The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, January 6, 1939, Page 4

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5 " Dail y Alaska Ex antern slides on the evils of soil erosion to, the legis- lators at Albany. An Assistant Secretary of the Navy ordinarily has large pod of a Wash- that job from 1913 to dminisirative officer | npire COMPANY Published evers ev EMPIRE PRINT! HELEN TROY BEN R. L. BERNARD Second been a rather small pea in the ngton administration, but 1920 Franklin D. Roosevelt largest navy ever operated by the United Smu-s; ir the Po Entered i1 t Office 2 it fought in its largest war SUBS PTION RATES. Wiy B o | Deivered by careler i Janeau an While his chief Daniels, was in Europe, ail, postare paic Josephu her nd_demobilization purposes e his title, both in Washington and iships with men then prom- added to their own standpoint of the ar- base of his communications. He for a long period, which he could not anticipate, when his sole activity would be in the field of the interchange of ideas. he acting and on two long visits to Europe for ined a dignity far Likewise 1 abroad inent was secretary € n advance, $6.00; nce inspection y notify . the de- he€ ¢ in those he cemented fr who, in mar Above all, he broadened the MEMBER OF Associated Press is exclusively ation of t otherwise credited ASSOCIATED PRESS. i to the use for to it or not the local news y cases, have el - tature from the i this pape chives e — laid the groundwork ALASKA CIRCULATION GUARANTEED TO BE LARGER THAN THAT ORF ANY OTHER PUBLICATION. [ —— | Death came THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, FRIDAY, JAN. 6, 1939. YEARS AGO From THE EMPIRE 2 SATURDAY, JANUARY 7, 1939 Mingled good and evil appear in | the horoscope for today as astrolo- gers read the signs. The morning hours are promising for conferences on labor disputes. Inclination to see the worst in human character may be strong enough to precipitate serious diffi- | culties. There is an aspect encourag- public buildings. It was believed | ing to deception. Nations as well as | that the death of his son Quentin jngividuals may be affected by the in France contributed 'largely 1o \configuration. Roosevelt’s condition which Ied to| yndustry will benefit through the his death. | cooperation of labor and importart agreements between employers and e%roscope “The stars incline : but do not compal" JANUARY 6, 1919 Headlines told of the death of for- mer President Theodore Roosevelt. at 4 o'clock in the morning at his Oyster Bay home. iFIagh were all at half staff on the White House, the Capitol an®t all Charles Goldstein returned from Fenger-Hall Portland, S et It was in 1921 year, after he had cam- > office of Vice President, Mr, Roosevelt, and but himself, to have re- With partial ied otherwise. home a secretary— o handles his confi- “in retirement” pondence which probably nificance in making any velopment of himself and educated himself, and, » well known that it was Angeles less that f paralysi pai ly fo that seemed ed unsucces infantile ruck to almost ever moved him from public 1s the months went by, he deci Bringing Marguerite into his mother LeHand wk Mi rre the same dential affairs today Roosevelt conducted a vigorou: will be found to hold deej ultimate picture the Th of d idea 15 in a way md that, kept himselt nominated and elected familiar figure that he wa 3 his career has been 16; ther THE ROOSEVELT PAPERS Challeng Cleveland Plain Dealer) of the martyrs is the seed of wrote Tertullian hoily man of I'here have been times when the courageous optimism Christian father omething suggestive of the hearty Tertullian, as well as a notable achievement unity. message denouncing religious ution in Germany which is signed by leaders of Roman Catholic and Protestant Episcopal the Federal Council of Churches of Christ rica, the Presbyterian Church and the Southern Convention ers of many creeds declare all totalitar- Fa or Communist, is deliberately the faith of Christ. In opposition to the churches is d upon the youth” and “ireedom in educa- ction is increasingly restricted.” atement is believed to be the first time in spokesmen of all Christian denominations in untry have uniied in declaration of such rtance. It is offe its signers de e, “in no elf-complacent sense our own righteousness but | m a profound spirit of Christian justice.” Such a protest may move those who control gimented fury of the Nazis. But it cannot fail a vast impression upon all who recognize stection of human rights and human the proper concern those who speak ized Christianity The that he proposes fo bequeath to the nation in archives nt announcement by sident Rooseyel a to be built on his family ¢ his estate at Hyde Park the paper 0 dealing with public activities holds more than | persecutions seemed Lo belie th passing interest. These be most eIy notable as a running commentary on thirty tous years in hi actuated by a man and hear and do. As he outlined the papers will perhaps ere momen- observed and to some extent who has had rare privileges to see proposed gift in an announce men ich came to all but his closest intimates, the plan should giv try and to history light on the W the New Deal with processes of ¢ of interests As Charles points out equally facile as a writer of recipient of them. His world-wide f o as a complete surprise to the coun- d War the new PSR o anc 1 a view of mental | & A of extracrdinary vigor and range | w pondent the President is Was an unusual correspondent ngton corre letters and as an eagc correspondence has been liter- « a e to time inhibition. m even the nted correspondence the of ti some of it as important and profoundly 5 the St tha € St pre s not interesting in Whit ite correspondence of the It is in this per correspondence that student of which later crystal Naturally may search for the basis of ideas into official policies and conclusions eatest interest among research students and his- luicr-.\nwricun HiL’l!\\'il\' s will ce around the § o i after March nter State papers and cor- 4, 1933, but there will preliminaries of that (Wask ar) Nearly half of the projected inter-American h from L do, Texas, to Panama is now im- roved with gravel or higher type surface, according » the 1938 annual report of the Bureau of Public Roads of the Department of Agriculture. When ompleted, this highway will extend 3305 miles hrough Mexico, Guatemala, El Salvador, Honduras, Nicaragua, Costa Rica and Panama. The present im- provement is reported as follows: 1,083 miles of paved d, 447 miles of gravel road, 43 miles of graded earth and 1,732 miles of ungraded read or trail. Over half the entire route lies within Mexico, where 805 miles have been improved and 1,015 miles remain un- improved. The route within the other countries is repor as follows: El Salvador, 103 miles improved 88 miles unimproved; Hondu 23 miles improved. 67 miles unimproved; Nicaragua, 35 miles improved, 210 miles unimproved; Costa Rica, 48 miles improved, 308 miles unimproved; and Panama, 323 miles im- proved, 44 miles unimprove respondenc b peric.l c rton e erest in the preliminaries extend clear back tc of the ginnings of public career Franklin D 1910 cne of the R Roosevelt in Probal intere: him individuals, nothing in the President's quiescent or commonplace. And there are probably thousands of letters and papers outside of official activities of which no one knows except these directly with each item Putting which has been pretty c both by informed writers publication of papers, ti study any number of and to embellish the ory of this century. If the office of President and the organization of the New Deal were not sufficient to make the Roose- velt papers of historic undouhtedly osevelt papers will be un- rdless of the sentiment held toward ting by reg because, generally speaking perimeter has ever been his sphere concerned ancy of the White House itely catalogued publicly the President’s own ill remains a mine of aside his occ n and by rich enough to scholars that motorists are offered “guaranteed start- vbe it's logical to look forward to some forin interest in themsclves, as they | anteed stopping be - do, there would the supplementary me from a man who, by fa walked with all his maturity. A junior State Senator of New York, as Roosevelt from 1910 to 1913 a voling unit, unless Yet ¢ of conservation tishing serious fact that these papers ¢ and Rus | rights than ia and Japan are squabbling over The dispute deubtl will bé more mere human rights were involved ily breeding has prominent men through nd asseciation dmost i Why doin't the Kellos Briand But why mar a lovel, uropean countries just reinitial ? asks Senator Gerald P ntique? wa virtually he eswas a nonentity excepl as increases his prominence | Roosevelt, then ponding in that field to lecture before, and display in other ways the with and a nt. student The nerves sensitive to Kitterness are located far the tc You wouldn’t always think so, ver, just listening and visiting i Je bringing Gifford Pinc with A figure back on t Four Hurt as Fast Texas Train Jumps Track Only four persons were hurt when this Missouri Pacific passenger train left the tracks 15 miles north to a nearby cotton gin. The overturned engine (left) of Austin, Tex., and sent one of the sleeping cars in was badly wrecked. Fifty passengers escaped injury. Those injured were all members of the train crew. recovery | the | j employees are forecast. Merchants will profit despite post-holiday slumps. ?e,= Adverse sway of Uranus has been interpreted as presaging increase of malicious propaganda and other | Russian Christmas services #eté| forms of mental suggestion. Snap jto be held at the Greek Church’ ab| jugements and selfish points of 7 o'clock, with the Rev. A. P. Kashe- ' yjow will be prevalent, even in varoff officiating. ! legislative halls, | Congress comes under a the stars that indicates a session | of contesting opinions and heated oratory, but an international inci- dent will cause a thrilling chapter in United States history Chancellor Hitler's ruling planet is Venus, whose aspects to Mars and Saturn at the hour of his birth are believed to account for ruthlessness | and ambition that ignore human | rights. By 1940 he is to meet re- | Mrs. J. W. Bell was to leave on| verses and by the end of the year the City of Seattle for Seattle where| he may lose power. Tl health and | she was to visit for the wigter, catagucophe are foreseen by London | - seers. | Judge John R. Winn was to leave! porsons whose birthdaté it is have for Ketchikan on the City of Seattle nd the term of Court in that |a trip to New York and stated that | within ninety days times would be | better in Alaska than'in'any pla |in ‘the country 4 ! rule of M. H. Sides was discharged from military service at Camp Pike. Ark., with the rank of Second Lieutenant. {according to a letter received from him by Acting Collector of Customs, |C. D. Garfield Tom E. Williams, formerly of Per- severance, was to arrive in Juneau| on the Alameda from Seattle. the augury of a year of substantial gains and rewards for long effort Both men and women should pros- per, but hasty decisions should be | avoided. ! Children born on this day prob- | ably will be ambitious, industrious | and persistent. These subjects of | Capricorn may have unusual tal- ents. Adolph Zukor, motion picture pro. ducer, was born on this day 187 | Others who have celebrated it as a birthday include Albert Bierstadt, | painter, 1828, James Burrill Angell, college president and diplomat, 1829, | (Copyright, 1939) - ! | ‘OMOBILE OWNERS | | to at clty. Marlin S. Jorgenson was sched- | uled to return from Seattle on the | Alameda. { O | Weather: highest 36; lowest 33; | in ra - e EVELYN HOWELL DIES IN SOUTH | Evelyn Howell, nee Jacobsen,|NOTICE AUT passed away at Dallas, Ore., ! Wednesday of this week as a result | | of tuberculosis, according to a radio- | cenge plate: gram received by Ada Murray. 7 Evelyn Howell attended the High | School in Juneau for several years.| She left for the States about five | or six years ago, leaving a host friends among the young people of Juneau. £ Survivors are her young son, Ro%| bert Howell, in Juneau. also a brother, Elmer Jacobsen, of the A.J. Mine staff, her stepfather, Louis Karstens and half-brother, Bobbie must have their 1939 li- | by noon, Saturday, Jan. | , instead of Jan. 27 as published | 2h an error. Any car operating | after that date without 1939 plates will be subject to a fine. | DAN RALSTON Chief of Police ] -, i Vassar ccllege was founded in 1861 with an endowment by’ Matthew Vassar. i All ca | | adv. NOTICE OF HEARING ON FINAL Karstens. ACCOUNT AND REPORT AND -> oo PETITION FOR DISTRIBUTION In the United States Commissioner’s | (Ex-Officio Probate) Court for the | 4 Territory of Alaska, Juneau Com- S"I.I. E | missioner’s Precinct. \In the Matter of the Estate of ! FRANCIS HOPKINS STEVEN- | | SON, Deceased. WORCESTER, Mass, Jan. $.— Mrs. Mary Cary of Worcester held | NgTICEbI$ HE:‘EBY GIVEN that 13 clubs in a bridge game, bid 1t | On December 29th, 1938, MINERVA properly but lost the bid and saW |, ol DLr: 85 executrix of the es- her opponents make a grand slam. | 2\ eqm HANUIS HORFINE SIEV- Mrs. Aida Thyberg, one of thé | ENSON, deceased, made and filed in | oopLbeRta, et attme heart WaHd | the above-entitled Court at Juneau, | and her partner had better than |’/aska, her Final Account and Peti- S : > b s . tion for Distribution, and that on normal support. After spirited bid- | ' 4 T b whih e said day the said Court entered its | her bid to Seven clubs, Mrs. Thy.|Order dirccting that a hearing be | berg won the contract at séven| Nad upon said Final Account and hearts and made it as Mr Cary-‘Rel"’"L and Petition for Distribution | sat and' tossed off club after cluby|Pefore it on Saturday, March 4,1 » 11939, at 10:00 o'clock A. M., at the! futilely. 4 3 q | e office of the said United States and make their objections, if any, ! thereto, and to the settlement there- ' Wheatland’s main street, husiness-‘I MINERVA B. REEDER, Executrix. The city council decided the busi- nessmen were right; that one bar | FERN BEAUTY PARLOR | Closed until about Feb. 1. KRAFFT’S Mnfg. & Building Co., Ine, CABINET WORK-GLASS PHONE 62 ; Commissioner, in the Pederal-Ter | torial Building, in Juneau Precinct Territory of Alaska, and requiring‘ Eafh S'reel | all persons to then and there appear | Sufficent | of and to the distribution of the | ol residue of the assets of this estate | | WHEATLAND, Wyo. Jan. 8= djrect to Jestie Stevenson, of Litho- | When a second bar was proposed for | polis Ohio, a sister of the deceased. men signed a petition that said, | “Another saloon would make 1t 50| gjrst publication, Dec. 30, 1938, no woman would care _!‘,o walk down |y publication, Jan. 20, 1938, that side of the street. 2 b 2 | for the street was sufficient and) | the license for the proposed one! | was denied. | s T adv The B. M. Behrends Bank Junenfi. Alaska COMMERCIAL and SAVINGS Resources Over Two and | |in the finger bowl? | should learn to eat in such a way *| been developed by a California man- |\ Happy %irthday | The Emptre extends congratula- tions and best wishes foday, their birthday anniversar? .o the follow- ing: . JANUARY 6 Arthur Fox Jackie Gucker Anatole A. Matkovsky Stella Wayland Mrs. T. F..Church e M ODERN ETIQUETTE « By Roberta Lee Q. If Frank invites John to drive out in the country with him for a day, and stops to buy gasoline, should John offer to pay for it? A. This is not necessary, John can offer to pay for luncheon. Q. May one touch the lips with tips of fingers that have been dipped but their A. This is often done, but one that the lips do not become greasy. The napkin placed to the lips should | really be sufficient. Q. When a bride has no father, | would it be all right for her mothes | to give her away? | A. Yes, if she wishes. LOOK and LEARN #* By A. C. Gordon 1. Who was the first Postmas General of the U. S.? 2. How many creditors are nes essary (o place a firm in bankrupt- | cy? i { enough to cause a serious and even fatal injury to a man? 4. By what economic law buying and selling governed? Where is the largest rubber- er is all 5. manufacturing center in the world? | ! ANSWERS Benjamain Franklin Three. 1 5 What bird is able to kick hard | ¥ a4 B. P. 0. ELKS meet every Wednesday at 8 p.m. Visiting brothers welcome. DR. A, W. STEWART, Exalted Rul- er; M. H. ¢IDES. Beo- ietary. DRS. KASER & FRFEETLEG DENTIS™ Blomgren Buflding PHONE 56 Hours 2 am, to 9§ pm. MOUN™ JUNEAU LODGE NO. 141 Secona and fourth Monday of each 'month G\\(> in Scottish Rite Temple '\ beginning at 7:30. p.m DANIEL ROSS, Wor- shipful* Master; JAMES W. LEI- VERS, Secretary. Dr. A. W. Stewart DENTIST Hours 9 am. to 6 pm. SEWARD BUILDING Office Phone 469 -—&5 -——liy ” Guy Smith DPRUGS. PUROLA REMEDIES PRESCRIPTIONS CARS. o> } ol ’ l ¢ 4 FULLY COMPOUNDED Front Street Next Coliseum PHONE %--Free Delivery ! ot it 3 b e P — e s Di Richard Williams DENTIST OFFICE AND RESIDENCE GOLDSTEIN 73Ul.. ING —_— Dr. John H. Geyer DENTIST 310 Goldstein Building PHONE 1762 Hours: 9 am. to 6 p.m. Whittier CPIROPRACTOR. F.agless Physician Office hours: 10-12, 1-5, 7-9 Rooms 2-3-4, Triangle Bldg. PHONE 667 The ostrich. 4. The law of supply and de-| mand. | 5. Akron, Ohio. ! DA DAILY LESSONS IN ENGLISH * By W. L. Cordon Words Often Misused: Do not say, “My son-in-laws were there.” Sa; il “My sons-in-laws (or daughters-in- | law) were there.” Often Mispronounced: Laundernd.l Pronounce lawn-derd, not lawn- drid. Often Misspelled: Misstate; two Synonyms: Haste, swiftness, quickness, pidity. Word Study: “Use a word three | times and it is yours.” Let us in-| crease our vocabulary by mastering cne word each day. Today's word: Revelation; act of disclosing, or that which is disclosed. “Difficulties | i are especially given; hurry, speed, | dispatch, ra-‘v in revelation to prove our faith.”—Newman. | - A two-wheeled wheelbarrow has ufacturer to prevent tipping in haul- ing of heavy materials such as ce-| ment: -re — Empire Ads Pay. TIMELY CLOTHES NUNN-BUSH SHOES STETSON HATS QUALITY WORK CLOTHING ® FRED HENNING Complete Outfitter for Men Jarman'’s-Friendly FORTUNE $4 VAN'S STORE 218 S. FRANKLIN JARMAN'S- FRIENDLY HARRY One-Half Million Dollars RACE DRUGGIST i DR. H. | Consultation and | free. Hours 10 to VANCE | CSTEOPATH | li:lk T to 9:36 by appointment. Gastineau Hotel Annex South Franklin St. Phane 177 Robert Simpson, Opt.D. Graduate Los Angeles College ‘ of Optometry and Op*halmology Glasses Fitted Lenses Ground ot — | The Charles W. Carter Mortuary Fourth and Franklin Sts. PHONE 136 tions. Butler-Maaro Drug i 3 [ —— H. S. GRAVES | “The Clothing Man” Home of Hart Schaffner and Marx Clothing | | { GASTINEAU MOTOR SERVICE R e e e el Have Your Fyes Examined by Dr. Rae L. Carlson DOPTOMETRIST Office Ludwig Nelson’s Jewelry Store Phone Green 331 GENERAL AUTO REPAIRING Gas—O0il—Storage 4 | a | I b 5 Efi—"::— FINE Watch and Jewelry Repairing at very reasonable rates PAUL BLOEDHORN 8. FRANKLIN STREET ek UN THE MEZZANINE HOTEL JUNEAU BEAUTY SHOP LYLAH WILSON Visit the - SITKA HOT SPRINGS |’ 1 i JUNEAU | Music and- Electric Appliances Mineral Hot Buths i Accommodations to suit every “NEW AND DIFFERENT taste: Reservations, Alssks Afr Tra; 3 FOOTWEAR” DEVLIN’S Paris Fashion Shoes | PR SRR - “The Store for Men” . SABIN’S Front St.—Triangle Bldg. i MELODY HOUSE (Next Gastineau Hotel) Mrs. Pigg Fhone 65 e U COME IN and SEE the NEW STROMBERG-CARLSON RADIOS J. B. Burford & Co. “Our doorstep is worn by Satisfied Customers” Alaska Federal Savings and Loan Association Accounts Insured Up to $5,000 P. O. Box 2718———Phone 3 OFFICE—119 Seward St. Juneau, Alaska . —_——— e —— Try The mmpme crassificds for wesults. TELEPHONE-—5I COMMERCIAL AND SAVINGS ACCOUNTS CAPITAL—$50,000 SURPLUS—$100.000 2% PAID ON SAVINGS SAFE DEPOSIT BOXES First National Bank * JUNEAU—ALASKA .~ -

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