The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, December 1, 1933, Page 4

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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, FRIDAY, DEC. 1, 1933. other difficulties that beset us here and now. With | time we come to see more clearly, to reason morol calmly, to act more justly. This is not a doctrine| of passive waiting for the fates to decide our| problems for us. But it is a ccunsel of patience and | hope. Many and many an apparently insoluble problem will be solved in the next decade or two,| thanks to the healing and revealing qualities of time. Daily Alaska Empire ;{()BERT W. BENDER - - GENERAL MANAGER ed every eveming except Sunday by the PRINTING COMPANY at Second and Main . Juneau, Alaska. !:!vlvlith YEMPIF Firee “Entered in the Post Office In Juncau as Second Class matter. SUBSCRIPTION RATES, Dellvered by carrier in Juneau and Douglas for $1.28 per month, By mail, postage paid, at the following rates: One year, in advance, $12.00; six months, In advance, one month, in advance, $1.2. scribers will confer a favor if they will promptly the Business Office of any failure or irregularity y of their papers. i for Editorial and Business Offices, 374. TREES ARE DISTRIBUTED. State forestry departments distributed 88,463,883 | voung trees for planting in 1932, according to re- ports from the States to the Forest Service, United States Department of Agriculture. Of the total 23,-| 496,764 trees were for planting farm lands, 44,016,291 for State lands, and 20,9508 for private lands other than farms. AIll these e grown in| State nurseries and no private! trees are| included in the reports. Distribution of trees by the States the past year was exceeded by that of 1931, when more than 100,000,000 trees were sent out, but showed a ga in | over 1930, when the total was 79,319,000. New York | [led, with 40,991,100 trees distrib for all classes ( of lands. Michigan sent out e delive: elephone MEMEER OF ASSOCIATED PRESS. “he Associated Press 1s exclusively entitled to the use for republication of all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited in this paper and also the local news published herein. 1 A CIRCULATION GUARANTEED TO BE LARGER ih THAN THAT OF ANY OTHER PUBLICATION. | Ohio, Massachu- | | setts, and Indiana, over 2,000,000. | In providing trees for farm planting, New York, | with 4,021,100, yielded first place to Pennsylvania,| which State sent out 5,150,268 forest trees. The | Federal Government, under the Clarke-McNary forest |law, cooperates with the States in the production | | of trees for farm forest and woodland planting. The |trees are distributed through the State forest| agencies directly to the farmers, usually at cost. The Federal Forest Service does not distribute plant- |ing stock for State or private lands. ALASKA’S NRA BOARD. As has been predicted in these columns on several Alaska can stand for a lot of NRA enthusiasm, occ in the past, the NRA system is about tO the more the better, but it can get along very ne to / ka. The code arrangement for industry nicely with a total absence of NRA hysteria. and business, under which the rest of the Nation | slowly but surely climbing back to prosperity | Reports from the election contest hearings at t{hrough the profitable re-employment of labor in 2 New Orleans would indicate only pink lemonade is as well as relief to a hard-pressed needed to put them in running for the slogan, “the al population, is to be esta shed here biggest show on earth.” form. It is now certain that the codes| y used for the remainder of the country' will not be epplied to the Territory. That is cer-| ol tainly the meaning of Delegate Dimond’s announce- (New York World-Telegram.) h Associated Press dispatch to| Texas Guinan, foremost female exponent of the a special Committee has been night club era, gaudy if you please and rampant, authority to modify NOW dead, helps date an important American period. The whole period was freakish. But its flashy characters were leaders in a practical rebellion o managed industry gene: Texas Guinan. ment, quoted in an The Empire, that pointed for Alaska and given existing codes or to arrange entirely new ones to meet conditions obtaining here that are not common W T R ot tne VolsaRl 0 peshiof the gounity | Texas Guinan helped make Prohibition scem The personnel of the NRA Committee—Hugh ' ¢ only ‘sidiealous but futile, even as she elevated Wade, Deputy Administrator, James J. Connors and to public view a great crowd of shallow and brazen David Housel—in itself insures equitable treatment citizenry grouped by herself in one of her most for all interested parties, which means everybody. typical categories—'Big Butter and Egg Men from Industries and businesses, labor of all classes, and the West.” the general public, will all be considered in the! She glorified the brazen and the mediocre, the formulation of codes. Mr. Connors and Mr. Housel inebriate and the strident. She contributed to cur- ploneer settlers of the Territory They know Tent language and affected the trend of Amerlcfin] problems of industry and busines well as manners or lack of manners. “Give the little girl a big hand!” “Hello, sucker!” needs of labor and those of the general public. i 10, tawdry now with usage, G Wade, less familiar with the north than they, 1y usage, the Guinan jargon and Mr A .’ manner expresses a large element of our noble popu- and not so widely known is nevertheless familiar jotion under the stress of a great social hysteria with Alaska’s peculiar situation, is a trained investi- anq the physician wWho attended Texas Guinan in gator, a student and is possessed of a wholesome her last hours relayed this to the wearers of the and sanely balanced temperament that fits him well white ribbon: “She told me that she had never for his duties as Deputy Administrator. With a touched alcohol in her life.” And to readers at large Board of this character Alaskans need have no he added, “Miss Guinan was one of the finest and the NRA code system will ‘most grateful patients I have ever attended.” An epitaph for a woman. An epitaph for an era. are the the as uneasiness about how worrk out. The Board can be assured in advance | that it will be given the fullest co-operation from | every local interest in its duties. The Needs of the Consumer. | (Cincinnati Enquirer.) | Daniel C. Roper, Secretary of Commerce, says ; 3 3 |that our concepts have not kept pace with changes Vi intolerance, just as every | 3! l‘f‘vl‘ live in an figedm‘n e or] mtulerancey‘m the economic and social processes. But Secretary other generation llved X x . 'Roper sees encouragement in the fact that business Human passions and misunderstandings exist Sl‘l"jlenders throughout the country are giving a great and too often we are so close to the impact of deal of their time and thought to the longer-term these passions that we cannot comprehend them m,problems now facing the country. true perspective, Time is the great solvent. It is| Secretary Roper believes that the maintenance of necessary to the clarification ‘of many tensions, and |the American economic system depends upon the only with time will many of our greatest problems prompt adaptation of our ideas to a changing social be solved. and economic order. He says the idealistic appeal The other day the ashes of Vicente Blasco |0f economic planning often obstructs the practical Tvanez were brought to Valencia in state. A hundrea *Proach o it, and that our present industrial thousand Spaniards, including Cabinet officials, wcm‘{rhnnmng for the future should not be viewed as 5 |the setting up of a perfect system which we believe at the dock to pay mbute‘w the grcameg of their |g,ou1d still exist in ten or twenty years. v fellow countryman whose liquid prose has lmmor»ml» In other words, recovery cannot be stated in ized the countryside of Valencia, and whose passion-terms of any fixed system. The consumer’s needs ate indictments of the old monarchy drove him into must be studied and conserved. Methods of dis- exile. Six years after his death Blasco Ibanez tribution will need periodic revision. is honored as one of Spain's great heroes. | All of which means that recovery cannot be We seem on the eve of recognizing Russia after |achieved by any art of magic, by any nostrum of 15 years of isolation. How many persons realize |legislation, but must come as a result of concerted that Russia refused to recognize the United States |effort by business men and the general public acting from 1776 to 1807, as being too radical? Time broke in harmony. down the unwillingness of Empress Catherine to recognize the insolent American Republic, which boldly asserted “all men were born free and equal.” Time has broken down also the insistence of American groups that Russia is not entitled to organize her economic and social life after her own Fasnuer. g 2 Well, we see France plans another debt default As with these instances, so in many others, does 'in December. No doubt it will be successful. She time clarify the confusion. It will be so with many |has had plenty of practice.—(Ohio State Journal.) NOTED BANKER TIME AND TOLERANCE. Brewers figure that in six months beer drink- lers have spent $700,000,000 to quench their thirst. If the country hadn’t been so hard up it probably wouldn’'t have been so niggardly about its purchase of suds.—(Philadelphia Bulletin.) }Inslilule of Industrial Research. | Their educational activities extend- |ed also to the University of Pitts- King. They had two children, Richard King Mellon and Sarah Cordelia Mellon. | burgh, which with the Mellon sup- port grew into one of the greatest | universities of the day. Richard supported also many denomination- al and civic bodies. In New Position PASSES AWAY R. B. Mellon, Brother of richara took over active control Former U. S. Secretary of Treasury, Dies (Continued from Page One) ered in that city for the most part Engaged in Lumbering Mr. Mellon's first business ven- ture was outside banking circles, | for he turned his attentions to the Jumber industry. Soon hearing the of the banking world, how- he entered the firm of T and Sons from which grew present Mellon National Bank. his early years as a bank- took a leading hand in the of the Legonier Valley e |of the Mellon interests. He was | President of the Mellon National Bank, was identified with other 1 institutions of Pittsburgh, as a Director of the Guar- |anty Trust Company of New York and of the Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland. He was closely identified as an executive with many of America’s foremost industries, including the Aluminum Company of America, the Standard Car Company, the Pittsburgh Plate Glass Company, the Westinghouse Electric and Manufacturing Company, the Gulf Oil Corporation and the Pittsburgh Coal Company. Mr. Mellon was a member of the leading clubs of Pittsburgh, New York and Washington, and he maintained homes in Pittsburgh and Watch Hill, R. I In 1897 he married Miss Jennie iNFORMATION OF 2 MISSING MEN IS NOW DESIRED Inquiries have been received by the office of the Governor of Al- aska regarding the following per- sons supposed to be in Alaska: CARL EDMUND ARNOLD, who has been missing for several months and was living in Alaska | when last heard from by his sls-i ter, Alice H. Arnold, of Los Ange- les. CHARTER OAK McCRAY, grad- uate of the University of Michigan in the class of 1902, is thought to be in Juneau or Fairbanks. ! Anyone having any information | about these men are asked to| please communicate with the Gov-! ernor's office, in Juneau. ; - e — BETTER THAN EVER | Our line of Christmas Greeting Cards and Art Prints. adv. | —ee> —— | A count of the “hoboes” on one freight train between Fresno and | San Francisco disclosed 261. | PUPILS’ COSTUME This evening, at 7:30 o'clock, ir pupils of Mrs. Carol Beery Davis w the public is invited. The follo: taking part: Evening Song PatrICI Hong Kong Nights RECITAL TONIGHT Grade School Auditorium, the a costume recital to which the program and e Davis MacLachlan DOROTHEA HENDRICKSON Grandfather’s Clock Joun The Desert Caravan MAXINE N sing Toy ConsTANC Dutch Dance Haymakers Dance Maxim Watson [ULVIHILL Lively £ DAvIS Cramm Rogers Doris C Punch and Judy Waltz BEVERLEY Da ce of the Spooks MeRY MARGARET Boy Scouts on Parade The Glider MarcoLm The Clown 3 MILDRED Long, Long Ago Minuet Miiler Anthony FEMMER williams Wagness Fat Kern Bayley .Haydn ———MARY—MARCIFET FEMMER ~ Ghost in the Haunted Room All Thro' the Night Jimmrr Valse Espagnole Zorina Anthony Owen GLASSE Paldi SHIRLEY Davis Anthony DOLORES SMITH Juanita Castanets MaARY MarcA O Sole Mio Jack C In a Polish Garden ENNIS Cello Solo—The Old Portrait Spanish Melody Rebe RET FEMMER Eduardo de Capua SLASSE Williams WHITE Cooke GENE TARLSON Accompanied by ESTHER NIEMI Russian Dance THOMAS Russian Gypsy Melody MARGARE ™ Gypsy Love Song SyLvia ‘The Scarf Dance CATHERINE Scandinavian Dance KATHL) Vocal Solo—I Know Where a Garde MINNIE Norwegian Dance Accompanied by Joyce MORRIS Engelman ‘WHITE Peery SANBORN Herbert Davis Chaminade ToRK Olaf Petersen Ca n ( Mo Densmore Grieg ANNE MORRIS Turkish March MINNIE MORRIS a;d Beethoven i Dor1s FREEEURGER OREGON BEATS ST. MARY'S BY 1370 7 SCORE First Victory of Webfoot- ers Over Gaels in Five Years of Sport SAN FRANCISCO, Dec. maxing the most successful foot- ball season in many years, the University or Oregon defeated St. Mary's 13 to 7 yesterday before a crowd of 20,000. Tt was the first victory of the Webfooters over the Gaels in five years of rivalry. Oregon held the upper hand throughout the tough, clean fought struggle. 1—Cli- You can’t buy style “off the shelf!” True style isn’t stamped to a pat- tern — it's moulded to confirm to your figure. That's one reason why a hand-tailored suit by me gives hard-to-fit men a style that can't be dup- licated. Custom Tailored Suits as low at §50 SAM The Tailor Lower Front Street Cigars Cigarettes Candy FOR BETTER LUCK LARAMIE, Wyo., Dec. 1.—Virtu- assured ol occupancy of the Rocky Mountain Conference foot- ball basement, the Wyoming Co boys have started basketball prac- ti intent on annexing their fourth successive ecastern division championship. [3 A SKILLED ORGANIZATION Through the work of skilled operators here the utmost that modern scientific re- search has accomplished is utilized to create a beautiful, a natural memory picture of the loved one who has gone beyond, at a considerate cost. No Charge for Organ or Chapel The Charles W. Carter Mortuary PHONE 136-3 “The Last Service Is the Greatest Tribute” pupils i e ] ! 20 YEARS AGO PFrom The Empire e T BER 1, i913. Beile Goldstein and Dr. Robert Simpson were united in marriage in the presence of large number of relatives at home of Mr. and Mrs. Charle: Goldstein on the previous evening at 9 o'clock. The ceremony was simple, but impressive and was| | performed by Judge J. B. Marshal | "The bride, handsomely gowned i brocade satin charmeuse, carried a shower boquet of white roses. She wore a long tulls veil formed in a Juliet cap which was held, in place by sprays of orange bln:-g soms. I The bride was attended by her | ster Miss Minnie Goldstein, who was gowned in pink and carried a i Miss { Helenc W. L. Albrecht PHYSIOTHERAPY Massage, Electricity, Infra Red Ray, Medical Gymnastics. 307 Goldstein Building Phdne Office, 218 DRS. KASER & FREEBURGER DENTISTS Blomgren Building PHONE 56 Hours 9 am. to 9 pm. Rooms 8 and 9 Valentine Building ‘Telephone 176 boquet of pink _Lohengrin’s and Mendelssohn's wedding march- es were played by Mrs. J. F. A. Strong, and Miss Crystal Snow sang “I Love You Truly” and “A Perfect Day." Supper was served| in the dining room which was tastefully decorated with flowers and shaded candles. Dr. and Mrs Simpson left on the Admiral Sampson for the South. Mr. and Mrs. Francis B. Sayre, who were married in Washington, D. C. in the East Room of the White House surrounded by the highest officials of the land and foreign diplomats on November 25, left New York City on the George Washington for Europe. President Woodrow Wilson was on the pier to bid farewell to his daughter and her husband. Mrs. Sayre was the former Jessie Wilson. Delegates from seven different; Native settlements met in conven- vention in the Native Presbyter- jan Church in the afternoon to take the initial steps in the for- mation of a society to be known as | the Alaska Native Brotherhood. The Sixty-Third Congress opened | at noon at the Capitol. Vice-Presi-| dent Marshall declaring the ession adjourned “without and in the next breath he an- nounced that Congress had assem- bled according to the Constitution. The banquet tendered Col. Wilds | P. Richardson, head of the Alaska Road Commission as a testimonial of appreciation of his effo the matter of road | [ IS S | Dr.J. W. Bayne. DENTIST Rooms 5-8 Triangle Bldg. Of’iee nours, § am. to 5 pm. ‘wvenings by appointment, Phone 321 Dr. A. W. Stewart DENTIST Houss 9 am. to 6 pm. SEWARD BUILDING Office Phone 409, Res. Phone 276 Dr. Richard Williams DENTIST OF#ICE AND DRESIDENCE | Gastineau Building, Phone 431 | s e Robert Simpson Opt. D. Greduate Los Angeles Col- lege of Optemetry and Onthalmology LAl " DE. R. E. SOUTHWELL Optometrist—Optician Eyes Examined—Glasses Fitted Room 1, Valentine Bldg. Office Pnone 484; Residence | Phone 238, Office Hours: 9:30 to 12; 1:00 to 5:30 L throughout the Territory, and par- ticularly in this section, | tended by a representativ from each of the Channel com-| munit’ During the Col. Richardson spoke of the pro- posed channel bridge and clearly { indicated that his co peration and | assistance in obtaining it, could be counted on. | Judge R. W. Jennings said he would not grant another saloon license in Juneau before July first | | of the following year, as he be-| lieved that there were quite| | enough saloons in Juneau for the time being. { ‘ Halting into the grill room of the Alaskan Hotel, the previous | evening. their faces mended with| court plaster, noses and ears stuck ion with physicians’ tape and feet swathed in absorbent cotton, mem- bers of the Gastineau football squad sat down to a banquet pro- vided by and presided over by James Whipple, assistant manager of the Gastineau Company, and| E. C. Russell 1 The Alaska-Gastineau Mlning“ Company had taken possession of the new offices aprovided for in the addition to the new Valentine Building. Under the new arrange- ment, the general offices occupied nearly the entire front of the large structure. They were fitted | up in fine shape. i Mining and Fishing | banquet,| | Rose A. Andrews Graduate Nurse | Electric Cabinet Baths—Mas- sage, Colonic Irrigations | office hours 11 am. to 5 p.m. ! Evenings by Appointment Second and Main Phone 258 - — Jones-Stevens Shop LADIES'—CHILDREN'S READY-TO-WEAR | Beward Street Near Third — ] | Glasses Pitted, Lenses Ground - +- | | Fraternal Societies T OoF | Gastineau Channel SRRSO e | B. P. 0. ELKS meets every Wednesday at 8 p. m. Visiting brothers welcome. L. W. Turoff, Exalt- ed Ruler. M. H. Sides, Secretary. NIGHTS OF CO Seghers Council No. 1760. Meetings second and last Monday at 7:30 p. m. ,_i"&}_'-';é XY MB ed to attend. Councll Chambers, Fifth Streci. JOHN F. MULLEN, G. K. H. J. TURNER, Secretary —a ur lrucks go sny place 8ny.| | O ti A tank for Diesel Ol | ime. . A and a tank for crude oil save' burner trouble. PHONE 149. NIGHT 148 RELIABLE TRANSYER | < | | | Wise to Call 48 Juneau Transfer Co. when in need of MOVING or STORAGE Fuel Oil Coal Transfer Konneru p’s MORE for LESS | | | JUNEAU-YOUNG i ™ . D, | Tuneral Parlors ! Licensed Funeral Directors | and Embalmers | Night Phone 1851 Day Phone 12 —a SABIN'S | | Everything in Furnishings for Men n e { THE Juneau LAunpry ' | Franklin Street betweem ) | Front ana Second Strests | i 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 ¥Yront St., next to Brownie’s Barber Shop orfice Hours: 10-12; 2-8 Evenings by Appointment ——a JUNEAU FROCK SHOPPE “Exclusive but not Expensive” Coats, Dresses, Lingerie Hoslery and Hats ;—--,_~___.i HOTEL ZYNDA Large Sample Rooms ELEVATCR SERVICE 8. ZYNDA, Prop. GARBAGE HAULED Reasonable Monthly Rates E. O. DAVIS TELEPHONE 584 Day Phone 371 ', '. Harry Race DRUGGIST “THE SQUIBB STORE" dominates the business life of the Juneau district, employing more capital and more men than any other industry. Both management and employees of these great interests demand the best in banking service, and for forty-two years they have Cards found it in The B. M. Behrends Bank. The New Arctic Pabst Famous Draught Beer On Tap M4 AWML ) The complete facilities and seasoned serv- ice of Alaska’s oldest and largest bank will prove their worth to you. The B. M. Behrends Bank Juneau Coffee Shop Opposite MacKinnon Apts. Breakfast, Luncheon Dinner | Open 7:30 am. to 9 pm. HELEN MODER | | | To selll To sellll Advertising 1 your best bet now. FORD AGENCY (Authorized Dealers) GAS OILS GREASES . Juneau Motors -PUOT OF MAIN ST, MAYTAG PRODUCTS W. P. JOHNSON ~— McCAUL MOTOR COMPANY Dodge and Plymouth Dealers r* Smith Electric Co. Gastineau Bullding EVERYTHING ELECTRICAL JRNGE——— _J BETTY MAC BEAUTY SHOP 107 Assembly Apartmemts PHONE 547 [ TYPEWRITERS RENTED ,1 $5.00 per month | | J. B. Burford & Co. “Our doorstep worn by satistied customers” I The world's

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