The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, January 13, 1933, Page 4

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

O M TR AT RGNS R R S S e gy Daily Alaska Empire JOHN W. TROY - - ROBERT W. BENDER - - PRE?]DE\T A‘\D l:DlTi)R there is no more easy money, GENERAL MANAGER make a living is to work for it, and work will again Floyd E. Thompson of Chicago, head of the EIKs, has discoversd the reason for prospective relief from | depression. He says the people have discovered that that the only way to " Published every evening except Sunday by EMPIRE_PRINTING COMPANY at Second and Main Streets, Juneau, Alaska. the | He's probably about right. J fourteen Rumanians were frozen to' become popular. At least Entered in the Post Office in Juneau as Second Class |death while going to the polls to vote. matter, People have | {lost their lives on election days in the United States SUBSCRIPTION RATE Dellvered by carrier In Juneau and Dnuula- for $1.25 per month. By mail, postage paid, at the following rates: One year, in advance, $12.00; six months, In advance, $6.00; one month, in advance, $1.25 Subscribers will confer a favor if they will promptly notify the Business Office of any failure or irregularity in the delivery of their papers. Telephone for Editorlal and Business Offices, 374. MEMBER OF ASSOCIATED PRESS. The Associated Fress is exclusively entitled to asy for republication of all news dispatches credited t It cr not otherwise credited in this paper and also th 1ocal news published herein. ALASKA CIRCULATION GUARANTEED TO BE LARGER 3 THAN THAT OF ANY OTHER PUBLICATION GARNER’S OBJECTIONS WELL 3 FOUNDED. It is said that Speaker Garner is opposed to the proposed Senate Prohibition repeal resolution. He objects to the provisions that retain any author-| ity to the Federal Government in the premises. He | insists that the separate States ought to have com-| plete control. He bases his objection largely upon the failure of the resolution to meet the demands of the Democratic National platform upon which Mr. Rcosevelt swept the Nation § Th: Speaker is right. The Democratic National platform clearly indicated the purpose of the Demo- crats of the country to return the liquor question to the States. However, the drys that support the Senate resolution are making one concession they have not heretofore accepted for an instant. The resolution does not prorpose the inclusion of a legis- lative feature in the Constitution. It doss not outlaw anything in itself. It simply gives Congress power to legislate on the subject. One of the ct tions to Prohibition is that it has no proper place in the Constitution. It has been contended that under our form of government the furthest Lhe Constitution could consistently go in the premises’ would be to authorize Congress to legislate on the question. That principle was recognized by those who sought child labor legislation. They did not propose that child labor should be prohibited by the Constitution, but presented a resolution that would authorize Congress to legislate However, the Democr: liqguor question wa$ a matter for the people of each State Lo decide for themselves what the law should be within their State. That was the principle of the resolution that came within six votes of getting a two-thirds majority in the National House of Rep- resentatives. If the matter goes over to a special| session that is probably the sort of a resolution that will be adopted. It will simply propose that the! Eighteenth Amendment be repealed. T = e e e et el biec- NEW DEAL IN NEW YORK INDICATED. On the front page of The Empire yesterday ap- of New York and former Gov. Franklin D. Roose- velt, soon to become President, and former Gov. Alfred E. Smith, Democratic Presidential nominee in 1928. The picture has appeared in all the Eastern Associated Press papers that arrived in the last mail. It is causing a lot of comment. It has suggested that these are the three men who are expected to set things right in New York State and City as| well as to wield very important influence in the Nation by making the Deniocratic Party a more powerful instrument for good government. The impression seems to be deep seated in New York that it is the purpose of the “Big Three,” who clean- ed up on Tammany Leader Curry at the last Demo- 1 cratic State Convention and made impossible the | return of former Mayor James J. Walker, to com- plete the job next year by electing either former AN ——_—— The signs of friendly understanding among President-Elect Franklin D. Roosevelt, Gov. Herbert H. Lehman and former Gov. Alfred E. Smith were the most significant aspect of the inauguration ceremonies today. In the eyes of the assembled political leaders from all over the State the chord of insist- ence on the reform of local government sounded by Mr. Roosevelt and Mr. Lehman was particularly disquieting to Tammany Hall and its allies, who were amply repre- sented at the inauguration. It was stated that Mr. Smith, who spoke first, did not touch upon the sore subject of local government, but his agrecable em- ployment of the phrase “the forgotten man" was interpreted as approximately the ulti- mate in the direction of a conciliatory ges- ture toward Mr. Roosevelt, It was Mr. Roose- velt's first use of that phrase last April which led to Mr. Smith's virulent attack upon him cn the charge of demagoguery and drew the lines for the bitter battle at the Chicago convention. In the corridors of Albany hotels there was much more talk about the political situation in New York City than about State or National problems. On all sides it appears to be taken for granted that the movement for charter revision in New York City is leading a fight fo the end for control of the Democratic Party in the city. With his remarks upon the improvement of local government ‘today, 3¢, Roosevelt mark- ed himself in the eyes of«Tammany, the most aggressive of its political foes. Ed- “ ward J. Flynn, Secretary of State and leader of the Branx, is classed as his firm dSidritbe peared an Associated Press picture of Gov. Lehman | : Gov. Smith or former Mayor McKee to be Mayor of New York. In either case it is believed that Al Smith will be the actual, if not the titular, head of Tammany The Hel Tribune, leading New York Repub- lican paper, commenting upon the association of the “Big Three” at the inauguration of Gov. Lehman, | said ~lon the old car to pay for the new license tags.— {but they usually went a warmer route. figures show that the Alaska Juneau en- the New Year pursuing its consistent suc- 1 way. The tered Compensation. which Ttow and Fushimi were ac- the murder of Frank closed with arguments for Assistant Dis- cused of Dunn, |the government From The Empire D e USSR | January 13, 1913. Charles Goldstein left The Japanese murder case, by i | 20 YEARS AGO for Seat- |tle and Portland on the Humboldt {to make spring purchases of stock for his department store expect- |ing to be absence about two weeks, in © by Julia Cleft-Addams ¢ Autkor of “YOU CAN'T MARRY~ SYNOPSIS: Unaole to face ruin, Samuel Lodely, has shot the opposite himself, Licnel Quentin, his from before the gas was lit. partner, lies dying. Only these autumn nights aren't James Cane, of the firm of 100 warm.” Quentin, Ledely and Cane, re- mains master of himeelf. And ©nceé rose from contempt Buying Barbara has been walking up and down on side of the Market And any Mark's feeling for Miss Roop at to pure Fraternal Societies OF | Gastineau Channel B. P. 0. ELKS meets | every Wednesday at 8 p m Visiting brothers welcome. Geo. Messerschmidt, Exalted Ruler. M. H. Sides, Secreta y. PROFESSIONAL O e et @ Helene W. L. Albrecht | PHYSIOTHERAPY l Mussage, Electricity, Infra Red Ray, Medical Gymnastics, 307 Goldstein Building Phone Office, 216 l i i ke has dene nothing to dis- [03thing. She babbled on, un-i DRS.KASER & FREEBURGER Tflfi?lémnfiw_s_ tinguich himself in anycne's Knowingly. DENTISTS Seghers Councll No, 17 : eyes—unless the telegram Mrs, | “Doesnt she 1look fascinating, Blomgren Butlding "eenny.e; N s Ledlely saw him stuff into his 100, in those new furs?’e PHONE 56 A wallct means something. Three lovely children are left penni- “I didn’t know Miss' Tanner had 'any furs at all, new or old,” said It was characteris- “Aonday at 7:30 p, m. “ransient brothers urg- ed to attend. Council Hours 8 &m. to 8 p.n. ! . L] R SR, | ' i v Mark coldly. |trict Attorney Folsom and District| less by the smash. Barbara | i L ® | Chambers, Fifth Street, (New York World-Telegram.) (Attorney Rustgard and Attorney| Quentin, Leila Cane and Mark | i ;’fr “”:hbtffit-&s “;::‘o"“!:‘s i [ JOHN F. MULLEN, C. k. Feodor Chaliapin, arriving in Paris, is quoted in Cobb for the defense. It was giv-| Lodely. i e et ahtaer pwould let Dr. Charles P. Jenne | H. J. TURNER, Secretary. |the New York Times: yen to the jury late in the after- ——— ¥ 1a)d “ & ‘eustitipite Tarions | DENTIST | —\——-~l America is a sad place just now. The [noon. him, he did gk : + Rooms 8 and 9 Valentine | OUW—"‘ =gy | Americans are all sad. The economic de- | CHAETRR 3 jmoments that: she /Would At Build i || time. A tank for v | N - h his totals, Hi i Diesel oil | pression has disheartened this people who Dr. Sloan arrived in New York MABE (SN SN L |h"r 0“9’, i i : Od 5 me Telephone 176 !} |and a tank for crude ofl save { astonished the world by their youth and after an absence of six months wa. :(nc' lights in ngt reached for his crutch and, as 4 i SRR sl - burner trouble. anathY Whey nave: no. 16hger thie "Ml <o spent in travel and study in Eure twenty years later, but head-clerk disappeared into the =1 PHONE 149, NICHT 148 | ow i grnigormad Gprddtnthy ope. He expected to be home]it come to the Bank. The |manager’s room, slid off his stool. Dl' J v B l‘ ‘ RELIABL T And a French agent, landing in New York this|about February 1 Bank was still lit by, gas, which| “Now you know quite well what . J. W. Dayne ! E RANSFER pebk with 1 dollars or so, announced he’ flared and made dirty patches up- I mean—that it's the young lady DENTIST 11® b ol J : Mn the ceiling. Under the badly waiting for you that has got the Rooms 5-6 Triangle Bldg. o 'was hers to buy back from impoverished Americans| W. I. Hahn, Superintendent of 7 (6 2k B AR Office h 9 D e e . + f % % placed globes, the clerks sat and |new furs,” simpered Miss Roop, ours, § am. to 5 p.m. |European art works acquired in days of careless|the White Pass & Yukon Route, | : i i Evenings by appointment Fri e larrived from Skagway on the|inscrived rows of figures endlessly |walking straight into the snub. i o NEW RECORDS In some ways no doubt we deserve these humilia-|Humboldt to attend a transporta- |In their ledgers. R nr Seonys L et bels —e NEW SHEET MUSIC |tions. Perhaps excessive prosperity softened us.| [tion case pending. Tl‘z LZ; ]e”cf;:mlc EOon Ft oqtilal | 0 00U, e | Yet there are other elements in the picture. s ey, i S 0N il Dok W s N Last week France defaulted a payment of $19,-| Passengers arriving from Skag- |Bures were ladders, lifting people; “Not in any capacity,” dissented Dr. A. W. orewart RADIO SERVICE | 5 ' |{way £ 1 + +|to wealth — which he summarized Mark and made his way with 000,000, and a number of other Eurpoean nations|Way on the Humboldt stated that . .. : E t Radio R reluctantly paid $98,000000 with the intimation it|the Winter there had been extreme- |85 freedom—or forcing them down- surprising agility between the lines Hours . am. to 6 pm. xpert Radio Repairing i BT g !ly mild; that people were getting|Wards to poverty, which he desig- of desks to the door behind which SEWARD BUILDING |might be the last on the eleven billions due Am- Te tod quits’. HAWHG 6y pan ited HiA Dokt and. hat Oftice Phone 469, Res. Radio Tubes and Supplies |erica on account of the late, very disturbing war—| ready for spring planting and Pat€d dw R APy, 2 ARCH RS Bk & . Phone 276 there. A Natlonalist leader proclaims that Ger-|that flowers would soon be nfMark sat under the last gas- The youngster looked up from R JUNEAU MELODY { i P | 1obe furthest away from the door, his work as Mark's crutch tappedj%—— o |mans cannot pay the agreed interest on money bor-Ploom in their home town. 4 y ¢ — —_ |rowed l‘)erp to finance great German social impmve—' away 'S Hiue igt] adieh. and So BRSNS RS ing oot = ) HOUSE | Pour fishing boats had been out ne final tally—furthest away | “Is that Lodely going home?” . z {1;(]\::‘11\‘ (l\lllluxlx‘)ghthe last ten years. We took all hat‘from te West' Obest. hoom M G the manager’s room. Yes sir, I believe so. Found Robert Sl}npaon l £ The franc, “stabilized” ab one-fifth of par, has|€lERt Weeks and fears were enter- | ] I»(r‘ hng‘anmm Mark s;me]czjne_ o m;xsh" off for him. I Opt. D. | P R SRR jtained that they had been lost,|counted this third his greatast and'shouldn't wonder. ‘ rcruuxwd French finances, and M. Chaliapin travels' ® B i e P 4 P sal 1 abroad on American dollars worth 100 per cent, or|SIX fishermen had been at anchor [best: for the business of geitirg| *It just ocours to me" sald the 1|{ JUNEAU TRANSFER & oo near Craig for fourteen days wait- |nim into the sanctum to receive manager, locking up again, | JIIAYE SIS CORIEY o ing for the weather i complaints in person was a lengthy there was some orange peel on | COMPANY | Indeed, we have substantial reason to feel de-|'"® fo modgieies ! : | ld I N 5 Wils wook. o TREIAD CRstit { cne. So lengthy and so piteous— the steps when I came in this af-| ° | pressed, ew 7 - i e — mas trees were sold. Tomorrow they will glow with| L+ B: Adsit and E. J. McKanna i left for Ketchikan for a short \gay holiday lights and Santa Claus will make them| and others over the land a joy in millions of house- | holds. 4 Americans, it is true, are properly chastened and | |sobered, but the “youth and strength” that “aston-|Ciic Coast Company, here with Hshedl the Woddi™ sre bhiIl.on!ths. fob {his family to attend a transporta- S ‘ tion case pending in the Court e s was much impressed with the| Blue-Pencil Wives. sound foundation of Juneau's min- | | - ing industries. He discussed the| (New York Times.) need of a first class hotel and! | Before the widow of Nathaniel Hawthorne gave stated that his compéflv would co- her husband’s Note Books to the world she edlted‘operatc in any way possible in ob- , business trip. President J. C. Ford of the Pa- {them in the intersst of prunes, prisms and prudery.| | taining one. This is pointed out by Professor Randall smwaxt‘ of Yale, who has just prepared an unabridged and} revised edition. Mrs. a brunette” into “mischief of a brunette,” “quick-tempered as the devil” into ‘“very tempered,” and “pantaloons” into “trousers,” |“supper” into “tea time.” She made more serious|Harry ‘her illustrious husband. Mrs. Hawthorne must thus take her place on an evil eminence with Mrs. Mark Twain, Victorian and Puritanical ladies put shackles on ihc\ and M. C. Fremming, Many Orpheum Theatre. Monte York and Master ic position was that the|changes in toning down cynicism and disillusion in|Bratton .- Go Window snopping In your easy The two mid- |chair. Read the advertisements. from Douglas and Juneau Hawthorne changed “devil of planned to attend the opening of and | the new Ap- quick | pearing on the program were Mrs.T Snow, Jamie free spirit of their husbands. The result? Well,| | f— . !there is a story thay Abraham Lincoln wanted to |know the kind of liquor Grant got drunk on, so he could send a barrel to his other Generals. We jcan think of any number of American authors whom one could have wished a prim and chilly {New England wife if the results were another Mark Twain or Nathaniel Hawthorne. | Hawaii’s Patriotism in War. ! (Honolulu Hawaii News.) | The late Franklin K. Lane was quoted today | |by members of the Hawaii Legislative Commission in their argument that this American Territory is| jentitled to continued self-government, threatened I‘by bills now pending before Congress. In June, 1918, Lane, then Secretary of the Inter- ior, made an official visit to Hawaii and traveled' in all parts of the Territory. Before going back to‘ |the mainland, he delivered an address in Honolulu, ! in the course of which he said: | I do not know of any better place to come to get a running start or to get in- spired as to the patriotism of our country ! than to this most mixed community. I { frankly say to you that I have been aston- ished on my trip through these Islands to discover how early, how well, how cer- tainly the most remote people, the children of the schools, the men and women of the plantations, and in the upper reaches of the grazing country, knew what the significance was of this great war in which we are in- volved. I can frankly say to you that I have traveled throughout the country from New England to the Pacific Coast, searching out those spots where there might be slack- ness of sentiment, and there is no part of our country where the people as a whole know better why we are at war, or have any more purpose to win it than they do here. In his first public address after returning to the mainland, Mr. Lane said: | Newhere have I found in all my travels a more intelligently patriotic and devoted people than our citizens of Hawali. Conservation of game birds has approval, but from the way the States are lining up behind the twentieth amendment, “lame ducks” are out of luck —(Louisville Herald-Post.) Beer should be warned that when it comes back it is expected to end unemployment, produce prosperity, balance the budget and make every- body happy.—(Cincinnati Enquirer.) If you want to see a really long one now, don't look at the breadline, but just take a squint at the one at the ple counter.—(Cincinnati Enquirer,) The American public is prosperity-minded, at least; it persists in regarding a $20,000,000 defau!t as a matter of chickenfeed —(Bostoh Globe.) The old-fashioned man who got a mustache cup for his Christmas present now has a grandson who wants a hip flask.—(Dallas News.) A depression is when you can't borrow enough (Ohio State Journal.) A man people always like to have around one who's always on the square.—(Dayton News.) is FIRE ALARM CALLS Third and PFranklin. Front and Franklin. Front, near Ferry Way. Front, near Gross Apts. Front, opp. City Whart. Front, near Saw Mill Front at A. J. Office. Willoughby at Totem Seventh and Gold, Fifth and Kennedy. Ninth, back of power house. Ninth and Calhoun. Tenth and C. Twelfth, BPR, garage. Twelfth and Willoughby. Home Grocery. Seater Tract. idzvpped his crutch and nearly it all right.” shpped going round the head-! The head-clerk left the room ‘clerks desk and finally sunk ex- without rejoinder. He went, un- by the time Mark had dragged |himself to his feet and found and hausted into the visitor's chair by |the fire—that even the manager itried to ignore the incomprehensi- ible mess Mark sometimes made of |both the ascending and the de- |scending ladders. Instead the head-clerk had in- Mark met the horn-rimmed gaze of Miss Roop. ternoon. more unwillingly into |structions that that poor young evening, turned back into |beggar Lodely, should be given Bank. |tasks monotonous in their simplic- b e JUNEAU FROCK SHOPPE “Exclusive but not Expensive” Coats, Dresses, Lingerie Hosiery and Hate e e}, | I. —e GENERAL MOTORS “ , and i | MAYTAG PRODUCTS | W. P. JOHNSON | | »> e L Call Your RADIO DOCTOR for RADIO TROUBLES 9A M to9 P. M Juneau Radio Service Shop PHONE 221 ) i Harry Race DRUGGIST - “THE SQUIBB STORE" o | ity. “Near through with it. asked the head-clerk unfriendly way. {hind Mark's chair and scrutinized a total. —look'ee here now, how His pencil went from entry to en- 'try. and finally drew as sure a | line uxrk had ever seen. | he moved on, grumbling, and Mark resumed his contemplation of the ‘vames of the upward-flung light. |He began absently to place ‘curve of a shadow on paper. “Mr. Lodely, I'll finish off these totals for you! horn-rimmed glasses of Miss Roop. I've cleared up all mine and you look properly think you should be excused the overtime work, you should, really —you can't stand it.” “Besides,” added Miss Roop arch- | she says Lodely?” in his not He stopped be- lard were taking “Why you're just fooling can—" hill into. the town. laborer stared and, lower through the whole page as Presently of washing slowed her pace; been a candy shop, the heels to peer after him. Mark met the his brawn that in Leila Cane, tired. I always James Cane—“Sugar” |lard. ly, “Miss Tanner is sitting over er and strangers had to be stared | by the window this evening and at; and because in another way]| | a certain young lady ‘he was not a stranger, being only| e- Go after him, will you? —and make sure that he gets past| willingly into the lobby and still the hall. Mark had already closed the main doors behind him, and the clerk flumbling irritably with his sheaf of papers and disinclined to go out into the rawness of the October the Farrell Armitage and Kings Mal- stock of each other through the autimn days. Armitage became aware of the scrutiny as soon as he closed the Upper Mallard vicarage gate be- hind him and started down the A passing down, a girl pushing a perambulator full the corner where once there had three loung- ing youths in caps pivoted on their Armitage did not flatter himself that it was either his beauty or drew attention, nor of his travels nor his interest daughter of Sir Cane—thrice: mayor of the town and once Mem- ber of Parliament for Kings Mal- No Kings - Mallard stared beca.use, in a way, he was a strang- Dr. C. L. Fenton CHIROPRACTOR Hours: 10-2; 2-5 LELLENTHAL BUILDING i Douglas 7-9 P. M. Moevs, Packs and Stores Freight and Baggage Prompt Delivery of FUEL OIL ALL KINDS OF COAL PHONE 48 ] ] g g Office Phone 484; Phone 238, Office Hours: 9:30 to 13; 1:00 to 5:30 Rose A Andrews—Graduate Nurse | ELECTRO THERAPY ¢ Cabinet Baths—Massage—Colonic J Irrigations i | PLAY BILLIARDS Office hours, 11 am. to 5 p. m| | S Evenings by Appointment ' 9 Second and Main, Phone 259-1 ring BURFORD S ! SO~ TN | TrE Juneau LAUNDRY Franklin Street, betweem Front and Second Streets Dr. Richard Williams DENTIST OFFICE AND RESIDENCE Gastineau Buflding, Phone 481 r | | | I ; PHONE 359 L the man-sized edition of the si- lent, odd twelve-year-old who had lived along of parson .at Upper Mallard for nearly a year. Let's see now, wasn't it in the same autumn Mr. Lodely shot himself, that the boy left? No, 'twas the year before surely.... And so forth. Farrell walked on, rroWnlng He told himself that he had not come back to the west country before this because the vicar of Upper Mallard, his one intimate friend, so greatly enjoyed visiting him in London. And as for his money, ugliness might have made it but in its*turn it could make beauty— let the metaphysicians disentangle that! And as for Leila— (Copyright, 1931, Julia Cleft- Adams.) DONALDINE BEAUTY PARLORS Telephone 48v RUTH HAYES ] PIGGLY by| oI i Sia e FINE half d lives. paide i Watch and Jewelry A;iverusemenn are your pocket- beok editorials. They interpret the merchandise news. REPAIRING at very reasonable rates WRIGHT SHOPPE PAUL BLOEDHORN Yellow Cab | Warmer, Safer, | l MICKEY FLORIDAN [ | CIeamng;qmi Pressing [ Next . to Ahskm Hotel r 1891 1933 42 YEARS’ BANKING SERVICE to the People of Alaska. COMMERCIAL and SAVINGS We appreciate your patronage and extend to all our best wishes for a Merry Christmas and a Happy and Prosperous New Year. The B. M. Behrends Bank JUNEAU, ALASKA : +:-+: OLDEST BANK IN ALASKA Cheaper PHONE 22 . UPHOLSTERING | MADE TO ORDER Also Recoverinng and Re, Dishaw Bldg. . SAVE YOUR HAIR NU-LIFE METHOD Valentine Bldg. Room 6 PHONE 419 . | TCARL JACOBSON | JEWELER WATCH REPAIRING SEWARD STREET Opposite Goldstein Building ’ More For Your Money AT COLEMAN’S SABIN’S Everything in Parnichings —— e | GARBAGE HAULED Reasonable Monthly Rates E 0. DAVIS |/ ‘The_ad e ':l’fllfllllml, are your ¢uld. .

Other pages from this issue: