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‘dren in privatc ing factors in e: Dazlw Alaska Emplre ROBERT “’. BENDER - - Editor and Manager Published cvery evening _except EMPIRE PRINTING COMPANY at 8 Streets, Juneau, Alaska Bntered In the Post Office in Juneau as Second Class matter is too chilly dance. the Main unday nd by and Despite inclement weather which may be one of the contribut- stablishing the belt of sanity. A fan dancer shies at coming north because it She might come and try a parka the. Elks and Legion " SUBSCRIPTION RATES. Dellvered by carrier in Juneau and Douglas for $1.26 er month, » fgllowing rat months, in advance, By mall, post One vear, in adva $6.00: ene month, in : Subsacribers will confe they will promptly notify the Business Offi ofany failure or irreg in the “»%very of their 1ph¢:m. News Office, snz Business Office, MEMBER OF ASSOCIATED PRESS. The Associated Press s exclusively entitled to the use for republication of all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited in this paper ‘and also the local news published herein, ALASKA C!NCULA‘VIOH GUARANTEED TO BE LARGEF THAN THAT OF ANY OTHER PUBLICATION i et 374 CONGRESS CAN SET EXAMPLE. With spring in full bloom and summer but a short step away Congressmen, like the birds that | trek north, begin to tire of affairs in Washington and look longingly toward home pastures. The glamour of the winter in the National Capital is beginning to wear off and despite the jam of legislative machinery the solons are thinking strong- ly of the political fences back home that need repairing here and there. In private it is reported that there is talk of early adjournment for the summer and then a session again in the fali, but is doubtful if the idea gets more than passing strength. It would appear that the Congress is up against about what every legislative body runs into toward the end of its deliberations, and that is a heavy calendar of important matters that have been shunted aside frcm time to time for political or| other reasons. The President’s social security pro- gram, NRA extension, the banking bill and other issues were presented early in the session and lhuy: are still in much the same shape as when they, came into being. About the outstanding action that; has been taken thus far is passage of the Chief Executive’s $4,000,000,000 work relief program. So| the Congress finds itself in something of & pickle, | and, of course, being human, begins to wonder just what can be put off until some other time. If a private business found itself in such a predicament, and it means to continue as a going concern, it would settle down to hard work and begin digging. It would know that insolvency would be the price of putting off until another time something that shculd be disposed of at once. The Senators and Representatives are doing the nation’s business and it would seem appropriate for them. to set an example. They will find, and most of them know, that there is no use ducking the important matters still to be disposed of. sbout pleasant vacation jaunts, if the Congressmen will settle down to the business at hand and quit worrying cbout the shouting of Father Coughlin, Huey Long and the rest of the Utopians they can dispose of their work and still have a few weeks of summer left to enjoy. Business, with restored confidence is going ahead, and it is entitled to the impetus settlement of the matters now before Congress will give it. THE “BELT OF SANITY.” While Hitler builds submarines and points with pride to what he terms the “Germany of Peace,” one of his Nazi eugenic experts, Dr. Burgdoefer, views with alarm the fact that the fatherland is short some 300,000 marriages. He blames the de- pression and the World War. The low birth during the war, he says, is responsible in part for the lesser number of people of marriageable age at this time. Though the information is imparted to the world, the doctor undoubtedly means it for his chief, be-| cause it is his job to bring that “be fruitful and multiply” program up to the goal. Hitler is build- ing cannons; he looks to his eugenic expert to supply | the fodder. France, Britain and Italy protest. How different that picture than the one in the Western hemisphere which Dr. Ernest Gruening, Director of the Division of Territories and Insular| Possessions in the Interior Department, describes| in this apt statement: . We have succeded in smoothing out the difficulties and easing the strains that cause tension. We are establishing a belt of sanity in this hemisphere, in telling contrast with the terror of impending war and intensified hates and nationalism in the Old World. As a nation we may not be the king pins on international relations, but we still raise our chil- arity | tup and was selling lon the street and asked no favors. Instead of dreaming put up a good ball game, and a little rain doesn’t keep the fans home in Juneau. A good attendance was on hand to stick it out until the washout in the sixth inning. High Blood Pressure. (New York World-Telegram.) | Doctors to whom we talked about the reported successful reduction of high blood pressure by surgery were cautious and standoffish according| to the scientific mannerism of their calling They considered the treatment experimental, | as _ |possibly of value for relieving pain but not prom- ising a cure, as a report likely to arouse false hopes. We would not transgress professional = service. But conceding all their hestitations, still ‘it is hard not to vision a brilliant hope growing out of the increasing boldness and mastery of surgical reme- |dies for all kinds of heart ailments. One week we read of an operation upon the walls of the heart itself, this week of an operation upon the nerves to reduce excessive stimulation of vital organs. Similar objectives have been pursued by the method of thyroid removal Such work may be as tentative as one chooses |and entirely circumscribed in application. To the| layman’s eye the exciting fact remains that the work goes on steadily dealing with the living, throb- | bing tissue of the heart itself. That entitles it to| the name “miraculous.” While so many millions of persons, especially those 40 or older, are sufferers from cardiac and | nrterlal disorders, this experimental work may count upon the breathless attention of its audience. The audience is cheering the surgeons and telling them to hurry. The piddle-aged are praying for their| deliverance. 5 { Safe” Explosive. | (Literary Digest.) What safety engineers have long been looking for, an explosive wiich will not go off accidentally, apparently has been developed in the laboratories of the E. I. du Pont de Nemours and Company.| Called nitramon, the new explosive is about 20 per cent stronger than TNT, but it cannot be detonated | by the most powerful blasting caps, flame or im- pact. To explode it a special dynamite priming | cartridge, at least four inches in diameter, is | necessary. | Stk S A The “Candy Man.” (New York World-Telegram.) Last Friday New York iearned through the | World-Telegram that James M. Washburne was old and broke and also that he had a courageous heart and & likely idea. All his life he had been in the candy business, building up a great store chain, losing everything in the smash, And now at 80 he had his chin non-fattening vegetable candy It wasn't a sob story nor an appeal for aid. was good, sound, old-fashioned human interest Hard-hearted New York read, and it resopnded with a-rush. Hundreds of orders avalanched into the Wash- burne kitchen over the week-end. The president of a bank volunteered money to put up a candy factory. Another man invited him to manage a factory alerady built. A subway concessionaire has offered him a retail outlet. Mr. Washburne is re- ported as still clear-headed, grateful but looking into his prospects carefully before deciding. There's inspiration in this yarn of wiry courage, |and there's cheer in the demonstration of the cxcys responsive sympathy. Vegetable candy begins look much like the common bread of humanity. It Air Travel at High Altitudes. (Kansas City Times.) | It is difficult to imagine a greater demonstra- {tion of the advancement of transport aircraft than that to be seen in the remarkable dash across the United States by a Douglas airliner of Trans- continental and Western Air, Inc., in the brief span of 11 hours, 5 minutes and 45 seconds. One of the outstanding features of the perform- | |ance was in the fact that, although delayed over | |the Rockies by ice and snow, and over Western| |Kansas by dust, the air transport machine arrived | |in New York barely more than one hour behind the | |record for the same distance for special raclng‘ |aireraft. It is not now difficult to believe that| |even the present racing plane record for trans-| continental flight will be lowered by transpurt‘ aircraft in the near future. J With the beginning of this most recent of record |dashes by the air line plane came also the an-} |nouncement by T. & W. A, that it is interested in | scheduled flight at high altitudes; that in' a sense, | the fast flight of its Douglas monoplane was started | |for the purpose of determining certain ideas in connection with high altitude flying. That the air | |line long has been interested in high flight levels| |as a means of avoiding storms in the air and S0 | :estabnshing an even higher percentage of nompleted ischedules, is well known. | sSince the company has gone into the matter V‘serlously, it is to be presumed the day is not far| yway when we shall be declining dinner invitations |at_Kansas City with the explanation we are going to eat dinner in the stratosphere on our way to| New York or Los Angeles. The unusual of today in the business of air transport has come to be the |conventional of tomorrow. —eee . |ence greeted THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE MONDAY MAY 20 1935 20 YEARS AGO From The Empire MAY. 20, 1915 In Italy, the bill authorizing the government to declare war against Austria and giving it plenary pow- er to conduct warfare, manage the | finances of the country and to en- | force all laws, civil and military without recurrence to Parliament,| was passed with unanimity. Italy's | ultimatum was to be served on Aus- | tria.within four hours, Mort Truesdell tied the hlghes; letter is printed. score yet made out of a possible 50 twenty-five cents. birds at Juneau's Gun Club shoot,‘ = by breaking 49. F. V. Berger had previously set the record. Willis E. Nowell arrived in Juneau from Seattle aboard the Jefferson. Dr. L. O. Sloane, one of Juneau'’s leading and most popular physi-| cians, was married today in Butte, Mont.,, to Miss Alcinda McMillan, ister of Mrs. John B. Stevens, wife of the pastor of the Juneau Pres- syterian Church. News of the wed- ding was received in telegrams by W. S. Bayless, the Rev. John W. Stevens and E. P. Pond. Mr. and Mrs. B. M. Behrends and Miss Beatrice Behrends arrived' home on the Admiral Watson after |a month’s visit in California. D. W. Branch, of Seattle, western manager of Libby, McNeill and Lib- | by, was in Juneau on his way to Yakutat where his company has extensive interests. Edward M. Brennan, of Thane, a popular member of the younger set on Gastineau (Channel, returned from a visit to the States, A large and well pleased audi- the excellently pro- duced annual play of the Juneau High School and all agreed that much praise was due Miss Lavina Willson, coach, and the cast mem- bers which included Miss Haze! Jaeger, heroine of “The Stubborn- | ne of Geraldine,” non, Suzanne McLaughlin and > McLaughlin. Ann Maximum, 70; mini- clear. Weather: mum, 4 5 feet square showing 12 inches i 4 Al above gronnd, approximate latitude (AA P’TOL BEBR P/‘ RLORS 158° 14’ 30” North and longitude 1134° 52 West, bears N 17° 46’ 10” AND BALL ROOM W 2524.65 feet; thence S 5° 50' W Private Booths Beer Simpson Mac- | Lunches PARIS INN PEARL and BILL nght Wmes HAPPY —BIRTHDAY The Empire extends congratula- tions nnd best wishes today, their UNITED STATES PATENT | U. 8. Survey No. 1492. Anchorage Alaska, March 6, 1935. | 5 Serial 08356 Notice is hereby given that, pur- sant to an Act of Congicss ap-| NOTICE OF APPL]CATION FOR | & proved May 10th, 1872, ADMIRAL- birthday anniversary, to the JOllOW-|py A1, A 8K A GOLD MINING ing: COMPANY, a corporation organiz- MAY 20 ed and existing under the laws of|* B. F, Olsen the Territory of Alaska, whose POSt | i 2 office address is Juneau, Alaska, Mrs, T. W, Hetoll bas made application for a patent| e —— upon the following described lodes,| lode mining claims and premises, all situated upon “.l.iralty Island, Harris Mining District, Juneau Pre- cinet, Alaska, and described by the ‘| official plat and by the field notes| iome file in the office of the Reg-| ister of Juneau Lana wu: CL, An- and Wear the Difference! | |mncrage “Alacka, as follows to-wit: y White Hand Laundry || Beginning at Corner No. 1 Point We Pick Up and Deliver | |Lode, whence U.SLM. No. ALASKA'S PROSPERITY CHAIN | letters for sale at Empire office. | All you do is to fill in names and| Two dozen for adv. . ; TRY OUR SERVICE | PROFESSIONAL | Fraternal Societies | Helene W. L. \lbrccht PHYSIOTHERAPY lissage, Electricity, Infra Red | Ray, Medical Gymnastics. 307 Goldstein Building Phone Office, 216 | ‘ OF i l Gastineau Channel l ——gy B. P. 0. ELKS meets every Wednesday at 8 p. m. Visiting brothers welecome. DRS. KASER DENTISTS Blomgren Building PHONE 56 Hours 9 am. to 9 pm. P. Jenna DENTIST Rooms 8 and 9 Valentine Building Telephone G, 176 Lt FREEBURGER | Dr. Geo. L. Barten CHIROPRACTOR 2 Point| | 201 Goldstein Bldg. Phone 211 | Office Hours: 9to 12,1 to 5 Evenings by appointment { Dr. Richard Williams DENTIST AND RESIDENCE ineau Building Phone 481 OFFICE John H. Walmer, Ex- amd Ruler, M. H. Sxdes, Secretary. ! KNIGHTS OF COLUMBUS rs Council No, ., 1760. Meetings second “land last Monday at 7:20 p. m, Translent hrothe.s urgad to at- tend. Cownei' Cham- bers, Fifth St. JOHN F. MULLEN, 1 1G. K, H. J. TURNER, Secreta:y MOUNT JUNEAU LODGE NO. 147 Second and Fourth Mon day of each month ir Scottish Rite Temple, beginning at 7:30 p.m. HOY”*RD D. STABLER. Worshipful Master; JAMES W. | LEIVERS, Secretnry . DOUGLAS - AERIE W 117, F. 0. E. &% Meets first and third Mondays, 8 pm.. Eagles' Hall, Douglas. Visiting brochers welcome. Sante Degan, W. P, T. W. Cashen, Secrctaxy Phone 802 M. Hagedorn | |[€T0ss on exposed bed rock on small| > o |18land in Funter Bay, bears N 50°| . e 189" W 325301 ft, and runnmzi for—rrress - s owe ~mmeeeses. (thence' N 67° 5% E along line of| D) | mean high tide of F.nter Bay, IT AS 197526 feet to Corner N | laxle; thence N 25° 56’ E 395.95 Wise to Cali 'R | feet to Corner No. 3 Point Lode; |thence N 64° 00° E 31590 fcet to Juneau | Corner 4 Point Lode; thence S 12°| |96’ E 400.80 feet to Corner No. 5 Po'nt Lode; thence S 31° 55’ E| Transfer CO, {176.20 feet to Corner No. 6 Foint| Lode; identical with Corner No. 2 when in need of Ocean Swell Lode; thence S. 31°| MOVING or STORAGE | 55 E 8092 feet to Corner No. 3 | Fuel Oil Coal i‘OCuan Swell Lode; Thence S 88° Transfer 19° E 19442 feet to Corner No. 4 — -—==s==s Ocean Swell Lode, identical with! o B Corner No. 1 Queen Bee Lode, B { | whence USLM. No. 10 bears N 64° | = s |18' 30" W 445285 feet; thence N | Tumorrow’s Styles 18 30" E 42317 feet to Corner No.|| 9 : 1 King Bee Lode, whence USLM.| Today i No. 10 bears N 69° 4§ 10" W|| 142623 feet: thence N 44° 57 E 296.00 feet to Corner No. 2 King Bee Lode; thence N 35° 27° E 184.50 feet to Corner No. 3 King Bee | Lode, identical with Corner No. 3 Tellurium Lode; thence N 8° 47 30” E 33865 feet to Corner No. 4 Tellurium Lode; thence N 18° 16’ 380.65 feet to Corner No. 5 Tellur-| ium Lode, identical with, Corner —|/No. 3 Lone Star Lode; thence N ¥ 5° 50’ E 666.60 feet to Corner No. 4 Lone Star Lode; thence N 70° 00| “Ji:neau’s Own Store” “The Florence ‘Shop | Permanent Waving a Speelalty | E 35915 feet to Corner No. 3 Otter rlorence Flolmquist, Prop. | Lode; thence N 5° 50’ E 666.60 feet PHONE 427 to Corner No. 4 Otter Lode; thence |N 70° 00° E 1500.00 feet to Corner No. 1 Otter Lode, whence U.S.L.M — |No. 21, a cross on a granite boulder | | Behrends Bank Bullding | o n 666.60 feet to Corner No. 2 Otter Lode; thence S 70° 00 W 359.15 feet to Corner No. 1 Lone Star| Lode, whence U.S.LM. No. 21 bear§ N 6° 32 W 321105 feet; thence 8 5° 50' W 666.60 feet to Corner No. 2 Lone Star Lode, identical with Corner No. 1 Tellurium Lode, |whence U.S.LM. No. 21 bears N 4° 25’ W 3864.81 feet; thence S 18° 16’ W 175865 feet to Corner No. 2 Dancing Every Night Lunches ( BAILEY’S T=%&. CAFE = r ?4-Hour Service “WHERE YOU MEET YOUR FRIENDS” | Tellurium Lode; thence S 70° 00 W 21630 feet to Corner No. 4 King Beer—if desired ‘Bce Lode; thence S 19° 22° W 778.00& Merchants’ Lunch ‘Ieet to Corner No. 5 .Klng Be; Short Orders | Lode, identical with Corner No. Regular Din: gular Dinem 1'w 14596 feet to Corner No. 3 |Queen Bee Lode, identical with| Corner No. 2 Swamp Lilly Lode,| GASTINEAU CAFE GASTINEAU HOTEL BUILDING “)|whence Corner No. 1 Swamp Lilly| |Lode bears N 70° 00' E 1500 feet,| from which U.SLM. No. 10 bears N 54° 57 W 4573.01 feet; thence S |32° 00" E 613.40 feet to Corner No. n. " |3 Swamp Lilly Lode; thence S 70° French-Italian Dinners Wines—Beer |/,"w 1500 feet to Corner No. 4| ‘Swamp Lilly Lode; thence S 32° 00’ ° ninge {E 31265 feet to Corner No. 3 Hid-| WINDOW CLEANING PHONE 485 . 1 |den Rock Lode; thence § 52° 40 W ’\1500.00 it. to Corner No. 4 Hidden 3 Rock Lode; thence N 32° 00' W 800: ( |ft. to Corner No. 1 Hidden Rock Lode, | \ |identical with Corner No. 4 Valley| | Lode, whence U.S.L.M. No. 10 bears N | e e et 135° 32’ 40” W 4685.45 feet; thence N| ALASKA MEAT CO. FEATURING CARSTEN’S BABY BEEF—DIAMOND || TC HAMS AND BACON—U. S. Government Inspected 132° 00" W 423.45 feet to Corner No. |273.80 feet to Corner No.6 Valley Lode; thence N 5° 42° W 279.74 ft. to Corner No. 7 Valley Lode; thence N 46° 15’ E 306.24 feet to Corner No. 1 Valley Lode, whence U.S.L.M. No. 10 bears N 45° 41' 30" W AUDIT -:- SYSTEM WALLIS S. GEORGE, C.P.A. Associates JAMES C. COOPER, C.P.A. WALLIS S. GEORGE & CO. ‘ CERTIFIED PUBLIC ACCOUNTANTS Juneau, Alaska 4129.65 feet; thence N 46° 03’ W 324.11 fiet to Corner No. 1 OOEMI‘ Swell Lode, identical with Corner | No. 7 Point Lode, whence U.SLM./ :NDA 10bears N 45° 39" 40" W 3805.58 | |feet; thence N 46° 03'W 19243 feet |to Corner No. 8 Point Lode; thence P N 12° 05 W 36196 feet to Corner SERVICE | No. 9 Point Lode; thence N 4° 11°| E 109.92 feet to Corner No. 1 Point| ilode. the place of beginning. | Adjoining claims, as shown by the plat of survey are: Queen Bee Lode; thence S 21° 08’ . |5 Valley Lode; thence N 73° 20’ E|" |to spend a few days with her | parents here before leaving for Bellmgham to continue her post- graduate work at the normal {school there. i —_————— | MRS. LANGFELDT HOSTESS DOUGLAS NEWS PRSI : | Honoring the teachers who are LARGE CROWD AT BALL |500n to depart, and also Mesdames The annual Cance of the Doug-|John Martin and Lawrence Carl- las Volunteer Fire Department was|son, who are planning a visit to given here Saturday with its usual the States, Mrs. Henry Langfeldt| successful termination. Extra ferry entertained with a dinner party boat trips were made to bring the|at her home last Friday. Covers large number attending from Ju-|were laid for twelve. neau and practically all of Douglas | P PR IEE el S dancing folks were there. Music by | LEAVE FOR SOUTH “Dude” Haynes and his orchestra was particularly adapted to arrord‘ersen are southbound passengers the good time enjoved by all| (rom here on the North Sea, the present. | former to visit his son Archie in e — | Seattle and the latter to spend the MISS AALTO RETURNS After another term of successful Stanwood, Wash. after first tak- teaching at Petersburg, Miss Impi ing in the sights at the San Diego Aalto came home on the Victoria Fair. James Edmiston and Martin Ped- | summer vacation at his home in| YAWKEY HUNTING PARTY BAGS BEARS Perhaps it's the fact that his club has attained the first division {of the American League, but Tom Yawkey, owner of the Boston Brave |baseball team, and his party have | bagged seven bears on Admiralty | Islanc. | That's the news received here in |a letter to Mrs. Ed Jahnke from | her husband, who is one of Yaw- | key's guides. Yawkey and party, travelling m a Campbell Church, Jr., yacht, are | expected to visit Juneau before re- turning to the States . | — .. | TERHUNE TO KETCHIKAN | H. W. Terhune, Executive Of- ficer of the Alaska Game Com- ! mission, went south on the Alaska to Ketchikan on business. He ex-| lpecl., to be gone about a week. Making Alaska Business GO! is just as much a part'of om" service as is pro- tecting the deposits of the Territory’s residents. In 1935, as since 1891, we are ready to supply funds for the temporary use of well- managed businesses of approved credit standing. Your requirements will be carefully con- <idered here. ! [J The B. M. Behrends Bank Juneau, Alaska i | | et ettt e | The Alaska No. 2 Lode, un- surveyed; Jumbo No. 1 Lode, unsur- veyed; Jumbo No. 2 Lode, unsur- | veyed; | Uncle Sam Lode, unsurveyed; King Bee, 2nd. Lode, unsur- | veyed; | Tellurium, 2nd Lode, unsur- ‘ veyed; | Lone Star, end Lode, unsur- | veyed; Ish Nik Lode, unsuveyed; Mill Site Lode, unsurveyed. FLORENCE L. KOLB, Acting Register. First publication, March 20, 1935. ' Last pubication, May 29, 1935. BETTY MAC BEAUTY SHOP In New Location at 12th an¢ B Streets PHONE 547 Dr. A. W. Stewart DENTIST Hours 9 am. to 6 p.m. SEWARD BUILDING Office Pncne 469 || Our tucks 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 Robert Simpson Opt. D. Graduawe Los Angeles Col- lege of Optometry and Opthalmology Glasses Fitted Lenses Ground | Commercial Adjust- i % | ment& Rating Bureau 1 | Coperating with White Serv- I ice Bureau il Room 1—Shattuck Bldg. | [ We have 5,000 local ratings | on file { | | DR. H. VANCE OSTEOPATH Consultation and examination Free. Honurs 10 to 12; 1 to 5; 7 to 8:30 and by 2ppeintment. Office Grand Apts., near Gas- tineau Hotel. Phone 177 Alaska Transfer Co. GENERAL HAULING ED JEWELL, Proprietor PHONES 269—1134 l i W (B < SEE BIG VAN Di. J. W. Bayne ‘ Guns and Ammunition DENTIST LOWER FRONT STREET | Rooms 5-6 Triangle Bldg. | Next to Midget Lunch | Office haurs, 9 am. to 5 pm. | 23 Evenings by appointinent | PHONE 321 | ), Sosems e oot ) HOTEL ZYNDA Large Sample Room ELEVATOR SERVICE 8. ZYNDA, Prop. Phone LADIES’ TAILORING AND. DRESSMAKING 411 GOLDSTEIN BLG. Phone 564 | ORAMAE HOLLISTER { Cardinal | | | | . o " ROSE SUAREZ Modiste from New York City Dressmaking, Remodeling, Alterations TELEPHONE 277 | Feldon’s House, near Moose Hall JUNEAU FROCK SHOPPE “Exclusive but not Expensive” Lingerie, | Cabs | | | | . THE | MARKET BASKET { | Provisions, Fruits, Vegetables | Phone 342 Free Delivery | | . — Maybe you'll have two or three dates, if you CALL 15 And have your Spring + Clothes put in first-class shape with our cleaning service, [ ] YOUR ALASKA PHONE 36 For very prompt LIQUOR DELIVERY ‘P THE JUNEAU Franklin Street beiween Front and Second Streets LAuNDRY lg PHONE 358 ‘ LT e SR AP | e e el | WARRACK Construction Co. Phone 487 Juneau Ice Cream Parlors | SHORT ORDERS 3 o iC. H. METCALFE CO. | Sheet Metal—0Oil Burners | Heating—Air Conditioners General Electric Oil Burners Phone 101 Front Street | | | | od DAILY EMPIRE WANT ADS PAY! 4 -