The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, October 6, 1934, Page 4

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I3 i § ¥ § i i ¥ ¥ THE lcourse in journalism, a new addition to the high school curricula this year. Two years ago The Empire cnco‘umgod the stu- Dail;;Alaska Empire DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, SATURDAY, OCT. 6, 1934. — — 20 YEARS AGO' NRA OFFICIALS BIRDS SMART; — - I PROFESSIONAL | ’ P & | ROBERT W. BENDER - - GENERAL MANAGER . . = "0 = roval of the factlty, to organize n i & T Published _every evening except Sunday by the & Staff and publish a newspaper:as a means of Prom The Empire { Helene W.L. Albrecht ING COMPANY at Sccond and Main| ge)f expression for themselves, and as a medium | | PHYSIOTHERAPY . Alaska. _ . SR 5 i 1deas of SChool| T T o . | Massage, Electricity, Infra Red | hrough which the news, happenings, : ntered in the Post Office in Juneau as Second CIAss yo " g pe”0oheaveq OCTOBER 6, 1934, ' f 1 T k . i Ray, Medical Gymnastics, | P oy Ae could be ved | tions this year,| The Camp ire Girls had ther Waterfowl Take to Wing | “207 Goldstein Bunding | " SUBSCRIPTION RATES. . | SudstE o By B2 ce was fruitful|fiist meeting of the season at Miss e Before Hunters Can Phone Oftice, 216 | Dellvered by carrier in Juneau and Douglas for '$1.25 the two previous years' experience Wwas ! Edith Kempthorne's studio in. the ; v i P R0 il doiags Dol 31 the-following rates |and the knowledge gained in Le"p"";"“;frd“ making | cparon house. Present were su-iliocal Business Agent Blythe. Clean Their Guns ST 30 T S X TR One year, in advance, $12.00 months, in advance, ) 5 petter written, more interesting . zanne McLaughlin, Regina Epstein, |/ iy 5 o T T ¥h'it they will prompty | In addition to aiding, and stimulating students|Ruth Umstead, Lily |Korhonen, Given Extensxoq for otk Nl e Rogfad“};ceAfiesl;ews : gl e Buthess O, b 3w i o IneSliEiS | 4o think for_ themsives, 1o be more observing, 10| Helen and_ Dorothy Troy, Dorothy Washington Visit |er pre-mature aitumn with frecz-| | prestrle. Gublnct Boths—Mas. | Telephone for Editorial and Business Offices, 374. | accept responsibilities in their high school com- 3-1a ey, a' ge Case, Rose MicLaughe ing temperatures and Arctic blasts sage, Colonic Irrigations ] " MEMBER OF ASSOCIATED PRESS. munity life, which should prove helpful in-grap-jlin, Mabel }li‘fl‘_*}t‘v. Myrile Jorgen-| ‘H. E. Thompson, secretary of the s circumventing normal waterfowl| | oerice hours 11 am. to 5 pm. | The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the| 1o with Jife's perplexities when they leave school, | son, Mary Kashevaroff and Ger- Alaska Laborers’ Association, said|shcoting this season is breeding Evenings by Appcintment s M use for republication of all news dispatches credited to, . ™= tion each week should make the|trude Nelson. Plans were made for|today that the local NRA officials |apprehension among northwestern N i it or not otherwise credited in this paper and also the 'the a ation e Hblic derenstyii : Second and Main Phone 259 local news published hereir chies much more interesting. 8 ‘D! 5 N of Camplhad been cooperating thoroughly |sportsmen. A ) ALASKA CIRCULATION GUARANTEED TO BE LARGER THAN THAT OF ANY OTHER PUBLICATION bl el Lloyd George and Wilson. (New York Times.) ( In his successive volumes of war memoirs, Mr {Lloyd George has allowed himself a free hand in attacking or slandering the dead. They cannot | answer him noWw, though many of them in their {lifetime left him in no doubt what they thought lof him. He has already had some hard things to say of President Wilson, but in his latest book seems to have outdone himself in insinuations and charges | full of malice disguised as history. To accuse Mr. | Wilson of insincerity and deception is a task which ‘shollld be left to somebody other than Lloyd George. | His friend and political supporter, the late C. P.} ——— | Scott of The Manchester Guardian, set it down as an unquestioned truth that “Lloyd George doesn’t | know what a principle is.” And that most austere this week land correct of English statesmen, Sir Edward Grey, gave as his reason for refusing longer to follow mship officlal advising that|yj,vy George as leader of the Liberal Party: “He c had increased by 117/;04 man whose word cannot be trusted.” 933, and that he expected | aq for his assertion that President Wilson's heart would be twice as large as 1934, was not in the war, after the United States hadt the other from the Juneau Chamber of Commerce|entered it, and that he withheld aid from the} information booth secretary, showing that 841 visitors Allies as long as possible, it is sufficient to appeal had registered at the booth from 40 States plainly : to the written record and the memories of men still shows the re-vitalized tourist traffic to Alaska, and living. From the first it was the plea and purpose indicates the possibility of its economic importance. of President Wilson to comply with every reasonable Recent information in a Tacoma Chamber of request of the Allies, beginning Wlf?hmf;(‘yv m:gl‘;: Commerce magazine discloses , that 317,330 people '0ns and ships. They knew, wi e possible | 4 5 . exception of Lloyd George, that this country could! passed through the Rainier National Park entrance this 0™ troops to France until it had time to year up to September 1. The magazine credits a consid- collect, drill and equip them. At the critical hour able portion of this tourist traffic to the advertising gy the men were ready and the British Ambas- | campaign conducted in California by the Pugel saqor laid before the President the urgent need of Sounders and British Columbians’ advertising cam- yeinforcements, Mr. Wilson at once promised him paign. ‘This organization includes the commercial the aid of every American soldier who could be got groups of five Northwest cities, somewhat similar in across the Atlantic. Of this msta_nt and firm dL form and purpose to the Californians, Inc. When cision by the F“r%idenb, made without copsultln]fi this later organization was.formed in. 1922 to stimu- his Cabinet or his military phists, sigrd Rt'adll}ubl'rJ‘s late development in Central and Northern California, -“‘“ld 13‘* ‘; “'::sl?:ef"‘:"’::;;;‘:sl“my of power by a these parts of the State entertained about 100,000 Fuler that he ° 3 o \ POTg! S islike out-of-State tourists anmually. As the advertising =~ UOYE Ceoree 1o ‘fl?}“‘l‘;‘w};:dma;‘ac‘!“”:’;;;n‘m:U.d_ continued the number of tourists steadily increased. o B man could.have been' Shote .un]ikc. How according to a detailed report from the m;:u.m?av unlike may be seen if one tries to imagine Woodrow tion's headquarters, it reached a peak in 1931 of yjjson reviling a deceased fellow-worker in a great 1,060,472 tourists. In 1922 the tourist expenditures cayse. were $6,500,000, and in 1931 $68,252,583, according u»‘ B — the report. The years of 1932 and 1933 had a re-| 2 > o cession of about 33 per cent but this year is expected | The Power of Advertising. to reach the 1931 level. | The future potentialities for Alaska from tourist (Seattle Post-Intelligencer.) uture po s aska s ; e isi | The governor of the Hudson's Bay Company ' travel are large. Any Alaskan who visits in tne! ~The governor o P! X vole throughout, feturned lately to Montreal after making the arduous | States realles the sfronk iniegaty aple (DTOUSDOL gy i e Astic and back along. the old fur trade country \, 4 " 2 £S5] U “route. - see it. Alaska has tholisands of prospective toUrlsts.| e fact that he was the first governor of the Steamship, rail and airlines are consistently ad- nistoric company to take the journey is less inter- vertising Alaska as a Summer vacation land. The esting than the tale he brought back. Army and Navy flights and cruises to Alaska this! An Eskimo living in the Far North saw an past Summer have given invaluable publicity to the 'advertisement depicting a model in a stylish gown Territory, both through newspapers and mouon’and‘notcd that the price was $25. picture news reels. The possible visit of the President| Going to the nearest trading post he tendered to Alaska has already given more prominence to @ Valuable fox pelt in payment and ordreed the Alaska, nationally |articie to be shipped to him. Tha vacline-Chiambers of Cafiumercs In the cities’ . TODaRSHY Wanduted WEY/QL, Bakindo, Wk (10 buy a woman's modish gown. and towns of Alaska are all contributing thv»ir bit | Thot . 1ie: lesrned’ that iHe" Wouldba crnlikat: to publicize the Territory. All indications point to',, the evidence of his eyes, supposed that the certain and rapid increase in tourist travel which woman and the garment went together, and what eventually - means profitable tourist business 10 he was really trying to purchase was a wife. Alaska, if Alaska will properly grasp shis oppor-| The real point of the story, however, is not in its tunity and if each town and city will help in humor but in the well-known lesson which it re- featuring its local attractions to the degree of where peats to business men—it pays to advertise. tourists will make longer stop-overs, and enjoy thcm-:[ When a remote aborigine observes an advertise- selves sufficiently to return each year, then Alaska Ment and endeavors to send his patronage to the will begin to receive real profits from this business ddvertiser everyone must admit that good advertising still the best salesman, and that even local 1S | force. The tourist business can become an important business in Alaska. | 1t begins to be apparent that those who planned ito reconstruct the NRA forgot to lay in plank that | General Johnson would be willing to walk.—(Boston | Herald.) THIS TOURIST BUSINESS. Two Alaska tou s issued in Juneau, one frc his company's tour per cent this year « the 1935 traffic repo THE J BIRD. In today's Empire the second issue, Volume III, TR of The J Bird, appears. It is a newspaper in which| Ours is a pecullar country. We strain every the news is gathered, written and edited by the pesource to obtain wages for unemployed men so students of the Juneau High School, under the that they can strike for higher wages.—(Dallas supervision of a faculty member, who teaches the News.) SENATOR POPE GETS NOTICE IN CONGRESS TJunior Member from Idaho Is Stealing Lots of Day’s Thunder IN MUNITIONS PROBE For one thing, Pope has kept |close to his office most of the time since Congress adjourned. And that means more than one would think, | offhand. He has been available to news- paper men for comment on all things. Where during a session of Congress a first-termer usually is overlooked for such purposes, dur- ing times of adjournment anyone in either House or Senate Who is in town is sought eagerly. Aside from the Senator’s pres- ence in Washington during the “dog days” on capitol hill, however, there is another reason why he has be- come known. During the last Congress, most important points to be de- veloped in their inquiry. Pope got his chance to assume the role of Senate prosecutor four days after the hearing opened. From now until the investigation is concluded, from all indications, he will play an increasinigly important part. ., FORMER U. OF W. GIRL Miss Evelyn Tostesen, who spent the summer with her aunt, Mrs. attending the Alaska Agricultural 1College and School of Mines at Fairbanks this year. She has been By HERBERT PLUMMER WASHINGTON, Oct. 6.—Idaho’s “other Senator”—It happens at the after persuaded the Senate that it should et i Fire work to be held upon the arrival of Miss Francis Gulick who was expected soon from the south. A. H. Zeigler brief business Mariposa. trip south on the Miss Fannie Emilia Tervaluto and Victor Kukkola of Douglas were married at the Congregational par- sonage. the Jefferson after visiting in the States. Charles Miller was making pre- parations to move from his old quarters at the Douglas Opera House to a new up-to-date restau- rant in the Day building on Front Street. Mrs. A. Dortero of Skagway and her daughter were Juneau visitors, guests of Mrs. Fred CIliff. under scheduled at the Moose Hall, = | Another Shamrock Club dance, returned from a!Alas) pr B ad ga Another Shamrock Club dancc,‘k“”“’” | the management of Rob. | River countr . ert Porter and James Momb was | and was buried at Chitina. requ continue discussions, as an ‘author- ized representative of the local or-|‘‘largest flocks of teal for late sum- with the organization in endeavor- in to get authority from the NRA jofices nseparate codes for various craftg in which the organization believes the codes agreed to in the continental United States do not in Washington, to set u in operly apply. Letters of introduction to Wash- ington oficials were given to J. R. by |Gov. John W. Troy, Delegate An- thony J. Dimond, and others, ac- Miss Rena Jorgenson arrived on|cording to Mr. Thompson, when he was called east recently because of the illn Secretary ythe, local business agent, of his sister. Thompson has bes vised that Mr. nizations, granted. ity S T i OLDTIMER DIES Johnny Nelson, oldtimers in y, passed away recentl; e Daily Empire Want Ads Pay! Blythe has dis-; cussed the Alaska situation with of- ficials in Washington, and a radio t to stay an extra week to!and life-long resident of Bald Eagle one of the best the Copper | scurrying southward along the lakes P of this region are the reason. Their intuition prompts them to say, “Impossible.” But nevertheless there are flocks of darting teal pointing southward over the lakes —riding on frigid air that crystal- lized water on many shorelines. Observers in forthern Minnesota on famed Winnibogoshish and on Lecch Lake, have reported the feathered hordes are already ‘“on the wing.” With hunting time ap- m|{for a warmer clime. From central portions of the northwest come Similar reports. M. B. Jamieson, veteran outdoorsman | lake near St. Paul, reports the mer in my memory—and they arc migrant ducks.” Sportsmen of the school who five years ago would have deemed such early flight im- { Possible, are among those exhibiting Y |alarm. In the days of August freeze ups, 110 .degree temperatures, and drought, dust stbrms, wilting lakes and general duck depletion, they Rolling flocks of teal and mallard L | DRS. KASER & FREEBURGER proaching, the birds, notably teal and mallard, already were heading ** __ conservative 7 e ‘confess anything can ha ENTERS ALASKA COLLEGE Blanche Cascaden at Livengood, is | a student at the University of Senator Nye of North Dakota had |Washington for the past twe sears. present to be James Pinckney Pope, a native of Louisiana—is winning a place of his own in the national Jimelight. Time was in Washington when most people, in referring to Idaho's representation in Congress, men- tioned Borah and let it go at that @n the Roosevelt landslide of '32 however,, a_ tall, bald, soft-spoken Democrat was swept from the may- or's chambers of Boise into the look into the conduct of the muni- tions industry, Vice President Gar- ner appointed Pope as one of the seven Senators to do the job. He and his colleagues are at the task now, and their efforts are re- sulting in one of the biggest stor- les to come out of Washington at the present time. PROBES NAVAL MISSIONS Senate to sit alongside the “lone Jion of Idaho” and since then ‘Washingto™ be~n conscious (that Id>ho has @ + spokesman ‘Be.ides Borah ia tie cadits As a matter of fact, in the dpin- don of scrge, the juni Idaho has come very g the show from Borah—at during the summer. s . Nye has given Pope a real break in the investigation. At the outset he put him in charge of that portion of. the in- quiry dealing with the activity of United States naval missions and other members of the investigating committee consider this one of the HORTON—TREVETHAN Miss Frances Horton, youngest daughter of Capt. and Mrs. Andrew Horton of Seward, was married in Seward September 14 to Murl Tre- vethan at the home of the bride's parents. Mr. and Mrs. Foster Singleton attended the young bride and groom and the marriage was performed" by U. S. Commissioner E. P. Harwood . ———-——— Millions of tons of stone left in the wake of gold dredgers oper- ating on the Sacramento, Cal., river under the management of Robert Porter and James Momb was sched- uled at the Moose Hall. Miss Nadine Saum, who had been | delighting audiences with her| dancing of the Highland Fling at | the Grand theatre, Juneau, was on | Douglas. Weather: Trace of rainfall, - - the program of the Lyric '.hexan.re.‘| | Daily Empire Want Ads Pay! | ppen. ' ed E. BR. WILSON Chircpodisc—Foot Specialist | 401 Goldstein Building | | PHONE 495 ' Se 1 Se il he, DENTISTS A I Blomgren Building PHONE 56 | | | ' Fraternal Societies OF | Gastineau Channel ]I \ B.P.0O. ELKS meeis . ¥ every Wednesday A at 8:09 p.m. Visiting brothers weicome. John H. Walny - Exalted Ruler. M. H. Sides, Secretary. e KNIGHTS OF COLUUMBUS Seghers Council No.1760. eetings second and last Monday at 7:30 p. m. Transient brothers urg- to attend Councik Chambers, Fifth Street. JOHN F. MULLEN, G. K H. J. TURNER, Scretary —_— ,MOUNT JUNEAU LODGE NO. 147 cond and fourth Mon- —3!|day of each mopth in ottish Rite Temple, ginning at 7:30 p. m. E. HENDRICKSON, :r; James W. LEIVERS, Sec- Hours 9 am. to 9 p.m. | Douglas Aerie 117 F. O. E. | Meets first and third Mondays, 8 p.m., Eagles Hall, Douglas. Visiting brothers welcome. W. P, T. W. Cashen, Sante Degar, Secretary. Dr. C. P. Jenne | DENTIST | Rocms 8 and 9 Valentine Building by Telephone 176 i l.l‘ R e, | 7 av | ‘Dr.J. W. Bayne | | DENTIST | L | | Rooms 5-6 Triangle Bldg. | and a tank for crude oil save 3l 4 | Our trucks go any place any | time. A tank for Dicsel Oil | burner trouble. PHONE 149; NIGHT 148 RELIABLE TRANSFER i i | Office hours, 9 am. to 5 pr. 'z;:. | Evenings by appointment | PHONE 321 b = ¥ “\\\\\\\\\\\* THE BEST TAP BEER IN TOWN! ' © THE MINERS’ Recreation Parlors and Liquor Store BILL DOUGLAS | Most of the newspapers publish- iEd in the United States since 1868 |are probably doomed to extinction 'through decay of the paper unles3 ! preservative measures are employed, reports. Robert Simpson Opt. D. | Graduate Los Angeles Col- ! | lege of Optometry and | Opthalmology . | Glasses Fitted, Lenses Ground | Commercial Adjust- £ ment & Rating Bureau | Cooperating: with White Serv- ice Bureau ! Room 1—Shattuck Bldg. | ‘We have 5,000 local ratings | on file | | the national bureau of standards, | | Not Because We Are Cheaper BUT BETTER “CONTESTS Why not organize a team among your friends, and get in on the fun? Teams from all parts of the city and representing many or- ganizations have already en- tered this first series. Brunswick Alleys POOL BILLIARDS BARBER SHOP FINE Watch and Jewelry Repairing at very reasonable rates PAUL BLOEDHORN FRONT STREET REPAIR Telephone HENRY PIGG RiCE & AHLERS CO. PLUMBING HEATING SHEET METAL “We tell you in advance what Job will cost” ITS Wise to Cali 18 Juneau SEE BIG VAN Guns and Ammunition LOWER FRONT STREET | Next to Midget Lunch | Harry Race DRUGGIST The Squibb Store Transfer Co. when in need of MOVING or STORAGE Fuel 0Oil Coal Transfer Alaska Transfer Co. GENERAL HAULING ED JEWELL, Proprictor PHONES 269—1134 French-Italian Dinners GASTINEAU CAFE GASTINEAU HOTEL BUILDING Wines—Beer draught or bottled beer PHONE 114—Femmer's Dock. )i- HAROLD L. ST ABLER, Local Agent DISTRIBUTED BY ALASKA-RHEINIANDER DISTRIBUTORS For prompt service and immediate delivery of either Rheinlander L+ e &7 et " DR. R. E. SOUTHWELL | | Optometrist—Optician i | Eyes Examined—Glasses Fitted | Room 17, Valentine Bldg. Office Phone 484; Residence | | | i Jomes-Stevens Shop LADIES’—CHILDREN'S READY-TO-WEAR Seward Street Near Third a | Phone 238. Office Hours: 9:30 to 12; 1:00 to 5:30 - | i DENTIST | | Gastineau Building [ = Dr. Richard Wimams] OFFICE AND RESIDENCE | JUNEAU-YOUNG | Funeral Parlors Licensed Funeral Directors and Embalmers Night Phone 1851 Day Phone 12 | =1 Phone 481 || Dr. A. W. Stewart 23— DENTIST Hours 9 am. to 6 pm. SEWARD BUILDING Office Phone 409, Res. SABIN’S Everything in Furnishings for Men Scientific Masseurer Massage, violet ray and vibrator treatments. Try a salt glow bath. Scalp treatments and shampoos. Phone 276 [ £ P = I - —_— Tue Juneau LAunbry | 1 Franklin Street between Dr. Geo. L. Barton | Front and Second Streets CHIROPRACTOR | | | | 201 Goldstein Bldg. Phone 214 | | Office hours—$9-12, 1-5. Even- THONE 208 .l\ ings by appointment = 95 ¢ JUNEAU FROCK SHOPPE “Exclusive but not Expensive” Coats, Dresses, Lingerie, Hosiery and Hats Call 142 Gastineau Ave. or Phone 617. DR. H. VANCE OSTEOPATH Consultation and examination Free. Hours 10 to 12; 1 to 5; Large Sample Room ELEVATOR SERVICE S. ZYNDA, Prop. HOTEL ZYNDA I 7 to 8:30 and by appointment. Office Grand Apts., near Gas- tineau. Hotel FRYE’S BABY BEEF “DELICIOUS HAMS and BACON Frye-Bruhn Company | Telephone 38 GARBAGE HAULED Reasonable Monthly Rates Mining Location ~otices at Em- ' %L%H?N%Yiis pire office. . Phone 4753 | e — T — | P & Prompt Delivery ' GENERAL MOTORS and MAYTAG PRODUCTS W. P. JOHNSON e o S its known patrons. A Good Business Reference Just as you judge a man by his business con- nections, 80, too, you are inclined to judge a bank by ——rrrrnd LOW PRICES! HUB BEST SERVICE! WARKET BIG SAVINGS! TELEPHONE 602 near Folsom prison have been ship- ator|their relations with the manufac-|ned to other points to enforce lev- near | turers of armaments. Both Nye &ndiges on the river and other streams. Daily Empire Want Ads Pay! ALASKA MEAT CO. FEATURING CARSTEN'S BABY BEEF—DIAMOND TC HAMS AND BACON—TJ. S. Government Inspected The B. M. Behrends Bank likes to be judged in this way. This bank is the oldest and largest bank in Alaska and it has operated under the same manage- ment since it was founded forty-two years ago. Throughout this period it the industrial and commercial enterprises by which all this section lives. The B. M. Behrends Bank JUNEAU, An alliance here will help you. & t McCAUL MOTOR COMPANY Dodge and Plymouth Dealers The Florence Shop Permanent Waving a Specialty Florence Holmaquist, Prop, PHONE 427 | Behrends Bank Building | has been identified with ALASKA %._T_ TYPEWRITERS RENTED $5.00 per month J. B. Burford & Co. “Our doorstep is worn by satis- fied customers J Juneau Ice Cream Parlors Exclusive Dealers HORLUCK'S DANISH ICE CREAM e St SHOP IN JUNEAU! PR R — — e

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