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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE TUESDAY JULY 21, 1936 % BARNEY GOOGLE AND SPARK PLUG r . DON'T BE SCAIRT, HONEY -CHILE. | : T HAINT NO SPERRIT--- | M-MARCIFUL ‘voReALo\tj'Epé-ZAZ AR EZ | HEVINS /! - | TURKEY BUZZARD ! P-P-PAPPY . o “Roll the tatters here in an Ozark mounta at right, do the square dance 'round hyar, n farm at Self service from this “ in Phelps County, Mo., it lock’s place” at Davisville, C home “Wor Once isolated and ROLLA, Mo those who have had the ad distinetive hill communities, the Oz- ages of a few years' schooling § ars are going modern fast Hill feuds mostly have ceased, b Automobiles, hard-surfaced roads Lloyd says—because “in his \m- 1 and radios have knocked down bar- pulations the Ozarks dweller found riers, the outside world to there were simply too many persons the mou who differed with him on this point | he old ti ian harmony or that to enable him to settle all and ballads are becoming difficulties with his [fists, knife or a thing of the past,” laments S. H. gun.” Lloyd, Jr., of the psychology and 235 y department of the Mis- SERVICES HELD souri Schogl of Mines here. Lloyd < S , Funeral rites for Mrs. has studied the mountaineer and his _ ° - . Tryck of Wasi family for 15 y S. RAE 15 ARSHE “Fiddle music is being immensely i , 1 " s ther Warre cha I ! influenced by radio.” he says. “The ; : [ b 4 Tryck died suddenly of a cere- [ teachers say students prefer to get VX COC = : fl their versions of old time tumes | © 'lwwa;l B L from t »-called hill-billy bands et SR VDB ] T tendent of the Road Commission § on the air. These bands have 1t Wasill v d up’ the music and altered ° - i > e until it sounds as much uare dance, although. still A [} common, is being crowded out for t amusements offered by the folk in town. ilroad. i § 1 i ‘Many of the younger generation furnished and accl d by i drive to town on Sunday, so the nilroad men as representing the itnerant pastor has retired to other very latest in travel com t. The fields. Much of the religious su- ition no longer is accepted by car is the pride of the Anchorage hops of the railroad Cotton Goes for a Dip Scme of 'the cummer's smartest sea suits come from the cotton fields. This one, combining top and shorts, is made of red, white and blue printed cotton breadcloth lined with light weight wool jersey and is typical of the season’s trend in swim suits. The brief beach coat is made of the same material and lined with white toweling. s e meee r the RECKON HIT'LL ‘SPRISE YE TER KNOW VR.G. HAS A CHECK FOR 45,0009 FER YE, PAPPY - WAAL - ATTER TH' AcageNT 1 FIGGERED I SHOWED UP MISSIN' TH! WUD PAY YE FOWER OR FIVE HUNNERT DULLERS-- TER PROVE I WUz PLUMB DAID I BEEN PLAYIN GHOST AN’ SKEERIN' TH' lazy Susan’ been in use about 60 years. rawford County. Folmclans Ponder Drought as Big Issue (Continued from Page One) A n? Many knew. One suppose politicians wish they of at it is to happened of the way lookng that what has a_ consider 1l be a double blessing mocrats—that it will cur nd raise prices it is giving the 1 oppor to a fit the farmer. me d th that a area D tion time tration yen he ad min ame tunity new to litical theory good in weather cent weeks for g table is facilitated by the revolving upper deck. A greup of older generation hill folk, RAILROAD COMP'NY ouT'v FOL!{S By BILLIE DE BECK 5000 DULLERS I HIT'S FRUM THEM RAILROAD] CRITTERS -~ RECKON (L HEV TER GO 'ROUND (N T4(S DADBURN SHEET mo‘ MY BORNED /59 I " EE DAYLIGHTS ' TETCHED (N TH' HAID - WIFE OF FORMER JUDGL; OF ALASKA John Hedstrom, vet DIES IN SEATTLE river ml\\n\ emplo ing with CORDOVAN INJURED attle Tibey acquired when h- fell near th The Rose Dovell Lyons b6 | COTHOVE ROSS DELER Thomas t president of the o ociation in 1934 and former Federal Judge of A fire escape was a partial escape trom the heat for these youngsters of the terements of the io east side of New York. If a breeze chanced to come cown Mulberry street, they'd be sure to get it. Eimilar scenes dotted the crowded scctions of the city as temperatures sdared to record heights. (Associated Press Photo) Fairbank 1909 to home <ka, frcm 1912, died yesterday at her 1813 10th N. Requiem mass will be Ave said at 9 o'clock tomorrow morning at St = : Joseph's Church, 734 18th Ave. N s s e B i Cllvhry Celtbtory REUNION PLANNED MEN PLAY BASEBALL jn_charge of the Bonney-Watson The . SRR MNEL LS (U Tuhelal Parlord A reunion of the entire family of have challenged the single men of Jirs. Lyons was a member of the Dr, and Mrs. J. H. Romig will be ‘}\v sanie ity t0 & Diksuall. ghiie, Wermen's University Club. She wa i Anchorage on. Atigust 1, ‘the Procesdb ot BN kb i R 2 Pitcher, Richard Haines, who wds boin . Walla Walla. Surviy the first time in 15 years i T e injured in a gamie recently R i 0 Mg > {amily have been together .o Erechy, Dwyer, BERLI: . Dr. H. G. Romig, is to arrive T. H. Donohve, member of a { . RiGd : from San Francisco, a daughter, pioneer Cordova law firm, is taxiing SEWARD GETS NEW PRIEST . Elizabeth Daily, is to come himself around these days in his Father William Chaput of Mon- from Dawson, and another daugh- own two-seater Fairchild mono Shown | Toe, Washington, was recently in- ter, Mrs. J. P. Hannon, will arrive plane. He has the rating of private stalled in the Seward Parish by from Seattle. pilot. Father D O Flanagan of Anchor- : age, whose guest the new priest for a few days before being HUUS[JNS FRESH- LOCAL GROWN HONOR EDITOR ‘ornmm conducted to his new BAY \gos In honor of Editor darry Steel, post. Cordova newspaperman who died SR GREEN ONIONS, RADISHES 1ocently, 2il Cordova business| BABY BORN houses closed their doc 1c r. and Mrs. qun:m Grau of FROM OUR OWN FARM minutes ohe afternoon last week. a are the parents of a baby AP horn recently at the Palmer Ho: map might be Presi Roosevelt worst handicap ir farm coun- that if crops were good a went d the farmer lose a nce in Dem- A assura the new erosion program offered an ef- fective way out of the farm prob- lem The other way of looking at it is to infer the dry weather will g help the Republicans. On side the already is being made that the Roosevelt crop curtailment policies have greatly aggravated the effects, of the drought and that the combined re- sult may be to re available for and other production to rdo argued on the anti- administration side that er relief g now i, and t uch spending has to be popu! FARM PROBLEM AGAIN Anyone who is interested can take his choice of these opposing arguments, but abou* one thing ev- eryone can agree: The drought has brought home cnce again the vital place of ag- riculture in the national economic structure and has demonstrated the boss of agriculture is the ma atever successive administra- s may do, however, they may it out according to the text- or political expediency, the nce of power still rests with re sunshine and the rain, the floods and the dust storms, the eternal variety of nature. It would appear that if these ha- zards ev e to be overcome, and if man ever of the forces of nature, the way be, pointed by science rather than by politics. That is so elemental even the politicians agree to it. Yet what is being done about taking the farm problem out of politics? With every national cam- paign, it becomes more a political issue; and the orable natural law which insures ITOW's sunrise is no more of tainty than is the prospect the dry spell of 1936 will be center of the before the campaign is much older. - DESTROYER AT CORDOVA Cordova had a visit from one of the navy's most up-to-date fight- ing craft, the U. S. S. Aylwin (335), which dropped anchor in the Cor- do harbor last week. The boat, which carries a crew of 156 men, has only been in commission about a year. The Aylwin stayed at Cor- s and then left for she was to meet T destroyers now cruis- ing in Alaska waters. | R HAS TREATMENT Fred Post. Alaska Railroad em- | ployee, is in the Anchorage Hos- | pital for medical treatment: tom is to become master and more inexor- politics of 1936 | SHOP IN JLN!‘AU' A Person-To-Person CONVERSATION with 5,000 MEN and WOMEN If you had something to sell and were able to'call up and tell people about it vour chances of making pretty good, wouldn’t they? But you can’t go pense of contacting these people on the But y son-to-person with an Empire Want telephone. it, pers Ad! Approximately 5,000 people read The Em pire every day. dollars’ worth of through Empirc Want Ads If you have something to sell, if you want to buy something, let us connect you with the right party. numbers” PHONE with Empire Want Ads. EMPIRE WANT ADS ARE ECONOMICAL! DAILY EMPIRE FQR QUICK RESULTS! California Grocery THE PURE FOODS STORE Telephone 478 Prompt Delivery FOR INSURANCE See H. R. SHEPARD & SON Telephone 409 B. M. Behrends Bank Bldg. —_— WINDOW CLEANING PHONE 48% sl a sale would be AFTER 6:00 P. M. to the trouble and ex- PHONE 226 4 your Daily Alaska £mpire has not reached you PHONE 226 and a copy will be sent by SPECIAL CARRIER to you IMMEDIATELY. ou can tell them about And every day many business is transactec There are no “wrong :usvnAn%fi Allen Shattuck Established 1898 Alaska Juneau - X, | o e JUNEAU CASII GROCERY f CASH GROCERS Corner Second and Seward Streets Free Delivery PHONE 58 YOUR WANT AD TO THE THE TERMINAL “Deliciously Different Foods” Catering to Banquets and Private Dinner Parties