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¢ § § § ot P R s s THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, WEDNESDAY, MARCH 25, 1936. Daily Alaska Empire ROBERT “' BENDER - - Editor and Manager, hed cvery evening e PRINTIN A Second and Main Entered in the Post Office in Juneau as Second Class mattcr a7 SUBSCRIPTION RATES. Delivered by carrier in Juneau and Douglas for $1.25 per_month. By malil, postage paid, at the following r One year, in_advance, $12.00; six months, i $6.00; one month, in_advanoce, si.25 Subscribers will confer a favor if they will promptly notify the Business Office of any failure or irregularity in the delivery of their paper Telephones: News Office, 6 MEMBER OF ASSOCIATED PRESS. The Assoclated Press Is exclusively entitled to the | use for republication of all news dispatches credited to it or not otherw local news published herein ; Business Office, ALASKA CIRCULATION GUARANTEED TO BE LARGER THAN THAT OF ANY OTHER PUBLICATION ept _Sunday by the | | but Gov. Landon hopes a lot of Republicans don’t get | to look as if politics was getting back to normal. |in the way in which Gov. Hoffman and “Jafsie” Con- | don are dodging each other. credited in this paper and also the| g | | sons, houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable | searches and seizures, shall not be violated, and no, Ewurmms shall issue but upon probable cause, sup- | ported by oath or affirmation, and particular Amendment to the Constitution—the “Man’s home is his castle” amendment. It expresses a basic right, a | pression and bloodshed. |ization about the ends justifying the means—such, !ployed in their defense of wire tapping and home | raiding without warrants. piece with that short and easy course of torture that police and prosecutors so often try to take in obtaining acted wisely and it may be hoped that Delegate Di- mond can carry the message to the right sources in Washington. Borah is classed as the Republican “white hope,” their hope. With three mayoralty tickets in the field it begins There must be great comfort to Bruno Hauptmann The Black Controversy. (New York World-Telegram) “The right of the people to be secure in their per- s dee seribing the place to be searched, and the ’1!("‘~r)hs or things to be seized.” That language is pretty clear. It is Il\c Fourth very precious right, a right born of centuries of op- Its violation cannot be justified by any rational- for example, as the zealots in prohibition days em- Circumvention of this Fourth Amendment is of a HAPPY —BIRTHDAY The Empire extends congratula- tions and Uvest wishes todoy, their tirthday anniversary, «o the follo: ing: MARCH 25 ; J. M. Giovanetti Mrs. R. P. Nelson Mrs. Dave S. Burnett W. K. Fukuyama ” Lincoln = Turner i W.'B. Kilroy i — Ot > er knife is not provided? 3! MARCH 25, 1916 | Edward Krause, through his at-{ torney, Kasis Krauczunas, entered | a plea of not guilty o the four in- dictments returned yesterday charg- ing forgery. Plea was entered with the understanding attorneys for the L defense would be allowed to file a demurrer to the indictments at any time before April 2. The city of Verdun was reported Modern Etiquette By Roherta I .ee Q. When should the groom pay Ythe minister his weddingg fee? A. The groom does not give the fee to the minister personally. He should place the money or check in an envelope and. give it to his ‘heq man, who will hand it to the | miister following the ceremony. Q. When giving a musicale, should offer to pay ' an armt i el | the hostes: for his | A Yes, From The Empire [ Q. How | | by Axll means do s0. should one take from the butter plate when a but- 20 YEARS AGO e theis of e e | S eee - R e e e e Daily Lessons in English 6y W. L. Gordon WORDS OFTEN MISUSED: Do E ‘This picture is not as large osts more than the other one.” Sa large but costs more.” OFTEN MISPRONOUNCED e e e i OPEN GLACIER BAY FOR PROSPECTI The Alaska Territorial Chamber of Commerce this|man to be punished, the preservation of any of the week has endorsed the bill introduced by Delegate inherent rights such as the one under discussion now Anthony J. Dimond in Congress providing for the; convictions. On the well worn theory that it is better for a hundred guilty to escape than for an innocent {1s more vital than any resuit, however good, that might be attained through the violation. to be in flames, according to state- ment of army officials. The city was fired by the heavy howitzer fire which was concentrated to pre- vent the transportation of troops and ammunition to the firing line e S opening of Glacier Bay National Monument to pros- | d 2. Since the administration of the late Presi- 5 i S | that Fourth Amendment in prosecuting its search for dent Coolidge, who signed the bill closing the area, | evigence. the district has been closed to mining of all kinds.| At the time President Coolidge signed the order it was | believed that the area might present something of in- terest in the way of a national park. Since it has been | proven that the district is virtually denuded of any- | thing that is worthy of marking it for a national park. The fact of the matter is that not even vegeta- | tion of any outstanding nature exists in the district. That, however, does not discredit those who in the first instance planned it for a national park. Only time could tell the right answer. But now Geologists are convinced it will never be the natural playground that Mt. McKinley park and other natural wonderlands offer. though that the entire district has deposits of copper, molybdenite and probably gold and silver. Why then not open it to prospecting as Delegate Dimond advo- cates and the 14 member chambers of the Alaska that the procedure was regular, that proper subpoe- nas were served, that the committee acted manner employed and approved by every Congression- al investigation since 1792. the executive branch of the government and operating under authority limited against such an act, provided the Black committee with a “blanket” copy of every telegram sent in or out of Washington for a consider- iable period of time is also alleged. To that Senator Black replies that no telegrams in possession of the committee were supplied by any other branch of the government. They do find | The assertion is now made that the Black Lobby |last Investigating Committee exceeded its authority under The counter assertion is made py Senator Black the That the Communications Commission, a part of And there the controversy now stands. Judgment cannot be passed until more evidence is in. The court test of the legality. under the Fourth Amendment, of the committee’s action is to be made. | We are glad of that. For the outcome will reveal wheth- | er the basic right has been violated or whether the at- tack on the Black committee is just another backfire, such as was instituted in an attempt to stop the Teapot Dome investigation. i Theodore Roosevelt was petition- ed by 600 cowboys to lead a volunteer expedition after “Rough Ride Villa. Henry Ford, who aggreed to bring peace to Europe and failed, carrie the Oscar II idea into his employ ees’ homes, when he issued rules providing that employees who disa- gree with their wives must hoist the white flag, obtain a divorce or quit the employ of the company, the idea being that the men who quarrel with their wives make poor workmen. Dr. Frederick 2. Took of North Pole fame was given a hearing be- fore the House Committee on Edu- cation on his claim to the discovery of the North Pole. Simon Hellenthal received a build- old age Wi ous.” point when earth? are there? fidel. Pronounce second i as in fit | (not as in fight), e as in dell un- stressed, accent first syllable OFTEN MISSPELLED: Vermii-| ion; one 1. Million; SYNONYMS decrepitude, superannuation, dotage, § Horosmpe “The stars incline but do not compel” THURSDAY, MARCH, 26, 1936 cultural problems, for Saturn smiles upon farmers A;Lmlogem who have long em- phasized the importance of de- centralization in United States gov- ernmental affairs now foretell suc- cess in projects undertaken by cities, counties and states. Mercury smiles today upon writ- ers and seems to promise good tid- ings in the newspapers. It is an au- spicious day for signing contracts and other legal papers. under this sway which encourages planning rather than actual work. Engineers, contractors and archi- tects should benefit greatly in the coming summer. Steel may be utilized more than | ever before in modern buildings. New inventions will benefit the home-builder and will improve the dwellings of moderate cost. s where public affairs are d are subject to the best possible rule of the siars. Lawyers should be fortunate under this sway. An eastern astrologer who has made a study of the horoscope of aspirants for President warns that Colonel Frank Knox, Chicago pub- lisher, should be ruled by prudence. _‘fl Benefic aspects rule today, accord- ing to astrology. It is a time for courageous effort in adjusting agri- ;———— DB.S. KASER & FREEBURGER Building will occupy attention | | In the evening banquets and other [ 7] L Helene W.L. Albrecht 1 PHYSIOTHERAPY Ray, Medical Gymnastics 307 GOLDSTEIN BLDG. Phone Office, 216 DENTISTS Blomgren Building PHONE 56 Hours 9 am- 0 3 pm. Massage, Electricity, Infra =d P O R A S e ] LI A R T Dr. C. P. Jenne DENTIST | « Rooms 8 and 9 Valentine 1 Building Telephone 176 1 (S DENTIST ! OIFIZE AND RE JIDENCE | Gastineau Bu.lding Phone 431 O e T Dr. Richard Williams B — DENTIST Hours 9 am. to 6 p.m. BEWARD PUILDING Office Pone 469 R Dr. A. W. Stewart [ —a TELEPHONE 563 — ——— ____Tn RD STUDY: three times and it is yours.” increase our vocabulary my master- ing one word each word: PREPROSTEROUS; rary to nature, reason, sense. “Such ideas are preposter- “Use ’| word Look arnd Learn By A. C. Gordon 1. Has lightening towards the 2 Who was the first woman to! gione. fly across an ocean alone? 3. How many Office Hours—9-12; 1-6 Dr. W. A. Rystrom for there is an “obstructive combin- ation in his natal chart.” The same seer finds that Govern- DENTIST g|or Eugene Talmadge of Georgia Gver First National Bank “lacks dominance of leadership” but X-RAY there is a possibility of his coming | g | before the Philadelphia convention. | His criticism of the President is due | to a clash between influences of the | ruling stars of the two Democrats. Persons whose birthday it is have the augury of a year of great activi- ty, assuring satisfactory incomes. Older folk will aid those who are Opthalmo’ogy younger. | Glasses Fitted Lenses Ground | Children born on this day probab- | ¥ = ———— Robert Simpson o Upt. D. Graduate Los Angeles Col- ‘ege of Optumetry and i 3 h; ily will be self-reliant, trustworlh\“ and capable of real success. Sub-| DR. H. VANCE Jects of this sign are usually fond | OSTEOPATH of building chacacters and institu- Consuliation and examinsticn Free. Hours 10 to 12; 1 to 5; 7 ‘0 &:30 and by appointment. Office Grand Apis., near Gas- tizeau Hotel. Phone 177 i ident of Amherst, was born on this | 1 Heman Humphrey, onetime pres-i |day 1779. Others who have cele-k |ing permit for erection of a large| "4 What is a sphygmometer? e B A R i | | | | Chamber of Commerce have unanimously endorsed? ( Attitude of Millions. | ‘Whether or not Gla mate continues. 600,000 square miles there is room for lock up the known mineral areas whes room for natural parks? The Territory can not hope | €€ction.” | for development if all its major areas are withdrawn from the prospector. The cold fact is that too much of Alaska’s vast acreage is tied up tion. More than 90 per 10 per cent of her heritage. The question is simple. Is Alaska park for the world or a mighty empi If she is to be the latter, the Glacier Bay area cer- tainly should be opened for prospecting as are other | for snow and vice.—(H. I. Phillips in New York Sun.) thousands of square miles within her borders. The | Territorial Chamber of Commerce, UNITED STATES 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”7 W. and it is now in the files of the U. 8. Land Office, Anchorage, Alaska, and if no protest is filed in the local Jand office within the period of publication, or thirty days there- after, said final proof will be ac- cepted and final certificate issued. GEORGE A. LINGO, ier Bay 15 opel be, to prospecting, the danger remains in staking out the areas of Alaska for reserves. That means the ulti- ing,up of all the best districts if the practice Alaska is a land abounding in mineral | simple and affecting: wealth. It also is justly famed for its wild life. In its | the administration, because it ha BRUNELLE TG BE ned, as it should (Atlanta Journal) “The phrase used by a Laurens county farmer in a letter to the Dublin, Ga., Courier-Herald in stating his position toward Roosevelt and his administration is 1 could not say anything against s helped me when | both. Why then | I could not help myself.’ And that. in all probability, | n there is ample | will be the attitude of many millions in the coming | Los Angeles is barring persons without financial | means; if Uncle Sam doesn’t look out, he may come now by regula- | within this classification. — (Savannah Morning cent of her lands is in | News) reserved areas. She can not be rightly developed with PREnCl SR R 0 The alphabetical agencies may have cost the | country a lot of money, but not as much as WAR.— | to be a natural ( (Norfolk Virginian-Pilot.) | re in the north? | It's certainly been a terrible winter in New York | “The Taxpayers,” says an editorial, “need a battle- \Vhat about * Ouch;”waaybon Joumal) we believe, has s0 be present at the meeting. GUEST SPEAKER An announcement of a forthcom- | ing Poster Contest, open to Juneau AT C. C. MEETING ' school children, will be made at the meeting. A guest speaker, M. E. S. Brunelle of Cordova, Tertitorial Senator, President of the Territorial Cham- be MRS. M'DAIRMID ON Y! I(UN of Commerce, and connected western Railroad, will be a feature | States Coast Guard Leutter Morris, of the Chamber of Commerce lunch- |is a passenger dboard the Yukon en- eon in the Terminal Cafe tomorrow. | route westward. QuicK.. : HOROUGH AND.. pconomicat everything you want you'll find in a Several returning members will al-| | Mrs. Donald B. McDairmid, wife | with the Copper River and North-{of the commander “of ithe United | Register. First publication, March 4, 1936. Last publication, April 29, 1936. GENERAL @ ELECTRIC s T UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF THE INTEHIOR GENERAL LAND OFFICE District Land Office Anchorage, Alaska. January 13, 1936. Notice is hereby given that Harry F. Starr, entryman, together with his witnesses E. J. Kirschofer and Frank Deorge, all of Juneau, Al- aska, has made final proof on his homestead, Anchorage 08033, for a tract of land situate on the Glacier Highway about 7 miles from Ju- neau, embraced in U. S. Survey No. 2153, containing 6.46 acres, lati- tude 58 degrees 21’ 44” N. longitude 134 degrees 33° W. and it is now in the files of the U. 8. Land Of- fice, Anchorage, Alaska, and if no protest is filed in the local land office within the period of pub- lication or thirty days thereafter, said final proof will be accepted and final certificate issued. GEORGE A. LINGO, Register. First publication, Feb. 5, 1936. Last publication, April 1, I'fl.;( # WASHER AMONG ITS FEATURES! 1. Activator Washing Action. 2. Permanent Oiling. > 3. Life-long Adjustable Mechanism. 4. Quiet Washing Operation, 5. Trouble Free GE Motor. 6. Built by General Electric. ONLY $60.00 CASH—A Real Washer Value if there ever was onel 100% General Electric quality. SOLD ON EASY PAYMENT PLAN Alaska Elctric Light & Power o, JUNEAU 6 DOUGLAS 18 residence on Calhoun Avenue. The grand jury recessed until Wednesday morning of the coming week Weather: Maximum, 40;" Mini mum, 33; cloudy. — .- ATTENTION MOOSE Regular meeting Friday night, | Moose Hall, at 8 o'clock. Initiation, refreshments and entertainment. All members urged to attend. adv. STANDS FOR 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™ 4 5. What was built | where Chicago nmw stands? 1. No; it mm(‘h IuIlo\\\ the path of least resistance. 2. Amelia Earhart 13. About 400,000. 4. An ' instrument for measuring lh(' strength of the pulse beat . Fort Dearbcln (‘ARD OF THANKS Our sincere thanks is extended f ST SR Peter Pan Beauty MARGARET LINDSAY, Prop. HELVI PAULSON, Operator | brated it as a birthday mcludmg‘., on the site Rohert Fros == | Storer, physician and naturalist, | , poet, 1875; David H 1804, —'COp right, 1936). PHONE r many friends for their offer- E&,s during the illness and loss of r beloved husband and father, Pred H. Rowe. MRS. FRED H. ROWE, FRED J. ROWE, adv. ROBERT H. ROWE. — ., SHOP IN JUNEAD" CARDINAL CABS “THE REXALL STORk” Supreme Radio Service 1 "WORK GUARANTEED" | — FENERAL MOTORS and MAYTAG PRODUCTS | W.P.JCHNSON Jones-Stevens Shop READY-TO-WEAR i LADIES’ — MISSES' i Seward Street [ Near Third BRUNSWICK BOWLING ALLEYS Rheiniander and Alt BEER ON TAP JUNEAU-YOUNG Harry Race Hardware Company Druggist PAINTS—OIL—GLASS | Shelf and Heavy Hardware CHOCOLATES | | Guns and Ammunition ! | - GARBAGE HAULED CALL 634 FREE E. O. DAVIS | FOR SERVICE AND el . 5 Phone 4753 - .l The B. M. Behrends g Bank Juneau, Alaska COMMERCIAL and SAVINGS Resources Over Two and One Half Million Dollars Construction Co. | Juneauw Phone 487 | | | WARRACK J H. B. FOSS COMPANY ARCHITEGTS--CONTRACTORS. PHONE 107 JuNEAU When in Need of DIESEL OIL—-UTAH COAL GENERAL HAULING STORAGE and CRATING CALL US Your ALASKA LAUNDRY ——— ] Fraternal Societies | OF —— — 1 Gastineau Channel :i B. P. 0. RLKS mees every Wednesday at 8 P. M. Visiting brothcrs wes. come M. E. MONAGLR, Exalted Ruler. M. H SIDES, Secrei=~y. KNIGHTS OF COLUMBUS Seghers Council No. i 1760. Meetings second ¢ and lest Monda~ at 7:30 L. m. Transient )7 orothers urged to at- \\49/ tend. Council Chum- vers, Fifth St. JOHN F. MULL®Exs, 5. K., H. J. TURNER, Secretary. MOUNT JUNEAU .CDGE NO. 147 Second and fourth Mone day of each month in G Scottish Rite Temple 4 beginning at 7:30 p. m MARTIN 8. JORGEN. SEN, Worshipful Master; JAME* W. LEIVERS, Secretary. , RO s e e | TYPEWRITERS RENTEL $5.00 per month i J. B. Burford & Co. “Our Joorstep is worn by atisfied customers” TRIBUTE Those who regard a fun- eral service not as a duty but rather as an expres- sion of love and devo- tion, appreciate the feel- ing of sympathy, peace- fulness and deep solem- nity which pervades a funeral service as con- ducted by our organiza- tion of experienced mor- ticians. The Charles W. Carter Mortuary PHONE 136-2 Our trucks go any place any ‘r time. A tank for Diesel Oil | and a tank for Crude Oil save burner trouble. I PHONE 149; NIGHT 148 RELIASLE TRANSFER | e Y Commercial Adjust- | ment & Rating Bureau Cooperating with White Serv- | ice Bureau ROOM 1—SHATTUCK BLDG. | We have 5,000 local ratings on file | p—— HUTEL ZYNDA ELEVATOR SERVICE S. ZYNDA, Prop. McCAUL MOTOR COMPANY Dodge and Plymouth Dealers ; e —— FORD AGENCY (Authorized Dealers® GREASES GAS—OILS JUNEAU MOTORS PHONE 15 TAP BEER IN TOWN! ® 3 THE MINERS" Recreation Parlors