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Newspaper Page Text
THE NOME DAILY NUGGET GEO. S MAYNARD. Editor RUSSELL G. MAYNARD, ’anager. Published every evening except Sunday by the NOME PUBLISHING COMPANY, Nome, Alaska. SUBSCRIPTION RATES Delivered by carrier in Nome, Little Creek, and Sunset Creek, for $2.00 per month. By mail postage paid outside of Nome and vicinity, $1.50 month. Subscribers will coniei a favor if they will promptly notify the Of fice of any failure or irregularity it the delivery of their papers. MEMBER OF ASSOCIATED PRESS The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for republica tion of all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited in this paper and also the local news published herein. Entered in the Post Office in Nome as Second Class matter. PRICE FIXING IS MONOPOLISTIC The principle enunciated by Federal Judge Davis of St. Louis in an adverse decision on coal price fixing is logical consistent and bound to prevail in the end—which should be soon. Judge Davis finds that the recovery act prohibits “monopoly or monopolistic practices. He finds that price fixing is monopolistic and therefore contrary to the identical act under which it has been permitted not only in the coal rode, but in reality or effect, in numerous other codes, He finds specifically, in the case at issue, that "underselling is not unfair competition as the term has always been under stood.’ When the recovery bill was debated in Congress twenty months ago Senator Borah contended that its passage, with the relaxation of the anti-trust laws permitted, inevitably would mean price fixing. There were efforts at assurance to the contrary, and the country was given to understand that consumers would be protected in the matter. But many of the codes submitted by the various trades and industries carried provisions for price fixing or its equivalent and, in most instances, such codes were officially accepted. Just this month the NRA gave permission for continuance of the coal code and the price fixing it contained. But if the re covery act is to be extended at this session of Congress, price fixing will have to be reconsidered. EXPORT OUTLET DESIRABLE There is one phase of the Alaska salmon packing indus try, and a very important one which we have inadvertantly overlooked during the last month in which time The Seward Gateway has been endeavoring single-handed—with no as sistance nor cooperation from any Alaska newspaper—to present the other side of this so-called problem in our fisher ies, which politicians have kept aflame. We have reference to the desirability of an export out let to take care of any exportable surplus that might develop from time to time. It is true that there is a protective tariff with reference to salmon produced in British Columbia, Japan and Siberia, and while importations from those countries have in the past proved a very serious menace, the greatest problem is the dealing with trade in other countries. With the increasing costs of both labor and material due to codes and the voluntary payments for wages which MUSICAL STRINGS MANDOLIN. VIOLIN. GUITAR. BANJO NEW SUPPLY VIA AIRPLANE NOME DRUG STORE "Cappy McDougall, Proprietor Telephone Main 95 Opposite Telephone Office ONE SIP AND YOULL KNOW CRAB ORCHARD is a genuine Kentucky Bourbon naturally aged in charred oak and bottled straight from the barrel. ALASKA LIQUOR STORE Opposite Telephone Office ROUST AIRWAYS MEMBER OF THE ALASKA AIR TRANSPORT ASSOCIATION When You Travel, Fly in our New And Comfortably Heated Cabin Planes_For Rates, Any Place, Any Time, Call Tlie ROUST AIRWAYS BASES AT NOME AND CANDLE in many instances is considerably above that paid in other countries, salmon packers are automatically barred from meeting prices in world trade circles. This means that they must be dependent entirely on the distribution and consump tion within our own borders, irrespective of business condi tions or prices obtainable.—Seward Gateway. THE NATION GAINS When the Chamber of Commerce of the United Stales admits that business is getting better there must be some thing to it. The conservatism of this organization, and its consistent opposition to administration policies, effectively prevent it from unwarranted optimism. In the past four months, according to estimates of this organization and the American Federation of Labor, about 700,000 men have been added to industrial payrolls. With ] unemployment figures near the 20,000,000 mark, there’s still j a long way to go before anyone can be proud of the record j but a start seems to have been made on the road to recovery. ] Labor leaders lament the fact that prices are rising more rapidly than wages and that incomes, which have remained stationary, are actually less today than they were at the bot tom of the depression. This is a condition which, given time, will be corrected; strikes and violent measures right now might give the nation a set-back in which all that had been sained in the first Quarter of the year would be lost. Bremerton’s participation in a return to better times for tlie nation will be slight. Prosperity for this city de pends on factors which do not directly affect the nation at large. Fortunately, present naval policies insure good busi j ness conditions to parallel improvement in the country at 1 large. Better times for the nation will help Bremerton by pro viding jobs for workers who fail to find a place here. Jobs anywhere mean fewer men on relief rolls, and the city can spend its money more effectively if the hundreds existing by public support are taken back into industry.—Bremerton Searchlight. DID YOU EVER STOP TO THINK? By Edson R. Waite, Shawnee, Oklahoma This is an old story, but true today as always. The success of a city is measured by the prosperity of its citizens. When the citizens work as one for better business to build the city, nothing can stop its progress. When the merchants stop advertising, the citizens stop buying. W7hen people stop buying, the merchants stop selling. When merchants stop buying, the manufacturer stops making. When the manufacturer stops making, many people stop working. When many people stop working, they stop earning— j and when they stop earning, nearly all business stops. Merchants should advertise and people should buy. When they buy, the manuafacturers can sell. When the manufacturers can sell, many people can earn. 5 When people can earn, they will have money to spend. LET’S HAVE BUSINESS AS USUAL ! HATS, COSTUME JEWELRY FOUNDATION GARMENTS AND COTTON BLOUSES TUST ARRIVED BY PLANE MILDREDS SHOPPE NOME HARBOR LIGHTERAGE COMPANY Agents For HYDRAULIC SUPPLY MFC. COMPANY Designers, Fabricators, and Erectors of HYDRAULIC MINING EQUIPMENT Steel Slip Joint Pipe, Hydraulic Giants, Gravel Elevators, Gates and Valves, Penstocks And Syphons, Steel Tanks Flumes, Water Lifts, Well Casing, Flumes & Riffles WE WILL ORDER YOUR REQUIREMENTS AT NO EXTRA COST TO YOU FOR OUR SERVICES For General Information and Estimates Call At NOHALICO OFFICE Phone “NOHALICO” NOW IS THE TIME TO START GETTING SNOW PICTURES WITH THE NEW CINE EIGHT MOVIE CAMERA MADE BY EASTMAN KODAK CO. You will be both delighted and surprised with the pictures you get. And its so simple to oper ate—Not in the least bit compli cated. COME IN AND LET US SHOW YOU This remarkable Kodak—Sold at the nationally advertised price—S34.50 AGENTS FOR EASTMAN KODAKS AND FILM PIONEER DRUG CO. NOME’S NEW AND MODERN DRUG STORE MIROW AIR SERVICE Nome, Alaska. Fast And Economical Passenger And Freight Service To All Parts Of Alaska MINERS AND MERCHANTS BANK OF ALASKA NOME, ALASKA. Has established temporary quarters in the former office of W. J. Rowe Transfer, and is carrying on its business as usual. WE SOLICIT YOUR ACCOUNT Northern Light & Power Co. AND Alaska Telephone & Telegraph Co. Second Avenue and Lane’s Way LIGHT, POWER AND ELECTRICAL SUPPLIES LOCAL AND LONG DISTANCE TELEPHONE SERVICE NOW IN SEATTLE IT’S HOTEL MAYFLOWER N 4th AT OLIVE CHAS. W. HUNLOCK, Manager \ Outstanding In Dependability - SERVICE TO ALL PARTS OF ALASKA, WITH FAST AND DEPEND ABLE AIR TRANSPORTATION. rn T A rw* FLY IN WARM CABIN |\l /\ I PLANES J| WITH EXPERIENCED PILOTS Consult Our Office For Rates FAIRBANKS —ALASKA— NOME