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o T A NG e e e THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, TUESDAY, JULY 17, 1934. GOOD LUCK, OLD PAL - TLL BE ROOTIN! FOR. YOou --- LOOK THE BULL RIGHT N THE EYE- DISPUTES BOARD: MAKE PROPOSAL . OF ARBITRATION Entire Present Controversy Asked to Be Submitted Immediately (Continuea rrom' Page One) and machine guns, artillery and gas units were dispatched this morning to the east bay section . to await orders. Extenslon or tne walzout brings practically the entire strength of the unious to 100,000 members in the bay section. Behind the movement of the gen- eral strike, according to labor lead- ers, is defense of “American prin- PRICE v ciples of organization, and col- lective bargaining.” Ask Martial Law San Francisco civic and business organizations plead for martial law but Acting Governor Merriam de- clared that if the National Guard was unable to cope with the sit- uation, he would take whatever sieps necessary. This is taken to mean he might request Federa) soldiers. More restaurants will be opened today to the food stricken city. Johnson on Scene Gen. Hugh S. Johnson, NRA seAdministrator arrived today by plane but declined to make any comment on his plans. His address at the California University has been cancelled. Food is scarcer in San Francisco ..but in Oakland, plans are being made for delivery of staple goods with union sanction to groceries .and chain stores. Viclence Violence is reminiscent of the | 1906 fire and quake and spread a; wseed of terror over the area. No ¢ _major acts resulted frem the first, day of the general strike but the extent of minor incidents led many small shébpkeepers, who did (@ ) | effective as they used to be. not immediately close, to lock their doors. Loek Up Gems # Jewelers followed the advice of the authorities and put their gems in vaults and ceased business. Food profiteering is responsible for violence. Stores have been looted in Oakland, trucks over- turned and drivers beaten. Several fights broke ocut and the ers and made several arrests. IL.OADNG AT SEATTLE SSATTLE, July 17.—All is quiet police | raided the Communist headquart-| | | | wrought. | doctor. HEY, SuLLY ! WHICH WAY DID T, HE GO 32 THERE'S ONE THING MORE HE MUSTN'T FORGETY - . here. - Nonunion labor continues td load foreign shipping. PORTI AND bll'Ur\TlDN FORTLAND, Oregon, July 17.—It indicated tha a general strike here will come at 5 o'clock Wednes- day afternoon, if it comes. . Julius L. Meier has com- municated with the President and also United States Senator Wagner ' urging the latter to speed here to ala m mediation. STRIKEBREAKERS ENROUTE | NEW YORK, July 17—P. L.| Bergoff, a private detective, said| last night he sent 100 strike- | breakers from Chicago to San Francisco yesterday by airplane and train and another group of 100 “key men” will be sent to the coast sometime today. Bergoff estimated that if the general strike lasted one week, he will have 1500 strikebreakers on the scene. He plans to leave for the coast himself shortly. o THE POLITICAL GAME it were smallpox, and shouting indigrantly that political thoughts never enter their innocent minds. Political action is the accepted form of popular expression in the United States. The political party dather than the bayonet or the bomb, is the legal instrument by which changes in government are Then why do so many public men speak of politics as if it were something unclean and un- American? In no other branch of human endeavor do the participants, and the beneficiaries, take so much pains to discredit their own kind and inferentially themselves. Many observers think it highly questionable whether the old poli- tical tricks are anything like as The trend toward independent votmg would seem to indicate that fewer Americans are being sWB.yedl by prejudices and bombast; that! more Americans are voting after sober reflection, based on a real- ization that no man and no party is wholly good or wholly bad. The voter is, in the end, the The old tricks will dis-| appear only when he laughs them, off the stage. | ————-—— WHOLESALE FIRM ADDS NEW LINE TO STOCK J. B. Caro and Company, ]ocal wholesalers, have added the Proc-! tor and Gamble products to their lines of merchandise. These pro- ducts include soaps, shortenings, candies, etc., the first shipment of | which arrived on the Alaska. | “Germany’s Old Man” One great leader stands out in Germany when trouble stirs. It is “Der Alte”—to the “Old Man”—that millions of Germans turn. Two decades ago they called von Hin- denburg to stem the menacing Russian tide. Tannenherg, where German arms triumphed over the forces of the Czar, became not only a battle but a tradition as well—a tradition of victory that put von Hindenburg in su- preme command of Germany’s armies. Five illustrated stories—the first today in The Empire — summarize the career of Germany’s ‘Old Man,” show him as a soldier, as he was when popular demand called him from retirement to the Presidency. carry him through the Hitler campaign and into the days of Nazi ascendancy—but still the President and still “Der Alte,” Germany’s “Old Man.” STARTING TODAY They KENAI ARRWES TODAY; MAIDEN TRIP TOMORROW ‘Dav1d Ramsay Will Be Pur- ser— Was Formerly on Estebeth, Same Run Ready to serve the mail route between Juneau and Sitka, the steamship Kenai of the Alaska |Steamship Company, formerly the Puget Sound fort tehder General Miiflin, arrived here at 3 o'clock this afternoon. The Kenai has accommodations | for thiry passengers and space lur 200 tons of cargo. She is a vesse' of 406 gross and 231 net tons reg- | ister, 130 feet long, 27 feet beam and 12.1 feet in depth. Sailings from Juneau to Sitka !with passengers, freight and mail will be made every Wednesday evening at 6 o'clock. The Kenai was purchased from the Government by the Puget Sound Tug and Barge Company | and sold to the Alaska Steamship Company. The vessel formerly wa operated as a Puget Sound fort| tender by the Quartermaster Corps. | U. S. Army. David Ramsay, formerly purser on the Estebeth on the same mail run, will act as purser on the Kenai, which is to leave tomorrow evening at 6 o'clock on her first trip. e ——— ALEUTIAN DUE AT 2 A. M. Steamer Aleutian is schvdu!ctl to arrive in port at 2 o'clock to- morrow morning enroute to the westward. The steamer will be in| port six or seven hours discharg- | ing freight. STEAMER YUKON AT20°CLOCK Will Be Fully—Loaded with Passengers, Leaving Juneau at 5:30 The steamer Yuken, Capt. O. C. Anderson, commander, and M. J. Wilcox, purser, arrived from the Westward at 2 o'clock this after- noon with 20 passengers for Ju- neau. Arrive)s are T. B. Brown, Mr. and Mrs. Charleh H. Flory, R. Marie | Preston, Jessie Plattenberg, Mrs. |Dan Russell and child and Mrs. !W. G. Benewa from Seward; V. | Popovich and Nick Moroloff from Valdez; John Gilbertson, Mrs. John Palm, J. S. Jeffrey, Fred K. Ord- way apd E. S. Fish from Cordova; and W. H, Dugdell, Sam Elstead, Peter Louie, Katie Miller and Mr. and Mrs. Yakutat. THe Yukon was scheduled to sail |at 5:30 o'clock this afternoon for Tacoma, and according to local agents of the Alaska Steamship | Company, all reservations have |b(en filled for the southbound trip, | giving the vessel a full load from | Juneau on. - eee —— L. OSGAD LEAV HOSPITAL L. Osgad left St. Ann’s Hospital | vesterday after receiving medical wcarc thexe for several days. D MRS. JAKE CROPLEY AND SON HOME FROM HOSPITAL TODAY Mrs. Jake Cropley and her in- fant son left St. Ann's Hospital ARRIVES HERE T. P. Hinckley from | F ire Demon Again Visits Scene After Five Years KETCHIKAN, Alaska, 17.—Five years to a day after fire destroyed the reduction - plant, about ten miles north of ! Ketchikan, another blaze de- stroyed the rebult plant of the ‘Salmoil Corporation on Sun- “day. A barge containing 1,000 bar- rels of salmonm oil, alongside shore plant, was saved. It is believed the fire start- ed in the meal drier. BURDICK LEAVES TO INSPECT PROJECTS To inspect trail projects under way in several communities, Dis- trict Forest Ranger Charles Burdick left here today on the airplane Fatco for a two-day trip. He was accompanied by District Ranger Harold Smith, of Cordova, and Harry Sperling, Administrative As- sistant. The party will go first to Pack Creek on the east coast of Ad- miralty Island, thence to Angoon and Port Alexander and from there to Sitka to spend the night. To- morrow they will return here via Tenakee and Hoonah. > fiw'lLL TEACH SCHOOL AT PAULOFF HARBOR Mr. and Mrs. Leonard Rodland, of Everett, Wash., are leaving on the Aleutian for the Westward, where Mr. Redland will teach in the Territorial school at Pauloff Harbor, on Sanak Island. Mr. and Mrs. Rodiand have been in Juneau for the past few days, coming from Hox,mh where he was with the }Bmcdu of Public Roads. He has |been teaching the past year or [for their home this morning. more in the Everett pub]lc schools. Ask Your Grocer for | | I { | | ; M’MT e —-: INSURAN(JB I MUSTA WENT THROUGH THE WRONG Alleii Shiciti Ec YACHT ARILYN 'ARRIVES HERE 'FROM SEATTLE Party Aboard Plans Sev- eral Days’ Stop in Juneau | We carry ah the mew ceolors introduced at the recent auto shows Juneau. Aluska | With a New Treat youd car to & new coat of paint and you won't need a 34 molel! Drive in today for a free estimate. You'll like our price — and yow'll appreciate our service and workmanship. Connors Motor Co., Inc. _——J —Will Go to Skagway | The 50-foot diesel yacht, Maruyn, owned by J. C. Bowles of the Se-| attle Yacht Club, and navigated by Capt. F. W. Hardwick, arrived in Juneau yesterday evening from Se‘ attle. Mr. Bowles is not aboard: me' Marilyn, the party being composed of Mr. and Mrs. H. Lincoln and Mrs. E. A. Marshall, all three of | Seattle. The yacht left Seattle July 1, and has been cruising about the islands of the British Columbia and Al- aska coast since that time. It is planned by the members of the party to remain in Juneau for sev-| eral days. ‘When the Marilyn leaves, she will go first to Taku Glacier and | LUMBER Juneau Lumber Mills, Ine. then to Skagway, the present it- inerary calling for a return to Se- attle by September 1. The return trip will include a cruise along the West Cecast of Prince of Wales Is- land. On the way in yesterday, the Marilyn met the Pagan, owned by W. H. Lyman Jr.,, of Beverly Hills, Cal, which was on thé way out, but had burned out two bearings| down the channel, and towed the latter back into port. ——e—— LEAVES ON ALEUTIAN operate on a 40-ho Ben C. Delzelle, merchandise bro- ker, is leaving on the Aleutian for Wcsbward and Interior cities, Heatin, Plumbing ’l | | | GARLAND BOGGAN | Hardwood Floors | Waxing Polishing Sanding CAlIfORi.N'IA TELEPHONE 478 NOTICE In compliance with the N. R. A. Code this shop will ur week basis. Working days will be from Monday to Friday inclusive. Harri Machme Shop Fruits and Vegetables Prompt De Phone 546 J. A, Sol IT'S A Dirt Dét there’s It’s like a story of adventure, engineers experimented and worked to velous dry cleaning system. searches out hidden dirt — cleans: gently, ever so thoroughly. It perks up the But doesn’t leave a trace of odor. lievable? Then try Zoric—and see! "STAR BA KERY NON-ACID BREAD DAILY . . 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