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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, TUESDAY, OCT. 22, 1935 BARNEY GOOG. LE AND SPARK PLUG LITTLE SHUEEY SHIwr, IR MISSING SINCE MAY 27tR --- NO TRACE OF THE YOUNGEST MEMBER OF THE FAMOUS HILL-BILLY SEXTUPLETS PRWATE CITIZENS, POLICE SNUFFY SMUTH, JR- HAS LARGE BROWN EYES--DIMPLES IN_BOTH CHEEKS- TORNED-UP AND GOVERNMENT AGENTS THROUGHOLT THE LAND ON LOOKOQUT --- — O DO —— PLEASE NOTIFY THE DISTRACTED RARENTS /F You HAVE ANY INFORMATION OR ClUE TO THE LEETLE-UNS " WHEREABOUTS - - ® 1933, King Features Syndicate, Inc., Great Britain rights reserved y Worlqule fied Cross F ér;ces Ready To Aid Victims of Italo-Ethiopian War| As Mussolini’s soldiers swung into action in the Aduwa sc United States and 60 other neutral countries awaited orders from their international committee By ALEXANDER GLEURGE WASHINGTON, Oct. 2 p fons of mercy, enlisted throughout the world under a common, inter- ner, come to ‘‘attention” the war dogs of death n on the loose again n Red Cross and Red in some 60 other neu- 8 tions it word from the in- | ternational committee of the hu-| manitarian organization as to the A tance they may be sive in alleviating suf- | caused by Italo-Ethiopian | nal ban: can society—the death- | rvice of whose nurses, er-bearers, ambulance driv- canteen workers was a ssic of courage—is so ull resources in time of war are available only when + the United States is a party to the| conflict. Neutrality Limits Activity Maintenance of strict neutrality ses a limitation of its activity in which this country is not| icipant. Consequently, the or- ganization has made no appeal for funds or s and has taken no definite preparatory action in rela-| tion to o-Ethiopian hostilities. | AJmiral Cary T. Grayson, head of | ehe Am Red Croess, says “con- | tant communication is being main- | ned with the international com- | »e at Geneva so that the so-| have the best information to the action to be| milar situation is said| to prevail in other neutral coun-| tries, 1 Italy has a Red Cross society de- | cribed as a “well established and| 4ighly efficient organization” with nsiderable experience obtained in| lisaster relief work. Ethiopia recent- | ly started to organize a Red Cross cociety of its own. Sixty-two nations rave societies affiliated with the In-| ternational Red Cross, the first so- ¥ | zouncil alone expended $272,000,000 | (¥ ticn of Ethiopia, the Red Cross societies ;v DOUGLAS NEWS EXTENDS TIME FOR CONTRACTS DOUGLAS WORK City Council Takes Action on Installation Wat- er, Sewer Systems Du2 to delays in being allowed to set started on their contract for in:stalling the new water and sewer ystems and the misfortune of losing | their equipment, Wright and Stock | Co., through their Superintendent,; H. E. Olds, petitioned the Douglas city council at a special meeting last night for a 40-day extension on the 120-day time limit previously ved, or such time as elapses be- fore the new machinery arrives. This was granted by vote of the Council| and resolution drafted to that effect. Formal applications and other legal forms connected with the bonds covering the government loan to the | city were reported received for proper ambulance drivers, who silote cars through raining hells and -every menace of the fire cne, the Red Cross had workers in the field for the soldier at every ere they could be any chance him. It supplied ambulances perating equipment, dental rooms, plants to make ice to pAck head wounds, sheps to man- ufacture cial limbs, and eom- to ser with nication bureaus to search for Block from Front to Wil- the imssing man” and give his | family news concerning him. Serve Despite Dangers Girls in the canteens, while the | oldiers were at the front and when | the windows of their huts cracked [rom shellfire and the roof fell tol pleces, stayed on duty through nights | of horror. In the zone of war, the | Red Cross worker does not think of | afety beyond the sané precautions | o[ the soldier. The American Red Cross war in the 20-month period between May, | 1917, and February, 1919, It provid- ed incalculable amounts of supplies { all kinds ranging from beans to m and from woolen sox to plants yverseas which manufactured nitrous "xide gas for use as anesthetic in emergency operations on malmed1 | found guilty at Haines of violating | zoldiers. vvvvv - —— - ELEANOR GREGG TO | LECTURE TONIGHT| Miss Eleanor Gregg, Supervisor of | Nurses in Alaska for the Bureau of Indian Affairs, will be a guest| speaker of the Graduate Nurses of Gastineau Channel at a meeting to! te held in the recreation room at St., Ann’s Hospital at 8 o’'clock this evening. Doctors, their wives, and any in- terested Gastineau Channel residents who may be interested in the sub- | signatures and retuned to Washing- {ton by Mayo A. E. Goetz. A letter from the Alaska Electric I‘Lighl and Power Company, quoting ‘rates to the city for lighting the | Douglas bridge in conjunction with | Juneau was read. The matter was left in abeyance upon report by Mayor | Goetz that as a result of a talk he| | had had with Gov. John W. Troy, he { helieved the latter had a special fund LOWER MAIN_ SOON OPENED FOR TRAFFIC pense. | loughby to Be Ready | Thursday for Autos Wharf Damage | A communication from the.Alas- ka Steamship Company, relative to | damages caused at the city wha! by The last of this year’s street pavinz[me steamer Victoria a couple of barricades will be removed Thursday | months ago, was also 'ead. The pro- morning when the block between|pozal to allow the city three 50-foot Front Street and Willoughby Avenue | pilines to replace thioe pulled out on Main Street will be thrown open | is offered by the Steaxiship Com- to automobile traffic. That section pamy. Th considere’ ~=a@vquate was poured on October 4 by the Gas- | for the total damass N it tineau Construction Company, using ' was decided that st slow-setting cement which required |of repairing the = three weeks to harden sufficient for | borne by the comp automobile traffic. i their lability in th. — - | veted to have the work uc . » FOUND GUILTY the Alaska Steamship Company to | pay half. George Saunders, Indian, has been | o Steal Light Globes A report that some person or per- the law passed by the last Legisla- | SCNS had recently stolen the light ture prohibiting the careless use of | 8lobes from several street corners firearms and has been fined $100|resulted in the Council deciding to land given a jail sentence of four|?2sk the Light company to have the months, according to a message to, botfom cleats removed from their the Marshal's office from Deputy Poles to make more difficult the Marshal Callin at Haines. Saund- |climbing of the poles. (which would take care of the ex-|_ By BILLIE DE BECK e e T 018 KID HERE-- ME BRUDDER 272 naW It | T EOUND HIM ONDER A UMBRELLER AN' T BEEN diseussion arose regatd[ng.ammari service now being performeéd by the | Cab compan and ‘the bearing on some of the city’s ordinance regulat- ing such traffic. Action in the mat- ON SICK LIST Mrs. John Mills has been confined to her bed by iliness for thé pas ceuple of days, She is under the care of her physician Joe G who was recently brought in from his ranch at Hors: island by a government boat, Is Towly ring from illness at the Wezhe, n saw-mill home: -+ MAIL DELIVERY CHANGES today there is a chang: 1s regular mail schedule leave Douglas on the same y that brings the mail Jouz ving at noon or there- abetts. This change in the schedule | oegessitated by the reduced schedule inder which the ferries are now op- 2rating and which will be maintainec hioughout the remaining few day: will operate. BEAUTY SHOPPE TO HAVE NEW: LOCATION The Cosmopolitan Beauty Shoppe, with the latest and most improved type of beauty parlor equipment, an- nounces its opening in the Lending Library location adjoining the Pirst National Bank Building. The Cosmopolitan, which will con- tinue the handling of late books for rent, is under the management of Sylvia and Sylvia, who have operated similar shops in California and Washington, and have many years experience in beauty culture, Among the feature equipment of the place is a new Frederick perma- nent waving machine, known amonz beauty shop operators as one of t finakt types on the market. o SHOP IN JUNEAU, FIR! | BUY NOW ! Y Prices are going up and wi | twice in the past 30 days. If ‘you plan on buying a washing machine soon Lady Luck! GetOn and Ride«- From October 15 1o November 15, The ALASKA ' TRANSFER will operate under their Alaska Profit -~ Sharing System. 2 FOR THE PRICE OF 1 ON EVERY 15TH ORDER To the lucky person who places the 15th coal order with us, for any kind of coal, we will ‘deliver: On 1 ton order—extra % ton FREE. On 1% ton order—extra 4 ton FREE. On 14 ton order—extra 300 lbs. FREE. Ob 7 or 2 sack order—extra 100 lbs. FREE. A Fair and Square Dedl to All We’re Rarin’ to Serve You! PAY AS YOU ORDER Alaska Transfer PHONE436 Lee Rox, General Manage: Matt' Sumara, Sed.-Treas. PICK POCKET UNDER ARREST I Youth® Arrested in Seattle on Charge Preferred at Ketchikan SEATTLE, Oct. 22.—Ralph Young, 20, left aboard the Yukon for Ketchi- kan, last night to face an alleged charge of violating a Territorial pocket picking statute. Young, ar- vested Sunday night waived a re- moval hearing. He said he had been drinking before starting south, and that he didn't know on what the| charge could be based. Young is in the custody of Dep- pe—————— uty United States Marshal Michael Green on the trip north. ! i | | | { | FOUR HUNTERS BACK, FULL BAG OF DEER' # | OPEN ALL NIGHT Alaskan Hotel Liquor Store Phone Sll(li 0-2 rings : ) Crab salad was on the menu every day during the two weeks’ hunting trip enjoyed by Dr. G. F. Freeburger, | Simpson MacKinnon, M. A. Mill and | E. L. Hunter, who returned from | Sitka and Peril Strait Sunday night | aboard the gasboat Nora, owned by | MacKinnon and Freeburger. This ls' - ———— according to Hunter, fovdsossesdose “We had a crab trap aboard andi I?OR l/\,SURANCE caught fresh crabs every day,” said | Hunter. “Crab salad is Dr. Frec-I 3 See H. X SHEPARD & SON Telephone 409~ B. M. Behrends Bank Bldg. burger's specialty.” | A fine bag of deer and ducks was | ills ills, Inc. brought back to Juneau by the hunt- | Juneau Lumber Dave Housel, Prop. ing party S SRS S MARTHA SOCIETY DINNER \ i Remember Martha Society Dinner Wednesday evening, 5 to 7:30, Pres- byterian Church parlors. Adults 65c, children 50c. —adv. 4LASKA MEAT CO. FEATURING CARSTEN'S BABY BEEF<DIAMONbD TC HAMS AND BACON—U. 8. Govérnnent Inspected DO IT NOW— . : ODAY! . . e Gastineau Construction Co GENERAL CONTRACTING e have had increases| | g 5 gowLING, President Jurieau, Alaska o ——— NSURANCE | P e e F NEW STOCK GENERAL ErLECcTRIC THor — Easy ers will be brought to the Federal| jail here to serve his sentence. | ., & GAME LAW OFFENDERS Two game violations and convie- | tions are reportéd to the Alaska| Game Commission office here from | Game Warden Jack O'Connor at An- | chorage. Sol Hanson was fined $100 and given a jail sentence of four | months and 10 days for poisoning | Want Shower Baths A. Shudshift, chairman of the| School Board was present ai the meeting to petition the Council for | shower baths at the natatorium. The matter was referred to the committee n Public Works, Mark Jensen, chair- man, who was instructed to confer vith the members of the Board and with them to jointly sponsor some |reau of Indian Affairs, will intro- ject, are cordially invited to attend.|fur-bearing animals and Jack Lak- Kind of an entertainment to secure Miss Mildred Keaton, of the Bu- |ksonen, an alien, was fined $100 for | the necessary funds for the showers. hunting without an alien license, Bus e and his gun forfeited. Clerk Felix Gray reported the re- ciety being founded by Swiss philan- | duce the speaker. thropists in the middle of the nine- — - —— teenth century. LEAVES ST. ANN'S Wide Range of Relief Work | Charles Townson, who has been While service of the “world’s good in the St. Ann’s Hospital isolation godimother” may be curtailed to ward suffering from measles, was, some extent by the remoteness of discharged today. “the East African war zone from large | Ty, 7o it a supply centers, the multiple activi- ATTENTION DE MOLAYS ties of the Red Cross in the World | Meeting” Wednesday night at 8 proved.” It is still uncertain whether > ceipt from W. H. Bacon of $25 cov- SMITH IMPROVING ering his bus and taxi license. A pe- The condition of Walter Smith, | tition from Mr. Bacon was also pre- DuPont Powder Company agent, who | fented asking for a turn-out privi- was seriously injured in an explo-lege on city pfoperty at the foot of sion last' Friday, is reported this{Nob Hill on St. Ann's Avenue so morning by his physician, Dr. Will- that he will be able to turn around! |iam P. Blanton, to be “slightly im-|there with the buses. In connection with the lunchl.se: war indicate its potentially tremen- c'clock. All members are urged to or not he will go outside for treat- for operating a bus service in and | * dous range of relief work. |attend. —adv.| ment. out of Douglas, held by Mr. Bacon, | s ONLY $69.50 $9.50 Down Balance Monthly Liberal Trade-in Allowance EASY PAY PLAN Alaska Electric Light and Power Co. JUNEAU—Phone 6 “Allen Shattick, The. Established |1898 7 Junéan, Alasks e . e it it i | e just received. Select ‘from either of these foremost makes. B e WINDOW CLEAN PHONE 485 NG Thanksgiving Award 1st—TURKEY DINNER 2nd—CHICKEN DINNER 3rd—HAM DINNER DOUGLAS—Phone 18 POLLY AND HER PALS WELL, I GOT IN AT FIVE THIS MORNING . MY ADVICE, DATTER, IS T'CALL MHIS AND I'M AFRAID THAT IF PA FINDS OUT HE'LL RAISE CAIN HON| . — v M8 = b o Fs S, . G B s . You MEAN " HE'LL ADMIRE ESTY 2 CALIFORNIA GROCERY PHONE 478! Prompt Delivery NOPE. I MEANS HE NEVER COULD REMEMBER ANYTHIN' OVER THREE HOURS, AN!' HE'LL. {ad 1 l Juneau Cash Grocery CASH GROCERS Cerner Second and Scward Free Delivery UNITED FOOD CO. CASH GROCERS 4 Phoné 16 We Deliver - Meata—Phone 16 ABOUT IT BY TH' TIME HE GITS HOME! == [:] 3 ! l | t