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t he is"—to improve a bit . . conscienc: He “is Daily Alaska Empire o v woen Perhaps Americans, both young and old, see in ROBERT W. BENDER - - GENERAL MANAGER . . the realization of thelr desire to be inde- s o . " . Published cvery evening cfcept Sundhy (by the Pendént and to be masters of their own ships. SMPIRE PRINTINGICOMPANY at Second and' Malt | ye™: ohvious that, in Popeye, there is a phil- Streets, June: . w] . ey, 8 AT s 1. | Osophical lesson for us a. hy must we be conten Entered in the Post Office in Juneau as Second Cluss i t freedom just by read- mati . to enjoy th ness, in the right amount and omething we all could r month, boeliirn acquire to good adv A dependence, more on By mall, postage paid, at the following rates: ? i year. in advance, $12.00; six months, in advance, one’s initiative and less on the other fellow, would °, $1.85. £3.00; one month, i be a good thing. SUBSCRIPTION RATES., ing? His as Deilvared by carrier In Juneau and Douglas for $1.25 in the right direc if they will promptly Lcm"; l(;ul n\mnv'. y failure or irregularity So, with this New Year, let us agrée with Popeye v the delivery of their papers. f Iy 1if g 16 Ld‘.m,“’“,,a Business Offices, 374, | that we will be what we are, that our daily life with an individualism in mating our hopes. ed in 19 m MEMBER OF ASSOCIATED PRESS, T | will be The Assocrated Press s exclusively entitled to the our actio 13 for Tepublication of all news dispatches credited 10 or not otherwise scal news publ credited in this paper and also the d herein ok RS Y nirades. . C ades! JLASKA CIRCULATION GUARANTEED TO BE LARGER ! Corgrades, Comrades! THAN THAT CFF ANY OTHER PUBLICATION. _ | et . } Business in Germany must & full of comarader The 1fids of 'thé *Labor Front lo after’ that Labor Law must be carried ut rigidly. Business, s the Business Lommum\, vith its Feuhrer and't aff. Sometimes a {man or cle must be a litile s {prised when he finds.a placard on- the wall of his hop or cffice, laying down the rule that happiness must prevail in L business families have seen formed, composed of the boss and a cor fidential c of two, one a workman and One a clerk. The; to get together, to learn to under- and and lcve one another. For this purpose they arz made to take a week’s education in the com- munity school. There they live in one room dnd learn to appreciate one another's point of view.” il Learn to detest one another would seem to be a A GOOD'YEAR: ' {Eghf Somt o n't love to work on a Berlin news- correspondent of The London copies itation sent to the staff of a prominent” journal of that town. The business cader summons all the "Comrades of. the company re foretold with their clese relations” to the First Comrade- n in good hands. In the<le hip Evenir ves, them “the copportunity for imes.) be cooperative and IT HAS BE December 31, 1934 ast day of a year As years go, it has been a good y: the good things predicted for 1934 have Nor have the dire ostications of the pes: eventuated as they we The cou than two years he has been in office, Presi-|: voluniary athering the ' small entrance dent Roosevelt omplished mor ce of 20 pfennigs p head.” The leader offers & United States than A hree-hour program, an entcrtainment by artists in addition presents to the Following : > the total ‘value’ of one mark cepted by~ the wait 5 s (beer and eoffee;. like period. When he took offite he 1e conditions in this country nece: remedies. He set about to provi nized tha 1 immed > those reme to do something in an emer would cxpected to. stigk through the the country and its people out of a ression tha Evening “unconditionally and had lasted several years. a mere two or three hours.” A mar- While recos not by any means complete,|.ied man is allowed to be absent only on a presen- 1934 has witnes ble progress. That i ation to business leader of a medical certificate perticularly notice & showing that wife is ill Fishing, mining tivities, not to forg Who does not appear at this Comrade- Federal Public Wor contributed to em- ship Evening or tries to throw a veil over ployment the . ix Of. "bits{niess condts “f‘ ne ppearance with xnvfihd reasons, tions. Pro; fnet Svd hea hi If outside the working commun- g g nd therewith outside the present order much greater, of course, if it had not b for the of tHing shipping strike . which del e st it Suh What a pleasant evening and what a sweet| summer employment Howeve of the|rraternal spirit! industries, and nature herself, apparently, worked|. = = . S during the shortened season to overcome thi handicap. More “Defense” for Japan. The Nome fire cast a gloom over the fall season TN but the magnificent. spirit of the people of Nome fSAnaRe Dity. . Stas) : the help of the Federal Government and Lt R¢ > action of the Okada Cabinet in approving s P t appropriat r national fense in Cross may turn the disaster into a bless! prraitistions tor | alimml. detenis | i ry of the Japane: empire demons! es > the influence e sed over the affairs country by the c rs of its army and y.. The pr in wime. when, the ir roads and other projects constructed| . al Works and CWA funds throughout| the, Tercitorys Rave-pregided s employment= and \con- tributed generally to better business conditions. in Alaska. There has been substantial progress jn Juneau. Street improvements have been made, Wil- lcughby Avenue - has been completed as a Public Works project, the highways out of the city hav never been in as good conditicn. And the Douglas bridge has becn started. There is no magic that will bring about Utopia in a day, 2 month or & year. It raquires thougi effort, experiment, failure and the will to try again. All of these combined in 1934 to lead us into better days in 1935. through Fe of the Japanese taxpa. [slainly call for was strongly resisted by he Minister .nanece, ktut had no chance 2gainst the demands of his colleagues, the Mir of the Army and the Minist the Navy, b of whom are professional officers. All Gen. Sen- juro Hayashi and Admiral Mineo Osumi had to do was to threaten to resign and the Cabinet promptly acceded to their wishes. In countries where civilians maintain control of fhe government, the arrangement in Japan seems almost incredible. But, according to the Japan tradition, not -only are the Ministers of the Arm: and Navy regularly drawn from the professional services; they are responsible directly to the Em- peror, instead of to the Prime Minister, who rep- resents the will of the people. Moreover, such is the prestige of the army and navy, that the resigna- tion of either of their representatives in the Cabinet P is likely to produce a political crisis of the fir -pres e ve e stalks across ! - SEWpthasst pipe, Fupeyo the Tlumion order.. Japan, therefore, at the insistence of a gen- e comic sections, which reach Juneai from Seatile, eral and an admiral, continues to prepare for and animated motiow picture presentations into the war, heedless of the burden such a policy imposes hearts and imaginations of not only the childrenlypon the national treasury and the increasing but the men and women, of America. strain it entail world peace. He eats his spinach, and he squints his eye—does this humorous creation of some philosophical cartoon artist. He has a forearm that would make Primo Carnera green with envy; and he uses it as a sledge- hammer, much to the universal pleasure of all who Fall— follow his sure-feoted path gof life. o A And that is why Popeye the Sailor is such a A lot is being printed on how to detect counter- fascinating fo with the publie. He does what he breit bills of fz large ‘denomination.” Many per pleases; he sticks that -belligereht « mandiblefsons have forgotten how a genuine one his out and follows the dicte of his own ‘Bunula Courier- pr '€ss.) l'llll,OhOl’HY, POPEY L—H “I yam what I yam." His ponderously typical jaw tightly clenching his fo; People in pa of New Hampshire and Penn- sylvania who had grown to maturity without ever (Boston; Tra -3 flllllllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIllIIIIIIIIlllIIIIIINHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIillIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII|IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIHIIIIIH . HEADQUARTERS FOR Juneau-Young Hardware Co. i WllflllIIIIIIIIIIII_IJH!IMIHIH“]W{Illlll]lllllIIIIflllII_l!IIllII!IIHIflIlIIIIII‘IIIIIIIIIlllllIH'IIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIII[I MR e TR 20 YEARS AGO | ! From The Enpire —— DECEMBER 31, 1914 Twenty Gernan dirigibles were al Ostend preparatory to an air raid upon London. Word of the Zeppelin plans was contained in a private wire from Berlin through the German owned wireless stagion at Sayville, L. I. The di from Ostend to London, 75 3 could be managed easily by big German airships, it was polnted [out Installation ceremonies placed in | chairs the following new officers of the Masonic lodge: C. E. Naghel, worshipful master; M. S. Whittier, senior warden; John Rustgard, jun- ior warden; J. R. Willis, treasurer; E. D. Beattie, secretary; J. B. Stev- ens, chaplain; F. B. Hyder, mar- shal; W. F. Fry, senior deacon; S; P. Raymond, junior deacon; G.'H. Whitney, senior steward, F. E.| Koeper, tyler, Alvin Goldstéin, or- ganist. H. T. Tripp, retiring wor- shipful master, was presented with | a beautiful past master's jewel manufactured in Juneau. In the presence of a number of friends. the infant daughter cf Mr. and Mrs. Rinikki was christened i bv the Rev. Owen Umstead, in Douglas. A gala masquerade ball was plan- ned by the Juneau camp of the Arctic Brotherhood to celebrate New Year's eve. Miss Mary Beckstrom of Douglas went to Mendenhall to visit for a couple of days with Miss Kuyken- dall, the teacher of the government school. Paul Petersen arrived from the south to spend the holidays in Treadwell. Capt. Erickson and Andy Melie of Douglas left for Warm Springs Bay to spend a short vacation, The Pioneers' Home at Sitka re- ceived a valuable Christmas pres- ent in the property of the building and grounds used for the naval hotpital at Sitka. A. G. Shoup, su- perintendent of the institution'ac- cented the property from H. A Crowell, custodian of the naval de- pot at Sitka. | WARRACK | | Construction Co. | Jumeam Phone 487 > of expenditure at al ™ Cigars © Cigarettes I ~ | Candy i '\:ai‘dh \ r ' The having seen a Democrat are getting an eyeful this || New Arctic Pabst Famous Draught Beer On Tap " JIMMY*™ CARLSON W | For very prompt LIOQUOR DELIVERY e —— ro R D AGENCY (Authorized Dealers) GREASES GAS OILS Juneau Motors FOOT OF MAIN ST, [ Py | BIRTH DAY/ THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, MONDAY, DEC. 31, 1934. The Empire extends congratula- s and best wishes today, their virthday anniversary, to tke follow-| supposed to have heen assembled i DECEMBER 31 Cary L. Tubbs James T. Burnett George T. Dudley Albert L. Fisk NOT!ICE ON AND AFTER JANUARY 1, 1933 the scaie of pay per hour will be $1.20 for carpenters as allowed Northern Zone by the P.WA. ('\RPEN’I‘ERS LOCAL NO. L Your .own druggist is author- ized to cheerfully refund your money on the spn! if you are not relieved by Creomulsion. LADIES'—CIUILDREN’S READY-TO-WEAR Seward Street Near Third PHONE 35¢ ; CONTESTS Why not organize a team among your friends, and get in on the fun? Teams { | BEAUTY SHOP from all parts of the city Brunswick Alleys Rheinlander Beer on Draught BARBER SHOP | JUNEAU FROCK Examined=—i SHOPPE “Exclusive but not Expensive” Coats, Dresses, Lingerie, Hoslery and Hats JUNEAU-YOUNG Funeral Parlors Licensed Funeral Directors and Embalmers | Night Phone 1851 Day Phone 13 I Mabel Schmitz D - B4 “Tomorrow's Styles Today “Juneau’s Own Store” e e LUDWIG NELSON | ALASK A JEWELER Watch Repairing Philco—General Electric Agency Jurean L \UNDRY 1 [ The Flo*ence Sho | Permanent Waving a Specialty Florence Holmquist, Prop. Franklin Street between Front and Second Streets PROFESSIONAL Helene W.L. Albrecht PHYSIOTHERAPY Massage, Electricity, Infra Red | Ray, Medical Gymnastics. 307 Goldstein Building Phone Office, 216 SY| Rose A. Andrews Graduate Nurse | Electric Cabinet Baths—Mas- | sage, Colonic Irrigations | Office hours 11 am. to 5 pm. | Evenings by Appointment | Becond and Main Not Because We Are BUT BETTER ] E. R. WILS , Chirapodn—Fopt. Specialist 401 Goldstein «Buildiny PHONE 496 RICE; & AHLERS €O. JUMBING N “We tell you in advarnece what Job will cost” KASER & FREEFBURGER Blomgren Building ‘6ET OUT OF "‘Y LIFE FOREVER ! Hours 9 am. to 9 pm. Dr. C.—P. Jenne Rocms 8 and 9 Valentine Telepnone 176 Dr. Geo. L. Barton CHIRCPRACTOR 201 Goldstein Bldg. Phone 214 Office hours—9-12, 1-5. Even- ings by appointment Banished clothes basket, and laundry tubs. And she's a gayer, for her husband now she sends her laundry . Richard Williums DENTIST OFFICE AND RESIDENCE Gastincau Building clothes to the Fraternal Societies oF Gastineau Channel — B. P. 0. ELES meets every Wednesday at 8 Jm. Visiting brothers welcome. John H. Walmer, Ex- ited Ruler. M. H. Sides, Secretary KNIGHTS OF COLUMBUS “asghers Council No. 4 760. Meetings second ad last Monday at % :30 p. m. Transient ! srothers urged to at- end. Council Cham- ers, Fifth St. JOHN F. MULLEN, % K, H. J. TURNER, Secretary, (et e R R ik i VIOUNT JUNEAU LODGE NO. 147 a Second and fourth Mon- ! day of each month in | Scottish Rite ‘Temple, beginning at 7:30 p.m. L. E. HENDRICKSON Master; JAMES W. LEIVERS, Secretary. DOUGLAS A °, £ AERIE N\ 117 F. O. E. deets first and third Mondays, 8 ».m., Eagles’ Hall, Douglas. Visiting rothers welcome. Sante Degan, V. P, T. W. Cashen, Secretary. —_— Our tru s go any place any] time. A tank for Diesel O * and a fank for crude oil save : burner trouble. i PHO'NE 149; NIGHT 148 i RELIABLE TRANSFER | Commercial Adjust- | ment& Rating Bureau Cooperating with White Serv- | ice Bureau Ro>m 1—Shattuck Bldg. We have 5,000 local ratings on file TR | Dr. A. W. Stewart Hours 9 am. t¢ 6 pra. SEWARD BUILDING Office Phone 409, Res. Laun(lry ELECTRICAL Behrends Bank Building | | | & Wiring Servicing | TYPEWRITERS RENTED ' $5.00 per month i J. B. Burford & Co. “Our doorstep is worn by satis- fied customers I Juneau Ice Cream SHORT ORDERS Fountain Rep(ur Work | l BETTY MAC 103 Assembly Apartments Mize 3804 PHONE 547 and representing many or- ganizations have already en- s tered this first series. { | pomnan BILLIARDS i SABIN’S Everything in Furnishings TAP BEER HOTEL ZYNDA IN TOWN! Large Sample Room ELEVATOR SERVICE 8. ZYNDA, Prop. THE MINERS' For Quick . |1 RADIO REPAIR EXPERIENCE Nearly half a century’s accumlated ex- perience and conservative progress have qualified the B. M. Behrends Bank to offer its services to the people of Juneau and Alaska in all matters pertaining to sound banking. We are glad to have you take advantage of our facilities in all your banking problems. The B.-M. Behrends Bank Recreation Parlors }|{ Telephone Liquor Store BILL DOUGLAS * GCARBAGE HAULED Reasonable Monthly Rates E. 0. DAVIS TELEPHONE 584 '-n- Mh‘ Man JUNEAU, ALASKA " Robert Glmpaon Opt. D | Graduate Angeles Col- | | | ‘lege of Optometry and | | Opthalmnology | Glasses Titted, Lenses Ground | DR. H. VANCE OSTEOPATH Consultation and examination Frec. Hours 10 to 12; 1 to 5; 7 to 8:30 and by appointment, | Office Grand Apts., near Gas- tineau Hotel. Phone 177 Alaska Transfer Co. GENERAL HAULING ED JEWELL, Proprielor PHONES 269—1134 TTSEE BIG VAN | |1 { Guns and Ammunition /| | LOWER FRONT STREET | | Next to Midget Lunch " L Drucs AND SunprIES ] or LIQUORS IN A HURRY! PHONE 97 Fast Free Delivery | Guy L. Smith | Drug Store Next to Coliseurs , | Hollywood Slyle Shop Formerly COLEMAN'S Pay Less—Much Less Front at Main Street BEULAH HICKEY HENRY PIGG B — | Dr.J. W. Bayne ; | DENTIST Rooms 5-8 Triangle Bldg. | | Otfice hours, 9 am. to 5 pm. | |+ Everings by appointm.nt | | PHONE 321 | 27— S Harry Race DRUGGIST » The Squibb Store Gt S | IDEAL PAINT SHOP If It's Paint We Have It! J] WENDT & GARSTER PHONE 549 }hguuuy-mn.m or -h-at'ng_