The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, November 14, 1933, Page 4

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, TUESDAY, NOV. 14, 1933. il ric) TR i i ¥ e | B—— Y m 3 . out racial, religious and other forms of friction S R o e Dadoy Alaska Empl,re s Bach. Amorioan family, each truly American| HELEN WILLS MOODY WALKS AGAIN PROFESSIONAL Froltrnal Soactios o organization should constitutg such a group. W | e . . — 2“ YEA f‘ AGO 1 OF | have suffered enough without augmenting it with o P e g‘,_____——————:; Gastineau Clumnel ROBERT W. BENDER - - GENERAL MANAGER | (he misery of internal strife. : e iy ol Helene W. L. Albrecht | |: it : 3 | Ik SRR PHYSIOTHERAPY e Ui { Published every evemng except Sunday by the | VANISHING GOLD. NOVEMBER 14, 1913 Massage, Electricity, Infra Red R ) KMPIRE PRINTING COMPANY at Second and Main | 1 , 1913, Ray, Medical Gymnastics, 1| CVeTY Wednesday 2t Streets, Juneau, Alaska. \ Guests at the Hotel Cain were s 4 1 {8 p. m Visiting Somewhere in the world there is more than entertained by an informal musicale | 807 Goldstein Building | | prothers welcome % ' i the Post Office in Juneau as Second Class |$15,000,000,000 of gold that has disappeared from T A of Whe Hofél 4he Phone Office, 216 meu;ur:nc'om;m- ke Isight in the few centuries that have elapsed since| vious evening. The Filipino man-| mi————. RN I t SUBSCRIPTION RATES. C:;lumbus smlgd westward and clmmf'(l ,lhc Mv\ dolin pl:\yelrs proved to be mpu»llI Secretary. i Dellvered by carrier in Juneau and Douglas for $1.25 World for Spain. That vast sum has vanished {ro lar entertainers and sang several e ket | ey { Del‘dmonlh;‘ o the books and is lost to service in so far as financi of their plaintive airs as well. Mr.| | PRS.K pseldio s KNIGHTS OF COLUMBUS v mail, post id, at the foll tes: ki g P £ 3 § oy D e nce. 12.00: six months. fn advance, |structures are concerned, [ Cain said that impromtu con-| e iy | | Seghers Counctl No. 1760, i $6.00; one month, in advance, $1.2 | From 1493 to 1932 the world produced about certs were- to be given periodi-| | | Meetings second and last H Subscribers will confer a favor if they will promptly | | | cally. | PHONE 56 Monday at 7:30 p. m. H {.mm’ t‘;m] mmno{s,-mo{no;a;‘»:rnny failure or irregularity (1,109,800,000 ounces of the yellow metal, accordma} | . i sty O ik i » nsmym broéhers ;’1. H_fhe dellvery Of iyt {to estimates of the United States Bureau of Mines ; Ta g~ l Telephone for Editorial and Business Offices, 374. | e a e T —— - More than one-half of this has dropped from the| S X‘:}:a'ga“Td;yl"srimgr"gf‘f[°;1al‘(’f1 — —————————————jed to g hCo;nc:l 1 MEMBER OF ASSOCIATED PRESS. {vision of man. It all some 536,563,320 ounces has 'm} r'epammm & estabiiah o) Dr. C. P. Jenne | Chambers, Fifth Strecs. The Assoclated Press 1s exclusively entitled to the | qicanenred g P ations iblish a| DENTIST JOHN F. MULLEN, G. K. use for republication of all news dispatches credited to PP . | delicatessen luncheon at his candy H. J. TURNER, Secretary it or not otherwise credited in this paper and also the | Some of this, officials say, is in the tightly ! store on Seward Street, Charles Rooms 8 and 9 Valentine g L009 et b i \clenched grip of misers, some in the hoards of Bennett, formerly of Seattle, was Building | :.0._._______T_-__n ALASKA CIRCULATION GUARANTEED TO BE LARGER |fabulously rich Indian princes. Possibly as much | ‘1o be in charge. | Telephone 176 |l “llr m:h' x: ;ny l‘;i‘“l ‘(’7‘!’]‘ AR “THAT 'OF ANY OTHER PUBLICATION. las one-third of the vanished gold is estimated to! - o b .::’0- & k‘!; 'fl'd fl: nul’ |have made its way to India which hides it away.| The night school at the Juneau | u | ™ ::m!:r.::b;o [Part of it is in the form of adornments that have Public §chool. sta}"t_ed the prevl?us Dr. J W. Bayne | | PbKE 10 NlGH“E o P {been buried with their owners, while a vast store | i Mo e chop s DENTIST i ! of the metal that men have fought and schemed | e e en it Lrit] | o nooms 576 TURRGIS RICE RELIABLE TRANSrER |for, have starved, thirsted and froze for, lies in| tw}{;e BI];III)XJC £ bein;; beebis Were‘ Of:ice hours, 9 am. to 5 ;:m. ‘unrathomed depths at the bottom of the sea. f | English, writing, reading, and Evenmg;hl:x;:);g;’m men! ‘ . ! arithmetic. This furnished an op- r » ‘{ Millions in distress have been fed, clothed R"qi | portunity to learn English at the|Z otherwise helped by the American Red Cross which | small charge of fifty cents a week. !,_,____.———- |has distributed 10,688,307 barrels of flour, 92,784,- Sessions were held from 6 o'clock | r. A. W. Stewa | 060 yards of cotton cloth and 55203612 ready-made | to 9:15 o'clock on Tuesday, Wed- ! DENTIST |garments. Help this humanitarian work by joining. | Inccday and Thursday evenings. Hours 9 am. to 6 p.m. i . [ i SEWARD BUILDING | Wise to Call 48 One thing we're not going to kick about is how b alnd Mrs L«é‘ gfin?:.?er}tr};: Office Phone 4¢3, Res. | Juneau Transfer our currency is managed—if we ever get any cur- ;M‘rr{ re! "”}:;‘Hd thie stedmE T | Phone 276 C e rency. After spending several weeks in a hospital Helen Wills Moody, g;“fdi°"‘h aboard thesteamerkum g~ —8 0. when in need rormer tennis champion, is able to walk a few blocks a day for exer. | DOIGL: s of MOVING AS THE STAR PRESS SEES US. ! f S cise. She was treated in a San Francisco hospital for a dislocated Vertebrae which caused her to default to Helen Jacobs in the cham- | J pionship tennis meet. She is shown leiving lme for a short walk | Dr. Richard Williams " | DENTIST ; | The entertamnment given by Miss | Edith Kempthorne at the Orpheum or STORAGE Again the Seattle Star, and other Western mem- Alaska Needs a New Deal. bers of the same newspaper chain, are at the old (Seattle Star.) {Associated Press Photo) i 4 H i Stin 5 g D A i Theatre the previous evening at-| | 4 | * game of trying to "f' U S°“‘Pthmf “":’ru" ma'fl:ar Strange rumblings are coming out of Alaska| ST . tracted a large crowd with prac-| | GOI';'ICE ;Nfixnmgx);r:cfil 3 Fuel 0il It seems as if they have an idea that sinister|yyp, the seasonal return of men occupied there g e e every et i thd Aheatre|l| Sheet BTG i influences of some kind, prabably “redutory |ihrough the Summer months 34 UL IE SEE BIG VAN | taken. The slides were interest- ]l N = a Ceal capital,” have the entire Territory sewed up and are Instead of mining and prospecting by troupes 0“ S sk ing and the Camp Fire scene, in|-= i - preventing the development of its gold and other ithousands, as in the old days, instead of activity | Gunsand Ammunition | | yhich about a dozen Juneau girls|—— Teangtir mineral resources by the prospector and individual in all the wide range of openings and offerlng.s; TR L 204 Front St. 205 Seward St. | | dressed as Indians, sat around a, > —a r. that Alaska holds with lavish hand, there return- H GUNS FOR RENT camp fire and sang songs of their Robert Simpson | mine: | P 2 2 In a “canned editorial” that is one which ap- ing men bring reports of inactivity and dxscourage-’ | Jodge, was most attractive. 0 t D ARG roeoe. g s t, except in two or three spots, in all the . . . peared in the Star, the Spokane Press and probably |men! 8 | | ol les Col- other Western units of this chain, reference fundamental things we have a right to expect in| | W. 7 Leivers and Harry Smith, || ul';f;;lf; OptomAme'.ry A % % made fo “blg exploiters who are politically |that northland—a worse condition than ever in 30 | i two of Juneaws young men, were | | o A Konneru ,s l ; in the saddle as never before” For the edification [YeA: : [ R g : | 10 Teave on the next sailing of the| | cyoyep mm'h‘!m‘ s (Ground P ) While gold production in Alaska is at a stand- F W “ BC D t ed | Al-Ki for the South on their way { |Fate 1 etermin e — i to visit with thelr = MDRE for LESS | to England | relatives whom they had not seen for years. ——————— of Alaskans, to whom such things must come 25 &gy the output of that precious metal in British| surprise, the artricle is reprinted in an adjoining | columbia has increased ‘fourfold in the last four | column. |years. Mining permits issued by our neighboring| The chain of papers which carried that editorial |British Province have increased from 3,000 to 18,000 DR. K. E. SOUTHWELL Optometrist—Optician Eyes Examined—Glasses Fitted by Seven Officers of Loyal Army 1 convict themselves of one or two things—they arefin that same period, in a field less mineralized than | TR ! ) ot yoar feet. wallen densely ignorant of Alaska or they are utterly |Alaska and less than half of Alaska’s area. HAYANA, ‘Cu.):.l.. Nov. 1;‘.,1—1‘86‘:?‘ I;"«Z:::tr:rii‘gled.y Eorn . Next tc Room 7, Valentine Bldg. ‘ - ! unserupulous and without regard for either facts or( In the Dominion of Canada, covering all the [1o7alussmy (OrSoes o T | Brownie’s Barber 8hop, ady | | Office Pmone 484; Residence JUNEAU-YOUNG | W% beuth, | Provinces, & system of Government encouragement in |ing the fate of 3 "é"brs_j‘l“’l‘ o ! i 0 e S Phone 238. Office Mours: 9:30 | | Funeral Parlo f To illustrate the point: It is asserted that the the last decade has increased its gold output in of participation in Cuba’s A { AL A P to 12; 1:00 to 5:30 J 1) ESkensed Wk TS ; 2 : b ab e ind numbers from $4,000000 to $40,000,000 per :nd bloodiest revolt. The {ic?lh{‘ . — | Daily Empire Wan e e X ——g ! eral Direciors | British Columbia gold production has increased |, iy stimulating benefits to all industry and | penalty for three of the 34 scidiers | | Resurrection Lutheran | s S T s YR - e ' and Embalmers | fourfold in the past four years, and that the totaly ohoia) profit to the Dominion Government |is asked by the Government. ] | Church | L4 Night Phone 1851 Day Phone 12 | output for all of Canada has risen from $4.000.000 |, ounting to many millions of dollars above its — { urc) i FINE [ Rose A. Andrews -— N |4 | REV. ERLING K. OLAFSON, | Watch and Jewelry Repairing ! Graduate Nurse e R a Pastor ning Worship 10:30 AM. REV. A.P. KASHEVAROFF| RECEIVES INVITATION TO MEETING, ENGLAND at very reasonable rates || [ Electric Cabinet Baths—Mas- WRIGHT SHOPPE | Saps, | Gelehlo, Lrrigniiite Office hours 11 am. to 5 pm. | PAUL BLORDHORN ° | Evenings by Appointment Second and Main Phone 259 to $40,000,000 in the last four years. The facts dO|expenditures in these efforts. not substantiate that assertion. | And all the while Uncle Sam’s vast empire of The World Almanac for 1933, published by the |Alaska has been lagging, been going back, been New York World-Telegram, a Scripps-Howard news- |falling more and more into the paralyzing grasp of paper, the British Columbia and Canadian|a few powerful exploiting groups who would drive Alaska and its store-, Mc¢ | | SABIN’ | i |‘ | gives Daily Empire Wanv Ads Pay. old production for 1928-1931, inclusive, the latest|out all others—would close 0 o _|— —— Shicataniadinn, > 5w D v ¢ el Eus ’;Dr which data was then aavilable, as follows: |houses of wealth against access to the millions| Father A. P. ECRSDevaralt, OIS |'e L St et it sttt g i | G e ye: S aa s & rhos: § adv. e | tor of the Territorial Museum, is|§ S —T British Columbia Canada of Americans whose right is to have equal advantage | | s ¢ 1 invitation | i i 1928 $4064434 $39,087,008 in that field of opportunities. oot b B i o8 b i IDEAL PA INT SHO‘ Jones-Stevens Shop | |z S - 1929 3187.680 39,861 663 According to all returning Alaskans, too, Lhcse"I“;u{‘::‘c"l‘f"nuv‘tc‘)‘l‘;u_“ ~(’)‘;“A“mm 14 [ e | S -? 187, 861, : , t an ational gres: Anthro- e, . , LADIES" 1930 3,397,023 43,453,601 .s‘f ,f:dgfl::fsoxt in the saddle politically in Alaska | ) 0" nd Ethnological Scienc- | | If It's Paint We Have It! EEADY-TO-WEAR THE JunEAu LAunpry ’ 1931 3,308,969 55,687,688 1 ' i s, to be held in London, England, | T = A Franklin Street betweem | all re; ber th riences of the Klondike | ¢ e 3 h [ 54€ o Seward Street Near Third able, those for the four years immediately proceed-|iyo ret of the United States and the world, lifting 30th to Augusa 4z'h,._ 1934, P | & Yo = 2 —— s — g 2| 1 ing are convincing proof that the Seattle Star and,q magically out of despondency and depression by Preparation covering a perqu,h-m i = st aia R | PHONE 359 \ of twenty years has resulted in| *— o | A its fellows are either ignorant or deliberately falsi-|their invigorating benefits. fied the record. Those stimulating days and experiences may There is no more foundation for any of the |not be repeated in their full force and volume, but they might be with new discoveries. Great good | the establishment of the New Con- | gress and many noted scientists) are on both the list of officers ALLAMAE SCOTT e e iapert Beanty Speclalist JUNEAU FROCK INSURANCE mineral re- other assertions in the editorial. The sources of Alaska, except coal and oil, are as free to any individual as they are to any company. Prospectors have not only not been hampered but they have been financially isted by the Territorial Government in their work for several years. As to coal and oil, any individual has the same right to utilize them under a Federal Government lease as any corporation or company The entire editorial is a hodgepodge of mouthy vaporings without foundation in fact and wholly at variance with the truth. It is interesting merely because it typifies the class of mind that is always looking for blood, scenting victims and, in the case of the Star, picking on Alaska because people in the cour at large are abnormally ignorant of conditions that e here. PREACHING TOLERANCE. A Jewish rabbi, a Catholic priest, and a Protestant minister are being sent forth through thirty-nine American cities scattered throughout the country by the National Conference of Jews gnd Christians to urge upon the people of this country the great need for being tolerant. Newton D. Baker, one of the three co-chairman of the conference, describes the project a purely domestic campaign, de- claring: The National Conference of Jews and Christians is interested in our own condi- tions. It feels that the outbreak of intoler- ance abroad must not be duplicated in this country. The American ideal is inconsistent with that spirit, and the conference there- fore aims by educational conferences to em- phasize the American spirit, to instill sym- pathy and co-operation in our own country. Whatever may be the concern of any of the members of the Conference about the overseas situation, the Conference itself expresses no opinion and seeks to have no influence beyond the happy example we hope America will set in being a country in which neither race nor religion are al- lowed to be used for political or economic discrimination. Signs are not lacking that there is need for such a campaign in this land where live and let Mve is the traditional ideal. We have groups seek- ing to ape Hitler, others who would have America emulate the Fascists. Lynchings have been more numerous this year than usual. The K. K. K. as an organization has not broken forth from as out of the depression of 1921 is stirring once more. Btrikes and lockouts are prevalent and even the dairymen and farmers grow violent in their despair. Fear of want, insecurity and uncertainty nurture ‘hatred and breed violence. The tolerance tour plans the organization of its | shroud, but its spirit that blossomed so nox\ously' would come anyway, with organized and intelligent & effort. The opportunities that Alaska holds are known now to be in larger variety and abundance than |any of us dared to dream a decade or two ago. Why then are they dormant? What is wrong? The “new deal” is not working in Alaska. It is the same old deal that we thought we voted out last November, and fast getting worse. s | U. S. Gold Market. (Anchworage Times.) Establishment by President Roosevelt of an United States Government market for gold and the announcement that the Government expects to make the first purchases of gold under the new plan almost immediately will be good news for Alaska— one of the greatest of American gold producers. ‘Washington dispatches say the prices to be of- tered by the Government probably will be above that offered by London and Paris. The promise | opens speculation as to many possibilities, From all appearance, Uncle Sam does not in- tend to sit idly by and see the gold he produces carried away to other countries. He needs gold to back his currency and to store for emergency pur- poses. The recent decree ordering all gold in America turned into the Government treasury and the policy of going energetically after all gold hoarders indicates too well that your Uncle Samuel is not unappreciative of the might and prowess of gold. He will not be*so sleepy as to see the yellow metal good Americans dig sent abroad. He first extended the privilege to Americans to sell their gold in the world market. Now he announces he will step into the arena and pay as good if not better prices than any others. Some predict that gold soon will be command- ing a far higher figure than any previous time in history. Some enthusiasts even predict gold will bring $50 an ounce within a year. In any event gold is gold and always will be one of the most coveted of all items. There is no danger of it slipping below the old valuation of $20 an ounce—and every prospect of it permanent remaining much higher. | To go into gold mining is one of the safest ventures in the world today—and no field for that industry offers better inducements than Alaska. | With the world stampeding after gold, with news |of every old mining camp in the States and other |countries humming with life where only ghost cities prevailed for many years—Alaska with her many |virgin deposits and her developed properties should !thrill with the new life of gold mining next year. | A New Jersey nonagenarian’s recipe for longevity consists of a good drink followed by a big dish of rice pudding, which would be all right if a man didn't get tired of rice pudding.—(New York Sun. If rumor is true, a liquor prescription is one of the things no longer hard to get.—(Detroit Free Press.) or of being invited ing of great terested, it will be impossible for! me to attend,” Father Kashevar- off said. nd executive committees. “Much as I appreciate the hon- to this meet-! garding tly in- scientists r ubjects in which I am g —————— Cigars Cigarettes Candy Cards The New Arctic Pabst Famous Draught Beer On Tap “JIMMY" CARLSON Salmon Creek Roadhouse ANTON RIESS Allen Shattuck, Inc. Eetablished 1898 Juneau, Alaska e ! 3 Phone 58 -3 Juneau Cash Grocery CASH AND CARRY Corner Second and Seward Free Delivery Conservatism —which in the banking business means putting safety FIRST in every trans- ction—has been the working principle of The B. M. Behrends Bank through all the years that it has served the busi- ness and personal interests of Juneau people. Broad experience has equipped us to help our customers convert present day % business advantages into new and greater achievements. The B. M. Behrends Bank JUNEAU PERMANENT WAVING Phone 218 for Appointment Entrance Pioneer Barber Shop L S ——— S L A JUNEAU SAMPLE SHOP The Little Store with the BIG VALUES — C. L. FENTON CHIROPRACTOR Soutn ¥ront St., next to Brownie’s Barber Shop orfice Hours: 10-12; 3-8 Evenings by Appointment . Harry Race DRUGGIST “THE SQUIBB STORE" { Juneau Coffee Shop | Opposite MacKinnon Apts. Breakfast, Luncheon Dinner | I Open 7:30 am. to 8 pm. | | HELEN MODER | To selll To sell!l Advertising 1 your best bet now. FORD AGENCY (Authorized Dealers) GAS OILS . GREASES Juneau Motors MUOT OF MAIN ST, SHOPPE “Exclusive but not Expensive” Coats, Dresses, Lingerie Hoslery and Hats HOTEL ZYNDA Large Sample Rooms ELEVATOR SERVICE 8. ZYNDA, Prop. *— I"CARBAGE HAULED | Reasonable Monthly Rates | E. 0. DAVIS | TELEPHONE 584 } ! Day Phone 371 | GENERAL MOTORS and MAYTAG PRODUCTS W. P. JOHNSON R R R e T McCAUL MOTOR COMPANY Dodge and Plymouth Dealers ' Smith Flectric Co. Gastineau Bullding EVERYTHING ELECTRICAL I | [ BETTY MAC BEAUTY SHOP 107 Assembly Apartments | , PHONE 547 !. TYPEWRITERS RENTED | $5.00 per month | | J. B. Burford & Co. | | “Our doorstep worn by satisfied | 1 customers” | B — S The world's greatest mneed fs courage—show yours by advertising.

Other pages from this issue: