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D nl l k E -re able to government in a constrtictive manner at all H A P P Y [ o b G i aily Alaska Empire |t | CARPENTERS |Asbeboee Givw i i i BIRTH Y| 2 ‘ : i ROBERT W.'RENDER - - Editor and Manager| Ohairman E. T. Welr, of National Stecl Corp, said DA 20 YEARS AGO ] Horoscop() to Charity Solicitors e . that employers should “improve industry’s social func- The Empire bend | | Published every evening except Sundiy by the EMPIRE|tion as they have already improved its technological| ,; bt Frum The Empire 3 Do PONCA CITY, Okla., Dec. 28— PRINTING COMPANY ai Second snd Main Sireets, Juneau ) o ., ons and best wishes today, their ] The stars incline An ambulance reared u bus Alaska. unction. birthday anniversary, to the follow- 2| but do not compel” P a busis i e And President Lewis H. Brown, of Johns-Manville | jg. DECEMBER 28, 1916 | ut do not compe ness house here. L gt i Corp., advocated “a wider appreciation of the social e The pluch 66 wat HRA Trslly set-{ & U i) For members, their families and ;- R"S: Ex;lowt.hflalmld Voorhies and ¢ BAE Gt 5 7 Rie R q id. Swn i . y set- i erman Smith stepped up to th Frey responsibilities of business.” Americans, he ssid, “want| DECEMBER 28 tled down hard on Sweden. The| TUESDAY, DECEMBER 29, 1936 }?Z“efl,,f”f.fifls' Dtpeutens: Local| i1 iiance “aitendaite andpexplain'_’ Belivered in carrier in June: A nd ::uu:{h‘; for svr b e month. | work, more money, still more leisure, security against | Mrs. C. F. Vassar inking of Swedish boats by the After “the early hours today ad- 3 : give a Christmas ed: stage paid, at the following rates 4 : : i bt = e P b0 e wonthe, n advance, $6.00; | unemployment now and against poverty in old age, and | Jennie Johnson German submarines, the configura- | verse stars are strong in their in- g;;;,y -;’:g};tf i ";fi ?'dd Fellm?vs | “We have your funeral home on [onth, in advunce, $135. 0 promptls motity | MOTE and better goods at lower prices,” and all these Mrs. J. M. Sharples tion of steamers by the German gov-|fluence, according to astrology. It'geoe - oo Wil SWArE b T30 ) st and it's prebty cold to walk ubscribers confer a fa hey otity g : 3 : Sy ) g ¢ lock. . the Business Office of any failure or irresularity in the delivery | Are wants that business and industry must help supply. John H. Dimond ernment and the failure of Ccargoes|js a day for rest and relaxation ra- Refreshments and dancing a.mfl_fup there after a community chest R vy Oirios: 608 BHustoses GHGE %6 This new program represents progress with a big Harvey Wildenradt to be delivered had put the nation ther than for work. a program are the arrangements | Bift: SO We just thought we'd let yoy p— ——|P. It is more than welcome. Translated into deeds it MBlfl R‘!?‘l"]pl‘ upon war rations. There is a sign encouraging con- | compjeted. The committee in charge | OMe after us.” The Assocn R O A S o the use for | Will Tesult in an America of happier, more prosperous Wsiin s Hild “gi i Tl e vivalty and gayety, but it may be, e tne arrair is M. A, Mello, Jim | They got the ride and also the do- republication of news dispatches credited to it or not ot | and more secure Americans 021 o 4 ) € of | unusually easy to lose oone’s head Paddock and Mike Karry. nation. wise credited in this paper and also the local news publis - | Lockie MacKinnon, who went east|under this configuration which en- B herein & | |to visit her aunt in Chicago and to|ccurages extremes. ALASKA CIRCULATION GUARANTEED TO BE LARGER Conseripting Youth MODERN | |accompany her son Simpson, to| The stars stimulate wit and un- Drinks for D Long Wait for Horse THAN THAT OF ANY OTHER PUBLICATION. o ETIQUETTE { |school, was returning on the Ala-|derstanding among friends, but i or Vogs b o . % (New York Times) meda. | quarrels are easily precipitated. The s POMONA, Cal—Paul A. Stiling The dictators may have their unpleasant surprise | By Roberta Lee | young should be careful in repartee.| COLORADO SPRING3, Cclo., —|of Bogota, Colombia, has bought a coming when the speed-up in the rearmament program | James L. Freeburn, who had been| Drivers should be thraordimrilylTfllrf»\y dogs will benefit from the | horse here and four years from now | re-establishes Great Britain as a great military power; |33 south on business for two months,! cautious under this sway for it is| wWill of Suzan McGenniss Smilh,‘he can put it to work. It is a pure< but to the English people nothing brings home the ugly | q 15 it ever permissible to 1:c| Va5 @ Teturning passenger on the believed to increase the number of|Who died recently. She left $2,000 \blood Arabian stallion purchased realities of present-day Europe so painfully as Lord |, matehed paper and envelopes in Alameda, bound for Chichagof, accidents in highways and airways.{to the El Paso County Humane So- |as a colt from the W. K. Kellog | Stanhope’s suggestion in the House of Lords’ debate | correspondence? where he was manager of the mine.| Women today are subject to plan-|ciety to erect four drinking foun-|Institute of Animal Husbandry of recently that England may be forced to adopt con- | A. The paper and envelope ‘should il etary rule which makes for ner- tains “suitable for dogs and other the University of California. Stil- cription to build the army. Efforts to increasel oo " L™ th as te sise, qu Bruno Chilinski, the runav boy | vousness and weariness. They should small anmals,” and made provision ing wants the institute to raise the | the territorial forces and the regular army to the re- . =8 B 0 ; musician of Seattle, was a guest atlavoid fatigue and omit unnecessary for the care of her own dog, Bobby. horse for the first four years, ther | quired strength have failed. For the new infar 'Q. What kind of .costubiR Sho: the Gastineau Hotel for a few days! activities, social and domestic. T ship him. [TI8, OUlY PHY e S AR B & SN0 .‘“?xnl.li [a woman wear to a Sunday morn- before returning to his home in Se-| There is a sign interpreted as' The early Englisii nome of George e intensive drive for volunteer: English boys will 5 Soce wttle ging startling mews of some R 1s i 3 y Ee ) i , |ing breakfast party? ging L 8 Washington’s ancestors is Sulgrave Thorn trees, aloes and euphorbias | join the navy and the air cor but they cannot be v 8 A0 iy rt today. It may come from across = & A phorbiasg |induced to enter a service that offers few opportuni-| 4 It is all right to wear ay. ay come Manor, located in Northampton- are common in the South African s i o sl tirk S e ey Ml F TS e T Burdette Winn, who hud been the seas, but warning is given that ghire. veld. | tes either for “‘_hi";f‘ “?]‘ g ‘{”m ir '; 5 bocllcst T article should aceom- |sPending Christmas visiting his fam- ' fires, explosions and destruction of ¢ ¥ good jobs in civil life when the term o istment pany the lem t tea? ily in Juneau, was returning to the' property may be reported in this STRIKE REVEALS HIGHWAY NEED | Martin Itjen, well known Skagway resident, say that wlat this country really needs is a road between so that we wouldn’t have to Juneau and Skagws Mr. depend on boats Itjen could have gone further| 3 | and sugested a network of roads over much of thej e ave i o 3 T 2 ] g trad f conseription, - 1. Is December 25th observed in Noipiasinin winter. Hospitals will need help, it Territo'y. And he could have included the Inter- Despite the long tradition s December 25th observed in| £ i 3 ing is unpopular in France. The lengthe pan? | Russcll Yorke of Douglas was re- js forecast a e national Highway, which, while only a small portion ey, of service to two years is accepted with g oans. | on w rs was PFulton's|covering from an operation for ap-' Health should be safeguarded and of it will be in Alaska, will be one of the things that Tk are no I s in French towns as the boj steamboa | pendicilis in St. Ann's Hospital, Ju- diet watched, for the digestive tract will get away from the inconvenience of boat traffic|trek nifv to the ¢ < | 3. Who was the chief god of an- M¢aU will be affected by the usual cold & such as we have known in the last two months. Military training is equally distasteful to Italian | cient Rome? | T weather epidemics. : g g o | boys. Years of Fascist education have hardened the 2 ot is Mrs. John Henson, wife of the U. Persons whose birthdate it is h: i 2 No more glaring example of the need for building & 4. What event is called the Na-| ! 3 ersons whose ate it is have o " kets ¥ : o h,g,?w.::x:r;,: ;],f émcf to Alaska could have been|YOUth of Italy and made them thrill to parade in' gt Commissioner at Douglas, had the augury of a year of definite ad- L2 e hd\et: f:’.r y(:urself and a friend or - RS TR 4 """ |uniform before their leader, but if you watch the, .. % p \ined distinction in Los Angeles bl ¥ & relative to see unearthed than the present maritime strike Resi- | 3 5. What European nation i§ of- ngeles vancement in business or profes. San Francisco, the coast have dents of Seattle, Tacoma, Portiand Los Angeles and other cities down good roads connecting with their adjacent agricuitural real cmh\‘ls{:nfn for the military life. g ; g A&swgns nine-mle trail. The perilous trip ably will be keen and logical in As a paid-up subscriber of The districts and if the produce was not brought to town _Thc Germans are more dox;)}v, They don't d‘.,«l,kr y was made by Mrs. Henson. accom- mind, talented in expressing their ° ° they could arive out n the valleys and pick it up in discipline and regimentation. The first conscripis of | 1 Yes, but as the ANDIVEESSIY pumid by Mr. and Mre. W. R. Hur- ldcas and senerally gibied Dall Alaska Em ir their cwn machines. But Alaska, dependent solely ;:1:;“;:‘(‘2( ?;,huv ‘:(l\;‘llmot‘r‘(?atc\"n\;:ihx:(:l:xlr?)n:)l(“'m"r‘n;l:\- of the death of Taisho, the last em- graves who was visiting in Los An-, Andrew Johnson, seventeenth y p e . rans g 3 e eroasis Ao v i ~ErIIREY | Petor, geles, in the, sk i six f e 3 S, was ) : for . 'y on walgr transportation “”.mnd ‘.\um)Alu.s‘ from llu' when conseription was proclaimed noticed that the| 9. Hudson River. ri et e, short period of six IP = "lfldu‘,‘ ll\u.l;;x(;lstdgtlat)e.s. w};\s Good only for current offermg. States, digs deeper into the barrel; her residents get joydest cheering came from the generation whose| 3. Jupiter. . R Rilbh colebtatd 1o as o DlLER e Your Name May A T along as best they can until the government is forced soldiering days were over. | & The birth of Jesus, e 5 ]d\» H' brated it as a birthday in- ur Name May Appear Tomorrow to the rescue with a few emergency boats | our conservation corps are the nearest American| 5. Switzerland A e Jetey. QUad: a0 sk afjfiede William B CHAE(0R SUERAR WATCH THIS SPACE y rps-) i ; ; two ton capacity was on the dock statesman, 1809; Charles Goodyear S How different if a great highway spanned Canada equivalent to the labor brigades and youth services | % S dpias 2 1S 5 2 s y , » 2 = “ > ‘ivantl i at Thane, consigned to the A, H. inventor, 1800. from the States to Alaska so that trucks could roll of Europe. But though under the direction of army gz = = — x e sl officers, they are civilian, not military, and their ap- | (Sumphries Transter Oo., of Juneay, (Copyright, 1936) % north just as they traverse the highways of the States. l \ _}. nivdeg v e an 1\“ £ ”' 4 DA ILY L:‘SSONS having been put off there by o i e ey The outstanding thing the marine strike has revealed :"::‘“i)\“fi";‘;;‘jm‘\_ )Jt\c:u\}co ,‘_‘l‘;m:"“: ‘n;““zx}sl‘;“ ““ B L | Ftake,~ Phe mashing wia is the need for a road between the Territory and the g o'ouige : IN ENGLISH the following summer States. And while a familiar fact to Alaskans it It may be that the exception to the rule is in 2 company’s teams were busy at othe: should be a revelation to government authorities in Russia. An English military observer at last summer’s By W. L. Gordou work PHONE 48% the States who are paying some $900 a day for the Red army manoeuvres reported in the London Times g R charter of boats to bring food supplies north. | that all the soldiers with whom he talked enjoyed the ! ATTENTION MASONS 1 o T life. “Many youths below the military age * * * told| Words Often Misused: Do not say,| 7phere will be o ‘Ststed Com- T Y BT T T e e e 4 REBUILT GER WAR MACHINE Europe is all astir over Hitler again. This time expires. Distaste among the you%h of today for the military life goes deeper than t. It is not confined to England. For the American young, likew tco many closeups of what the bands and marching lead to. Wherever the young are free to volunteer. | recruiting is slow and difficult. Even where the con- script system the boys go reluctantly military serv prevails, into ice yearly ‘levies march glumly to the barr and hear them cheer when they are released, you are convinced that all the “pre-military” drills do not induce any me with what eagerness they looked forward to their two years' service. The food is good, they sazid, and the barracks are being improved.” This eagerness is probably as much for good food and lodging as for e, soldiering | ** {has lost its glamour for a generation that has seen The lemen fork -oo - —— LOOK auid LEARN By A. C. Gerdon ten referred to as the Helvetic 1 public. THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE. MONDAY, DEC. 28, 1936. States to resume his studies at the | University of Washington. E. W ffin, one of the best: |known merchants of the Interior,, and owner of stores at Fai Chena and Ruby, was in Juneau on | | nis way south to purchase additional ndise for his businesses. y her remarkable climb to the sum- mit of Mount Wilson, at an altitude | of 6,000 feet, over a rough and steep “In so far as I know, as I know.” Or in Often Mispror inceG: So {4 iiarem T munication of Mt. Juneau Lodge No. 147 this evening at 7:30. Work in the F. C. Degree. By order of » be played frequently. country Music and musicians come under promising planetary government for the ncw year. There will be a great demand for bands and marches will 8 You are invited to present this coupon at the bex office of the Weather that is changeable and in some places exceedingly severe will cause much illness through the Capitol sicnal pur They may be tar- gets for dishonest speculators. Children born on this day prob- “Private Numbes” INSURANCE ¢ 1 Pronounce ha-rem, a as in hay, e the W. 3 fear is felt that the big man of Germaty may send military exercises. : y __ias in men, accent first syllable. | J. W. LEIVERS ks AREA troops to the assistance of the Fascist forces in an \out?;hpoi:mlr;:em L:'ll“:‘l':““h"‘:‘l;"l}d \"::]“‘“ ncr‘g:'r:lxlxfiv‘(‘l Often Misspelled: Fr: (Chris- | —adv. Secretary. ) g\r + e c ” ¢ s rernment ¥OUY st 3 tian name). Franc (French ). — b ! X t effort to overthrow the Communistic government yoU~h ©F EHF ‘O infblative. aHA wheraHt Wit reei nch coin BEE R i troops and thus start a European war. There should be little sympathy in this country for what happens to Europe as the result of what Hitler may or may not do. Great Britain, France and what we once called our allied powers have sat| mented it doesn’t volunteer. The tragedy of the conscription of the young is that so many have no choice; they are forced into line as the cheapest and most available raw material in the armament race. Synonyms: tive, inert, laz Word Study times and it Idle, indolent, ina slothful. your one word each day. a word three Let us in- crease our vocabulary by mastering Today's word: c- e g e o Ve e Established 1898 We truly believe thal we sell America’s Greatest Shoe Values and Prettiest Footwear ] It by = | | | | idly by for 10 years and let Hitler rebuild a war False Dawn Exhilarate; to enliven; to animat MEN’S DRESS { machine in Germany in direct violation of the treaties; i T to cheer. “Good news exhiliarates SHOES and Sen.95 | DEVLIN’S = following the war. They have done a little stewing| (Philadelphia Record) . the mind.” OXFORD: 2 N from time to time, but actually they have done nothing Coincident with the adoption of the n2w Russian S 230 South Franklin Tefephone 411 except trade power to Hitler to further their own Constitution, one of the larger retail stores in Moscow Minister Phflosophizes 328 ends until now the German leader sits in the driver’s created a sensation by displaying a frock coat and seat and can make his demands. |a full-dress suit for evening in its window. What Germany wants and Hitler proposes to gfl‘ No such habiliments have marred the proletarian for Bat” 14 the re':urn of colonies she lost after the. Scéne since the revolution and commentators were |**BIGYV | | CONNORS MOTOR CO., Inc MASON, Tex., — After holding 15 pastorates in a 40-year preaching quick to investigate. They learned that a full line career, the Rev. W. M. Lane has de-| e r— Distributo! war, and there is every reason to believe that she ;¢ ¢oa) clothes for men will be introduced during Sided: “A Methodist minister should | R H soon will get them. A man who can build & War!the year. The dress suits will not be importations, be ready for three things—ready to CHEVROLFT PONTIAC BUICK machine that rivals if not excels the German war put products of the Soviet's own factories. move, ready to preach, and ready m}l machine of 1914 in the face of so-called agreements | not to and while a group of supposed watchdogs arej sitting around is hardly one to fail at such a venture without a valiant struggle. | True, the world may turn against him as it turned against Wilhelm in 1914 but the fact remains that Germany today is just as potent a nation as she was when she moved on Paris lwen!_\'-wi'o years ago. | And it is something for this country to remember when the bleating nations of Europe start shouting for help again. Let them do their own stopping of the German war machine next time while we pro-; mote peace on the western hemisphere, | This Is Progress i (New York Wor Just year ag turers met at t drew up a pla Deal and i after spe tion, soc] 1-Telegram) | a the } of Manpu: ‘ol O ures as mena tem. Presider Clintor L. Bardc nomic crackpo and political r General Counsel Ja | Emery talked of “a y theories being | at the foundation of the present and proposed policy | of the administration hairman of the Board Robert L. Lund spoke of policies threatening the American industrial situation.” This week the National Assn. of Man'.x[acmrerx‘ met again in convention at the Waldorf-Astoria. A very different spirit deminated the proceedings, one that admitted industry’s social responsibility and its call to co-operate with the government in creating a At this meeting Colby M. Chester, of General Foods Corp.. as keynoter, urged a national depression study committee to avoid the evil of business cycles; pleaded with industry to “absorb all the unemployed possible” and “bend every effort of science and management to create still more jobs and more of the comforts of life for the American people;” called upon employers to make better goods at lower prices. “thus raising the standard of living;” proposed that business tell the public all the facts, “engender growing confidence on en and revelutiol i S The dress suit is priced at 782 rubles and 85 ko- peks. According to official Soviet figures for 1935, the average income of Russian workers is 2271 rubles annually. In other words, the Russian proletarian would have to pay about a third of his whole yearly wage in order to buy a dress suit. The only sample dress suit to appear thus far is a size 48. This fact adds greatly to the mystery and po ly to the social significance of the new stylistic development. For Harold Denny, of the New York Times, has figured out that the average Soviec wage means about $114 a year in terms of purchasing power. Not many Russian workers are going to get fat enough to wear a 48 on $114 a year. This may be production for use, but it indicates that capitalism isn't the only system in the world with some funny things about it. Any revolution that doesn’t go far enough to abolish the dress suit is what the Communists would call “superficial re- fOormism.” What in the name of Marx is the use of having a revolution if the people without dress suits are going to keep on feeling inferior and the 1 eople with them keep on feeling uncomfortable? Has Stalin sold out to Bond Street? Have the polo mallet and the oyster fork conquered the hammer and ickle? Watch Trotzky for a manifesto declaring: “Workers of the world, unite. You have nothing to '\‘ lose but your shirt studs.” There's nothing quite as amusing as the surprise |among the women when some one in the neighborhood suddenly has a baby without any of them suspecting, much less knowing it was on the way.—Ohio State Journal. Germans who smuggle money or property abroad are now subject to the death penalty. What you might call capital punishment.—Philadelphia Bulletin. With Jim Farley in Ireland and Mr. Roosevelt off to South America it looks okay for those fellows who voted for Landon to come out from behind the bureau. —New York Sun. In Europe neutrality is a flock of bombing planes ready to take off.—Toledo Blade. Business at Madrid is on a boom-boom.—Dallas News. The office boy thinks Lily Pons is a rock garden.— the part “ workers,” % “"fi*‘# erauox} avnnt Wheeling, W. Va., News-Register. | die.” Cigars Cigarettes Candy Cards THE NEW ARCTIC Pabst Famous Draught Beer On Tap “TIMMY" CARLSON SITKA HOT SPRINGS Mineral Hot Baths Aecommodations to suit every taste. Reservations Alaska Air Transport, Juneau Drug Co. r———— Winter Rates “Tomorrow’s Styles l Today” { { { { { ] i { Juneau’s Own Store LUMBE ‘ Juneau Lumber Mills, Inc. t - oo THE BEST TAP BEER IN TOWN! THE MINERS’ Recreation Farlors ® X | HARRY RACE, Druggist “The Squibb Stores of Alaska” HOTEL GASTINEAU The B. M. Juneau, Bank SEASON'S GREETINGS TO OUR FRIENDS AND CUSTOMERS ® [ N ! Every Effort Made for the s [ Comfort of the Guests! ' GASTINEAU CAFE ! in connection AIR SERVICE INFORMATION 4 Behrends 1 THE TERMINAL *“Deliciously Different Foods™ Catering to Banquets and Private Dinner Parties Alaska For Prompt, Safe, Efficien: PHONE | ' . - Service CALL A ‘56 y. CHECEKER CAB - PSS S S e B FOR INSURANCE See H. R. SHEPARD & SON i Telephone 409 B. M. Behrends Bank Bldg. o