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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, MONDAY, OC 9, I933 Daily Alaska Empire ROBERT W. BENDER GENERAL MANAGER despair, ened form “of pacific endeavor that cannot but command respect. Bluntly challenging Judge Moore's doctrine of Mr. Baker reaches out farther and castigates lall those who take refuge in cynical refusal to risk Published every evening except Sunday by Streets, Juneau, Alaska, the | progressive international policies. EMPIRE_PRINTING COMPANY at Second and Main Significantly, he wrote: Entered in the Post Office in Juneau as Second Class | matter. SUBSCRIPTION RATES. Dellvered by carrier In Juneau and Douglas for $1.25 per month. By mall, postage pald, at the following rates: One year, in advance, $12.00; six months, In advance, $6.00; one month, in advance, $1.26. Subscribers will confer a favor it they will promptly notify the Business Office of any failure or Irregularity i the delivery of their papers. Telephone for Editorial and Business Offices, 374. MEMBER OF ASSOCIATED PRESS. The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to tho | use for republication of all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited in this paper and also the local news published herein. ALASKA CIRCULATION GUARANTEED TO BE LARGER THAN THAT OF ANY OTHER PUBLICATION. JOHN AWAKENS. Old whiskey for sale now, delivery after repeal, that is the mission of New York's newest exchange —the American Liquor Exchange, Inc. ago it opened for business and old John Barleycorn awakened from his 14-year sleep, rubbed the cobwebs out of his eyes, and xocngmmd among old friends of the pre-Volstead era such personages Barbara, Belle Henderson, Old Grandad, Old Taylor and Old McBrayer. These and many other brands were listed on the exchange's bulletin boards. No liquor stock is carried on nd just now. As a starter, trading is done in w bonded ‘liquor, primarily No longer is the price of liquor to be learned only ! by stealthy inquiry into forbidden byways. Now the price is just as much an avowed fact as the price of spot cotton, or any other commodity. Whiskies ranged from $38.50 to $46 per case with one well- known brand of rye, distilled in 1914, quoted at $10 a gallon. For the ordinary individual a warehouse receipt, of course, withdrawal the liqu represented must await the repeal of the Eighteenth Amend- ment. Immediate withdrawal may be made, how- ever, if the buyer falls within the licensed classes, including druggists. The exchange does not own the goods it sells 1t merely acts as middleman. It charges a com- mission of 25 cents per gallon, 75 cents a case, to the buyer and a like charge to the seller BARLEYCORN of BAKER CHALLENGES CYNICS. A new note, or if not new one that has not been heard in this country for a long time, was sounded by Newton D. Baker, America’s great Secretary of War during the World War, and practical idealist, in defending organizations and pacts for peaceful settlement of international dis- putes. Not often in recent months have they had kind words spoken for them. Mostly comments on internationalism have been bitterly cynical, and the trend has been scaling down of the postwar ideals generally accepted by the liberals of this and other countries. One of the most serious discussions on the cynical side was from the pen of Judge John Bassett Moore in Foreign Affairs quarterly some months ago. He had lost faith in international movements to curb aggressive and warlike nations and argued that nationalism is the only out for the United States. In the next, and latest number of the same journal, Mr. Baker argues the case anew for inter- national conciliation and the peace machinery of postwar days. It is a document that is timely and ought to dispel some of the pessimism about the world outlook for peace. He recalls many telling arguments for optimism in world affairs. He sets down the positive gains that have been made in the prevention of war. He restates the services of the Briand-Kellogg Pact and the League of Nations. | He is not a professional pacifist and does not argue from that angle, but he upholds an enlight- A few days' as Old' i ehouse receipts for rye and Bourbon whiskies. | Tomorrow Nig[\t! SCANDINAVIAN-AMERICAN The world is cursed by its common fears. It is made better by its great faiths. The agencies so far devised have in them the seeds of growth. Lawyers with their doubts and statesmen with their policies may en- cumber this spirit and delay its achieve- ments. Some of the steps it eagerly takes | may have to be retracted and fresh starts | made, but if this is ever to be a world in which nations, like civilized men, are gov- + erned by moral restraints, it must be fought for in this spirit. Those who share this faith and work in this hope have no apology to make to their own or future governments. There is a potent tonic in such expressions. The public’s ideals have been sorely tried in | disillusionment of the past few years. They serve to check tendencies to isolate the United States from | ‘lhe rest of the world, to cause us to study policies | ‘and actions that might make it more difficult to ‘patch the shattered fabric of international con- ciliation. World statesmanship, after all, has not been a complete failure since the Versailles Treaty. It has accomplished much that is worth retention, that has proved its serviceability in maintaining peace and averting war. | | | | | “Boston Banks Anxious to Make Loans” says |a newspaper of that city. Maybe Gen. Johnson ;‘hns been speaking soft words to them. | carpenters used to be the only folks that did| any chiseling. Nowadays many are suspected. In the years to come man will attain greater wisdom, according to scientists. be just as foolish as he is toda A Caribbean gale has forced Cuban hostiles to suspend activities. Boy, if those marines just sailing for Havana ever have to land, the trouble-makers will wish the gale had never blown over. Adventure Revived. (Daily Olympian.) One of' the strongest of all the habits possessed by the modern American seems to be his habit of holding reunions. Apparently there is something about the bonds which are forged when men unite in a common cause that the years do not weaken very much. And of all the reunions of the year, the most interesting must surely have been that of the International Sourdough Association, held recently in Los Angeles. This outfit is composed of men who went to Alaska in the great gold rush of '98. Its members are not, in all cases, wealthy; for every man who struck it rich in the Klondike, and came back with a fortune, there were thousands who got nothing but experience for their pains. But that, perhaps, is precisely why these men find annual reunions worth their while. A reunion of this sort celebrates the sharing of a great experience. The men who attend it are men who are set apart from the rest of us by virtue of their having participated in something so stirring and exciting that they find it worth talking about all the rest of their lives. And the value of that experience is the same whether they got rich or not. As a matter of fact, it is a question whether the typical gold-rush veteran ever, in the bottom of his heart, really cared very much about getting a lot of gold. He thought he did, of course; he said he did, and he acted as if he did. But the common sharing of a mad desire to get rich quick would not be enough to bring hun- dreds of men together each year in a great re- union. If it did we.would witness annual conven- tions of the veterans of the bull market of 1929, No, the gold-seekers of Alaska, like the- men who opened up South Africa, California, Australia and the rest of the gold fields, were really after something else. Life suddenly gave them the chance to step outside of the ordinary routine, the chance to try out a new horizon and enter a new world. (They found that curious something which we call 'Adventure; they found excitement, danger. and a kind of freedom that most of us will never know. Once upon a time the earth opened up for them and took on a guise we stay-at-homes never saw. It made them rich in experience, if not in purse. The feeling seems to be growing throughout the country that Hooey Long will not need binoculars to see his finish.—(Indianapolis Star.) Cuba suffers from an overproduction of re- bellions and it has more plots than Edgar Wallace ever had.—(Chicago News.) T T T the | And he'll probably | MENUS of the_ DAY By MRS. ALEXANDER GEORGF: | BEEF STEW WITH DUMPLIN | (Dinner for Six) The Menu Beef Stew With Dumplings Mashed Sweet Potatoes Buttered Green Beans Bread Butter Cabbage Salad in Gelatin Date Bars Coffee Beef Stew With Dumplings | 2 pounds beef round, 1-3 cup flour, 2 tablespoons chopped on- ‘Aom tablespoons chopped cel- |ery, salt, % 2 T. [ Cut beef |Roll in flour. | kettle. beef, onions and celery. Add rest of the ingredients. Cover and cook slowly for 1 1-3 hours. dumplings. ! Dupmpiings 2 cups flour, 2 teaspoons baking | powder, % teaspoon salt, milk. Mix flour, baking powder and salt. Add milk. Drop portions | of soft dough from tip of spoon on top hot ccoking mixture. Cover | tightly and cock 5 minutes. Care- fully remove dumplings and pour | stew onto platter and surround with dumplings. Cabbage Salad in Gelatin 1 package lemon flavored gela- tin mixture, 1 2-3 cups boiling water, % cup vinegar, % cup su- gar, % teaspoon salt, % teaspoon paprika, 1 cup chopped cabbage into one inch pieces. Heat fat in decp les, and stir until it has dissolved Add rest of ingredients and pour into glass mold. Chill until stiff. with salad dressing. SUNDAY TEA FOR COMPANY Crab Salad Toasted Ch Sandwiches Orange Sherbet Angel Food Cake Coffee Salted Nuts ——,——— BULBS BULES BULBS We now have on hand our main supply of ' BULBS of the very choicest varieties and of the high- est quality. Daffodil Bulbs are much lower in price this yeas adv. JuU AU FLORIS' | | FINE Watch and Jewelry Repairing at very reasonable rates ! PAUL BLOEDHORN o . The money you spend on a washwoman 52 times a year; the cost of soap and wash- ing utensils that have to be frequently replaced; the wear and tear on clothes far greater by home methods; the possible illness due to unsanitary processes or over- taxing of your own vitality .« . just add these up and then compare the result with our low-priced laundry serv- " Alaska Laundry Add and quickly brown the | % cup chopped pimiento stuffed| olives, % cup chopped sweet pick-| WRIGHT SHOPPE || 4 tablespoons fat, 1 teaspoon | tablespon paprika, 4 cups| Add the | ar | 1 cup t Pour water over gelatin mixture Mandarin Ball Add" vinegar and seasonings. Cool. |latcst Unmold,on lettuce leaves and top 3 | casting C(‘RDOVANS T0 ATTEND DANISH-AMERICAN FETE (Cordova Times) enture that many dream comparatively few ac- ccmplish is being consummated this ter Buhl flnd his fam- va when y leave on on the start of a long which will carry them old home in Ribe, for a visit of nearly a h relatives. Mr. Buhl ( ordova-born children, Rita, Ann, five, and Roy, the pride and joy of the country relatives” who have seen their northern-reared nephews. interesting part of Mr. t in Denmark will be a a famous National park nd where a unique monu- to Danish-American good- being erected in the form e log cabin built from om each state in the union are donated by Americans nish origin. Through the ef- Mr. Buhl, Earl Jacobsen A. Hanson, of Cordova, the of Alaska will be rep- the completed building es yéllow cedar logs twelve ng shipped to Denmark for purpose. On each July fourth, at the site the cabin, it is also the cus- to hold a large Independence Day celebration when well-known Danish-Americans speak. At this a flag from one of the forty- sht states is hoisted. Throueh e aid of the local American Le- post, Mr. Buhl is taking with in American flag which he expects to raise there next July Fourth for the Territory of Alas- ka. | Buhl of F of tom time e e SCANDINAVIAN-AMERICAN . Krane, featuring his Scan- dinpvian - American Dance Music, Room, Wednesdav night. Jimmy American Dance Numbers. DON'T MISS THIS. * —adv. e y football experts are fore- that Ralph Kercheval, of the University of Kentucky, will be the o anding player in the outh this year. M | — DO YOU "% want to save at least one-third of your fuel expense”? Then use the I'ISHER DIESEL Oil Burner Clean—Safe—Odorless | For ranges or all types of heating appliances. No me- hanical features. See dem- bnstration at 236 Willough- by Avenue. Price Installed VISIT THE ‘Salmon Creek Roadhouse ANTON RIESS to| ,|as Steele’s REVELERS, | 20 YEARE AGO PFrom The Empire R OCTOBER 9, 1913 There was a possibility of a foot- ball game within the week. Rumor persisted that the town and male !nwmbcrs of the high school facult were to play the high school team . Enoch Perkins was expected to be the star of the pedagogues he played the previous year, however, the real come-back was to be Professor Green, whose football experience was all before 1901. The town members of the team wer not yet known. he terrific storm that had been ng at Nome had subsided and condition was not expected to worse. However, messages from ravaged town said that losses e fully as high as had been re- ported, many losing everything they had, including homes. The Juneau Department wired $102.10 col- lected at its smoker, to the Nome Fire Department The New York wulants won the second game of the world series from the Philadelphia Athletics with a score of 3 to 0. For nine innings both teams had stood score- less and the Giants made their rally in the tenth inning. Mathew- | son pitched for the New York team |and Plank for the Athletics. the Catholic Church met in the parlor of St. Ann's Hos- pital and ‘elected officers for the Altar Society for the coming year Elected were Mrs, Katherine Mc- |Kanna, President; Mrs. P. S. Early, | Vice-President; Mrs. Julia Turner, }Mx Henry Shattuck, Mrs. James | pados, Purchasing Commi Mrs. W. Geddes, Mrs. E. Valent: Visiting Committee. Ladies of The large auditorium of the Elks’ Hall was filled to capacity for the |Juneau Fire Department Smoker, lwith ma any attending from the other side of Gatsineau Channel. An excellent program was given |and everyone had a good time with y to eat—and drink, and also hing to burn. It was pro- nounced a fine smoker. Don’t Trifle With Coughs Don't let a strangle hold. Fight germs quickly. Creo- mulsion combine sthe 7 best helps known to modern science. Power- ful but harmless. Pleasant to take. No narcotics. Your own druggist is authorized to refund your money on the spot if your cough or cold is not relieved by Creomulsion. adv — .- —— Old papers foi sale ai. Emplre. —_— '!)l:»' them get Cigars Cigarettes Candy Cards The New Arctic Pabst Famous Draught Beer On Tap “JIMMY” CARLSON Building for Better Times PRI T PROFESSIONAL s — Helene W. L. Albrecht PHYSIOTHERAPY Massage, Electricity, Infra Red Ray, Medical Gymnastics. 307 Goldstein Bulilding Phone Office, 216 DRS. KASER & FREEBURGER DENTISTS Blomgren Building PHONE 56 Hours 9 am. to 9 pm. 1 | — | Dl‘ Rooms 8 and 9 Valentine Building Telephone 176 | — DENTIST | Rooms 5-6 Triangle Bldg. Of’ice hours, 9 am. to 5 pm. Evenings by appointment, Phone 321 Dr. A. W. Stewart DENTIST Hours 9 am. to 6 pm. SEWARD BUILDING Office Phone 469, Res. Phone 276 Dr. Richard Williams DENTIST | Gastineau Building, Phone 481 | [ A IS GG g CH Robert Simpson Opt. D. Srzduate Loa Angeles Col- lege of Optometry and Onthalmology Glasses Fitted, Lenses Ground —n i DR. R. E. SOUTHWELL Optometrist—Optician Eyes Examined—Glasses Fitted | Room 7, Valentine Bldg. | Office Pnone 484; Residence Phone 238. Office ™ours: 9:30 to 12; 1:00 to 5:30 | e TRl I3 P i Rose A. Andrews Graduate Nurse | Electric Cabinet Baths—Mas- sage, Colonic Irrigations Office hours 11 am. to 5 pm. | Evenings by Appointment Second and Main Phone 250 L [ LEON ENSCH CHIROPRACTOR | Palmer School Graduate Over First National Bank | PHONE 451 OFFICE AND RESIDENCE || { { Fraternal Societies —_—or Gastineau Channel B. P. 0. ELKS meets every Wednesday at 8 p. m. Visiting brothers welcome. L. W. Turoff, Exalt- ed Ruler. M. H. Sides, Secretary. KNIGHTS OF COLUMBUS | Seghers Council No. 1760. Meetings second and last Monday at 7:30 p. m. Transient brothers urg.. ed to attend. Chambers, Fifth Stres, JOHN F. MULLEN, G. K. H. J. TURNER, Secretary Our trucks go any place ln;fi' time. A tank for Dicsel O | and a tank for crude oil save | burner trouble. PHONE 149. NIGHT 148 RELIABLE TRANSFER i Wise to Call 48 Juneau Transfer Co. when in need of MOVING or STORAGE Fuel 0il ‘Ceal 1 E Transfer ' e bod Konnerup’s MORE for LESS JUNEAU-YOUNG Funeral Parlors | Licensed Funeral Directors | and Embalmers | Night Phone 1851 Day Phone 12 P f V | ) | | | THE JuNEAU LAunDRY ' l Franklin Street betweem | ' Front an? Second Streets ] PHONE 359 P | ALLAMAE SCOTT Expert Beauty Specialist PERMANENT WAVING Phone 218 for Appointment Entrance Pioneer Barber Shop — JUNEAU SAMPLE SHOP The Little Store with the BIG VALUES C. L. FENTON CHIROPRACTOR Soutn rront St., next to Brownie's Barber Shop ortice Hours: 10-12; 2-8 Evenings by Appointment J UNEAU FROCK SHOPPE “Exclusive but not Expensive” Coats, Dresses, Lingerie Hoslery and Hate & EEEE HOTEL ZYNDA Large Sample Rooms ELEVATOR SERVICE 8, ZYNDA, Prop. "GARBAGE HAULED | Reasonable Monthly Rates | E. O. DAVIS TELEPHONE 584 Day Phone 371 Harry Race DRUGGIST “THE SQUIBB STORE" Fer g Juneau Coffee Shop Opposite MacKinnon Apts. I S R GENERAL MOTORS and MAYTAG PRODUCTS W. P. JOHNSON R TR A S A *— . | McCAUL MOTOR | COMPANY Dodge and Plymouth Dealers ' Relying upon the natural resources of this section, its wealth in gold and timber, its fisheries and its rich dairying land, and above all upon the faith and courage of its people, The B. M. Behrends Bank is building confidently for better times which Alaska will enjoy as business — stimulated by the National Recovery movement — improves in the States. This institution stands shoulder to shoulder with those who believe in the future of the Juneau district. SHEET METAL | “Wo el Tou adrance whuat |18 The B. M. Behrends e - , Bank JUNEAU, ALASKA Open 7:30 am. to 9 pm. | | f | Breakfast, Luncheon Dinner | | e MUSIC and DANCING! HELEN MODER B R T Smith Flectric-Co. Gastineau Building EVERYTHING ELECTRICAL To sell! To sell!l Advertising i your best bet now. WHY Not Because We Are Cheaper BUT BETTER RICE & AHLERS CO. PLUMBING HEATING | Sandwiches Coffee BEER Lunches Ice Cream AGENCY (Authorized Dealers) GAS OILS GREASES Juneau Motors BETTY MAC BEAUTY SHOP | 107 Assembly Apartments PHONE 547 Capitol Beer Parlors BOOTH FOR LADIES NO COVER CHARGES Phone 569 for reservations Resurrection Lutheran Church REV. ERLING K. OLAFSON, || g Pastor uornlnc Worship 10:30 AM. i ; HHHWWMIHHIIIIIIIIIIIIllllllllllllllllllllmlllllIllll!llllllllllllllllllllllllllllfllfl BTt 00000 . | ! l lllllllllllIlllllll|||||llIIIIIIIII|IIIIIIIIIIIIIIlIIIlIIIIIlllIIIIIIIIIIIIII||I|IIHIIIIII|||II|!|IIIIIIIII|I|IIIIIIIIIlIIlIII|I|II|II The world’s greatest need s mmnwmuuuu.