The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, August 26, 1935, Page 4

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li)(li‘l‘\: Aleska Empire | ditor and Manager 1 EMI Stre Bt matter { RATES. i} and Douglas for $1.25| | Delivered by PRES ASSOCIATED attributable to the THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, MONDAY, AUGUST 26, 1935. but we have ignored it a good deal on the lhem‘y’ that the mind is quicker than the machine, which is sometimes not the case with result that damage | and death result. It makes no difference whether his politics is| Left Wing, Right Wing or Centrist, every automo- | bile driver should be an ultra Conservative, keeping| The Empire extends congratula- to the right | tions and best wishes today, their birthday anniversary, to the follow- |ing: HAPPY — —BIRTHDA always A Real Pump Primer. York Herald Tribune.) In announc the plan of his company to s,pond; 000,000 cn new plant and machinery, Alfred Sloan, President of the General Motors Corpora- invites attention afresh to the important place rship that the automobile industry holds in country today If the present (New | H AUGUST 26 Ann D. Seavers T. R. Layton Mrs. T. Everson J. M. Griffins 1 leade | booms in Italy and Germany are| % e e o g prosperity of the armament in-|% dustries, and if a building revival has done more | 20 YEARg AGO than any one thing to put England back on its feet| e economically, then such recovery as this country From The Empire has enjoyed to date is to an overwhelming extent due directly to the automobile industry. A recent a as born on this day, 1865. Others who have celebrated it as a birth- day include Hannibal Hamlin, tatesman, 1809; Peter Norbeck, United States Senator, 1870. (Copyright, 1935) — .- SHOP IN JUNEAU! —_— “The stars incline Horoscope but do not compel” MONDAY, AUGUST 26, 1935. | erse planetary aspects are ac- tive today, according to astrology The planetary government is un- P ZORIC DRY CLEANING e warning is given against gos- | sip and evil reports that may affect | | business confidence. Under this rule {of stars propaganda from many | sources will be disseminated stimu- | "..mw destructive rather than con- | structive thinking. | 1d news of some sort is forecast this week in which there may |be many threatening gestures af- dort Water Wash.ug I PROFESSION AL Fraternal Societies T oF | DRS.KASER & FREEBURGER . Helene W. L. Albreeht ‘ _Ga_sumeau Channel J, PHYSICTHERAPY | | ~fassage, Electricity, Infra Red | B. P. 0. ELKS meets Ray, Medical Gymnastics. | every second and fourt 307 Goldsteir Building Wednesday at 8 p. m. Phone Office, 216 Visiting brothers wels come. M. E. Monagle, Ex- a'ted Ruler, M. H. Sides, Secretary DENTISTS Blomgren Building PHONE 56 Hours 9 am. to 9 pm. KNIGHTS OF COLUMPUS Seghers Council No. 1760. Meetings second and last Monday at 7:30 p. m. Transient brothers urged to at- 'tend. Covwnet' Cham- bers. Pifth St. JOHN F. MULLEN. G. R, . J. TURNER, Secretary b AN L g Dr. C. P. Jenne DENTIST Rooms 8 and 9 Valentine Building Telephone 176 AUGUST 26, 1915. | fecting trade and commerce, but | these are only transient. Sixty-two French aviators newl Wwomen should postpone import- over a German arms factory m".—un initiative and attend to the north Saarlouis, throwing 150 shells, | a{fairs that are nearest the home. - The amount of damage could not|It is a favorable day for shoppmg: 1 our |analysis in “The Wall Street Journal” in fact, ar- {rived at the conclusion that motors were responsible |for no less than 80 per cent of the business gains |recorded up to that time, either directly or through its influence on other industries. Colonel Leonard | economist for the Cleveland Second and Fourth Mon- day of each month ir, Scottish Rit2 Temple beginning at 7:30 p.m. o) é Dr. Richard Williams ] DENTIST HOWARD D. STABLER,, Trust Com- Worshipfui Master; JAMES W, ~|a large proportion of its nickel, lead and aluminum, GOVERNMENT SPENDING. Administr making Opponents of 1936 the present n, point- much of undertaken in the ince Mr. Roosevelt ich has been spent as National Government | d twenty-five years| that 1789 to outlay around last two ing for the are the last campaign amount of spending two years. They claim that went into office nearly as r was n to support the one of its They 1913 Federal Government $24,000,000,000. Adding years and the one of 1§ fi during t hundred existence point out from the was budgets of the and 1936 they declare the the ire is alm Of cou the fact that the burden They overlook Administration omy, | consideration World War, rapidly Coolidge for econ- they take as a consequence debt in thi the fact which I 21,000,00¢ pport do not into the of grew the utation 0 was more than a total of spent Government from the well into the second than was requi the time of Washi administration a point dore Roosevelt, more one hundrec And take ing from actual st had themselves but sti necessiti hunger ¢ probat fact mill that only the spend- ns in this country counties and States bankrupicy and the had no cognizan X kept Cities, into ¢ of public rvation ative food job to be spent P heir people without i The Federal Government were wasn't a day occurrence revolutict was called up It may lowing the war our setting up which now immediately fol- ame along that in th th until th be depression Gove much money machinery rnment expended i Government up. But the present Ad- be blamed for the follies of rules of Coolidge, Hoover be overlooked that we are more extensive t b ministration can hardly the so-called prosperity and the It cannot still paying the at the made to rehabiiitate our people. mu. kep rest war and post-war spending outlay being cost of same time that a vast is In the old horse and buggy days it was all right to drive in the middle of the road because horses were smart enough not to run into- each other. They would either stop, or turn out. But humans, in too many tances, are not so intelligent. They roar down the middle of the road in their automobiles and trust luck and the good use of their faculties to keep them from hitting something. Since the beginning of the automobile age, the cry has echoed and re-echoed “keep to the right,” PROUD OF HIS D to Ycu don't Seattle, “that th, all you walking you did arcund th of the 38-year-cld geld dust, part of foot race, and he was rea the Internaticnal Washington Hotel. Berry (left) it frem the to breuy place.” But “Sandy” A $16,000 wage v to show it to anyone rdcugh Reunion Headquarter: The Reunion was held at Seatil Sandy” Yukon after all the is pretty [p. Ayre | be ascertained. Grand Duke Nicholas accomplish- |pany, arrived independently "at roughly the same conclu 1. Even in a normal year the automobile industry accounts for 23 per cent of the country's iron and steel production, 70 per cent of its plate glass, 9 per cents of its hardwood lumber, 19 per cent of its copper, 85 per cent of its gasoline, and |into the interior, necessary for the | orderly retirement. As the Russians | retired, they destroyed the lines |and wrecked the roadbeds. estimated not to speak of using 80 per cent of the coUNty’s ernment officials imports on rubber. production for other industries, the percentages run even higher The word “boom" can be used without qualifi- cation to describe what is happening in the motor car industry at the present time. Last year auto-| mobile manufacturers produced nearly two* million nine hundred thousand passenger cars and motor trucks. This represented something more than 100 per cent improvement over the depression year, 1932. During the first six months of this year alone output came within seven hui ‘ied equaling the 1934 twelve-month total. Should activ-!House, friend and advisor of Presi- ity continue at this same rate during the second|dent Wilson. Mr. House declared half of the present year—an optimistic hope, but one that is not impossible of fulfillment—production would reach a figure surpassed only twice before, namel; 1928 and 1929. | It is frequently said that |more “motor conscious” than any country in the world. If this is true—and there is no reason to {question the assertion—then the condition is prob-|foot among the natives of Hoonah ably attributable less to any temperamental differ-|and Kake villages to take advantage ence in Americans than to the business methods of | of the bill passed by the recent leg- motor car industry. The proposed expenditures | jslature, making it possible for na- |on plant and machinery replacement by General|tives to organize their village if that it is probable that|in poland at an enormous cost were destroyed. As the railways con- stituted the only form of advance, the Germans weré materially de- layed. “The European war will be the means of educating {at home this year, the monied Am- ericans are getting acquainted with |the United States, especially with | Alaska.” the United States is the he important, these opponents|Motors are a typical example of why the industry!ihey so desire, the government to|and are exceedingly honest. | has won such an important place in the economy pe entrusted to a native council, A {of the United States. It has been this readiness|petition signed by 15 natives is all {to scrap old plants and build new ones—to spend|hat is necessary to make it pos- money to put out better cars at lower prices—that | sible to call a vote on the question. has,above everything else, characterized the conduct| Y of the automobile industry. It was to a large extent| john W. McCord, hero of Rex this characteristic which made it possible for thé|peach's novel, “The Iron Trail,” |industry to, pull the country out of one depression|which deals with the construction a decade ago, and which is now making it possiblé|of tne Copper River and Northwest- to duplicate that feat. 1 Railroad, returned to Seattls £ B, S e tafter elght years in the North. Times Out of Joint. | (Charlotte Observer.) LI ice in Fairbanks, announc- The fundamental error that forms the premise! ed the inauguration of an organ- of the argument of many critics of Roosevelt and ization to fight fires in the inter. his policies is that they do not admit he faced | jor, thereby saving many millions a condition early in 1933 that no other President|of feet of lumber. had faced in this generation, if ever. e | The policy of “let nature take its course” had, The openng of John T. Spickett |been followed largely since the crash of 1929, and|Douglas Orpheum Theatre was an- |the “course” was ever downward business paralysis, nounced. The theatre promised to increasing unemployment, decreasing buying power, |seat 220 people—about half the fewer sales, less business, less demand for manu- | number that could be accommodat- factured products, more workers laid off to curtail |ed at the Juneau Orpheum. production and costs, further decrease in buying | power—down an apparently bottomless spiral stair-| Weather— Maximum, 68 | way. mum, 30; clear. ; mini- FINE Watch and Jewelry Repairing at very reasonable rates PAUL BLOEDHORN FRONT STREET | When Huey Long went New York to demon- }slrule how to mix a gin fizz he must have carried |a few coals to Newcastle—(Indianapolis News.) With a one-mill ccin in circulation, France would be in a position to pay us a little something on account in our own ' currency—(Detroit News.) | UST LOBBY PROBE 1S CONTINUED HARRI MACHINE SHOP “ELECTROL —Of Course” £ Senate Investigators Plan- | ning Course Along l Broad Lines “T'omorrow’s Styles Today” WASHINGTO! porarily abandoning vestigation, the Ser mittee gathered future course in er all forms of lobb; ital. | Some members ated that | while no definite decision wa: reached the committee might holc 26.—Tem- reir utility in- te Lobby Com- | xay to chart a king to uncov- 7 in the Cap-| Aug ind “Juneau’s Own Store” ed his aim of holding the railroads | Gov- | In a year of less than normal|more than 5,000 miles of lines built | ° the idle rich |’ |to realize the value and beauties| |of their own country,” said Henry | thousand of | C. House, brother of Col. E. M.| that with the tourist trade “staying| There was a lively movement on |« ) S. Graves, chief of the for-| 1/ and hostile attitude on the part of| , | of prominence. jfor clothes and for renovating, | homes. 1 men and women who pos- wealth that assures security are| r a rule that may encourage| ay in dress and entertaining, ! they should beware of osten-| on. Through the depression so-| ind fashion have reflected ex-| gance among those who are|- ible 1o spend money carelessly, but | e ne the stars presage ill for thosfl“ T 0 T F NI 4 who indulge in pomp and display.| Grocar y Jupiter conjoined with Mars to- presages speculation that ef- specially the - London stock arket. Much foreign money will investment in British securi- | James Ramsay & Son FRESH FRUITS and VECZTABLES FRESH MEATS |{Phone 182 FreeDelivery it is predicted. | Explosions may continue to be SRS | ALASKA LAUNDRY PHONE 15 | - numerous through the autumn There are ill omens for certain mall towns on the Pacific coast and in Japan and Russia. { Persons whose birthday it is have the augury of a year of sudden {gains through speculation, but loss-' iz through strangers may offset em. H. S. GRAVES “The Clothing Man” i3 P — Children born on this day may/| lbe exceedingly determined in na- | | | ture, decided in character and suc- | | | cessful through their own efforts.' | Subjects of this sign win confidence | Home of Hart 3chatffner and Marx “'sthing k & i PAIN1L-~CILS Builders’ and Shelf HARDARE i Thomas Hardware Co. Joseph T. Robinson, United States | Senater, was born on this day 1872.| | Prince Albert, grandfather of the | King of England, also celebrated it as a birthday, 1819. | A AUG 27, 1935. | aspects domi- inate today according to astrolozy.! {1t is rather a disappointing day in {financial matters. Payments of men- ey may be delayed. { There is a promising sign for be- ' ga. ;innings of projects, expansion of & susiness and initiative that will de- velop rapidly. This is a day to start| GENERAL MOTORS mportant matters of many sorts. | and Judgment should be reliable whl‘.e" | MAYTAG PRODUCTS chis configuration prevails and for > J' 1 this reason plans may “be made ' g W. P. JOHNSON Fy | with more than usual confidence. Good-luck attends those who | &% g GARLAND BOGGAN travel on the water today. The stars | record-making volume | i l Hardwood Floors indicate a of sightseers for expositions as well i Waxing Polishing Sanding 15 for scenic resorts. PHONE 582 This is not a favorable sway un-{ der which to begin new friend-| ST R S IR | . GARBAGE HAULED Reasonable Monthly Rates E. O. DAVIS TELEPHONE 584 Phone 4753 hips for there may be a ecritical strangers. Young men may be un-| usually impervious to both beauty and brains, Many quarrels and dissensions may be expected among groups of various sorts. Early political ambi- tions will be prevalent among men BETTY MAC BEAUTY SHOP In New Location at 12th anc B Streets PHONE 547 | * —— —e Nervous diseases and rHervous ten- dencies now may be widely trouble- come, Many accidents may be due| to lack of poise and too much haste. Strange mysteries of the seas as! | well as the land are foretold. Crimes| |of unusual character are prognosti- |cated. Women and children must | be safeguarded. Persons whose birthdate it is have | |the augury of a year of fair for- | tunes, but they should avoid litiga- tion and speculation. Children born on this day prob- | ably will be exceedingly cheerful| and inclined to be over sanguine. Subjects of this sign usually are {independent and inclined to follow| ® their own devices. ‘ Charles G. Dawes, Vice President | of the United States and financier, | | IT’S Wise to Call 8 Juneau Transfer Co. when in need of MOVING or STORAGE Fuel 0il Coal Transfer JUNEAU-YOUNG | Hardware Company PAINTS—OIL—GLASS hearings for one or two days next| ee—eee. week, and then adjourn until late in the fall. A large staff of ir kept busy digging up ators are ience e FATHER HUBBARD PHOTOGRAPHS ROCK Th: Rev. Bernard Hubbard, .am- ed “glacier priest”, photographed crushed rock today. 1 Father Hubbard, on a tour of the Alaska Juneau Gold Mining Com- pany plant, was taken to the wharf where the endless belt “feeder” car- ries czushed rock to the dump barg- les, moored alongside. The priest was interested in the new device and - took r otion pictures of it, probably for use in his illustrated lecture tour in the States next winter, GO TO SITKA HOME Harry Hall, aged 70, who entered bl el - finn‘s Hospital on July 16, for| i ot o treatment of an inlected leg, was discharged aturday and sailed at the New (o Sitka on the Aleutian where he e last week, anter Ploneers’ Home. financial institutions, of experience, requirements, as in the forward view. broader future find Frew of proud The B. swWill i The Forward View ® The B. M. Behrends Bank, oldest of Alaska’s But in its attitude to its customers and their provided for their service, this bank takes People . . . or businesses . . . planning for a sponsive as it is responsible. ® M. Behrends Bank Juneau, Alaska Shelf and Heavy Hardware Guns and Ammunition -— LA L TYPEWRITERS RENTED $5.00 per month | J. B. Burford & Co. “Our doorstep is worn by watisfied customers” S f LUDWIG NELSON JEWELER Watch Repairing Philco—General Electric Agency FRONT STREET JUNEAU Drug Co. “THE CORNER DRUG STORE” P. O. Substation No. 1 FREE DELIVERY respects the lessons the facilities it has this institution as re. OFFICE AND RESIDENCE Gastineau Building Phone 481 |LEIVERS, Secretary. fOE DOUGLAS AERIE 17, F. 0. E. %50 Meets first and third Mondays, &' p.m., Eagles’ Hall, Douglas. Visiting brothers welcome. J. B. Martin W. P, T. N. Cashen, Secretary. Dr. A. W. Stewart DENTIST Hours 9 am. to 6 p ST Ftohert Simpson Opt. D. Graduate Los Argeles Col- lege of Optometry and Opthalmology | Glasses Fitted Lenses Grosnd Our t.ucks go any place any | time. A tank for Diesel Oil | and a tank for crude oil save | burner trouble. | PHONE 149; NIGHT 148 | RELIABLE TRANSFER L e e et e R R R Commercial Adjust- | . . A H x R SEESREL ment & Rating Bureau i Uomsultation and examination | Free. Hours 10 to 12; 1 to 5; 7 to 8:30 and by appointment. Office Grand Apts., near Gas- tineau Hotel. Phicne 177 Coperating with White Serve ice Bureau Room 1—Shattuck Bldg. We have 5,000 local ratings JUNEAU FROCK SHOPPE “Exclusive but not Ezpensive” Coats, Dresses, Lingerie, Hoslery and Hats A Harry Race DRUGGIST “The Squibb Store” McCAUL MOTOR | COMPANY Dodge and Plymouth Dealers I CONSTRUCTICN CO. Phone 107 Juneau FORD AGENCY (Authorized Dealers) GREASES GAS—OILS JUNEAU MOTORS Foot of Main Street Cigarettes Candy Cards Pabst Famous Draught Beer On Tap “JIMMY™ CARLSON HOTEL ZYNDA Large Sample Room ELEVATOR SERVICE 8. ZYNDA, Prop. IDEAL PAINT SHOP If It's Paint We Have It! WENDT & GARSTER PHONE 548 MARKET RASKET Provisions, Fruits, Vegetables Phone 342 Free Dellvu‘y_. PHONE 36 For very prompt LIQUOR DELIVERY L3 I . ] | | . TrE JUNEAU LAUNDRY Franklin Street betweem Front and Secoend Streets PHONE 358 THE MINERS’ Recreation Parlors and, Liquor Store BILL DOUGLAS P Juneau Ice Cream Parlors SHORT ORDERS Pountain Candy | Ry

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