The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, January 18, 1934, Page 7

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- THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, THURSDAY, JAN. 18, 1934. By BILLE DE BECK BARNEY GOOGLE AND SPARK PLUG BARNEY ! I'VE GOT A HUNCH YOUR WIFE 1S RIGHT HERE IN TOWN- AND SHE'S PROBABLY HAVIN’ YOU WATCHED FOR A FEW DAYS BEFORE SHE COMES BACK TQ Vou- WHAT OUTTA HERE * Lgen, O‘Nl . ce Again We can «upply that long-time fuel friend— Black Diamond Lump $14.50 PER TON At Bunkers Especially adapted for the range Bunker Price $12.00 Yo wb .AJ;\ al D0 GREAT SCOTT! YA MEAN SHE'S GOT SOMEBODY -SPYIN’ ON ME ? ALSO— Indian Egg-Lump Carbonado Egg-Nut The ideal furnace combination PHONE 412 CIFIC COAST COAL G r" "‘” JUNEAD ALASKA SO IT'S BEEN FIWE VEARS SINCE YOU'VE SEEN YOUR WIFE ? YOU'VE PROBABLY CHANGED A LOT IN THAT TIME, BARNEY WHY DONT YOU HAVE SOME ] PHOTOGRAPHS TAKEN-- SEND 'EM TO YOUR SHE'LL CHANGE HER WMIND ABOUT COMINY/---~ m b HOW LONG WILL T TAKE FOR A FuLL SET OF X-RAY PICTURES-? BOYY THAT'S A GREAT |DEA- \\ FOR I"fiSURANCE See H. R. SHEPARD & SON Telephotie 409 ° B. M. Behrends Bank Bldg. HELLO-- STORAGE COMPANY ? SAY--- YOU'VE GOT A TRUNK THERE — FULLA MY WIFE'S CLOTHES ==+ YEH ===+ YOUVE HAD IT FOR FIVE VEARS MOTH BALLS - L gE - WIFE'S TRUNK. COME ? e " FRYE’S BABY. BEEF SHE'S COMIN/ WANNA QET (T -~ T BACK ----AN'’ YEH - AN THERE WASNLT - A STITCH N [ e ®XX W % X U AR® STUBKS RETAIN‘ VALUES THOUGH STERLING DROPS _.peculators Take Profits and Sit on Sidelines for Develocpments ‘ (Continued from 2age One) stock is 22'%, American Can 99, American Power and Light 7%, An- aconda 15%; Armour B. 3, Bethle- | hem Steel 42%, Calumst and Hee- | la 5, Curtiss- anhL 2%, Fox Films 14%, General Motors 36%, International Harvester 41%, Ken- | necott 21%, North American Avia- | tion 5%, Montgomery-Ward 25! Standard Oil California 39%, Unit- | ed States Steel 53%. | ‘Thursdny at 8 p.m. SERIES OF LECTURES TO START THIS EVENING The first of a series of lectures to be given during the Church UmLy Octave from January 18 to nuary 25, will be given by Father Budde in the Church of the Nativ- |ity at 7:30° o'clock this evening. | The subject will be “Did Christ Wxah Unity in His Church and {How the Lack of Unity Among Christians Was Brought About.” | The public is welcome to attend these lectures. ATTENTION Women of the Moose to meet Initiation. All| Brother Moose are invited to at- tend social to follow meeting. Al is desired. GERTIE OLSON, Recorder. Daily Emprre want Ads Pay Daily Cross-word Puzzle ACR. $8 . Moccasins : Jewel . Smooth- spoken 2. Pagan god . Feminive game . Speed contest . General drift . Marked with bars of con- trasting color . Finish the upper wall of a room . Pronoun 2, Monkey . Woolly sur- face of cloth 26, Steps . Repeated without regard to [EIE], the meaning fl?fl@l BEIHU E[L[T] . Outer garment it Eierercen tree 46 gdavters'send . Heraldic term 3. Wings of " The herd dill .. buildings 3 M'nk(‘r o( pour $2. Musical 3 ]zhmdur tea 56 | Permit 5. Before Beam of light i ca Solution ot Yesterday's Puzzle DEISTAICIOTL ] . Southern state: abbr, 3pe squares egend 5. [ 3 g. Made-up face; . Ripple against ) 10. Ergzen water [‘:]mm 1, %fi r bottom animal: collog. . Mr. Van Wine Kle's first name 20, Afterward Dismay Famous agnos tie . Danger . Disputed . Diner . Cubic meter . Came back . Ten-cent pleces . Short jacket . Entangle . Part of an egg . Withstood use . Preceded v . English ca- thedral city . Character in .u: . Wild plum Arlleh 7 II fll.l/flll/,,,,, l MW -IIIHV///II %/ dEEd/ HI ////WI Ifl. w7/ // g From the opinion of the Su- preme Court on the Minnesota | moratorium it is possible to obtain a fairly clear idea of the princi- Ipal by which the court is likely to judge the great mass of new | legislation recently enacted. Tho case hefore the judges turned on ywhether a statute of Minnesota, to relieve mortgagors, was contrary to the provision in the Federal Constitution against the impair- good time is planned by commxttee'mem of contracts. ‘m charge and a large s,m.endancm ‘The details of the statute, of the particular case, and of the argu- ment from precedent we may leave %0 the lawyers. Our concern i3 with the general principles which were invoked by Chief Justicz Hughes in the majority opinior holding the Minnesota statute con- ;smutlonal Por presumably his | statement of principles in this case discloses what will be the mind of the majority in considering the body of the new legislation. l The basic principle is that the power exists in American govern- ment to protect “the vital interests {of the people,” “We must never forget,” says the . Chief Justice, Marshall, “that it is a | .. i 5 % & g5, intended to endure TR Egggg f Thug # transpives that the court holds that extreordinary may be- justified, clear that it dedls i ¢f { ] 1k Today and Tomorrow By WALTER LIPPMANN e | The Voice of the Supreme Court Copyright, 1933, New York Tribune Inc. power. The court does not say that a legislature may do what it likes on the plea that there is an emerg- ency. It says that a legislature may does must be done sincerely, can- didly, and with plain and specific relation to the actual situation. In recognizing that power exists to deal with the emergency the court, furthefmore, lays down the rule that extraordinary legislation must be ‘“temparary in operation «. . (and) limited to the exigency which' ealled it forth” A legisla- ture, for example, may relieve dcbt- ors in a crisis; by giving them a moratorium,. but it cannot cancel their debts for all time to come.” This statute runs until May 1, 1985. “The operation of the statute,’ says the court, “could not validly outlast the emergency or be so extended as to virtually destroy the contracts.” This appears to be quite in line with other decisions in recent years ‘which, draw, a rather sharp line between | and permanent legislation. Toward temporary laws to meet a erisis the court is very liberal: it recognizes that the pow- er exists to do any reasonable thing economic convulsion, But laws which are to be permanent it quite <vidently intends.to serutinize care- fully and to judge by much stricter standards .of . constitutional powers and mfis : Altbmshmwnmudeclslon is by & parrow majority of five to four, few reasonable people have mmmmmwwld nohnt this decision by the so-called lib- erals” of the court makes it per- fectly clear that permanent chang- € in American institutions can- not be wrought by subterfuges, by exploiting the emergency for ends which, however good in themselves, are part of the emergency. is the genuine 1 doc- It eanumphbq a ent s adapted, as Magshall said of humah af- w al a %‘1 e R of the people, by the people and do what is necessary, but what it|] | have clunua but lttle elsewhere. to meet a crisis, be it war, or earth- | ° ,|quake and flood and fire, or an J. 8. DEFARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE, WEATHER BUREAU The Weather LOCAL DATA | Foreoast for Juneas and vicinity. beginning at 4 pm., Jan. 18: 4 Occasional snow tonight, Friday fair and slightly colder; mod- ‘erate east winds. | Time Barometer Temp. Humdity Wind Velocity Weathe: | 4 pm. yest'y ....29.76 28 70 E 9 cuy. ., | -4 am. today . 2071 29 98 8 [ Snow | Noon today ...29.45 30 80 L 5 Snow | CABLE AND RADxO REPORTS ————— e e YESTERDAY | TODAY Highest 4pm. | Lowest4am. 4am. Preclp. 4am. | Station “DELICIOUS” HAMS dnd BACON Frye-Bruhn Compan Telephone 88 very temp.” mp | temp. temp. velocity 24hrs. Weathe: -36 -42 -42 0 Clear -2¢ -32 -32 0 -32 -3¢ -34 0 -28 -28 -28 -28 -24 -24 10 6 18 18 12 20 28 25 32 32 10 34 8 2 Barrow Nome .. Bethel ... Fairbanks -25 Clear | -36 Clear Snow Clear Clear 0 Cldy 02 Snow 04 Clear a8 Snow 0 Cldy 46 Rain 24 Rain 0 Cldy .01 Cldy | [} Cldy 0 Cldy -24 -22 6 18 12 24 29 25 34 36 16 34 38 2 .08 o leabSoacaens - geEREsEEREy serEEe)BE| s“fl”fl The barometric pressure remains low near the Gulf of Alaska and ‘south of the Aleutian Islands with light snow or rain from the Central Interior to the Washington coast. The pressure is high and | rising slowly over the remainder of the Territory with generally fair weather, Temperatures have fallen .in exmnu Welum Alaska and they are M confused by the pres-' in because they are frightened by a great but temporary denger. A constitution which is flexible Were yesterday 1 mrrlm M vm-fim'i ¥ Mullen in Ju- have lived mmt”c;l~~ W %0 CREDITORS In the! Iwmluianer‘s Court for ,, Territory of Al- p Number One. In 1 the ,a"nn- of the Estate of CLARA STILL- NOTICE 18 REREBY GIVEN m the umdersigned was on the 17th’day of - ‘January, 1934, duly ap- pointed executor of the last will and testament of Clementine Clara Stillwell, deceased. All persons hav- ing claims against the said estate of sald deceased are required to present the same to the under- m ‘With proper. vauchers at- t Wunéau, Alaska, within six (@) lm‘hq from the date of Bl‘zUe M‘ry 17, HM HENRY A. JENKINS, Executor of the estate of Clem- entine Clara Stillwell, deceased First publication, Jan. 18, 1934. Last publication, Feb. 15, 1934. Willls' is the da Aaren Wilson, and her husband is| the eldest son of Mrs. Mary Willis, ———— F. D. MEETING The regular meeting of the Douglas Volunteer Fire Department will sbe held this evening in the City Hall. All members are request- | ed to attend. —'—‘-.-.———— mny Whipwe Want Age Pay f Joues-Stevem Sh LADIES’—CHILD) ' READY-TO-WEAR Thira If you are still burning black DIAMONDS You should ‘see the two used electric ranges' we have for sale’at blrgam prides. Convgniem terms if desircd . Alaska Electnc Light & Power Co. JUNEAU—Phone 6 DOUGLAS—Phone 18 IDEAL PAINT SHOP If I¢s Paint We Have It! PHONE 549 Wendt & Garster ALASKA MEAT CO. FEATURING CARSTEN’S BABY BEEF—DIAMOND TC HAMS AND BACON--U. S. Government Inspected PHONE 89 Deliveries—10:80, 2:80, 4:80 UNITED FOOD (0. CASH GROCERS Phone 16, We Deliver = Meats—Phone 16 SWEDISH MASSAGE for Stiff Joints SORE MUSCLES ' TENSE NERVES & So good for that tired feeling! PHONE 10, Gastineau Hotel fof Appeintment Mrs. J. M. Malila GRADUATE MASSEUSE 'I'IEHOI'ELOFALASKANW The Gastineau Onm‘hYuhhnlNulh’

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