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< 4 THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, SATURDAY, JULY 1, 1933. ™ against it. In three months after the opportunity D ’l Al ska Em L@ | ¥ Presented one-third of the 48 States have turned atl y a p |thumbs down. Only 20 more are needed to effect = /the change. GENERAL MANAGER!| For 20 years prior to last Tuesday on every vote, West Virginia had steadfastly clung to the Dry side of the argument. It ratified the repeal ! resolution by a decisive majority. This clearly indi- |cates the trend of sentiment in the south. It doesn’t differ from the trend in other sections of the country. Indiana first showed how the Mid- west regarded ional Prohibition repeal. Iowa jconfirmed it. other Southern States vote this Summer, there no doubt that West Virginia's 'accuracy as a barometer will be equally well estab- lished. Repeal is a foregone conclusion. More than that, it is not one of the indefinite eventualities. It will be effective just as soon as the necessary number of States have voted on the proposition. And that will be before March 15 of next year. The Drys will do well if they abandon the fight against delay, cease their efforts to stem the Iirresistible tide, and join the real friends of temperance in working out some system of control of the liquor traffic that will effectually bar the old evils of the saloon system. ROBERT W. BENDER Published every evening except Sunday by the EMPIRE_PRINTING COMPANY at Second and Main Streets, Juneau, Alaska. Entered in the Post Office in Juneau as Second Class SUBSCRIPTION RATES. Dellvered by carrier In Juneau and Douglas for $1.25 per month, By mall, postage paid, at the following ratel - 12.00; six months, in advance, $6.00; one month, in advance, $1.26 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 Editorial and Business Offices, 374. MEMBER OF ASSOCIATED PRESS, The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for repu ion of all news dispatches credited to it or not ot se_credited in this paper and also the local news published herein. ALASKA CIRCULATIOM GUARANTEED TO BE LARGER THAN THAT OF ANY OTHER PUBLICATION LARGE DEMAND FOR TB TESTI The demand for the tuberculin test by owners of cattle herds in 23 States is greater than the veterinarians, employed by the State and Federal Governments, have been able to meet. During April 1933, there were nearly 2,000,000 cattle on the wait- ing list in those States, according to records of the United States Department of Agriculture. Five States—Iowa, Minnesota, Missouri, New York, and Vermont—each had more than 100,000 cattle on their waiting lists. The other 18 States had substantial though smaller numbers of cattle await- ing official tuberculin tests. These waiting lists continue to exist notwith- standing the large volume of testing conducted. In April the total number of cattle tested in all States exceeded a million, with five States each testing more than 50,000 and two of them exceeding the 100,000 mark. This work is being conducted cooperatively in the 48 States and in Hawaii and Alaska. Nine entire States have practically eradicated bovine tuberculosis from their borders and others are expected ao make similar showings before the end of the year. o CONSPIRIN(; AGAINST NATIONAL WELFARE. If there is a plot afoot to defeat the Roosevelt Administration’s program for national economic re- covery, as Senator Capper, Republican, of Kansas, charged in an address at Grand Rapids recently, it ought to be exposed in the fullest details with as little delay as possible. Such a plot, ,coming as it does in these times of dire distress, would be nothing less than a conspiracy against national welfare and almost treasonable. This is not the first inkling that some interests are seeking to take selfish advantage of the Administration’s pro- gram. Senator King, Utah Democrat, had some- thing to say about “price hiking,” and Gen. Hugh S. Johnson, Administrator of the National Recovery Act, warned publicly that unreasonable advances of prices would not be tolerated. Neither he nor Senator King intimated this might be part of a deliberate plot to defeat the program, but it is not impossible that such was the case. Only very foolish or very foolhardy will undertake such a scheme. Every sane, well- balanced trade association, or its leaders, ‘must recognize that such a plot will inevitably be dis-. covered, or that, even though there is no deliberate plot to defeat the Administration's plan, any organ- | ized effort by any individual, corporation or trade association to make quick prolits by unjustified price boosting, cannot succeed except for a brief time. The facts cannot be concealed from the Administrator and his power to punish is as great as his power to assist. As Walter Lippmann pointed | out in his article in Thursday’s Empire: | If the men who organize the co-opera- ; The disappearance of certain sunspots is said to have something to do with the admitted be- ginning of the return of prosperity. Our own notion is that it is the return of more ten-spots that is doing the desired job. The finding by a California fisherman of a rattlesnake in the stomach of a black bass he had just caught merely strengthens our conviction that every fisherman ought to be well supplied with some old-fashioned snake bite remedy. interests The Salt of the World. (New York Times.) As President Lowell defined the salt of the world, they are those who do not lose their heads in times of public distress or excitement, who hold on to themselves * * * who keep their calmness and balance of mind, striving to see things in their true proportions, un- disturbed by prepossessions, and on the other hand by fear, by halluncinations or the outcries of the impulsive multitude. lThese words were addressed to his last graduating class at Harvard, but they might be heard to ad- ’vnnmge throughout America and the world at this moment when all the savor of such saltiness is tion these laws permit are foolish, short- sighted, greedy for quick profits and for little advantages they will discredit the whole experiment. Let them not imagine there will be no reaction if they are being allowed. The | reaction will be swift and drastic, and they needed to keep life sound and wholespme. will not like it when it comes. Among the essentials in society is personal char- As he further urged, this is no time for American acter—supporting a standard of conduct beyond mere d 4 ENan CRTtal Xk enforcement of law. The qualities of which it gives Ry, Setioan JpR £ @usrionn cantial (o so8 evidence in man are the enduring things, and to Special advantages for gelllah purposes. All of themio, by viist tun 1n times of crisis, which means are in the same boat. All of them must honestly'tnay they must be there at all times. President and sincerely come in on the “new deal” with clean y,well has been saying this in his own living for hands. More .than that, it is a part of their duty al] these years as man, as teacher, as president. to see that all labor, all industry and all capital! And it is to be hoped that now that he lays aside does the same thing. If they do not, and by so|the routine responsibilities of office, he may have failing aid in wrecking the Administration’s recovery |more freedom to give advice in public affairs. He program, disaster awaits not only them but the|should be especially helpful in enabling others to whole nation. distinguish between the lasting and the temporary in our political, economic and social order, between “the things essential to the framework of every good human society and the expedients useful for the moment, not letting these impair the permanent structure.” The world needs the salt of such wisdom. The sum of Dr. Lowell's advice is to “hold fast to yourselves.” In one of the Gospels it is written: “Have salt in yourselves and be at peace one with e GASTE SYSTEM BEING CREATED BY CAPITALITS Charges Are Made Regard- ing Educational Facil- ities in U. S. CHICAGO, Tll. July 1.—Charges that capitalists sought to destroy the educational facilities of the | masses and create a caste system of peasants were made last night as the vanguard of the 8,000 school teachers gathered for the National Educational Association's annual convention. The charges were made by Joy E Morgan, of 'Washington, D. C., Director of the Publication's As- sociation at the meeting of the National Council of Education. Morgan said: “America is in the midst of a struggle between dem- ocracy and a caste system fostered by the great financial czars, gigan- tic mechanized industries and pri- vately owned utilities.” Morgan further said the educat- RATIFICATION PROCEEDS. Without regard for precedent, ratification of repeal of the Eighteenth Amendment proceeds. West Virginia and California, latest States in which votes have been taken, join the column of States voting solidly for repeal. The count now has reached 16 for wiping out National Prohibition and none NEW PARTY IS URGED BY MRS. ELLA A, BOOLE National President of W. C. T. U. Attacks Both Old Organizations :l’rohibition Unit In Alaska Out; Marshals Take Over The Federal Pronibition Unit in Alaska yesterday ended its career. Its duties were today transferred to the United States Marshals of the four Judicial Divisions and its agents, four in num- ber, and one clerk, were fur- loughed. The property and records of the unit were also trans- ferred to the United States Marshals. This included sev- eral boats and automobiles. The agents furloughed were: Willam R. Vinacke, Agent in Charge with local rs, Joe M. Free- ley, Ketchikan; 8. G. Swain, Fairbanks and L. L. Fill- more, Anchorage. Mfs. J. R. Sharpless was Secretary of the Unit. It is understood that Mr. Vinacke will leave Monday for Seattle. - e E. J. Beck, superintendent of the Nome schools, and Director of the National Educational Society for the Territory, was a Valdez pas- senger on a Northern Air Trans- MILWAUKEE, Wis, July 1— Charging that both the Demo- cratic and Republican parties be- trayed their consituencies, Mrs. Ella A. Boole, of Brooklyn, Na- tional President of the W. C. T. U. opened the Fifty Ninth annual convention with a plea that a mew political party is what ‘‘we meed, a new party with morals and ideals, a party that stands for the policy of Prohibition and its administration and by its friends.” of| e port plane piloted by Frank Pol- lack. Mr. Beck left for Chicago to attend the World's Fair and later will go to Columbia Univers sity where he will resume his post- graduite ‘work, returning to Neme on the September steamer. —_——eee Emplre Want Ads Pay e e ors blamed the big business men for a reduction in school finances. ———,eo—— The Bureau of Standards has found that books in'eoun - ries last longer than those city libraries because of the greater amount of sulphur dioxide in city i 4 B e 2 T S ‘ The last vote taken in the Sen- ate was on the Administration com- promise dealing with the veterans' allowances. This compromise, while it liberalized the payments, main- tained intact the principles of the reform which was instituted in {March. It confines payments to those veterans of the World War whose injuries or illnesses arise from their military services; it strikes from the rolls those whose disabilities have no connection with the war; it provides for a review of those cases where the connec- tion between war service and the disability is not clear. This does not mean that the first rulings of the Administration are now final. They can be revised. They undoubb- edly’ will be revised. They should be revised. My own belief, for example, is that payments to men actually dis- abled in battle, to men suffering from diseases directly arising from the war, and to the widows and orphans of men who died in the service, should be restored to their original amounts. The only justi- fication for reducing these allow- ances in March was that all wages and salaries had to be reduced, that the cost of living had fallen since these allowances were first established, and that a moderate reduction in dollars represénted no real loss of income. Since that time the Administration has, how- ever, embarked on a policy de- signed to raise prices, to raise wages, and to increase the income of farmers. It would be consistent with this policy, and an act of Jjustice, to restore to the genuine- ly disabled and to the dependents of those who died in the war, the allowances which they formerly re- ceived. e s Having done this, the Adminis- tration can with clear conscience and with overwhelming public sup- port resist any further attempts by Congress to put men on the public payroll who have no better claim as against other citizens than that they once wore a uniform. The winter a Congressional election will be in sight, and the pressure on individual representatives will be very great. The test will then come as to whether pensions are to be paid only to those who suffered in the war or in the end to all men who were mobilized. That will be the essential issue. If the de- cision is to confone pensions to the genuinely injured, then the coun- try will have been protected against the creation of a privileged class drawing public money in amounts that will become unbear- attempt will surely be made. Next Today and Tomorrow By WALTER LIPPMANN The Administration and the Veterans The battle which has just been won by the President will have to be fought out again and won at least once more. He should not fail to make his position imptez- nable by doing not' enly justice b the most generous kind of justice to the veterans whaose claims upon the government are indisput- le % .0 The Senate vote indicates that in upholding these principles no reliance can be put upon the Re- publican party. In the Senate, the Republicans were unanimous in wishing to break down the pension reform. For once the two wings of the Republican party found some- thing to agree upon, and the re- ‘form would have been seriously un- lermined but for the fact that out of fifty-eight Democrats (counting pairs) finally voted to uphold it. This action of the .Republicans has been thoroughly denounced by leading Republican newspapers. It is well to ask ourselves why on this issue the alignment in the Senate was almost exactly on party lines. Is it that the Democratic Senators . are individually more public spirited and courageous than the Republicans There is no reason to think they are. What, then, is the probable explanation? It must ve, I should suppose, that the Democrats are bound together by the national program of the Ad- ministration and have staked their .personal fortunes on its success. The Republicans, on the other hand, have no program, nor even a negative program of opposition, and therefore for them it is a case of each man for himself. The Dem- ocrats know that they will be re- jelccttd if the Administration is (generally successful. The Republi- cans have to scrabble around for odds and ends of votes wherever they can find them. Were the po- sitions reversed, it is more than likely that the votes would have been reversed. | R From the point of view of the President, the moral is clear. It is ‘that the only sound policy from now on is to do only those things which will make the program suc- cessful. No concession is worth ‘making which in any respect en- dangers it. No clamor matters. No ‘pressure matters. If the program fails, no concession of principle or of patronage will stop a popular revulsion. If the program suc- ceeds, no pressure of factions, no clamor of minorities, no partisan agitation will make any important difference. Copyright, 1933, New York Tribune Inc. By MRS. ALEXANDER GEORGE SUNDAY BUFFET SUPPER Recipes Serve Eight) The Menu ‘Chicken Mousse Stuffed Olives ‘Tomato Salad Hot Rolls Currant Jelly Pineapple Ice Box Cake Salted Nuts Coffee Chicken Mousse One package lemon-flavored gel- atin mixture. One and one-quarter cups boil- ing chicken stock. Three tablespoons vinegar. Two tablespoons sugar. One teaspoon salt. One and three-quarters cups of diced cooked chicken. Four tablespoons chopped green peppers. Three tablespoons chopped ripe olives. One tablespoon chopped sweet pickles, One-half cup diced celery. Two tablespoons chopped pimien- tos. One third cup salad dressing. One-third cup whipped cream. Pour stock over gelatin mixture, stir until dissolved. Add vinegar, sugar and salt. Cool and allow to thicken a little. Mix dressing and cream. Add, with the rest of the ingredients, to the gelatin mixture. Stir well and pour into glass mold. Chill until stiff. Unmold on bed of ttuce placed on large platter. Sur- round with the stuffed tomato sal- | ad. Pineapple Ice Box Cake Two-thirds cup butter, ‘Two cups confectioner's sugar. Four egg yolks. One teaspoon vanilla. One teaspoon lemon .extract. One-eighth teaspoon salt. One and one-half cups crushed pineapple (canned). Four egg whites, beaten. Sixteen slices angel food cake. Two cups whipped cream. Four tablespoons sugar. One-half .cup red cherries, Cream butter and sugar, Whenl very soft and creamy, add yolks and beat two minutes, Add vanilla, lemon, salt and pineapple. Mix well. ;Add pineapple. Select shallow glass dish and place layer of cake slices |in bottom and on sides. Add half pineapple mixture. Add layer of cake and rest of pineapple. Cover with rest of cake. Chill 24 hours or longer. Unmold carefully, cover with whipped cream mixed with 4 tablespoons of sugar. Sprinkle with cherries, serve at once. The cake 1slices should be two by two inches land one-half inch thick. COAST CLUBS " HITTING LUCK LOS ANGELES, July 1.— The releasing and signing of players has fans of the Los Angeles and Hollywood clubs of the Pacific | Coast league puzzled to say the ledst. Los Angeles released Fred Haney, third baseman, and Ray Jacobs, first baseman, and Hollywood snap- ped them up. The Stars cut Fay Thomas, a speed ball pitcher, loose and Mike Gazella, third baseman. The Angels signed both of them. Haney is leading the league in lm}en bases now, with seventeen. ‘me- is the home run king of the loop with twenty-three circuit clouts. Thomas has proved to be one of Los Angeles’ most reliable pitchers and figures to be even better when night ball gets under way. Gazella, who was added to the roster only recently, is expected to fill the gap at third. —————— 00000 ovo0c0conn ° AT THE HOTELS . RO eacaeeoe t Gastineau F. R. Townsend, Inian Island; A. O. Larson; Robert Lindsay, Ju- neau; J. N. Gilbert, Ketchikan; Edward Benson, Seattle; G. W. Gray, Seattle; A. F. Halloway, Se- attle. Zynda Emma Lambert, Chitina; N. Van Houten, Juneau; D. M. Morrison and wife, Jureau; Inez Hansen, Petersburg; Florence Hansen, Pet- ersburg; J. E. Boyle, Seattle; D. 'T. Fett, Seattle, John H. Dunn, City. UNITED FOOD CO. CASH GROCERS Phone 16 We Deliver 20 YEARS AGO From The Empire e e ettt JULY 1, 1913 Every committee having the Fourth of July entertainment in hand was working conscientiously toward the end of making it a success especially for the children. There was to be no fuss or fire crackers and toy pistols, due to the safe and sane ordinance passed by the council, but there was planned many wholesale sports in the base- ball park with prizes to be com- peted for, and plenty of peanuts, pop corn and sandwiches to be dis- tributed free to all youngsters. 1. M. Jensen, for many years publisher of the Daily Alaskan, at Skagway, but for the last five years president and manager of a big manufacturing printing house in Seattle, arrived on the Princess May. Mr. Jensen is recognized as one of the best printing house managers in Seattle. Work crews under city engineer Blakeslee, had almost completed the excavations for the new school house. The steamer Dolphin struck at 1:25 o'clock in the morning near Alert Bay and suffered slight dam- age. There was no excitement aboard and the passengers were transferred to the Princess May to complete the journey while tne ’ PROFESSIONAL l — ————n Dolphin proceeded to Seattle for repairs. Invitations were sent to Fort Seward at Haines and to Skagway to participate in the Fourth of July celebration in Juneau, by Mayor C. W. Carter. — e ——— HITLER TO JOIN GERMAN GHURCH BERLIN, July 1—The Rev. Lud- wig Mueller today said Chancellor Adolf Hitler will join the new National Evangelical Church of Germany and waive his Catholic faith as soon as Mueller's work of reorganizing the German Protes- tantism is completed. J. B. WARRACK LEAVES TOMORROW FOR FIRST CITY ON BUSINESS TRIP J. B. Warrack, of the Warrack Construction Company, will take passage on the seaplane Chichagof, piloted by R. E .Ellis, for Ketchi- kan on its weekly trip tomorrow and while in Ketchikan will com- plete negotiations for the purchase of the interest of L. S. Ferris in the Ingersoll Hotel in ‘that city. Mr. Warrack is representing J. R. Heckman and C. E. Ingersoll as well as himself in the deal. Mr. Warrack expects the details| of the purchase to be completed soon after his arrival in Ketchikan and will return to Juneau next week on which is now in Seattle. Old papers at The Empire the seaplane Baranof,| ® Helene W. L. Albrecht PHYSIOTHERAPY Massage, Electricity, Infra Red | Ray, Medical Gymnastics, | 307 Goldstein Building | Phone Office, 216 [ | DRS. KASER & FREEBURGER DENTISTS Blomgren Building PHONE 56 Hours 9 am. to 9 p.m. Dr. Charles P. Jenne DENTIST Rcims 8 and 9 Valentine Building ‘Telephone 176 B Il Dr. JéE;';_isanne | | | Rooms 5-6 Triangle Bldg. Office hours, § am. to § p.m. Evenings hv appointment | Phone 3l —~—y Dr. A. W. Stewart ‘ i DENTIST | Hours 9 am. to § pm. | SIWARD BUILDING Office Phone 469, Res. rhone 276 Dr. Richard Williams | DENTIST OFFICE AND RESIDENCE Gastineau Building, Plone 481 | ! Robert Simpson Opt. D. | Qraduate Angeles Col- Glasses Witted, Lenses Ground | DR. R. E. SOUTHWELL Optometrist—Optician | Eyes Examined—Glasses Pitted | Room 7. Valentine Bldg. | | Office Pmone 484; Residence | | | | Phone 238. Office Hours: 9:30 | to 12; 1:00 to 5:30 [ ———————, | . 3 . Rose A. Andrews | Graduate Nurse | { Electric Cabinet Baths—Mas- sage, Colonic Irrigations Office hours 11 am. to 5 pm., Evenings by Appointment | Second and Main Phone 250 | (e ————————— = 0 ALLAMAE SCOTT Expert Beauty Specialist PERMANENT WAVING Phone 218 for Appointment | Entrance Pioneer Barber Shop CHIROPRACTIC “Health from Within” * Solarium Baths * —Authentic— JUNEAU SAMPLE SHOP The Little Store with the BIG VALUES MR, b S TR JUNEAU-YOUNG Funeral Parlors Licemsed Funeral Direetors aad Kmbalmers Night Phone 1861 Day Phone 12 I o R | ABIN’S Everything tn Furnishings : for Mem Palmer School ‘Graduate DR. DOELKER PHONE 477 C. L. FENTON CHIROPRACTOR. Golastein Building Office Hours: 10-12; 2-5 Evenings by Appointment L. C. SMITH and CORONA TYPEWRITERS J. B. Burford & Co. customers” The B. M. Behrends Bank Juneau Alaska BANKERS SINCE 1891 Strong—Progressive—Conservative We: cordially invite/you to avail i,zonuelves' ‘of our h_ci]ifie(ior > ~handling your business. - Fraternal Societies oF | Gastineau Channel | B. P. 0. ELKS meets every Wednesday at 8 p. m Visiting brothers welcome, L. W. Turoff, Exalt- ed Ruler. M. H. Sides, Secretary. KNIGHTS OF COLUMBUS Seghers Council No.1760. * Meetings second and last Monday at 7:30 p. m. Transient brothers urg- ed to attend. Counefl Chambers, Fifth Strews. JOHN F. MULLEN, G. K. H. J. TURNER, Secretary [ ——— a Our trucks go any place any | time. A tank for Diesel Oil | and a tank lnrmdaotlnn\ burner trouble. PHONE 149, NIGHT M8 | RELIABLE TRANSFER JUNEAU TRANSFER COMPANY M oting and Storage Moves, Packs and Siores Freight and Baggage lfrompt Delivery of FUELZ OIL ALL KINDS OF COAL PHONE 48 i e D | | | ! Konneru p’s MORE for LESS s i THE JuneAu LaunDry Franklin Street between || Front and Second Streets ! PHONE 359 ! it JUNEAU FROCK SHOPPE “Exclusive but not Expensive” Coats, Dresses, Lingerie Hoslery and Hats HOTEL ZYNDA Large Sample Rooms ELEVATOR SERVICE 8. ZYNDA, Prop. T G 3 AT | GARBAGE HAULED | | = Reasonable Monthly Rates | E. 0. DAVIS | TELEPHONE 584 1 Day Phone 371 | SOMETHING NEW! —Try Our— TOMATO ROLLS Juneau GENEEAL MOTORS ‘| and i MAYTAG PRODUCTS W. P, JOBNSON e f~CaRL jacoBsoN T sEweizs - L RUSSIAN BATHS | The Green Building | || Tuesday, Wednesday, Friday, | Ifll.turdnyrromlp.m.to!&m[ | GASTINEAU AVENUE || L] D ———— i ORPHEUM ROOMS | | Steam Heated. Rates by day, } | week or month. Near Commer- [ | _ cial Dock, foot of Main St. | | Telephone 396 Bessie Lund | PEERLESS BREAD Always Good— " Always Fresh “Ask Your Grocer”