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. A "a(‘kmn from time to time, will stimulate the vocational Daily Alaska Empire i i . i i rowrss piiiom Published every evening except Sunday by the EMPIRE PRINTING COMPANY WELFN TROY BENDER - - - - R. L BERNARD - - Vige-President and Business \ Second and Main Sreets, Juneau, Alaska President is known by the general public considering the amoun of useful work which is accomplished. Rotary is a movement which is destined to play ar t which is th of politics A | Jaries 25 per month, rates n advance, $6.00; or creeds in truth, ties, mail Rotary ha One Sear, 1 save ome month. in advance Bubscribers will ¢ pportunities—and great responsibil or if they will promptly notify failure or irregularity in the de- WORK IN PROGRESS livery of their papers Telephones: New Office, 602 Bustness Office, 374 Really, Rotarians, Juneau looks terrible The Associatcd Press | Such then is our conception of Rotary, about the| cheme and aspirations of which extraordinarily little | t| great The town THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, THURSDAY MAY 18, 1939. N increasing part in national and international affairs, | more potent in that it has no boun- LARS AGO Trom THE BUPIE | c%TO&CO FHappy he stars incline pe:‘ 20\‘ Il | . MAY 18, 1919 B thd ‘] but do not compel || siz Mayer and M. Mayer, of the| i a}’ firm of Mayer and Brothers, Seattle FRIDAY, MAY 19, 1930 | jewelers, arrived in Juneau on thel The Emptre ertomds conmatuh. After the morning hours benefic|City of Seattle and were at thejjons a@ad best wishes today, their aspects rule today, according fo¥as- Gastineau Hotel irthday annive.sar .o i"e follow- trology. Workers may expect good | g luck before breakfast. Mrs. A. W. Rhodes had moved her | — Although men and women who dressmaking parlors from the Ma-! MAY 18 occupy places in the Sun and. én-|/ony Building to the First National John Hermie joy power or prosperity may be dif- | Bank Building. Ray G. Day B | Jacobson ficult to approach under this con- ropDes o ol news Guepiteher credited ‘to It of not hAs mever looked worse. Streets are forn up, even|figuration, the stars promise bene-| Sam Sorenson, a Juneau draft “'lux":h: hared‘m-d in this paper and also the local news blocked completely, by sewer and paving excavations.|fits to all who are industrious. man, who had previously been re- o~ ovatad LY i _ There are a good many places where buildings are| This is an auspicious sway for|leased from the service, was em- Somers ALASKA CIRCULATION GU! ED TO BE L. ARGER ither being put up or torn down. constructive and progressive activi- | Ployed by the Pacific Coast Fuel as| Malcolm Faulkne THAN THAT OF ANY OTHER Bt Revd not soologiiing ty. Engineers, builders and ~ stee nkerman, to succeed Philip | i Helen R We think this is probably the only place you've workers should profit. through big |HOTe: Grant, Ritter New York and Bo ' recently where something is really being done, Juneau [T racts o B bt 5 ! Whes Ea T ebicd bt - T SHE e A g | Unemployment should diminish | Walter B. Heisel and Mrs. Heisel{ Guy Westfall having a building boom and a business boom. Alw b1y this” month for passengers from Juneau - to Mrs. L. C. Gaddie as had, from the time Joe Juneau and Richard Harris as men, although the 1 the City of Seattle Erwin But | came over from Sitka in the eighties to do a little[be discrimination against girls in! o { ——— prospectiisy, numerous. vocations. b J. B. Bernhofer, who had| r‘ 2 | Juneau is a busy little place. We're not even| The stars seem to presate unusual 1 at the hospital for the pre- MODEKIN lowing down while youTe in town. Not that we|Ruthority for college women as|vious week, was convalescing and JETTE ren’t mighty glad to see you, but there’s lots of work | $Xecutives in many fields of govern- %50, reeqive Nishors | ET1QU E ment service, Chemists will be in zov i % to do here. And we're doing it demand. United States Marshal| W N e . e Girls who have vision and m who had been in Ju-| By Roberta Lot | An Unconquered Viennese chanical ability should train for eviou left on ' e o5 k < ground service at airports and for Seattle for home in 3 New York Times) places in factories where there will Nay | Q. Isit well 1or a person to form | Word from Paris that Fritz Kreisler has become be urgent need of trained hand —_— sudden friendships, with people that a citizen carries one somehow, more than twenty [#5 well as trained mind R. E. Douglas, manager of the Tee one has known but a very short ———_|vears, to the days before an artist’s nationality be- [ Astr s abroad announce that Harbor Pack Company, arrived | tjme? came of great importance. Mr. Kreisler's personality | the horoscope of Mussolini contair far better to procced WELCOME ROTARY s well as his violin playing had won him the affec- jmore promise of lasting power than tiously, until one is betier tion of a large American public long before 1914. In | horoscope of Hitler, For both | M ein and Mi ¥ hefore formir real oo ol that year the old Austrian Government called him to [ dictators evil omens are argr ey jentertained a few ). An . avs Jur 5.3 & bt "", i 1 as captain in a line regime a strange em-| The first quarter of I it the Ro: tudio. b equally n friend homes in W, ldaho; B Columbia | 1ovment for a sensitive musician, A bullet fr a time most unfortunat and a slow enemy and Ala 200 men and women Who | hjm Jeaving him with a limp but not impairing rman Fuchrer. In the con A tea~was given by Mrs. Willis E nne » make are hor presence e they marvelous fingers. When we entered the World W ummer Saturn will be s v and Mrs. H. J. Fisher at the b L WO attend t e of Rotary District he was on tour in this country. It hard for any |on the Chancellor E Mar ne of Mrs. Nowell n i 101 ne to think of being at war with Fritz Kreisler, but | Will be a square on his Nadir. The 2 nta ' for a time he played for us no more portents will be followed by other Weather: highest, 48; lowest, 41; t houl¢ b It would have been pleasant if our “war” with |that are threatening present proverbiall xtended by Alas Mr. Kreisler could Bave been ended by his becoming | Persons whose birthdate it is have 7 g nt W d a mar to those w stay ¢ under the midnight |an American citizen. He has done the next best thing | the augury of a year of activity that | g I atoat t Tir . sun. The welcome is warr of the things by taking out naturalization papers in another coun- |leads to success. Finan matter ?JR)-' flD 'fil(}o TG A. The womar right i 3 e clubs, stand; e happily praises as “a s hold in which |should improve for both men 2 1 ideas whict up human dignity k for the 1'ONOT, liberty and love o : His American public will want him to know ¢ such ideas will never be banner of which 180,000 End thtowe SEall Dok ehisel tor. cities and towns render him nce. In a his homeland is In its name a vast what it always was, for, whenever and.wherever he s performed, blays, there is the Vienna of vouth, unconquereg of its and immortal large. R R R R AT S hos- Department of (nmpleh- Embarrassment ployed mer 1 i juven employment bureaus a avenues of cor “‘x ;\): .l X i ; ; 1€ ievelopme n he porate service that organized on | New ¢ a territorial ba; ks v tananbey e e Ui fcie In the int sphere their aim is the pro- now seven years old, one of whom was take motion of goodwill, a quality which sadly needs foster- after birth and given the results of the ing'in a world “arming for peace.” Rotary, built with ideas about child condition at Tegard to, but without division for, race, tongue or study clinic. creed, provides a platform on which every member The other g can make contact with his fellows in an atmosphere “""‘l‘["‘}f‘,_"k‘:‘, ot Py of @mity. Such an inflilence, illustrated by the great (oo ) ol ik conferences of the movement and by the polyglot clubs, onjy little better than aver: is steadily, if slowly, leavening the lump of inter- The unscientific twin s “perfe marks national relations by deepening the understanding of, | school, is quite an athlete and bosses his and sympathy with, the problems and difficulties, the brother around. ideals and ideas, of those who, a generation ago, were We know, ha-ha, that this d prove anything, ho-ho-ho, that you need more evidence than settle the argument, ha-ha-ha, but, anyway when we think of those serious-minded ho-ho-ho! We'll have to stop, this is summarily dismissed as “foreigners.” From the ap- ")"'\. o preciation of the personality of the other man arises most readily the understanding of his point of view; and transition from that stage to the appreciation of national aspirations and characteristics is easy. Yes, Rotary has a great contribution to make to the cause of peace; it has given its quota already, but the greater gift has still to come as its influence widens. A news dispatch said when Benito Mus away for a rest a few days ago, that t Italy was expected to be quieter. We offer example of pure deductive reasoning that as an Cordell Hull .says that the world is too small for powers enslaving others, We look for the Nazi pre to deny that Hitler has territorial aspirations in outer space, however. Important as are Rotary's corporate activities, its greatest contribution is individual in plan and execu- tiom. Its ideal connotes personal action and the policy of the movement is to foster that service through vo- cational and communal channels. Recruiting its members on a classification basis—roughly, one rep- resentative of each trade and profession within an allotted area usually but not always coincident with municipal boundaries—the club forms a cross-section of the business and professional life of the district. Its members are, therefore, in an advantageous posi- tion to spread the tenets which form the Rotary code, both by the variety of interests with which the weekly | meetings bring them in personal touch, and by the breadth of the occupational field which the club ter-| ritory comprehends. Social, labor and philanthropic questions thus are susceptible to an influence (and its practical translation) which is entirely dispropor-| tionate to its numerical strength. Along those lines would seem to lie Rota main road to the goal ofl service to the community, but the importance of team | ¢ fifth wi work muse not be, and indeed is not, overlooked. The | bombing of lrllum)up of the club, finding expression in corporate‘vr, BX-2? ] Fair Girls Guide World of Tomotrow Visitors In Connect and her husba to go for a smoke and she hasn’t seen him since. sumably he favored the brand that gives you a lift were on a train in 1921 he left her Pre- A riot started when a man won the annual hoop race at Wellesley College. be taken against interlopers in the carrying of the daisy chains. of grow equipped with motorized that may be all of up to be white The upshot wanting to tricycles. the youngsters wings. Dispatches Peiping that from : United States Embassy has handed Japanese officials | Martha report tten protest in American property two weeks against in China.” Form Two trim lines of lassies form a lane leading directly to the Trylon and Perisphere, the fair theme, as they undergo inspection at the New York World’s Fair, where they act as guides for visitors to the World of Tomorrow. tuation in i In New York City the street cleaners have been | 15 | | | | | | | | { icut a woman testified that when she |C Especial care probably will | women . . U e b ndustrious i fu € Akihir 3 T 2 3 1 L ubjects of T may be fo g1 AOCTEE R i kg Gt i omp and President of the Grand Igloo By A 1939 Pioneer A N 3y ! the Territ b y > W numb Juneau Visitors ing. 10 1800 5, " e resul A C . C Y M . \' £ ,’_‘ ":f re Complimented e ret : U. S upreme Court? For Mrs. W the avera altitude 3 }l“ (”I\ ; lution No. of t bove sea level? ighter, Mrs. Tke P. S polyandry? Al Dorsh. ¥ 1 “ : the \: to Robertson designate the presen 1 burgh? » e menn 2 T ¥ with 3. proximatel feet V\Vv 4 e of h ng more han 5 1 and at a tim r Ficken Lewis plans to il I)r\ll \ l I'SS()Nb sumn leave within ; o N visit during the summer t f,"' e * le Mrs. Dorsh \ trge - By W. L. Cai ien ch of | customer J b WANT The B. M. Behrends TO BUY Banle Juneau, Alaska ® COMMERCIAL and SAVINGS SE THE | “WwANT” Resources Over Two and One-Half Million Dollars ofessional Fraterral Socicties Gastineau Channel , “[%rec OTY : .—TDl——K‘. B. P. 0. ELKS mect : every Wednesday at 8 s. Kaser and p. m. Visiting brothers welcome. H. C. RED- Freeburger DENTISTS Plomgren Building PHONE 56 MAN, Exalted Ruler; M. H. SIDES, Secretary, B MOUNT JUNEAU LODGE NO. 142 "Juneau Melody House or home in SEny - < y promise the —— e e e . i 1‘ tes will be well entertained. 2y | e — a perhaps too early to set the w145 Often Misused: Do not say, HosPITAL NOTES | |exact date for the convention now.'ugyery one of them know it is Lo 4 but I am strongly inclined to acc true.” S Every one of them T - stion of No. 4 and fix the jyowe it s true.” | date for the 194 se fte ronounced aryngi- | Wally Rogers was admitted to St. in September, after the HP‘“" ,T\‘I‘:,:”" e : i s Hospital last n and is re- son 15 over. I : at, first and third i's as in it, second ing medical |from other igloos. i as in lie, principal accent on third| | SR b i - syllable. | Mrs. H. Conine, » had been I Often Misspelled: Welfare; one ursical patient at St. Ani's Hospl- ‘Aa"er Scotts 1. Well-being; two I's and hyphon tal, was dismissed last evening ited monyms: Racial, lineal, ances- witier e s ctsrargie! & “SANR Dmner Hosts .5 from medical supervision at St. Aun | Word Study: “Use a word thres | Fospital toda Mr. and Mrs. Walter P. Scot|limes and it is yours” Let us i | e iigh Adrgsmith {1y | Crease our vocabulary by mastering | Mrs. Richard Harris entered the 25 S0 CFURIE (R TENHE WO one word each day. Today’s word Government Hospital this morning | @10 Party T ome O Reconcile; to cause to be friendly lto receive medical attention Wesi N Street, honoring Mr.| oo «He was reconciled to his and Joe Willlams, Mr. and lyooie . PTrAR B L R S Mrs. sl Coke and Mr, and Mr i he | tention at the Government Hospital, | W- E. Cahill of whom are leav- Nelson w dismissed this |18 soon for vacation trips to Ci aerial | morning, fornia, ke Other guests during the eve- lat the Government Hospital, will Glenn Oakes, Jame Boyle and | leave for his home in Petersburg on Joe Campbell | the Mummnp Northland tomorrow. | - i T" GF] l - i IR'S BARBER SHOP D ELE R DR. IVE SAYS ARG Comfortable feet are the key to|Open for business at the old log happiness.” Valentine Building tion, 116 Seward St. Old and phone 648 adv. | %\ Second and fourth / \ Monday ©f each month @ in Scottish Rite Temple <\¢,v\ b(\gmnm" at 7:30 p. m, " SHAS, W. HAWKE | WORTH, Worshipful Master; | JAMES W. LEIVERS, Se(rrlar} | Dr.A.W. Stewart DENTIST | Hours 9 a.2. to 6 pm. | SEWARD BUILDING Office. Phone 469 |1 | [ —— \ \ | [ | | GuySmith Efiudson Whitiier CHIROPRACTOR | Drugless Physician fil4 oreTptes e ||| DI IGS Rooms Triangle £ | PHONE 667 SIS | PUROLA REMEDIES —— || PRESCRIPTIONS CARE- | "ULLY COMPOUNDED Dr. John H. Geyer ||| rouve DENTIST (| Front Street Next Coliseum ! 9--Valentine Bldg. | | PHONE 97—Tree Delivery | PHONE 762 b - to 6 pm. | DT T s - " DR.H.VANCE || OSTEOPATH and e 19 to 12; 30 by appointment. au Hotel Annex in St. Phone 177 | kiR “Tomorrow’s Styles Today" HOBERT SIMPSON, OPT. D. | Gra Los of. Optometr up:lm]xmn lua Ange les College \ nd ‘ | Glasses Fitted Lenses Ground | | 3 f " 1 e {' “The Rexall Stcre” Your Reliable ¥barmacists Butler-Mauro Tbe Chdl’ es W. Carter Moriuary | | Fourth and Franklin Sts, | PHONE | Have Your Eyes Examined by | |——+—————— Dr. Rae L. Carlson | . » ~ | o TETRIST 1 AT PTON | H D GRAVE Office Xudwig Nelson’s Jewelry | | | *The Clothing Man” | Store ne Green 331 | | L — . | | HOME OF HART SCHAFFNER & MARX CLOTHING Watch and Jewelry Repairing at very reasonable rates | PAUL BLOEDHORN S. FRANKLIN STREET | FINE | Gastineau Motor Service PHCONE 727 GENERAL AUTO REPAIRING 5 R HARRY RACE JUNO SAMPLE SHOP IN THE BARANOF HOTEL Telephone | ¥y e DRUGGIST ‘ e S RS “'léhe Squibh | CALL 642 Al TRIPLEX "Odorless’ | DRY CLEANERS | Pickup Delivery—'Sam the Tailor’ | “The Store for Men" ‘ SABIN'S | Front St—Triangle Bldg. L 'OFFICIAL MAPS OF JUNEAU—25¢ J B. Burford & Co. ‘Worn by GASTINEAU CAFE Doorstep Ts atisfied Customers i | Music and Electric Appliances (Next Irving’s Market) Front Street Phone 65 | LUNC! l"aON SPECIALTIES ALASKA FEDERAL SAVINGS & LOAN ASSN. Accounts Insured Up to $5,000 | P.O. Box 2718—Phone 3—Office i 11y Seward St., Juneau, Alaska | Mnfg. & Building Co., Ine. BINET WORK—GLASS PHONE 62 / COMMERCIAL AND SAVINGS ACCOUNTS CAPITAL—$50,000 SURPLUS—$100,000 2% PAID ON SAVINGS SAFE DEPOSIT BOXES 1 First National Bank | JEBEAU—-ALISEE &~ LA - WA ol