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EMPIRE, MONDAY, JULY 18, 1932. : THE DAILY ALASKA — ' By BILLE DE BECK 'BARNEY GOOGLE AND SPARK PLUG DON'T GET (MPATIENT, SULLY -- ONE OF THESE DAYS “YQU'RE GONMA BE THE \WORLD'S CHAMPEEN RASSLER’ BOY! T can seE You Aow-- 2 “THOUSAN'S © PECPLE ST THE RING SIDE YELLING 'EMSELVES %ARDSEE s S SHUT YOUR EYES, SLLLY, Je JUS' (MAGINE TTHAT YOURE q (N YOUR CORNER AN IN A MOMENT You'LL HEAR. HAVE YOUR OWN CHECKING ACCOUNT.. '+ . . and keep your balance up to a reasonable point so that you culn p:’y your obligatior promptly and protect your credit standing. Pay-by-c{-ec — it s to your reliability and good business judgment . . . and your funds will be SAFE until needed. ] = cate, Inc., Great Britain nghts reserved. DOLITICS &t Rarzdlom ’ By B“To;pm(\x thgmg voice, so soon to be quiet- (Chief cf Burcau, The Associated |€d DY bitter disappointment, as he 7 i the whole convention to a| Washington.) | 1ifted c | new emotional height: “I was four years ahead of my time.” enough of deadlocks.” HOPEFUL ROO Finally, Roosevelt, though all for the futu: py face lighted by hoy before the conventipn hour, accepting the call to bat ‘What possibilities for high suc- cess or high failure lay all about him as he stood there in t Come in, your check book is ready! BAND CO! Three moments of high drama : h i : 5 : & chowers GIVEN HERE WEDNESDAY : Tae Uniformed Juneau City Band will come to Douglas Wedz y night, according to arrangements) being made today, and give a con-| If the weather is favorable, | the concert will be staged in the| cpen air ‘at the ‘ball park, prevail, the con in the Nat. i is in compliment to citizens, just an exchange of friend- | ly ngs between thé two met- ropolis of Gastineau Channel. Fur- ther announcement will be made tomorrow. { | be given concert e RETURNS TO DOUGLAS Mrs. Elsie Weldel returned home | Saturday morning on the North-/ land from Seattle where she has been visiting friends and relatives past month. Accompany- s of those wi in conven Chicago. The central ch assembled at ntrasting party McAdoo, Roosevelt one amorous pos- -Smith, | out { rounded by from the old the story , nominee, and the hope FIGHTING AL SMITH ba cular night de: on. Still, dejected retreat ‘Chicad, the Happy Warrior, ng and winning his fight for the 1 stand out forever in the mem- | 5 saw the Demo- were three | for a| Did these leaping words, after ain the great mystery of I his opposition to Roosevelt? Was a confession that he could not bear to see another step into the |place of advantage which he felt he, himself, had so lar prepared? | all, ENTER McADOO Next McAdoo, In Madiscn Square Garden, leader in two deadlocks ovér the Pre: dency. In the excitement of those lasl ding ballot in the stadium, Tam- many sent an emiss to him. | s true that California was| about to break to Roosevelt, start- | ing a landslide it would be hard| to 'stop? McAdoo replied with a stion: ; NEW PARTY PATTERN Smith’s old rival{ tlluss(x ends of t moments of preparation for the de- | ® vsst‘ly Loy destiny— of the spotlights, and pro | his creed of leadership “I pledge myself to a new dea |for the American peor | Only eleven words, meaning much | or little, as time may disclose, 1 i e In the march of these three gures aeross its stage, the-conve tion saw something more than the| making of a graphic page of poli- | tical history. It saw a turn of the history, a corner in gathering up of the past to piece out | ent paltern of par- | better or for worse. | di - B FIND RIO NeeEDS SUBWAY ‘ RIO DE JANETRO, July 18— been recommended by an engin-| First National Bank B ITS SAFERTO PAY BY CHECK W of JUNEAU CALIFORNIA GROCERY SPECIALIZING IN FRESH FRUITS AND VEGETABLES [the repeal plank he wanted and | vas denied in 1928. Almost unbeliev: y unconscious e odds he faced In the later e over the nomin: n it od with hlazing face amid of thousands, e of victory g as ins Waldal north were M, Antonio Contantino, the her r, who- will visit here for two weeks. M Con- stantino is a daughter of Mr. and| 1D @ popularity contesé conduct- Mrs, LeRoOux. |ed by a New York newspaper the = CETNS TS Sisters walked a RETURN TO KETCHIKAN {the first prize in the hm‘mun.izer.v eau reported to Gov. James Rolph, class, rolling up a total vote o Jr. 21249. The contest, which begun = " i e W son left yesterday on the Noi May closed July 4, and the - “lana for their h in Ketchikan 5 ek e “srs. %}@uum..;;umluulmiummmnnni|m|l|mnmimnmuuul|||||||||u||m|u|u|umumlmlmuumlmmmu||||mulmmullllmmnnmm}gag; | eering commission which | |the population of Brazil's capital | |and its suburbs to be 2,500,000. | They suggested 21 miles of un- derground as a starter. | Tennessee collected $27,000 in & | pr——— Window Cleaning “If we don't, where are we go- ing? For whom will we be work- ing? Who is your candidate? The Tammanuy leader tempor: ed, and McAdoo made his decis- | ion: I am unwilling to follow furtt along a blind lead for I have Phone 478 A subway in Rio d2 Janeiro has i found 4 ‘ Prompt Delivery The Boswell Sisters—V jet., Martha and Connie te government costs have in- | }L»m-m.--g.-“,-,--“”-mmw 760 per cent ce 1911 California Tax nz:nfi Bur- and noisy very the Charles Graham and lit iration in the en toll bridges 16 relatives. 7,598 votes - i B A ballot was published in the = VISITS OLD HOM ETOWN newspaper daily for 50 days, which | == |gave the girls from New Orleans | = = After an absence of about six-|an average of practically 425 vi teen years, Lawrence Erickson, who|a day in the Gr New York | was one of the Douglas boys 20 |area, covered by the newspaper's years ago, was visiting friends and | ¢& ulation scenes of his youth here yester-| The Boswells, Erickson operates a butcher Martha, as they |radio audiences, from Maine Hawaii and from Alask: of Mexico, E | E | = | { | | i Connje, Vet., a nown to th FORMER DEAN OF DIPLOMATS Or Other Articles From Peddlers ? You Are Told In a Very Convincing Manner By these peddlers that you are saving on the price of articles because they come was p i speaking for her | “We are happy indeed to lmve! {been among the winning artists| {in this cont We wish to ex- IN PAR'S tend our sincere thanks to our radio audience for the honor done |us. Our work on the “Music That | 22 agh 3 i Satisfies” program is a pleasure | Jules Jusserand, for Years|in itself, but this just doubles our | | pleasure.” | Ambassador to U. S., |""the Bosweits are heara mon-| !day and Thursday evenings at 10 Passes AWay p. m., Eastern Daylight Time, over ! : the Columbia Broadeasting Sys- | (Continued from Page One) tem'’s nation-wide network ! THE Royal Range Quick and Even Heating Oven direct from the mills to you, thus saving wholesalers and retailers profit, and often you are led to believe that there are only twe steps from grower to you. But These Peddlers OMIT Telling You The salesman is paid a pmfit of from 15 to 5090, plus bonus money if his sales go over a certain average. i of the attaches| ; | :}mnrllwfimlofmnigz called at the range for aid for Poland, which French Embassy to congratulate M. |3t that time was threatened by ; d. In honor of the oc- {attack by the Red Army of Russia. pecrans. | M. Jusserand was a close student casion he § was given -a clock of - . i i ibed. |of English literature and produced i e SMary g ibe lucid and vivacious mono- | i rogh ing also some | Tfiin;?éeog;gfiflgr:d 1:;:2'1; con- | 8raphs on comparatively little | :’;mlamns I'a Jatter M. Jusser-|known subjects. His writings in-{ and officially began his duties as |cluded “A French Ambassador at|] S brual 7‘4tlxe Court of Charles IL" from un-| fg:]; hsil;“:‘;r‘x:gasfy:d]:: (r:‘:mbox?., z‘PllinShed papers of the Count de; EPL Cominges; “English Wayfaring During hisM::rv‘;Ze in the United i"‘”e'_ a literary ‘h!smry of the | States M, Jusséraid. made many English people; “Ronsward” and| trips to France and on one of “With Amf.ncam of Past and Pres- these, in 1920, he was named head (ent Days. ¢ of the French commission which American Honers Went «wifh'a . simitiar commission! Among the American honors con- | L~from England to Warsaw to ar- ferred upon M. Jusserand was his| election as President for 1921 of| " perreoeresereereereeesssq|the American Historical Associa- tion. He was the second foreign diplomat to be thus honored, the first being the late Viscount Bruce, ormer British Ambassador to the United States. The honorary de- gree of doctor of laws was con- ferred upon M. Jusserand by Har- vard, Yale, Princeton, Chicago, Co- lumbia, McGill, Temple, St. John (Md.) and New York universitics and the State of New York. He was a grand officer of the Legl:ml of Honor and belonged to the Na-| {tional Geographic Society, was a| iFellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, a correspond- $18,000,000 was dedicated yesterday.) an honorary fellow of the Royal| Society of Literaturs and a member of the American Philesophical So- ciety. October 15, 1895 at Paris, M. Jusserand married Elsie Rich- ards, an American. JUDGE BURTON 1§ | WEDDED, CALIFORNIA Newark L. Burton, formerly a member of the Juneau Bar, and of | the law firm of Winn and Bur- ton, later United States Commis:| sioner at Juneau, was married ai Gardena, California, May 13, ac- cording 'o advices received here. Judge Burton has been practic- ing his profession at Gardena the i Eliminates Guess Work and Baking Failures K Large Cooking Top Surface Long Lasting Body Construction NOW ON DISPLAY Thomas Hardware Co. MRS District, Branch, and Division Managers, also get commissions and salaries and frequently keep offices in larger towns from which they hire and send out salemen. All these expenses must be taken care of in the price you pay for peddlers articles. Special prizes, conventions, etc., are offered and held by these sales-crews, all costing money and necessarily figured in the price you pay. Frye-Bruhn Company PACKERS—FRESH MEATS, FISH AND POULTRY Frye's Delicious Hams and Bacon Three Deliveries Daily It Costs Money to Sell from House to House! 7 “Tomorrow’s Styles Today” COMPARE VALUES AND PRICES WITH YOUR LOCAL MERCHANTS % 2 ©Y Juneau Commercial Association Cash Bazaar Juneau Lumber Mills Harris Hardware Co. Juneau Motors California Grocery George Brothers Conners Motor Co., Inc. Thomas Hardware Co. Juneau Drug Co. B. M. Behrends Co., Inc. Alaska Meat Co. Allen Shattuck American Beauty Parlor UNITED FOOD CO. Latest in “CASH IS KING” Slip-On Sweaters FOR INSURANCE See H. R. SHEPARD & SON Telephone 409 B. M. Behrends Bank Bldg. ALASKA MEAT CO. QUALITY AND SERVICE TO YOUR LIKING Meadowbrook Butter Austin Fresh Tamales PHONE 39 Deliveries—10:30, 2:30, 4:29 Halvorsen’s Juneau Frock Butler Mauro Drug Co. Nelson Jewelry Store Harri Machine Shop Dr. L. P. Dawes Dr. H. C. DeVighne Winter & Pond Co. Rice and Ahlers Co. Daily Alaska Empire H. 8. Graves Harry A. Race Juneau Sample Shop Gordon’s < Garnick’s Grocery Juneau-Young Hardware Co. Sanitary Meéat Co. - Pacific Coast Coal Ce. Dr. W. W. Council Juneau Bottling Works J. B. Burford & Co. Stroller’s Weekly H. R. Shepard & Sons Dr. R. E. Southwell Mrs. Wm. Jarman for Sports and General Wear \\J O 000 A All Colors and Sizes THE CHAS. W. CARTER MORTUARY T A “The Last Service Is the Greatest Tribute” e Corner 4th and Frankin Sts. Phone 1362 H O AT s S Own Store 4%%" Ry i past ten years,