The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, June 16, 1934, Page 7

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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, SATURDAY, JUNE 16, 1934. BARNEY GOOGL E AND SPARK PLUG LISSEN, BARNEY - T GOTTA KNOW JUS’ WHERE I WHAT ABOUT ME 7 I ALREADY CABLED THE FAMILY IN UT\CA TO COME OVER- STAND OR_T'M GRABBIN'/ THE NEX TUE DUTTA HERE -~ WHERE'S THAT GUY FROM DUBUQUE WHO WANTS TO BE SEC. OF AGRICULTURE ? HOW GOES THE BATTLE ? MAN Vs, MACHINE WHO — mME 32 A POSTMASTER. ? GNATS H! T WANTA BE AMBASSADOR OR NOTTIN/ AT ALL - SEE This is the sixth of a series of daily articles on the stat- ute of the machine in var- ious ccuntries. VI. GERMANY By JOHN A. BOUMAN BERLIN, June 16.—One of the geeatest problems facing the Third | Reich—the relative adjustment of | craftsmanship and machine pro-| duction—is being attacked vigor- ously. | From its beginning, the Hitler movement was aimed at attracting the great army of small artisans —the “Handwerker” — to whom promi of a bright future, with plenty of remunerative work, were held out. ¥ “Neither the Kaiser nor the postwar system knew how to put § the machine into its proper place in the state,” said‘ Hitler's organ. | Voelkisher =~ Boehachter recently. “The new state will find a solu- tion.” From all indications, the process is somewhat painful all 'round. Machine ve. “Handwork” \ On one hand, there is Ger- any’s vast output of machinery,' flinning into billions of marks val- | ue per annum, and giving employ- ment to 5,000,000 workers. i On' the other hand, handicraft, it is urged, is creative work, mnot soulless drudgery, and therefore alone worthy of the German gen- ius. “German handwork,” said an ap- peal at the time of the November | plebiscite, “is indissolubly bound up with the thousand-years-old| kultur of the German race, and has ever shown the true national instinct in times of crisis. It will tgke the foremost place in the Reich's reconstruction.” e A law was passed as far back as last July whereby cigar manufac- turers, for instance, were forbid- den to instal modern mass-pro-| ducing machinery. They were, ‘however, permitted to continue us- ing their present machines, pro- vided they did not turn out more than the previous week's output. Government subsidies were of- fgred in various ways to such oth- er industries as were willing to ycease usin gmachinery and revert to hand work, in so far as this was possible. Boc ting Consamplion Spasmcdic efforts followed to boost tm at trade. ~ hat; give your e was one week's used ) be the of the free- 2g23. d pianos ar> to cuitivate Cer- was the next wear a blue suit for Sunda runs a decre2 by Rcieri Lev. leader of the “La- bor Front.” B'ue clothes were the garb ¢f honor, worn only by fx”n- born men in the middle ag InerucLi"m were incidentally given that a red-patterned shirt Everyhoidy m J— | The Florence S Prrmanent Waving l Florence Holmquist, Prop. PHONE 427 | Behrends Bank Buflding | ITALIAN-FRENCH DINNERS ¢ ' with wine if desired DAILY—A full course dinner you will enjoy for 75 cents. Gastineau Cafe Gastineau Hotel " Sy Germany under Hitler is seeking an adjustment between ma- chine and handicraft workers, but the problem remains a difficult cne. Here are two German mechanics at work on a dynamo. should not be worn with a blue suit. Local nazi leaders were quick to take the hint from above, and the campaign against the ‘“soulless machine of the accursed marxistic age” raged fiercely. But what the hand workers gained, the machine workers lost. Industrial Warning President Flottmann of the Chamber of Industry at Bochum, the center of the Ruhr industrial region, recently made public pro- test against “interference by ig- ncorant meddlers, resuiting in the opping of orders for machinery, because intending purchasers are| afraid they will be forcibly pre- vented from using it.” Flottman unemployment was not the fault of the machine, and that the ma- chine is not the worker's enemy. The machone iconoclasts, he said, were very much mistaken, because not over-production — but under-| consumption—lies at the root of the world depression. Answer Not Found He strongly warned the gov- ernment “not to permit economie || to play with vital national| tyros interests.” Vice-President Daeschner of the Labor Front, writing in an offic-| ial publication, complained among | other things of farmers being pre- vented from using harvesting ma- chinery. In another case, he said, all the| industrial manufacturers of one town were ordered to increase their staffs by 20 per cent at once, and | to disconnect all their labor-sav- ing machinery. Tomorrow—South America R G DINE AND DANCE At the beautiful Woodland Gar- dens tonight. Music by the Wood- Jand Trio, featuring Harold Knox, on the accordian. —adv. NEW TELE A new telephone book will be issued by us about July 1 and all advertisers will please see that their ad copy is in our hands not hter than June 25. Thank you, JUNEAU AND DOUGLAS TELEPHONE COMPANY. adv. further argued that| WE DIRECTORY lJ. T. TENNESON AND FAMILY LEAVE FOR TENAKEE THIS A. M. J. T. Tenneson, President of the Superior Packing Company at Ten- akee, arrived in Juneau from the |south last evening on the steamer Yukon and left at 10:30 o'clock this morning on the cannery tender Captain Bing for the ecannery. Mr. Tenneson was accompanied {by Mrs. Tenneson, their son Jack land Mrs. C. McLouth Blandin, James Blandin and a nursemaid. Mrs. Blandin, who was a class- matz of Mrs. Tenneson's at Wel- lesley, and her son will visit at the cannery for a week or ten S befere returning to their home in New York MR st SRS, In the BAG! | Pack your clothes and linens in the laundry bag, send it to us, and you'll smile! That's what thrifty women do! Alaska *|serve any beer or wine except in THOSE GUIVS'LL ORIVE ME CRAZY — ‘L CAN'T STAND 1T U "ORDINANGE IS | INTRODUCED ON. LIQUOR SALES | Alms at Sel]mg to Minors, Drunkenness—Action | Is Postponed (Continuea from Page One) dance, or place of amusemmL within the corporate limits of the City of Juneau. Section 14. Any person or cor- | poration who violates any of the terms of this ordindnce, and any licensee, owner, manager or em- ployee of any place where beer, winle or intoxicating liquor is so!d vended, served, furnished or give: a.wny. who shall violate any of the provisions of this ordinance, shall be deemed guilty of a mis- demeanor and, upon conviction istrate, shall be punished by a fine of not more than $100, or by imprisonment in the city jail for not more than thirty days, or by HELLO, BOVS - T'VE COME OVER TO SPEND THE WEEK-END, WITH YA = BARANGF MAKES TRIPS TO MANY NEARBY POINTS At 8:30 o'clock this morning the seaplane Baranof, of the Alaska Southern Airways, Pilot Gene Mey- | thereof, before the Municipal Mag- ring, Lloyd Jarman, mechanic, left for a round trip to Todd with Nick Bez and Gov. John W. Troy on the outbound trip and Mr. and Mrs. Arthur W. Rust as passengers duty of every licensee to ascertain both ‘such fine and imprisonment from Todd to Juneau. the age of all persons before sell- ing, serving or furnishing them any such intoxicating liquors, and any licensee who sells, serves or furnishes any such intoxicating li- | quor to any person under twenty-, one years of age shall be pre-| sumed to have known that such person was under age. No uoensee‘ shall sell, serve or furnish any in-| toxieating liquor to any habitual drunkard or to any person who is ‘drunk or intoxicated at the time; and any person who is no- ticeably under the influence of in= toxlcating . liquor in any degree shall be deemed runk or intoxi- cated. Section 3. No person under the in the discretion of the municipal magistrate. AR MARTHA SOCIETY ICE CREAM SOCIAL PRONOUNCED SUCCESS The Ice Cream Social sponsored by the Martha Society yesterday in the Presbyterian Church Parlors was a great success, according to the ladies, the society lncres.smg‘ its treasury by more than $50. Lunch was served at noon, and tea and ice cream were served during the afternoon. A feature of the occasion was the serving of Schillings coffee by H. B. Crewsun representative of the company, ai aze of twenty-one years shall beMrs. Crewson. | allowed or permitted to frequent | or oiter in & beer parlor or place operated under or by virtue of a dispensary license, and it shall be | the express duty of every person |and licensee owning, managing or | working in any such place to en- | force this provision. i | Employing Minors Section 4. Tt shall be unlawful for any licensee to employ any perzon under twenty-one years of lage to work in or ‘about any beer ‘p.Arlor or to sell or serve any beer‘ or to allow any female! to solicit business therein, | person jor to furnish or provide enter- | tainment to the patrons of such place, or to loiter in any such/ place except as a bona fide cus- tomer thereof in good faith. Sectien 5. No person shall be served or allowed to consume beer | in any beer parlor except when seated. No loud, lewd, vulgar, obscene or profance language or i noises shall be permitted therein, either by employees or patrons of such places. Secction 6. No licensee operating| |any place under or by virtue of a Restaurant License shall sell or uncapped bottles to bona fide cus- tomers of such restaurants, to be consumed on the premises by such | customers, while seated and with meals. Clesing Hours Soction 7. Beer Parlors, dispen- saries and liquor stores of every description shall be closed and kept closed, and the doors thereof locked between the hours of 1 a. m. and 8 a. m. of each day; and during such closed period no per- son or persons shall be allowed to loiter therein except bona fide employees whose presence is nec- essary in the conduct of 'such beer | parlor, dispensary or liquor store. Section 8. The sale of beer, wine | or other intoxicating liqior what- soever by any person, company or corporation ” without a Territorial license is hereby prohibited. Section 9. All licensees shall post their licenses in a° conspicu- ous place in the principal room in which the business is conducted, where ‘the same are accessible and can be convenlently read and in- spected by ‘the’ general public. ! Intoxication Banned Section 10. It shall be unlaw- ful for any person to bé or appe; upon the streets, alleys or pubr places of the City of Juneau, Al- aska, in an intoxicated condition, or under the influence or intoxi- cating lquor; and 1§ shall bé un- lawful for any perSon to drink or consume intoxicating - Mquor upon any of the streets, alleys ar pub-| lic ‘squares'6f the City of Juneau.' Sectlon 11. It shall be unlawful, for any person to drive or attempt | to drive any automobile, truck, or other ‘vehicle updh Or over any o{ the streets, alleys or publtc phar of ‘thé City of Juneau while in- toxicated or under the influence of liquor. | Section 12. No person within the | Cfty ‘of Juneau, Alaska, whether! licénsee or mot, shall serve, sell,| give, or furnish to any perwn‘ untler the age of twenty-one yenrs| ':nv intoxicating liquor of any na-| ure. Amusement Places Section 13. It shall be unlawful, - .o WEEKLY NEWSPAPER IS STARTED AT STEW. Stewart, B. C., now has a four- page weekly newspaper called the Northern Argpnaut. W. R. Smith, former Stewart resident ‘and own- er of various property interests in !that distict, 15 the editor of the Argonayt. Pending the arrival and setting up of machinery, the paper !is being.printed in Vancouver. e Old newspapers for sale at Em. pire Office, HEY! YOU! The Public demand it —WE HAVE IT! A good clean Saturday Night Dance W ANTED! YOUR FEBT and a 1000 more at the Y’l! furnis h the ‘HM — you' can- not help but DANCE with JOY— ThRTZa A~ On the first of two trips to be made to Chichagof, the Baranof, Pilot Meyring, Mechanic Jarman, left its Juneau base at 11:30 o'clock. Stops were to be made at Hoonah, Port Althorp and Chichagof. Out- going passengers were Mrs. M. H. Damron, for Hoonah; M. W. Saar, fer Port Althorp and Mike Paul, Miss Lea O'Dell and Mrs. J. E. Smith for Chichagof. Another trip to Chichagof is to | be made by the Baranof this after- noon immediately upon its return here with a stop at Sitka on ths flight back to Juneau, according to A. B. Hay. Man; D CH!CHAGOF DUE HERE FROM BASE AT KETCHIKAN To take members of the Wash- burn-Crillon Expedition gn a flight to Lake Crillon and the Lituya Bay district, the seaplane Chichagof, of the Alaska Southern Airways, Pilot R. E. Ellis, A. P. Brewer, me- chanie, is due in Juneau today from its Ketchikan base. The plane will probably remain overnight and return to Ketchi- kan tomcrrow, A. B. Hayes, Man- ager, said Daily Empwre Want Ads Pc) “Tomorrow’s Styles Today” “Juneau’s Own Store” FIRE ALARM CALLS -3 Third and Franklin, -4 Front and Franklin. -5 Front, near Ferry Way, 6 Front, near Gross Apts. Front, opp. City Wharf. -8 Front, near Sawmill. -9 Front at A. J. Office. -1 Willoughby at Totem b Grocery. ‘Willoughby, opp. Cash Cole’s Garage. ~~ ' Front and Seward. Front and Main, Second and Main. Fifth and Seward. Seventh and Main. Fire Hall. Home Boarding Hous8. Gastineau and Rawn Way. | Second and Gold. Fourth and Harris. 1 1 1 1- 1-7 1 1 2 Seventh and Gold. Fifth and Kennedy. Ninth, back of power house, Calhoun, opp. Seaview Apts. Distin and Indian. Ninth and Calhoun. Tenth and 'C. Twelfth, B.P.R. garage. AN, IN VI TA TION t5'diné well' _ad rest “well - st Seattle’s most distinguished ad- dress. Here, you will find an the modern hotel convéiilences * ne- cessary to your complete comfort’ ahd &Il those old Tashicned'iens of ‘friendliness and hospitality that ' are necessary to a good hotel ‘nll operated. ADOLPH SCHMIDT, Managing Director. HA(::;;LHEqu\.niners—mk for Permanent Rates. NEW WASHINGTON Seattle’s Most Distinguished Address CEEMENSEEEEEETLEINANIIEERREEESAASRIEITASNT D BN N IATNARINERALENT BEE” 3T SR BN AR RS IAS AL RREAAASEINASTIINLRTRNRLLN Nettléton Shoes for Men LEADER DEPT. STORE GEORGE BROTHERS WHOLESALE AND RETAIL GROCERS Phones 92—95 Free Delivery A Miles Automatic Air Conditioner is operamlg in the new.Jensen Ap;rtments. SEE IT.,, Miles Air, Conditioner can be in- stulled on any hot air furnace job. Hatrl Machine S[mp Plumlnng Heanng Sheet Metal Edson Permanent Waves $5 FINGER WAVES—Water or Fluid—50 cents TEMPORARY LOCATION—226 Willoughby Ave. PHONE 241 IDEAL PAINT SHOP .. 1f It's Paint We Have I¢! PHONE 549 Wendt & Garster P e Juneau Cash Grocery CASH GROCERS Corner Second and Seward Free Delivery Pnce Reduction 18% OFF All of our preserft stock of Floor, Bridge, Boudoir, 8%, Bed and Table Lamps PRICED TO SELL NOW ® Alaska Electric Light & Power Co JUNEAU—Phone 6 DOUGLAS———Phone 18 Phone 58 v WINDOW CLEAN PHONE 485 ¥ UNITED FOOD CO. CASH GROCERS Phone 16 _We Deliverr Meats—Phone 16 ALASKA MEAT €O0. FEATURING CAKSTEN’S BABY BEEF—DIAMOND TC-HAMS AND BACON—U. S. Government m e e o] 1 it Ty

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