The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, August 22, 1934, Page 7

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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 22, 1934. 7 — COME ON, STEVE . MRS, YANCEY AIN'T | GOT TIME_TO LOOK AFTER THE SAWING __ T'UL MANAGE SOMEHOW. BARNEY GOOGLE AND SPARK PLUG o' HEERED ME, STEVE. F3EN BRATS 1S JES’ VeV T’ TRAGUND HERE HOUSE PROBERS OF JUDGES NOW LOSE CHAIRMAN Carefully Lfi Plans May Be Set Back by Defeat of McKeown By HERBERT PLUMMER WASHINGTON, Aug. 22.—Defeat of the veteran Oklghoma member of the House — jovial, Irish Tom’ McKeown of Ada—-may upset the caretully latd plans of the Judiclaty Committce of that body for pro- coeding against certain Federal Judges in impeachment proceedings in the next Congress. McKeown, an eight-termer, was Chairman 6f a sub-committe¢ in- vestigating the judicial conduet of various membert of the Federal beneh. His committee had amassed censiderable information for use in a drive tuted by the House U “clean up” the Federal judiciary. Due to the press of business in the Seventy-third Congress it was fcund neccssary to postpone acLionJ until the next session McKeown and his committee hac been particularly active in looking into the activities of Chicago Fed eral judges. When the drive is launched ir the next Congress by Hatton Sum- ners of Texas, Chairman of tht House Judiciary Committee, thc aid and counsel of McKeown may be missed. MILK MATTERS Plans for what is expected to b the most far-reaching investigatior of the milk industry in history arc being carefully mapped out at the Department of Agriculture. Not much is being said about it publicly, but those on the inside predict tumultous upheavals once the machinery has been set in motion. Former Representative Victor Christian of Minnesota, a dairy ex- pert now connected with the AAA, is one of the big figures behind the proposed investigation. Drastic changes in the 19 Re- @ional Labor Boards throughout the country are being considered by the President's new Labor Rela- tions Board. The purpose is to try to expedite the han g of local labor dis- turbances. At present each board is working in a different manner, causing a great deal of confusion for the national body Prcposed changes are cxpected to include a realignment of geograph- ical set-ups, probable changes in some of the regional boards, uniform procedure in the handling of labor diificulties and 2 possib.e reduction in the number of boards. PRINKS ON THE HOUSE Afterncon tea at the State De- partment long has becn one of the accepted customs in governmental circles around Washington. Ogden Mills, when he was Secretary of the Treasury, often had tea served in his office around 4 o’clock in the afternoon. Postmaster General Farley is fond of giving parties to newspapermen assigned to cover his department following his press conferences. Madame Secretary Frances Per- kins, however, has gone them all one better. At,her press. confer- ences (during the hot summer in Washington) a negro attache in her office moves noiselessly about with'a heaping tray of ginger ale and ice dispensing liberal portions to all who care to imbibe. ———ao— NU-WAY HOT SPRINGS Famous Soap Ldké Minéral Health Baths. Drugléss Institute. —adv. personnal 90,000 CASES ~ SALMON PUT UP \Tenakee Cannery Crew of! Superior Packing Com- pariy, Stowing Gear | The Supefior Packing Company cannery tender Captain Bing, T. Engstrom, captain, left at noon to- day for Tenakee, after being in | Juneau since yesterday morning on | business. About 90,000 cases of salmon are reported to hdve been put up by | the cannery, with about 20,000 cas- es still awaiting shipment South. Nearly the entire crew is at the cannery, cleaning up, and will re- | main there uutil the traps are brought in and the gear stowed away for the winter. It is thought that the workers will start south shortly after September 1. Equator Brings Report The cannery tender dEquator, Capt. Frank Sutherland, owned by the Peril Straits Packing Company, is tied up at the city float un- dergoing engine repairs. As soon as the repairs are completed, the vessel will leave for Todd, its head- quarters. According to reports, the can- nery at Todd still has about 75,- 000 cases of salmon to ship south, of a total pack of nearly 85,000 cases. All canning operations should have been finished last ev- ening, as there is said to have been no more than enough fish on the floor to keep the plant going intil that time. Cannery workers are to go south as soon as the traps are in, prob- ibly between September 10 and 15. D s BARANCF ARRIVES IN SEATTLE AT NOON, SOUTHBOUND ‘With Nick Bez, president of the Peril Straits Packing Company and Robert W. Bender, General Man- !ager of The Empire, as passengers, | the seaplane Baranof, of the Alas- ‘ka Southern Airways, pilot Gene Meyring, Gordon Graham, mechan- ic, arrived in Seattle at noon to- day, according to word received in Juneau. It remained at Ketchikan last night. Both Mr. Bez and Mr. Bender Lo will be south for several days on business. The Baranof is expected to leave within a short time for | its base in Juneau, according to A. B. Hayes, manager of the Alaska | Southern Airways. The Alaska Southern Airways plane Kruzof, pilot Murray Stuart, is under charter to the U. S. Bu- |reau of Fisheries today. i —e —— | Arbor day, a legal holiday in many states, first was observed in Nebraska on April 10, 1872, on which occasion more than a mil- lion trees were planted. N g IT PLAYED 15 Weeks in Seattle 4 MORE DAYS N ey ONE NIGHT" GABLE—COLBERT [OUSSSSSSSEESS S - FR Fruits and DAILY CALIFORNIA GROCERY TELEPHONE 478 Es Vegetables Prompt Delivery YO/ WOMAN'S JES' HOSTED PLUMB T DEATH.. SEE, WE-ALL BEEN A-HAVIN'SO DANG MUCH COMP'NY O'LATE TH'OLE OVER VANDER'S TH' SHACK OL' GRANNY BOGGS USTA LIVE N = AH RECKON YOU-UNS KIN MOVE \N AN’ SET A SPELL AN’ KINDER TALK THINGS OVER _ hou | There was a total of about 960,- | 000,000 bushels world ‘on August 1, of wheat in 1933, that amount. sales. the | of tourists at St. The | during United States held 36 per cent of | Lip Reading | deaf and dumb people. The “Trail of the Caribou” (below), large twin-motored biplane carrying James Ayling and Leonard Reid, Canadian fliers, on a projected hop from Toronto to Bagdad, landed in London after a flight of 31 cross the Atlantic. Their plane is shown as it took off from Wasaga Beach, Ontario. At top Reid is shown in the cockpit just before the takeoff, as.he bid farewell to Lee Murray, Canadian representa tive of the builder of the plane. (Associated Press Photos) Among the many organization NOTICE Petersburg, Fla Having been called to Seattle, ons is the my office will be closed for about of | three weeks. —adv. the winter sca Club, composed DR. E. B. WILSON. BEHOILD--«A Sower ent Forth To Sow! OME SEEDS FELL BY THE WAYSIDE. ... : Some fell upon stony places where they had not much earth . . . . Some fell among thorns—but others fell into good ground and brought forth fruit, some an hundredfold. N ADVERTISING not ofie¢ dollar of the ap- propriation should be sown by the wayside .... of in stony places, or among thorfis. Avoid mediums haying large percentages of waste scatteration. CONCENTRATE your advertis- ing where greatest profit can be made from The Daily Alaska Empire offers the highest concentration of circulation available'for advertising. | HEAD VISITING " JUNEAU TODAY One of Famous Brothers Is ! Aboard Yacht:Now Tour- | ing Southeast Alaska The Campbell Church yacht, Westward, Capt. Roe Dykeman, came inta the Juneau harbor at 8 o'clock this morning and is to leave for Peril Straits this evening. Aboard the yacht.are Mr. and !Mrs. E. E. Hills 'of San Francisco, Mrs. Wellington Henderson of San | Franeisco, Richard Bertheau of {New York, and James Cowden, sor fol Mus. Hills. | Mr. Hills s a member of Hills Brothers Company, one of the larg- |est coffee companies in the world. Mr. Bertheau is a banker, and Mr. Cowden is a senior at Harvard University, The party has been taking bear pictures and fishing since the be- ginning of the cruise, which start- ed at Vancouver June 22. For the I next week or so, an effort will be made to get some brown bear tro- phies, and it is with this end in view that they are going to Peril Straits. | Two guides, Hosea Sarber of Petersburg who joined the West- { ward there, and Wesley Meyers of | Ketchikan, who joined it in Ju- neau, are to accompany the hunt- bt | | { s cruise Is schoduled to end | September 10, and the Westward's | pagengers will probably take a south from Juneau at time. ., Japan was the -only non-goiter- Ious country found in a recent worldwide study of the occurrence of this disease. DOUGLAS NEWS nomination for Senator. Even the windiest politicians, who j ordinarily will undertake to-explain anything form tiddledywinks to the Einstein ., theory, grow confused when théy try to atcouht for aill that is happening today. But even if they can't explain it, they one and all are able to present proof that Is satisfactory (to them) that their side will win ) 44 SUNDQUISTS TAKE COTTAGE W. Sundquist, re- Mr. and Mrs cent arrivals from the South, have M November. 3 moved to the Wehren cottage ad- ” e N R Jjoining the sawmill and the Doug- B. P. 0. ELKS Jas road, where they will make Regular mecting tonight at eizht their home. A o'clock % g e M. H. SIDES, NEW CEM SIDEWALE |V Secretary. e 3 Joe Reldi, local baker, last wenk] completed a cement sidewalk front of, the Reidi store on D, Street, being a permanent im- provement in a much needed field for Douglis. Last year Mr. Reidi placed a similar walk in front of bis bake shep on Third Strete, the first in the town’s business dis- trict. SHOP IN JUNEAU! e e D, Phone - . IMPROVING SLOWLY | Mrs. Robert DuPree is underzo- ing blood transfusion at St Ann’s Hospital for restoration of her health. She is reported on the road to apparent recovery. | - - - ! . Democrats Seem in ! Fertile Field But Republicans, Drought | (Continued 1rom Page One.) the Democratic Senatorial nomina- | tion with the support of organized labor and on a platform too lib- eral for the Farley-backed Shaver to accept | The evidence is widespread that the pendulum of public opinion is| %" swinging away from old-time boss- I fsm” in politics. ! Wateh and Jewelry Repairing | But in Missouri, Boss Tom Pen-! | at very reasonable rates | dergast of Kansas City won prob-| | PAUL BLOEDHORN | ably his greatest state-wide vic-| | FRONT STREET tory in securing the nomination of | | his candidate for the Democratic| Candidaté fof TERRITORIAL TREASURER WILL H. CHASE 37 Yéais 4 Residerit of Alaska d Coihisisterit, Constriittive Advocate of All Aldskit Projects thit Meric Support YOUR SUPPORT Wit.l. BE APPRECIATED Indian Egg Lump $12.00 per ton at bunkers Your $ 15 bigger wheri you buta Indian Egg-Lump PHONE 412 PACIEIC COAST COAL Co. GASTINEAU CAFE GASTINEAU HOTEL BUILDING French-Italian Dinners Wines—Beer OPEN ALL NIGHT FREE DELIVERY Alaskan Hotel Liquor Store: Phone Single Q-2 rings Dave Housel, Prop. FOR INSURANCE See H. R. SHEPARD & SON Telephone 409 B. M. Behrends Bank Bldg. B S DSBS SNY e RS e e Juneau Cash Grocery CASH GROCERS Corner Second and Seward Free Delivery PHONE 58 GLACIER TAVERN _ TOM CASEY en every hour of the day! Music by Jg%Merrlman' NNERS LUNCHES SANDWICH BEER

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