Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
e . e e s Daily Alaska | York., It admitted that there was | because there was little Republican money at the odds offered. Empire JOHN W. TROY Published every EMPIRE PRINTING CO Streets, Juneau, Alaska. MPANY Entered in the Post Office In Juneau as Second Class matter. SUBSCRIPTION RATES. Oellvered by carrier In Juneau, Dou Thane for $1.25 per month g By mall, postage pald, at the following rates: e year, In advance, $12.00; six u%‘; (z'ne month, in advance, $1.25. Subscribers will confer a favor If notify the Busineas Office of any fal in the delivery of their papers. Telephone for Editorial an PRESIDENT AND EDITOR ROBERT W. BENDER - - GENERAL MANAGER | d Business Offices, 374. Brigadier-General Glassford, retired, has resigned his position as Superintendent of Washington City evening exoept sse:::d“mz' “E":\Pohcp. That is just another casualty of the Bonus- 1eers War. { The Wisconsin La Follettes have definitely left {the Republican Party as far as the present elec- glas, Treadwell and | iio) i concerned, at least. If their following goes with them the Wolverine State will probably be months, in advance, | |decisively in the Roosevelt column on election day they will promptly | flure or irregularity | Smoky Mountains. MEMBER OF ASSOCIATE The Associated Press iz exclusively entitled to the | ase for republication of all news dispatches credited to | it or not otherwise credited in this paper and also the | local news pubSshed herein. ALASKA CIRCULATION GUARANTEED TO BE LARGER THAN THAT OF ANY OTHER A WELCOME ANNOUNCEMENT. The announcement of the Ala ways that it will next yzar have a fleet of three rplanes in operation in Alaska and will give &|uhore he apneared on the rostrum in furtherance direct service between Juneau and Seattle, Calhna;uf his candidacy for Delegate to Congress, as he at Ketchikan and such other towns as furnish|created in Seward, the race for Delegate promises| business, is welcome. The Alaska Sou ick Bez, Anscel Eckmann, Augus thur Rust, all of them well N and business management and sq An airplane service between and Seattle and the Northwest great use those at both ends the Alaska Southern Airways may count with con- fidence upon the friendship and c people of Southeast Alaska. The Alaska Southern Airways sor, the Alaska in Southeast Alaska for four directors of the this country. They know what know how to do it; and-they are ever they set out to do. sea: TOO SOON TO WORRY. those who for so many have years Some of b demon rum runneth not the dry States might protect the States after the Eighteenth have been repealed will probably not be so many Stat: tion as our dry friends expect. of a dozen years with Prohibition wet of bootleggers in all of the States it will soon be discovered that Prohibition laws and most States, in all probabil for a law controlled and regulated most of them will be ready to use taxing the traffic will produce are too anxious to have something As a matter of fact hands full for a few years in trying to prevent dry States from going wet, and, probably, they will be losing battles at about the prevai WALL STREET BETTING FAVORS DEMOCRATS. The New York Herald Tribune said last issue to be received in the ma odds in Wall Street were two ti Roosevelt would be elected President. that the Democrats would carry New Jersey, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, Rhode Island, Connecticut, Ohio, Indiana and California. The odds were twenty-five to one that Surrogate John P. O'Brien would be elected Mayor of New known The names of these men mean efficient operation Washington Airways, Alaska Southern know all about | to the contrary are worrying over how Well, in the first place there | After the experience the drys D PRESS. |razor-backs get next to the movement! Seward for. Dimond. (Seward Gateway.) Without an effort at oratory, but displaying a keen debative mind, and the ability to get at the bottom of a question, Senator Anthony “Tony” J. Dimond, in his Seward speech proved himself more than a match for Judge Wickersham. If Senator Dimond created the same impression in other places PUBLICATION. ska Southern Air- |to be a hair-raising finish, with Senator Dimond | is officered by holding the position of favorite. t Buschmann and| If anything, Senator Dimond went far to in- in Alaska, |Ject into Alaska politics something of substance and clarity, totally ignoring the time-honored cus- tom of mud slinging, torial campaigns in the past. When called upon to meet - accusations and could be of WEEY |\ ende thrown out by his opponent, Senator Di- of the line, ‘mdimond displayed rare qualities in his aptitude in marshalling political records in lieu of personal opinions. And in doing so he tempered his stric- tures with mercy, revealing a remarkable self-control and ability to fend off thrusts sought to swerve him from the vitalities of the campaign. Not only was his speech instructive, but it was clear-cut and permitted of nothing which could |be characterized as evasion or subtlety. $a ho dine S| 1 os |y | Judpe' by Hla Gmcaptiin iand. ths g0 Co “hu[.’mvorablz‘ comments heard on every hand, he leaves Seward with' its vote in his pocket. uare dealing. Southeast Alaska | o-operation of the| and its predeces- have worked sons, and all the fighting the | the memory | ! Stealing Herbert’s Stuff. een e — Shat (Milwaukee Journal.) The Hon. Pat. J. Hurley, Secretary of War, must have given Gov. Roosevelt the surprise of his life with the charge that on the power and utility question Mr. Roosevelt is stzaling President Hoover's stuff. The New York Governor has had the active enmity of the power interests because of what he did as Governor of New York. mselves from the| Amendment shall | es wanting protec- | and the education | tion of securities, protection of the investor as well are futile things,|as of the consumer. And everybody knows it. ity, will be ready liquor traffic. And‘ e the revenues that | that “every constructive phase of Gov. Roosevelt's Portland speech is covered in a paragraph of the | President’s inaugural address March 4, 1929.” Now fear: L ‘T'“’. ok '"\]) o+%|think of that! Mr. Hoover had all these ideas back s (i in March, 1929, when the Insull utility “empire”| will have their was being built up to its last phase of exploiting |the investor. If he had 'em, he w ling rate, Hoover came in. If one looks up the inaugural address Mr. Hur- ley names, however, he doesn’t find a word about protecting investors. The truth is that Secretary Hurley and Secretary Hyde are out on the stump for the President to say {things that would be benecath Mr. Hoover's dignity to say—to say things that would be answered so quick they'd look foolish, but even before they were answered would be laughed at. in the il that the betting 0 one that Gov. Even money New York State, A studentv of the times complains that Ameri- cans no longer whistle poular tunes. Well, you see, since the war they've been too busy whistling for their money.—(Akron, Ohio, Beacon-Journal.) (EDITOR'S NOTE: This is Presidential election and pointing Connecticut’s Vote for President in 1928, 296,614 Hoover: have been | e by NNECTICU [ kLeeT [ ™28 ) 8 | t FHOOVER - 7_96,.9_114,\/' SMITH 252.040 s the state has given the most 25 to a Democratic Presidential candidate but once, in 1912, Alfred E. Smith and his prohibi- vie! were able in 1928 to Republican majority in the state to less than 45,000, Con- cticut long 'has been acknow- a wet stronghold. Democrats succeeded in the 1930 ing narrow ma- ss, former graduate school, Governorship and for two five candidates for Con-| eats | Roraback, Republican Mmitteeman attributed National Col the 1930 results to economic condi- tions. The prohibition issue also figured in these campaigns. | Prohibition has been a wi discussed issue ip the current cam- paign. Both parties have included repeal planks in their state plat- forms. Connecticut supported Alfred E. Smith for the Democratic nomina- tion throughout the convention balloting at Chicago. State lead- ers who supported Smith have since given their endorsement to the party’s nominees, | Connecticuut has eight electoral votes this year. In 1928 it had| uThe Campaign Puzzle §tudy Past State-by-State Vote? in Making Your Forec the staunch ried by Taft in 1912 has estab- Warren G. |lished a Republican record broken the ninth of 16 articles showing how States voted in the 1928 out developments since.) [ | Utah's Vote for President | West Virginia’s Vote for President in 1928. I in 1928. Hoover: 94,618 Hocver: 375,551 Smith: 80,985 ; Smith: 263,784 Utah one of the two states car-; Herbert Hoover's majority in West Virginia in 1928 was the larg- est this usually Republican state In vo‘zf ;);11;: by its vote for Wilson in had ever given a Presidential can- and in 30 1916. jdidate. West Virginia has voted In the Presidential campaign of' 1928 Utah was keenly interested | WEST VIRGINIA in the prohibition views of the two [ ELGCTORAL VorES= candidates. ‘The attitude of the Mormon church is dry and the voting strength of the state long k been cast on that side. Utah has had no senatorial or gub- bernatorial elections since 1928, In the Congressional elections of 193'for only one Democratic candi- Republican can- . date in 40 years, giving its vote didates wer (to Wilson in 1912, elected in both == state by a com- issue in the 1928 Presidential cam- olned majority of paign but popular attention was 18099 of a total divided between that contest and ?r 144349 votes, a lively race between M. M. Neely for candidates of /(D) and Henry Hatfield (R) for the two major (the Senate. The lake cargo coal parties. The com- bined Republican majority in the. |freight rates case formed a major ue in the Senate campaign, in which Hatfield was elected 327,266 two districts in: to 317,620, it o|| Neely was a candidate again in ;)75%5401:: vote of {930, defeating James Ellwood | Jones (R) by a vote of 342437 to 200427. Economic conditions and |coal freight rates were the issues most widely discussed in this cam- paign. i Registrations in both parties have shown an increase in 1932 jover 1928. Republican registration | has increased from '445579 to 473~ |045. Democratic registrati rose from 360,531 to 450,876. Economic and taxation programs have been outstanding in this year's political discussions in both state and national fields. ‘West Virginia this year has eight electoral votes, as formerly. Utah in 1928 elected a Demo- cratic Senator, William H. King, by a majority of 29363, and re- d George H. Dern (D) as nor for his second term. Iver is an issue of major im- portance in this year's Presidential campaign, as well es in the Sena- torial campaign in which Reed Smoot (R) dean of the Senate, is opposed by Dr. Elbert D. Thomas (D), professor of political science in the University of Utah. Utah has four eiectoral votes this year as formerly. little betting | African hogs are being introduced in the Great| Just wait until the famous| so characteristic of Terri-| Wall Street is| fighting Mr. Roosevelt because he proposes regula- | Yet out pops Pat Hurley with the statement|her alone 't using them. | The Insull idea both boomed and burst since Mr.| | THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, FRIDAY, OCT. 21, 1932. LA 4 SYNOPSIS: Distrait because of dawning love for his young wife, Nan, disturbed by her torrible dream that he is dead | Jervis Weare is awakened in the dead of night by a noise in his room. A pebble is toss- ed in. Beneath his window stands Rosamund Carew, the { girl who jilted him in an un- successful attempt to secure his great fortune and asks Jervis to come down. CHAPTER 35. JERVIS TO THE RESCUE “What do you want,” Jervis de- manded of Rosamund, who stood below his window looking up at face, ‘Tl tell you if you come down. Don’t wake anybody else.” He hesitated, frowning furiously What was all this about? He turned his wrist and looked at the luminous dial of his watch. It was _ two o'clock. was Rosamund playing at? “Jervis, I'm in a perfectly dam- nable hole.” He said, “All right—wait a min- ute” and turned back into the room. He got into some clouucs—a ten- nis shirt, flannel trousers blazer, socks and shoes. Then he went down in the study, opened the window and got out. “What's the matter?” he said. “My car broke down.” “Where?” “About three miles away, on the main road.” “Well, T'll wake up Mrs. Mellich She’ll have a room got ready for you.” “No—no—I don*t want to do that.” She came quite close and put a hand on his arm. “I want to get back. Janet Tetterley does- n't know I'm out.” “What have you been up to?” said Jervis. “That’s none 'of your business.” “What do you want me to do?” said Jervis angrily. “Make less noise to start with, and then lend a hand with the car.” ‘What's the trouble?” “I've ditched her. We could get| |her up together, but I can't ‘budge | and there isn't likely| to be anyone passing for the next | four hours or so.” Jervis did mot know what promp- ted him to say: “You're alone?” “Well, would I come and dig you out in the middle of the night if T wasn't? I don't walk three miles in evening shoes for fun.” “All right I'll get the car out and run you back.” Rosamund’s hand closed on his arm—a strong hand for all its Wwhiteness. “No you can’t do that—itll give the whole show away.” “What is there to give away?” said Jervis. “Well, to be quite frank,” said Rosamund, “I' can't afford anoth- er scandal on top of turning you down. It isn't all jam as it is. Janet’s under Basher’s thumb, al- though you wouldn't think it. Basher's a prude of the first wa- ter when it comes to his own womenfolks. If he knew T'd been out all night, he’d never have me in the house again.” “And it's none of my business ‘where you've been?” “Well—is it?” “How can you get back without someone finding out?” “It's as easy as mud. The sec-| ond chauffeur sleeps over the gar- agé. You couldn’t wake him if you drove a truck through his room. T've got a key, and I can take! her in the same way T took her out without anyone being the| So she couldn't have gone out along,” he said. Rosamund moved, let go of his arm and stepped out of the shad- ow. The moonlight touched her uncovered hair, and took all the| gold out of it. It looked grey| with threads of silver in it. Her| of her throat were like ivory seen through water. She was drapped in a black Chinese shawl whose embroidered flowers were like faint ghosts whose color and sweetness Nothing by Patricia Wentworth him, the moonlight gray upon her | What on earth 1iv out of his mind. |like faf& to thrust Rosamund up- | much before midnight. Queer business, this. 2 “Well, we'd better be getting face, her hands, and the column|® Venture She moved beside him walking 'quickly out in silence. She could | keep pace with him without ef- fort. She produced as always, an effect of graceful ease which was in sharp contrast to the habitual bluntness of her speech. She did not speak until they were past the gates. Then she said in a mocking voice. “Don’t you want to know where I've been?” Not particularly.” No wonder I jilted you! You don't care whom I've been meet- ng?" “Why should I?” Do you?” No, I don't.” No healthy curiosity?” j ariven the “Here's thorn trees road from the other. the car” mund. “We haven't gone three miles.” “It in these hoes.” The road dipped into the shad- ow. The car stood in at an angle towards the ledge. s [3 as black as an overhanging boughs | * DRS. KASER & FREEBURGER @ sure felt like it could make it. “You ought to have left your lights Rosamund didn’t heard her move but he couldn't|g see He cpened the door of the car|® and leaned forward to switch on the on” said Jervis, answer. Dier. lights. (Copyright 1932, Lippincott.) ’ Nan asks Rosamund some questions toworrow, without k stood above| e- the ledge on one side and a row of elms cast a dense shadow across said Rosa- | The place was He PHYSIOTHERAPY Phone Office, 2168 | PROFESSIONAL Helene W. L. Albrecht Massage, Electricity, Infra Red , Ray, Medical Gymnastics, 410 Goldstein Building DENTISTS Blomgren Building PHONE 56 Hours 9 am. to 9 p.m. DENTIST . Building Telephone 178 & ! * Dr, Charles P. Jenne Rooms 8 and 9 Valentine S ey icous success. [ kY I' like to know what you're| ©€ONSP . arving at?” ' *|| Dr. 1 W.IsBayne “I'l like to kmow myself,” said ENTIST Rosamund, her voice harsh on the ' J- A. BULGER } I Rooms 5-6 Triangle Bldg. S Plumbing, Heating, Oil l l Office hours, 9 am. to 5 pm. They walked on without speaking Burner Work Evenings by appointment a couple of hundred yards.| Successor J. J. Newman | || Phone 321 | is couldn't help a feeling of | % e —e exireme nervousness perhaps it|e: ° — |was the fact that his rest had|| MIDGET LUNCH | Dr. A W. S . been disturbed in so curious a|| OPEN DAILY UNTIY | L. A. . otewart | ! et ! Hours :’ li»{:xst': 6 p.m, | Nan had dreamed that he was Merchant Lunch—4C cenis | .m. . dead. Tt wasn't an omen, of course l | m?fio:uzfmc ‘nr\‘alhfl he was an intelligent citi-|® o Phoiis ns' Res. |zen of the twentieth century who P P ® 4 {hadn't the faintest belief in omens DON'T BE TOO land tabus. Yet he could not put LIBERAL . 5 Nor were his nerves due to his strange errand. Nan would never have demanded such a thing at such an hour. Nan would not have gone out in a shady venture; if she had been caught with a ditch- ed car at 2 o'clock in the morn- |ing, she would mnot have made unreasonable requests of the neigh- bors. Not even of her husband. Yes. The more he thought the lless strange this early morning |visit was. Rosamund was a de- |manding person. She was mever a considerate person. Probably it had seemed quite the proper thing to do this business of flinging ‘pcbhles into someone's window to |save her own skin. He felt bet- With tvhe coal if It comes from our place. For our ccal goes farther and gives a more even and satisfying heat. 1If your coal bin is running low, better have us send you a new supyly to prove our statement. Our draging service is always the best Ler. Then he asked. “Are you going to marry Leon- ard?” “Should you mind if I did?” “Not in the least. But I should think twice before I did it if I were you.” “Why?” said Rosamund. “The ‘man’s an outsider.” “Thank you—he's my cousin.” “Everybody's got some dud rela- tives. ‘Are you going to marry him?" “N¢” said Rosamund. “Well that's damned sensible of you.” Rosamund moved a little further away from him. “You've made such a sensible marriage yourself—haven't you!” Jervis said nothing. Quite sud- denly when she said that, he saw Nan as he had seen her setting back again her pillows; her rum- pled hair, soft and brown; her little trembling smile; her eyes clear, shining after rain. Sensible? That wasn’t the word for the marriage that had brought Nan into his life. Who wanted to make a sensible marriage? He had taken a leap in the dark, and it had landed him in a place ol extraordinary enchantment. You weren't sensible in an enchanted place. He threw back his head and| laughed. What a jest fate had| played on him. What a gorgeous, | rollicking, enchanting jest! Gusts of laughter shook him. He want- | ed someone to share it with him.| But he couldn’t very well share | it with Rosamund. It was just| on him at this juncture. They had reached | a bend where half a dozen wind- HAAS Famoue Candies The Cash Bazaar Open Evenings i '. | JUNEAU-YOUNG Funeral Parlors Licensed Funeral Directors and Embalmers have died and been forgotten. E . GOOD Financial success chance or accident people. ly wealthy. A more one which will not - Juneau, - Don’t therefore depend upon luck to open a bank account or become sudden- should it happen your way, is to open a savings account with B. M. Behrends Bank | Night Phone 1861 Day Phone13 ' . LUCK or good fortune by come to very few She had crossed to the other side | (of the road. Robert Simpson Opt. D. Graduate Optometrist—Optician Office Phone 434; D.B.FEMMER || " wniswom | Phone 114 = = e |e. R R RRTE: ThT a NREE A || | DR.E.MALIN HOTEL | ——— ELEVATOR SERVICE 8. ZYNDA, Prop. Nervous Diseascs * P wep— | JUNEAU DAIRY : ; |~ ICE CREAM { Smtith Electric On. | ' Always Pure and Fresh EVER G [ A BOME PROnDoR. ELECTRICAL i . e { . ele 7 | GENERAL MOTORS ' \ f MAYTAG PRODUCTS | McCAUL MOTOR | W. P. JOHNSON | | COMPANY s 1 | SR PSRRI ST TR T Call Your || MISS %nflé&flLTON RADIO DOCTOR Fur Garments Igl.a. and for Gastineau Hotel, or care of RADIO TROUBLES 9A Mto9 P. M Juneau Radio Service Shop PHONE 221 3 George Anderson EXPERT PIANO TUNER Alaska Agent KOHLER BROMBACH PIANOS Expert Piano Service Phone Orders 143 ANDERSON MUSIC SHOPPE Juneau, Alaska Harry Race DRUGGIST “THE SQUIBB STORE” Goldstein’s Fur Store B SABIN’S for Men SERIES 222 THE NEW certain method and interfere with luck, Alaska The Florence Shop Permanent Waving a Specialty Holmquist, Prop. 8 FOR A NEW AGE! Juneau Distributor | Clasees Fitted, Lenses Ground | | Eyes Examined—Glasses Fitted ! Room 17, Vilentine Bidg. Restdence | { { || Juneau Rooms, over Piggly ! Wiggly Store, Phone 472 | e te JUNEAU FROCK SHOPPE “Exclusive but not Expensive” Coats, Dresses, Lingerie Hoslery and Hats Hupmobile IN TRUTH A CAR 0.0 it - bt Dr. C. L. Fentow CRIROPRACEOR Electric Treatments Hellentbal Building FOOT CORRECTION | Hours: 10-13, 1-5, 7-8 L3 [2 B T — DR. R. E. SOUTHWELE: 1 i i i Everything in Furnishings 1 JAMES CARLSON Fraternal Societies — OF Gastineau Channel P R D B. P. 0. ELKS meets, every Wednesday at 8 p.m Visiting brothers welcome, Geo. Messerschmidt, Exalted Ruler. M.H, Sides, Secreta y, " LOYAL ORDER OF MOOSE, NO. 700 Meets Monday, 8 p. m. C. H. MacSpadden, Dic- tator. Legion of Moose No. 25 meets first and third Tues- days. G. A. Baldwin, Secretary and Herder. Dr, W.J. Pigg, Physician, KNIGHTS OF COLUMBUS Seghers Council. No. 1769, . Meetings second and last Monday at 7:30 p. m, Transient brothers urg- ed to attend. Council Chambers, Fifth Streeb. JOHN F. MULLEN, G. K. H. J. TURNER, Secretary. T . Ty .Om- trucks go any place any time. A tank for Diesel Oil and a fank for criude oil save burner trouble. PHONE 149, NICHT 148 | RELIABLE TRANSFER NEW RY.CORDS NEW SHEET MUSIC RADIO SERVICE Expert Radio Repairing Radio Tubes and Supplies JUNEAU MELODY, HOUSE i COMPANY Moves, Packs and Stores Freight and Baggage Prompt Delivery of ALL KINDY OF COAL PHONE 48 | —_— e ] PLAY BILLIARDS —at— BURFORD’S ‘|‘ —— { . " THE JUNEAU LAUNDRY Franklin Street, between Front and Second Streets PHONE 359 CALL 22 for a Yellow Cab Stand at Burford’s Corner METER CARS 25¢, 35¢, 45¢, 50c Never more than 50c in city “FINE Watch and Jewelry REPAIRING at very reasonable rates WRIGHT SHOPPE PAUL BLOEDHORN Goodyear Tires Full Stock of AUTOMOBILE ACCESSORIES Juneau Motors Authorized Ford Agency BUSINE PP d |« ! | ol JUNEAU TRANSFER i X 1