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THE DAILY ‘ALASKA EMPIRE, WEDNESDAY, MARCH 6, 1935. By BILLIE DE : former Montana examiner in charge 5f building loan fations; R. L. Mullinger, attorney for the Utah sanking department; ‘and A.0 A. Smith, attorney for the Oregon >anking department: b The five are charged with plan- aingian ‘illegal proty“\mmment to gain control of the company for ‘private and personal gain.” AV VA v W DAILY EMPIRE WANT ADS PAY! BARNLY GOOC I E X'\ID SPARK PLUG 'GHARGES MADE OF ATTEMPT T0 DEFRAUD N S:F. il Five Officials of Western | Loan Building Com- pany. Acc Accused SAN F‘RANULSCO. March 6.— ‘Charges that officials in Utah, Oregon and Montana conspired to | defraud stockholders of the West- "|ern Loan- Building Gompany, are made in.a suit filed in the Fed. eral Court here. Judge A. F. Stsure issued the or- der returnable March 18, requir- ing the present executives of the company to show cause why they should not be restrained from car- rying on the operations of the company. AFORE YE SCEET OFF, GOOGLE --WUD YE MIND SIGNIN' THIS-A-HYEH PEETITION -22 SUNTHIN' il FUR TH' WELFAR' O TH' DEESTRIK --- ALL DAY JOWIN' 'BOUT SNUFFY SMITH F AN' DAN'L. BARLOW--~ I HEV MY WORK TER DO, SAIRY- HYAR , LUCY-BELLE - £l WEN MIST' GOOGLE GITS BACK FRUM TH' SETTLEMINT. AX HIM EF HE FUND OuT EF THAR wUuZ A LETTER FUR ME I AR 'SPECTIN' --- Schilling i A Toasted 621 WOMEN OF THE MOOSE ‘The only tea that comes Will-hold their regular meeting “'Nor 4s trouble between Abyssinia Thursday evening &t 8 o'clock. In- A 00-01d Conflict of Europe and Africa e Eckoes in Italan Clash with Abyssmw o m,l,"«le g [ o e gt M M g gy Bt commissioner |'the pufchase of the port of Assab, |the social following the meeting. in what is now southern Eritrea. Officers and drill team be at thel Yacl.unlv pa Gi!s&de.mn ified the last of the to you ss fresh and fragrant as it léft the ench At (hc ug)‘t is a l(‘udll arcnas of racial cl ANGLO- EGYPTIAN ( SUDAN I the partin; ns lnw fou ; Th Ab s as a warrior, By MELVIN E. COLEMAN (As-ociated Press Staff Writer) WASHINGTON, March 6.—Italy clashing with Abyssinia and “paci- fying" southern Libya, the French foreign legion slog® through the sand to fight Berbers, i diers guarding Morocco— all just modern reflections of one of the oldest rivalries in history— the centest between southern Eu- rope and northern Africa. Spanning or circling the blue Mediterranean, Latin stock has fought Arabic stock in those arenas since almost the beginning of hu- man records. Alexandria, by its name still tes- Alexander | the Great added Egypt to his Mace- | tifies to the time that donian empire. * Ancient Rome strove through three Punic wars, spaced from 264 to 146 B. C. to overcome the North Africans of Carthage. Americans Stop Pirates A wave of Saracens swept from Red Sea to the Atlantic. crossed the straits of Gibraltar and over- | ran Spain in 711 A.D,, staying there for 300 years. Scme 400 years later Spain was fighting the Moors in northern Afri n the United States was but an infant republic, the pirates of the Ba: ry coast preyed upon Spanish, French and Italian ship- ping which ventured too near the African shore and kept it up until American frigates under Stephen Decatur, Jr., humbled the bey of Algiers at Tripoli. In 1859 and 1893 there were wars between Spain and Morocco, but | probably the most dramatic modern struggles took place there 14 years ago. In 1921 a Spanish army, seeking to “pacify” the hinterland of its Morocco, met disastrous defeat. The Dons had hard work maintaining a foothold on the coast. Riffs Finally Defeated The next year they tried again and were repulsed and it was not until 1923 that Spanish arms could claim a decisive victory over the Riffs. That chapter of military his- tory still echoed in the revolution Dally Cross-word Puzzle ACROSS 1. Rubber . Roof made of straw or reeds Solytion of Yesterday’s Puzzle [PILTE[BRNATR]1 | 11. Algonquian Indian . Back of the foot . Formerly . Small . Withdraw . Fixed charge . Philippine . Scent . Antlered animal . Female sandpiper . Jules Verne character . Dull color . Long fish . Twist . Like . Exclamation . Insect . Make repara- tion . Stations . Fixed re- sponsibility on . Low monotén- ous sound . Guido's high- IEE..I‘IE Ell [sSANP[ALTIA O PIAIR] savage . Find the sum o( 3% Shore and nlLrue. tive saying Alack LEScAlL] IREN]1 ] o] . Novel . Duteh city Town in DOEERER=EE . Sanctifies . Sea_eagle . Mations of . Lonk narrow s, . Mimicked . Mathematical unction he.n Africa, n in lien's mane head drecs, em- ter and it took 2 1000 French troops to win the re- | | sulting war. France has been fighting in Mo- | rocco for a century. There was war ‘ there in 1844 and 1859. After the n world war France stated a syste- matic “pacification.” In the fall .of 1925, Abd-el-Krim, victor over the | Spanish, attacked the French. Mar- shals Lyautey and Petain entered a joint action arrangement with | the Spanish command and the Rif- { flan warrior was squeezed into sub- mission. What France hopes was its “final ‘p,\ciricnt‘xon campaign” was carried on last autumn in the southeast corner of Morocco. Prcssure From 11 Duce Italy got her real foothold in northern Africa by winning the war of 1011 with Turkey. Cession of what now is Libya was one of the| prices which the Sublime Porte | paid for that conflict. Like France in Algiers, Italy found the tribes of the hinterland disinclined to ac- in the castern saeticn of | 7P European rule. t Grecks'ond Romans, Sara- Muz-olini has applied steady pres- shores ¢f the Mediterranzan |Sure on them for a decade and n Ialian fort on the border of | While Gen. Emilio De Bono, new joint administrator of Eritrea and Italian Somaliland, was governor, the Ttalian motorized columns ef- 0 ! (5 Attempts to colonize the cuum.ry}Moose Hall at 7 o'clock for prac- resulted in pitched fighting in 1885 | tice. |and am’ expedition was sent from‘ Italy in 1886, but it was withdrawn [ —adv. the following , a failure. GERTIE OLSON, Recorder. - e - “ Tiouble For Italy | LUTHERAN LADIES’ AID ; Will meet at the church parlors In 1889 Italy tried to umbllsh' “-uwsday at 2 pm 1 protectorate over all of Abys— e even-year effort ended disa:tro in 1896 when King Menelik, with 80,000 Ethiopians, an- nihilated 12000 Italians at Adowa. Th2 Abys:inian monarch made ‘no attemplt to Jrive onward into Eri- trea and the latter was constituted a coony in 1890. That was —adv. DEPARTMENL OF THE INTERICR GENERAL LAND OFFICE District Land Office Anchorage, Alaska. December 20, 1934, Notice is hereby given that Wil- mether with his witnesses, Carl Roberts and Frederick Hugh Mc- Rae, all of Haines, Alaska, has made final proof on his homestead, Anchorage 07412, for the 8%SWY, sec. 23, NEUNW?Y, sec. 26, SEl Just r after Italy had acqu re of ‘influ- cnes” dn 8 liland by treaties with native chiefs, Great Britain, Zanzibar and Abyssinia. The as- | similation pro was completed in 1905 when the sultan of Zanzi- bar accepted $720,000 for his ‘‘sov- | ereign rights.” In 1908 ¢ oundary between Italian Somaliland and Abyssinia was fixed on paper, by treaty with Menelik. It was a survey of that paper line which brought on the ‘Ilrst clashes of the present imbro- glio. | C.RM. containing 160 acres, and it is now in the files of the U. S. Land Office, Anchorage, Alaska, and if no protest is filed in the local land office within the period of publication or thirty days there- after, final certificate will be issued and final proof acepted. FLORENCE L. KOLB, Acting Register. First publication, Jan. 16, 1935. Last pubhcnuon, Ma.r 13 1935. -~ DAILY EMPIRE WANT ADS PI\Y' EYE to EYE WITH THE BETTER BUY liam Henry Feight, entryman, to-' SE% sec. 22, T. 28 8. R. #4 E.| western states. The defendants are: J. A. Malia, Utah bank commissioner who took charge of the company in 1933; Oscar Peterson, former bank com- missioner of Orégon; ‘R. W. Bailey, This Bank served; vice. counsel, and The firm does business in seven | tea garde snv. and conveniences for dej handling their finances; it must be ready with sound counsel and ad- Provides MORE than Safety To carry out its full mekisure of duty to customers and corhmunity, a bank must provnde more safety for depositors’ mush_act as the financial center for the con\mumty, it must see that credit is extended where de- it must provide services than funds. It sitors in At this bank you get SERVICE as well as safety for yogr funds We are always ready t vise. co-operate with you. Qur many facilities are at your service—use them for your finan- cial convenience. THE First National Bank Tuneéan, Alaska FOR INSURANCE See H. R. SHEPARD & 50N WISE buying these days doesn’t, necessarily, mean extensive and tortuous shopping tours. Wise shop- ping, yes, but NOT ‘extensive. | . Birthplace of Beethoven 5. Alighted . Greater Subeyieiding 47, Sugar-yiel vegetable Peac butterfly . Symbol for est note . Female sheep . Toward . Lock of hair . Timber tree . Large re- ceptacles . English es- sayist and humorist . Dessert BiUA BAE b . Elevated rail- road: collo. . Handle . Plant without a woody stem Telepliotie 409 8. M. Behrends Bank Bldg. gy oo S R O stanza DOWN 1. Biblical The Daily Empire Ads offer you all the best buys in the things you need and want . . . and you don’t have to move out of your homes to know immediately where they are! judge i 2. Pleasure ex- . By cursion 10. Fatiguing AEEEEE aNEE ANEE JuNN JEm UEEE JEES AN o ddEEE dm didd JEE JEEE - “WHERE YOU MEET YOUR FRIENDS" Hundreds of people: hdve taken advantage of this easy and accurate way of shopping. They like it. They’re still doing it. Be wise and SEE the better buys each day in the Ads of The DAILY EMPIRE . The Meeting Place of Values and Economy CAPI TOL BEER PARLORS AND BALL ROOM Lunchu Dancing Every Night GASTINEAU CAFE GASTINEAU HOTEL BUILDING French-Italign Dinners Wines—Beer Private Booths e . UNITED FOOD CO. | CASH GROCERS Phonc 16 We Deliver Meats—Phone 16~ ‘ / flll///i’lll./// flll Hl.fl.l//AflH.Ill o W NS i