The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, December 14, 1934, Page 10

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. o S R B ot anpc 2 THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE FRIDAY DEC 14 1934. v 500,000 young women from |is off the ground. For six hours| Young..men- have slmnn.r work The labor r offers them | feed the animals, clean the stables, but so strong is, the pressure upon thell ¢ forest underbrush, wash oOr |them that, attendance. is yirtually ] p R . 2 clothes, prepare f00d. compulsory. For boys the work 0 cAGE TEAM s LLFI VA ] For luncheon they gather in the [takes on a military aspect, and camp. Afterwards they have a rest |they learn to drill with their hoes 3 1) M 31 2 period. In the afternoon they par- |and spades. 5 :.‘—“..._, 0 it % t | 5 icipate in various sports, and hear “The ;joy of common worlg 15.41_; \“m Ia Dec. 14—A pre- v‘“ | M. 3 g tures on such subjects as wom- [to an increasing realization that (,; ine Towa State basketball team place in the Nazi state, the [life finds its fulfilimént in iabor,” | national politics, the race fsays one writer regarding the girls’ like a roster of the football | By A. D. STEI FERUD tiring fami en with four gridiron stars re- | BERLIN, Dec. 14— Nazidom is |operation in t question, and problems of the set- | service. : ing for ‘practice ‘with but a | forcing thousand g men | cupposéd to tler “This labor is not an irksome in- s rest from their arduous grid | and. wemen fr jobs. 2 t of the Na If they aren't too tired, the de- |terlude, but a preparation for life. | ..jedule. | initial careers into u and not the individ vote their evenings to light recre- [ Only _the working person has a The football men who wound up | labor corps where Hitlerite id ation place in society, and only to him |;.ir season against Kansas State and manual work replace r day begins before the dew Girls To Find Joy in Work belongs the recognition of others, | ;4 then answered the basketball | For the government regardless of the work he does. |.. the following Monday are Capt. “They will leave the camps full | of hope for the future, knowing | Hood, left end; Marlowe ms, halfback; Fred Poole, end reducing unemployme: the dole, building up ano of adherents and getting that the work has given them will [ ,,,i Harold Schafroth, tackle. pensive work done at_low power, knowledge and self respect.” ——to——— ! it ! bR T | For the youths, aged 19 GALEN PLANS TRIP Joumes L. Galen, President and 3 al Manager of the Mount Mc- |K Tourist and Fransportation y, was in Fairbanks late in nber to attend the, apnual ng of the company; and re- to his home in Cordova > he will remain until .after Damage estimated at $300,000 was caused by this blaze Which swept half means abandoning ambi the fulfillment of which prepared themselves; going to the farms and kitchens—if they are girls—and to road gangs and ge: eral labor camps if they are boys Hitler Exalts Hand Labor “The time will come,” says Adoll Hitler, “when no German can be- come a voting citizen unless he — ALAN GOULD first has done his time in a labor { Christmas, when he plans & busi- I First National inotion picture studios at BurBank, . Fifteer- persor camp. & ness trip to the States. . (Associated Press Photo) 3. ; “We are socialists in deed, and "Biil Perry apparently had no idea R st not only in name and theory. Our of flinging a challenge to New MAIL BY DOG TEAM rier by dog team betwdefi Nome | the distribution of left over mail |first trip this year he carried about labor camps hreathe the spirit of community. Manual labor is as highly regarded as any form of work Never “‘Common’--Neveér “National Socialism is not a ! 5 § ! § question of acquisition of Wielding ; ‘Dflt(’d" ; & { \ { 3 ) { N York’s baseball writers this winter Golovin, Unalakleet, and way not carried by the airplanes of th2 |400 pounds of mail from Nome to when he got around to resenting| p.ir Curran, Jr, mail car- points, has as his duties this year | Pacific Alaska Airways. On his |outlying towns. tha crmcum growing out of the collapse .of the Giants. in, the tional Lugue pennant race, but, he has_done .50, neyertheless. His re- mark in New Qrleans that he fesls qualitied. to manage the . Giants wmwut any help from fiu,m Nfl‘clpond&nts has, stirred up 8, ,hot debate in the; cojumns. of metro- politan sports pages. Terry is. accused of selfishness in his attitude, inasmuch as he has four years more to go on a tive year contract and has nothing to worry, about, perspnally. Another _critical view is -that Memphis Bill has put his boss, Charles, A. Stoneham and the club ownership ;‘on the spot” by his jibes at the newspapermen, his lack |/ of diplomacy and unwillingness. to call a spade an agricultural im- plement. Wilbur Defends Will ,To the defense, meanwhile, rush- es Mr, Wilbur Wood, the sports éditor of The Sun and a reformed boxing writer, as follows: “If Terry needs the help of the baseball, . writers in running the Gilatits, it might be a good idea for Mr. Stoneham to fire Terry and hire the scribes, who probably can be had for less money. .. “The dissatisfaction with Terry goes. back to the season of 1933. Memphis Bill started the season with a club that was almost unani- | miously . picked by the experts to| finish fifth or sixth. Terry's hint thdt the Giants might win the pen- nant was received with loud guf- faws. But as the season rolled on, the Giants remained at the top, and after winning the flag they defeated the Washington Senators for the world championship. So, the laugh at Terry’s expense had to | be deferred. It is quite a trick to' laugh at a man whoetakes what seems t0 be a mediocre ball club | and so inspires it that it wins the world championship. . “In the season recently closed | erry kept ch;s same club in front | until the lash few jumps when it was nhosed out. by the Cardinals. | Losing the pennant with the same‘ power, but of education and disci- pline “We shall succeed in realizing our ideal, because there is an un- flinching will behind it.” The theory and practice of feed- ing pigs and patriotic idealism are neatly mixed for thousands of Ger- man girls in the ‘“voluntary” la- hor corps. ‘They learn something about the household arts, work in fields and forests, and take care of children and cattle, and find, in so doing, health and the satisfaction of help- ing the fatherland. They often are told by Nazi lead- ers that their bucolic efforts will help them in choosing a life voca- tion, that their older countrymen need the jobs they otherwise would fill, and that they thus have a part in building a new and better so- ciety. The girls mostly are recent grad- uates from schools. Many of them dre from the larger cities. Their | § year on a farm or in a labor camp | JEWELER is in accordance with a Nazi anti- w unemployment scheme for thus re- ] Nothing you could give could possibly be more complimen more expressive of your own individuality than jewelry from Bloédhorn's. A really fine stone, however inexpensive, :defies time and changing fashion. We invite your inspection. ANew Hat? NO! Just Our Stock of Nationally Advertised Watches and Silverware Is Complete Another Re-built Chapeau from Leonard’s New HOF F M AN H. R 10 Hat- Blocking Machine $1.00 club that was picked to Tun sixtn n 1933 became a gross piece of CLEANS mm‘fi nt in 1934, according to those who like to make use of and the second guess.” 8o, much *for Mr. Terry, who seems to be very capable, indeed, of handling his own arguments as well as his ball club. There is no toubt that a large number of base- ball writers were only too eager | to emit wolf-like sounds as soon as the Giants collapsed, feeling perhaps that it was a long defer- \red ‘vindication of their original | i]udgment or rather, their condem- nation of the team’s chances. I fl t& Gther hand, the Giants' m friends who ad- | mire hlm as much for his !ormghz‘ as they do for his skill or '%lp on'the diamond, All too | many of sports’ headliners indulge g ifil{ww in, the habit of saying | think they ought to v m.{ think will sound |* y print. In shart, Memphis 1“ 13 a refreshilng kind of a guy, gflm you like him personally or & ¢ BLOCKS IT! THE FlNEST GIFT YO COULD GIVE HIM=- s . o0 BN WHETHER he’s the proud owner of the best cellar in town, or whether his stock is on the sideboard, the man who really knows how to judge fine wines and liqueurs is the one who best appreciates the excellence of JUNEAU LIQUOR STORE’S Brands. COMPLIMENT him . and yourself . . . in your Christmas’ gxft Remeniber him this yedr with a' sele¢tion’ from Alaska’s Most Complete Liquor Store! Latest Type—Electric and Steam Operated VALET SERVICE F rbnt'St Phone 516 i ] RUMS COCKTAILS GINS WHISKIES WINES MIXERS RYES - ALES PHINK Uflfl STORE - ; ALL LEADING'BRANDS' OF WINES AND LIQUORS FOR THE HOLIDAYS (VL GIOUORS bE Gas tineau U ikibbios! PERCY REYNOLDS Manager

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