The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, December 6, 1935, Page 4

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- THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, FRIDAY, DEC. 6, 1935. Daily Alaska Empire | ROBERT \\'T BENDER - - Editor and Manager ept Sunday by the B PRINTIN 1 and Main E_PRINTIN( ine A 3 COMPANY st Office ir the P Juneau as Second Class SUBSCRIPTION RATES. Delivered by carrier In Juneau and Douglas for $1.25 per_month. | at the following rates months, in advance, | By mail, One year, in advance they will promptly failure” or irregularity " 2; Business Office MEMBER OF ASSOCIATED PRESS. The Associated entitled to the cpublicatior credited to otherw and also the Wwa published herein. 1sively dispatc s paper CIRCULATION G AN THAT OF ANY | G. 0. P. / D THE PRESS. One of the profound problems now being con- sidered in the more exalted circles of the Old Guard Republican management, according to political com- mentators in the East, concerns that subject which has been so feelingly touched upon by various re- actionary spokesmen and pounced upon by Senator Schall, namely the freedom of the press, Roosevelt, of even enabling him to profit through assumption of the role of, let us say, a martyr. The people as a whole are quite incapable of vis- ualizing the President in that melodramatic part but it can doubtiess be conceived by these reac- tionary Moguls who concern themselves with politics only on those rare occasions when their citadel is in | real danger. However, Clapper adds that he doesn’t think much will come of this isolated case of a stand- pst publisher who suggested giving the New Deal an even break in the news “and concentrating on attack in the editorial columns.” Clapper toys with the idea a bit and then concludes that whether newspapers of the Old Guard “will be intelligent enough to follow his prescription or not is a ques- tion.” He then relates that Chairman Fletcher has set up in National Republican headquarters “for very aggressive activities” a radio department, wherein “a 13-week series of dramatizations is being pre- pared by a group of actors who for some years have been presenting commercial news dramas over They are working on electrical transcrip- will present issues from a G. O. P. A young couple, for instance, consider matrimony. The preacher asks them if they have given any thought to the national debt. They haven't. So he explains how vast is the debt, piled up in this administration.” They mustn't marry, of course, and President Roosevelt is thus presented as an obstacle to what might be true love. Who knows? And who, but Fletcher and Hilles and Mills and Hoover, can entertain the least idea of how embarrassing it is to attempt the conduct of a Presidential campaign with nothing and nobody to offer. the air. tions which standpoint Times do change the meaning of words. Sam |Hill in the Cincinnati Enquirer deals on the word “smack” rather neatly. In courting days, he says, it means a kiss, in early married life—what they give the kid, and in old married life—just one of those fishing boats. ssion is over The best indication that the depr Whether to print the news, now that so much of it relates to continued rapid strides toward|is that some citles are going to offer around a economic recovery, or whether to continue to dis-|guarter of & miilion doilars to Republican and tort and minimize the earnest efforts of President|Democratic politicians to come to town and hold | Roosevelt to restore normal business conditions with | the minimum loss of time, that is the question. i To the most casual observer it was apparent a few days after the last solemn, secret conclave of | the Republican National Executive Committee in| Washington on September 25, that the so-called| “Chicago mthod” had gained high favor with the| High Command. Thereafter the treatment of re-| covery news in the ultra-conservative press followed | the example set by Col. Frank Knox's Chicago Even- ing News and Col. Bertie McCormick’s Chicago Tribune of “playing down” all that was good news and “playing up” all that might possibly be con-| sidered unfavorable to the President and his pro- gram But like other policies inaugurated by these out- moded politicians earlier this year, such as the, grass root conferences and a variety of fantastic| schemes to discredit the AAA in farming sections, their plan to continue the coloring of the news may | have struck a snag At least Raymond Clapper, politigal editor of the Washington Post (Republican), records that “one of the leading Western Repub- 1 newspaper publishers” vowed that he “is con- cerned lest the newspapers play into President Roosevelt’s hands by being too aggressive in their| eriticism.” ! “He recalled,” writes Clapper, “that his own/ newspaper often has elected incompetents to office a convention. When Mussolini calls on his followers to act, | those who are tardy are soon referred to as the late. —(Dayton, Ohio, News.) | It’s hard to tell whether the new King of Greece, deserves congratulations or condolences.”—(Indian- apolis News.) You'll have to admit a fellow in jail misses a lot of temptation.—(Fiorida Times Union.) Oil conservation ordered by Italy. This doesn't apply to international banana oil.—(Exchange.) FREFRMIEEE W08 S 1R i That war over there interests Americans almost | as much as football—(Lorain, Ohio, Journal.) Nobody can deny that Mussolini has routed Hitler from the’headlines.—(Chicago News.) i | Beer is 81 cents per bottle in Ethiopia. War, as| General Sherman once remarked, is hell—(Wichita | Eagle.) Japan is making hay while the Rising Sun shines. | —(Dallas News.) England’s him of hate: Mussolini.—(Buffalo Cour- ier-Express.) {on him. | District Attorney James A. Smiser |certain men who should be wary. | |entrance into war: HAPPY - ! “The stars 7acline The Empire extends congratula- but do not compel” tions and best wishes today, their| birthday anniversary, to the follow-| ing: | 9 “ SATURDAY, DECEMBER 1, 1935. DECEMBER 6. | Benefic aspects rule strongly to- F. H. Foster. | day, according to astrology. It is a Mentur Peterson. | time most auspicious for relaxation Albert L. Slagle. fas well as for serious conferences. Nora B. Chase. | In the morning some occurrence - - — may be of great importance to s workers. Factories will require ad- ditional hands and there may be a |general speeding up of certain in- | dustries. | Merchants and men at the head | of business enterprises are under the ~—=J |most promising planetary govern- | ment which should bring real pros- | perity. {2, YEARS AGO Prom The Er.pire DECEMBER 6, 1915. | : 1 - The Empire published pictures of | ,Naval omuler_s are well dxrectn' Capt. James O. Plunkett, presumably | bV the stars which seem to forecast murdered by Edward Krause, now;“’" then added honors. Movements held in Juneau under charges of |Of shibs in the Pacific Ocean are kidnaping and murdering William |foreseen. S Christie of Douglas. Also pictured| The evening of this day is read as in The Empire was Krause's name-la time for clear thinking and keen less launch, which mysteriously dis-|mental vision. It is to be marked appeared from its anchorage in Sal- |bY important events. Jupiter is in a place presaging n Creek, and was only recentl: oy 7 yiposmve policies and definite decis- discovered in Ward's Cove, near Ket- I : . chikan, from which citv he tonk|ionson the part of the United States passage to Seattle as Ole Moé, whomj, . SOvernment. A young diplomat is to police say he killed. gain fame. Edward Krause was granted a hear- | Newfoundland is lisely to exper-| ing before the United States Com- |jence a winter of extraordinary se- missioner Marshal tomorrow at. 2 o'~ | verity. Canada will have new trou- clock, in the courthouse, on a charge |bles affecting labor and industry. ~f kidnaping William Christie of | Persons whose birthdate it is have | Treadwell on the afternoon of Oc-|the augury of a year of gain in| tcher 30, by serving a fake subpoena | Which many will receive legacies | Secret friendships are foretold for and Asst. Prosecutor J. J. Reagan| Children born on this day probnb]y] will represent the government. Kazis| Will be practical and reliable. Sub- | Krauczunas will appear for the de- |jects of this sign are usually shrewd | fendant. i‘m their judgments. | tar witnes: Albert H. Abbott, statesman and | mfi‘f: ‘;;::,f J;;F; ;Efe;:‘:r:;n f;:;'(}eneml Secretary of the Canadian | “700” mill at Treadwell. King has Red Cross during the World War, | identified Krause as the man who | Was born on this day 1871, Others| took Christie out of the mill after|Vho have calculated it as a birthday | seing the prisoner at the United include Mary Q_uz‘ren of Scots, 1542, States jail. | (Copyright, 1935.) ooy \ : T Modern Etiquette By Roberta Lee ” That Juneau is threatened with an epidemic of scarlet feyer is the belief | that may result in the closing of | schools for seven days. Councilman ! Geddes and Holland, of the City| Council, have taken the matter in| hand. They declare the strictest quarantine will be enforced under direction of Dr. E. M. Bevis, health | | commissioner. | Q. Isthere any difference between |a wedding invitation and a wedding ' President Wilson, in his message | announcement? to Congress, said regarding possible| A. Yes, there is quite a differ- “Great demo- ence. Should you receive a wedding cracies are not belligerent—they do|invitation, it means that the bride not seek or desire war. We insist|and gropm will be pleased to have upoen security in prosecuting our self | you atténd. Should you receive an chosen lines of national development. ! announcement it means that for The war has never been a mere mat- ter of men and guns; it is a thing|the wedding. of disciplined might. If our citizens| Q. When the guest of honor is a are ever to fight effectively upon|man, where should he be seated at cfudden summons, they must knowithe dinner table? how modern fighting is done and, A. At the right of the hostess. EEaas some reason you are not invited to' PROFESSIONAL Look and Learn * By A. C. Gordon Helene W. L. Albrecl: Fraternal Societies ORF e =i Gastineau Channel J . PHYSIOTHERAPY Massage, Electricity, Infra Red Ray, Medical Gymnastics 1. How many residents of the U. S .of foreign birth, are unnaturaliz- ed? 2. Where is Commonwealth Col- 307 GOLDSTEIN BLDG. lege? Phone Office, 216 3. Who is Secretary of the Navy? | & [+ 4. What is talus, in geology? B. P. 0. ELKS meets every Wednesday at 8 P. M. Visiting brothers wel- come. M. E. MONAGLE, Exalted Ruler. M. H. SIDES, Secretary. — | 5. What is the official languagel,; of Mexico? DRS. KASER & FREEBURGER Seghers Council KNIGHTS OF COLUMBUS No. | Telephone 176 Phone 431 ANSWERS DENTISTS 1760. Meetings second 1. 3,800,000. | Blomgren Building and last Monday at 2. Near Mena, Ark. | PHONE 56 7:30 p. m. - Transient 3. Claude A. Swanson. | Hours 9 am o 3 p.m. brothers urged to at- 4. Rock debris at the base of al: 23| tod. - Counctl Oham- cliff or slope; pronounce the a as in bers, Fifth St. JOHN F. MULLEN, e |G K, H. J. TURNER, Sccretary. 5. Spanish. kS R R TS s Dr. C. P. Jenne MOUNT JUNEAU LODGE NO. 147 e DENTIST Second and fourth Mon< £ } Rooms 8 and 9 Valentine day of each month in Da]ly LCSSOHS Building Scottish Rite Temple, beginning at 7:30 p. m. 5 3 D ke 5 HOWARD D. STABLER, m EngllSh 1: bod Worshipful Master; JAMES W. By W. L. Gordon 2:———.—-——..——69 LEIVERS, Secretary. || Dr. Richard Williams ||~ Ok Words Often Misused: Do not say, | DENTIST D';gg:‘;s 7 “Your ‘cake, Mrs. Brown, is delight- OFFICE AND RESIDENCE ful.” Say, ‘“‘is delicious.” 11 Gastineau Building i 117, F. 0. E. Meets first and third Mondays 8 m., Eagles’ Hall, Douglas. Visiting brothers welcome. J. B. Martin, W. ., T. N. Cashen, Secretary. Often Mispronounced: Rapier, Pronounce Ra-pi-er, a as in ray, i} 31 | p. {as in it, accent first syllable. Often Misspelled: Carburetor. Ob- MR LD e AR SES L -erve the e, and pronounce as in bet. Dr. A. W. Stewart | Synonyms: Graphic, descriptive, | { DENTIST - | picturesque, pictorial, vivid, delinea- | | 11T tory. | Hours 9 am. to 6 pm. | Word Study: “Use a word three | | SEWARD BUILDING i imes and it is yours.” Let us in-| | Office Pone 469 i | | crease our vocabulary by mastering g % £l one word each day. Today’'s word: | 1 | Sanction (verb); to ratify, confirm; jgz— - 1 RELIABLE TRANSFER Our trucks go any place any time. A tank for Diesel Oil and a tank for Crude Oil save burner treuble. PHONE 149; NIGHT 148 | 3 approve. “I sanction everything Lhac] Robert Simpson you have said.” i gt IR S el Opt. D. NOTICE Graduate Los Angeles Col- To Scottish Rite Masons: | lege of Optometry and Opthalmo’ogy Glasses Fitted Lenses Ground Degree work this week as fol-| lows: | Commercial Adjust- ment & Rating Bureau Cooperating with White Serv- ice Bureau ROOM 1—SHATTUCK BLDG. | | | ‘We have 5,000 local ratings on file 18—Thursday, Dec. 5, 7:30 p.m. & e 5 30—Friday, Dec. 6, 7:30 pm. 2 T ! 32—Saturday, Dec. 7, 7:30 pm. |%— =5 Visiting members cordially invit- DR. H. VANCE o~ ed to attend 1 OSTEOPATH Consuliation a nd examinstion Free. Hours 10 to 12; 1 to 5; 7 to 8:30 and by appointment. Office Grand Apts., ear Gas- tineau Hotel. Phone 177 — TYPEWRITERS RENTED $5.00 per month | I. B. Burford & Co. JUNEAU FROCK SHOPPE “Exclusive But Not Expensive” Coats, Dresses, Lingeric, Hosiery and Hats “Our doorstep is worn by eatistied customers” PHONE 36 For very prompt GENERAL MOTORS ' and | MAYTAG PRODUCTS ’ 1 I W. P. JOHNSON ||| TR e S O i P B e 2 McCAUL MOTOR COMPANY Dodge and Plymouth Dealers LIQUOR YELIVERY Jones-Stevens Shop LADIES' — MISSES’ READY-TO-WEAR Seward Street Near Third solely because it opposed them so relentlessly.” | Life, a rural editor points out, gets harder for the | Here we have' what seems a wholesome fear of | farmer in the winter, but, then, so does his cider.— | what to do when the summons comes to render themselves immediate'y Q. What is the most commonly used brief form of introduction? unwittingly creating sympathy for Franklin D.| (Boston Herald.) | CAUSTIC WEEKLY COMMENTS Garnick’s Chats “A Newspaper Within a Newspaper” THE FRIENDLY STORE DECEMBE NEW DEAL STATISTICS Population of United States Eligible for Townsend Penson 124000000} last shipmen 50,000,000 —{ make your Balance 74,000,000 Prohibited from work under child act and employed by govt. ing fast. 60,000,000 14,000,000 13,999,998 Balance Unemployed BALA Leaving to produce the naticn’s goods—You and Me —and I'm all tired out. o—0—o PASSING OBSERVATION like listening to the fiery speech of a half-baked radical. 0—0—o0 COME ON, SCIENCE It would add considerable to the safety and joy of life if they only could learn to fool-proof all the things that need to be made that, o—0—o MAKE HIT WITH THEM What the woman who looks like a walking stick and the) woman who looks like a ten-ton| truck want is a share-the-fat] HEAD 4 pounds LARGE Dozen, 0—0—0 MORE EQUAL DISTRIBUTION “Don’t you get tired of be-| ing kissed by your boy friend?”) the pretty thing was asked. as mother does kissed by dad.” 0—0—o WHAT EVERY “When Women | Headline, of not being}and forced to go { locking for the buj | things think they We are unpacking our | Gifts and Toys. Come, early . . . they are sell- All 25¢ Canned Vege- tables and Fruit 20c A CAN For Saturday Only! Nothing burns up a real patriot] All Brands of CATSUP Regular 25¢ bottles 20c on Saturday None Better KNOWS g ! It means their hus- she admitted, “as tired{ bands are elbowed out of bed R 6, 1935. THE FRIENDLY STORE STREAMLINED MISS She planes the ocean, scales the heights Without a thought of fear, The great Olympic records She shatters every year— She wins the tennis champion- ship With cryptic smile, so mocking The only thing that floors her Is a runner in her stocking. Her prototype of former days Was want to swoon and faint But streamlined Miss rides victory With lip stick and red paint. She craves wide open spaces And living in the rough, And yet' she’d simply die if she Sheuld lose her powder puff. —Hydeho. o—0—o NOT SO HOT Hawkins—So you went to the Horse Show, eh? What did you think of the horses? Larkins—Well, I wen't mort- gage the furniture to get the money to make a first payment on one, and so far as I could see, none of them were any improvement on the old model my granddad drove 50 years ago. 0—0—o EXPECTED AT THIS TIME OF YEAR Pants Pocket Thief Busy —headline from our own paper. That's not surprising—friend wife knows she’s just gotta get busy with her Christmas shop- ping—and husbands are so hard to convince—and so slow about forking over. o—0—o t of Xmas selections RICE for 25¢ EGGS 40c HUSBAND Wake Up"— prowling about rglars the dear have heard. GARNICK’S GROCERY - - - PHONE 174 available and immediately effect- |ive.” A. “Mr. Allen, Mr. Wilson.” — e SHOP IN JUNEAU, FIRST! Weather: Maximum 37; minimum | ——--———— 35; rain, .84 inches. | SHOP IN JUNEAU! R - ITS Guild Tea, Trinity Hall, Satur-| Wise to Call 48 |day, 2 to 6 pm. —aav,| D — SHOP IN JUNEAU, FIRST! i GARBAGE HAULED | Juneau Reasonable Momuauy Rates | % E.o.pavis | { TransferCo. TELEPHONE 584 i hen i dof Phone 4753 | VUAD 15 B00Et & . e} MOVING or STORAGE & Y Fuel 0Oil Coal Transfer WARRACK Construction Co. Juneau Phone 487 i Sl SABIN’S | “Everything in Furnishings for Men” Ludwig Nelson JEWELRY and WATCHES The B. M. Behrends Bank Juneau, Alaska COMMERCIAL and SAVINGS Resources Over Two and One Half Million Dollars ;Ed?’ <F 793 If you enjoy indoor sports— Here’s one of the best—TRY BOWLING! BRUNSWICK BOWLING ALLEYS Rheinlander and Alt Heidelberg BEER ON TAP HENNA PACK i} Finger Wave and Marcel | $1.50 [} COSMOPOLITAN BEAUTY SHOPPE Phone 517 JUNEAU-YOUNG Hardware Company PAINTS—OIL—GLASS = : | | Cizm | Shelf and Heavy Hardware Cixareltu | Guns and Ammunition \ s TR GARLAND BOGGAN Hardwood Floors ’ Waxing Polishing Candy Cards The New Arctic Pabst Famous Draught Beer On Tap Sandix:g PHONE | SPEND WHERE YOU MAKE IT! ZORIC DRY CLEANING ® Soft Water Washing ® Guy Smitw DRUGS PUROLA REMEDIES PRESCRIPTIONS CARE- FULLY COMPOUNDED Front St. Next Coliseum Your ALASKA LAUNDRY PHONE 15 FORD AGENCY (Authorized Dealers) GREASES GAS—OILS JUNEAU MOTORS Foot of Main Street TAP BEER IN TOWN! Recreation Parlors Liquor Store BILL DOUGLAS i But the Flame Does Not Die There is the constant worry on the part of those who have others do for them that which is necessary that the little things which are so import- ant may be overlooked. It is our earnest duty to care for the details. The reverence due the departed one may linger forever dear with the knowledge that tribute was complete. The Charles W. Carter Mortuary PHONE 136-2 “The Last Service Is the Greatest Tribute” o

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