Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
(S8 THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, TUESDAY, AUGUST 8, 1933. DRY UNIT MEN BE DISMISSED ment Employees Given Walking Papers ON TOMORROW: Twelve Hu;a;:ed Enforce- | Blow at T ammany of MEN'S SUITS Year-Round Suits From MICHAEL-STE AND OTHER BRANDS Now Now Now For quick selling all remaining Spring and Summer Shoes for including the famous Star Brand Selid $5.95 B. M. Behrends Co., Inc. | Juneau’s Leading Department Store | HELPSFOR ~ HOUSEWIVES men i|llll women SHOES $2.95 Leather Shoes will be reduced to CONCRETE WORK BEGINS ON GOLDEN GATE SEAN If youre using marshmallows and wish to cut them up into smaller parts put some flour on your scissors or knife before cut- ting. Lettuce should always be wrap- per in a wet cloth to keep it crisp and kept on ice if it is to be at its best. ! Mint can be dried and for mint sauce during 'the | stason” when mint is difficult | obtain. sayed “oft to THROW THOSE SPOOLS AWAY? FIRST SEE WHAT BABY SAYS ‘Empty spools snould never be thrown away in a house where | there are small children. The creeping baby enjoys rolling them on ‘the floor and chasing after them. Strung on a stout string, he likes to handle them and bang them against hard surfaces. The 4 or 5-year-old will find them just the thing to use for smokz- stacks and chimneys. V“’ELL BALANCED BREAKFAST VITAL TO CHILD'S HEALTH The first pouring of concrete for one of the anchorage piers en 8an Francisco’s Golden Gate “brid was begun on the Marin county side of the bay. In the foreground is the anclorage pit, with steel’| Inforcements covering the bottom. The concrete is mixed at the plant in the backuround.‘dmnnl‘lQ i trucks which carry it to the convevor seen on the steel Joricht. (Assaciated Press Phatal ped R A well balanced breakfast, eat- €n in a leisurely manner, is es- sential to-the child's health A properly balanced breakfast consists of fruit, fresh or cooked, eooked or ready-cooked cereal, a meat substitute, such as eges, or 8uch meat as brailed bacon, bread, toast or muffins, Milk should ‘be given to the children. Coffee may be given to thosz of college age. RELIC OF 01D ' WEST NO MORE MUSKOGEE, Okla., Aug. 8- AR Ancther of Oklahoma's landmarki} COOK MEALS IN ADVANCE; of the old west has passed with IT'S A 'HELP IN SUMMER the razing of the federal jafl, USU* gummer meals can be preparéed 1.\lly called the stockade, = It WBS| Lith less discomfort from the used from the latter years of the heat if the cooking is done op Coach Dopes Out New Plays nineteenth century until 1907, at oowpain days, preparing meats, which time Oklanoma was admit-| yugetables and desserts for u},' tad to the ‘union. l'm.uro' days" of the week Frank and Al Jennings, nobor-l Meats can be re-heated or | ious irain Yobbers, were confin- served cold, ' vegetables can’ be ed in the stockade at one time. ‘crean)ed, browned or made info The jail was in fact a group of{aq5 ' Al variety of desserts cah ek 4 ) | three small {rame houses, SuI*|pe made at ‘One time to last for ounded by a high wooden walli gjeral days. | Since it contained but a few steel , prisonérs made numerous at- | from {as Glenn of Illinois, Bingham of | WASHINGTON, Auz. 8.—All Pro- hibiticn Enforcement employees 0f the Government have received of- ficial notification of dismissal ef- fective at midnight tomorrow under President Robsevelt’s reorganization program abolishing the bureau. Someé of the 1,200 employees will be immediately reemployed for work in the Prohibition Unit of the new Division of Investigation. ., — NEW TEST FOR * OLD GUARD OF | ‘Senale Side——oT|934 Polit-- | ical Picture to Be ! Considered By HERBERT PLUMMER WASHINGTOII, Aug. 9. — Aside the fact that Congressional elections of next yehr will be high- ly significant because all the new| > crop of Demo- ¢ ‘ratic Rcpresen- tatives must run again, the Senate side of the politi- cal picture must come sideration. In the tidal lin Roo: to the presidency in 1932, the Re- publican Old FESS Guard of ‘the Senate was all but enzulfzd That old wheelhorse of Repub- licanism, Jim Watson, of Indiana, was shunted from a place in the naticnal spotlight that d back @5 far as 1894. ‘Reed Smoot, dean of the Senate and the epitomz of G. O. P. standpatism, went down to defeat before a young professor in Utah, a novice at polities. And Georgz M the scintillat- g wit and satir SIMEON D. newcomer in national New Hampshire by the Fred Brown. politics in| name of Hers De Combat Thesz wers the major casualticsi the Old Guard suffered in the fall | of 1932. There were others, such| Connecticut and Thomas of Idaho, all Republican stalwarts. Next year another section of th> Old Guard must face the elector-! in for con-| Jlwave of votes] hat sw:zpt Frank- Dispensing of enormous patronage andpfundnfunder public works pro- visions of NIRA, in'New York, New Jersey and Pennsylvania, is in hands of Edward J. Flynn, Demo- cratic party boss in Bronx imrough A ! of New York, a foe of Tammany. EPUBI.I His choice ag regional public works administrator by James A. Farley is deemed another Roosevelt blow at Tammany. ¢ My Beauty Hint MMM LAVWLOR that is take the ends and curl them up For bobbed hair long, with bob pins as tightly as you }¢an. find your hair ringlets. The result tra attention. CHAMPION COW well justifies the ex- SYDNEY, Australia, Aug. Wagga Gladys, an Australian cow which lost the world’s champion- ship for butterfat production to a New Zealand cow, has recaptured her laurels. In a year, Wagga Gladys produced 1,259 pounds of butterfat, against the New Zea- ‘land co production of 1,220 pounds in a one-year period. 1. 8. DEFARTMENT OF AGRICUUTURE] WEATHEK BUREAD I The Weather By the U. 8. Weather Bureau) ) LOCAL DATA | Forecast for June#¥ and vicinity. beginning at 4 p.m., August 8: | Rain tonight and Wednesqny; moderate southerly winds. ‘ | | | | When you remove them you will |° in one mass of T 1 | | i except in the Southeast. ern portions of the Gulf of Alaski with rain in Southern Alaska except the extreme Southeast ani with clear weather on the Ber- )ng Sea coast and in !hp upper Y.ukon Valley. The pressure is high over most of the northern Pacific Ocean. er yesterday from the'central Interior westward and northward. Time Barometer Temp. Humility Wind Velocity Weathes 4 pm. yest'y 30.19 53 89 s 6 Rain 4 am. {oday 30.12 50 14 -1 4 Rain Noon today 30.06 53 81 SE 10 Clay CABLE AND RADIO REPORTS » YESTERDAY | TODAY dighesi 4p.m. | Lowest4am. 4a.m. Precip. 4a.m. Statlon temp. temp. | temp. temp. velocity 24hrs. Weather Barrow 56 56 30 40 4 0 Foggy Nome 60 60 52 54 6 0 Clear Bethel .. 66 62 52 52 10 [ Clear Fort Yukon 64 62 50 50 4 [ Pt. Cldy Tanana L0 70 52 52 4 0 Cldy Fairbanks 66 66 50 50 6 0 Cldy Eagle 60 60 36 36 4 0 Clear St. Paul 48 48 4“4 u 20 .70 Cldy Dutch Harbor 50 50 | 44 46 12 Trace Rain Kodiak 50 50 - | 46 46 4 6 Rain Cordova 56 54 | 50 54 10 .68 Rain Juneau . 54 53 50 50 4 16 Rain Sitka b 61 e | 49 —_ 0 50 Clay Ketchikan 68 64 | 48 48 4 0 Clear Prince Rupert 64 62 | 44 46 4 0 Clear Edmonton 82 6 | 48 50 4 0 ' Cldy Seattle 8 8 56 56 0 0 Clear Portland 82 82 | 60 60 4 0 Clear | Ban Francisco ... 64 60 | 54 54 6 0 Cldy The barometric pressure is mosderately low throughout Alaska It is lowest in Bering Sea and the west- Temperatures were high- Store Open Evenings GEORGE BROTHERS Leader Department Store THE HOTEL OF ALASKAN HOTELS e Gastineau Qur Services to You Begin and End at the Gang Plank of Every Passenger-Carrying Boat ALASKA MEA [ CO. QUALITY AND SERVICE TO YOUR LIKING Austin Fresh Tamales Meadowbrook Butter { PHONE 39 L Deliveries—10:30, 2:30, 4:30 i) UNITED FOOD (CO. CASH GROCERS Phone 16 We Deliver = Meats—Phone 16 e et e e ettty i B i . f st of the Old! | it e e e i < ‘Guard, fell before the attack of a \' 8.— Old Papers for Sale at Empire Office ate. What will happen to them? Glance down the list of those that are up for re-election in 1934'i ‘There are 17 Rzpublicans, 14 Demo- | crats and one Farmer-Laborite. | Heading the list is Austin of Vermont, as solid in his Republi- | canism as the granite for which his state is famed. There's Fess of Ohio, Republican keynotar at the Kansas Cily convention in 1928. Hale of Maine, who occupies the seat in the senate his father once had, is another. Dr. Hatfield of| West Virginia must run. | Then there's Hecbert of Rhode' Island, eastern campaign manager for Herbert Hoover in the 1932 Presidential campaign, o say noth-! ing of Dave Reed of Pennsylvania.' ‘There are oth:rs such a-K:an} of New Jersey, Patterson of Mis- | souri, Townsend of Delawase, Van- denberg of Michigan and w-alccui of Connecticut whose politics are as regularly Republican as clock. | How will the “new deal” affect the political futures of these Sena- tors? What will happen between now and the nominating and clec- sion eampaigns of 19347 ‘They all admit at the present | that the great game of polities is msring from the doldrums. The | st of them are waiting for the briaks. Some, of course, already have started campaigning, but it gonsists for the most part in ‘mend- | ing political fences in an unobtru- sive sort of But 1934 after all, is not so far away. They must get under way | MAKING MEAT TENDER tempts to burn it down. A pinch of baking soda added e to the water in which you are Unemployed Like AI"S boiling meats, p:fm/cv ly meats v you have bought in economieal and ACCOIInm St“d}'l frame of mind and which are good —_— but not so tender as the choicer cuts, will add to their tender- ness. i \ | | | COLUMBUS, O, Aug. 8-—~Ac- | counting and fine arts were two | of the most popular courses, offic- ials of Ohio State University found when they opened a free college for the uncmployed here. Four sections for accounting and fifteen courses Tn fine arts' were found necessary when the 1,200 | “students” ranging in ages from |18 to ¥0 presented themselves for | enrollment for the six weeks col* COLD CUTS FOR SUMMER A variety of cold cuts. such as sliced ham, roast lamb, sliced liv- erwurst and meat loaf arranged on a platter and garnished with parsley makes an excellnt summer. &ish. Stuffed tomato salads can be served with the meats. ————— 1 “Ig's all in the execution,” says -Howard Jones, but he doesn’t mean In winnizg poxer pols, but in winning football games. The . famous University of Southern Califcrnia foofball coach uscd the chips to work out new formations and plays, and here he is ex- some of his latest plays to two of his star pupils. Stand- in fim Baker, former Trojan All-American guard, who will * ' gustall the “Jones gystem” in the Icwa Conference when he becores coach of the Towa State Teachers' College this Fall, and sitting | lege. Two classes In plano and| Bakers of Southern Californfa T 1 siar, who will introduce the “Jones | WO in voice training also were ; x w e, farmer Army opened. council to pass an ordinance fo at the University of Arizona when he takes over the coach- —————te - staridardize the weight of dough- RSN R R WS 4 l Daily Empire Want Ads Pay |nuts. soon and make up for lost um&l FOUR WEDDINGS A B a7 AYDIN, Turkey, Aug. 8—This is the tale of a family that claims a record in weddings. Hatice Hanim was a widow with niné grown-up children, Ali Ef- endl a widower with six adult off- spring. Now, all in one day, and all from | the house of the widow (to econ- omize on the clergymen‘s fees and on the reception feast) eight mem- the | § ' bers of the Hatice-Ali family gof married. : petitioned - the Los Angeles eity| Hatice married Ali, making the two families one; three of Hatice's daughters and three of Ali's sons promptly followed suit, - =