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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, MONDAY, JAN. 21, 1935 : Beauty and the Beet. —— Daily Alaska Empzre Fraternal Societies —_— ! PROFESSIONAL | E— | g M: (New York Herald Tribune.) HAPPY | . , o RORERT W. BF\DEF' " I 2 Despite new literary admonishments of possxblc 0 YEARS A‘JO BIRTHDAYl‘ = —— e castine Chann, l I Published ¢ evening _except &u...l., h, tne danger in fighting Time with chemical warfare, | Prom The Eropire 4 | f Helene W.L. Albrecht 2 au e EMPIRE PRINTING COMPANY at Second and Main | were there ever so many ways of saving face—so| | | Rt — 1 B Jomean : many lotions, hormones, skin diets, muscle firmers, st el { | PHYSIOTHERAPY — Entered in 1k matter. SUBSCRIPTION RATES. Dellvered by carrier In Juneaw and Douglas for $1.25 per _month, rouges, |colored talons? .27, mail, postage paid, at the following rates: today—in those e in advance, $12.00; six months, in advance, P00 one Shonth 1n agvancs, $1.55 Subscribers will confer a favor if they will promptly |blazing toenail, notify the Bus fice of any failure or irregularity in the deliv r papers. Telephone orial and Business Offices, 374. Rarely in th MEMBER OF ASSOCIATED PRESS. for a price The Associated Press s exclusively entitled to the was it the cust use for republication of all news dispatches credited to gifts of remedi se credited in this paper and also the lace valentine days would have sent his mistress a | ALASKA CIRCULATION GUARANTEED TO BE LARGER THAN THAT OF ANY OTHER PUBLICATION. | conveniences in | bought for $2. all, blow into the simple, cost was poetic, CAPT. RYNI Versatile indeed are these men that go down to ‘Wire dispatches carry the news| the sea in ships. ~|and the effect, ss | wrinkle smoothers, _latre applications, luncheon creams, showerproof ‘ Russia’s three-fold assault on the vanishing eyelashes, ting or appearances? From weekly jar of turtle glands, lipstick. Only in late years has public improvement | before a mirror become anything but confession to| |a bad complexion and bringing up. And yet great- grandma did have her little secrets. | pioneer mothers knew ways of overcoming lack of Where there was fire there was soot, and added most beguiling shadows to brow and lash, |giving an Irish sort of upward gaze that can't be were deep-red lips and tinted cheeks. harmless but delicate mist of powder. done in giggling girlish privacy, for to be a natural ‘beauly then was woman's art. nothing—and the feminine reserve was aristocratic, astringents, evening bases, the- cocktail lips, carnage | What would beauty be in the raw intervals of plain skin between put- permanent to the preparation of the person for public view grows more scientific. e past did ladies consent to proclaim | Nor to make of reir reliance upon beautif: om in more gallant periods les for natural defects—no suitor a neck food or a kissproof Even heroic covered wagons. Where there was beet juice there And, last of before an evening party, grandma had only to flour barrel in order to apply a This was But it was quick, it worked. The process upon ancestral evidence, was all that could be desired. | \ [ of Captain Ryning of the:steamer Btarr, who, with, the assistance of a woman passenger benefit of doctor or nurse, successfully brought twin: into the world as his ship neared Dutch Harbor. Harry C. Hunt, of Unga, and The mother, Mrs. and w: n.houb mines, somewhat just Two Setbacks. (Cincinnati Enquirer.) After its brilliant success in handling the Hun-|O. Sloane. | Barian- -Yugoslav dispute and the question of the Siw.r‘ the League of Nations enjoyed an extra-| |ordinary prestige. That success is being dimmed | now, however, by two distinct set- the babies are reported doing nicely in a hospital|packs, The League Council offered a conciliation plan to Paraguay and Bolivia, which the former flatly at Dutch Harbor. ‘Too often the avi rage landsman, perhaps swayed |refused. So the stubborn war in the Gran Chaco|local branch of the Sullivan Drill a bit by fiction or film, pictures the marine on the|goes on unhindered. bridge as a rough, uncouth fellow whose best parlor men that sail the seven seas. for Skipper Ryning? And to the League. It A quarrel between Italy and Ethiopia flared up| from Perseverance where he Was English would be appropriate only in the mixed rather suddenly, and the African kingdom protested | demonstrating for forecastle of a four-master in the China trade. the aftermath of such tragedies as the recent Morro Castle disaster leaves little of compliment to the So why not a han Italy abruptly rejected arbitration, demanded an indemnity from Ethiopia, and, accord- ing to last reports, has pursued a vigorous military | q|Policy of revenge for the slight loss of life in a|or g frontier clash some days ago. is unfortunate that the Rome Government How many of us ashore in ordinary walks of o1 not recognize the value of arbitration and life would have been able to fit into the emer-|peaceful settlement when its own interest was in- gency? TOO SCIENTIFIC A mighty few we'll venture. PERHAPS. volved. dispute. Rome Yugoslavia, and lem haps it is prec Italy observed a discreet silence, Powers were against her, and she was isolated. Per- | It may be, however, that this denial of the ;T::ne operator, So to Captain Ryning of the good ship Starr League's function comes from the fact that Italy| pjres, we hand the palm as sea-going physician deluxe. was one of the losers in the Hungarian-Yugoslay | word from friends. A man who saw his duty—and did it well. had championed Hungary against when the League took up that prob- The major isely because he was suffering from | The advancement made by medical science in the | that unspoken reprimand that Il Duce jumped at | last decade or so has been little short of phenomenal Persons badly injured, who a few short years ago as hopeless, es bibufht'‘Back to Mealth physieally un-|,Teoous threat to the world's peace, and -its ad- | handicapped through: knowledge of the’ profession.|jstment through the League or some other way is|, Diseases, which formerly were considered incurable|not particularly important. would have been given often tiHfi up the opportunity good offices in The RO A ment and that and in many cases fatal, now are quickly arrested trate frontier and cured as a result of the great strides made precedents, whether the stakes are large or small. in medicine. And now from Chicago comes information mm the medical society there has announced it mAay ... o sort of fur inside their soon provide means for pre-determining sex. In other words, you'll be able to tell whether its a|ton Herald.) girl or a boy before birth. The secret is said to be in a certain vitamin found in wheat and hke" The utilities don't like a lot of things President | F—— | Roosevelt has done—but the cruelest blow of all was | substances. last week to turn down the League’s the Ethiopian dispute. feud between Premier Mussolini's Go\ern-‘ of Haile Selassie is not, of course, Such refusals to arbi- disputes, however, are unfortunate Recent investigators have discovered that clams ouths. Life mv seem like a continual morning after to them!—(Bos- | We admit to being old fashioned and a trifle the use of candles on the White House Christmas | baffled. We have nary a word but praise for the | | tree instead of electric lights—(Financial World.) great enlightenment of the world through science,| but what father or mother can forget those few hours of mystic wonder and suspense just before (Vi) armory. the doctor said: might be? “It’'s a boy” Pitcure, the father of tomorrow knowing every- A stranded circus is putting up in a Rutland | Vermont, according to the Novem- or girl as the case ber returns, is one of the few refuges where an 1elepham is safe.—(Detroit News.) It is getting about time to go into the matter | thing, as it were, casually remarking “we'll have n\n( what you are not going to do about those | boy in the family in a couple of weeks.” thing a cinch, no gamble nor the thrill before| knowledge. | And what d Every- | New Year resolutions.—(Macon Telegraph.) o you suppose this Attorney Jackson Oh well, the world moves on, and maybe after |Martindell thinks the true blues would be doing all vitamin business. it would be well to look further into this while his reds jand overthrowis | graph.) were kidnaping «President Roosevelt ng the Government?—(Macon Tele- It may be hard to teach your to do things after they've had a blnle with a flock of in- fantile paralysis germs, but lit- tle Carrie Surlak of New York isn’t downhearted about it, as the picture (lower left) plain- Iy indicatés, Carrie is showing her legs a thing or two with the help of Miss Constance Huerstel. Nor has she anything on the 15 n-r-vlq lad smiling from a res- virator (right). He is -Herbert Fuchs, also of New York. Two smiling youngsters (upper left) their-legs in braces, partake of their midday luncheon at Camp Alyn for Crippled Children in Cincinnati, Ohio. These four and more than 200,000 fel- low-sufferers throughout the na- tion will be beneficiaries of the 1935 Birthday Ball for the Presi- dent, Jan. 30, wheax more than 5,600 communities from coast to coast upite to raise funds for fightting what Col. Henry L. Do- herty, national chairman of the Birthday Ball committee, calls ‘‘the most-dreaded disease men< acing the nation”. Seventy cents of every dollar raised will be re- tained by local communities to rehabilitate infantile paralysis victims, while thirty cents of eve ‘ery dollar will be turned over to a Birthday Ball Commission for Infantile Paralysis Research ape pointed by the President. it | JANUARY 21, 1915 German forces resumed its steam roller characteristics today alike in the North, center and South. With what they believe to be overwhelm- ing forces have been ordered to the hammer and tongs attacks with all of their strength. Hope of finding Arthur Wilson |alive is said to have been aban- doned at Haines and Skagway. Wil- son left Haines in a small boat to row to Skagway January 10. A search was made from each town over the distance of the four- teen miles between them. The missing man was believed to have been drowned, H. R. W. Holmes, who recently returned from Tillamook, Ore., left for Eagle River where he will be employed. Mrs. R. J. Wulzen and two chil- dren left on the Mariposa to spend the balance of the winter in Cali- fornia. Miss Laura Harris, niece of Mrs. John Museth, left on the Mariposa | for Seattle on her way to Los An- ‘geles, | Little Marion Belle Pond 'was :rapidly recovering from an ap- | pendectomy performed by Dr. L. Mayor M. J. O'Connor of Doug- las left for a short business trip South. B. B. Brewster, mnnager of the | and Machinery Company, returned the last ten days. A. H. Mann, of the clerical force unnison and Robertson, re- turned from a vacation. Ruth Priestly, who two s previously was a local tele- was in Buenos The Argentine, according to ‘ ‘Weather: mum, 21; Maximum, clear. 36; mini- . MADAME ORLOFF | TEACHER OF VOICE | Class or individual instruction | | | Studio—5th and Kennedy } Appointments 4 to 8 p.m. Saturdays—All Day ll | HOTEL ZYNDA Large Sample Room ELEVATOR SERVICE 8. ZYNDA, Prop. The Empire extends congratula- tions and best wishes today, their| birthday anniversary, to the follow- | ing: Sue Stewart BELGIUM PLANS ACTION AGAINST NAZI AGITATORS Troops Are Sent Into Two, Cantons — Arrests Already Reported BRUSSELS, Jan. 21.—The Bel- gian government is taking (orceful‘ action to stamp out the agitation | in the cantons of Eupen and Mal- medy for a return to Germany. Additional troops have marched into the areas and a number of agitators are reported to have been arrested. It is said here that the agita- tion for a union with the Reich has been inspired by the recent Saar plebiscite. The cantons were taken from Germany and given to Belgium af- ter the World War. It is asserted that Hitlerites in the cantons have been subsidized from German Nazi sources. The Belgium government offic- fals said they have been over- lenient with the Nazis to date and intend to clamp down on them. R JUNEAU COUPLE ON BOAT Mr. and Mrs. Bert Caro are Se- attle passengers on the Northland. He is of the Caro and Com- pany, wholesalers. . —_— & FINE Watch and Jewelry Repairing | at very reasonable rates | PAUL BLOFDHOR‘V FRONT STREET The Florence h & Permanent Waving a ( Florence Holmquist, Prop. ! | | Bl PHONE 427 Behrends Bank Building l TYPEWRITERS RENTED i $5.00 per month i J. B. Burford & Co. “Our doorstep Is worn by satis- fled customers | l . Jones-Stevens Shop LADIES'—CHILDREN'S READY-TO-WEAR | Dodge and Plymouth Dealers _é | LUDWIG NELSON JEWELER Watch Repairing Philco—General Electric Agency 4 | FRONT STREET | IS 0 R S T | Free Delivery . THE MARKET BASKET | Provisions, Fruits, Vegetables Phone 342 [ s4BIN'S Everything in Furnishings for Men Banished forever are the clothes basket, wash line, and laundry tubs. And she's a gayer, jollier companion for her husband now that she sends her clothes to the laundry. Seward Street Near Third _T — 0 McCAUL MOTOR || Faree e il { COMPANY s HARDW _RI YOUR ALASKA Laundry Thomas Hardware Co. JUNEAU Drug Co. “THE CORNER DRUG STORE” P. O. Substation No. 1 FREE DELIVERY = THE JuNEAU LAUNDRY Franklin Street between Front and Second Streets | PHONE 35¢ l JUNEAU-YOUNG Funeral Parlors Licensed Funeral Directors and Embalmers Night Phone 1851 Day Phone 13 TR o SR WHY Not Because We Are Cheaper BUT BETTER RICE & AHLERS CO. " UMBING HEATING “We tell you in advance what job will cost” | | [ “Tomorrow’: Styles Today” Jls— “Juneau’s Own Store” 1 % 7 n'); i { ) 7 CONTESTS | Why not organize a team )| among your friends, and get in on the fun? Teams from all parts of the city H and representing many or- ganizations have already en- tered this first series. Brunswick | Alleys f | Rheinlander Beer on Draught POOL BILLIARDS BARBER SHOP [ — { FORD AGENCY (Authorized Dealers) GREASES GAS OILS Juneau Motors FOOT OF MAIN ST. PHONE 36 For very prompt LIQUOR DELIVERY JUNEAU FROCK SHOPPE “Exclusive but not Expensive” Coats, Dresses, Lingerie, Hoslery and Hats - OLD NEWSPAFERS In bundles for sale at The Em- pire office, 25c. Fine for starting your fires these chilly mornings. 1891 The B. M. Behren ously served the Juneau, “PIONEER” is the Pioneer bank of Alaska. . . . Established in 1891 it has continu- in every way consistent with safe and sound banking. The B. M. Bank 1935 ds Bank of Juneau people of Alaska Behrends , Alaska Massage, Electricity, Infra Red Ray, Medical Gymnastics. | 307 Goldstein Building Phone Office, ?16 \ | i | Graduate Nurse | Electric Cabinet Baths—M: sage, Colonic Irrigations [ Office hours 11 am. to 5 pm. | Evenings by Appointment | Second and Maii Phone 259 | AL} | F. R. WiLSON | Chir.podin—Foot Specialist 401 Goldstein Building H PHONE 496 DRE KASER & FREFBURGER DENTISTS Blomgren Building PHONE 56 i Hours 9 a.m. | to 9 pm — C. P. Jenne DENTIST Ro.ms 8 and 9 Valentine | Building | Telepnone 178 TR | | Dr. Geo. L. Barton CHIROPRACTOR | | 201 Goldstein Bldg. Phone 214 { Office hours—9-12, 1-5. Even- | ings by appointment SR S N RO M 3 | Dr. Richard Williams | | | DENTIST OFFICE AND RESIDENCE | | Gastineau Building | Phone 481 TR | Rose A. Andrews s B. P. 0. ELKS meeis every Wednesday at 8 pm. Visiting brothers welcome. John H. Walmer, Ex- alted Kuler. M. H. Sides, Secretary KNIGHTS OF COLU. Seghers Council No. 4 1760. Meetings second ind last Monday at 7:30 p. m. Transient brothers urged to at- tend. Council Cham< sers, Fifth St. JOHN F. MULLEN, |G, K, H. J. TURNER, Secretary MOUNT JUNEAU LODGE NO. 147 Second and fourth Mon- day of each month in Scottish Rite Temple, beginning at 7:30 p.n. HOWARD D. STABLER, Worshipful Master; JAMES W. LEIVERS, Secretary DOUGLAS N ° £ AERIE 117 F. 0. E. o %3 Meets first and third 'VIondn)s, 8 ).m., Eagles’ Hall, Dou.as. Visiting srothers welcome. Sante Degan W. P, T. W. Cashen, Secretary. —a! | Our tru.“s go any place any | time. A tank for Diesel Oil , and a tank for crude oil save | burner trouble. | PHONE 149; NIGHT 148 RELIABLE TRANSFER i Commercial Adjust- ment & Rating Bureau | Cooperating with White Serv- | ice Bureau | Room 1—Shattuck Bldg, i i | I We have 5,006 local ratings on file | R e — | - < P o DR. R. E. SOUTHWELL | Optometrist—Optician | | Eyes Examined—Classes Fitted | Room 17, Valentine Bldg. ‘Olflce Phone 484; Residence Alaska Transfer Co. || GENERAL HAULING ED JEWELL, Proprietor | Phone 238. Office Hours: 9:30 FHONES 23—ust | to 12; 1:00 to 5:30 b —& | L a P ——— S | | SEE BIG VAN | - ! 1t | Dr. A. W. Stewart ||| Guns and Ammunition | | e ?E;TTG o || LOWER FRONT STREET | } L R }é ext to Midget Lunch 4 | Office Phone 408, Res. | 5 g | Phone 276 K —_=|| Drucs Anp Sunpmigs — = or LIQUORS Robert Simpson IN A HURRY! Opt. D. PHONE 97 | Graduate Doe Angeles Col- | ‘ege of Optometry and | Opthalmology | Glasses Pitted, Lenses Ground l — — B DR. H. VANCE OSTEOPATH Consultation and examination Free. Hours 10 to 12; 1 to 5; 7 to 8:30 and by appointment. Office Grand Apts., near Gas- tineau Hotel. Phane 177 % P SR Ok R Di. J. W. Bayne , | | | | DENTIST Rooms 5-6 Triangle Bldg. Office hours, 9 am. to 5 pm. i Evernings by appointm.nt PHONE 321 ISR S L S GARBAGE HAULED Reasonable Monthly Rates E. 0. DAVIS TELEPHONE 584 Phone 4753 “The Clothing Man Home of Hart Schaffner and Marx Clothing | Cigarettes ' Candy Cards The New Arctic Pabst Famous Draught Beer On Tap —_— Old newspapers for sale at The Fast Free Delivery Guy L. Smith Drug Store Next to Coliseura } Hollywood Style Shop Formerly COLEMAN'S Pay Less—Much Le.os Front at Main Street BEULAH HICKEY F or Quick RADIO REPAIR Telephone 65 HENRY PIGG Harry]{ace ; DRUGGIST The Squibb Store i ————d 1 IDEAL PAINT SHOP | If It's Paint We lhve 1t | ) WENDT & GARSTER | PHONE 549 ? THE BEST TAP BEER IN TOWN! [ J THE MINERS’ Recreation Parlors Liquor Store BILL DOUGLAS ) A -