The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, January 15, 1932, Page 5

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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, FRIDAY, JAN. 15, 1932 - By GEORGE McMANUS BRINGING UP FATHER MAGGIE 1S RIGHT 1 SHouLD STANY HOME AN' READ SOME OF THESE BOOKS. THEY COST ME ENOUGH. NOW. LETS SEE" BY GOLLY! THERE AINT ANY PICTURES IN THESE BooKS., WELL! OF ALL THINGS ? GET UP OUT OF THERE, YOUL BIG LOAFER. DONT YOU EVER THINK OF DOING A LITTLE WORK? IF | WUZ EVER RIGHT, 'D BE WRONG '\N THIS HOUSE. CANCELLED CHECKS Tell the Story ””//’/ A checking account in the First National ./6 6: \;fi affords a customer an efficient service which (/ cannot be equalled in fundamental business procedure Pay your bills by check and you always have a receipt in your cancelled checks. Joint checking accounts for husband and wife is but one of the popular service to be had, services which can be enjoyed by merely maintaining a nominal balance in your account. © 1931, Int') Feature Scrvice, Inc., Great Britain rights r_erved. POLITICS AT RANDOM Democrats and Republicans, and vote that way, or they are swayed by local or other special consid- erations and vote one way in one| locality and the opposite in an- Many hairdre: beb will be best, s say the long because it lends particularly to indi- ment and is in keeping h the current apparel mode. Flat to continue for another year, edge of the new hats. The nev | “ould create a race of bald wo- wave will have a continuity that | men,” one asserted. | makes the head attractive from any | itself more For those women who have e and may start at the side |vidual tr dyed their chestnut or ven locks and progress in a gently |w other. uN HER TH Rn NE‘cxtromo‘ blonde there is only line around the head to the |little plastic curls at the back of It is interesting to mnote that| one sure way to avoid the telltale otl de. the head, and little rolls at the Montana labor leaders say Hoovers§ widening bands of dark hair as| The new windblown beb shows a |side, as well as the back of the resistance to wage cust has greatly | ‘m{- hair grows out. Thy e on one side of the head with | neck, are emphasized. helped him with the workers, while e hair must be bobbed quite |the rest of the hair softly wareui Combs, pins ana ornaments will First National Bank BLONDE TOTTERS : YOUR By BYRON PRICE (Chief of Bureau, The Associated Press, Washington) The present furor over war debt: is sure to have an-echo of one kinc or another in the '32 campaign, but s of a clear-cut issue be two parties seem effec- tm»l} squelched. ‘The pro sf) against “reduction o1 cancellatio: of these debts wa n into the moratorium reso- Iution with the active support o. Republican and Democratic Con al leaders alike, and nd was raised against it. Apparently the verdice has beer cepted as‘final, too, at the Whit: and State Department. Pres- ident Hoover suggested some read- ments might be wise, but he refully avoided proposing either uction or cancellation. Now h¢ 13 mot disputing the stand taker by Congress. This would seem to forecast al- identical planks in the . jcan and Democratic plat affirming in strong word that Europe henceforth should looi to ‘herself, not to the United States for solution of her troubles. Candidates Or Not? ‘When is a candidate not a can- didate? More and more in recent year unans\(erable riddle is lcnd g of the air Df € mystery play. A generation ago it was the fash- ion for th mentionéd for public office to say straight out whethe they would run, and then if the answer was affirmative, go oui after the ve A lot of voLsrs, and politicians too, have had to take courses ir reading between the lines sinceth old “My-hat-is-in-the-ring” day gave way to the “I-do-not-choose to-run” era. Two eminent gentlemen men- tioned for the Presidency, one ¢ Democrat and the other a Republi- lican, are using words just now that undergo much microscopic ex- amination among those who wan to know whether they intend to b candidates, to-wit: “I am ready to stand before the American people on such a propo sition as that (opposition to the moratorium) advanced here today. —Hiram W. Johnson in a Senat: speech. ‘To that cause (liberalism anc idealism) I am deeply committed and for it I want to fight, whethe: carrying a4 banner or in the rank sesms to me to make little dif- ference.”—Newton D. Baker, in ¢ letter to the Winston-Salem Jour- nal. Well, sions. draw your own conclu- That ‘Labor Vote’ Around this season much talk i heard of rounding up “the labo vote 'or “farm vote,” or som other kind of “vote” just as i tthese blocs could be counted on ¢ march to the polls in solid phalan: and cast a specified number o ballots for this or that. Most politicians recognize tha class solidarity in - politics i largely a myth. Many promise have been made, but no one ye has been able to deliver the labo: vote, or the farm vote, on a na tional basis. Mostly, the people concerned ar¢ —— - Rexall ASTHMA POWDER 75¢ Butler Mauro Drug Co. Phone 134 We Deliver Express Money Orders Indiana Federation of Labor offi-| s are charging that Hoover has etray MEN'S FURNISHINGS All store have been reduced to a new ow-price level to make room for a complete line of juvenile and | misses’ carry. —adv. ed the workers. — - BEING CLOSED OUT men's furnishings in this thirty-two will year with black clothing which we will THE CASH BAZAAR. Hair Styhsts Spell Doom of de Platinum Locks— Brunettes Favored NEW YORK, Jan. 15.—Nineteen- be a brunnette 2 hair preferred, |17 forecas! some of Manhattan’s popular hair- | dressers predicted today. “The platinum blonde craze, were |~ shor‘ and a transformation of the red color worn until their own ing glory, growing cd;c; out the last traces of | blonde bleach. New Waves There is a decided swing back- | ward to femininity in all the fash- s for the new year and the hair styles must follow suit. The back hair will be longer, long enough to curl softly over the While it is expected there will be longer, | more bobbed heads than ever be- its | | fore, three new fashions have b created for long hair. Long hai must be thinned out and formed into a low knot that does not conceal the shape of the head; or divided into two parts which may be folded into flat little buns. The vle is sug; d for very backward and downward. | complement most of the evening coiffures. These may be simple of hell or celluloid, or they will be brilliantly encrusted with gems. — eee The air nheroine of Japan it Mlyoko Miyamora, a girl 19 years old, who is the country’s only fe- parachute jumper. She 1is parachute jumping her pro- Scientifically Purer.. Something every smoker wants to know! ® Absolutely pure. .. that’s what you ex- pect in the things you eat and drink. .. and in the cigarettes you smoke. *Chesterfields are as pure as the water you drink,” a mnoted scientist writes. There’s no way to make a purer cigarette. Starting with tobaccos . . . the ripest, finest, purest leaf that grows is selected for Chesterfields. Mild to start with. .. Cross-Blending makes it milder still. Then it’s wrapped in paper that is so pure it burns without any taste or odor. The phrase “Scientifically Purer” is entirely justified. By our use of a highly scientific process which was worked out by Dr. Paul Gross, the Head Chemist of our Research Department, Chesterfield reaches a state of purity unmatched, to our knowledge, by any other cigarette. In addition, scientists check every in- gredient, every method. Even the factory air is washed, and changed every 415 minutes. More purity! Notice, too, the clean, white, attractive package . . . moisture-proof. Chesterfields come to you as good and as pureas they’re made. Good . . . they've got to be good! Change to Chesterfields and see. A WONDERFUL NEW RADIO PROGRAM! Tonight ... at 10:30 ... Chesterfield’s Radio Program. Light a Chesterfield . . . lean back . . . and relax while Nat Shilkret’s Orchestra and Alex Gray, soloist, charm away your cares. It's on the entire Columbia Net- work . . . broadcast from coast to coast ... every might except Sunday. And the hour’s 10:30 E. S, T. THEY'RE MILDER THEY'RE PURE © WRAPPED IN DUPONT NO. 300 MOIS- TURE-PROOF CELLOPHANE. THE B AND MOST EXPENSIVE THAT'S THEY TASTE BETTER e 5 - A © 1992, Loy R N Tamas £ | <l N E ALASKA LAUNDRY CLEANING PRESSING Telephone 15 § NO RUBBING—NO POLISHING YWuneau Paint Store HERE is A COAL with a Price that appeals to every Coal consumer in Juneau I N D I A N LUMP, $14.50 NUT, $14.25 PRICES DELIVERED We have higher priced coals but none at any price, that will give more satisfaction and economy than “INDIAN.” Stick to known coals that serve, satisfy and save. Pacfic Coast Coal Co. CALL DIRECT—412 PiccLy WiceLy —_ FOR INSURANCE See H. R. SHEPARD & SON Telephone 409 B. M. Behrends Bank Bldg. CALIFORNIA GROCERY DISTRIBUTORS OF An Unusual 0pportunity During This W eek We offer every ELECTRICAL APPLIANCE in our large stock at a GREAT DISCOUNT In fact at a very material saving Alaska Electric Light and Power Co. PHONE 6

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