The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, February 3, 1936, Page 4

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from 38 billions in 1932 and, according to Treasury i . . PERESRS = —a i Dall'y Alaska ‘Emplre estimates was close to 60 billions for 1935, or halfway HAPPY Mod I PROFESSIONAL Fraternal Societies. | s . TR er|DACK to the 1929 level; the Government tax receipts, vodaern ! H s = - OF [ : BOBERT W. BENDER - - 'Edifor and Managet| which can only be collécted from national income, are| == : S or OSCOP(/ ——— = ; ; ! i St 2 ; s v g # : BIR THDAY Eti uette ! | Gastineau Channel ] evening except Sunday I;“ thv estimated at $4.470.000,000 for the current fiscal year, v QL “The stars Zacline ’ He]ene W.L.Alhrecbt i o 4 ! e VoG OMPANY at Second and Mt | o) 5 gain of more than $2,200,000,000 over collections in | Ay Roherta J.ee but do ‘n:)I compel™ | PHYSIOTHERAPY e S o ' Entored In the Post Office In Juneau as Second Class | the fiscal year ending June 30, 1933; industrial pro- | The Empire extends congratula- o | Massage, Electricity, Infra Rad | | i A e i 3 S “ | duction, which in 1932 sank to 59 per cent of the 1923- f‘_fl;’:d:"drbifl wishes h:dafl. their L oeeeoes — J‘ Ray, Medical Gymnastics i B. P. 0. ELKS meete i T SUBSCRIPTION RATES. |25 average, is now up to 88 percent of that average, a |- - Y anniversary, > the follos={ o <yhat does rendezvous mean,| TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 4,1935 || 307 g‘omsmm BLDG. | ey Y‘;ef’";s"fhy “v‘: "' ) Osiivered by carrier In Juneay and Douglas for $1.25|gpin in less than three years-of 50 per cent; the}™: and how is it pronounced? After the early morning hours| | one Office, 216 ol exsn:d 7 ;;O&SG& . By mail, )~-;s&f{u- .n;ll.z-'l-’h!fw Y.“lluwvgu ra wholesale price index, using 1926 as a basis of 100, had | FEBRUARY 3 “ A. It means a place appointed 'l‘or benlx[u{ aspects rule :stroquS: today, ‘7 e éxall::i .Ru.lcr. & i L T T Sl risen to 80.7 by the end of September, 1935, compared | Ed J. Radde a “‘“"‘]fi P“°“"“‘1’C:‘ m“g'_df'[“"; according to fla{folflg&_‘ This lsr'j “(fg B— —_— SIDES, Secretary. i Sub: 'yll);;s will confer @ favor if they will prl»llnp((L\ | with 59.8 in February, 1933; farm products, which Ernest A. Johnson a a l:‘;l \v[f‘ a”* :; et, 00 as in tool, | for promotmgcllmsmesls)nrnpro (n{sxz - DRS. KASER & FREEBURGER | | — P, o notify the Business Office of any fsilure or irregularity | - Vs d g s accent first syllable. | matters and may be rhore fortu-| | 2 » % l ey e . Business: Office, 474, - | 8000KdINg. o the sime index fell fo 409 in Feuruary, Ades. O N, Crotie | @ How long should one remain :a[':\nfm- men than for women. | DENTISTS KNIGHTS OF COLUMBUS ! e — —— " """ 11933, are now up to 795; the gain in farm income for Mr; ('_mr_';"" Wools | when making a formal call? The stars appear to presage great Blomgren Building | | Seghers Council No. 1 n i The Abselnted. IS-F»A?ssoxs.!TTE-DlyFT-Elsns.«l to the | 1935 over 1932 is estimated at nearly 3 billions; in the r;’“l;z“L g"“e" A. Twenty minutes, unless urged {activity among engineers, naval of-| | PHONE 56 | | 1760 Meetings second E ! . for republication of all news dispa | same. period listed bonds are up nearly 8 billion dollars s b i1 to remain longer, out no longer than | v and military commanders.| | Hours 9 a.m to 3 pm. | jrgdo last Monday at ‘Y { local ."I.'Ls”‘.!:.m‘- rrhsakaed e of and the value of listed securities has risen by more | thirty minutes. { Again masculine strength both men- | f————- —————-——‘_.z éfoths;smfirggaxlifiw { ALASKA CIRCULATION GUARANTEED TO than 20 billions. s, : % 7 bl If LS enhel ookt Sty ftal snd physloal wiTL R s e ACtOAER g —————— i tend. Council Cham- i “AITHAN THAT OF ANY OTHER PUBLICATION In addition, weekly payrolls in industry nave in-| Ao Ll e 1“;(‘)1;",;“;‘3:7 when Uike Eirt i };‘;““:‘J‘L";‘r:’ L Dr. C. P. Jenne Iaers. Fifth St. JOHN F. MULLEN, | e — ¢ - ey ek ! om The Empire a glass or 2 stima g planetary 5. | . 3 5 : jcreased by 122 millions; factory employment by more 2 A. This is merely affectation. | Jjupiter as well as Saturn will en- DENTIST | |G K. H. J. TURNER, Secretary. { than five million men and women; building activity | 4 2 GRS £ el il s Sty R Rooms 8 and 9 Valentine | S ) curage manufacturing and mer i ' -rount | has gained many fold; gold and currency Which took | 1 3 i e e~ eeee =4 | ~handising. 1 uilding [ A JLIIIWEAU LODGE NO. 147 { | flight as a result of lack of confidence, have ¢ome back | } . i | There will be world oportunities | ! Telephone 176 'd:COHflI md;wfl-h h:on- i { out of boarding and expatriation. ‘ : WP TPty T.esSONS |{tor Americuns who are: thorotghty 18-~ 2 AR day of each month in b’ |, FERUARY 5 i 2l Dy Mgt sl e e S| XX geottish Rite Temoie . 3 . Zynda, proprietor of the Eaglé nd N A - 5 4 " ki T - e — — 0 2 :30 p. m. g b 5 his shas PN ol now will profit. Great discoveries . ] | Now thatithe groumnd "OL'V \a:s ) q"v ,dow Well| grewery, who recently returned from mn hn-);] Sh will change methods of war o seal | Dr. Richard Williams a MARTIN S. JORGEN- ! [ probably go right ahead having the usual weather for |, " P B0 0 R L okane, AT pal DENTIST N, Worshiptal Master' TAMES | | this time of year. had. hade for thE 1 - L. Gordon H s S Most veterans don’t care whether the bonus cur- rency is new or old sc long as it doesn’t bounce. WALLACE BRUCE JESSUP Many friends in Alaska are shocked to hear of the sudden death in a Seattle hospital January 26 of Wal- lace Bruce Jessup, publisher of the Bremerton News- Searchlight and father of Mrs. Prosper Ganty of Sitka. Mr. Jessup, 60 years of age, was the victim of a heart ailment. Last summer, Mr. Ellsworth’s Rescue (New York Times) The pulse quickened, cares vanished, as the. eye fell on headlines which announced that Lincoln Ells- worth and his pilot, Herbert Hollick-Kenyon, unheard | of since November 23, when they left Dundee Island for a flight across the south polar regions, were safe | Jessup visited here while en route to Sitka with Mrs. Jessup for several weeks' stay|in Little America. Two months of hoping against| zigantic. “It was a colossal statue.” |foreshadow the usual wild gayety DENTIST | western from a business and pleas- -o-o b ! with Mrs. Ganty in Sitka. An extensive traveler he|hope. Then a flier in an airplane sights specks on | o it S ‘;I e = - {that precedes war excitement. Peace | | Cver First National Bank had been to Alaska several times and was one who saw | the ice below. In that city wilderness they are easily !¢ 1P € States, Mr. Helps saye | i lovers should be untiring in theic| | X-RAY interpreted. A few hours later,the world learns that Ellsworth and his companion arg alive and safe. The thanks that greet the tidings are mingled with cheers for one of the most daring flights in the history of aviation and one of the outstanding feats in the his- tory of exploration. No doubt Ellsworth takes the rescue as a matter of course. Had he not planned it—indicated precisely where he might be found 1if forced down? Had he not been marooned for three weeks on an Arctic floe after a forced landing? Has | he not always been on the verge of disaster on every one of his polar flights? Yet to most of us his return seems like a resurrection. Translate this adventure i#o terms of our Amer- ican geography. Imagine the United States and Mexico its great possibilities, Mr. Jessup was in active newspaper work in many parts of the country before he bought the Bremerton | Searchlight, a weekly, back in 1910 on a shoestring, and made it into one of the best small dailies in the State of Washington. His sons tell the story of how | their father made the down payment with an overdraft | check that was held by a friendly banker until the| new publisher got his feet on the ground. He was the head of a “newspaper” family. Surviving | are his widow, three sons, John, Wilford and James, and two daughters, Corra, wife of Albert W. Wilson, Associated Press correspondent now in the Ethiopian arrangements doubling of the capacity of his brew- in capacity. Speaking of the prohi- bition law in Seattle, Mr. Zynda said curtly: “The temperance law is one colossal farce.” Part of the cargo on the steamer Spokane for Juneau was 2,000 sacks of cement for the Alaska-Juneau Gold Mining Company. J. D. Helps, Alaskan representative of the Standard Oil Company, re- |turned to Juneau on the North- business in the States is picking up § in all lines, but that Alaska looks the best to him yet. I Misses Elva Kirkham and Etta Brown sang at the Douglas Island Woman’s Club meeting in the Labor Union Hall, Leaving on the Spokane for points north were W. B. Hargraves, Mar- garet Turner, J. C. Turne, W. Gal- lagher, O. Wilson, J. Trijovich, G Kendall and Mrs. C. Dunn for Skag- way, and Mr. and Mrs. W. Grant — his impudence.’ Often Mispronounced: Jew's-harp. or. jews-harp. Pronounce as spelled, and not juice-harp. pronounced flem. Synonyms: Elastic, resilient, buoy- ant, springy. Word study: “Use a word three imes and it is yours.” Let us in- rease our vocabulary by master- ng one word each day. Today's ord: Colossal; of enormous size Look and Learn By A. C. Gordon 1. Can the President of the U. 8. ¢ legally arrested for any crime ~hatever? 2. Who was the Philistine woman loved by Sampson? 3. What is the color of turquoise? 4. What is archaeology? 5. Where is the Vaal River? Often Misspelled: Phlegm, thoug: | | Aspects of the moon are read as i Deaths of prominent persons are prognosticated. A motion picture pro- ducer will end his career and there will be much illness in the national capital where pneumonia may be prevalent. J Warning again is given that specu- +lation and all forms of wooing of the god of chance will be widespread this winter. Horse-racing may causc | & scandal affecting young persons. | Pleasure will be sought recklessly |as winter wanes. The signs seem to efforts before the coming of spring. Persons whose birthdate it is have | the augury of a year of real happi- | ness. For the young courtship is ! shown. All should beware of too many cocktails. Children born on this day prob- ably will be independent and self-| | jcontained. Subjects of this sign are usually industrious and practical. | fearless and ambitious, Charles A. Lindbergh, aviator, wa born on this day 1902. Others who |have celebrated it as a birthday in-' clude Mark Hopkins, educator and | | Glasses QFICE AND RESIDENCE W. LEIVERS, Secretary. l presaging strikes and riots. Fires & |, The players have chosen up sides and the political |ery. New machinery will come north | " w45 Often Misused: Do not say, | may be more numerous than usual | | Ga“g;:::eil;llldmx DOUGT °§ {ball game can officially get started with the good ola|immediately. A large tank will be| he chid was called down for his |this month, and a disaster is fore- s s AERIE | vox populi cheering 'em on from the stands. constructed in the cellar and the |, ,dence.” Say, “was reproved forl told 1%, F. 9. E. bottling department will be doubled ot DENTIST Hours 9 am. to 6 pm. SEWARD PUILDING Oftfice Pane 469 — Y Dr. A. W. Stewart | | |Meets first and third Mondays & o.m., Eagles’ Hall, Dougias. ?"isiting “roihers welcome. J. B. Martin, W e, =~ Cashen, Secretary. —— TELEPHONE 543 Office Hours—9-12; 1-6 Dr. W. A. Rystrom Robert S.impson' : ~ Upt. D. Graduate Los Angeles Col- lege of Optumetry and Opthalmo’ogy Fitted Lenses Ground "DR. H. VANCE JSTEOPATH i PRECEDENCE . Certain things come, with the years, to be an expected part of every occasion. Within our £ >fession, this regard for the tiaditional must be combined . ANS X ‘onsultatis with new ste] - war zone, and Mrs, Ganty. | covered with ice and snow. In the interior, near Chi- | Baldwin for Haines. o I;‘:v(vffil impeacheq |Statesman, 1802; Jean Richepin, | ;‘r’:‘:“lfla;‘:‘i:‘ ;’0”:0 °;‘;m:"'t‘”°s" o Sfiicz‘;z‘:‘;dog:”;fi_ Mr. Jessup embarked on a newspaper career as A |cago, is a place called the South Pole. Beyond that, | Owing b-HH6 wabér shortage. in |V Cfll\él'p . x i “ poet, novelist and dramatist, 1849, 1Ly (0', 30 ahd by 1pp¢’)intm°en’u | atio;l at all times.ts bt onk | i i v | g IS rtag % ~oDV" 7 o . L. “cub” on The St. Paul Pioneer Press. That was in the |starting from New York, lies Salt Lake City, the | 2. Delilah. (Copyright, 1936) ! equivalent in distance of the Bay of Whales from the |'Atlantic. Of the intervening region virtually nothing is known except that it is swept by blizzards that have days when Col. Roland H. Hartley of Everett, former governor of Washington state, was on the statf of Juneau, The Empire, which formerly used water for the operation of its presses, installed an up-to-date elec- 3. Bluish green. 4. The study of antiquities. Hartley’s father-in-law, Governor Clough of Minne- been known to scour rusty iron, fray wood and toss tric power machine. This was done | +5- South Africa. AP I Mining equipmem and supplie: were recently taken to McKinle; Office Grand Apis., Lear Gas- tineau otcl. Phone 177 of the standards marking a service by us. _| Park on the freight train from Fair- banks by Ernie Mauer, Joe Miehling sota. |ten days ago. The Empire went to *IENTRAL MOTJRS : packing cases about like paper cartons. There are no this paper was concerned One of Mr. Jessup's first “big” stories was arranged | janding fields—nothing but jagged masses of .:now,i““"‘ added expense in the true spirit and Mike Siler, who went to the and | by Hartley, an interview with Governor Clough |glaciers, crags as tall and precipitous as some in the 4""2?1“’;)"”’““".’,"?"’;‘ ‘{":“f ‘f‘“{}“"“‘ mining ground on the Kantishna MAYTAG PRODUCTS | The Charles W. Later Mr. Jessup went to Missoula, Mont., to become | Rockies. About 2,200 miles distant lies the goal—Litule (16¢¢ be no wasted water so far owned by Miehling and Mauer. In-' | Carter Mortuc:ry The Seattle Post-Intelligencer. He was stationed at |are unfolded. LADIES’ — MISSES’ time. A tank for Diesel Oil city editor of The Missoulian. Subsequently the Jessups Antxgri(-]n‘, our "m\;\gxln:\r_\' Salt L}J:\ko C:;y, Comparcd[ in French ;‘I"tdld‘llln th‘o tI"qlmpnwnt l\\"m Ia new | ! EHGRE The 5 hi moved to Bellingham, where My | With this perflous’ leap over the ice- the: crossing of :, B - Caterpillar bulldozer, which w | » Saet PRI Jiod to ST ORI, ¥ rinting | the Atlantic is like a pleasant excursion on a Summer || Weather: Maximum, 36; minimum, and driven from the Park to the Kan- : SRS 0 MEWEREDRT P |day, despite the perils of fog. Yet the goal seems '’ ¢Iar Italian tiskna i oY FEw s work. - £ |to have been reached with a birdlike sureness. Tens| SHOP IN JUNE, I Jones-Stevens ShOp l S A MR S Mr. Jessup’s next assignment was marine editor of | of thousands of square.miles of entirely new terrain LR Dinners | Our trucks go any place any | ] told the recent convention of the American Bankers As- | effect upon the smuggling of alcohol, which is the | p . . (Authorized Dealers® i sociation. “As national income increases and as |chief problem of enforcement officers. | Dflll‘llt BGGI JUNE AU TRANSFER GARBAGE HAULED 5 ! GREASES { Federal income increases, the need for Government| The decrease in prices of Canadian and Scotch | Reasonable Momua.s Rates GAS—OILS i spending decreases—and that is the trend today.” | whiskies has hastened the fixing of lower prices on | OII Tll) !} Phone 48 Night Phone 4703 , E. O- DAVIS | Speaking as a practical business man and banker’d°:“;2“s°":“g::“;‘oTt:§lc;§::iz‘ :}’:‘p:;'-“w";es::g:’y 0(; % _"MMY" CARLS\')N i | TELEPHONE 584 | JUNEAU MOTORS i of more than 20 years’ experience, Mr. Eccles reminded |* % PRl B AR i B“fle[ M.ur D CQ. Ao i { Phone 4753 Foot of : his banker colleagues that when their 1932 convention | -, they are brought more directly into competition | f 0 Urug e SR o l Malh pio i Port Townsend because of the lack of a system ot | What the significance of this achievement may be The veteran newspaper man saw exciting umes‘!nm the unknown? And what of the emotions when when in 1908 he served as Associated Press (.o"esmn_;mne America was sighted as the last drops of fuel " v < |evaporated in the carburetor, propulsion ceased and dent during Army and Navy maneuvers in the Philip- |y *110no clided down like an exhausted bird? An pines, and again in .1927 with a United States ”“L:eplc of adventure and courage remains to be told. war problem and cruise to the Atlantic Coast. A world, happily relieved, eagerly waits the telling. His two eldest sons, John and Wilford, lost no time | ——— L L | in enlisting in the United States military forces in 1917. | Lower Liquor Prices ! Mr. Jessup was born in Rochester, Minn., the son | of Mr. and Mrs. William Jessup. He married Miss Mary | (New York Times) i Py | The cut in the tax has already reduced retail prices “We shall not continue to have a budgetary de- |©Of imported whiskies by as much as 50 cents a bottle for ficit when the conditions that caused the deficit, the|Scotch and §1 for Canadian whisky. It has also had reduction in national income, are corrected,” Chair-|‘he effect of almost ending the smuggling of whisky | | from Canada and of sharply curtailing smuggling from | man Marriner S. Eccles of the Federal Reserve System | oor countries, although it has as yet had nttle | |with domestic brands. As stocks of matured whisky | was held, supposedly “sound” fiscal policies Were |increase in the United States, it is believed that this | being pursued in an effort to balance the budget to factor, together with Canadian competition, will bring maintain the gold standard and to restore confidence. about in n reasonably short time even lower retail But deflation and liquidation intensitied, hoarding prices than have been announced in the last few days. | increased, industrial activity declingd even more rapidly, breadlines grew, the national income fell from more than 80 billions in 1929 to 38 billions in 1932, Fed- eral revenue correspondingly diminished, confidence? Society As A Machine. (New York World Telegram) i Ogden L. Mills, Secretary of the Treasury under | | Arctic - Pabst Famous £ The B. M. watisfied customers” ! I 1 | “Our doorstep is worn by | \ 2 z F 0SS CONSTRUCTION CO. A Behrends Still Coughing? | \ Even if other remedies have | failed, don't be drugglst | Creomulsion and to refund your | money if you are not satisfied with | results from the very first bottle. Get Creomulsion right now. (Adv.) P —— GARLAND BOGGAN | Hardwood Floors DIESEL OIL—UTAH COAL GENERAL HAULING STORAGE and CRATING CALL US H.S. GRAVES | | “The Clothing Man* Home of Hart Sehaffner and | Marx “'~thing ; (o ol N e, B LY STRATTON & BEERS MUNICIPAL ENGINEERS ] discouraged, your | is authorized to guarantee ! | | i If you enjoy indoor sports— Here’s one of the best—TRY BOWLING! and a tank for Crude Oil save Cooperating with White Serv- ice Bureau | ROOM 1—SHATTUCK BLDG. | We have 5,000 local ratings on file 4 READY-TO-WEAR Compounded | i ety wontemnication. in enabling us to comprehend the relation of the 45 Gastineau Cafe yofi";m';‘:‘&‘jgdhf%?y’;‘:,“ymu"‘gg‘”g{x"é’;‘:_ Seward Street Near Third | burner trouble. In those days incoming ships from far-away |Anfarctic continent to rsnfi_::’q ‘;’:‘L‘;:f:or‘;‘::m“"‘“| exactly Nt s kAl B o old or bronchial irritation, you can | _ RPHONE 149; NIGHT 148 - ; : ustralia—one of the burni s phy | reomulsion, | ! 5 places picked up the marine writers at Port Townsend. | arid smilowi it Eleotth Bnd. Ui SRHESG ot B as written Serious trouble may be brewing and | ELIABLE TRANSFER ‘They wrote their articles en route to Seattle. A : 3 | you cannot afford to take a chance | SN WA 7L | It is enough that an intrepid explorer has been re- | 15 vour With anything less than Crecmul: | %\ \\[‘ 7/// Y/ s | R N AR ORI - | Mr. Jessup always was a Republican but joined |gyoreq to us. At the moment the human story com- i ) Sion, which goes Tight to the seat || N o 2 ) the “Bull Moose” adherents of Theodore Roosevelt mands attention. Why was the emergency wireless | doctor. | TYPEWRITERS RENTED iof the trouble to aid nature to || o= C 23l % when the former President bolted from the G. O. P. ominously silent during all these anxious weeks? What H $5.00 per month ! gm: ”‘;’sd t’::lgg;’mge%mg?x; | E% = ommercia Ad]““' l i in 1912. | snowy marvels were revealed during that daring leap Juneau Drug Co. N B. Burford & Co. 15 loosened and expelled. = ) d ) | { ‘ meni & Rating Bureau HUTEL ZYNDA ELEVATOR SERVICE e —— Hardware Company PAINTS—OIL—GLASS Shelf and Heavy Hardware Guns and Ammunition 1 = Liedloff at St. Paul in 1903. When the new trade agreement with Canada weni | Phone 107 Juneau | ! Waxi e 1 | i : i g xin, Polishin, Keenly alive to the duty of fostering the develop- |into effect on January 1,_inc1udmg the reduction by . | a g ® g | BRUNSWICK 3 ment and progress of his state, Mr. Jessup was a man |20 Percent of the Federal import tax on whisky, there | = | Sanding ¥ : ¢ Stk was speculation as to what its immediate effect would | : PHONE 582 | BOWLING ALLEYS of marked ability in all branches of newspaper work > op | B " 4 be. 1t is already'evident that: it is tremendously in- | - — &1 | Rheinlander and 4lt Heidelberg | © ] and an excellent citizen. He will be sadly missed, not| creasing the importation and ‘withdrawal from bond | ! lDEAL PAINT SHOP | T S R ~ | BEER ON TAP | | only in Bremerton and Washington State where ne 15 |of imported liquor, not only from Canada but also i | It It’s Paint We Have It! I || McCAUL MOTOR best known, but among all who knew him. | from other countries, because of the most-ravored-na-] | FRED W. WENDT [ ! B P SRR RN R |tion policy which made the reduction applicable to | i ¥ 1 PHONE 549 ) When in Need of JUNEAU-YOUNG ‘ | COMPANY NATIONAL INCOME RISES. |other whisky-exporting lands. B ! B Dodge and Plymouth Dealers FORD AGENCY DRY CLEANING cteadily ebbed and chaotic conditions prevailed. b 2 iy X But beginning in March, 1933, as a result of bmn,‘:::‘;‘g;‘“:f Hoovery via¥p: Wit Alnmy e sopa) s Bank SURVEYORS \ ° § adequate intervention by the Government, the tide of | .y planners do not think in terms of men as | t . VALENTINE BLDG. | . deflation was turned. At present bankruptcies, Which | jndividuals . . . .” he said in Washington the other .luneau. Alaska | Telephone 502 i sofl numbered more than 25,000 with liabilities of more night. “They have a mechanical conception of society, | 2 ——— than 760 millions for the first nine months of 1932, | which they view as a vast mechanism that they can Water | .- . . numbered less than 9,000, with liabilities of only 170 |operate all the more readily the greater the uniformity | { 'WHEN IN A HURRY Washing millions—a drop of 77'% per cent— for the same period of the parts and the more generally they can be forced | COMMERCIAL CALL COLE FOR OIL! of 1535; bank failures for the same period of 1952 |Into definite grooves and channels.” : | | 34 plus or 27 gravity, in any | PY P B : r. sets us to wondering whether it may not amount . . . QUICK! exceeded 1000 with liabilities of mearly 600 millions |, o po il T N O S oover who. s oo and SAVINGS COLE TRAE SFER | A as compared with 79 bank failures involving 36 millions | teermeq eventually to have thought of men as indi- IN 'I‘OWN! for the first nine months of 1935—and this figure |yiguals. | Phone 3441 or Night 1803 Your & included banks not licensed after the bank holiday Feeding the hungry, making work for the joble Resources Qver Two and One s ® ® il of 1933 and since liquidated. The “turn of the tide |lifting the mortgage burden from the old homestead 1s | -— A L A SK A THE Mms, of deflation” brought many other interesting develop- |not our idea of a mechanical conception of society. | Half Million Dollars b k { th ! We still believe it was the Gi 1 ments which alarmists, now grossly distorting the |Quite the reverse! e She Drees WINTER COATS AT Recreation Parl 1 riors ), 3 Engineer who thought of America as a vast mechanism. HALF PRICE ! iNetRment's spending program, have ignored. The‘And while he refrained from acting in terms of indi- | e A H dl!d salient items pointed out by Mr. Eccles included the | i) need, the wheels stopped turning, rust began to | . .| | Juneau Frock SIM:M L St following: spread, buman cogs chipped and crumbled under the| ~ | “Exclusive But Not Expensive” PHONE 15 quor Store ' The national income rose to 50 billions in 1934 gtrain—until a different hand took the throttle.© * - BILL DOUGLAS

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