The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, July 11, 1932, Page 7

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THE DAILY ALASKA LMPIRE MONDAY jULY 11,1932 By BILLE DE BECK utter darkness by clouds of dust. Woodward was serving 4 to 15 years for grand larceny and Moxley was served from 10 to 20 years for BREAK PRISON HE'LL BE ReADY (N A FEW MINUTES- IM A WRASTLER,MR.GOOGLE, {way out of their cells in the State|goods store in Juneau, l:mmfllng | Prison 'here, scaled the walls and |men's suits, women’s dresses and escaped in a stolen auto. They swealers, blankets, socks and other mads thelr escape between 11:15|merchandise. He has not yet de- Saturday night and 1:45 o'clock |cided upon a location but_ will be {Sunday morning during a wind mdy for business shortly after storm which threw the prison in|August 1. AN T WuZ WONDERIN: (F YOUSE DONT AEED A (Boy’ qéoggvs“go“a | DURINB HEAvY |a hold-up, No trace of the fugie SPARRIN' PODAER TS Wt S | tives has been found. SN e Wflfll STBRM Toss HiM (0 WAIT HERE. o v TEXAN TO OPEN 3 & Mlqus T €D IS WAY/! NEW STORE HERE fousE DoM HAETA Dav | | Two Conwcts Escape Whenl Coming all the way from Hols- {ton, Texas, to make his home im Pemlentlary Thrown Juneau, Carl Lovett arrived on in Darkness the Alaska Saturday, He is reg- L istered at the Aldskan Hotel. il ![m "m WALLA ALLA Wash., July 11./ Mr. Lowett represents tbe Utah mml‘ —Ellis Wodward and W. D. Moxley, | Woolen Mills of Salb e City \ both aged 23 years, sawed their|and infends to open woolen i \~\\ © 1982, King Febfares SyRicate Inc, Great Bru-m\rbpmxumz‘. ()4‘4"& G- // Busmess Trends---General Actwlty Dvchnes ST(][}K MARKET mam: DINNER FOR MISS ELVA KIRKHAM | 1 | DOUGLAS Mrs. Glen Kirkham was hostess el e e e e S s | s s (o | s A R to twelve young lddles at a bridge | ’NJ" NUMEERS BASE 1923 AVCRAGE =100 ‘ | NE WS dihner at her home Saturday even- 125 ‘ ibizalll | b | A ,ing complimentdry to her sister-in- [ ‘GENERAL BUSINESS ACTIVITY | law, Miss Elva Kirkham, who s [ 4 { here for a brief visit With her " | | | ELECTRIC W ASHING o | P —_—— MARRIED MEN For' the bridge playing, Mrs, < 2 3 % ) Helmi Bach received the prize for 4 TN i 3 l Little S tre “g‘h Deve’ops |high score, and Miss Cecile Cashen | MACHINES » 75 - - 4| During Session—Hogs [received the consolation, also the l J J ‘ 523 | Helps Packing ‘mt i ¢ | | | s Mrs. Kirkham was assisted in| AR NFR e 1 A S s e pindlin e o susdwntun il —_— {he entertaining by Mrs. J. O.| ASY—GENERAL ELECTRIC and VOSS 1920 1921 1822 1923 1924 . 1925 1926 1927 1928 1929 1930 1931 1932 NEW YORK, Julq 11.—The Stock m,khflm Market began the week by folowing b ST g £ 5 F R —a—9— 1931 — | 3 2 the, familiar pattern of sagging lar P f 4 in the morning and finding little| RETURN FROM SBITKA All Are Regu Standard . AUTOMOBILE PRODUCTION + BUILDING CONTRACT AWARDS,TOTAL STEEL INGOT PRODUCTION T v . i i e e o o v s g Tt G T T e T B e it e = i strength us the sessioh, advdnoed.| F Guaranteed Articles 134l & 7] | “Barly selling was concentrated|F1nal Even! of Poslponed Mr. and Mrs Jerry Odshen fe- | againist ' American Telephone and F ll’l [ l C l turned honmie Saturday on the Dor- 1 0o} Bl 1 | Elbinioh it Goch cons ana eare] - Fourth of July Cele |otiey texariger from Sitka where : ¥, 75} + |ried a handfil of issues off froim| bration Is Held they have spent the past two weeks You can trade in your old washer no matter 50 i . |o0g o Iwh Dquis Dediines; werS) R T how old and decrepit it may be — Credit 250~ 4 —| |largely recmjeredv i - >oo——— ot B O O 0 DO B g O | P R T B Lt 1 L1 1 ) | ‘A substantial assortment of issUSS| After leading a part of the way,| ¢ | allowance made on request B AR PR SO JUC AT SE7 OTT v DEC | A FEBMARAPRAGRY JUN JUCAUG $EF.GCT-GW DEC 3k FEB MAR APRMIY SO JUC AU SEFOETROVIEC | climbed one Yo two points. Liie oasted ‘nlen of. Dehales ot ENROUTE HOME 2 Packing Stéck continued to ad-lto the single men by the narrow ! | | 50, ELECTRIC POWER PRODUCTION! CARLOADINGS, TOTAL DEPARTMENT STORE SALES | vance in sympathy with the higher;margin of one point in an exciting| A. E. Goetz local merchant, is )V o MR S e S PNt B G s S AR T Oy G T T [ JER e o 5 S G g B R v | price of - hogs. !)m baseball game played here last & home-coming passenger on the . 1 . Lt h V25| N " Tobaccos were up P night for the Fourth of July prize Alcutian due tomorrow, after 4| Alas’ia Electnc lg { und 10ofS=Rt 0 e-a0-0-2 United States Steel, American|money. The final score Was 12 to MONths visit in the States. ‘ 751 Can, Standard Oil of New Jerseyiil. The teams divided the money,! 2, N —— | ') C 50 and some others were up fraction-|$50 going to the winners and $25] SILVER TEA | ower 0. 5 = j L i“uv to the SoubFA. | Wednesday afternoon, July 13, at | 25 r 5 7 |home of Mrs. C. A. Fox, for St. 1, e N S OIS T A 076 & 8 O RO e e R S o The married men had A. J. Balog'porce g "ol Juneau—Phone 6 Douglas—Phone 18 AN FEBMAR APRMAY- JUN JUL AUG SEP- OC T NOV-DEC, JAN-FEB-MAR-APR MAY- JUN JUL'AUG SEP- OC T- NOV-DEC ** JAN-FEB-MAR APRMAY- JUN-JUL AUG - SEP-OCT- NOY-OEC CLOSING PRICES TODAY for pitcher and John Niemi for| o g0 e A t y 2 7 _ . ——————| NEW YORK, July 11, — Closing|coe ', 1o, Tundell and ‘t‘g“‘;‘r‘m] AUXILIARY MEETING EDISON MAZDA LAMPS (By The Associated Press.) |quotations of Alaska Juneau minelg.. e gnole men and Everett! There Will be a meeting of the | stock today is 9%, American Can Ladies Auxiliary of the Bagles 30%, Anaconda 4, Bethlehem Steel Mond&y mgm at 8 o'clock. 9, Curtiss-Wright 1, Fox Films 1, - — P The larger chart shown above, senting the swing in actual business activity from 1920 to date, | Fleck was on the receiving end. ’ Peculiar Signs on Gold Beads Give Science Clue to Deposits shows that acuvml; (c;ec!uzed a;;"'tmJ | General Motors 8, International < i el Ve 0 14 e g I|IIHIIIEIlIIIIIIIIIIIIIlIlIIIIIIIIIIHllIIIIIIIIIIIIII||IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII|IIIIlIIIlIIIllIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIlIlII1|||||lII!IIIIIIIlIIIIIllHHIlHI WSS p) The chart, prepared by the Na-| tional Industrial Conference Board | (accociaed Press Science from the statistics of the Oonfmu‘ HOUGHTON, Mich,, July 11, — L i e i :1:‘“;g"fm*:'z‘“é;:‘“;O‘]“‘ln}:";‘;"a"cvfisxy Little gold and silver beads made | thigh "’"“g"dzfm;ng mf low period clue to deposits or rare metals' in in_the. S g 1 the west and southwest. By HOWARD W. BLAK] than average improvement in mrj Of Plat',nltm anlI Rare Meta,g;;l::l- 22 xMoLun o Smes| i SALMON SALES “SHOW INCREASE The smaller charts show the rate of activity in 1931 and 1932 to date. Automcbile production gained 20 per cent in May over April, when a decline usually occurs at this season. Similarly building con- struction improved 20 per cent when a five per cent decline is us- | ual. . with gold or silver, especially with 1 4 & Other indicators, however, re-gold, but are so diffused that their 13;‘3::9 in exports to foreign coun duced the effects of these gains.!existence, even in paying quanti- it ‘The metals are platinum and its still rarer relatives, ruthenium, rho- dium, palladium, asmium and irid:- um. These are mostly newcomers in commercial mining, but all po- tential prosperity biulders. They occur in many ores mixed Output of steel and iron declined!ties, has been as difficult fo de- more than is normal to mew low |tect as a needle in a haystack, | axmu-acite! | Electric | levels. Shipménts of were sharply curtailed. power produced in May declined/ again by a more than seasonal amount, although 2a slight im- provement has been observed dur- | ing the first half of June. The dollar value of department stores sales in May declined by four per cent under April, al- though a usual. Wholesale prices fell two per cent, Preliminary estimates of employment in manufacturing in- dustries reveal a more than nor- mal decline under April. Alzogether, the conferente, found, the further decline in business showed no slowing up in the rate of contraction, The levels of ac- tivity in a few major fields are less than half of what they were a4 year ago. Consumer purchasing power continued to subside, al- though a slight advance is normal at this time. Thdss tlie shot fagt sl 10 per cent content of iridium. s . — 5 PG PO 48 S sots oot 13 moes} g 5 g i Hupmobde promptly—these concern the whole structure. That is why each merchant must Dally Emprre Want A centage of ruthenium. AIways qinm i it know just how each customer is paying at other stores. S LISTERINE { For boudoir, bathroom and travel two per cent of rhodium. The col- 'y 2 . Gl it [ or of old rose means about two- ¢ e A Cash, Bazaar l-hlvorsms Gordon’s 14 oz. bottle e e R A Juneau Lumber Milla Juneau Frock Shop -Garnick’s Grocery what pebbled surface, warps the Harris Hardware Co. Butler Mauro Drug Co. Juneau-Young Hardware Co. Juneau Motors Nelson Jewelry Store Sanitary Meat Co. $1.00 A Dé Luxe Fillable in White Jade Effect Free Juneau Drug | Co. e o two per cent increase is)is. ,not Process Reveals Rare Metals ‘The Michigan Tech discovery is| that every one of the pm,mum\ ’mezaxs will write its own peculiar ! sign upon a gold or a silver bead | made by a certain easy process.| These autographs reveal both the presence of the rare metal and an| accurate idea of how much there The sign reading was largely |developed by J. L. Byers of the metallurgy faculty. i ‘The beads are droplets of gold| or silver slightly smaller than match heads. They are made by' heating highly purified things o!‘ the ore to be tested. 1 If there is any ruthenium in the gold, even as little as one-t,enth. of one per cent., the surface of‘ the bead will show somewhere al small, coruscant dark blue spot,i a tiny crystal of ruthenium diox—,’ ide. 1 they show first at the bottom of | the gold droplet. As the amount of rdare metal increases, the blue encrystation spreads upward. With two per cent of ruthenium in the ore, the blue mantel entirely cov-i ers_the gold. Rhodium Changes Color of Bead Rhodium s}gnallzes its presehce by an encrustation, but by, changing the color of a gold bead’ to an iridescent reddish purple./ That shadé is the index for about spherical smoothness and yields colors ranging from brillidant gold to a silvery bronze. All the var- iatlons indicate fairly definitely the padadium percentage. Osmium and iridium show their preserice by causing dimples to form in the surfaces of gold beads. The dimples are accompanied - by a lacy fretwork as the rare metal content iricreases. At high per- centages the bead will not hold to- and falls in fragments. Clues to rare metal deposits have been discovered at Michi- | gan College of Mining through | use of gold and silver beads. Abeve is J. L. Byers, who de- velcped the process, and below fs a gold bead which has been dimpled and disintegrated by a dimple making. Platinun signs off by decreasing the lustre of the gold, until with | five percent the bead is slightly - e MsComb, Miss.,, residents have agreed to collect and sell waste pa- | per by the carload to maintain its | Boy Scout organization. | ———— |reported canned | animals died of fright. SEATTLE, July 11.—The Seattle | Merchants’ Exchange on Saturday salmon water shipments from the Sound in June ‘totaled 168975 cases, compared to 157,154 for the corresponding month last year. The gain is attributed to an in- ‘When attempts were made to ship a herd of Texas deer to other game preserves, a majority of the THE NEW IN TRUTH A CAR FOR A NEW AGE! JAMES CARLSON An ambitious thief made off with | the cornerstone, which contained al few coins, of a church at Verona Juneau Distributor FOR GOOD STEAKS G0 BAILEY’ TO A I, S CAFE PHONES 83 OR 8 ¥ { Post Office Substation No. 1 PHONE 33 5 It Bars Credit Everywhere Pay By July 15-Keep Your Ctedit Good There was a time when a person with unpaid bills 4t one or two stores might go elsewhere and still be able to supply all his needs on credit. Store A knew nothing about the credit customers of Store B across the street. Conditions are different today. s for credit. as It is easy to see that this saves much trouble for the prompt payer in arrang- ing new credit connections when they are needed—he is one to be welcomed. It also makes it impossible for a délinqueént or slow payer to conceal his past record. So much business is done today on a credit basis that credit is no longer a private matter between buyer and seller only. - Juneau Co California Grocery George Brothers Connors Motor Co:, Ine. Thomas Hardware Co. Juneau, Drug Co. B. M. Behrends Co., Inc. Alaska Meat Co. Aflen Shattuck American Beauty Patlor Oar ‘purpose is 1o make it harder for those NOT entitled to credit—and easier for those who are entitled to credit arrfi Machine Shop P, Dawes v . DeViglme Winter & Pond Co. Rice and Ahl Daily Alaska Empire EA’S. Gravg Jmleau Sa ple Shop Dr. “Protect Your Credit mercial Association One goes into a store, Immediately the manager consults the “Credit individual concerned has been at any time, a credit customer of any other store, full information about the account is given.’ ives his name and ureau” and if the Alnhty to _pay, willingness to pay Pay Promptly” Paci{:,c Coast Coal Ca. r. W, Y. Council Piiend Wailing woeka J. B. Burford & Co. Stroller’s Weekly H. R. Shepard & Sons Dr. R. E. Southwell Mrs. Wm. Jarman lers Co. = %fllmflIIIIIIIImllllmllfllllllflllllmlllmmlllflIIIIllllllIlllllllllllllIIlImIIllllIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIllmnmlllIIIIIIIII!IHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIllIIIIlllI|IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIHHIWMHIWMH

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