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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, WEDNESDAY, JUNE 22, 41932 ‘By BILLE PE BECK | NUTTON: DOINY <TF P La - W i AT I GO SEE- WE i ; ‘ SULUBIANS EMBASSY - ( } HE HEARTBROKEA LM‘AJ.A.K é)Al\T- “?é"é’ YES Y | HERE DONT LET i SN C POOR. SuLLY! 'f NOBOLY : ] / 4\ > A MAN WITHOUT e 1 ikl ' GUIDA]\CE“ N WHILE THE 4 5 _AS 4 A COUNTRY -Terr Tt VERY BusY! CRE\AQLOQSHUNS, < 7 Z HIM Tm HERE - : 3 GO OA 3 o PERHAPS I % £ s > &/ ; =G can 8 . Fo control by a superior foree is to gulde—it 5 P X | can result well or ill. Your financial policy can be eontrolled by mass-fear—or it can suc- ceed through your own independence of will and understanding of the problem. It s the scheduled plan which succeeds — 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 — conversely busi- ness is safe when sane saving and wis buy- ing exists. HOOVER’S NAME BRINGS BIG DEVONSTRATION WHEN NOMINATED 2200 CARLOADS % i A e | ‘ : OF FOOD GIVEN | First National Bank ; ‘DROUGHT AREA | Mg VISITORS FROM KEfCHIKAN gincs | — B..M. Behrends Gets Ad- Mrs. Willilam Robertson, accom- vices on Dakotas, panied by her daughter, Mrs 4 Charles Graham and the latter's| g Momana, Nebraska little son, Charles Jr., arrived here on the Prince of Wales yesterday More than 2200 carloads of food, | for & couple of months’ visit with feed and clothing for drought vic- |relatives. For the present they tims in North Dakota, South Da- (are the guests of Mrs. John Mills, kota, Montana and Nebraska have « sister of Mrs. Robertson, been distributed by the American ST Red Cross—the ' distribution being GEORGE VALESON TAKES the most extensive of donation BRIDE supplies in the history of disaster relief, according to word received by B. M. Behrends, Chairman of | George Valeson, rormer Douglas |the local Red Cross Chapter, from |YOUng man and a graduate of the 'A. L. Schafer, Manager of the Pa- [Douglas High School was married | cific Area. in Seattle on June 5, according to A5 5 S 9 o0 D | 'A ‘national report compiled by |& meszage received lately. * Mr. James L. Fleser, Vice Chairman in | Valeson and bride will make their * |charge of domestic operations in|home in Dryden, where his par- Washington, D. C., reveals that a|€nts are in busi |total of 336 carloads of food and = e ELECTRIC WASHING { clothing and 209 less-than-carload fluts were given to the Red Cross g =Y ’ iand made available through chap- — MACHINES i ters in Montana and North Dakota. |The aggregate weight was 14,603~ > 3 1817 pounds. ey [ > B s " 2 | In addition to the clothing the e R EAS GENERAL ELECTRIC and VOSS | shipments included apples, beans, Hop FLAVOR Associated Press telephoto of part of the milling thousands who participated in staging an enthusiastic demonstration in tha Chicago (flour, potatoes, canned goods, cer- : o / udiveide stadium for Herbert Hoover ending in his almost unanimous choice os republican presidential nominee to succeed himself. | eals, lard, dried meat, syrup and | s S i es, hardtack, o e vl e stpee W (Y M A LT SRV “AMERICAIN | Galveston Beauty Pageant on Rocks Raice 1 oo e et Alt Are Regular Standard Guaranteed Articles A\ 1S CHANE HELUSER-BUSC! i {at $100,000; LUSER-Bu: ; P THE PAC'F'G | tigen e | Donatea feed for livestock also N You can trade in your old washer @10 matter Annual Pulchritude Parade Discontinued Owing to Depression; Bishop’s Hostility and | was’distributed in large quantities how old and (](!Cl‘(‘pit it may be — Credit in Nebraska and South Dakota W Colonel’s Charges of Favoritism. Car fot shipments totaled 18 " allowance made on request - 3 | Steady Growth Since War | : Speaking before the National | Hi h t . s — - . | es 3 - . 2 Conference of Social Work in Phil- s ” 3 5 i { ladelphia, recently, DeWitt Smith, | Al k El . L. ] l Oriental Interest Discussed ; ; 3 | |Assistant Director of Domestic Op'iin ualit aska ectric "g i anc in N k— W, | Ea % ; i e i P i 3 : ] erations, Amerjcan Red Cross, at | in New Book—Wom- | & 4 L S S Tl ; Washington, D. C., said: i Power CO ki oy | d 3 4T know of no parallel to Red I » L AI‘C Conhaslcu | i & 5 4 R 5 Cross development since the wnr.’ ow o | e idt g % 5 - £ The'present 3,625 chapters consti- - uneau—Phone e By WARE TORREY i - H ? 4 tutes the largest number rncordedJ in Prlce J » one 6 Douglas Phone 18 NEW YORK, June 22.—The back- | & 3 , § : & i i 5 at” dany time during the last ten l o ground of the United States’s in- i i 4 . 4 | years. | EDISON MAZDA LAMPS terest in oriental affairs is % ? ; ;. 2 i 7 b, 2 “Home service to ex-service men, | in “America in the Pacifi ' i 7 ¢ s 4 Iservice men and their famili Foster Rhea Dulles. i 7 i 1 : el ; 2 claims the attention of more chap. The volume reviews American ! % £ 7 2 i d 3 S lters than any other single ac- % T expansion westward from the day 1 4 : : 3 b tivity.” | | ¥ou Can “Save Money at when Daniel Webster thought that * £#8 ; : s o et | Our Store gzlir(:'nia zmdl Oregon u:;;h: e 1 % g\ AEERY < - JUNEAA;!SOS(I):?:I::CIAL \ i SEE US FIRST day become strong republics allied | LS 3 : : A4 | D : y i : Y with the United States, down to i 3 3 s An important meeting of the As- | I Harris Hardware Co. | || i our ¢ I le » the conquest of the Philippines in | i3 - i ¥ e jsociation will be held at the City Lower Front Btreet | ® iithe - constitution ~follows-the-flag"” ; ; . Hall tomorrow night, Thursday, | Tl TR AT ; g Alfls’ia era. June 23, commencing at 7:30. Busi- - . A preface tries to link all this| ! i ¥ 8 ness of importance will be trans- | r ) with Japan's 1932 policy toward: g8 . ; : 3 jacted and all members are urged | | The Florence Shop | ] ; A Laundry China, but the book itself stops! 2 5 4 G & % |to be in attendance. —84dV.| | permanent Waving a Specialty g y < gith u‘ speech by the 1galo Sen;‘\m 2 5 » 7 ' 4 4 ————— | Florence Holmaquist, Prop everidge in January, 1900, in which | §é ) N8 i 1 ; ‘3 i - B. P. 0. ELKS I y | ’ : he declared that “the Philippines | . 4 ; i ; . Regular ameeting tonight after the | TRone 427 e Elag \ TELEPHONE 15 are ours forever, and just bevond | ? 3 5 3 5 ball game. —adv. - them lies China’s illimitable mar- | P : 1 y DI s J ‘. B A , . . " FRESH STRAWBERRIES { “The last of the old time politi- # e, ; - ; ; & 2 FRESH FRUITS AND VEGETABLES ¢ians” the late Joe Bailey called : . himself, and he was true to that | Nerza DUCHATEAL The Best the Market Affords—Arrived on the yradition to the: end ‘of his Career. | 7oy the first time in more than a décade Galyaston will ot baxe its International PageantiofPelckitude this Yukon Today fAs Senator from Texas, he was a | year. The colorful event that brought the cream of the world’s feminine loveliness to the Texas cit{ has been most bitter opponent of both Pro- | abandoned for reasons—tbree in number. The depression, as is to be expected, takes its share of the blame, - hibition and women’s suffrage. the pageant having ended in an ocean of red ink for several years. Then there is the hostility of Bishop C. o : tam l E. Byrne, who has long waged a tooth-and-nail fight against the “leg show on the sea wall.” Lastly is the g iy e S T i L s S el e St BT sliow cailhs Texas were not getting C 'ALIFORNIA G ROCERY 2 " _| a square deal in the contest and that some of the visiting entrants had enough synthetic complexion to paint 4 — —_— he Washington Monument. The colonel’s protest came last year when Anne Lee Patterson of Kentucky was i chosen over the Texan beauty, Miss Eugenia Tullis, of Dallas, for the title of “Miss United States.” However, Prompt Delivery PHONE 478 in refutation of the colonel’s charges it is pointed out that Catherine Moylan, another Dallas beauty, won the ! m. title of “Miss Universe” in 1926. Last year the world’s beauty crown went to Belgium on the head of Mlle, Netta Duchzieau, but there was a difference of opinion as to the justice of the decision. However, a glance at - - ——— - £ QUALITY AND SERVICE TO YQUR LIKING NEW the records shows that American girls have done well at Galveston, Dorothy Goff, of New Orleans, was a . s Gt ok SO0 LQUR L “Miss Uriverse” title holder, as was also Miss Dla« Bri!lonilof New Jersey, rndhlrenehAhlbzrgh, of New Yo::(, ¢ i t}i\l f;) E)O utter Austin Fresh Tamales won the “Miss United States” title in 1929. Galveston will put on a “local” show this year, reverting to the {ONE 39 . t0g_ 20490~ ¥ MES}I orizinal idea of the pageant, only girls from the surrounding States being eligible. g T;!{E ‘ROTG_ VERSO Deliveries—10:30,-2 :80; 4130 e HOSE that is a particularly illnmm;l:ln::] R. C. Hufchinson in “The An-|TWO SENTENCED AT CRAIG | Electric Wash,ing Machine Frye-Bruhn Company picture, not only of Bailey, but also|swering Glory” gives a clear-lined FOR DRY LAW V!OLATIONH, of the administrations of Roose-|picture of Miss Thompson, a prac- | P velt and Taft. [tical and determined little mission-| Archie Young, Indian vesiden: and TH PACKERS—FRESH MEATS, FISH AND POULERY Bailey was d y an individu- ary, who is invalided home to Eng- |of Oraig, . pleading guilty there to! FAST FE and OROUGH #Frye's Delicious Hams and Bacon PURE SILK alist, a man of changing moods. imha and who spends her strength |ino yiolation of the Alaska Bone | Three Deliveries Daily Phone 38 | in an effort to get back o her i5-| Dry ‘Law, was sentenced ester- Built for Fast, Noiseless Efficient Laun- Contrasttie Worsn land off the coast of ncavand 101 day by Commissioner Peters to 90 | x A" aa n 3 L Wlddafml, x “Pre-W?:";h\: natives who are waiting Im'.( imprisonment in the Federal | dry Serv"fi’ e Of the. mmplest In taupe, sun-tan, T Py o e e her, jail at Keichikan, according to washers to care for. Everything from y T : between women “hefore the war"| A.nw.)ng other new ?ooks are “Re- | advices received tOflay at the Unit- mmaparent silks to heaviest woolens is ])t‘xge and black and the Tess'romantic but more de_;m'a}hn of Mafnkind by Carleton | ed States Marshal's office. A % UNITED FOODw cisive girls of the present period. | WAShDUIne, & study of education .n| Maud Rischard, Indian, plead washed quickly and harmlessly, entire- " Emilia spends the years directly |™20Y ‘u!um es; E. Alexander Pow- |guilty to a similar charge and was I free f m ]i t after the armiMice in a French|€U'S 'Lndx;co}'erfd Europe” and | give a three-month suspended y gom dirt. “CASH s KINC"' SPECIAL village, and finally returns to Am- Diana Patrick's “Pirst Your Pen-|sentence. Z erica to discover new speeds, strid-i2Y: | >t $ 1 25 encies and intensities, as well as! g.gs,;zg(ioo%\%:c%fifiia;;; S ”ardwar $ ot changed styles in lipsticks and REBEKAHS TO MEET |—not merely relieve it. Butler . g skirts. VAL ’ In part she adjusts to the new| The regular meeting of Persever- | M2 Drug Co, exclusive agents QUICK STEP—The best floor paint for wood work i ance Rebekah Lodge No. 2-A will| —edy. | and for boats inside and outside. % ' and a reminder [be held Wednesday night. Visiting 3 = o e el T the past. |members welcome. J uneau P aint Stor e MZ % “The Truth About Hoover,” by MRS. EDITH SHEELOR ™ PHONES 83 OR 85 “The Store That Pleases’ Herbert Corey, surveys the Presi-| Noble Grand. | Second Street, Near Main dent, attempts to investigate ALPHONSINE CARTER, PR, | e i e o, 0w SRS THE SANITARY GROCERY to be the really factual “news ——————— ¢ .story” of his achievements, Daily Empire Yvant Ads Pay