The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, December 1, 1932, Page 2

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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRl Fabrics Silks Velvets Woolens There’s nothing like lo\(‘l\ mater- ials to 'fashion a gown to add to your glamour. These ave truly beautiful fabrics and can be had in the new colors. 39 in. Transparent Velvet $3.95 yard 54 in. Novelty Woolen Fabrics $2.00 yard 39 in. Silks—$1.95 yard Men’s Furnishings and Shoes MEN’S SUITS with 2 pair.s-l pants, as low'as BLUE SERGE SUITS BOYS” WOOLWEAR SUITS with 2 pairs pants ... $13.50 and up Men’s Shoes and Oxfords Kid and Calf Leather, Famous Stir ‘Brand, more miles per pair— $5.00 to $8.50 pair BOYS’ SHOES for school and dress wear—a knife with every pair— $2.75 to $4.50 pair B. M. Behrends Co., Inc. Juneau’s Leading Department Store BABE HERMAN ; . ons of his party leaders in I)zmwauc Cl)llf!’l‘?ll(‘(’s ngress, just as President Hoover At Warm Springs Bring | nhas been miucn criticized for mak- 2ol cisions without con- Our Real Significance _‘S‘Emi';”cfmsfm s | | As a student of Roosevelt has observed both of these things in his time. Warm Snrings and the events flowing LEAVES REDS; s e o DEAL IS MADE ability ¢o translate his training in- Hard Hme, Goes’ to Chi- |to results. { cago Cubs for FOUI‘ R il rG¥S, GIFTS, HOLIDAY GOODS Pl'aycrs, Cash CINCINNATI, Ohlo, Dec. 1. We have the ‘largest stock of | TOYS; GIFTS and holiday govds mind the hazards as well as the in town. Please look over oW pahe Herman, hard hitting right advantages of close relations be-‘smu\ and prices before buying. fielqer of the Cincinnati Reds, tween White House and Capitol. |Credit extended to reliable custom- has heen traded to the Chicago President Taft was much criti- | e Open evenings. Cubs for four players and a cash cized for yielding too often to the |- CASH BAZAAR. consideration, Sidney Weil, Presi- ey~ T T dent of the Reds, announced last night, Dallv Croas-word Puzzle " vses 1 some s oo nati are Bob Smith, veteran pitch- ACROSS rer; Johnny Mogre @nd Lance Rich- . Metric land | bourg, oltfielders, and Rollle Sems- measurcs {105, ateher, et e Herman came fo the Cincnnati B i Reds in trade with Brooklyn last . Atonement March. Egg-shaved A5 . Unseal The exchange has not cauud . Ignited again much surprise as fans believed '.éudud . Jury lists . Bemember politics, Mr. (Pontinuea 1: rage Gne) yet it fs the fact. The whole ten- or of history is that a President, to get what he wants, must know | how to handle the politicians, It‘ is that job the President-Elact now is undertaking. A T Doubtless *Mr. Roosevelt has In | dv. ¥ Solution of Yesterday's Puzzle WIEDIS BBE RIS A | 24, Rellgious fear 25. More ignoble 26. Close: poet. . Interprets: archaic Oppermost m, m E m < x > ; =l > > NV Z[P)>] 00 part Opernue solo . Frec! >lune nllrlung ol L 1 M o L Cookln( dishes 36. Donor of peace prizes Clear ggin . Marked with alphabetic characters Gnawing animal . Sailor Deserter . Crumble to HéTfMan would be used in a deal m strengthen the tail-end Reds. e “Jlltul’ ’ Suitor Seeks om|mir {0 §§ 2. sled . Like . Female sheep archists ch A0[0[w O PO |<|m[r m(x[>|TjwlN-[m/vm[o ’s Ruling CHICAGO, ch 1 her & man sues a woman for breach of proth- ise, that’s news—and a very in- |teresting legal problem, as well. ‘80 Judge Uoseph B. Da¥id tried to get the case appealed to the higher courts for the establishinent of a legal precedent, when Alanson Ma- | lott’s 426000 - suit - against Mary ' Anne Luetting Brown of Gilencoe came up in the superior dourt. | it | Let the advettisements help you | make your stoppia§ plans. 'WAKE 0P YODR LIVER BILE~— WITHOUT ‘CALOMEL and Yum dBeln W EREE WRREES R Hs H[Z|m|3[>] mi<j{= —|m| < MmN O/ m|<|mR§w»[n > (B> M| [m - . Engles . Mark of omis- sion — [ ¥4 O+ m{»[m TR O[m|F{n]m ZIORN»|[z|m|<[> dust . Cut in thin slices 55. Ingéhuous 6. Pulled apart | Measure of sulhce 1f:|n¢ cards 9. Bard . Lose one’s foot] ot St t th . Savage of e island of . Player at children’s games » Z, m . Sing in the Swiss fashion 3 BVQ!‘EYEBH tree GX “The [unter” . Growing out . Winglike 4. Comfort. & T (e chiet & Humor meal Drive away 6. Repeating Mimicked 68, Smooth ble 69. Direction 70. Bound with narrow fabric . “The others WN c!D voured ves back eadplece At home it [ndian gyptia solar disk Cleopatra river Silk waste Insects Kind of frnea number P end 22 Seed container 12, 13 18 prcgfi’et he!nso UNME SuE fllll%flllw‘fll lllyflll’filI, G T P nuaalI%uIlnaanfl JNd JEJEE sEEEE | the trio set out on a motor '3 MURDERED, CASH STOLEN BY SOLDIERS Chinese Cydul d Executed After Confessing Aiding in Plot DISAPPEARANCES ARE CLEARED v Assassination of American| and Two Others Is Revealed PEIPING, China, Dec. 1.—The United States Legation has been advised that Liu Jenshu, seldier of the Shepsi Provincial Guard, has been executed at Sianfu after con- fessing -he helped to plot the and two others on uly 23. Ekval was an employee -of me China-United Motors Company. I company with the Rev. G. D. Tam val and Koto Koizumi, & Japanese frip | and then disappeared. | Liu Jenshu, in his confession, said the - Chinese soldiers who three, stole the motor car and $20,000 and fled from Province. 1 | DIES AFTER HE erly winds. Dutch Harhor Kodiak | Cordova. murder of H | Sitka .. urder enry Ekval, American Ketchikan {Prince Rupert actually committed the killing of vy, | the k€ tion of the Gulf of Alaska. P, CVOROVICH Lepeln Termia in i THURSDAY, DEC. 1, 1932. — J. 8. DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE, WEATHER BUREAU The Weather LOCAL DATA By the U. 8. Weather Burean) Dee. 1: southeast- Forecast for Junean and vicinity. beginning at 4 pm., Snow tonight, Friday rain and warmer; moderate Weather Pt. Cldy Cldy Snow Time t p.m. yest'y 4 am. today Noon today Barometer Temp. 29.31 24 Humidity Wind Veiocity 83 w 4 .29.51 23 47 E 13 20.48 24 61 E 13 CABLE AND RADIO REPORTS YESTERDAY | TODAY Highest 4p.m. | Lowest4a.m. 4a.m. Precip. temp. temp. | temp. temp. velocity 24hrs. -10 -10 | "-10 -8 14 -4 -6 I -6 0 22 v-12 -14 -14 -8 20 -14 -18 =20 -20 ~14 ~14 =16 -14 -20 =22 -30 -26 -4 -12 -20 -10 28 26 20 20 45 46 38 38 18 18 16 22 20 20 4 4 25 19 23 35 20 - 36 26 30 32 28 32 28 16 24 46 44 46 52 48 48 60 50 5 4a.m. Weather Cldy Cleur Clear Clear Clear Pt. Cldy Cldy Snow Cldy Snow Clear Cliy Pt. Cldy Clear Clear Cidy Rain Rain suuon Juneau Francisco A severe storm is central nc northward, westward and sou ughout Alaska, except on the hington with light rain or snow weather prevails over most of ih: In Temperatures have slightly in 0 Harber wi d the p coast, and 1 Kodiak wes r Dutck hwa E Western Eastern risen in extreme i ICEDAR TO BE HERE | Planned by Dr. Eckenerj UNTIL TOMORROW To get supplies and ballast, the{‘ land Central Alaska and have fallen Alaska. RIO DE JANEIRO Dec. 1] f ! Hugo Eckener, Commander of thel Graf Zeppelin, hopes to make Rio| ‘de Janeiro the terminus of reguiat| # “zx | dirigible service between Germary and South America, he announced| We'fl Known Miner ‘Had et Suffered from L]ver Axl- { Negotiations for formation of | subsidiary company to build han ment Many Years igars and a mooring mast are und.r | way. Peter Cvorovich, a miner, aged| p.rnambuco, a thousand miles 45, who had lived in Juneau and|,orth of Rio, is the present termi- nearby communities, more than 25| s for most voyages of the Graf, "HAS OPERATION this morning of pneumonia, whicn developed after a surgical opv‘lfl-luon to Buenos Aires, and commu- tion for an ailment of the liver.|nication with Chile and Peru by years, died in St. Ann’s Hospi‘al yu; Eckener prefers Rio because it |s |offers direct airplane transporta-|_ United States Lighthouse tender | Cedar came to Juneau today from | the South. She will depart for Lhe! Westward tomorro The vessel mi a I ic Steamship Q.mpans wharf this morning to take akoard pany's coal tubs, which she bor- | d to load ballast rock. She chifted to the Alaska Juneau Gold | ng Company’s dock where she | tained her ship’s supplies and 1 oved to the Rock Dump to Ihigh on his hands. His illness had been of long dura-| tion. In the past few years, he| had been a frequent patient 'vx‘ the hospital. Six weeks ago, he| underwent a preliminary operation. and appeared to his friends and! acquaintances to be in normal, health. | Operated on Again He re-entered the hospital last| Monday and was subjected to sur-| gical treatment again. He seemed to be making satisfactory recovery until pneumonia made its appear- ance, Mr. Cvorovich came to Alaska) jalmost direct from his native coun- try, Montenegro. He returncd there for a while to participate in the Balkan War of 1913. He worked as a miner, at the Alaske Juneau, the: Chichagof on Chichagof Island, the Admiralty Alaska at Funter, and at a fw Other properties. He has no rela-| tives in the United States. His mother and brothzrs and sisters, live in Montencgr Moose And l"lu Orders He was a member of the Mogse Ladge and of the Serbian Sociaty Mr. Cvorav.ch was fond of pins. ochle, and had a tendence to hid Among his familiars, he was called “Pinocule The remains are at the Charles W. Carter Mortuary. No arrange- ments .h“e yet been made for ’he Special WASH DRESSES ! and SMOCKS $1.00 , : l/n fl i | %HI;I iflflflll%flll%g=lfl ¥ CPTT .allI-W He recovered his strength Qquickly | p——————— A DflLLAR now gives yomu the luxury eof SHARI... way of Bolivia. e Ll e S Old papers for sale at Empire. “Tomorrow's Styles Today” SCARFS The ideal gift sug- gestion offered in Chiffon, Silk and Woolen materials. [T LAST this smart satin thrift box makes Shari a luxury within reach! It costs only $1.00 yet it is just as beautiful as the larger paclmge for which so many pay $2.50. And it contains the same de- lightful powder fragrauced wi lh nre flowers from old S]lAlll thrift size face powder Priced to Please at enh BUTLER MAURO DRUG CO. SAVE with SAFE exail bR Juneaw’s Own Store ¥ N WHERE DO YOU ‘KEEP THIS --and other valuables? OUR insurance polmes, , Securities, and other uhu es, deserve pro- tection from the dangers of fire, loss, damage, and theft. And adequate protection costs far less than replacement. A Safe Deposit Box in our strong vaults will give your valuables the protection they should have at a cost of only a few cents' per month. ¥ your valuables are worth keeping they are worth satekeeping—so select your ‘box today. We have a size to meet your needs. \ OPEN TO BUY LARGE QUANTITIES OF MINK BOTH RANCH AND WILD HIGHEST CASH PRICES PAID N. SOBEL, Inc. 208 West 30th St., New York City Contact for Information and Shipping Tags H. J. YURMAN, Alaska Representative Triangle Building, Juneau GOOD EATS Quick Service Low Prices PIONEER CAFE J. K. Paull and Nick Noak 114 Front St. NEVER CLOSES Phone 137 Once Tried, Always Patronized For Expert Window Cleaning Phone 485 GET OUR PRICE BY THE JOB— Not by the Hour 30 Gallon Range Boiler $9.50° Toilet $15.00 (Standard New Pattern Bowl) RICE & AHLERS CO. PLUMBING HEATING SHEET METAL “We tell you in advance what job will eost’ ROLLER SKATING EVERY DAY—3 {o 11 pan.; except’Saturdays, Sun- days, holidays—1 to 5:30, 7:30 to 11. Instruction @ hour, 6:30 to 7:30. A. B. Hall. Gus Gustafson, Mgr. 3 ALWAYS FRESH FRUITS and VEGETABLES AT CALIFORNIA GROCERY Prompt Delivery PHONE 478 Old Papers for Sale at Empire Office &

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