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_w_,,.mm._..,.w. THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, TUESDAY, OCT. 6, 1936 Daily Alaska Empire fl)'ll!'l‘ W. BENDER - - Editor and Manager Publishod every evening except Sunday by the EMPIRE rl.'l'nlo COMPANY at Second and Miin Streets, Juneau. weeks of August were contra-seasonally higher than H A P P Y in July.and 127 por cent above the same weeks in August Tast year.” BIRTHDAY Daily average sales of general merchandise in small towns and rural areas for August were 20 per cent higher in dollar volume than in August, 1935, tions and best wishes today, their | and 41 per cent above those for August, 1934, the De-|ing: i t Off in Juneau as Second Class i - ke B odaa s partment of Commerce revealed on September 14. i SUBSCRIPTION RA National Lumber Manufacturers Assn. reported .‘OCTOBF:R 6. 5 1 Belivered tn earrler in Junean and Douglas for $1.25 per month. | &t 12: “New orders exceeded output for the week Mrs. Louise Glover three years ago and now they are popping up on all of American railroads during July, 1936, and the re- her dinner table? “(:)E]mlxl:n g T sides to slap him in the face. | covery, between 1933 and 1936 to July 31, of $514,000,000' A ¥€s: so far as her taste goes, |\ " o) ons and ambitious. For example, on December 18, 1933, Governor Lan- | in gross earnings of the $1,873,000,000 “that melted :x"" ’f‘l‘"‘”"‘r‘:s']?x\‘:‘““, 0 _(,]l‘]p' i'l‘l"‘r" Subjects of this sign usually have i don in a letter to Secretary Ickes said: |away from 1929 to 1933.” Sriicity 57 fe Lol ‘;‘Cmr’;m“‘: studious habits and inquiring JE Under your most capable administration | Time magazine survey showed consumption of g what i «n":]lpruprlutv - minds. . o‘d"h(i code, th‘e og]_mgustry.] lh(:j C%l’:‘sul;‘{:’ng [electric power during August increased 18 per cent pression to write on a card when ederick Hale, statesman, was ? an e general public have already benefite K 45 &7y 58 & born on this day 1874. Others who in a most substantial manner and the in- <°'"A’1‘:fk“5°' ‘91(35"] e ; M;\“l‘"&_wml“": to 2 TN . | have celebrated it as a birthday in- g dustry itself is now on about a break-even } s a pee e l-nme han 8,000, cases of salmon ,.,'\ ‘(.1 ~.‘m;‘)>.\vu or “With da. dhess Wi toomb: . RUAT : basis. When you took control it was, and for and alzepdy ils tourlst.@aye forithis season haa passed, decpesi sympathy,” 1s swipeah, American poet, 1853; Joseph E § some time prior thereto had been sustaining | the 31,000 mark and is estimated to reach 35000 by Q What kind of clothes should p 01" o) srates Semator § tremendous losses, This letter is sent with the end of the year, OneiWear o, a formal GinuRE? 1858, < 3 those fundamentals very definitely in mind. | PR 50 40 S A. Evening dress, alv OGDYElght, 1 . : i x | SAESRIDRNAG, pyright, 1936) It is because of my appreciation of these facts i 2 o i and my earnest desire to see your adminis- O Where Is He? o SUMMONS FOR PUBLICATION : tration of the code as successful in the future | New Toa o LOOK and LEARI' e i T ON as it has been in the past that I bring these | < (New SYOricHTIEs) ar N o matters to your attention. You may depend | f‘ur weeks the }!.ammer of Monopoly has been By A. C. Gord In the District Court for the Ter- upon my continued co-operation and sincere |Missing. The country swarms with squadrons of Yy A. C. (vordon ritory of Alaska. Division Number support and T renew my former proffers of 1\\ord-bombers. The nation is being saved and lost *| On At Juneau. any aid that T may be able to render. From thF Al class to the newest and greenest of the it bt Dok tn bt = FRANCES ESTHER ORCUTT,! InMagoh-o8- 1083, Governor’ Landon made: the|SPTakers: Diksan statesmen of ail kinds have uttered . o T8 #i0" 000% B2 QBAEEER | Plaintitr, vs, THURSTON DE- following comtmests solemn warnings, appeals unq vaticinations. But 1 b JRNOrer I worthy of his re- v ORCUTT, Defendant. . { where was Mr. Borah? Where is Mr. Borah? Why is Ward™? 64 Breainbnt | of “the ST A 1Eed 1 destresto-acknowledge, in a tangible'way, " his yoice, once the loudest, heard no more? He has 2. How much timber is desttoyed gyoiot of America To the above the appreciation of the people of my state of een sought for in Slickpoo. The heights of Thunder annually in the U. S. by fire, storms, s . ik the courage with which President Roosevelt |nountain have been scaled in vain in pursuit of him. and insects? ROy Cs ot (OREEEING: has attacked the depression. If there is any “Tl A h < 4 : i 2 You are hereby required to ap- |There is no trace of him in Sinker. He has not taken 3. Which is the lower voice, con- i i way in which a member of that species thought |, 056 in Freedom, and Three Creek knows him not. tralto, or alto? [Pear in the District Court for the e to be extinct, a Republican Governor of 3 |pe was said to be hiding in Rolling Lava Bed. Battle 4. Wbat is the name of the larg-| LCLOrY Of Alaska, First Division, middle western state, can aid him in the | Creek a‘nalura] g i d D % et e g at Juneau, Alaska, within thirty| 5 : < | s sanctuary, failed to produce him. est of the salmon? S fight, I now enlist for the duration of the His disappearance alarmed his friends and made 5. What a wher _|days after the last publication of | < e |even his app?x)meuls anxious. A woman's letter in The |der Zcuad and where s the ZUy-| (his summons, namely, within thir- On April 17, 1934, the Kansas Chief E’“'C“"V"’,Idvmo Statesman summons him to return &) his po s 5 ;[5- days url.pr the 20”.’ day of on. wrote to President Roosevelt: . | “In years gone by you have thundered warnings NSWERS Dit LBF. 10 4 on Ghisisummons 4 This civil works program is one of the |to the people to shun and guard against bureaucracy 1. The Bible, I Dhmothy, G:1ay | Paplished, or within forky days after soundest, most constructive policies of your_ |and to cling to and fight for individualism. Why the 2. Approximately 7000000000|'h® date of its service upon you, in administration, and I cannot urge too strong- {silence now when the crisis is at hand?” feet. |case this summons is served upon ly its continuance. ‘ The Constitution is in a bad way. Why is its. 3. Contralto. | you p(frscnally, znd answer the In a speech at Ellsworth, Kans., on SEDt"mb“T.Jamlur and guardian absent? Why do you leave the 4, The king-salmon. complaing ‘of the above named 18, 1934, Governor Landon said again: | electorate in doubt as to whom you favor for GOVernor 5. A gulf off the North Sea jn|Plaintiff on file in the sald court Regardless of party, we are all interested land for President? “In the past Idaho has boasted Holland. g {in the above entitled action. The in seeing the recovery program of the na- {that you were a statesmian and not a politician. Now AL i plaintiff in said action demands tional administration succeed. In this great {is the time to prove it.” Those who don’t know Mr, |the following relief: i emergency the President has been accorded Borah from of old might think that he was perhaps Men! Women! There are big| Dissolution of the bonds of B united support from the press and the people living disguised at Chilly. The despicable tribe of bargains for everyone during the| matrimony existing between ¥ generally, greater than has ever been ac- cynics say that “Bill is preparing his effect.” He has Rexall ORIGINAL One Cent Sale.| Pplaintiff and defendant on the republication of all news dispaiciies credited to 1t or not ether. | ar, according to the Association of American Rail-| # + b R ST IR e U A DAILY LESSONS "“ALASEA CIRCULATION GUARANTEED TO BE LARGER Subscriptions to the U. 8. Treasury’s offering of T ' " THAN THAT OF ANY OTHER PUBLICATION £400,000,000 in 2% per cent 20-23-year bonds for Sep-| IN ENGLISH —— S t=mber 15 amounted to $5,200,000,000, or more than| By W e | 12 times the offering. H By W. L. GorCon | Buick Motor Co. announced September 11: “The| — —— =g company s currently expending $14,500,000 in expan-| Words Often Misused: Do not say. sion and improvement of factory buildings and ln-""'l‘):('n- is no one else but you."| ctallation of new machinery.” ‘Omll else when but is used. Sajy Henry F. McCarthy, general passenger' agent u[‘ no one but the Boston and Maine and Maine Central railroads | 'n Mispronounced: Sandusksy reported September 12: “Summer travel in New | Accent second syllable, mnot the X Ingland this year has been the heaviest in the pafl.’nr;" it s ; en Misspelled sess, pos- ceven years; the Boston & Maine, excluding commuter ession, po: sor: Hpith t:affic, showed a 51 per cent increase in passenger: | synonyms Hope, (noun), trust carried in June and an 81 per cent increase in July faith. reliance, confidence. while the Maine Central had a 23 per cent boost in! wWord Use a word three June and 57 per cent in July.” itimes and it is yours.” Let us in- GOV. LANDON’S HANDICAP Department store sales reported by all Federal crease our vocabulary by master- Reserve districts were 7 per cent in August over Aug-|ing one w cach da Today’s By mail, postage paid, at the following rates: One vear, in advance, $12.00; six months, in ndvance, $6.00; one month. in advanc Bubscribers will confer a favor If they will promptly notify the Business Office of any failure or irregularity in the delivery of their papers. Telephones News Office, 602; Business Office, 374 MEMBER OF The Assoctated Press is OCIATED PRESS. It is an old court room adage that “everything you say will be used against you,” but it is much more apropos in politics as the Republican nominee, Governor Landon, paign. Some have wondered at times at the silence of the man from Topeka, as they have listened to his! running mate, Colonel Knox, swinging around the country in a two-fisted campaign in which he has pulled no punches. But it must be remembered that the Colonel has not been in public office and there- fore is not as vulnerable as Governor Landon. The latter is the vietim of having said things two and corded any other peace-time President in history.. From the very first, I advocated the granting of unusual powers to the President because of the national emergency. Governor Landon, being an honest man, has' said many other things during the past two or three years which had a definite ring of sineerity. He doubtless saw eye to eye with the present adminis- tration on many things. vated to the honor of being the standard bearer of the cpposition and obliged to go out and attack the very things with which he was in sympathy. Such are the strange ways of politics. Such is exciusively entitled to the use for | Of is finding out in the present cam-| Now he finds himself ele-' Vivian Gruber Mrs. Kate Jarman Edward Christensen Helen Gray Fred Newman Harry D. Murray the corresponding week last - - o ending Sept. 5 and were appreciably above the ne\\" business for the corresponding week of 1935, having r aghed 70 per cent of the high production of 1929.” Loading of revenue freight for the week ended £optember 5 totaled 764,680 cars, an increase of 172,739 292 per cent over ust, 1935, and 10 per cent for the first eight months Word: Emulate; to strive to equal of 1936 above the same period last year. or excel. “We should ‘try taemu- Real Estate Association of the State of New yor ! 'ate this grcat man's principles. — > rcported September 13 that realty sales in New York state during the first eight months of 1936 exceeded | those for the same period last year by 70 per cent. [ American Iron & Steel Institute reported September . 11 that aggregate net earnings of 104 companies in the iron and steel industry for the first half of 1936 (were $55,249,000, compared with $23,873,000 in the , | first half of last year. BT o e | The magazine Railway Age in its current issue’ Q. Is it possible to read the per- reports 130 per cent increase in net operating income Scnality of a hostess by a view of MOLERN ETIQUETIE | | | | By Roberta Lee \ i stirred curiosity and set tongues wagging. Where is Two for the price of one, plus only lour wandering Bill tonight? lc. 250 bargains to choose from. The orchestra is playing. The audience is wait- Wednesday, Thursday, Friday, Sat- |ing impatiently. Before long the curtain will go up urday, October 14, 15, 16, 17 But- | and reveal Our William in his familiar acts. He Jer-Mauro Drug Co. The Rexall | Jknows the value of suspense. Drug Store. —adv. | In The Trouble Zone TN TN PIGGLY | (Cincinnati Enquirer) Establishment of a European squadron by the | American navy is not a new departure in our foreign pelicy, but the resumption of an old policy which had {been in operation“Mor more than a century. Only The Empire extenas congratula-| birthday anniversary, v the foiiow-| ‘l » I P ‘\ “The stars incline | l but do not compel” | | WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 7, 1936 | Benefic aspects rule today, ac- | cord: to astrology. Is it a date that encourages business activity. {Both men and women should push |wh is of major importance. } Venus smiles on women while [this configuration prevails and is, |believed to stimulate artistic am- {bitons. Muscians and actresses should beneft. The configuration is fortunate |for radio interests and seems to presage great profits which will be {the cause of changes in policies d performances on the part of those who direct broadcasting Weddings today are subject to kindly sway that seems to prom- success in home: Wives are ikely to rule husbands. Happine dicated AltY gh this is not a fortunate day for seeking coveted positions it is a date for formulating plans that may lead to success. T is a sign read as foreshad- owing se > disappointments for men who direct political campagns Unexpected incidents will change p plans. secret machinations and whisper- ing drives will be widespread and S ineffectual, although propaganda undermining American institutions will gain influence. is a lucky day for shoppng i will assume unusual influ- e in the coming winwer when hanges in fashion may be costly as well as significant. Persons whose birthdate it is have the augury of a year of real pros- perity. F nds will prove of un- usual assistance realizing import- ¢ | grounds of incompatibility of temperament; that plaintiff have the care, custody and con- trol of the three minor children of plaintiff and defendant; and for any other or further relief merited. | And in the event you fail so to appear and answer, the plaintiff {will take judgment against you for {want thereof, and will apply to |the court for the relief demanded in_her complaint, and as herein- |above stated. 20 YEARS AGO From The Empire et i b i e | | | OCTOBER 6, 1916. f A report from the British front |in France indicated that the Brit- |ish army was then within two miles of the German fortress of Bapaume. In the most recent ad- vances, cavalry patrols were be- "ing used as the fighting was in the open. The Grand Igloo of the Pioneers of, Alaska had voted to hold thej next meeting of the Grand Igloo in Juneau. This meeting was to| be held in 1917. At a meeting the previous even- ing, the Arctic Brotherhood Dance Committee had made plans for the| Alaska hop to be given on O(LObLX‘, 15, in commemoration of the pur- of Alaska by the United| States from Russia At a joint meeting of the Tread- well and Thane Club members the; previous cvening, 14 men signified | their willingness to attend the Jack- sonville rifle encampment, in Flor-| ida. The men were to provide| their own subsistence and trans- ation was to be furnished by > government. | Weather: Maximum, 58; Mini-, mum, 37; Gomdr. Klellmm Transferred East (Seattle Times) Comdr. L. V. Kielhorn, noted for his strange discovery of a gigantic submarine mountain range in storm-swept Berir Sea, and his ship, the cutter Chelan, due in this port October 5 from Alaska waters, have been transferred to Boston, according to orde received today at Seattle Coast Guard headquar- ters from Washi n, D. C: Commander Kielhorn has been appointed Chief of Staff of the Boston Division of the Coast Guard, while the Chelan has been assigned to that port which in the future will be her base. In previous Coas the Chelan was transferred from Seattle to Port Angeles and the new 328-foot gunboat type cutter Samuel D. Ingham, assigned to Boston. Now the orders have been changed and the Chelan will go to Boston and the Ingham, nearing completion at the Philadelphia Navy Yard, to Port Angeles. Due in Seattle October 5 from the Bering Sea, the Chelan will sail for the North Atlantic Novem- ‘b(‘r 1. The new ship is expected Port Angeles October 31. ly Guard orders, Commander Kielhorn last year made surveys that determined the location of peaks higher than Mount Baker or Mount Olympus ——— FRESH- GREEN ONIONS, RADISHES FROM OUR OWN FARM California Grocery Telephone 478 l The First National Bank JUNEAU [ ] CAPITAL—$50,000 SURPLUS—$50,000 [ J COMMERCIAL AND SAVINGS ACCOUNTS SAFE DEPOSIT BOXES 2% % Paid on Savings Accounts S —— AFTER 6:00 P, M. PHONE 226 If your Daily Alaska Empire has rot reached you PHONE 726 and a copy will be sent by SPECIAL CARRIER to you IMMEDIATELY. LOCAL GROWN THE PURE FOODS STORE Prompt Delivery and rugged valleys and deep chasms Read 1he C1c551f19d Ads in THE EMPIREI fon the floor of Bering Sea. Scien- tists have held that Northern Al- | aska, in prehistoric days, was in the tropics and Bering Sea now |covers a lost continent where there were vast jungles. Commander Kielhorn came to Seattle in 1934 from the Philadel- |phia Navy Yard, where he was in charge of the decommissioning of destroyers. He formerly was Chief of Staff of the Seattle Division of the Coast Guard, relieving Comdr. Fred A. Zeusler when he was trans- = ferred to Coast Guard headquarters |in Washington, D. C. | During the World War Com- | mander Kielhorn was with the Navy West Indies squadron and later was stationed at Brest and Gibraltar. He commanded the de- stroyers Henley, Tucker and Sem- mes and was in several engage- ments with submarines. g e RHODA MAY CLARK—Foot cor- 230 South Franklin CONNORS MOTOR CO., Inc CHEVROLFT the handicap under which the Governor finds hqn-‘;mcc 1929 have we failed to maintain a small nava] self at this time. The Kansan will be a very shrewd {unit in European waters. Witness the Honorable Geo. F. L ‘Mexander, judge of said court, and rectionist. 517 Goldstein Bldg. adv. S SN TR RN i B and able politician if he is able to maneuver around' some of his earlier statements and still gain suffici- ent votes for his election. “FUMBLING WITH ll}]CBVER\'?" Iron & Steel Institute announced September 14| production advanced 4.3 points to 73.5 per cent of ca-| pacity from the preceding holiday week. For the corresponding week in 1935 production stood at 48.3 per cent. Department of Commerce reported failures of of the period 1925-1919; insolvencies at the lowest since September, 1920, and liabilities at the lowest since 1906. Monthly business review of Col. Leonard P. Ayres, Cleveland economic expert, issued September 14 states: “This is the first year since the depression in which general business has improved for three successive quarters. The steady course of improvement of the second quarter over the first and third quarter over the second has prevailed in all the major divisions of our economic life except one. The single exception is agriculture and there the effects of the drought have been so very severe that many crops will have seriously small yields. The political campaign seems to be having no important effect on the course of business activity.” A Census Bureau report issued September 14 stated that American manufacturers used 574,289 bales of cotton in August, compared with 408,325 in August, 1935. Cotton in public storage this August amounted _to 4,336,724 bales, compared with 5895412 bales in co. announced September 14: confinumg to make impressive m mmheuflenflywemflnanthe n M six years.” Same authority {1 'bullding for the first three! There is no need to feel that this will draw us the seal of |into European entanglements. For it is not a squa- |dron of threesor four naval vessels that will entangle | us in a Eurupean quarrel. It is the vast fleet of mer- |chant vessels carrying goods to and from Europe that | might involve us. If we want to keep clear of the ' conflict brewing in Europe, we must be careful of .. ECONOMY - our commercial policies, rather than our naval policy. 3 ‘The squadron in European waters is merely a small unit for the protection of American nationals MAYTAG PRODUCTS who happen to get caught on the wrong side of the | water when trouble develops. The provision of relief w' P 8 JOHNSON !for such citizens is a proper function of the American | * R0 | Government. Aid to stranded Americans should end, | g——"—" """y rhowever, after a few weeks; that is, after they have | had ample time to wind up their affairs and leave the areas of danger. | Many persons will recall the destruction of the |Maine in Cuban waters, and the attack on the cruiser | {Quincy in Spanish waters a few weeks ago, and cite | these precedents as showing the peril of maintaining |a European squadron. But the destruction of the Maine would not have led to war with Spain if America had not wanted war anyway. The important thing is that we should give reasonable protection to Ameri- cans abroad, without at any time using our naval forces to intervene in foreign disputes. If the services of our vessels in Europe are limited to the succor of | American lives—not American property—there need be | no risk of entanglement. % L I SRR | Note to Europe: If Canada and United States should fortify their 3,000 mile border, they'd have “alarming incidents,” too.—Detroit Free Press. i After listening to a leading G.O.P. spellbinder one night and to an eminent Democratic orator the next night, a contemporary American might well ask him- self, with Pilate, what is truth?—Boston Globe. +For a real thrill, think of the life of a Forest Ran- ger in California where 120,000 amateur hunters go out at the same time to shoot deer,-—l.oul.svtlle Courier- Journal, e said court hereunto affixed, on this 28th day of Aug- |ust, 1936. ROBERT E. COUGHLIN, Clerk. —_|Howard D. Stabler, Plaintiff's Attorney, Shattuck Building, Juneau, Alaska. First publication, Sept. 29, 1936. Last publication, Oct. 20, 1936. A i Lode and piacer location netices for sale at The Empire office Ludwig Nelson WATCHMAKER and JEWELER Juneau, Alaska COMM TheB. M. Bank Juneau, Alaska and SAVINGS Resources Over Two and One- Half Million Dollars Behrends ERCIAL Telephone 411 Distributors PONTIAC BUICK Mrs. Lena Perelle You are invited to present this coupon at the box office of the Capitol Theatre and receive tickets for your- self_and a friend or relative to see “Mr. Deeds Goes to Town” As a paid-up subscriber of The Daily Alaska Empire Good only for current offering Your Name May Appear Tomorrow WATCH THIS SPACE HOTEL GASTINEAU. Every Effort Made for the Comfort of the Guests! GASTINEAU CAFE in connection AIR SERVICE INFORMATION ¢ TR O AR W RN S 14 _————————————— FOR INSURANCE SeeH.R.SHEPABD&SON Telephone 409B. M. Behrends ‘Bank Bldg."