The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, March 10, 1937, Page 4

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Daily Alaska Empzre ROBERT W. mm:x r-bmnoa I r\tmny c\{'flpl un PRINTING COMPANY 4t bcloml and Main Streets Juncau, Alasks. Entered in the Post Office 4n Ju matter. Delivered In carrier in Juncau and Dougla By mail, postage paid, at the fol One year, in advance, $12.00; six months, in advance, $6.00; ome month, in advance, §1.25. é;fl\(‘k:frl()‘ RATE:! BAe s A R e R TR IRE, WEDNESDAY MARCH 10, 1937. . u»u~c}Fa¢vw~v¢oo ‘Editor und Manager Thy the EMPIRE spirit in which it 5 cond (.lh-i o 88 iecon stitution itself. s, s for §1 lowing per month. Bubseribers will confer a favor if they will promptly notify the Business Office v any failure or irreg of their papers. Telephones: Rews Office, 602 MEMBER SOCIATE] The Associated Press republication of all news dispatch>s credit wise crecitsd in this paper and also the Business Offic exclusively entitled to tue ase for ularity in the delivery 374, — — Harry Hopkins, h PRES ed to it or not other- talk with Harry. local news. published Viewing the result of Colonist Ruddell’s chat with and the rest of the anti-Matanuska group had a little 'wrm.en by young men, not a one of them over 50. Most H A P p Y of them much younger. ment; an instrument which is just as good today as the day it was written when interpreted im the same They wrote a living docu- was written, ow would it be if Senator Thomas BIRTHDAY The Empire extends congratula- tiona and best wishe. As the President very frankly stated, What | pirinday anniversary el need today is to appeal from the Court to the Con- i That appeal can be taken by retire- ment from the bench of men over 70 and replacing them with men younger who can interpret it in the spirit of the young men who originally wrote it — to promote the public welfare. 20 YEARS AGO From The Emplre [ Horoscope “The stars inclire but do not compej” |6OP CAMPAIGN | DEFICIT LARGE; Wealthy Widow - Reports Loss of ™ 1$40,000 in Jewels BAN FRANGISCO, GAl, Mar. 10— an sgfln "ufl;Mrs Alma de Bretteville-Spreckels, | widow of the California shipping L] and sugar multimillionaire, report- ed to the police today the loss of $40,000 worth of jewels: She discov- ered her loss after a luncheon: at which she had showed the diamonds and emeralds to friends. The police believe that maybe a pickpocket stole the jewels. —————— A Real Chairma lil'Tamilton An- nounces $100,000 Re- ceived in Two Months WASHINGTON, Mar. 10. — John Hamilton, Chairman of the Repub- lican National herein. AGWASKA CIRCULATION GUAJIANTEED TO BE LARGER THAN THAT OF ANY OTHER PUBLICATION. The Saturday Evening Post is all adither because Secretary Perkins remarked that sit-down strikes had | not yet been declared illegal. Well, have they? Eighty Doiiars a Year (Cincinnati Enquirer) Bishop Asbury, that great saint of the American Methodist, Chureh, in 1815 made this entry in his diary: “My salary for 30 years has been but $80 a year, of which I have had to spend about $50 a year on my horse." The ‘Bishop in his constant travels was enter- | tained by the members of his flock, and when he moved on they filled his saddlebags with what we | would call “lunch,” but what in the old days was al- ! | ways referred to as “provisions for the journey.” But | the horse had to be fed at the stables of wayside taverns, and it needed occasionally to be shod. So the horse had the larger part of the Bishop's salary. . | Eighty dollars a year seems absurdly small. In a few words last night during his fireside rlmt.m no wonder that Bishop Asbury never married and President Roosevelt, aptly as usual, told the American'staplished a household. speed : * %y R TRN - ' A\ HARDENING OF JUDICIAL ARTERIES 1t He had neither fime nor | people the purpose of his proposal to money to care for a family. He literally lived on horse- up the judiciary back and tradition has it that he was as much es-| “My plan,” he said, “is to save the Constitution|teemed as a horseman as he was esteemed as a great from Bardening of the judicial arteri to enforce and effective preacher. the Constitution as written and not amend it Now, in Washington, Bishop Asbury is immortal- | jzed in bronze—a great equestrian statue with the\ st Bishoptholding & Bible. It is an artistic and effective ! s creation which cos§ more money than the Bishop reference to our judiciary system. There is (‘r)xhg}wcr hdd ')l his Yife. Thus posterity recompenised | need, as the President pointed out, to make the Con- him for what his contemporaries failed: to give him. ! stitation again a living document as-the forefathers pg,¢ Bishop Asbury would not have seen it in that ! ‘willed and not to set it aside in some archive to be’ light. ‘To him $80 a year sufficed to keep him and | worshipped. | his horse doing their daily tasks, and in his work he As has been pointed out scores of times, lhere‘luund perfect satisfaction. | is nothing wrong with the Constitution. But there is | something radically wrong with a judiciary system Ads Jjudicial say-so.” That, in a nutshell, is the entire situation with \and display them in & prominent A. That the one catching it will|Guy McNaughton, A. J. Ficken, prosper, since fashion decrees am- !be the next to-be married. laude Ericson, J. W. Bell. ple draperies and full skirts for {women. |second? iese and Chinese belcn}? ing: MARCH 10, 1917 I The State Department at Wash- ! MAR 1 ington had given advice that arm-| THURSDAY, MARCH 11, 1037 Fentin sty ed merchantmen had a right to| Astrologers read this as an un- Leaas Bl choot al a German submarine at|certain day, since mingled good Mrs. C. J. Bergstrom sight. and evil plentary influences are Maydelle George e discerned. It is more favorable to Lucille Fox Voting on a permanent President{women than to men. bt Do in the Senate was blocked effectu-| Under this planetary government ally by Senator Hubbard on a pointhIUbS and other organizations com-: AR+ s ~82 ¢ order made after the nineteenth;posed of women should push all MODERN l tie roll call of the Senatorial dead-|Welfare plans, especially those with ) [lock. Senator Hubbard contended [peace motives. There is' a promisihg sign for weddings which will be numerous this spring and will include an un- usual number of marriages of per- sons no longer young. Neptune frowns today and the aspect is read as presaging contro- versies over naval affairs as, well as efforts to mislead persons en- gaged in diplomatic maneuvers. Under this sway men and wo- men will engage. in secret illegal | transactions, including violations of| the neutrality laws. that Senator Heckman, elected tem- porary presiding officer was in fact |permanent president, and the Or- ganic Act provided for no election of a temporary president. Senator Heckman announced that he would make his decision the following Monday. ETIQUETTE By Roberta Lee | AT H Q. What should a hostess do when a caller brings her a box of cut’ flowers? A. +She should arrange the flow-! ers immediately in a vase of water, ' Officers nominated by Hose Com- pany No. 3 of the Douglas Volunteer i place Fire Department were Wm, Baltoff, Q. When serving dinner, should|Jack Gillam, Frank Robertson, Os- the waitress wait -until all the |car Fritzburg, Alex Kiloh, A. Stur- guests have finished a course be-|rock \fore removing any dishes? etary direction for modistes and A. Yes. Officers for the coming year elect- milliners. Sewing, knitting, croch-| Q. What is the old belief con.'.-d by the Juneau lodge of EIks eting, and other home occupa- | cerning the custom of a bride were Barney A. Rosselle, J. Latimer tions will gain in popularity. throwing her boquet to the brides- Gray, P. F. Whiie, J. W. Wood- Manufacturers of silks and oth- maids? | ward, M. E. Russell, J. L. Museth, er costly fabrics will continue to ([ e i o Mrs. Winifred Hyland, business| This is a lucky day for seeking woman of Telegraph Crerk, was injemployment and for signing con-| |Juneau as the guest of Mr. and Mrs. tracts. Promoters of big business Charles Goldstein. Mrs. Hyland|are subject to favorable aspects. {was owner and operator of trading| Persons whose birthdate it is have !posts at Dease Lake, Liard and the augury of a year of varied in-! Telegraph Creek.' On her way to terests which include new friend- | i- |Juneau, it took her six days by dog sh|p< and exciting love affairs. team to reach Wrangell from Tcle— Children born on' this: ‘day prob-| ‘gl aph Creek. She brought with her. ,ably will be inquiring of mind and shipment of furs valued at 820- iactive of body. Subjects of ths {sign may be interested in whatever | Jnvl'os research or investigation. Otis Fisher Black, biochemist, was born on: this day 1867. Others who have celebrated it as a birthday LOOK eid LEARN By A. G/ Gordon i 1. What is the® .approximate ve \ocity of the earth" Ih its orbit, per 2. What famous: v(oman in his- fa tory was called “The Maid of Or- leans”? { 3. To what race do the Japan | Young Simpson MacKinnon, who |bad passed his: final esaminations [rur entrance to Annapolis, had left 4. What is anoxemia? which permits five of nine men on the Supreme bench' to become a policy-making body for the people of the! Unjted States over the will of Congress whose mem- ' bership is made up of men and women elected by probation. Today, if used, it would create a Iavorable} the voters of this nation. In other words, as Mr.| impression upon the listener’s mind. Not so many | Roosevelt explained last night, the Supreme Court has years ago newspaper readers complained if, in their, set itself up as a third house to pass upon the wisdom | estimation, too much space in the family paper wxm of the acts of Congress rather than to interpret the Con- | Biven to advertising. Today the average reader would stitution. Evidence can be found in countless cases ‘ffelllrcr:']?:nn“‘t\g;txgsolfiz::gneyx : :/:Srugulcfo :ec ::vzg: K::el:‘i;‘;:tstotrh;';:r!;‘:%?r:}:; ;:‘l;(:‘;np g andé‘tubl hed fact that many ncvvspa‘per readers who con-: 4 % 3 | fess, so far as the news matter is concerned, to being It cannot be overlooked that the Constitution yeqqine readers only, find their greatest interest in provides fora more perfect union and promotion of tj,e advertisements. They find in them both pleasure the general welfare. Yet when the President and Con-|and profit. This winning of the public favor is di- gress, under mandate of the people, take action to rectly attributable to the good sense, the technical promote that general welfare and are supported by skill, the artistic methods and, over all, the honesty“ four Justices on the Supreme bench, the five remain-!of the advertisers. So cleverly is the newspaper ad | ing Justices can dissent with the result that the cf- Planned and executed that the reader is unconscious forts of the people themselves to help themselves is Of the combination of influences which attract his thwarted. That does not make for a living Consti- | interest. Sincerity, truth, service and consideration tution, written to promote the general welfare. for the needs of the buying public are among the gt *iThe President; despite propaganda to the contrary,'id"“ls of the best advertisets. They are making ad - : A vertising a science and a fine art. And this explains D TS Jecpoen Yo jepaxiny e Guustitucion, Te "“e‘!nu change of attitude on the part of newspaper not even suggest amendment. He simply Droposes;yeagers toward the advertisements which share pages that the famous document again be made a living! with news and headlines. instrument by supplanting the jurists of advancing] years, over 70, with younger men who are more in: Another place where party lines should mean step with conditions in the nation as they exist today.|nothing is during consideration of the Supreme Court Not men who will mis-interpret the Constitution to|jssue.—Indianapolis Star. suit the fancy of the President or Congress but men who will interpret it as it was written and not attemot | Child marriages are getting to be such every day to decide the policies of the people of the nation. It gccurrences that some one ought to invent combina- must be remembered that in the first instance it was: tion \\Pddmg and teething rings Ohxo State Journal. BILL PASSES D'Z':.;'.ZZ:TN i ALASKAHOUSE —Samuel Witaker, BZ year-old ) Los Angeles organist, convicted ;::xerfiioz?gthiwg’;wz: i, Bureau Will Be Under At- torney General If Ap- of slaying his wifc during!a [poed husiness trip to Seattle. , propriation Made (Bremerton News-Searchlight) | An “advertising sheet” was once a term of disap- | 'LOUSSAC DECLARES BUSINESS IS GOOD Z. J. Loussac, former J\meaune land now a prominent Anchorage business man, proprietor of Lous- :‘:I',‘:dh:;’"l’;ll" :::: in the pris-. | “Bysiness conditions in Anchor- Guurd:lodny ”cya'"m that at |28B.8%e very good since the settle- 2 ment of the marine strike and the the trial WitaRer declared after |puan Jones Coal Corporation's olit- ::;::‘:::‘::;L:‘;mg::']a":‘: put at their mines at Jonesvilley in to my cell, 32'm gailty. of this which I am heavily interest, I8 horrible crime.” Witaker entered prison only last Saturday and had not yet been :.ssigned to a cell e 1 The Walker finger-print bill, set- ting up a bureau of criminal identi- fication and investigation under the Attorney General, passed the House | demands made for coal by the ov- ernment operated ships, during the imarine strike, so all in all I have 'no kick and I look forward to a this afternoon by a vote qf 10 to 6. \very busy season in the Anchorage' It previously has been approved by district next Summer,” he said. the Senate where it was ll'nlrod\xced:sPAN'sH FanEs ARG Lo e i . f :gmsae;‘namr N. R. Walker of Ket M G MAN BACK | FROM STATES WITH | | Henderson, executive of the Passage of the measure means, MINE EQUIPMENT <Alaska Central Mining and Explor- if it is to become effective, that a special appropriation must be set up in the general appropriations bill to carry out its provisions. Senator Walker estimated to the Senate that it would require probably $7,000 for Government troops are reported;Creek, who passed through Juneau v yielding slowly to an army of “about southbound about three weeks ago, the biennium. 15,000 Italians.” |is among the passengers booked for The Spanish forces are being Seward from Seattle on the steamer {back on the southwest front toward Alaska. Madrid through Guadalajara Pro- On his brief trip to the States Mr. }vmce, Henderson purchased a diesel trac- Defense forces are holding dog- tor and other new equipment for ‘Bed{y to positions along the Aragon his company’s mining operations. Highway against a terrific Insur- The new machinery is northbound gent fire from tanks, machine guns aboard the steamer with him. and bombs from airplanes. - P LOU HUDSON RETUBNb MISS WINN LEAVES Returning to Juneau from a va- Miss Barbara Winn, daughter of cation trip of more than a month, Mr. and Mrs, Grover C. Winn, . is Which took him as far south as San a passenger aboard the Princess Francisco, Lou Hudson, manager of Norah for Seattle. | the Family Shoe Store here, arrived Miss Winn plans to continue her from the South aboard the Prin- studies at the University of Wash- cess Norah. France. ,mgmn where she is affiliated with While south, Mr. Hudson sacri- One radio message said the war-| the Delta Gamma Sorority, returning ficed sufficient of his vacation time ship is bombarding all vessels pass-| home again about the middle of to choose a selection of fine spring ROCHEFORT, France, Mar. 10— i Radio messages from the Island of Quessant said a Spanish Insurgent warship is making a running attack on Spanish vessels virtually in the trans-Atlantic ship lanes. One oil tanker has been under‘ attack off the westernmost tip of ing the island. ! June. shoes for his store here. Quessant is near Brest. ' ——r e et i . - - Eli Tanner, proprietor of the P. Lakie, freight agent at Prince Miss Zora Brown, who has be:n|Scandinavian Rooms, left Juneau Rupert for the Canadian National Railways, arrived in Juneau aboard the Canadian Pacific Railways _steamship Princess Norah a patient at St. Ann’s Hospital for|{Sunday aboard the PAA plane for several days, underwent a major|the Interior, where he is interested operation this morning. Jin mining operations. above normal, owing to the unysual - MADRID, March 10.—Reinforced ation Company located at Valdez| SN\ the East and was on his way to include Thomas Hastings, architect, IN ENGLISH By W. L. Gordou ( 4 * | Juneau Radio Service | For Your RADIO Troubles 122 Second St.—Next door to l San Francisco bukery l adv. 5 EAESa Juneau Drug Co. -~ S S UL Work and Dress call Femmer, phone 114. hjgho:t"z‘g;n1Eu::::;vf:ha'i?fitezet;\:‘; Juneau to spend the summer here. 1360; John Henry Clay, economist, in the world? IAt the end of the summer he would 1859; Henry Byron Hall, engraver, return to the Academy and enter as 1808. ANSWERS & midsipSg LS = ks, | (Copyright, 1937) 1. 18-% miles a second I o classifi TR i o Y ! Charles Sey was transferred from' Empire classifieds pay. Joan of Arc. pe o — " time keeper at Treadwell to com- DRI Al 2oy 3. Mongolian race, " : £ d Air sickness ori mountain sick- ! cr-fendn ABamechanbalde: ness tment. ‘ | Compounaed Sic Cariok, i SReS Weather: Highest, 41; Lowest, 31,“ ’ EENCRY. 4 Snow. ol as written e e gk TN T H by your DAILY LESSONS | NOTICE t ) For special fresh dressed chickens, | | dnctor. | — Words Often Mfused: Do not say: “We urged to go, bm. of no avail” Say, &]{zm vain." i Often Mispronounced: Calculate. i 3 Pronounce kal-ku-lat, first a as in| at, u as in unit, secqnd a as in late, accent first syllable, ' Often Misspelled: Errand, two r's. 3 Synonyms: Spurious, counter- feit, falSe, adulterate, fictitious, notI genuine. | Word Study: “Use a word three times and it is yours.” Let us in- crease our vocabulary by mastering one word each day. Today's word: Infectious, having qualities that may infect; epidemic. “Infectious fever.” “Infectious clothing.” “In- fectious vices.” “Infectious air.” - Era; one r BIG VAN'S 228 Front St. —_— e ————— “THE REXALL STORF” Lode and piacer location rnotices for sale at The Empire office. Pay’n Takit | PHONES 92 or 25 Free Delivery Fresh Meats, Groceries, mquors, Wines and Beer We Sell for LESS Because We sell for CASH Leader Dept. Store George Brothers " WEATHERSTRIP FREE ESTIMATE . ON INSTALLATION " See Victor Power at the Zynda Hotel or phone 123 PSS ¢ . “Tomorrow’s Styles 3 Today” | | f_"—‘——_ | PHONE 36 | ! For very prompt l i HARRY RACE, Druggist “The Squibb Stores of Alaska” LIQUOR DELIVERY 22 Juneau’s Own Store —_—— PHONE The B. M. Behrends Bank Juneau, Alaska COMMERCIAL and SAVINGS , CARDINAL CABS . 25¢ Within City Limits Resources Over Two and One-Half Million Dollars ‘Republican Presidential Committee, today said the Republican campaign defi- cit is $900,000 after contributions of $100,000 were received during January and February. Former ' Goverrior Landon, and candidate, | sent in $1,000, the first contribution | received this year, ELKS MEET TONIGHT Nomfhation of officers. Bowling team report of Anchorage games (we didn’t bring home the bacon but we brought home the moose.) bers and visiting Elks are urged to attend. adv. —————— 'Alaska” by Lester D. Hendersnn This should be a profitable plan-|Moose meat lunch tonight. All mem- | night, March 13th, Douglas ‘nata- torium, in memory of the Dream- land, Mike Pusich, Proj For Every Purse - PACIFIC COAST 4! Dance Date, Saturday adv. COAL x=a and Every Purpose COAL CO. PHONE 412, e For your convenience our office ' will be open until 10 P, M. dur— ing tax period. JAMES C. COOPER COMPA Certified Public Accountants 205 Seward Street INCOME TAX REPORTS PREPARED } CHEVROLET Juneau s HOTEL GASTINEAU? Every Effort Made for the Comfort of the Guests! GASTINEAU CAFE in connecticn AR SERVICE INFCRMATION vistributors PONTIAC Juneou Lumber Mills, E ) [ WINDOW CLEANING. PHONE 485 INSURANCE Allen Shattuck Established 1898 mm:gi se Ev Remember!!! If your "Daily Alaska Empire” has not been delivered By 6:00 P. M. PHONE 226 © ;| A copy will be sent you IMMH)-' IATELY by SPECIAL CARRIER.

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