The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, March 3, 1939, Page 4

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Daily Alaska Emfiiré | Published every evening except Sunday by the EMPIRE PRINTING COMPANY WELEN TROY BENDFR - - - President B L BFRNARD sident and Business Manager Second and Main Streets, Juneau, Alaska. by his own known ability Willie Will Like College Vive In the Post Office in Junesu as Second Class Matter. (Cleveland Plain Dealer) SUBSCRIPTION RATES. 198 . | When the first enticing warmth filled the air; Deitrer. o s for $1.25 onth. ';.’L:F?’L,'u.'.:.".fffa'":‘"?n"’- talll.nrllx,lru‘utr:,"mn iwhen the smell of coming spring permeated the Ope year, in advance, $1200; six months, in advance, 36.00;: school room, the chances were that missing Willie in advance, § rs will confer a favor If they will promptly notify Office of any failure or irregularity in the de- eir papers. News Office, 602; Business Office, 374. had found a comfortable spot beside some purling brook or the old mill stream and was indulging in the gentle art of fishing. To him, as to most boys, school seemed a dreary, wicked waste of time when A the path across the meadow called to lake or pond B e A e o . Through many generations of Americans the lure Stherw i this paper and aiso the local news of the hook and worm can be blamed for a large per- _”_'"5“"’7 here! . centage of truancy ALASKA CIRCULATION GUARANTEED TO BE LARGER But such idyllic days pass. Life cannot be all THAN THAT OF ANY OTHER PUBLICATION. ! fishing, and Willie, if he was smart, would go back Represented Ltonalls by the Fenger-Hall Co. Ltd. with to his text books and prepare for the business of earn- offices In Sam Praneisco, Los Angeles, Portland, Seettle, Chicago. jno o Jiving York and Boston. But to the rescue of the incurable Waltons among the Willies, by now Williams, comes that college which he wished in adolescence to avoid. Two courses in angling—covering all angles—are to be offered by | Columbia University’'s Teachers College. Imagine! Going to college to learn how to fish! One course will teach all about baits, lures and plugs, and also the cooking or mounting of the catch. The other is entitled, “The Theory and Technique of Fresh Water Angling,” designed for those who want advanced work | Tt is going to be tough on the fish. Not only licensed, but diploma-ed anglers will be after them. What would old Izaak say about these Doctors of Fishing? {He undoubtedly would entertain the suspicion that | some members of the faculty are Willies at heart - In the past three years the American canned sal- { the ivery Telephones: MEMBER 'OF ASSOCIATED PRESS. Gentleman Unafraid CANNED LMON WEEK e (New York Times) Out of the European crisis of last fall one states- mon industry has spent approximately $800,000 in advertising to inovease the sale of one of Alaska’s madn products Part of this vast campaign of promotion is | " ma | honor. Horoscope “The stars incline but do not compe SATURDAY MARCH .4, 1939 Good and evil portents are seen in the horoscope for today, accord- are favorable to constmictive pro- jects. gty | Public building will help large | numbers of people and ‘there will be a shortage of certain lnes of trained ‘workers. Agitation’ regard- ing limited apprentice ms gov- erned by labor organ: is fore- cast. ¥ The stars encourage trnn.qporm-! | tion by water and seem to indicate much travel in Europe and the; Orient, despite war complications.| This i§ a lucky day for/sthfting an | ocean voyage, although : fxough weather is prognosticated. Clothing merchants and real es- |tate agents should profit today. In-! | creased demand for wines and beers | is forecast. ( Labor continues subject to disturb- ing to astrology. The morning honr.x' THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, FRIDAY, MARCH 3, 1939. 1t is the wish of America that Pius XII may have a long and glorious reign, as distinguished as that of his great predecessor and that which is foreshadowed YEARS AGO From THE EMPIRE | MARCH 3, 1919 | Harry F. Morton resigned as Dep- |uty United States Marshal to be- come a candidate for Chief Clerk of the House. The nomination of James A. Smi- ser for reappointment as United States District Attorney for the First Diyision of Alaska had been: con- firmed, according to an Associated Press dispatch received by The: Em- pire. Robert Oliver, Secretary of the Ketchikan Labor Union, and John Sutherland, formerly the General Secretary of all Anchorage Unions, was to be present at the meeting here of the Alaska Labor Union. Representative John H. Dunn, of the Fourth Division, had taken an apartment at the Bergmann Hotel for the Legislative sessi D. C. Sargent of Cordova. explo- jing omens, but certain signs indi- { cate increase in wage scales and im- ‘ proved working conditions. Mining | in western states will offer employ-| | ment to many men. | A London astrologer predicts that | the aftermath of the Spanish war | will produce menacing developments | notwithstanding rumors of tolerance | by Insurgent leaders. Perils to many | nations threaten as the Spanish con- n, at least, emerged with credit and untarnished |flict ends. There is a warning sign | i issuing certificat The character of the former President of [to the United States as well as to Czechoslovakia, Dr. Eduard Benes, shone the more | European governments. | brightly in the dismal light that fell across the face | {of the world into every home in America the message that the | to meet his enemies’ demands, had fought valiantly North Pacific is producing a food which, for delicacy, | for liberty and democracy in one small state, had nutritive value, wholesomeness, and econcmy, is second | spoken the truth calmly when the air was charged to none with rant and hypocrisy. In office he had been m.} Canned Salmon Week, far as Alaska is con- | telligent, self-sacrificing and humaue. If cerned, is the most important of the many “weeks | Misfakes they did not impair his iategrity which are observed in America throughout the year. Anything which irfereases the use of canned salmon, which makes it more than ever a stable item for every pantry shelf, is putting money directly into Alaska’s pocket he made In re- is temporarily lost | Under Benes, as under Masaryk, Czechoslovakia | was an outpost of democracy in debated territory Its domestic problems could have been adjusted it had not become the pawn of inte tional pow that Coming with the advent of the Lenten season, | politics. Dr. Benes, ‘as a symbol of the democratic Canned Salmon Week centers attention on this pro- | regime, is superficia and for the moment a figure duct, of which we all may be proud, just at the time of defeat. 1In his own country his public honors have been withdrawn, though he must feel certamn that he is honored in the hearts of the liberty-loving of year when that attention does the most good in | | its effect on sales. Alaska’s canned salmon is in the | 5 5 R .| masses of his people. Here, on his arrival yester- spotlight in national magazines and in the NeWSPAPEIS| ;.. ., 104 4 taste of the respect and affection he | this week as well as in the nation’s kitchens. Editors ). " incpired among Americans of varied interests | of leading women's service magazines, Who eXercise aanq peliefs. We welcome him and we are proud greater influence over the nation’s eating habits than o take off our hats when he goes by. Few of us | any other group, due to their influence on daily meal | understand his native tongue, but in a more than planning by millions of housewives, are prominently | literal sense we speak his language and he speaks | featuring dishes made with canned salmon { ours. Our sympathy goes out to him, but even more | All of -which isthe best possible kind of boost for! our hope, | Alaska.’ | g | Canned salmon, in large measure, has developed this country. The industry has built our cities, es-| tablished our means of transportation, located our homes, paid our taxes, paved our streets, sent our| children to school, brought to Alaska all the advan- tages of 20th century living An Alaskan cannot look about him without seeing some evidence of the good works wrought by the salmon industry. Truly, for Alaska, every week is Canned salmnn: Week. Absent-Minded? (Cincinnati Enquirer) Premier Bela Imre of Hungary has resigned This in itself is not of great moment this far from the | |1and of the Magyars. But hisreacon for retiring from the Premiership is at once significant and absurd Having urged strong anti-Jewish measures, Imredi discovered—or suddenly remembered—that under the Nazi test of race purity he also is a Jew. One of his grandparents—he must have had eight of them, as is customary in all countries—was Jewish. Whether Premier Imredi really forgot that he | would be among the victims of his own proposal, or whether he revivified his Jewish great-grandfather in order to have a “graceful” reason for resigning, is not | entirely clear. But his action helps to demonstrate | the absurdity as well as the gross injustice of the anti- Semitism which is spreading through Europe. Hungary is one of those unfortunate states des- tined to be a pawn of stronger powers. As such it is obliged, if it hopes ever to regain lost territory, to go along with Germany’s foreign policy and ape its domes-~ | tic tyrannies. Yet Hungary is a land of shocking ex- tremes of poverty and wealth, Nazism, if it came to | ary, would probfably bear heavily on the landed“ ry which rules Hungary. | The problem of Tmredi and other, more complete- retary under Pope Mus XI and has directed in large ly Aryan, Minjsters at Budapest is to steal lr:l'.;lm‘vnl.\ of Nazi doctrine and fit them into-their own political measure the temporal policies of the Papacy since 1929 : when he was appoinked to the office on the retirement | system. By thal means they hope lo prevent revolu- | tionary Nazism from coming into upset their pr ivileged STk i) ol [ status. 1t is unfortunate that anti-Semitism should Pacelli was olected yesterday on the Cardinals’i,. o, o e first importations under this dubious third ballot, a procedure which for promptness of political strategs choice is unprecedented on the modern history of the Catholic Church and all the more remarkable because | American-made the Papal Secretary of State generally is not considered | Ttaly “en papabile” or in line for succession to the high fill the void left by Ch throne of the Church. Pacelli must have been almost “ and Goebbels might & unanimous choice of, the:Cardinals as they hastened Mickey Mouse, but we POPE PIUS XII Adolf Hitler's face, presumgbly, is pretty red to- day. The hue and cry of Nazi Germany when Pope Pius | XT died last month was that he had been a “political | Pope” and that a “political Pope” was not desired as his successor. Elevated to the Papacy yesterday was Eugenio Cardinal Pacelli, who if Pius was a “political Pope,” certainly is even mere one himself Pacelli, who takes the name Pope Pius XII, has | made statesmanship his life work. He was Papal Sec- movies have been forced out of rlie Chaplin and Pop Eve, | n do as a stand-in for an't think of a worse substi- to Rome to select a successor to Pius fvidor ‘Garbo: than SOGE his attorney, Howard D. Stabler, Especially gratifying to the United States is Pacel- AT Shattuck Building, Juneau, Alaska, % A 3 § ok b 1936, travel- Rumor has it that y has a new plane | ginin six months from the date of I's election, for he visited our country in 7 Mihth' can or descend vertically. ‘That shouwld |tnis motice, Date of Notice: Febru- ling across the nation by airplane in order to VISIU| o5 Hitler's temperament perfectly. ary 17, 1939. all sections of the eeuntry in his limited time. | A & MELVILLE LEATH, Pius XII is the first Pope ever to have laid eyes| It it's publi he wants, maybe Adolf Eiflet Admintstistie. on the Unifed Statés, which has one of the greatest had better deliver his next speech in secret to the |publication dates: February 17, 24; United States Senate Military Affairs Committee. March 3, 10, 1939. | Catholic populations in the World ‘- - BUILT TO SCALE, Howard Walters' “Railville” in Audubon, N. J, includes this village sexved by 3 eleciric engines and 15 freight ears running in and out the h around. an q-flcor garden over 400 feet of rails. Builder Wallers l; n:‘u-: :2“:::«:”::..‘ e We can see where Benito and Adolf might | Expositions will attract great ’ Tt it o raar ke ! He made, and needed to make, no )numbers of visitors through the |Plurality of 33 Osnned Salmon Week, -just ending, Wit ) | apologies. He had trusted his friends, had gone far | summer and will contribute color-| ful pages to history, it is prophesied. A sensational occurrence may mar a ceremony at the New York Fair. Persons whose birthdate it is have the augury of a year of gain through personal effort. New opportunities tirement he has dignified the memory of a cause |will come to women who have after vacati trained hands. Children born on this day prob- ably will be extremely vigorous and a ous. Many of these Pisces sub- jects are athletes and there is often artistic and musical talent. (Copyright, 1939) What Is Your News I. Q.? By The AP Feature Service Each question counts 20; each part of a two-part question, 10. A score of 60 is fair, 80, good. 1. Identify this sports world figure and tell how he made news recently? 2. What is a rhumbatron? 3. Was the death toll in the recent Chilean earthquakes about (a) 500, (b) 15,000, or (¢) 30,000 4. Whois charged with trying to get his 13-year-old nephew’s job? -5. What $80,000,000 deal, start- ed last year, was completed re- cently? (Answers on Page Six) NOTICE 1S HEREBY GIVEN: That on February 15th, 1939, in the United States Commissioner’s Court for Juneau Precinct, Divigion No. 1, Territory of Alaska, thé under- | signed was appointed administrator | of the estate of Rita McCaul, de-!| ceased. All persons having claims against said estate are required to! present them, with proper vouchers, and verified as required by law, to said administrator, at the office of sive inspector, arrived on the North- western from Ketchikan. He was al the Gastineau Hotel. Senator Luther C. Hess and Mrs. Hess, who arrived from Seattle on the Northwestern, were also at the Gastineau. According to the returns accepted by the Canvassing Board as off icial es of election to members of the Legislature, former Delegate Charles A. Sulzer had been | elected Delegate to Congress by a Maurice Casey was at the Berg- mann Hotel and had resumed his ! former position with the B. M. Beh- ’rends Bank G Geddes returned to Juneau oning in the south. Highest 20; lowest 19; | G Weather partly cloudy NOTICE OF ATTACHMENT ARREST OF PROPERTY No. 4331-A IN THE DISTRICT COURT FOR; THE TERRITORY OF ALASKA, DIVISION NUMBER ONE, AT| JUNEAU, IN ADMIRALTY STANDARD OIL COMPANY OI CALIFORNIA, a corporation, Libel- ant, vs. The oil screw or vessel called | the “SAMSON II" her tackle, ap- parel, engines, furniture, equipment, | | etc., Libelee. | !TO ALL CONCERNED: % | NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN,: | that the undersigned United States | Marshal for the Territory of Alaska, [Dinsion Number One, did, on the {17!1] day of February, 1939, attach, |arrest and seize the oil screw or | vessel called the “SAMSON I1,” her | tackle, apparel, engines, furniture | equipment, etc., in the above entitled |court in a certain action brought | |by the Standard Oil Company of California. a corporation. libelant, against the said oil screw or vessel “SAMSON II" her tackle, apparel, | engines, furniture, equipment, etc. The cause or nature of said action ibvmu a cause of action civil and | maritime, in which the said Stan- ! dard Oil Company of California, a corporation, demands the sum 01’1 One Hundred Ninety-two Dollars |and Ninety-eight Cents ($192.98) and costs. | All persons interested or con-| | cerned herein are requested to be and appear af the time and place of the return of said process, to- | Witz on the 18th day of March, 1939. in the United States District Court ‘al, Juneau, Alaska, at the hour of 110 o'clock in the forenoon of said day and answer in that behalf. or defanlt will be entered and con- ‘lVl'nHmHn n ordered as prayed for in said libel | Dated at Juneau, Alaska, the 17th day of February, 1939. WILLIAM T. MAHONEY, United States Marshal. By VICTOR B. ROSS, Deputy. FAULKNER & BANFIELD, i Proctors for Libelant. ! First publication: February 24, 1939, | Last publication: March 10, 1939. [ _zomIc { SYS1ZM CLEANING | PHONE 15 L Alaska Engoiey | 52 Bank Juneau, Alaska L] (5 COMMERCIAL and SAVINGS Resources:Over Two and 'One-Half Million Dollars ey <, Behrends e e N {cent of all the children, the Bureau | The Empire extends congratula- tions and best wishes today, their birthday anniversar? .o the follow- ing: MARCH 3 Homer G. Nordling § Tom Rakich; ' Josephine Cartér A. B. Cain Ed Shaffer Jr. Mrs. R. Linguist Jack McDaniel Jr. Claude Helgesen P M'ODERN ETIQUETTE * . By Roberta Lee Q. How long after the wedding ceremony should the reception be held? A. The wedding reception is held immediately following the ceremony. Q. Are sherry glasses large or small, and what is the correct shape? A. Sherry glasses are small, and are V-shaped. Q. 1Is it all right for a hostess to have her monogram appear on her place cards? A. Yes, if she wishes to do so. - [ DAILY LESSONS IN ENGLISH * By W. L. Cordon Words Often Misused: Do not say, | ‘All men are better than he.” Say, | “All other men are better than he.”| Often Mispronounced: Adverti »“ ment. Preferred pronunciation is| with accent on second syllable. ! Often Misspelled: Jam (a fruit preserve). Jamb (part of a doorway). | Synonyms: Near, contiguous, ad- | jacent, adjoining, close, close at| hand | Word Study: “Use a word three times and it is your: crease our vochbulary by mastering one word each day. Today's word: Abash; to destroy the self-possession | of; to confuse; disconcert. “But there were at least three persons in | the room whom nothing could | abash.”—Arnold Bennett H LOOK and LEARN || g ‘ By A. C. Gordon 1. What is a “bonanza loquially? 2. Which was the last state to be | admitted to the Union? | 3. Who was the first white chlld% born of English settlers in America? | 4. Are bats blind? 5. On what island is Honolulu! situated? ¥ ANSWERS 1. A stroke of good fortune any sort of venture. 2. Arizona, Feb. 14, 1912, 3. Virginia Dare, born in 1587. 4. No. 5. Oahu. — e THE PIONEERS' AUXILIARY Number 6, is giving a card party on Tuesday, March 7, at 8:15 p.m., at the 1.O.O.F. Hall. Bridge, whist and pinochle will be played. Prizes | and luncheon. Public cordially in- | vited. Admission fifty cents. ady. R | One-fourth of all the families in | the United States produced 63 m'r% in of Agricultural Economics reported early in 1939, WANT _ TO SELL L) WANT TO BUY F P S Let us in- | § * used col- | | Satisfied Customers” DRS. KASF”. & FREEBURGER DENTISTS Blomgren Building PHONE 56 ‘ 3 v‘ e T F M5 o4 Ur. A. W. Stewart DENTIST Hours 9 am. to 6 pm. SEWARD BUILDING Office Phone 469 Dr. Judson Whittier CHIROPRACTOR Drugless Physician Office hours: 10-12, 1-5, 7-9 Rooms 2-3-4, Triangle Bldg. PHONE 667 — [ DR.H. VANCE | OSTEOPATH Consultation and examinaton free. Hours 10 to 12; 1 to 5; 7 to 9:30 by appointment. Gastineau Hotel Annex South Franklin St. Phone 177 p—— s ROBERT SIMPSON, OPT. D. Graduate Los Angeles College of Optometry and Opthalmology Glasses Fitted Lenses Ground — TheCharles W. Carter% Mortuary Fourth and Franklin Sts. | PHONE 136 Have Your Eyes Examined by Dr. Rae L. Carlson OPTOMETRIST Office Ludwig Nelson’s Jewelry | Store Phone Green 331 FINE 1 Watch and Jewelry Repairing at very reasonable rates PAUL BLOEDHORN S.FRANKLIN STREET | ON THE MEZZANINE HOTEL JUNEAU BEAUTY SHOP LYLAH WILSON Contoure Telephone X: Er-Vac - 538 HOUSE OF DANIEL GREEN “COMFY” SLIPPERS DEVLIN'S Paris Fashion Shoes 4 SRR ESA A Wkl SIS R T SR, | | CALL 642 | TRIPLEX ‘Odorless’ DRY CLEANERS Pickup Delivery—'Sam the Tailor’ e OFFICIAL MAPS OF JUNEAU—25¢ J. B. Burford & Co. “Our Doorstep Is Worn by Juneau Melody House Muysic and Electric Appliances (Next Gastineau Hotel) Phone 65 L —— [ masea reoemar_ | SAVINGS & LOAN ASSN. Accounts Insured Up to $5,000 P.O. Box 2718—Phone 3—Office 11y Seward St., Juneau, Alaska — e Directory Professional Fraternal Societies Gastineau Channel B. P. 0. ELKS meet every Wednesday at 8 p. m. Visiting brothers welcome. DR, A, W. -t STEWART, Exalted Rul- er; M. H. SIDES, Sec- retary. MOUNT JUNEAU LODGE NO. 147 Second ‘and fourth Monday of each month in Scottish Rite Temple . _beginning at 7:30 p. m. " SHAS. W.: HAWKES- Worshipful Master; "LEIVERS, Secretary. GuySmith DRUGS PUROLA REMEDIES | PRESCRIPTIONS CARE- et FULLY COMPOUNDED Front Street Next Coliseum PHONE 97—Free Delivery (] a — "Tomorrow’s Styles H Today" Jlalonens Juneau's Own Store S | [ "“The Rexall Store” | % Your Reliable Pharmacists ‘ Butler-Mauro Drug Co. vt | H.S. GRAVES “The Clothing Man” HOME, OF HART SCHAFFNER & MARX CLOTHING i e T T S L T e A Gastineau Motor ; Service , PHONE 727 GENERAL AUTO REPAIRING Gas—Oil—Storage HARRY RACE DRUGGIST “The Squibb Stores of Alaska” “The Store for Men" SARIN’S | Front St.—Triangle Bldg. l —_— GASTINEAU CAFE LUNCHEON SPECIALTIES Krafft’s Mnfg. & Building Co., Ine, CABINET WORK—GLASS PHONE 62 ‘... TELEPHONE-—5] ' JUNEAU—ALAS COMMERCIAL AND SAVINGS . ACCOUNTS CAPITAL—$50.000 SURPLUS—$100,000 2% PAID ON SAVINGS SAFE DEPOSIT BOXES First National Bank '} i ~ ———

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