The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, October 12, 1935, Page 4

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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, SATURDAY, OCT. 12, 1935. | DOG LICENSE TAGS R 34 & “The star fntne || 04,21 ¥ By dog catcher. Is your dog li- | The Empire extends congratula- but do not compel” censed? {first sharp test.” | ¢ ! ” . i o s tions and best wishes today, their The greatest world event of last week was un virthday anniversary, to the. follow- denably the action of the Council of the League in & upholding the Covenant as a living and binding |9’ treaty obligation. For the British Government, Prime Minister Baldwin and his representatives at ' Geneva stated that British foreign policy was based upon the Covenant of the League. Speaking for| France Mr. Laval affirmed that the French Govern- ment now regarded the Covenant as a fixed and| settled part of international law. Both France and | ° |Great Britain, together with all the other nations, except Italy, represented in the Council, took the | position that they had assumed an obligation which they could not disregard without dishonor to them- selves and danger to the peace of the world. With reluctance, with ravity, yet with unflinching determ- ination, they all voted to proceed to apply the doc- trines and directions of the Covenant to the un- settled controversy between Italy and Ethiopia. This was because it carried an immediate menace of war, while the great object of the League was to prevent war or to punish a country entering upon an ag-|>™"""""" gressive war. This is admittedly the bravest and most un-| OCTOBER 12, 1915 compromising step yet taken by the League. It| Headlines: Boston Red Sox Win will be contrasted with the action, or failure to act,|the World’s Baseball Pennant; | in the case of Japan and Manchuria. To be sure,| “Harry Hooper, the 1915 edition the League dealt with that matter, and appointed |of Heme Run Baker, gave Boston a commission to report on the facts. When the re':anot,her world’s championship this port came holding Japan to have been in the wrong,|afternoon, when the Red Sox came the League agreed that the Japanese Government|from behind and beat the Phillies had violated the Covenant, as well as other treaties, 5 to 4. Hocper hit two hcme runs but did not propose to enforce sanctions against the |into the center field bleachers. The offender. The difficulties of doing so were con-|californian came to bat in the fessedly great, yet the weakness shown by the League |ninth, with the score a tie, four to in that crisis was highly damaging to its repute.|four, and sent the series into his- It may have led Mussolini to think that he could|tory by a terrific clout that clear- do what Japan had done. But from that disap-|eq the center field fence by 3 feet.’ pointing and humiliating episode, the League has| now reverted to its original noble purposes and appears before the world today as revived and strengthened for the work which the peoples have placed in its hands. Nobody should expect it to resort at once to extreme measures against Italy whether economic or military. It has left the door wide open for further efforts in behalf of conciliation and a peace- ful settlement. Negotiations to that end do not need to be held exclusively in the hands of the League. They may be privately conducted by diplo- matists in a three-Power consultation. The League would accept and approve any solution upon which they might agree. But all the while the League pretty flat when the cables were daily telling the story of the way in which it was taking its courage in both hands in order to exalt and execute the Covenant. As The London Times declared, the |action of the Council gave “a firm and dispassionate peent Sunday by ihelanswer to the incredulity of any who have come el Rl bl |to think that the collective system would fail at the Fraternal Societies oF Gastinecu Channel Daily Alaska Em pire ROBERT W. BENDER Editor and Manager | Helene W_ L. Albrecht PHYSIOTHERAPY | | ~fassage, Electricity, Infra Red Ray, Medical Gymnasticx | 307 Goldsteir Building [ Phone Dffice, 21¢ ROY HOFFMAN, Chief of Police. Publ JEMPIR! Stree B. P 0. ELKS meet” every Wedn.sday at ¢ P. M. Visiting bothers welcome. M. E. MONAGLE, Ex< alted Ruler. M. H. SIDES, Secrefary. KNIGHTS 01 CoLUMPUS Seghers Council No. 4 1760. Meetings second and last Monday at 7:30 p. m. Transient brott.ers urged to at- tend. Cowns' Cham- | pers, Pth St. JOHN F. MULLFR, ‘G. K, H. J. TURNER, Secretary —adv. Ly g Permanent Waving A SPECIALTY Peter Pan Beauty Shop MARGARET LINDSAY, Prop. VIOLET PETERSON, Operator Front Street Phone 221 | - 1 matter. SUBSCRIPTION RATES. Oelivered by carrier In Juneau and Douglas for $1.25 per_month. By mail, postage paid, at the following rates: One year, in _adyance, § six months, in advance, *$6. 01 onth, in advanc 25 fli_confe ss Offic SUNDAY, OCTOBER 13, 1935 Until the later hours this day is read as unfortunate, according to astrology. For many the thirteenth may be unlucky. While there may be a tendency to find fault and to decieve even | oneself, the churches should bene- | fit since the stars presage wide- | spread interest in religion. Old-fashioned ideas again will be | popular, it is prophesied, and in the | coming ‘winter many towns will be visited by revivalists who will have |a wide influence. 20 YEARS AGO | Clergymen should benefit during | this planetary government and ser- Tro e monspmay be received with extra- ordinary response. Again young | men will seek the ministry as a | vocation. Under this rule of the | stars women will contribute work | for churches. Astrologers foretell that many dencminations will unite with wom- on’ ganizations in bringing about civic reforms and in pushing cam- aigns to stamp out vice. Temper- mce movements will engage the interest of women as in the past and gradually cocktail parties will be outmoded, it is prognosticated.! Persons whose birthdate it is have the augury of a year of sur- prises including journeys, illness of kohert s“npson superiors and uncertainty in money matters. i ; Opt. D. Children born on this day prc:-| | Graduate Los Angeles Col- ably will be determined and even | lege of Optometry and stubborn. Many subjects of this sign | | Opthalmology ! probably will lead eventful and ! GlassesFitted Lenses Greend | successful lives. e 2 Charles Sprauge Pearce, artist, was born on this day 1851. Others OCTOBER 12 James Sey William J. Baldwin October 13 Capt. James V. Davis Albert Schramen Olavi Wahto ‘Wilbur Kusistio R. J. Sullivan Emmett B. Connor e f e e I DRS. KASER & FREEBURGER. | s DENTISTS Blomgren Building PHONE 56 Hours ¥ am. to 8 pm. 7 will_promptly crib % or irregularity notify the in the deliv Telephor MEMBER OF ASSOCIATED PRESS. +« The Associated Press is exclusivel use for republication of all news disy it or mot otherwise credited in this p jocal news published herein, ieir paper Offic Business Office, 374. also the | Dr. C. P. Jenne DENTIST Rooms 8 and 9 Valentine Building Telephone 176 ALASKA CIRCULATION GUARANTEED TO BE LARGER THAN THAT OF ANY OTHER PUBLICATI S MOUNT JUNEAU LODGE NO. 14! Second and Fourth Mon ‘éx day of each month ' Scottih Rit2 Temple Worshipfui LEIVERS, . JUNEAU Drug Co. “TUE CORNER DRUG STORE" P, O. Substation No. 1 beginning at 7:30 p.m. HOW *RD D.STABLER, Master; J..*TES W, Secretary. | Dr. Richard Williams i DENTIST OFFICE AND RESIDENCE Gastineau Building | Phonz 481 1 \ ! | | \ \ { { ] \ DOUGLAS €OE AERIE Y 1i7, F. 0. E. 8% <y Meets first and third Mondays. # p.m., Eagles’ Hall, Doug'as. Visitirg {brothers welcome. J. B. Martin W. P, T. N. Cashen, Secretary. | | ———t sart . i DEN1IST | Hours 8 am. to 6 pm. Guns for rent, bought sold and} | exchanged—Always Open Off:*e Pnone 469 SEE BIG VAN s g 3 Tower Front Street Our tucks go any place any | A tank for Diesel (\ll! HOPE FOR SMALL BOAT HARBOR. SEWARD RUILDING Encouraging news for a small boat harbor which Juneau has long been seeking comes in dispatches from Delegate Dimond to officials here. The War Department, it develops, already has the matter under consideration and is working on a survey of the waters of Gastineau Channel with the aim of determining a site. Information has been requested by the Department District Engineer in Seattle from both the city and the Governor's office and it is anticipated that a first hand examination will be made shortly by representatives of the District En- gineer's office. Delegate Dimond indicated a report on the matter might be expected from the Engineer in about 60 days. Need for a small boat harbor, always felt here, now has become imperative as the Alaska Juneau Gold Mining Company has given notice that it needs time. and a tank for crude oil save burner trouble. PICNE 149; NIGHT 148 ReviasrLe TRANSFER -» > Rome: Replying to a personal letter from His Holiness, Pope Benedict, the Sultan of Turkey has promised to comply with the Pope's request that the Armenian mas- sacre be stopped. The Sultan told the Pope he would see that the killing of Christians came t0 an| u), paye celebrated it as a birth-| e day include Edward Baldwin Glea- There was some excitement this ., pnyician, 1854; Harold Harris | H. S. GRAVES 1| morning when Frank Sargent of p .. ithologist, 1879. “Tue Clothing Man” R the Fire Department noticed a| - ) Ornithologist, 1875, | man’s feet sticking up out of a yoNpAY, OCTOBER 14, 1935 Home of Hart 3chatfner and | | hole to the rear of the Arctic Marx - Watch and Jewelry Repairing at very rcasonable rates | PAUL BLOEDHORN FRONT STREET © AN CITMEICINEREREADTERET YRR G ! RR. H. VANCE OSTEOPATH Comsultation and examination PFree. Kours 10 to 12; 1 to 5; 7 to 8:3 and by appointment. Office Grand Apts., near Gas- tineau Hotel. Phone 177 Commercial Adjust- ment & Rating, Bureau operating with White Serve ice Bureau Room 1—Shattuck Bldg. [ We have 5,000 local ratings on ftie - ~'athing AR EDET Y SRS TR A Y TITEW >3 . ; . burning with the zeal to find new lands, but, rather, | . - tacking the League at the very time when it was the space now used on a rental basis by the lower city float. With that property unavailable for the purpose, small boat owners will find themselves stumped for a place to berth. With the number of boat owners gradually in- rreasing, the undertaking becomes more and more necessary, and it is sincerely hoped favorable action will be forthcoming. The plan as now considered would call for the use of works relief funds for the project. Situated as Juneau is on the water, there are few projects here on which public money could be better spent. DEBUNKING COLUMBUS. RSN 1492, Columbus ‘suiled (ne ocean blue—for 10 per cent. That is the picture one sees in the writings of the modern debunkers of the men who just 443 years ago today discovered America, and to whose memory the nation pays tribute with observance of Columbus Day. Gilbert Seldes tells us, has made this interesting | ““discovery about the intrepid discoverer Christopher | Columbus: That he sailed the ocean not especially | {® profit thereby. This modern biographer of Colum- | "bus claims the explorer asked, as premium for find- wng a new land, the rank of Admiral, the position | of Viceroy of any new lands he might discover and ’10 per cent of the profits from all trade originating from such countries. The King of Portugal, he re- “fates, turned the offer down and Spain took up the plan. Further, this debunker has peered into the dim past and found that hardly a man of Columbus’ crew but believed that the earth was round. (> Maybe. Perhaps Columbus did do it for 10 per scent. What of it? It was worth it and much more. ‘XIf he got 100 per cent and a cut on the gate at a Blorida winter resort, it still would not erase the "BElief from the minds of most of us that the great -explorer, sailing in the hazardous ships of that day, s considerable of a man and a daring sailor. For “~ that reason America today marks the occasion of that discovery, and probably will go right on observ- ing it long after the names of the debunkers are forgotten. Italian Minister Tigi Giguicei has failed to| leave Addis Ababa as ordered and the Ethiopians| may have to resort to force. He's probably waiting | for Mussolini to come and get him. Don't forget to order your extra copies of the Douglas Bridge edition of The Empire for mailing | S—-te friends and relatives. It tells a story well worth passing on to those in other parts of the world. After feading of the temper of these bown bears when meeting hunters it strikes us it might be an jdea to mobilize a troop of them and send them over to Haile Selassie, or would they get by the Neutrality Act clause as implements of war? ™ Down in Pocher, Okla, Mayor Fred Gray has ordered a ban on “necking” in automobiles. The Mayor has probably forgotten they called it “spark- ing” when he was a boy. King George II of Greece may have been exiled to London but he appears to have picked up some pretty sound politics while on vacation. He demands %is people vote him back, despite the coup d'etat of his followers. The League’s Revival. (New York Times.) - If ever remarks were ill-timed those of Senator ABorah last week about the League of Nations must “be so designated. They were unlucky for him and “for his reputation as a statesman, and must have filled his hearers with amazement. For he was at- rising to the full height of its power and the dignity of its fanction in the world. He called it a mere “scheme for aggrandizement,” and went so far as to say that some of jis promises and professions were those of “hypocrites” While he was talking the | |thirty-two years of service in the mint, in more stands behind them or beside them and before the eyes of all men as now the greatest instrument of peace in the whole world. It is endowed with large powers, which are not arbitrary, but flexible and controlled by the explicit provisions of the Coven- | ant. This revival of the League in all the strength | and efficiency which the Covenant was intended | to confer upon it, will be as a signal of hope and fresh courage for multitudes who have been living in fear that a needless and disastrous war would whelm the world in terror and misery. The Two Huey Longs. | (Raymond Moley in Today.) Endowed with enormous riatural talents, Huey‘; Long was for mearly all his public career a com- bination of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde, but a com-| nating, in swift incalculable turns, with more vul-| garity and empty-headed noise. blatherskite and ranter. Yet in five minutes he:’ could turn this side of his nature off and become the cool, earnestly persuasive and logical man who' delievered that masterpiece of argument at the Chi-| cago convention of 1932. He had, combined with a remarkable capacity for hard, intellectual labor, an extraordinary power-| ful, resourceful, clear and retentive mind, an instru- ment such as is given to very few men. No one can tell what services he could have rendered his State and nation had he chosen to use that mind well. He did not choose to use it well. He misused it, squandered it, battered it, as a child might treat a toy the value and purpose of which he did not understand. He used his mind so erratically as to seem, a great deal of the time, not only chfldxsni but insane. He wused it for his own reckless,| grandiose, and shoddy personal ends. He used it to harvest cheap praise and expensive notoriety, he used it for petty revenge on petty enemies. He used it to destroy the only foundations on which some of his reforms—and they were genuine reforms—| could securely rest. He destroyed many things with | his mind. Among them was himself. 7 No Offense to Miss O’Reilly. (Kansas City Times.) “But do you have to print anything about me?” The question was asked in mild protest a few days ago by Miss Mary M. O'Reilly of Washington whose recent years as Assistant Director, was so efficient that the President by special order extended her retirement for one year beyond the stipulated age| of 70. It was then that Miss O'Reilly became news, |then that she was asked some questions, then that she replied in a kindly manner, expressed her grau-' tude to the President and her devotion to work, |but ended with the query as to whether it was |necessary to print anything about her. Fortunately for the public and not at all un- fortunately for Miss O'Reilly, it was necessary. Miss O'Reilly for the moment had become public prop- {erty; her singular record was of legitimate public| interest. For it had becomie a matter of record that so thorough was her mastery of her business| that not once, over the period of more than thirty years, had she been known to consult a file in| lgiving desired information about the mint. She| knew it without going to that trouble. Really, there is no choice as to printing something about such| a record; and Miss O'Reilly, we may feel sure, will pardon the printers for once. { The way the Mexican Congressmen have of stop- ping debates with 44s is a bit uncouth, maybe, but you may say this for it: It stops 'em.—(Macon Tele- graph.) | One trouble about keeping harmony in the ranks of Huey Long's followers is that so many of the| privates wish to be Generals.—(Indianapolis News.) | ST, < | Adolf Hitler is against Wilson's Fourteen Points. | He doesn't seem very strong for the Ten Command- ments, either.—(Dallas News.) | One thing about this new war, if it ever starts there will be no argument who started it—(Detroit Free Press. ) League was acting. Sneers at its cowardice fell ibest and get the most enjoyment in after years about | Brotherhood building, and a mo- ment later pulled cut a man who | bad fallen into the hole head first | yico anqg to sell. and was unconscious. He had been an inmate of the city jail for sev- eral weeks and had evidently gon out of the back door to clean hi sweater with* gasoline. The cpened gasoline bottle was found in his hands. His head was cut. Dr. E. M. Bevis was called and the man was taken to St. Ann's Hospital. Ninety-one passengers from _the vreckad steamer Mariposa reached Juneau on the Admiral Lineg, Ad~ miral Evans. Only a small port! 2f the baggage was saved but bination in which the good qualities were ready and | mail and express were not damaged | tica] work. The seers declare that ! |amiable partners of the evil ones. Few men, cer-|and were brought into Juneau. Pas- tho time when their efforts in new ! tainly none who have gone so far in public life,|sengers who had 'been previcusly fields were accepted with chival-| have exhibited more pure native intelligence alter-bound for Juneau included W. B. roys praise is past and in its place Gray, Gus Morgan, Charles E. % : At one moment | Bruff, J. H. MacKenzie, L. L. John- ny regard to age or sex. J. Leslie Mitchell in his book Earth Conquerors,ihe was a buffoon, a loud-mouthed, loose-tongued'son, N. Ninnis, Edward J. Cazhel,, Girls in schgools and colleges Cora McVean, Mrs. J. M. Ousby and infant daughter, Charles Simon-| stead, Edward A. Born, D. Smith, James P. Momb, Mrs. E. Smith,| Mrs, L. L. Johnson, J. G. Navarrs, W. Gray, August Smith. X A Columbus Day Celebration was given by the Knights of Columbus. Those participating on the program ‘were: Miss Crystal Snow, Mrs. L. P. Dawes, Monte Snow, Mrs. H. P, Crowther. Weather: Maximum, mum, 34; rain, .83 inch. —_—a— x SPECIAL DELIVERY TO DOUG- LAS! Daily at 10:00 am. and 2:30 pm. Kelly Blake’s SPECIAL DE- LIVERY—Phone 442. adv. PEP UP APPETITE; RELISH YOUR FOOD No matter how liilie you eat, you should relish your food to feel your 57; mini- out of living. If clogged-up bowels |and inactive kidneys are mm‘ni—bo exert their abilities toward high your system, causing you to have a “puny,” finicky appetite, and mak- ing you feel run-down, sluggish, without ambition or zest for the good things in life — take a few doses of good old William S. L. K. Formula and see how much beiter you feel. Williams 8. L. K. Formula is for sale by the Butler Mauro Drug Co. un- | 4 1 As the week begins an encrgizing| aspect is dominant, according to astrology. This is a day to adver- The sway is fortunate for fore- ign relations and seems to pre- age for the United States added ponsibility o Europs and Asia. A tendeacy cn the part of; Japan, Italy and Germany to pick flaws in Uncle Sam’s manners will b2 noticeable. This is read as planetary rule under which to mak: anyssort of a start. It is auspiciou for splanning, since the mental vi iousamay be clear and the mind judteidl, ! ‘Women should prepare for pmc-‘ i5 cetermined competition that pays should develop talents that are un- usual and should choose vocations| that will not arouse men’s envy, as- trologers advise. | 'Those who peer far into the fu- g:a vision women as attaining preat. heights in science and the rned professions, but they must | i'earne every reward by the severest | effort. In economic adjustments there will be millions who must remain unemployed, a London occultist points out, and to the well edu- cated and thoroughly trained will be assigned the work of the world. Maladjustments in relief work— white collar men as laborers—will | prove that tasks must be provided for brains as well as brawn and| that they must be of permanent possibilities. Persons whose birthdate it is have the augury of a year of ad- | vancement in which money will be | more plentiful than it has been. _‘Children born on this day prob- ably will be generous and willing ambitions. Subjects of this sign have courage and self sufficiency. ‘William Penn, pioneer and found- | er of Pennsylvania, was born on' this day 1644. Others who have' celebrated it as a birthday include | Francis Henry Smith, educator, 1829; James O'Neill, actor, 1849. | (Copyright, 1935) .- SHOP IN JUNEAU, FIRST! —adv. COMM TheB. M. Bank Juneau, Alaska and SAVINGS Resources Over Two and One Half Million Dollars Behrends ERCIAL an unfavorabl: | ; Thomas Hardware PAIN1-~CILS Builders’ and Shelf HARDARE 14 Co. ||| SRR R | GENERAL MOTORS MAYTAG PRODUCTS W. P. JOHNSON I} [ JUNEAU FROCK SHGPPE “Exclusive but not E=pensive” Coats, Dresses, Lingerte, Hosiery and Hats | and | | ] Jones-Stevens Shop LADIES’ — MISSES' READY-TO-WEAR b Seward Street Near Third | | i SABIN’S | Evervihine in Furnishings ] Lo | . McCAUL MOTOR COMPANY for Men e | | Dodge and Plymouth Dealers 1 | ! | | . i f ~— forrroer s o e ZORIC | DRY CLEANING i | \ JUNEAU-YOUNG Hardware Company PAINTS—OIL—GLASS Shelf and Heavy Haraware Guns and Ammunition 1 | ITS Wise to Cali “8 Juneau Transfer Co. when in need of MOVING or STORAGE Fuel Oil Coal Transfer NNk i FORD AGENCY (Authorized Dealers) GREASES GAS—OILS Feot, of Main Street | B T e Juneau Ice Cream Parlors SHORT ORDERS PFountain Candy G R ALASKA LAUNDRY PHONE 15 ! g Daily :mpire Want A ; Pay! L § REPAIRED P e e Butler Mauro RADIO SERVICE and SUPPLY BERT WHITFIELD STRIKE! BRUNSWICK BOWLING ALLEYS Rheinlander Beer on Tap Daily Empire Want Ads Pay! TAP BEER IN TOWN! L J THE MINERS Recreation Parlors Drug Co. . “Express Money Orders Anytime” Phone 132 Free Delivery Arctic Pabst Famous Draught Beer On Tap ~JIMMY" CARLSON Daily Empire Want Ads Pay! “Next First National Bank” PHONE 534 MODERN FACILITIES GIVE YOU LOW COSTS It has always been our object to provide the ul- timate in service at the lowest costs. Our thor- oughly experienced staff and our modern equip- ment have helped us in reaching this goal. The Charles W. Carter. Mortuary PHONE 136-2 “The Last Service Is the ' Greatest Tribute” r 5 [ | l JUNEAU MOTORSJ -

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