The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, April 25, 1939, Page 4

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i L THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, TUESDAY APRIL 25 1939 | dustry ranks third in importance in the Territory, . ¥ . ' 3 g Daily Alaska Empire | enova u i ame an many of he fl YEARS AGO % r‘————‘—m o 1 B Published evers evening except Sunday by the established trappers, both white and native, who are oroscobe Prom THE DPIRE Yy btibvr v ] l EMPIRE PRINTING COMPANY intimately acquainted with the region in which theyf Ch 1 WELEN TROY BENDER - - - President | are operating find it necessary to have other work | The stars incline | [ . i Gastincau Channe ‘l R L BERNARD - - - an (. '"f»* Manager | to supplement their earnings from trapping ! but do not eompel’ APRIL 25, 1919 th a}’ | e e = | “The Alaska Game Commission was established ; 1 B P 0 ELXN el K th u as Second Class » " i ¢ : Arrangements for the patriotic s s T P g e B ey e "flsuflr ! u as Second Class Matter. | ¢ brotect and conserve the fur resources, and re-| ~ TUESDAY, APRIL 25, 1639 | oo i,m program in lh(‘plm.e:‘)(':s(l The Emptre ertonds congratula- D K d H every Wednesday at 8 RIPTION RATES stricts the trapping sea 11l over the Territory,| Good and evil planetary aspects| o " o8 BRI T en com. |tions and best wishes today, ‘heir IS. Kaser an e Visitihy hebu S ed by L June: 3 - . COn: g . ay. ac ) S= e 4 ] : - 4 vel s ‘4 By oty 1uiwiabe e g s o, ShinediDel pEpas SO Y contend foday, according to s |oeq and the following were to|virthday annioc sary .o (e follow- Freeburger STEWART, Exalted Ruls o0 ton demands closed season on al fur over an entire| OI08Y. ~Adverse influences may | Dy icisate: ofricers and men froming: B Subscribe ihes will promptly notifs | Tegion. A resident trapping license costs $2, but that | GO ¢, especially n the eve-|yne yicksburg, officers and men who 5 D“NTI‘;T‘ISM retary. | the Busi irregularity in the de- e Ay S ol Tehe's WO " g r 1 dhs 25 | wumgren Buildin . Bosinses, Otfis. required for a nonresident i slm A full \mle actual| 1y’ the early hours thessimay l"\‘:}:lga::é"rr?:?n?hgxffx:‘\; aé::; Plfi,tl;‘]:L M:‘iifl;‘i;m\ ; RN 58 g Telephones: News Office, 602; Business Office, 374 residence is required before becoming eligible for a|clear vision regarding important | > ) = 2 i LA | el _ — ; arb] adets ork- 5. Della Clark - MOUNT JUNEAU LODGE NO. 142 *| ME ASSOCIATED PRESS. resident trapping license, and by regulation a three |matters, but power to carry out well ctuoy C‘d‘;'“‘: the Ffid Cross work i‘!’“}m b‘lu[h»x'\ll‘uyl { The Assock exclusively entitled fo the use for | vears' residence may be required made plans may be lacking. SE8 | BOUBCEN - WIS (RN - tved s by H Second and fourthy republica s dispatches credited to it or not * . Z % R : $ Cross, the Elks and other volunteer Gerald Cashen Monday of each month etherwise paper and also the local news “In suitable locations, farming may be succe Under this configuration con-| o2 (i - PLRNICY . Tt - {| Dr.A.W. Stewart \ y BUNEEW Bt fully carried on, providing the capital investment is|Structive work may be hampered, | 1% | X {," g m;n;emnl--o ALASKA CIRCULATION GUARANTEED TO BE LARGER | ample. There is much good land in Alaska available idents and damage to machinery | pro men Gash SRRy | DENTIST A\ beginning at p. m. A = ! ~ P S ! 2 9 om '‘ashen gave birth t % i & W. HAWKES- THAN an OF ANY OTHER PUBLICATION y are indicated in factories, Caution " 5 . v Hours 9 a.”). to'6 p.m. __ | for homestead entry. However, in most of the farm-| ¢, 0 EEE T EY a fine 12-pound baby boy at 3 o'- MODE K iv |1 . WORTH, Worshipful Mast Represented nationally by the Fencer-Hall Co. Lid. With | ing regions the virgin land requires clearing and grub-| pE {579 b clock this morning at St. Ann’s Hos- g o e SEWARD BUILDING | |JAMES W, LEIVERS, Secretary. offices I San Prancisco, Los Angeles, Portiand, Seattle, Chicago The stars seem to: predage for| or 'p HCTTS & He 40 : ETIQUETTE Office Phone 469 | New York and Boston bing before it can be properly prepared for a Ccrop.|those who exercise authority tenaci- | Po i 10 ]‘ mother and baby were g BBNER Hi - g AT 2 This is cost ) | ous hold upon their power. This in- | *POrted doing fine. I" g | - There is the true picture. Alaska has almost un- |cludes financiers as well as govern- | o By Roberta Les | ! | e 5 W . A communication from the Ter- coming north on a steamer cannot wrest a living from | . In Europe dictators will encounter | ,,,o" ¢ o jetter from Franklin D , y ) CHIROPRACTOR [ difficult crises. Many perils arc ; 3 BEMIRR Q. What should be done with the % | them with his bare hands s Booschelt, Adkika rotary of 4Ne y B S . Drugless Physician - 4 told as spring ‘advances, Economic , Assistant Secretary of the | g e after using it for cutting food? | . ® 10012, 1.5. 790 |1 With Governor Troy, Delegate Dimdnd, the De-fohiems will be desperately insis-| . 7, Was read in the House of Rep-| 4~ Pplace the knife at the edge|| Rooms 2.3-4. Triangle T 1g. | | partment of Public Welfare, Chamber of Commerce,|tent in Japan as well as Germany. | cocniatives with the informalion|or the piate, and on the plate, never st el R he newspapers and other persons and agencies in-| The. planetary government ,_M’“;’“r‘mad fflmml&*l:" had been ap-|with the handle resting on -the - | PUROLA REMEDIES erested In Alaska’s progress working together to cut| threatening to industry. Labor con- | Fot m,f’u’::l‘:::; “l"’d“ ‘“"“l’jv“”(')f table. | || PHESCRIPTIONS CARE- off the labor migration, some good along that line is|flicts will assume novel forms. A |’ 5 e e o ealesteq | @ When & marrjed woman is| | FULLY COMPOUNDED R G, leader is to lose either his life or { redlayIang coal lands as requested | raveling .mlm:» lthllr(i \h:fl:\xii)l‘h‘l“‘ Dr. John H. Geyer 1 oo it . Nast Ol Alaska can't use down-and-out job-seekers. The |his office | Waino Hendrickson i st o e st DENTIST o Sive Ty Sl vas a passen- | pandoiph ! A. No. She should use her hus-|| Room 0—Valentine Bldg. nd’s name and sign, (Mrs) Ro-| PHONE 762 A British Empire continues under iire portents that seem to menace the government Diplomats . and can't use Alaska, they find after they ar PHONLE 97—Free Delivery opping them before they reach the Ter- job-seeke ger on the City of way to Fort Seward ittle on his | where he was rive here, £ o5 ~ ritory would be mutually advantageous. statesmen face great exigencles next to be released from rvice. A. Randolph, Camden, N. J. Hours: 9 am. to 6 pm. ——— Nad S Paeed 5 - ———————— month, it is forecast B Q. What should a daughter-in-| DA)””N(_U’I: TREAM Sinilés Antons tlek s mp,.oll‘,a,.,“m".“ measures will be| Members from the Island and|law call her husband’s father and | . . G ' il i pushed in the United States; Many |from Thane helped to crowd the:mother, when she calls her own DR. H VANCE | "Tomorrow’s nines Gov. John W. s appeal to the steamship (Olbveland Blaiis Bollon manufacturers will - enlarge their |Odd Fellows Hall the previous night | parents “father” and “mother”? | | ¢ g g companies and to the Seattle Chamber of Commerce T 18 o for homatiihl St e are amuging | R on the oceasion of the celebration| A ther Brown" and “Mother OSTEOPATH | I'oday to do what they can to stop the Alaska-bound 1abor jniaiides even to the strains which hold the world | Persons whose birthdate dis haye |of tbe one hundredth anniver Brown . Consultation and examinaton | | | army, which is heading north in increased numbers in nervous tension and desecrate the sacred character | the augury of a year of ups and Of tne Lodge. s R s | | ~free. Hours 10 to 12; 1 to 5; X | this year ofly to become a problem to the Territory of a week which should be holy low There may be unexpected owde § | 7 to 9:30 by appointment, r*’/ AA N 3 o S ARG S ¢ | profi but obstacles will be en-| Weather: High 43; lowest " a3 b Gastineau Hotel Annex 9 = after it arrives, should head off a number of misin- Some of the humor may be ironle, but at least it | IOl but obeuacles WEL 86 enc| 0 ’l Dr\u Y l [.5; ONS South Frankiin St. Phone 177 | | | b)l v:,gl‘(fl i « B formed men who plan to spend their last dollars for helps to make the day-to-day jump from crisis to Al )N s more bearable there. | e ~ T . IN EN (”.l SH | cri; a ticket to Alaska in the hopes of finding work as soon Thus a few days ago the headlines told us Children born on this day prob-J|Boys Goodby” because it has be f B s r ek kil Poland’s arms to guard England” What a position | 1PV Will be excecdingly original in' banned on the grounds that it is an | | ROBERT SIMP'SON, OPT. D: | The steamship lines, by telling every applicant for a one-way steerage ticket just what the unemn their ideas, daring in expressing undesirable piece of pl righting By W. L. o lom for the mighty lion of Albion! If his face was not 3 - hemselves, sensitive and intuitive.| Nevertheless the good citizens of Graduate Los Angeles College | | | Juneau's Own Store |*° loy- red, it should be, at the idea of a Polish mouse over ment situation in Alaska is, can do the Territory a there in mid-Europe on guard, in spiie of the ancient [ Many of these subjects of Taurus|that metropolis will have an oppor- 3 B [ "fo(;,-"’;:":;’.f]‘(:\‘(’w:“d e great service, The service to the worker will be even assertion that “Britannia needs no bulwarks.” may be independent to the point: of | tunity to read all about it because| Words Often M e x;\ | “Gitisses Fittel Lensed G e greater. These men would not want to come to Al- It is even more amusing than that recent sight | eccentrigity. ‘m the emergency, the producers ‘the “'*f of ‘_“"' ““Ak o SAY, g, | esunsaes ed nses Ground | . aska if they knew conditions here. Informipg them Which made the cynics smile, the British Tories in Sonyceth 8 {have booked the play into Ogden, hc“"n“”"'n:{ dpeihs d: Hacienda| —— m { *"The Rexall Stcre” o they Il save them a little money and the House of Lords declaring that, after all. those & s ot | Utah, just 35 miles away, and are Oftfx\ Misprongurie o HaneD "__ ¢ PP bem;‘ ”"; b et 1Y and| pussians are mot bad feliows. This from the same [ planning to advertise it in the Salt | (8 jee a8 P";””L“‘ s TGN Your Reliable Fharmaclsts o il noble peers who less than a year ago were eager to Lake City newspapers. da, both a's as in ah, € as i i 'r Ch . Alaska Delegate Anthony J. Dimond is certainly follow the Cliveden philosophy that Fascism might (andy Maker | “Some of the Broadway observers Accent second syllable : }‘e arlesW (arter‘ o Bufler.l\{[auro in a position to know the facts regarding employment ' yet save Britain's aristocracy from the rude Re: | were prone to be a little sarcastic . Often f\’“"\”:““" Radius ‘“‘"", Moriuar [11 S in the Territory. Here is his advice to prospective There are also grimly humorous aspects to the {about this decision to refuse Cindy 81 Radii o fo LT Y ;‘ : " Gattior protective occupation” . by which Mussolini plays Lou a chance to kiss the boys good- }_S, lonyine; sHblar, (UE: Uik nge, | | Fourth and F:auk]m Sts. | [ | “No one familiar with the Territory will deny that GTanny Wolf to Little Red Riding Hood Albania. In ses e(lpes by in Salt Lake. But is seems to Shade. o Al PHONE 136 B \ » hepions i ook " jt<elf, it is not a move of great consequence. Albania me the theory of state rights in a ' werd Study se @ word three | e | Alaska is a land of opportunity. The waters border- ;. . 140 of a state, with less population than Cuya- ’h'murr;u'. such as ours should ex- tmes and it is yours” Let us In-| e AR ing Alaska are rich in fishery products, the Territory poeq County and about one-fourth the area ef Ohio | tend even to cities, and if Salt Lake CTeAse our vocabulary by mastering o has large areas of land that are well suiteti to general Of course this makes gobbling no less. painful to the Imes wants to keep its citizens from eat- tml«‘ \"ux'(‘l vm‘lh day ”'I‘ud?l\':g !\\m‘d ' | Have Your Eyes Examined by | | R farming and grazing; forests containing timber suit- Albanians, yet they have been under Italian domina- | ing the Devils flesh, but at the same Yehement: acting with t force Lt ||| s T able for lumber and paper pulp; mineral lands con- tion for several years, so their annexation would make B | time permit them to drink his furious: impetuous. (Pronounce ve-| | Dr. Rae L. Carlson {11 H. 5. GRAVES ! taining gold, silver, lead, copper, platinum, tin and slight practical difference. . broth, why that clearly is the busi- €-ment, first and second e's as i {| OPTOMETRIST | . 0. |l o s ¢ rroleum, coal,| Bt to Mussolini such a move is a godsend. He's [§ Are Said fo Dafe|nes of sa Lake he, accent first syllable). “Orators, | Office Xadwig Nelson’s Jewelry | | | “The Clothing Man” many other metallic ores, as well as petroleum, coal | ] oy e 8 RS et 1006 ATe Qipaie mee B 1. are most vehement when they have| | Store Phone Green 331 | | | v sulphur and asbestos: all resources capable of ulti- |Peen biting nails recently, even when the photogra- | In passing I might add that the §re O3t TERETMEY ISR = ICY L G | HOME OF HART SCHAFFNER { Rl kst mavy lifdustriss dnd malihiniae v RReE Nere Nk looking he senior partner of the Ba(k as Far as TWO | boys are expecting a heavy trade in o @ gk % 57, | & MARX CLOTHING e, . & € & Berlin-Rome axis has been getting all the play. This | Ogden on the theory that the lure b | Ry s ey e e we popitistion s plain cruelty to Benito. ght to be a law! of forbidden fruit is still rampant— - — - | an Uil | | Watch and Jewelry Repairing | | fishery resource, which appears now to have been 1 3 RS i ke at very reasonable rates | { Protection for the Decent Employer ” fully exploited, almost to the point of depletion, each i s 2 v By GEORGE 1uCUKER ¥ Thi¢ must have been embarrass- | PAUL BLOEDHOBN I Gastmeau MOIOI’ # of the above mentioned resources requires development (Philadelphia Record) NEW YORK, April 25.—There is|ing, A young man, a timekeeper, be- | ‘By A. C. Gordon before it will represent an industry of importance, There was a day when protests would follow the |2 maker of candies in Washington|ing dissatisfled with his position, |\ e . S. FRANKLIN STREET Il SeIViCe l ; Such development is difficult, if not impossible, with- mere suggestion that an employer, caught in the mid- [street whose receipts are said o go!answered an advertisement in one TR e B # i t a reasonable a f capital, by anyone dle between two rival unions, ought to be given some | back thousands of years, even fo be- | of the newspapers and said he yearn- | 1: What material is most gen-| | FHONE {787 0 e Noun ol RPN DY e A ler the National Labor Relations Act. |fore the days of the Christian era.|ed to better his lot. The next day ST8l¥ used in the world for cloth- | |} CENERAR - ST A O \ 2 8 e a8k s DO8 o -est | Protection under the National Labor Relations Ac : 2 . ere.1ed | s aj | 5 Dil—S tempting a future in Alaska. It is possible to wrest P Halh il B dowh-Trombea P R Dl | Gas—Oil—Storage L | Any such proposal, however timidly urged, would 1 down as a covert attempt to smash the act Now we hear that Senator Robert F. Wagner, a living from the wilderness with little more than bare hands, but it seems certain that one hundred will fail in this where one will succeed—and most of be F ser, are still secret, and are main-|you satisfied? sons fighting on bofh sides during| er to son in the traditional Mman-|we got your letter all right, Arent 2 'hat famous opera singer had | B A B A N o F | ‘—_"—"“"“—“ ol taining their practitioners today in a Naturally Joe was ‘stunned. Tt just the World War? ¢ \ \ | — ing? ‘ [ OFF THE LOWER LOBBY | author o » Labor Relations Act, will appear before p . e | 1 H S Alaska is yet a wilderness. (lhlr[ ‘s:‘n(.xu-[ltt.b(.,»b(;(,,‘;,,luum. mAask just L‘,(.h protec- | manner no doubt would cause some | dawned on him that he had ans- 5 Vhat is a sinecure? | BEAUTY SALON I ABRY '! he industries that Alaska now has have suf-|tion for the employer, He will do it as part of his|f the earlier candy-makers to rub|wered an advertisement from his f }f’i‘“’_?’;‘:“" S0/ dive. R DO LYLAH WILSON H RACE ‘e= fered little, if any, during the recent years of depres- | defense of the act against crippling amendments. | their eves. k {own company. But he managed to pounced “the wisest man in| Frederics—X-ER-VAC | ) ston, and most lines of business there remained fairly He is right; the request for more protection for [ Nicholas E. Abald is his namecollect himself and he said, no, he @€l 0 o0t | - | DESGGISTE: stable if 1ot prosperous during this time. But so many | the innocent employer is a defense of the Labor Rela- [and he came to Manhattan in 1891.| wasnt satisfied, not by a heck of a > Aaaty S SRR oNe i | agis d © MANY | tions Act, the smartest and most effective kind of | YOU may see him and talk with his|sight. IheiLying cspier of BB e The Squibh | i unemployed persons from the States ve gone to the Safensa 1 i s sons and even witness them at| His superior looked at him ANSWERE | C/\l l 6/1‘) Blons of Territory during the past several years that the influx he personnel of the National Labor Relations | WOrk If you care to.make the jour- | thoughtfully for a moment and then Cotton. | 44 - Alasks” 1 y down to 53 Washington street.|beckoned him to follow. They went| 2 Ernestine Schumann-Heink X ' ' -fire of adverse pub- .| beckor : . c ! There is one formula observed that|into the office. Half an hour later| 3 ANy office requiring little or| | TRIPLEX 0d0rleSS | “The Store for Men"” y | has created a condition where there are simply more| Board could have avoided a cros men looking for work th there are jobs available|lic opinion had it been far-sighted enough to amend 3 e bil ¥ g al for them. This is true in the skilled and ‘white col- | its own rules to give the employer this measure of pro- | YOU Will not soon forget. These con-|Joc emerged with a new job—a much 1'%, FEERONsIIILY or active service. | DRY CLEANERS | lar' classes of employment, as well as of unskilled | tection fections are pastry delicacies, the | better one. Joe's name really isn't| = ;q“""“y‘,'“_k RN i o AB"T’ o o labor. | Under the present arrangements, elections to b:s]lek ‘)gn‘;""gg:gésvg:"‘:"":’ f“‘;‘ 'E"he\.\‘;o:» 11\" U\(‘hr.‘;)u can’t go around| > NeWw Yor ;l".N(“ sichipis | Eloleniv Deltrarysiont the Tlor 1 > 4 p my o o DArE 5 ativés o o e 3 ver saw. Y | betraying confidences when your P/ g 4 . Anyone planning to go to the Territory in search L'omh‘u'\.l‘QI'1{flf»“.-'pq'\’,lia(:}‘2‘".,,,’5,?%:3 :};:;;D;:r'; ;'felé roll it out and when it is a.yard|tell you things. v CLASSES NOW ENROLLING Front St—Triangle Bldg. %*! of employment should have enocugh money to provide 15 not redcanised R Esh lhuug‘h he may have a fine | Square they pick it up as you would | i F’nr Spring Recital, fifty cents ._________—_l‘ | for himself for several months and then to purchase | 1o vecord, not . pick up a table cloth and shake S jper lesson, Dorothy Stuarns| OFFICIAL MAPS OF l % T even though he may have signed a |F o RUMMAGE SALE |Roff School of D: i " i return transportation to the States in the event WOrk | jegitimate contract with a legitimate union, only to|i¥ until it becomes eight feet square.\m Lumheran Church Parlor, Wed- | gr oo OF Dancing. 315 Third | J“NEA“__ZS N | 18 not found. Tt should also be borne in mind by one | find himself picketed by a rival union This is called blaklawa and. it i8|nesday. Donations appreciated, |0, Frone Red 119. adv. | c GASTIAEAU CAFE : considering going to Alaska that employment there He has been helpless, caught in the middle, a vic- |Made from a special butter imported | ppone 579 and they will be called| ~*° 20 Empire ac. ! J. B. Burford & C | is definitely seasonal in character in most industries, | tim of labor's jurisdictional strife, With which he had | ffom Syria, and goats milk. These| or adv. | R urior 0. * | delicacies will remain fresh for = e | Try The Empire classifieds for | s doubly difficult to find work nothing to do. This is an outrageous situation 5 3 | The quicker it is ended, the sounder and healthier | Yéar. They are composed of 40 lay-| of (he 567,668 patients admitted 1 1 &, ers rispy, flaky pastry, which will the labor act and the labor movement become. |©rs of the crispy, flaky Yy |to 99 hospitals in New York City espite the articles to the contrary that appear is seasoned with honey and filled ;) qu over ‘hail were UBBbIS ‘to “Our Doorstep Is Worn by Satisfied Customers” and for this reason it during the winter mont from time to time in various periodicals, trapping in z vith pistachio nuts, walnuts and BB e Y P I e o 3 . * preme wad for his teacher in law schoo! SS0- n A i | stantial amount of financial revenue, and no one cjate ce Hafland B Btons. Shss will no doubt]. e Abaids fl‘-‘? 1:““‘ s “‘flll“‘m‘ Try an Empire ad, | uneas Y should go to Alaska to trap. Although the fur in-scentinue to take opposite sides from time to time. l!)];at]lzou;g?&SBSBlPrgle;‘cn]l{L“isb?"?';:i‘ = — = Music and Electric Appliances | - > | Street Called Straight"—a pistachio | I . S 1 i (Next Irving's Market) | — honey roll which, with “Opulence,” | rene Stewart's | || Front Street Phone 65 ||| LUNCHEON SPECIALTIES and “Lady Fingers,” are among thei LENDING LI ! T0 SELL | l newer confection triumphs. A strange BRARY | ¥ ’ interesting family, the Abaids. BARANOF BASEMENT LOBBY | | s e | | Hours: Noon to 5:30—7:30 to 10 | ,AHLAN S i Kl‘afft,s nE e i th | P Sundays: 1330 to 2 pam. | | 2 i s B h . j — — : = . || Accounts Insured Up to $5,000 Mnfg. & Building Co., Ine. 14 ¢ P.O. Box 2718—Phone 3—Office CABINET WORK—GLASS %: @_—— 11y Seward St., Juneau, Alaska PHONE 62 2 The B. M. Behrends TO BUY i Y s 3. . Bank Juneau, Alaska P COMMERCIAL AND } SAVINGS ACCOUNTS } ‘ o ‘ %lwz\NT COMMERCIAL USETHE | CAPITAL—$50,000 ; SURPLUS—$100.000 B2 and SAVINGS “w ANT” 29, PAID ON SAVINGS < | SAFE DEPOSIT BOXES L Resources Over Two and ADS ary » One-Half Million Dollars . A ; BOATS TAKE WINGS in the Pan American Airways’ giant new sisterhood of Clipper ships Fll'St Natl()llal Ballk of which above flying boat, still known unromantically as “No. 20,” is a member. This is the plane-boat | Pimtes, Bhe covered 713 milcs a an average speed of 161 miies dn hour, This 41-ion Clipper ship I8 a9 e R e A XS L JUNEAU—ALASKA 4 ” ’

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