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"4 THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, FRIDAY, AUGUST 18 1933. Daily Alaska Empire GENERAL MANAGER 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 matter. SUBSCRIPTION RATES. Dellvered by carrler In Juneau and Douglas for $1.25 per_month. By mall, postage pald, at the follow!ng rates: One year, In advance, $12.00: aix 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 fallure or irregularity in the delivery of their papers. Telephone for Editorial and Business Offices, 374. MEMBER OF ASSOCIATED PRESS, The Assoclated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for republication of all news dispatches creditéd 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. BARS TO RECOVERY. A considerable purpose of the National Recovery Administration will be frustrated if means cannot be found to bring into line the steel, coal, oil and automotive industries which Gen. Johnson has just declared are shortening the stride toward national recovery. In two of the industries, steel and coal, unionism is at the base of the difficulty. In the oil and automotive industries, the producers seem unable to agree among themselves on the policy to follow. The resistance of the oil refiners has met with a definite setback through the decision of the Supreme Court of the District of Columbia which declined to enjoin the Secretary of Interior from barring the interstate shipment of oil produced in violation of State regulations. The Secretary's power to stop such shipments is vested in the National Recovery Act and, while the Court did not directly rule on the constitutionality of that law it significantly declared: “In law it is recognized that necessity confers many rights and privileges that without necessity might not be conferred.” It is national necessity that forms the basis of the National Recovery Act. Congress in it declared an emergency to exist and vested the President with certain extraordinary powers for a two-year period s0 that some authority would be in position to deal with crises arising from abnormal conditions. It is gratifying that the first attack on the statute has been repulsed by the judiciary This will strengthen the hand of the National Recovery Administration in proceeding to deal with recalcitrant industries. It will, of course, follow out its policy of letting public opinion force the de- linquent businesses and trades into line. But where there are interests who feel they are sufficiently powerful to defy public opinion, it is comforting to know that the courts are inclined to recognize the power that Congress has liberally bestowed on the Chief Executive. The controversy in the coal mining industry is one of the most serious handicaps the Administration has encountered. Blame there must be divided. Mine operators in the .Pittsburgh region have gone so far as to purchase vast stocks of coal from West Virginia to enable them to ride out a long tie-up in their own fields, and have virtually defied the Administration to enforce any code of competition. But workers in the same area are hardly less at fault. Expecting more from the Recovery Act than they had any right to expect they refuse to co- operate even temporarily until a code can be drafted and approved. At the same time comes reports that agitators are actively at work in certain Penn- sylvania fields. Neither labor nor capital should seek to take advantage of public necessity at this time to en- deavor to force through impossible bargains. For capital to try to exalt prices or refuse to pay living wages is not less reprehensible than for labor to endeavor to obtain impossible working conditions and excessively high wages. Where either is at fault, every possible pressure from public sentiment e “Tomorrow’s Styles Today’ ¥ WE 00 OUR PARY, We're with you, Mr. President, in your plan to bring back “Prosperity” | Halvorsen’s, Juneau’s Own Store, is wholeheartedly in accord with dent Roosevelt’s Recovery Code, we will do all we can to help. - _Juneaw’s Own Store ought to be brought to bear to aid whatever legal action the Administration may find necessary to bring to correct and eliminate such evils. AN U There has been a great deal of criticism by some of the Dry elements as well as some members of the Republican party’s organization because of what is termed the President’s pressure on State govern- ments to act promptly on the repeal of the Eighteenth Amendment. According to the critics it is a menace to our constitutional system for the Federal Gov- ernment to use pressure on a State Government to obtain action on a Constitutional amendment since the essence of the amending process is the freedom of the State to use its own discretion. That the President, or his aides, have infringed upon that freedom is yet to be shown. Mr. Roosevelt and Mr. Farley, National Chairman, as well as Postmaster General, have both urged prompt action by the States. Both have asked the States to ratify JUST CRITICISM. By MRS. ALEXANDER GEORGE A RAINY SUNDAY Breakfast Menu Fresh Peaches, Diced Soft Cooked Eggs Broiled Bacon Buttered Toast Dinner Menu (Serving Six) Baked Pork Chops Baked Sweet Potatoes Escalloped Cabb: Spiced Beets Coffes e | the repeal resolution. But that is quite a different Bread Butter |thing to using actual pressure to force ratifica- Deep Dish Apple Ple |tion. No hint has been made that patronage has Cottee been used as a weapon, or that any other means Supper Menu [of compulsion was used or attempted to be used s ouly 5 "| Oatmeal Cookies Iced Tea Mr. Roosevelt is the Democratic Party's titular b2t leader, and Mr. Farley is the head of its regular Bakcd Pork Chops, Serving 6 national organization. That party last year pledged| 6 loin chops, 1 egg or 2 yolks, itself and its candidates to bring about Prohibition|1 tablespoon water, ': teaspoon repeal. Mr. Roosevelt and Mr. Garner made that|salt, %4 teaspoon pepper, 2-3 cup plank one of their major issues. crumbs, 2 tablespoon fat, ' cup Now is the time to make good the party’s prom- ises. Who except Mr. Roosevelt is in position to do that? Who better than Mr. Farley can go on the stump, as he has done in North Carolina, Ten- nessee and other States, and urge upon the Demo- crats the duty.they owe as party men to see that its pledge is redeemed? Because the party system of Government is what it is, repeal is a responsibility upon the Democratic Party. Surely it is logical for the President as its head, and Mr. Farley as his| chief of staff to demand that their followers keep their promise. Both would fail in party responsibility if they did not do it. And it has been in their capacities as party chieftains and not as President and Postmaster General respectively that they have acted in this matter. The administrative heads in Washington are becoming so familiarly known to the public at large that they are being called by the first names. But, boy! that's nothing to what the heads of the last administration were called. A financial shark recently revealed that 96 per cent of all bank accounts are small. Anyway, they are much safer these days than they were six months ago. 34 | Midsummer Education. (New York Times.) It might have seemed madness a few years ago to propose continuance of school into the hot months. Now the Summer session in colleges and universities has become customary. New York is almost as much of an educational center in August as in midwinter. And the student life is more like that of the medieval universities when with the greater freedom and informality - there is also the greater intellectual seriousness. Most of the patrons of the Summer session are attending lectures, work- ing in laboratories, because they want what is of- fered, not because they are sent. It is serious business for them. Many even cross the continent to enrich their experience and incidentally to be- come acquainted with their country—riding in buses and sitting up nights. Columbia University alone has had this Summer nearly ten thousand students—a somewhat smaller number than usual, but still more than the eco- | nomic conditions led the authorities to expect. Nearly two hundred came from the Far Western States. Every continental division, indeed, is well represented, with small contingents from Alaska, the Canal Zone, the Hawailan Islands, the Philippines, Puerto Rico, Virgin Islands and twenty-five differ- | ent lands. It is noted that the number of teachers| registered as students is somewhat less in percentage than last year, but they are still 64.5 per cent of | the total. | It is noticeable this year that governmental, | economic and sociological courses have had an | unusual following as compared with the courses in technique of teaching. Interested audiences overflow (the largest halls. This is true of New York Uni- | versity as well. The “New Deal” makes its way | into almost every course to emphasize its social values. And a relatively increasing number of men | frequent the courses, though women are in the large majority. Summer sessions, despite the un- favorable economic conditions of the moment, are significant of the new educational regime, in which the adult is to keep on as a perpetual student. $2.20 Regular Value boiling water. Beat egg and tablespoon of wa- ter. Add ‘salt and pepper. Dip chops into crumbs, then into egg mixture and again into crumbs. Pat well to prevent crumbs falling off during cooking. Heat fat in a baking pan. Then add and quickly brown chops. Add boiling water and lid and bake 50 min- utes in moderate oven. Inspect pan frequently and baste chops or turn to allow even cooking. Speced Bects 1 cup vinegar, 2-3 cup water, cup sugar, 2 sticks cinnamon, 12 whole cloves, 4 cups sliced beets. Mix vinegar, water, sugar and spices. Cover and ceok 10 min- utes. Add beets. Cool and chill, Remove spices and serve. Oatmeal Cookies (3 Dozen) 1 cup fat, 2 cups dark brown sugar, 3 eggs, 3 tablespoons cream, 2 teaspoons cinnamon, 1 teaspoon cloves, 1 teaspoon nutmeg, 1 tea- spoon vanilla, 1 cup chopped dates, 1% _cup nuts, 1% cups oatmeal flakes, 3 cups mlour, 1 teaspoon soda, 1 teaspoon baking powder, 4 tablespoons molasses. Cream the fat and sugar. Add rest of ingredients. Mix well Drop portions from end of spoon onto greased baking sheets. Flat- ten cookies and bake 12 minutes in moderate oven e ATTENTION ELKS Visiting Elks are also cordially invited to attend the special ses- sion of Juneau Lodge 420 B. P. O Elks Sunday evening at 8 o'clock to meet Grand Exalted Ruler Walter F. Meier on official visita- tion. Refreshments following meet- ing. EXALTED RULER, —adv. B. P. O. E. 420. PEESE G, Reports of unclothed gambolers in Swope Park, Kansas City, led to a fruitless search of the grounds by the park superintendent. FORD AGENCY (Authorized Dealers) GAS OILS GREASES Juneau Motors FOOT OF MAIN ST. T ___’uf BETTY MAC | BEAUTY SHOP | 107 Assembly Apartments PHONE 547 Yardley’s ENGLISH LAVENDER Powder ‘ | and LOOSE POWDER Compact : BOTH FOR $1.35 | Presi- | Juneau Drug Co. TO THE WOMAN BEREFT . . . Many times we are called upon to act for a grief- | stricken widow with only small children and no one to assume the responsibil- i ity of burial arrangements. We are thoroughly sym- pathetic and considerate in such situations and can be completely relied upon to render a well-directed and attentive service ad- justed to the familys means or ideas of expen- diture. Chapel Service Free The Charles W, The Empire will show you the best way to save and invest what cash you have. Read the advertise- ments of the local merchants in Carter Mortuary PHONE 136-2 “The Last Service Is the ' Greatest Tribute” R SR R TR T MOTHER OF SZVEN DIES COL. KUMPE GOES SOUTH Col. G. E. Kumpe, Officer-in- Charge of the Washington-Alaska Milintary Cable and Telegraph System, is southbound on the Yukon after an inspection trip to the Westward and interior. D Mrs. Margaret Berry, aged 44, of Otis G. Berry, and the mother of seven children died re- cently in Fairbanks. She had been1 wife very ill since the birth of her lat- est child, a daughter, July 1. The infant is in good health. Denver, Colo., recelved its name from an Ohioan, General James W. Denver. Go window shopping in your easy chair. Read the advertisements. United Food Co. CASH GROCERS FLOUR, White . . . . 43¢ 10-POUND SACK ROLLED OATS . . . . 45¢ 9-POUND SACK CORNFLAKELS, 2boxes 25¢ LARGE BOX COFFEE.Ib. . . . . . 19¢ OUR SPECIAL SUGAR, 3 lbs. . . . . 25¢ POWDERED We display the most complete assortment in Juneau and ALWAYS PRICED RIGHT ... MEATS . .. Quality Whatever your needs be in this line we can Price supply you at a saving—SEE US! Free Delivery Phone 16 LET US QUOTE ON YOUR REQUIREMENTS FOR TRAP LOGS TRAP PILES DOCK PILES ALASKA MATERIAL Juneau Logging Company JUNEAU, ALASKA Office at Juneau Lumber Mills, Inc. PHONE 358 The B. M. Behrends Bank Alaska Junecau BANKERS SINCE 1891 Strong—Progressive—Conservative We cordially invite you to avail yourselves of our facilities for handling your business. T ————n PROFESSIONAL H 2 T —" Helene W. L. Albrecht |, PHYSIOTHERAPY Massage, Electricity, Infra Red Ray, Medical Gymnastics, | 307 Goldstein Building | i Phone Office, 216 — = " | DRS.KASER & FREEBURGER DENTISTS Blomgren Buildirg PHONE 56 " "Hours 9 am. to 9 pm. | Dr. Charles J. Jenne | DENTIST Rooms 8 and 9 Valentine Building Telephone 176 Dr. J. W. Bayne | DENTIST | Rooms 5-6 Triangle Bldg. Office hours, 9 am. to 5 p.m. Evenings by appointment Phone 321 k' s s | Dr. A. W. Stewart DENTIST Hours 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. SEWARD BUILDING Office Phone 469, Res. { Phone 276 —= .- 7o 11 i Dr. Richard Williams | DENTIST | OFFICE AND RESIDENCE | Gastineau Building, Phone 481 | » Robert Simpson Opt. D. Graduate Los Angeles Col- | lege of Optometry and | Opthalmology | Glasses Fitted, Lenses Ground | — & DR. R. E. SOUTHWELL ' Optometrist—Optician Byes Examined—Glasses Fitted | ‘Chambers, Fifth Strecs. | I L PR i e Fraternal Societies | OF ~ | Gastineaw Channel | - | \ B. P. 0. ELKS meets every Wednesday 2t 8 p.m Visiting brothers welcome. X 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. Iransient brothers urg- ed to attend. Council JOHN F. MULLEN, G. K. H. J. TURNER, Secretary 2 4 Qur trucks go any place any | A tank for Diesel Oil | and a tank for crude oil save | | time. burner trouble. . PHONE 149, NIGHT 148 | i | ‘| RELIABLE TRANSFER Wise to Call 48 Juneau Transfer Co. when in need of MOVING or STORAGE Fuel 0il Coal Transfer SN S SS S SU N s e <SS S SR Konneru p’s MORE for LESS - " Room 7, Valentine Bldg. | l | Office Pnone 484; Residence ||| JUNE i Phone 238. Office Hours: 9:30 | | | h | 3 .30 Funeral Parlors | | Licensed Funeral Directors | > e =5 o P}:‘md Embalmers ) i i Rose A. Andrews & SRRl DayEhone s : Graduate Nurse = —_— o | Electric Cabinet Baths—Mas- = =] sage, Colonic Irrigations S A BIN, Office hours 11 am. to 5 pm. S Evenings by Appointment Second and Main Phone 2598 | Everything in Furnishings ol d for Men . y i < | 22l | LEON ENSCH Wb | CHIROPRACTOR | ' THE JuNEAU LAunbry Palmer School Graduate | ~ Franklin Street betweem ) | Over Pirst National Bank ||| Front an® Second Streets | | PHONE 451 | , L3 a2 PHONE 359 | ALLAMAE SCOTT Expert Beauty Specialist PERMANENT WAVING Phone 218 for Appointment Entrance Pioneer Barber Shop | R g CHIROPRACTIC “Health from Within” * Solarium Baths —Authentic— Palmer School Graduate DR. DOELKER PHONE 477 i C. L. FENTON CHIROPRACTOR Squtn rront St., next to Brownie's Barber Shop orfice Hours: 10-12; 2-5 Evenings by Appointment Harry Race DRUGGIST “THE SQUIBB STORE” 4 Want to Make a Good Steak Taste Better? 1 Then order a bottle of Ex- tra Pale to go with it! Our Beer is just bitter enough to sharpen a wilted appetite— yet full-flavored, creamy and mild to make a bottle for its own sake a pleasure. . BAILEY’S CAFE - JUNEAU FROCK SHOPPE “Exclusive but not Expensive" Coats, Dresses, Lingerie Hoslery and Hats HOTEL ZYNDA Large Sample Rooms ELEVATOR SERVICE 8. ZYNDA, Prop. _ o~ S GARBAGE HAULED | Reasonable Monthly Rates | E. 0. DAVIS | { | TELEPHONE 584 ) Day Phone 371 e S bl b oS | e - GENERAL MOTORS and MAYTAG PRODUCTS l W. P. JOHNSON SCANDINAVIAN ROOMS |Phone 513 Steam Heat | | LOWER FRONT STREET | Rates by Day, Week or Month | —_— 5 X » ! I ORPHEUM_ ROOMS | | Steam Heated. Rates by day, | week or month. Near Commer- | cial Dock, foot of Main St, Telephone 396 Bessie Lund | -— —_—— e o Exclusive Agency KABO CORSETS z g i Seward Street 4 e Ay Daily Empire Want Ads Pay "