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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, TUESDAY, MARCH 31, 1936. lon the smoothness of our political machinery, and, of course, the loser always, for lack of a better excuse, blames “politics.” But we are infants in arms in this game of politi Note Herr Hitler, the great man of Daily Alaska Empire ROBERT “’."BENDER - - Editor and Manager Published 7'. vening "\\_“I;( \-:\:.”‘::;{f"'r..,};" “‘\""'\' Germar No graphs nor charters on how Sorghum e g U bl and Mt | untry is going in the Hitler scheme. He has the sure s Second Class | Method for winning elections—getting all the votes P Brief study of the Sunday election in Germany reveals how he does it. One ballot was prepared. It had one circle where the voter could cast his vote for SUBSCRIPTION RATES. Dellvered by carrier in Juneau and Douglas for $1.25 per_month By mail, postage Baid. at the following ratcs the Nazi government, which is Hitler. All ballots 3 six 8, a e, N o " R e mosihe eV oy months, In advance. | o ked otherwise were declared “invalid.” The final Subscribers will confer & favor if they will promptly | toyo revealed, says the report from the German pro- Office or irregularity heir notify the Busin B oftic MEMBER OF ASSOCIATED PRESS. The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the! use for republication of all news dispatches credited to or not otherwise credited in this paper and also the [Beal Rews published herein. anyway. ALASKA CIRCULATION GUARANTEED TO BE LARGER Now there IS a system. Backed up with the: force THAN THAT OF ANY OTHER PUBLICATION |of a few hundred thousands Nazi shock troops, it was, 3 " las we put it in this country, “in the bag.” A great deal of noise has been going on over here, especially since the Roosevelt administration went into | power, about dictatorship. What do we know about dictatorship? Has President Roosevelt carried on with such a high hand in this country that he called a spe- cial election every six months and then handed out the right kind of ballots to see that he got a vote of confidence? Of course not. Everyone knows the thought is silly. Under our form of government, Roose- velt nor no other public official in our country could | or would do such a thing, nor attempt it. Those who are shouting dictatorship in Washington might do well to look over politics as it is played in Germany. The comparison readily shows how utterly ridiculous is the charge of dictatorship in this country. paganda bureau, that 99 per cent of the votes support- ed Hitler, The other one per cent was thrown out as “invalid.” Guarding against any slip up, Hitler long since disenfranchised the Jews, so they couldn’t vote 374 THE NORTHWARD MIGRATION. ——— | Cities and communities of Alaska, concerned as! No wonder the League of Nations turned to “new well they might be over the intlux of job seekers business” in the Rhineland. Mussolini has the situa- to the North again this spring, are entering protest tion well in hand in Ethiopia ,and Germany offered against misleading advertising in the States wln(‘hfa fine chance for the League to change the subject. give many of the uninformed the idea they can easily | e get a job if they can but scrape up the money to’ Who's kicking up that dust storm in New Mexico? come to the Territory. Such a situation is umcrtu-fWe thought Borah was in Washington and Landon nate and is bound to bring hardship in many in-|in Kansas. stances. Not only will the communities suffer if too - many without resources come looking for work lhat; We'll bet Bruno Hauptmann isn’t available but the individuals themselves who are |against the power trust. on a quest to a new land will be disillusioned. Coupled} with the fact that Federal relief is discontinued for | lack of funds, it is indeed an unfortunate circum- | stance. (New York Times) But there is another side to the picture which 1s| Navigation brings us naturally to the lady whose too often’ overshadowed by the immediate problem.|{AC€ Was reputed to have launched a thousand ships. | s T warq | AbOUt this Helen of Troy the world long ago got to | ity SRUe ar ferkiso - ever b '°f"'“rd;suspe-ct that she was no better than she should be, | They didn't pick and choose the |y it is now asserted an expert archaeological author- | people that migrated by covered wagon across the|ity that Helen actually never was. Our Ambassador | is one guy who's Helen Provoked Sanctions. without population? | | | £ | HAPPY —BIRTHDAY The Empire extends comgratula- tions and best wishes today, their, ‘rthday anniversary, 5 the follois-| ‘ing: | | Mrs. 1. P. Taylor i Mrs. G. E. Cleveland | Sally Shafer Francis A. Reindeau - .. { Fromi The Empire | { 20 YEARS AGO || 4 e | 2 The grand jury returned antother indetment in two counts against Edward Krause. This indictment charges that Krause forged a pub- lic document, consisting of a sub- poena issued out of the district court at Juneau, and served on Wil- liam Christie at Treadwell, and that after securing Christie’s signature on the supposed document, he-des- troyed it. The other count was iden- tical with the exception that it al-) leged the forged paper was issued[ by the Commissioner’s courf at Ju- neau. This made the eighth indict- ment returned against Krause by| the present grand jury. “ Ernest Schiller, German spy, wxasi captured in Delaware and placed | ' was Pancho Villa, famous Mexican | bandit, who was reported suffering| ollowing a fierce battle at San Ger- fatherless by the war. | i Ralph E. Robertson, returned on the Alameda from Portland, where | he had been conducting a case. | | A herd of government inspected | cows arrived in Juneau for a new | dairy, proprietors of which were| Mrs. M. Bernhofer, connected with ! the Bergmann hotel, and George plains to seek gold in California in '49. They all went | to Turkey recently visited the site of Troy where exca- west; the rich and the poor, the industrious and the|vations are being conducted by the University of | bum. The crowd follows the tide of empire, and the | Cincinnati. He was told that the story of Helen and crowd is made up of all kinds. Under force of cnr-i”"’ ten years' war is a myth, 5 | cumstances they all somehow find their niche. Many | The demolition of Helen is a pity, for any number | = 5 of reasons. Today we cannot help recalling that Helen | return - disappointed failures; others stay €0 |ya; the heroine of one of the few cases of effective | win success and achieve. !sanctions in history. She was carried off from her The migration to Alaska, that is if we want migra- husband Menelaus by the Trojan prince, Paris tion, which seems to be a popular thought. is bound | Thereupon Menelaus and his brother Agamemnon. to be like all others of history. The bad must be |king of Mycenae, demanded of all the Greek pr taken with the good. From the grain the chaff will| collective sanctions against Paris (which has an odg sound today) and obtained them and be weeded by natural process, and Alaska will go b The Greeks be- | o b i e sieged Troy for ten years before it fell, which is not : o odtisg & b s0 slow as sanctions go nowadays. Most of the time The pressure of actual existence is often the|wag taken up by quarrels among the sanctionars s mother of invention and those coming north who'Greeks; and that, too, has a strangely familiar sound have what it takes will be able to tind ways and | But if Helen of Troy goes into the discard, so much means of livelihood. The others will return some goes with her—Achilles, and Hector, and Ulysses, and how from whence they came | Aeneas. who carried his old father, Anchises, from The humanitarian position of those authorities | tN® bUrning ruins of Troy on ‘s shoulders and sailed throughout the Territory who are today attempting away to found Rome. Will Mussolini stand for this? £ et the flow: of fnis-infarmation: is. laudable And if a thousand warships have got to be launched, NO| wouldn't most people prefer a thousand galleys ! one with an ounce of human blood in his veins wants | Jaunched by Helen’s face than a thousand bombing to see people starve and face unnecessary hardship ' planes by the face, shall we say, of General Hermann with which they are not familiar. It is absolutely a | Goering? first essential that we in the North keep pounding on | the fact that resources are a prime requisite for com- | ing to Alaska. There are muny who will take heed. The ones that do not, can not be stopped any way. | g (Cleveland Plain Dealer) And again, it is but natural for us to want to protect | ha\IL{ ;';] l:p;')(‘:\l"l,\' p(euce mf" t)he foran:s w;nt ‘:jhe_v Qr own peoplé by givi i g | havi ortunity now to show it. ey should at emplosment. But it annot e overosken hat e |1, LU 0 (he League since Gormany again con- e siders herself an equal with her European neighbors. coming today are the ones who may be first 20 years | Then negotiations can be conducted within that organ- from now. |ization on the German demand that it be divorced Surely the fight for education and correct infor-|from the hated Versailles treaty. mation must be carried on. It is only fair to the It is Germany's turn to display her good faith. people that live here and those that want to come|EUrope is on edge because it believes that the old here to make their homes. But since the beginning of | time, the peoples of the earth have migrated. They will continue to migrate until the end. Trying to stop A st Germany’s Good Faith. e branch she offers is genuine even though it was tend- ered on the point of a a bayonet. i them is like trying to stop the tide ! 2 NI, T Life used to be what we made it. Now it's what ! REAL DICTATORSHIP. | Washington makes it.—Dallas News. £ In this country we make a great deal of politics With $200 2 month in Townsend Plan money, & %; and politicians. Sometimes we rather pride ourselves | has-been would be a has.—Detroit News. £ | { 7 | yok PHONE everything you want you'll find in a ', GENERAL & ELECTRIC WASHER | 1. Activator Washing Action. PR—— CARDINAL 3. Life-long Adjustable Mechanism. 4. Quiet Washing Operation. c A B s 5. Trouble Free GE Motor. Built by General Electric. policy of “blood and iron” once more prevails. It is to | Germany's interest to give evidence that the olive | —_— Danner, one of the most experienced | dairy men in the north. The Knud-| son ranch at Mendenhall was being prepared, barns remodeled and oth -; er improvements made. Regular de- | liveries by auto were promised lnr‘; the residential sections of the city S £ | FINE Watch and Jewelry Repairing PAUL BLOEDHORN at very reasonable rates FRONT STREET G L o8 WHEN IN A H1 RRY CALL COLE FOR OIL! 34 plus or 27 gruvity, in any amcunt . . . QUICK! COLE TRANSI=X Phone 3441 or Night 1803 | | the Modern Etiquette By Roherta I.ee Q. What is the correct pronun- th { word both masculine and feminine? { A. Pronounce fe-ang-sa, e as in ! me, first a as in ah, second a as in ciation of “fiancee,” and is say, principal accent on last sy “able. Pinace (one e) is masculine, fiancee (two e's) is feminine. Q. It is really necessary for one ics with a roast? a roast really requires to serve vegetal A. Yes; vegetables to accompany it. Q. It is obligatory for a man to give his seat to a woman in a street car or bus? A. No; it is merely optional. S e Daily Lessons in English 6y W. L. Gordon - not say, “funeral obsequies.” Om funeral. Obsequies means rites OFTEN MISPRONOUNCED : | cies. Truth is to prevail in an am- Frieze. Promounce the same as|azing degree. Scandals and dishon- | freeze. esty in many lines of human activi- | OFTEN MISSPELLED; Nymph; pronounced nimf. SYNONYMS; Praiseworthy, laud- under close guard. Also near capture | Pl¢. meritorious, commendable, es- timable. WORD STUDY: “Use a wort from a broken leg and other injuries | three times and it is yours.” Let us | spring opens with promise of pros- increase our vocabulary by master- nomimo. An announcement from| ‘D¢ one word each day. Today's| French headquarters said 800,000 Word: Devoid: destitu_te of; one in French children had been made DOssession of. “The article was whol- 1y devoid of public interest.” A T R ——— Look and Learn By A. C. Gordon 1. How is 1936 written in Roma; numerals? ied? 3. Is “Marion” a girl’s or a boy’ name? cient Egyptian Sun God? 5. Of what country was Catha; ancient name? ANSWERS 1. MCMXXXVI. 2. In the Episcopal Cathedral, in Washington. ian"” is a girl's name. 4. Re, or Ra. 5. China . —— WORDS OFTEN MISUSED: Do funeral Horoscope “The stars incline but do not compel” z 1 - WEDNESDAY, APRIL I, 1936 e With the beginning of this month come rumors of war preparations in which the British Empire leads. Great expenditures for army, navy and air forces in the United States 1- \ benefic aspects dominate, accord- inge to astrology. Under this rule of the stars lead- ers in both business and politics will gain confidence. The aspects presage certan entrenchment for This is an auspicious time to pro- should be fortunate for candidates for public office. Many political sur- prises are prognasticated. Both Republican and Democratic | delegations to national conventions will reveal unusual line-ups in which young men and young wo-; {men are conspicuous. ‘While this configuration contin- iues there should be a tendency to- wards frankness and directness in meeting public or private exigen- it ty are forecast, but they will be un- covered. This is a sway in which old fueds may be revived and ancient preju- dices remembered. Impersonal view- points should be cultivated as the | ) d i perity. King Edward VIII is subject to a direction of the stars that presages tremendous changes in the nations over which he rules. By the time the planet leaves Taurus in 1942 it is prophesied that the entire fin- ancial structure of England will be recast. are forecast. On this All Fools' Day, persons who have attained positicn; | or power. r imote any sort of enterprise and' PROFESSIONAL —£ OF —— s elene W. L. Albrecht PHYSIOTHERAPY Massage, Electricity, Infra Red Ray, Medical Gymnastics 307 GOLDSTEIN BLDG. Phone Office, 216 da | Gastineau Channel B.P. 0. ELKS meesa M. Visiting brott:crs wele Ccome M. E. MONAGLR DRS. KASER & FREEBURGER DENTISTS Blomgren Building PHONE 56 Hours 9 am. to 9 pm. Exalted Ruler. SIDES, Secretary. M H KNIGHTS OF COLUMBUS Seghers Council = No. 1760. Meetings second and lest Mondary at <5 | 1 ' every Wednesday at 8 P, | Dr. C. P. Jenne DENTIST Rooms 8 and 9 Valetine Bailding TELEPHONE 176 7:30 1. m. ’I‘mnxlemv l:s;;? brothers urged to at- tend. Councll Chum- bers, Fifth St. JOHN F. MULL®mW, G. K, H. J. TURNER, Sccretary, Dr. Richard Williams DENTIST OFFICE AND RESIDENCE Gastineau Building Phone 431 ‘1 TIOUNT JUNEAU LCDGE NO. 147 | 4 Uecond and fourth Mone 3% day of each month ig & Scottish Rite Templae, beginning at 7:30 p. m MARTIN S. JORGEN. | | SEN, Worshipful Master; JAMES W. LEIVERS, Secretary. [+ } TYPEWRITERS RENTED Dr. A. W. Stewart DENTIST Hours 9 am. to 6 pm. SEWARD BUILDING Office Phone 469 $5.00 per month | J. B. Burford & Co. “Our doorstep is worn by satisfied customers” ks | B — ] TELEPHONE 563 Office Hours—9-12; 1-6 Dr. W. A. Rystrom DENTIST Over First National Bank X-RAY w3 08r P, — e ————1 Fr | | Evil communications of many sorts are probable under this plane- “ Glasses tary government. Gossip should be avoided, but it will be difficult to n brevent an epidemic of false reports. & | Persons whose birthdate it is have | 2. Where is Woodrow Wilson bur-, the augury of a year of progress and good fortune. Speculation and !30(-1 ' ting should be avoided. Children born on this day prob-| | 7 to 9:30 and by appointment. ! 4. What is the name of the an- 2bly will be fond of the pleasant | things of life. Subjects of this sign y of Aries usually love color and beau- “lty. | Edwin A. Abbey, painter, was born on this day in 1852. Others who have National Ceiebrated it as a birthday include o i tto von Bismarck, first Chancel- painter, 1786; Edward Askew Soth- ern, actor, 1826. (Copyright, 1936) WINTER COATS AT | HALF PRICE | Juneau Frock Shoppe “Exclusive But Not Expensive” i ! Dinners Gastineau Cafe Short Orders at All Hours If you're out to please the man of the family . . . let us help you! A grand selection of good food . . . vegetables and i i WARRACK Construction Co. Phone 487 Juneau — 5 — =nf o Uy Y | STRATTON & BEER | MUNICIPAL ENGINEERS SURVEYORS . VALENTINE BLDG. | | Telephone 502 | | | | PAINTS — OILS Suilders’ and Shelf i HARDWARE ‘“ Thomas Hardware Co. oppe } 4 kil moN'::pzzl l Wflxmgs d.Pohs]nng | | PHONE 548 MARGARET LINDSAY, Prop. HELVI PAULSON, Operator all the $hings that men [ike best. ” Sanitary Grocery . PHONE 83 or 85 “The Store That Pleases” Butler Mauro Drug Co. ONLY $60.00 CASH—A Real Washer Value if there ever was one! 100% General Electric quality. SOLD ON EASY PAYMENT PLAN Alaska Electric Light & Power Go. JUNEAU 6 DOUGLAS 18 ‘ The B. M. | Bank Juneau, Alaska Behrends COMMERCIAL and SAVINGS Resources Over Two and One Half Million Dollars The New Arctic Pabst Famous Draught Beer On Tap “JIMMY" CARLSON H. B. FOSS COMPANY ARCHITECTS--GONTRACTORS PHONE 107 JunEAu When in Need of DIESEL OIL—UTAH COAL GENERAL HAULING STORAGE and CRATING CALL US JUNEAU TRANSFER Phone 48 Night Phone 4703 [ Graduate Los Angeles Col- lege of Optometry and Opthalmology Fitted Lenses Ground Robert Simpson, Opt. D. | ‘ TRIBUTE Those who regard a fun- DR. H. VANCE OSTEOPATH Consultation and examination Free. Hours 10 to 12; 1 to 5; | Office Grand Apts., near Gas- 3. “Marion” may be either; “Mar- 10 of the German Empire, 1815; | William Mulready, Irish genre tineau Hotel. Phone 177 GENERAL MOTORS and MAYTAG PRODUCTS W. P. JOHNSON 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 , Seward Street Jones-Stevens Shop LADIES’ — MISSES’ READY-TO-WEAK Near Third PHONE 136-2 Our trucks go any place any | time. A tank for Diesel Oil | If you enjoy indoor sports— Here’s one of the best—TRY BOWLING! BRUNSWICK BOWLING ALLEYS Rheiniander and Alt Heidelberg BEER ON TAP and a tank for Crude Oil | save burner trouble. PHONE 149; NIGHT 148 | RELIABLE TRANSFER | l{‘ Commercial Adjustment and Rating Bureau Cooperating with White Serv- ice Bureau ROOM 1—SHATTUCK BLDG. ‘We have 5,000 local ratings on file JUNEAU-YOUNG Hardware Company PAINTS—OIL—GLASS SHUP IN JuncAV! GARBAGE HAULED Reasonable Mona.s Rates E. O. DAVIS TELEPRONE 584 Phone 4753 DRY CLEANING ® Soft Water Washing ® Your ALASKA LAUNDRY PHONE 15 McCAUL MOTOR COMPANY Dodge and Plymouth Dealers I | . Shelf and Heavy Hardware | Guns and Ammunition | = —_— & FORD AGENCY (Authorized Dealers® GREASES GAS—OILS \ JUNEAU MOTORS Foot of Main Street THE BEST TAP BEER IN TOWN! ® [HE MINERS’ Recreation Parlors and . Liquor Store e § # v AL\ - —a Fraternal Societies | N 3 . =Y g oo ¥ e K v -4 e LR “ i 2