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L 3 Dally Ala.sLu Em pu:é JOEN W. TROY - - - EDITOR AND MANAGER —;Nl every ev ¥ excopt Sunday I»y the EMPIR nwrl\n. COMPANY ut Second and Main Streets, Jun J Entered in th: Post Office 1 matter. eau as Second Class SBUBSCRIPTION RATES. Delivered by carrier in Jun Douglas, Thane for §125 per month. By wafl, postage 1| t the following rates: One year, in advance, § x months, in advance, $5.00; eme inouth, In edvance, $1.% Bubscribers will ¢ the Busincss Office of any failur Hvery of thelr papers ‘ Treadwell and i1l promptly ify in the de- 74, ts exclusively entitled to the ews dispatches credited to it this paper aid also the local news ED TO BE LARGER ION GUARANTEE PUBLICATION T ¥ OTHER ALASKA CIFCULA THAN TH DELEGATE SUTHERLAND RAPS LABOR UNIONS. In the course of his support of the proposal to place a Wigh tax on non-resident fishermen in Alaska Delegate Sutherland made it plain that he hasn't much us> for Unions in the United Delegate declared speect in Labor States. Early in his peech, the that “the men who live in Bristol Bay country and livelihood are simply at the pursue fishing for a merey of the FRishermen's Union of those cities Francisco] and of the packing after the $100 on [Astoria and San companies of Alaska. Later in his specch, Delegate had urg each d a special tax of (] non-resident herman coming to Alaska for the i bt season, Mr. Lomen asked frit Isn’t it a basic rule among [Labor] i Union that recipro demands that labor E is one State will 1ot tax lahor another ; State for entering into competition; and would such tux az this meet with the % f the Lahor Unlons of the United Mr. Sutherland replied | 1 don’t think so; no! | After further remarks, still disct the Lahor Unions of the country, Mr. Sutherland suid | | Well T tiink the Labor Unions are fust fish as the cannerymen There is no about (hat. 1 am not here to ns ¢ ¢ as question speak for Labor Uni The International amen’s Union of America ; and the Alaska Pishermen's Union took strong '; ground against the proposed tax on ‘non-resident 11 fishermen for which Mr therland was arguing. § The Seamen’s Union, speaking for 4,000 members, fi8 ineluding marinc firemen, oilers, sailors, cooks, wait- b ers and others, as well as fishermen, who would be' affected, and the Alaska Iishermen’s Union, speak-| 5 ing for 3,000 members, pr stested against the proposed, ! taxation in lengthy telegrams. i Both the International Seanien's Union of A and the Alaska Fishermeu's Union are associated with the American Federation of Labor, one of the A consructive forces in the industrizl life of the 3 Nation. The American Federation of Labor is not radical but stands for development and progress. Mr. Sutherland had attacked the cannerymen for u)usuI-1 their own interests and then declared| Unions are just as selfish as the! fssue waus unmistakenly clearly ering only that the “Labor cannerymen.” The drawn WHAT MIGHT HAVE BEEN. A professor has arrived at the conclusion that| i it Franklin, Jefferson, Lincoln, Cleveland and other men who were great in their day were living now, and young, they would be kicked out of college for £ one reason or connected with their fine 3 minds. If that is would think that Y the colleges would now be kicking out the live-wires and earnest thinkers instead of the dull ones and ¥ the loafers. It is not likely that all those who are attending college are without genius, and the record " seems to be that the ablest of them are sticking. . It is possible that if Franklin and Jackson and Lincoln and Cleveland, and possiblye Jefferson, had gone through a present day college the finished product would have heen different and not so valuable . to the country. But there is no reason to suspect 3 that any of them would not have made brilliant college records. another correct, one PRESIDENT TAK RIGHT COURS President Coolidge has at last taken the advice of The Empire and told those self-styled ‘‘Liberals” in Niacargua to quit fighting or the United States would intervene, and, apparently, the war is over. The American Government had concluded that Diaz was to remain as President until his successor could be chosen at an election and the insurrectionists had said that they would under no cirtumstances fight the United States. Under the circumstances, the quick and humane. way to settle the proposition was for the United States to do just what President Coolidge, throngh Mr. Stimson, has done. i l AB()R QHORTAGE ‘!7 Secretary Jlardine hn.~ sounded an alarm because b of the exodus of workers from the farms. He says the farm population in the United States last year decreased by 649,000 as a resnlt of the movement | from the flelds to the citics. This is the largest L movement of that kind since 1920, he says, but he 2 ) adds that farm desertion for factory work has been . continuous. He fears a shortuge of farm hands this . year. . This condition has been urged as indicating that " the farmers ought to have reliet so that they might by _be able to compete with the Industries in the city . for the labor of the country. © ' However, the real cause of the movement from in the | particularly interested in the lably have [vears ago at New ¥ lofficial, \sey of Pr ipresent are made for the student with a good memory jand a (type of mind. [number of shortage of labor & industries are getting more; ! 'l than their share of the labor that we have because| | ALONG LIFE’S I th | the farms is probably due to a country. The in the competition they offer better prices for it DETOUR I it If the farmers| than the farmers can afford to pay ¢ Ty SAM should be aided by the Government so they wluhl.‘ Vs 2 tic " outbid the industries for the lahor the result would|,, fa s e S S | You'll Get Real “Kick” Out'a That of e a sh g 4 & |Say, listen fellers, you'll be happier a This would seem to suggest that the only remedy| gituation would be to permit more enough labor to both agriculture than you'd be If you got back that wine and haer It when Chest workers call on yon you'll say, “Sure boys, I'll double what I gave last year.”| to meet the immigration so there would be reasonable demands of supply the and the manufacturing industry. That would induce s h bhoth increased comsumption and increased production. ; fea e FUSTS Observations of Oidest Inhabitant ., o Times and customs have changerl A scientific investigator has come to the 80! to announce that if given the eat 56 times his weight in There are a lot of people in frontiput the Good Samaritan is still what chance a fish willlhe was 2,000 years ago—show you" T, singlajone by helping those who have faller by the way. mosquitoes in a Alaska and| season {sewhere i » ish ¢ : Az itrod |planning how their salaries and va e (elsewhere who will vote to give the fish a chance. i 3 The Ananias Club 1:‘:.””“”!!”]“‘“ b6 apant: Telephore 176 W o R IR BT 7 \\e‘ll. V\ul'l!’ exi med the Ve "' ywould be a great relief to some . . Detroit ig making a fight for the Democratic|eran Chest Worker, “people this year jyaq whose hushands kick about Convention next year. The hotel men are!®“em Lo have run out of alibis, for I yoiyihing and ahowt all the time | B campaign. They wuh-":f?.‘J,"',i('...li|"’.'n,.fii;"'.’,“,? e long session threelgiving.” K i ) et | Just as Much Cause | succeeded so well in| Blinks: “I should think the wifs their minds on that lthe other kind of high flyer does, The Great Hoover Mystery. about her husband.” | (New York Times.) For four days all Washington, official and un-, has been in a flutter over the question wlmu And fathers say it looks like that the President could have meant in his remarks about| ™ yw.p ot the met. Secretary Hoover last Friday. Nothing so portentous; paia has been seen the attitude of a ruler since the Mean Brute d when, if Napoleon turned a cold shoulder to; “\When he is courting her a man a foreign Ambassador, it was known to mean war.|thinks there ix no other woman like ® began Mrs. A helmet's now the style of hat That daughters get ! But Mr. Coolidge has now happily cleared up the lu-r Grouch. | mystery—which was never a mystery at all except butted in her Inl»nlmml, -|M as it seemed to indicate that the President had|if 2fter he is married he hus any ‘I: we for his fellow men he'll hope for once failed in caution and perfect tact. " He explains that Secretary Hoover's position is| 50 high and assured that no reference to him could| possibly be taken as a slight. This time Mr. Cool-| +pa said Clarence, “what is ol® idge does not permit his language to be quoted nervous breakdown, zny | directly, hut the correspondents are plainly given “It usually is, son, the shark’s in | (o understand by the White House “Spokesman”lerest people pay on borrowed trov. that nobody standsa higher than Mr. Hoover in the|ble” replicd his dad. President’s respect and affection. Although therej ) 5 3 » is no recalling ot last week's statement ithat :the| 'U® ® c"“w'-e:::‘" Y PR, el Secretary of Commerce would not be appointed| A xew York artist had to jom the! | Secretary of State should Mr. Kellogg resign, there!qiniers’ union before he was allowed | that nobody stands higher than Mr. Hoover in thelio decorate tne labby of a hotel. competent to fill any position in the Cabinet \v!n(l” Now what we wanna know is this, | g he might desire. Certainly no more than this could /will they mext be stopping flappers be asked of the Spokesman. He evidently took tojon the street to make 'em either heart the advies of the old revivalist hymn {show their union cards or wash the . what is it makes you moan? {paint oft their.maps? Say, what is it grieves you 1d let the worst be known ng will relieve you. I there isn't More Truth Than Poetry What's the Use! “l see that an English preacher cays girls with appetites are the best jto marry,” remarked the man who College and Genius. |reads. 7 bl | “Apple sauce! Also bunk!” growled | | (New York World.) the hu;’h;;ml nrl a ,';'.’";(’" r‘nnlu . "";\I ! n Lincoln, sa Prof. Walter L it tyoung fellow who thinks that kind| R el Walter L. Whittle-) T "end a lot of time in the kitchen | | rceton, probably would not have gone to] bocause she likes to eat will soon | | college today. In the first place, the cost would! yiil vl 0o gpend most of her tims | | have been prohibitive, and in the second place, “a jn Ler houdoir doing hes dafly dozen mind like Lincoln's would have outrun all bounds ana (aking stuff to kill the appetit: Abra THE DAILY . ALASKA EMPIRE, MONDAY, _____—-fl women going in for this hatless fad like a good many like a “majorit around home. The on a good many men spend Hours 9 a. m. to 9 p. m. | eir evenings somewhere else is b f E——m—— able. Dr. Charles P. Jenne faces is due to the fact they wives who think they are helpful by - » sling shot or And Think the Bill for It Is Same dangering life or LET Aimquist rress your Suit. Wi S M/\Y 9, 1927. D ———— DENTIBTS 1 and 3 Goldstein Bidg. PHONE 56 married man feals things but never The average use their e cha have been nt to the attic to make way for mething up-todate and uncomfort The married look *on some men's have DENTIST Rooms 8 and ? Valentine Bldg. the old fools would just include e bucket in the things they kick Dr. A. W. Stewart DENTIST Hours 9 a. m. to 6 p. m. SEWARD BUILDING News of the Names C'ub | Chris Necker was married in D | B T L S i Sl We are so used to the nude shade . at legs in black stockings now look ! 1ot i out 4E AP L they Fuoult PROFESSIONAL Fraternal Societies the girl was wearing a long skir'.| ] OF The hardest test for our imagina- | i . 0 1k trying 4o~ thiik of & hatchet.| ™ Gastineau Channel aced woman calling the little runt [ [] a husband who looks more like L) slave than_any Lincoln freed, her | | Drs, Kaser & Freeburger B. P. 0. ELKS Lord and Master.’ vt evenings at 8 o'clock Flks' Hall GEO. B. RICE, Exalted M. H. SIDES, Secreta Visiting Brothers welcome. ¥ Ruler Co-Ordinate Bodies of Freemasonry Scottish Rite Regular meetings second Friday each month at 7:30 p. m. Odd Felluws' Hall WALTER B. HEISEL, Secretary. LOYAL ORDER OF MOOSE Junea: Lodge No. 700 Meets every Monday aight, 8 o'clock, Moose R. H Hall. J. A. . J. Pigg I TRIkl A Any ‘hild found u other an airgun, weapon. en President Coolidge has troit last week—the bride’s nam Office Phone 469 Res. Phone 27¢| | Davis, Dictator; quelling war in Central America, why dces he unl‘::'“‘l:" sviator would, worry & lot abour oo faryvie Goosy. [} Stevens, Becretary. try his hand in Hlinois? L R ) S pcse LT try | Jinks: “Yes, sho probably worries FRE D & VR TR las much about him as the wife of| PARENTS TAKE NOTICE T—— —u|MOUNT JUNEAU LODGE NC. 147 A P L SR T ™ of '-m-h month ln 0Odd Fei- 1oy Hall, beginning at property, will be 17230 orclock Tdealt v th with verity, | Oftice—S8econd and Main EEIA(I(I\T" M ! J0ORGE A, GETCHEL! Telephone 18 adv. Chiet of Po R — P —_—————— " | Dr. H. Vance call and deliver. Phone 5 = — - m| | Osteopath — 201 Goldsteln Bldg. Service Transfer Co. | 17403 or by ‘appoin s FRMATER L1 Licensed ostecphatic phy: WILL HAUL SAW MILL WOOD Phon»s: Office, 167; AND COAL Gastineau Holul . il Office Phone 339 ) RS Residence Phone 3501 - 7 Dr. Geo. L. Barton t CHIROPRACTOR Hellenthal )ld% Office Hours 10 to 12; 3 to 6; 7 to §: and by appointment. Phone 269 Robert Simpson, Opt.D. Graduate Los Angeles College PRI st Lol gy L 0 el of Optometry and Opthalmology Surgery not Osteopathy. Glasses Fitted b e nea Lenses Ground B L ey A o . ]elvne W. L. Albrecht PHYSICAL THERAPIST i Medical Gymnastics. Massage B £ " - Jlectrielty Miss Caroline Todd | | [ 410 Goldstein Bldg. PIANO-—HARMONY P) tne—Offica: 423 ass and Private Instruc xth end Gold St. ion Phone 5703 DR. ANNA BROWN KEARSLEY Physician and Surgeon Y SO TR TSP TR A o Valentine’s Optical Department |. R. L. DOUGLASS | OPTICIAN and OPTOMETRIST | Rtoom 16, Valentine Bldg. | Hours 9 a. m. to 6 p. m. and | by Appointment | Oftice: 420 and 422 Gold-. steln Buiding, Phone 582 0ld papers tor sale at TlLe Lmpire (and been unwelcome at the average university.” and—reduce the weight. Grover Cleveland, who arrived at conclusions de — liberately, would have been too slow, the professor thinks, “to answer with the glibness demanded by educators today.” Jefferson and Franklin, he thinks,!a home of affluence is one where would have been dismissed because they “would not|father's evening clothes are not his have submitted to the restraint placed upon present-|business suit pressed up. day students.” And he summarizes his reflections| Sometimes a marricd man's idea of | by asserting that college entrance examinations at|S2fety zone Is-—company present. The girl most disappointed in love is not the one who files a §50,000 {breach of promise suit, but the tired 1 ing befora a sink full of whether this or that great \:"zsv“:fl:x";“ ‘e man would ‘have made MNis- mark - in the moderr We reckon no home is so perfect ollege, of course, is not new. It is a favoiite that the wife never has been called of buttressing an indictment of the supposed rub {upon to bawl out friend hub for ask ber-stainp quality of American education. But why|ing for a second helping when she doesn‘t somebody supply the diseussion with evi-|gave ‘the strict order “Family hold dence? If it is true that a first-rate man wonld|back” befora the company arrived be kicked out of the modern college, then a goodly ! As long as the millinery shops diy first-rate men must already - have been |Play those cute and expensive crea- kicked out of callege. Who .are they? - What .we tions there isn't any chance of the need is a complete kickedsout-of-college list. The| TAYPIC R names of Edgar Allen Poe, Jame§ McNeill Whistler NOTICE OF AFPLCIATION ) and Bugene O'Neill come to mind at once, as per- FOR P;ATENT fumery for the head of the ticket. We shall be glad| RSEAL N SEREE to publish any information by which the list éan|In the United States Land Office for be extended. ! | the Juneau Land District at An- i chorage, Alaska. In the Matter of of J. M. DAVIS, of Juneau, Al- aska, for a Soldier's Additional 3 Homestead. emphatic| NOTICE 1S HEREBY GIVEN That More or Less True The average family man's idea of “quick, ready-to-wear, served-hot-with-mustard” Speculation as to Too Much Governmenl by Emotion. the ' Application (Seattle Buslnens Chronicle.) Saturday Evening Post takes rather {time paying caustic respects to ru:limln who deal out selected facts and half truths, |aska, has filed application serial No. in an effort to contribute to the destructive criticism|063560 in the United States Land in which such indiviunals specialize. Office at Anchorage, Alaska, for It finds that the mind of the college professional,|Patent for a tract of land embraced in its remoteness from realities, is peculiarly sus-|in U. 8. Officlal Survey No. 1565 ceptible to propaganda of this kind. There is the|Situated on the east shore of Gas- type that favors downward revision of war debts,|tineau Channel, approximately four along the lines of European suggestion; and closely|(4) miles northwest of the Town of related is the type that finds fault with everything ‘;33";&‘; fi‘““' 1o Legate 58 deg: that has been done to remind Mexico of a sensel30. M. wnd mariEien dot ek of international decency. So' strong is the college|ag follows. to-vl:r?{' PR, Creons influence along theoretical lines, rather than prac- “Reginning at cormer No. 1 tical, that the graduate “must go back before he; whence U.S.L.M. No. .4 bears Imn go on.” There is a fallaey in the belief that N. 26 deg. 25° W. 26.88 chains the underdog is always right, as some self-appointed distant; thence E. 19.09 chains keepers of the national conscience would have the to corner No. 2; thence S. 5.74 country believe. chains to corner No. 8; thence The Post is everlastingly right in declaring that| Dby meanders along the line of America, while far from perfect, is far better and| mean high tide of Gastineau {sounder than its critics, both’ Buorpean and Ameri-| Channel as follows: lcan. The situation calls for a little less propaganda chl‘l‘fl: N. 69 deg. 40° W. 2.26 and a little more knowledge; a little more patriot- (2.) N. 82 deg. 68 W. 10.39 ism and a little less politics; a little more Ameri-{ ohaing canism and a little less radicalisi (3. N. 73 deg. 17 W. 2.22 N chains Gasoline companies engaged in a price-reducing (4) N. 64 deg. 00’ W. 3.03 contest can “fight it out on that line it it takes all| chains summer,” without causing anybody much grief.— (5.) N. 61 deg. 05° W. 1.95 (Seattle Times.) chains (6.) N. 31 deg. 00° W. 0.57 chains to corner No. 1 the place of beginning, containing an area of 7.124 acres.” Any and all persons claiming ad- . fversely any of the above described we're|land should file their adverse claims lookers.—|with the Register ot the U. S. Land Office at Anchorage, Alaska, within Several of our battleships and cruisers are at Shanghai, owing to the fact that no suitable harbor could be found at Herrin, Ill.—(Omaha Bee.) With television bearing down upon us hoping all wrong numbers will be good (Milwaukee Journal.) s the period of publication or thirty Mussolini says he is going ‘to live to be 100|d8yss thereafter or they will be years old. The man evidently thinks he has all|barred by the provisions of the statute. Dated at Anchorage, Aluh, this, Former Governor Lowden, of Illinois, has cn!'l“h gy _‘1” ENB‘U:‘;’I:MN his hat into the Presidential ring, but the ex-z 3 Register. the marksmen on his side.—(Toledo Blade.) Governor is a rich man and he can afford to waste!First publication April 2, 1927. a hat.— (Boston Globe.) Last. publication June 81 PREPARE YOURSELI' exception to government by emotion, at the samejj M, DAVIS, a citizen of the United pseudo-intellectual |States, and resident of Juneau, Al-| F=""""===rrerroerro Tue Cuas W. CARTER MORTUARY “The Last Service Is the Greatest Tribute” Corner 4th and Franklin St. Phone 136 Start With Any Amount THERE IS NOTHING DISAGREEABLE ABOUT STARTING A BANK ACCOUNT It Only Requires The Will To Act A GREAT MANY PEOPLE think they should have a hundred dollars before they can open a bank account $1.00 WILL DO STARTING IS THE SECRET OF ACCUMULATING THE First National Bank OF JUNEAU R THE SOWER The abundance of the harvest depends upon the seed falling on good ground. Care in saving part of your earnings and placing them where they will z5% multiply contains the : ; seed of your future financial success. As you sow, so will you reap. Now is the time to save. One Dollar or More Will Open a Savings Account The B. M. Behrends Bank OLpEST BANK IN ALASKA Order of EASTERN STAR Second and Fourth Tue; duys of euch month, &t LIAMS, by ALICE NROWS Matron. Secretary. KITIGHTS OF . Tra rs urged to ate Souncil Chambers, Fifth Strect. EDW. M. K. H. J. TURNE AUXILIARY, PIONEERS OF ALASKA, Igloo No. 6. Meeting every second Friday ot each month at 8 o’clock p m. Cards and refreshments. At Moos.c Hall Mrs. Edna Radonich, = President; Mes. Minnie Hurley, Secretary. » - [} | Tug Jusea Lavsory | | Franklin Stre:*, between Front and Second Streets l PHONE 339 L il e ey L = L4 RELIABLE TRANSFER Phone 149 Res. 148 COURTESY and GOOD SEIVXCE Our Motto . » = e ] D M B BN ] I’IAS’]ERIN(. | CEMENT WORK | | CONTRACTING | C. W. WRIGHT { _I’ITONE lS-l—_-‘ INSURANCE Allen Shattuck, Inc. FIRE Property Loss Bulfieu Interruption Use and Occupancy MARINE Cargo Hulls Registered Mail AUTOMOBILE Fire and Transportation Collision Property Damage Liabilit; CASUAL Compensation Public Liability Accident and Health LIFE All Forms ALLEN SHATTUCK,Inc. Insurance — Real Estate JAPANESE TOY SHOP H. B. MAKINO Front Street P. 0. Box 218 for Mail Orders — —— —a THE CLUB LUNCH | ROOM : I are ing for men, or{::kiufnrn b, call or : see PETE HAMMER - SR