The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, September 29, 1937, Page 4

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ROBERT W. BENDER - - Editor and Ma.nagvr| Published evers evening except Sunday by the EMPIRE . for bombing Chinese towns. MPANY at Second and Main Streets, Jl.nvuu.‘ anese must Entered in the Post Office in June matter. SUBSCRIPTION RATES, nd Douglas for $1.25 per month. Delivered by earrier in June By mail, p Y One year, in ady one month, ip advan Subscribers w at the fol the Business Office of any failure or iriegularity in the de- | livery of their papers ) Telephones: News Office, 602; Business Office, 374 \ MEMBER OF ASSOCIATED PRESS. The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for | Count the money in your pocket. If you have republication of all news dispatches credited to it or nou| Y Hare: otherwise credited in this paper d also the local news |$50.38 then you have your share; that is the per published herein ALASKA CIRCULATION GUARANTEED TO BE LARGER THAN THAT OF ANY OTHER PU Daily Altiska Em pire E months, in advance, $6.00 ‘some of the boy Class ! Down au as Second in turned with lowing rates a favor If thay will promptly notify capita amount of United States money in circulation. { To go into details you should have $1.12 in pennies and nickels, $2.66 in silver, $32.53 in Federal Reserve and the balance would be in silver certificates, BLICATION. notes the per capita way | men’s pockets and {banks the money |1t is | THEY WANT PEACE The world’s two outstanding dictators, Hitler and | | Mussolini, have conferred. And they announced to the world that their ambition is|international cast, has |comedy or a new low in high comedy, we're not sure peace. They are, Premier the real truth attempting to save “European Culture”| from the “false lying God of Geneva and Moscow.” |leading the great pirate hunt from the poop decks In other words, the strong men of Germany and of Downing Street and the Quai d'Ors Italy want the world to understand there is no true inviting Il Duce and his fellow-buccaneers to join the culture except that culture and civil: a Fascist form of government which they represent | and which is dictatorship—a government of people subject to one man or a group of men of one political faith The fallacy of their position would appear to lie| in the fact that they criticize the ver in a not unsimilar way ism or the system of government Russia which is generally considered as Communism. In Russia there is but one political organization is the government A Russian newspaper man in when asked by Empire reporters if ernment action was permitted in Ru replied in words of similar meaning that there could | be no criticism of the Soviet government in Russia | because that government could not To free thinking Americans, such a situation is| hard to realize. It seems utterly i it is dictatorship regardless of what it is called Yet Mussolini refers to such a system as a “false lying God” and most of us will agree with him the German, explain can the Italian leader, or their own systems? of one political party. must subscribe to that system force. it is they have to subscribe to. Hitler and Mussolini say they want peace. can be no peace in the hearts of submit for the time being to such tems as are found today in Russia, The war lords of Ttaly and Germany had better first put their own houses in order if they actually want Throwing javelins at Russia, whose s) is equally as bad as their own, will not insure peace. | And that may be just what| peace. But it will make war. the war lords want. A clash with may take the minds of their people conditions under which they live. orchids are due from this community to the men who have built one here with the aim of life. Has he ever been away? ‘They are teaching school by interspersed we suppose With advertising and a few hotcha tune: It is reported, but not confirmed, Mussolini Mussolini re lying God of Moscow,” meaning, of course, Commun- crew probably would rip the mask from diplomatic Those who value their lives usually become | “good” Nazis, or Black-shirts, or Soviets or whatever some l | The imitation having conferred says, seeking! which. ization built upon;h“nl- |sank it, or when. Why? thing they foster have red faces. ers to the “false | of ‘Recovery now in vogue in | caution That [ Anywa) on bottom? Juneau recently | criticism of gov-|giplomats will be. 1ssian newspapers, Even be wrong mpossible because | It must have But | the | { clowns. jantics understood There people who must governmental s) Germany or Italy. of a circus next tem some other nation | off the impossible | g ope. preserving human | Journal. radio in Chicago, | shaving cream that whe earth shock was felt Thursday afternoon at 5:29 Globe-Democrat. EMPLOYMENT OFFICES TO0 BE OPENED SOON Plans Call for One at Ket- chikan, Juneau, Anchor- age, Fairbanks, Nome Tentative plans for opening em- ployment offices in five Alaska cities in conjunction with the functioning ! the Unemployment Compensation Commission in the Territory have been completed, according to Wal- ter P. Sharpe, Executive Director of the Compensation Commission, who has just returned to his Juneau headquarters after a swing over the Territory with H. R. Justice, repre- sentative of the U. S. Department of Labor which cooperates with the ,'aska Commission in the under- taking. The employment offices will be established at Ketchikan, Juneau, Anchorage, Fairbanks and Nome, the latter two part time offices. It is anticipated, Director Sharpe said that at least one of the offices would b= operating by November 1. Mr. Justice, who returned here by plane with Mr. Sharpe, continued on to Ketchikan on the Yukon in connection with the work and ex- pects to return next week when fin- al arrangements will be made for starting the work. Conditions in the Interior are es- pecially bright, Director Sharpe re- ported. High price of gold coupled with the installation of new equip- ment has revived mining to a point comparable with gold rush days, he reported, and a prosperous condi- tion prevails through the area R Hitler, Mussulini - Shake f_lgms. Part BERLIN, Sept. 29.—Like two pals, Hitler and Mussolini parted today, ending a five day demonstration of Fascism and Nazism. Both men smiled broadly and ap- peared extraordinarily well satis- fied as they clasped hands warmly in a farewell on the station plat- form. They chatted for a few minutes after I1 Duce had entered his car, he leaning out of the window. - - invented in 1866 a Swedish engi- Nobel Dynamite was by Alfred Nobel, neer under whose will the prizes were established. o'clock cocktail. The League of Nations has “condemned” Japan feel mortified. san called a AFL picket a “pantyw the epithet waterfront situation was reported as a “riot.” Have You $50.387 (Cincinnati Enquirer) ational bank notes, and a few odds and ends. um of money in circulation is not carried around in {of it is in the vaults of the banks and in the cash drawers of the stores. jday, put their money back in the banks. jmerchandising bills, and to settle all kinds of accounts. a kind of river that flows in a circle. Back in 1879 the per capita circulation was only $16.92. No one then had much money was more money in circulation per capita than now, | for the figure in that year was $53.21. Somebody’s Sunk Act T ended with the grand chorus of diplomats Act IT has opened upon a more somber scene. | pirate submarine has been sunk. No one knows who | the crew doomed—unless there is swift rescue lone moves to the rescue! |be a major embarrassment to some nation.” No wonder there aren’t they pirates? Particularly since, if the submarine isn’t sunk, the To Make People Laugh (Port Angeles Evening News) |of the Wenatchee Daily World to forsake his for a time two weeks ago and don the greasepaint and the laugh-clothes of a circus clown. How refresh- 1ing it must have been to stop columnizing and advis- ing people when they don’t want to be advised. How fundamental difference between the Soviet system and\m,“gmm] to don the cap and bells of the tent show Both are built on the premise | jester and just walk up and down the arena lookinz The people of those countries | foolish, acting foolish, making oldsters smile and kids If too many of them|yell with delight do not subscribe there is the well known “purge” which | with fewer editors who refuse to be else but seriou amounts to nothing but the application of fear and |but the world cannot afford to get along with less | Their pantomine is a universal language, their | on daily and nightly with trouble and sorrow on his | mind, the circus clown is a good trouper and a mighty good example for others—he hides his own troubles and tries to bring cheer to others. Mr. Woods on a humanizing effort, we'd like to try our hand. We're getting altogether too | serious-minded for any use. American ships mu | because of the “mad dog” submarine, nor to Shang- | hai because of the Japanese. | to trading with only Patagonia and Capetown.—Boston With pirates prowling in the Mediterranean and We know nothing of iron lungs but we feel that|international robbers stealing China, the world seems to be in the midst of a crime wave. — Ohio State | —— A congressman standing around with a fragment The U. S. sucker comes back, says a headline. |0f torn coattail in his hand may be a feature of next year’s campaign.—Toledo Blade. They still make some motion pictures to appeal |to the 12-year-old mind—of the producer.—Lee Ship- | |pey in Los Angeles Times, No matter how much of Asia the Japs conquer, N the | they still have to live mostly on rice—St. Louis wondered what had been in that My goodness, the Jap- Francisc CIO longshoreman t” and the latter re- Small wonder the But of figuring is misleading. The total women's handbags. The great bulk The stores, of course, day by From the is withdrawn for payrolls, to pay In 1920 there (Philadelphia Record) one word each day. Apprehension; fear or distrust. “The zance now going on in the Mediterranean, with an |pain of death is most in apprehen- sion.” performance of the Pirates of Pen- has reached a new high in low all solemnly A But the submarine is on bottom, And no 's slow motion in the rescue party. Why not let ‘em stay that's too good for them Rufus Woods hetum been fun for Editor The world could well get along by everybody. And though he go We congratuate And if he kno season that wants a spare mimic | n't go to the Mediierranean We may yet be reduced | Goat Puts on Dog, Gets Town’s Goat SKOPLJE, Yugoslavia, Sept. 29. —A goat that understands eight | languages and is “so unusual” his mistress can’t find a “proper wife” for him must go to court to face ai charge of being a public nuisance. Manne, the goat, is too handy with his horns for his neighbors in Georg Skopljantsche street. His | best score is three people at one butt among them the mayor's wife. They were walking single file to avoid a water puddle, Again, say the neighbors, when | | * President Lincoln was as: | stressed, lrn verbally or by telephone. | o HAPPY BIRTHDAY The Empire extends congratula- tions and best wishes today, their birthday anniversary, to the follotv- ing: SEPTEMBER 29 William A. Holzheimer James Morrison Frank Dunn James Ramsay, Jr. Mrs. J. G. Morrison Mary Harris Louise Skinner - D — DAILY LESSONS IN ENGLISH By W. L. Gordon . 4 ! | | | l | 4| | Words Often Misused: Do not say I see Mary most every day.” S: ‘I see Mary almost every day.” Often Mispronounced: Gaseous. Pronounce gas-e-us, a as in at, e as in me, accent first syllable. Often Misspelled: Hearth nounced harth, a as in arm.) Synonyms: Acquirement, accom- plishment, acquisition, attainment Word Study: “Use a word three times and it is yours.” Let us in- (pro- crease our vocabulary by mastering Today's word - . - LOOK and LEARN By A. C. Gordon * 7. What play was given at Ford's Theatre in Washington on the night sinated? 2. Mow much mone in the liquor business, and how re chor? ats. 1 Glance at the (.homi]nf l()lu;l‘(:l::‘ap: Al many workers are employed? ‘ Then glance at the dispa 3. How many satellites has the the submarine and seizure of its earth? . while disclosure of its nationality would | 4 1 the Pope always an Ttal- 5 What two lakes are connected by the Detroit River? ANSWERS 1. “Our American Cousin,” by Tom Taylor 2. About $500,000,000; more than [ 1,000,000 workers. 3. The moon. 4. Yes, since 1591. 5. Lake Erie and Lake St. Clair. THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, WEDNESDAY, SEPT. 29, 1937. e | *- | * | | D 20 Years Ago || Horoscope i 3 “The stars incline *| but do not compel” SEPTEMBER 20 1917 Y 0 A farewell smoker was planned at Douglas for C. E. Bennett, for 15 years master mechanic at Treadwell, and I. D. Carpenter, carpenter for the same period. High winds kicked up a nasty sea on the channel the previous even- ing and boats ran to shelter or tossed out extra anchors. There was much damage done | | The boys of the Juneau High School held a ‘“smokeless smoker” the prevous night in the new build- ing with a program and eats. Mrs. friends at her home on Sixth Streel Arthur Riendeau, wife and three ildren arrived from the south on the Admiral Watson. Weather Report—High 47, low 43. Rain - “Alaska” by Lester D. Henderson. UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR GENERAL LAND OFFICE District Land Office Anchorage, Alaska. August 6, 1937. Notice is hereby given that Silas Dalton, entryman, together with his witnesses Matthew Laurence and Charles Fawcett, has made final proof on his homestead, An- chorage 06672, for a tract of land embraced in U. S. Survey No. 2124, situated on Port Frederick within Survey No. 1899, Hoonah elimina- tion from Tongass National Forest, in latitude 58 degrees 06’ 20” longitude 135 degrees 26° W. con- is invested taining 582 acres, and it is now in the files of the U. S. Land Office, Anchorage, and if no protest is filed in the local land office within the period of publication or thirty days thereafter, said final proof will be accepted and final -certifi- cate issued. GEORGE A. LINGO, Register. First publication, Sept. 15, 1937. Last publication, Nov. 10, 1937. “Smiling Service” Bert’s Cash Grocery PHONE 105 | Free Delivery fi | Juneau - MODERN ETIQUETTE p | By Roberta Lee 1 | v Q. May a woman staying alone at a hotel wear full evening dress? A. Not unless she has an escort. Otherwise she should wear the most modest and least conspicuous dress, appropriate to the hour of the day. Q. What is “Mardi Gras,” and how is it pronounced? A. Mardi gras is Shrove Tues- day, and in some cities a day of carnival. Pronounce mar-de-gra, both a’s.as in ah, e as in me un- accents on first and last syllables. | Q How should one extend an| invitation for a motor drive? t A. This invitation is usually giv-i‘ " ON THE MEZZANINE T HOTEL JUNEAU BEAUTY SHOP | LYLAH WILSON | Contoure Telephone X-Er-Vae 538 ‘L € -5 | THE VOGUE | | Correctly Styled Clothes | For Women | | 101 SEWARD ST. . S “Tomorrow's Styles Today” Halyorer> Juneau’s Own Store [ Guy Smith DRUGS PUROLA REMEDIES PRESCRIPTIONS CARE- FULLY COMPOUNDED Front Street Next Coliseum PHONE 97—Free Delivery PRESCRIP- TIONS compounded exactly as written by your doctor. ——— | The Juneau Laundry GREEN TOP CABS Franklin Street between PHONE Front and Second Streets J. PHONE 358 | & The B. M. the breezes should be wafting the aroma of summer flowers thx'ough; Georg Skoplpjantsche street they | carry only the inescapable remind- | er of Manne. | Worst of all, however, Manne walks down the street, one of the | best in town, as though he owned it. - - - NO WELCOME—SKAGWAY H A radio was received by the Ter-| ritorial Health Department this af- ternoon that traveling salesmen| and others contemplating trips to Skagway by boat or plane will not| be welcomed there until the present Juneau scare is over. The radio was signed by Dr. F. 1. Dahl, of Skagway. R e Juneau, “Alaska” by Lester D. Henderson. = Behrends Bank Alaska COMMERCIAL . and SAVINGS Hesources Over Two and One-Half Milliors Dollars —— J. B. Marshall entertained | * junusual circumstances there may be | ITHURSDAY. SEPTEMBER 30, 1937 According to astrology this is an |uncertain day in planetary direc- tion. Il omens are discerned for | the morning hours when it may be difficult to concentrate upon rou- |tine matters. | Uranus is in a place read as threatening to aviators. Accidents may be numerous. Severe winds |and sudden storms may add to fly- ing hazards. This is a sway under which there may be much mental chaos and lack of logic. The stars encourage ar- gument and discussion which are futile. This applies to domestic matters and to government affairs | Labor today is subject to dis- | turbing influences which may not action, but will increase the general discontent with the estab- lished order. | Music and musicians come under 'a sway which seems to presage | popularity of band music and male singers. March composers will prof- lit in coming weeks. As September closes astrologers read for next month serious criti- cism of government heads. Oppo- sition to state and federal policies {will be bitter. Newspapers will be severe in their {comments on political leaders and 'there will be danger in the spoken |word which arouses enmities. Many jquarrels are indicated among per- \sons of differing views on public | policies. Again emphasis is placed by as-| trologers on the importance of con-| serving food and keeping the family| storeroom well stocked. Owing to| e scarcity of meats and vegetables. i UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR IMIS, Guggenhgim oyt T rd Seeks Divorce. ™" "= Anchorage, Alaska. May 28, 1937. ‘ Charles Holden Switzer, Entry- man, together with his witnesses NEW YORK, Sept. 26. — MIS. | Fred Orme and James E. Sparks, Elizabeth Eaton Guggenheim, third |all of Juneau, Alaska, has submit- wife of Col. M. Robert Guggen- |ted final proof on his homestead heim, who settled one million dol- entry, Anchorage 06459, for a tract lars on each of his former Wives of land embraced in U. S. Survey when they divorced him, is in|No. 2121, situated along the Glacier Reno for a divorce, the World- | Highway about 7 miles northwest Telegram says. _yof Juneau, containing 14258 acres, Mrs. Guggenheim, prominent in and it is now in the files of the the Long Island society set, will ask y. 8. Land Office, Anchorage, Al- for a $5,000-a-month alimony, the 'aska, and if no protest is filed in paper said, adding it is rumored the local land office within the Colonel Guggenheim is willing 0 period of publication or thirty days pay $2,000. thereafter, said final proof will be The Guggenheims were married gaccepted and final certificate iS- in 1927 in Baltimore. He is the gyed. youngest son of the late Daniel GEORGE A. LINGO, Guggenheim, who left a mining Registrar. fortune of two hundred sixty-nine ' pirst publication, August 11, 1937. million dollars, and a brother of yast publication, October 6, 1937. the former American Ambassador to Cuba. Try The Empire classifieds for The colonel has won acclaim for results. his startling sartorial effects, such @ — T as a billiard green dinner jacket— A —— he told friends his underwear was| | Alaska Federal Savings the same color — and a sky-blue | 2 -blue| | and Loan Association uniform he }vfn.e to hunt balls. Accounts Insured Up to $5,000 7 R BTG P. O. Box 2718———Phone 3 | Visit the Temporary Office: COLUMBIA LUMBER CO. SITKA HOT SPRINGS | : & r~ Mineral Hot Baths - | | \ | | | £ Accommodations to suit every | | 1 | taste. Reservations Alaska Air | 55 | When in Nee Transport. L ML e SEL OIL—UTAH COAL GENERAL HAULING STORAGE and CRATING FORTUNE from $4 CALL US JUNEAU TRANSFER Phone 48—Night Phone 696 Persons whose birthdate it is have the augury of a year of succes: (in business and financial ventures.| Friends will gain a new value. Do- | mestic changes are presaged. Children born on this day prob. ably will be original and forcefu in their ideas. Subjects of this sign may be exceedingly clever in var- ied ways. Artistic and creating idea- | belong to this sign. Richard Brinsley Sheridan, d: ho have celebrated it as a birthday include Earl Begas, pain ter, 1794; Samuel S. Sox, diplomat and statesman, 1824. (Copyright, 1937) e — Try an Empire ad > 'PHONE 36 For very prompt LIQUOR DELIVERY ! “The Rexall Store” your Reliable pharmacists compound Butler Mauro Drueg Co. B ——— LTS | ‘YOUR APPEARANCE IS OUR RESPONSIBILITY” | Shattuck Bidg. Phone 318 77 MODISTE TO WOMEN OF BETTER TASTE | MRS. STERLING | Room 300—Goldstein Bldg. PHONE 553 THE BEST TAP BEER IN TOWN! [ ] THE MINERS' Recreation Parlors BILL DOUGLAS {ZORIC [t DRY CLEANING [ ] | Soft Washing [ 1 Your ALASKA LAUNDRY PHONE 15 | Water i FORD AGENCY (Authotized Dealers) GREASES GAS — OILS { JUNEAU MOTORS Foot of Main Street Van’s Store Cigars Cigarettes Candy Cards THE NEW ARCTIC Pabst Famous Draught Beer On Tap "JIMMY" CARLSON 300 Rusms . 300 Bat JSoom ‘2,50 Secial Weesly Kutes ALASKANS LIKE T CARDINAL | CABS | 25¢ Within City Limits FOR INSURANCE See H. R. SHEPARD & SON Telephone 409 B. M. Behrends Bank Bldg. Juneau Luinber Mills, Inc. INSURANCE Allen Shattuck Established 1898 .8 i LR “" < e Ly NE—— s,

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