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arprer % g M ! 'THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, TUESDAY, OCT. 22, 1935. : M. S. ANDERSON | PLEADS GUILTY T0 4 CHARGES Swimming Pool Promoter| Admits Taking Stock 4 Certificates who came promote a guilty in morni on S. Anderson, last summer to pool, pleaded f larceny ey un, duled to come up Monday with st ing Bremner Gold Mining stock cer- tificates from B. F. Talbot, forging Talbot's name to them and obtaining money on them william R. Nissen, charged with assault with a da us weapon, and Ben Bailey, accused of burglary and larceny, were arraigned this morn-| ing and will plead tomorrow morn- ing. Bail of Larry Bunger, accused on the same count with Nissen, Ethiopia, IS S e MEN RADID U S. Merchants Play Minor trial will come up later, TEXAN PIcKETS | SINGER WILL EXTENDLINES GIVE RECITAL |N "_A STRIKE Harriet. Malstom to Pres- ent Concert in Presby- terian Church Tomorrow One Dead, Two Missing in 10-Day-Old Waterfront | DlSP ute on Gulf radio singer, newly returned from a g P triumphant concert tour of Alaskan HOUSTON, Tex., Oct. -One towns, will present a program of man is dead and two others missing gongs and recitals in the Northern as police and strike pickets increased Ljght Presbyterian Church tomor- teeir lies in the D\erpefrmal/yow evening at 8 o'clo Longshoremen’s Association strike in| The program is sponsored by the Texas and on the Gulf Coast. 'Martha Society. Galveston port officials, expect-' aziss Malstrom, daughter of Ry- ing a crisis in the 10-day-old strike, ner Malstrom, Seattle’s well-known added 15 men to their special mater- pharmacist, and niece .of Harold front police Malstrom, editor of the Dawson Port Arthur deputy sheriffs, who News, has made five trips to Alas- are watching the situatio: re t0-ka and has a large radio following day-confronted with reinforced pick- jn a]l the towns she has visited. On et lines. |this summer’s tour she visited at Police investigated the death of whitehorse, Dawson, Fairbanks, Harriet Malstrom, famed Etienne Christ, picket, and discover-'skagway, Anchorage and Matanuska. ed that two non-union dock workers: 15 Matanuska, she gave the first Are missing. public concert ever to be rendered Pictures in Miss the large e pre- old to the colony. Malstrom’s possession show -‘(-unnnunu,\' center in which s - .o PLANES HUNT sented her program of s melodies and dramatic r F | packed to the dot er and hungry f with paople eag- the beauty {had to o Miss M m ng erous in giving Junca of Capt. Walker and portun hedr her lovely sop voice. She has sung for the Martha Society, the Juneau Women's Club Lieut. Goldstein and the Business and P ional SEATTLE, Oct. 22—Army planes Women's Club. This noon she was from Fort Lewis and from other air- the guest of honor at the Rotary ports in the Northwest continued to- Club Luncheon in the Terminal day to search for Capt. Henry Walk- Cafe, where she sang several num- er, of Pullman, and Lieut. Jack Gold- bers stein, of Seattle, Reserve officers.| The concert, which Miss Malstrom missing with a plane since Sunday, says will be comprised largely of old- enroute from Seattle to Portland. |fashioned songs and comic sketches, Two hunters reported sighting & is under the auspices of the Martha plare, believad to be the mussing,Society. ship, in Cowlitz County, on Sunday, circling low in a fog. most gen- One Clue in Disappearance A —— Daily Empire Want Ads Pay! Dail:); Er?(;ss-wordfi Puzzle ACROSS Bolution of Yesterday's Puzzle 9. Bestow among competitors 7 10. Distress [STcTA[REAAlc OB F signal [ 11, Garden L EEB BlA[DE implement [PRZE|c (oL 16. Roll up (L] [T[E[R]A]L] 18. Musical 2 instrument [1{c] Pl 20. Asterisk 21. Discard as worthless wound 22. Inclined 23. Day of the trough weels 24. Deputy 27. Young person 25, Pen 1ame of 29. Labor for & modern breath author 0. Again: prefix 26. Periods of 31. Flo time 32, Music drama 28, Pertaining to 34. Highest note the home of Guido's 33. Kind of fuel scgle 34. Equalizers for 35. Near hicles 3 Sien 36 ian poet . Mechan EReAL 2R 38, Ardor bar sys 1. Knock gently 45’ Respond to a 39. Pervade 61, Part of & 2. Wrath stimulus 42 Partof an - curve 3. Relate optical 62. Notions 4. Baking instrument 5: chamber 43. Direction 5. Moral faults 44. Division of Insect soclety Symbol for 45 Seat of the §7. Watch tellurium affections secretly 8 Adaption "EP 11 17 4 This picture adequately illustrates the even in the so-called dry season. k 3 ] seing hauled across & stream in the jungle by & scors of uatives. | Somaliland. sho + difficulties of travel fhrough | Necessity for similar methods An expedition truck is|a real Why Italian March Through Ethiopia Will Be Slow Role in Ethiopia Trading By ALEXANDER S. GEORGE WASHINGTON, Oct. 22. — The United States has a comparatively nall business interest in Ethiopia, e principal African empire whose potential riches form the chief e for Mussolini’s venture. Fastidious coffee drinkers in this country consume a considerable amount of Ethiopia’s high-priced product but the chief American bond with that isolated and exotic coun- try is a romantic interest in a peo- ple whese rulers claim descent from King Solomon and the Queen of Sheba and who for 16 centuries have fiercely guarded their ancient type of Christianity. Minerals Not Exploiled The foreign trade of Ethiopia never has been nearly so great as the reputed wealth of the country would seem to justify. It is not 2n in- dustrial country despite a reputation for having mineral potentialities of such an amazing extent that it might well become one of the most pro- ductiv2 in the world. Gold, platinum, coal, copper, sil- ver and oil have been found, but there has been little or no exploita- tion of these resources, and just how much wealth lies hidden in the land no one really kno' Wild coffee grows in abundance and, if it were cultivated by approved methods, | could be produced in enormous quan- 's and beccme an important t of the world's coffee supp COSMOPOLITAN BEAUTY SHOPPE xt to the First National Bank FEATURING Expert Permanent Waving On Our New Frederick Machine $3.50to $7.50 Phone 517 Permanents SYLVIA & SYLVIA Principal American imports from Ethiopia in 1933 were coffee, goat- skins, beeswax and civet, the bills totaling $27,078. This country in the same year sold $181,164 worth of au- tomobiles, petroleum, sewing ma- chines and typewriters to Haile Se- lassie’s realm. Religious Missions Main participants in Ethiopian trade are French Somailland, Ja- pan, Belgium and India, followed by the United States, Russia, Italy, Egypt, France and Germany in the order named. Increased production in the country i§ said to depend largely on exploitation of mineral iesources and development of hizh- ways. There are no American business houses established in Ethiopic. Am- erican interests there are concerned mainly with religious and phi thropic missions, future enginee ing projects and anticipated higt way construction which if material- ized will open a market to varieties of American manufactures. e ONE FISH BOAT IN in transporting war materials is proving | roblem for Italian forces in their advance on Harar from Italias . | COLD WEATHER | P 3 SN s B T HAS CRUSHED RIBS Frank Metcalf, to handle the affair. | It also is planned by the Post to| sponsor a motion picture on Armis- | tice evening and a committee of I. R.| Andersen, A. E. Karnes and O. E. Johnstone was named to take charge TR e e PP mELER. SHOP IN JUNEAU, FiRST! : &tart on the mempership drive was S i ) N v 0 | Itio"n:neft yem: were discussed and ARMISTIGE L qummander Polley said he would ' announce in a few days a general | 8 " 1 | committee so early preliminary work [ LANNED Fu {oculd be done toward making the | Tu His DEATH ‘1936 convention the ‘best ever held | @ in the Territory. | 1 It'» chop suey night at the Le- SATURBAY NUV| g%glon next Mondsy with Bob Kaut-| TONASKET, Wesh., Oct. 22—The s | mann acting as chef, |body of Benjamin Sund, aged 21, H f SR L g crushed by a fall from a cliff into i T N Yy tl Blue Lake, has been found after a |Legi 1 ffair| Two Negro Youths one day search. ‘Legxon Wll-l Sponsor Affait] Confess to Crime; | “sund disappeared Sunday from a — Also Picture Show to 3 Nnenting party, Be Given Armistice Day | Are Rushed to Jail}\ e = Daily Empire Wart Ads Pay! Plans for an Armistice Day ball, to| m‘:";‘;’x}z‘d&;‘z‘”fir %tflafii’;‘ - - be held the Saturday evening pvre-‘negm souths haye Rlimitted M 4 “, ' * oA ey {. | Migs; Geraldine Killman, aged 19. l & ‘; ':'iee”“g of :he ‘.Acuzrd!io?:nmf:sflm negroes have been rushed to the c A i ln M, Polley named a committee of|m8 L B\aklng Powdel' i Homer G. Nordling, William Johnson, mia de ; Eric Erickson, Ralph Martin and! ) from Cretanartar S -makes \SL) o % ol good things, “qooder” Emil Olson, Hoonah man who came to St. Ann's Hospital two days ago, has been discovered to have two broken ribs and will be con- fined to the hospital for some time. IN MATANUSKA; | NIGHTS FROSTY Houses for Colonists Rap- idly Being Completed | and Occupied | i PALMER, Alaska, Oct. 22.—Colder weather is now prevailing at the Matanuska colony, with some snow and frosty nights. Seventy-seven transients started outside Sunday and two more famil- ies are goinz as soon as transporta- tion is available. One family is leav- ing on account of sickness, the other because of family disagreements. Cne hundred sixty-threez houses a2 now enclosed under roof, and 128 families are now occupying houses. Much interior work in many houses remains to be completed during the winter months. ee— — IS RETURNING HOME Mrs. Betty McCormick, who has Only one boat sold fish in Juneau |, . " “eo o varal months, is today, the Klinket, Capt. Jimmie Martin delivering 2,500 pounds of salmon to the Alaska Coast Fisher- ies. ~ - BECOMES CITZZEN Sigrud Fause of Juneau was grant- ed U. 8. citizenship papers in Fed- eral District court this morning. Lending Library in connection LIVERY—Phone 442. ANNOUNCING The Opening of the | returning to her Juneau home aboard the Northland which sailed from Se- attle last night. B SPECIAL DELIVERY TO DOUG- LAS! Daily at 10:00 am. and 2:30 pm. Kelly Blake's SPECIAL DE- adv. made last night when it was decided HERRATY erpacial importance due'to the De- de Gare of the local Voitura, to meet PRESENTS at that time. to name eight members each from 5 partment convention being held here tonight at 8 o'clock in the Dugout o Two regular Post committees were lSS arrlet alstmm the Post and the 40 and 8 to con- The Martha Societ e Martha dociety next year. The 40 and 8 has been and members to the membership ramed by Commander Polley last Soprano Soloist of Seattle duct the drive which this year is of called by Homer G. Nordling, Chef . ~~mmittes are cxpected to be named night, They were: Americanization A. E. Karnes, John N. Newman and “Tame= Nordling; visiting commit- tee, W. E, Hendrickson, John H‘; Nexman and I. R. Anderson. | Plans for {he Department conven- | o NGING AND COMIC RECITATIONS 1| WEDNESDAY NIGHT B e Permanent o Wfl'vin(&r gl Promptly at 8:00 o’clock A SPECIALTY { Presbyterian Church ‘ Peter Pan Beauty Shop ¥ MARGARET LINDSAY, Prop. VIOLET PETERSON, Operator Front Street Phone 221 [ Admission 40c - Children 25c | A’I‘ER KE " RADIO New: models] New featires!. New grices) The curtain’s going up on the most exciting show we have ever’put on. New sets, new quality, new performance. Come in and see ik ’ 1Y ] MODEL 337 The most exciting compaet set* on the market today. 7 new metal tubes. Features the new im- proved Atwater Kent Control-Room Reception tone uality. It's portable, brings in forei d :nmde programs, and is mod:nofmrll:c. ‘ MODEL 317 (af right) For those who prefer the con- 4 sole type cabinet there is this same 7 metal-tube chassis in what we is the season’s best looking cabinet. [ ‘hever model you prefer, you can be sure that yon're o u:'nbout everything you'd want Come over and see these models on display in Juncau by . W.P. JOHNSON “The F r‘igidalire Man”