The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, February 10, 1939, Page 7

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v BARNEY GOOGLE AND SNUFFY SMITH =~ : : | To MAKE A LONG STORV SHORT SNUFEY AN OLD MAN DIED AND LEFT WIS ENTIRE FORTUNE TO B\S ONLY DAUGHTER -- BUT HE FIXED WIS WILL S0 SHE COULDN'T GET THE DOUGH TILL SHE GOT MARRIED : YOU SEE 2 S0 MR ROLLEM ,THE LAWVER , MADE ME HER PHOTOG MR ROLLEWM GRVE ME HE SAD T WAS THE ONLY ONE SHE EVER HAD TAKEN --- RACH--- JEEPERS A PROPOSITION - 1T WMAR ESTATE'S HERS SETTLED AND VYOU'RE GONNA BE MY BEST MAN-- COLLECT ¢55.000 AND THE 8% 'S ALL KRY THE GIRL - WOU ON ,COUSIN- AAINT VE LETT VOREGE'E N FER SUNTHWN' - 2 NE OQN'T EVEN KNOW WHAT q TH GAL e 2 LOOKS LIKE - r S ) i WANT AD INFORMATION Couut five average words to the lne Daily rate per line for consecutive insertions: One day ..o 10¢ Additional days ... 5¢ ilinimum charge ...50¢ Copy must be in the office by 2 p'clock 'in the afternoon to insure Insertion on same day. We accept ads over from persons listed in divectory. Phone 374—Ask for Ad-taker. FOR SALE telephone PLATE GLASS, 6 ft. by 6 ft. Call 428 after 1 p.m FOR SALE—Oil circulating heater and ac Cost $93.50, $60 k 550 é with B-ROOM house nished, on 5 acres dee 7 miles from Junes tricity low white elk shoe size 9. Phone Green 147 skates, {NCOME property for sale. PR Blue 135 PORD TUDOR, driven only New tires, deluxe radio and Juitting ness. Wr 02714 or one 334. FOR SAL ity Float Beer Parlor. Phone 541 after 4 p.m PR R R TWO-ROOM furnished Apt. with bath. 337 Willoughhy FOR RENT—Warm sleeping room, 437 Seward St. i\lODI“,RN room for s person in private family. Phone Red 295. 2-ROOM house 9th Street. Mrs. McMullen. BOAT STALL, by Dougles Bridge, $2 per month, Green 475 COZY, warm, furn, water, dishes, and bath. Reasonable a{ Seaview LOST AND FOUND FOUND—Bunch of keys on ring. Owner may have by proving property .and paying for adv apts. Light. LTOSTv—Elgln wrist watch—has link chain. Kindly return to Empire. WILL person who found black purse on Franklin Street keep the money and return the purse to Empire Office. MISCELLANEOUS AUARANTEED Realistic Perma- rents, '$4.50. Finger« wave, 65¢ Lola’s Beauty Shop, telephons 201, 315 Decker Way. ITUIEEPT-YVOLLI‘ old gol_d in‘o valu; cash or trade at Nuggsi Shop. 4 Call at AF. of L. Hall, o phdnie; 652 for general laboters, hod carriers, building laborers, etd. Local 1395. — B | HAVE AN EXPERT | | Carpenter-Contractor build your | | house or remodel it. It will cost you less. Good mechanic. Phone 396 after 4 p.m., for estimate. ¥ DALE | SRR PO RN SRR | $4.00 PETERS Shoes All Leather—T alest Styles, Good- | year Welt Couistruction—Quality | Shoes for Less— 278 VAN’S STORE S, Frauklin U ——— honme Youn telephone ! 9,000 cooking utensils | - | was perniciou: key | this | __{ Vatican Qity and Paris. ] POPE PIUS XI "~ MOST FORCEFUL OF ALL TIMES ‘Siood Out aS Fighfing Head ! of Roman Catholic a Church tinuea from Page One) matic, he used deeds and words, both spoken and written, in these campaigns, projecting his id by encyclicals, pastoral letter: and, sometimes, by his personal ap- pE es. His mass of expiation for the anti-religious movement in the Soviet Union, said in St. Peter’s 19, 1 he turned into a mn protest which echoed throughout the Christian world. 'Down through the y he persis- tently condemned communism In 1926 he called upon all Christ- | regardless of sect an Cathol ian Mex! to pray for the hei hy of ng withdrawn the urches in protest enforced constitu- s from all c suddeniy 1inst re itions. The controversy sted three years, flamed at cne ge into open reyplt, invelved at her the depertation of all Cath- 1sed propos: ic boycott against the priests > them fin- they ed in- laws. President in 1938, boa: up arms and w urned to their parishe sumed work under a liberal tation of the Cardenas of Mexico ed there was freedom of worship in i the country, pr the chure “keeps its hands out of governmen- [tal affairs.” French Question The French quéstion Pius at the start of his reign. | gap between church and gevernment confronted | there, caused by expulsion of religi- ders in 1905, had been bridged jonly in 1921, when a papal nuncio was retur . But the struc- {ture was constantly imperilled by | activities of French royalists, all rardent Catholics. | Pius ! ed the bridge into rigid {ity by putting “L’ Action Francaise,” | ‘."HIC:\JI publication of the royalists, on the index, thus banning it as reading for all faithful Catholics. He explained that churchmen might rightly prefer a Monarchy to ja Republic, but that the political |action advocated by the periodical barred Catholics from membership in the royalist party and paved the way for cordial relations between Other Centroversies Controversies with the totalitari- an regimes in TItaly and Germany ihingcd largely upon the Pope’s in- sistence -upon the right of the | Church to train children in Church {schools. There were political ques- tions too with Italy, but these were resolved by the Lateran treaties, under which the 110-acre domain of Vatican City arose as a sovereign territory and the Holy See acknow- ledzed the House of Savoy as the rullng family of united Ttaly. The accompanying concordat stipulated Catholici as the religion of the ligious instruction in primary and secondary schools. But Premier Benito Mussolini held this did not {abrogate the right of the govern- ment to say how children should be pute, after a sharp flare-up in 1930, never was fully resolved. Arcused at Hitler So, too, Pope Pius claimed that de- crees of Adolf Hitler's Nazi govern- ment in Germany, hostile to Catho- | lation of the concordat of 1938. Cen- sorship of sermons, especially after the absorption of Austria and the annexation of the Sudetan grea of | Czechoslovakia, irked the Church. {Also the Nazi sterilization law was | abhorent to the Pope and Hitler- |ism’s anti-Semitic measures arp rebukes from him. Spanish Insurgency ain’s civil war was a recurring | | sore spot. The Vatican saw Loyalist Spain as communistic, and ex- th.mg:-(. envoys with the Insurgenf S radio | But the Pope frowned | The | . The action virtually | CREEPERS: AN NE NEVER Tou ! | government, | Francisco Iran organized by Gen.| baptized Achille. His father was a 0. A Vatlean broad- | silk worker who later became mana~- | cast on August 29, 1936, asserted | ager and then a partner in the busi- | that muiltitudes of the faithful in|ness. | Spain were praying for the triumph From boyhood he was an honor of “the good cause,” an expression | scholar. He completed his academic which typified the attitude of the |education at the Lombard Seminary Church toward Franco and repre- [ in Rome and was ordained a priest, sented too the resentment over anti- | on December 20, 1879. Soon after- church rioting under the leftist gov- | ward the death of his father forced | ernment of, the republic. | him to make his own way, but he managed to complete his studies in World Immorality | 1882. His scholarship record was $o Pius found much to condemn in|pigh that he was presented to Pope what he saw as a growth of worldiLm XIII, together with a class- immorality. Lightening of marriage | mate Lualdi, who later became a ties by making divorce easy, and|gardinal and sat i the conclave the era of high skirts and low n“"kflwhich chose Achille Ratti as Pope. 3 omen’s fashions, were de-|. He returned to Milan as a teacher nounced. In fact he deplored every | iy the theological seminary there manifestation - of tendencies 0| pemaining until 1888 when he took change the ioncept of motherhood | yp research in literature and philol- |as the chief privilege of women, in- | 5oy in the Ambrosiana library, Mi- cluding in his denunciations beauty | jan. He became ect of the insti- athletic meets for girls and tytion in 1909. Two years later Pius modern dancing. At one time he of- X made him Coadjutor Prefect of fered a prize for a design of a mod- | the Vatican library est dress, the medal going to a, model with high neck, long sleeve: ho: she Evoluti In 1914 Pius X appointed him pre- : of a Diplomat and ankle-length skirt Plays and musical omedies ' fect and made him a monsignor merked by risque situations and With the adgded. titles of apostolic lines, sexy novels and “indecent brotonotary and canon of St. Peter's, | He took up residence in the Vat | films™ also roused his wrath. On July Y and through World War years be- 2, 1936, he ordered Roman Catholic | bishops throughout the world to 2an to show the diplomatic qualities censor films shown in their dioceses Which were to bring him preferment andto ad ish members of the and elevation to the throne of St.! Peter. He was, for example, a go-between 'when Italian military leaders inti- | mated that the Church, by Austrian | intrigue, had been responsible for | the disastrous defeat of Italiangrms |at Caporetto in October, 1917. Mer Ratti was credited with giving Car- {dinal Ga i, papal secretary | state, data which refuted the cha When the treaty of Brest-Litovsk |on March 3, 1618, took the Russians | word of his elsction in the square!out of the war and changed condi- outside St. Peter’s, the first time|tions throughout eastern Europe, the benediction had been given in|Benedict XV, who had become Pope | {the open since 1870. His predeces-|in 1914, sent Mer. Ratti to Warsaw sors back to that year had given for the diffi- Church from attending those which fell under the ban, Less than three months later he said world pictures | had become “morally better.” Apcstolic Blessing He strove for a better world in both material and immaterial af- fairs and urged progress by example as well as by precept. His first act as Pope was to bestow the apostolic blessing cn the multitude awaiting { of as “apostolic visitor,” the and thejcult task of maintaining impartial world” from inside the great cathe-!neutrality between the Germans | ral as a protest of usurpation ofland the Poles, He proved his g | power by the united king- Italy. He repeated the L osix after his corenation, ppeared again on the out- a, wearing the tiara. tact by doing ju that Went to Poland Poland became a nation in Octo- | ber, 1919, a tti was made the IF ) to the new state, Thus he signified that he hoped|with jurisdiction, on behalf of the his reign an era of peace.|Church, over all tht territory that| me to power when post-war|had been lopped by the war from burdens weighed heavily upon Eu-|[the former Russian mpire. pe and aimed from the start to In the spring of 1, Cardin: 1 h closer relationships be-{ Ferrari, archbishop of Milan, died ween the Church and these troub-\and in May the Pope summoned led states. {Mer. Ratti from Warsaw, created | £ ' System of Relief {him a Cardinal and appointed him He instituted an effective system|to the Archdiocese of Milan. of relief, giving more than $1,000,- he choice of his motto was 000 from his privy purse in the first|prophetic. His coat of arms bore| |18 months of his reign. Impover-|the words “reptum transit,” mean- ished Austria, Germany, Ireland,ing “it passes rapidly.” Just eight Greece, Asia Minor and Russia were | months after his elevation to the recipients of this bounty and he|Cardinalate he was chosen Su- aid special attention to the state f the Russian Orthodox Church. For European Conciliation | Aiming to conciliate peoples still under the spell of w time propa- ganda, he urged his views upon the nternational conference which as- sembled in the spring of 1922 at! “I was born under a Pius; I came Genoa. He expressed them in a|to Rome under a Pius; Pius is the letter to the bishop of that city,|name of peace—then Pius shall be | sending the missive through the for- |my name.” cign affairs department of the vati-| = —— can. The conference embraced 29 European :governments, including the Spviet Union, the first time that the bolshevik regime had been seat- ed at an international council table, The significance of this from the Church viewpoint was that the con- ference was the first to approach post-war questions from a recon- struction angle, instead of from the viewpoint of reparations or | Benediet XV died January 22, 1922, | and Achille Ratti was elected Feb- | ruary 6, receiving an almost unani- mous vote on the fourteenth bal- lot. Explaining why he took the| name of Pius, he said: - CHANGESASKED UNEMPLOYMENT, 0LD AGE LAWS House Bills Would Broad- en Social Measures in Terrifory (Continuec from Page One) | ally broke down because Belgium, backed by France, insisted upon restitution for all foreign-owned property confiscated or destroyed in Russia, did not erase the signifi- cance of the Pope’s lefter. Early Official Act | | i Italian npation and permitted re-! {rained for citizenship and this dis-| lic Youth organizations, was a vio-| drew | An early official act that gratified | Catholics in the Americas was a de- cree that lengthened the interval that must elapse between the death of a Pope and the convening of the College of Cardinals to elect a suc- cessor. This resulted from a protest |by William Cardinal O’'Connell, archbishop of Boston, who after the death of Pope Benedict XV, sailed on the first steamer for Italy but reached the Vatican just two hours after the election of Pius. Rigid church law at that time ixed 10 days as the maximum inter- regnum period. Pope Pius, on March 15, 1922, signed an order making the minimum 15 days and allowlnui three days of grace. This total of 18 days insured the attendance of! Canadian, Brazilian and Argentine princes of the Chureh, as well as those from the United States, at future conclayes. Baptised Achille Pope Pius XI was born May 31, 1857, at Desio, near Milan, to Fran- cesco and Teresa Ratti, and was! other penalties. The fact that it eventu- interest on contracts, by express agreement of the parties, may be as much as eight percent, instead of 10 percent as the present law reads. Ccpper River Memorial A new memorial (HJM. 25) was introduced by Representative Smith to urge appointment of a commission of engineers to examine possibilities of operating the Copper River Rail- read. His House joint memorial No. 13, dealing with the same matter, was withdrawn, Representative H. H. McCutcheon withdrew his House bill No. 5, ap- propriating $5,000 for stocking the Territory with elk, bffalo and game birds. The House; deciding there v no “nigger in the woodpile” in Senator LeRoy Sullivan’s reindeer branding bill, passed it 11 to 5. Members of the Committee which had recom- mended the bill be killed explained their change of heart by saying it had been whispered previously that a joker in the medsure would have made it possible for. white owners THE DAILY ALASKA.EMPIRE, FRIDAY, FEB. 10, 1939. AR Riat By BILLIE DE BECK WAAL & TAAT HAWN'T ENUFF TO MAKE & 006G SNIGGER AN LAFE - \_; STARTING YOUNG Pratt of Lake Placid, N. Y., d‘rlvcr. and Bud Washbond of Keene Valley, N. Y., brake, get ready for a ride down the Lake Placid run. They're learning to be race drivers and use the regulation sled. This year’s these two 14-year-olds, Buster Lake Placid races marked first time all sleds were equipped with standard eight and ten millimeter runners. to claim great herds of I deer which did not belong to them Fish Trap Hearing A hearing on Rep. Ed. Coffey {ish, trap memorial was made a spec of busiy for committee- consideration nenimously at yesterday were Representative James Davis' House bill 16, req quiring bids to be called on all Territo pur- e imo X‘(‘\I\<' chases of more than $50, and House joint resolution No. 4 authorizing purchase of a plague to mark the Edward W. Griffin Memorial at Kodiak Safely through second reading vesterday was House bill No. 47, licensing junk deale: After a heated agrument along ivisional lines, the substitute for House bill 40, authorizing the Terr torial Board of Road Commissi to apportion road funds, was tinued in third reading un A companion bill, s con- 26 ute f until that time. D Bob Ellis Beats Stork with His Airplane KETCHIKAN, Alaska, Feb. 10—~ Beb Ellis, well known Al- acka flier, beat the stork to Seattle. He arrived there at 11 o'clock this forenoon after a flight from here with three passengers, and a scn was born to Mrs. Ellis at noon. BY A WIDE MARGIN ‘Marion Tyrrell of Torom i nada, and William Tate of Blowing Rock, - g " station preme Pontiff of the Roman Church. | House bill 41, also was continued! lezged race at Pinchurs, N, C, Hi line, easy winners. The idea of th end of the track, dismount and tie two back to the starting line, ' TODAY } in the HOUSE | | House Bill 61, Martin, MecCor- | mick, Smith, to make Alaska bone | dry. { House Bill 62, Rogge, amending | placer mining claim laws. House BIill 63, Rogge, regarding fekeeping records. Bills Passed | House Joint Memorial 20, asking bol ment of Richardson High- | v tolls. House Joint Memorial 25, asking a highway between Government | Railroad and Richardson Highway. | House Joint Memorial 27, urging reestablishment of a Coast Guard at Nome { House Joint Memorial 23, ask ing extension of the Juneau Fe eral and Territorial Building. House Join{ Memorial 22, redue- ing residence requirements for di- vorce in Alaska. House Joint Memorial 29, asking Congressional investigation of pos- sibilities of Copper River and Northwestern Railway. e eee When making rolled cookies it is advisable to chill the dough (over night is not too long). The dough {can be handled more easily and | the cookies quickly cut out. Our !umndmothers frequently rolled the | dough on a large board and chilled it out of doors for several hours. N. C., won the three- lere they are coming to the Il seward Street —— Phone 723————il5-2nd St. | | THE ROYAL | SANITARY BEAUTY SALON | | “If your hair is not becaming to | ‘ P I G G L Y you—You should be coming to us.” e —————————— | WIGGLY | Garhage Hauled i Reasonable Monthly Rates 3 ___E. 0. DAVIS ' Sanitary Meat Co. TELEPHONE 212 Phone 4758 | | | | FOR QUALITY MEATS AND POULTRY | FREE DELIVERY | Call Phones: 13 and 49 Jones-Stevens Shop LADIES". \ READY-TO-WEAR Near Third | it Widesl MISSES’ Selection of LIQUORS PHONE 92 or 95 S’ Take Me Out To the ROYAL is the ‘most popular refrain of our patrons —they know there's one place always to get a good steak dinner ——— at the ROYAL CAFE . ‘ The Juneau Laundryi FRANKLIN STREET between Frout and Second Streets PHONE 359 | =|{ 1 BLA& DIAMOND COAL ' Alaska Dock & Storage Co. Bodding Transfer TELEPHONE 412 MARINE PHONE i BUILDING Rock—Coal Hauling Stove—Fuel Oil Delivery HOME GROCERY Phone 146 Home Liquor Store—Tel. 699 | American Meat——Phone 38 | HERMLE & THIBODEAU Thomas Hardwarggo. PAINTS — OILS Builders’ and_Shelf HARDWARE '| PETER PAN | BEAUTY SHOP—Triangle Bldg. Telephone 221 |1 Specialty on Permanents IR s AT | Hardware Company ‘ | PAINTS—OIL-—-GLASS Shelf and Heavy Hardware Guns and Ammunition (] When in Need of DIESEL OIL—-STOVE OlL YOUR COAL CHOICE GENERAL HAULING STORAGE and CRATING CALL US Juneau Transfer Phone 48—Night :’htme 696 | PH ONE m FOR VERY PROMPT A “SMILING SERVICE” LIOUUR DELIVEBY Bert's Cash Grocery PHONE 105 Free Delivery GENERAL MOTORS, DELCO and MAYTAG PRODUCTS W. P. JOHNSON “The Frigidaire Man" IF IT'S PAINT WE HAVE IT! Ideal Paint Shop' FRED W. WENDT Reliable Transfer | Our trucks go any place any time. A tank for Diesel Oil and a tank for Crude Oil save burner trouble. .. PHONE 149—NIGHT 148 . McCAUL MOTOR COMPANY DODGE and PLYMOUTH DEALERS Family Shoe Store “Juneau’s Oldest Exclusive Lode ana piacer :wation notices bor sale at The Bmpire Office. You Are Sure of Choicest Meats Only IN OUR MEAT DEPARTMENT ° California Grocery THE PURE FOODS STORE Telephone 478 Prompt Delives FOR INSURANCE | See H. R. SHEPARD & SON } TELEPHONE 409 B. M. BEHRENDS BANK BLDG. i L. Sk o B e ) Window Cleaning PHONE 485 Seward St.—Juneau | forrrrrrrres LUMBER R R P R ¢ race is to ride horseback to one legs together, ‘and race leading the two bnu'ag Juneau Lumber Mills, Inc.

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