The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, July 12, 1937, Page 4

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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, MONDAY, JULY 12, 1937 Dail Alaska Em ire fil::llsz’:r can increase his force to the normal H A P P Y _‘. Gt B ropigiaghoieg ol - Bt E R BIRTHDAY | 20 Years A go || Horoscope ||| Fresh Fruit and Vegetables e fund in 1937 and 1938 when the Commission The Empire extends congratula- From The Empire i AR ki e Ty s Baca at ki Berests Tmests will not begin the payment of unemployment tions and best wishes today, their | | «rha stars incline HOME GROWN RADISHES, ONIONS y Alasks compensation until January 1, 1939. It was birthday anniversary, to the follow- | . o ~—autered n (he Fow Offics In Juneau as Second Ciaws| Decessary to create a fund from which to |ing: JULY 12, 1917 P s oronpel and FRESH LOCAL EGGS DAILY matte: make the payments. This is being done now | —_— - — - — | " In Berlin announcement SURSCRIPTION WATES with contributions made in 1937 and 1938. JULY 12 : : v e ° Deltvered by carrier in Juneau and Douglas for §1.25 per month. These contributions are being deposited in Mildred Webster "}“_de o]r] thesxets}l‘gnauonfloilw Lt Be;zfsigeclsdrze li:; tlgf rin- rma mc By mail, postage paid, at the following rates the Federal treasury and are drawing interest Emilee Louise Dalton it S e e P Ome vear. in advance, $12.00; six months, in advance, $6.00; p p jcipal business hours today, but la- one month, in advance, $1.35 on daily balances and will continue to draw Alice A. Larson | T Bubscribers will confer a favor if they will promptly notify interest until they are needed to pay benefits Kathryn Long | w. H. case, Howard Case and|ter adverse influences are active. HE PURE FOODS STORE s fice of ) 4 | mr)nun:n;r;:”uu;"o any failure or irregularity in the de: to eligible unemployed. This interest is being Thomas Dwyer |Charles Adams were planning a trip According to astrology this should Telephone 478 Pl'ompt Delivery . ¢ | St fairly fortunate day. Telephores: News Office, 602; Business Office, 374 add e loy! e to Hawk Inlet and Icy Straits points|be a Mstionss 2 added to the unemployment trust fund and Clinton J. Tomilson lon a picture takng expedition, Business should have a decided MEMBER OF ASSOCIATED PRESS. can be used for no purpose other than pay- — > —\ | A S TTILHVRURILSG, < 0% ORI SRR\ AWET R, e The Associated Press is exclusively entitied to the use for | ment of compensation to unemployed wage- ' {impetus under this configuration| < e A. H. Ziegler leased the Cassie | which stimulates enterprise and en-| republieation of all news dispatches crediteq to it or not earners in Alaska. . | . H. dited this and s 'S - — itk Bt Dt a Blaw ton e DAILY LESSONS., | secrest nouse in the Casey-Shat-|courages commerce. — - RN R | T, NP ¥ ition. | There is a sign read as indicat- AN GrRULATIoH SARAR D P e The President is trying to dodge the heat, some| IN: ENGLISEE E#: tuck ‘Addition ling a keen Tataraitae it roreis. df] HAN THAT OF ANY OTHER PUBLICATION |of the Democratic Congressmen -are trying to dodge By W. L. Gordon .|| W.P.sStuddertand C.L. Anderson, insurance. Annufties also will be! Yon are \nvit:‘ to presont | the President and, judging from reports, the rest ot, 4 | lagents for the Bureau of Fisheries,'sought by both men and women. LatiS ('O'fpml at the box the country is trying to dodge taxes. The old vicious | % 'were in Juneau to give those inter-; This is a lucky day for. signing office of the circle. Words Orlen Mlsused: Do not say, ‘mtvd instruction in the Scotchlegal documents and may be mOS(; e e s e i i E . Say, method of curing herring. }tullundtc for government contracts.| ca itol The Londoner who .chose to stick to his dog| “Here is a pair of scissors.” ;S?‘m? .~‘m( of a foreign pact is rure-V p ! rather than his wife probably figured the advantage | Often Mispronounced: Ceramlcs Lieut. A. M. Jones and Dr. H W.‘sl.ddo\wd. 4 Pronounce se-ram-iks, e as in see, Craig, of Fort Wm. H. Seward, were| Propaganda from many organiza- eatre bbb o o ciber v B S oo booad a as in am, accent second syllable. in Juneau to examine applicants tions will be widely distributed be-| N S e X T | Often Misspelled: Tear (to for admittance to the Reserve Offi-)fore autumn when secret agent : and receive tickets for your- Fairbanks romance is reported to have started rend). Tare (weight.) cers Training Corps at San Fran-'will cause trouble and arouse sus- self and a friend or in a hospital. Unique, of course, in that it didn’t, like| Synonyms: Platitude, banality, cisco. Among those who had ap- picion relative to see s0 many, end there. | commonplace, truism, triteness. . |plied for admittance to the camp! This is a most auspicious day for| ¥ SRS : Word Study: “Use a word three were Thurmond Brown, W. C. Coyy- sailing on long voyages. Crowded‘ “ ° ” s " BLid s g g 5 . times and it is yours.” Let us in- yer, H. E. Spear, R. A. Wilson, J. steamships will carry Americans to R Revolutionaries Facing a Revolution crease our vocabulary by mastering C. Smith, W. J. Nelson, C. E. Naghel, little known parts of the world. | eunion (Philadelphia Record) one word each day. Today's word: Walter Johnson, H. B. Snead, R. R.| New vocations will give employ- : y Acute; having nice discernment; Pullen, F. M. Jardine, M. B. Leming, ment to scientifically trained men As o paid-up subscriber of The Just what is going on inside Russia? The world penetrating; clever. “He alone is J. T. Hunt, Walter O'Brien and and women. Chemists, engineers,| NAVY WEEK | doesn - S se W | i :illocsr; lvknofw]—flm! neither do those who live under |an geute observer who can observe W. H. Thompson. |navigators and radio experts will be Dall Alaska Em lre T2y TR he Soviet rule. | mi: i . m demand. sti g minutely without bein, ed. 58 T AgAIn , Juneeitife: G AREIMITEH (Oliis Rl 18 = o0 But by now it Has become apparent that the im- Lavatery i iy Postmaster Jack Henson of Doug-| Death of a man of worldwide iamv opportunity to welcome the Navy. It is an annual S insi v ‘ | ppo! y 3 gy portance of recent events inside the Soviet Union e las was leaving for Eagle River on is prognosticated for this month Good only for current offering. event that this community has come to look forward transcends any question of the: personal guilt or in- fff—m e —— & }ic annual vacation. Jack Lang-.when there will be international to with a great deal of pleasure. Not only does the nocence of the hundreds recently arrested and tried | MODERN seth who owned a miner. claim in incidents of great Importance. Your Name May Appear Tomorrow Navy get better acquainted with ‘Alaska and her for treason, sabotage and “Trotzkyism.” | that ~district, was accompanyl o o1t 1s y i e . st § panying | Persons whose birthday it is have i > people but we in the north are afforded a close-up of In fact, it can be assumed, for the purposes of ETIQUETTE Him, Rt g s s ey WATCH THIS SPACE the nation's first line of defense, a naval arm with 54 VSI% that fhose el o el Istacles that interfere’ with plans,| which we expect to become more and more familiar g -lbsp nore s bamdiad By Roberta Lee Roy Nolan, for the previous two but business affairs should be fur- -— ment with Stalin’s policies. The significant guestion s naval operations are extended to the Territory and oy o+ whather they were “guilty G gy : vears electrician with the Alaska tunate. » S e “guilty,” but why they. were » " -'-'H-l'- feofertecfecfeefed : w Lt s il Electric Light and Power Company, Childrén born on this day prob- & bases established in Alaskan waters. “guilty.” . When a woman is visitin, Faw Today the Northampton rides at anchor in the When Trotzky was driven. from Russia, Stalin ‘.\-n?p with' a woman friend, woulq Vas leaving for Dixon's Harbor to ably will be exceedingly careful re- Channel and out at Auk Bay the Salt Lake Clty has estimated that the following of the former Red Army |1t be proper to introduce her. o’ 0ca ;& homestead and ‘engage in garding: whikwver - they amdertake: come to berth. Thursday the Chicago is scheduled chief had become almost negligible. That judgment |saleswoman, whom she has knmown BE e Butiieccs 5 NI ;R SO O 40 and aboard her as the guest of Rear Admiral J. R. WAs Drobably correct. What then has happened for several years? conserve talents as well as prop- A i & ccouri. Tt je Since to break the near unanimity of Communist s 2 ! Robert McKanna, who for the erty. ' ' ' Tassig will be Gov. Floyd C. Stark of Missourl. It is i 1 A, Xes Why ‘natt S And SERs past year had been longshore boss; John Robinson, botanist, was born emem er oe o " T 51 " ™ Jeaders? Why has Russian industry been thrown into your friend will begin by patron- s antifip{:t.ed -that some destroyers may visit here as confusion and its progress slowed down, if not halted? |izing this shop, due to the intro- at Juneau for the Alaska Steam- on this da_v_ 1936. O?hers whg have | they usually do. Why has it seemed necessary to Stalin to execute not |duction, which will be credited to| P Company, left on the Mari- celebrated it as a birthday include Not only Juneau but other Alaskan points are only political leaders but seven of the Soviet's ablest 'your saleswoman. posa for Anchorage where he was James Savage, antiquary, 1784; seeing the Navy. Sitka has a warship or two and a military leaders? Why has the chief of the Russian| q Is it all right for a Vting to be employed by the same com- John Jacob Astor, capitalist, fourth unit of the naval bombing squadron is basing there air force sudder disappeared under circumstances widow to wear white pany. of his name, 1864. f " . . " E vhite at her second | in connection with its maueuvers to the Westward. | that lead observers to believe he is under arrest? WhY |wedding? | e OO If your "Daily Alaska Empire” has It is Juneau and Southeast Zlaska’s Navy Week. have 37 more Trotzkyists just been executed in the " A No It is not customary for Weather: highest, 56; lowest, 49; ATTENTION MASONS not been delivered . i " ¢ Soviet Far East? rain There will be a Stated Communi- Let’s make the most of it and give the officers and a woman t vea | S X Whatever the specific answers it is clear that the 0; Near whita Ak, ler e cation of Mt. Juneau Lodge No. 147 men of the Navy a genuine Alaska welcome. In the A |second wedding, regardless of her § Mond: . 3 ek Soviet regime is facing the most strenuous opposition onday evening at 7:30. ‘Work. in By 6:00 P. M. years to come we'll see a great deal more of them since the end of the Russian civil war and that the aga Sl g WORLD Sl‘. RVlCE the E. A. Degree. By order of il o o ———— Pew, teli BE dbteor s ASBORNIgY el iainst bty | chateaubriand | CJRCLE IS PLANNING . |the W. M. |mean on the menu card? members and men who formerly supported Stalin. | | J. W. LEIVERS, UNEMPLOY “FNT COMPENSATION As Harold Denny has recently pointed out in the | & Center out of fillet of eef. | HIGHWAY LUNCHEON —adv. Secretary. PHoNE -~ New York Times, the safest group in Russia today | L AT % Much s heard these days about unemployment ol o %y Tt I T 1 ners. of the | The members of the World Ser- .Speclallsis say flea beetles do compensstion, as the result of a new law which 15 4 sristocratic and middle classes. Those whose|| LOOK and LEAR‘N vice Circle -of the Northern Light heavy damage to tobacco during the 2 2 6 nbw in effect in Alaska after passage by the last heads rest most uneasy are the once proud holders By A. C. Gord Presbyterian Church will have a Period just after the plants have Legislature. The Unemployment Compensation Com- of Communist party cards. | ¥ A oRRaS | luncheon at Mrs. John Crone Mar- Peen set out in the field. mission has held its preliminary meetings and the It has been suggested that the defensive “popu- % 4 shall's cabin on the Glacier' High- = Al set-up for the Territory has been arranged in con- 1ar front” policy which Stalin’s followers in other| - way tomorrow afternoon. Cars will Jjunction with the Federal Social Security law. In Dations now pursue is distasteful to the Bolsheviks, 'l"lm IZneka.]k:';dw:)D( s::e(esn:nel:w:s f¥hie M Nyt Sl e Jhyer K cog Hb rou IMMED View of the fact that both employers and employees 'v]vha came (f powerl pllel()‘lsely by hew;ng to a line or‘me United States? ‘invn chureh tomorrow forenoon at 11 9 ‘ COpY Wi e sent you - are now paying toward benefits in the future, some on-cooperation with ‘1 eral groups in revelutionary | 2. What flower o'clock and those attending the Ghahe ssllent Toatihe Sril reqiireluats o1 tha ko situations, such as present day Spain. These groups | |emblem of Greece? |af(du are requested to be on time. £ cannot swallow Stalinist caution and compromise, BL-\ . 'y ->-oee gram should be of interest. Following are some of the cording to the theory. 8 iy 15 & caryatld, in Ruehfell o o ot e Thdians have IATELY bY SPECIAL CARRIER. principal features as outlined by the Commission: | That may explain at least a part of what is hap- | PROTHEEL “obnamed $18,000,000 in claims from ‘ : 4. When did the first electroey- 3 i pening behind the Soviet facade of censorship. | |the Federal government. It should be kept in mind that Alaska’s Broeadly, it is true that effective revolutionaries seldom | tion take place in the United: e law fits in with the national social security make smooth administrators. When, like Stalin, |States? ! law and that if employers in Alaska made no they become interested in preserving the status quo > 10 What Shakespearean play| P 9 T kit unemployment compensation contributions to |5 all costs their former comrades are likely to accuse 9°€S Ariel appear? ay nia the Territory, for use in protecting Wage- |(nem of losing sight of the objectives of the revolution. | earners in time of business stress or unemploy- | yn the early days of the United States, the Feder- | ANSWERS ment, they would be required to pay such gt group was roundly denounced as traitors to the 1. Washington and Oregon. Free Delivery contributions to the Federal government for revolution by the Jeffersonian “radicals.” | 2. The violet. Fresh Meats, G 3 the use of age-earners in the States, none of & res eats, (yroceries, » . | Stalin’s cautious international policy today may| 3. A draped female figure sup- Liquors, Wines and Beer which would be used in Alaska. |be dictated by good sense and a healthy desire to main- {porting an entablgture. i} We Sell for LESS De i If you run any business, excluding a small tain world peace. But it is not difficult to see how | 4. August 6, 1890, in Auburn, 5 We S "ehog ;;""‘ ;:‘;V";‘h";n;ngg'fig :35 :]Zd:;“il::?g};‘;“;:fsg‘:: Isuch a policy would drive into opposition many men New York. e Sell for CAS e s ‘wlth the temperament a raini f e, » during any twenty weeks in the year you are | The doclrfie of * ;:er:lin"em r;‘vgol?mfils:vea‘;u:;adel P Th:l'?m.pit,’fi Leader Dept. Store % N : : subject to the law and required to pay @ Per~ |44 order for temperaments such as that. But it was Alaska” by Leswer D. B dersn George Brothers Ntk 230 South Franklin Telephone 411 centage of ‘your payrolls to the Alaska Unem- l;o4 made to order for a government trying to sta- | i 7o e o ployment. Compensation Commission. Those pjjize jtself before it must fight. Thus Stalin and his | 2 ot = y; twenty weeks need not run together. They 'friends, who preached revolution for so long and so | | S tly coNNoRs MoToR co. lnc. may cover many periods in a calendar year. effectively, find that it returns to plague them and ! “Smiling Service” ! ; .- Any employer having less than eight eém- | (nreaten their own stability at a time when they desire | | Bert’s Cash Grocery ; Distributors ployees may voluntarily come within the pro- the continuation of the ‘stat: Y visions of the law by filing application with 'I‘:)ry 2 stanisaup nehearlly e I Free'Del’PHONE ciad s CHEVROLET PONTIAC BUICK ivery uneau the CDm"'fissm!‘il S i If the methods Stalin uses now are almost indis- l;rh\s PERE AL crnloyers ol ‘elghl QRO tinguishable from those the Tsar used against revo- will be required to make a contribution of |lutionaries, then it must be remembered that in many 18 percent; next year the rate will be in- respects there is not much difference between the two { ol __—' creased to 2.7 percent. absolutisms. D After January 1, 1942, the Unemployment 5.5 ek Compensation Commission will have a record o I on which to base the percentage of contribu- | Lessons From Bilboa v See H. R. SHEPARD & ”N tion to be made by industries in each class. e oy (Cincinnat Enquirer) ‘ 11|l For Every Purse TAP BEER ||| Telephone 409 B. M. Behrends Bank Bldg. substantial reduction in the amount of its Military experts are now busy assessing the con- ! “The Squibb Stores of Al 3 iz tion : - quest of Bilbao, and seeking to learn its implications | und Evel‘Y | IN Tole contributions. Statistics will be carefully kept by P R ~ for each employer during the three years pre- for military strategy and tactics. Evidently the suc- Purpose ceding 1942 and the Commission will be able | omes t‘;fd 'v{he ;‘alli:ni anduspamshxrebel am;iest his a‘c- ' | i ® . to determine readily at any time the amount |cOunted for by their vastly superior power in the air. : A v of contributions paid by employers in each |They had great numbers of excellent German and | | Juneau Radio Service PACIFIC COAST THE MINERS classification and the total paid to idle wage- Italian bombers and pursuit planes, manned by trained | | gor Your RADIO Troubles COAL CO. i earners in each class: |fliers from those countries. The defending Basques | 122 Second St—Next door to Recreation Parlors All collections will be set apart exclusively {had almost no planes and no anti-aircraft guns. San Francisco Bakery PHONE 412 l BILL DOUGLAS for the payment of unemployment compen- | dIn co:.sequence.ntlhe rebel force wlas alr)le to bon:ib % ¥ sation to wage-earners in Alaska. None will and machine-gun e enemy trenches freely, and, - 7S L nbe Mllh ’ be used in :ny state and none will be paid even more important perhaps, to flow low enough over e Juneou u L r 'y 'w' for overhead or any expenses of the Unem- Bilbao to machine-gun the civilian population. This ployment Compensation Commission. The law way of striking at the Basque troops by attacking | says all contributions must be held in a trust their defenseless families probably accounted for the | z o R l c fund for the particular purpose of paying un- |rapid breakdown of morale, once the retreat began. employment compensation in Alaska. But far from proving the superiority of attack | s Except in a few instances, employers have over defense, the Bilbao battles confirm the inherent DRY CLEANING shown a desire to cooperate with the Commis- strength of defense. For if the Basques had had, not | The B. M. Behrends l N s u R A N c sion in putting the law into effect in Alaska. even planes but siinply a few anti-: mmn guns, they | The wage-earner is not the only beneficiary might have kept rebel planes high enough over the . 3 of the program. Employers will find it highly city to prevent wholesale slaughter of civilians. The Bank An Shattuck beneficial to them when the Commission be- remarkable fact is that untrained Basque infantrymen | Sof en gins the payment of compensation, with little artillery support and no air force or anti- le) t If you operate an indusirial establishment |aireraft protection were able to reslat a powerful for-| Juneau, Alaska Water \ Established 1898 that has slack business during any period of eign army for months. | 4 the year and you are forced to reduce your The lesson of Bilbao, from the military stand- Washmg payrolls in that season, the employment serv- point, confirms that of the fighting about Madrid— ice of the Territory, working in cooperation that defense has tremendous advantages over attack CL)MMERCIAL with the unemployment compensation com- despite the development of remarkable new weapons [ ] mission, will seek jobs for your idle workers in for offensive tactics. It is a grim warning for Ger- | and SAVINGS keeping with their experience and qualifica- many in particular, whose general staff has been | Yo is the national | i | PHONES 92 or %5 tions. If business conditions are such that relying on a swift attack with new motorized and | et e BOOKKEEPING SERVICE idleness results from no fault of his own, will | be paid unemployment compensation for not The government is taking on new employees at) Resources OVer Two and ALASKA exceeding 20 weeks and the rate of payment the rate of 6,000 a month. By the year 2000 we will Rass will be based on the employee's weekly earn- |all be on.the payrol.—Wheeling (W. Va) News- One-Half Millionn Dollars L AUNDRY ¢ TRAINED ACCOUNTANTS ings during the time the employer and em- Register. > Tax and System Service ployee are contributing to the fund, but the —_ = IAms C. COOPER COMPANY total will not be greater than $15 a week. In Not until December will our European debtors - PHONE 15 CERTIFIED PUBLIC ACCOUNTANTS most cases this should keep the idle worker in again be put to the anoyance of dernulung %le\elnnd ) ¥ funds for life’s necessities until the time the | Plain Dealer. i . \ Phone 182 Juneau, Alaska Goldstein Bldg.

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