The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, December 29, 1938, Page 4

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4 THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, THURSDAY, DEC. 29, 1938. - - —- e comome = . —— ) peratures prevail from Canada to the Gulf of Mexico. Dall Alfl k(] E"l )lre |" The lowest in Juneau has been six above zero. YEARS AGO i A few gusts have reached up around 25 miles an O‘rosco e EMPIRE a Professional \shed every evenine fay by the 4 From THE Fraternal Societies Funiis hour. The girls are shivering a bit on occasion, but|| e & y EMFIRE PRINTIN i e 3 The stars incline Gastineau Chansel BELEN TROY BENDER £ o till clinging to those silk stockings as the only pro- g l) J ’ l" . hd RL BERNARD - - cets, J Alaska. fection against the winter breezes. A few smart old-| ut do not compe BLMEIEEY sl l‘rt ay ' - =l e p ; R s from the Interior have dragged out their over- |'— | e e ~3 B. P. 0. ELKS meet b i hoes but most of the populace sticks to the low shoe | FRIDAY, DECEMBER 30, 1938 Dr A i DRS. KASER & FRFFETRGER every Wednesday at 8 SUBSCRIPTION RATES | ed with a pair of rubbers. e States Public Health Service, and| g,, pmptre eatends congratula- | DENTIE™ i pm. Visiting brothers arrier in Juneau and Douglas for $1.25 per month i g i s onely Conflicting planetary aspects are | Mrs. Lucy Phillips, Red Cross nurse, | yion " and best wishes today, their Blomgren Build welcome. DR. A. W. b pale, v the They call Southeast Alaska the “banana belt” of |, five today. according to astrology. | arrived in Juneau on the Estebeth birthday IlDeHa o0 the Jolloi PHERE & Lng STEWART, Exalted Rul- dvas he north. In comparison with most of the States|The morning hours may be depress- | from Sitka, where they were sent ing: % & A i er: M. H. =IDES. Sec- > ",‘j‘ y "m’f_ t this time of year, it's the banana belt of H\r“ ing as the year's achievements are | by Dr. Emil Krulish, head of the ex- | jours 3 am. to § pm. Letary. otfice SRR orEher past ior AHE HARIA summed up, : ’:)xnd;tlf:;mm,- the relief of influenza DECEMBER 29 News ‘Otfice; 602; Dusiness o Now be that'll make us feel warmer. Ilmbor mfl.\}' 5eidlsb-:)atli-*fll:‘ia&d erm- i s Charlotte Soule ~~ .| MOUN™ JUNEAU LODGE NO. 141 . ployers are likely 00} e fu- p Elmer J. Jacobsen 18 —i s SSOCIATED PRESS 5 I IS " econd and fourth g \nw“m;'" OF ASSOC 4 s S 2 ture with apprehension. The seers| Deputy United States Marshal J George E. Sheeper I Monday of each month republic ews dispatche WSS Mr. Wallace Reports stress the need of cooperation and |Egan. of Tenakee, arrived on the Mexflnd“ Hamlin | Dl'. A w. Stewar‘l A\ in BoOLIH RIte T ;’::t‘x::rhld h o ; 3 = sympathy among all classes, Estebeth and was registered at the N DENTIST . %Gwl‘wginnmg at 7:30 pm ALASKA CIRC tHew Xerk R way. | Ginls may b]c (‘nti(l‘al and .~o\1;1.<n3ma.~kan Hotel, I onie O e iy fapegimi i A" NY OTHER We have come to look forward to Secretary Wal- | under this rule of the stars. Mer- g { SEWARD BUILDING X AT OF ANY OTHER Pl 7 JAMES W. LEI- e s ailed ace’s annual rep: as models of what such docu- | cenary motives may be apparent in| Ed Harmel, oldtime Interior man, M ODERN | Office Phone 489 ;'g{‘,f,“] sn::i:;ry Hid o Bhath nents should be. The report now published maintains | their acceptance of suitors arrived on the Jefferson from Seat- | _f: VESS, Secretar i 3 s previous standard. Its 160 pages discuss both the | The planetary government indi- tle and registered at the Bergmann. | ETIQ U ETTE (= 5 = : or-| T = ™ general farm problem and the wider problems of demo- | cates good news for the United | S — A . \P o ok ratic government in a manner at once lively and | States. Bankers and financiers will, H. L. Morris had recovered from| - Gibe erseverance Lodge NU. 2-A meew thoughtful. For the successful working of democracy |be encouraged to risk capital in 1939 a severe attack of lagrippe and was B’ R"b‘"‘" Lee D1 Richard Williams every second and fourth Wednes- t is particularly necessary that such clear and inform- | projects | able to be up. L . bl‘ | DFNTIST ldgfi' IO.OF. Hall BETTY Mec- ng official reports, unfortunately so rare, should | President Roosevelt has happy | Q. Is it ever permissi ‘kmvln- B I s | CCRMICK, Noble Grand; RUTE ye made available. so that the citizen may understand | portents in regard to foreign poli-, Gowie Shepard had secured a po- | terrupt a person who APt GFOFLDLE AND R'BVU T BLAKE, Secretary. ully what his Government is doing cies, and will be prominent in a 1939 ' sition in the engineering department A_ It d(’{)f‘nd.”(’ntnel,\ upon the | STEIN 3UlL ING GRS (e L S Thi: not to say that all the contentions made | international tangle. | of the Sunset Mining Company at ireason for interrupting. kIt is r\!g( ‘ P M e v Mr. Wallace are likely to meet with general agree- This summer Hitler comes under Index, Wash. according to word re-|t0 do so merely to break into the @ - ment. He continues to defend the present agricultural j evil omens. Saturn will be station- | ceived by his parents, Mr. and Mrs, | conversation, to. introduce a person, jv—————————r ment. {He corl It ego dt I i vin his Sun while Mars will be in| H. R, Shepard or because one is bored. If the house U rog in virtually ev aspect, but this involves jary in his Sun while Mars 4 { ; yrogram . : St He | the square on his nadtr. T health ; | were afire, one would be justified. | [ eyer \ P im in what many wi gard as ad S, i < 8 ry visit- upports ()ln- ‘, sinciple of acreage restrictions, but|and even a major catastrophe are T. B. Cosgrove of Seattle arrived | Qh Wh_at':re the fllstoms\(;oseusr:{tl DENT! s't 3 D k U W s P16 AL tHib i realiv A ooy OF “AbUnARTEE Hv]“”‘"“ad”“"d in Juneau on the Alaska and \\v;\.~;“’;»_ e ¥ 91“ . ‘:OIY“fl" v Wi 310 Goldstein Building ! lefends Government crop loans, but admits that suc |,; Congress will have a session of staying at the Alaskan Hotel |0 ;“"E:“:??: ?;e?;‘::“‘ofi} 31"an : PHONE 1762 ,t PORGHA RIS ) cans are “highly speculative and risky p:\rl)(’ulmlv“’MNUI(UI\(H\ drb‘ne,l nnld ‘unu.snm(: B L S Hours: 9 am. to 6 p.m. | — | for e . ble,” he s alignments. Financial policies an T amourette of Seattle ar-| 5 i for the export crops.” “It is ll.n.m\\.:,r he poiat ‘t))'l‘x](vl“'“. el D R e i e iend| Q. What should be done with the '—_"} anscmvnousU:Au. - PR L B e TR for a single country to fix the world price of a, com- [ Wé IKROSI ai et | / . ; A, WEeRT S retace. Tativils: the FULLY COMPOUNDED HANDS ACROSS THE BORDER modity produced and sold extensively throughout the | France faces 1939 with portents of at the Alaskan Hotel ‘[‘”’)W » e | Fat . world. Therefore, what the operation amounts to is | *Xtreme tests of governmental sa- S : hond ettt e ] Dr. Judson Whlfllel' Front Street Next Colisewm r whicl 1 roaching and | gacity. European diplomats are to, United States Marshal J. M. Tan-| A. The napkin should be left un The new year which is rapid ITOAC ant cimply a refusal to sell below a certain figure. It is|% D PR | foldad bustdE ths piate, | CPIROPRACTOR ! PRONE BiiE Deli will be starting in another couple of days may well peculative storage, undertaken in the hope of a rise | ®ngage in intricate and perilous ;m S\:w to leave on the Es[(‘beth‘ e » | P.agless Physician | L i ey 4 sce a start ‘made toward cor ction of the Alaska i, prices later. Should the hope not be fulfilled, | games. ; : ”T( agway in connection with bus- | Office hours: 10-12, 1-5, 7-9 || ZZ7"° o “Thternational Highway. The American Commission the Government loses money and agriculture loses a | Persons whose birthdate it is have iess i | Rooms 2-3-4, Triangle Bicg. N P o nd on the project s appoint )art of its foreign market All this is highly nifi- /the augury of a year of progress 3 K | PHONE 667 il B ’ 10 #tudy. stk reootmend on the proje AR o ”1' ',I '\ Y]"‘ 1”, '“ ‘f(‘ LAl l““ Government now | 8fter crises have been reached. Many | F. F. Lane and Mrs. Lane of Se- LOOK and LEAR A - J: Tomorrcw's styl.' B President. Koosevelt last summier, More rec 3 “" ol vietaTly an: enblie Jeke ghowth of. Atiarioan: Willi10ee agad; ralntives, attle arrived in Juneau on the Al- % 2 | i a similar five-member Commission was appointed by Holds v R oo : i % | Children born on this day prob-aska and were registered at the Gas- B S« e Prime Minister Mackeme King of Canada to de- °oUon In siorage under sueh loons, and that in the || SNUR T8 T, Mt QL PO (30 Brp B0 By A.C.Godon | T DR H. VANCE || Today™ termine what Canada can d 1 building its por- | 1 . omparad | “Onscientious. These subjects of - CSTEOPATH R otton fell more than four million bales, compared ; 3 S T ¢ ! tion of the important project. Sentiment expressed i jos wiie the world consumption of foreign. | Capricon make friends who aid| Weather: highest 31; lowest 27; 1. How many degrees are there in | Consultation and examination | from our neighbor across the boundary indicates that | yrown cotion mereased five million bales. "7 |them in their careers cloudy. 8 ;”‘“;gw e S depeene - 1 [ DS BUESRI0nt0 .14, 81 1958, the Canadian Commission will the same m- Mr. Wallace calls attention to the great dangers, Rudyard Kipling, author, was iR s et e d = ol ,,( il Pl d‘t Bt T to 9:36 by appointment. 1 ) g ¥ : 5 : sreased | DOrn on this day 1865. Others who Roosevelt elected President o | Gastineau Hotel Annex ; pathetic consideration that has accorded the of export dumping, both through possible increased | i ettt S 0. 89 s e s s ) ; the inistratio >attullo of tariff barrier importing countries and through a |Dave celebrated it as a birthday ‘in- ! . g 00 Dy ctin mininkition of Pretuier, Patfullol STAGHEL bactien by KnRor g oo AL M I olide Genehal minpsiatarion || HLOSPITRLINORRE 115 v vas the voistead dut? b British Columbia Rpmets g “Yet he névertheless favors a | Drake, founder of Drake University 4 What big event marked 57 =7 St There are numerous technical difficultic mporary” and “limited” export subsidy for wheat.|1830; Alfred E. Smith, ex-Governor Damin Shepard was admitted to Christmas Day, 17767 uneau’s Own § OI’O', faced in planning an international project of ectinnes 16 TvhE the tlax He tecenitly put for y | of New Yn(x;k lvfl"li;] o St. Ann’s Hospital today for medical -\(.l-gH:,\-: 13:11)\9 r:]y:ln‘.:! :r lx;a\égabxl:; Robert Simpson, Opt.D. | magnitude. But ty oups sincerely devoted to fop “some two-price arrangement by which low-income et res attention :;“x‘-{l r;um-m; : & Graduate Los Angeles Colloge seeing the road built should be able to devise an groups of consumers could buy surpluses at low pr - A J eS¢ of Optometry and ‘ acceptable formula for joint action while the rest of the population paid the regular mar- SKI NOTES . Steve Selles, a surgical patient at - ANSWERS ' Ob halmaiogy $ Horaid b st i AR et e price”; but he says nothing regarding the im- | St. Ann's Hospital was dismissed| = 29 Glasces Fitted ILenses Ground The advantages to both Canada a Gonterdalt s AR o 2. Once, in 1904 ! 3 4 mense administrative problem this would involve, nor | A short slalom was held today ny 4 on. g o ‘ B o % (pNies atemany atlls Pralile Imo o ! iscuss the implication of putting a great|on the first meadow on the Dou: oy 3. The act which enforced the |= 1 the viewpc « Tnited States, | €0 1ISCUSS licati o a al lon the firs a v 8- " b RGBS rohibi 3. g points. ont, from the viewp oae Ll ‘J‘" A8 section of our people into an officially recognized |1as ski area Emory Herrett placed ; Sylvan Greiner was admitted Z“:’?{q?‘x‘tliggnzflmemlmenl e |. | it will encourage tourist travel 1 Alas pauper cl to be treated as wards of the state | first and Jay Williams second. ast evening for medical attention at COns R . | - "development. From the viewpoint of C i will > . ‘Wallace polr ccessively to the weaknesses | Raph Menrill and Bob. Waldron | St Ann's Hospital. n:x :;,‘IZQE‘\II"F’TL?:‘H\QO‘T:“O” over the | The Charles W. Carter | open vast stretches of territory now lacking any trans- of such concepts as “parity price,” “parity income”|are making remarkable progress in | e »'R ;_ i i 000 miles, i Momm oo o uet 1. AT T zing p 3 A and Mrs L. e itt are bl portation facilities nd “cost of production” as standards for judging the | sontrolled skiing. r an sad o e Wourth aud Pragkin’ Sk B S the Seattle PT. st he most im-' ext of farm aid. But he himself favors a \ruurum! = SEE the parents of a baby girl weighing T ) PHONE 136 b Bl e o T Siemen iTe B ke Of “e hic balance,” or of granting farmers a “fair itk 6 x is and 11 ounces, born this ) irtant benefits are those which would accrue alike ! SUMMONS Roen v RS are of the national income,” fully as vague as the morning at St. Ann’s Hospital = | -a R hare of the natienal income, [uly 13 vage 45 e 1 1oy DISTRIOT GOURE. FOR i DAILY LESSONS 8] . < e husm\«n will safeguard both nations from ;....cceq farm prices of the last year, and the many g‘;‘\fi;g‘r‘qmgg&;;g“é‘gmifi_ Grace Pusich, who underwent a IN ENGLISH ] T T i) * H. S. GRAVES l “the cffects of any paralysis of constwise Ship service, directions in which his program has met with ill luck . i tonsilectomy yesterd: Ann’s ! ave Your Eyes Examined by { “The Clothing Man” €ither a5 the result of labor trouble or warfare upon he declares in the end that “economic planning JUNEQF{ OOKS. Platatizy | EPIEL ¥ ! ¢ ! | Dr. Rae L. Carlson ||’ ‘ the Pacific. It will encourage the inc tion of substitutes order for chacs.” ALBERT 0, CRODES, Blaigtir, - By W. L. Cordon SPTOMETRIST Home of Hart Schaftner and | v lane o nost convenient operat- 3ut let us not forget that some of the real or!VS: ELIZABETH PHOEBE e ¥ N 11 ig Nelson's Ji Marx Clothing Bew airplane ser y he most convenient opera 3 — Office Ludwig Nelson's Jewelry ; : t ¢ would not | CROOKS, Defendant | What Is Y 4 ing routes. It will make it possible for either nation, apparent contradiclions in this report wo not g B = 1at Is our : Store Phone Green 33 oo b0th. fo mOve 1ts Tattt ancs ots tarces for the defouse | xist but for Mr. Wallace's own remarkable candor,| TO ELIZABETH PHOEBE $Words Otterl SHsibed: Ho Ho sa. o = ; ‘P ”‘"“(l ’; Pl Sk foices fol : Few other officials attempt to present questions, as | CROOKS, Defendant, GREETING 9 | Directly she appeared on the stage |g; —31| - of the Pacific on e e A Pt Tokt Tea v | ITHE NASGE DI TR UNITED ews L Q.? | e auience appiaudea say, “as e | GASTINEAU MOTOR More than a century of peace between Canada gn. hicture of a thoughtful, conscientious but har- |STATES OF AMERICA, you are ERL I | soon as she appeared.” | ’ SERVICE and the United States has shown both countries that ,ceq official grappling with a problem so immense |hereby required to appear in. the y The eature Service Often Mispronounced: Habitue. FINE JI bl fieither need fear from the other nd difficult that none of us can be certain that we District Court for the Territory Pronounce ha-bit-u-a, first as as in | | yaien and Jewelry Repalring P The Alaska International Highway project is one know the full answer to it. of Alaska, First Division, within ask unstressed, i as in bit, the tu as 0 veey Heuhauiite Toles | GENERAL AUTO REPAIRING -9l the most ambitious attempts to make the “hands| et # e |thirty days after the last publi- in picture, second a as in day, prin- i PAUL BLOEDHORN | Gas—Oil—Storage across the border” working hands | A G.O.P. Split? |cation of this summons, namely cipal accent on last syllable. $ & ST e i iR o within thirty days after the 12th Often Misspelled: Cinnamon. Ob- | | S. FRANKLIN STREET | |- ________ THE ¢ AN o B o (Philadetphia Record) day of January, 1939, in case this serve the nn. p d THE “BAN '\T\'? BELT W they've talked about a split in the Demo- jSummons is published, or within ynonyms: I_Bcg. beseech, xmglm‘e. GASTINEAU CAFE arisons are often mi i inapt. De- cratic party for so long that we take pleasure in |forty days after the date of its entreat, supplicate, plead, petition, & Comparisons A A o B Mot pd e S s service upon you, in case this sum- ask. ON THE MEZZANINE spite l)v\ul gust of whir ow outside the window, Republican National Committeeman George H.|MoDns is served upon you person- Word stu_dy: Use a word l-h;f-o‘ HOTEL JUNEAU § it would be a bit misleading to compare Juneau’s Bender, of Ohio, has just denounced the election of |ally, and answer the complaint of | } times and it is yours.” Let us in- weather today with the north pole. But down where| former Senator Hastings, of Delaware, to the G.O.P, |the ahove named plaintiff on file ! crease our vocabulary by mastering BEAUTY SHOP be tali corn grows they are having weather these days| National Executive Committee. Says Mr. Bender: 'in the said Court in the above en- one word each day. Today’s word: LYLAH WILSON 4 Jwhich makes our Gastinea mel zephyrs seem “Mr. Hastings is a reactionary and the most outstand- |titled action. Cedulons; Weiined o be“‘""fi‘t ~ | Contoure Telephone | i like balm from Miami » ing opponent of social legislation. He cannot domin- The said plaintiff in said action pecially on slight evxdence.. I_ B X-Er-Vac 538 Eighteen deaths have been -left in the wake of ate the committee His election should not be |demands the following relief: Each question counts 20: each | Rothig bt Sredilons iunsishition! .6 —e a winter blast which swept down across Minnesota ‘r'e‘”“ ; ed as ’\’l"'””‘ i [lh‘" '%‘f rank and file-of the | Tfi}:ingr\’?"h;;m_ll‘nm E“{ vbm‘ds”"f fiart of a two-part question, 10, I| ] Mind Yie okt plain: ste And that's below latitude Republican party is reactionary matrimony existing between the score of 60 is fair, 80, good. I- S A PeL L g B, And et 2 ,;‘" hoe We don't think the G.O.P. rank and file is reac- plaintiff and the defendant at the $ 4 opez eI'VI((-':S re ’, SNEW AND DIFFEREN LUNCHEON SFECIALTIES gU whilé we are north of 58. Down in New ork siate tionary We welceme Mr. Bender’s candid statement, present time. i 1 lde“"fy this senator who | V’A]H'l’l' they grow apples and chorus girls, it’s 10 below zero while around the Great Lakes it has been blowing At & velocity of 112 miles an hour. Below zero tem- Eas ‘Excavation, - shows progress of excavation on the east abutment. Hoover Republican party of 1938 refuses to sit still while Toup tries Abutement, Progresses This general view of the east slope of the Sacramento River Canyon at the Shasta Dam site, in California, The white lines indicate the approximate future foundation limits of the upstream (left) and downstream faces of the giant dam now under construction by the United States bureau of reclamation of the Department of the Interior. Vastness of the project may be by the size of constructor’s camp buildings at extreme right. declared for President Roose- | velt as the Democratic “stand- ard bearer in 1940.” 2. What is Memel? What group has political control there? And in the event you fail to so jappear and answer, the plaintiff | will take judgment against you| | for want thereof, and will apply to | |the Court for the relief demanded | to draw its portrait in the image of at Dam /in his complaint, and as herein- | 3. Have German exports to {above stated | | South America been (a) halved, Witness, the Honorable George | (b) doubled or (¢) quadrupled | F. Alexander, Judge of said| | Since Hitler came to power? | Cowrt. and the seal of said 4. How did cotton growers Court, hereunto affixed on vo&e‘ 0?.,‘,%;""'"““‘ n:’arketmg this 15th day of December,| | ptrol” | s:;d,‘f;;v"s ey e || et | ROBERT E. COUGHLIN, | :v: can yet hand on our inheri. | By J. W. LEIVERS 1 tance of freedom”? | Publication dates, December 15, 22, 20, 1938; January 5, 1939 I Answers on Pag:- Six FOOTWEAR” DEVLIN’S i Paris Fashion Shoes o e Py JUNEAU MELODY HOUSE Music and- Electric Apphances (Next Gastineau dotel) Tomorrow Afternoon Funeral services for Jose Lopez, who was a victim of heart attack | last Tuesday morning, will be held tomorrow afternoon at 1:30 o'clock at the Chapel of the Charles W. Carter Mortuary. Catholic services will be held and interment will follow in the Ever- P Visit the SITKA HOT SPRINGS I | | Mineral Hot Buths | Accommodations to suit every | taste. Reservations, Alaska Afr | Transport ! | i ) | P green Cemetery. Lopez was about 60 years old, and a Mexican resident of Juneau for many years. Mrs. Pigg Yhone 65 Alaska Federal Savings and Loan Association | | Accounts Insured Up to $5,000 P. O. Box 2718———Phone 3 Today’s News Tuaay.—Empire. @ = The B. M. Behrends } Bank Jumeau, Alaska COMMERCIAL and SAVINGS Resources Over Two and One-Hcl@ Million Dollars TIMELY CLOTHES NUNN-BUSH SHOES OFFICE—119 Seward St. Juneau, Alaska “The Store for Men” SABIN’S Front St.—Triangle Bldg. —— Try The smprme ctassifieds fox wesults. i STETSON HATS QUALITY WORK CLOTHIN ] | FRED HENNING Complete Outfitter for Men KRAFFT’S Mnfg. & Building Co., Inc. CABINET WORK—GLASS PHONE HARRY RACE DRUGGIST Stores of Alaska” TELEPH ONE-—5I As the year 1938 passes on. We welcome 193¢ and hope sincerely for Peace and abundan( happiness to all. First National Bank JUNEAU— ALASKA ) <

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