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' The Washinglon THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE—JUNEAU, ALASKA PAGE FOUR -bailyiAia‘gka Empire Tr{oro are rev; things the rich ;Jon‘t resort to i;\ order to flaunt their wealth. The other day a couple[ Published every evening except Sunday by the got married in a taxi with the meter running. EMPIRE PRINTING COMYANY Second sud Main Streets, Juneau, Alasks Middle age has hit you when you start off the ROTHY Y LINGO - - - Vice- rmmnt day full of vim and pep and wind it i VOl m ';acgb 3 4 ¢ u"a'“‘::' ..&“':' m'_m e & pep wind it up feeling weaker SEPTEMBER 1, 1928 iy R e % ns a ra g R fl"-‘nn:‘nfizmon $ : % 7 e o s B | Mrs. George Simpkins §nd her three daughters, Mary, Jean and | SEPTEMBER 1 Barbara, returned on the Princess Charlotte after spending the summer e®enecccccsce Alaskan Resettlement (Fairbanks News-Miner) Details of a vast multi-million dollar resettlement program for Alaska, as envisioned by administration planners, were disclosed recently in an Associated Press dispatch from Washington, D. C. William E. Warne, Assistant Interior Secretary, said the government proposes to utilize up to two: million acres of Alaska land for the project. { The Reconstruction Finance Corporation would |’ loan a maximum of $7,500,000 to the prospective set- tlers. The loans would be for 40 years and would bear interest of 3! per cent. | denberg, Rotterdam’s Burgomeister The money would be used for land clearing, con- |Oud spoke of Holland's pride in struction of farm buildings and for purchase of feed, prominent Americans of Duteh fertilizer, equipment and supplies. descent. A limited amount of free land clearing (up to five | “In addition to you, Senator,” he acres) would be allowed. In addition, the govern- |said, “there are Herbert HOOVer, e,y start against the ducks and eventually won by a large score, for ment would clear land for village sites and byild entire | Congressman Harold Youngblood ;. 1,14 daylight only an occasional duck could be seen, althoough the communities, complete with roads and docks. Cost (Mich.) and Congressman Charles) . o= o;iinued merrily. of this part of. the operation would be paid back by the | Hoeven (Towa). They constitute a (""" 5 settlers over a 20-year period. very impressive representation of If nothing else, the plan proves again there is | Dutch Americans.” Travelling men arriving on the Admiral Rogers included A. Van nothing new under the sun. | “Thank you, Mr. Mayor,” Van-|Mavern Prof. Rexford Guy Tugwell, the New Deal's first | denberg said quietly, “but your list resettler of other people’s lives, was far ahead of Mr. |1 Incomplete. ¥ou - overlooked Warne and others who have devised the present |Franklin D. Roosevelt.” scheme to “take the curse off pioneering in Alaska.” | : Tugwell, using the Federal treasury, fathered sev- BI-PARTISAN in Seattle. Joann Guy Terry Pegues Harry J. Hansen Dean Royal Johnson Glenward Kirkham George Messerschmidt Grace Cummings Nadine Stephens Miss Gertrude Sandberg, who was to teach the kindergarten of the |Juneau Public Schools, was a passenger aboard the Princess Charlotte. |She was from Virginia, Minn. me year, $15.00 the following rates: ix months, /n sdvance, $7.80; By mail, postage paid, r. in advance. $16.00 month, in advance, $1.80. Bubscribers will ccnfer a favor if they wili prompily Botify ibe Business Office of any failure or irresularity io the delivery of their papers. Tulephones: News Office, 802; Business Office, 3. MEMBER OF ASSOCIATED PRI The Asssciated Pross is exclusively entitled to the une for -nnuumn of all news dispatches credited to it or not «ther- | Wise credited in this paver #nd also the local news published Serein. — NATiUNAL REPRESENTATIVES — Alaska Mewspwpers, 1411 pourth Avenue Bidg , Sesttle, Wasiv e W. 8. Pekovich, Superintendent and General Manager of the Ad- miralty Gold Mining Company, was an arrival on the Admiral Rogers {from Funter Bay. for a short trip. The annual bombardment in celebration of the opening of duck hunting season was staged from Salmun Creek to the west side of Men- denhall Bar, Aided by a full mdon the hunters were able to get an Weather: High, 45; low, 44; clear. Dally Lessons in English % 1. GORDON | eral communities designed to further his theories 013 Defense Secrétary James PO BUCKS BEWARE—ALSO HUNTERS collectivism and planned economy. However, in those ! Sadtal Ctle bz“ b t; t br- days (the middle 1930's) even the New Dealers hadn't |- o appareniy, BV (s | partisanship in the campmgn‘ \gotten around to thinking in terms of millions of | acres. Yet ‘each Tugwellian community represented s\, heavy loss to Federal taxpayers. How Mr. Warne and | confined solely to| WORDS OFTEN MISUSED: Do not say, “I told him to get off of my | foreign affairs, The one-time Wall |property.” Omit OF. Street banker is quietly carrying OFTEN MISPRONOUNCED: Duel. Pronounce the U as in FUEL, Tit a step further. H ‘not as 00 in TOOL. Personally, he is contributing !o' OFTEN MISSPELLED: Cater-cornered; not CATTA, nor CATTY. i “he Democratic National Commit- SYNONYMS: Pride, conceit, vanity, egotism, superciliousness. tee and has also chipped in to help WORD STUDY: “Use a word three times and it is yours.” Let us| should not be The deer hunting season has opened and not only the bucks but also the hunters should beware. It is @ up to the bucks to be on the alert but it is triple so for the hunters. 'his co-planners propose to avoid similar difficulty on i a much larger scale—after they have the new settle- | It has been several years in this vicinity since a ment groups in hock—remains to be seen. tragedy has been reported, “mari killed, mistaken for | = peyn after 16 years, the New Dealers have yet to| a deer,” & leam that they can ignore certain economic facts of It seems also most inexcusable that a death 'life but they cannot %upp.ress them. should occur just because of hunting deer. Many | P hunters are too quick on the draw and take a shot at | Taxes on Newspaper |get away with i . { Q. Is it necessary to repeat a person's name with each introduction, {when introducing him to a group of persons? A. No. In this instance one may say, “Mr. Smith, this is Mr. Jones, Mrs. Wendell Willkie, widow of Mr, Wilson, Mr. Gray, and Mr. Doe,” with a sligh . 5 s t gesture th the 1940 Republican standard-bear- | to indicate each person it el lflz‘;?:em Ai‘:im:?: x?e::\’:::s p:;m;;i increase our vocabulary by mastering one word each day. Today's word: Y “ | | family and through friends, Forres- | IMPENETRABLE; inaccessible, a<' to reason, sympathy, etc. “He hasp !tal, indirectly, is also giving ‘an impenetrable mind and heart. ‘ I hand to certain New England Re-1 the slightest suggestion a deer has been spotted. A (Cincinnati Enquirer) | publican Congressional cand]dat’gs t | & slight rustle in the bush or a quspxc:ou: en;ovemen | While we have seen, in the United States, 1,ev(eral‘nAs Coni\:jscms it The ambl MODERN ETIOUETTE ROBERTA LEE should be investigated before a shot is fir ! hotable efforts to undermine the freedom of the press‘ lous mln koes not putxdaldhns eg] ' There are hunters who go it alone, because Of through taxation, the people of this country—and the in one basket — provided he can | the recklessness of a comrade who fires before cer- | courts—have resisted succesfully virtually every such | tain of game. Groups should be exceedingly cautious, attempt. Now, in Miami, Fla., also another purely | POLITICAL SHORTS should make sure what the object is before taking | political measure has been voted by the City Coun- | ORTS B ! mission. The ordinance would place a levy against all | & abot individuals and/or companies “engaging in the busi- Let us go through another season Without A& ness or occupation of publshing a daily or a weekly | er, is at odds with a New York i .asualty by exerting careful hunting. newspaper in Miami.” ibank ver -the s HAnAlag: - e BAK Q. If one has received a wedding announcement, is it good man- —_ The background of the Miami tax plan is "°“husbunds estate. . . John Gibson, ners to write a letter to the bride? lable young Assistant Secretary of A. Yes; it would be nice to send best wishes, but it is not obhgatory' Labor, first suggested to President 'unless an invitation to the ceremony is received. Truman that he open his campaign Q. Does a woman have the privilege of refusing to shake hands, with a Labor Day speech in De- even if the person she meets extends his hand? 1 troit. Former Nebraska Gov- A. Noj; never refuse an offered hand. ernor Dwight Griswold, who is quit- ' —— e ——. A——— - ting as U. S. Aid Administrator in { LOOK and LEARN ¥ ¢ corpon | important—for it reflects the selfish motives behind it. The newspapers in the Florida metropolis have been firing some hot shots at the administration of the commission. The fight has resulted in petitions for a special election to determine whether or not the mem- | bers of the commission shall remain in office. Stung to the quick, the politicians have retaliated by passing LOU IS’ “LAST” Joe Louis has just dsnled the new rumor that he is planning to pul his heavyweight title on the block “just once more.” We hope he makes the denial EI0 the tax proposal. Pe. L""“ right, now can ge out at the top, as, The danger inherent in such a program is obvious i‘flf a champ as ever put on the gloves. He can add | enough. The fact that Miami newspapers might well Greece to take part in the Dewey | campaign, placed the New Yorker'| inati th - nothing to a career that, as one sports writer put it be able to pay the tax is beside the point. The prin- e i o Sl “made him a credit to his race—the human race, !ciple of a free press still would be violated. Having ). 400’ ve not véry emhusxasuc' 1. What is the motto of the United States? that 1s!" He might do much to subtract from it.|progressed that far, unserupulous politicians would hold ;o0 "the Senatorial ambition of| 2. What country has the lowest death rate? Jersey Joe Walcott almost got to him in that first fllle whip hand uv{er’every sj‘ournnl I;IhAm:rlfia lzy t’l;l‘e Rep. Virgil Chapman of Kentucky., 3. Who was our “Hoosier Pres;dent"’l 2 fight, and even in the second—except for the crushing | stmple process of increasing—or threatening °r " He won the nomination but has & S b 06 Weakistr of ‘tha nrscie B he finale—Louis looked too much like a man crease—the size of the tax levy, they could either force only an outside chance against ¥ muscle known as the biceps? blows of t! | newspapers out of publication, or could force them to . 5. How many black keys are there in a piano octave? who doesn’e have it any more. A younger Gus Les- G ;able Republican Sen. John S 2 ‘pnnt only the politicians’ views and opinions. Cisonet. .o, yaterat of (CRHEG I 6! ANSWERS: nevich, even though he doesn't belong in the same When selfish politicians gain contrel of any gov- }ton‘i oo 2 = aA 1. “E Pluribus Unum,” meaning “One out of many.” ring with the Louis of 10 years ago or even five, might ernment, and seek to dominate completely its people, | ;" b0 "o "; Nx:.yska‘ . A1 2. New Zealand. 4 really get to him. It would be tough to have to watch | the first move they make is toward abrogation of the Ci:airfx:m a‘;";“‘héad o tmth i';:l‘ 3. Benjamin Harrison Louis go out a beaten mass of flesh in the center of nghts of a free press. Under dictatorships this end is T L ,:ssoclation oroGOPe s‘;"; 4. In the upper arm 4 3 a ring while the crowd howled for & new champion. | simply and quickly accomplished. But under a free o .o % S0 el ‘as the ;- Five, % ! and democratic Zsrm the politician must seek his goals g ¢ & een as % t by devious methods. Huey Long knew that when he western campaign manager of the |2 e There've been greats in the pflst who went out ! in defeat and still clung to their greatness. Dempsey,1got the Louisiana Legislature to pass laws taxing after Tunney had whipped him twice, was probably | certain classifications of newspapers which had at- more popular than ever. Babe Ruth played out his tucked him. Happily, the legislation did not stand up string and then went on a little beyond that; the |in the courts—for it was, as is the Miami measure— Republican ~ National Committee |} with headquarters in Chicago . . .’ Governor* J. Strom Thurmond of South Carolina, Dixiecrat Presi~ C.J. EHRENDREICH —C. P. A. BUSINESS COUNSELLOR | dential candidate, got a cool re- crowds stayed with him. But neither had promised® fl?;:";’i{?;“tg"{:i “lsb:s‘lce :x::‘:;;tz“fll"s‘zu‘:f:‘;t "ot ception during his Rt At Accounting Systems Taxes to quit, then reneged. Louis has promised. Both lgovemmem The power to control through taxation s | €lectioneering. With one exception, Phone 351 Room 8—Shattuck Bldg. before and after the second' Walcott fight he said this |,/ 4omoeratic and unconstitutional. We are confident all the important state leaders was his last time around. Now he has said it again. | oy the courts will so decide when the Miami case | ducked Thurmond Senator = — Harry Byrd, boss of Virginia Dems ccrats, is quietly grooming ‘his son, Harry, Jr., to succeed him in 1952. — e i comes before them. Let it go that wav, Joe —_— The Sweetest Spot in Town CHANNEL EMPORIUM Candies — Ice Cream — Soft Drinks — Tobaceos 330 South Franklin St. J. A. SOFOULIS, Proprietor lem. In speeches and snappy | bones of their hope for a light | campaign literature, Cervi has rak- | vote. 2 p ‘ ed Johnson from stem to stern with | But if the vote comes out in ho“r‘:?‘:; g 1;5235L;?:ste:en::r Ur;-n i ti record in |force, it's in the b: Imm £ Dis GKLRUAKGE JIENE . a0 ¢ £ bag o nah than 216 million kilowatt-hours Merry-Go-Round r ;. Mrs. Pekovich accompanied him. Joe Sadlier was aboard the steamer Yukon on his way to the States ! ‘Thursdays. — | the Senate. Cervi has dug up ev-l ot By DREW PEARSON {erv vote cast by Johnson and is REMINDER Yo S AL T — fiss s nailing him embarrassingly On| . i o0 gen arthur Van-| Empire wantads get resultst (Continued from Page Ome) them. ks S 52 01 d o -| The battle is tho wougnest John- | { est Bank in Alaska !son has had in his long career. Kls\ chances are very uncertain. Polls show a touch-and-go situation.! erful organizat'ons in kev stoles,t ind, in the cvent Truman ioses, of Crossword Puzzle 1891—0ver Half a Centfury of Banking—1948 (he national .mocratic mirchinery | . 40, € 8| A R are at stak: iv these tests. Also, two years go, contrary to the| , (ACROSS bR e Bl | national trend, - Colorado gave( 4 Drove of cattle 4. Light 1tth= AlS nsif7ins (e concern of the|smashing majorities to liberal Dem- ' 3 ;};f, s SR BlUIR e ) ssimos are twe fac- s. lentury plant 45 Al6 » ? It looks bad for Jofinson. ] 15 Antique 4N, s i) 8 ciced” voters, niunifest in every im- e d in 5 jors T|R| a .~ T | pet g m;: Pt:;; 52: la‘c)ul;‘r BADGER MELEE el rridccs Town in Ohit E | wohl 1SS " It 5 | 7 " i e 1 $ : Ralph M. Immell is making Automobile = s crusading Representative Bees e | inings eqaally unhappy for the Old | gl {3k ror LiE afety ”ms“ S e L bo | Guard G.OP. bosses in Wisconsin. | " ‘a'u-n. Bl coes, thes cer- | 27 Rew q 2 A A tall, striking veteran of both| 3y )ifly English a B -’ tainty. Au)(hln,-ca‘nhhapi:;-dl. :(l:\:nwmd Wik and. re JoF picgtas P . ole Oxes or Re'.t Eezfl;a.l .,fi’;{b“‘f‘,,,’;n’ cv;’k.,; have-n | Ve he has what looks like a :';:r:;-fil_\m' Tt Solution of Yesterday's Puzzle ey € s NV A | winning grip on the Republican Form of brake i, Pigpen fuki x COMMERCIAL SAvas »‘”_{f“g ::):;:tc s ave | BUDernatorial nomination. Like | 37. Chief Norse e °°WIN : ?::S‘;:“"‘ N Ay, wo I ses L - v god . One of the ~ e " | Cervi, Immell is aggressively carry- | o5 o Lo T e il . Posiskkan 6. Cut of meat Colorado and Wisconsin. In the ;o pic fignt to the opposition and gl S T apuunl = former a militant young Democrat is aggressively challenging an uld boss, and in the latter a two-fisted progressive has an Old Guard Re- publican machine on the ropes. 3 [e . Photographic devel mincing no words about them. Naming names, Immell is blasting state G.O.P. leaders as reaction-| aries and advocating & detailed list of reforms. In his numerous . Scene of action _ Interprets: C. 0. BENSEL as a palt-ap suuscrar W THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE is invited to be our guest THIS EVENING Moisture . Brazilian g et e e —— VETERANS OF FOREIGN WARS Taku Post No. 8339 Meets first and third Post Hall, Seward Street. Visiting Comrades Welcome. V] METCALFE, Commander; WILLIAM H. SHERLOCK, Adjut- ant. Widest Selection of LIQUORS PHONE 399 “Say 1t With Flowers” but “SAY IT WITH OURS!” Juneau Florists PHONE 311 The Erwin Feed Co. Office in Case Lot Grocery PHONE 784 HAY, GRAIN, COAL and STORAGE Call EXPERIENCED MEN Alaska JANITORIAL Service CONKLE and FOLLETTE Phone Red 559 STEVENS? LADIES’—MISSES’ READY-TO-WEAR Seward Street Near Third Alaska Music Supply Arthur M. Uggen, Manager Planos—Muxieal Instrunents and Supplies Phone 206 Second and Seward HEINKE GENERAL REPAIR SHOP Warfield's Drug Stere (Formerly Guy L. Smith Drugs) NYAL Family Remedies HORLUCK’S DANISH ICE CREAM Huichings Ecnomy Markel MEATS—GROCERIES FREE DELIVERY PHONES 553—92—95 The Charles W. Carier WEDNESDAY, -SEPTEMBER | MOUNT JUNEAU LODGE NO. 147 1948 SECOND and FOURTH Monday of each month in Scottish Rite Temple beginning at 7:30 p. m. WILLIS R. BOOTH, Worshipful Master; JAMES W LEIVERS, Bec-sury. @ B.P.0.ELKS Meeting every Wednesday at 8P. M. Visiting brothers wel- come, JOSEPH H. SADLIER, Exalted Ruler. W. H, Secretary. g o8 e S T e e H. S. GRAVES The Clothing Man LEVPS OVERALLS for Boys i ) Bert’s Food Center Grocery Phones 104—105 Meat Phones 39539 Deliveries—10:15 A. M. 2:15 — 4:00 P. M. "The Rexall Store” Your Reliable Pharmacists BUTLER-MAURC Public Accountant Andttor Tax Counseser Stmpson 81dg. Phone 77 Ideal Paint Shop FPhone 549 - PFred W. Wendt _— Juneau’s Finest Liquor Store ] BAVARD'S Phone 689 The Alaskan Botel Newly Renovated Reomw at Reasenable Rates PHONE BINGLE 0 PHONE 136 PHONE 5656 everage Co. Card Beverage Co. |' | fhomas Hardware Co. PAINTS — OILS PHONE 216—DAY or NIGHT Bufiders’ and Shelf tor or SODA POP HARDWARE Wilulu;—Allo—-flMe—GMSS- { minglon Typewriters SOLD and SERVICED by IDEAL GLASS CO. | | i J. B. Burford & Co. 538 Willoughby Avenue 0w Desestep i Wees by Opp.lsz:fhrdyoll Co." o-i—l" 3 DON ABEL PHONE 633 FORD AGENCY (Authorized Dealers) GREASES — GAS — OIL BOGGAN Flooring Contracior Laying—Vinishing Oak Fleors CALL 209 Casler’s Men's Wear Pormerly SABIN'S NUNN-BUSH SHOES STETSON HATS Quality Work Clothi.g 5 P speeches he is tellingly relating a i money 4 = COLORADO RODEO Civil War episode to get over his | B TS Presexit this eoupon to the hox office of the Complete Outitter for Mea The Co.crado crusader is Tugenc | point that a big change is needed | Lump of earth Cervi. A stocky, bustling, ¢x-|in the state’s management. This e gt mfl'm- mm newspaperman who was born in a is Immell’s story: L \n: timbe miner’s cabin, Cervi has set the| During one of General McClel- | Pikelike fish and receive TWO TICKETS to see: l. W cms state on its ear by his slashing lan's long periods of inaction, "\““*l‘i'““w‘e’.’l" e i e . campaign against Sen. Ed John- | Lincoln wrote him the following sid m Y 0 : Cleaning . The conservative Democratic boss “Dear Gen : lement il n eral ipleinel Pegera: 1a. ~12¢ per Person | of Colorado, Johnson, at 64, is seeking a third term in the Sen- ate., Tall, hulking and slow in mevement and speech, he was un- decided for a long time whether to run. It's probably he now wish- es he hadn't in view of the tough going he has encountered from Cervi. The young militant has spared no punches. Throughout, Cervi has carried the fight to his old oppon- “If you don't intend to use your army, could I borrow it for a while?” Immell's biggest problem is over- confidence in his ranks. Obvious- ly in the lead, his supporters may take too much for granted. The | G.O.P. machine is unquestionably scared and in trouble. But it's | well-heeled and if the vote is light | has a chance to skim through. Re- | publican leaders are no | makin o, Wild animal PHONE 14—THE ROYAL BLUE CAB (0. and an insured cab WILL CALL FOR YOU and ! RETURN YOU to your home with our compliments. ] WATCH THIS SPACE—Your Name'May Appear! . He whom Hamlet knew well suarrEws SANITARY MEAT ( FOR BETTER MEATS 13—PHONES—49 ETM il d Junean Motor Co. Foot of Main Strees DELIC]()US CREAM hw—qlthl it by same J uneau Dairies, Inc. Chas. G. Warner Co. HOME GROCERY Phone 146 Home Liquor Stere—Tel. 000 American Meat — Phene 38 ————————————————————————————————————— —