The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, March 31, 1939, Page 4

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time Bristol Bay mentioned. good-naturedly remarked in debate, “I wish to heavern you had never seen Bristol Bay.” was ‘Daily Alaska Em pire Sunday by the Publish 15 evening excep ev EMPIRE PRINTING COMPANY sersisted, making his points and making them stick. NFELEN TROY BENDER R i Wl In the bitterness which attended the last few R. L. BERNARD Vice-President and I days of the session, Senator unrmmI P b g maker. His was the ulimpassioned voice = n the Post Offiee mn June Second Class Matter. to sink personal animosities | But Joe Hofman THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, Senator Roden n | | Horosco pbe “The stars incline but do not compel” SATURDAY, APRIL 1,.1939 FRIDAY, MARCH 31 2 YEARS AGO MARCH 31, 1919 From THE EMPIRE | Former Representative Andrew Nerland of Fairbanks was a visitor |in Juneau while the Alaska was in | port and stated that he thought Al- aska had too much politics and that citizens should devote their time to business. The wrecked halibut boat Valhal- la, which sunk off Green's Cove on .| Admirality Island three weeks pre- vious, was safely on the gridiron near the City, Dock and was under- going repairs, F. E. Parsons returned to Juneau SUBSCRIPTION RATES. L slation. He had been| on this first day of the, month Delivered by ‘.""'.ff “ll‘J“'mH and Dous! ~'""‘_~""f'""""'"" before, ably in 1935 as Speaker | conflicting Planeta'ry s.speci,s are One - i a e, $1 X € 36.00; | of the House of Representatives after a previous term | discerned, according to astrology. - i g P nptly notify | a5 & member. The morning is unfavorable to im- & the E Office any « the de- It is hard to ti kindly little Joe Hofman |portant business matters. There are livery « s Oiitia, 4 % e Officn. 398 2 dead. In his pe ¢ Territory lost a good “ndiplanglary influences re_t.ardlng pro- | s 2 . ¥ gressive plans and causing a feeling 3 57 MEMBER OF ASSOCIATED PRESS icnest man. His heart was pure Alaska gold. of uncertainty. The s gt P (1] 2 7 | This is not a fortunate date for ity . Tin this 4 also the local new The (Practical) Good Neighbor | entering into new _partnerships . or e | signing confracts. It is beli to RANTEED TO BE LARGER delphia Record) be most unlucky for the:! employ- ICATION The Uni States hopes to establish a|ment of women. P ST o x f Hall 1t in the Western Hemisphere which will| Demand for real estate will be off! 8 cise Ange I case need, to ¢ against the totali- | general this month; small towns o 2 e | and ‘cities should profit. Home own- ks G ] Wilhelm Faupel, N ader, | ership will be a widepread ambitic an ck on country i we | as marriages increase in number. | oals im There i§ an evil portent threaten- just what the United to|ing opposition to women anxious f o b He to, Ao ah s for important positions. tinetly understood by “in case of Labor continues m‘ be restive un- n only defense of this Rerikidiere hizations which will change i W redits the U " n management and direc- e A S by L ) p. Government aid will be ju- essive designs in Europe If we al y than partison i economic ances in Latin America and ‘othep mn;“,““ 1 1ce of t Monroe Doctrine, a N I 1 be greatly stimulate older S Femer o n capital will seek inve SUpreiacy and business will expand Our Good Neighbor policy in Latin [ troys nd' sovereignty, uses no threa andising should be fortu- S ————————r e | { just the opposite of the Bad Neighbor through &he _entire . spring. | JUNIOR SENATOR FROM THE THIRD |deliberately pursued by Germany. A natio Large wholesale orders will brine | who lays down an open plan -of cong fortune to dealers in foodstuffs and | o for all he neighbors in the South and East—as H ' will scarcely escape ule if his spokesm in an aspect read 2 other cou ies for pusuing a policy of non-acquisi tive friendliness. After the conquest of Austria and the Sudeten wrea, General Faupel needs typical Nazi brass to criticize United States for trying to improve its Wed- sic while was here for the session relations with the other nations in our natural sphere of € He attended no banquets, no of trade and influence. p: ne r ) nees; but he always an- An example of the U. S.-Latin American policy ¥ C e Senate roll call in action is the new trade treaty with Brazil 1 m rious business to Joe. Argentina, Brazil has exports such as co! nick hat it did not call for a €t¢. that the United States can take without ide or the other, from Joe Hof- 40y domestic producer. In spite of this ideal condition, U. S. trade he air, he woul k' slowl; chair, he would walk slowly | g o0 oo otr nearly 10 percent last year, his desk, h hands deep in his E , | the penetration of the German b it Ke' wol a of what he would g,uth American economy. General y with a gentle little o the United States sit by with it And the Senators listened Joe while Germany walked off with its Hofman friends. advance ho t measure. He made up his mind, it . The U. 8. State Department has d. weer t it took him to walk slowly around It has arranged a credit of $69.000,000 hi hrough the Export-Import Bank and ti A latir by whim. Joe Hofman's method Treasury, secured by future output of Brazil's 1 17 Pis it AR munes. = R S o ‘m.nd‘ lx(qv}(\nll\ In return, Brazil will thaw frozen U ! Teading another Senator to call him to task one day, o FU0 b o o ilian bonds. I8 Noting gy on '8 bl T whih, fus (RINEDIE I8 000 of which are outstanding here, the Judiciary Commities, he had given a favorable goroin: ror oy Brazilian 6% percer Wrecommendation. He ch ides no less than, siX peen as low this year and 8 percents have times on a memo at @ commission of \heen down to 11%. They rose on reports of the pact engineers study the Copper River and Northwestern and on the day when the agreement was announced Railroad with a view to uming service over the advanced to 16 and 19%, respectively | roadbed This means a definite clearing of the air in| But Joe Hofman was a dogged, determined war-|U. S-Brazilian financial relations. And it should rioFtos. . Wheéfiever there wes a séven to omel yote Mmean more actual trade because this is not one of in the Senate, Joe was the those trade treaties where we try to sell our goods He had one consumir tiow Boklos Xt was without b_rmg ?\mmg to take anything in rt{luru. ) 3 o 2} Especially hopeful are some of the details of the S 4 oppo 17to. the kings of Federal Bureaus and ... .o.ord. We are sending experts to Brazil to ;Departments in Alaska, “interference” he called it see what can be done to develop their rubber, hard- itorial Joe Hofman was for T¢ 3 control of everything, | wood and other industries. There is no reason why might n 1 footing a larger tax bill.| American capital should not be encouraged to develop even though i 2On principle, he was against all Territorial projects products that can be sent to this country. This is which cal for matching by Federal funds. On especially true of rubber, a strategic material, whose . moved to strike the words “United States present sources are too far away for comfort in 3 sment clause aying the Ter- event of a major war involving the Eastern Hemis- of enforc ¢ “pass the buck” to the Federal Gov- Ph No wonder General Faupel is sore. ernment " | Jncle Sam is ac y gel g b i h Joe Hofmar thick e was a joy to hear, Uncle Sam is actually getting back into the South | | 1 American market. cause he used it so beautifully, so confidently, so H as in Miaja His sts for U-nanimous adition and history | | {i (New York Times) ung man, a German im- Purism recently broke out among the radio news *migrant, Joe m everything that was his, commentators and the Spanish war bulletins. They all the resy oved, through his own honest began P plane bombardments at Valenthia and untiring and Barthelona. No doubt there is a problem for M nd-outer has known Joe's hospi- | the oral news reporters in the Spanish z and ¢, which | ality at hi s hotel. No money? Well, come ' A€ often t and the Spanish g and j, which are often B o« e " h. The newspapers immune. They can print B ot cold. And there would be 8 Goyta and Cartagena without the slightest moral ob- gPeeTinpal ‘gimmering “an Hofman' £3uge. 400 ligation to think of them as Thayoota and Cartahena. i United States Marshal 8t The yadio announcer, on the other hand, may be igham’ on Bristol Bay, the ‘afraid of being called to task if he said Gerona, s effect on his legislative spelled i of Herona rd the last, the other s enators sighed every 'ness by a would smell as sweet. Kumanian iroops Reviewed by King Carol King Carol of Rumania (right) and Crown Prince Michael review troops in Bucharest, capital of the monarchy which 1s extiemely ch 1n natural resources, particularly oil. Carol is r i keeping his troops prepared for any eventuality after sharply rejecting the reported Nazi ultimatum which would give Berlin eontrol of lus country’s wdustries, P especially for its The I v is to give the native pronunciation | ntempt, whiéh ! to the l wn names and the English pronun- | But Bristol Bay left mv]m”z r o \\’Iclll k;\o\vn that lxl_llov are virtu- L in Ta(a A Aot .. 8lly part of slish language. There is some | an, in his?)egislubive, ek, s, 1 \hia, but not for Barthelona. Other- ol Bay a_thousand. wige we w ve to speak of the Muenchen Pact of s his theories. jast & hough, to be sure, that piece of busi- vards for those seéeking | understandings with pean powers. Taxation looms as grave problem in the United States. Persons whose birthdate it is have the augury of a year of hard work | that will be profitable. romance For the| and many mar- iren born on this day may mperamental and erratic.’ The jects of this sign of Aries may zain fame through extreme indi- viduality of talent. (Copyright, 1939) i LADIES" AUX. CARD | PARTY 1S TONIGHT at Union Hall the sec-| on in a series of card parties will| be held, starting at 8 o'clock. The | affair is sponsored by members of Juneau Ladies Auxiliary. and pinochle will Be played al invitation is extended al public to be in' at tendance. | - TO WHOM IT MAY CONCERN | Notice is hereby given fhut”fhe undersigned will not be’ responsjble | for any bills not contracted by Him- personally. | ALEX DEMOS adv What Is Your - News . 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. 3 " much did it cost Rob- er: (Iil:r%’nn Sproul, above, ‘b turn down a job? 2, What outstanding Ameri- | can recently failed to show up for worle l?or the first time ears nig.el’s Mrs. Maria Magdalene ber, who's about to become . 8. citizen, (l )(n) u-gs%uu, ress, or (€) novelist? (b;."ev‘hat jokes did the Ameri- can Federation of Actors re- 002 ceg.uivlrt:\?vn Prince Frederick and Princess Ingrid, soon fto visit America, come from what country? Answers on Page Six i | McQueen | previous on the City of Seattle after spend- ing the winter in California. Waldo E. Burford, formerly of the Alaska Daily Empire staff, was prac- cing law at Porterville, Cal, ac- cording to word received here. A letter from Lieut. Earle Jame- on, former member of the Empire taff, said that he was located at Mogengroff, Germany, with the American Army of Occupation. Flester Hayes, well known resident { Valdez, was a Juneau visitor while he Alaska was in port. He had spent he winter in Chicago. sermon by Rev, James T. on the “Privileges and Responsibilities of Citizenship” the night, as a pre-election sermon, drew an interested congre- ation to the Methodist Church. Mrs. J. E. Higgins had opened a afe on Front Street next to the Helenthal Building, which she had named the “Delmonico.” superintendent for The Dan A. Jone: | the Alaska Board of Road Commis- ioners at Nome, arrived on the Princess Mary to consult with the members of the Commission in Ju- neau. Weather: Highest 38; lowest 36; | rain, SR, T CARD OF THANKS We desire to express our deep ap- preciation to all of those who as- sisted in the search for the lost Marine Airwa, plane and ac- knowledge with sincere thanks the many kind expressions of sympa- thy. Mrs. Alonzo Cope, Palmer, Alaska Mr. Eddie Cope, Oklahoma City, Okla.; Mrs. nest E. Ek, Taco- Mrs. Earle H. Clifford, Se- Mrs. John H. Chappell, Mrs. George C. Cham- Anchorage, Alaska; Mr. u; berlain, and M Ketchikan, Rudolph, Crai; ad Alaska. CERTIFICATE OF DISSOLUTION I, FRANK A. BOYLE, Auditor of the Territory of Alaska and cus- todian of corporation records for said Territory, DO HEREBY CER- TIFY That there has been filed in my office on this, the 9th day of March, 1939, the written con- sent of the stockholders of INTER- COASTAL AIRWAYS, INC., a cor poration organized and existing un- r and by virtue of the laws of the Territory of Alaska, to the dissolution of said corporation, jwritten consent to such dissolution | having been executed by all of the stockholders on the 31st day of January, 1939. N WHEREFORE, in view of the above premises, I DO FURTHER CERTIFY that the INTERCOAST- | AL AIRWAYS, INC, a corpora- tion, is dissolved, pursuant to Sec- ion 924 of the Compiled Laws of Alaska, 1933, upon the filing in this sffice of the proper proof of pub- lication of this certificate, IN TESTIMONY WHEREOF. I have hereunto set my hand and of- ficial seal, at Juneau, the Capital, this ninth day of March, AD., 1939. FRANK A. BOYLE, Auditor of Alaska. First publication, March 10, 1939. Last publication, March 31, Irene Stewart's LENDING LIBRARY BARANOF BASEMENT LOBBY New Books to Sell and Rent = The B. M. Behrends Bank Juneau. 'COMMERCIAL and SAVINGS Resourcefi"Oyer Two and One-Half Million Dollars Alaska John F. Chamberlain, | Alaska; “Mrs. Thomas | 1939. | 1939. JHa ‘%t)il:tyhday The Empire ertonds congratula- tions and best wishes today, ‘heir Professional Fraternal Societies CGastineau Channel Directory ‘ | B. P. 0. ELKS meet every Wednesday at 8 p. m. Visiting orothers Drs. Kaser and welcome. DR. A. W. virthday annive sary .o i*e follow- Freehurger STEWART, Exalted Rul- ing: er; M. H. SIDES, Sec- DENTISTS Sty Blomgren Building o MARCH 31 PHONE, 56 Francis A. Riendeau Sally Shafer Mrs. Ike P. Taylor Mrs. G. E. Cleveland Mervin E. Click e M ODERN ETIQUETTE ByROlz:rfaLel ~—— Dr. A. W. Stewart DENTIST Hours 9 a.2. to 6 pm. SEWARD BUILDING Office Phone 469 MOUNT JUNEAU LODGE No. 142 Second and fourth Monday of each month UGG n Scottish Rite Temple \ beginning at 7:30 p. m. THAS. W. HAWKES- WORTH, Worshipful Master; JAMES W. LEIVERS, Secretary. Dr. Judson Whittier CHIROPRACTOR Drugless Physician Office hours: 10-12, 1-5, 7-9 Rooms 2-3-4, Triangle Bldg. PHONE 667 o P RIS T || Dr. John H. Geyer | the | Q. Should a woman, after death of her husband, be addressed as “Mrs. Mary Blank” or as “Mrs. James Blank"? A. The death of the husband of a4 woman in no way affects the name by which she is known. She con- tinues to be “Mrs. James Blank.” DRUGS PUROLA REMEDIES PRESCRIPTIONS CARE- FULLY COMPOUNDED Front Street Next Coliseum Q. Is it necessary for a man to| DENTIST rise when dining, and another man | Room 9—Valentine Bldg. PHONE 97—Free Delivery stops at his table? PHONE 762 A. Tt is not necessary when there is no great difference in age. If the | man who stops is elderly, it is cour- teous for a young man to rise. Q. Ts it proper to introduce one'’s self, if one has not met the first| member of a receiving line? 5 A. Yes, if this should happen,| one should say, “T am Mrs. Smith."l‘ | Hours: 9 am. to 6 pm. - “Tomorrow’s Styles Today” 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 | DAILY LESSONS ENGLISH T By W. L. Corden ROBERT SIMPSON, OPT. D.| Graduate Los Angeles College of Optometry and Opthalmology Glasses Fitted Lenses Ground . Juneau's Gwn Store | Words Often Misused: Do not say, “I donated a dollar to the boys, for| | “The Rexall Stcre” ice Say, “I gave a dollar to the boys.” Donate is properly used Th h | Your Reliable Pharmacisis ! when the gift is important. “He| | | | donated ten thousand dollars lo; € c arles W' Carlerl | BUfleI‘-Maur:‘ the church.” 11 Often Mispronounced: Vague. Morluary ! 4 Dl’llg CO. I e Fourth and Franklin Sts. | PHONE 136 ¥ % PRESCRIPTIONS Pronounce vag, a as in i Oftery Misspelled: Merchancize; | ise, not ize. ! \ Synonyms: | onening, vent. | ‘5 Word Study: “Use a word three | times it is yours.” Let us in-| Orifice, aperture, Have Your Eyes Examined by Dr Rae L. Carlson |crease our vocabulary by mastering | | £ {one word each day. Today's word:{ | . OFTOMETRISE | H. 5. GRAVE§ | Patrimony; any inheritance. (Pro-, ice Xudwig Nelson'’s Jewelry | | | “The Clothing Man nounce the a as in at, i as in it, o| | Store Phone Green 331 | | | yove Op HART SCHAFFNER as in no, accent first syllable). “Vir- | & MARX CLOTHING {tue is the best patrimony for a i |child to inherit."—Proverb. | FINE Gl o e MRS TR - || Wateh ana Sewelry Repairing ,__G____—_, ! o at very reasonable raf i N I T . Gastineau Motor LOOK and LEARN || PAUL BLOEDHORN || : ! * H S. FRANKLIN STREET ! Service | By A. C. Gordon e e PHONE 727 e i | GENERAL AUTO REPAIRING | T oFr THE LOWER LOBBY Gs—Oll—Storsge ., & |are exactly of the same length, in all parts of the world? | 2. Who was the first Vice-Presi- | dent of the United States. What two nights of the year| | BARANOF s fep resenst | BEAUTY SALON LYLAH WILSON | North America? | Frederics—X-ER-VAC | 4. What is the ancient writing of | DRUGGIST { the Egyptians called? | “Th, uibb | Where is the Klondike? AT R R T ¢ 5.;::,, - ANswERS CALL 642 e September 22 and March 21 John Adams. California condor. Hieroglyphics. Region in northwestern Can- . in the Yukon River basin; 800 | square miles. | R ! LAUSEN VISITING TRIPLEX ‘Odorless’ DRY CLEANERS Pickup Delivery—‘Sam the Tailor’ ']r—-"'l'ho Store for Men” ' SABIN’S Front St—Triangle Bldg. 5 Bopwwr MISS ¢l OFFICIAL MAPS OF JUNEAU—25¢ J. B. Burford & Co. “Our Doorstep Is Worn by Satisfied Customers” | | Miss Charlotte Clausen, who was |a stenographer during the Territor- |ial Legislature here, left for Pet-| | ersburg last night on the steamer | North Sea for a short visit with her | parents. GASTINEAU CAFE Juneau Melody House Music and Electric Appliances (Next Irving’s Market) Front Street WANT TO SELL Phone 65 ' ALASKA FEDERAL SAVINGS & LOAN ASSN. Accounts Insured Up to $5,000 P.O. Box 2718—Phone 3—Office 11y Seward St., Juneau, Alaska Krafft's CABINET WORK—GLASS PHONE 62 P WANT 'O BUY TELEPHONE—5I COMMERCIAL AND SAVINGS ACCOUNTS CAPITAL—$50,000 SURPLUS—$100,000 29, PAID ON SAVINGS SAFE DEPOSIT BOXES First National Bank JUNEAU—ALASKA b | 4 @ b . E L 4 g -

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