The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, December 4, 1935, Page 4

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planes, and no one can.be sure that some benefit will not. énsue when prave and-ablemen stretch | their energies to the farthest. “The stars 7acline Horoscope but do not compel” HAPPY- , —BIRTHDAY The Empire extends conamtula-‘ tions and best wishes today, their birthday anniversary, to the follow- ing: Daily Alaska Empire ROBERT “'T BENDER Editor and Manager § Fraternal Societies O e i ‘ Gastineau Channel J= Look and Learn By A. C. Gordon | Helene W. L. Albrecht ] PHYSIOTHERAPY | Massage, Electricity, Infra Red | Ray, Medical Gymnastics 307 GOLDSTEIN BLDG. Phone Office, 216 by 2 !’hA Sunday by and Main e x¢ “England’s Most Hated Man.” COMPANY € (New York World-Telegram.) J. Ramsay MacDonald, thrice Prime Minister of Great Britain, appears hopelessly crushed by the general elections held recently. “Today,” he commented after n just a tired old man.” Few political careers have been more colorful. Born in Scotland, as he himself expresses it, “in s | ® but and a ben” (a one-room hut with a kitchen), " _|he has known what is means to go hungry. Yet qualities lifted him to the position of chief b 1. What has been estimated as the safest maximum speed for an auto- mobile on the open road? 2. Whom did U. 8. Grant succeed as President? 3. What living organism has thz | & ‘trongest sense of smell? 4. What is monotheism? 5. Which was the first state west of the Mississippi to, be admitted to thlc.‘Union? Entered Post Offfce matter B. P. 0. ELKS meets every Wednesday at 8 P. M. Visiting brothers wel- come. M. E. MONAGLE, Exalted Ruler. M. H. SIDES, Secretary. THURSDAY, DECEMBER 5, 1935. This is one of the rarely favorable | days in planetary government, ac- | cording to astrology. It is especially lucky for those who seek business through advertisements. Shopping is under a most promis- ing sign. Merchants and manufac- turers will enjoy the profits of an un- | usually large holiday trade. A | The stars encourage enterprise and |impart courage to those who invest money. Intensive expansion will be SUBSCRIPTION RATES. carrier In Juneau and Douglas for $1.25 per month. at the Eoaed - by it was all over, following rates in advance DECEMBER 4 Annabel Hagerup T. F. Oleson M. F. Christensen Gladys Weymouth B. B. Benjamin. e if they failure will promptly or irregularity & KNIGHTS OF COLUMBUS Seghers Council No. 1760. Meetings second and last Monday at 7:30 p. m. - Transiéht brothers urged to at- tend. Council Cham- bers, Fifth St. JOHN F. MULLEN, G. K, H. J. TURNER, Secretary. 2; Business Office, ! DRS. KASER & FREEBURGER DENTISTS Blomgren Building PHONE 56 Hours 9 am o0 d pm. MEMBER OF ASSOCIATED PRESS. xelusively entitled 1o the ews dispatches credited to in this paper and also the | hi: adviser to the King and country and made him a familiar figure in England's marble halls. 2 From a Socialist on a soap bex he: became |\ 3 LARGER Britain's first Laborite Premier in 1924 and a second ! oy time in 1929, Then, in 1931, splitting with his 2(1 {EARS AGO | i e Labor associates over the budget, heé formed a "Na- Prom The Er.pire . § | necessary for certain manufagturers tional Cabinet” by calling in Tories and Liberals. | Women today are well directed by In the subsequent eleetions the country upheld his|+ sew=reee. —-,-»x{the stars. The stars predict that course, but both Labor and Liberal parties were DECEMBER 4, 1915. ' ‘they wllls‘tl?;_tig;mc?nuon:g mg:/lc- | almost wiped out. The United States Attorney's o{”mcnt mobilizing the wives and moth- Thus many of his former followers came to Te-|fice agreed with Zazis Krauczunas, |%S Offl the country. e lgard him as a traitor. But none who really know |counsel for Edward Krause, aceused| 11U 18 8 happy wedding day since him well would call him that. Throughout a long|slayer of William Christie, that the | Stars promise much success and apparently inconsistent career he was true at | g spirati oving part- hearing would occur on Dec. 7, at an Jiroah (e THRDM SR OL Y g P least to his own convictions. | nership. Many marriages will mark A pacifist during the World War, he was de- hour not yet designated. Mr. Gauo-| . the winter. zunas said he would have no local | o) P \ S scribed by & London newspaper as “the most hated Today is an auspicious time for man in England.” A labor union leader, he saw the S emarded it me would send for | COFrespondence. A letter today may crew of a British ship strike rather than carry him|J. Grattan O'Brien, professor of{ring 8 Ohristmas present later in across the North Sea to a peace conference at The|criminal law at the University of ”‘?:‘g;"h;.;m’er’":lss"e: asre under a Hague. Ironically, he went to defeat supporting|washington. $004-GHRUEENL O n‘e stars, 5 the Tory demand for rearmament. His argument | While this configuration prevai | was that the League of Nations is vital to world| i i c| any of | 7 CDl:xhc;;?u;;lii;::.:dp:}:g;xl li,’sf‘those who have places in the Suni peace and the support of a powerful Bri imperative if the League is to survive. s S | will enjoy many pleasant experienc- % 4 y iy i % fits of wealth and will be inclined Today MacDonald is aging. He is more than|hands of the district attorney. fw display their opulence. half blind, and his health is said to be failing.| In Krause'seffects also were f"““d. Wz;rning % ghven (h.u;. ihe Wiy But one more honor is almost certain to be his.|a small typewriter, some Berkshire 2 King George probably will make him a Peer, the Laird of Lossiemouth. But the bitterness of being Bond stationety corresponding mwand others who have not yet recov | Synonyms: Expensive, costly, valu- e % red fr ressi able, high-priced, dear. that used in the Christié and Plun: [¢7ed rom the long depression may g ) “misunderstood” he will likely carry with him not only to retirement but to his grave. |2 ANSWERS 1. 45 miles an hour. 2. Andrew Johnson. 3. Fish. 4. Belief that there God. 5. Missouri, in 1821. - eee R e Daily Lessons in English By W. L. Gordon ALASKA CIR! BE THAN THAT c is but one Dr. C. P. Jenne DENTIST Rooms 8 and 9 Valentine Building Telephone 176 MOUNT JUNEAU LODGE NO. 147 Second and fourth E : beginning at 7:30 p. m. HOWARD D. STABLER, day of each month in Scottish Rite Temp le, Worshipful Master; JAMES W. LETVERS, Secretary. -5 | n Dr. Richard Williams DENTIST OFFICE AND RESIDENCE Gastineau Bu}lding Phone 431 DOUGLAS AERIE 117, F. 0. E. % Meets first and third Mondays 8 p.m., Eagles’ Hall, Douglas. Visiting brothers welcome. J. B. Martin, W. P, T. N. Cashen, Secretary. Words Often Misused: Do not say. | “They were married over twenty| | years ago.” Say, “more than twenty years ago.” 5 Often Mispronounced: Maraschir:o. I Prcnounce mar-a-ske-no, first a as| in at, second a unstressed, e as in me, principal accent on third syllable. | | Often Misspelled: Cretonne. Ob- serve the nne. MAIL SERVICE. last a is Alaskans that they are to have mail service, at least for time. he Northland, this trip out of Seattle, bringing mail, and both she and the North Sea will both north and south bound. mail including to at Dr. A. W. Stewart DENTIST Welcome news comes better time. A tank for Diesel Oil and a tank for Crude Oil save burner trenble. PHONE 149; NIGHT 148 i Hours 9 am. to 6 pm. SBEWARD BUILDING Office Pone 469 carry it in the future e contract calls for all classes of e b & hiie Yile Bbka Okt - | be in resentful moods as the holiday | Word Study: “Use a word three! | kett letters, & large bore "8003¢ gUN. | sea5on qraws nigh. Threatening |tmes and it is yours.” Let us in- 4 a high-power rifle with a niche parcel post | crease our vocabulary by mastering signs are read in the stars. the Southeast of Commerce apparently has borne he commendation of whole Territory for service in the North. Tt that the action is the fore- The efforts of Juneau and other Alaska Chambers fruit and they eserving their communities and the pushing much needed may be hoped, however, runner for another type of service that Alaska needs —air mail. Now that contracts have been awarded for further steamer mail service, the efforts should be continued to be directed for getting air mail serv- ice in the Territory another year. are a FAITH IN UNCLE SAM. sam’s ability to pay, despite the as Faith~in Uncle oft heard wails of repudiation, seems to be just firm as ever. Monday the Government sought $900,000,000 loan to finance the winter The books were opened in the that night the quickly It just another money paying little that the nation is spending Rather, those who buy whether in large or small quantiti ef the futurd” They know thé Goverhment's financial structure is Spending for public funds to' meet an emer though on a large scale, is not going to throw our financial sheets so far off that they cannot be balanced a relief work morning and closed with compiete subscription recorded and readily indication that with to political cries into bankruptey nment is those attention itself Govers are securities, 5, have no fear sound ancy ALASKA WI 1ES HIM WELL. | It is like news of a good friend leaving the com-‘ munity for a distance place to read that Major| Frank E. Stoner, Executive Officer of the Army| s at Seattle is leaving his post there| to take command of the General Staff of thel School of the Army at Fort Leavenworth, Kansas. While not of Alaska, Major Stoner was always,‘ for Alaska and he has carried forward a strong| policy of giving people in the North the best com- munication service available. He has made many| friends, both personal and for the Signal Corps, as| a result of his fine efforts. Alaskans, while sorry to see him leave the Seattle headquarters and thus lose neighborly gontact with him, wish him well at his new station. BRAVE MEN CARRY Coming so close on the heels of the disappearance | of Charles Kingsford-Smith while on a flight from England to Austr: the latest reports that Lincoln Ellsworth and Herbert Kenyon are missing on a trans-Antarctic flight raises doubts in the minds of many as to the good of such adventurous tr across the skies. Even aviation men sometimes wonder if bold hops such as these are worth the! candle now that the pioneers have paved the way, both from perfection and standpoints. But s must be remembered that the Lindberghs the Kingsford-Smiths, the Wiley Posts and the Chamberlins paved the way for the great transport mechanical exploration | terranean. | the Soviet Government and Siberia, .| ously Doubtless there have been abler statesmen in| the history of Britain but certainly few more | sincere. * Tf he has reached his political end it is too bad it had to come this way. i Neutrality vs. Profits. (Albany Knickerbocker Press.) As Secretary Hull intimated, the nation cannot| expect to carry on free and unrestricted trade with| belligerent nations and at the same time keep out| of trouble. Neither will an embargo on “war im- plements” alone serve the purpose; we must be| prepared to give up trade in all materials thatjunusual breadth of shoulders and‘la“_ General George A. Custer |& might help to prolong war. The League of Nations embargo against Italy| went into effect November 18, The present neu-| trality resolution giving limited powers to the President, expires on February 25. Secretary Hull| plainly implied that the Administration desires more power to shut off all trade in war materials that| may help the aggressor nation and to cooperate | with those nations tha tare trying to bring the| war to an early end. | America at the Naval Conference. Tt { (Houston Chronicle.) ) | Britain fears for the safety of her far-flung em- pire, with growing friction in the Orient and a| possibly antagonistic Italy with a major war strength across her line of communication through the Medi- Japan fears for the future, with respect both to and possible Western interference with her course in China. In| addition, she has a colored-race inferiority-complex | and cannot accept an obviously lower rank than! other nations. | The simple fact is America has no such dangers | to face as have Britain or Japan, and our terri- tory is much more easily defended than that of | the British Empire. We are in the best posmon: of any of the powerful nations to agree on aj limitation of battle craft, and should find the| proper formula, A War-Weary World. (St. Louis Globe-Democrat.) We see fifty-two governments cooperating to stop | the war in Ethiopia, and bringing punitive pressure to bear uppn Italy which has inaugurated that| | war. Indeed, we see virtually the whole world | united in sentiment, and for the most part in action, against the aggresssor in that war. This never happened before in the history of mankind, and it would have been impossible before the World War. cooperation will be, but the fact that it exists is something altogether new, and something tremend- significant. It is an expression in govern- mental action of the world’s condemnation of war for any other reason than actual defense; and means, it must mean, that the world is determined to put an end to war, sooner or later. Ttaly, land of great builders, gets a strange kick out of annexing mud huts—(Lorain, Ohio, Journal.) Lager beer is all right as far as it goes. What TR = 3 He’nyy rains and muddy roads forced the pressing into service of a tractor and sled as an ambu- lance to take Mys. John Hett, Matanuska colonist, she was stricken with appendicitis. Her ‘husband is at her side as the tractor pulls the sled out of the colony. (Associated Press Photo) ACTOR-AMBULANCE FOR MATANUSKA PIONEER is needed is larger beers.—(Jacksonville Times Union.) to Palmer, Alaska, then by rail to Anchorage when We do not yet know what the effects of that| | in it, which, the authorities claim,| was cut for a Maxim silencer attach- | ment. There are also a bottle of hair | dye and a gag. As he stood in the outer office of | the Federal Jail yesterday, while‘ Warden Harry Morton searched him, Ed d Krause looked straight‘ ahead, his blue-gray eyes raised a| trifle above normal position, giving | them a glint of peculiar hardness. He is a man of great muscular/ ength, of average height, but of depth of chest. Though his hands are perhaps a little undersized, he has| a wrist of iron, and one so large} that the manacles with which he| was cuffed to the guard- were let out | to the last notch. | His face was white and of the pallor of nervous apprehension, in- tensified by the reddish furze of beard and moustache. For all the muscle shown i the build of the man, he looked limp yesterday after- | noon. Except for the glint in his eyes, there is nothing about him_to suggest wanton cruelty or evil. The chin is fair, and is topped by rather heavy lips which show plainly | under the thin, pinkish-red mous-| tace. | | Tke Sowerby and family moved into | their handsome new home at Sixth | and Main Streets. Weather: Maximum, 37; minimum, | 32; cloudy. ENSCH'S Scientifix X-Kay Chiropractic will | remove the cause of your stomach,| liver or kidney trouble. Call 206 Main Street or Phone 451. 2:30 P. M. Telephone 442. adv, | GARBAGE HAULED | Reasonable Momua.y Rates E. 0. DAVIS TELEPRONE 584 Phone 4753 WARRACK Construction Co. Juneaun Phone 487 | 3 Sweelos? CHOCOLATES Harry Race Druggist —adv. | Special Delivery to Douglas Daily | Persons whose birthdate, it is have the augury of a year of good fortune. For many new positions and new in- terests aye foreseen. Children born on this day probably will be inclined toward leadership. Subjects of this sign are always in- terested in their fellow men. Martin Van Buren, eighth Presi-; | dent of the United States, was born |1 o'clock. lon this day, 1782. Others who have | invited. celebrated it as a birthday include Clinton Hart Merriam, biologist, United States cavalry officer, 1839, (Copyright, 1935) ———— Modern Etiquette By Roberta Lee Q. When a man has taken a girl t6"a public dining room, should she give her order direct to the waiter? | found scholar.” “His wisdom is pro- 7 | J. B. Burford & Co. one word each day. Today's word: Profound; intellectually deep; enter- | ing far into subjects. “He is a pro- | | found.” e Under auspices Zmerican Legion | Auxiliary at the Dugout Thursday, | December 5. Play starts promptly at Admission 50c. Public —adv, ! ———e—— SHOP IN JUNEAU, FIRST! ! -3 TYPEWRITERS RENTED $5.00 per month “Our doorstep is worn by eatisfied customers” PHONE 36 For very prompt LIQUOR DELIVERY i | | | A. No; she should give her order' to her escort and allow him to give the order to the waiter. Q. Where should the date be writ- ten on a social letter or note? . A. The date should be written at the left of the signature, on the last page of the letter or note. | Q. Is it good form, when intro- ducing two persons, to say, “This is my friend, Mr. Wilson?” | A. No; this implies that the other person is not a friend. | | ITS Wise to Call 48 Juneau Transfer Co. when in need of MOVING or STORAGE Fuel Oil Coal Transfer “Everything in Furnishings Ludwig Nelson JEWELRY and WATCHES | The B. M. Juneau, CO Bank MMERCIAL and SAVINGS Resources Over Two and One Half Million Dollars Behrends Alaska HENNA PACK Finger Wave and Marcel $1.50 [ ] COSMOPOLITAN BEAUTY SHOPPE Phone 517 Cigars Cards The New Arctic Pabst Famous Draught Beer On Tap “JIMMY”" CARLSON Guy Smitr DRUGS PUROLA REMEDIES PRESCRIPTIONS CARE- FULLY COMPOUNDED Front St. Next Coliseum PHONE 97—Free Delivery D e e ] | Robert Simpson Opt. D. Graduate Los Angeles Col- lege of Optometry and Opthalmo’ gy Glasses Fitted Lenses Ground DR. H. VANCE OSTEOPATH Consultation a nd examinstion Free. Hours 10 to 12; 1 to 5; 7 to 8:30 and by appointment. Office Grand Apts., r.ear Gas- tineau Hotel. Phone 177 | { RELIABLE TRANSFER l Commercial Adjust- ment & Bating Bureau Cocperating with White Serv- ice Bureau | ROOM 1--SHATTUCK BLDG. | We have 5,000 local ratings on file - | JUNEAU FROCK SHOPPE “Exclusive But Not Expensive” Coats, Dresses, Lingeric, Hosiery and Hats GENERAL MOTORS and MAYTAG PRODUCTS W. P. JOHNSON | Jones-Stevens Shop LADIES’ — MISSES’ READY-TO-WEAR Near Third | | Seward Street < = If you enjoy indoor sports— Here's one of the best—TRY BOWLING! BRUNSWICK BOWLING ALLEYS Rheinlander and Alt Heidelberg BEER ON TAP % A 0 S SRR : JUNEAU-YOUNG Hardware Company PAINTS—OIL—GLASS Shelf and Heavy Hardware Guns and Ammunition - S GARLAND BOGGAN Hardwood Floors ! Waxing Polishing Sandil;g PHONE SPEND WHERE YOU MAKE IT! DRY CLEANING Soft Water Washing Your ALASKA LAUNDRY PHONE 15 i }; | McCAUL MOTOR [ COMPANY | Dodge and Plymouth Dealers | PO FORD AGENCY (Authorized Dealers) GREASES GAS—OILS JUNEAU MOTORS Foot of Main Street Recreation Parlors and Liquor Store BILL DOUGLAS But the Flame Does Not Die There is the constant worry on the part of those who have others do for them that which is necessary that the little things which are so import- ant may be overlooked. It is our earnest duty to care for the details. The reverence due the departed one may linger forever dear with the knowledge that tribute was complete. The Chat:les w. Carter Mortuary PHONE 136-2 “The Last Service Is the Greatest Tribute”

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