The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, October 28, 1935, Page 4

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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, MONDAY, OCT. 28 ial characteristics; education, and i R e e e B Daily Lessons in English Daily Empire Want Ads Pay! Fraternal Societies OF — i Gastinecu Channel l Daily Alaska Empire ROBERT W. BENDER Editor and Manager HAPPY “The stars incline ——-BIR THDAY Horoscope Another reason would be that the Japanese birth rate is one of the highest in the world e native birth rate one of the lowest. slands are certain to become Japanese PROF_ESSIONAL the Main Puhh«hul every N ] anc UNTING nd ning _ex COMPANY 18 Second Clas SUBSCRIPTION y carrier In Juneau RATES. and Douglas for $1.2 lowing rates in advance, i1l promptly or irregularity ; Business Office, 374 MEMBER OF ASSOCIATED PRESS. entitled to the itches credited to and also the UARANTEED TO BE LARGER OTHER PUBLICATION | tically pseudonym of ion should decline or stop migration is increasing. It was 8,000 ainst only 4,600 the year before. t year as a BELIEV h. ]\ I)OOM OF BRITAIN. \IYI\\F ini believes lh(‘ British Empire is about to Mr adventure? that the Italian empire will rise majes- place, according to Albert Viton, ominent American journalist who from Italy, in the Nation. Vi cor ues: What is Mussolini’s object in his Ethiopian The answer is not economic but Mussolini has embarked on an ex- and in se its lorence, itical. tensive campaign which aims to convert the but do not compel” R i TUESDAY, OCTOBER 29, 1935 Benefic aspects dominate today. | according to astrology. It is a day auspicious for interviews and confer- | ences, financial transactions and ness expansion. Merchants should be fortunate at this time when the starting of new branches is encouraged by the stars 1t is a day for seeking capital and for advertising. Whatever is per under The Empire extends congratula- tions and best wishes today, their birthday anniversary, to the follow- |ing: OCTOBER 28 A. R. Hendrickson Roland C. Ingram Helena M. Poole b William Fullerton Albert F. Garn Mrs. Henry Roden Burford R. Glass Mattie A. Baldwin John Kearney, Jr. e - i constructive should this configuration r.mm..m. b et trades and professions. Building is | | | which presages activities in many | times and it is yours. | cur vocabulary by ma Pronounce ta-ran-tu-la, iast a’s as in ask unstressed, tu as in picture, accent second syllable. serve the iar. unfeeling, born., By W. L. Gordon Words Often Misused: Do not say ‘We accepted of their hospitality Omit of. Ofien Mispronounced: Tarantul first anc Often misspelled: ‘Plagiarism. Ob-l Synonyms: Obdurate, hardened, unyielding, firm, stub- Word study: “Use a word three| Let us increa tering one| | HclencW L.A]brrmht PHYSIOTHERAPY | lZassage, Electricity, Infra Red | Ray, Medical Gymnastior [ 307 Goldsteir Building Phone Office, 218 | | | DRS.KASER & FREEBURGER | DENTISTS : Blomgren Building s Hours y a.m. to @ pm. 1 ] PHONE 56 DT . B. P .0. ELKS meet" every Wednesday at & P. M. Visiting bothers welcome. M. E. MONAGLE, Ex- alted Ruler. M. H. SIDES, Secretary. NIGHTS O1- COLUM?US eghers Council No. 760. Meetings second id last Monday at :30 p. m. Transient rotrers urged to at- :nd. Conve? Cham- rs. Mith St. JOHN F. MULLER, «. R, H. J. TURNER, £-cretary Dr. C. P. Jenne | DENTIST Rooms 8 and 9 Valentine Building Telephone 176 (OUFT TUNEAU LODGE NO. 141 Second and Fourth Mon. )é( day of each month ‘'z Scottih Rit2 Temple Vorshipfui EIVERS, kingdom of Italy into an empire. Ethiopia is to be the beginning; the Mediterranean, an Italian lake, is to be the end. In the eyes of Italian military and diplomatic leaders Ethio- pia is destined to be the Italian Gibraltar, the foundation of the new imperial Rome. But where will Italy expand? The answer ' to this question will sound fantastic outside of Italy, but it is a commonplace within the Duce’s borders. Mussolini expects to plant the Italian imperial lion on the cadaver of the British empire. Every Italian down to the plainest man on the street is convinced that the British empire is either collapsing or already dead and that it will take only a strong on Italy’s part to inherit its greatness. . . . peated contact with high Italian officials | word each day. Today's word: Lexi- | 20 YEARS ACO As to the future as foreseen by as- | con; a dictionary, especially one of 1 From The Empire u‘olog?rs the principal cloud is due | Greek, Hebrew, or Latin. ! § | to labor discontent. Saturn frowns - e - i eeeeed |upon employers. More strikes are SPECIAL DELIVERY TO DOUG*V i | predicted. LAS! Daily at 1000 s.m. and 2:30 Women will profit through de-|Pm. Kelly Blake’s SPECIAL DE- OCTOBER 28, 1915 | vices of their own invention. Money | LIVERY—Phone 442. adv. Headlines: French Rush 150,000 will come to many through origina’' e Men and 100 Guns to Serbia; Allies| and unusual projects. Hear Cry of Serbians and Send Army | Reactionary influences will affec L to Aid Them. “That the Allies have men's manners and dress, it 1s fore- | heard the cry of Serbia for aid, and | told. Again the top hat will be pop-| | LADIES’ — MISSES' are responding, was disclosed today | ular and with it added formality in| READY-TO-WEAR N Bl i el o s when dispatches were Teceived from | cocial affairs. Beward Street Near Third __oz-hm“ N R AL Bucharest saying that 150,000 troops| Warning is given that increase of | Dl‘. A W Su, wart I P. T N 'dame}: Seu!urr and with the common people has persuaded and 300 heavy siege guns are being | robberies and burglaries is foretold.| — ) 5 » S e v me of the universality of this view. landed at Salonki to aid the Serb-| It is well to live the simple life in| %™ o 2 = e n— DEN1IST - 2 Once Mussolini’s imperial dream is recog- ians.” | days when want envies prosperity. JUNEAU-YOUNG Hours 9 am. to 6 pm. | 7 nized as the basis of Italian maneuvers in | Southern Russia comes under o Hardware Company | SEWARD RUILDING Our tiucks go any place any | PAINTS—OIL—GLASS - Ethiopia, and the Italian belief in the immi- The Ladies Guild of St. Luke’s an- | Sinister sway while Uranus rules. Offire Pnone 469 time. A tank for Diesel Oil | Shelf and Heavy Hardware A | il { nent downfall ‘ot Britain is c?n‘pr.ehmdefi‘ ”f tertained at a silver tea at the hom:| U ings and extr‘eme pumshmems{ | and 8 t.::‘::n::r cru:leelol save | is eas to forecast how Italy will play its of Mrs, M. A. Snow. | been prognospcabed. % |1 Guns 868 Antibunition troul diplomatic game. Under no circumstances will \ erscns whose birthdate it is havei j e -\c-ll aspected. beginning at 7:30 pm. HOV'*RD D. STABLER, Master; J.CCES W Secretary. Dr. Richard Williams | DENTIST OFFICE AND RESIDENCE Gastineau Building — e Jones-3tevens Shop | 1 i ! | - DOUGLAS FOE AERIE N\ Phona 451 17, F. ) B PO —————= | feets first and third Mondnys ' NAVY DAY. * Both on land and sea throughout the United States | and its possessions civilians as well as the militar today are observing Navy Day in tribute to Uncle Sam’s great sea force. | In the seventeen years since the signing of the Armistice the United States Navy has grown into a naval power of major proportipns, and today ranks| second only in strength to the sea forces of Great Britain. | Present tonnage in ships sufficiently modern to be | considered effective is for Great Britain 980,238, United | States 731,510, Japan 648415, France 367229, Italy 294,806, Germany 60,100 | Although many believe that the relative isolation | of continental United States obviates the necessity | of a large Navy it is well to bear in mind that German | < i e s e el Kohert Simpson t. D. Graduate Angeles Col- | lege of Optometry and | Opthalmology 1 | Glasses Fitted Lenses Grornd | — PR. H. VANCE OSTEOPATH Cousultation and examination Dr. y i her, Pree. Hours 10 to 12; 1 to 5; ! r. Johnson's biographer, A o s i [ Office Grand Apts., near Gas- JUNEAU FROCK tineau Hotel. Phcne 177 SHOPPE “Exclusive but not Expensive” [} | PHONE 149; NIGHT 148 | Italy take hostile action against France or the augury of a ‘year of good for-| | RELIABLE TRANSFER Jugo Slavia. It must maintain friendly nil- working for the establishment in Ju- | une. Sudden increase of money may — tions lx;‘n 'm“:dg; éx:bsgfis England decides to neau of a branch of the Nnnonal""' (‘\peuwd]:spe(;rls and speculations close the 3 ar. may cause Furthermore, it will try to remain on diplo- :f‘:g?gg:ngfl cwh‘;fii:rs r&;\::sé p'::f‘, chmren bor. on this day prob- On the other hand, it will oppose with the which was drawn up by the w"’“'\fy Mmoo bl o i same determination it showed last summer any tution committee, which met at the Il‘(‘)"&t Hoe, inventor, W .born attempt at independence on the part of Aus- Bome of Mrs, T4, B, Tuaber previY i day 1784. Others who have tria, which must remain a gateway for raw Mrs. Frank Metcal requested SBELL, G N o o ey inclide damé materials on the continent. The Ttalian front = |CRCR Person attending bring paper), ., pher, is solid against Britain, and the key to this |*nd pencil. John Keats, poet, 1795. submarines successfully reached the shore of the anti-British attitude is the belief that Britan- 1Copyri;;ht 1935) United States during the World War and with the nia is doomed. i & o improved construction of these craft as well as the g airplane, geographically isolation is rapidly being made The Same Methods. unimportant Further, Slates, including the Atlantic approximately 13,000 miles. The women of Juneau, who were B ——1 LUDWIG NELSON || JEVELZR ! Watch Repaliring | Philco—Genera: Zlectric Agency FRONT & FREET l e e R | Commercial Adjust- | ment & Ratlné"gureau | roperating with te Serv- | lce Bureau | | Room 1—Shattuck Bldg. | | | n We have 5,000 local ratings on file {174 The Arctic Brotherhood was the | beneficiary of an evening in the| theatre, when all funds received DY g —— Mr. and Mrs. John Spickett were| L.ook and Learn {turned over to the Arctic Brother-| By A. C. Gordon ar e g il | GENERAL MOTORS | and | MAYTAG PRODUCTS | W. P. JOHNSON SABIN’S “Everything in Furnishings for Men” ental coastline of the United Gulf and Pacific totals b osiane (New York Times.) | hood. A large attendance was pres- What is there in the plentiful record of World |ent. The picture shown was ‘‘The hat of Alaska is 15000 war brutalities perpetrated in hot biood to com: \are‘c(»,mr. s Brother,” which was based:| miles and o possessions exclusive of the Philip- with the cold-blooded brutalities of Nazi theo: {upon a Gouveneur Morris scenario |\, pines is 1,448 miles. It is both reasonable and essential practice in peacetime? Wartime ruthlessness willland had as actors William Humph- bl that these great expanses of coastal waters have ade- send thousands of men to their death on the battle- | field or scores of men to death by rt-martial. Peacetime ruthlessness will sit in its 1 Alaska has reason to be unusually interested in an Proclaim race doctrines condémning to ultimate ex-| Rfaiiate’ Navy; because:of ita strategio. poaliion injiirpetion DAl s million “stranger who have lived |, ¥he North Padifie, Nation todky in the country ere up to xxl((-s*x\ humlrved vears. | o : r ttleline commander who plays with 13 the gpgual tribuge plted; Statas sen. Tocacs, a lesser sinner against our basic human- 413 o VInE Navy. L he civilian fanatic who passes judgment on The brute at the front says you cannot win battles without bloodletting. The|c, zealot in an editorial chair or a bureaucrat's office Japan will hold on to the mandated Pacific Islands, | 3YS YO cannot make omelets without breaking cggs. | It is the same thing not so much through military force as through colon- = £yt 5 i#ation and. intermarriage with the islanders, acoord-| oo o NOVEls and plays GPRCSR mane Y YL THREY S SaR .8 8 lessness and war’s horrors have been published since ing to Willard Price's article, "Japan’s New Outposts,” | the World War, and their net effect has been pitifully | in the October number of Harper's Magazine. small. One reason would be that people cannot help' S e Mr. Price seeing how ruthless and horrible a so-called state | . Modern It was easy for Spain to sell the South Sea of peace may be. -Another reason is that so many peo- | Islands because there were no Spaniards there. ‘ le have a soft spot in their hearts for their own | B Bet ruthlessness, with the highest motives in the world, | Ethuette | of course McCAUL MOTOR COMPANY | Dodge and Plymouth Dealers Taah gt 4 Li H Who founded the first 5-cent eah Baird an use Hum-j. .02 | store? 7 i ok quate sea fighting force protection as an insurance against war t German state is the | ¢ of Nurembarg? 3. How much does mercury >and under heat? 4. What is a Harlequin? » 5. Where is the tomb ofi America’s fUnknown Soldier? | ANSWERS 1 1. Frank W. Woolworth. | 2. Bavaria. | 3. .01 of its volume for every 10(1‘ degrees Fahrenheit increase in tem- S TRIKE Pgi:“mAre.character in comedy and BRUNSWICK BOWLING ALLEYS pantomime with shaven head, part- Rheinlander Beer on Tap drug store he'd ex-i contest in which ns of Juneau bables were| in the store and personsk Jupeau were asked to vote. [, o S S R e S AT TR and j the ins Ur 1 the - men’s lives ity than whole races and classes. FORD AGENCY (Authorized Dealers) GREASES GAS—OILS JUNEAU MOTORS r'eot of Main Street Alic2 Joyce in “The Theft of the rown Jewels,” played for the .l the Orpheum Theatre. Maximum, 45; minimum. SOUTH S S BECOMING JAPANE! | Weather: 135; cloudy. R S L ly-covered tights, masked face and sword of lath. i 5. Arlington National Cemetery, Juneau Ice Cream Parlors SHORT ORDERS Candy say: - e Germany lost the islands in the World War, | and Hitl vs he would not kill one man to get them back, beause there are no Germans there. But now that the islands are filling with Japanese they are becoming as irrevoc- ably a part of Japan as Kyushu or Tokio. This operation of natural forces to set at naught the yeas and nays of both Nipponese The Akobo, Uibor and Baro rivers \ m the west or southwest frontiers ' 3l | of Ethiopia for 250 mile By Roberta Lee slatures seem to have difficulty defining a| lobbyist. Why, a lobbyist, sir, is the other fellow’s | advocate.—(Dallas News, « Q What does it indicate when al person whose diction is perfect and‘ who is an exceptionally mte-e;tmg\ Beware Cougl:s Temperatures as high as 163 are reported at one and Eurouean diplomats, who may have con- sidered that they had full power to answer such questions, is seen not only in immigra- station in Ethiopia. | for a place to sun, he picked a lulu—(Atlanta Con-; If the new Caesar is looking stitution.) speaker, monopolizes the conversa- tion? from common colds A. Tt indicates egotism; the onel tion, but in the magic birth rate and inter- “marriage. Suppose not another man, woman or child should go from Japan to the South Seas. Suppose the islands, with their 40,000 Japanese and 50,000 natives, were sealed up S0 that no one could enter or leave. Return a few years later to visit them, and you would find the population chiefly Japanese! One reason would be that the intermar- riages which frequently occur between the Japanese and the better-class natives always result in a family more Japanese than native Apparently the President's pork-control measures | | haven't much effect on the number of pigskins flying through the air these days.—(Brooklyn Eagle.) Grass-rooters may have scared the Democrats, but | without any further demonstration by them, the scare | | has about worn off.—(St. Louis Globe-Democrat.) | Like those big wire rat traps, Ethiopia may be easy to get into but hard to get out of —(Louisville Courier- Journal.) ETHIOPIA ANSWERS RAIDS WITH ANTI-AIR GWS thiopian soldier tallan bombing plane: hown setting up an anti-aircraft gun “somewhero in the war zone” to fight in the Italo-Ethiopian war. (Assoclated Press Photo) who does so may speak perfect Eng- he is ill bred. Q. Is it all right for friends at- tending a funeral to wear any kind {of dark clothes, or should they wear, nothing but black? lish, and be very entertaining, buv' A. Any kind of dark clothes is ahi That Hang On | No matter how many medicines you have tried for your cough, chest cold or bronchial irritation, you can | get relief now with Creomulsion. uble may be brewing and you cannot afford to take a chance | with anything less than Creomul- sion, which goes right to the seat | the trouble to aid nature to THE BEST PHONE 15 right. Q. Should the bridegroom furnish | the bridesmaids’ bouquets? A. No; the bride should furnish them, | | | | PAUL BLOEDHORN s FRONT STREET bmnesnsthe rm-laden loosen andge n Deen if hfled don't be discouraged, your is am.hmmd to gum{nce money if you Are not sattsfled wlth from Daily Empire Want Ads Pay! 1ts the very fi bottle FINE Watch and Jewelry Repairing at very reasonable rates —_— E. 0. DAVIS TELEPHONE 584 Phone 4753 { | | 23 The B. M. Behrends Bank Juneau, Alaska COMMERCIAL and SAVINGS Resources Over Two and One Half Million Dollars ot.hex'd remedies have | Get, Creomulsion right now. (Adv.) | | | noot.he and heal the inflamed mem- | | | "GARBAGE HAULED | Reasonable Monthly Rstes | | o TAP BEER IN TOWN! ® THE MINERS' Recreation Parlors and Liquor Store BILL DOUGLAS | Rainicr Club BEER WINES Tobacco ® WARD and JONES OLD WOODLAND GARDENS LOCATION Butler Mauro Drug Co. “Express Money Orders Anytime” Phone 134 Free Delivery Arctic Pabst Famous Draught Beer On Tap " JIMMY" CARLSON SHOP IN JUNEAU, FIRST: Daily Empire Want A Pay! WATCH HOSPITAL P. L. McHALE “Next to First National Bank” Clean $1.50, Jewels $1.25, Main Spring $1.50, Balance Staff $1.50 Crystals 50c and 75¢ “All Work Guaranteed” 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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