The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, November 9, 1934, Page 11

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, FRIDAY, NOV. 9, 1934. KITTS COACHES affectionately call “Bo Bill."” He is | the self-appointed mascot of the | teams and sits on the players’ bench. Kitts likes to slip off for a htmi hunt, and is a devotee of hand- | ball. The latter sport keeps him in fine physical condition. - Scottislrnfl P;stfiisheu V”Allistnlians Ha;e— Had Excels with Needles' 25 Years of ‘New Deal’ T | be in the hospital two months. | Louis Landagin, driver of the car, is being held for trial. Police 1 say he did it on purpose. e, CARD PARTY MEMPHIS, Tex., Nov. 9.—Amer- ica’s “new deal” is not new In |every detail, says A. W. Revelman, native of Australia who recently moved to Memphis. | Socks, pullovers, mufflers, gloves, | «mor more than 25 years the natty golf club “stocking Caps,” | pystralian Government has been and the stockings the women in I- | .ojating working hours and min- ral Scotland still pull over their |im,m salaries,” Revelman asserted. limbs—all are grist to Anne’s rest-‘ Revelman was born in Sydney, less fingers. : [N. 8. W, and lived there until Her spare time knitting work |eight years ago, when he came to has been exhibited at competitions | (1o United States. all over Scotland. In eight years | IRAEREE S she has collected nearly 200 prizes" for her work. ! Daily Empme Want Ads Pay! BUCHLYVIE, Scotland, Nov. 9.—| Anne Leckle, local postmistress, is a Scotswoman who waggles a mean knitting needle. RIBECOURT, France, Louis Landragin hates speeches. The Pioneers’ Auxiliary will hold For 16 years he listened to May- |a public card party immediately or Bourgoin orate on every possi- iafter the business meeting to be G ble occastion, summer and winter, ‘held at 1. O. O. F. Hall, November —— fall and spring. After each one |9. This is the third of the series By HARRELL E. LEE he told his neighbors he couldn’t land bridge and pinochle will bel pyenon Tex., Nov i i hy . 9—A trim sit through another. played starting promptly at 8:30 black-haired soft-spoken fello w After the latest speech, Mayor [p.m. Prizes and refreshments. Ad-| o 5100 s aimoct young enough to Bourgoin was pedaling his bicycle | mission 50c. Everybody welcome. pass for a college student himself back to the town hall, when an —adv. is winning his spurs in his first automobile hit him from behind wobs big-time football coaching tests. and threw him 30 feet | He is Jimmy Kitts, 32, who 1ft- — : ~,|ed the oft-plucked Owls of Rice Nov. 9.— | political Transplant Salmon ARCHANGEL, U. 8. S. R—Amur river salmon from Siberia have been transplanted to rivers flow- ing into the White Sea in an ef- fort to propagate them nearer to the populous centers of the Soviet Union. HUUSE RULES ‘pued as frequently as in the past. Speeches Are Haled, SENATE IS DIFFERENT So He Lands in Jail The Senate leadership has no GH ANGE Tn BE |sueh situation with which to con- |tend as the House. The relatively ! smaller membership and greater | prestige of Senators make it un- necessary for the leaders to resort |to ‘‘gagging” tactics. Only in ex- o treme cases is the rule of cloture Wild Clamor Is Rumored|invoked. . | A Senator has more avenues upon but Believed Demand | which to approach nis constituents H | than has a member of the House. Will Not Get Far He can talk to his heart's content any time he desires and air his w‘:gflill:g:g:'r N‘;:‘,‘“;’“E“The views1 ont hanythmg he pleases at clamor for liberalizavion of the |*7¥, length rules of the House in the next Ho’lu“;: ;‘;;‘:gim "l::ml?]erm:fw‘ckl‘: Congress will be raised, but no one % e here expects it will amount to any- thing. It will come from many of the Democrats who, in the last Con- gress were prevented from exercis- ing little more than a voting mem- bership. ' They won't get far, however, it is believed, because the leaders themselves will be against it. Prob- ably not one of the 10 or more candidates for Speaker would com- mit himself in advance on the sub- ject even if it meant votes for him. RULE EMBARRASSING Experience has shown that an unbridled House is capable of wrecking the most carefully laid plans of the Administration. In the last session there were numerous instances when the leaders were forced to clamp down with the greatest severity to insure the safe- ty of the Administration’s program. The so-called discharge rule— which permits 145 of the 435 mem- bers of the House to force a vote on any bill—bedeviled the leaders most. The “pay-the-bonus-now” » and other measures were forced to a vote by means of this rule. Plans were afoot even before the close of the last session to kill this rule and make it necessary for a majority of the House to force a vote on legislation. Whatever the leadership set-up in the coming Congress may be, it is regarded as certain that the rule will be amended and the “gag” ap- of leaders, has little opportunity to do more than cast his vote. He may secure time to make a speech on a dull day, but even these re- ceive scant publicity. i Then, too, a Senator, if duly| elected, serves for six years and is able to concentrate on other things 3Ul JO IOqUWIAW Y ‘UOWDI[a-3l UBY) House come§ up every two years for re-election and must of neces- sity keep himself as far as possi- ! ble before his constituents. S ee— NO SCALPING RALEIGH, N. C., Nov. 9.—Clifton Daugherty may or may not be trying to set a new style of hair-| cuts for football players, but he is | calculated to throw fear into en- | emy ranks—if appearances count for anything. The big tackle on| Coach Hunk Anderson’s North Car- olina State college team appeared | for practice with his hair closely clipped except for the crown of his | head. There, the hair is long and| stands straight up, reminding of | an early Indian on a scalping spree. PSP e | BIDS WANTED I Sealed bids will be recetved by | the City of Juneau at the City| Clerks office up to 5 p.m., Nov. XG,I | for the” furnishing of 5,500 barrels, more or less of Portland cement. Terms and specifications may be obtained at the Clerk's office. l By order of H —adv. CITY COUNCIL. You are aVital Link in the Gra Chain F Credit PSSR L GREDIT is like a chain of many links—made up of producers, manufacturers, retailers and profes- sional men—and you, the customer. You are the vital link! For prompt payment on your part starts money around “the credit circle,” through the retailer and professional man to the manufacturer, the producer and the worker—and whether your in- come is from labor or from stocks and bonds, it will come back to you. But if you fail to meet your obliga- tions promptly the credit chain is broken. If you delay payment of a bill for two, three or four months, you're taking the amount of that bill out of circulation, and, perhaps un- intentionally, retarding business re- covery. Let’s pull together! Let’s use our credit—buy what we need—and, by paying promptly, give others a chance to earn what they need. Use your credit freely and pay all bills by the 10th cr promptly as agreed s Eaca Alaska Credit Bureau Valentine Building Phone 28 CHARLES WAYNOR, Manager SECURE With Information Just as the diver needs a clear wire through to the : for reliable information— stairs” boat “up- so the modern business man needs an accurate source of facts regarding business trends. This bank offers such a source to its commercial clients—and helps to interpret them long experience. in the light -of in STYLE® VALUE* QUALITY" 18 DIAMONDS BOTH RINGS 37500 DIAMONDS! tollored in fashion's newes!, smartest oot Diamonds ore woeclally- selected. TWO RINGS instead of ome... The Nugget Shop IliI>IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII||III|II|IIlIIIIIIIIIIllIIIIIIlIIIIlIIIIIIIIIIlmllIIIIIIIIIIIIlIIIIIIilfiI — \ o P ) NSHINE ZONE N\ Circulating \ JSComfor A D U }New\ (1 X Heater Just the heat you want at the turn of a valve. Ng,more res Clean, Sate, .Economical OIL HEATER SPARK offers you MORE than plenty of Warm Circulating Air—you have Radiant Warmth in the Sunshine Zone. It's fine when you come in cold and wet and want to dry clothes quickly. And the new, superior Spark Circulating Heater burns the economical domestic stove oil. Here’s the Secret—Streamline Unit You’re just as warm in one corner of a room as in another—because of the inner Streamline Heating Unit which more efficiently circulates warmth. And more efficiency means more economy. Come in—see the heater with the welded battle- ship construction. ’s 2 newer, sturdier heater is noiseless, odorless and clean. Has beautiful Porcelain Enamel Pinish. that harmonizes with your furniture. Dollar for doliar. ;ou cannot ob: ‘hhlmwflnnflil&m E Institute into the national grid- (iron spotlight in the opening weeks jof the season with shutout victor- ies over Purdue and Southern Methodist. Until this fall Kitts was known chiefly as a basketball coach. While at Athens, a small city in east 'Texns. his high school cagers cap- No System Either tured two national championships. He was head basketball coach for ftwo seasons at Rice before accept- '1ng the head football assignment. His Rice club doesn't use any “system” exclusively. Kitts ex- plained he has tried to combine features of the short punt, the single wingback and the double wingback into a method of play best suited to the men available. “I suppose our system is morz nearly like the one D. X. Bible uses at Nebraska than that of any other nationally known coach,” Kitts said. | Kitts has a great deal of ad- |miration for Bible, whom he knew ‘when “D. X" was turning out good teams at Texas, A. and M. He went to Lincoln to watch Bible's | spring drills this year, The young Owl mentor is not a {driver. He doesn't “get tough” with | players as he outlines their mis-' | takes to them. s | | “Even if T were that type,” Kitts said recently, “I surely would have | (had no cause to 'bawl out’ the | iboys so far. Every one of them | :hu been hustling, even in practice, | .and when a bunch like that plays | heads-up football—they are bound to go places!” Kitts has a 7-year-old son whom the football and basketball players Everything Goes! We are closing out many items of furnishings to give us more room for our increasing tailoring business. At the prices we are selling we must insist that all purchases are strictly CASH. EVERYTHING REDUCED! Regular $2.25 MEN'S CAPS, NOW $1.75 Flannel SPORT SHIRTS, value $6.75 NOW $5.25 BROKEN lines UNION SUITS about ' PRICE MEN’S SHOES, RUBBERS, BOOTS, WORK SHIRTS, SOX, DRESS SHIRTS ALL AT REDUCED CASH PRICES SAM CUSTOM-MADE CLOTHING THE TAILOR FRONT STREET CONTINENTAL 766 EAST I12TH ST This-is a true Cognac Brandy < no foreiqn maifer is used <the flavor and the marvelous bouquet is de- rived from the center of distillation, or hearts of wine « The color is its own You will truly believe Cognac France has moved to America’ ] Cognac Brandy is recommended by leading European physicians for the sick and convalescent Other Conti-Royale products o that have received popular favor are~ Gin Fizz* ==\ Choice of Kentuck . w King St o Gl.it" g inq Straiq Speily Blended Swect o ee ‘S.';a I)rl/Y Wines® LIQUORS LOS ANGELES THE HOME OF CONTI-ROYALE PRODUCTS Distributed by The PACIFIC BOTTLERS SUPPLY CO. PHONE 1219 Exchange Bldg., Seattle SOLD EXCLUSIVELY IN JUNEAU BY Juneau Liquor Company 36 PROMPT DELIVERY OSEE OUR WINDOW DISPLAY

Other pages from this issue: