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; A Daily Alaska Empire Published every evening cept Sunday by the EMPIRE PRINTIN COMPANY WELEN TROY BENDER - B L BERNARD Becond and Main Streets, Juneau, Alaska Second Class Matter. nd Doglas for §1.25 per month at th o f rate six mont @elivered by carrier in Juneau By mail, postase paid One year, in advance, $12.00 one month. in advance, §1.25 Subscribers will confer a favor if they the Business Office of any fallure or irregula livery of ‘Telephone: nce, $6.00 News Oftice, 602; Business Office, 374 . OF ASSOGIATED PRESS ED TO BE LARGER 2 PUBLICATION - - President Vice-President and Business Manager gues, and as: Aroused societies, clubs, le object is conservation. and united emergency THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, SATURDAY, OCT. 8, 1938 he observes. “Eleven million Americans pay an an-’-l»_. e nual license fee to fish or hunt, and there are 36,000 | rciations whose avowed | in one cause, they have saved the ducks from a precarious and could be equally effective in other Horoscope “The stars incline but do not compel” — L4 HAPPY BIRTHDAY 1Es L 4 | The Empire extends congratula- tions and best wishes today, their P o+ & |birthday anniversary, to the follow- “It is time for us the custodians of our own fate ing: 1d f our children’s children, to heed the signs SUNDAY, OCT. 9, 1938 ch are written along the trail which civilization| Until evening adverse planetary OCTOBER 8 ed through the ages” he continues, urging | 3SPects rule ‘]’3‘?“‘* ot ‘{rd’f"% R Russell McGee ted States Biological Survey, the United States 7 Doris Irene Cahill Bureau of Fisheries, and the various commis game normal duties We perpetually, he accomplish their in abundance 1 and conserva 1 story loudly enough.” { THE PRICE OF DICTATORSHIP " Hitle ‘W:l\ doing of s Herr one marches a Hitler reported Yesterday phal Sudeten enthusiast struck him in the face. A lot of people it was too bad the bouquet didn’t contain a brick that is what der henceforth it has Fuehrer suspects be tak Such is the price of his line of march, dictatorship. state fish-and- jons are given the funds they need to his | effort toward 1 to have thrown a bouquet to the leader which | are going to | Of capital and labor will be numer-| ‘ been ordered | away from persons along pondency and pessimism. tive to the planetary influences can have wild They should find interest in church says, “if the sports- onists will organize and tell their | Need of air for foreign nations will work and charitable endeavors. be much stressed in coming months Revelations regarding dition of Spanish and Chinese vic- tims of the war will arouse Ameri- can sympathy and cause renewed united internations assistance. Clashes between representative ous this month Government rencies will be involved in difficult oroblems of unusual character, Honors for a clergyman who will receive ernmer the are from ngton ze president will recognition Wasl A coll gov- prog- at ted. ‘Women may be peculiarly sensi- | the con-| Mrs. O. H. Hatch OCTOBER 9 Mrs. Oscar G. Olson Mrs. Gertrude Naylor William King Clark George Jorgenson W. J. Sorri Merritt Monagle - D - MODERN ETIQUETTE By Roberta Lee Q. When should a man wea full-dress? A. Full dress should be worn 20 Years Ago From The Empire -u Furniture Company, was passing out cigars on the strength of the fact that Mrs. Weinstein presented him with a son at St. 1's H pital. At 9:45 o'clock in the morning, L. D. Cook, YM.C.A. Secretary, ad- | dressed the students of the Junior and Senior High School at their L Auditorium. | sidney Jacobs returned to Juneau on the Admiral Farragut from the Westward where he had been on | business. Victor H. Wilhelm returned here on the Admiral Farragut after {having spent the summer in | Westward with the | survey crew. | Miss Klondy Nelson had taken tan apartment at the Gastineau for Julius Weinstein, of the Alaska | the | United States| | Directo DRS. KASER & FREEBURGER DENTISTS Blomgren Building PHONE 56 Hours ? a.m. to 8 pm. Dr Richard Williams : DENTIST ! OFFICE AND RESIDENCE | GOLDSTEIN 3UILDING Y | Dr. Judsun Whittier | { CHIROPRACTOR Drugless Physician | office hours: 10-12, 1-5, 7-9 || Rooms 2-3-4, Triangle Bldg. H PHONE 667 PROFESSIONAK) FRATERNAL SOCIEFIES GASTINEAU CHANNEL B. P. 0. ELKS mee$ every Wednesday at 8 pm. Visiting brothers .welcome. DR. A. W, STEWART, Exalted Rul- er; MOUN™ JUNEAU LODGE NO. 14t Second” and fourth Monday of each month G /> in Scottish Rite Temple V{ beginning at p.m shipful Master; VE! Secretary. T REBERAHS DANIEL ROSS, Wor- JAMES Wi ¢LEI- Perseverance Lodge No. 2-A_meets every second and fourth Wednes- day, I1.O.OF. Hall BETTY Mec- CORMICK, Noble Grand; RUTR BLAKE, Secretary. s Dr. A, W. Stewart | Guy Smith | DRUGS Government Bonds be chosen for a diplomatic mission. after 6 pm. to a formal dinner m;"lm winter. SN Il DENTIST Gl X Persons whose birthdate it is have evening wedding, a ball, the opera SRR e | Hours 9 am. to 6 p.m. D v HE allR . 5 2 T ¢ formal evening affa Jp to October nters T SEWARD BUILDING PUROLA S =y WYVRT T Times) he augury of & year of small w or any other formal evening a I i % = REMEDIES WELL DONE, MR. ROOSEVELT X g paradox of a ries with large rewards for patience| Q. What is a “bore” in conver- | having little luck during lV;u d}uu\l | Office Phone 469 1 0 : e sl securities, to- |and hard work. | sation? | season, and (\Tx!\ 'xho.‘z. w \3 :A( i PRESCRIPTIONS CARE: Tribute is being universally pald President Roose- | = = with one of the largest oversubscriptions on ildren born on this day prob-| A. An accurate description of a ;4'%1(1‘"' -\U"N‘”f":t-":“' from :(“:x“‘: W h ety = H FULLY COMPOUNDED 1 \ averting a Jurope : g o i 7 i a )re, according e s v ad been able to “bag geese” enough S e e velt for the part he played in averting a war in Europe - o $700,000,000 in new issues. It probably ably will be self-willed and deter-ibore, according to one authority, is| A% & aiitonhg (! DR. H. VANCE Front Street Next Colisemm 4 o sages the Presi- Sy e mined. Many subjects of this sizn]“a person who is interested in what | to make a showing | . I, during the recent emergency. The messa he Presi- wil] be said that subscriptions for that amount in R e i i ik R Vbl , | OSTEOPATH | s e X ¢ i nd te . bond ning respectively five and fourteen years,|8Te egotistical and able 1o achleve) C0¢s Tioi nterest j e’y ] ARty s e e 3 & il ¥i—Free very dent directed to Adolf Hitler and to the other les g i e Aol 1515 DaraaRk e than their abillty warrants. | that you s his enthusiasm” | Weather: highest 46; lowest 45; IC()nsuIl;auonwnnd T?J\;xn:tigv Gl 2 abroad were t influence in bring ’ s : b 1seppi Verdi, Ttalian composer Q. TIs it permissible for a man |cloudy. ree. Hours 18 o 5; —— ! nt in before the opean war became s 7 to 9:30 by appointment. } , solution without ope ute. Nevertheles gainst the %00.000 asked S born on this day 1813. Othersto examine the items on his check i T . Gastiacen el Annex' ¥ 5 e bk o A for, cash tenders of no less than $7,549,278,850 were | Who have celebrated it as a birth-| when dining with a girl in a restaur S PeLELSE B “Tomorrcw'’s Stylu # : g rted. The offer was oversubscribed pnea ten | day include Elaine Goodale, poet, ant? I . L AW mount actually allotted by the Treas. | 1005; Gamallel Bradford, author,| A Yes; he may dosoina casunl || ¥ (YK nd LEARN s st Today 1 r t to be als with ©803.000.000 1863. manner to see if any error has been | |5 ~ —_— ¥ . e ade. HI he world crisis which ha verted, What, it may be asked, was the meaning of so e N i . | Chamber- i e R MONDAY, OCT. 10, 1938 e By A. C. Gordon | | Robert Simpson, Opt.D. | | i e wa t and least selfish b of the b dit : o Aixonith Astrologers read ',‘”f as ~fl"1 un- | 4. i X — ||| Gracuate Los Angeles College esma e R e Hm)mllm[lt :l{a.\ i Dl H[Pfl:z 41‘11»\:‘- DAILY LESSONS s ————— — * of Optometry and 1t history is written—no mat- e chrmiat The question is partly answered, but | 4% "‘j‘g?ra; L / L | 1. Wnat proportion of men in Op*halmology ) rite it—it will be recorded that partly, by the -k \ fact that when large :”(‘l'" “:]"r‘ si:nfl q’x;:";]" ‘,‘:,‘,f\‘o:]jm”v: IN ENGLISH [this country are financially inde-| | Glasses Fitted ~Lenses Ground | | I »f events followed swiftly upon the slicants expect such oversubscription as will make ;‘:Um??tvu‘ on 8 g persons ir pendent at the age of vf 3 ———— f Franklin D, Roosevelt to the me CEsSar stting-dov f individual subscrip- | ° y. , - 2. With what letter of the ai- F lin D. Roosevelt to the mer \ecess: cutting-down of individual subserip- |“"p b e one and navy are sub- By W. L. Gordon s g vt e within their power to solve t y 1 ase correspc gly, above | ;o) influences stimulating ac phabet do the names of y of || crisis : : i wha the end to get amount of | 4iop e S SR i kAT de- | T - ru_; ~1‘;};‘\“u;u e fee The Charles W. Carter | SaT v Teliciliue b Qhnine QL Jor 8, Frea. ol B ARSI they are | ands. Enlistments will be encour-| Words Often Misused: Do not say,| = = o5 (| o0 Mortua BRI Roosevelt attained new heights, both for sometimes pls in an a situation. but banks d though peace plans are dis-|“I carried four armsful of kindling fingernail growth ortuary x himself and the political literature of the have come to ure pable subscription | xw‘wl ‘W‘m; $oreign powers. say. “I carried four nfuls 4 W}m' two 1y \”A“I?} ':\‘;”* Fourth and Franklin Sts. | The Rexau S‘oref' world, in the writing of those messages, es- ue e t the amount of ” 2 ; g national b avies of the U. S 1 . PHONE 13¢ | " Divergence of opinions among = : e - o : your ally the message of la Wednesday, di- oy s not indicate exactly, or at times £ ¥ 5. What called “the most dan- || o cociYy” aadreassd th Obhfioallor B VA o ot S| statesmen and leaders in mol } e R ST . Relishhe rectly addressed to Chs x r what the investing community .o centiment will be marked ! 3 Ao o pharmaessts | This was a masterly yet in no sense a dic- : 3 e effects of secret propagand: nounce first w I T ~'~r:"n- i5 e | compound tatorial presentation of the cause of peace; | evident that the investing com- | .14 determined subversive agencie in he, a 2s in ask unstre LT A b bracai . stact | | Eimye Four Eyes BXabataslt by: i) presesip- dignified and firm, yet altogether kindly; a | munity was entirely ready to cover, on the Govern- |, e revealed. Scoant firat syliable! tics, out of o 2 R Dr. Rae L Carison || ton perfectly accurate reflection of the opinions nt’'s own terms, all the $700,000,000 or more asked | v % R < PRl " ing at the age of 25, 36 are dead, \ . o i ons. k Canada is to demonstraie he Often Misspelled: Bouillon. Ob- | . 1 & 3 g o prayers arice . sef O y s Ty rv. For this t o Severs i o e 54 financial wrecks, and 10 are in-/! | OPTOMETRIST 2 and the prayers of the American people, set r by the Treasury. For this the e several,Obvi- | sriendship for the United States|serve the ouill il h 5 Butler-Mauro D Co. % i 4l i Sl o4 s S A s T Ry S » wos & dependent at the age of 65. | Office Ludwig Nelson's Jewelry | | | rug Lo. forth in simple language the meaning of us explanations. One is the plethora of bank funds; a service of great value fo the| Synonyms: Fantastic, fanciful,| ‘D iR ¢ E B Briobe Gresn'ast | | i g vhich could not possibly be misconstry ting surplus reserve e than §3 ¢ ¢ S e 1 3. The' letter “a.” tore one & " which ¢ .(1‘14( possibly be misconstrued; in ; I\unh X ]«.‘,« M!mv(xc lhdx: cnx 000, nungon tion. A noted statesman with al- | imaginative, visionary, lusory, un-| 3 ;35 or an inch a week, or & | - -1 every respect a great state paper. | ¢ oh record of their history) a ne member | \.oianc, vl " com ~hime! | « bt X o gt I e The effectiveness of Mr, Roosevelt | and the existing difficulty of finding profitable :(l(;,l:,(:l::: ;’:,; gll:‘“:\” \:,l,l‘l ;?::I: i ‘”0;‘1‘ l:.,,( a word three | little more than 1% inches a year. ®——————— { . e : | for it Yok phith Bffects. 1% HOtH Aarde ) o ; i 4. Niagara and Rio Grande. —— 5 | H. S. GRAVES timed effort is apparent in the ha 1 1er s, 58 S 2 ment in Washington, D. C. It > Let us in-| o pooneo [ I B s It is doubtful that any other pres institution avings bar and insurance Gommunism will gain many sup-| cre our vocabulary by mastering LE e S | FINE | “The Clothing Man” . fkaaar 18 World dtfais N S |companies, is the relatively small volume of new | . rtor i Biivorc s akel e Apeiag cal B fiiiy @ R | | ader orld affairs could have done th : s 2 B e ey | porters in Centrml Europe and make | one word each day. Today's word | Watch and Jeweiry Repalring | | | Home of Hart Schaftner aud His own people and those of Europe involved priva d headway among young Americans, | Discretion; prudence. (Pronou | | by immediated threat of war, in truth the peeple 1 the world, are deeply grateful to him i ON WILD LIFE “DI Censervation of wild life is a subject about which more has been said and less done tk the world ex pt the weather, declares J. N Darling, cartoonist and former chief of the United States Biological Surve in the cwrent Rotarian Magazine. With America’s wild-life population on the downhill skids, he says, much must be done to conserve for coming generations resources intended to be the heritage of all. “We may inflate currency soils on our eroded farms he asserts. “We may acc world in our Tr on our n anything in “Ding but it won't put back 101 bring back our forest 1l the won't put ulate gold in the ez sury, but it water back artificial deserts nor r ore our food crops. fish, fowl, and gifts of Nature. Americans have poured down the rathole much of that which Nature gave them, writes Conservation- ist Darling, for rivers once teeming with sewers; millions of acres of the richest soil have become ugly, eroding scars; and forests of priceless value have been hacked down and burned away “We have lots of conserva onists, but little con- and our resources continue to disappear U.S. National Guardsm " | securities fish are| en Hold Convention, >mpany iss for new capital, during the first of 1938, barely exceeded $600,000,000 than $850,000,000 during 1937. As for |the investing community’s willingness to accept for so large a loan rates so low as 2 nd 1'% percent | it will be observed that banks are now getting barely |1 percent on I ade commercial paper, that their | eight months ainst more loens of a cor al character are still $800,000,000 less than a year ago, that the Federal Reserve's re- discount rate is only 1 percent, and that competitive discounting of Government paper for three months brings as return only a small fraction of 1 percent. But is no judgment passed on the economic situa- tion created by the lavish increase in our publi indebtedness? Under existing circumstances, appar- | ently not. If business were active and business loans rising to normal figure if the status of existing were not impaired by reduced business profits at home and the threat of war abroad; if, ir other words, the country’s banking business were on {a normal basis—then the response of the banking community. might be different. As matters stand in | these troublous times, the credit of the United States G nment, which is judged not so much absolutely 'as relatively, remains very high A hundred ago some Englishman was alarmed because Canada’s unfortified frontier left the dominion “dangerously vulnerable to invasion™ from the United States. Yes sir, think how much pro n a Maginot line would have given the Dionne 4 quintuplets against Ame: tourists! Meeting in their thirty-eighth convention, some 1,000 delegates of the National Guard Association of the United States opened recently in San Francisco for three day: General George E. Leach, association president and mayer of Minneapolis, Minn, Leading the conclave was Brigadier Photo shows, stand- ing, Generals James C. Dozier (left), Maurice Thomp:on and Milton Reckord. Seated are Generals Charles Grahl (left) and Harry Morehead as they discussed conveniion programs, be [the victim of a secret enemy whom the stars forecast trouble Russian“dictator who will Hut he tri a friend and associate, London seers predict. In the Near East the Arabs are to receive secret aid that may cause far-reaching reverberations. and Neptune continue in that are menacing to the whole world. Although certain of the seers deny world war possibili- ties, there are portents of gravest potentiality discerned by most as- trologer Persons whose birthdate it is have the augury of a year of ups and downs. Disappointments regarding financial matters are forecast for both men and women. Children born on this day prob- ably will be extremely intelligent but highly emotional. These subjects of Libra usually have imagination and personal charm. Helen Hayes, famous actress was born on this day 1902. Others who have celebrated it as a birthday in- clude Jean Antoine Watteau, ar- tist, 1864; Benjamin West, Ameri- | can painter, 1738. i (Copyright, 1938) R LD | ATTENTION MASONS ‘here will be a Stated Communi- evening at 7:30 o'clock. 1 the F. C. Degree. By order J. W. LEIVERS; Secretary S L LS The number of men in gainful occupaticns in 1930 was three and a half times the number of women. — ee———— Empire classifieds pav. adv. the e as in red). “It is good discre- tion not to make too much of any man at the first; because one can- not hold out that proportion.”— | Bacon. CALL FOR BIDS The Hirst-Chichagof Mining | Company is calling for bids to be | submitted within seven (7) days |from the date of this notice by mailing the same to the company at Kimshan Cove, Alaska, for the performance of a contract to sink a shaft 150 feet deep on a mining claim near the Hirst-Chichagof Mine. The work must be done under a contract and specifications which are available from Faulkner & Ban- field, Juneau, Alaska. It must be dene by an individual person or cor- poration as an independent con- tractor. The right is reserved to reject any and all bids. Dated October 5, 1938. HIRST-CHICHAGOF MINING CO. 11, 1938. NEW ALASKAN ‘ | HOTEL | { So. Frarfklin Street ‘ ."ElNEA»U Phone Single O ¥ | Authorized to practice before‘[ | the U. S. Treasury Department | and U. S. Board of Tax Appeals. | JAMES C. COOPER Certified Public Accountant A The B. M. Behrends Bank Juneau, Alaska COMMERCIAL and SAVINGS Resources Over Two and One-Half Million Dollars Publication dates, Oct. 5-6-7-8-10-| | | ZORIC SYSTEM CLEANING Phone 15 ALASKA LAUNDRY | PETER PAN BEAUTY SHOP—Triangle Bldg. Telephone—-221 FORD AGENCY (Authorized Dealers) GREASES GAS — OILS JUNEAU MOTORS | Foot of Main Street g | CALL 771 ] | For Appointment | Marie’s Beauty Shop | | 231 Seward St. | (above Family Shoe Store) ' TIMELY CLOTHES NUNN-BUSH SHOES STETSON HATS QUALITY WORK CLOTHING [ FRED HENNING Complete Outfitter for Men “The Store for Men” SABIN’S Front St.—Triangle Bldg. Mnfg. & Building Co., Inc. CABINET WORK—GLASS PHONE 62 DRUGGIST “The Squibb Stores of Alaska” at very reasonable rates | | PAUL BLOEDHORN | S. FRANKLIN STREET L_C;N—'I;;E-— MEZZANINE :f ‘ HOTEL JUNEAU | BEAUTY SHOP | LYLAH WILSON Contoure X-Er-Vac Telephone | | 538 | —f “NEW AND DIFFERENT SERVICE | PHONE 721 e GENERAL AUTO REPAIRING | Gas—Oil—Storage ! Marx Clothing et " "GASTINEAU MOTOR ; Visit the ! | SITKA HOT SPRINGS | Mineral Hot Baths 1 Accommodations to suit every FOOTWEAR” | taste. Reservations, Alaska“Afr ' | Transport DEVLIN’S fd i 1 Paris Fashion Shoes . ~——# | COME 'N and SEE the & e | STROMBERG-CARL 1 | JUNEAU : RADIOS {| MELODY HOUSE | J. B. Burford & Cy.' | | Music and Electric Applances | | “Our door step is worn Il (Next Gastineau dotel) | Satisfied Customers” I Mus. Pigg Thone 65 | |: ' i s’ | Alaska Music Supply | Arthur M. Uggen, Manager | Pianos— Musical Instruments and Supplies Phone 206 122 W. Second Alaska Federal Savings and Loan Association | | Accounts Insured Up to $5,000 P. O. Box 2718———Phone 3 || OFFICE—119 Seward st. | Juneau, Alaska c‘-————*a(-. Lode and pracer locauion notices for sale at The Empire Office. GASTINEAU C. French and Italian Dinners =S LUNCHEON SPECIALT” “ Lode and placer location notises for sale at The Empire Offioa " or: Empire classifieds pay. The First National Bank -5 JUNEAU [ J CAPITAL—$50,000 SURPLUS—$100.,000 Co @ COMMERCIAL AND SAVINGS ACCOUNTS SAFE DEPOSIT BOXES - o 2% Paid on . Savings Accounts