The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, October 14, 1935, Page 4

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[Carey failed to come up to scratch, that he did in fact render a valuable public service. He not only indicated exactly how the abstruse matter should be handled to the satisfaction of the BIR THDAY | strategists of the Old Guard, but he went further.| |He dwelt upon the Hoover suggestion as the main issue and worked himself up to the following jerky,| The Empire extends congratula- if passionate, peroration: | tions and best wishes today, their This Administration cares little for the |birthday anniversary, to the follow- future of the country; its main purpose is |ing: to keep things going until the next election. The program until after the next election is to keep up extravagant expenditures and to spend money for any purpose; to keep business in a state of unrest and to keep capital out of industry in order that money which is going into banks will be available to purchase Government securities for financ- ing the program. I believe the people love the Constitution and that they will arise in their might and drive from power those | who would tear down the Constitution and I, R i put up the red flag in place of the Stars | and Stripes. Senator Carey had bent his back to the task of saving a stymied slogan as well as the Stars and Stripes. But as he was assuring the Young Re- publicans and the world that President Roosevelt “is determined to set up communism in the United | 'OCTOBER 14, 1915 States,” there were certain interesting developments| Headline: Germagvtwesitern A;:y in Moscow. There in the Kremlin the Amencan5F;3;e‘sw?:;p:::cdes;;‘;&dm;& Lhos; Ambassador delivered an exceedingly sharp notei%\,ho visited her as ‘one vast great which warned the Soviet Government of *“most hospital’” serious consequences” unless the recognized seat of | communism “take immediate steps to stop com- munistic interference with the internal affairs of this country.” Otherwise, the note added, “the development of friendly relations betwen the Rus- J. B. WARRACK GOES ON KETCHIKAN TRIP J. B. Warrack, of the Warrack Construction Company, arrived from Sitka on the Northland and con- tinued to Ketchikan to survey the ground preliminary to submitting R a bid for his company on the new TUESDAY, OCTOBER 15, 1935 |Federal Building to be erected at Adverse planetary influences rule|that place. strongly today, according to.astrol- Mr. Warrack expects to return ogy. It is a day in which there may |io Juneau probably on the next be a sense of futility but it should | northbound voyage of the North be a good time for careful investi- | Sea. * gation and planning. Labor continues. under ill omens that presage disturbed industrial conditions. While there may be more sympathy for the workers, hey may suffer great misfortunes through strikes. Delay is suggested for those Who desire employment. Appointménts of many sorts are forecast before December for those who seek . pub- lic service. Business expansion is indicated for many cities. Quarrels and dissensicns affect persons in all classes. will be widespread and will be the |Mine. cause of many troubles among|_ women as well as men. Women's clubs will be scenes of much in- trigue in the next few months. Warning is given that political sympathies may affect many non- partisan organizations. Secret ef- Fraternal® Societies OF Gastinecu Channel e — B. P .0. ELKS meet” every Wednesday at & P. M. Visiting bothers welcome, M. E. MONAGLE, Ex¢ alted Ruler. M. H. SIDE3, Secretary. KNIGHTS 01 CoinUMPUS seghers Council No. 760. Meetings second nd last Monday at ;30 p. m. Transient roty.ers urged to at- send, Conra' Cham- ars. Wifth St. JOHN F. MULLFEI, i~ R, d. J. TURNER, Secretary IOUNT TUNEAU LODGE NO. 14{ i Second and Fourth Mon ,‘é( day of each month ‘e Scottixsh Rite Temple Norshipfui LEIVERS, Daily Alaska Empire ROBERT W. BENDER “The stars incline Horoscope but do not compel” HAPPY Editor and Manager | Helene W_ L. Alhrecht PHYSICTHERAPY Ziassage, Electricity, Infra Red Ray, Medical Gymnastic 307 Goldsteir Building Phone Office, 218 nday by the Published nd and Main EMPIRE PRINT Streets, Juneau Entered in the Post Offic 1 as Second Class matter. SUBSCRIPTION RATES. Oelivered by carrier In Juneau and Douglas for $1.25 per_month. By mail, postage paid. at the following rat One vear, in ad #ix months, in a $6.00; one month, in advance, $1.25 Subscribers will confer a favor if they notify the Bus Office of in the delivery of their p Telephones: *News Office, EMBER OF ASSOCIATED PRESS. The Associated Press is 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 OCTOBER 14 Mrs. Harry I. Lucas J. A. Kendler Harold Swanson Hans Arp Louis J. Israelson Harold Pederson Leonard A. Johnson Mrs. H. I. Lucas Mrs. Hans Berg = 20 YEARS AGO | From The Empire i vance, | DRS. KASER & FREEBURGER DENTISTS Blomgren Building PHONE 56 Hours ¥ am. to 9 pm. will promptly any failure or irregularity 602; Business Offic —et—— FLY ON HUNTING TEIP Lynn Tucker and “Sonny” Lund were passengers to Lake Patco this t morning aboard the Alaska Air Transport Patco flown by Sheldon Simmons, for a hunting trip ol three or four days. e LEAVES 5GSPITAL John Lundquist, who has been .in St. Ann’s suffering with a frac- may tured jaw, was discharged yester- Envy |48y and will return to work at the 74. g iafiadedil il "Drs C. P. Jenne | DENTIST Roomis 8 and 9 Valentine Building y Telephone 176 —& _Dr_ Ricimrd Williams 1| DENTIST OFFICE AND RESIDENCE Gastineau Bullding Phons 431 ALASKA CIRCULATION GUARANTEED TO BE LARGER 5 THAN THAT OF ANY OTHER PUBLICAT ~ beginning at 7:30 p.m. HOW *RD D. STABLER, Master; J..“MES W. Secretary. DOUGLAS FOE AERIE W 117, F. 0. E. @,Mm fTeets first and third Mondays. 4 »m., Eagles’ Hall, Douglas. Visitirg rothers welcolze. J. B. Martin —_— Dr. A. W. Sicwart DEN1IST Permanent Waving Editorial from the Seward Gate- | way: “The Juneau Empire has jusi | completed a Special Development Number of which all Alaska ought LEAGUE / The League of Nations appears to be determined to regain the prestige and potency it lost two years ago when Japan walked in on Manchukuo in the face of League opposition, and nothing very much was done about it, except by the Nipponese who annexed themselves a big slice of new. territory The League’s failure to act at that time was believed | by many to have killed the value of the convention of nations, other than just a place to meet and sit! around and talk. | But in the present instance of Italy and Ethiopia the group again becomes an important body. Per-‘ haps, the fact wer is so close to home has some- | thing to do with it, but, at any rate, the League members appear to be determined to take a stand | now, and if possible avert a general European clash. Already it has voted an arms embargo against Italy and a commercial boycott is being considered, the recommendation for the immediate discontinuance of bank credit to Mussolini's government having been made. Instead of forestalling a general conflict, there is always the possibility that the definite action such as the League is taking may be just the thing | to fire the European powder box, but whatever the result, it is evident League members are determined the Ttalian aggression should not be a duplication of the Japanese affair in so far as the League is concerned. That fiasco of international diplomacy after the avowed and announced purposes of the League is still too vivid in the minds of League supporters to let a similar situation occur without | some action to save front. THE “ATT .X(‘k" UNDERWAY. Several days bef Senator Robert D. Carey Jjourneyed to the Yellowstone Park to keynote to the young Republicans of the Northwest, the Republican | National Headquarters in Washington announced ! that the Wyoming Senator's effort “would mark the cpening of the attack the Republicans will make this Fall on the Democratic administration.” While the word “attack” instead of “campaign."‘ was employed, there had been considerable specula- | tion over a report that the Senator would clear up an abstruse “issue” which had been causing con-/ fusion in the ranks of reactionary spokesmen and' commentators. This concerned the charge made by | former President Hoover that President Roosevelt was “preparing to Europeanize the Government of‘ the United States.” It had been used extensively by Col. Frank’ Knox, Ogden L. Mills, former Gov. Frank Lowden et al. but seldom twice in the same way. That is to say, some of them had attributed ' to President Roosevelt a determination to install at| Washington a fascist regime; others as confidently | asserted that he would proclaim his adherence to| communism, and Col. Robert McCormick of the| Chicago Tribune and others insisted that he would | have both at the same time. So, of course, it was confusing. Everybos wanted to be as explicit as' they are on what they will substitute for the AAA,| deposit insurance, farm credit and home owners loan | sets-ups, etc. etc. And they were represented as! being dissatisfied with having to impute to President | figence that Mr. Roosevelt will go down to defeat|man, Juneau; H. J. Stout; Eugene Roosevelt a purpose of establishing simply some| next year unless he can convince the country that|Stout; Charles Hall, Tenakee; Rob~ sort of socialism, without going into any details. | ‘The Eastern newspapers anticipated somelhing‘ quite out of the ordinary from the dependable stand- | pat Senator Carey. They sent staff correspondents to interpret what they seemed to expect would be a| more definite indication of the party's proposs.lsl to the people than b?s been disclosed on the floors‘ of Congress by the corps of colmunists, or at the| grass root and sage brush regional gatherings. Now it should be said, regardless of the strong! intimations of the staff correspondents that Senator | proval on his policies. sian and American people will inevitably be pre- cluded.” Here seems to be a situation worthy of the inspired words of Francis Scott Key as on a gray morning he looked out toward Fort McHenry and observed that all was well. Behind Wales’ “Here’s How!” | (New York World-Telegram.) Recently at the British Embassy in Paris the| Prince of Wales lifted his slender-stemmed glass of fizzing wine and 'toasted France and his guest of honor, the swarthy Premier Laval. The toast was sigmificant. Across the Rhine at that moment Nazi Gérmany was feverishly rearm- ing—a movement which has now been going on, day and night, for twenty-four months. Southward in ‘the Mediterranean the British fleet was massing at the entrance to Suez and at Gibral- | one who wishes to understand what to be proud. The special number has forty pages, each page the size of a page of Seward Gateway. It has articles froms the Governor | who kncw of what they speak. The issue is beautifully illustrated. An; this great section and indeed all copy, and whoever sends. a <c€opy) outside will aid the Tefritory. Well done, Empire!” Delegate James Wickersham left Fairbanks for an automobile tour over the trail as far as Chitina'and from there by train to Cordova. He intended to spend several. weeks | in Southeast Alaska before proceed- | ing to Washington, where he would; tar. Beyond that, along the Ethiopian frontiers, the legions of Benito Mussolini were awaiting the com- | mand to attack—to begin a war which before it is| done may change the map of the world. The toast| was significant because all these things are inter- related. One cannot be unmindful of the fact that a similar scene a third of a century ago marked the beginning of the entente cordiale—an alliance be- tween Britain and France, extending through the World War. { According to dispatches, it was officially admit- ted that the Franco-British conversations were of “most vital importance.” The British are convinced that Il Duce's African and Mediterranean adventure menaces what they, call the empire's “life line.” They wish to stop him, | even at the risk of war. | For this enterprise they need the support of | France. - Yet France has no material interests in- volved in the region of Ethiopia. What she fears is Nazi Germany. She desires British support against the danger she sees across the Rhine. For years France has been attempting to get| security for herself by creating a vast, intricate European peace structure based pretty much on the status quo. Italy, at first hostile, thrown her full weight on the side of France. Britain, on the other hand, had been rather cold. l Now the shoe seems to be somewhat on the other foot., Not only is Britain increasingly uneasy over, the rapidly Nazi air fleet, which might bomb | London at the end of an hour's flight, but Italy is threatening to dominate the Mediterranean and Britain’s sea route to India, Australasia and the| Orient—the life line. Today Britain apparently needs France as much as France needs Britain. If that is so, it would not be strange, therefore, if the two Powers eventuallyl revived something approximating the old entente, | modified and revised to meet the changed condi- | tions. Time may show that it was some such under- stantling as this that was being signalized when Britain's Prince raised his glass and said, in effect, to France's Premier:—“Here's how!” has recently | { Mr. Roosevelt’s Chances. attend the opening of Congress on; the first Monday in December. i W. A. Holzheimer and Capt.| Rollie Davis returned from a trip to Wrangell and Petersburg on the gasboat Helen. Reofing was laid on_the new Arctic Brctherhood building, gym-| nasium and natatorium, ‘making the building almost ready for in-| terior finishing. was working hard to rush the com- plation of the building, and wa: said to deserve much credit for the way in which the project was han- cled from the time work was first started in July. | ‘Mrs. Fred Campen and two chil-| dren returned yesterday on the Jefferson. | Mrs. J. W. Woodford left on the steamship Princess Alice for a trip| to Seattle and California, whers| she was to meet a sister, who was| coming west from Colorado, prob-| ably in Seattle. Weather: Maximum, mum, 39; rain, .93 in. 51; mini-| ®e000 0 0.0 00 ! ° AT THE HOTELS . T e 00000 e o Gastineau | E. E. Peterson; Mr. and Mrs. R. E. Ellis; Frederick H. Magill, Jr. Sentinel Island;. Fred Henning, City; Allen Warkick, Hoonah; B. F. Ficken, Sitka; Peter Kostrometin- | off, Sitka; Joe Green, Hyder; Geor- gia Gallagher, Seattle; Mary Joyce, Taku; William Dahlgren; Oscar B. (Hartford Courant.) Lippmann is a shrewd political observer, ers equally shrewd do not share his con- Mr. but oth the New Deal has'mot all these months been re- tarding recovery. It is not to be overlooked that he carried all but six States in 1932 and that the midterm elections put the stamp of popular ap-| 1t is generally conceded that’ a great change has come over the country since the new Congress came in, but it will require hard.‘ and persistent work to translate this change into a Republican victory in 1936. Much will depend on | the calibre of the candidate the Republicans nom- inate, on his ability to dramatize the issues and on the kind of platform that is adopted. New U.S. Army Airship Passes Test Flight Test flights of the U. S. army’s TC-14 at Scott Field, 11, where this photo was taken, were pro- nounced a success by observers. The non-rigid airship is the largest in the world of its type. Olson, Tallapoosa; C. E. Wortman and Mrs. Wortman, Sitka. | Zynda 3 | Mary Sweet, Juneau; A. B. Chap- ert McIntosh, Sitka; J. A. Lawrence, | Sitka; Hilmer Berg, Sitka; Gordon | H. Proffitt, Berkeley; Thomas Ril- ey, Sitka; Mrs. Archie Tibbetts, Ketchikan. Alaskan Gilbert Wilson, Juneau; R. Peko- vich, Funter Bay; John Dotson, Eagle River; Thomas Robinson, Pe- | tersburg; Exa Charles, Hoonah; | Margaret Charles, Hoonah; Alice B. L. Thane and numerous others| Alaska means should send for "al = The merabership| ! akee; Harry Williams, Tee Harbor; | ! forts to influence members may be sffective in many cases, astrologers Toretell. Girls should cultivate generous aims and should avoid all forms of usy. The wise will tell little of best hopes and ambitions. Bereavement for the British roya amily again is indicated. Thc e of Wales is subject to a| direction of the stars that caus> him to accept heavy responsibilitio: in the coming winter when British governmental leaders will have new problems. Persons whose birthdate it is havc the augury of a year of difficultics that may lead to unpleasant pub- licity. Both men and women should be exccedingly decorous because candals are presaged. ldren born on this day prob- ably will be versatile and brilliant. Subjects of this sign may attain fame through their own efforts and unflagging ambitions. Ernest C. Peixotto, artist and writ was born on this day 1869. Others who have celebrated it as a birthday include Marvin Z. Wester-; velt, ph ian, 1876; William Fearce, bishop, 1862. (Copyright, 1935) George W. Samples, Hoonah; Pol Nore, Juneau; Martin Strand, City O, Ness, Hoonah; A. Warwick Hoenah, DUCK HUNTERS GET LIMIT, SUNDAY TRIP Six duck hunters Sweectheart Flats late Saturday aboard the gasboat Arrow, Capt.| T. McAllister, returned last mght.l with their bag limits. Those in the party were V. L. Hoke, Eddie Rod- enberg, Tom Rudolph, 1. Johnson Malcolm Morrison and C. F. Brown, Johnson returned with the prize, & 15-pound goos - CALL FOR BIDS Blds will be received by the City of Juneau at the Clerk’s Office up to 5 p.m., Friday, October 18, 1935, for the installation of an oil burn- er and heating system for the Municipal Wharf. Plans and speci- fications on file with the City Clerk’s office. —adyv. — - SPECIAL DELIVERY 10 DOUG- LAS! Daily at 10:00 a.m. and 2:30 .m. Kelly Blake’s SPECIAL DE- LIVERY—Phone 442. adv. B e "SHOP IN JUNEAU! Houston, Hoonah; W. A. Hart, Ten- The B. M. Juneau, Bank _ COMMERCIAL and SAVINGS Resources Over Two and One Half Million Dollars Behrends Alaska { Peter Pan Beauty Shop i Front Street e e e A SPECIALTY MARGARET LINDSAY, Prop. VIOLET PETERSON, Operator Phone 221 - JUNEAU Druy Co. "fue COFNER DRUG STORE" ) P. 0. Substation No. 1 FREE DELIVERY ITION Guns for rent, bought sold and exchanged—Always Open SEE BIG VAN Lower Front Street —i who went to| Jones-Stevens Shop LADIES’ — MISSES' READY-TO-WEAR Seward Street Near Third Hours 9 am. to 6 pm. SEWARD RUILDING Offi2e Pnine 469 i Kohert Simpson | Opt. D. Graduate Los Angeles Col- lege of Optometry and Opthalmology Glasses Fitted ~ Lentes Greend | —_ ¥. P, T. N. Cashen, Secretary Our fiucks go any place any | tinfe. A tank for Diesel Ol | and @ tank for crude oil save burner trouble. PHCNE 149; NIGHT 148 | ReLiaBLe TRANSFER s & : i R. H. VANCE OSTEOPATH’ Cozsultation and examination Pree. Hours 10 to 12; 1 to 5; 7 to 8:30 and by appointment, Office Grand Apts, near Gas- tineau Hotel. Phone 177 I Commercial Adjust- | ment & Rating; Bureau | | roperating with te Serve l | ice Bureau | Room 1—Shattuck Bldg. | *We have 5,000 local ratings | on file GENERAL MOTORS and MAYTAG PRODUCTS W. P. JOH! Everything in Furnishings for Men JUNEAU-YOUNG | s Hardware Company J PAINTS—OIL—GLASS = | Shelf and Heavy Hardware | Guns and Ammaunition ! ! Wise to Call 8 Juneau Transfer Co. when in need of MOVING or STORAGE Fuel Oil Coal SR BN = 7'\ STRIKE! BRUNSWICK BOWLING ALLEYS Rheinlander Beer on Tap ZORIC DRY CLEANING LAUNDRY PHONE 15 i | «, Daily “mpire Want A”; Pay! Butler Mauro Drug Co. “Express Money Orders Anytime” Phone 132 Free Delivery ——— Daily Empire want Ads Pay! | s Recreation Parlors and Liquor Store Cigars Cigarettes Arctic Pabst Famous Draught Beer On Tap ~JIMMY" CARLSON o JUNEAU. FROCK SHOPPE “Exclusive but hot Expenstve” Coats, Dresses, Lingerie, Hoslery and Hats McCAUL MOTOR COMPANY Dodge and Plymouth Dealers FORD AGENCY (Authorized Dealers) GREASES GAS—OILS JUNEAU MOTORS Poot of Main Street — — Juneau Ice Cream | Parlors SHORT ORDERS Fountain e RADIO SERVICE and SUPPLY BERT WHITFIELD “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”

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