The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, September 5, 1935, Page 4

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THE DAILY: ALASKA EMPIRE, THURSDAY, SEPT. 5, 1935. Daily Alaska Em pire WOBERT W. BENDER - - Editor and Manager except NY at Published every EMPIRE PRINTI Streets, Juneau Runday ing MPA Entered in the Post Office in Juneau as Second C mattey SUBSCRIPTION RATES. Delivered by carrier In Juneau and Dougias for $1.25 per month. 1t the following rates: 00; ix months, in advance, 1,25 By niahi One vear, in ; one moath bscribers w fy the Busin the delivery Gf their pa Telephones. News Office paid will p or irre ATED PRESS. ly entitled to the atches credited t the MEMBER OF ASSOC! The Associated ! use for republicatior I news put CIRCULATION GUARANTEED TO BE LARGER AT OF ANY OTHER PUBLICATION | | has been made by the men who get into the hills for the winter. And there are many: other such stakes to be made. The shipment of profits from Alaska's major industries to the Outside annually has bled Alaska white these many years. 10 the profits from the gold operations alone were reinvested in Alaska each year the country would go ahead with leaps and Loun As hard-e: will she soon as Alaska learns to keep her ned wealth at home, the sooner get under way as a land of perma- nent wealth. And one of the best ways to do this is to stay with the country, make this a homeland and apply every cent of available funds to the opening of latent, resources summer ‘and winter. ‘ There lies pne of the answers to,_mtm.’e yenm_:m and_commercial success. 'Make AlasKa - homeland, Alaskd for Alaskans and put Alaskan money 1n’ Alaska enterprise. The deer season is underway in earnest without a single shooting accident’ thus far. Let's make it a perfect season and ke¢p ‘looking for the horns and not shoot at moving objects in the brush. Taking a chance isn't worth'a stretch in jail for the care- less use of firearms. That “highly desirable” suggestion of Secretary HAPPY— —BIRTHDAY The Empire extends congratula- | tions and best wishes today, their birthday anniversary, to the follow- SEPTEMBER 5 Mrs. H. M. Hollmann Mrs. Vance Blackwell - {20 YEARS AGO Loy From The Empire ¥ i E SRR SEPTEMBER 5, 1915 Dr. Karl Heifferich, secretary to the German Imperial treasury, speaking in the Reichstag on the second reading of the $2,500,000,000, 000 war loan, said: “Until now $5, 000,000,000 have been voted and our estimates of war needs are still ex- ceeded by real war expenditures. “The stars incline Horoscope but do not compel” | { FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 6, 1935 Astrologers read this as an unfor- |tunate day in planetary direction. It is a time to clear the way for | future activities and the wise will | ccucentrate on routine work. | This is a most unlucky day for | those who seek appointments cither in politics or in business. The vis- ion of persons in authority may be unreliable and those most worthy of consideration will probably . be igrored. | The stars forecast many ecfforts to heal rifts in friendships or in business associations. Old feuds should be forgotten and new under- | standings established. This is not an auspicious rule under which to make a decision. | There is a sign that warps judg- I ments and inclines both men and | women to be over-confident of their FROM BRISTOL BAY George Forsby, A. C. Higgs, and J. Markstrom, three recent arrivals here from the Bristol Bay salmon area, are passengers from Juneau to Vancouver, B. C, on the Princess Louise. e M'GINNIS COUPLE LEAVE witnessed the wedding of their daughter to Norman Beers last week, left on the Princess Louise for Van- couver, B. C. McGinnis, interestel in mining properties, will be flown with his wife from Seattle to New York by the United Air Lines,; DRY CLEANING e dort Water [t Mr. and Mrs. R. B. McGinnis, who | | PROFESSIONAL L Helene W. L. Albrech PHYSIOTHERAPY \ ~fmssage, Electricity, Infra R Ray, Medical Gymnastio 307 Goldsteir Building Phone Office, 21¢ | DRS.KASER & FREEBURGER. | DENTISTS | Blomgren Building | PHONE 56 I Hours ¢ am. to 9 pm. 1 ey Jenne ST e Rooms 8 and 9 Valentine Building ‘Telephone 176 . 5 i Dr. Richard Williame—: DENTIST OFFICE AND RESIDENCE Gastineau Building s Fraternal Societies OF ——— Gastinecu Channel B— B. P .0. ELKS meets every Wednesday at 8 P. M. Visiting bothers welcome. M. E. MONAGLE, Ex- alted Ruler. M. H. SIDES, Secretary. ~ "KNIGHTS ©r COLUMPUS Seghers Council No. . 1760. Meetings second 3 and last Monday at “Lsza | 7:30 'p, m. Transient ‘brothiers urged to at- ‘tehd. Cownet' Cham- bers. fth St. JOHN F. MULLEN, G. K., H. J. TURNER, Secretary MOUNT JUNEAU, LODGE, NO, 161 \ Second and l’mlvt‘h Mon @( beginning at 7;30 p.m HOWARD D. STABLER, day of each’ month ir Scotti.h. Rite Temple, Worshipful Master; JAMES W, LEIVERS, Secretary. The expenditure in one month is OWR POWers. Phone 431 THE BRIDGE. mighty steel arch rising high above the waters Gastineau Channel, its great concrete approaches ng two of the richest communities in stands the Douglas Island Bridge, a compliment to the ingenuity of man; a monument to those courageous and far-seeing Alaskans who looked not back on the gold that was drained from the creeks and moun- |- - tains of the North into the coffers of the world but ahead into a future of brilliant achievement which will dwarf into insignificance the now glories of the past. Here in the very area where Joe Juneau drove his pick into pay dirt that was to ring the magic words “Alaska gold” around the globe has been erected an impesing structure which is as epochal of the future as was the first yellow color taken from Gold Creek. This is the symbol of trade, of commerce, of stab of a great future city builded on the untold wealth to ken from the ground by Alaskans of fortitude, courage and tenacity who look to the Territory as home and not a place to make a few dollars and depart thither. The great span which has just been completed is depictive of a future metropolitan Douglas and Juneau, mining camps of the step into the role of cities. area past, now As wealth continues to be taken from the earth through the energy ‘of men with vision industrial development will bring*to the North virile men and stage. women imbued with the spirit to achieve and where |through lone 'Federal grants and close to the fields and streams today two small towns are connected by a Alaska | dimming Hull seems to have had a very desirable efféct on that little oil scheme in Ethiopia. “Dollar Diplom- acy” does not rule that man in the White House. A cracked-brained reactionary says Roosevelt {can't “take it.” | can’t take it laying down like his predecessor did. | The Wild. (New York Times.) “Ding,” new Chief of the United States Bureau of Biological Survey, said a few months ago in an address in Pennsylvania that our-endowment of wild- life resources is “the bowlegged girl of the village . Everybody sympathizes with her but never asks her to the picnic.” He must have been gratified that| she has now received the attention shown a Cin-| derella. At any rate, she has been invited to the| party. He has announced the initiation of a princely} program (of nearly a million dollars for the next five years) the auspices of the Wild Life Institute. The purpose is not merely to prevent the exterm- ination of wild life in some of its species, but to| train men and women in the land-grant colleges and others in methods of increasing fish and game | “for the future profit and recreation of landowners and sportsmen.” Animals have been defined as \“fixed ideas incarnate.” Human beings have taken advantage of these fixed ideas of the dumb animals by lying in wait for them with gun or net or hook or other devices. The purpose of the institute will be to cause the “fixed ideas” which have madc the animals what they are to serve our present popula- tion more abundantly but without depriving future| !Americans of their rightful estate. | _Most of our activities for wild life conservation | begin, as “Ding” has said, “at the postemortem Here is a beginning of an effort which, the institutions maintained in part by under | steel span a great metropolis will rise reflecting the 'in every State, will help to conserve our national true advancement of Alaska. The Douglas Island Bridge to the foresight with purpose through but etched in the cor commercial advancement of to come. A A HOMELAND. MAKE ALA “Alaska for Alaskans’ Outride stemmed if the Territory is to achieve is not only a tribute Alaskans who have carried on the Territory's bleak infancy crete and steel is the sign of | is the cry of the sourdough and a proper one, but, unfortunately, Alaska for the is the actuality that exists and must be |resources and multiply enchantments which, Nature |would offer through her “unwearied powex” 6 in| |varied form | | | Real Humorists of the House. (Jay Franklin in Vanity Fair.) The real humorists of the national House of Rep- resentatives are men like Blanton, Bulwinkle and ‘Gassaway, the Solid South’s contribution to the |uation’s fun. Tom Blanton, for example, is Abilene, | {Texas's, gift to popular government, a hardboiled |Texan who is so windy that he took twenty-two' | closely-printed pages in the Congressional Record to 1ts PrOPer| gogeng himself against charges brought out by the place and its residents permanency. As the Seas‘m‘Dierict of Columbia Crime Subcommittee. ends each ye: with their S, summer, to be spent on dwindies, money drains out the Outside. of the North rests on the money that will drain mto‘dlsbrict government. r, thousands trek back to the Slales‘; large or small, made during the|pol His critics go so far as to say that he is in itics for patronage, and that he tries to us his Population | position on the District of Columbia Committee to; The future development|give him control of the many, many jobs in the Then he goes back to Abilene thé Territory, and the country offers fine 0ppor~;and tells the home folks how he prevented the high- tunity for those who will stick, make Alaska their |toned blue-stocking birds from running away with home and invest their capital in paying enterprises. As the Anchorage Times aptly points out: Alaska’s' hard rock mining offers one of the best opportunities for winter activities. Numerous inviting properties can be had, either on lease or otherwise, where those who know the mining game can apply them- selves opening up prospects at all seasons. in the Willow area alone are hundreds of claims presenting opportunities. The chances for making a in such ventures are as good in Alaska as anywhere. No mining country ever opened without a lot of persistent and determined work ‘The Valdez area has demonstrated with- in the last year that hard rock properti can be opened and put on a paying ba: That area now has a number of splendid properties whi have been brought into the producing column by winter prospecting. Other areas will get similar results by trying. Alaska’s producing hard rock prop- erties are few compared to many of the Rocky Mountain States, and simply for the reason the necessary prospecting has not been done the year round. rapping another field offering good winter opportunities to those who remain in Alaska for the winter. Many a neat sum TINY CITY RISES is is AT ithe treasury. He is a beautiful example of a hard-| {boiled and windy politician from a small windy cny‘ in Texas, exerting every possible pressure on na- tional problems. Bulwinkle and Gassaway owe most to their names —like Gallagher and Shean. Bulwinkle comes from North Carolina’s ill-fated Gastonia, and got into | public print as chairman of the subcommittee which |investigated Dr. Wirt last year, at the time the |Gary school teacher tried to convert Congress to a |Hearstian red witch-hunt. Even the Chicago Tri- |bure had to poke fun at the whole silly perform- jance and published a cartoon in which was a sign, 1“Beware of the Bulwinkle.” Gassaway is the best name for a Congressman which has yet been devised. Percy Lee Gassaway, a Democrat and former judge from the TX ranch near Colgate, Okla., is a natural-born and conscious clown. He wears high-heeled boots and a sombrero in Washington, and garnered space on the front |page by “taking after the Kingfish.” Burlesquing |the Long bodyguards, he got several page boys |from the Hol as his guards, armed them with ‘(\A]]v])l.\{(rl.\ and galloped through the newsreels. | i | | | There’s nothing Japanese Emperor especially impressive about the being a descendant of the Sun Goddess. We have similar royalty over here. There are thousands of sons and daughters of mdbn- shiners.—(Ohio State Journal.) * BONNEVILLE DAM | higher by one-third than the total expenditure for the war in 1870, but every German knows that the sacri- fices will not be in vain. Up to the | present the German total expendi- Most Americans are thankful I"eflures have been the highest; but|2Lfairs. The most persistent sum- |they are now being exceeded by | those of Great Britain. The coali- tion of enemies now is bearing al- most two-thirds of the total'cost of the war.” | The excursion trips to Sitka of the | | Alaska Steamship Company and the Pacific Coast Steamship Company ended with the arrival of the {steamer Dolphin from Sitka early in the morning on her way south and the City of Seattle, also en- route for the southern ports. | Foreman Byron Olson, of the Al- aska Gastineau Mininz Company's creek tunnel crews, reported ghat the tunnel, which is being driven to tap the Upper Lake for power | | purposes, has been driven 550 feet. It would be 1,400 feet when com- pleted, Three shifts of men were |being worked in the tunnel and good progress was reported. Bonuses were paid for speed. Mrs. R. C. Blackwell left for Or gon to attend the Methodist confes ence in Roseberg. Mrs. Georgia Holzheimer, wife of W. A. Holzheimer, who rezently lo- cated in Juneau and had offices in| the Goldstein building, became the first woman in his executive commiss: during an exposition. During absence of John Schram, of Seatile,: resident of the Washington State Commission, Mrs, Holzheimer was in | charge of the Washington exhibit at the San Francisco fair grounds. The arrival of a baby girl to Mr. and Mrs. B. W. Johnstone confarred |upon George Forrest for the first time in his experience the title of | grandfather. | Weather: Maximum, 56; mini- mum, 34; cloudy, rain .02 inch. —————— FORMER DOUGLAS BOY TO ENTER SEATTLE COLLEGE Clement W. Johnson, nephew or‘ {Glenn G. Oakes, of the Alaska-Ju- | neau staff, will enter Seattle Collere | this month. He is a Douglas Island i boy, the son of Mr. and Mrs. W. I. Johnson. Mrs. Johnson, the formerl Alma Oakes, was on the nursing staff of the St. Ann's Hospital in| | Douglas. The Johnson family now | resides in Port Orchard, Washing- | ton. —————— TO STANFORD Returning to Stanford University for her sophomore year of study, is Miss Aline Ann Goldstein, a visitor | | here this summer with her grand- | parents, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Gold- stein. Miss Goldstein left on the | Princess Louise. SHOP IN JUNEAU! | | FINE Watch and Jewelry Repairing at very reasonable rates UL BLOEDHORN Women are subject to unfavorable planetary direction while this con- figuration prevails. They should | postpone important matters. Ths is not a lucky day for love mer suitor may be forgetful under this planetary government. New anxieties for women are forecast, for as the autumn ad- vances many will be concerned by the exigencies of threatened war| which may separate families in Bu- | rope and cause demand for trained Washiag a Tour ALASKA LAUNDRY PHONE 15 American engineers. Persons whose birthdate it is} have the augury of a year of much| pleasure but heart i be troublesome and business affairs| may be neglected. i Children born on this day prob- ably will be exceedingly =popular. Subjects of this sign usually have great personal charm. Jane Addams, settlement worker and author, was born on this day, 1860. Cthers who have celebrated it as a birthday include Henry Seidel | Canby, educator, author and edi- tor, 1878; Marquis de Lafayette,! French soldier and statesman, ! 1757; Heinrich H. Muhlenberg, the | fcunder of the American Lulherani P i | CLICK FAMILY MOVES J. E. Click and family moved from their summer camp at Tee Harbor to their J e e { AMMUNITION Guns for rent, bought sold and exchanged—Always Open SEE BIG VAN Lower Front Street { Peter Pan Beauty Shop PHONE 221 MARCARET LINDSAY, Prop. Introductory Special $7.50 Permanent Now $5.00 $10 Permanent Now $7.50 $5.00 Permanent Now $3.50 Finger Wave Free LIMITED TIME ONLY Across from Peerless Bakery | MUSICIANS LOCAL ) NO. 1 Meets Second and Fourth Sun- days Every Month—3 P. M. DUDE HAYNES, Secretary ' | | 1 | | | . B | 84 09 g i ) rl PA I FRONT STREET 1 | [S——— [ ) The B. M. Behrends Bank, oldest of Alaska’s financiali institutions, of experience, But in its attitude to i requirements, as in respects the lessons ts customers and their the facilities it has provided for their service, this bank takes the forward view. interests ‘may/ | 1 | e o Guy Smith DRUGS PUROLA REMEDIES PRESCRIPTIONS CARE- FULLY COMPOUNDED Front St, Next Coliseum PIIONE 97—Free Delivery ———— e TR SERS H. S. GRAVES “The Tlothing Man” § Home of Hart Schaffner and Marx ~'~thing ? & PAIN1-~OILS Builders' and Shelf HARDARE Thomas Hardware Co. | | TR Dr. A. W. Stewart DENTIST Hours 9 am. to 6 pm. BEWARD RUILDING Off>2e Pnone 468 1 | 5 Kobert Simpson | OMMO&-. = Angeles Col- lege, of Optometry and Opthalmelogy Glasses Fitted Lenses Gre'nd — DOUGLAS f'(I,IE AERIE é%, 117, F. 0. E. S iy Meets first and third Mondays, & {pm,, Eagles' Hall, Douglas. Visiting |brothers welcome. J. B. Martin W. P, T. N. Cashen, Secretary. I N, Our t.ucks go any place any | time. A tank for Diesel Oil | and a lank for crude oil zave | burner trouble, PHONE 149; NIGHT 148 | RELIABLE TRANSFER —3 ——— || PR. H. VANCE OSTEOPATH Comsultation and examination Pree. Hours 10 to 12; 1 to 5; % to 8:30 and by appointment. Office Grand Apts, near Gas- tineau Hotel. Phone 177 Harry Race DRUGGIST “The Squibb S'ore” CONSTRUCTION CO. Phone 107 . Juneau GARBAGE HAULED Reasonable Monthly Rates E. 0. DAVIS TELEPHONE 584 Phone 4753 | 8 GENERAL MOTORS MAYTAG PRODUCTS f W. P. JOHNSON TR A NG SRS | | GARLAND BOGGAN ‘ Hardwood Floors , Sanding 15 PHONE 582 IT’S Wise to Call 8 Transfer Co. when in need of Fuel Oil Transfer | and Waxing Polishing Juneau MOVING or STORAGE Coal | | | Cigars Cigarettes Candy Cards The New Arctic Pabst Famous Draught Beer On Tap *JIMMY"" CARLSON HOTEL ZYNDA Large Sample Room ELEVATOR SERVICE S. ZYNDA, Prop. JUNEAU-YOUNG Hardware Company PAINTS—OIL—GLASS Shelf and Heavy Hardwarc Guns and Ammunition JUNEAU Drug Co. “THE CORNER DRUG STORE™ P. O. Substation No. } FREE DELIVERY TYPEWRITERS RENTED $5.00 per month J. B. Burford & Co. J EAL PAINT SHOP | It's Paint We Have It! WENDT & GARSTER PIIONE 54 " Commercial Adjust- ment & Rating Bureau Coperating with White Serve ice Bureau Room 1—Shattuck Bldg. We have 5,000 local ratings on file —a JUNEAU FROCK SHOPPE “Exclusive but not Expensive” Lingerie, 1 | FORD AGENCY, (Authorized Dealers) GREASES GAS—OILS JUNEAU MOTOR: Foot of Main Street S MARKET RASKET | Provisions, Fruits, Vegetables | Phone 342 Free Delivery | P - ]| - PHONE 36 For very prompt LIQUOR DELIVERY THE JuNEAU LAuNDRY Franklin Street betweem Front and Second Streets | i1 PHONE 35¢ I Pcople . . . or businesses . . . planning for a broader future find this institution as re- sponsive as it is responsible. The B. M. Behrends Bank Juneau, Alaska “Qur doorstep is worn by IN TOWN! o THE MINERS' Recreation Parlors and Liquor Store B e —————————— LUDWIG NELSON ’ JEWELER Repairing SHOP IN JUNEAU! | i a Construction Co. | Juneau To:azam . "The 20 permanent houses erected at Bonneville Dam form a sm. c all, carefully planned city to Fouse per- manent employes at the $40,000,000 federal power and navigation project on the Columbla. river near Portland, Ore. Green grass is growing, and the streets will soon be paved. (Associated Press Photo) rrrrrrerrrerrrrerrere

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