Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
3 peit e Ty T ———— T THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, FRIDAY, FEB. 5, 1932. Size 86x108 SALE—$5.50 may: mean that a vexing problem of the G. O. P. has been solved. That problem is a new Chairman of the Republican National Com- mittee. Why Brown? Why was the Postmaster General L [ T ey ©Old papers at The Emplre. |43 — i ANNOUCEMENT |M'GINTY TAKES | ActwessRobbed JEGIONMIXER | ™™y o o e z. S The W eather OF HOOVER HAS | STAND, CASE OF SATURDAY NIGHT o, W i e s rea s - Eoseonst fon Jumann and. beginning at 4 pm. Feb. 5: ] STARTEB quRY FosHAY HENLEY A mixer for members of the Cloudy and unsettled tonight and Saturday; gentle variable winds. 3 American Legion and the Auxiliary i i | : will be held tomorrow nigh at the i s SOCAL. “’::m { 15 b | Salmon Creek Roadhouse. Auto- Time = Barom Temp. Hum Wind Velocity Wentner 3 oruary Clearance Has Problem of New Chair-| Testifies Dividends Were mobiles wil be. st the Dugout at| 4 Dil. vesty ... W8 % Ry Clear % > 9 o'clock. A splendid program, in- .m. ‘toda; y N 24t ¥ oy L man for Republicans | Paid Out of Capital Ol packints 16 hot Grraie, | Noon tedays L 2088 i 8 w3 Clay b | Been Solved . Stock, Not Earnings - CABLE AND BADIO REPORTS o i By HERBERT PLUMMER MINNEAPOLIS, Minn;, Feb, 5— jpmy and subsidaries were making w 1 WASHINGTON, D. C., Feb. 5— (H. E. McGinty, co-defendant with money as dividands showed. Highest 4p.m. | Lowest4a.m. 4am. Precip. 4A.mL - o iy ¥ 2 It was not the actual announcement | W. B. Foshay and H. H..Healey in ‘Twenty-seven witnesses have been B;:;é?n_ tflnn. ‘lesmp. | emp. um‘ m(,mu uh" Weather HF _\\\ C()T"[ ()\ ( [{b l)P of President Hoover's candidacy[the first. trial on mall freud summoned by the Foshay-Henley .- - -22 Clear { a4 - A -4 Y for renomination charges, appared yesterday as a ‘de'tcnse, the majority of them, in-| Nome 2 -10 [ -16 w 4 o Cuay ; g ¢ on the Republi- Government. witness in the second [oluding Bishop F. A. MoFlwain,| Bethel e 2 '3 10 56 Ram i BEDSPR[‘ \I)S can tickedt that |{trial. McGinty recently pleaded |of the Episecopal Church of Minne-| Fort Yukon -8 -8 =22 -22 4 0 Clear S e % | interested Wash- | (guilty. {apolis, as . character witnesses. Tanana o 1 2§ 4 -8 2 4 0 Cidy 4 |ington observers| &8 He identified commu nications | Following a parade of witnesses :ah-}banlm - 23 lg { 8 8 4 04 cldy g 3 3 4 % 9 so much, but with the defendants, includi who had invested funds in the agle ST i L -18 -18 4 10 Olear in colors--rose, blue, g()ld |rather the man in which MeGinty, while freas. | Foshay Companies before the re-| St. Paul . W e Cldy 13 chosen to make wrer of the, W. B. Foshay | ccivership in 1929, the Government| Dutch Harbor ... 48 46 | 30 42 14 Trace Cldy b 4 & 1 it. announced his Tefusal to make closed its case. Kodiak A W R 0 0 Cldy § Size 7’\]”(\ Re rular 4 S() It has been | |dividend payments on the grounds | T ot Cordova 3 28 | 10 12 6 0 Clear : SIZE /3 s gular pT. B gy S SRR Juneau 2% 2 09 e clay : thme . Abat 'Hoan i paid out of the capital m“ pra g i CO' HONORS BARD i{:zhman gg 5 i :g ;(; 0 [] Pt. Cldy &5 B, ver seeks a sec- tead of the earni | 0 28 ain fi AT HALF PRICE Joa G g ey Spissapont | ) o EDINBURGH—AIl Scotland is| Prince Rupert ... 32 30 % 4 4 16 b7 i 4 £AMOUS “Whon i sam‘“b‘; M cGlntywtf t:xe“:i‘e-' Associated Press PROH {preparing to hopor this coming| Edmonton 8 8 3 @ 8 0 Clear 1% but - Hoover” WALTER RBROWN |r o ol e ere in Ny | Carmel Myees, screen actreas, ra- |Summer the memory of Sir Walter| Seattle - 4 M 3 40 18 0 Pt.Cldy { f question has been settled in the|york on Janu: ay mue New 'cently was held up by two armed |Scott, 1932 being .the : centenary| Portland 32 30 30 32 4 .08 Cldy b minds of almost everyone. % ary An an- 'men and robbed of jewels which year of the death of the famous| San Francisco ..... 50 48 4 46 4 04 Rain i : swer was immediaetly sent back to she valued at $20,000 in her Beverly |bard and novelist, The chief cere- *—Less than 10 miiles ; § i ¥ > E ‘ = & ‘True, the formal announcement |McGinty that they, the defendants, Hl!la. Cal., apartment. | monies Wil be held here in St . 3 ». B i l< A\'C\ R A\ ()\ Bf I)SPR[‘ ,\l)g was news for all the papers. But|Foshay and Henley, would assume ' s | ¢4 i The pressure is moderately iow throughout Southern Alaska, i ey £ & ARG AP the fact that a certain gentieman |all responsibilit; | {Glles cathedral and at various| except in the Aleutian Islands, and moderate rain or snow by £ 4 b A out of the ocapital 'stock in order points in the border country. fall A { b —Postmasier General Wailter F.| The Government's contention Ls‘m induce investors to buy securi- | T E el o et ey o g ) § W hlte Zlnd C()lOrS Brown—gave out. the statement |that numerous dividends were made |ties on the strength that the com- | the Interior. The pressure is moderately high in Northern Alasks and from the Aleutian Islands southeastward. Temperatures have ris- en in Bering Sea and Southeastern Alaska and have fallen in other districts. | No Need to Be Bald Dandruff, itching scalp and excessive halrfal‘l toJay lead to BALDNESS tomorrow. The process is grad- ual and painless and before you realize it your hair is gone. NU-LIFE METHOD combats all scalp disorders leading to BALDNESS and positively grows hair. CONGRATULATE youlfself that you are fortunate to now be able to receive right here in Juneau those wonderful scien- tific treatments as given by Seattle Leading Hair Specialists, “The Howard Method.” We use exclusive- ly the Howard Formulae, which has proven success- ful for many years. NO CHARGE for complete sealp examination and consultation. If after receiving one treatment you are not thor- oughly satisfied that our method is psychologically sound, the treatment costs you nothing. NU-LIFE METHOD HAIR AND SCALP SPECIALIST (MRS.) ISA E. CLICK, Manager Office centrally located—89 Front Street, Room 101 Hours 2 to 6 p. m. delegated to - announce formally that President Hoover was & can- didate for renomination on the Republican ticket? Such . statements usually are voiced either by the candidates themselves or by the party Com- mittee Chairman. The latter hap- pens to be Senator Fess of Ohio. The Senator was in the Capital at the time—just a few blocks away in the Senate Chamber. If not Fess, then why shouldn't it have been the second in com- mand, Robert H. Lucas, Executive Director of the party? Or Pat Hurley, Secretary of War? .° HEAVY WHITE COTTON BEDSPREADS Size 72x105 SPECIAL—$3.25 e =, o 0 @ o Co CASH IS KING 25¢ et e s TATOES—Good Grade, 690 -pound Sack ... ... ........ . 29¢ D e 10¢ & ACON—Eastern Sliced, ound .. [ ocin. - | 10O ST 3 | Speaks Like A Chairman It begins to look as though ru- mors are true that Brown will take over the Committee and engage in rounding mp convention delegates for Hoover. A paragraph in his Hoover an- nouncement seems to bear this out: eyl " “The only way President Hoover - can be renominated is to get dele- ] 3 gates to the convention. There are T 3 ,|about 200r 30 different methods of OLITICS o Random &im iz w5 and the President’s friends will conform to these methods in tae By BYRON PRICE | ner and use them in due course for | different states. (Chief of Bureau, The Associated | Smith. For quite & while it has been re- Press, - Washington) One explanation is that Smith|graded as a certainty that revamp- B M. BEHRENDS CO., Inc. Juneau’s Leadmg Department Store wA (= gINEAPPLE—Shced Extra Large Cans, APPLE BUTTER—Libby’s, Tall Cans, can .... .. e merely is trying to drive Roosevelt A good many Democrats, here- |into a more forthright declaration tofore but mildly curious, are be- |against prohibition. Another isthat ginning %o show real concern over | Roosevelt has disappointed Smith the great Smith-Roosevelt mys-|by mnot consulting him enough tery. about New York state issues. Some For months it had been taken |say, %00, that Smith merely sees for granted by experienced poli- |a Democratic vietory this year, and ticlans that mothing genuinely seri- | feels he is entitled to the fruits of cts had come between Governor . Roosevelt and his boon political companion, former Governor Smith. Whatever had happened, it was assumed Smith would go no fur- ther than to tacitly disapprove of the Roosevelt Presidential aspira- tions. Present signs that Smith actually intends to be at least a receptive candidate himself put an entirely mnew face on the situation. There are those who ever foresee a major battle between him and Roosevelt, ending in the destruotion of what ever chances either may have had, and leaving the party again quar- reling and nerve-shaken. For few party - leaders believe Smith could be.renominated, and few bélieve Roosevelt could be nominated over Smithis' open oppo- |t sition. Tt so happens that Smithis reckoned the one candidate who could hurt Roosevelt most, and Roosevelt the one who could hurt Smith most. ‘When the consuming Democratic desire for harmony in 1932 is con- cidered, it is easy to see why in- tense pressure is about to0 be ap- plied to develop just what the Roosevelt-Smith tiff is all about, and whether something effective be done about it. Nothing Authentic two ation between the * Itisnotthat gossip is lacking as to the true inwardness of the situ- old | friends, You can hear a dozen "in- side stories” any day, but when you have siftéd them there is one in- Tt isthattheamountof authentic information abroad could be put it. Looks Like A Break When all is said, the evidence of a genuine break bebween the two| is quite convincing. Testimony has come to thiswrit- er, from both sides and through trusted channels, that when Roose- velt and Smith recently lunched to- gether neither mentioned politics. That, in itself, would seem mighty extraordinary. It can be said, too, on good au- thority, that Roosevelt's most trusted lieutenants have no idea hatever of Smith's real intentions. Finally, though, he said affer the 1928 defeat he was finished with running for office, Smith re- cently has pointedly refrained from saying anything of the sort, at a pledge delegates to him are undex Rhode Island and New Hampshire. The Republicans had a somewhat similar situation on' their hands four years ago, but it disappeared largely because Coolidge refused to let his name go into the primaries. It is not too' much to say the Smith - Roosevelt mystery.- has recahed a state pubting the whole Democratic Party on the anxious seat. The thrill of its possibilities and Smith supporters, of. favorite sons, and rank and file. And not the least: concerned are those always-alert apd always- numerous hitch-hikers who want to be sure they flag the right band ‘wagon. L ALBERT WILE FIRST Mr. Wile was the first.%0 file.on the Democratic ticket, and his was also the first filing to be made in the office of Clerk of Court g way in New York, Massachuseifs, |1 traverses the spines of Roosevelt |: ing the Republican National Com- mittee for 1932 campaigning pur- poses could be expected momen- tarily. Brown's « annnouncement—spoken like a Chairman—may mean that revamping bas arrived. ————————— LOGAL HALIBUT FLEET TO BEGIN FISHING FEB. 16 Juneau B Caichas B2 pected to Be First of Spsop i Seattle AllL boats of Juneaw's balibut fleet are expected to be on the banks at Icy Strait and Cross GRAPEFRUIT—Del Monte, No.2can .5, [, BEANS—Mexican Red, BEANS—-Van Camp s, with Pork, B.cans .o L M e T e HONEY——Pure Yakima Fireweed, 0poeundsc....... ... ¢ aes see e EGGS—Standards, Fresh 2dozen i ... .. &8 € ae a4 o0 anae e LETTUCE— : Large Sulid Heads .. .. . —~—————— GRAPEFRUIT—Sweet Texas, Sfor © ee s s S se se se e ee se s e e RAISINS—Seedless, 4 pounds .. .. . A 48 ae e e e 25¢ i lflc IHIIlIlfl“IIIIIIImIUIH|IIIIIIIIIIIIH!!IIIIIHIIIIIWHIIllIIIIIfllflllllfllHImnlfllfllfllllllllnllllmmmIIlIlIIIIIIH_HIIIIIIIIIIIIlIIIHIIIII|“Hl||l!|lllllllllfl|fllfl!llllllmmIIIIIIlIIllllllmlllllllllllmlIIIIIIIHI]HIHHIIIHHHIIIIIIIHIIIIHHINIMIIHIIHIIIIHIE N THESE times there is no method thnt you should leave uatried in your business. Even now there is no W“l‘ {ito do that little tihlx than using print- terature now anid n-“:& oldcutdpern ‘that you uc lfilo-thg t m«wgfle wcnmomenwifl:the t. amudphoemryo\i. ShE. M‘!lhl COSTS ARE LOW The Daily Alaska Empire ' TELEPHONE 374 FOR INSURANCE See/H. R. SHEPARD & SON - Telephone 409 ~ B/M. a&mmmw.. B oS £