The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, May 1, 1934, 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, MAY 1, 1934. — It -is effective June 1, 1934, and provides rigid rules for private operators in protection Daily Alaska Empire_ GENERAL MANAGER ROBERT W. BENDER blished eve evening except Sunday by the ml;'inz FRINTING COMBANT at Second and Main Streets, Juneau, Alaska. Entered in the Post Office In Juneau as Second Class matter. PLAY BA’LL! Next Sunday the City Baseball League is sched- uled to open its 1934 season. From all indications it will be the most active season the circuit has experienced in several years. It has restored its membership to four clubs, as it was during the first few years of its existence. Douglas is the new member. It is a good thing for both Douglas and Juneau as well as for the league that the Island town is back on the baseball map. It has always been a good baseball town, and has turned out many fine teams. Its team in the Juneau league this year will agdd interest to-the pennant chase. Favored by .recemt wefither, the four clubs wfll; be in better shape to start play than has been| the case for the past two or three years. against fires and other destructive agencies, and preservation of young growth during and following logging, which shall be selective; co-operation by forest-owning groups with public authorities in extending systematic protection; methods of re- stocking after cutting, and sustained yield forest | management. The hearings on the amendments B o o unaay by - s1.es revealed that, despite widespread sentiment within i voilkiee 5274'"."(“{':;@ following rates: th industry in favor of forest conservation, dxverggnt o,,’,’yz".‘;, o dvance, $12.00; six months, in advance, | interests were never able to agree upon details. O T afer 's favor if they will promptly | “June 1" read a statement issued by the National notify the Business Office of any fallure or irregularity | Lumber Manufacturers' Association, “will be a red- In he el e o mltorial and Business Offices, 374. |letter day in American industrial history, because MEMBER OF ASSOCIATEL, PRESS. it will mark the beginning of sustained treatment The Associated Press is exclusively entitied to tE |of 400,000,000 acres of land.” nse for republication of all news dispatches credited to 3 : A It or not otherwise credited in this paper and also the In declaring that “the oil industry was the 'ff:l;:i“i:?i?é'm‘r‘ A’:inmm;m 10 BE LARGER | [irst to show the benefit of operation under a THAN rufi; ANY OTHER PUBLICATION, NRA code” the T. S .Hose review of petroleum 4 # conditions says: Under Government control the industry has been able to achieve results that even the largest companies could not bring about. The bhig units were unable to prevent the “racketeer” from wrecking the price struc- ture. Now it is generally recognized that placing production under control has not only maintained a better price structure and renewed employment but also has prevented the sapping of the fields. Without the strong hand of regulation, the oil fields of Europe have continued to flow and have exhausted their potentialties to the point where they are no longer a serious competi- tive factor with those of the United States. Thus the v interests which have been deplet- ing the country's natural resources are enabled to conserve them under the governmental control pro- vided for in the lumber and petroleum codes. The House Investigating Committee has decided that Dr. Wirt's charges were all the bunk. Maybe the Gary professor needed examination by a special- ist on diet rather than a bunch of Coongressmen. And as a reminder, in case you weren't around last night, the legal sale of alcoholic liquors was most successfully launched in Juneau just after midnight ! Modern Pioneering. The | players have beeh working hard in their practice sessions. Old players and new ones are showing' the finest sort of spirit, the spirit that makes it a concrete plan for bringing on a proposed over- possible for Juneau to have baseball throughout the S, ol o Bl ean social order may be summer. The league is a simon-pure AmAteur|)ess jogica] than his other charges. It is, certainly, organization. The players give the best they have yery jlogical. to offer to the fans for the love of the gamef There is nothing more American than the oppor- Not one of them receives a single penny for his tunity for Americans to own their own houses, raise playing. None of the officers or managers aretheir own food and to make their own livings and salaried. |their own clothes and furniture. It is scarcely more The expenses for park and baseballs are taken ' than a century since this was a common thing, the out of the|ususl thing in the Ohio Valley. Down the Ohio, up the Wilderness Road of Kentucky from the Gap, across the State by the National Road came the pioneers bent on establish- (Cincinnati Enquirer.) Dr. William A. Wirt's assertion that subsistence homesteading smacks of Communism and is part of care of, or that's the theory anyway, gate receipts. Last year the Juneau Volunteer Fire | Department lost $200 on the ‘season. This year the | league is undertaking to sell season tickets enough ing their homesteads—with the aid and financial to guard against a repetition of that. Fans can gqgistance of the Government, which made the new save 50 per cent by purchasing them and give the jgnds available to them on an installment plan. sport a boost at the same time. Both are worth-| These pioneers, our ancestors, felled trees, built while objectives. It is hoped that at least 200 their own homes by neighborhood house-raisings, season tickets can: be sold.. This is a modest goal|and eventually joined forces in ‘harvest fields, at and one that should be reached easily before the threshings and husking bees. lid comes off for the season next Sunday. ‘ The present national set-up for subsistence home- |steading makes it possible for families without employment to own their own houses and small plots, big enough to support them, through a nicely |calculated time-payment plan. If installment buying That industrial codes of falr competition ;\Ifurd“f “’:‘A’“L‘“"“" we have been a long time finding lit out. the means for conserving the Nation's natural re-| Dr. Wirt Eiks fitea: Fibsish : r. Wirt seems not to have studied subsistence sources was a hope held out by President Roosevelt | P Y homesteading plans. At the Conference on Sub- when he signed the National Industrial R.(»':covfl‘y‘Smu‘nCc Homesteading held at Dayton, Ohio, De- Act, which has since been realized. As child 1abor [ comber 8 and 9, under the mspimt'mn of Dr in cotton mills “went like a flash” with the Presi-|George W. Rightmire, President of Ohio State dent’s signature of the code for the cotton textile | Universtiy, he might have learned much. The first NRA PROMOTES CONSERVATION. P.- T. A MEETIN the to be presented the program Parent-Teacher ditorium tonight, will be a review by the Rev. John A. Glasse, “Our Movie Made Children,” James Forman's book which based on the, findings of scientist: dationin an effort children of today. This book has been enthusiasti- cally discussed by educators, ed in the trends of the younger percolator, There’s a specia reason. In a Drip Coffec Ma nor percolator. In one or t or mar good coffee. Be sur each method. but cach is specially prepar Associatiory] meecting in the Grade School Au= of, Henry s, who worked under the Payne Foun- to determine the influence of*motion pictures or ents and others who are interest= | - +-generation, . and , because, he,. felt LARGE fiRflwD" '\ I'sure that it would be of great in- | ]tcrésl to parents of Juneau, the Rev. Glasse chose it as the sub- ject for his talk tonight. Se 1 selections by Willis E. 'No\\ ensemble violin class will be luded in the excellent musi- | cal program to be given this eve- | ning and are being looked forward |to by all those who really appre- Among the outstanding items on|ciate fine music. In addition to the at o violin numbers there will be sev- eral groups by the Grade School Glee club. v] Everyone is urged to attend this er Association for the current year. In addition to the interesting pro- am, election of officers for the next year is to be held and several matters of interest taken up. - FRANK PARRISH HERE Frani: Parrish, wholesale repre- par-! sentative, arrived in Juneau aboard the steamer Alaska after a trip to | Wi rn and Interior Alaska cities. Would you put Buttermilk on your cereal ? Buttermilk for some things—sweet milk for others— and you don’t use one for the other. For the same reason, don’t try to use the same coffec for either drip maker or 1 coffee for each. Here’s the ker, boiling water drips only oeneé through a coffee specially prepared to yield its flavor quiekly. \V)Eilc in a Percolator, the water continues to pass many times through a coffee prepared to yield" its flavor slowly. The same coffee can be used for both methods, but like a “Jack-of-all-trades” it is “master of none”—neither drip he other, little things happen. It’s a little weak, or a little strong, or a little cloudy, or it has a little less flavor. It’sthese little things that make ¢ to use the correct coffee for Your grocer has two Schilling Coffees, identical in flavor, for its purpose—each one different in blend, roast andjgrind. [ final meeting of the Parent-Teach- | industry, so, after four months of concentrated effort, the purpose of the 30-year campaign to con- ' serve the forests on 400,000,000 acres of privately owned lands was accomplished with his approval of amendments to the code for the lumber and ttmber products industry. Publicly owned timber | is confined to about 150,000,000 acres, most of it| units were financed by leading Dayton business men, many of them heads of large industrial plants, to tackle the problem of the unemployed. Enthus- iastic supporters of the movement are manufacturers all over the country, numerous coal operators and American cities. Homesteading seems to be one of the few governmental schemes to preserve indi- lying within national forests. Ivlduallsm, Conservationists assert that the program em- Two more Frenchmen have fought a bloodless bodied in the lumber code amendments accomplishes 'qgyel, what they have fostered since the tugn of the pad for lumbago.—(Dallas News.) ® No Argument! ® No Statement! Can stand against the testimony of our many satisfied customers AS AUTHORIZED DEALERS of the RAY HART BRADER OIL BURNERS @ We are in a position to give you the best to be ha(d at_any price! ; ICE & AHLERS (0. PLUMBING HEATING SHEET METAL “We tell in advance what job will cost” PHONE 34 [ ¥ P e fiprmcenfiprencalipm THE SANITARY GROCERY . PHONESB3ORSS ., ... .. ‘TheStore That Pleases” Bowing in the cool morning air, however, is|— George Bros. KUPPENHEIMER Clothing for Men LEADER DEPT. STORE Store Open Tonight Fraternal Societies | oF \ Gastineau Channel i B. P. 0. ELKS meets every Wednesday a$ 8 p.m. Visiting brothers welcome. L. W. Turoff, Exalt- ed Ruler, M. H. Sides, Secretary. —_—— KNIGHTS OF COLUMBUR Seghers Councll No. 1768, Meetings second and last Monday at 7:30 p. m.. Transient brothers urg- ed to attend. Councll Chambers, Fifth Streol. JOHN F. MULLEN, G. E. H. J. TURNER, Becretary MOUNT JUNEAU LODGE NO. 147 Second and fourth Mon- jday of each month in Scottish Rite Temple, beginning at 7:30 p. m. L. E. HENDRICKSON, Master; JAMES W. LEIVERS, Set retary. : | PROFESSIONAL 20 YEARS AGO T Helene W. L. Albrecht YHYSIOTHERAPY Massage, Electricity, Infra Red Ray, Medical Gymnastics. 307 Goldstein Building Phone, Office, 216 s Rose A. Ardrews Graduate Nurse Electric Cabinet Baths—Mas sage, Colonic Irrigations Office hours 11 am. to 5 pm. | Evenings by Appointment Second and Main Phone 258 e From The Empire MAY 1, 1914 The greafest feature of the May Day Ball to be given by the Draper Club in the Elks’ hall in the eve- ning for the benefit of the Juneau library fund, was to be the crown- ing of the May Queen and the May pole dance in which twenty-two of Juneau's fairest young society girls were to take part. The crowning jof Miss Sylvia Koskey, Queen, was to take place shortly before 10 o'clock, to be followed at once by |the dance. The May pole dance |had been rehearsed and was to be | conducted under the direction of Miss Lavina Wilson and Miss Lor- raine Ahdrews. Those to take part {in it were, the Misses Florence! | Getchell, Gladys Swenson, Ruth/ Christianson, Marion Qusby, Mur-! | iel Folsom, Anna Dudley, Kather-!rs ine McLaughlin, Eva Cole, Cather-| ine Wagner, Ruth Priest, Alma/ Sowerby, Beatrice Behrends, Ger-| trude Heid, Vera Mullen, Elizabeth | Held, Charlotte Ousby, Ruth An-| derson, Esther Joslin and Alice, | Margrie. —r | E.B. WILSON | Chiropodist—Foot Specialist 401 Goldstein Building PHONE 496 I — | DRS. KASER & FREEBURGER DENTISTS Blomgren Building PHONE 56 | Hours 9 am. to § pm. | ‘ | —— Patrons of the Circle City Ho-| burner trouble. T SR TSR T Y ; [tel entertained the previous eve-'"T ). (. P, Jenne ittt i Ining with a farewell party for Mrs. Jradet = RELIABLE TRANSFER | : = DENTIST q__é, | Mary Bergmann, who was retiring 8 9 Valen! - Rooms 8 and Une e A (from the management of the place| | Bu - |to assume charge of her own new | el llldlnln. NOW OPEN Commercial Adjust- hotel, the Bergmann. The Circle| | ment & Rating Bureau City was the scene of a real old- time party with the dining room Cooperating with White Service Bureau cleared of furniture to make room | Dr. J. W. Bayne for the dancers. Many of the prom- DENTIST inent and older families of Ju- Rooms 5-6 Triangle Bldg. Roo; | neau were present. | ~ ours, m J—Shatiudk Pide: Of:iee nours, 9 am. to 5 pm. We have 5,060 local ratings on file Our trucks go any place any N time. A tank for Diesel Oil and a tank for crude oil save | | &venings by appolntment, H. A. Bishop, formerly Mayor of | Phone 321 Juneau, and prominent in Alaska!g'- Democratic politics for several|= | years, was strongly recommended |&¥ | for the appointment as U. S. Mar- | shal to succeed H. L. Faulkner, who | had signified his intention of re-| | signing. ;!: !. | sroaa — . FINE Watch and Jewelry Repairing at very reasunsvle rates WRIGHT SHOPPE PAUL BLOEDHORN | B Robert Simpson Opt. D. Graduate Los Angeles Col- lege of Optometry and Opthalmology | | 2 Glasses Fitted, Lenses Ground | Weather for the previous H | hours was cloudy with rain. The:. maximum temperature was 48 de- grees and the minimum was 40.|ss. | Precipitation was .24 inch. | DR. R. E. SOUTHWELL ‘ P e Optometrist—Optician | Eyes Examined—Glasses Fitted BOWLING Room 7, Valentine Bldg. Nothing like the thrill of Office Phone 484; Residence a ten-strike!l Develop your Phone 238. Office Hours: 9:30 game on the finest alleys to 12; 1:00 to 5:30 | you ever played on. Brunswick Bowling Alleys Pool Billiards Bowliug Cigars Tobacco Soft Drinks Barber Shop in connectiom Lower Front Street, opposite Winter and Pond JUNEAU-YOUNG Funeral Parlors Licensed Funeral Directors ! and Embalmers 1 X Night Phone 1851 Day Phone 12 SABIN’S Everything in Furnishings for Men FESEIRTN L R F Dr. Richard Williams DENTIST OFFICE AND RESIDENCE * @Gastineau Building Phone 481 | THE JuNEAu LAUNDRY Franklin Street between Front and Second Streets | Dr. A. W. Stewart BT DENTIST | Hours 9 am. to 6 pm. I SEWARD BUILDING 1 Office Phone 409, Res. L PHONE 355 Phone 276 ey IDEAL PAINT SHOP If It’s Paint We Have It! PHONE 549 Wendt & Garster ——n WARRACK Construction Co. Juneau Phone 487 556 JUNEAU FROCK SHOPPE “Exclusive but not Expensive” Hosiery and Hats HOTEL ZYNDA Large Sample Room ELEVATOR SERVICE 8. ZYNDA, Prop. ] B S oSS GARBAGE HAULED Reasonable Monthly Rates | I E. 0. DAVIS TELEPHONE 584 | Phone 4753 | e — | | ALASKA MEAT CO. FEATURING CAKSTEN’S BABY BEEF—DIAMOND TC HAMS AND BACON—U. S. Government Inspected PHONE 39 Deliveries—10:30, 2:30, 4:30 THE HOTEL OF ALASKAN HOTELS The Gastineau Our Services to You Begin and End at the Gang Plank of Every Passenger-Carrying Boat YOU CAN REALLY We' carry the new colors intraduced it the recent & auto shows. “The White R FOR STOVES Will positively burn flame. Absolutely n HAVE A NEW CAR - With a New Paint Job! Treat youd car to a new coat of paint and you won't 7 need a ’34 model! Drive in today for a free estimate. Youw'll like our price — and f you'll appreciate our service and workmanship, i Connors Motor Co., Inc. ay Oil Burner AND RANGES oil with a clean white 0. soot. See This Burner In Operation FRYE’S BABY BEEF “DELICIOUS” HAMS and BACON Frye-Bruhn Company Telephone 38 Prompt Delivery Demonstrated Dependability has enabled The B. M. Behrends Bank to earn and keep the good will of depositors from every part of the great district which this institution serves. Whether you require Checking or Savings serv- ice, or cooperation in the solution of some business problem, an alliance with Alaska’s oldest and largest bank will prove its worth to you. Our officers will be glad to talk things over and to suggest ways in which we might be helpful. BETTY MAC BEAUTY SHOP 100 Amembly Apartments The B. M. Behrends Bank Juneau, Alaska

Other pages from this issue: