The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, June 14, 1938, Page 4

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. fast drivi to tell a h ribbon of pavement a little excuse for all kind: cuse long on Alaska Empire iz | Dailx her by the Sunday Gl EMPIRE PRINTING COMPANY “‘” ]w the : approximately 30 miles, it is hard for "(T”’:enEmptre. gxiends comgratulo- i - - - President t nd best wishes today, thcir From The Empire HELEN TROY BENDEF ka8 o understant motorists insist on -hurtying, pirthday unniversary, to the follow- R. L BERNARD - - Vice-Pre & d '\‘ E e n driving reckle ¢ while under the influ- ing: ———— — e 3 ‘ : nee of li It doesn’t make sense, yet officers JUNE 14, 1918 ;;'”d S i e il oo re cailed upon from time to time to make arrests, JUNE 14 | . 2 SUBSCRIPTION RATES. nd but yesterd conviction followed The result William Byington Mr R. P. Nelson, Gertude, Irene Dellvered by carrier Juneau and Dourlas for §1.25 per month it v Doris June Graves and Eugene Nelson arrived from By n postage paid g S T il e e, 9 Brice Mielke /the south. Mrs. Nelson and her two dvance w i Are we going to heed it, or are we 1'4\: 7 to keep & Gy, W daughters had been spending a va- w v i ""”‘if opardizir r own lives and everybody sin Uy oo & |cation in California and Eugene ~ | ne to see how fast toolishly we can get to the | DAILY LESSONS | |had been attending the University | News ( 60: e nd of the road? ! IN ENGI ISH | lof Washington. George Nelson was MEMBER OF ASSOCIATED PRESS. | 3 o | lin the Naval Officers’ Training e N ey ulinatir or A A GOOD JOB WELL DONE By W. L Gordon | coms a Bremerton the 1 T i e \" i Vw\ leading part| . /Ords Often Misused: Do not say,| D. A. Thompson, manager of the LATION GUARANTEED TO BE LARGER 3 K ® John Hancock was the .first man |dr goods department of B. M IAT OF ANY O PUBLICATION a centering attention and bringing action on the ¢ 41 to sign the Declaration of In- |Behrends' store, had rceeived. a ST itional Highway is Congressman War- gependence.” Omit of all. telegram ordering him to report at Magnuson of Washington state. He has, with Often Mispronounced: Christen- once to headquarters of the Ambul- te Dimond of Alaska and others of the Wash- ing. Pronounce kris-n-ing; the t ance Section at Camp Lewis, Wash- ton delegation, done an excellent piece of workl is silent. ington, He was enlisted with the t of it in his home town, contrary to tra- Often Misspelled: Attorneys: evs, Masonic Ambulance Corps. ition of the local boy being without glory not ELst He. Bbrae: Lok 1d the Seattle Post-Ir er _ Synonyms: Ungenerous,illiberal ‘he Republican convention con- ’ » bow in the following words y nu‘v rl, ('Fnsc, mean. vened with fifteen delegates pres- 4 d Study: “Use a word three ent. Dr. L. S. Keller of Skagway sident Roosevelt's appro of the times and it is yours.” Let us in- was elected tempor chairman bill t project a long step nes 1 International Highway me plishmen The bill, introduced by Seattle’s Repre- sentative Warren G. Magnuson, provides for the appointment by the President of a non- alaried commission of three members, to _— = discuss with a similar commission from Cana- FLAG DAY da actual plans for financing and construct- 3 ing the highway, its feasibility having been 7 % established by a previous board Today the nation observes ir of half Representative Magnuson informs The . hearted way national Flag Day. Patriotic organiza- Post-Intelligencer that he will endeavor to tions have at times done a little something abol have headquarters established in it and in some places it has aroused inte: in di It would be a fitting selection, both in view playing the flag on this occasion, but on the whole of the city’s location and the interest it ha lag Day wins little recognition. It probably shoulc always taken in Alaska and the present pro- win more, especially in view of the nationalism spiri Ject which is being constantly fanned in foreign countric Regardless of the selection of headquarter . Representative Magnuson is entitled to hearty We car’t over-emphasize the flag and what it stanc commendation for his activity and to con- for gratulations for the success he has already Flag Day marks today the 162nd year since Con A i gress resolved “that the flag of the United States b AT L - thirteen stripes, alternate red and white; that th What To Tell a Graduate Union be thirteen stars, white in a blue field senting a new constellation.” The exact date wa (New York Times) June 14, 1777. This.was the official origin of the et B e e sisonsensstient. pekios American flag uring the busy month of June. They can warn this At first, as the number of stripes were unequal, the w's graduate against a number of things, but they flag very often varied, sometimes having seven white | can’t promise him much at the moment. They can and red stripes, and at other times seven red and | exhort him to have high ideals and behave himself six white, and it was not until som¢ time later that |but they must be unhappily aw that their own it was authoritatively laid down that the laiter ar-|3eneration. and especially that portion of it which Fanbement: was the ofe. to be: adoptéd was young during the flas Y peculation-mad It has begn held by some students of the fag | ?eriod following the World War made only a middling that'it. was‘suggested by the crest and arms of the| "R 10 Buls fespest o 6 hot say George Washington family. However, historians point | i, uate will probably be all Fight, He has airesdy out, that the Washington crest was a raven which|paq some hard jolts and knows the world is not all The Wa. ton arms were | strawberries and cream an singing. He s would discount the theory enior a white shield hs two horizor ed bars and | young, and can take it on the chin and come up smil- above these a row of three red stars. This might,|ing. He is hopeful, because it is biologically impossible historians concede, by stretch of imagination, be sup- | for heaithy youth not to be posed to have inspired the original idea of the flag| Moreover, though the world may not seem to be " T | cle oring or | service: i S1 ly g g ) which was that each state in the Union should be| c‘amoring for EL V00N, Q0 A urely: golug:tc need him. He will > anywhere from twenty to represented in the national flag by a star and stripe. | | i s R forty years longer than the orators and the genera- urally other states coming into the Union eX-| i, they represent. When they step out he will have pected the same privilege. After Vermont in 1790 and | 1 siep in Kentucky in 1792 had entered the Union, the stars| h and stripes were changed in number from thirteen tc fifteen. Later on other soon - the | He may not get in the end there a job next week or next month will be plenty for him to do. A few decadc tates joined, and more and he himself may be pull- flag came to consist of twenty st and stripes. It|ing at his gray whiskers and scratching his grizzled was, however, found objectionable to be constantly|Poll as he tries to find words of advice for a still altering the national flag, and in the'year 1818 it was|¢Wer generation. He won't be able to tell them much, but they will go on and do their work. It's a determined to go back to the original thirteen stripes, but to place a star for each state in the blue union canton in the top of the corner of the flag next to the staff. Thus the stars always show the exact number of states that are in the Union, while the stripes denote | the original number of the states which formed the | Al Union. =y Lo human race, hill, just the othe 1d a pers side of the tent one, and over the ainbow, lies Utopia. It's Got To Be York World-Telegram) sood Thousands of worshipers to whom the your | Maude Adams is still a special and exciting memo: | will take personal pride in her agreement to act for 1 | Again the police department has issued warning | (N movies. They will want as nearly as possible | a permanent record of her to be made, even if it is not that further reckless or drunken driving will not be ks | identical with their own mental image, and they will tolerated within' the city. It should not be, nor out-| e .1 21o0ct Jike proprietors, saying to the future, side of the city cither for that matter, except that We «atch that if you can.” have no highway rol to check up on it. | Maude Adams going to the movies? Times have It really shouldi’t be necessary for the Chief of | ¢ 1 to bring the At star of the Barrie plays Policeé to issue Anybody with a nickel’s | into what used to be the old blinding flickers. She ally drive an|had te pluck up courage to step out of her privacy liquor and gasoline do | into Hollywood. We can only hope that Hollywood's times, | brashness in approaching her will be matched by its taste and good sense. The films have a chance in this venture to touch sreatness, both present and future of the past are mere names and hearsay. But Maude Adams is to be placed on the record to be seen, heard nired for long years after her lifetime DRUNKEN 7!)]{!\' ERS uch a warning and old enough to lef worth of brains automobile should that not mix. It has been proven a great Last year the death toll in the States ran over 30,000 from accidents, a considerable percentage of which were attributed to drunken drivers, If we in Juneau were situated on a through high- way which connected with the States there might be know many auto and ac Photo Memo To Puzzled Parent Tub’s Fine For Fun—If Mother Stands By Edited By Lydia Gray Shaw RIG“T The story is different if mother is on TITUER Y hand to supervise bathtub exercise. Young son is having a grand time learning how to swim—and getting cooled off at the same time— but his mother holds right on to him. (The bath- tub, by the way, is a fine place for a swimming Jesson.) ’ Youngsters can have a lot of fun e W“o" climbing around the ba b, but * fhere’s nothing more dangerous—if they're left * ‘alone, like this baby, to play around as they please 4% The rubber mat heips some, but anything might “happen to this child—from a bump on the head to ~drowning. by auto road from the The stage figures ! PRI e o BIRTHDAY | 2() Years Ago crease our vocabulary by masterin one word cach day. Today's word Colossal; huge; tremendous, “It was L. Harding, temporary A Credentials ypointed consisting of with L. Committee the colossal statue.” lowing: Grover C. Winn, W. H. oo o R. E. Robertson. T &= Tt T _ ‘ LOCK and LEARN [ close nine-inning game, By A. C. Gordon | re newsies beat the Dis- b e + patch boys at baseball by a score 2 : 5 ‘he Empire team 1. Which is the oldest symphony 2 5 8 2 g Pno Jowell, pitcher; G. White, orchestra in the U. 8.? 2. Who wrote “The Merry Wives of Windsor o2 3. What is the Bill of Rights? 4. Do black horses or white s feel the heat more? What is the floral emblem of Italy? agar, Sumers, Holmquist, Moe, a, Barnett, and I. Whyte. The Dispatch line-up was Lerner, pitch- Ellingen, H. Ellingen, K ng and Burke Gol While endeavoring to separate ANSWERS g ; % T . two figh dogs, Albert White, New York Philharmonic. : twelve-y son of Mr. and Mrs. E. J. White, of Douglas, bitten on one of his arms. 1 2. William Shakespeare. Was : as The first ten amendments to the U. S. Constitution. 4. Black horses are more affect- i heat Henry Ford, Republican, had de- 5. The white lily. cided to accept the Democratic nomination for United States Sen- - e - MODERN ETIQUEFE By Roberta Lee ator from the State of Michigan, I after being urged to do so by Presi- | + dent Wilson -+ > Hlinois Leads in Liguor Tax Paying WASHINGTON, June 14 s internal revenue bureau reported liquor tax receipts totaled $587.305.- - Q. To whom should one send ac- ceptance or regret to an invitatior when the names of two or more hostesses appear on the invitation? A. The envelope is addregl to the one at whose house the: part is to take place. Or, to all the na:u xactly gs in the invitation if it i to be at a club or hotel. 610 in 1937, an increase of $8,2: Q. What is the correct size mr‘”‘ over 1936. dinner napkins? | The report showed tax collections iest in Illinois, where they 675,674. Pennsylvania was ty- | were he |were faste to|second with A. About twenty-two te four inches square Q. Ts it considered good $68,949.462, and Ne use terms of endearment in death |York third with $62310,395. “The HoloR0 bureau said state figures did not A. No. reflect truly the tax burden, since PR taxes paid by manufacturers might HAGLUND RETURNS |be borne by persons in other states. G | R D oy Hilding Haglund, son of Mr. and| Try an Empire ad. Mrs. J. B. Godfrey, returned to the | Capital City on board the steamer | Alaska, after spending the past nine months attending Whitman College, at Walla Walla, Wash., where he completed his junior year. He will spend the summer months in this ZORIC SYSTEM CLEANING Phone 15 city, returning to school next fall — e Try The Empire classifieds for “The Store for Men” result: 1’ 7| SABIN’S Jones-Stevens Sho P ; Front St.—Triangle Bldg. | | LADIES'—MISSES’ READY-TO-WEAR -— | Seward Street Near Third - P MARINE BUILDING | PHONE | 707 | Rock—Coal Hauling | Stove—Fuel Oil Delivery FORD AGENCY (Authorized Dealers) GREASES GAS — OILS . GARBAGE HAULED IUNEAU MOTORS l i Reasonable Monthly Rates Foot of Main Street | E- 0. DAVIS I TELEPHONE 212 | | Phone 4753 3 — £ | ssamen i | | 2 [ E— - | foswtvmny ™ ||| FAMILY SHOE STORE UNITED FOOD Co. T noe S TELEPHONE—16 { ! LOU H?I‘;;OSNTMnnager ||| Seward St.——————Juneaun The B. M. Behrends Bank Juneau, Alaska COMMERCIAL and SAVINGS Resources Over Two and One-Half Million Dollars Janiksela, | Closer relations with Great Britain - The % T BODDING TRANSFER | THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, TUESDAY, JUNE 14, 1938. ; 7\’V(' could think u|)!H A P P Y A ql - peed cop for’ kicking But with PROFESSIONAL FRATERNAL SOCIETIES GASTINEAU CHANNEL Directo floroscope “The stars incline | but do not compel” o TR TR, B. P. 0. ELKS meet e =7 DRS. KASER & FREEBURGER every Wednesday at 8 | WEDNESDAY, JUNE 15, 1938 DENTISTS n.nln. Visnxcxn: brothers | { welcome. . H. Mac- Conflicting planetary aspects rule Blm’;flg},g",gdm“ | SPADDEN, Exalted Rul- today, according to astrology. Mar: ok o o i | er; M. H. CIDES, Sec- |in threatening position may cause Gk Lot retary. | warlike gestures as well as secret' ), 5 — = | plots. While there may be a feeling of | & American business |centers evil portents atfecting in-! | Dr. Charles P. Jenne are discerned. Labor troub DENTIST ssume new forms. || Rooms 8 and 9, Valentine Bldg. i TELEPHONE 176 | confidence in | dust may | This is not a favorable configura- | tion for elderly persons and appears to presage the loss of a distinguished | | statesman long prominent in Wash- | | Second and fourth | "%’ DANIEL ROSS, Wor- Monday of each month in Scottish Rite Temple | shipful Master; JAMES W. LEI- L | VERS, secretary. . RARE BV MOUNT JUNEAU LODGE NO. 147 begitining at 7:30 p.m. - sid ington. Ik REBEKAHS | This is not a lucky date for, . 21 H Perseverance Lodge No. 2<A meets launching enterprises or making Dl‘. R'Chard WI“lamS every second @nd fourth Wednes- changes ih important plans. The| DENTIST day, IOOF.+Hall BETTY Mc- |sway encourages foresight and is| OFFICZ AND RESIDENCE CORMICK, Noble Grand; RUTh auspicious for outlining future ac-| | GOLDSTEIN BUILDING BLAKE, Sccretary. tivities k) 1 There is a sign that seems f{o| | promise good fortune for oil pro- i ducers. Demand for increased pro duction may be insistent long be- fore the autumn. New fields within the United States will be worked. | é The United States Navy is under | the most promising planetary di-| Rooms 2-3-4, Triangle Bldg. i rection. It is to become stronger PHONE 667 | i CHIROPRACTOR | Drugless P? ysician \ Office hours: 1v-12, 1-3, 7-9 (- Hee « as. 7 PUROLA REMEDIES PRESCRIPTIONS CARE- FULLY COMPOUNDED Next Colisewum i PHONE 9%i--Free Delivery PUTUSESULS than all othe except that of an| ally, the seers prophesy. This should be a happy day for university students and astrologers | predict for 1938 class members e: traordinary achievements, seientist is to gain sudden fame. Increase in travel to the British| | Isles is forecast for next month - Front Street i Dr. A. W. Stewart A young| | DENTIST Hours 9 am. to 6 pan SEWARD BUILDING Clfice Phone 469 the United|. are prophesied for States. Persons whose birthdate it is have the augury of a year of advanc ment and happiness, for many un- expected favors, gifts and honors are indicated. Children born on this day prob- ably will be gifted and industrious. Subjects of this sign usually have unusual powers of expression in the artistic professions S A2 N ! “Tomorrow’s Styles 3 DR. H. VANCE Today” OSTEOPATH 3 Consultation and examination free. Heurs 10 to 12; 1 to 5; | 7 to 9:30 by appointment. | ) Gastineau Hotel Annex | South Franklin St. Phone 177 U™ Juneau’s Own Store tam-| | Robert Simpson, Opt.D. Madame Schumann-Heink, Ver ous singer, was born on this day|| Graduate Los Angeles Colleg BRI O P S o 1864. Others who have [ of Optometry and 3 it as a birthday include Opthalmology Frank Edwin Grieg, composer, 18 Elwell, sculptor, 18 (Copyright, 1938) -eo— : The Emplre classifieds for| | | | | | Glasc>s Fitted Lenses Ground | —— WHEN IN A HURRY CALL COLE FOR OIL 34 plus or 27 gravity, in any amount . . . QUICK! COLE TRANSFER Phone 3441 or Night 534 Try results. Crrrrrrrr ey f | Butler-Mauro Drug Co. | SAaET H. S. GRAVES “The Clothing Man” ICE CREAM N ! Have Your Eyes Examined by \ ) 3 Dr. Rae L. Carlson || Home of Hart Schaftner and OPTOMETRIST Marx Clothing | office Ludwig Nelson’s Jewelry KRAFFT'S Shop Phone Green 331 CABINET SHOP S Glass, Moulding and Plyboard | J ikl | FINE Watch and Jewelry Repairing at very reasonable ratés PAUL BLOEDHORN S. FRANKLIN STREET GASTINEAU MOTOR | SERVICE PHONE 727 GENERAL AUTO REPAIRING Gas—Oil—Storage PIIONE 62 | if It's Paint We ifave It! I I8 | : o L e et IDEAL PAINT SHOP | 1;2_:__.___._fl|., } ARRA {[ R ne st fi || on THE MEzZANINE Eng.!;l?e.r;w—Contr(;Eton | | HOTEL JUNEAU | L : - 3 BEAUTY SHOP | LYLAH WILSON Contoure Telephone X-Er-Vac 538 A » I e e | 4:| | COME IN and SEE the NEW | — STROMBERG-CARLSON | it d RADIOS J. B. Burford & Co. “Our door step is worn by Satisfied Customers” Sanitary Meat Co. FOR QUALITY MEATS AND POULTRY FREE DELIVERY Call Phones: 13 and 49 || “NEW AND DIFFERENT FOOTWEAR” DEVLIN’S Paris Fashion Shoes The Charles W. Carter | | hiomcs ‘ pourml!.l&"#flm Sts. J ki JUNEAU i SPECIALIZING | e | | MELODY HOUSE Rigie M | | Music and Electric Appliances SRS R TR (Next Gastineau Hotel) and i | Mrs. Pigg . Phone 65 e |1 NEW ALASKAN E."—'_——'_é'" e 1 HOTEL T | So. Franklin Street | | JUNEAU. Phone Single O Alaska Music Supply | Arthur M. Uggen, Manager Pianos—Musical Instruments and Supplies | | Phone 206 122 W. Second 5| Lode and placer location notices for sale at The Empire Office. GASTINEAU CAFE B PORTRAITS—by TED COWLING Phone 369 —photogiapher 0ld 1st. Natl. Bank Bldg. Try the Empire classifieds for | results. Empire classifieds pay. The First National Bank JUNEAU DRUGGIST “The Squibb [ ] stA::‘:l CAPITAL—$50,000 SURPLUS—$100.000 v [ J 'S CAFE || PERCY’S | COMMERCIAL AND SAVINGS ACCOUNTS SAFE DEPOSIT BOXES 2% Paid on Savings Accounts Ice Cream, Soft Drinks, Candy 1 COFFEE SHOP l\ Alaska Federal Savings and Loan Association Accounts Insured Up to $5,000 P. O. Box 2718——FPhone 3 OFFICE—119 Seward St. Juneau, Alasks

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