The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, June 1, 1935, Page 4

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Daily A laska Em plro ~published evening _except EMPIRE_PRINTING COMPANY at Btrects, Juneau, Alaska Entered In the Post Office in matter. Editor and Manager the Main by and Sunday Second every Juneau as Second Class SUBSCRIPTION RATES. Dellvered by carrier In Juneau and Douglas for $1.25 per month postage paid, at the following rates: 12.00; xix months, in advance, $1.25 favor if they will ny failure or i By mall, One year, in advance, e _month dvance Business Office their_pape ws Office, 602; Business Office MEMBER OF ASSOCIATED PRESS. The Amsociated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for republication of all news dispatehes credited to It or not otherwise credited in this paper and also the ‘ocal news lvlnH-h-d herein. JARANTEED TO BE LARGEF OTHER PUBLICATION ALASKA CIRC LATION AN | should be the agency for social action.” | | 1 |tation to become advocates is strong in some and |especially in the presence of adult minds. SITKA RELICS. | & | The Forest Service carrying on excavation work at old Sitka, esfablished by the first Russians Archangel, and uncovering many articles of | historical interest. China beads, axes, rifles, items found which of a settle- their mode“ is as New spikes, being sort Sitka, porcelain and other are interesting e Russians had at reveal facts of what ment the of living and other data. About half the been unearthed and mapping as Forest Service men hope to reconstruct on paper replica of that historic spot It is a worthy work that should prove of great| historical value to Alaska and the world. The supply | of historical knowledge is never too great and no| doubt some things hitherto unknown will be re-| vealed in the Sitka undertaking ‘ MIGHT TRY I’ old Sitka stood has | they go along the al area wh ABOVE THE CIRCLE. lady wealth Leona Jay by historic Jays matinees go to the she get over a New Yo hunting party e money Back in New York Citv a young and reputed social position—Miss name, who hints of relaticnchip to —says she is tired of the rounds of and ‘“cocktail parties” and faraway places. So enthusiastic her idea that she inserted an ad paper offering to join a scientific ¢ into the wild regions and put up Bids poured into her from last report she had accepted “I'm just bored. No love just tired of the ho-hum away to quiet and the far places. accompany an Eskimo if he knows "1 the igloo belt, she explained. Well, if the little gal really war quiet might try Alaska up above the cle, and probably are some Eskimos up there who know their way around. of th teas wants did to in many places but at none and told lc routine t even way around ts re attained Charles The ultimate in optimism has been Out of the darkness of the past Curtis, the ex-Vice-President, with statement that a dozen Republicans can defeat Roosevelt 1936, however, he declines to name them comes the in from time money, but, money.— | It may be true, as we see asserted to time, that there is plenty of call ding it all, there's darned little answer (Boston Herald.) , | culture.” y |interested jown belief: |tematic adult education. 1000,000 {annual bill for |speech :I:xCL they |grams in the world A Depression Asset. (New York Times.) The director of the American Association for Adult Education, Mr. Morse A. Cartwright, speaking recently at the annual meeting in Milwaukee, in assuming that the country is emerging from the depression, has a gratefu! word to say for it in that it has proved an asset to adult education. “Peoples in the midst of trouble materially ever have turned toward concerns of the mind.” Such prosperity as we experienced in the late Twenties is “not conducive to the development of & national If this is true, it will be hoped by those in this movement, which has gained | strength in the last five years, that we may never [ see again the material prosperity of the 1929 variety. But what he that the end of a in the years of the depression, doctrine or “idea,” stated succinctly of its own progenitors, is that “the especially notes in his report is new educational doctrine, born is approaching. The in the words school is and The school it itself, of course, a social agency, possibly the most important of social agencies, and may well be an cgency for the preparationi of people for social| action, but it is not itself and should not be “an| agency for social action.” The quality of openmindedness in teach- ing—an honest effort on the part of the teacher to strive against indoctrination—will, more and more, become the gauge of success ; in teaching. It is not necessary that students be led by the teacher to believe. It is neces- ary that they should be led to understand. This is true in every subdivision of education, | but especially in that of adult education. The temp- But it is the teacher’s highminded part to let his students in their expanding preparation® “formulate their The importance of the application of is emphasized by the growth of sys- It is estimated that 20,- sixth of the total population | of the United States) avail in some form or other of educational provision for adults, and that the such provision, public ana private, This gives urgent reason for the /maintenance of a national organization to help for- ward through experimentation the most helpful 'forms of adult education—giving freedom from “the |drabne of unfilled live: this theory pecple (one is $2,000,000,000. 100,000 Telegrams. (New York World-Telegram.) One hundred thousand telegrams poured into Washington following one Coughlin pro-Patman Now 100,000 telegrams look like a lot. In look for the moment like all the tele-| They resemble what one ardent Journalistic advocate of printing-press inflation calls the cverwhelming sentiment of the American peo- | ple. 1t is only when we stop to think—if we do stop and we do think—that 40,000,000 votes were cast in| the last Presidential election that 100,000 shrinks to its proper proportion. | Organized minorities, just because they are or- ganized, always look bigger than they are. Wayne B. Wheeler knew that and applied it more effectively than any one else in American history. He and utena the Rev. Clarence True Wilson | John Hwnh Straton, Bishop Cannon and | politicians of this country believe that to oppose Prohibition was ter an irresistible public revulsion up and ended the noble experiment covered that the supposedly terrifying but a minority after all. may be only coincidental, but it ting to note that leadership by clergymen ized the Prohibition movement as it now the inflation movement. ps there is something about the ministry velops a peculiar genius in making minorities ok like majorities Could Sunday's higher percentage of automo- |bile accidents be attributed to the lower mentalm of drivers?—(Toledo Blade.) Supporter’s rally: “The bonus is dead—long live the bonus!"—(Buffalo Courier-Express.) American Legion Baseball DANCE ELKS HALL TONIGHT ® DUDE Admission $1.00 HAYNES' ORCHESTRA Dancing 9:30) |new Buick roadster, purchased in: {him in Seattle by Rene Cosgrove, | Faine and Mrs. |turned to Juneau on the Cordelia HAPPY ——BIRTHDAY The Emplire extends congratula- ! tions nnd best wishes today, their to the follow- 20 YEARS AGO From The Empire JUNE 1, 1915 British submarines commanded birthday anniversary, the Sea of Marmora and the trans- 79° portation of Turkish troops to the derense of Constantinople has been topped. The sinking of five Turk- izh gunboats in the Sea of Mar- mora by British submarines and the knowledge that they were still at large in the waters adjacent to Constantinople, had served to ter- rify the Turks. JUNE L Frank A. Boyle R. W. DeArmond Joe M. Sunick Mrs. 1. Goldstein JUNE 2. C. G. Shattuck Carl Stallard - MRS. H. W. TERHUNE RETURNS AFTER WINTER IN SOUTH Mrs. H. W. Terhune, whose hus- d is Executive Officer of the Al- » Game Commission, returned to Jack Mullen was the owner of :‘ who had just returned from a vaca- tion in the South. Mr. and Mrs. E. R. Jaeger, Miss Hazel Jaeger, Mr. ‘and” Mrs. V. A. J. H. Cann re- an absence from here of about ten months. She spent the winter in le where their daughter, Eliza- | D. from a trip to Kake and Rocky Pass, J. H. Trving, well-known Seattle tallor. arrived in Juneau to look over his interests Lere. zton. way north, Mrs. Terhune | On her pped eeks visiting her brother and in-law, Dr. and Mrs. O. H. Mr. and Mrs. Terhune are 1g into their home which has \ua let by Mrs. Helen Webster last fall. zabeth Terhune wfll re-| to Juneau on a steamer leav- | altle June 15, accordinz t Terhune. R CARD OF LHANKS We express our sincere heartfelt thanks for the many @ Returning to Juneau on the Georgia from Skagway, after mak- - ing the trip to Whitehorse for the King's birthday celebration, were . Mr. and Mrs. A. E. 'Long, Sam Guyot, Charles Marvin, Albert ‘. King, H. Stewart, Miss Kathryn Walsh, Miss Marian Sutton, R. F. Peterson. From Jualin, the Georgzia brought Mr. and Mrs. C. C. Titus = Nick Rocovich bought a lot in Juneau from Carl Fellstrom. ne Paddy O'Neill, foreman of the crews that drilled the Sheep Creek adit for the Alaska Gastineau Mining Company, returned to Ju- aeau from Seward. George F. Kilroy, formerly of Nome and the Iditarod, was in Ju- neau on his way to Circle City. ny id brother, Jimmy, and for al beautiful floral offerings. staff the of St. Ann’s Hospital Elks Lodge, No. 420. Mrs. Monte Benson of Tread- well and her children, left for Sea- ide, Oregzon, to spend the sum- mer. SON —adv. R NOONAN xr1URNS Dan A. Noonan, Turner Pease | Company reprezentative, arrived in Juneau on the Alaska from a Southeast Alazka port. Maximum, 46; cloudy. R Weather: mum, 58; mini- ANDERSON ARRIVES \ PAINTS—OILS Builder#’ and Sheif HARDW R Thomas Hardware Co. | J uneau Cash Grocery CASH GROCERS Corner Second and Seward Free Delivery I. G. Anderson, Siems-Spokane Construction Company executive, r2turned to Juneau on the Alaska n 4So.unum Alaska \my pa'c Merchants’ Lunch ( BAILEY’S ™=, LEY’S CAFE - OO | ?4-Hour Service Beer—if desired GASTINEAU CAFE GASTINEAU HOTEL BUILDING French-Italian Dinners Wines—Beer PHONE 485 ALASKA MEAT CO. FEATURING CARSTEN’S BABY BEEF—DIAMOND TC HAMS AND BACON—U. 8. Government Inspected WALLIS S. GEORGE, C.P.A. Associates JA.MESC COOPER, C.P.A. WALLIS S. GEORGE & CO. CERTIFIED PUBLIC ACCOUNTANTS Juneau, Alaska SYSTEM TAX SERVICE au on the Alaska this morning | |two weeks may be made. Scarlet| ! is attending the University 01|T(") off in Ketchikan to spend| of kindness and expressions of sy m.‘fesslonal airplane flights covering extended us during the ill-|all Alaskan Territory. Hundreds of s and loss of our beloved son satisfied patients welcome his re- Es- | vacation trip, while two able, pecial gratitude is extended to the | uate assistant Optometrists conduct and his practice in Seattle at 1431 MR. AND MRS. J. F. DENNIS, |where he has one of the finest and | MRS. CATHERINE HUTCHIN- | best Makmg Alaska Business GO! is just as much a part of our service as is pro- tecting the deposits of the Territory’s residents. In 1985, 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- sidered here. The B. M. Behrends Bank Juneau, Alaska WINDOW CLEANING P e e $000000000000000000000000000000040000 S T THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE SATURDAY JUNE 15 l935 A home garcen without radish-| es hardly can be imagined. The|-— seeds should be sown 12 or 15 to|® the foot in a furrow or drill 10 to| and covered with 1} | 20 feet long, inch of soil. They may be sown| thinly in the same drill with beets, carrots or parsnips, as they grow quickly and break the soil for the other seedlings. “They should be pulled, however, before they are| large enough to injure the crop with which they are sown. Two or three plantings at intervals of Globe White-Tipped, French Break- Icicle and Long Scarlet Short are amongz leading varieties. - Max Baer, heavywcight boxing cnampion, hurt his hand in an automobile accident recenily while raining for his bout this summer ith Challenzer Jamos Braddock. | ~ew - PROTECT YOUR EYES THIS ANNUAL OPPORTUNITY o HAVE YOUR EYES EXAMINED by DR. J. W. EDDMUNDS, we! known and popular OPTOMETRIST of SEATTLE, is | YOUR CHANCE to consult him | now, al the GASTINEAU HOTEL. ROOM 216, UNTIL JUNE 4. Last summer Dr. Edmunds made 21 pro- turn, on this 9th annual Alaskan grad- FOURTH AVE, NEAR PIKE ST. equipped - Optometry Offices in Washington. Your eyes should oe RE-EXAMINED ONCE EACH YEAR, and GLASSES CHANGED | USUALLY WITHIN TWO YEARS. Phone 10 early for appointment. —adv, GENLRAL MOTORS and MAYTAG PRODUCTS W. P. JOHNSON JUNEAU-YOUNG Funeral Pariors Licensed Funeral Directors | and Embalmers i | Night Phone 1851 Day Phone 12 IT°S Wise to Call '8 Juneau Transfer Co. when in need of MOVYING or STORAGE Fuel 0il Coal TYPEWRITERS RENTED $5.00 per month | J. B. Burford & Co. “Our doorstep is worn by satisfied customers” . Hollywood Style Shop Formerly COLEMAN'S Pay Less—Much Less Front at Main Street 2 BEULAH HICKEY l R SR T R HARRI MACHINE SHOP “ELECTROL —Of Course” McCAUL MOTOR COMPANY Dodge and Plymouth Dealers PR U L e GARLAND BOGGAN | Hardwood Floors | Waxing Polishing | f; Dr. Geo. L. Barton I @( GRADUAT! “ | T | PROFESSIONAL HelanW L. Albrepht PHYSIOTHERAPY Ilassage, Electricity, Infra Red Ray, Medical Gymnastics. 307 Goldstein Building Phone Oflice, 216 Fraternal Societies or Gastineau Channe; J} B. P. O. ELKS meets every Wednesday fat 8 p. m. Visiting brothers welcome. | i I i John H. Walmen-Ex- alted Ruler, M. H. Sldes Se&,‘qg‘.nry | DRS.KASER & FREEBURGER { DENTISTS | Blomgren Building PHONE 56 Hours 9 am. to 9 pm. KNIGHTS CF COLUM’BUB | | Seghers Council No. . 1760. Meetings second jand last Monday at 7:30 p. m. Transient {brothers urged to at- tend. Conrn' Cham- I bers, Fifth St. JOHN F. MULLEN, }Cv. K., H. J. TURNER, Sew&nfl Dr. C. P. Jenne DENTIST Rooms 8 and 9 Valentine Building Telephone 176 | MOL‘N’I‘ JUNEAU LODGE NO: 147 Second and Fourth Mon day of each month ir ,Scottish Rite Temple, beginninz at 7:30 p.m. HOV"*RD D. STABLER. Worshipful Master; JAMES' W. LEIVLRS Secretary. X CHIROPRACTOR 201 Goldstein Bldg. Phone 211 | | Office Hours: 9 to 12, 1 to 5 [| Evenings by appaintment | DOUGLAS AERIE 117, F. O. E. Meets first and third Mondays, 8 p.m., Eagles’ Hall, Douglas. Visiting brothers welcome. Sante Degan, 1W P, T. W. cmmn »atcxet‘lr‘y Dr. Richord Williwms | | DENTIST OFFICE AND RESIDENCE Gastineau Building Phone 481 “Dr. A. W. Stewart DENTIST Our (.ucks go any place“any | | time. A tank for Diesel OIil'| and a tank for crude oil save | Hours 9 am. to 6 pm. burner trouble. SEWARD RUILDING | PHONE 149; NIGHT 148 Office Pnone 469 1, RELIABLE TRANSEER | Robert Simpson Opt. D. | Graduaw Los Angeles Col- lege of Optometry and Opthalmology | | Glasses Fitted Lenses Ground | Commercial Adjust- ment & Rating Bureau Coperating with White Seiv- ice Bureau Room 1—Shattuck Bldg.: We have 5,000 local ratings on file DR. H. VANCE OSTEOPATH Consu':ation end examination Free. Honrs 10 to 12: 1 to 5; 7 to 8:30 and by 2appointment. Office Grand Apts,, near Gas- tineau Hotel. Phone 177 _—— Alaska Transfer Co. GENERAL HAULING ED JEWELL, Proprietor PHONES 269—1134 ———— T The Florence Shop ‘ Permanent Waving a Speciaity | | \ j Di. ). W. Bayne ’ DENTIST | | | - | | rlorence Holmquist, Prop.| PHONE 427 Behrends Bank Building o nn Rooms 5-6 Triangle Bidg Office hours, § am. to 5 pm, Everings by appoint.n.nt PHONE 321 | | | - i [ o 1 M..m--~.,~...r. HOTEL ZYNDA Large Sample Room ELEVATOR SERVICE S. ZYNDA, Prop. | ORAMAE HOLLISTER CADIES’ TAILORING AND DRESSMAKING 411 GOLDSTEIN BLG. Phone 564 ROSE SUAREZ Modiste from New York City Dressmaking, Remodeling, Alterations TELEPHONE 277 Feldon's House, near Moose Hall e o JUNEAU FROCK SHOPPE “Exclusive but not Expensive” " MARKET BA%KET Provisions, Fruits, Vegetables [ Phone 342 Free Deltvml PHONE 36 For very prompt| LTIQUOR DELIVERY ' i i | i ‘ THE JuNEAU LAUNDRY Franklin Street bet: Front and Second sm‘ PHONE 35% WARRACK A Date- MUSICIANS LOCAL NO. 1 Meets Second and Fourth Sun- days Every Month—3 P. M. DUDE HAYNES, | | Secretary | . BETTY MA C BEAUTY SHOP In New Location at | 12th anc B Streets | PHONE 547 | Laundry 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 uneau Ice Cream _ Parlors SHORT ORDERS Candy- | IC. H. METCALFE €O/ Sheet Metal—Oil Burners Heating—Air Conditioners General Electric Oil Burners Phone 101 Front Street 1 | 1 | . : DAILY EMPIRE WANT ADS PAY)

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