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Daily Alaska Empire Published evers evening except Sunday by the EMPIRE PRINTING COMPANY WELEN TROY BENDER 5 B L BERNARD Becond and Ma! President e-President and Business Manager Strevts, Juneau, Alaska. v Bntered 1n the Post Office In Juneau as Second Class Matter SUBSCRIPTION RATES. elivered by carrler In Junean and Do~z By mail, postage paid. st tto Ope year. in a ene month. in advan Subscribers wili ¢ the Business Office livery of the'r pa §1.25 per month. ce, $6.00; 25 r a favor if they w nromptly notify flure or irregularit y in the de- ness Office, 374 M )CIATED PRESS. The Associste v entitled to the republication ) 3 ed it or ot rwise C d in this paper & also the local bt ished b for not news LABKA CIRC T GUARANTEED TO B! THAN THAT OF ANY OTHER PUBLICA THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, TUESDAY, OCT. 18, 1938. sational version. Japanese papers published the gar-| # bled stories. Chinese reporters immediately guessed what had| happened and began elaborating the tale. They told how each ape carried four grenades; how they were so quick on their feet they could dodge machine-gun bullets; how each ape carried a cup into which a dime was thrown ery time he killed a Japanese. The unsuspecting Japanese, always on the lookout atrocity for all that, too. The mystery of the centuries of Chinese survival a result of their brilliant phical position; their high for yarns, went been iplomacy birth rate; explained their their a geo organized family society. We think The Chinc humor. now all those explanation are wrong. survive because of their sense of BOYS, LET’S WAIT { s HALLOWE’EN hence, on the evening of October 31, town and nc of one is going to say very much if on the mor November 1 windows are covered with icultural system; and their highly *. — Horoscope “The stars incline but do not compel” + WEDNESDAY, OCT. 19, 1938 Conflicting planetary aspec active today, according to astrolo- gy. It is a favorable day for adver tising and all forms of publicity. Contracts should be signed under thic rule of the stars which en courages decisions and aids in'plan- ning. After the morning hours the judgment may be unreliable: Decep- tive influences may be prevalent in business and governmental affai Women should be especially ca | tious in social and professional in-| — | HAPPY BIRTHDAY * The Empire extends congratuld- tions and best wishes today, their birthday anniversary, to the follow- ing: OCTOBER 18 Ralph E. Robertson Ted Keaton Ingvald O. Sunderland Verne M. Soley Mrs. Frank A. Boyle Marjorie Snell e — MODERN ETIQUETTE t The erests all classes Growth of tendency pranksters will be active about the i) be apparent among persons of organizations By Roberta Lee with| @ How can one be assured that to pretense 20 Years Ago From The Empire - E | OCTOBER 18, 1918 The reading room of the local Christian Science Society was being moved at this time from its former | location in the church, to a room im the Maloney Building. | M. S. Sutton received word that ‘Mr. and Mrs. Percy E. Rice were ~Flthe proud parents of a daughter| | born in Seattle. Mrs. Rice was the | former Esther Sutton of Juneau. Several Juneau residents who had been preparing to leave for the Out- | side had at this time cancelled their reservations owing to the influenza | epidemic. Directo PROFESSIONAL FRATERNAL SOCIETIES GASTINEAU CHANNEL e e —————————— o DRBS. KASER & FREEBURGER | DENTISTS | 3 Blomgren Building | PHONE 56 Hours 3 am. to 8 pm. ‘} D1 Richard Williams DENTIST OFFICE AND RESIDENNCE GOLDSTEIN 3UILDING 43, B. P. 0. ELKS meet every Wednesday at 8 pm. Visiting brothers welcome. DR. A. W. STEWART, Exalted Rul- er; M. H. <IDES. Sec~ retary. MOUN™ JUNEAU LODGE NO. 14% Second and fourth Monday of each month in Scottish Rite Temple beginning at 7:30 p.m. DANIEL ROSS, Wor-~ shipful Master; JAMES W, LEI. VELG, Secretary. T REBERARS 4 | Perseverance Lodge No. 2-A meets every second and fourth Wednes- |day, LO.OF. Hall BETTY Mec- CORMICK, Noble Grand; RUTRH Dr. John H. Geyer DENTIST . will be rapid|a business letter will be brought to| he attention of a certain person? | B ] 1t's the window washer on the job. designs an 310 Goldstein Building | BLAKE, Secretary. made with annual revolutionary aims U PHONE 1762 | through the coming winter. Workeis soap. to get I C. S. Harley, manager of the Ten- ¥ - ol e e P At any rate, it is often amusing % & . remarkable story coming from the scene of operations tiv lates | better way of moving toward greater industrial peace, ant thereof, and will apply to the than to ask the representatives both of ALASKA DAY Seventy the life lly enough Seventy-one years very 1 time the hist men still living who can. remember chase. But n have a far greater sig By that have a position in the today ably will be counting mn limited road mile thousands of miles the various cities of the even be paved. They may time some substance which makes a better road than the today. Great airplane fields, hangars, air terminals will be found in the respective cities. And the cities, no doubt, will be cities in the full. sense. Juneau, today a small city of around 6,500 inhabitants, can well be talking about a half a million or m in that r of 2009. What was Seattle 71 years a A f in a clearing on the waterfront, Yes, 71 years from today they will be observing the 142nd arniversary of the Alaska Purchase. Time, tradition and groewth will ler.d far greater nificance to the day than in this year of 1938, It would be interesting to see it. It would be like going to a World's Fair for those of us living today That is why most of thankful we won't be around in that There wouldn't be too. countries the Alas| in ry of are Alaska Pur- another ye and Day will y that stars ds, they of thousands millior Against there probably will be Alaska will Where prob- time it is laxy of State we count our people in thou m in hundreds years hence, or even in onr of today of excellent paved roads connecting In f have d they may not veloped by that land paving know municipal we go? shanties us can be year of 2009, any Alaska as we know it to go back to after seeing | States. What is important is that its recommenda- and answer to the complaint of the fair, THE CHI SENSE ();‘ HUMOR the reported Chinese in their war with on occasion effective. In Saturday's Empire The strategy of the Japanese is as deccy locomotive which the fool their oppenents into Chinese had cc ng of & ructed to bombs, thing. They have built decoy airplanes to draw Japa- nese fire and they resort to other trickery. But most in the and revealing the Chinese sense of humor re to orang-outangs the battling defenders had trained th to fight with their army. 3 But that is This if la two weeks hence mor to the ok isn* a an unsightly 31 to make ard Labor Peace Times) ition of Labor 1 report of executive coun- bitte ittacked the administration of the 1 Labor Relations Act. The council declares Labor Board has “brazenly and by official self as a proponent of the CIO, foster- and by the effect of ‘its decrees the CIO.” The council de- ide discretion given to the Labor the law in f the manner and tiv holding elections and in determining the “proper nit” for the purpose of collective bargaining. It eclares that the Labor Board has sought to impose upon workers, regardless their wishes, the type ar on it favored. The demand for revision of the Wagner act grows nstantly stror It is no longer confined to em- loy to the 'neral public’; as the com- I AFL show, many of the orkers act wa ned to “protect” are growing of it. Yet it should be clear of the Wagner act would leave ome of the major problems in the field tions. What is needed is a broad, bal- anced governmental program dealing with this field The Presic t as already indicated the way in which this great problem should be approached. The commission he appointed to study labor legislation and relations in England and Sweden turned in ob- jective, informative and very helpful reports. the commission contained representatives of unions, government officials and representatives of employers, s reports were concurred in by every member. The most useful step the President could take now would be to appoint a commission similarly constituted to outline a broad program of labor legislation. Such a commission might incidentally recommend revision lof the Wagner act. It might, on the other hand recommend its repeal and the substitution of an en- | tirely new act or group of acts. It might suggest Federal boards of mediation or Federal labor Tt might indicate which role could best be played b; the Federal Government and which by the separate eclared it iited membership for n Board unde xin of or rs or T 1creasingly suspicio hat a mere revisios msolved £ lak A tions should not be confined beforehand to some narrow point, but should be as broad as the com- | mission thinks necessary. i It is doubtless too much to hope that a commis- sion containing representatives of both workers and employers would bring in a unanimous set of recom- mendations. But it is not too much to hope that ere would emerge some central core of recommen- dations upon which all the members agreed, and that from majority and minority reports Congress would belief that it was the real|pe able to devise some compromise generally accep- the issue of said marriage table. Industrial peace in this country means friendly consultation and negotiation between the representa- of workers and emplo There can be no erefore, workers and employers to share ffort to frame ible public poli in the common es for governing . GOLDIE DIVEN, Plaintiff, Though | s, | forty A. Write, “Attention of Mr. Ben- son” on the same line as the saluta- tion, or on the line below it to the right ontent with the es-| of things. ts of violence are rerous despite efforts toward mpromises and improved indus- ndit hold his her put husband her, or let Should for a Certainly he should hold it for He should show his wife the - | same courte: that he extends to other women professional and hile this conf tion prevails; they should avoid complications. anger of accidents may be wide-| Q. When planning a spread iarrels may be viparty, where many of the guests started under this sway which may | keep office hours, what would be the ndic new tional cris best hour for dinner? Persons whose birthdate it is have A. Seven o'clock. the augury of a year of fair st —_—————— Women may be helpful in fir % . ancial problems. Children born on this day prob- DAILY LESSONS ably will be fond of mental and| physical exertion. Subjects of this| IN ENGLISH sigen usually are keen, clever and| suceessful. By W. L. Gordon Fannie Hurst, noted American 3 w »r, was born on this day 1829 Others who have celebrated it a birthday include Joseph ‘C. Hut- cheson Jr., judge, 1879; Henry B ate inte | 1o cess. * -+ Words Often Misused: Do not say, “We are glad to accept of your hos- pitality.” Omit of. Cassel, former Congressman, 1855 Often Mispronounced: Revocable. (Copyright, 1938) | Pronounce rev-o-ka-bl, e as in set, e o as in no unstressed, as as in ask i 1 t f llabl LR o . |unstressed, and accent first syllable. WOMEN OF THE MOOSE | " . wisepelied: Hippopotamus. Public card party, WedBesday at|ycorve the three p's and the a. 8:15 pm., at the Odd Fellows Hall.| “goponomg: Ancestor, forefather. Whist, pinochle and bridge. ~ adv.| o0 o itor. — Word Study: “Use a word three JMMONS | times and it is yours.” Let us in- No. 4275 | crease our vocabulary by mastering In the District Court for the Terri- | one word each day. Today's word: tory of Alaska, Division Number |[Nomadic; wandering; roam One, at Juneau. “After these years of traveling he became tired of the nomadic life.” - vs. CHARLES DIVEN, Defendant The President of the United States of America To the above greeting: B You are here required to ap- pear in the District Court for the| Territory of Alaska, First Division, | within thirty days after the last publication of this summons, name- ly within thirty days after the 8th day of November, 1938, in case this summons is published, or within days after the date of its service upon you, in case this sum- mons is served upon you personally, | . 3 LOOK and LEARN By A. C. Gordon named defendant, | =4 . 1. What is the only insect known as a dometic insect? 2. What are the names of the | Dionne quintuplets? 3. What are the three main branches of the U. S. Government? 4. What term is applied to an : ’ P the above named plaintiff on file [#imal that ehew e b in the said court in the above en-| - FOW IS the O e D e Rooon titled action. | city, Edinburgh, pronounced? The said plaintiff in said action ANSWERS B % o The honey bee. demands the following relief: dis- { : Annette, Cecile, Emilie, M solution of the bonds of matrimony tat Yvonne. now and heretofore existing be- Txecative tween plaintiff and defendant, and : % that plaintiff be awarded the cus- tody of the two minor children, Judicial, Legisla- Ruminant. As if it were spelled Edin- buro. And in the event you fail to so appear and answer, the plaintiff will take judgment against you for R s ATTENTION ALL ELKS Official visit of District Deputy Grand Exalted Ruler Leonard So- holt Wednesday, Oct. 19, 1938. Be present. for the relief demanded in and as hereinabhove court her complaint stated. M. H. SIDES, dinner akee Pisheries Company, was stay- ing at the Gastineau Hotel. W. R. Selfridge arrived in Juneau from Killisnoo and was staying at the Hotel Gastineau. Hours: 9 am. to 6 p.m. 57 Dr. Judssn Whittier CHIROPRACTOR Drugless Physician Office hours: 10-12, 1-5, 7-9 Rooms 2-3-4, Triangle Bldg. PHONE 667 ited es District Attorney | James A. Smiser and Mrs. Smiser returned to Juneau on the City of Seattle after a trip to the East. W. S. McKay arrived in Juneau from Tenakee and was at the Gas- Hotel Dr. A. W. Stewart DENTIST Hours 9 am. to 6 pm. SEWARD BUILDING Office Phone 469 tineau Weather: highest 45; lowest 42; rain | e NAVY DAY 0 BE OBSERVED 'Amateur Radio Operators Are to Receive Special Message That Day | | In accordance with . the practice of past years, a message Wwill be broadcast by the Navy Department by radio telegraph to the amateurs of the United States and insular possessions on Navy Day, Octo-| | ber 27. | In connection with this broadcast the Am 1 Radio Relay League at West Hartford, Connecticut, will conduct a receiving competition. The league will receive the copies from DR. H. VANCE | OSTEOPATH | Consultation and examination free. Hours 10 to 12; 1 to 5; 7 to 9:30 by appointment. Gastineau Hotel Annex South Franklin St. Phone 177 || Robert Simpson, Opt.D. | Gradnate Los Angeles College of Optometry and Op‘halmology Glasses Fitted Lenses Ground The Charles W. Carter Mortuary Fourth and Franklin Sts. PHONE 138 t Guy Smith DRUGS PUROLA REMEDIES PRESCRIPTIONS CARE- FULLY COMPOUNDED Next Colisewm PHONE %i--Free Delivery | i} Front Street “Tomorrcw's Styles Today” Juneau’s Own Store “The Rexall Store” your Reliabke pharmactsts compouné prescrip- tions. e |the various contestants and in due course will supply the results to the Chief of Naval Operations. Let- ters of appreciation from the Navy Department will be sent to these Dr. Rae L. Carlson persons who submit perfect copies : OPTOMETRIST of the broadcast. iomce Ludwig Nelson’s Jewelry | The transmission will be at the Phone Green 331 rate of approximately twenty-five Have Your Eyes Examined by H. S. GRAVES “The Clothing Man” Home of Hart Schaffner and Marx Clothing St words per minute and will be pre- ceded by a five-minute continuous l“cQ” call. The transmitting sched- | ules are as follows: From Washington, 9:00 p.m., 75th ‘Mcridmn Time, simultaneously on | 4045 and 8090 kcs., call letters NAA. From San Francisco, 7:30 p.m., 120th Merdian Time, simultaneously osll letters | B-or——r—r—meriarm ON THE MEZZANINE HOTEL JUNEAU BEAUTY SHOP LYLAH WILSON Contoure Telephone X-Er-Vac 538 —_— | Watch and Jewelry Repairing at very reasonable rates PAUL BLOEDHORN S. FRANKLIN STREET !nn 4045 and 9090 Kkcs., - | WOMEN OF MOOSI Meeting Wednesday, 7:30 p.m., at 1.0.OF. Hall ‘ HATTIE PETERMAN, Recorder | - \ Lode and placer location notices | | adv. - | for sale at The E<upire Office. FORD AGENCY (Authorized Dealers) “NEW AND DIFFERENT T FOOTWEAR” DEVLIN’S B GASTINEAU MOTOR SERVICE PHONE 727 GENERAL AUTO REPAIRING Visit the SITKA HOT SPRINGS Mineral Hot Baths Accommodations to sult every taste. Reservations, Alaska Afr Transport COME *N and SEE the NEW STROMBERG-CARLSON RADIOS J. B. Burford & Co. “Our door step is worn by Satisfied Customers” b The original story was that “wild men” had ap- wae peared in Chinese forces, meaning apparently the W aborigines in Southwest China. But the character their future relations the Honorable Geo. F. judge of said court, and id court hereunto af- Witnes; —_— Alexande: ight: Why don't those fellows over in the seal of Secretary - —er——— - adv. Paris Fashion Shoes GREASES | J GAS — OILS = T B B Y R A 80 41 00 008 o 1 wa e “wild men” is similar to that for “orang-outang” #»2 and a Japanese translator elected to use the more sen-| iu .. — write their treaties with disappearing ve themselves embarrassment? I'hey're Rooting for the Yankees, You May Be Mrs. William Dickey, Mrs. Lefty Gomez, World series ts, the Yanks and the Cubs, moved on to New York after their Chicago series and with the clubs went the wives of the players, Sure Mrs. Lou Gehrig and Mrs, Joe McCarthy among them this quartet of Yankee rooters. Left | to right, Mrs. William Dickey, Mrs. Vernon Gomez, | Mre. Lou Gehrig and Mrs. Joe Mec ALASKANA, By Marle Drake, 50c. fi 1938, on this 10th day of October, =S — ROBERT E. COUGHLIN, (Court Seal) Clerk. By PEGGY O. McLEOD, Deputy Clerk. First publication, Oct. 11, 1938. Last publication, Nov. 1, 1938. HOTEL | So. Frarfklin Street INEAU——Fhone Single O b1 JAMES C. COOPER Certified Public Accountant Authorized to practice before | the U. S. Treasury Department | and U. S. Board of Tax Appeals. 8 Alaska Music Supply ||| Arthur M. Uggen, Manager Pianos— Musical Instruments and Supplies | Phone 206 122 W. Second | 3 38 The B. M. Behrends Bank Juneau, Alaska COMMERCIAL and SAVINGS Resources Over Two and One-Half Million Dollars 3 AU MOTOR NEWALASKAN ||| TONEAD MOTORS — JUNEA! Foot of Main Street MELODY HOUSE Music and Electric Apphances (Next Gastineau dotel) Mrs. Pigg Thone 65 - & | | = T Alaska Federal Savings | and Loan Association Accounts Insured Up to $5,000 P. O. Box 2718———Phone 3 OFFICE—119 Seward St. Juneau, Alaska Lode and pracer location notices for sale at The Empire Office. TIMELY CLOTHES NUNN-BUSH SHOES STETSON HATS QUALITY WORK CLOTHING [ | [| complete Outfitter for Men — R P “The Store for Men” SABIN’S Front St.—Triangle Bldg. COMMERCIAL Mnfg. & Building Co., Inc. CABINET WORK—GLASS PHONE 62 HARRY RACE DRUGGIST “The Squibb Stores of Alaska” GASTINEAU CAFE ' | French and LUNCHEON SPECIALTIES Lode and placer location notices for sale at The Empire Office. Empire classifieds pay. The First National Bank JUNEAU [ J CAPITAL—$50,000 SURPLUS—$100,000 [ AND SAVINGS ACCOUNTS SAFE DEPOSIT BOXES 2% Paid on Savings Accounts