The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, October 19, 1936, Page 4

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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, MONDAY, OCT. 19, 1936. Y ? s — BIRTHDAY 20 YEARS AGO A e 010000 of st ser was mre|——BIRTHD Y Horoscope From The Eiapire (han a billion short of the $11,941,000,000 gross income |, » “The stars incline | { . e e of e | tions and best wishes today, their it represented a “real farm income” of W0 pirinaay anniversary, to the follow. ”» HORS I e 0 DR but do not compel f OCTOBER 19, 1916 r cent above 1929, “allowing for the difference in | jng: e level of prices paid by farmers for commodities | 1e gross 1935 income was 17 per cent above the | road up the Taku river that 6,000,000 of 1934 and 59 per cent above the $5.337.- | connect at the Canadian 0,0,000 of 1932. Last included ‘ anadian hl::h\\‘;\)]' 0,000 cash income from sale of crops and liv ‘ )::m\:r;u;’ 307,000,000 estimated value of products raised and | il nsumed and $498,000,000 cash received | o m various farm benefit programs | o in production costs, "the return to farmers last ye;u-{H APP vas over three times as large as in 1932.” Daily Alaska Empire ROBERT W. BENDER - - PRINTING COMPANY Alaska STOCK UP NOW BEFORE THE COLD WEATHER A COAL FOR EVERY PURSE o+ ANDIEVERY PURPOSE Sk fo) Per Ton F.0.B. Bunkers $12.50 13.50 13.50 14.30 15.40 17.50 27.00 11.00 Editor and Manager | PIRE | Of 19 neau, || Entered in matter OCTOBER 19 Amy Gail Morrison SDAY, George A. Bacon While bene! Albert Petersén ceording Stella B. Stedman be cautious in Amos Armsted Fous me the Post Officc in Juneau as Second C A - OCTOB would SUBSCRIPTION RATES. and Douglas for 1 at t year’s total 5 per month. following rates months, in advance, Atlin w up a f of the d astrolc to to |e on NS ht l 1 Federa % [ costs to produce in 1935 were estimated at|| 970,000,000 taxes, wages hired interest, depreciation on buildings and equipment favor if they will promptly notify I o ure or irregularity in the delivery DSt Bunkers 5 .70 75 75 .30 .80 .90 175 .60 45 e Indian Lump Carbonado Briquets Nanaimo Lump .. Utah Lump Utah Nut (boat) . Blacksmith Coal Steam Coal No. 1 Steam Coal No. 2 should First Divisi Comni urned DAILY LESSONS IN ENGLISH g ; By W. L. Gordon gt G 5 &3 MEMBER OF ASSOCIATED including of b uld be )k m exclusi PRESS. ed to the use for )rent oent mews pairs 1a1d commodities used in production, leaving net re Jtim to farmers of $4533.000,000 for their labor, ca {td and management and the unpaid labor of their ARANTEED TO BE LARGER | {.milies. This the highest return simce 1929 ANY OTHER PUBLICATION 2 | end while the income in 1935 was 17 per cent Ligher than in 1 : (g . 2 enough to pay expenses.” Omit| il.llu)g the one was 31‘pen cent. {5t | great Foppaditins | Little wonder the L:\nz.-m..‘\u):\l{(‘x are con((‘n-! Often Mispronounced: Postpone. | Results due to the Olympic games { ating on the farm belt. That's a high hurdie to get | pronounce first syllable post, not|PoW Will cause surprises in the Unit- f | cver. | pos-pone. 1 |=d States. Beneath the surface of|Alaska Day celebrated by an | E o fowahi scult forces ¢! At Home in rency - ted Often Misspelled: Authorize; fze;| *°°0 fellowship occult forces now At Home ir {not ise may be discovered. Douglas n i e ; in continues to indicate {3 nA , Wfluences for the retic tion, restraint | nfluences affc ot apsi Word Study times | erease from on SKA CIRCULATION G THAN THAT OF bt o0l defeated Douglas Kamera Club at football in the Basin grounds by a score of 31 ito 0. | A i In addition to the fooiball game, Words Often Misused: Do not The money donated is not scarcely yrOsS those 10 seek educated girls forecast d luck loyment. for For . the increase in the net income | P 5 was Hall, A Jun.an 8 Bzll of Mark of . some magic | There is something about that story of s cure for warts which reminds us ¢I the campaign speeches. Only through could they be put into practice annual sin- A Brother Thi Depression, prohibition. “Tse 8 word! Miee | monti close wi 15 for far-| and it is your Let us®n.|{iunz strides. Alien influences and our vocabulary by master- |\¢adership will be dominant in cel |ing one word every day. Today's|t4in auarters. word mical; antagomistic; in-| The evening of compatible We are at war with|P¢ auspicious for a system, which, by its essence, i and espec inimical to all other governments continuation . Burke The stars encourage bankers and nanciers to united efforts toward veted commercis The peo- ple will be restive under economic LOOK and EECEMGL " 6 st sl > wedding day.| The Rev. J: ) The seers foretell many marriages| Condit and child By A. C. Gordon eers foretcll many marriage restric- atfecting labor, A Hali Century of Satisfactory Service Mrs, Hugh Gallagher, wife of the gent of the Admir Line in Ju- was returning from a visit to n Eugene, Oregon. Elinor Glyn says she has forgotten bat the little gals in the movies haven't. about this day should ts political candi- r those who igh office, PACIFIC COAST COAL €0, WHOLESALE AND RETAIL PHONE 412 Mrs. J. B. Caro returntd on the Princess Alice after a trip to Nash- vill Y accompan- cd Miss ho ent ( Ward- B WRITING TO THE PRESIDENT dates Fictitious re i B e e . ths o AntHat] (New York Times) Writing to the President seems to be the latest shaebody I8 sdw PR n The | paramount issue of this Presidential ¢ not to be outdone by Roy How- |&lly, it is an announcement good for one, speech only, {or at most for one week only. It is now several weeks nce Secretary Ickes made a radio address in which Hearst and a few others, has joined in the game.|ho said that the influence of Mr. Hearst in selecting The Enquirer addresses an open letter to the Chief|Governor Landon for the Republican nomination would probably be the deciding factor in this cam- paign. That prediction now seems like a poor joke 1. From what that has become very stale with age. But Mr. Hearst | largest number | has suddenly risen in another guise, that is to say. |as the “notorious publisher om the President de- s {nounces for unfairly attacking him as an ally of the Communists and the revolutionaries. This new issue also will soon pass as irrelevant and immaterial Older play-goers will' remember the comedy entitled “Too Much Johnson.” It looks just now as if this campaign were suffering from too much Hearst. It would be a wise son of the prophets who could at this time tell what will be the preponderating qu tion in the minds of millions of American voters who |have not yet made their preferences or their inten- |tions plain. They are thinking hard but ng little From all parts of the country come reports that pe litical discussion is stirring uncommonly keen interest even in small s and villages. Often there isplays of violent partisanship, but more frequently if President Roose- ¢ 0 o0 € observers m;nrl' that they run ever velt is in accord with the ideas of Jefferson. Of|(yere as it were, into a great mass of curiosity— course, the impl is that the President has|ecyriosity, that is, concerning what the contest is really = forsaken the ideals of Jeffersonian democracy which|about and what is going to happen on Nc e It appears to be well settled that there is body of voters ready to go to neither extreme. Right nor Left—but anxious to find some dle ground on which to stand and vote. In his speech before the, Liberty Governor Smith declared that the great question be determined is whether this country is to be ruled — from Moscow or from Washington. The strong pro- g bability is that it will be ruled from neither cit Voters in the Middle West and in the Northwes | o D mneing on. Usu- indoor sport, especially in the campaign year. - Cincinnati Enquirer, Condit, M returned to Ju Dr. Condit had Synod in Ever- ard of the Scripps-Howard papers, William Randolph | FRESH- LOCAL GROWN GREEN ONIONS, RADISHES in of the can- FROM OUR OWN FARM California Grocery THE PURE FCODS STORE Telephcne 476 uding some that ignore econo-|neau on the Alice problems. Secret alliances may | been attending imerous. ett. rsons whose birthday e augury of a a1 accession of r essional or bus rildren born ¢ bly will be “ambi to work hard to attain al.| Mrs. W. P, Many subjects of this re fa- eral Hospital mous. —_— David Edgar S vil War! The neral, was born on this day 1 campa hers who 1day dis per < the | in Executive and in it quotes this significant paragraph .S do die Jefferson A8y ‘ 1799: a letter Thomas on January 26, from Gerry wrote to of ons city language represent spoken in “I am for the powers not y preserving w the States lded by them to the Union, and to the Legislature of the Union its constitu- tional share in the division of powers; and I am not for transferring all the powers of the States to the General Government, and all those of that government to the executive branch. I am for a government rigorously frugal and simple, applying all the possible savings of the public revenue to the discharge of the national debt; and not for a multiplica- tion of officers and salaries merely to make partisans and for increasing, by every device the public debt, on the principle of its being a public blessing The Enquirer want Harbor been cailed Aiis 2k'ng orator” 16 Prompt Delivery {LASKA MEAT CO. FEATUR!NG CARSTEN'S RABY BEEF —DIAMOND I'C HAM5 AND BACON—U. S. Government Inspected i BT TR Jun n u police had inst all vag What is one skilled in stuffing kins of animals? called and who i rants. mounting o have lebr t as neluc n Palmer: Leave it to Mary Pickford to do something new. For her f big uper-picture, “Less then the Dust” she was cmploying for the fir time in the moving picture an advance agent fo n picture. He was We her ¢ repre A} di WERS, Heart ase. San Fr i Daniel Webster. From to 100 A taxidi te are to know 1bs. mist S n that on September 14, 1936, the undersigned s appointed executrix of the es- g o ince m e % tate of Mrs. Charlie Benson, de- | prony Rinzl [ MODERN | . ceased h;l .”.,,, Pmlh:\'.r I:‘ri;\w]‘ ‘{'«‘)1' A > ETIQUETTE ! u Precinct, Juneau, Alaska.| yyeather: Maximum, ion wa the anti-Roosevelts have been alleging through the | campaign for lack of a better issue. The fact is that! Mr. Roosevelt is a Democrat of those that hint at his alleged veering from Demo- cratic principles. But there is something to the Ji: ferson letter which much more important and which the Enquirer fails to dwell upon. 49; Mini- olid ersons having claims against | pum “40: cloudy, rain, said estate are required to present with the proper vouchers, ed required by law, to) ‘ ARD D. STABLER, Attorney- Wiien' the ‘person who I3 make , Shattuck Building, Juneau, an introduction does not speak |Alaska, within six months from the a name clearl and it is very im- first publication of this notic will have much to do in determining the complexion portant that the name 'be kndwfi MRS. BESSIE WILSON, of our Government during the next few years, and if | of whem shou d one ask that tHe Executrix. any one could accurately read the mind of these Men name he repeated? | Pirst publication, Sept. 28, 1936. and women, he would know how the Presidential ‘ Last publication, Oct. 19, 1936. e A. Ask the election is going. not the one e roduction. i Q. Is it all right for one to leave the table if there is a very urgent cause for doing so? A ¥ but one thing should be! observed, and that is never to leave the table still chewing. | better than some 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 €. B, Holland relative to see s L& “These Three” As a paid-up subscriber of The Daily Alaska Empire Good only for current offering e a classified—Empire. League, By Roberta Lee them T is D Pay’'n Takit PHONES 92 or 3 Free Delivery Fresh Meats, Groceries, - Liquors, Wines and Beer We Sell for LESS Because We sell for CASH Leader Dept. Store George Brothers The Jefferson letter was written in 1799. | There were no automobiles, no airplanes, no stock | market, no public utilities, no great network of roads, no transcontinental railroads in those days, and, incidentally, no relief for which the Federal govern, ment had to pour out millions of dollars to keep peo- ple from starving to death. * Mr. Jefferson spoke of a simple and frugal gov- ernment. There is some difference between 13 colo- nies and 48 states and possessions. It was not nec- essary for the third President to bother his head | about a Department of Air Commerce or a Depart- | ment of Labor or a commission to control the stock market to keep the private wolves from eating up | the public lambs. i mmlurrrl.' the in-| Brains—but No Umbreila (Philadelphia Record) Who do you suppose was the brainiest man who ever lived in North America? Dr. Ales Hrdlicka, the anthropologist, says he was an unknown and un- named native of the Aleutian Islands, whose skuli % A | v i " ® Q What is really the correct| has just been discovered. iz A : _ |length of the first social call? The brain cavity was 2005 cubic centimeters. | A. Twenty minutes, President | That The Democratic principle sounded by Jefferson cratic party velt today as it was when Jefferson wrote it. it is also true, as the Enquirer and everyone else well knows, that with governn.ent in days of Jefferson is like compar- ing a dog te But The report issued recently by the Department of Agriculture showing gross farm of course, is a popular idea in a campa ster, the largest of any other known American, whose brain capacity wes a little less than 2000 cubic cen*i- meters. Turgenieff, the Russian poet, had the larg- est known anywhere—2030. Beethoven’s measvred 1750 and Immanuel Kant's, 1740. And what did this is just as much part of the Demo- and the philosophy of President Roose- But the comparison of government today am with the China Clipper writing a letter to the President Zn year. all his life on the Aleutian Islands, which are said to have the nastiest climate in the world. It only stops raining when the fogs are so thick the clouds get lo.st A HIGH HURDLE Which goes to show what little use brains are against much more powerful forces, such strong attachment to one's native heath. Here was the brainiest man in North America, yet he never had income during the | genge enough to leave his home for Southern Califor- better than the skull capacity of Daniel Web- | | as the | T T CARD PARTY | Rebekah Card Party at Odd Fellows’ Hall, Wednesday, October | 21, eight o'clock. Contract bridge, remarkable Aleut do with ail |Pibochle and whist. Relreshments. | that brain? So far as Dr. Hrdlicka knows, he lived |Admission 50c. I3 —adv.} [ GENERAL MOTORS _ and MAYTAG PRODUCTS W. P. JOHNSON | o RN - & Compounaed HARRY RACE, Druggist “The Squibb Stores of Alaska” THE BEST TAP BEER IN TOWN! Your Name May Appear Tomorrow WATCH THIS SPACE INSURANCE Allen Shattuck Established 1898 calendar year 1935 was $8,500,000,000, the highest in six years, revealed that in view of the slow increase Alaska nia. In fact, he didn't have sense enough to come in out of the rain. ) S = - exactly | THE MINERS' WHAT HAPPENS WHEN LOCOMOTIVES COLLIDE Recreation Parlors Liquor Store ® BILL DOUGLAS by your For Prompt, Safe, Efficien: Service CALL A CHECKER CAB THE TERMINAL “Deliciousty Different Foods™ Catering to Banquets and Private Dinner Parties doctor. QUALITY AND ECONOMY Juneau Drug Co. The B. M. Behrends Bank Juneau, Alaska HOTEL GASTINEAU Evéry Effort Made for the Comfort of the Guests! GASTINEAU CAFE in connection AIR SERVICE INFORMATION Men’s Dress Oxfords BIG VAN Phone 479 South Franklin St COMMERCIAL “Tomorrow’s Styles and SAVINGS Resources Over Two and One- Half Million Dollars T FOR INSURANCE . See H. R. SHEPARD & SON Telephone 409 B. M. Behrends Bank Bldg. . = i i phitatty tarf.the'story ‘of the collsion ‘which resulted at Tucson, engine backed down a grade and crashed into the engine o an oncoming freight train. At ked r immediately after the crash. Below, one of the oil tenders in flames a later. The engine crews jumped to safety. (Assdciated Press Photos) A Ariz.,, when a run- 3t

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