The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, September 17, 1935, Page 4

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A Em pire Daily Alaska ROBERT W BENDER - - Editor and Manager' Sunday by tra except Second and Muin Published 3 MPANY at EMPIRE PRI Streets, Juneau e NG CO! Alaska Juneau as Second Class Entered in the Post Office in of 1934 by liberalizing and simplifying the issuance of stamps by the Postoffice Department. Amends the Lacey Act of 1900, which in large part was designed to aid the States by prohibiting shipment in interstate commerce of game and other wild life killed or shipped in violation of their laws, so that it will apply to present-day vehicles and methods of transportation such as the automobile THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, TUESDAY, SEPT. :17, 1935. “The stars incline Horoscope but do not compel” HAPPY ——BIRTHDAY| The Empire extends congratula-| tions and best wishes today, their| “Tormorrow’s Styles Today” PROFESSIONAL ™ || | Helene W. L. Albrecht PHYSIOTHERAPY | -fassage, Electricity, Infra Red | T ‘Fraternal Societies 1 | OF e Gustineerr' Channel B. P .0. ELKS meets every Wednesday at & Ray, Medical Gymnastic g 307 Goldsteir Building [ & Phone Office, 21¢ | ‘ "DRS.KASLR & FREEBURGER. | DENTISTS Blomgren Building PHONE 56 Hours @ am. to 9 pm. and airplane. Extends the operation of the Lacey Act to for- eign commerce in game and wild life and puts “teeth” into that act, which made no provision for its enforcement, by imposing penalties for its viola- tion, Authorizes payment to the States of 25 per cent of any revenue that may be derived from wild life refuges and reservations administered by the De- partment of Agriculture. Empowers the. President to allocate out of the $4,880,000,000 appropriation made in the Work Reliel Act of April 8, 1935, such sum as he may deem necessary or advisable for the acquisition of areas in carrying on the Government's program of wild | life restoration, rehabilitation and protection. P. M. Visiting bothers welcome. M. E. MONAGLE, Ex- alted Ruler. M. H. SIDE3, Secretary. matter birthday anniversary, to the follow- ing: SUBSCRIPTION RATES. Dellvered by carrier In Juneau and Douglas for $1.25 per _month WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 18, 1935. SEPTEMBER 17. following rates: T x months, in advance, Sinister planetary aspects rule to- day, according to astrology. Con- | fusion of wind and weakness of purpose may be prevalent under |this rule. Although there may be the will | to do certain conditicns will thwart lefort. This may be apparent in |the househoid as well as in the world of businass. i It is not a favorable day to make important decisions or to execute bank dealings. Investments should | be postponed. Many uncertainties !will retard. big enterprises. Labor 'continues under a sway !that threatens the progress of in- | dustrial projects. Many strikes will ! disturb this country. | Speculation will fempt many, but Vilhjalmar Stefansson, noted Po-|again the seers warn of sudden f| fluctuations on the stock. market and changes in financial systems in more than one country. Women should be careful today. Contentions in their organizations ar> expected and many struggles among those who are ambitious to attain recognition. The autumm will be marked by the deaths of prominent persons. A woman leader will close her ca- reer. In 1936 many great respon- sibilities will pass to the young. Ttaly, Grezce and Japan will have | of many sorts within months. As the earth|® trembles, so will government offic-| ials. it is prognosticated. { Porsons whose birthdate it is| By One year, 'in a $6.00; one month, in ad 1 Subscribers will confer a favor if they will promptly notify the Business Offige of any failure or irregularity in the delivery of their papers Telephones. News Office, 6 MEMBER OF ASSOCIATED PRESS, The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for repuvlication of all news dispatches credited to it or not other in this paper and also the local news published J. A. Hellenthal “Juneau’s Own Siore” {| Willlam Franks Joe Belloto Margaret Yeakey Aleda Lee Warner Noreen Patricia Andrews Steve Vukovich Herbert McLean. KNIGHTS ©r COLUMPUS Seghers Council No. {1760. Meetings second ‘and last Monday at 30 p. |broteers urged to at- tend, Covwe® Cham- 4 bers. ™fth St. JOIIN F. MULLFN G. K, H. J. TURNER, Secretary | | | ¥ P | ORIC DRY CLEANING SRR AR S A Dr. C. P. Jenne DENTIST Rooms 8 and 9. Valentine Building Telephone 176 CIRCULATION CUARANTEED TO BE LARGER ALASKA THAN THAT OF ANY OTHER PUBLICATION - {20 YEARS AGO From The Empire . SOCIAL SECURITY Approved: August 14, 1935 Provides for the establishment of a system of | Federal old-age benefits and undertakes to enable |the States to make more adequate provision for aged persons, dependent and crippled children, maternal and child welfare, public health and the 'administration of State unemployment compensa-|lar explorer, and two members of | tion laws. his expedition. who since 1913 had Creates a bipartisan al Security Board of |been thought to have perished in three members, to administer the program inde-|the Arctic, were discovered safe pendently of the Department of Labor. They are to|and sound. News to this effect be appointed by the President, by consent of the reached Ottawa from Nome, Al- Senate, each to receive a salary of $10,000 a year aska, and was given out as offic- land serve six-year terms, except that of the first|ial by the Canadian government, three members appointed, one would hold office |which had financed Stefansson’s Today the nation is observing Constifition DAy, for two years, another four years and the third | voyage to the North in the gas-| each political party according to its own lights./for six years. schooner Karluk. The men were! The Republicans, for example, are telling of its Authorizes an appropriation of $49,750,000 for the|found on Banksland by the Seattle sacredness and hinting rather broadly that the current fiscal year, and so much as may be needed | trading schooner Ruby, in com- party now in wer i attempting to tear it asunder. thereafter, to enable each State to furnish flnancial‘ms.nd of Captain Cottle. They had | They are pointing to certamn legis! that has 8ssistance "s; far as practic;zble :nder the condi- | been glvenrupdwh_en !t?emi(s?rluk's . > " _'tions in such State,” to aged needy persons, more men were found, in rightful con- bt Dy the Supreme U A e |than 65 years oid. Tederal grants are authorized|dition, on Wrankell Tsland, which e w e e on a fifty-fifty matching basis with the States, |they had red after the ice had because he has suggested that it is not impossible o oot that the Federal Government's share in no|greund the Karluk to pieces, and nor im "ac!x('al to amend the old document when|.ace would exceed $15 a month. Stefansson and his tWo COMPAN-!nhave the auzury of a year of per- the people see the need for Provides for a long-range contributory old-age | ions had struck out on foot for|plexities and anxieties. Conserva- The Democrats are pointing out that the Con- pension system, to be financed by an income tax on help. The men were almost in-|tive business methods should pre-| stitution is not infallible but that on the whole employees and a payroll tax on employers, starting|sane. Two or three had died jor | yajl, it has served an excellent purpose throughout the|in each case at 1 per cent in 1937 and rising each met death when the ice crumbjed | years. 7 three years until 1949, when each contribution is|their ship. > to be 3 per cent. Under the operation of the sys- It is interesting to note that while Fl\e nation tem, each qualified worker who retires at the age of| . Two hundred and forty people pauses today in observance of this great instrument, g5 Lyt not prior to January 1, 1942, would receive|were reported starved to death mx?ramf. 3 that even back at the time of its Writing it Was a monthly pension, until his death, ranging from|Mexico because of the revolution. ‘} for‘tz.' y still of human endeavor. In an effort to get the $10 to $85, depending upon the total amount of | John Sl?‘em Cabot A}:bott. his- 13 colonies together under one form of government wages earned by the beneficiary alner December 31, gy ponl, who had secured me‘gfi’};:: Bl :::’«: :’;e;i‘a‘ze:ai{ ?501‘ instead of 13, the leaders of that day drew up the 1936, and before he reaches retirable age. i unemwmmmu to build a government|pirthday include Clinton Scollard,; MOUMT JUNEAU LODGE NO. 141 Second and Fourth M & beginning at 7:30 p.m HOW *RD D, STABLER, day of each month ‘¢ x Scottish Ritz Temple, Worshipful Master; J.."*ES W, LEIVERS, BSecretary. R A I Dr. Richard ‘Willizms | DENTIST OFFICE AND RESIDENCE Gastineau Building Phone 481 SEPTEMBER 16, 1915. DOUGLAS fOE AERIE N7 117, F. 0. E. «a% AN Meets first and third Mondays, 4 p.m., Eagles' Hall, Douglas. Visiting brothers welcome. *J. B. Martin W. P, T. N. Cashen, Secretiry s Sack Dr. A. W. Sicwart DENTIST Hours 9 am. to 6 pm. BEWARD RUILDING Off:2e Pnone 469 I3 e s LAY e Arane THE CONSTITUTION. Our t.ucks go any place my‘ A tank for Diesel Oil | and » tank for crude oil save | burner trouble. LAUNDRY PHONE 15 Roben?n;;on t. D. Graduate Angeles Col- | | | | FPHONE 149; NIGHT 148 lege of Optometry and Opthalmology | RELIABLE TRANSFER Glasses Fitted Lenses Grownd | | —k poy lation Commercial ~ Adjust- | ment & Rating Bureau I LADIE! MISSES’ READY-TO-\WEAR Seward Street , Near Third PR. H. VANCE OSTEOPATH Uomsultation and examination Pree. Hours 10 to 12; 1 to 6; 7 to 8:30 and by appointment. Office Grand Apts., near Gas- tineau Hotel. Phone 177 i J Coperating with White Serv- ice Bureau Room 1—Shattuck Bldg. ‘We have 5,000 local ratings on file Children born on tais day prob-| ably will be changeable and moody | {in character, but they wlli poscess that absorb knowledge of JUNEAU-YOUNG Hardware Company | PAINTS—OIL—GLASS | Shelf and Heavy Hardware Guns and Ammunition “Exclusive but not Expenstve” Coats, Dresses, Lingerie, Hoslery and Hats TYPEWRITERS RENTED $5.00 per month | J. B. Burford & Co. “Our doorstep is worn by eatisfied customers” McCAUL MOTOR COMPANY Dodge and Plymouth Dealers UDWIG NELSON JEWELER Wateh Repairing Philco—General Eleetric Ageney FRONT &£TREET THE BEST TAP BEER IN TOWN! [ J fHE MINERS' Recreation Parlors and Liguor Store BILL DOUGLAS bl ol | oxc Guy Smith DRUGS PUROLA REMEDIES PRESCRIPTIONS CARE- FULLY COMPOUNDED Front St Next Coliseum PHONE 97—Free Delivery i | 2 | RO BT FORD AGENCY (Authorized Dealers) GREASES GAS—OILS JUNEAU MOTORS Foot of Main Street one, Grocery James Ramsay & Son {| FRESH FRUITS and | VEGETABLES FRESH MEATS 2hone 182 FreeDelivery Phone WHAT CONGRESS DID, 1935. To0 iy MUSICIANS LOCAL NO. 1 Meets Second and Fourth Sun- days Every Month—3 P, M. DUDE HAYNES, Secretary The longest session of Congress since 1922 has come to a close and a wide range of * important legislation was enacted into law. In an effort to give a more thorough in- sight into the various measures adopted, The Empire is presenting a series of summaries of the major bills passed into law. THE GAME AND WILD LIFE AC. OF 1935 Approved June 15, 1935 Amends the Migratory Bi | | constitution, and it was far from perfect as they| Provides for a Federal-State system | hospital for Indians in Juneau, ar- - { . spi dians in & 3 author, 1860; Samuel Johnson, Eng- saw it then. None other than George Washington ployment compensation, by Federal grants in B’d'«rlvcd e on the Humboldt: iiDy elpoaRphar Rt Y 8 . v ths N tax on employers. 50 - a h that it wasn't everything that could be desired but “** B8 FEP IR L ion of $24150000 for the| OVEr 1400 peopte atfen ed (b8 that under the circumstances it probably was the current, fiscal year and such amounts.§s mmay se formal opeaing of the Rexall-Nya_ll best they. could get up at the time. = Drug Store on Froni Street in For those who would make the Constitution a pyrnish financial assistance “as far as practicable i i i v ¥ A G % very one present and each lady campaign issue it might be well to remind them under the conditions in such State” to needy de- i g ‘ ‘ = & 2 |received a carnation as well. A of its human origin. It was man-made and there- pendent children. |concert was given during the ev- ARR!VE AT NOME y ictrola- h Had’ the Bt under the elrcumstances snd 'stll|heglnning with the current fiscal year, doiessist| B8 BV i6 VIERELEET A7 AFTER FAST TRIP | does. But when the majority of the people of the|the States in promoting the health of mothers and| = o iocec” vere played. The — ; nation decide there should be an improvement why|Children “especially in rural areas and in areas The Pacific Alaska Airways Lo: | not improve it? A B / 4 od Electra, piloted by Jerry Jone: times do change. _No despite the campaign Ambmue_s An appropeiiiion o s3mge R bt Mark - Kimball won the “roller.8nd Bill Knox, arrived in Nomeo g ) beginning with the fiscal year 1936 to assist States £ | Mast Thursday with the following noise, is tryving to ‘undermine the Constitution, but in providing medical, surgical and corrective serv- coaster” race for boys by defeating =~ - American principle to let them rule? to operate with State public welfare agencies. a course from the New Cain hotel presmmstg; °é "heGA';"l';n: e o Authorizes an appropriation of $1,500000 to aid|t0 Burford’s. His prize was one of EVHER Nl g News report of the reclassification of books at State agencies in caring for homeless and neglected dbr thie duiioes. of the Brith.Drug Minnufacturing (;ot'i] (‘LrBl'An‘fV‘:ws' 5 sales manager of the Taylor ar- here is one of the city'’s most worthwhile enter-| Authorizes an appropriation of $841,000 for the i‘;}:r );f;]: (:(c;z;;)ve‘.”m;ghlg?;: ton Iron gand Steel Ci of New prises which should be afforded every help possible fiscal years 1936 and ‘93;’- $1938,000 a P there- : v T by both public and private citizens. |after to supplement and strengthen State voca- of Hills Brothers products and oth- $8,000,000 annually for assistance to the States and |Sliter were officials. S SNE it Tunean; Al e b . \land, vis| i Now might not be a bad time to consider en-|their political subdivisions in maintaining adequate e ViR e ey S Xt v vices, 11 ,000, £ ! larging the display next year at the Southeast Public health services, as well as $3.000000 for the . WO B S b T o0 T Gucker, of Juncau, - representing 4 H li trophy at the Willouzhby Rainier Beer «nd various liquor resented. annually there after, to assist State plans for aiding;Yison tiact ¥ % g i [the ' nesds biind, the Pederal grants Tof. the Tattes [AVMine\ ratige My iy, Trissdgi! HSe: 44 Nelson, Gengnal Heeiphp o-fi -t i who had won the trophy, havin to be made on a fifty-fifty mztching basis to States 8| nd Mr. Brown, & leghl eounel foe |to good shooting. iLhe Alaska Steamship Co. The lat- | ter two arrived in Juneau last Tues- Press dispatches from Addis Ababa cost 28 cents| | a word. However, Il Duce expects to revive the “Veni, | { On the Thursday flight the plane et | travelled from Fairbanks to Nome | tution.) | in total elapsed time of 2 hours commentéd When the instrument had been signed {Dased on the imposition of a uniform payroll-excise poet, 1709. needed in future years, to enable each State tc Douglas. Souvenirs were given to JUNEAU BROKERS fore subject to error, but Washington said, it Authorizes an appropriation of $3,800,000 a year, After all we do move ahead and SWffering from severe economic distress.” Jmeconietar ey Estner a1 I if the majority demand amendment isn't it an|jces for crippled children, the Children’s Bureau ® field of eleven at 1 o'clock over pa:séngers: Corey C. Braytcn, re- | the coasters. The race was held un- Presenting the American Rubber the Public Library emphasizes anew the fact that children. heimer, J. L. Gray, George Burford, Jersey; Joe Meherin, representative |tional rehabilitation of the physically disabled and W. H. Seelye and Chisf of Police Members of the Juneau Gun | '© the Alaska Legislatare; J. W. Alaska Fair. More communities should be rep- fiscal year 1936; and, as much as may be needed agent of the Alaska Steamship Co., meeting set standards. decided to put it up at a stimulant C. W. Hawkesworth, of Hydaburg, | 48¥- Vidi, Vici” style of battle report.—(Atlanta Consti-|/Alaska, was granted a notary's com- and 50 . minutes. | Weather: Maximum, 56; mini- ! 35; cloudy; rain, .15 in. I | | | | | I ! | Some day people, failing to recognize the rear lof a truck as scenery, will tire of motoring.—Toledo | U™ Blade.) SIS SN, Daily Empirc Want Ads Pay! DINE and DANCE | | i GENERAL MOTORS and MAYTAG PRODUCTS W. P. JOHNSON I — | | Cardinal | Cabs H.S.GRAVES | “The Clothing Man” | Home of Hart Jchatfner and Marx “'athing g PAIN1-~CILS - Builders’ and Shelt | HARDARE | Thomas Hardware Co. PR N i S ————— HOTEL ZYNDA ‘Large Sample Room ELEVATOR SERVICE 8. ZYNDA, Prop. l e ; i FINE John Bull probably is wondering whether Italy | ‘ |would attempt to bluff the international poker game Watch and Jewelry Repairing | | rd Hunting stamp Act!with one duce—(Indianapolis Star. ! g at very reasonable rates | | | PAUL BLOEDHORN FRONT STREET Butler Mauro Drug Co. “Express Money Orders Anytime” Phone 134 Free Delivery l‘* 14 AMMUNITION \"i’ \ T/ ’ Guns for rent, bought sold and A exchanged—Always Open SEE BIG VAN Lower Front Street ol W) A\ N1 165 e L Juneau College Of Liberal and Religious Education ANNOUNCES | FALL TERM BEGINS SEPTEMBER 24. The following courses are to be offered—leading to College DEGREES and diplomas: General Psychology *Economic History of U. S. Modern European History *History of Christianity Old Testament History Relgious Values Public Speaking Physical Education *Life of Paul ] THE 'y MARKET RASKET Provisions, Fruils, Vegetables | Phone 343 Freo Deltvery | PHONE 36 For very prompt LIQUOR DELIVERY SHOP IN JUNEAU, FIRST! e Cigars Cigarettes Candy Cards The New Arctic Pabst Famous Draught Beer On Tap *JIMMY"* CARLSON 42 Years Banking' Service to the people of the Territory of Alaska: is proof of our. ability to satisfactorily care for the financial needs of our customers . . . both Commercial and Savings Depart- ments fully equipped to handle all business entrusted to us. The B. M. Behrends Bank Juneau, Alaska IDEAL PAINT SHOP If It's Paint We Have It! T L] | | | | | | History of Philosophy Sociology *Alcohol and Man Argumentation Beginners’ Greek Beginners’ French History of U. S. since Colonial Electro Acoustical Engineering Period WENDT & GARSTER PHONE 549 — THE JUNEAU LAUNDRY H arry Race DRUGGIST “The Squibb Store” [ Foss CONSTRUCTION CO. Phone 107 Juneau P All Classes Are Limited to Afternoons and Evenings REGISTER NOW AT 503 GOLDSTEIN BUILDING H. J. REFT, Managing Director #*Courses are free to local public. Juneau Ice Cream Parlors SHORT ORDERS Pountain SHOP IN JUNEAU!

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