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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, SATURDAY, JAN. 9, 1937. D .I 1 I \kfl E"] ire ! expenditure of ]mlblx(‘ |Iun]ni(‘\']m rlel;\(im)‘dlo HA P PY. | frenti——————— . :;ey“ & T clehe sl indus-lnewl ‘{'iendi:gm aremmedsem 3 f A > 3 himself and his household that consider Children born on this day prob- (ll ‘/‘ < (lL % p questionable.” Among them: $3,128 for a B I R T H D A Y‘ ?0 \7EARS AGO Horosco e l Women are subject to the mos(.lflbly will be endowed with various ROBERT W. BENDER - - Editor and Manager Lincoln limousine in 1933 (Governor La Fol- p stimulating sway which promises|capabilities, including executive tal- e g oy io the. MBI lette had been driving a Ford), a $198.70 samo- The Empire extends mgratuw-\ Frum The Empire “Th ¢ incli much to those who are well trained|€nt and unusual initiative. Sub- AT oM ANy S Juneau var set, a caretaker, a full-time and part-time tions and Dbest wishes today, thmvi 1.' e stars incline iri leading professions Ijects of this sign may be successful Alaska chauffeur, two watchmen for his presidential birthday anniversary, to the follow- |\ ———— =" 'l but do not compel” o Rt in literary work. They are fond of T — a0, & BebonA ARAN house, parties for Glenn Frank Jr. ing: JANUARY 9, 1917 bddleel :pp nE§sd colges u:(') the | aqventure. 3 watter 6. He does not give “thorough attention ‘ The Russians were preparing for — ;l ;W ho smflflmc l:';] Erh l*;drule‘ William James, philosopher and TSUBSCRIPTION RATES to detail within e University,” likes JANUARY 9. |a great offensive in the Riga sec-| SUNDAY, JANUARY 10, 1937 [ ‘l" stars. Her paths s ‘;“ be | equcator, was born on this day 1842. Belivered n carricr 7 Juncau ani Douslas for 8135 per month. | graduate work better than under-graduate Jane Farrelly |tor. Troops were mear Mitau amal oo G G in pt:isant] PI‘BCOS ;"w"g_ the rich Others who have celebrated it as a| By mail. pe the following rates: © | work, older professors better than instructors. Walter Andrews lsouth of Riga. Artillery fire had c aspects rule today, ac-|and the talented who are ’“‘c“““bxrthday include Howard Taylor, m‘;""”“ F President Frank was quoted as ying, “those Irene McKinley |constantly increased on both sides cording to astrology. The clergy|ed in public service. \aulhor and traveler, 1825; Sir John, o they will o vlare the kind of things you can hear at any majol Rosena Schmitz |quring the last few days and be- 5h°“ld_ b"nl’f’;"mr"“gh expanding| qpe buplic mind should bo clequfllexander MacDonald, Canadian! - o university in the country.” Elmer Reed |come extremely violent. ok 1%"1‘)&::5 l’: on matters of national importance. |statesman, 1815; in Rochefoucauld- Telephones: News Office, 602; Office, 374 | The educator is more than half right in that | srous LIS Veln e Y Unity of thought on international Liancourt, philanthropist and poli- " MEMBER OF ASSOCIATED PRESS ment, but it is only in rare cases such as his JANUARY, 10. Judge R. W. Jennings ammiounc- "url:‘f.’.ox;‘. wh},!{, o i sponsi- | Proplems is presaged. Energies [tician, 1747. The Associac > ahd th sl WHcIeat EReviby ruferrea by George D. Benson fea that the January term of courti —Fefsors WA have mEAy “;‘P"m; should be employed with tireless| (Copyright, 1937) x»’:ir;‘:&:.:" a1 T TS RGBT (¢ 18 pio R. H. Beistline (was in session. Lloyd G. Hill was i . ) nund(.rrll\is w' m‘ persistence, for there are signs thzu‘ . DR ok :\“ ortur for our n‘(|‘\‘1(\||1m\ul i;mnu- D“.“’“' M |appointed foreman (o2 "!w gl l\ll‘x;l.(;ll:xhql\: the fnrcms: o‘;)ma:). SO L, reeie. SURCRNe . GYENES] TTnNHON DONRIOE NORWAY b T e e Gertrude V. Thompson jury. Serving on the grand jury Seroiceitie] for which all should prepa 7 Special meeting is to be_ held THAN THAT WA . i Joseph Scott were F. A. Brown, Benjamin Gould, : AR S | The seers warn that labor con- |Tuesday, Jan. 12, at 8 pm,, in the 3 [s. f educators are to be rated Mae Kilroy E. H. Keith, N. G. Nelson, J. C. Again the stars appear to en tists ShvdiVe taube Shat’ st bo Hill. All members are exe wair or the kind of auto- Louis Paul Readman, S. B. Combest, J. N. Gr courage faultfinding on the part of met justly m‘d'h‘m " Differences | Pected to attend. ey dr t bode well for the future| Buddie Brown bill, John W. Poeth, Pred Perkins,|the public which will criticise gov-y, 0 OB 0 J0E (0 o Srenensy GEORGE JORGENSON, — Robert Browning, V. Dortero, Fred {ernment officials and misjudge mo-+,, "= t e ~l—adv. President,. tH c s tives actuating important policies y point out, affecting national o - s A geBRiE. T nr‘l‘ L‘ 0. W‘a]krr, D. M.‘ The siath Yrmxl: ot Taderstin welfare in ways that are not yet Today's News Tod: E Make “Local” Share Relief | MODERN l’,l e fi',,fgff{‘“;;.ofi’ é“m(‘ff:\;] [business and industry who should tegognlacd. i ¥ P TN Saie: T 3 8 | g 'd G, | have good news of some sort today. This is an auspicious direction £ N w oot ETIQUETTE ] At Bl (':j:;‘d! 'E l:',h)g‘m(m. i g ; obstacles may be met by man- |of the stars for gay entertainments elie hat \(n‘] o-h:l el urers end transportation or-|of many sorts. A brilliant winter tiol rat cle a y v i8S DI ” " r?ruu\ to p:(x:u \:)urk: By Roberta Lee ! | officers installed by the Eastern in society is prognosticated with sen- Dr. Glenn ‘Wisconsin gents of that institution has at tion, is out. The Regents. news s ousted him by a vote of eight to sev The Frank case, which savors of s AT odor to that in evidence several j « 1 Suzzallo was relieved of his ¢ of Washington during the famed has an interesting background. Time cussing it in a recent issue had this to sa Glenn Frank left the editorship of Cen- tury magazine for the presidency of the Uni- versity of Wisconsin in September month marked a mo Progres: x Republican John J. Blait Governor, old “Bob” was dead after running a poor third for President the + year before, “Young Bob”' was being eased into his father’s Senate seat, Brother Philip was district attorney of Dane county. Old Bob had peered amiably on occasion into the Uni- versity but when the Republican and Pro- gressive regents got together to elect Editor Fr: then an eloquent young Republican liberal of 37. no La Follette raised a hand to interfere year Phil La Follette was ap- pointed a lecturer in the University Law School. He held that job until he was elected Governor in 1930, As Madison’s and Wisconsin's two first citi- zens, living in the proudest houses in town Governor La Follette and President Frank po- litely ca'led ach other, pleasantly nodded at Badger football games Governor Phil, worldly wise, did not share the resentment of many a rural legislator at President Frank's suavity, his well-pressed clothes, the fact that he spoke with a soft cultivation belying his birthpla Queen City, Mo. And as Phil had been the youngest U. S. Governor, so Glenn Frank had been (until Chicago's Hutchins) the youngest chief executive of a major U. S. on university. What Glenn Frank thought of Phil La Fol- lette was, and has remained, his secret. Wise- acres gossiped that Phil was hurt when, after his defeat in 1932, Glenn Frank seemed to get along just as well with Democratic Governor Albert G. Schmedeman. To a Wisconsin Pro- gressive, Republicans and Democrats are alike “reactionaries.” In 1933 Mr. and Mrs. Frank called on Mr. and Mrs. La Follette, who then lived right across the street. Their courts not returned. Last year at a Lincoln Republican rally in Chicago, ambitious Day President Frank, who has been sporadically the local govern- | & r were May F. Case, Edwin C.| federal government | $id e s ,_|Homilton, E. Ione Moricn, Eliza eder ernment | Q ‘When one is nt»lhe the 5 Howdeshell, Iekene * Taylor, the people and advancement , is it all right for him to go s 3 L 1 the part of workers. New labor es, cities, (nunu\lol to hi at? |Mary D. Bussey, Harriett Case, Jen- ) el Ee i, to help the feder A. The well-bred person will waie |Die Smith, Vera Pettengill, Gladys Parties W (Bi <0 ki e 2 clief pay roll within | o tne first intermission, so that Ellen Nelson, Elizabeth Me- | ’j‘ ‘.‘f}*”“‘t-’{ AP 8 _LJ S REbIE, is reduce it as it can be reduced | no will not disturb other people X Clementine Wahlgreen, f:“" “,“*,” - rt‘rem"‘s‘:: e n {who are watching the stage. Eva K. Tripp, Sadie Edmundson, Many will ca 24 le -mg a : if they were| o wnat is the maximum num-|Maud Knapp and Louis McCoy o mf.ce' K B ey ecific share of |po"of courses that the fashionable Uranu. o ;"l i pd“‘.c“ ”tf‘,". 9 ) Administration Pro- yyncheon should include? g T a - Juneau basketball P ,\Fd “;I‘.)fl»p,',m;;“ S ,.P Hr 7 { A. Not more than four courses. m beat the Wrangell team 38 to force afiecund vi€ c‘mm:l“ o arted the assumption that this w»u}(i‘ ré 16 the first game of a series to]the vorld. Fluctuaticns in value are federal government would pay wages | be played on: the: Channel . The|forecast : ical | @ trative c The local governments | 4 e % Wrangell boys were fast and ‘“‘"“""1 Speculation will m}lcrest great Dr, [Would pay for puaterials and for project |:1(;\n.\“unll ed credit for the uphill fight they Bumbers ";” waring c;’(n‘(vxzfil‘hu upervision n return, the would et Jobs for the hade agsd ot . S may be sudde! rKe! varia- 5 | and they would also get desirable public EOOK cic PRI | {made scainst (helnBpoone [tions. The gambling instinct wiil | | \ e > +ib- (be strong this winter and will be s the theory. Having ehind it, | By A. C. Gordon 5 l'flK:,:: :’z:,?‘“ dn;]‘.i(elfi evident in many ways of risking v't worked out well in practice |have contributed They weren't penalized, |the earth? v g "“‘““.’-‘,‘Z‘ ,“]3,0‘” [;‘ T“.‘,“ ~;‘ for two reasons:—Administrator Hopkihs refused to! 2. Which is the oldest province 417 peo0n TortutE R e ,““fvjl"y"f“l" let the unemployed suffer ho matter what the local i the Dominion: of Canads? 111;[» lungm tmand Labor Union f’l’&‘*.l“’nmlm may. be somewhat dis- i averihaaRts i 3 JPA tried ¥ e tio: 3. Who wrote the “Leatherstock- installation party was a great suc-|turbec with Tocal offit \.yv»"‘\ ‘.]- ‘t(rz(.“,,“v,‘.,- ;f;l-k‘;;(,:)i:;g ing Tales"? |cess. Officers “installed were D.| Childen born en this day prob- head, through ¢ lobbies and their Congressmen, | 4 What is the largest and most J. Kinzie, Jaek Wilson, A. Grier,ably will be keen of mind and dy- | Per s that was less serious while the local gov- important of the so-called ductless R. G. Datson, James Christoe, R mic c cter Subj ( BYot | |ernments had the honest excuse of their own poverty. glands of the body? | Trevors and Charles Sey. On the!this usually succeed without 3ut business rev wi it hasn't solved the unem-| 5. What is the chief city of Wis- program which followed the in- any ance and they are able to | ployment 'm, has improved the financial posi- consin? tallation were Miss Beth Anderson,|overcome difficulties. : | tion of cities, counties and states. Most of them can R Miss Amy Wilson, May Ramsa Ethan Allen, American soldier, was |find a way to pay their fair share for work relief— hy Dagmar Youngstrom, Sophia An- born on this day 1737. Others who if they are required to do it | ANSWERS derscn, Helene Smith, Mary Wil-| have celebrated it as a birthday in- The danger that they won't pay even when they| 1. Mars m, Esther Cashen, Elsie Edmins- clude Reed Smoot, U. S. Senator, |can, and that their needy unemployed will lose the| 2= Quebec on, Etta Brown. 11862; Howard Chandler Christy. benefits of work relief, seems remote. Local public| 3- James Fenimore Cooper. lillustrfitor, 1873. entiment will take care of that 4., [LES *loen: Weather: Maximum, 38; mini- Before Congress votes any new appropriation for| 95 Milwaukee. mum, 28; cloudy. MONDAY, JANUARY 11, 1937 we believe it should write into law a fair, | 8 R M R i d enforceable standard for A e =il | According to astrology this is a tions to the WPA program DAILY LESSONS | ATTENTION MASONS 'varely fortunate day and really the | That will halt the present competition among local |governments to shift an ever increasing share of |load onto the federal government. fa better WPA program, with | planning and materials to worth money available And it will meanl go into projects of genuine nich and Hain, 1518 to NOI: iy | HODEY |beginning of a prosperous new year A called communication of Gas-|of business and commerce. | /tineaux Lodge No. 124, 'Odd Fel-| Whatever is constructive and pro- lows’ Hall, Saturday night, at eight gressive should benefit under this o'clock. Installation of officers. By | configuration which impels ad- order of the Worshipful Master. the | IN ENGLISH By W. L. Gordei. for | {vancement in arts and sciences as [ 7 = Words Often Misused: Do not s SAM DEVON, |- TR ; oy : In Defense of the lur lined Teacup I shall be back again next Mon- —2dV: Secretary I ! — day. “I shall return pext:Mons| = T eeRens | (Philadelphia Record) day.” Try ‘I'ne runpire classifieds for | —*‘ your | Now on exhibition at the Museum of Modern Art| Often Mispronounced: Centennial, |Iuick results. | R |in New York is a fur-lined teacup, with saucer Pronounce sen-ten-i-el, four sylla- | feeeeeooow ~oe —oooooe e g | Reliable and spoon to match. A specimen of “surrealist art,” bles, and not sen-ten-yal. pharmacists it is touted as the ultimate in acsthetic abandon, the Often Misspelled: Stratum (sin-, pa ’n Taklt i {epitome of sheer uselessness. gular). Strata (plural.) | y i compound | Connoisseurs of trinkets from the Victorian era Synonyms: Doubtful, dubious, in- or gadgets of the present will feel that the surrealists definite, uncertain, questionable, PHONES 92 or »5 gvacyiptions. not only are behind the times in their thinking but equivocal Free Delivery |even obtuse in respect to their ism (a nice surrealist word!) : There are countless objects fur-lined teacup. Indeed, less useful we can vision the day wi the whole smart set will be using fur-lined teacups— own anti-utilitarian- than Word Study: “Use a word three times and it Let us in- crease our bulary by master- ing one word each day. Today's word: Obsession; a vexing idea that Fresh Meats, Groceries, Liquors, Wines and Beer e Sell for LESS Because We sell for CASH a hen mentioned as Presidential timber, made his when Vogue will carry ads telling how surrealism e Al i fo < Saa first big blunder by using the phrase “our | “has bousht charm. funtasy, beauty and sunllety to s ees the mind. Be curetul § Lecder Dept. Store party.” Those words shivered all through the modern tea table.” Fashion editors will observe i ‘ George Brothers politically alert Wisconsin. When Phil La that fur-lined teacups are soft to the touch, do not . o f Follette got back the Governorship last year, clink or tinkle, and therefore induce reverie, can be | i 2 > Mr. and Mrs. Frank were not invited to stand rubbed the wrong way without disaster, and are “per- eoe . = o 1 * in the receiving line at the inaugural bzll. fect” for guests who dote on splitting h: And even w o o D ] Mr. and Mrs, La Follette stayed away from bargain basements will offer fur-lined teacups in PHONE 36 Wisconsin's last commencement airs, for ear muffs 4 The news flashed from Madison this AT mgrches on! Hemlock $6.50 Cord || F t | autumn that Governor La Follette wanted ] . or very promp | President Frank to resign. Madrid’s Minister has told the League Cash Delivered | LIQUOR DF?L]VERY l Now it develops the wish of the Governor has been of Nations C that there is a war in Spain. | Fi 1 — Glaci e sy ireplace acier fulfilled. Dr. Frank has been relieved of his duties, | There was no sense in keeping it a secret any longer.— 1 54 effective as of the end of the school vear. The Boston Transeript Alder—Any length o charges, as reported by Time, included: e D T cut to order. b A 1. He was not a “business or educational ohn Hamilton’s course is clear in the ordeal & administrator” fit to handle $7,000,000 a year ahead. He must hunt up some leaders, also some Bill Manthey p l cc Lv 'Tom?rr;;w s"Styles 2. He has “lost the confidence of those followers, give Jefferson back to the Democrats, and e e PHONE 2653 | il If the market reports hadn't assured us that rye . | ailed to “devote sufficient time going up, our lay observations might have con-| | We truly believe thaf. we sell T 2 N n to University affairs. us that the movement was generally in the| | America’s Greatest Shoe Values s permitted practic direction.—Boston Herald and Prettiest Footwear DEVLIN'S With Pope Pius X| enfecbled by illness and ¢ the triple crown of the Roman Cathelic Church. as most likely to succeed the pope (left to right): Costs, archbishop of Florence, and L 'd age, igi Lavitranc, archoishop of Palermno. interest was centered upon possible successors to Informed Vatican circles regarded these three cardinals Eugenic Pacelli, papal secretary of state; Elia Dalla (Asscciated Press Photos) l The B. M. 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