The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, December 21, 1938, Page 4

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1 '*Dml\ Alaska Empzre g except Sunday b EMPIRE !‘m\‘n\l. comr SreLEN TROY BENDER - Published every event President ness Manager CRIPTION RATES cred b Junean and Douglas for $1.25 B e wing rate n advance, $6.00 will promptly notify in the de- frepublicatic fotherwise cre $published here TEED TO BE LARGER PUBLICATION. ATION GU. OF ANY CIRCUL N THA HEF H PLANNED AVI \Tl()\ FUTURE E Much Vi'r progress in aviation and swithout cou has mac unmatched tin any other > world. We see notable ¥evidence of it in Alaska in the last few years with fregularly scheduled routes established and more frecently connection with the States now in the process H yof development ' But the march of aviation in the future will be geven ¢ ter if progress continues along planned #lines, ware Noble, Chairman' of the new Civil % Aeronaittics A X di ing the ambition of fthe new aythority recently made this statement in ferring to developments of the past “The pre t been nd unquestionable. He then went on to point out s ha is not' enoug gk isytoday, for instance, fourteen times on an airline as it was ten years ago. | gratifying. It as safe to fly The airlines last year flew twelve million miles to} cach fatal accident Plainly a sound technical and economic founda on for civil aviation has been laid. But the achieve- | ing that foundation may well! of the future. They are | of the past ir rfed the dw by prospects pects to which the young rging from educa- should be attracted in many| territory which confronted | Men have been years. e eme tional institutions, Think of the new first aeronautical designers. for thousands of little use to the aeronautical de- ines o the building experience was ships of signers. Your marine architect could start with rea-|into new'contracts or partnerships: enlargement and development of the first| 'The planetary governmeht favors log canoe. He conld add a litile material here, | the payment of debts and promises | off a little there and produce something thatySatsfaction through dealings, with would, at le float. Unless your aeronautical de- signer w nis highly unl to know how and where he made his He has had to overhaul the entire ysis and (1(’\1“11 mi; of a science ave had, no knowledge of [Iw physical properties of the uppen| dicate THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, WEDNESDAY, DEC. 21, <~7{(;roscope “The stars incline THURSDAY, DECEMBER 22, Benefic nd genoeral optimism. It is most favorable for the sign-| But their|ing of legal papers and seems to promise success for_those who enter | For the last week of the Labor continues under d and but do not compel 1938 aspects dominate today according to astrology. It is a sway | presaging good news, happy plans bankers and financial agents. year there right the first time he was| s o sign ‘presaging good forfude to | builders and contractors, as well as architects and engineers. | disturbing v instarice, until recently almost | influences. Serious «conflicts are in-| Ve B strange complications s and au- is not tenden- Only astronomers needed such knowledge. Now |Ivolving artists, mu At : ; I thors. we must have me e and complete acquaintance) "o oLonie of this day vith the farthermost reache our atmosphere. We | juciy for heads of families who may may soon be travelling through it object to money-spending So it went in radie, instruments, sound-proofing— | cies. Father may try to tighten edicine. All of these sciences must be increas- | pt applied to categories entirely new to human | ce Th of us who are still respectably! middle-aged can well remember how hard it was to 1at the Wright Brothers had made practical something that from Daedalus to Darius Green had | experience in believe starving thousands in Europe and been generally considered the concern of the crack|asia are received. | pot alone. Now that it has become practical, a genera-| Next month may be marked by tion has barely scratched the surface of these scien-|severe storms. In California and tific applications. | Florida there may be unusual “Aviation radio presents infinite possibilities, | weather S There are not, for instance, anywhere near’ enough| Persons whose birthdate it is have radio channels available for all the uses aviation can | tunes in which losses are followed put it to with the Instruments now in hand. Many |y % ' VI SRS 8 S phases of airplane operation could be tremendously \cky in their ambitions. rdvanced by the development of some radio facility| Children born on this day may be | other. irtistic, yet practical. Subjects of The instrt have not yet been devised by |this sign of Capricorn have traits which to study some of our problems in physics and | that belong to Sagittarius. n dynamics and combustion. Edwin A. Robinson, poet, |on this day 1869 Other: “Mechanical movement in aviation is ceeding the already ex- speed of sound. Ballistics is the only other | irse-strings, ced. Agricultural problems gton. Destruction of the but he will not suc- will cause | extraordinary perplexities in Wash- food * will cause severe criticism as reports of | the augury of a year of shifting for- be was born who have celebrated it as a birthday include YEARS AGO From THE EMPIRE DECEMBER 21. 1918 Dr. James H. Condit had rolurned’ from Hoonah where he had been establishing the Rev. Carl S. Glad- felter as the new Presbyterian mis- sionary at that point. | Tom Thompson, who looked after | lhe stereotyping department for The mpire, was to leave on the (next hmeu to wisit his brother in Ohlo. | The Jualin mine was to open soon | according to @ telegram received by Dave Housel, employment agent for the company. Sarah Joanna Wise and Vincent 1. Soboloff were married by the Rev. | James T. McQueen at the parsonage. ayer and his sister attended the bride and groom. J. F. Warner, of the United States | Land Office, moved to the Zynda | Hotel for the winter. | Ole Hagen, a pioneer Alaskan who resided in the Yukon country for a decade, and had been in Juneau for the last several years, bought the horse and rig of Charles Switzer, and entered the express and deliv- ery business in this city. Six cases of refugee garments were to be shipped to Seattle on the Ala- meda from the Juneau Chapter of | | the American Red Cross. | Mrs. Carrie Z. Denny, who left in October for the East was to re- turn to Juneau soon. She had been | Licentiousness; lawlessness; immor- | | visiting with her daughter, Miss| Helen Denny. Weather: lowest 31; | Highest 33; SNow. of ‘the stives A | Deems Taylor, composer, 1885; Tere- me of the objectives of the future: branch of science of which this can be said. Someone | o." carreno ma"mp 1853. 1 he sronautics Act lays dowr othods 3 | The Civil Aeronautics Act lays down for us methods ¢t perfect material and forms for these speeds. AR T RN | ed by half a cen on: | It-ad8Pts | gicherto all we -nave asked of steel Bas been rels James Laye, a medical patient at ¢ s JOINS HER HUSBAND | % K U e m to the special pre of thi ilit ) % b ey emim ared itles A | ) | st ‘;‘\mn Hospital, was dismissed “Before any new ai can fly th thori ) ordinary use in the air we are| Mrs. J. H. Chapman, wife of one | today detern : ill serve public convenience gemandir 1 s three and four hun- | 0f the announcers on the staff of % ] Its ra be fair and reasonable. grod mil ur KINY and also the radio operator wen Fitzgerald was dismissed BalitnE ik Pot be Uhfalrof destittive’ B {arrived on the Baranof from Seat- from medical care at the St. Ann : e e i lharent S T T [tle. Mr. and Mrs. Chapman have | Hospital yesterday afternoon. eileniitainge vl L S Anthony Eden | taken an apartment at the Im- & M s | Seb p & & an 25 o s B : = perial, seorge Mooney was admitted for : E to the 1v-: f“ the Securities and Exchange York Tmies) | LAY |=munal attention this morning at § Commission.” The Civil Authority must About a decad nthony Eden was referred | Delicious Christmas Stollen at the | S: Ann’s Hospital. ' its business trar standards of honest to as “that terrible yc nan who wants peace so | Peerless Bakery, Friday and Sgtur- i L & and efficient manag t much.” He had earned a Military Cross in finding | day. adv.| Mrs. E. Baratich and baby, Char- - wers over physi out what war As a rising diplomat he strove, | L L line Jo, was d)sn]ussed today from he Author- Ky “ il "‘) d, ““” ute il NOTICE OF APPLICATION FOR | s wers to investi- ocarno and to extend the pacifying infine H § S & . WELS 10 Anyed Yanins. of Mitions, Ha owed/s matiratiders] PATENT | Mrs. J. Paul was dismissed from SETG DC cane, ANd aRe| L e the strength and Qighlty ‘of his twh conniiey, | Sf"‘“1§°' “9225 4 Ottice| St Ann's Hospital today after re- i S R g but it was joined with a larger loyalty to European "“IO“] :hg ‘J“;:’Oau‘al:;d Ditrict a¢| Ceiving medical aid for severe face nirlbuting to safety we inherlt all that the|cjyjization. Retreshing one's memory of his training [ 0% °8 MAOR | burns government has hitherto done. That means not only and record one recalls that he once wrote art criti- | ";“ ‘mr;\‘g“ asr e A the lonz accumulation of experience represented in cisms for a Yorkshire paper, that his collection of | 5 rl P:RFI: EerBoRA;\J;;‘ES s ciel‘i;‘:“‘ Bae fial Sirne 8 mdkg the regulations for safety, but much of the skilled French classics of the sixteenth and seventeenth | :’r s Dt R o “ufima;\fl{lmm» n to St. Ann’s Hospital last personnel to interpret and apply the regulations for | centuries is not to be despised, and that he made a | ;“b“‘: ll:uk u"‘d:‘;’”m“M'{ s night. | Be W koot thhisit ‘& Nbed Asteukive ohyaloal: study of Oriental languages. But his adven- | PuPlC lands B it it M. govalaitant ks ehibtered ihis . art and erudition did not blunt the edge of | May 26th, 1934 (48 Stat. 809). At the Government Hospital, Wil- {))‘\N*”('“l i i gl‘((Mv (““mvl i fneid B " his courage, as h swed conclusively in the crucial | NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN | jis peters, of Douglas, was dismissed ;t l:(x‘n:x“\-‘ as aids to air xl.u\.,.,n‘un MESC (st he had to meet last February that Fred E. Brandes has filed ap- | today after having received medical consist at the present time of more than three hundred No messenger could have come at this time better mhmlmn Serial No. 09258, in the cqre radio stations of all sorts, weather reporting st nearly an equal number of ions, more than twenty thousand miles of teletypewriter circuits, and more than two thousand lights and beacons on twenty-two thousand odd miles of lighted airways. “The airlines will c: sengers this Abc carried in non-schedule mean by fly es passen best estimate re thar people, less, half of one pe: lation acnmly make use of travel by pose whatsoever. “It is perfectly true that fear as well as fare keeps many of these pvuplu out of the air, Those of us most closely familiar with the problems of flight believe 5 very much exaggerated. were }\A led in .nul-)mnbll(' and only a million and a half pas- t the same number will be flyir 3ut that does not e miilion individual repeaters, The half a million yeal a lor tk g shot hat thr Many of th is that em @ not air for any pur- that nine thou: dents last killed in “In the every five airway, d per six air transportation. air there separate highway level hundred feet. Down the middle of each the radio beam sends a marker as plain as the white line in the center of any surface highway. Furthermore, wherever these airways cross traffic is i d as it is on the most modern highway—by a ration of grade. Pilots approaching these inter- ons untain their passengers were scheduled is a must m level if on one airway and must rise above it by five hundred feet if on'; another | “The results of this careful planning are already QSAFHC HAZAR in Martin Place o bt 2 oy R :ent of our popu- | . velt’s recent DS for motorists in Sydney, Australia, where comely misses to show their physical fitness dyring the nation’s health week. cquipped to explain England to Ar will find here a hearty welcome and ence that will spread far beyond which he speaks. ica. Mr. Eden receptive audi- he walls within | 1934, (48 Stat. | follows, to-wit: (Seattle Post-Intelligencer) According to Canadian newspapers the coming m of the dominion parliament is expected to be | nted with a government plan for a 200 percent | in Canadian naval and air defenses. This is not as extreme as it sounds. Canada’s | | present navy consists of six destroyers. The new | naval plan would provide two squadrons, each of eight : destroyers and a “leader,” one squadron for the East | Coast and one for the West. The air defense plan | is said to look to approximately 0 planes. Canada received with enthusiasm President Roose- | proncuncement that the United States would not leave its neighbor to the north undefended in the event of an attack by an sor nation. No who views the international situation | realistically can imagine the United States doing | otherw! With Canadians as neighbors there is no reason for fortifying our northern border. But there are | ious few other nations which could be trusted as implicitly. But Canadian defense States will no ing North Ame one plans indicate the United bear the whole burden of keep- | a peaceful li And this independent judzment of the hazards of international affairs confirms cur own administra- | | tion’s decision that it is far better to be safe than Fi L T e = W after All of Lot Eleven (1 tion Twenty-five (25), ship 50 S, Range 67 E, River and Lot Six (6), y-six (36), |United States Land Office at An- chorage, Alaska, for patent to land | hereinafter described under the pro- | wisions of the Act of Congress of | | May 26th, 809) for and more particularly described as‘ 1), Sec- Town- Copper Meridian, containing 1.36 Section Township 50 S, Rangc 67 E, Copper River Mer- idian, containing 3.21 acres; both of said lots being located at approximately Latitude 57° 30" N, Longitude 134° 35 W, and being the same land elim- inated from the Tongass Na- tional Forest as Homes! tead No. 408 under executive order dated December 14, 1937. Any and all persons claiming ad- ith laska, cation or thirty versely any of the above described land should file their adverse claims the Register of the United Stales Land Office at Anchorage, within the period of pub- (30) days there- or they will be barred by the rovisions of the statutes. Dated at Anchorage, Alaska, this 6th day of October, 1938. GEORGE A. LINGO, irst publication, ast publication, Register. Oct. 26, 1938, Dec. 21, 1938, — e, — ATTENTION EASTERN STAR Christmas basket donations to be left at Zenger's by Friday, Dec. adv. i | | UNITEL» STATES | | DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR | 1 GENERAL LAND OFFICE | District Land Office | Anchorage, Alaska. | | October 6, 1938. I i Notice is hereby given that Jor ! {gen Peter Christensen, has made | application for a five acre tract| under the act of May 26, 1934, for | |land embraced in U. S. Survey No. | 2291, Anchorage 08469, situated on | Glacier Highway, about 11 miles| northwest of Juneau, containing | 14.83 acres, latitude 58° 22' 30” N.| longitude 134° 39’ W, and it is now | in the files of the U. S. Land| Office, Anchorage, Alaska. Any and all persons claiming ad- versely any of the ahove mentioned | land should file their adverse| |L‘]B.ll‘ns in the local land office with- in the period of publication or | 'thirty days thereafter, or they will | be barred by the provisions of the | Statutes. GEORGE A. LINGO, Register. First puhlication, Nov. 2, 1938, Last publication, Dec. 28, 1938. || The B. M. Behrends — Bank Juneau, Alaska 2 COMMERCIAL and SAVINGS Resources: Over Two and One-Half Million Dollars 1938. Jappy PBirthday | The Empire extends congratula- tions and best wishes today, their birthday anniversarr .o the follow- ing: DECEMBER 21 Peter Carlson Joe C. Johnston i John E. Kevik | Hebert Mead | Mrs. George Larsson Thelma Bodding Mrs. J. V. Davis e DAILY LESSONS IN ENGLISH * By W. L. Gordon Words Often Misused: Do not s “He is scared of the consequences.” Say, “He is afraid of the conse- quences.” Often Mispronounced: Deceased. Pronounce de-sest, both e’s as in see, Director Hours 3 a.m. to 8 p.m, | Dr. A. W. Stewart DENTIST Professional Fraternal Societies Gastineau Channel er; M. H. ¢IDES. 8ec- wetary. | e T ey B. P. 0. ELKS meet i every Wednesday at 8 | DRS-EASER & FRR=CSuER ' p.m. Visiting brothera ! Ailchbn welcome. DR. A. W. l PO 50‘”"‘ STEWART, Exalted Rul- | MOUN™ JUNEAU LODGE NO. 141 Second and fourth Monday of each month Scottish Rite Temple { beginning at 7:30 pm accent last syllable, and not de- seez'd. i Often Misspelled: Pompeii. Ob- | | serve the final vowels. Synonyms: Offspring, progeny, descendants. Word Study: “Use a word three times and it is yours.” Let us in- crease our vocabulary by nmstermg one word each day. Today's word: chxldren, i | * | D1 Richard Williams | DENTIST ! OFFICE AND RESIDENCE GOLDSTEIN 13Ul Dr. John H. Geyer | DENTIST 310 Goldstein Building PHONE 762 Hours: 9 am. to 6 pm. | j‘ Hours 9 a.m. to 6 pm. DANIEL ROSS, Wor- SEWARD BUILDING sh JAMES W. LEI- pful Master; :‘: _Orhce Ph—one 469 ! vu:,:,, Se(xftjf}"' £ = oo ..___.i; REBERKAHS | Perseverance Lodge No. 2-A meeit every second and fourth Wednes- day IO.OF. Hall BETTY Mec- CCORMICK, Nohle Grand; RUTR BL\KE, Secretary. Guy Smith DRUGS PUROLA REMEDIES ING | i) | | PRESCRIPTIONS CARE FULLY COMPOUNDED P P.agless Office hours: Rooms 2-3- D; Judson Whittier | CPIROPRACTOR Front Street Next Colisewm PHONE %i-~Free Delivery ) e it Physician 10-12, 1-5, 7-9 Triangle Bldg. ality. “A great licentiousness treads PHONE 667 P SR on the heels of a reformation.’— g L|| “Tomorrcw’s Styles Emerson. e S — o e TR e '3 DR. H. Today ETIQUETTE L4 Q. What would be the proper | salutation for a letter to the Pres dent of the United States? A. Any of the following forms is correct: | Sir |1 ‘ MODERN | i OSTEOPATH t Consultation and examination VANCE free. Hours 10 to 13; 1 to 5; o~ 7 to 9:36 by appointment. Gastineau Hotel Annex s | South Franklin St. Phane 177 i S i | Robert Simpson, Opt.D. Graduate Los Angeles College of Optometry and Op*halmology Juneau’s Own Store Lenses Ground -5 The Charles W. Carter Mortuary Fourth and Franklin Sts. PHONE 136 I | -8 To the Pres | Glasses Fitted Mr. President: Dear Mr. President: " Q. How can a bachelor repay his l social obligations if he is a man of | limited means? t A. By making himself useful to | | his hostess and agreeable to her | gues or by sending flowers to his | host on al oc * Q. What is the corr (l \\dv to &— cat an apple at the table, when small silver fruit knife is pmvmmv_‘ A. Cut the apple into quarters and eat with the fingers. RS s LOOK and LEARN By A. g Gordon 1 there | many " sheets are |in a quire of paper? [ 2. Who is called “the father of | the automobile”? ‘hnd situated at Angoon, Alaska,|23 1 p.m. Foods, toys, and clothmcl 3. What is the table of measure How that a druggist uses? 4. Of what country is Oslo the capital? | 5. What was the name of Henry Hudson's ship which sailed the Hud~ son River? ANSWERS 1. Twenty-four. 2. Gottlieb Daimler (1834—[900),1 of Stuttgart, Germany. | 3. Apothecary. ! 4. Norway. 5. The “Half Moon.” | — e | GIL RICH COMING | Gil Rich, one of Alaska’s well| known traveling men, came north | on the Baranof to Kewlukan and | will come to Juneau on the next steamer. - e Delicious Christmas Stollen at the Peerless Bakery, Friday and Satur- day. adv. 9.0.0.0-0H!1 A CORONA Just what I wanted for my school work! . I certainly love it! @ ;v oRET J.B. BIIIFIIRD & C0. “Our Doorstep Is Worn by Satistied Customers” RACE DRUGGIST “The Squibb Stores of L] T L L N | Have Your Eyes Examined by Dr. Rae L. Carlson APTOMETRIST H. S. GRAVFS “The Clothing Man” Home of Hart Schaftner and Office Ludwig Nelson's Jewelry | | . Marx Clothing Store Phone Green 331 e e S 5 — i = . GASTINEAU MOTOR | FINE Watch and Jewelry Repairing at very reasonable rates PAUL BLOEDHORN 8. FRANXLIN STREET SERVICE PHONE 721 GENERAL AUTO REPAIRING Gas—Oil—Storage [l = —a GASTINEAU CAFE ——— ON THE M:EZZANTNE | HOTEL JUNEAU || BEAUTY SHOP ‘ LYLAH WILSON Contoure ’l‘zlephuu X-Er-Vao :,___________u 1 1 | SNEW AND DIFFERENT LUNCHEON SPECIALTIES i |\ v { Fashion Shoes V‘ .t tlle [ Teerwne s || SITKA HOT SPRINGS ‘, a- Mineral Hot Baths , 'JUNEAU e S A 4 | MELODY HOUSE L Transport ) Music and-Electric Apphiances (R (Next Gastineau Hotel) | i oo il o Mrs. Pigg Alaska Federal Savings and Loan Association Accounts Insured Up to $5,000 P. O. Box 2718———Phone 3 OFFICE—119 Seward St. Juneau, Alaska Fhone 65 “The Store for Men” SABIN’S Front St.—Triangle Bldg. Try The wsmpmwe cmassificds fou wesults. TELEPHONE—51 First National Bank J Request our tellers for NEW CUBRENCY and Special CHRISTMAS CHECKS UNEAU—ALASKA -y o .l 3 i ‘ # r e Y » b 00 Y 4% P .

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