The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, April 12, 1933, Page 4

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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, WEDNESDAY, APRIL 12, 1933. Daily Alaska Empire JOHN W. TROY - - ROBERT W. BENDER PRESIDENT AND EDITOR Published every evening except Sunday by the 'MPIRE_PRINTING COMPANY at Second and Main Streets, Juneau, Alaska. Entered in the Post Office in Juneau as Second Class matter e R, O S S — SUBSCRIPTION RATES. Detivered by carrier In Juneau and Douglas for $1.25 per_month, By 1mall, 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 ootify the Business Office of any failure or irregularity in the delivery of their papers. Telephone for Editorial and Business Offices, 374. MEMBER OF ASSOCIATED PRESS. The Associated Press is 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 published herein. ALASKA CIRCULATION GUARANTEED TO BE LARGER THAN THAT OF ANY OTHER PUBLICATION GENERAL MANAGER ¢ hemoglobin of the blood. This hemoglobin cannot then pick up the oxygen and transfer it to the tissue through the body. Methylene blue is an indicator of oxygen reduc- n. As such it has the ability to take up or give oxygen readily. It is able to take the place of hemoglobin theoretically. Experiments on animals have demonstrated that it could perform this func- tion if injected into the blood stream. Only re- cently a serious case of carbon monoxide poisoning occurred in San Francisco. Injection.of 50 cubic centimeters of one per cent methylene blue in aqueous solution saved the patient. The dye car- ried the oxygen throughout the body for a suffi- cient length of time to allow the hemoglobin-carbon monoxide molecule to be broken up. The secret of the treatment is said to lie in prompt administra- tion of the antidote and a liberal supply of oxygen for the victim, The Communist Internationale has called on German communists to rise in arms and overthrow SYNOPSIS: Margaret Malig- ni, distrustful of Jules, her hus- band, and frightened by the advances of Raisul, son of the Kaid cof Mekazzen, receives an offcr of help from Schlacht. Ostensibly Schlacht represents Germany in an intrigue with the Kaid against France. Jules and his father are the Kaid’s agents, but they secretly plot with Schlacht against him. Tha ancient Moorish citadel is a welter of intrigue, and Mar- garet is English, and lonely in this barbarous land. VALIANT DU by Percival Christopher Wren ‘ntlw GESTE® » You hoped and knew I should te drugged?” you were insensible, apparently dead drunk, I hope: you had been drugged. I knew you had been drugged. I was cer- you had not merely made a f yourself.” nk you,” interupted Jules ni with a hint of shrcasm. “Very kind of you.” k1 Well, kindness is a virtue,” he continued, as Margaret, white-faced and big-eyed, watched him with in- t anxiety, “and virtue is its own ard. You have it—for I .exer- speech- tain bea T \ 1 didn't say that. On hearing; i Bride’s bunch of ball players. May- : From The Empire ! 4 1 20 YEARS AGO b | | APRIL 12, 1913 Everyone who was able to stop a ball without the aid of a gill net 4/Was admonished to turn out for baseball by those who attended the big baseball meeting in the O. K. Barber Shop. There was a lot of enthusiasm in town about the ap- proaching baseball season, and such well-known players and mag- nates as Walter E. Bathe, Walter K. Zott, Herbert Conway, E. G. Hrantow, Thomas Radonich and Len Hurlbutt were present. New uhiforms were ready for J. C. Mc- PROFESSIONAL ! Helene W. L. Albrecht PHYSIOTHERAPY Massage, Electricity, Infra Red Ray, Medical Gymnastics. 307 Goldstein Building Phone Office, 216 H DRS. KASER & FREEBURGER DENTISTS Blomgren Building | PHONE 56 Hours 9 am. to 9 p.m. ,. Dr. Charles P. Jenne Fraternal Societies | — OF Gastineau Channel ) v 2 - KNIGHTS OF COLUMBUS Seghers Council No. 1760. Meetings second and last Monday at 7:30 p. m. Transient brothers urg- ed to attend. Couneil B. P. 0. ELKS meets every Wednesday at 8pm Visiting brothers welcome. Geo. Messerschmidt, Exalted Ruler. M. H. Sides, Secretary. JOHN F. MULLEN, G. K. H. J. TURNER, Secretary N — I Chambers, Fifth Street, Chapter 28 4 the 'same virtue of ‘kindness o C: W. Carter, the moving spirit DENTIST L = Dictator Hitler. And that is what can be termed JULES RETURNS Both of us kind, and ' this aggregation proudly dis- R<OHms 8 and 9 Valentine m——fi_.. a “man’s sized job.” Frightened, unhappy and puz-|! s rewirded.” \played its new maroon uniforms Building | time. A "‘"u m‘:l Ol};\ zled as Margaret was when shel was going to say you show 2nd at the same time toreatened Telephone 176 to get the scalps of the Alaska Gastineau outfit. { ir kindness in a curious man- Jules, in leaving me alone reached her room, her mental con- |y dition did not improve as she sat burner trouble. Now that the country has sampled and voiced its PHONE 149, NIGHT 148 and a tank for crude o) nve1 Yet it would take a.sizeable volume to carry all of unqualified approval of 3.2 beer, the House has decided the restaurant in the House Office Building on Capitol Hill can serve bottled beer. Maybe this will cut down Congressional visitations to the House cloakrooms. his plan provides a means by which “through exist- and waited for her what it would be best to tell him. about her meeting with the Ger- man officer? husband and |1 tried to come to a decision as to And should she say anything at all |eg > all night, but of course it wasn't your fault. It was my mis- {fortune. But it mustn’t happen Jules. You mustn't leave me in, while we're here. And tn't be here a day longer Mr. and Mrs. William Lass of Treadwell planned to entertain the bridal party, M. V. Christman, Miss Ella Grundler, H. Roscovich and Miss Lily Liljestrand. ! Dr. J. W. Bayne DENTIST Rooms 5-6 Triangle Bldg. Office hours, 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Evenings by appointment Gastineau Building, PLone 481 CALL14 | | | B Perhaps it would be as well to n is absolutely mecessary for| b i Phone 321 v Mortgage Relief. make no reference to him, inas-|making preparations for the jour-| The Ppublic of ’Doug]as’ WHE g e ] f ¢ much as she had tacitly agreed to|ney B jvited to give a hearty welcome to PR RERNS. T R S e O RO al Blue e R s g (New York World-Telegram.) regard what he had said as confi-| “Why this sudden fear of being thé Rev. Owen Umstead, who Dr. A. W. Stewart B e i The Rooscvelt Administration has gone to theldential. It would be rather foolish |alone, and this—unrest?” (OAIG LISEAE il Cires pernc e, i MAY ESTABLISH UNIQUE RECORD. |root of the farm problem in recommending debt i g I ctey the Congregational Church the fol- DENTIST and pointless to say to Jules. I should be afraid to be left ¢ Honrs Diam. .66 6 pn aons iy {relief for distressed, farmers overburdened with high- | I met Herr Schlacht and had @ |alone again as T was last night— 1OWIng day. B el Sl The Eleventh Alaska Legislature seems well oninterest mortgages on land bearing inflated valuss.|chat with him, but cannot repeat|because of Raisul” [ 3 (-)-EX:RDMO; s ING ! 25 the way to es h a unique record and enduring; The new bill might well be added as an amend-iour conversation to you.” | observed Jules non-com- | Word had been received from +hones 276 ! Cc fame for itself by repealing more old laws than it/ Ment to the farm price relief measure and luo!.hi Bosldes. Mo whole. Ineldent Goe y. the Silver Creek strike saying that | | i g B enacts new ones. That is an end greatly to be Pssed together. And then when Mr. Roosevell, utterly insignificant in comparison| ‘Look here, Jules, you know L"A?I;rulr h“:, blmm‘m:-mg}',:}:f — S Anywhere in Cit desired, one often "discusséd by laymen as well as|°° e has promised, acts to help the small home|wyth the other matter of which shé R proposed to me at Oxford Tesult of a dog onhishend lep . ———m) Yool S o atarar et 0 : hing |OWner of the city, and asks Congress to permit nego- imust speak. after he first met me.” | awmakers, and, almost, equally as often 15 NOWNNE 4,110n of reciprocal tarlff agreements to Improve| at the end of one of the longest | | Fifty passengers on the Princess| | T). Richard Willi — o done about it é ‘ of one of the longest i i r. nuchart 1l1ams — R e * world trade, the nation will be on a firmer and unhappiest days of her life,| “And you know that he then pro- SoPhia, passing through Juneau, A o As law-making bodies go, none of the Territorial |pasis, Margaret's husband knocked at the |fessed o be desparately and madly Were enroute to the Teslin goid DENTIST i Legislatures have been prolific in enacting laws.| Generally, as Mr. Roosevelt said in his message, \ojted door, of Margaret’s room,|in love with me” strike, OFFICE AND RESIDENCE JUNEAU TRANSFER I i and, protesting surprise at finding| “Yes.” | & 3 f them under a single cover. Every biennium the'ing agencies of the Government the farm owners ¢ Stampeders to Silver Creek had| | COMPANY Legislature meets and under influence of current|of the nation will be enabled to refinance them- taken all of the dogs of Skagway [&- * conditions enacts statutes that soon become obso- [S€lves on reasonable terms, lighten their harassing along with them and drafted them | M. oting and lete. Yet they remain on ths books until something Purdens and give them a fair opportunity to return into an industrial army, leaving Robert Simpson occurs to remind us they may not only be cumber- to sound conditions.” Iaiietiugs. O AR« dthe s C l A%y 2 23 % y y The bill proposes, at the outset, the issuance bereft of dogs that were in the Opt. D. Stora e i some but are actually detrimental. Then someone| . g5 000000000 in four per cent bonds, the interest habit of monopolizing the streets| | Graduate Los. Angeles Col- g | {guaranteed by the Government. These bonds may to the detriment of traffic. The! | lege of Optometry and i Legislature, taking advantage of the phe yused to purchase outstanding mortgages or to gossiping street corner dog had Opthalmology | Moves, Packs and Stores compilation and codification of the laws now inimake new loans. bowed his head to the collar and| | Glasses Fitted, Lenses Ground Freight and Baggage progress, is following a different system. It pro- The distressed farmer will be assured of an im—‘ was losing two pounds of flesh for | &% et Prompt Deliver: f “ poses to get rid of a great mass of laws which are mediate decrease in interest payments to four and | every pound of weight he took over |7~ V.9 either obsolete or have been supplanted by lntor‘? half per Cem{ he may {lr;nmzre amortizatizn ;;f :;sl 2]12 lt{mfl, according to the Skagway | T DR, R. E. SOUTHWELL FUEL OIL enactments. The Senate Judiciary Committee has|loan over a longer period of years, an B sz Optometrist—Optician 1 fostered this work. Tt is the natural source of the id‘s"‘?“ is extremely acute he may secure a reason- B <0 S T Eyes E?xamined—clsases Fitted f ALL KINDS OF COAL i repealers because it is collaborating with Mr. Rod-m‘“b“:”’l'f"“‘o‘:?““’:'ly RO Gl o PR b T R Room 7, Valentine Bldg. in the compilation and codification. It is receiving| . tH 0‘; e ol E oy K o NORTHWEST NEWS BRIEFS o gr“f“ 21;:“&"‘“?“ Mfd‘;“s’g PHONE 48 the heartest kind of support from all members of |\ " 1o values were unduly ‘inflated; but it is . OF 25 YEARS AGO . .,nem Y 1-o§em ;‘g; g both branches, and all of them deserve the thanks|,,¢ likely that this scaling down will apply to ®eevecvecec el HS H H | ) of the Territory for the whole-hearted spirit they |mortgages made in very recent years, for during — Sl " are exhibiting in this festival of law repeal. that period land values had already been reduced. TACOMA.—Attractea by a clos-|Rose A. Andrews—Graduate Nurse 2 i - P L SRR | _other provisions of the bill will permit the Gov- ing out sale, 1,000 men rioted at ELECTRO THERAPY MAY HAYES i i POUEST N N n} ernment a through the land banks to purchase a clothing store on Pacific Ave-| Cabinet Baths—Massage—Colonic . it REQUEST NOT UNJUSTIFIED. mortgages from private holders, preference being | nue. Several shoved through win- Lrrigations B“M‘)dl“e The suggestion of the Territorial Senate, which has |EIVED to individuals, and while these theoretically ~dows sufefred cuts and bruises. | Office hours, 11 am. to 5 pm. st ;‘0‘;“' ] e ) R ® |would lose the difference between their present high [ Evenings by Appointment > ' | been exchanging telegrams with President Frefle 0f the [j,,terest rate and the four per cent paid on the | SEATTLE.—Four youths were ar- |Second and Main. Phone 259-1 ring 2 | Association of Pacific Fisheries, that the salmon|new bonds, they would in fact benefit because the 7 |rested for teasing a cageful of coy- P ' s, packers take some definite step toward putting into |obligation they would hold would be guaranteed |otes at Woodland Park by whistl- | THE JunEAu LAUNDRY | effect their expressed desire to co-operate with the [by their Government. ing the “Merry Widow Waltz,” H 1 J F Franklin Street between Territory in solving its unemployment problem by This, apparently, is no charity bill intended to = causing the coyotes to howl and aze ames F gfl;‘m Front and Second Streets giving prefersnce to Alaskans in packing plants is|transfer to the Government the whole mortgage “i'm terribly sorry,” Jules began. throw themselves against the bars. J TEACHER O , timely. Concrete action is th burden. It could hardly be, since it involves the 8 o i A DUNNING SYSTEM PHONE 359 i y e only thing that|>™ 900,000,000 I Bond! v the door bolted and barred against ~“He hasn’t got over it; or he coL i 430 Goldstein Building ile 1 will meet the need of the timies. lssuance of only $2,000,000,000 in bonds, &s compared |y, "o, samitteq after satisfying [thirks he hasn't.” Tl Raman, W Telephone 196 | —8 At & recent hearing of the Sehate Fisheries Com-| VoD & total farm mortgage debt of almost $9.000- (0 "¢ o nis jdentity. 9% Elret Hlo B, iy deas | oorane deckied imsanstiutionad [ mittee, discussing a license tax measure affecting|yrmers and promises thus to stabilize the whole ‘(Yio:u}at, lf’acotiogj;afln:r)\(boyant Yoo morxld? :\nd o S are”not. ation certain securities and evi- LOOK YOUR BEST ! non-resident fishermen, Senator Bragaw, Chairman|mortgage market. soivewering . o Qide lack: of eass (WS MY Gfes, b, ate 'wet dences of indebtedness. . . Personal Service Beauty | of the Finance Committee, tersely stated the view- It is true that the Government, simultaneously, by false and poisy _easmess. and to| “Then since he hasn't, Jules— R e e ol Treatments point of most if not all of the members of the|will be endeavoring to raise farm prices to pre- fg;mfg} ::::i:::z’; d"s d:xrn ;:]':Z:‘;":?: ::‘uity‘:“ur‘;?mtngmchedmsn‘tjyou Advertisements are your pocket-|| Licensed Chiropractor and Donaldine Beaut ' Legislature. In effect he said: war levels through the farm relief bill. But this is| B B% ‘2480 x‘lgm e o “Unéers:;fn > W"f;{? ARk book editorials. They interpret the| | Sanipractic Physician e | The burden of unemployment, pressing definitely an experiment, and so described by Presi- o =1 00 2T T PEE EE W pd merchandise news. | State of Washington Parlors heavily on the Territory and its municipali- dent Roosevelt. He doesn't know that it will work,| - o W O LI a“;}:mn Understand why [ won't be left j — - | Phone 472 JUNEAU ROOMS | | | Phone 49 RUTH HAYES ties for the past two years, will entail ex- or actually raise farm prices; he hopes it will. We Al 1o livasiosd o6t i]is 'v.-m; alone again, and Why‘ I want to|E&* el | Over Piggly Wiggly Store || o] | enditures next Winter which itorial do, too. « b f ATS leave here at the earliest possible ) 0} . ' P the. Terr . |about her, he found himself coolly, SABIN 4 treasury cannot meet on the face of indi- Congress could do no better thing, we think, moment. Understand why T hoped R cated returns. Unless jobs can be found for a large number of those now idle, we will have to raise more money to care for them. We can only increase revenues by raising taxes. We don't want to do that. The one big source of employment during the next few months is the salmon fish- ing and packing industry. It can absorb a large proportion of the Territory’s un- employed. If it does, it probably won't be 000,000. But it offers definite help to distressed than to pass the debt relief bill along with the farm price relief bill. And do it quickly. Beer Racketeers. (New York World-Telegram.) Mr. Thomas F. (Humpiy) Jackson, reformed burglar of the old Bowery days and now an up- standing, respectable keeper of a bird and pet shop, firmly, and very definitely, checked and repulsed. Expecting fierce an- ger, accusation, and a torrent of reproach, he found an attitude of mination, that was more disturbing. Rightly or wrong, he firmly be- lieved, in the light of a not exigu- ous experience, that the best way to argue with an angry woman was with a closed mouth—pressed firm- calm, cool seriousness and deter-" you were drugged, and not drunk, last night.” *Oh, come, you exaggerate, my dear. Young Raisul's calf love . . .” " “Can be a great nuisance,” in- Itermpced Margaret. “Life is full of nuisances,” shrug- ged Jules Maligni. “Well, my life was rather over- full of this particular nuisance last the 1907 act exempting from tax- Everything in Furnishings for Men |i JUNEAU FROCK SHOPPE “Exclusive but not Expensive” & | | | DR. E. MALIN Harry Race DRUGGIST “THE SQUIBB STORE” (R T 3L T YELLOVW and SR l BERGMANN DINING ROOM ; Meals for Transients Cut Rates Chicken dinner Sunday, 60c MRS. J. GRUNNING Board by Week or Month | HOTEL ZYNDA necessary to increase taxation. If it doesn’t, poses an important question, or makes an important|ly against hers; and that any of- |“E0%" Coats, Dresses, Lingerio that industry very likely will have to Pay [statement, on the eve of the return of beer. He|fended girl can be quickly imscdl SRR do you meani Hoslery and Hate TRIANGLE Large Sample Eopens more taxes. said in an interview in the Herald Tribune: from bad temper into good tem- |, el camo. Ul here. mnd ippes [ . Ly ELEVATOR SERVICE Another way in which the packers can help The mug has got to have a racket. He per. :‘eff’d me;" - o CABS 8. ZYNDA, Prop. reduce unemployment is illustrated by a news item employs maybe a hundred guys, and he's got But this was not an angry and “wn“m‘ 4 9 recently appearing in the Anchorage Times. It| maybe a hundred enemies. If he quits he |bad-tempered woman. N dre" y‘;“ Were .. . When e EXPERT { 25c . announced that Libby, McNeill & Libby had placed| ®ets knocked off. So, beer or no beer, It was a woman cruelly hurt, bad- fge CERRES SN | GARBAGE HAULED % i liquor or no liquor, the mug is going to keep |y frightened, and quite determineq |(COPY/I8RY 1932, F. A. Stokes Co) | | BT OOR SERVICE | o o Reasonable Monthly Rates ' an order with a Matanuska coal mining company for 2,000 tons of coal to be delivered to one of its| ~ YiSht on with his business. He will turn to upon her line of conduct. Any Place jn City I . ! ®| the policy racket, the insurance racket and “I say, T'm terribly sorry about| - MW terror comes into Mar- New Floors—Borders PHONES E. 0. DAVIS ships at Seward about May 1. As a Tesult of that B tisty et Fackatarh s : garet’s life, tomorrow. ELEP: 2 Sieym el T s o e a great many other rackets. _ |last night,” he began, as Margaret’s Y leaning TELEPHONE 584 order, eight a ners were There has not beén much speculation along this|extended hand repulsed his em- | Sanding—Waxing 22 and 42 . age and put to work at once. If other companies|iine by social thinkers lately. Beer has loomed |brace. “I domt know what tnew T‘-'—‘__’f AT I S M4 operating canneries in Prince Willlam Sound, Cook |big and has monopolized the view. But the problem |gave me, but one minute I was -iie B ESTIMATES FREE i Inlef, on Kodiak Island, the Alaska Peninsula and |has been much discussed in the past. The opinion|ting there chatting with Dad d: ETFY MAC I -—_ GENERAL MOTORS Bristol Bay should make similar purchases from the [always has been that with Prohibition out the beer|the Kaid and old Schlach: andl BEAUTY SHOP ||| GARLAND BOGGAN JUNEAU-YOUNG ot Matanuska mines, many times eight men would get |racketeers would swarm over into other predatory|Raisul—and the next minute T | 103 Assembly Apartments MAYTAG PRODUCTS profitable employment for months. occupations. woke up in Dad's room, hours later, | | PHONE 547 | Ah0ne Jo 0% Cojcuen Al Funeral Parlors In the matter of box shooks there is another| The depression stands against them there, hoW-fand absolutely blotto.” o . Licensed Fumaral Directers . | W. P. JOHNSON ohance. of putting Alaskans to work, :3f.all of ‘the|CVo:, +Xhe other rackets now are crowded. Mer-| “Tell me, Jules. Did you get] - = ¥ ulmmm ! ) By Siitin Lasd : chants are poor. And it is harder to find a market|arunk? Just be serious and tell me | Night Phone Day B L ——_ | wooden boxes used by the packers for containers s vajyable articles stolen. This condition already|the truth, because it's mos: &t .. L of salmon‘ caught and processed in the Territory, [nag expressed itself in reduced crime. 5 ribly important. T won't say a word °. PR Sy CARL JACOBSON the sawmills could operate to capacity for most However, the fact remains that thousands of|of reproach.” % | JEWELER of the year, employing several hundred men in their [the underworld and more respectable employees of| “Drunk, my dear, on a gla : Th B M B h d B k UDWIG NE REPAIRIN y , my , on a glass or) manufacturies and an equally large number in the |the beer racket will be out in the cold. This may|two of claret? You don't think my |} e ® & e ren s an I L JIEIIRBISON [r wsmm mfl woods getting out lumber. turn into a major police problem. head’s as weak as all that, do Watch Regalring Opposite Goldstein Building } The Senate has offered to co-operate with the 4 o you? Have you seen me drunk, or Brunswick Ageney ( packers by furnishing them with a list of unem-| Gosh! We're getting so we even hate to g0 tolin the &lightest degree the worse Juneau, Alaska | FRONT STREGT = sleep while F. D. is in the White House. We don’t{for drinks in all the years S, ployed persons available for work in the canneries. It has suggested that the industry place a. few employment agencies in coastal sections to select from this list capable workmen. This does not appear to be a visionary scheme, nor to be im- practicable. Certainly it is not unreasonable to ask, nor to hope that the suggestion will be adopted by the packers. DYE USED AS AN ANTIDOTE. _ A common dye, methylene blue, is coming into want to miss anything.—(Chicago Tribune.) Trouble is brewing in Europe, according to the headlines. Something else is brewing on this side of the Atlantic—(Louisville Courier-Journal.) This double-quick pace the Chief Executive has set for Congress has the added advantage of ren- dering it short-winded.—(Washington Post.) It may be the brewers’ purpose to get the boys out of the speakeasies by Easter.—(Buffalo Courier- use as an antidote for carbon monoxide poisoning. The American Chemical Society recently made that fact known. This poisoning, it will be recalled, is really a form of asphyxiation because the carbon monoxide forms a very stable compound with the Express.) Japan's Irritating habit of talking pacific inten- tions with her mouth full of Manchuria may have to be brought before .the .League’s.subcommittee on table manners. troit News,) that; you've known me?” ¥ “No, T haven't, Jules, unti came to Morocco. You've drinking far more than is for you, for the last six months—it seems like six years. But I have not seen you drunk.” Gently shaking his head, Jules smiled reproachfully. 2 “And you really did not get drunk last night, Jules?” Jules again smiled reproachfully, and ftreated the question as un- worthy of further answer. “Very well then,” continued Mar- garet. “You must have been drug- ged deliberately—as T hoped* a; o Al ¥ BANKERS SINCE 1891 Commercial and Savings Resources Over $2,250,000.00 e The advertisements are your gulde to efficient spending. PEERLESS BREAD Always Good— Always Fresh “Ask Your Grocer” T N ST PlG’.;I-Y HAAS ‘ Famous Candies The Cash Bazaar l Open Evenings

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