The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, October 29, 1929, Page 8

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Daily Cross-word Puzzle ACROSS Solution of Yesterday's Puzzle 11. Things lost 1. Satiate 12, Past 5. Departest . Togethers 0. Expression of prefix sorrow . Pathology of mental dis- Tovel Immaculate: eases abbr. 17, Air: comb, . 1Tk of an form East Indlan 18, Western tree ndian Jupanese sash . Limb ewer Rent Lingerte Good-fore nothings L Attlia Fury 4. Stain . One of a Celtle ra . Kind of mold- ing . River dam ake Ofispring Manlike npes Moon: eomb, form Kind of fur idunl per- rman . Flectrical gree . Contents of a de- 1. Watering measure L Halted 43. Those ruined 61, Bring aga) e 1. Knitting stitch ASt recoverys into comparte 2. “n charaes g3 Our mutual lang son 15, Before 4. And: Latin Cenel ruler b, 16, Shade treo Jod Out: prefix 8. Brought fatn 48. Complete cols 6. Anclent Teue proper position Teetion 13 tonle race 86, Convenes 19. Highways: ree: prefix Have effect 8%, Three-fold en 59, Stalrs Anxlety pward the tered side Withs prefix . Blent of a n MRS. FRANCES STEEL AND ELDON DALY WED Stecl nected with the post office there. Mr. Daly is one of the lead the Alaska lumber industry ar well-known here Frances and Eldon President and manager of et the Ketchikan Spruce Mills, were| C. O. Thatcher, mining man married last week in Seattle, ac-|Nuka bay, and wife, are en rou cording to word just rece: ; | to the States aboard the Yukon. cii Mr. and Mrs. Da 57 SN 7 0w R el Vi ng in Southern California and John F. Correy, well-known at- will return to Ketchikejr in about |torney of the Third Division, is 60 days to make their home. | passenger on the Yukon bound for | Mrs. Daly has resided in Ketchi- |the States. THE ONE PLACE TO GO TONIGHT! The American Legion’s Show Cappy Ricks FEATURES— A 100 Per Cent American Comedy! Action and Laughter from Start to Finish! Well directed cast of Juneau Actors! Also Surprise Musical Features by Miss Aleece Graves, Fred Dobler, Al King, and Dick McGinn, Organist. Doors open at 7:30—Curtain at 8:15 PRICES— Parquet All School Pupils General Admission N. B.—This is the one show for Juneau this season, that it is essential you should attend. . Order of Mary SEN. BURTON PASSES AWAY, | ~ CAPITAL CiTY [Prominent Leader of Ohio i Dies After Several f Months Illness ‘ ((‘onunued from Page One) |a | bor appropriation, Burton was appointed by Presi- | (mu Roosevelt as chairman of the |York City for two years. Tr ter of the Rivers and Harbors Commit- ¢ In Nation's Affairs Aside from his more than a qua ter century of service in Cong | Burton had a conspicuous part in the nation’s interna nal affairs. He held a number of important as- |signments on missions abroad, a m active part in the funding of the arge wartime obligations due the United States. | He was born at Jefferson, Ohio, December 20, 1851, the son of the! Rev. William and Elizabeth Bur- ton, and was christened Theodore Elijah. He attended Grinnel Col- lege in Towa for a while, was gra |uated at Oberlin College in 1872, jand received a master’s degree three | years later. Subs‘cqmml\ he was | given honorary de s by Oberlin; Dartmouth; Ohio Um ersity; St. Johns, Maryland; and New York University. | After teaching three year: | Oberlin, he took up the p tice of |law in Cleveland. | ried. A number of factors led Mr Burton not to seek re-clection to his senatorial seat, the course of na- | tional and ‘- Ohio politics being a ;u\mmng one. The Democratic par- , firmly entrenched in Ohio, had born swept into power nationally in 1912, and in the split in Re- | publican ranks Senator Burton had adhered closely to the Taft faction | |against the Roosevelt wing. In ad- | d:l'on since entering the Senate, the constitutional amendment plo- iding for direct election of Sena- tors had been adopted, while m {Onio the machinery for nhmmmg ,mw nomination had been changed \ |from the convention system to the nary election plan. These chang- ' , although not given by him as; I reasons for his retirement, were | said by friends to have welghed‘ heavily in his mind Tarriff Law Supporter He had been a target for the ‘Rnusr\.elt Republicans, and also the | nl)_]ml of bitter assault from the Democrats because of his :uppor(‘ of the Payne-Aldrich tariff law, and the prospect of heated opposi- {tion from these sources did not ap- peal to him. Despite his decision to return to private life, Burton received the “favorite son” vote of the Ohlo b4 He never mmg | e b4 * | William Howard Taft at the pu tional convention at Cleveland. \r:1‘;"lles;‘zsflge:::“:;}’; _";‘ fhon 19 interested in the financial affairs ference, and as a member of the | N3tion and was offered, but de- | American Debt Commission took an | Ced: the secretaryship of the | R Y L | Treasury under President Taft. For ; ! Compamson |conducted a famous one-man fili- | fou er, holding the floor for almost hours, and successfully forcing | compromise on a river and har- iland Waterways Commission in mu7 and later headed the National | decided taste for books and as a /aterways Commission, For a numver of years he was a mber of the executive commit- | tee and executive council of the In- | In later years he became an author rpa hmmcn(ury Union and par- ticipated in meetmgs at St. Louis, London, Paris, Geneva, The Hague, Vienna, Copenhagen and Berne, Was Keynoter In 1908 he presented the name of | Re- blican National Convention and teen years later delivered the ynote speech at his party’s na- For while there was a decided move- ent to select him as President Coolidge’s running mate. Throughout his life, Burton was Herrick, later ambassador to France. | He became the chief opponent of THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, TUESDAY, OCT. 29, 1929. years he was a member of the nal Monetary Commission, and during the interval between his Senate term and his return to the |House, he was president of the Merchant’s National Bank in New In early life, Burton showed a | shepard boy frequently read a Latin grammar as he watched the flocks near his home in northeastern Ohio. himself, three of his best known ooks being “Financial Crises and ods of Commercial and Indus- trial Depression,” the “Life of John the land's famous mayor and exponent of the “single tax” cent” PRESIDENT HOOVER TO WASHINGTON, D. C., Oct. 20.— | The White House announced that President Hoover will attend the public Bur The decision of the President is in keeping with the high respect he held for the Ohio Senator. late Tom L. Johnson, Cleve- AT THE HOTELS Gastineau W. S. Balcom, George B. Grigs- by, Ketchikan; L. Pedersen, Baran- of; Charles B. Wheeler, Seattle; Mrs. F. Owens, Anna Sinclair, Tena- kee; Mr. and Mrs. Leo Moore, Mar- shall; E. R. Alcott, Mrs. F. Ash,|Pelersbure; Donald McGrego George Lytell, C. A. Brereton, Ju- | U788 W. C. Robb, Tee Harbox neau; R. Howell, Unalga; J. Mec- A B. Coleman, Juneau. Donald, Nick Grastos; Nels Ander- oty son, Clifford Anderson, Douglas. Alaskan T. J. Shea, L. C. Woods, Jchn‘ Ansak, Eaton, B. C.; A E. Egild- son, Seattle; Gordon Selmyhr, ¥ Nichia, H. McGinie, John Price, Carmier, Juneau; Frances Foster Taku; Arvid Nyman, Kent; Kimert, Kake. and the “three street car fare, ATTEND BURTON FUNERAL Zynda V. A. Paine; Mrs. J. M. Devinney| funeral services for Senator t be held here tomorrow. p on, o The 1lone policeman of Grant Iowa, had to borrow a badge fro a neighboring town when his officd % was created. Sherman,” and “Corporations and the State.” He studied law in the office of Lyman Trumbull, a Chicago mtor-I Wwho was a personal friend of braham Lincoln, and in whose of- fice William Jennings Bryan also studied. ~ Admitted to the bar in 1875, he borrowed $150 and began practice. The same year he was elected a member of Cleveland’s council, where he served with Myron T. uy 00000000000 00000000000000~ By | CABBAGE, poun TOMATOES, 2 p SWEET POTAT( pounds ...... . Large Head LETTUCE . ALASKA TURNIPS, bunch .10c ALASKA C\RROTS bunch.10c 3| CAULIFLOWE APPL ES, PUMPKI! ..05¢ ..25¢ ounds . ... JES, three .25¢ .15¢ R, CELERY, Gy RAPES Purveyors to Pari GEORGE BROTHERS 5 FAST DELIVERIES DAILY 10 am., 11 am., 2 p-m. ticular People CALIFORNIA - GROCERY Phone 478 e e D YOU DON’T PAY MORE HERE AMERICAN BEAUTY MACARONI, SPAGHETTI or NOODLES (high grade products) per pkg...10c PRUNES, fresh whole in syrup, large No. 2 1- 2 can, DEL MONTE CUT STRINGLESS BEAN , No. 2 DEL MONTE SOLID PACK TOMATOES, No. 1 tallcan ..... WALNUTS, large fancv budded per pound . CELERY, fresh and crisp, per bunch TOMATOES, solid and ripe, 2 pounds ....... HAPPY HOME LOGANBERRIES, No. 2 can, 2icans. . o HAPPY HOME SWEET KERNEL CORN, No 2 can, 2 cans ..... .. 16¢ ..40c ..20c .25¢ .55¢ PROMPT DELIVERY . T 30and430pm. delegation for the presidency at the 1916, but the question has been raised as to whether this support | was pressed as ardently as it might |have been if at the time he had been a Senator. During Burton's first period of House service, his chairmanship of the Rivers and Harbors Commit- | tee brought him his real national | prominence. ~ Demand for “pork barrel” legislation was at its height but he took a positive stand against such log-rolling measures, several times refusing to support propos- als recommended by Army Engi- neers for his own district because he did not consider the expendi- tures advisable from a national viewpoint, Upon entering the Senate, he con- .lmu(‘d his interest in river and | harbor d(‘velopment and in 1913 TICKETS FOR | “Cappy | Ricks” The American Legion Show to be given Oe- || tober 28 and 29, now 'l on sale at Company Free Delivery Phone 33 Post Office Substation No, 1 New Line of Juneau Drug | —— PHONE 83 OR 85 THE SANITARY GROCERY QUEEN QUALITY SHOES $6.00 to $8.50 Republican National Convention i | ALWAYS SOMETHING NEW HERE “Latest A Beautiful Assortment FOUR-IN-HAND TIES FOR MEN 95 cents each READY-TIED 65 cents LEADER DEPARTMENT STORE George Brothers OPEN EVENINGS rrivals” WING BOW each GARNICK’S “The Store FRESH SHIPMENT Peach Sandwich Cookies, pound, 28 cents , Phone 174 That Pleases” SAL Mg Back on the 0 Hazel’s Tax At the Same Old Stand ALASKA GRILL EL. 45 HAZEL DARR

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