The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, March 28, 1939, Page 4

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Py e THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, TUESDAY, MARCH 28, 1939. : 0 { D(l"y AI“ ka Emplrc Deatllflra Nalmn YEARS AGO (fl’ A : = Professional hed evers evening except Sunday by the (Philadeiphia Record) ¢ ' C%TOSCOPC 2 From THE EMPIRE appy D 1 r e C 't O I‘ Fraternal Socicties FMPIRE PRINTING COMPANY Czechoslovakia died yesterday. In its two decades “The I % Gstinesr Chanter | | HELEN TROY BENDER - - - - = President of life it never approached great power. But perhaps staru incline R . hd | I_ il R. L. BERNARD - Vice-Pr and Business Manager it will be remembered as one of the few nations that]‘ but do not cornpel" MARCH 28, 1919 lrt ay e o —— S e ooty e ond and Main Streets, Juneau, Alaska never committed an act of aggression upon its neigh- The joint committee on the Sen- B. P. 0. FLKS meot Entered the Post Offiee tn Juneau as Second Class Matter, | bors. No “glory” attaches to its name. There are ate and House the previous night oA % every Wednesday at 8 ¢ oo e ~ | worse things that can be said about a nation. WEDNESDAY, MARCH 29, 1939 | took more evidence in the investiga-| T"e E;"l’b’”’t ew;:fhedf ’f)‘l’l"'lsz;‘llp‘:r Drs. Kaser and . p. m. Visiting prothers | Dellvered by carrler in Juneau and Douelas for $1.25 per month. Czechoslovak ively strong when Ger- tion of the probating of the estates)fions an Cf i e F b welcome. DR. A, W. o R LA¢ tne following rates: " many, Austria and Hungary were still prostrate from | Conflicting planefary aspects of the victims of the Princess So-birthday anntvC:sary’ .0 i%e Jollow reepurger STEWART, Exalted Rul- ar. in 01 S v, B whest defeat and when Russia was torn by civil war, Even |seen in the horoscope for today. The phia, ing DENTISTS TN S, B T8 scribers will confer a favor if they will promptly notify then the Czechs did not attempt to spread their boun- | €arly morning may be adverse, but —_— : Blomgren Building A, the Business Office of any failure or irregularity in the de daries. They did not dream militantly of the ancient |later in the day the stars are help-| Miss Laura McCloskey entertained MARCH 28 I PHONE 56 i = | O vhonoc: News Ottioe, 803 Bisitiess Oftios; 314 Bohemian dominance in Central Europe, although |ful. at a pleasant party at her home Mrs, Norman B. Cook | — 1 | MOUNT JUNFAU LODGE NO. 163 | — e Pt P ——— | that is no more far-fetched than the Roman Empire | Although there is a sign making during the week. Guests were Ger- 1 »\}"‘ D C*i-‘:““: : S e S £ 5 | The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for hokum Mussolini feeds the Italians and the Nurdxr"for mental poise and clear judg- trude Nelson, Wilma Gamble, Doro- Gertrude E. Lackey | | 9\ Second - an our republication of all news dispatches credited to it or not myth which Hitler tells the Germans, ment, there may be a bad start for|thy Troy, Dorothy Haley' Belle R S | D A W Si f / \\ Mondar of each month \ Lo il ¥ e ot Bl Bt Czechoslovakia relied upon the guarantees of the | the day owing to disturbing news.|Hood, Vivian Sparling, Emma Per- r. A. W.dlewarr | ; (@ in Scottish Rite Temple v - |League of Nations, backed, supposedly, by the power | Positive ideas should control. elle, Elive LaBounty, Lillian Collins | DENTIST B /* beginning at 7:30.p. m. ALASKA CIRCULATION GUARANTERD TO BE LARGER | of Britain and France. Meanwhile, it attended well| This is not a lucky day for sign- | Florence Bracken, Madge Case, Roy ! Hours 9 .. to 6 pm. {125 JHARE W, BAWEES- L . 3 . | to its own business, encouraging democracy in the hos- In8 contracts and may be most un- | Torvinen, Walstein Smith, Emmett | SEWARD BUILDING WORSEL ;L OSeibd TGl *hguster: of § Represented nally by the Fencer-Hall Co. Ltd.. with| tile soil of Central | JAMES W. LEIVERS, Secretazy. Office Phone 469 by the FenvenHall Co. Led. with rope, building up an independent | fortunate if agreements with labor Connc Adolph Engstrom, Pau '}Il”\‘\w\'\:l‘ksm nnw;::o. Los Angeles, Portland, Seattle, “' |farmer class, encouraging industry F are concluded under this configura- | Athinson, Belle Beaudin, Dave | tion. Evans, Patrick Coyle and Fred| % . a was | - Les kia Was | 1 Jbor is subject to ill omens that | Sorri By Roberta-Lee proverit unity Of RbEiot el cre | bt —~ - {| Dr. Judson Whittier ’ i | The defect that proved fatal to Czechoslova congenital, not a mistake of policy. The actual ter- ritory inhabited by Czechs alone or by Slovaks alone was too small and dispersed to make a nation with GuySmith| | is conflict with employers. Industry| Capt. C. E. Ahues, Superintendent| @ When a secretary is introduc- | CHIROPRACTOR will need trained men for speedy of the Libby, McNeill and Libby can- | 18 & caller to her employer, should any chance of survival as a genuinely independent! G " thouoh the spring. Coop- | nery at Taku Harbor, and E, B.|She say, “Mr. Morgan (the caller), Drugless Physician | | political entity. Statlon e A 4 Wivken b-m)(‘km“);‘?‘ ’m“ ‘w an. | this is Mr. Gibson (the employer)”? | Office hows: 10-12, 1-5. 7-9 | | ’ s Some Slovak. leaders ‘igreeds §o, the (PIart! of the | = g0 0y it watling bw el dlrect- ndes. were 1'('1-!1~tlm'm at the Gas-| 4 No. She shoild mention her P }xfl?fl\T“g“ s S A g Czechs, Masaryk and Benes, for a combined nation o !r-:((ay Manufacturers will profit _““‘_"” Hotel " 8 . °"| employer’s name lirst; “Mr. Gib- VE 667 2 PUROLA REMEDIES Bub there wag 1o geniling SyfibAsy DEtWeen the tWo ., niersHnings will eRlisd 6od re § AL . son, this is Mr. Morgan, who tele- | || PRESCRIPTIONS CARE <0 peoples. onomic, cultural and religious differences iy BEEELC R EE BC BORE T The Eastern Star was to give!Phoned you for an appointment.” | gy aema 4 = E - ! | set them against each other from the first. in’ demang inAThE ao\iiiNlEs " oven | an BHEUS Motk dnnce ot | @ Which is better, to have a!| Dr. John B Ge or FULLY COMPOUNDED ¢ | The Czechs were more advanced in industrial )" B 2 e BT 7 !dozen real close friends, or be like| | . . Gey | oA s ¢ ik , though they may be costly Elks Hall, the arrangement t | | Front Strect Next Coliseum development. Thus it was only natural that their] This fi & favoranic SRar Wos bo g ok b ‘ | some people who seem to be a friend | | DENTIST apital should find an outlet in Slovak territory. It sl ndl ol e EVLAor uder the direction of R. B. Fairly, | \5 " s | R Valentine Bldg i PHONE 97—Free Delivery ginning journeys on land and sea.|Charles E, Naghel and William oom 9—Valentine Bldg. was only natural, too, that the Slovaks should resent > . o aRRe” an b | A. It is preferable to have a 2 764 4 & N . e Although bad weather is prognosti- S | PHONE 762 | a Czech “exploitation.” The Czechs took more readily to " 5 | dozen real genuine friends. The old | rs: 9 a | ¥ S e A i A ¥ iy 2 2 - E .4 | cated, storms will not interfere with A large plate zlass window inj . Hours: 9 am. to 6 p.m. 1B e democratic self-government. _B\IL it was to be expected the plans of tourists. Railroads come | Valentine’s Jew ‘1:\ Store was|Proverb says, “A friend to everybody | IT CAN HAPPEN HERE that the Slovaks should resist Czech control of the ' o050 L O i grasewe iy, S0 Wiy n friend! fo niobaay " | § AN H/ sl “RE political life of the nation jundex a fortunate ule o the stars. | simashed by the wind'and one of the | = ot “eue 20 ol and ‘wife are | @ e o AR "s Styl : s . i els are to have months of real | plate gla ows he groc ¥l h % | ; i ; ok et agutst Prague was itense | Bollsur fo have monihs of el | ite gass window. i the grcery | & Whet 8 hubatd wnd e we| (TR p Ty nrmE ) || “Tomorrow's Styles| § This is not Germany. And this is not Italy cven before Hitler. But it is possible that the union | PFOSPErity. Americans are to indulge | department of Goldstein’s Empor- | 028 & € TVEE 88 S0Ae (00 < | | 4 2 If it were, a good many things would be different.| of the two peoples might have. heeri worked ot m | Ielr 1ove of travel, and places of |ium also suffered tha' wridis Ab the MoK s e OSTEOPATH 1 I'oday i One which would be different and—we're sorry to have | time if a force had not arisen that was ready to take ""l‘;,‘(‘,};'(‘,;f\“'“,{;i,(ff';,’,‘,.;‘]‘,‘gff‘m‘“i"“;:",j.’,',": L ; I yive? i || Consultation and examinaton } | to say it—better, under either of those regimes, is|advantage of every disunity in Central Europe. the atimiy Gl e ot R onod “A]‘n “};’:‘w‘ v ‘,‘" x‘;’\\‘n‘ 11.\;:“;‘ | A. The husband. { f'";‘"("{;",i:;‘bm ")’ il ’r"“L ’ 1 racial & y 260 Do b y " 4 g00d | Ligi S Aallol arrive Ju- 9:3 v 8 nen | the degree of respect shown the national flag. . . The racial and cultural diyigion of Oechoslovakia " pov ne byt they shotild Watoh:busi- | neat ang was At the Gasties m TR S | Gastineats Futel hanex | | Suppose there had been an airplane crash at, :‘ ?i;l"" ,mfl_"l‘f :”x‘;qg;n“"nfu{op; There “”‘[‘l“l'\‘““f"‘"“ ness with unusual care. Women Lo —— == | | South Franklin St. .Phone 177 "‘ say, Konigsberg. Three of the six men killed in the l::usp;i’::"mllm‘ i l‘:-\ll' [;:e ":::a]';‘al'l""ml:q'\ ‘f“_: should practice wise economies. Dudley G. Allen left on the (;m-\l l) ” \ l } SS()\'S e s com e 1 | accident had fought for the Fatherland in the Great| g oy." Fowever much it lspregl ssed. the drive Children born on this day prob-|of Seattle for Petersburg on busi- | ks | AR I S ol : /eterans’ ory i i 3 i ably will be intense in re and | nes | TN o i War. A veterans' organization one afternoon got out| for ykrainian separatism, Georgian separatism and exceentfiuly. GRS Tl‘]‘:\:‘“.:;\u:i‘l;l b o : ll IN ENGLISH | ROBERT SIMPSON, OPT. D. its flags and paraded through the town in escorting a half dozen other nationalist movements that i cien % - | #n 5 Felos ) Y be carefully trained and wisely edu-| The Rev. A. P. Kashevaroff was| { | Graduate Los Angeles College | two of the bodies, with honor, to a ship which was troubled the Tsar remain strong na tee ) % 4 £ ‘ g y | < 11 i & ol es . " 3 cated. Many of these Aries subjects|a passenger on the City of Seattle By W. L. Corden | of Optometry and waiting to take them to their homes for burial Hitler makes no constructive contribution to the become successful writers or paint-| for Ketchikan | Opthalmology 14 And the people in the streets just stood and | basic problem of Europe—to find a formula for com fi e kan i | ers. Glasses Fitted. Lenses Ground promise between the économic need for unity and | Words Often Misused: Do not s the cultural need for self-determination and ir , ha terested, Few took off their hats as ( yrigh ) e S ost 26 looked, half in (Copyright, 1939 Weather: H Thwekt 2 [ e o e e | T " The Rexall Stere” | "% the flags passed by. No one saluted. | peniteing, B s snow | “Please lend me your pencil” is pre- Il { h The “;”0“'“: “““”’00,“ r:-;d 5"’;”““" b“““"“ '1011 But though he offers no answer, Hitler knows how MON]‘ANA Now R - {ferred. Loan iz primarily a noun 1 || Your Reliable Pharmacists ' onor was formed to escort the body of the brave pilot, | i, take advantage of the problem. He has expunged | “otten Mispronounced; ~ Dessert| ! also a war veteran, to another ship. As the flags| the anclent cultral differences within Germany. i f 'ulovulw At e Gt hid The Charles W. Carter ] -, Butler-Mauro ! moved through the streets only one out of ten showed the regimented drive toward the “dead level” of totali- plA N N l NG BEG onounce t, i as in did H Mflriuar : the minimum of respect required to doff a hat. tarianism, cent last syllable. ( | g Y i1 At the dock, stevedores kept their caps on their The strength and the (_'mm‘adhn(;n _in his posi- ROAD pROGRAM ow on Misspelled: Arctic; two c's, | Fourth and ?‘runknn Sts. [ heads as they received and loaded the flag-draped |'°" that he enforces unity within while encourag- not artic A | PHONE 136 HH ! ing separatism and disunity without. nonyms: Resolution, determin- | b——————— I | ‘ casket aboard the ship. | For the present, that program is unquestionably n, firmness, tenacity., persever- i R | It couldn't happen there. But it could happen|.frective, Especially with Mr. Chamberlain and M. HELENA, March 28—The Mon- | s atendtaniness . thretons | = | t here. It did happen in Juneau last week. "D:\L«h(-:' concurring with Hitler's plans. tana Highway Department discm\cd[ AL PR Word Study: “Use a word three| Have Your Eyes Examined by | ; 5 AR R3 5’ Disrespect, or lack of respect, to the national sym-. Certainly those gentlemen bear as much if not more Plans today for a 1939 road building] WASHINGTON. March 28.—Sen- | yimeq ang it is yours” Let us in-| | Dr Rael. C 1 S acere j bol in one of the dictatorships is punishable by any- | responsibility for the tragic end of Czechoslovakia ANd reconstruction program esti-|ator Wagner, Democrat, New YOtk | oqc0 our vocabulary by mastering| | I hae L. Larison L i H S GRAVES 3 thing up to and including death. In Konigsberg, if | than the dictators themselves mated o cost more thaniithree reports the Senate banking. sub-|one word. each. day. Today's word:| ~ OPTOMETRIST | B A i ot sxIutA) tha Tiag Che SoRld- Have Besn The dissolution of Czechoslovakia is an unwritten mMilllon dollars. i | committee has agreed to recommend 1, .umbent (adjectiv imposed as! | Office Yadwig Nelson’s Jewelry | { “The Clothing Man” P . | clause in the Munich pact. D. A. McKinnon, State Highway | a $1,000,000,000 increase in the mort-| o auty or obligation, “All men, truly| | Store Phone Green 381 | || .. o 3 fallen upon by the crowd and beaten until yanked | Had Britain wished to save the remnant of Czech- engineer, said that with the voting |Rage insurance limit of the Feder: alous, W per those good | bmm oo, | | HOME OF HART SCHAFFNER concentration camp-ward by the police. cslovakia without fighting it could have granteq Of three million dollars in highway |Housing Administration. | works thi re incumbent on all | & AR Sl TR The truth is, however, that a German would h.unll dits to protect and rebuild the position of Prague debentures by Montana residents| The present F. H. A. limit on in-| cpyistians.”— Sprat i—_fiE——j ' ety saluted. Whether through fear. or through some |after Munich. But it tossed the Czechs a few million last fall and the subsequent sale sured home mortgages is $3.000,000 = e | | S S R S i nobler persuasion, he respects his nation’s flag. No|and let Hitler have the next move. ofe one-half of that bond issue, m:-‘OOO and a request to double this Watch and Jewelry Repairing | —_— doubt the great majority of Germans love their Now Hitler has moved. He has another six months department would be able to take amount drew criticism from several at very reasonable rates - b R [of “glory” to take the Germans' minds off their advantage of Federal highway aid. |Senators and officials of the Fed- ¥ ,..OOK and LE A[J\ PAUL BLOEDHORN [ Gastineau Motor ‘ : IO R L& AN ke vensbn Lo love and fe.|ttoubles | 'The program will be the largest|eral Home Loan E:mk system, : | | S s ! = the “appeasement” which Mr. Chamberlain always A e | through IJmIdmL dnfl loan groups. A S RGO | PHONE 727 that love and respect in the simplest way, by honor-| nas known would not “appease.” : Forty-elght Americans, 164 Swiss,| Wagner said the subcommittee ¢ | | GENERAL AUTO REPAIRING‘ R Ing the flag; the aymbol of the nation’s greatness. - 65 Hollanders and 70 Frenchmen |also has agreed to extend F. H. A.| 1. What percentage of the| [ OFF THE LOWER LOBBY ||| _ Gas—Oll—Storage We'll still take America, of course. It takes more | live at the Portuguese colony in Af- | insurance of building and purchase world's pepulation can neither read| | | ol el [of small homes, costing less than |nor write? BARANOF 2, cher’s son succeeded | the balance in favor of Hitlerism, when that system SR b - st 1$6,000, with a 10 per cent down pay 2. What pre 1| B 1s compared to our own (New York Times) X [ ———— {ment and twenty-five-year amor- 2 preacher’s son as President of the BEAUTY SALON 3 William Hale (Big Bil) Thompson's failure to 2 e 4 o U. 82 | tization plan. The program was to . LYLAH WILSON ¢« What Is Your | have expired July 1. | 3. What is a philologist? 1 than a habit of showing respect to the flag to weigh | HARRY § RACE F Bul.we can't halp wishing Americans did demone| 0y, (o ‘penublican, nominstion for Mayor of Ohldago] strate some of the pride in country which no doubt is for at least one reason a fortunate thing. If Mr. | The $1,000,000,000 increase in 4. What is the fundamental law Frodetioas R FESTAL | DRUGGIST all of them feel. | Thempson had won the primaries and then gone on | News I Q A e could be made only |Of the United States? —_— | to be elected to the office which he filled for twelve . ® ® |if the President found it necessary.| 5 What two large cities, on the SR RIS “The Squibb PROTEST picturesque years in the not distant past it might have btk AP Eosbore Service | F. H. A officials had asked that | OPPosite sides of the U. §., bear the » Stores of gl {led to international complications. The last time he | 3 | the new limit be placed at $6,000,- Same name? I8 CALL "42 Alaska™ Y The Congressional Record has banned insertion | Was in office Mr. Thompson threatened the late George of (laughter and applause) from the undelivered|V With a severe personal chastisement in case the | | Britis| re s is face i hicago. speeches by Representatives and Senators which are British monarch dared to show his n Chigago Now the son, namesake and successor of George printed for home consumption. & 3 f V is about to visit the country. Chicago is not on the We: who haven't a Senator and haven't a Repre-| royal itinerary, so far as we know, but the mere pre: sentative and so should be unbiased in the matter,|ence of a British King on American soil might ea: hasten to protest have been regarded by William Hale Thompson If a Congressman isn't as much entitled to un-|a menace to our liberties. He was not likely to take laughed laughter and unapplauded applause as he is| the opposite view—namely, that it is a rather hand- to unspoken speeches—then logic is no more and there | SOM¢ gesture in George VI to come over and help us i1 bo’ dhrk 0kve Tk 6 Baws b the bl commemorate the sesquicentennial of a very serious | poea S, SEe | TRIPLEX ‘Odorless’ *..n g | T W caoy rever & i || DRY CLEANERS thiane | ceeded Chester A. Arthur. | = }F l"St W oman 43 f;r“"“‘"‘ of languages. | Pickup Delivery—‘Sam the Tailor’ | SAB'N’S l E | ." The Constitution, Chairman B S [,0].1'.}'—-—_'OPFICIAL'MAPS oF 5wt | WINNIPEG, March 28.—For the| ATTENTION O.E.S. | LU e i o s v || JUNEAU—26c || [GASTINEAU CAFE 4 woman, Alderman Margaret McWil- | AN R R Anlilaeion i liams, is chairman of the Civic re~|a0d refreshments J. B. Burford & Co. lief committee. She has been a mem- | LILLIAN G. WATSON, | “Our. Doorstep Is Worn by er of the city council for five years,|*dV: Secretary. | Satisfied Customers” ly | precious in a democracy as freedom of speech itself. | peen nominated md mm.o( be e]pcud We repeat: We protest: (Laughter and ap-| - plause.) Since people are happiest in rooms where sound seconds, and the Democratic House caucus A Senator says it's necessary for us to answer hington was found to have a rever the dictaters “in their own language.” Yes, but what | period of 3 seconds, remodeling of the acoustics is | is German, Italian, and Russian for “Go jump injunder way. 1If that doesnt restore party harmony, the lake?” they’ll probably give up. $ | Each question counts 20; each part of a two-part question, ;g A score of 60 is fair, 80, go B mie Chtvaniy of ‘Daes Aesis. 1. What new obstacle threat~ | ment of architecture has been un- | ens his career? able to fill demands for architects Juneau HEIOdY House 2, How did a rainbow, 2 WisP | and no graduates in recent years of sSmoke and a birthday signal- | are e vears w A N T ] : ize a recent news event? e omponNd, 4| Music and Electric Appliances (Next Trving’s Market) 3. What amendment to the Front Street Phone 65 Social Security act is pro) 3 oy Senator Wagner BNS)? | Irene Stewart's || WO SELL | LI was born to what aueent |\ ENDING LIBRARY E v o et s, ||| Kraffe's i shal Petain, French hero of Ver- | | BARANOF BASEMENT LOBBY | | i { Mnfg. & Building Co., Ine. dun? New Books to Sell and Rent 5 s Answers on Page Six [ ] Accounts Insured Up to $5,000 3 gy, e P.O. Box 2718—Phone 3—Office CABINET WORK—GLASS 3 \( 5 119 Seward St., Juneau, Alaska PHONE 62 kbl Il WANT TELEPHONE—51 The B. M. Behrends | TOBUY A i Bank i 5 ot Juneauw, Alaska ¢ COMMERCIAL ,AND | SAVINGS ACCOUNTS o COMMERCIAL USE THE CAPITAL—$50,000 < SURPLUS—$100.000 29 PAID ON SAVINGS SAFE DEPOSIT BOXES and SAVINGS CSWANT” Besourcés Over Two and ADS One-Half Million Dollars First National Bank °) JUNEAU—ALASKA —_——— - "TO SAVE NEW PLANES from prying eves of sirangers, Russia u ) " d g « for a parachute jumping meet at Thilisi. Each of the contestants :ade I::ej:::p:f“e i

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