The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, September 21, 1932, Page 2

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— If you want to be smartly and correctly attired, get one of these newest dresses for Fall and Winter wear. The new fashion features higher ngcks, wlrid- ened shoulders, puff sleeves, straight skirts and crinkly fabrics, Priced from $7.50 up B. M. Behrends Co., Inc. . JUNEAU'S LEADING.DEPARTMENT. STQRE, | | - . Nebraska. L;ague Finds Real key to Suecess. e j DT . 7 5 Lot ¢ e i “ "i:fzo At ; b3 3 he 1932 Presidential Norman Thomas (above) ds the candidate of the Soclalist Party, which demands a 10 billion dolar rclief appro- priatich. William D. Upshaw (below) is the Prohibition Party standard-bearer. N i L In the werst year minor league baseball has ever experienced the little Nebraska guided by Bob Russell, former Cornhusker athlete, is rolling along merrily. Young talent and a stan- = State cireuit, BIGOUT - DOOR ADVOCATE WILL , LEAVE CONGRESS Great Admirer of Wild Life Will Be Lost to Low- er Chamber By HERBERT PLUMMER WASHINGTON, Sept 21—Wheth- er young Champ Clatk or his Re- dard wage of $75 a month furnishes the answer. Rissell himself draws nc salary . . . just has fun. B . Yic 2% PERER } By M. L. WING | Gutside the le A C agle, none is over LINGOLN, Neb,, Sept.-21.—~Ama-'gs “Goars old and the average IS teurs have made a good thing of g yagyg Nebraska's professional baseball E ' league, | In the big mimors these bays | i e __ibave done well, although the; Al While blgger and better clrcuits pavent. wade e maions veh ey GET INDEBATE flounder under dwindling receipts’gpalk who stan bed“m KA %Wen and ‘flagging interest, Class D.|¢ Jelits 914 and beoame. a5t oyl- feams’ in the Cornhusker state! i nging player in the Western scrap for the pennant again flus:mel has just been sold to the last year, led by Bob Russell, league president of Lincoln, for- mer all around athlete at the Uni- versity of Nebraska. Like the club 1930 season and the presidency! o wos goins bogging, The packers| Debate Here—Rust- wanted to pay back their friends 1 before they quit and got Rnssell{ gal’d Wl“ Ignore h presidents, he has hadno profes- |y tae charge for another attempt,{ Mt 4 T slonal. baseball experience, . dra A {Iu one year the obligations were| (Contited frum rage Gne) Jlo “salaty_and expects 10 Prof-iiquidated but the, backers decld iy ed hot lo quit. Fun Main Idea “A baseball man will do things . “We'll be happy if wé pay all the NC_sane person would . do,”. said, by reuém of his past record l;ld plans’for the future, @ n fun.” N £ 4 Included in the ;“fun” i3 seeing N shate, i youngsters who stested with she.F RANK WARD, FORMER';?,I’”M than the 22nd league, thmb up through the big] o g the uls RESIDENT, IS/ Wi Wake Camp of two Citss D leagtes remaining DEAD' IN MASSETT; B.€.! vt &%% out .of 17, the WNebraska circuit 2@. the del Dlease offers & few pf the rare chanoes for u htart i organized baseball. |ident, -died: last week in Massets, ., “Don't tell me that all the boys|B. C. after an illness of;, more: wa to 'do now is caddy,” S&ld]thln & year. He had resided in | Ru: {We had enough turn-|British Columbia . since leis,vln;i out this o make ten leagues. ihere some 10 years ago. Mm}m@; upgrg:fl:fr v.henéd p;xd Mr, Ward is survived Mrs. 0 way rom Canada, | Ward, three daughters, Mrs. George | week, N Cuba, the Hawaitan Islands, and 5l 61 Prince Bupers, A Saack | Sorind, a5 the:#ash coash Just 40 get a chance | Eaney of Hoquiam, Wash., and Mrs | : at ‘!5_‘ month berth. And welJ. P. S. Burton of Massett, and : y ¥8 of them' = |two rons, Patrick Ward of Pouce $75 Per Standard Coupe and Fred Ward of Port . Clements. A native of England, Mr. Ward came to Canada in 1904 and mov- ed here about 1013. He was heaa| WELLINGTON, of ‘the drafing department of the|Uncle Sam. $14,000 Frank Ward, former Thane res-| thorcughly. . This him_ back here weeks of g% mail rate welght. ! ed operations. He. then moved| ‘Golden Coadt” back to Canada establishing a res- by the milé ot b .| fdence near. Sangun River on Gra- | i ham Island. He moved to Mns-“ BALKAN sett in 1931 after his health de-| . — X BELGRADE~H g {ing less . populag. i ON OFFKXM: v‘sngslavup_m’ Han fi; Pk | meét the des Mother ' Mary ' Leopoldine and B Sister Mary Patriék of Vidforia, R Tt Nofio!t.zn C., are in Juneau on an in- Island-—-average about spection of the hospital and the school conducted by the Sistecs' ONE-ROOM SCHOOL VANISHIN —— iy Connecticut's. one-room Eountr provincial if the present rate of closing in|for Western Canadd and Alaska.| maintained. Consolidated schools in She end Sister Mary Patrick will be hece a few weeks. ——ee —— CONCERT towns are taking their place. w. and, 25¢, —adv. - vestigating. WITH RUSTGARD, 8t to give suitable public i hills,” he said, “but it's & lot of,Kussell ! 3 b & {¥ears ago he made a speech .n s s 56 o B ey e, e doalls of)| Goseress about/a dog and he sif Eaul fam: a8 far P mfwe%'fig plans to ‘Gpver. the First, Division He probahly will leaye here next ordoya, Valdez, will_ occupy,. two, weeks . and._ bring the last_four MAIL COST It cost the Alaska Gastineau Gold Mining | Small sack of ‘mull to New Zea- wage. Oth-|Gompany until that company cas. |1and on ‘the “Américan freighter are_becom- e - Balkans factory— [ dn,, Jugo- shaves. HARTFORD, Gofin—~The last of wm started early l!r of St. Ann.. €chool houses will disappear by 1051, €letiric Mother :Mary Legppldine is the the State Board-of Education says, mother - of the order ————— POOH! FOR S8COTLAND YARD Concert by Crawford, Mercer and| LONDON — Somebody stole $376 Potter at- Public School ‘Auditorium | worth of jewelry from a hote] here September 27-28, auspices B. & P.|—20 yards from the main entrance Club. Tickets reduced to 50c tp Scotland Yard. Police are in- tublican opponent, former Mayor Kiel of St, Louis, 'wins in the race for the United States Senate | Missouri this fall, the faci remains that that body loses one of ifs greatest spec- lalists ' after {lé fummer with fesl sypport from yoikees by Oklahoma Oity.: | f wf I § Mdete M1 pes ’ | b of March. ‘home town fans. Started five years ago, the league | i He is Harry The kogue got out of the red|ya; geep in debt at the end of the Challenges Latter to Public ) B. Hawes, ex- pert conserva- e tionist, lover - of v % “everything that outdoors. anhd muscular Hawes perhaps ¥ Broads Sehator arllent admirers of wild life. likgs to refer to his favorite fish as, “my friend, the black bass.” 1| @ets Tequests for copies of it ‘tbr at least 50 years he has bee:: a_student and lover of the outdeors. Outin “Mizzou” he has Where he goes to escape the “too- reress” of . the city. ~ m::h THE CAMPFIRE #}w .um& there makes the adigtdr “more’ endurable for me; the - flapjack, the bacon -and the ‘comtesback’ after: hard Work and | the hotel o 1 his " legislative. hobby, the yeai's he has heen-u member of both the House. and the Senate. .hd$ formulated for himself his is|gentieman is -as_assential in contact with and . . {things as it is in g:’lp fellow, of _f sportsman, carfies with him the binks of roaeideration - -and - to| the cifice, i the G men tent conservation and a ¥ is Thomas, Coxey, Ups | |House the next four year. | Laborites and Communists will poll 4 ranks foremost among the sincere and He & lodge called the “Houn’ Dawg' thel you that the cause of ‘to him is both a duty the Uppor |gess Leulse THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, WEDNESDAY, SEPT. 21, 1932. “Third Parties” Train Sight on Presidency; haw, Foster, 4 Candidates and Republicans, but @ four- “third pariies” seek to have their say as to who shall |be the occupant of the White Socialists, Prohibitionists, Farmer their quota of votes November 8. | Already their standard bearers are lin the field making appeals. Prominent among the four is the Sccialist party, led by Norman |er and mipister. Thomas has beefl” a candidate for many olfices, /To him cam- paigns are intellectual pursuits. Never elected, he has run againsi was the Socialist candidate in 1928 Born in Marion, Ohio, he started his career as a newsboy delivering | ‘Warren G. Harding’s Daily Star“ In 1905 he was graduated from | Princeton, then plunged into set- | tlement work. | After two or three years of this he took up theology; became As- soolate Minister at Henry Van| Dyke’s- brick Presbyterian church on Fifth Avenue and a year ldter pastor in Bast Harlem. There he resumed his social service work until 1918, when he definiately ¢ast his lot with So- cialism. Would Recognize Russia Thomas is running on a plat- form which demands a $10,000,000- 000 Federal appropriation for re- lef activities, recognition of So- viet KRussia and socialization of the mnation's principal industries. On the question of Proh: on the Socialists not only demand re- peal of the Prohibition laws, but also government ownership and operation of breweries. ‘The lame but active and vocif- erous William D. Upshaw of Geor- gia bears aloft the standard of| the Prohibition party. Upshaw af-| tiliaced for the [irst time this year with that party, has served four terms in Congress. The Prohibition plank in his party’s platform unequivocally op- poses repeal or weakening of the Eighleenth amendment. “General” Jacob S. Coxey, who marched into public notice as leader of an unemployed army trekking to Washington in quest 6f relief in 1894, is the Presiden- tial candidate of the Farmer-La- bor Party. Now 78 years old, Cox- ey still is vigorous as the mayor of Massillon, Ohjo. Seek Money For Unemployed Coxey is running on a platform that, among other things, calls for gavernment ownership of public utilities and the issuance of money by the Federal government to aid the unemployed. William Z. Foster, who polled 48,770 votes in 1928 as the nom- inee of the Communist party, has been selected again as its candi- date. The Communist platform con- tains planks “in opposition to Hoover's wage-cutting policy, em- @ and forced collection of debts; equal rights for the negro oppo- sition to. capitalist terror and to all forms of suppression of the politicai rights of the worker.” FOREIGN TRADE RESTORATION IS NOMINEE'S AIM Gov. Franklin D. Roosevelt Makes Important Sscedh in Sedttle (Continued from Page One.) forgotten under policies of the present Republican leader- ship.” ‘Gov. Roosevelt paid a tri- bute to Homer T. Bone and tirged his election as United States Senator. NOMINEE CHEERED BY THOUSANDS IN PORTLAND 2| -PORTLAND, Ore., Bept. 21.—Gov. Franklin D. Roosevelt entered Ore- gon during the night-anhd is a’ guest of) this city today where he will give ‘an address this evening. Thousands cheered ' the Demo- eratic nominee for the Presidency when & Roosevelt parade was held during the day. MISS HELEN KEYSER ENDS JUNEAU VISIT cisco, wh has been a house guest bird conservation |in the home of Mrs. Beverly Moody for & few weeks, left on the Prin- on . the return . trip, to Jkcme.. Miss Keyser departed regret, she said, as she was an enjoyable and delightful Thomas, one-time settlement work- & some of the best vote getters. He| against Bmith and Hoover and | | polled a total of 267,420 votes. | ergency relief for the farmer am’li:o all intents and purposes in some cxemption of the farmer from tax-|past campalgns. “Getieral” Jacob S. Coxey (4bé¥e) Mayor cof Massillon, Ohio, whe gained promipence when he led an unemployed army to Washington in the 1890’3, is' the Presidential nom- inee of the Farmer-Labor Party. William Z. Fester (below) heads the Communist Party ticket. By BYRON PRICE The public can have its choice of a confusing variely of opinions as to the full meaning of the tic gains in the Maine but on one point every-! body appears in substantial agree-{ | at the refurns give visible mony that a compact, deber- mined and hopeful Democratic or-| ganization has been at work in {Maine and means to continue at work everywhere between now and November. { It 15 not easy, in a state which | has been going for one party regu~ larly and overwhelmingly, to get |the voters of the opposition party really interested. The Republican partisans know that from long ex- | perience in the South. The Democratic effort in Maine demonstrated that Democratic lead- {ers do not intend to let anything go by default as they have dong, ROOM FOR DISPUTE Since only local. officlals were voted for, the politiclans have .room for dispute as to how far the Maine figures can be consid- ered a valid poll of strength be- tween Hoover and Roosevelt. Be- yond this is a disagreement as' t» how much polls taken this far in advance emount to, anyway. To a negotiable degree the press |ent Democratic optimism appears to be baged on various polls takefi in' widely-seattered . seetions, Govs nor Roosevelt himself recently | remarked publicly that these polls indicated Demoeratic victory in | November. 3 ~Of course there are elements involved in poll taking which fre- quently discount the value of the results. Sometimes it matters greatly who is taking the poll Sometimes sentiment changes rap- idly after the poll is completed. So the Democrats will continue to wark at top speed no matter how encouraged they may be by early nose-counting. In some instances this year pol« takers have found a marked relue- tance by voters to express ahy prefecence at all. In- one oniy u small fraction of those cir- culated responded. Whatever this may mean it gives no joy to poli- tical planmers. : Py On the Repupiican side the re- cent upturn of morale appears to center largely around the business rally reflected politically by an imprdvement in campaign contr- butions. One Repyblican stalwart wha sald six months ago he did nof {know where to turn to raiss cam- [paign money mnow has reportsd) No Museum for | he's gone I want tc keep him with case |1 i J. 8. DEPARTMENT OF AWLWM:, WEATHER BUREAU i The! eather . . LOCAL DATA , /By the U. 8. Weather Bureau) Forecast for Juneau and vicinity, beginning at 4 pm., Sept. 21: Rain tonight and Thursday; moderate southerly winds, Time Barometer Temp. Hum!dity Wind Veiocity Weather 4 pm. yest'y . 20.99 49 87 . SE 8 Rain 4 am. today 30.02 4 k13 E 10 Cidy Noon today 29.95 50 80 S 6 Rain CABLE AND RADIO REPORTS YESTERDAY | TODAY .m. | Lowest4a.m. 4a.m. Precip. - 4a.m. Station | temip. temp. velocity 24hrs. Weather Barrow 2 24 4 0 Clear Nome 3 40 30 a2 Rain Bethel 3¢ 36 4 (] Cldy Fort Yukon 30 30 16 0 Cldy Tanana ... 20 20 4 0 Pt. Cldy Fairbanks . 28 28 4 0 . Cldy Bagle . % 28 12 09 Cldy St. Paul . 0 #4 10 .04 Cldy Dutch Farbor ... 52 50 2 4 0 0 Cldy Kodiak 42 3B 36 12~ .14 cldy Cordova: “80 ' 50 40 ‘40 8. 80 Rain Juneau @ 4. 48 0 u Cly Sitka .. 55 -~ 45 - 4 .20 Pt. Cldy Ketchikan 56 54 48 50 6 Trace Cldy Prince Rupert ... 58 54 46 46 4 .06 Pt. Cldy Edmonton 50 4% 34 34 4 .08 Cldy Seattle . 64 62 46 46 4 A Clear Portland ... 66 64 46 46 4 0 Clear San PFrancisco ... 70 62 58 58 6 0 Clear The pressure is low in the Gulf of Alaska and moderately low in Northwestern Alaska, with rain in Bering Sea, the upper Yukon Valley, the Gulf and Southeast A'aska. The pressure is moderately high from British Columbia southwestward and from the Aleutian Islands southward ‘with generally icloudy weather except clear weath- sTemperatures ‘have fallen in the er in extreme Northern Alaska. Interior and have risen .in ‘Western' Alaska. Owner Buries Dog Star 1‘Rinfiy,’” By ROBBIN COONS , ;. f HOLL' , Cal,’ Sept. 21— Lee Duncan is « sentimental fel- low who isn't ashamed of it. When - his dog Rin « Tin - Tin died, Duncan re- ijcelved numer- ous wires and letters offering money for the privilege of pre- providing, —adv. | NOTICE TO TAXPAYERS The taxes assessed you by the City of Jimeau are now due and payable and will become delinquent on! the first Monday in- Qctober; that if one- half of the tax is paid on or before the above date the balance will not become delinquemt until the first Monday of the following March. however, H. R. SHEPARD, City Clerk. serving the can-|- ine movie star for museum pur- poses. Some peo- “iple might havel taken the high- est bid, but not SoLLEEN Moemy Duncan. “No, he said, “Rinty was my pal, T owe him a'i T have. He was always close to me, and now that me—let him rest.” So “Rinty” is buried in the back garden of Dunbiv's home, where the tall bronzed man with graying hair lives ‘with his mother. ' The grave is unmarked except by a white rose bush. HARD WORK FOR DUNCAN Duncan, whose “educated” Rin- Tin-Tin, and many other dogs in- ciuding “Rinty Jr” who will carry BRIDGE and WHIST SOCIAL ® To Be Given by The Ladies’ League FRIDAY, SEPT. 23 LEAGUE ROOMS 8 0’'CLOCK Refreshments and Prizes GRAND PRIZES Everybody Welcome on the mame in pictures, always directed the dog star, even after ‘talkies complicatel things. But the microphone did mnot change his methods of direction. In every Ria-Tin-Tin - talkie, Duncan spoke his commands to his pet as usual, but his voice was not heard in the picture because by accurate -timing # was kept from the sound track—a matter of “tuning out” by switching a dial in the control room. If anyone has the nobion that man can take a dog-and let the dog work for rim, as Dutican seems to have dene, he would be disillusioned by watching the real work the dog's master does. “Rin- ty” did the work, but Duncan work- ed twice as hard, with endless patience and kindness. “ Duncan isn’t sizong for “dress- ing up” and “going out in soclety” He prefers overalls and staying home, It's one secret of his suc- tc;:ss with dogs—he plays with COLLEEN COMING BACK ° nearly three moxnths ceiving a pemyfs that he hopes to raise $200,000 in his section. That is only & part of what he ccllected in same territory four years ago, the interesting thing is the if his expectations. He reported that centain titude of mind to induce these business men to embark on expan- | “Tomorrow’s Styles Today” W ool Dresses Offering the smartest in wool crepe models for both women and misses; Price $12.95 ‘to $22.50 at Ay

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