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T ——————— DmI\ /fla '\(l Emplre ROBERT W. BENDER - - GE\ER-\L M \‘\Y GER the ’ Malr Sunda Second except ANY at every evemnr PRINTING COMP eau, Alaska Entered in the Post Office in Juneau as Second Class matter SUBSCRIPTION RATES, Delivered by carrier in Juneau and Douglas for $1.25 per month. postage paid, at the following rate: One y n advance, $12.00; six months, in $6.00; one month, in , §1.21 Subscribers will confer Vor if they will promptly notify the Business Office of any fa ularity in the delivery of their papers. Telephone for Editorial and Business Offices, 374 By _MEMBER OF ASSOCIATED PRESS. B The Assoclated is exclusively entitled to the use for republication 1l news itches credited to it or not otherwise credited i aper and also t local news published herein ALASKA CIRCULATION GUARANTEED TO BE LARGER THAN THAT OF ANY OTHER PUBLICATION BASIS FOR BELIEF. Capt. A. E. Lathrop, visiting here this week en- route to his home in Fairbanks after an extended tes which took him as far “I believe that the business trip to the Sta East as New York City, NRA is going to be the salvation of the country He has a sound basis for belief. He found conditions mightily improved throughout the count ©f course, we are not back to a high level of pr perity, there are millions still out of work, and want still stalks abroad in the land, but things are so much better than they were a year ago that com- parisons are unnecessary. Just a little more than seven months ago, Frank- 1in D. Roosevelt was inaugurated President. Things began to happen immediately. The biggest of these said: that was the NRA, which culminated all of the pre- liminary movement initiated under his leadership. The NRA has set America on the road to a planned economy. It has coded some 30 industries, reduced hours, lawed many unfair practices. Partly as this revolutionary law almost 3,000,000 men have been put back to work, buying power at the rate of $3,720,000,000 a year is being restored, 100,000 children under 16 years of age have been freed from wage a result of G~ labor. ¢ A serious effort is being made to prevent profit- eering and bids fair to be more than passibly; successful. The Agricuitural Adjustment Act and other influ-| ences are responsible for an increase of $1,217,000,000 | in the farmers' gross income. Mortgage relief Is 3 slowly being extended to home owners \of ferm E and city. The Public Works Administration has allotted $1,653,591,410 out of its $3,300,000000 work relief fund. That only $70,000,000 has been disbursed is not the fault of the Administration but is largely due to the failure of localities to take advantage of the Government's aid. The Reconstruction Finance Corporation has lent more than $2,000,000,000 and is setting about to buy preferred stock of banks and reopen as many closed banks as possible. It is preparing to loan upwards of $1,000,000,000 to NRA industries, refinance irriga- ? tion districts and insurance companies and otherwise expand public credit. The Emergency Relief Administration has under- taken to beat the enemy hunger. 000,000 war chest it has granted $176,000,000 to the States. It is purchasing $75,000,000 worth of food surplus to distribute to the poor, organizing transient relief, and adult education work for idle teachers. Through the Civilian Conservation Corps, the $25,000,000 subsistence farm fund, Muscle Shoals, the oil, timber, coal and other codes a real conservation movement has been initiated. 1 The Nation's current finances have improved. Aside from the emergency debts the normal budget shows a deficit of only some $212,000,000, as against three times that amount a year ago. Customs, tax and postal receipts are climbing. Prohibition repeal and beer taxes will add to the national revenues. ' In our foreign relations we have not lost ground. In the handling of the Cuban situation, the Nation has strengthened its position in all Latin American countries. We have added to our prestige by our ] attitude in the current crisis over the Disarmament Conference. In of the unstable dollar our gn trade is spite gaining. deal has been accomplished in s a4 g S e— increased minimum wages and out- | out of its $500,- | e it et THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, THURSDAY, OCT. 19, 1933. , 4~cm. months. We are’not out of the shadow of creat depression, but, as Capt. Lathrop declared, if we do not falfer in’ our supr to the NRA, d the Administration’s program generally, we emerge gradually zmd~ su the M'KEE CANDIDACY (;\il’llERS HEADWAY. Joseph V. McKee, independent candidate for Mayor of New York, whose entry into the race| created a sensation in America’'s great metropolis| hat has not yet subsided, is making greater hsndvl way than had been supposed possible. He has| | attracted the support of the Hearst newspapers, | | former Mayor Hylan, a large number of the sup-| | porters of former Gov. Alfred E. Smith, ‘and prominent Democrats who are disgusied with Curry-| ism as well as a number of leading Republicans | who are not any more impressed with Major Fiorelli LaGuardia, Fusionist candidat than they wurbr l\i'hL‘n he ran as a Republican fo years ago. | | The outcome of the race is still uncertain. The political logic ‘of thesituation points to the re-{ election of Mayor O'Brien, Tammany candidate.} He has the organization support and ordinarily, in |any three-cornered race, that would be sufficient to |win. He can depend absolutely on Cu Man- | hattan organization. Whether the McCooey organi- zation in Brooklyn will be as solid remains to be seen. The Flynn organization in the Bronx, on the basis of early polls taken by the Literary Digest, is strongly behind McKee. Newspapers supporting| LaGuardia include the Times, Herald Tribune and | World-Telegram. Although they are making a stren-| uous fight, from this distance, and at this stage| of the race, it looks as New York's next Mayor| would be either Mr. McKee or Mr. O'Brien, with the odds in favor of the latter i | Lions in an African game preserve are said | | to be so tame that they come out for their dinner. That's another reason why we won't join any big| game hunting expedition to Africa. Comes of Age. “Poetry” (New York iterald-Trioune.) There is a typical blending of cynicism and |faith in the issue of “Poe: ‘upon its twenty-first birthday. What began as a pioneer and heroic en- |deavor in the comfortable pre-war days of 1912 has 'endured now confidently, now defiantly, through (the great depression m a financial point of |view, the poet has been hard hit as everybody else. Only the youthful spirit of Miss Harriet Monroe has kept this best of poetry magazines alive. !In the current issue she turns backward and looks |forward. She quotes from the foreword which intro- The final words make |duced the magazine in 1912 noble ready today: We hope to offer our subscribers a place of refuge, a green isle in the sea, where Beauty may plant her gardens, and Truth, austere revealer of joy and sorrow, of hid- den delights and despairs, may follow her brave quest unafraid. Those were brave words, but Miss Monroe is |abundantly right in thinking that they have been justified. Poetry has its ebbs and flows. As she |\remarks, there is hardly such acclaim today for any poet as greeted Longfellow for his “Evangeline,” or Tennyson for his “Idylls” But the twenty-one years have at least seen a great return of interest. New poets, new ways, have arisen. A poem is once | more not merely a filler to justify & magazine page. |1 remuncration is lean and far between and still dependent upon understanding sponsors, so it has been since Horace. Miss Monroe has history on her side when she concludes her present article with these confident words: So we may proceed into Poetry’s twenty- second year with some confidence that con- ditions are a little better for the poet than they were in 1912, in spite of the war and the alleged peace, the boom era and the depression, the slump and the N. R. A, and all the loud-speakers amplifying facts and jazz. The world cannot live by bread alone, nor yet by noise and slogans and propaganda. The still small voices of poets will be heard through all the clamor, and some of them, we may confidently hope, will speak for us to “foreign nations and the next age,” and persist into those remote and changeful centuries whose favor may crown mere mortals with the laurels of what we, in our brief and futile pride, call immortality. Thousands of happy paraders who marched to celebrate the NRA didn't have to walk on the grass.— (Boston Globe.) What a lot of Democratic job-seeckers want to know is, what's holding up the party.—(Buiffalo Courier-Express.) Repeal is getting so close it looks like cloves would be back in the vest pocket before Christmas. —(Ohijo State Journal.) Add Definitions—Inflationist: A man who doesn't care what becomes of the dollar he hasn't got.— (New York Sun.) %33 xum;um R sasiriaias ith the blue ribbon of the Atlantic ely in their grasp, the congratu- tions which Captain Francesco / 'nnm (hft) and Chief Engi- Luigi Risso, of the Italian liner are oxcmhnm‘r':x, seem u)let l‘ln . The own against the docked, she ew Yflrk"-kylme as g Saskes, tar to New York In 4 days, ls “58 minutes, -verltllgr el Buropa held the gid reco 30-HOUR WEEK STILL AIM OF LABOR CHIEF lndicalionnsxe that Cor- gress Will Be Present- ed with Proposal By HERBERT PLUMMER WASHINGTON, Oct. 19.—Vis- jons of a renewed effort to resur- rect the Black 30-hour week bill in the comingf session of Con-|: & 8r loom as thel result of labor’s] open declaration that hours under the NRA are un-| tisfactory. Washington ob: servers regard as fairly certal | that William| Green's upeninq statement to th Fifty-third annu al convention of W!-H/AM GREEN the American Federation of Labor that unemployment will not be eliminated until a 30-hour week | is established forecasts such a| move. ¥ The Black bill authored by| Senator Black of Alabama, already has passed the Benate. Approval of the measure was given by that| body by a vote of 50 to 22 early in| April. In the House, Ccnnery of Mas- sachusetts, chairman of the Labor | Committee, offered a bll of his| own as & substitute for that of Black’s. It was while this bill| was before the House's Labor Com- | mittee that Frances Perkins, Sec-| retary of Labor, made her first| appearance before a Congressional | body. | | ON THE SHELF | Miss Perkins proposed changes in the bill which immediately | brought protests from labor lead-‘ ers. Matthew Woll, vice presi- dent of the American Federation, told the same committee that the Labor Secretary’s plan “would make serfs of American industrial workers” and hinted of an upris- ing of wage earners. The work of the whole affair| was that the Connery substTute bill was shelved. What actually halted legisla-| tion was the fact President Roose- | velt had his own plan for dealing with the situation. The Administration -was to try out its own plan. eager LABOR'S ALERT EYES Green and his assistants have| sat in on all of the codes drawn under the Recovery Act and have| had much to say about the 1aho¥. provisions. 3 Therefore, his observation regarded as significant. “In our mature judgment, our honest judgment,” he says, “Lh*‘ hours in many of these codes are| so high that they will not ab-| sorb a single worker. Three mil- lion have been taken back to work| but 11 million are still unemploy- ed.” While Green counsels patience with the “new deal” he insists hours be reduced sufficiently to increasz employment i One method might be a drastic rewriting of the codes now in ef- fect. The other might be for Congress itself to act. | R ! ATTENTION { | WOMEN OF THE MOOSE There will be a meeting tonight at the Moose Hall at 8 o'clock. Social to [Follow meeting. All Brother Moose invited. | GERTIE OLSEN —adv. Recorder. NEW LOW DOOR PRICES OW IS A splendid time for building and remodeling. Prices are very attractive on doors, sash, trim and all kinds of millwork. All wood is well seasoned, carefully selected, always up to specifications. One-panel Doors, 2 ft. cinx6ft8in . .92.40 Five Cross-panel Doors, 2 ft. 6in. x 6 ft. SIS s o o . . Front Doors, includ- ing glass, as low as . Screen Doors, with galvanized wire, as lowas . . . . . . These are just a few items from our large illustrated catalog—a real guide and help in home-building. Send for your copy today. It's free. O.BWILLIAMS 1.80 3.40 2.75 Sash and Doors 1933 First Ave. So., Seattle | flour. | nill and everything you order is | ALEXANDER GEORGE USING LEFTOVERS (Recipes For Four) The Menu * Creamed Veal Duchess Potatoes Buttered Beets Corn Bread Butter Vegetable Salad Dougnuts Coffez Vegetable Salad 2-3 cup chopped cabbage, 2-3 cup diced green beans, % cup of cooked carrots, 2 tablespoons of chopped onions, 2 tablespoons of chopped pickles, % teaspoon salt. 1-3 cup salad dressing. Mix ingredients and chfll. Servei crisp cabbage leaves. Duchess Potatoes ups mashed potatoes, 3 table- ns cream, % teaspon salt, % oon celery salt, % teaspoon paprika, 1 teaspoon chopped pars- ley. 1-3 cup grated cheese. Mix potatoes, cream and sea- ¢. Beat well, roughly spread small buttered baking dish. kle with cheese, bake 20 min- in moderate oven. Corn Bread 2-3 cup corn meal, 1 1-3 cups 4 teaspoons baking powder, 4 tablespoons sugar, 1-3 teaspoon 1t, 1 egg, 1 cup milk, 3 table- fat, melted. on 2 into Sp: utes spoons Mix ingredients and beat one minute. Pour into greased, shal- and bake 20 minutes in| Cut in bars, serve pan rate oven. m or cold. Dougnuts (3 Dozen) 1 cup sugar, 2 eggs, 2 table- spoons butter, 1 teaspoon vanilla, 1, teaspoon salt, 1 teaspoon- cin- namon, 1 cup sour milk, 4 cups flour, 1 teaspoon soda. Beat eggs and add sugar, mix well and add butter (melted), va- salt, cinnamon and milk. Let stand 5 minutes. Add flour and soda, mixing lightly. Place dough, upon floured bread board, roll out quickly until dough is 1 inch thick. Cut out dough- nuts with cutter, fry in deep hot fat until doughnuts are well browned on both sides. ,the oath of office as | ing office force, Territorial ’n'easurerl’ | J. Crimont, .lic Church in Alaska and was to 20 YEARS AGO Frem The Empire Fesro. e OCTOBER 19, 1913. John McCloskey arrived from Skagway on the Humboldt in the morning. He and his brother, James McCloskey, had just closed down their work for the .season in the Atlin country. He brought back a fine collection of nuggets from the deep gravel mines be- longing to himself and his broth- er, on Spruce Crezk. The collec- tion numbered 14 nuggets that ranged in value from $25 to $130 and one worth $800. H. Eckstrom, of Douglas, who went hunting in the ncighborhood’ of Salmon Creek, reported the misfortune of losing his boat, a whitehall row boat, 18 feet in length. He had anchored the boat at low tide and did not allow line enough. Charles E. Davidson had taken Surveyor General of Alaska on the previous day, * which was administered by United States Commissioner J. B. Marshall and present were Gen- eral William L. Distin, the retir- Surveyor General, and his' W. G. Smith, H. P. Crowther, C. E. and Mrs. Crowther. Following the ceremony, General Distin made a feeling speech, congratu- lating his successor and commend- ing his former office force. The Very Reverend Father R. prefect apostolic of the Catholic Church in Alaska, ar- rived at Juneau from the Interior and expected to remain here for some time. Juneau had been made the headquarters for the Catho- be Father Crimont’s home. He had celebrated his silver pubilee in the service of the church while he was in Tanana on his present trip. Many people witnessed the fine program playing at the Orpheum, ‘Pathe’s Weekly” and the “Trip Through Yellowstone Park” were! & full of interest. In addition thers was a comsdy with the scene laid in Treland, featuring John Bunny. {and some good dramas. {ENDS SERIOUS COUGHS WITH CREOMULSION Don't let them get a strangle hold. Fight germs quickly. Creomul- sion combines the 7 best helps known to modern science. Power- ful but harmless. Pleasant to take. No narcotics.. Your own druggist Is" authorized to refund your money on the spot if your cough or cold is not relieved by Creomulsion. ad.' Migrate from Soviet ERDJICHE, Turkey Moslem Turks who have been residents of the Soviet Union are migrating top their home land. Nineteen families have come from the Crimea to this eastern province of Anatolia with 500 other families to follow. PRl s Daily Empire Want Ads Pay PROFESSIONAL o s s —— Helene W. L. Albrecht PHYSIOTHERAPY Massage, Electricity, Infra Red Ray, Medical Gymnastics, | 307 Goldsteln Building 1 Phone Office, 216 — 4] L 2 DRS. KASER & FREEBURGER ! DENTISTS | Blomgren Building PHONE 56 Hours 9 am. to 9 pm. DENTIST Rooms 8 and 9, Valentine Building | i Telephone 176 | C. P. Jenne . ‘ | | Dr. J. W. Bayne DENTIST I | Rooms 5-6 Triangle Bidg. Ofice hours, 9 am. to 5 pm. i Evenings by appointment, Phone 321 E & Dr. A. W. Stewart : DENTIST Hours 9 am. to 6 pm. SEWARD BUILDING Office Phone 4469, Res. | | Phone 276 WA P RAS Dr. Richard Williams DENTIST OFFICE AND RESIDENCE Gastineau Building, Phone 481 | K - Robert Simpson o __L L Fraternal Societies I oF [ Gastineau Channel | B. P. 0. ELKS meets every Wednesday at 8 p. m. Visiting -y) brothers welcome. \ L. W. Turoff, Exalt- ed Ruler. M. H. Sides, Secretary. — e KNIGHTS OF COLUMBUS Seghers Council No. 1760. Meetings second and last Monday at 7:30 p. m. Transient brothers urg- ed to attend. Councll Chambers, Fifth Strecd. JOHN F. MULLEN, G. K. H. J. TURNER, Secretary _—————] ur trucks go any place any | xflme. A tank for Diesel Oil | | and a tank for crude oil save ‘ | burner trouble. 7 i PHONE 149. NIGHT 148 i RELIABLE TRANSFER Co. when in need of MOVING or STORAGE Fuel 0il Ceal Transfer " Wise to Call 48 Juneau Transfer ; t. Sreduate l[:)s .ngelu Col- lege of Optometry and Onthalmology ‘Glasses Fitted, Lenses Ground DR. R. E. SOUTHWELL v Optometrist—Optician Eyes Examined—Glasses Fitted | Room 7, Valentine Bldg. I Office Pnone 484; Residence | Phone 238. Office riours: 9:30 l | to 12; 1:00 to 5:30 | 2 Lot 3 e ey Rose A. Andrews Graduate Nurse | { Electric Cabinet Baths—Mas- sage, Colonic Irrigations | office hours 11 am. to 5 pm. | Evenings by Aprointment Second and Main Phone 259 . 7 BUSY WHY Not Because We .Are Cheaper BUT BETTER RICE & AHLERS CO. PLUMBING HEATING SHEET METAL “Wn tell you in advance what l job will cost” Cigars Cigarettes Candy Cards The New Arctic Pabst Famous Draught Beer On Tap “JIMMY” CARLSON Conservatisin —which in the banking business means putting safety FIRST in every trans- ction—has been the working principle of The B. M. Behrends Bank through all the years that it ness and personal people. help our customers business advantages into new and greater achievements. The B. M. Bank JUNEAU has served the busi- interests of Juneau Broad experience has equipped us to convert present day ™ Behrends ALASKA LEON ENSCH CHIROPRACTOR | Palmer School Graduate Over First National Bank PHONE 451 \i —e | ALLAMAE SCOTT Expert Beauty Specialist . PERMANENT WAVING Phone 218 for Appointment Entrance Pioneer Barber Shop —————————= \ JUNEAU SAMPLE SHOP The Little Store with the BIG VALUES C. L. FENTON CHIROPRACTOR Soutn ¥ront St, next to Brownie’s Barber Shop ofrfice Hours: 10-12; 2-§ Evenings by Appointment Harry Race DRUGGIST 1 | | ' Open 7:30 am. to 9 pm. | | HELEN MODER | To sell! To sellll Advertising 1 your best bet now. FORD AGENCY (Authorized Dealers) GAS OILS GREASES Juneau Motors Konneru p’s MAORE for LESS L | ‘l JUNEAU-YOUNG Funeral Parlors | Licensed Funeral Directors | and Embalmers o et Phone 1851 Day Phone 12 . + S CLimeats 2 l THE Juneay Launory / Franklin Street betweem Front an? Second Streets ! PHONE 359 O s T o JUNEAU FROCK SHOPPE “Exclusive but not Expensive” Lingerte Coats, Dresses, Hoslery and Hate HOTEL ZYNDA Large Sample Rooms ELEVATOR SERVICE 8. ZYNDA, Prop. [ R e S S ] | GARBAGE HAULED | Reasonable Monthly Rates | E. 0. DAVIS | | | | | lI TELEPHONE 584 Day Phone 371 . 9 o GENERAL MOTORS and MAYTAG PRODUCTS W. P. JOHNSON [ McCAUL MOTOR COMPANY Dodge and Plymouth Dealers * r“ | Smith Eleetric Co. [l Gastineau Building | | ———a EVERYTHING ELECTRICAL o | BETTY MAC lBEAU"I'Y SHOP | 02 Assembly Apartments | PHONE 547 } [ C. lm—mfi TYPEWRITERS | 1' . B. B ford & Co. I 70 i vy | e e The world’s greatest need n courage—show yours by advertising | i L |