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They’re the BEST ANSWERS TO as EVERY MAN'S Wardrobe Needs. MICHAELS- STERN Famed Quality SUITS " > o FREEMAN SHOES as low as 34.95 HARDEMAN G PENNCRAFT | “A'!\s priced at ss 'oo ARROW SHIRTS o lov o §2,00. B. M. BEHRENDS C0., Inc. “Juneau’s Leading FDR’ Southern Is 35'xpl By MORGAN M. BEATTY AP Feature Service Wriler WASHINGTON, Av-. 24 — Dig Lehind the headlinc; and rip back through national history, and you teach the main theme of President Roosevelt's detour through the South on the way back to Wash- ington this summer. The President 1s really hulding up the South to the whole nation as a picture to illustrate his thrcc- point thesis on modern :oveiuriet. 1.—You've got to solve natival problems with national laws; 2—The well-being of one state or section depends on the well-being of other states and sections, and 3.—The 48 states by themselves can- not solve the "complex economic and social problems of the 20th century. That opens the way for a new ver- sion of the old,-old issue of state rights. The issue is there because cooperative Federal and state laws administered and financed largely by the Federal government are the heart of the Roosevelt reform pro- gram. Under some of these laws the Federal government imposes stan- dards on states, or so leads the way in social legislation that states are constrained to follow suit. Under Cthers, states may not interfere with the Federal government. In Review New Deal laws of this stripe al- ready on the statute books are the Wagner labor relations act, guaran- teeing collective bargaining for la- bor; the new Wages and Hours law, putting a floor nnd a ceiling ¢ rking day; Social Security. “law, providing benur" for ‘the old under pay-checks er the hours the in ki Department Store” I fiptnur ained by Beatty i population, and the federal ré-| ief system (WPA) which may be expanded or confracted in any state by an exccutive order from Wash- ington. Naturally, the on or suggested to the ready rubbing in spots. Oklahoma found her social se- curity benefits stopped for two months this year when federal in- spectors discovered money was being paid to people ineligible for benefits. A month ago, the Governor of Towa tried to stop a federal labor board hearing on the ground that it prevented the reopening of a struck plant in Newton. down, however, before making so delicate an 1e as labor relations between his own state and Federal government. And right now, curity board is threatening to withhold old age benefits from Ohio. It suspects Governor Martin Davey of making political out of social security sunshine by claiming credit for the benefits to old people under that law. In addition, the conservative ele- ments in both major political par- ties are pounding at the cost of the Roosevelt recovery and reform megsures. They are suspicious of further administrative leadership in Washington for fear it is creating a bureaucracy that might one day es is al- the social se- be delivered into the hands of one man, and thus make a dictator. MEETING THE I1SSUE So the President apparently decided to move in and meet the is- sue before it comes to a head. His advisers argue that that'’s one way of ‘beating the opposition to ‘the pungh and -getting ‘your Side of the g me hundlqpped ebmertq of, mbnudful new 1938 Geperal Eleciric Triple- ‘Thrift Refrigerators are now on :display. See m! iCheck the G-E . fox low current cost, low upkeep, long life, for preserving food. for fast freezing'and, reliase af ige cubes, for coijve- nience, etc. And we be- lieve ‘you wifl chodse a qufiul Elegszic, 'SOLD ON EASY Look C 'Theifty ir PRICE! Thrifty,in | Che.! Bw. PE‘P' FERATOR Thrifty in UPKEEP) . . ¢ the,price tags! Compare values! m‘fi?.pk favings of a new 1938 PAYMENT PLAN ‘Naska Elecri Lisht & Powss Ga. | JUNEAU———ALASKA———DOQUGLAS e ] Y} Johnny Amundsen wmt out’ in harness imposed | He backed | the | hay | has | - “T0 CORDOVA IN - AAT LOCKHEED Shell bnnmom, took off in. the Alaska Air Transpopt Lockheed this | morning at 5 o'clock to fly to Cor- dova and pickJ up the Reindeer Commission and bflng 1.hem w Juneau 3 the Fairchild 71 to Sitka with Stel- la James, E. Giovanetti to ,Ten- to Hirst with Mrs. Grant Evans and to Chichagof with Lee Dolan. Last night Shell returned to® Ju- | neau just in time for supper after |taking Jack and Jerry Gucker from Sitka to Petersburg, and Marjorie | | Morris and JUIUS" Piskibein from | Sitka to Wrangell. picture before the public ahead of everybody else. The first step was the singling out by the President of the South as the Nation’s No. 1 economio problem. “It’s | the nation's problem,” he | said, “not merely the South's. For | we have gn economic tnbalance in the nation as a whole due fo this| | very condition in’the South. . . .” It was the President's way of saying . that the ‘egonomic prob- lems of the South were too com- | plex far -the states to solve, each f in its own way. | The ‘condition he discussed was promptly defined .py the National Emergéncy Council, the President’s ‘roordlnatlng agency of the yarfous executive arms of the Federal gov- | ernment. The council explained to the na- tion how the South recélved only one-third of the' national income; how the South 'is rolling up a grm- er excess of population than nny other section, and is less able to | maintain {t; and how that section |is rich in land and resources, but | poor in ownership and develop- ment of that land and those ‘re- sources. | Then the President*swung through the Southwest, preaching every- where a sermon of national unity, and asking train-side crowds _to think for the good of the nation as |a whole and not merely for thein own localities. | Now comes the opportunity to | illustrate his sermons with a first | hand illustration, the South. Politically, of course, the cur- | rent fanfare is a curtain raiser for one of the big national issues n 1940—state’s rights. And the Presi- dent opens the way in the very section of the-country that fought for the principle of state’s rights in the Civil.War. | o BASEBALL TODAY | * The following are scores of base- ball games played this afternoon in the two mafor leagiies as received | up to 2 o'clock: | National League Boston 2; Pittsburgh 6. | Philadelphia 1; Cincjnnati 3. | New York 1;‘Chicago 6. Brooklyn 0; St. Louis 5. American League Detroit 5, 2; Philadelphia 10, 11; Chicago 8, 1y New York 5, 11. | Clevéland 5; Boston 3. 8t. Louls 6; Washington 8. — RETURN FROM VISIT - | Mrs. Arthur.Bringdale apd ' Mrs. J. C. Michaelson, who have been visiting with ' Mrs.\) Michaelson's brothers @t Ward Cove, near Ket- chikan, for the past two weeks, re- | turned to Juneau today on the | steamer North Sea. S V| ville, cloudy, 54; Juneau, clear, U. 8. DE!‘ARTMENT Ol" AGRI Forecast for Juneau and vicin Tulsequah, clear, 61; Yakutat, misti 58; Portage, cloudy; Fairbanks, dy,-42; Tanana, cloudy, 40; Ruby, cl tag, cloudy, 48; McGrath, partly cl Creek, cloudy, cloudy; Golovin, cloudy, 44; Solorio 37; Nome, partly cloudy, 34. Juneau, Aug. 25.—Sunrise, 4 WEATHER A ridge of high barometric pres the western Aleutians eastward over Canadian Prairie Provinces, with or Pacific ‘Ocean ‘at latitude 49 degres another of 30.34 inches at Kamloops. 142 insula where a slight barometric dey pressure distribution has been atter the Seward Peninsula, the Aleutian Tenakee, clear, 59; Port Althorp. cloudy; 50; Cape Hinchinbrook, cloudy, 58; Cord 34; Stuyahok, cloudy 2 am.,; over all of Alaska, except over the by fair weather over the remainder THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, WEDNESDAY AUGUST 24, I938 | SIMMONS BOES. | CULTURE, WEATHER BUREAU | * ity, beginning at 3:30 p.m., Aug. 24: | Fair tonight, Thursday partly cloudy to cloudy; gentle to moderate variable winds, mostly westerly | Weather forecast for Boutheast Alaska® Fair tonight, Thursd | partly cloudy to cloudy; gentle to moderate variable winds, mostly west- | erly. Forecast of winds along the Coast of the Gulf of Alaska: Moderate westerly winds tonight and Thursday from Dixon Entrance to Cross i 8bund and moderdte southerly winds from Cross Sound to Cape Hin- | chinbrook. LOCA Tiroe Barometer Temp ity Wind Velocity Weathe | 3:30 p.m. yest'y 30.15 u 8 3 Clear | i 3:30 am. today 30.17 51 o 0 Clear Noon today 3019 62 by ATEE Clear | f RADIO REPORTS | | | TODAY Max. temp. | Lowest 4a.m. 4am. Preclp. 4am | Statlon Inst 24 hours | temp. temp velocity 24 hrs Weathe ! AtKa 3 42 46 4 0 Cloudy | Anchorage 68 | 5 - | Barrow 42 | 30 30 6 0 Cloudy Nome 52 4( 42 4 01 Cloudy Bethel 54 | 36 38 4 0 1Cear : Fairbanks 58 i8 48 0 09 Cloudy | Dawson 66 | 50 50 0 0 Cloudy | St. Paul 52 44 46 4 0 Cloudy | { , Dutch Harbor 52 44 48 12 T Cloudy | Kodiak 66 | b2 54 4 0 Clear Cordova 64 | 52 52 6 0 Clear '| Juneau 2 | 18 51 0 0 Clear | Charging she had bought $55,000 in Sitka 64 | 51 “ £ 0 | annuities from Bernard Toplitzky Ketchikan 4 | 50 50 0 0 Glear |0 New. York, aild ihat she h';g el Prinee Rupert 8 | 48 50 4 0 Clear c»elved or}lx!v ;fthooo wort:" I:rzg | Edmonton 64 = o« « Ty Clear 1 ¢ 009E, A L e o Perry. is_suing for the $33, 000 bal- g‘:tl‘:‘ 4 gg | ":f ‘;2 1 g gll('m' ance.before Justice Ferdinand Pe- ! n | 56 ear § rk City. San Francisco 62 54 56 8 0 Cloudy coravm New ¥ i E_{' r“;mh?;‘:tkon o | ! £ # Y P&f\ig: | A special election will be held at WEATHER (‘()‘NDI']'I(IN* AT 8 AM. TODAY : ;Vald(‘(z s S“pw]rg)‘;/\fll ks, ait 2 Seattle (airport), clear, temperature, 49; Blaine, clear, 46; Victoria, ;‘,;;::’p;:i; bp e clear, 85; Alert Bay, clear, 48; Bull Harbor, clear, 49; Triple Island, part eloudy; Prince Rupert, partly cloudy, 55; Ketchikan, clear, 57; Craig, clear, 56; Wrangell, clear, 50; Petersburg, clear, 60; Sitka, clou- } dy, 53; Cape Spencer, cloudy, 51; Hoonah, foggy; Hawk Inlet, clear, 60; Hood Bay, clear, 52; Radio- Skagway, clear, 47; Haines, cloudy; ng, 52; Cape St. Elias, misting, 54; ova, cloudy, 58; Anchorage, cloudy, dy, 55; Hot Springs, partly clou- oudy, 44; Nulato, cloudy, 42; Kal- udy, 44; Flat, cloudy, 34; Crooked 30; Bethel, cloudy, 46; Platinum, 1, partly cloudy, 40; Council, cloudy, sunset, 7:21 p.m. SYNOPSIS | ure exténded this morning from the North Pacific Ocean to the center of 30.40 inches over the >s and longitude 156 degrees and | The barometric pressure was high western end of the Alaskan Pen- pression prevailed. This general | nded by light scattered showers over Islands, northwestern Canada and of the field of observation. | e Smgmg Star Weds | Back 'hn "her home m ‘S!cnnbné Pa., wi ] sung at fairs an Teviv: ?ff ‘F'h“.dwenr& Jeanne Mad- den, lovely‘ymng’ screén songstress, to wed Keith Martin, talented por- Oklahama . Jeads in . the produc- tion of zing gnih New Jersey and Kansas next peefe)n= PRl Hundreds of Juneau Men have already purchased these fine socks . . . and have come back for it Ty They 've gone to Hol- on ! honeymoon. Most Styles: 35¢ and 50¢ We always have a large selection of lisles, sitks and wools, in plain pctttems fancies and 6 x 3 ribs; 1 D BENNI Complete Outfitter for Men CANNING FLIES TO NOME William A. Bartholomae, of the | Bartholomae Oil Company, operat- | |ing a gold dredge on Gold Run | Creek, near Nome, arrived in Ju- | | neau on ‘the steamer Mt. McKinley and flew directly to Fairbanks with PAA. At Fairbanks, Bartholomae will| | board a plane for Nome and spend | a short time there inspecting the | company’s operations, returning | through Juneau on the first part of next month. | e PHONE 478 FRESH FIELD LIVIE IN VALDEZ Dr. R. D. Livie, dentist, has re- turned to his office in Valdez | after visiting Nabesna and ofher f! trail points. t PERMANENT ‘WAVE SPECIAL for AUGUST PETER PAN BEAUTY i RELIANCE—No. 2 tins HEART O’ FLORIDA CUT BEANS HAPPY HOME—3 No. 2 TWO 2-pound packages LAMB NG THE WEATHER Wasms Her 5000 Snichle Wiites His (By the U. 5. Wealher Bureau) | responsible for |saw that they were replaced prop- |in his parked car, | Coroner John O'Connell said a note on the car seat indicated suicide |and ended. “P. S. — This weapon belongs to Charles .Thanks Charley.” { Committee. {in a crevice near ‘was once Gen. i armory. Big Boxes—Sl.75 “Juneau’s Own and Independently-Owned Food Store” OFFERS 3-DAY SPECIALS-Thursday, Friday, Saturday “The Modern Pure Foods Store” TOMATOES —9 Ibs. 25 PLUMS ——2 Ibs. 2 Sc WATERMELONS — lb» 7.c . DINNER PEAS TOMATOES — WITH PUREE—No. 2/; tins ; UIT 3tins S# PRUNES Heinz Ketchup, bottle lge 1b. 30c [POT ROAST Ib. 23c Thanks for Revolver ST. LOUIS, Aug. 22 Duncan, twenty-one, as budget manager of a tire company, was many articles and 22 Joseph E. erly. His body was found recently a pistol beside it. — e ELKS ALLEYS OPE: The Elks bowling alleys were of- ficially opened today, it was an- nounced today by Leonard Holm- | quist, Chairman of the Bowling The alleys have been reconditioned and are now in ex- cellent shape, he said E 30 (1 PR L CHARIVARI Mr. and Mrs. James Dieringer were recently serenaded by the youngsters at Valdez following their marriage. — e BRANDY REALLY AGED CORPUS CHRISTI, Tex.—A pint size flask of Napoleon brandy, dal-‘ ed 1802, was taken from a cache | on the roof of an old building being | torn down here. It was concealed a hole on the roof that apparently had been a lookout., Historians say the building Zachery | Taylor's | IT'S TIME TO LOOK To Your PEARS c zfor 25 tins .. ~ 3 2 bs. 41 — QUR CHOICEST FRESH MEATS ARE CUT TO ORDER — You Will Find None But the Finest Meats Obtainable Here BEEF FRESH-KE‘I-W (mal) CHICKENS Plymouth Rocks and Rhode Island Reds California Grocery AND MEAT MARKET — PHONE' WE HAVE : ALL KINDS | FRUIT JARS dozen $l. Wide Mouth—Quarts dozen $l.35 WRONG NUMBER ‘must be _troubling “Jenny,” a performing elephant thai s ‘won favor with London audiences, as she tries to put through a phone call to “Mickey Mouse.” Today's News Today.—Empire. KERR Regulars—Quarts Ask Any of Our Customers They'll Tell You OUR PRICES ARE RIGHT! All of Our HOME - GROWN Vegetables bunches 25¢ Carrots—Beets Turnips—Radishes Swiss Chard and -others OUR FRESH FRUITS AND VEGETABLES ARE "ALWAYS THE BEST" PORK ROAST ® 25¢ » 78 |