The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, January 19, 1938, Page 4

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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, WEDNESDAY, JAN. 19 HAPPY BIRTHDAY The Empire extends congratula- tions and best wishes today, their birthday anniversary, to the follow- 1938. that might well have been given up for lost. In February, 1902, the expedition shin Ant- arctic landed Nordenskjold and five compan- ions on the little island Snow Hill, in the Wed- dell Sea, and then sailed north, to return for them the following year. But the ice condi- tions the next summer were bad and the Ant- FRATERNAL SOCIETIES GASTINEAU CHANNEL Daily Alasrkar Empire y by the 20 Years Ago From The Empire Horoscope “The stars incline but do not compel” Published evers evening except Sun: EMPIRE PRINTING COMPANY at Second and Main Streets, Ju +] B. P. 0. ELKS meet | >DRS‘ KASER & FREEBURGER the Post Office in Juneau a v | B U Sunean and Danely il Toand. dg“("m b L Ml o JANUARY 19, 191 L & | DENTISTS ;‘;‘ry &:fl::;d?m:‘}:m? 7 ohrriat in Juneau and Douslas 7o Hill Island. Captain Larsen landed a party R Murphy, du Pont powder| " g 4 | Blomgren Building iy vy rere s mall, ostage paid. et the of three. under command of Gunnar Ander- JANUARY 19 ot R m! oot “a| THURSDAY, JANUARY 20, 1638 pm. Vising brother FIELD, Exalted Ruler: M. H. SIDES, Secre- tary. MOUNT JUNEAU LOD(‘E NO. 117 Second and fourth Monday of each month in Scottish Rite Temnle { beginning at 7:30 p.m. DANIEL ROSS, Wor- $12.00; six months Lillian Clements 5 Don Gallagher Mrs. Charles Waynor Angelino Savovich Elliott McMasters H. L. Stansfield O. L. Hanson ©One vear, in advanc , tn advance i S':g?g‘lb:r-s will con r if they will promptly notify the Business Office of e or irregularity in the de- b ? their papers | arctic was crushed by the ice and sank, her lm’l"flznhnnéx Newe Office, 602; Business Office, 374. crew making their way to land. The parties ~ MEMBEB OF ASSOCIATED PRESS. spent the winter at two different. points on ely entitled to the use for Erebus and Terror Gulf, unable to communi- 3 s s, e . PE cate with each other or with Nordenskjold's SR it o base. camp. In October, 1903, when Norden- and also the local news —— e B skjold was on an exploratory trip, he was i ‘ MODERN sson, who were to attempt to reach the base PHONE 56 [ | and report on the situation, while the Ant- | pusiness trip south and east, re-| Astrologers perceive 0\11_ portents | | Hours 9 am. to 9 pm. turned to Juneau aboard the City|in the horoscope today. The morn- f Seattle. ing hours are especially threaten- ing. } Wrong thinking inspires preju- |dice and bad judgment in both small " V| land large decisions. Men may de- Dr. Charles P. Jenne | A ceive one another as well as them- DENTIST = Jarpe, atlselves while this configuration pre-| | Rooms 8 and 9, Valentine Bldg. | | Deputy U. S. Marshal Ketchikan, found 52 TELEPHONE 176 James Brennon of Petersburg was in Juneau on business and ple lure The Associated Press is e republication of all CIRCULATION GUARANTEED TO- BE LARGER, ALASKA CIr ER mmu( ATION. astonished to come upon the Andersson party. THAN THAT OF ANY C of sal-|vails. | a. L ey Meanwhile the Argentine Government had . he alil International affairs may be | |shiptul Master; JAMES W. LEI- mon. Lifting the lids he found ali I ster; e oy and had el ETIQUETTE |cases packed with filled whiskey bot- |marked by intrigue and dissimula- T o VERS, Secretary. S o Gapiain Trisst, b e which were confiscated. ltion as Mars frowns upon the R i ST By Roberta Lee [-|}2es Three secret indictments Q. Should a bereaved person re- returned by the Grand Jury. ply to letters of condolence? | 4 of the expedition. Captain Irizar arrived on November 8, 1903, and on the same evening N Captain Larsen and his men walked into the camp. The reunited paTties were then car- ried north by the Uruguay |Earth. The planetary infiuences en- had been|courage conflict affecting workers, military and naval forces, govern- | ment officials and others. While men indulge in bitter mis- REBEKAHS Perseverance Lodge mv. = A meets every second and fourth Wedneg- day, I.O.OF. Hall. BETTY Mec- Dr. Richard Williams | DENTIST | OFFICE AND RESIDENCE A A. Yes; a brief note of thanks| It was all quiet on the war fronts. | ' DOWELL, Noble Grand; RUTH » These sample instances of lost explorers hould be sent to everyone who has press dispatches indicated '\umm-qundnm. women today are GOLDSTEIN BUILDING | | BLAKE, Secretary. are for land or landfast ice. Things have Eooulc De SCI 10 2 O < Laad] under benign influences. They ! e happened on drifting ice that scem more re- NLLL0, Sere MO e | Lee Ricker, manager of the Berg-|should act as peace-makers where-| oy i markable to those unfamiliar with the ways N s s advertising steam |ever possible P = s AERR: TR of AhE k. We ol two of & poselblE SUBH for a fifth year wedding anniver- mann Hotel, was adveriising steamie Pos 2 ; = — ) pai e c 0 of a possible score. Sy heated rooms with hot and cold| This is an auspicious wedding D Judson w‘llfllel’ I On October 15, 1872, a party of nineteen et Al g % ¢ q T. | u 0 5 2, a party A Wood, tfurnitiie’ etk < |running water in each for $10 to $12,day and fortunate for bethrothals. HIROPRACTOR { (ten white men, two Eskimo men and two Es- - Wood, MU, SO s, Irhe siew Siir 1 o be fasteed by . RE candlesticks, cedar chest, etc. a month. 3 s Y Drugless Physician | kimo women, with five children) got separ- ated from the rest of the Hall expedition 700 miles north of the Arctic Circle in the bedlam of a night when it was thought that the milling floes would crush the Polaris and when orders were given to abandon her. The floe upon which they scrambled drifted south- ward 1300 miles ir five and a half months. There was food enough for only a week or two (14 cans pemmican, 11'; bags bread, 1 can dried apples, 14 hams), but it was re- Office hours: 10-12, 1-5, 7-9 Rooms 2-3-4, Triangle Bldg. PHONE 667 {intense love affairs and limited mJ Weather Report—High 34; low, 30. the young. | Girls may find this a lucky date| for seeking positions. Again the seers| |, {prophesy a period in which there| & | will be a great demand for women| PRESCRIPTIONS CARE- in many fields of activity. e 21 FULLY COMPOUNDED Stress is put upon the import-| | ance of truth and honesty. Betray: ! Dl‘. A- w' Stewart als of many sorts are prognosticat-| DENTIST ed between individuals and between) | Hours 9 am. to 6 pm. Q. What should a woman guest| wear to a christening? A. One may wear the same dress Cloudy | as to an afternoon tea e Ly o DAILY LESSONS IN ENGLISH By W. L. Gordon : & = A — fi w PARALYS FALL? RECALL THE INFANTILE QUARANTINE OF L PUROLA REMEDIES In supporting wholeheartedly the President's| Birthday Ball to be held in the Elks hall the night of January 29, this community, like others throughout | the country, will be doing more than paying passing| tribute to the head of the nation and joining in R] Front Street Next Colisen.a PHONE 97—Free Delivery o plenished by the game secured. When their community social function to make it a success. It will be sharing in a humanitarian movement drifting ice island was about to melt in the spring warmth off Labrador, the party was picked up by the sealer Tigress—on April 30, Words Often Misused: Do not say, “We have an excellent show of win- nations. SEWARD BUILDING Breach of faith is to be of grave| | Office Phone 469 significance to the United States R AN | 1 PO which will be bringing life and happiness to countless| | as a foreign nation abrogates sol- — — i ary 29 go toward financially aiding clinics, orthopedic hospitals and research laboratories in combatting the sickness of which so little is known thus far. Under the new Foundation arrangement which | is being started this year with the Birthday ball, a' Often Misspelled: Jeopardize. Ob- serve the five vowels. Emblem, symbol, to- should be prosperous. Children born on this day prob- ably will be exceedingly talented ., and successful. Subjects of this _____ sign may have extraordinary pow- &t dreasen and I went north over the moving pack from Alaska with food for about thirty days. At that time it was commonly believed that no game existed far north of Alaska and far from land. But there proved so much Gastineau Hotel Annex Phone 177 youngsters throughout the country afflicted with in-} 1873. Everyone had been in good health o Ry il | SO i your fantile paralysis, that dreaded disease which leaves| through the whole time; no one was the worse :‘:;‘:m ;“f‘;mx‘:zgl?.ave &hexoslient "p:’;e AgLeStIoEe teludng . to viorld) ] DR. H. VANCE | Reliable * i i 5 rreckag s for the experience; and, inst losing i : b | STEOPATH ists in its wake a trail of hun.qan wreckage. The funds| S “1 opical msreml "_f osing Often Mispronounced: Resérvoir. Barkomi e hines HibtEAnte 16 18 have] 4 O s |\ pharmac A derived from the President’s ball here and the thou- ers, the party had increased, for an Es- Soationitice 1ék-sr-Yuin, © 8 HNGE. the Eilaty ofva vear of many in|i| ConSUIBHon |6 . n | compoun sands of others held throughout the nation on Janu-| Kimo child had been born and had thrived e el fereslh B mENAIaT business, (Gifls| | free:. Hours 10 oi18; 1 $o-5ii) prescrip- In March, 1914, Storker Storkerson, Ole An- e % s T ° 7 to 9:30 by appointment. | tions. ] | South Franklin St. Butler-Mauro Drug Co. Synonyms: ken. ¢ Word Study: “Use a word three e e broader-gauged program is being undertaken than' ~ that we missed no meals and lost no dogs el s = youns.. (HeE M ers of expression. Writers belong > D ! “Tomorrow's Styles B e iuen. Wiidie “ob. Bresident's. original Whrra from hunger, althongh . (heford: resshing an crease our vocabulary by mastering to this cusp of Capricorn and Aqua-| | Robert Simpson, Opt.D. ;i i Springs Foundation movement. Under the new plan| uninhabited island) we traveled over the ‘;“9 1W°'_'d each df‘-" I‘o'dav"s W""f‘ rias, = Graduate Los Angeles College | Today » more of the money raised in Alaska, for example,| ~ PAck 700 miles and three times as long as al- i oiaw Jrlo, & Caplons Faihni owlitnne, | pogt o Untnie B anid |1t . 3 4 f | lowed by the provisions we carried. By next tion; implicate. “Involved in other critic, was born on this day 1866 Opthalmology | z will go toward fighting infantile paralysis in the Ter-| (FWE¢ BV b Provislons We carried. By next i PRt el Otiara it iy slebratal 1E Sl | Gl e T Bl ki | ritory; for clinical and orthopedic work directly (’un-‘ up on the north coast of Alaska, there was their ruin.”—Beecher. birthdate include Nathaniel P. Wil- 2 cerned with Alaska and its people. | In this community we can all recall that it was' infantile paralysis which forced closing of the schools here for two weeks last fall. Fortunately, the disease was checked quickly, due, no doubt, in large part to - eee LOOK and LEARN By A. C. Gordon lis, journalist, poet. 1806; David Wil mot, political leader and reformer 1814; Josef Hofmann, pianist, 1876.! | (Copyright, 1938) scarcely a dissenting voice—we must have died because we had not returned within the limit of our provisioning. So we remained dead for a year, in the opinion of the outside world, but in reality the game animals of the WHEN IN A HURRY il L CALL COLE FOR OIL 34 plus or 27 gravity, in any amount . . . QUICK! i y " . o ely sea and later of th minhabi isla £ the quarantine which health authorities immediately it e he uninhabited island had I, o COLE TRANSFER 1 ordered when the disease was first detected. We also supported us in good health and in comfort. . e ' Phone 3441 or Night 554 | | borerorerrrrrrrerm W can realize what might have happened had this com- | It appears to be the opinion of most, if 1. How mny men signed the Dec- s, oo (NN - | 'L G UROUUIE [ "TORE TS T TR T gy | — | not all, of the polar members of the Explorers Club that, if the Levanevsky party, not seri- ously maimed, were alive a day after their forced descent, then they will still be alive a vear after it. Therefore, a minimum require- laration of Independence? 2. Did Buddha live after the time of Christ? 3. What are the three well-known orders of Greek architecture? munity been less fortunate as was the case in Chicago and districts in Canada, We could have had “crippled, twisted, powerless bodies,” as the President terms it, in this community. | Have Your Eyes Examined by PASSES AWAY - | | H.S.GRAVES | | Dr.Rae L. Carlson | e (GlodinE AR ! r Home of Hart Schaffner and Cuch o situation may arise again. But in aiding ment of the tradition and of the probabilities S Ay ANCHORAGE, Alaska, Jan. 19.— OPTOMETRIST Marx Clothing ! “n the fighi against the disease we are guarding is that the airplane search be not given up 5 w,‘.‘ll y .K,” l'“(m hToHET Miks b0 .A]“Ska Ratroad brake. Office Ludwig Nelson's Jewelry % 4 g against its outbreak as well as helping the thousands before the good visibilities of the cold winter P T i A e m.@ Tor o _wr.z s Seadihiere ml-, Sh Phone Green 331 e who are now afflicted | and the fair visibilities of spring are replaced A ‘ln.xmg " hng“iiilmss | s 00 e — | Hollmann’s Pharmacy ' We of this community have had actual experience :‘m‘r']‘f ;;:‘;;lllt:l'(n‘v;l}i {083 of late June and the NSRS BRITAIN'S NEW envoy | ODD FELLOWS ATTENTION | ° FiNE "l | 201 Seward St. Phone 45 with infantile paralysis. We should be more respon- | p Bt e 1. Fifty-six. to China is Sir Archibald Kerr | Installation of Officers of Alaska | | | PRESCRIPTIONS CAREFULLY Watch and Jewelry Repairing | | | (above), replacing Sir Hughe at very reasonable rates 1 Knatchbull-Hugessen, wounded COMPOUNDED FROM sive toward helping to carry on the fight than many | FRESH DRUGS communities where the disease has not occurred. 1 Lodge Al and Silver Bow Lodge A2,/ | Thursday evening at 7:30, 1.0.O.F. 2. No; he is supposed to have Women, we are told, can do anything a man can died about 486 B. C., at the age ”1 do. Ali NGSL but we'd like to meet the woman who |gg- by Japanese machine guns. Hall, Juneau. Members urged to' | PAUL BLOEDHORN [z b S . can get enthusiastic about greasing a trout line in - attend. Lunch will be served. ' - TR I 3 PR | 3. Doric, Ionic and Corinthian unch will be served. | . FRANKLIN STREET STEFANSSON STILL 'Y{(‘)“m HOPE | 5anuary in anticipation of the big ones to be caught| 4 A meal made from parched jadv. H. VAUGHN CALLOW | & e | FOR LEVANEVSKY ‘m the spring. seeds of various native plants of the| MARGHIN Is |~ OnrrED BTATES . |i——m e — ] J. B. WARRACK R i Southwestern U. S. | | DEPARTMENT OF T 7 ON THE MEZZANINE . | L e d 2 HE INTERIOR §—» | b me search for Pilot Levanevsky and his Sov l;t The 1938/ 6ourist trek has started. It was heralded| 5 Selne river aENERAL TanD orrice || - HOTEL JUNEAU | Engineers—Contractors | ying companions who were lost last year in an at-yore yesterday in the form of an ambitious robin S e, [ SENT Tfl GELL District Land Office i BEAUTY SHOP I 1‘ JUNEAU | tempted flight across the North Pole probably will be 1o,uine for a worm. Europe is improving the status Anchorage, Alaska. | | i 14 kept up through the winter and until “the fair visi- | of its hotels with the aid of govern- | | December 13, 1937, | | LYLAH WILSON f R et . . i it 4 A , gt L) Telephone G i) bilities of spring are replaced by the handicapping | Politer Politics r_nem appropriations. ANCHORAGE, Jan. 19, — “Rus- Notice is hereby given that Olaf | Contoure P! o = 1 X-Er-Vac 538 fogs of late June and the nearly prohibitive fogs Mj July.” ‘This is the theory of Vilhjalmur Stefansson, famed | Arctic explorer and President of the Explorers Club of New York which is taking a leading role in the [ter to Justice Van Devanter on a similar occasion search through one of its members, Sir Hubert Wil- ‘1)19:1\51\1 reading. It may be said that retirements so kins, who 1s now conducting flights in the Arctic|congenial to future rulings of the Supreme Court on where the lost fliers are believed to have gone down. | {his policies put him in good humor, but such is his sian Jack” Marchin has been sen- SWanson, John Lowell and Walluf | | tenced to two and one half years Rasmussen have applied for a trade | at the McNeil Island prison follow- and manufacturing site under the E—" ing conviction of the murder of Provisions of the act of May 14, Milton Hamilton last March 22, (1898 (30 Stat. 413) for land inciud-| | Marchin claimed self-defense. led in Survey No. 1530 situate on - > - |Glacier Highway 14% miles north- Allen town, Pa. advocates a law West of Juneau, Alaska, Anchorage \ "Audit—Tax and System Service | =1 | JAMES C. CPOPER « C. P A SIGRID’S \i 303-05 Goldstein Building "BEAUTY SALON | Public Stenographer “YOUR APPEARANCE IS | Notary Public OUR RESPONSIBILITY” 5 "Phone 723 115-2nd § THE ROYAL BEAUTY SALON OPEN EVENINGS “If your hair is not becoming | to you — You should be coming to us.” (New York Times) Mr. Roosevelt's reply to Justice Sutherland’s letter declaring his intention of retirement is, like his let- Just why members of the Explorers Club are natural and normal humor. It is not always easy for 3| "to arrest and fine reckless pedes-;08183, containing 40 actes, Latitude | | Shattuck Blds. Fhsocl | ¥ hiis 3 L 4 ‘a4 5 —edp et trians, 58 degrees 23’ 40” N. longitude 134 d still holding out hope for the men is revealed in an‘u politician to be urbane. It is hard for Mr. Roose- bt X e |degrees 33’ 35” W. and it is n 1380 _—— SPECIALIZING enlightening article by Stefansson in a recent issue| Vvelt to be other than urbane. In politics one must HARRY |47 tha - 'filas : 6f ks TS Land | of the Explorers Journal. Stefansson writes: often be unjust to his opponents, but to judges who, as e et S i JUNEAU In French Office, Anchorage, Alaska. Any and all persons claims ad- iversely any of the above mentioned RACE DRUGGIST {Mr. Lincoln said of the majority of the court in the Dred Scott case, have not shrunk from their duty, it is right for a President to show appreciation of their We do not know that the Levanevsky party is still alive, but we do know that many polar MELODY HOUSE - i Music and Electric Appliances TIVOLI explorers have returned safe and sound who : “The Squibb |land should file their adverse i Italian * services, evi ; v S o b R | (Next Gastineau Hotel) . had been given up for dead under conditions :"““"" even if they have sometimes stepped on his | Stores of CAFE |claims in the local land office, An-| | Mrs. Pigg Phone 65 which, at that time, seemed less hopeful oo p i Mners s 3 Alaska’ chorage, Alaska, within the period than the Levanevsky situation does now. He in the matier of the Dred Scott case it is often (Formerly Bailey's) lof publication or thirty days th stk el e bl S forgotten that the decision agreed with the then poli- PUDORIDR e T dags inorey & L after or they will be barred by the || Statutes. GASTINEAU CAFE GASTINEAU CAFE Finest Coffee Shop and \ 5 ) | tical complexion of the United States and was ap- N i { Restaurant Service ) \ N N g e proved by the majority of the people. Some eager public men who have quoted Mr. Lincoln on that case and have tried to apply to the interpretation of stretch to ninety; he had good camp equip- ment, suitable clothing, plenty of fuel in the gasoline which must have remained in their fuel tanks and which they would burn in their PERCY’S CAFE Ice Cream, Soft Drinks, Candy | Alaska Music Supply Arthur M. Uggen, Manager Pianos—Musical Instruments GEORGE A. LINGO, SHORT ORDERS Register. e i i Tl il the Constitution the doctrine of the sacredness of the COFFEE SHOP ' DAY and NIGHT First publication, Jan. 19, 1938. and Supplies s e rreeed of the leads in his nelghborhood is filled with majority, “the popular will,” carefully omitted Mr | Percy Reyrolds, Manager | Last publication, March 16, 1938. Phone 206 122 W. Second | > Rennll arifmalilite: fiar. seals wwin about: in Lincoln’s approval of the judges discharging their | Pete Lucy—Owner o TR P 42| Lode and placer location notices % i 4 duty. Every once in a while some discharge of bitter- —_— (hg o ¢ le at The Empire Office. those leads devouring shrimps, and that polar ge of bitler it S S A L S or sale al P bears prowl hunting the seals, we think rea- ness by u)o. lf'rf id advocates of the Admmx.\trhum.{ ' ——— BODDING TRANSFER | Try the Empire classifieds for T e sonably probable. For so did my third expe- makes many ;vx'r.»un.x think that the era of bad feel- | { MARINE PHONE results. Empire classifieds pay. dition find conditions two or three hundred ing has come again. The now dead controversy about | £ A~ BUILDING 707 3 miles southeast of where the Levanevsky the Supreme Court too often flamed with partisan- | [ Rock—Coal Hauling L party is supposed to have made their forced [|*PIP- [ Stove—Fuel Oil Delivery | descent, and that is how the Soviet drifting But let us recall the “good old days” when l?.r‘ 4 Federalists and the Republicans were at each other's throats. William Cushing of Massachusetts, an as- north of the supposed descent, From these sociate justice for twenty-one years, died in 1810. Mr animals Levanevsky has a chance to secure Jefferson' wrote sympathetically to Albert Gal 4 g “I observe old Cushing is dead. At length then we For Women It is in accord with the chivalry of explora- have a chance of getting a Republican majority in B(‘nk tion that we shall not give up the search for the Supreme Judiciary.” Jefferson wrote to Presi- lost explorers while, humanly speaking, there dent Madison that “another circumstance of con- appears to be even a chance of their being |EFBtulation is the death of Cushing” His hatred of Juneau, Alaska alive. After Sir John Franklin, with his two Chief Justice Marshall was as ncorous” as that i ¢ ships and more than a hundred men, dis- “which Marshall bears to the Government of his The First National Bank JUNEAU . party led by Papanin have found things at the North Pole, some two or three hundred miles The B. M. Behrends “THE VOGUE— | Correctly Styled Clothes ® CAPITAL—$50,000 SURPLUS—$100.000 A [ ] 101 SEWARD ST. Health Foods Center appeared in the Arctic in 1845, there was no country.” These are private opinions, but it is hard C5h worry for him till the third year. The search to believe that even privately any public man of the 4 AMERCIAL B:?DLEOT%RE?II(;I:TAE‘:::‘ COMMERCIAL AND SAVINGS . for Franklin was continued officially by the first rank would now be capable of such a fit of choler W o FOODS ACCOUNTS § British Government till 1855. His family anu n; ‘I!efleraon usually had when he wrote about Mar- and SAVINGS 230 Franklin St. . & friends continued it until 1859, when Sir Leo- shall. In spite of many lapses, the bile of politics is lephone 62 AI I: XE pold McClintock returned from his vovage of |diminishing. { imer s B VEPORE RO uru Fox to brlxng definite proof that the last < 4] 2 e i 2‘7 P id of the Pranklin party had died. We know eport to Secretary Ickes shows that a topo- <esources i 0 aid on i now that the search was already in progress graphical map of the United States, begun in 1875, is csources Over Two and Alaska Federal Savings g before the last of his men died, and that they |about half done. At last, an ideal project!—Kansas One-Hal M Loan Association avings might have been saved had there been better City Star. ne h J'f MllllOn DOHGI‘S Aaclc'ad-nu Insured U':clla $5,000 fortune, or better judgment in just where the Bl P. O. Box 2718——Phone 3 Accounts searchers went to look. The world is getting better. To be sure, nations RO OFFICE—119 Seward St. L The Antarctic expedition of Dr. Otto Nord- still steal other nations’ lands, but no longer with uni- c—— ,)‘3 ' Juneau, Alaska enskjold presents a series of escapes by parties l\'(-rml approval.—Boston Globe. l ‘j\\\ (13 3 (Y

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