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i - W THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, WEDNESDAY, JULY 20, 1938. figitb g Eotllans and the MbMigunt, of as “‘\"H APPY. [ 4 ’ 4" Dai'}' A’as’ifl Empire Mufligan, put it, “a great day for the Irish.” Published evers cvening except Sunday by the EMPIRE PRINTING COMPANY PROFESSIONAL BIRTHDAY P 20 YC("'S A go | H Oroscope Directo FRATERNAL SOCIETIES The Empire extends comgratula- GASTINEAU CHANNEL ide from the undaunted spirit of oceanic flier n, there are veral other remarkable features f t The flier made the trip in what we p “ ars inclis HWELEN TROY BENDER - - - - = President : “] \aile woniA i ST i Staks ot '1: tions and best wishes todagf their From The Empire The “‘"’b ':"-‘;"‘en P R L BERNARD - - Vice-President and ess Manager | IS e e sl € birthday anniversary, to the follow- |1 bl S ik o o B. P. 0. ELKS meet e = \1F Corrg b ofsan e 4R, Atlows] y il b | | DRS. KASER & FREEBURGER every Wednesday at 8 he Post Office in Junes nd Class Matter | eciatids G RO B ek JULY 20, 1938 | Frank W. Pettygrove, commer-| THURSDAY, JULY 21, 1038 DENTISTS pm. Visiting brothers SUBSORIPTION RATES oo depreciiives it Lo gl S RIDEC YOG b | cial agent who had spent several| Blomgren Building welcome. C. H. Mac- SXwess by carrier In Junesw and DeusinsYor $1.95 ver menth, 4 281 De concluded thas in fothsl Falue the Corrigan G. B. Rice days in Juneau, left for the West-| Benefic aspects rule today, ac- PHONE 56 SPADDEN, Exalted Rul- By mail, postage paid at the following rates: | olane was ¥ s than nothing. The fact that N. Lester Troast |ward on the Admiral Farragut, dur-|cording to astrology. It is a time Hours 3 am. to 9 pm. er; M. H. SIDES, Sec- b i N e o 5 he Air Commerce Bureau refused to give him a per- Robert Light ing which time he was to call at|for social interchanges and is be- retary. J one month bser it indicates that was classified with the junk Frank M. Dick | cordova, Valdez, Seward, and An-|lieved to promote lasting friend- | o de- . | e | 2 e Mr.. CorripsSAfib ‘15 meross tHe ooean Ethel Nonnemacher | chorage. {anios. g e = | MOUNT JUNEAU LODGE No. 141 @2 B Office i thout radio equipment and with only the barest of e | J m‘(: "“_’i:‘;d’;“:"j‘:"f":';"\gaé’:mig";fl | Second and tourth NGt - PR 5 fore el B {1, Miss Daisy Lundstrom received| | & or engagements | | Monday of each mon s ‘exclusively eatitled to the use for % i B oinid bkebe 1o the epocti| | * | word on the list mail from legaljto marry, and even is fortunate for Dr. Charles P. Jenne [ in s,;,,g;xsh Rite Tzlm:: republication of all news dispatches it or 1 ; | |authorities, to the effect that she|love letters. DRaTeT inni 73 Sberwise Credited in this paper an i n nt of Lindbergh, Tncidentally, wasn’t there | - is, | Rooms 8 and 9, Valentine Bldg. R Degitming (8t 180 Din. Published here Tl 35 | |was the direct heir to city property| News of a double significance is s 214 DANIEL ROSS, Wor- v bit of Lindbergh in 1 | |1 St Paul, Minn., valued at $8,000,|forecast from the Near East where| | TELEPHONE 176 ; shipful Master; JAMES W. LEI- VERS, Secretary. EED TO BE LARGER THAN THAT OF A PUBLICATION. 1 on landing in Baldonnel, “T left, by her uncle, Charles Lund-|outside sources will foment trouble| Jus trom {and extend aid in Arab uprisings. |_° s For Japan there are evil portents. | g ST i mind of the Irish lad when 1 IN 'ENGLISH ot in from New York that when I By W. L. Gordon bergh landed at REBEKANS S et Field in Paris, he said, “I'm Charles Lind- * | Mr. and Mrs. J. P. Mooney made|There will be seismic disturbanees| | o - Words Often Misused: Do not sav. | the motor trip to Mendenhall with|and severe storms. Unrest among Dr. Richare Williams | | Perscverance Lodge No. 2-A meets W 1spect we're going to hear a great deal more “T Wish T was going with you.” Say,|Miss Ethel Forbes, L. L. Harding,|the people who are paying a high DENT[ST ‘;ve.ry Is;cg;i B}:lgll fou;;',é}m\‘i:'(ed:a- : Corrigan, the pride of the Trish, "I Wish I were going with, you and A. H. Murphy as guests. They |Price for war will spread sl L MO SR, Kople: TR S T It is apparent that he is not a young man who i _ Often Mispronounced: Inimical. had a supper party, and returned| Interest in obtaining public of- OFFICZE AND RI El ST Al finda J e bkl i j ) Pronounce in-im-i-kal, all i's as in|in the evening. |fices, high and low, will be more | GOLDSTEIN BUILDING R et opped by ba S. it. a as in at unstressed, accent i general than ever before as govern- fh Ry ¥ " % A i econd syllable. George C. Burford made the*trip ment salaries rather than a desire i : e i ST T i s R e g ry for Japanese Schoolboy Often Misspelled: Post-mortem; to the bar, taking with him Mrs.|to serve the public give impetus to - g ( . ——— em, not um, Charles Otteson, Miss May Otte-|campaigning. 1 T+ [ G s th (New York Synonyms: Flagrant, flagitious, son, and Cary Tubbs as his guests., Women will prosper in vocations | Dr. Judson Xh“her i “y ml The revelations from the of an escaped | siroctous, outrageous, Kelatda vil- By | that do not interfere with the am- | CHIKGESS GRS I £ ¢ > ysician | Soviet general, said to be head of the Far Eastern | jainous Skagway had the best month in|bitions of men. Astrologers i) J Dree Eas % D R u G s ecret police, would sound more credible if they were| word Study: || office hours: 1v-12, 1-5, 7-9 Use whole vear in June” said Judge|that there will be severe opposition | A. Rasmussen, United States Within the learned professions a word threc jours.” Let us in- e ——— ! The disclosure of the strength of the |crease our vocabulary by mastering | Commissioner at Skagway, “and|well as among business enterprises.| ), A PROGRESSIVE AMERICAN Red Army in the East and the amount of assistance one word each day. Today’s word:|this month it is doing as well”| Astrologers prophesy that in pre-| 2 w\‘-,'n ]u: China by the Soviet Government, together | odverse; opposing; unpropitious; Judge Rasmussen was in Juneau, venting a world war women are to | f—— with the c Rooms 2-3-4, Triangle Bldg. PHONE: 667 PUROLA REMEDIES not issued to the press of Tokyo by the Japanese|times and it i s - = | authorities. | PRESCRIPTIONS CARE- FULLY COMPOUNDED Yesterday residents of this community had the arge that China is Stalin's “tool.” which | antagonistic. “Adverse conditions' during this time on legal business.|achieve tremendous influence. { he intends to bolshevize when the war is over, comes | prevented.” | 'sons se birthdate it is have| | | opportunity for a closeup of the man who probably | & R Bt e B . T : \\mmn]gmnunurl. A O mf"m;‘?;;rwhos( birthdate it is have Dr. A. W. gtewafl Front Street Next Coliseum safely described as the second best known AL N el N &= —— Mrs. Sadie E. Ex son, who w. DENTIST S0 can be safely described ¢ . best eno Russia is ready to fight is released just when {g— — & B2 | (o five yaars§iribclonl of the Gov- | Drosperity. For many, hoart inter- b || PHONE %i—Free Delivery individual in nation of more than a the Japanese authorities are hard ed to explain || | | ernment Native School at Juneau, est will interfere with business or SEWARD BUILDING [ R R R YR twenty-five million people. The of course the setbacks in the field and to reconcile the popula- MODERN | became'the bride’of J. W. Pritchett, professional ambitions. ‘ Office Phone 469 Sy s 48 President. And hi lence is as great|tion to the ever-increasing sacrifices required to | ‘ publisher of the Wrangell Sentinel.| Children born on this day may| g 2 of Fran Roosevelt /hatever may be one’s opin- There is plenty of other evidence to point upy | | Dr. caruther of the First Methodist acteristics, for they are on the cusp | d—————-—— fons, political or othe of Jim Farley, it can't be| the picture of Stalin as a political boss who gets rid./ By Roberta Le¢ £ | Giureh, in the parlors of the Frye of the two signs. They may be fond | DR. H. VANCE Today” dénied that few if any Cabinet officers of the United Of his opponents by putting them to death. We have | o Yot & Hotel, of change and extremely emotional.| { OSTEOPATH | States ever held the public interest as has the Post- o “”:‘:1 1 confessions of many of these “traitors 8.5 NP A Henry W. Blodgett, noted jurist.| | consaltation and examination B i ahd ChaLEAR G e Dermomrabil s.” General Lushkoff is the first repe bachielor make any = A pirade in celebration of an Was born on this day 1821. Others| | free. Hours 10 to 12;'1 to 5; T master General and Chairman ! 4 tant purger to escape to “tell all” abroad. His story |Special preparations for receiving . erican victory was staged, which Who have celebrated it as a birth- 7 to 9:30 by appointment. Nattonal Committee. The man emanates color i qoes not explain how he managed to debate several |Women guests? parade was led by Jack Hayes who day include Chauncey Olcott, singer | | Gastineau Hotel Annex 1 actfon and word and the millions of the nation have months whether he should obey orders to go to Mos-| A. Yes, the same as & hostess . je on a prancing horse, with the and actor, 1860; Joseph K. Barnes,| | South Franklin St. Phone 177 found it omt, long since w. It is not clear why Japan is the “foreign soil” |makes. A room should be prepared | ,i4c of the American flag proudly surgeon general under President 1t i yuraging, no doubt, to the vast majority where he feels it his duty to oppose Stalin and the|for their wraps, and a few simple waving, and the steed seemed to Garfield, 1817. e — e heard him Red Army. pur rmy is as drastically | toilet articles should be set out for 23 | o of those Wl ed with him and b or why, if this ar xpress the spirlt ‘of e occcasion Y | " speak on now three different occasions since he ed burged as he alleges, it is as strong and well-equipped | their use. | came the members of the Gas- SOo0TEL, 100 |1 - Juneau’s Own Store iy i e ¢ on the Asiatic front as he reports. | '@ Who should accompany the|{oess ohamml Band and then the — e | Robert Simpson, Opt.D. Seviss hand that I Purley 4 o Kk he fugitive general tells little that is new about | funeral party to the cemetery? Home Guards and civillans and| - o087 s Today.— | | Graduate Los Angeles College: | 3 b Fatitai i t Russia, but if his diary is authentic it helps to sub-| A. Only those friends and rela-| iper organizations. Little Zalmain s w=" - of Optometry and 22 of Alaska. He i A 1,\‘:‘:«\ 8 e tantiate the Kremlin contention that the army was | tives who are invited to do so. Gross, dressed as a sailor boy. led | Opthalmology 'l "The Rexall St . l;” bilitie RlopATS '-;(‘1';‘ % ; neycombed with officers in the service of foreign l"l) I?h”;”dk cantaloupe be eaten e Red Cross nurses who were | If Its Paint We ilave It! i it i Ground ore Some perhaps will see politica Dk owers. Why this is truer of the Red Army than of | With the fork or spoon? uniform. The local orderat Elks was: | —_—— - your attitude on the part of the Democr 1al Chair-| any other in the world, why the Kremlin should show | A. With the fork also represented in the parade. | | lDEAL PAINT SHOP I |— — — e s A3 Reliable man but when one considers that al com-|up so many officer spies and traitors, is another -oo | el | I"KP,PI;{(mFW;NDT | |7 WHEN IN A HURRY | pharmacists plexion of Alaska has virtually no k g on the|and more significant stéry RSt —s| Weather: High 61; low 56. Partly £ 549 |1 CALL COLE ¥OR OIL compound pation’s political results other than send a non - ———— { Slonty _| 34 plus or.27 gravity, in any | | prescrip- >N amount . . . QUICK! | tions. voting Delegate to Congress, the politi 1 fears are Gain for Civil Service | — e = . quickly discounted. Therefore, Alaskans can assay at ) LOOK and LEARN | COLE TRANSFER | Phone 3441 or Night 554 £ B“t_l" -Mauro Drug Co. | X $ While President Roosevelt’s order placing 130,000 = 5 ——— everything Alaskan _ g 130, By A. C. Gordon SV \ : [ i . Sadter. G itutally: enough he is in-|More: Fede employees under civil service is said [ SYSTEM CLEANING i3 i ¢ A e e outa (0 be the Jargest step taken in that direction by any | 4 s i Phone 15 | Have Y)ur Eyes Examined by | H. S. GRAVES st Epan il ang T W9 president since the clvil ice law was enacted in { 5 be mighty glad of it. But he is equally interested in|jggs there are two strings : ached 1. With what does the thirteenth ALASKA LAUNDRY Dr che L leson “The Clothing Man’ seeing the actual building of the International High The first is that the order does not affect em- |Amendment to the U. S. Constitu- — T | * OPTOMETRIST | Home of Hart Schaftner and way, of seeing Alaska get facilities of transporta- | ployees of sixteen of the largest New Deal agencies |tion deal? SELAHOMA UITY S J Marx Clothing tion and communication which it has sorely lacked | such as AAA, TVA, HOLC and PWA. The second is, | 2 Who wrote “The Old Oaken|When A. J. Beddo, Garvin county Otfice Ludwig Nelson's Jewelry | | Bt e el s he revealed here yesterday, naturally, that thousands of Democra Bucket"? sheriff, arrived to inv ¢ Jim Farle ive American, interested not & patronage basis, will now be ensconced in perman-| 3- What is the difference be-|theft of three cows, he took one tion in Maine and| Dt jobs because the examination they take to win |tWeen a compound fracture and a|look in the pasture and said: | Mortuary GASTINEAU MOTOR " | I , appointed on stigate the | The Charles W. Carter [ | 7Shap Phone Green 331 | alone in the outcome of an ke A ks only oho o HiE aonis X | e e Tt is true that Congress specifically exempted the | 4 On what does the ordinary|with feet as big as that | PHONE 136 i FINE friee O naht workers on New Deal agencies from civil service regu- | SPider mostly feed? So he went to the home of a man | | | | Watch and Jewelry Repalring | | EMCINE 351 g . : : lations, but the plea was that there was not time to| % What city is known as “the|Who wears size 11% shoes and the @ S 7 o at very reasonable rates [ ENEERL AUICBRALRING, “A GREAT DAY FOR THE IRISH” |classify them. If these bureaus and administrationg | F€8rt of America’ GiRatcantomcd, fo-e-ceeee-————-——2 | PAUL BLOEDHORN || cin Dt in Ll are to contiuue, and the president indicates that | rivs SRS T “ ol = For a young man who is going places and doing | they wil be permanent fixtures of the government.| ANSWERS Lgiis’ Fasteur™ was i very, -noars The Store for Men | B. PRANKLIN STRENT RiRT e things, we nominate Mr. Douglas Corrigan, 31-year- | their employees should be placed under civil service | 1- The abolition of slavery in the |sighted 9 . [ ' old aviator, who seems to have the knack of doing | At first the question of time may have been pertinent, | V- S- - = < SABIN s e ff J. B. WARRACK what he sets out to do. Mr. Corrigan is the determined | But these agencies settle down to their routine| 2 Samuel Woodworth, in 1817. 2 | ON THE MEZZANINE Bt C young flicr who has been trying (o fly fo Treland for | {asks there is time to place them under the regulations| % A compound fracture is onel| Seitary Meat Co. Front St.—Triangle Bldg. U ngineers—C(ontractors ever so long and the Bureau of Air Commerce refused | Which should govern the majority of Federal offices, | ! Which the skin and surrounding FOR QUALITY MEATS | HOTEL JUNEA e = i O e wotally B Maiaie, Toicral SUTOR | oy are Reoum A e MG —————————d| | BEAUTY SHOP soNEAD give him a permit, which, of course, is something | There 15 probably no reas A e g AND POULTRY & = G B naaail, ti thore | THE ange as this order contemplates without | ™ o o q v of o e Bt o o ou e Apparniy e S0 S U S, o Mot e s e FeE pewrvemx | TBODDING TRANSFER ||| oonolliA% VSN | la was no objection fo the young daredevil fIying 0| pappen to be political appointees, It s hoped thag|0De 18 broken in two places Mm s ate ) | MARINE PHONE | | | X-Er-Vae 3 California, so bright and e r last Sunday morning, | the clause in the order which goes into effect Febru- | : Flies. . cotear. | BUILDING 707 I | dn COME IN and SEE the NEW Aviator Corrigan announced he was taking off for|ary 1, 1939, outlawing political activities, will be made| 5 Kansas City, Mo, & 51| Rock—Coal Hauling il ‘f STROMBERG-CLRLSON | “Califorr Just 28 hours and 13 minutes later he|really effective. The net gain of the change is that | S FE Stove—Fuel Oil Delivery L1 RADIOS 8 deq at Baldonnel, Ireland. in the future these jobs will be under civil service| TITY the wmpire classitieds for ’ GARBAGE HAULED ! ' :‘: “NEW AND DIFFERENT J. B. Burford & Co “Where am 1?" he asked upon landing. regulations. | eults ![ ""E"“hg WB’""'" Bewe ) R FOOTWEAR" “Our door step is worn I'; Informed he was in Ireland, intrepid Mr. Corrigan ~ PR I S, . U. g tomers’ e : v ; Members of a sorority in Del Monte, Cs ol i AVIS I AEARFTS MANUEACTURING DEVLIN'S P 2 innocently replied: “Really, now, I thought I was| a sorority in Del Monte, Cal, take | | TELEPHONE 212 | d BUILDING COMPANY, I | f Paris Fashion Shoes lisos gy ‘ e e @ voie and decide that they do not prefer atnietic|} FORD AGENCY {|| Fhone 4753 A And SULLINNG COMEAST, hic, Il s Taking it like a good fellow, Mr. Bernard Mulligan, ]m_( ::1\ for husbands. ;Affer all one cannot eat track | (Authorized Dealers) g = z <3 = GASTINEAU CAFE Chief of the Air Commerce Bureau, calmly remarked, i e 0 | GREASES it err-raase Glass, Moulding and Plyboard || o—— JUNEAU & 5 “lt’s a great day for the Irish,” and let it be known 3 0% | French and If the upturn of the stock market is any indica- GAS — OILS TOP NOTCH :11’ wasn't thinking much about punishment for vio-i tjon the most helpful act of Congress was adjourn- THONE & i MELODY HOUSE e Dipuen ation of air commerce rules. ment. | Music and Electric Appliances As much as one admires Mr. Corrigan, it is only —_— R I JUNEAU MOTORS DATTISERVES sOXE = (Next Gastineau Hotel) ; e g fair to state that for sportsmanship Mr. Mulligan Entry in Redundancy Contest: Bay Village's | Foot of Main Street ICE CREAM !l Mrs. Pigg Phone 65 also rates very high. Altogether it looks like a field | highway detour around a detour. | iy | NEW ALASKAN Hitro-mtaissamitmpmmids sl | roote [ B X T AE . - S i ¥ | HOTEL A R Car Killed a Spectator Il samseaction | ||| ppagts oo et Alaska Music Suppl s Jersey Racing P | maon ey ||| Jomes-Stevens Shop ||| sunmatruoas since o || | Alaska Music Supply = ‘ | UNITED FOOD C0 i LADIES'—MISSES' ! Pianos—Mausical Instruments LUNCHEON SPECIALTIES & k. READY-TO-WEAR - and Supplies | TELEPHONE—16 ' I' Seward Street Near Third | | Phone 208 122 W. Second 9 g :| PORTRAITS by for B Bt o Brsrie Olon i TED COWLING Try the Empire classifieds for \ £ results. Empire classifieds pay. % g Phone 369 —photographer Old 1st. Natl. Bank Bldg. The First National Bank JUNEAU HARRY RACE DRUGGIST Stores ot CAPITAL—$50,000 : SURPLUS—$100,000 ® — 8 " PERCY'S CAFE || i Pl R ) | COMMERCIAL AND SAVINGS | The B. M. Behrends Bank Juneau, Alaska : COMMERCIAL | and SAVINGS COFFEE SHOP ‘ ACCOUNTS ; Perey Reynolds, Mansger | | SAFE DEPOSIT BOXES e i 2% Paid on } Resources Over Two and T Aaska Federal Savings s One-Half xMillion Dollars. and Loan Association 4t f 4 Accounts scene at the Hohokus, N. J., race track after a speeding car, out of control, hurtled crazily into & grandstand, killed one boy outright and injured fifteen othex". The crowd looks on as some of the are given first aid, and the body of the dead lad is placed in an ambulance. The racing cars had just been sent over the starting line when two of them locked wheels,