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t § 5 / THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, THURSDAY, FEB. 18, 19:32. ‘qu(l\' of the Bible text will be made and the com- Daily Alaska Em ,nr(’ itk Bl o 8210 il o submit the copy for the new publication p| The King James's Bible required a longer time JOHEN W. TROY - - - EDITOR AND MANAGER ;. 150 fixed for the American version. The| unday by _the | former was undertaken in 1870 by 67 English schiolars | Py e pve except Sunday Ry _ tae E rica er AT NTING. GOMPANT at Second and Main |collabo W American experts. Nea Streets, Juncau, Alaska. years was required to complete the New Tes i s c and 14 years were devoted to the Old Testament Ente h 0! Office In Juneau as Second Class J . 2 | e e The American Standard Bible was published in S z g 1921. Dean Weigle of Y Divinity School, and SUBSGRIPTION AATES: Chairman of the American Standard Bible Com- jer In Juneau, Douglas, Treadwell and iy o e Tx i Dellvered by coane for 81 25 per month & | mittee of the Int jonal Council of Religious e s T stven he Lol g T advance, | Education, announced recently that further revision $6.,00; one month. In 5 W e necessary, “as English usage changes and modern By e Eusiness > o or irreguls esearch in biblical literature progresses” Each year, in the del a Oftices ourse, brings to light valuable documeuts to aid —_— - E be research workers that were not available to the 1 OF ASSOCIATEUL PRE A £ B i s x BECTRLE aAtIRA b g o compiled the King James's version, use for repub n of all news dispatches ‘\;ui“'“d”‘" e they make the modern versions more e s praraigg Hsp e authoritative they also add to the scope of their| ASKA { GUAWANTEED TO BE LARGER e NY OTHER FL}BL\CAT!ON | “LEAD POISONED” DUCKS. This is not about the hunter who, when arrested | killing ducks out of season, 1 himself with the old alibi that he didn't| them, but that the birds had died from lead | Comes a queer tale from. Minnesota rally thousands of ducks died in a short| of time upon a lake where they were feeding | e numbers. There was nothing about the| » indicate the cause of demise and scientists | ted to make an investigation. They found gizzards of the ducks contained a quantity Hunters frequenting the lake had literally | {by a game warden for | defen hoo pe oning | space lead S50 LR - ¢ 1 mET " . + e . | bertson ummaries so many were i .\4‘ .‘n‘HI ]0“ its lmh;ar-rumeihllz-;denL pem;:.: AiMhg ut. Also the very. clever OUR ROAD CO-OPERATION. |and the birds, digging In for food, had ‘eaten the | onerison Score Pads. ATIESANIY] B e |lead. The inv tors asserted that the evidence|jjitie folding at 15 cents gives e bt ubcommittee of |showed the 1 bottom contained tons of lead. a gquick answer to ‘the questions Recently House Agr iral Subcommitice of | mo?l e tee on Appropriations tied up all of the | st asl g way Punds in Alaska and lim- | B i preciate one of these on the table. 3 el S e Gl No Confiscation. THE NUGGET SHOP.. adv. jted expenditur from the 1932-33 allotment 1o PR EEadl S $350,000. Before taking that step it was .u|\",~, d by | (Boston News Bitreau.) SHRINE ANNOUNCEMENT one of its members, Robert G. Simmons, Nebraska| 1. .05 Chief Justice Marshall declared the — Republican, that he had spent seven weeks “prowl- |power to tax is the power to destroy. For a while| The third of the series of Shrine ing” around Alaska last year and had found outl|back it med that this might come true as to at|pances, to which invitations have that the Territory had never paid one nickle toward |least part of the production of electrical energy. been mailed, will be neld Friday, the cons on and maintenance of its roads. Every | flat rate of a half-cent a kilowatt hour was|pFebruary 26th. Mu by Hunter's cent, he said, has come from Federal appropria- d at Washington. The idea was that this|serenaders. Refreshments will bé > oA theoretically raise $350.000.000 a year. As a —adv. tions, matter of fact, it would largely be destructive since|— — idus unexpended balances in the Forest High-|i; would amount literally to terrific taxation on | . way Funds authorized for Alaska amounted to $834.- | the electricity generated |Ask Your Druggist The regular ar jonme! ry e Con- Much of the rent sold to large-scale TS | 000. The regular apportionment from the ‘c“" a : d %o tar - use What to Do for gressional appropr: for the fiscal year 1932-33 |[now commands much over a cent a kilowatt would have been about $960,000. The total of all[hour—which would involve a 50 per cent tax. Con- VARICOSE VEINS authorized funds, there e. would have amounted 'ublo is sold at a %m]l:-c(’n[ or even less, which s SR RIS S0 Y ild mean prohibitive 1 of 100 peri G0l o .o Mo Drug Go. of Junk to $1,794000. Mr. Simmons's intervention " lor more. That would simply drive such large users | ~Butler Mairo Drug Co. s consequently, the difference between that|eiiner o prod their own curi or turning | '“‘;(‘” At R s, total and the $350,000, or $1,444,000. to such compe as oil, gasoline, gas or coal. | ]I"J': he iEiane ghikly, v s It the Nebraska solon was concerned about es-| That has now heen formally recognized at Wash- | 1e bod¥ Wi FOORes FERERC CO ing a reputation for economy for himself, he |ington in the declaration by the acting chairman|ZAtes YOUT S8 SEEREEE S need not hav \e about it in 50 expensive a manner (of the House Ways and Means Committee that su&‘ln;‘w\< l‘)m\nt binas kinRlG Pollel Territ 2iving the Committee a nax- |8 flat tax would be “confiscatory,” and that there- |33 il o 4 %o the Territory. By giving the Commitiee 8 nak- ) _" "~ Sely 3 “Then bind your leg with a band- rative of his Alaska “prowling,” he could have en-|fore he would propose & 5 pertcent to 10 per vemty o "l e “wide and long o E % S sed it, and con- |consumption tax on current used. The contrast as|'® oy 4 e S isrkasdy sikie lightened, enter .m\‘v(\ and amused it, and b between 5@10 per cent consumption and 50@100 enough to g e h.)('.;n‘mxn vince unshakably of his personal thrift which,|no"cont “(s self-evident, The former may mean 4:”‘;\“ ”c” indeed, has all of earmarks of having the o il 1ok 1 the 1 might mean death, h hat's of an Edinh - arhiar g N . shldiak ,\uv the blood flows in the veins. ance of an Edink brew, . The new burden on consumers at a 5 per cen “Any veins broken? Any ulcers? 1t would have been diverting, at Jeast, if he had |to 10 per cent excise percentage would not be|. U8 VIR BRECIL So¥os x‘[(vh" informed the Commitfee how he managéd to travel |staggering. With the average household bill around [Emerald Oil wil . SRR S i : | p ™ o |up. Make your leg as good as new thousands of miles s he prowled in search of real |$ a month it would mean at most less thanj faets about Alaska. He ought to have told it how he [* ‘}r‘l“ a (1 in a time of Tm\\-"\ need. » zh he acting chairman—who once served on the| is family traveled to, in and from Alaska 4 2 L (,l Wiy fre e 3 G sk o |forelen debt commission—truly says that never in almost exclusively on Government-owned and ope: is 16 years on the committee has it faced So un- ated boats and motor vehicles without the payment | of one nickle of transportation charges. The ex- ception was in the voyage from Bellingham, Wash. to King Cove on the Alaska Peninsula, which wa: made on a cannery company’s steamer, and that also pleasant a task. There must be new taxes, some of | them unpopular excise levies; and almost everybody thinks “the other fellow” should bear them. It is at least a refreshing relief to see a clear e of possible confiscation officially recognized such. NUGBET BRIDGE Ithe solution. PROBLEM NO. T Scuth (Dealer)— Spades—6, 4, 2 Hearts—A, K, Q, 10, 9, 8, 4, 3. Diamonds—A, Q. Clubs—None. w Spades—K, J, 10, Clubs—A, K, Q, 4, North— Spades—A, Q, Hearts—J, 7, 6, 5. Diamonds—38, 7. Clubs—8, 17, 5, 3 East— Spades—98, 8, 7, 3. Hearts—None. Diamonds—8, 5, 4, 3, Clubs—J, 10, 9, 6. Declaration—Six Hearts, doubled |by West and redoubled by North. We~‘ opens the King of Clubs. Problem—How shall South plan and play the hand? What is the dversaries best defense? This hand happened at a Boston | Whist Tournament and has been a favorite of Bridge Teachers in il- lustrating the “Elimination Play.’” Try it and save it and watch for It wont do your game 2 harm. e have received the new Cul- you needn't be ng it on your clothes. | “If Moene’s Emerald Oil doesn’t help you more than anything el you've ever tried, just bring it back and T gladly return your money.” —ady It doesn’t stail |afraid of get REGISTRATION OF VOTERS probably without even being charged the nominal g Registration Book for Registra- meal and berth rate tion of Voters, General Municipal That is, we admit, not in issue. But it is an| “Terrible Responsibilitv." Election to be held Tuesday, April interesting sidelight on this new authority on Al-| e x 5, 1932, will be opened Tuesday, asks 4 T 5 seeks’ “nrowling” w % 2 s 32, d remain open aska. Most of his seven weeks' “prowlin was done | (New Y Times.) March 1, 1932, an 4 . 1 some QOTRrI g o | until Saturday evening, March 26, from the cabin of some Government boat, or on the From the Foreign Office at Tokyo came a state- | 1932, hurricane deck of a owned and operated, distant from the ones Not more than one-s spent in Southe st motor car, also Government- on roads hundreds of miles that he so sharply criticised. enth of his Alaska stay was ska and sevenths of that ment echoing the one made to the Council of the {League of Nations by the Japanese delegate. He |said, and so did the Foreign Office, that the |League would assume “a terrible responsibility” if |it sought to ascertain the rights and wrongs of the action of Japanese Marines in Shanghai. Mr. Al time was spent .n fishing trips and sight-seeing, rather than in a genuine study of our roads and |Sato went on to speak of the danger that such the source of funds ‘with which they are being built, | SOUrse might bring on a “war.” From Tokyo L : e i = % X it is asserted once more that “Japanese military declaration that the Territory does not €o-|oefigials are not thinking of war.” This seems to operate in road construction and maintenance “nmnm that the Japanese, Government is more afraid utterly untrue. We do not charge that he deliber- of a definition—perhaps one reached by the League ately falsified. But the effect was the same because |of Nations—than of the thing itself. Anxiety to deny the name war to what the Japanese forces have done in China is obviously due to an accompanying he undertook to speak with authority based upon a personal investigation. American citizenship, twenty-one years of age, bona fide resident Territory of Alaska for one year, and the Town of Juneau, Alaska, continuously for six months im- mediately preceding said date of election are the qualifications re- quired. H. R. SHEPARD, City Clerk First publication, Feb. 17, 1932 Last publication, March 25, 1932, FUR SHUNNED BY TRIM NEW By DIANA MERWIN (Asscciated Press Fashion Editor) PARIS, Feb. 18. — Early spring coat devoid of fur and friv olity ar on the Champs Elyse Fifth Avenue are slim and trig and fur, if used at all, is| 1y applied. cality is the rule which gov- design. ne-color effects ple lines capable of being th many frocks indicate iical spring wraps to accom- poor pockethooks. Smart Wraps their simplicity, the new among the smartest seasor ick scarves tucked under collars. broad revers and snappy belts give a distinctive chic to the | effect Broad shoulders are the rule for street coats, waistlines are fitted to the without pinching, skirts ciently full to permit the free swinging walk of the modern woman. Sleeves in scme models are wide at the armpit, giving a ki- | o effect to the cut. blue and a bright rich sap- ue are favorite colors, while deep grey and 2 soft green seen. rfaced wools, 1 are the fav- fabrics for street wear. Another Model One of the smartest models is of soft dark blue wool designed with a guit collar, very broad revers and a gkirt having an inve: i the back. It is snapped to the figure with a narrow blue leather beit. Another model of grey wool has | a soft roll collar with a brilliant red protruding underneath and fucked into the belt. Three-quarter coats to wear with metching wool dresses also are| ng a bid for spring popularity. straightline blue wool models with ‘blue frocks trimmed in white and dark green and white | gns to accompany match- are beige also are pique twee ing frocks are among the offerings in the new length. ik o clie NOTICE The M. S. “Northland” will sail fromr Seattle on February 20th in- stead of Feb. 22nd. Make your freight reservations nccomnmy_ D. B. FEMME! | —ady, Agem i Not Only Cheaper but Better RICE & AHLERS CO. GOOD PLUMBING “We tell you in advance what job will cost” SPRING COATS rst wraps decigned for ver-|. s has produced in many |- ted box pleat| | NOTICE OF APPOINTMENT OF ADMINISTRATOR | All concerned avre_hereby notified that I, WINIFRED S. DAVIS, was appointed on January 20, 1932, by the United States Commissioner's and ex-officio Probate Court for the Territory of Alaska, Juneau Commissioner’s Precinet, as admin- istrator of the estate of H. C. (Davis, deceased, and that Letters of Administrtion therefor were duly issued to me on said day. All persons having claims against id estate are hereby required to present the same souchers within six (6) months from ‘he office of R. E. Robertson, 200 Seward Building, Juneau, Alaska. Dated at Juneau, Alaska, this 21st day of January, 1032 WINIFRED - 8. DAVIS, Administratrix of the estate of H. C. Davis, deceased. First publication, Jan. 21, 1932. Last publication, Feb. 18, 1932. Old papers for sale at The Empire. . SEE YURMAN New Fur Garments in New Styles Cleaning, Repairing, Remodeling | Yurman, the Furrier | Triangle Building LUDWIG NELSON | JEWELER ! | ‘Watch Repairing Brunswick Agency i FRONT STREET 1 i | | T ] You Can Save Money at Our Store SEE US FIRST | Harris Hardware Co. | Lower Front Street i WHY BE BALD Nobody really wants to be bald. Nobody really has to be bald | hair. Consult | NU-LIFE METHOD | Arctic Bldg., Upstairs, Room 1 | | Guardnteed 2 | SHEET METAL WORK PLUMBING | GEO. ALFORS PHONE 564 | REPAIR WORK NO JOB TOO SMALL Capital Electric Co. GARBAGE HAULED Reasonable Monthly Rates with proper | | e date of this notice, to me at| | now. A Healthy Scalp will grow | | | | i ELECTRICAL ||| . 1 PROFESSIONAL F raternal Societies Opt. D Graduate Loe Angeles Col- lege of Optometry and Opthalmology .. | orF - > J Gastineau Channc® ! Helene W.L. Albrecht | 2 PHYSIOTHERAPY (R | Massage, Electricity, Infra Red M,,e“: % Pe.v:" ot | Ray, Medical Gymnastics. Wednesd ® h t?t . | 410 Goldstein Buildmg ||, STy®CH BIEAS | Phone Office, 216 B/ A i = L3 L8 Visiting drothers QA A A O 1 T ® | welcome. | DRS. KASER & FREEBURGE! [ i Lol n ® | |M. 8. JORGENSEN, Exalted Rula | Blomgren Building { M. H. SIDES, Secretary. PHONE 56 4 ' Co-Ordinate Bod- Hours 9 am. to 9 pm, ,ies of Freemason- ° . “l ry Scottish Rite . ;| fs %finfii‘éfi‘“%’?‘x;“;" ! : | Dr. Charles P. Jenne 1 Gens iiant ng s | DENTIST 7:30 0. m. Scot- | Rooms 8 and 9 Valentine tish Rite Temple { Building WALTER B. HEISEL, Secretary i Telephone 176 ; : A g P LOYAL ORDER OF . MOOSE, NO. 700 [ Dr. J W Bayne ‘Meets Monday 8 p. m. | DENTIST Ralph Reischl, Dictator. | Rooms 5-6 Triangle Bldg. Legion of Moose No, 25 Office hours, 9 am. to 5 p.m. | [meets first and third Tussdays | Evenings by appointment G. A. Baldwin, Secretary and | Phone 321 Herder, P. O. Box 213, - . © " = s MOUNT JUNEAU LODGE NO. 147 " Second and fourth Mon- Dr. A. W. Stewart day of each month in DENTIST Scottish Rite Temple, d\, | Hours 9 a. m. to 6 p. m. | [beginning at 7:30 p. m. 2NN { SEWARD BUILDING JOHN J. FARGHER, 7 | Office Phone 469, Res. ¥ | ; : i Phone 276 i ::f::er, JAMES W. LEIVERS, Sec- ° — o L4 T = ° ORDEF, OF EAS1ERN STAR 5 - | Robert Slmpson : Second and Fourtn i g Tuesdays of each month, Glasses Fitted, Lenses Ground - —————————o at 8 o'clok. Scottish Rite Tempie. EDITH HOWARD, Worthy Mat- ron; FANNY L. ROB- INSON, Secretary. KNIGHTS OF COLUMRBUS JUNEAU-YOUNG Funeral Parlors | Licensed Funeral Directors and Embalmers Night Phone 1851 Day Phone 1: » . | Dr. Geo. L. Barton e kel CHIROPRACTOR ! eetings second and lact Hellenthal Building | SIRCAY E 180 - | NLY | Transient brothers urg- | O}FI'KEQS:::VI‘CDE_IODH‘ ! ed to attend. Council | SPHO'N'E %06 o ! Chambers, Fifth Street. 1. 3 . JOHN F. MULLEN, G. K. — H. J. TURNER, Secretary. 4 T - | DR. R. E. SOUTHWELL % T 5 | Optometrist—Optician | Our trucks go any place any | Eves Examined—Glasses Fitted | | | time. A tank for Diesel Oil | Room 7, Valentine Bldg. and a tank for crude oil save | Office Phone 484; Residence | | burner trouble. | Phone 338. Office Hours: §:30 | PHONE 149, NIGHT 148 | to 12; 1:00 to 5:30 ! I8 | RELIABLE TRANSFER | z o . | | | | NEW RECORDS {|| NEW SHEET MUSIC RADIO SERVICE 2 | | Dr.C. L. Fenton CHIROPRACTOR Kidney and Bowel Specialist Phone 581, Goldstein Bldg. FOOT CORRECTION Hours: 10-12, 1-5, 7-8 Expert. Radio Repairing Radio Tubes and Supplies JUNEAU MELODY HOUSE HEMLOCK WOOD Order Now at These Prices Full Cord . Half Cord Five Cords or over, $7.f 00 conl E. O. DAVIS TELEPHONE 584 1" YE SANDWICHE | | SHOPPE ‘ | Open 10 a.m. Till Midnight | ESTER ERBLAND | GEORGIA RUDOLPH ‘ HOTEL ZYNDA ELEVATOR SERVICE PAINTING DECORATING KALSOMINING ESTIMATES FURNISHED FREE First Class Work Guaranteed J. W. MEYERS TELEPHONE 2552 JUNEAU TRANSFER COMPANY DON'T BE TOO LIBERAL Moves, Packs and Stores Freight and Baggage Prompt Delivery of ALL KINDS OF COAL PHONE 48 17 PLAY BILLIARD | BURFORD’S Official figures give him the lie. Since road|desive to maintain that Japan has not violated her : g 3 S. ZYNDA, Prop. building was begun in a, Federal appropriations | A8reement, under the Kellogg treaty, to renounce P. R i e sy ‘m. il the Sim’ of "$1T830, and alw to seek a sehlemem of international TS y 1031 To the came dats |AiSPutes by “pacific means” Thus Japan herself R Aune 93 o the same date, |assumes the responsibility, which most people would ial funds ating $5,747,359.01 have been | think sufficiently terrible, of deciding that shoot- FIRE ALARM CALLS expended by the same Federal agencies that ex-|ing and bombing and burning in China are pacific — pended the Federal money, and in co-operation \\nh‘lvho last touch is to ask the neutrals to warn the 1-3 Third and Franklin, them. In-other words, for every $3 of public nmm-.\"“I:!}U\" not to Ilah’! 1-4 Front and Franklin. granted by Congress to Alaska to be expended by| These verbal quibbles can hardly be urged longer }-g 4 nté. near FGerry Way. 2 s o = 16 th' a grave face after the action of the League - ont, near Gross Apts, Federal road construction agencies in Alaska, the |Y Ternl;,-v has put up $1 to the same b()dl:‘\ for the |1 Setting up a commission of inquiry, and also after FOR INSURANCE 1-7 Front, opp. City Wharf, S " |the representations which have been made to Japan | 1-8 Front, near Saw Mill. Sopie purpose i {by Great Britain and France and the United States. | T o Congress has fixed a general policy for Federal |Indeed, assurances are now given at Tokyo that See H. R. SHEPARD & SON b Grogeurgy y otem co-operation for highway construction in the United |Japan will not oppose a survey under League aus- h Japan will not se ague aus 2-3 Willoughby, opp. Cash States, e g Alaska from it, although it in- ‘p‘(v whether in Manchuria or in Shanghai. She Telephone 4'09 B' M' Behrends Bank Bldg' 8 Cole's g(}niage.pp ecluded the tory in the Forest Highway sections|{may see in such a move something now actually to @ . 2-4 Front and Seward. of the same law. For States having less than mp‘h(‘l benefit. It might offer her a graceful way out 2-5 Front and Main. per cent unappropriated domain, the States or ‘nf a situation daily becoming meore diffic 2-6 Second and Main, |tary operations in China are costing mu 2-7 Fifth and Seward. some subdivision of them and the National Govern- ””" th '“ at of the War Off 2-8 Seventh and Main. 2 e estimates ¢ ar Office ment share costs on an equal basis. But in the! {trade has suftered severely gl 2-9 Fire Hall public land States the Federal percentage is raised | : il bt el : 3-2 Home Boarding House. 5 |exporters in Japan are beginning to wonder if the 3-3 Gastineau and Rawn by one-half of the percentage of the public domain, unappropriated and unreserved, where such domain is more than five per cent. Thus a € with 70 per cent of its land in the public domain would get an additional 35 per cent to supplement the original 50 per cent. If this same rule were applied to Alaska's road the Federal Government would pay 99 per cent road construction and maintenance costs, of since domain. Thus, instead of the current ratio of $1 of Territorial money to $3 of Federal, Alaska would | have to furnish only $1 for each $100 made available | by Congress. This is not contended for by Alaska However, Congress ought to deal more fairly with the Terri- | tory than was done by the Commitiee to which Mr. Simmons made his “exposure.” TO REVISE AMERICAN BIBLE A revised American Standard Bible will be pub- | lished in 1941, During the nd ufl years a careful | |game is worth the candle. Then there is the \,xmstnk.\bl- injus to Japan's repute in the world {threatened by a turning of the moral sense and | judgment against her. This no nation can afford The s rav 3 i 3 | 8 an. affor e sure way to get ¢ in this world is |recklessly to defy, least of all, Japan. It would| t L y 1: dlongh ti 36 S mean for her shouldering a truly terrible responsi- | 0 save some money ALL the time. isn't bility. i 98 | per cent of the Territory is unappropriated -uhl‘c‘“k"‘““ or the kidnappers of the gangsters don't get | Still, it's the vou—(Buffalo Courier-Express.) | Remember how enthusiastically we |There?” What we need now is a spi |entitled “Come Acros (Toledo Blade. A Japanese ultimatum, whatev: the answer 4 to it, is a declaration of war.—(Louisville Courier~ oy B. M. Behrends Bank ‘The npaval lmitation conference should be at Shanghai this year.—(Dayton, It is not exactly war, but it looks |Ping-pong every day.—(Boston Transcript.) less home of the free if the Prohibition Ohio, Journal.. necessary to make large deposits, as small and frequent additions to your account will make your bank balance grow amazingly fast. held ) OLDEST BANK IN ALASKA like ‘Way. Second and Gold. Seventh and Gold. Fifth and Kennedy. Ninth, back of power We pay four per cent on savings accounts 47 Tweltth, BPR. garage. 3 . 4-8 Twelfth and Will 3 compounded twice a year 4-9 Home Grocery. Seater Tract. HAAS Famous Candies The Cash Bazm With the coal if it comes from our place. For our coal goes farther and gives a more even and satisfying heat. If your coal bin is running low, better have us send you a new supply to prove our statement. Our draying service is always the best and we specialize in Feed. D. B. FEMMER Phone 114 JUNEAU CABINET and DETAIL MILL- WORK CO. Front Street, next to Warner Machine Shop CABINET and MILLWORK GENERAL CARPENTER * WORK GLASS REPLACED IN AUTOS Estimates Furnished Upon Request THE JuNEAUu LAUNDRY Franklin Street, between Front and Second Streets PHONE 359 W.P. Johnson FRIGIDAIRE DELCO LIGHT PRODUCTS MAYTAG WASHING MACHINES GENERAL MOTORS RADIOS Phone 17 Front Street Juneau ———————— FINE Watch and Jewelry REPAIRING at very reasonable rates WRIGHT SHOPPE PAUL BLOEDHORN