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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, MONDAY, MARCH 13, 1933. BARNEY GOOGLE AND SPARK . — PLUG SO YOU WAS BAKING A CAKE .?7? WELL, T'M A .1 @ &&= WHADDA YA S'POSE WHACKO DUMPSY'D SAY IF HE FOUND THAT ouT ?? YOU BIG —- @@ % k. 7 IF THIS NEWS GETS OuUT THEY'LL CHANGE YOUR NAME TO SALLY... Lmeup of the States on the Prohibition 6ué§tio DRY LAW ADOPTED 191 STITUTIONAL AFTER N 8; DECLARED UNCON- ATIONAL PROHIBITION. CONSTITUTIONAL DRY LAW REPEALED; ENFORCEMENT ACT RETAINED. ‘WET' BEFORE NATIONAL PROHIBITION: ENFORCEMENT ACT REPEALED. REPEALED ENFORCEMENT ACT; RETAINED CONSTITUTIONAL DRY LAW. BNl WET BEFORE NATIONAL PROHIBITION [C] DRY BEFORE NATIONAL PROMIBITION. DRY BEFORE NATIONAL PROHIBITION, BUT SINCE REPEALED. Congress’s acticn in approving submission of repeal of the Eighleenth Amendment to the Stales has turned both Prohibitionists and Antis to a study of the States’s lineup on Prohibition since adoption of Federal dry laws. s divided the States on the eve of national Prchibition, ranks. It dees not show the States which subsequent to Prohibition passage adopted dry laws. and Anti-Prehibiticnis Defections from Dry Lists W eighed by Opposing Camps As Factor in Coming Battle This is the first of two stor- l ies “dealing with national pro- | hibition in the light of Con- | gress' action approving sub- ! mission of repeal to the states. | ARKANSAS: Has retained statutory dry law. its CALIFORNIA: Wet before pro- hibition, so far as state laws were concerned. Stafe enforcement act repealed by referendum November The above map shows how Prohibitionists and indicates the defections from these “original” dry EASTERN STAR NEW HAMPSHIRE: re- | tained statutory dry law. Business meeting, Tuesday, March NEW JERSEY: Wet before pro- hibition. State enforcement act re- 14 at 8 P. M. -—adv pealed in December, 1982. | . NEW MEXICO: Special L“.Z’C',l:)n“End senom Cou hs called for September 19, 1933, on| 4 question " of ‘repealing state prohi- {bition law. NEW YORK: Wet before prohi- bition. Enforcement act adopted in 1921 was repealed in 1932. NORTH CAROLINA: Bill pend- | |ing for repeal of statutory dry law. NORTH DAKATO: Constitu- tional dry law repealed November Has Don't let them get a strangle hold. Fight germs quickly. Creomulsion com- bines the 7 best helps known to modern science. Powerful but harmless. Pleasant to take. No narcotics. Your druggist will refund your money if any cough or cold no matter how long standing is not re- lieved by Creomulsion. (adv.) With.Creomulsion | DOUGLAS NEWS . — NORMAN FLEEK 70 BE BURIED | ON WEDNESDAY Victim of Drowning Trag- edy to Be Laid to ! Rest in Juneau Funeral services for Norman Fleek, one of the three young men drowned in the Channel last week, whose body is the only one so far recovered, will be held in Juneau on Wednesday afternoon in the chapel of the C. W, Carter Mort- uary. The time of the services will be 1:30 o'clock. Interment will be made in the Evergreen cemetery beside a litfle sister of the deceased who lies buried there. e - | |P.-T. A. MEETING 18 POSTPONED TO THURSDAY The regular meeting of the | Douglas Parent-Teacher Associa- tion scheduled to have been held Tuesday evening has been post- poned until Thursday evening. To accommodate the firemen who wish to attend, the regular meeting of the Douglas Fire De- partment will be held an hour earlier than usual on Thursday | night. | e MR. AND MRS. HOLMER £ ARE HOSTS AT BRIDGE A delightful card party was glv- en here Saturday evening by Mr. and Mrs. Charles Holmer at their home. Five tables of bridge were played. Prizes for the high score tions to Mrs. W. F. Cahill and George O'Brien. P S REBEKAH AUXILIARY CARD PARTY Third of series—bridge and whist —Wednesday evening, Odd Fellows’ Hall. Prize, refreshments. Admis- sion, 50 cents. —adv. Arctic Salads Grown Under Glass by Soviet LENINGRAD, March 13. =- Cu-\ cumbers and radishes grown under glass for phosphate miners beyond the Arctic Circle is the latest Soviet enterprise in the Far North. Up on the Kola Peninsula bor- dering the White Sea a dairy and veg:table State farm is supplying the tables of Khibinogorsk, center of important apatite deposits, The farm this year will cultivate 675 acres and will grow salad material in two hothouses and 100 hotbeds Planes Carry Ice Cream Into Jungle Gold Fields CANBERRA, ausiralla, March 13. —Ic: cream and electricity are the latest gifts of civilization ‘o the gold miners of the Bulolo fields hidden away in the tropic moun- talns of New Guinea, a territory which Australia administers under mandate. Flying over impenetrable jungles filled with cannibalistic tribesmen, airplanes have brought the ameni- ties of modern life to the gold- fields. Even fresh vegetables appear on the tables at every meal. BT A170F - L b THOMAS MAKES ROUND TRIP SOUTH ON EVANS J. €. Thomas, of the Thomas Hardware Company, left on a busi- ness trip to Seattle aboard the Admiral Evans. Mr. Thomas plans to return to Juneau on the next trip north of the Evans. - Good Books Are Being _Issued Now Season at Its. Height— Many Expected to Be Buried, Literary Flood By JOHN SELBY NEW YORK, March 13.—The books of at least two distinguished Englishmen and a considerable number of others, distinguished and otherwise, are discernible on the surface of the week's stream of titles, Which is worth remark, for the season is at its height, and many a good bqok will be buried in the flood. | The Englishmen are George Ber- nard Shaw, and John Galsworthy; perhaps Mr. Sshaw would prefer be- ing called Irish. He has to offer “The Adventures of the Black Girl in Her Search for God,” a long title for a very siender book. The black girl is taught Christ- tianity by a frustrated missionary, who then makes the mistake of | giving her pupil a Bible. Fired; by her present, the girl goes afield in search of God. She finds several | |gods, He of Thunder, He of Reyenge | God the Father, Spirit, and the definition that “God is Love." Mr. S8haw scotches most of the gods (all of whom, as he creates them, bear a quite astonishing re- semblance to ‘G. B. Shaw!). In the end the girl settles to cultivate her garden, and then Mr. Shaw steps| back Into character, and writes a| nice little explanatory essay about it all POSTHUMOUS GALSWORTHY The first of at least two pos- thumous Galsworthy publications is “Candelabra,” a collection of 18 addresses and essays covering a number of subjjects from the drama to a ‘Meditation on Fin- | atity.” They have the easy flow and clarity of thought one associites with Galsworthy; later therc is to !be published a novel which was {left complete by the latest winner of the Nobel prize for literature. Aside from these, there is an em- barrassment of riches. There is John Cowper Powys, for one, cry- ing a more or less Wordworthian philosophy in. “A Philosophy of Solitude,” offering “the art of creating for ourselves a continuity of secret happiness, in defiance of the world.” There is the erratic and lusty Jan Welzl, Czech locksmith and wanderer extraoardinary, who tells| (with the help of a pair of brother Czechs) another group of polar incredibilities in “The Quest for Polar . Treasure.” DEEP SOUTH From Louisiana came Pierre Gus- tav Toutant Beauregard, and from the south also comes his biograph- er, Hamilton Basso. Mr. Hamilton does not mominate his candidate for Olympus, but he does suggest in “Beauregard, the Great Creole” that history has been a little scaly in its treatment of this elegant mah, and gives cogent reasons in excellent prose. There are likewise three unusu- ally effective light novels, that by Robert Nathan being closest home Mr. Nathan's “One More Spring” is a delicately ironic tale of an an- tique dealer, a Jewish violinist, and a woman, depression victims, who spend the winter. in Central Park. A lot of genuine wit comes up through the froth. E. H. Young, she of “Miss Mole,” returns with a brightly A maliclous and penetrating study of 3 number of stock English characters in “Jenny Wren.” And Helen Eliat tells in “She Would and She Wouldn't” of the dilemma of a young German wife in Paris, frem- ‘bung between husband and lover. It is an adroit and intelligent novel. PACIFIC ALASKA AIRWAYS ENGINEER SOUTH ON EVANS G. E. Young, Divisional Engineer for the Pacific Alaska Airways, who has been in Juneau for the last week in connection with business for his company, left for Seattle aboard the Admiral Evans. Mr. Young plans to continue his trip to California where he will in- spect new airplanes which will be added to the company fleet in Al- aska. Before returning to Alaska, Mr. Young and Lyman S. Peck, Man- ager of the Pacific Alaska Airways, will fly to New York to confer with company officials. - e NEW HOUSE DRESSES Beautifully styled, low-priced, at Venetian Shop. —adv, 7 l BETTY MAC BEAUTY SHOP 103 Assembly Apariments PHONE 547 Smith Electric Co. Gastineau Building MAIL DUE TOMORROW | Four and one half days’ mail is due in Juneau tomorrow aboard went to Mrs. J. O. Kirkham and A. E. Goetz and for the consola- either the Princess Norah or North- "CALL 14 Royal Blue |8, 1932, and provided for state li- 1932, but enforcement act re- NOTICE OF MARSHAL'S SALE western. 1 Cabs By F. B. COLTON | . ls, SUEr SSEaIn. yhen sud it Jawigl} United States of America, District WASHINGTON March 13—The, tained. prohibition question, put back oni’ the doorstep of the states by Con-/ gress' passage of the resolution| to submit to the states to repea the Eighteenth Amendment, wil find changed attitudes in somej states after 13 years of the dr. law, if legislation during that per jod is any criterion. When National Prohibition was| ratified January 16, 1919—one year before it took effect — 32 states wete “dry” in the sense that they| had constitutional or statutory measures against the liquor traffic. Since then, eignt of these states| hdve taken various kinds of action; that anti-prohibitionists interpret/ as indicating a shift from “bone- dry” sentiment. | Thirty-Two Dry States 1 States which had some kind of state law against liquor traffic when prohibition was placed in the constitution and hence were offic-| jally “dry” were Alabama,, Arizona, | Arkansas, Colorado, Florida, Geor- gia, Idaho, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Maine, Michigan, Mississippi, Mon- tana, Nebraska, Nevada, New Hampshire, New Mexico, North Carolina, North Dakota, Ohio, Ok- lahoma, Oregon, South Carolina, South Dakota, Tennessee, Texas, Utah, Virginia, Washington, West Virginia, Wyoming. Since then, Arizona and Colo- rado have repealed dry laws from their state constitutions; Michi- gan repealed the dry law in its constitution, and provided for a commission to control liquor traf- fic after repeal of the ;Eighteenth Amendment; Montana and Wash- ington have repealed dry laws fro mtheir statutes; NevadaZ stat- utory dry law adopted in 1918 was declared uncofisiitutional in 1926; North Dakota has repealed the dry law from its constitution but retains a state enforcement act; Oregon has repealed its state en- forcement act but retains a dry law in its constitution. Delaware’s constitution provides for local .op- tion and under this law all of the state but Wilmington was dry when national prohibition was adopted. Later Wilmington also went dry. A state enforcement act was adopt- ed and later repealed. History of the prohibition situa-i tion by states since adoption of national prohibition follows: | ALABAMA: Has retained statutory dry law. ARIZONA: Constitutional dry provision repealed by referendum November 8, 1932, ' T its under U. S, laws. COLORADO: Constitutional dry law repealed by referendum, No- vember 8, 1932. CONNECTICUT: Wet rohibition so far as state laws were concerned. Now has state rohibition enforcement act. Urged repeal in referendum Nov. 8, 1932 DELAWARE: Has repealed state prohibition enforcement act, though state went entirely dry under lo- cal option after 1919. FLORIDA: Has retained its con- stitutional dry law. GEORGIA: Has retained constitutional dry law. IDAHO: Has retained its con- stitutional dry law. ILLINOIS: Wet so far as state laws were concerned hefore na- tional prohibition. Has state en- forcement act. INDIANA: Bill pending for re- peal of state dry law. IOWA: Has retained its statu- tory dry law. KENTUCKY: Wet before pro- hibition, but adopted a constitu- tional dry law later. Bill pending for repeal. LOUISIANA: Wet before pro- hibition as far as state laws were concerned. Voters approved repeal of state dry law Nov. 8, 1932, but result carried to courts. MAINE: Has retained consti- tutional dry law. MARYLAND: Wet before pro- hibition under state laws. Never adopted state enforcement act. MASSACHUSETTS: - Wet before prohibition under state laws. State enforcement act adopted in 1923, repealed by referendum in 1930. MICHIGAN: Dry law in its con- stitution before prohibition. Last November provided for a liquor control traffic after repeal of na- its !tional prohibition, should this oc- cur. MINNESOTA: Wet before pro- hibition but since has adopted a statutory dry law. Bill for repeal pending. MISSISSIPPI: Has retained its statutory dry law. MISSOUI: Wet before prohibi- tion under state law but adopted a dry law in 1920. Bill pending for repeal. MONTANA: Repealed its statu- tory dry law by referendum 1926, urged repeal of Eighteenth Amend- ment Nov. 8, 1932. NEBRASKA: Has retained its constitutional dry law. NEVADA: Statutory dry law adopted in 1918 but declared un- constitutional after prohibition, before | OHIO: Bill pending for repeal of constitutional dry law. OKLAHOMA: Has retained its| constitutional dry law. dated the 3d day of March A. D, OREGON: Has retained con-|1933, issued out of the District stitutional dry law but repealed!Court of the United States for the state enforcement act. Territory of Alaska on a judgment | PENNSYLVANIA: Wet before rendered in said Court on the 10th| {pronibition. Has retained second day of January A. D. 1933, in favor| of iwo state enforcement acts pass- of George M. Bidwell, plaintiff, and | |ed since prohibition. against E. E. Harvey, defendant, gHODE ISLAND: Wet before and certain property hereinafter| pronibition. Has no state epforce- ' described; which said Execution| ment act. ‘lprovides that the property ))revious-i SOUTH CAROLINA: Has retain- ly attached in this cause, which ed statutory dry law. ! property is described as follows, to—l SOUTH DAKOTA: Has refain- | wit: the amount due the defendant| ed constitutional dry law. |E. E. Harvey from Leo Haider and | TENNESSEE: Has retained stat- Tony Steele upon a contract, bond| utory law. |or option under which the said Leo| TEXAS: Has retained constitu- Haider and Tony Steele contracted | tional dry law. : ito purchase and obtained an option | UTAH: Has retained constitu-|on, those certain lode mining claims| tional dry law. situate on Woedesky Island, Peters-| ~ VERMONT: Wet before prohi-|purg Recording District, Alaska, to-| bition. Adopted statutory dry law | wit: Maid of Mexico, Maid of Mex- 1921. , |1co Soutn Ex:ension, Maid of Mex-| VIRGINIA: Has retained stat-|jco, North Extension No. 1, Maid utory dry law. |of Mexico North Extension No. 2! WASHNGTON: Statutory dry!Maid of Texas, Maid of Texas Ex-| of Alaska, ss. Public notice vember 8, 1932, ; ~|said mining claims have been duly y WESTIVIRA}XNIA: Bill pending and regularly recorded with the or repeal of state prohibition 1aw.| Recorder for Petersburg ~Precinct, 5 ‘WISCONSIN: Wet before pm-\where the said notices are now of ibition. Enforcement act passed | record, to which notices reference in 1921 repealed in 1929 by re!er-;ls hereby made for more particular endum. [ . | description; which sald agreement WYOMIB?GA Dry amendment to' ¢, purchase was made and entered state constitution repealed on eve into by and hetween E. E. Harvey 9f Congress action, and state con- ynq 1da J. McGinnis, partics of the ention called to act on submis-! ¢ 4 sion of repeal of national prohibi [Girsl e T e au| Hon. L " | Tony Steele, parties of the second| part, and was duly and regularly| irecorded in the -office of the MIRE MOYEE | corder. for Petersburg Precinct, on 1page 400 of Miscellaneous Records; SUFFERS together with the interest of the k BROKEN ! defendant E. E. Harvey, to-wil 'a two-thirds (2/3) interest, in RI.B; sms ON lCE above referred to six (6) mining jclaims: be sold; and I will accord- _Ray G. Day, of The Empire’s ingly offer said personal proj mechanical force, is confined to and real estate for sale ‘at publi his home suffering with a broken venue to the highest and best bid- | rib sustained this morning when der, for cash, on the 10th day of} he fell on the icy street at Secopd April A. D. 1933, at 11 o'clock A. M { and Main. Mr. Day is under the of said day at the front entrance | care of a physician but expects to - the Federal and Territorial to be back on the job within.a Building in Juneau, Alaska. | few days. & Dated this 4th day of March A |D. 1933. | JUNEAU SAMPLE || Joed siates Mamnal tor rc| ] SHOP t The Little Store with the . BIG VALUES Depuly | 1933 | Ppublication, March .27, 1933. | First publication, March 6, ] i | ,'lmt is hereby given,| that by virtue of an Execution| law repealed by referendum, NO-“tensionA The notices of location of |~ LUNCH Open for Business Tuesday Morning Under the Old Management TOM and MARIE STURGE Consider unknouwn inferior makes When you can buy a NATIONALLY KNOWN Voss Washing Machile at such a low price $60.00 = Terms if desired Free trial in your home with no obligation From the wringer right down to the casters, —the VOSS is the best washer for the money Tested and Approved by the Good Housekeeping Institute Alaska Electric Light & Power Co. Juneau—Phone 6 Douglas—Phone 18 Home Owned and Operated Gomfartably Heated SERVICE—Our Motto Rangeg Cireulating Heaters Heating Stoves Small Heating Plants See ‘one of these $25.00 burners under actual working conditions at ALSTROM’S NEWS STAND Rice & Ahlers Co. “We teH you in advance what job -will cost” Anti-Freeze For Your Car NOW JUNEAU MOTORS INSURANCE Allen Shattuck, Inec. Eztablithd 1898 For Exi»ert Rk B Phone 485