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

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THE DAILYALASKA"HI[P{RE THURSDAY, DEC. 3, 1936. DailyatinshaEmpire i o ks o s s HA B e o I meme e - "EAE 08 ;54 AT ¥ v sivirerrs V3 43 ‘ > CRNE RS nem PR L ) S MhE even be Shnposed, %00, el e B{R TK’DK-Y Tl el il | Charles "Romohr, 49/ long” ‘time vl positions. ROBERT W. BENDER - - Edilor and Maage g | resident of Valdez and vicinity, Fflda N ht words of a certain \;\uiw:s :,L, Lhc‘“:‘(l‘:a:f]rlll(\lulll:fi‘ll':::‘ The Empire extends congratula- RAILWAY EXPRESS AGENCY | passed away November 13, a day y lg here relative to junketing trips “77S tions and best wishes today, their Will operate on the S. S. Arctic | after entering the Cordova General DECEMBER 4 in the venerabie Senator’s ears when he happened birthday anniversary, to the /Ollou— north and south bound. Scheduled |Hospital. Romohr was the pro- y the EMPIRE lished every evening except Sund Streets, Junesu, Publ PRINTING COMPANY at Second and Mal Alaska. o to think about Matanuska. ling: ) sail from Seattle Sunday night. |prietor of the Tiekel roadhouse, 52 B S O At any rate, 135 Colonists have now testified that SIS —adv. | miles out of Valdez. KETBALL o e they are satisfied with their lot in the Matanuska | DECEMBER 3. —— 3 SUBSCRIPTION RATES. Valley. In other words, they like it a great deal better | Mrs. Sadie Cashen o7 Delivered in carsier in Junean and Douglas for $1.25 per month. wail, postage pald, at the following rates: ©One )rlr advance, $12.00; six months, in advance, $6.00 one month, in advance, $1.25. Bubscribers vill confer a favor if they Will promptly notif: the Business Office of any failure or irregularity in the deliver: of their papers. Telephones: Fews Of J. Leonard Ervin J. J. Fargher Royal M. Shepard B S than the wind-swept plains of the middle west from which a far-seeing government administration gath-| ered them together to start life anew in the north. | After all, isn't the basic theory back of the Matanuska project and other rehabilitation projects about the S x‘,’,:“)lz:f tA\'s);f"lc\.l‘Afl'lrvrIZPIK’:ll’v".m G b nation one of rehabilitating human bvnms and gi\ ing republicati atches credited to it or not oshersythenn:a fresh start inlife?s % :vl::“(mmlu. and also the Weal news pubfished [ ccess ggtimated, on -year — v ———basis? - Bponsorgiof ALASEA C BCUI LATION GU. \Rurrn:n TO BE l\RhER;fi ve recilh did dt %‘m B s flv success! in two or, e ghrs X < DECfi!Bm 3, 1916 p | colonistgjwere mafle fof a muci e W 2 | he German artillery ‘begamy the rkaBle thing' abmlt?t is tha%) Lofi dmeng of Buchafest frog o d are actually already® selfis! 4 Na‘)flmfl(‘x- rdhge of eleven miles, ‘atcording, tc | pected any such sudden human rehabilitation, except official dispatel from Berlin. [ ] RESERVES 602; Business Office, 374 haps Senator Thoma | s the Senator means when he labels Matanuska ~ Great Britain had lost '1863¢ failure that the Colonists have not yet produced men Kkilled in the month of No- {sufficient to pay back what the gov ent has vember in the World War; 40,063 {expended in setting up the project, he is dead ri woundsd, and 6,920 men missing |But it he means that human rehabilitation of o 3Uring the month of November. at many formerly starving people has not b Jiilge Joki B Wint wa .- smplished and the groundwork laid for' car: attle on his way to his home in g rd an agricultural development within the Ter- neau. While in California he hgd he is equally wrong. attended the funcral of hi§ ¢la J . The best proof that the original theor t with friend Jack London. 5 SENATOR THOMAS AND MATANUSKA |the approval of the biilk of the people of ‘the United s P WEEKLY & —_— | States was the endorsement given by more than 27,- Watson, traveling freight enger agent of thao Padfis MONT“LY e JUNEAU HI ALUMNI (8:30 P. M.) [ J Adults—25 cents Students—15 cents Grade or High School Thanks to Senator Elmer Thomas of Oklflhflmfl-‘om 000 voters last November 3 to the man who con- &% i p . eadiv saived 8 i LY T it Y p Company, accompanied ! the Matanusks colonization project has received some ceived and put the program into operation; that rea s s e - o more adverse publicity, The Senator, who headed one | humanitarian—Franklin Delano Roosevelt by Mrs. Watson, returned fo #laska - Sixth Street Entrance adverse publicity. Senator, | cn the Admiral Watson from the ONLY of those far-reaching congressional investigation com- | A R e South. They planned to spend sey- It would appear from recent negotiations that'eral days in Juneau before contim- CORNEK IHIRD E\ mittees who uswally charter the best government ves- | our debt to LaFayette witll uing to the Westward. sels and travel fnvariably during the balmy months of ieen A. T. Spatz, through arrangement with the owners of the building tock over the management of the Alaskan Hotel. | France wants v to pay | compound interest summer, the best time to take a vacation, will be| bl recalled in Alaska for his visit of last summer aboarc If there is any mogg, of that English money avail- | able, we'll take Mrs. Simpson to win against the field the Coast Guard cutter Chelan. | : The adverse publicity will not hurt tNietagitiiga [W#¥8 place ticket on/fgdyard VIIL roject at all. No project ever had more SH@hdnother { ) i B! y i S A :jmj~ e or two ‘“mj hardly be notice§=Thépomt We're the type who ¢an recall the mgme' of & n:;,',‘ 'f»‘,d e e »HM”U.',] Yy e s vatideville player seen in 1904 and can't remember who 11 the clty from Nevada Creek, js that the distinguished, gray-haired Senator now an for Vics President with Temke —Detroft News, RS stands rrpudntcd by 135 members of the Matanuska | R Mrs. Sim Freiman and son re- colony, actually 139 as four of them voted with llw If the Spar don't quit fighting soon, we fear turned to Juneau on the Mariposa Senator, apparently for a joke. In other words, after | the shipment of olives will be so light that next year’s *1'¢r @ Visit In the Stat about 18 months; of pioneering in. thg Matanuska \al<ixyxc11xc-. will all have to be called off —Ohio State ley, at least 135 of the Colonists are satisfied wil!\‘Junrnnl. The Douglas Stock Company that & 4 had created such a stir by its per- thelr lot and see bright prospects for the future. i e S R | i { formance of Heart of the EDISON MAZDA LAMPS %fi They Stay Brighter Longer g 10-15-25-40-50-60 Watt inside frost ....15¢ 75100 wattiinside'itost =02 20c The B' M' Behrends 25¢ Bank 100 watt clear ......... Juneau, Alaska 150 watt clear or frosted ................. 200 watt clear 200 watt frosted ... s 55¢ . There is renewed talk about a rebirth of the ; The natural conclusion then must be that the g BB ot haist s fhe Golomidld on the mesn-| STSDA O Barty. How about o Nitle slogan-Life ) SUEBIGER. 3 L olE s ciba se ol 300 watt clear medium base 90c || success rs in gre: re st w S s ? v o Ptk § ol ] . ing of success differs in er.~1~, degree. .\m'tv what | o S| Ot e e piad o 300 watt clear n—logul base . COMMERCIAL the member of the upper house of Congress m(“,“l\ by | Europe is a place where a man goes to sleep at Pheum. In the cast were Roy No- A sticeess or failure is only a guess. We have only his, pight, expecting to wake up in the middle of a war— lan, H. E. Murray, Pat McGuire, Ask about the Light Meter and SAVINGS unsupponcd opinion as to“the -Matanuska project. D.-nml Free Press. F. A. Lynch, Miss Jessie Koss, Miss sible | Molly Wiitanen, Miss Stella Me- MAKE SURE THE LIGHT YOU ARE He says it’s a failure and that it will be impos fo¢ ‘such lony to be self- ining in Alaska. It | Butter is getting scarce in Germany, it is reported, | Leod and Mrs. H. T. Pracht. 4 B T i o e eri i oo b hesources Over Two and One- J. J. Price and Earl Hyde, in- 1111 cer. S Half Millior Dollars may be that tho Senator expected to see send | cheaper. ——In(lhnmpuh\ M“ S. L AR ing engineers who had spent a cou- months an agricultural settlement that would ser s 5 o e States m- | & great quantities of food supplies to the States to com- |, gyrequ of Missing Persons has been given a | ple of weeks in the C of and pete with markets of the world. Perhaps he expected | r)) gescription of Susannah.—Detroit News, |Sitka section, were in Juneau to see less than 200 Colonists produce enough pro- | s M Fomeiianigi 7 3 5‘ s a ec "c lo’ uwer M | @icts in one ydar to supply the needs of 60,000 Alas- | T¢ was'the ‘elecHon that put the jest in Digest.— | 5 4 kans. And, perhaps again, he just didn't like the | Dallas News. A. B. Dodd, manager of the Alas- L Juneau Douglas e g?\“\é 5 AL > b ¥ DAELON LIRS e i SR e " P % AN LAARERLA2R2ERRRAREEIRARLALIRALRERIA2RE2182 4 A4 2 - ANNOUNCE o The Opening of Junéaw’s Newest and Most Modern Apartment House L The Fosbee Apartments : MAY WE BE OF SERVICE TO JUNEAU o . A AND ITS CITIZENS FOR YEARS TO COME. . iE y % 3 Development (0., Inc. 3 9 V~A'oaflqy) Pt ¢ P44 80000044440 1 1704040 1800000 4441 P HEIEEEIEEE 444

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