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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIR END OF THE WEEK SPECIALS! Yes, er Shoes fm men, women and children. Correct fit is also an import- there’s real comfort and service in these Star Brdnd Sohd 1.edth- ant feature that you get here. Children’ Sandals A sturdy serviceable all- leather sandal, . Cool and comfortable for sunimer days at $1.50, $1.75 pdir ¢ High Tof Wiis 12:in Cmm Ca]f A < wotis derful shoe for Boy Scouts at $4 95 plur Ladies’ Oxfords Sport Oxfords in two-tone, medium and low heels. Ev- smart and new Men’s Oxfords A serviceable all - leather, \ good-fitting Oxford at low- est price in years, $2.95 pair ery at $2.75, $3.50, $3.75 Men’s Work Shoes These work shoes are com- fortable and give long serv- ice at $2.65 pair Boys’ Tennis Shoes Famous Ked Brand of Ten- nis Shoes. They are high and tough at 85¢ and 95¢ pair Boy B. M. Behrends Jull(‘ifll”fi Leading Department Store ) I Pt Daily (,ross-word Puzzle STUCKS ISSUES | FRED ORDWAY | H I G H E R | ACROSS 7. Worthiess | E 1. Confined to feaving | one pluce & Sugaf-slelding | | s § i ve,r‘labll | 9 . Bubjec UN Ex cH A N | ¢ 10. G nh: of Fréd Ordway returned to Juneau| | 1ol | { 12. atal: bearing 1 :&‘I. | from a ten-day cruise in his gas- — e rluul( l’. hmmu boat with a brown bear skin lmphy[ | anish ) N ney ot rpent measuring moré thah seven feet, Leaders Go to Highest Lev-| o e gi Egfite. || The bear was shot on the shores| el in Years—Profit | & a0 bre- i T e ofh [eril Straits, by Mr. Ordway, =z cipitous T while s companion, Sam Berger,| Takmg Burden I3 Sheuigiacies ; :" by _{‘,',"‘ | ground out motion pleture film be-| eh rive a Mk ,;: Mnmni‘gt fore, and during the shooting The NEW YORK, May 25. — Stocks, Expert 33. Chal nl.:lqr in ¢ camera fi_nd gun hunters approach- after climbing to the higher levels| s y 8Yiators | 1k |ed to within 20 feet of the bear. - : 27, Small bays T ahd mad i 1 s of the past two years or more, Small bays Wwe 4 e some finé motien pic: were forced to surmount profit 1 fi,‘;’mxg’,af,“‘ i heric ;i‘i!::s fi;".es{m:h;che ‘:1‘1'17 ;oo); gplatf\e taking barriers today. L. Require mi ed, bu e Reactionary grain prices and 3‘1 E'EE?‘: pefors B2 Malt peversgs 08 e i B, f;cém::.flnd final shot dispatched strength of the so-called wet equi- eeveless 2 ay on words . Gaelic :v.[ r r. ties, nowever, maintained the bull- REsE e 5 E'Lfi,’;,;o.,.,,,,, b G’“““‘ & “'r%"'“ Mr. Oftway advises that he has i meres despte nermitint 1} Q8 uvus 0 Slberor . L QANR o wilkte | Mol i the gl marked to irregularities. | bit by bit " " things that . Mother of prove that the bear was actually| Today's elose was a bit ragged. u}. gnul :g:ap.%e"(" ::»ll«l:‘nfi to- . p.fi-fi‘g“g il C snot»and did not die of exhaustion Sales were over 4,000,000 shares. |i7. Malady §7. Mediterranean pression ot w ‘i"fi chasing the hunters. Alcohol Wanted 19, City in New sailing vrehlslofle o7 P o Hampshire vessel 1, Organ ut -UM The heaviest trading centered around the alcoholic division. Na- tional Distillers lead throughout. L. FRBEBURN SAYS WORK SATISFAC ORY Rails were firm most of the i time. Gains of one to seven points AT CH]CHAGOF Mm were recorded for National Distill- ers, Industrial Alcohol, American Comumercial Alcohol, Owens inois, | Liguid Carbonic. Small Gains Fractions or around one point gains were held by American Met- als, Liggett and Myers B, American Tobacco B, Public Service of New Jersey and others. Losers by fractions to about one point were New York Central, Case, Safeway Stores, Standard Oil of New Jersey, General Electric, Du- pont, American Can and American Telephone and Telegraph. satisfactorily at the burn, ‘Generéil Mandger, who came 0 Juniéau on the seaplane Baranof yésterday from the property. Work ha8 beglin ‘on' the ' sixteenth level and they afe @rifting at the pres- ent time, he said. Mr. Freeburn will be in Juneau imtil Sunday when he plans to také the Baranof té Ketchikan to look over' thé property at Helm Bay, which the company is develop- ing. At Keétchikan he Wwill mest Arthur H. Rust, of Tacoma, who is & héaVy stockholder in the Chi- chiagof' Mining Cdmpany, and his brother, Bill Freeburn, who is com- ing north with Mr. Rust. Afteér Several days in Ketchikan they' will ¢dme to Juneau, spend //// 7 CLOSING PRICES TODAY INEW YORK, May 25.—Closing quotation of Alaska Juneau mine stock today is 14%, American Can | 84%, American Power and Light 814, ‘Anaconda 13'%, Armour A 5%, Ifll//%flllfifl %==7/%IIIII W ymour B 3%, Bethlehem Steel /',7 7 sevérdl days here and go on to 26%, Calum:t and Hecla 5%, ///..- Chichagof. Mr. Rust will remain (Chrysler 22, Continehtal Oil 12%, %, N at the mine for a few days before returning south. Fox Pilms 2%, General Motors 24, International Harvester 34, Kenne cott 17'%, Packard Motors 4% Standard Brands 20, United States Bteel 487%, Timken Roller 2412, JUNEAU BOY GRADUATES . FROM SEATTLE SCHOOL . Announcéments of the gradua- tion of w McLean, son of Mr. and Mrs. Hector McLean, from the ©'Dea High School in Seattle, have| SEATTLE, May 25.—Unemployed, part in a movie, been received by friends in Juneau.|sailors “lied like troopers” for the| The satlors told $ome “tall ohes” *-Joseph Herbert McLean have| privilege of being wrecked in Ber-|of tHeir allégéd experlente as whal- attending the O'Dealing Sea by an infuriated whale. |ers but Capt. Lane elifiiinated alljare’ expected to return to town last year. Mrs.| The sailors came at the request| but three when theélr stories failed|with a big catch and many stories n with her|of Capt. Louis Lane, of Nome, Al-| to hold water under examihation.|of those they didn’t quite get. the winter,| aska, who is attempting to recrun The skipper is Hopeful of even- e in June, a crew of oldtime whalers to takef‘tually raising a crew. THREE FISHERMEN LEAVE FOR TAKU ON THREE bay TRIP YESTERDAY P. M. Unemployed A pply for .I obs : For Purpose, Being Wrecked To spend the next three days fishing in Taku Harbor and the viclhity: H. M. “Doc” Hollmann, James Carlson and G. A. Shumak- er, left yésterday afternoon at 3:30 ‘o\clook in & small gasboat they chartered for the occasion. All areé persistent and expert anglers and Make Millions Think—and Buy, Develepmem wm-i is progressing | | Chichagof | | Mine, according to James F. Free- || E, THURSDAY, MAY 25, CHAMBER HOLDS OFF AGTION ON FISH TRANSFER Heaus Extended Argument| on Dimond Home Rule Bill—Defers Action Page One.) (Continued Irom is all| 1933. |costs since 1917, he argued, against t theory. He said since that year the cost of schocls had increased two hundred per i3 the cost of such administra fices as the Treasurer and the Sec- retary, I the Auditor, had multi- plicd m; times. The same ox- {perience would attend the tr fer of the Ter: For Le Mr. P |Chamt the control of fisheri ory, he predicted ature To Determine es, who contended ought to endorse the bill,| said while the question of how the! Territory could defray the cost of administration was a matter for| the Alaska Legislature to decide; and not for the Chamber z\n:l should not enter into the discus-| it sion, asserted that to oppose | [solely on economic grounds was| short ‘LhiPL‘], The Territ 'AHmi to pay the co: | ling it made it po: to get regular employment, earn a living and thus add to the prosper- of the whole Territory. ansfer of control from F local authority, he ral | to |would have that effect. [be the means of induct | companies to give preference lo\ | Alaskan fishermen and worke; =3 |fore hiring outsiders. Wages and |e: ngs thus accruing would rlow} {into the channels of trade and| { business of the Territory instead of | ‘lhf)\f‘ of the lower Pacific S | Does Not Transfer | He pointed out that the bill it s:1f did not transfer control of the |fisheries to the Territory. It mere- |1y authorizes such transfer. |vides specifically no ch in jurisdiction become fect until aft Territor] 1 lature has accepted the sponsibility and pr led ways and jmeans to conduct the administ |tion and regulation. | He declared that the development {of the United States |nm a great | {nation was founded sol C cal u ¢ and control of |ural resources. The history pening up and settlement of t hole west was made possible by ra- | | Absentee control and would have defeated developme |there as it has prevented if in the past. Subject Is Continued The subject was, on motion Nenal.ur Allen Shattuck, continu \mul next week. There were seve a members, he said, who des Lo speak on it and time was get- ting too late to keep business men longer away from their stores, | The bill for the transfer of game | fand fur animals was also carried | over until next week. Fourth Fund Reduced Due to limited financial resourc- es, the Chamber has been compelle to restrict the Fourth of JJ‘} cele- bration fund to $500, a cfit of 50 per cent, the Board of Directors announced today. Secretary Walm- sley was directed to communicate ‘with the American Legion and as- certain if the local post will handle the celebration as usual. Several communications were from Miss t P received and read. One, Your work is so much neater and better, and success is so much easier of attainment KIND OF TYPEWRITER. $65 with tabulator and combina- don carrying cose ond personal raveling bag. Monthly payments f desired. Old machines traded in. J. B. Burford & Co. “Qur doorstep is worn by satisfied customers” " el with a Smith-Corona, a NEW | 4 nwiried last August at the age of 13, Bertha Brown, of Ardsley, Pa., repented after eight days with her 33-year-old husband and left him. She has now filed charges of non- | support against him, which Frank, | the husband, says he will fight. Hubby declared he married Bertha “largely out of sympathy fer her home surroundings.” 1 | Jeanette Stewart, asked the Cham-| Alaska. The pressure is moderately high on the Arctic coast with ber if it would willing to be the | partly cloudy weather over Northern and Middle Alaska. Tempera- ponsor organiz for the re-|tures have risen throughout the Territory except in the cxtfeme organizzd Girl Scouts. The Secre- | Southwest. | ta was ed to get additional | —— ——— SIS s PORAL ST information on the matter. GIVING CASH [ [ — JoRHEUoer Rewiing AWARD FOR ATTENDANCE 8 John Hooper, President of e 1 | ¢ Beasonablo. Munthiy Rates | As ~n;mu»1f T;u - t<.l Iéllf- 3?"'“‘"»“'\ The 85 cash attendance prize at, | GARBAGE HAULED I member of the loca hamber, ad- | ., B daa Ghéimas | 1 53 vised it that he and Mrs. Hooper | i PO e dihae ) | E. O. DAVIS | s awarded to Past Exalted Ruler | TELEPHONE 584 i s A ‘{““ oot D nll‘Wm Dickensen. Mr. Dickensen, af's it “““j‘ s“'“” i le et ”;’ not being present at the meeting, | — 5 & e months in Alaska and|y.s jneligible to receive the prize | f e = o leave here to attend a mONSWer|,.4 jt wiil pe held over .until next! sathering at Chicago in ! H p‘ "wn“ g Wednesday. On that date $5 more E will be added and the cash at- 18 P R g tendance award will be $10. Only C()LORITE ““L’J’,‘{ r'\ ”Ir, ‘f:’rj‘]‘\;[_ <|@ person present at the meeting is R s b leligible for the award. active In this work which he d‘i;(h”ml ., o I‘I/\T without cost to the Chamber or any | \ tion., H(‘ old papers at ‘The Empn 1§ [)YE Southeast Sy D | | towns this se: |1e oA .‘ fe for Reception Rubber Heels 35¢ 8 e Jones anncunced he| § s i 0 apbolti: mver of| | Rubber Soles $1.00 | | nts on the Program and En- IWARD STREET || B l M inment Comm Chairman T ; lx ll’t (’r - auro E. M. Goddard, to aid him in pre- | HOE SHOI | {paring a program for the Good | @————————— e D C X | Wil Tour of the Seattle Chamber g g rug 0. of Commerce | Fine Floors Estimates Free | | ‘2‘:‘12\' i I “IE m ;{,"“1 from || GARLAND BOGGAN | Express Money Orders A sourke- 300 b Bentiis | Flooring Contractor |} Anytime e il | Harawood Flooring—Laying, | | s b | Sanding, Finishing | {{ FPhone 134 We Deliver . here on the alternoon | | 403 Goldstein Blg. PhONE 582 | | &y 19 and remain until mid- night. ey | -'TWO HUNDRED INDIANS| EMPLOYED BY PERIL | STRAITS PACKING CO. ). Nick Bez retu!m‘d to his cannery at Todd, Alaska, this afternoon on the seaplane Baranof, after a brief ! overnight business trip to Juneau. Mr. Bez stated while here that the cannery at Todd would employ | approximately 200 Indians during i the season, many of these have| jworked for the Todd plant in prev-‘ |ious years and have given "oodL satisfaction. The plant did not ,operate last year and the former .| workers are decidedly pleased at| | the prospect of employment th\s| year. “Both as a canneryman and as| |an individual who has spent a| | great part of his life in the past| | twenty years in Alaska, I am | strongly in favor of turning over| | the control of fisheries, and fur| |and game to the Territory of Al-| | aska,” said Mr. Bez prior to leav- {ing today. ! | Mr. Bez, while in Juneau, dis-| | cussed plans for the airways with| | A. B. Hayes, Maanger. ———————— MRS. C. P. JENNE GIVING TEA FOR MRS. ARTHUR FOX| Mrs. C. P. Jenne is entertaining at tea this afternoon at her hothe on Seventh Street in honor of Mrs. Arthur Fox, whose marriage took | place at Trinity Cathedral early | this month. AT SRR IR, ST British movie-goers in 1932 paid| $215,000,000 in admissions. WAKE UP YOUR LIVER BILE— 'WITHOUT CALOMEL and sunk #na the world h swallow & lot of ‘water, tive candy or chewing -::dmu:lndlul.lo(’-’hl& For ull’t do it. They only move bowels ‘mere movement doesn’t “ | the cause. The l—anlor W" l!’vlr.llm o quid bite ihto ot bovds daily, hfiumnm&mfi. 5 l EE £ E g ! £ £ . s your stomach. You ba and out. Your whole In’ down i b4 | scuthwest of Ketchikan with light showers .over J. 8. DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE, WEATHER BUREAU The Weather LOCAL DATA By the U. 8. Weather Bureau) Forecast for Junean and vicinity. beginning at 4 pam, May 25: Cloudy, possibly showers tonight and - Friday; moderate south- easterly to easterly winds Time Barometer Temp. Humidity Wind Velocity = Weather [} 4 p.m. yest'y 29.76 64 33 SE 7 Cldy i 4 am. today 29.78 48 9 Calm 0 Cldy b Noon today 29.68 67 31 SE 9 Pt. Cldy | CABLE AND RADIO REPORTS [ RPN IR . YESTERDAY | TODAY .' Highest 4pm. | Lowest4am. 4am. Precip. . 4a.m. L4 Statlon temp. temp. | temp. temp. velocity 24hrs. Weather ‘ Barrow 28 2 147 14 6 0 Clear ! Nome 58 58 4 46 26 0 Clear : Bethel 58 58 | 30 36 8 .01 Pt. Cldy Fort Yukon 70 66 | 44 46 10 0 Clear Tanana T2 70 | 50 50 4 0 Pt. Cldy Fairbanks 2 68 50 52 4 Trace Cldy Eagle 2 70 | 42 42 4 0 Cldy St. Paul 36 34 | 34 34 26 .40 Rain « Dutch Harbor 40 40 | 36 36 4 62 Pt. Cldy Kodiak 48 48 40 42 0 .02 Rain P Cordova 64 62 50 50 8 o Cldy Juneau 65 64 4 7 48 0 Trace Cldy Sitka 56 - | 46 = 3 0 Pt. Cldy Ketchikan 56 54 | 46 46 4 .10 Rain Prince Rupert 58 50 | 46 48 4 14 Rain | Edmonten 68 68 | 38 42 4 0 Clear Seattle 68 66 i 52 54 6 .08 Rain Portland 4 4 | 56 56 4 14 Rain San Francisco 66 62 | 52 52 4 0 Pt. Cldy The barometric pressure is moderately low in Middle and South- ern Alaska, and remains unusually low, reading 28.80 inches, west- most of Southern . I PAINTS—OILS Builders’ and Shelf HARDWARE Thomas Hardware Co. McCAUL MOTOR COMPANY . 1\ | | | | Cooling Equtpment FRIGIDAIRE is absolutely mecessary to protect fine taste and quality of good beer. Frigidaire Engineers offer you com- plcle facts and figures on proper cool- ing equipment of all types, available lmmedlatel Write, call or phone W. P. JOHNSON LOCAL DEALER SPRING VEGETABLES BEST SELECTION IN TOWN CALIFORNIA GROCERY TELEPHONE 478 Prompt Delivery