Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
g e e 47 S 5 1 S SR N Y S . Iing paper for American exporters at reasonable |rates, maturing over a period of five years when | duaranteed by the exporter or otherwise secured. In exceptional cases, to assist in exporting farm surpluses or heavy goods that would materially in- crease employment, a reasonable share of the risk, without in any case interfering with or displacing private financing SUBSCRIPTION RATES. in this field. The purpose is to supplement snd Oolivered by carrier la Juneau and Douglas for $1.25 cooperate withthose engaged in that line. '{:-.rmm?:'?" « The RFC will continue to provide the bank with | $12.00; funds necessary to meet its requirements for these Daily. Alaska Empire ROBERT W.. BENDER - - Editor and Manager| | every evenlug ex PRINTING COMPANY at Streets, Juneau, Alaska Tntered In th moatter. pt Sunday by _ the Second and Main Post Gffice In Juncau as Second Class following rates: ail, postas gl months, In advance, i iber + if they will promptly | purposes. potify the B: y feilure or irregularity | In the delivery their payp rs. { —_— Telephones: News Office, 602; Business Offic ot e e | The Edition of The Empire which comes off the press for delivery ‘L»ru‘\ 21‘ ",'.“s.‘q‘.“x"(‘:: Sunday morning is going to be well worth sending per and also the 5 friends on the outside. It will be filled with factual information never before compiled in the Territory. } | The Amsociated nse for republ 3 i or not otherwise credited local news published herein ALASKA CIRCULATION GUARANTEED TO BE LARGER THAF THAT OF ANY OTHER PUBLICATION Henry Fletcher, G. O. P. chieftain, is going to| give his speech at night. Can't be it won't stand| the scrutiny of daylight? | than a week. And they call that news? | Hitler, and the Versailles Treaty becomes another ‘one of those things. Administrator Borah. | (New York Times.) Mr. Borah is now having his first experience as ENDEAVOR. |an administrator. A skilled debater, a matchless | stand-offer, a recurrent asset of the G. O. P. he The physicians’ clinic which Dr. W. W. Council,|\now makes his first appearance as an executive. | Dr. W. M. Whitehead. and Dr. Cassius Carter It is heartening to see him administer his boom. announced they would open in the Goldstein Build- All of us who are properly constituted must feel | ing in Juneau, late this summer, will fill a long-felt @ distinct moral exaltation when he administers a | need not only for Juneau but for the entire Territory |Tébuke to the selfish “group” that, visibly or in-| s et visibly, is trying to check the progress of the Bomh-i The progressive and professional spirit of these [or-President movement. He has exposed the dark| 3 i |designs of Walter Edge of New Jersey. New villains| doctors in conceiving and carrying . which they state will give Juneau a clinic, “second e Slite plan"keep turning up. Last week a “group” of forty-| three Republican members of the Massachusetts | to none on the Pacific Coast,” is likewise most com- mendable and worthy of the recognition, appreciation | Legislature came out for Landon. Here is more evidence that the infamous “in-| and gratitude of all who live in the Territory. |terests” of the East are trying to stab the tribune| The science of medicine and surgery have become |of the people. more and more linked and indispensably co-related midnight treachery is going on. A MOST COMMENDABLE In Ohio the same secret, black nndj The machine takes : 2 | not firmly established. £, NI e Mr. Robert Taft as its figurehead, but the Repub-|Cerning the water system which the| g to the science of the laboratory and the mode: |m‘v was at that time attempting to equipment that constitutes that laboratory. Like-|lican State Committee has satisfied itself by the wise specialization has entered into the practice|FeSults of a doubtless judiciously selected poll that| of medicine and surgery. Through the modern clinic| LAndon is the man the Buckeye voters yearn for. What must be Mr. Borah's wrath when he sees all these phases are scientifically united to give the| ;M NS best service to the cure and treatment of human the ills, and also, probably of ater the discovery and flls in early stages productivity In the last man over 10 years old in Increased between 15 and 20 coveries and practice of m Brown is said to be numbered among Landonians? Ha! It was like the perfidious | Import, t0|reactionary East to use a Midwesterner as a screen | and cure of these for its sinister purposes. | ars of health and| In Jowa a blacker deed was done. The Republican average life span. State Committee instructed for uninstructed dele- s the average span of life of |8ates to Cleveland. Borahites were present and the United States has made no sign of opposition. Administrator Borah | ars through the dis-|MUst have been off post. Surely he wouldn't' solenie consent to compromise on a great moral issue or waive objection in the hope of getting the un-1 even gr arr thus sting of dding y to the 50 y and These Juneau doctors the associates who o - . ‘ 3 s o gl fessionay \Dstructed - delegation himself. As he views the will join them, actuated by a Toulabie orotessioMal Californian landscape o'er he must see an oppor- responsibillty, will perform incalculable €00d 10 this |yunity to exercise his shining sdminicieatin (o community, through the installation of this rew Can “the outstanding advocate” of Mr. Hoover | modern clini¢ " in '28 keep out of the State the man so remark-! |ably befriended, tried and found wanting, wretched- Iy below the implacable Borahish standard? If |Mr. Borah keeps out of El Dorado won't the cynics say that his admission of his bad Jjudgment in '28 Jesse H. Jones, on behalf of the Advisory Com-'will make people think that his selection of a mittee of the United States Export-Import Bank, candidate this year may be at least equally erron- of which he is Chairman, has announced that the |eous? bank is prepared to assist in financing the export of | Besides, Southern California is the chief province agricultural commodities and manufactured articles Of Townsendia. Mr. Borah's backsliding has hurt | of all character, when it can be done on a sound Dim, he confesses; ruined him, perhaps, in Idaho.| basis. In carying out the Roosevelt Administra- il he not try to make his peace with so large a ; i oy | Datch of his someti s? tion’s policy of rebuilding the country's foreign sometime admirers? And in the trade, Chair Jones de it clear that as many jungle of eccentric opinions in that golden clime, | gese, CapTIan Japes made it clesy soan | IS Deculiar financial tenets should find adequate and as complete facilities will be extended American recognition. commerce and agriculture as are enjoyed by any country in the world. | Politics The Export-Import Bank will consider discount- jer Express. RFC AIDS IN REBUILDING. — DL o makes strange jmgolsv.s.—Bulinlo-Cour-‘ | UNITED STATES i DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR | GENERAL LAND OFFICE | District Land Office | Anchorage, Alaska. November 12, 1935, | REPUBLICATION | Notice is hereby given that James | | F. Dowling, has made application for a trade and manufacturing site, Anchorage 07809, for a tract of land described as lots 5 and 8, sec. 8, T.| 30 8. R. 58 E. CRM. contsxnlnsf 4459 acres. Any and all persons claiming ad- versely any of the above mentioned DONT FOOL YOURSELF land, should file their adverse| 5 claims in the U.S. Land Office, An- ‘ ‘ll"::rdo ; :‘: chorage, Alaska, within the period /) 1 of publication or thirty days there- to slave after, or they will be barred by and drudge when you the provisions of the Statutes. eu:’ save your u:lreuth GEORGE A. LINGO, and nerves with a Gen- Register. eral Electric Washer. First publication, Feb. 12, 1936. You are fooling no one Last publication, March 18, 1936. | when you zfis":i"df.! . é_g UNITED STATES Wast ook at this DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR GENERAL LAND OFFICE District Land Office Anchorage, Alaska. January 30, 1936, Notice is hereby given that Selma Pademeister, entrywoman, has made proof of her homestead entry, An- chorage 07887, together with her witnesses, Mrs. Linda Anderson and Klaas Grondsma, all of Juneau, Al- aska, for a tract of land situate on the Glacier Highway, one mile northwest of Juneau, Alaska, em- braced in U. S. Survey No. 2130, containing 0.76 acres, latitude 58 degrees 18’ 25" N. longitude 134 degrees 28’ 01” W. and it is now in the files of the U. S. Land Office, Anchorage, Alaska, and if no protest is filed in the local land office within the period of Dbublication, or thirty days there- after, said final proof will be ac- cepted and final certificate issued. GEORGE A. LINGO, Register. First publication, March 4, 1936, Last publication, April 29, 1936, E — un This marvel of me- chanical simplicity re- uires no attention rom you, not even, eiling the motor., GENERAL ) WASHERS COMPARE THESE G-E FEATURES ' @ PERMANENT LUBRICATION—oiled for a lifetime." ACTIVATOR—washes soiled clothes white, EASY ROLLING CASTERS. © QUICK-ACTION PUMP, & CONVENIENT CONTROLS, OME IN OR PHONE FOR FREE HOME WASHING i DO IT TODAY Maska Eleciric Light & Power o, Now $135 $13.50 Down the bank will consider taking Woman in Louisiana talked incessantly for more ! | MR S | client. They intimated that any MARCH N. Lester Troast Chester Shanks | Alice Hansen Murray | ———— Mrs. Froni The Emplre 20 YEARS AGO MARCH 18, 1916 Edward Krause was arraigned late naping and also impersonating an officer. Krause entered a plea of not | guilty to the kidnaping charge. On the charge of impersonating an of- | ficer, the atorneys filed a demurrer, The League of Nations decizes to dicker with|which will be argued Monday morn- ing at 11 o'clock. | Kazis Krauczunas | O'Bryan, attorneys for Krause, ab- | solutely denied that any partial confession had been made by their | stories to that effect were false and that the trial of Krause would be brought up in its regular turn be- fore the district court. “He could not confess,” they said, because so far as we know, there is nothing for him to confess. He has never made any statements to| anyone and therefore could not have| confesed anything. Any statements or stories to the contrary that you | may hear are without a doubt false.” | They added, however, that “While tirthday anniversary, .o the folloii- | ing: | 18 | | this afternoon on charges of kid-| and J. ol Modern Etiquette By Roberta l.ee —BIRTHDAY The Empire extends congratula- tions and best wishes today, their {or her first name? it Q. After a man and a woman have been introduced, who should| my begin first to call the other by his| ant day in planetary direction, ac- cording to astrology. Adverse aspects Horoscope “The stars incline but do not compel” ; —— THURSDAY, MARCH 19, 1936 A. This is the woman'’s privilege, appear to dominate. { though : continue to do so. i an invitation? A. A week is the maximum, but ! an invitation should really be ack- | nowledged within one or two days. Q When a finger Bowl and doily are placed on the dessert plate, and | jone is through using the bowl, what should one do? A. Place both the finger bowl and "(hv doily to the left of the dessert I plate. e . Daily Lessons in English 8y W. L. Gordoa WORDS OFTEN MISUESD: Do not say, “I want to see you badly.” Say, “I wish to see you very much.” OFTEN MISPRONOUNCED: Be- havior. Pronounce last syllable yer, n Be-hay-vi-er. OFTEN MISSPELLED: : Calis- thenics. or:Callisthenics. SYNONYMS: Eagerness, long- ing. craving, yearning. in Seattle, Krause admitted that he left Treadwell with William | Christie.” City Engineer B. D. Stewart re-| ported to the City Council con- buy from R. L. Lewis. The Juneau Woman’s Club pre- sented a petition to the city coun- cil asking for “The appointment of a delinquency officer, which office' shall be filled by a woman; the ap-| pointment of a competent physician as health officer, who shall have a| right to inspect and maintain a strict watch over contagious dis- eases; the enforcing of all ordin- | ances on the books and others which ' may be made in the future con- | cerning fire prevention and fire ex< its in public buildings.” i | Secretary Lane announced that “The United States is deadly in| earnest and Villa will regret tha‘ day that his bandits crossed the border and left death and destruc- tion at Columbus, Mexico.” Weather: Maximum, mum, 34; Snow. 1 36; Minl—‘ | PAINTS — OILS i | Builders’ and Shelf | | HARDWARE i | | 1 Thomas Hardware Co. !{ the BEST! If you're out to please the man of the family . . . let us help you! A grand selection of good food . . . vegetables and all the things that men like best. Sanitary Grocery PHONE 83 or 85 “The Store That Pleases” WORD STUDY: “Use a word three times and it is yours.” Let us | increase our vocabulary by mast- ering one word each day. Today's word: PRECARIOUS; uncertain; “I do not envy these men their precarious fortunes.” — Look ard Learn By A. C. Gordon -eoe 1. How many Japanese reside in the U. 8.2 ing the administration of Coolidge? 3. Does an iceberg contain salt? 4. What is a dodo? 5. Where is the highest bridge in the world? ANSWERS 1. 1930 census gives 138,834; more han 97,000 of those live in Calif- ia. | 2. Charles G. Dawes, 8. Very little, as the salt separ- es as the water freezes. 4. A flightless bird, now extinct, ¥elated to the pigeons, but larger than a turkey. 5. The bridge across the Royal Garge of the Arkansas River, near Canon City, Colorado; 1052 feet above the river. ——..-—— SPEND WHERE YOU MAKE 11! e rree e Peter Pan Beauty Shoppe PHONE 221 AN L~ MARGARET LINDSAY, Prop. HELVI PAULSON, Operator R ] “THE REXALL STORE” The B. M. Juneau, Resources Over JUNEAU6 - DOUGLAS18 || The juncan Lamndry | Franklin Street between ' Front and Second Bank COMMERCIAL and SAVINGS Half Millidw Dollars 4 Behrends Alaska Two and One quite often the man will call the woman by her first name, i then apologize; if the woman then| tiyqte reticence, since the stars fore-: grants him the privilege, he may 2. Who was Vice President dur- Butler Mauro Drug Co. I e N While women are under a prom- ising rule they are warned to cul- shadow much gossip and evil re- port. Libel suits may be numerous| ! Q. What is the longest time one|jate in the summer. should wait before acknowledging This should be a favorable sway for shopping, although Special care should be given to selections since snap judgments must not be trusted. Prejudices and misjudgments may be encouraged easily under this planetary government which in- clines men and women to believe the worst. cated. One of extraordinary char- acter may have a far-reaching ef- fect on the Pacific coast. | There is a mildly helpful influence today for those who sign contracts. Whatever concerns building should be profitable. Newspapers and those who write for them are to profit in coming months when there will be many changes among editors and publish- ers. Death will remove two promin- ent figures from the world of journ- | alism. It is foretold. The year is to be marked by a great many assemblies of men and women. In addition to conventions, world’s fairs and state fairs will become political forums. Persons whose birthdate it is have the augury of a year of uncertaint- {ies. Changes are likely and they | should be beneficial. Women should ]‘he careful in accepting strangers ' as friends. i Children born on this day prob- ably will be exceedingly energetic! "and courageous in whatever inter- ests them. Subjects of this sign us- jually are lucky in winning fame. ! Willian Jennings Bryan, orator and statesman, was born on this day 1860. Others who have cele- brated it as a birthday include Oc- |gx tavus Thanet (Alice French), writ-| er, 1850; David Todd, American' | astronomer, 1885; Charles Ernest Acker, inventor, 1868. | ST e SHOP IN JUNEAU' £ Tl e o Tty MAURICE AKRE | GUITAR INSTRUCTOR | SPANISH STYLE—Single or a series of lessons oifered, | | J | | STUDIO—416 Goldstein Bldg. J " “WORK GUARANTEED” | Supreme Radio Service CALL 634 TUBE TEST CARDINAL CABS 'his is read as rather an unimport- | | Airplane accidents are prognasti-|” i 7 L 6:30 and by appointment. 1 i I H FOR SERVICE AND FREE l\ | ) S e i PHYSIOTHERAPY Massage, Electricity, Infra 3ea Ray, Medical Gymnastics 207 GOLDSTEIN BLDG. Phone Office, 216 -+ SRR — | DRS. KASER & FREEBURGER | DENTISTS | Blomgren Building | | | PHONE 56 _Hours 9 am to ) pm. Rt G iyl (T, /3 ~—y Dr. C. P. Jenne [ l DENTIST Rooms 8 and 9 Valentine | | | al i Building | Telephone 176 ——— — Dr. Richard Williams DENTIST QJFICE AND RE JIDENCE Gastineau Bu.lding Phone 431 | e — T . | Py = Dr. A. W. Stewart b DENTIST | BEWARD PUILDING | | Hours 9 am. to 6 pm. , Office Pone 469 ] P e b | TELEPHONE 563 Office Hours—9-12; 1-6 | Dr. W. A. Rystrom DENTIST | Gver First National Bank | X-RAY i Robert Simpson | Ope. D. | Graduate Angeles Col- | | ‘ege of Optumetry and Opthalmo’ogy | Glasses Fitted Lenses Ground L — 53 " DR. H. VANCE USTEOPATH I Cornsuliation a nd examinsticn Pree. Hours 10 to 12; 1 to 5; Office Grand Apis., Lear Gas- | tizeau Hotel. Phone 177 B - [ SRR s g o U | T GENERAL MOTORS ] and W. P. JGHNSON - | g 4 r 2 ’ Jones-Stevens Shop | j ! | wAYTAG PRODUCTS | LADIES’ — MISSES’ | READY-TO-WEAR H Seward Street Near Third BRUNSWICK BOWLING ALLEYS Rheiniander and Alt Heidelberg BEER ON TAP JUNEAU-YOUNG Hardware Company PAINTS—OIL—G | Shelf and Heavy Hardware | Guns and Ammunition Construction Co. Juneaun | (VARRACK i l | i HALF PRICE | Juneau Frock Shoppe | “Exclusivé: But Not Expensive” = H.'B. FOSS COMPANY ARCHITECTS--CONTRACTORS PHONE 107 JuNEAU When in Need of DIESEL OIL—UTAH COAL GENERAL HAULING BNIQGB and CRATING GARBAGE HAULED | Reasonable Monva.s Rates I | { E. O. DAVIS TELEPRONE 584 Phone 4753 — =i PROFESSIONAL — g [ — : Helene W. L. Albrecht ‘ | I | Fraternal Societies i i sty 1 | Gastineau Channet A e i B.P. 0. ELKS mees every Wednesday at 8 P, M. Visiting broticrs wete come. M. E. MONAGLE, Exalted Ruler. M. H SIDES, Secretary. - KNIGHTS OF COLUMBUS Seghers Council No.'i i 1760. Meetings second and last Monday af 7:30 p. m. Transient orothers urged’ #o: at- Iu.—.d. Council Ch.n bers, Fifth St. JOHN:F. MULLREN, G. K, H. J. TURNER, Sccretary. B ~ e TMOUNT JUNEAU' LeDGE No. 147 Uecond and fourth Mon- & beginning at 7:30 p. m, MARTIN S. JORGEN- day of each month in Scottish Rite Temple, SEN, Worshipful Master; JAMES W. LEIVERS, Secretary. —_— \ | | bt | TXPEWRITERS RENTED | $5.00 per month i J. B. Burford & Co. “Our doorstep is worn by I * satisfied customers” 1 | i | We can do no more .... . . . quiet attention to every detail, the utmost in respect and reverence toward those who trust us in their hour of need, the .ultimate in per- sonal service, moderate rates fo all who come . . . it is to these we owe our reputation. The Charles W. Carter Mortuary FHRNE; 1302 — Y burner treuble. PHONE 149; NIGHT 148 RELIAALE TRANSFER I bbb STACES l Our trucks go any place any {|| time. A tank for Diesel OIl | | { ~and a tank for Crude Oil save ‘ Commercial Adjust- t} ment & Rating Bureau | Cooperating with White Serv- | ice Bureau ROOM 1—SHATTUCK BLDG. | | We have 5,000 local ratings on file HUTEL ZYNDA ELEVATOR SERVICRE S. ZYNDA, Prop. PRI e O RN e . McCAUL MOTOR ‘ | COMPANY Dodge and Plymouth Dealers l = i§ FORD AGENCY f (Authorized Dealers® GREASES GAS—OILS JUNEAU MOTORS Foot of Main Btreet TAP BEER IN TOWN! ® RTHE' Patl 5y ec‘teé_;:& 'a‘g ors (a4