The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, January 31, 1936, Page 4

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) ; 4 THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE 1936 FRIDAY, JAN. 31, | were the strongest. New England for instance. D(ulsr Al(lska Emplre | ‘The Senator from Idaho, let is be said at the outse, ROBERT “’:’ BENDER - - Editor and Manager by y as a liberal. and Main Published EMPIRE_PRIN Streets, Juneau, v ING ¢ Alaska Entered in the Post Office in Juneau as Second Class matter doubtedly. "SUBSCRIPTION RATES. f Delivered by carrier In Juneau and Douglas for $1.25 figure Theodore Roosevelt and his Bull Moosers did per_month. ; : By mail, post the following r to the Republican machine. e T s plish the same end while the Old Guard is blowing its horn long and loud against the New Deal? Will the Idaho Senator move into the Cleveland convention _ 'with just enough support to upset the apple cart? It is not beyond the realm of reason. The fact is that Mr. Borah can split the Republi- can party so far asunder that it will develop less PR 1 ~——— 'strength at the polls next November than it did in oy ’\,\HA(:RT’;HUALYAESNANGVUAOWY:{';:EE‘[ZB[?CAETEIOEARG[R 1932. Especially if Gov. Landon is to be the great 7 T .man of the Fletcher-Hoover machine. The Kansas Governor, in contrast to Mr. Borah, is an ultra con- servative. He is reported to typify everything that could be found in Mr. Hoover's policies which led the nation to financial ruin. The two extremes may well ance, favor if they will promptly any failure or irregularity ; Business Offics " MEMBER OF ASSOCIATED PRESS. Associated Press is exclusively l(lllt‘d‘(vll“m credited to The for republication of all news disy not otherwise credited in this paper and also the local news published herein. use t or campaign rather than being the compact unit it hoped to be in fighting the New Deal. (New York Times) | Obviously, it is to be a campaign of slogans. Mr. Farley has provided the Democratic leitmotif in Keep Out the Gangsters, upon which we must be prepared for numerous variations. Republicans are evidently going to do a great deal with Liberty at the Cross- roads. Both sides may offer prizes for winning slogans. The competition will be keen, since it won't It is a good principle of human kind Not to Speak pe necessary to send five Wrappers or carton tops with ill of the dead. But now and again some over enthus- the slogan. Epigrams will light up tne heaven at night P < " o . and come down like a smoxe screen by day. jastic individual crusading for a self-appointed cansm‘ The election will really be decided by the unem- violates that principle with the result that he blackens | poyment statistics and wheat prices as of September his own name and record more than he does the one |1 next. But since people insist on slogans, there is !one war-cry that might be suggested to whomever it | may concern. It has to do with the new neutrality. Such a situation recently has arisen in connection | ypder the old freedom of the seas we fought wars in with the Munitions Investigation Committee in the defiance of the right of search claimed by other pow national capital. Senator Gerald P. Nye, of North|ers. This immunity we no longer claim, and a good Dakota, Chairman of the group, in probing into muni- |slogan for the new neutrality would be “You can tions sales in war time as a badis to design legislation | Search me! toward keeping this nation out of war, has had the‘ temerity to declare that President Woodrow Wilson and Secretary of State Robert Lansing of World War days “falsified” as to their knowledge of war time/ (Omaha World-Herald) secret treaties. A storm of protest has arisen through- The AAA is de_fld- Dead in its entirety and dead in out the country as friends of the late President rally | €very single detail. Dead as the proverbial door nail i ¥ There can be no question about that. Justice Roberts AL fier s d people ek e el Ry m‘gh"!in writing the Supreme Court’s opinion of that effort “what has that to do with legislation designed to keep |y 4a0 agriculture out of the slough of bankruptcy, this country out of useless w makes it very plain that it isn’t just partially deed, Of course, Chairman Nye is particularly interested | but completely, thoroughly, eternally dead. That there will be great mourning in the Farm Belt over its demise need not be said. With all its faults agriculture loved it dearly, and those interests in the [ “You Can Search Me” DIRT-DAUBING THE SEPULCHRE OF WOODROW WILSON of whom he speaks. Dead and Mourned with his investigation of the House of Morgan activ- ities, but what a subtle and mean attempt to have it, appear that President Wilson was compelled by the | $87 S C0% 000 T U o B e reliance of these Morgans to drag this nation into the World War and | | States on farm prosperity for their own prosperity felt to sacrifice the lives of America’s youth. | well disposed toward it for the part it has played in the The brilliant Senator Carter of Virginia, | promotion of recovery. voiced the sentiments of the American people when | he declared in a scathing attack on Senator Nye No Glory In War Glass, No one ever associated with Woodrow Wil- son, no one who ever had access to the man’s thoughts would ever have the audacity to sug- gest that his sympathies were with the great banking interests of this country and that he took us into the war to save the paltry dollars (Boston Transcript) If Ethiopia is to be conquered it probably means a succession of advances with intervals between, during |which the invaders will make themselves safe [rom |attack from the rear and provide for the safety of | their communications. There will be more than on2 of Wall Street. 4 L AR rainy season before the end is reached. The French Describing the Nye statement as an “unspeakable| o, o1 "saiq of the charge of the Light Brigade at accusation against a dead President” and “dirt-daub- | gajoy)gyg that it was magnificent, but it was not war. ing the sepulchre of Woodrow Wilson,” the Senator what is happening in Africa is war without trace of from Virginia declared: magnificence. It is not the kind of war the Italian I resent it, as every American citizen who knew Woodrow Wilson would resent it, as an infamous libel, whether suggested or whether directly made. It is generally accepted that neither President Wilson nor Secretary Lansing knew of the secret treaties, but, whether they did or not, how can the information at this late date be of any value | i 5 mittee has to do with the manufacture and exporta- | wijl go to the length of putting on a set of false whis- tion of munitions of war. It had best stick to its last kers to do battle for the Republican party—even at the for what the pecple think of a person who would;behest of the Americah Liberty League—is not to be insult the memory of that great American, Woodrow | believed. Wilson, is something, as Senator Glass said, which | may not be spoken in the Senate, printed in the | newspapers, or uttered by a gentleman. led to believe they were to have. | Al Smith’s Stand (Norfolk Virginian-Pilot) There are many things that Al Smith can do to in | hurt the campaign of the man who nicknamed him the But Not Hoover | | (Oklahoma City Oklahoman) It might be possible for the Republicans to convince the country that Mr. Roosevelt ought to be voted out in 1936. But not even an angel of light could convince e ; ks sl espite Qle fm fhat Gov. Landon of Kansas “lethe people that either Mr. Hoover or some of the things magnanimously “consented ¥ oome 30 the aid of the | e represents should be voted in. If the Republican Grand Old Party if “needed”, the veteran Senflwr"leaders undertake to vindicate the Hoover adminis- Borah of Idaho appears to be making it very difficult i tration in the opening campaign, they will be in serious for the Republican high command. ;danger gr losing some of the half dozen States they Mr. Borah, leaning a little to the Democratic prin- | ¢arried in 1932, eiple of a fair shake for all, has come out for a “livme( I B3 TR platform to take care of the people as a whole.” For | Amencvamsm —Knowing well political platform & Repulican Presidential candidate it would appear ]pledges will not be fulfilled; eagerly following a candi- that the Senator has almost over spoken himself. Cax Eifi:fi,n‘:};o Rwpeg 8 erander Utopla,~Akriy) Heason- the Old Guard and the Liberty League countenance | g such philosophy as that? It must be indeed an un-| 4 y % | A Columbia professor finds thal eating carrots tasty pill, in view of the fact that Mr, Borah is rally- i ks and tomatoes helps one to see in the dar S 5 ing considerable support in some of the places where |Jike a light diet.—Dayton, Ohio, News, gl i REPUBLICAN SPLIT LOOMS [P = NOMINATION COUPON o (Good for 10,000 votes for the young lady you enter in this contest.) I nominate Miss . as my favorite in The Daily Alaska Empire and Juneau Merchants’ Better Times Drive, with the understanding that this nomination will entitle her to 10,000 votes. Your addres Your name ... Clip th1§ coupon from the paper and mail or bring it to The Daily Alaska Empire, Better Times Editor at once, so that your favorite may have an even start with other contestants. Only one lot of 10,000 free nominating votes will be credited to any one contestant. et g (the dyed-in-the-wool Republican leaders thought they is what is facetiously referred to in Republican circles How then is this following he apparently — BerHDAY " is achieving in the old line Republican strongholds going to be handled at the Cleveland convention? Un- it revives in the memory of those ardent Old Guard conservatives visions of what that colorful Will Mr. Borah accom- | 'find the Republican party hopelessly divided in the | | people, under the spell of Mussolinian eloquence, were | HAPPY The Empire extends congratula- tions and best wishes today, their tirthday anniversary, 2 the follori- |ing: | JANUARY 31 S. P. Raymond Cecile Cashen J. B. Warrack Peter Melseth Mrs. Elvina Morrow ————————— From The Empire j 20 YEARS AGO S T oy JANUARY 31, 1916 | Juneau was becoming metropoli- tan. Dispatches from steamship companies operating in this section promised one boat a day each way |for the summer months. Some days | several steamers could be expected to | be in port and the docks looked for- |ward to a busy season. Companies |operating that summer were the Al- |aska, Admiral, Canadian Pacific, Border Line, and Pacific Coast | Steamship Company. All bodies of the Ancient and Ac- cepted Scottish Rite of Free Mason- ry in Southeast Alaska were to hold their fourth annual reunion in ‘Ju- neau, starting February 7, and end- ling February 11. The work was to be held in the Odd Fellows’ Hall and the session to close with a banquet for all Scottish Rite Masons. ‘With the change of the moon came a change in the weather on Gasti- |neau Channel. The high winds near- | |ly died out and the temperature con- | siderably moderated. Business was| resumed as usual, with many persons put to work shovelling snow from the sidewalks. | Cast for the high school dramatic ‘pmducunn, “A College Town,” was |announced, with the following stu- dents participating: Simpson Mac- |Kinnon, Joseph Acklin, Harry Sabin, |William Taschek, James McCloskey, Carl Anderson, Waino Hendrickson, Wilbur Borford, Henry Lund, Mar- garet Dudley, Frances Ptack, Mary | Connor, Lillian Collins, Georgia Gil- |patrick, Ruth Umstead. The play Iwas to be given for the benefit of |the A. B. tank. The following students participat- |ed in a music recital given under the direction of Mrs. Sigard Wallstedt; Fay Thane, Alice Case, Jean Stevens, !Marmn Belle Ponda, Venetia Pugh, Vivian Carlson, Loura Girard, Hilda Hendrickson, Lulu Koskey, Charis Pettit, Virginia Martin, Elizabeth |Madsen, Esther Madsen, Dorothy Haley, Olive .La Bante, John Bu- chanan, John Taylor, Peter McEvoy. Two large and valuable plate glass windows were shattered into small |pieces when the frost raised founda- tions of a building on Front'street. The large window in Nelson's Jewel- |y Store and one in the Butler-Mau- |ro Drug Company, both popped and ‘broke shortly before noon. Weather: Maximum, 40; mini- {mum, 17; clear. || Cigars | Cigarettes " Candy y Cards The New Arctic Pabst Famous Draught Beer il i | 'IDEAL PAINT SHOP Modetn ]l | PROFESSIONAL e —£3 e Horoscope F — 2 1quette i Stk FiEnbe He](;r:'c; g’d_rl.“;EAnil;gecht but do not compel” U SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 1, 1936.| | Although this is an unimportant By Roberta I ee — Q. What might be termed the most important thing to acquire to Massage, Electricity, Infra Rad Ray, Medical Gymnastics 207 GOLDSTEIN BLDG. | Phone Office, 216 become popular in one's social [day in planetary direction, accord- group ing to astrology, a benefi¢ aspect |gz 7 AR 7 TR | A. The complete forgetting of | qominates it. | one’s self, and a sincere interest in | Uranus is in a place that is be-| | DRS. KASER & FREEBURGER others. lieved to encourage confidence and| | DENTISTS Q. How should a woman physi- | optimism. This month is to be sig-1 | Blomgren Building | cian be addressed, as “Doctor War-nificant in foreshadowing cxtraor-| | PHONE 36 | ner,” or as “Mrs. Warner”? dinary conditions in 1936. Hours 9 am- to 3 pm. | A. She should be addressed as,| The scers foretell destructive vi- | ] “Doctor Warner.” brations from Mars and they prcph- |7 = Q. Who should furnish the ush- ers, at a wedding, with their bou- tonnieres? A. The bridegroom. D esy that a new orld war will break I' unexpectedly, de ite indication: long studied by statesmen: | It is forecast that volunteers from' | the United States will lead the na- w-==+—==-—<ition’into serious international com-| | . plications. D'("ly IJ’.‘SSO“S | The stars encourage education |and presage a year of amazing progre: The youth movement is| ) | to be affected by political conditions [ | to which the aged will contribute. | i in English By W. L. Gordon WORDS OFTEN MISUSED: Do ), “Anyway I know where he | @ At any rate I know| The New Moon ruling this month of d warns ters natural | | re stor tornadoes are foretold ue to cold weather,; snow and rain will tax the hospitals | | at this time, and gr strain will' ! from is.” where he is. OFTEN MISPRONOUNCED: Posse. Pronounce pos-e, o as in of,{ be put upon philanthropic and| | e as in me unstressed, accent first charitable institutions. 1l syllable. Strange variations in the annual | | | OFTEN MISSPELLED: Visual.' cpidemic of infl Observe the s, though pronounced z. ticated. Science ienza are prognos- | | [ P Bhadh to provide novyl [#—-. Dr. C. P. Jenne DENTIST Rooms 8 and 9 Valentine Bmilding ‘Telephone 176 | Dr. Richard Williams DENTIST OFICE AND RESIDENCE Gastineau Building Phone 431 Dr. A. W. Stewart | DENTIST Hours 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. SEWARD PUILDING Office Pone 469 [ —d SYNONYMS: Servile, subserv- remedies. The medical “profession |zs ient, obsequious, cringing, fawning. | Will profit through the year. i WORD STUDY: “Use a word: Persons whose birthday it is have three times and it is yours.” Jet the augury of a year of fair success " us increase our vocabulary by mas- | in which friendsiip will bring bene- | | tering one word each day. Today’: y 11 journeys may be | word: APPALLING; such as to Profitable depress or discourage with fear.: Children born on this day prob- “Appalling difficulties confronted ably will be serious-minded and in- | us.” dustrious. Subjects of this sign of | TELEPHONE 563 Office Hours—9-12; 1-6 Dr. W. A. Rystrom DENTIST Cver First National Bank ¢ X-RAY Aquarius are exceedingly depend- 3 able. | ! Clark Gable, motion picture actor, was born on this day 1901. Others who have celebrated it as a birth- day include Granville Stanley Hall, writer and psychologist, 1846 Thom- as Ccle, artist, 1801 (Copyright, 1936.) | | i | | Look and Learn By A. C. Gordon 1. What is the largest insect? \ Robert éimpsor : ~ Upt. D. Graduate Los Angeles Col- lege of Optumetry and Opthalmo’ogy Glasses Fitted Lenses Ground o s OR IN 2. Who is Charlotte Bronte? 3. How many tons of water to NEW PA the acre must be used in irrigation == to equal one inch of rainfall? Rev. George J. Beck, formerly of 4. What does the Latin resurgam the Presbyterian mission in Ketchi- mean? kan, has been replaced by the Rev. 5. How many species of plants Donald George Christensen, who ar- | are found in Australia that are not rived in the First City on the Prin- KETCHIKAN DR. H. VANCE OSTEOPATH Consuliation a nd examination Free. Hours 10 to 12; 1 to 5; 1 to :30 and by appointment. Office Grand Apts., Lear Gas- found in any other country? cess Norah from Milwaukee. Rev.| HueatHAkE Shous 1TV il ANSWERS Beck recently assumed a post in, ———— ¥ Central America moth, with the East. e L wing spread from 10 to 18 inches. | v A :’OTORS ang | 2. English novelist. 3. 113 tons. el ;4. “I shall rise again.” BTN RN, 5. More than 7,000 species. THAT SPARK ol “SHOP IN JUNEAY, rrx;s'r: TOVE MAYTAG PRODUCTS i W. P. JCHNSON | | GARLAND BOGGAN | Hardwood Floors . Waxing Polishiny lf' Sanding [ PHONE 562 | DA e G ok 23 | | | | | | TYPEWRITERS RENTED | $5.00 per month | : | |. J. B. Burford & Co. ! | | | "Our doorstep is worn by | atistied rs” When in Need of a2 DIESEL OIL—UTAH COAL e GENERAL HAULING | FOSS STORAGE and CRATING CALL US JUNEAU TRANSFER Phone 48 Night Phone 4703 I CONSTRUCTION CO. Phone 107 Juneau . If It's Paint We Have It! R Jones-Stevens Sho; LADIES’ — MISSES’ READY-T0-WEAR N 7 BV, s 7\ If you enjoy indoor sports— Here’s one of the best—TRY BOWLING! BRUNSWICK BOWLING ALLEYS Rheinlander and 4lt Heidelberg BEER ON TAP | = = FRED W. WENDT PHONE 549 — —J H. S. GRAVE! | “The Clothing Man* | | | “THE REXALL SIOR:” Reliable Marx “thing ] Home of Hart 3chaffner and | } | | JUNEAU-YOUNG Hardware Company PAINTS—OIL—GLASS Shelf and Heavy Hardware Guns and Ammunition | pharmacists SPECIALIZING [ On Tap “JIMMY"* CARLSON The B. M. " Bank Juneau, Alaska COMMERCIAL and SAVINGS Resources Over Two and One Half Million Dollars in French and l | Butler Mauro Drug Co. ::':: | GARBAGE HAULED ‘ Reasonable Momua.y Rates E. 0. DAVIS TELEPHONE 584 Phone 4753 | Gastineau Cafe Short Orders at All Hoars i T STRATTON&BEERS | MUNICIPAL ENGINEERS SURVEYORS Behrends + VALENTINE BLDG. Telephone 502 i —_— CALL COLE FOR OIL! 34 plus or 27 gravity, in any amount . . . QUICK! COLE TRANSFER Phone 3441 or Night 1803 ». | WHEN IN A HURRY | | .. . i ] | WINTER COATS AT | HALF PRICE : Juneau Frock Shoppe “Exclusive But Not Expensive” - e et DRY CLEANING Soft Water Washing ® Your ALASKA LAUNDRY PHONE 15 | i | | | Our trucks go any place any Fraternal Societies | OF —— — 1 Gastineau Channel .{ B. P. 0. ELKS meets every Wednesday at 8 P, M. Visiting brothers wela come. M. E. MONAGLE, Exalted Ruler. M. h, SIDES, Secretary. KNIGHTS OF COLUMBUS Seghers Council No. 1760. Meetings second and last Monday at 7:30 p. m. Transient brothers urged to ate tend. Council Cham- bers, Fifth St. JOHN P, MULLEN, G. K, H. J. TURNER, Secretary, IMOUNT JUNEAU LODGE NO. 147 Uecond and fourth Mon- day of each' month in Scottish Rite Temple, beginning at 7:30 p. m, MARTIN S. JORGEN- SEN, Worshipful Master; JAMES W. LEIVERS, Secretary. DOUGT S fO0E AERIE s\ 117, F. 9. E. Meets first and third Mondays 8 p.m. Eagles’ Hall, Douglas. isiting rothers welcome. J. B. Martin, W P, T. N. Cashen, Secretary. PRECEDENCE Certain things come, with the years, to be an expected part of every occasion. Within our £ Ofession, this regard for the tiaditional must be combined with new steps toward perfec- tion. Their successful combin- ation at all times is but one of the standards marking a service by us. s The Charles W. Carter Mortuary PHONE 136-2 | time. A tank for Diesel Oil and a fank for Crude Oil save i | burner trouble. | PHONE 149; NICHT 148 ReELABLE TRANSFER Commercial Adjust- ‘ meni & Rating Bureau | Cooperating with White Serv- | ice Bureau | ROOM 1—SHATTUCK BLDG. HUTEL ZYNDA ELEVATOR SERVICE S. ZYNDA, Prop. COMPANY " McCAUL MOTOR FORD AGENCY (Authorized Dealers® GREASES GAS—OILS JUNEAU MOTORS Foot of Main Streev - 2 / ? < 7 g ’ THE BEST TAP BEER IN TOWN! [ J THE MINERS' Recreation Parlors Liquor Store BILL DOUGLAS s

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