believes Sharkey | JLs' MY Lock To SLLLBIAN BONDS HAVE AN APPOINTMENT NEAR THE SULU EMBASS DROP AMSTHER\ IilL GET A Bomg S PoiNts! BOUNICED oK ™My SGGNQE/J ork for the heavywcight t is shown right as he in the bm»kgruuna With the W orld’s Inventors Every word :;mkm at lengthy business conferences, similar round-table meetings. can be taken down electrically by a new speech recorder. Individual micropho with signal lamps on top, are placed in front of each member of the group at the conference table. The chairman, as he calls on a certain conferee, switches on that person’s microphone. The mike picks up his speech and carries it to a machine that records it on | Firing seven high-speed bullets a .22-caliber rifle, especially for guarding banks, has been produced. The rifle, with its seven barrels, is accurate |enough to hit a man at 500 yards ,, and pla all seven bullets in . ‘a thirty-five-inch pattern 100 yards. designed at A Chicago manufacturer has made ieal cotton harvester 1er the crop as fast as men could do the work. The mT» ‘chine passes over the plants and uses revolving cogs, which pick the fcotton bolls as it passes over the stalks. Dangers of mining coal can be jreduced by |bomb, or coal breaker, that has been tested successfully in lignite, |bituminous and anthracite work- ings. The bomb made of rubber, \is used many times, since it does {not burst. but ly i use of a hydrau}ci :Bad Beatmg Hamled Max Last Time { Gives Sharkey Edge in Bout Tonight chmeling, in his return engagement with Sharkey, will appear to Maxie. FLORY LFAVES FOR SITKA TOMOROW TO To make final close station of the Department of Agri-| culture, Commis: will leave here tomorrow on the Forester, Capt erson. by Eiler Hanson. ‘The closing of the sta will be effective July 1, ne centinuance after June 30. Closure was recommended by the C) of Agriculture, e S T S 1932. By BILLE DE Bl CK ey TEw Me THE SULTANS PRETTY WELL HEELED HE'S LLEKY - HE DONT KANOW THE Towea Goop ENCUGH T DRWE A Taxt DONT cARRY ON SoO. A shamel | HM S _WHAT (|| SUS WHEN ] 1 CRDE(‘LD | ONE & Yugnm FANGY SuluBan| | VEILS - TheE sutvan SHOULD OF TENDED To HIS || e | -DOUGLAS | NEWS MISS FEUSI Chaplain at Rebekah Assembly Miss Elizabeth Feusi, who has been south for the past month on (& business and pleasure trip com- bined, returned home today on the Yukon. As delegate from Northern Light Rebekah Lodge of Douglas, Miss Feusi attended the Grand | Rebekah Assembly which ‘was held this year at Everett. And during the election of officers, the choice of the Assembly for Grand Chap- lain fell Miss Feusi, a signal honor for both the delegate and Iher lodge . e — SUNDAY SCHOOL PICNIC The Community Sunday School | will have the annual picnic at the | Treadwell Beach next Sunday, June |26, starting at 11 a. m. Fach one }is to take his own lunch and cup. Should it rain the scene of the (pien: will' be transferred to the EL\(!.M League rooms 1 e RETURNS FROM TENAKEE ile Cashen who has been vacation at Tenakee home yesterday | { i ich are shown in photo Miss C lenjoying her 1 Springs returned on the Esiteheth. Misses Madeline Riedi and Helen Lyndstrom with whom Miss Cashen was camping, remained there for a longer stay. still sulking over the foul | Hardly a reassuring sight. | tion operated by the Department in the Territory. Mr. Flory will bring all movable equipment here for storage. Mr. | Hanson, who will return to Sitka | to make nis home after the bureau is discontinued, will reside in one of the station houses, and look af- ter the property generally, B | PETERS CREEK MINERS ON WAY THERE FOR SUMMER SHUT DOWN STATION arrangements to down the Sitka experime: Charles H. Flory, Alaska | joner for | 1at department, | morning l George Pet- accompanied Enroute to Peters Oreek, in the Cache Creek area, where they have mini; interests, George Mahan and F. L. Wagner visited Iocal headquarters of various bureaus to- {day. Th is Mr. Mahan’s first Alaska visit although he has been ccnnected with mining activities on Peters Creek for several years, His home is in Pullman, Wash., and he is Game Commissioner for Whitman County. Mr. Webster comes north every season. He will be ion, which was made ary by the failure of Con-| S to appropriate funds for its| not at Matanuska, on the ond sta- FRESH STRAWBERRIES FRESH FRUITS AND VEGETABLES The Best the Market Affords—Arrived on the Yukon Teoday CALIFORNIA GROCERY Prompt Delivery PHONE 478 Automobiles headlights which {automatically dim themselves at 'the approach of another car. is a |recent development designed 10 relieve the driver. The system is controlled by a light-sensitive plate which reacts to the glare of on- ,coming headlights and switches the circuit from bright to dim. | Shaped much like a gigantic pol- |liwog, a diving apparatus, said to be capable of resisting ocean pres- sures at depths of 10,000 feet, has been invented by a Cologne en- gineer for exploring the sea floor lin deep water. The diver, weighing two and one-half tons, is self- propelled. whe added objective of sceing that ¢ |each boy remains in the organi- The Florence Shop | Permanent Waving a Specizlty Florence Holmquist, Prop. | Phone 427 Triangle Bldg. THE ROTO-VERSO Electric Washing Machine FAST SAFE and THOROUGH Built for Fast; Noiseless Efficient Laun- dry Service; is one of the simplest washers to care for. Everything from transparent silks to heaviest woolens is washed quickly and harmlessly, entire- ly free from dirt. Thomas Hardware Co. ‘PHONES 83 OR 85 “The Store That Pleases” THE SANITARY GROCERY S HONORED Douglas Girl Elected Grand| GUIDANCE~- To control by a Superior force is to gulde—it can result well or ill. Your financial policy can be controlled by mass-fear—or it can sue- ceed through your own independence of will and understanding of the problem. It is the scheduled plan which succéeds — maintenance of direction and rate makes for effective fi- nancial growth. The First National Bank is ready and able to plan with you—work with you — because your future prosperity is our guaranteee to our depositors—their money is as safe as ygur business — con\ur\ely busi- ness is safe when sane saving and wis buy- ing exists. First National Bank OF JUNEAU ELECTRIC WASHING MACHINES EASY—GENERAL ELECTRIC and VOSS All Are Regular Standard Guaranteed Articles You can trade in your old washer no matter how old and décrepit it may be — Credit allowance made on request Alaska Electric Light and Power Co. ' Douglas—Phone 18 EDISON MAZDA LAMPS Juneau—Phone 6 Your Alaska Laundry TELEPHONE 15 ALASKA MEAT CO. QUALITY ' AND SERVICE TO'YOUR LIKING Meadowbrook Butter Austin Fresh. Tamales PHONE 39 Deliveries—10:30, 2:30, 4;30, Fr ye-Bruhn Comp any PACKERS—FRESH MEATS, FISH AND POULTRY Frye’s Delicious Hams and Bacon Three Delherl.u Daily Phone 38 UNITED FOOD CO. “CASH IS KING” QUICK STEP—The best floor paint for wood work and for boats inside and outside. Juneau Pdint Store Second Street, Near Main