The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, May 25, 1927, Page 4

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S e o B q. 9 P ot \ln other Latin American countries. . due this year. 2w | be used immediately IHE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, " WEDNESDAY, MAY 25 i 7 . for retiring the Liberty De ety i — e —a'— adi | g Jiberty Bonds m it takes for a movie kiss, but [ Dally / ilfluh(l EmI)lr(_’. [that must be paid That would leave but $500,000,- } 1 we do know the camera would have ] ] . Qe R 3 {000 to be provided for by selling short time Treasury ALONG LIFE'S [Mr be gulcker'n Bgytaing:to. Fikariie Riicitods THN W. TROY - - - EDITOR AND MANAGER Certificates that might be paid from next year's allott-| ' DETOUR 1 '\‘\jlr "“"hm“‘ “‘”«t’l:]"hlm‘n‘m“ Elves his | PROFESSIONAL Fraternagvbacnetwg b+ ) e 2 ¢ rus g O o work - FERULER | iSRGy ment for debt reduction—unless there heé another| | " 4 ) ! i ; ; P e : | 1y SAM HIL in the morning i ka. & : > the debt-reducing allottment in the Budget. The No Change in Them | make angels weep is a girl whose | o} m 2 e S £ TSRS ~«!taster the National delit: & Sentelisn the it Inlkedey| TIINE A4V We'rg’ Jying mofe -for|166s leok almost a4 . thin as ‘the » A Byl B. P. 0. ELX Entered In th» Post Office 1n Juneau as Second Class there will be | everything, | stockings she is wearing | . P. 0. ELKS matter. there ‘will 'be to pay tuiii. fok; to dIARRE - dates |” The beauty parlors are doing such Drs. Kaser & FNCbm'gcr ! | WUBSCRIPTION RATES. | ederalship’s cargo was checked at Van- cheup there is just about as little home- oldstein idg. T Deilvered by crrrie in Juneau Douglas, Treadwell and couver it was discovered that there was a ehrinkage As ever, are cheapskates. made beauty these days as there| PHONE 56 GREO. B. RICE, Bl SO e Tollowing. rites of only 40 cases instead of the 2,000 cases that was e e R T h o, T it N A M. Sions, e On> year, in adva x months, in advance, 86.00: reported. It s’ said that fb wad: the report that| SECsrvations cEgaest Inhabitant | 0N it i b S, month, in advan 3 b 650 casba had been TaMbE LT port that| “qpa gld-fashioned parents who used E:“‘"‘I%"‘\I‘“f";_j“"*l”fi' ”"" e Visitne Broth Rt ) 1 goiplty nolfty | 28 o ‘luu hat caused the ship tolto sit up and wait for their children Sion that he hes © 1St of the, e Famice " - 1w Tusine e o in the des yeturn to Vancouver that the cargo might be un-|to get home now have children whe divorce lawyers und a schedule ol 3 : O melephone for E¢ nd T s Oftices, 374 {loaded and checked. |go to bed when their children” go ou: 1ow much alimohy she thinks her Dr. Charles P. Jenne Co-Ordinate Eodies vh # ki - s, o e 5 . St A e S and get up when they come home, |King of her heart will be able to DENTIST of Freemasonry MENBER OF A Gradusity Jundan i) fapliR . ToREikiuGE b chal - " 1;:‘.|]\|“'.~\I‘”‘m':ntjw',I{ . badly Bouigah Jver, The Associuted Press fs ey the use for : ! ; : bt Ananias Club A ¢ ogets any more badly| | Rooms 8 and I Valeatine Bldg Regular meetines S uBligation, of dil news % US® for | clean-up campaign. But there s a lot of work yet| the kid, “I don't want|foolcd than the girl who thinks a Telephons 176 second Friday emci Rt iby Ty T local news|to be done along that line and. the entiuslism ought 11 run your errand for|zood-looking man will make an ideal month at 7:30 p. m. o bt o not to be permitted to die. just a penny.” ””l'““!”’ i thi N = g K § oL “,, o 'I",. s i { there is anything a man hates 3 1 N o \WEE 9 ARANTEEL ) BE LARGER ——— —_— e ‘ n lis ing i i " _—— e — AL N R ATRR PUBLICATION gl We Know a Lot'a Men Who Better WOIse than listening to his wife talk- | g——-————————4§ i NY 0 R | 4 The weatherman will not be as popular as we Investigiite 'Em ing crossly to him it is listening Dr. A. W. Stewart LOYAL ORDER OF would like for him to be until he begins making| C. H. Longman sends us a copy 0 his daughter talki mushy to 5 o R MOOSE his rain earlier in the week and glves us sunshine|0f the lotterhead of the “ASBESTOs hey sweede over L Y DENTIST Juneai Lodge No. 700 on Saturday afternoons and Sundays | BURIAL CASKET CO.” of Louisville,| Tl verson [er (00t ot Cah SR ey Aa sprety,s Mardig | . B mfil he Vhl'lll»w it ;u;,g s very subtle b ! poio A |”|'Iu (R “H'" ;. SEWARD BUILDING ht. 8 o'cloek, Moose ) ] appealing advertising Nodingr s P oo pRnaee " « . A i 3 3 3 qr " | (S | Wow! |wants to he'll have to put up the BRI . el > singsae A - | (New York World.) “ Mrs. Catty: “They are beneath m (¥ of oll new clothes to fit her Sty s iNNRe | NI ~|MOUNT JUNEAU LO | = |""As far as the girls are concerned, | ® | Dr. Butler in his Baltimore speech instanced a "OHC" ¥, © look:“from the skin out” isn't as far as it ¥ RaRaite [“nullification” of the Constitution which is not mere-| M Sar Kosmg Ten they 0N b o0 Dr. W. J. Pige 2 towr iz 1y tolerated but supported hy the drys, and yet “r;.,.‘),;"”““ L R MO | Nobody but a woman would tackla! - TETaiTLs B nth SR |might shake the very foundation of our Federal| the job of trying to impress her] i i il {administration. Congress has persistenly efused to, o, L3St Winter Sty With Us \triends with her husband’s greatness Office—Second and Main Master. | make a Congressional reapportionment. Dy .m-m\md“,“““‘_;I’,',“h“I,:I’_"; i tng “lwhen she has just come from ex-| Telephone 18 Secru- [nave apotted this Tolatton of Artlols"1..Hection 3,/0¢ it 1a Hable o/ b6 used up: befors|VICSAIE her (nfinite scord for Wim (@ ——————""> B v [because reapportionment would increase the urban!pext winter comes. for heing tha most infinitesimal e Order of | representation. Yet reapportionment also affects the g thing on earth e el e EASTERN STAR e | Electoral College, wherein each State has as many| There Ought'a Be a Law z £ Dr. H. Vance Soconal andy Roprth® T NULLIEICATION NOW AND IN EMERSON'S votes as it has members of Congress. If the Presi-| Guy P. Leaviit, of ML Airy, writes | Daily Sentence Sermon Osteopath — 201 Goldsteln Ridg. danys of each month, at TIME | dential battle in 19 were close, the popular w|II‘||li” the name of the dining car n“‘;'”””"\’:.', n.\.: a \‘y..'\l.y»r -Imlv::n; l1|m’|rs' 10 to 12; 1 to 5; TN O S S . e e f i) sl i h aftar arve i o on a|by o are standing around 0 8 or by appointment 3 LIAMS, Warth ; |might be defeated by the action of Electors who rep-{ Wil "‘_,")"w’f:“’\‘,f:" e o] waiting for her. Lileaneiid:. Auteuantls ANCHIGIAR 2 Matron, " ALICH BROWS Most of the able adherents of Prohibition have|Tesent population as it was in 1910, not in 1920. GECHL e s T 4 2 Phonzs: Office, 1®; Rexidence Secretary. B0l to: argus about the merlt of Maving it i fhe|there MiEHt be ;& jeanteafed . elagklon, s wlth oorisbsl S 4 o T L B News of the Names Ciub SEGinean s # 1GHTS OF L oh i connne Didir tontentinna in- favor ot LISNces a8 unbROPEAELAR A814 [ The public called him| Dr. W. K. Fast practices In Atchi o ML T T e | Dr. Butle’s point illustrates the amount of| AoveE S son, Kan,, but A. G. hastens to inform COLUMBUS ts enforcement to discussing the evils of nullification. fypkum that is spoken about “nullification.” Whin! Rut from that viee you broke us— |l the K doesn’t stund for Killem, |#———— I e o R Even Senator Borah declines to face divect questions|the word is used by Semator Willis or Mr. Wayne Now listen, please, don't name him for AR G S Dr. Geo. L. Barton L 7:0 p.om. Tran- Aocerniug the advisalMity of placing ‘“command:|Whealer they -are thinking only af,. the ' peclons| Your Pullnsn cars—youwll, choke| BARBER SHOPS GLOSED CHIROPRACTOR Hellenthal Bldg. BTl e ments” in the fundamental law, which is intended Eighteenth Amendment. It is because nullification us!!! i . Office Horrs 10 to 12; 8 to 6; 7 m! Fifth Strect. EDW. M. MCINTYE | ; | MEMORIAL, DAY fes ( i TYRP O to be the basis of a government that is supposed to|theatens that single part of the Constitution that| & »{ é o and by “'813’.';%'8'5:‘:51.5'"“"" 269 K. M. eeretary. i ' reZAT i Fror. The a , T roo! noug . Ty place and replace commandments in the statutes from they regard it with horror. They forget that mullll-j o, ot : 8 o avold a long wait on Satur I8 not the practice of Medicine, time to time in response to the mutations of public|fication s an accapted part of the process wllirhil,"“,h"\,\)d_l,: e e e T o e % a1 ahips. Wil b6 Gloeed Burgory’ mat’ Guiacpethy. AUMLAQE", PIONEERS OF 5 S : makes the unwritten portion of our Constitution Y M® I wears he dld notf o days., Sunday and Monday, May |®— — - - ALASKA, Igloo No. 8. sentiment, but thunders against the dangers of nul- : ol in over you intentionally?” d ay, = % Meeting every second Friday ot lific o4 th 3 TR S L R . |almost as important as the written portion The | anded the judge who was hearing 30th, get your work done as early | g— ¥ PSSl R i ST 1) ENS B it | fication. On the other hand scores of Strong WEN |j,ung of the authors of the Fourteenth and Fifteenth '(he guit for damages. tin the week as possible, All shops sach; magih A1 § o'cinel. B Jik SRS among the intelligentsia and others, including Presi-| amonaments has long been nullified. The intent of| “Because,” growled the victim, “if|open Saturday until 8 o’clock. adv Helene W. L. Albrecht ;:;nl r«;roxlnnvm At Moos. Hall dent Emeritus Hadley of Yale, Henry L. Mencken,|articte II. and of the Twelfth Amendment dealing a man lies about one thing he willlg z Wi syvatie: w PHYSICAL THERAPIST g fdna Radonich, President; Clarence Darrow, and scores of newspapers, have ac-|with the choice of a President, has long beenjabout another. He told me his car| | pobart Simpson, Opt.D. | Bdiow T T Mi, Mingle Hurley,) SSHIVENFE. cepted that fssue, and are defending nullification as|buried under a totally unforescen method of election.|was a light uix and believe me, 1 am | | o< Simpson, Opt.D. W o —— — . R i 6t rogveasive development: | Mshoken, in|ArticleiIV,, requiving the Uslivety of Hisitives tromiere to tIm RIS e wae, | st Los iageine: hollege ) o} P)one—Offica: 423, undisguised glee, declares that the rediscovery of nul-|labor, was nullified decades before the Civil War, [nothing light about ‘it of Optometry and Opthalmelogy || g .. i kNS | Tue Junnao LAUNDRY | lification is the sole blessing that has come out of} Other parts of A |f_(:’f‘::"":r’““““““‘,:,“:‘m""f:':”_lfl'i"“”‘; Passing Observation | Glasses Fitted ! Franklin Btrec ; between Front Prohibition R ‘W)"' ok R 3 ; l‘h-ivm‘:- hasn't yet hlwn u|.|o|'_u ex-| | Lenses Ground f [ 3 " &nd Second Streets Thi it B A Apine i B Ol A ain why a woman who can’t hit the < While nullification fs a dangerous doctrine toi" Wik “ie rys cry out against nullifeation AR s S . DR. ANNA BROWN KEARSLEY PHONE 259 practice or preach, we have always had it with its|{pe Eighteenth Amendment they are trying to pro-|stone can hit every telephone pole | e | e Physician and Surgeon | good and i1l with us, and wost of the time it has|tect the ome part of the Constitution which is for-|in sight when she drives and neverj, V"“’"”;“ Optical Department | St . 4 been an issue for heated discussion. And, strangeleign to its true purposes. All the rest of the in- fail to make a bulls eve when she | . L. DOUGLASS | o ey el o e el 12 £ e ihoots’ ‘at -her: hikband | OPTICIAN and OPTOMETRIST stein Buiding,-Phone 582 L] as it might seem, it has been opposed or supported|strument is organic law. This one addendum is a|®i¢ Ress ' u g { Room 16, Valentine Bldg. ! | % Iy the same school of political thought and the same mere piece of municipal legislation, whose VEWUW| b\ Ajike As Peas in a Pod| | Hours 9 a F o th e o ;nd‘ [ -a| | RELIABLE TRANSFER sections of the country to meet chamging conditions!|place is the statute books. If Senator Borah W”lll-w met most every Kimd of folks, | by Appointment | Phone 149 Res. 148 Be fian it ‘las ‘simply ‘been:'s iMmatter of whoss]100K" back-he will fAud that his riipetied colleague | "y, "go I never yet, alack! ! |01 papers tor sale at The Dmpire. | | COURTESY and GOOD SERVICE ) - rly |Senator La Follette was emphatic in denouncing it8/yjaye met a single plumber who Z < Our Motto i o8 pores. % intrusion into the Constituion. | For semething didn’t need to go " The recent publication of the *“Heart of Emer- AT o | back! - » son's Journals” for popular clrculation and its se ) { sV [ Tue Cuas W. CARTER MORTUARY lection in March as the book of the month for The Resurrection Men. What the Heck Is That? a0 i i 8 i A o ey country-wide club of book readers has led to the| — “Step-n Corsets,’ from an ad. | The Last Service Is the Greatest Tribute BurTerick PATTERNS discovery that Ralph Waldo Emerson was a stout| ; (Manchester Guardian.) ARG e R Corner 4th and Franklin St. Phone 136 BLANK BOOKS Cnullificationtst.” In 1851, twenty years after Gen.| A faint—but very faint—posaibility’ that iherél .. .. "4y of progress and kitch- Sheaffer and Waterman Pens o ey Yoo er. nuili- 13 @ poem in Shakespeare's handwriting in the tomb) 0 [, Ly on vickiancind Miiohs Loy R. P i Jacksan made South Carolina recede from her nu of Edmund Spenser has produced a suggestion u,m"“(“f‘f‘ 3P Cra ‘”"“" h }’“ e —— e e o . P. NELSON’S fication of the tariff laws and ten s hefore that s f the tin cans needs a heap bigger s iy ¥ t [the tomb should be opened in order to look for it. o ..y the man who collects the [ i Statlonery Store State seceded from the Union, Emerson, discussing|mpis is quite in the revived tradition, for there seems|guiy o PREPARE Yol ’RSEI F o the Fugitive Slave Law, declared | with some people to be a new fury for enterprises| Life also must be easier for the 4 e We shall never feel well again until of this kind. There were some grim enough examples dressmakers these days, for they t t .t t that destestible law is nullified in Mas lof grave-raking in the eighteenth century and a little now can make a dress with aboui S ar Wl h A Am chusetts and until the Government is |later, when relics of the eminent were handled witl¥jone fiftieth the stitches it used to n oun RANCE assured once for all that it cannot and conspicuous disrespect, but after that public opinion unfi ;::r (Iaveul more Ifrr'tmem;l“r‘(;ss.m THERE IS NOTHING DISAGREEABLE ABOUT P » executed he ave a i zal o o o sity. usband wouldn e | thall mot b executed here. All I have and |began to set against such forms of curlosity. Nowl A husban woultB? RO T STARTING A BANK ACCOUNT Allen Shattuck, Inec. all T can do shall be given and done in op- there appears to be a marked reaction in favor of position to the exccution of the law. | these gruesome exploits, so that it is not very long But that is not all. The Rev. Mr. Emerson,|ago since some people were urging that Shakespeare often then and since extollud as America's greatest himself should be disinterred in order that an exam, gcholar and intellect, speaking of Daniel Webster, | ination of the skull (if available) might settle for! ever — or the next few days — the disputed point| whether its owner had enough intelligence attributed to him. This pleasantry has fortunately fallen flat, as did the proposal to dig up General Oglethorpe trom his Essex resting-place and transport what could: be found of him to the quadrangle of an American university in the Georgia which he founded. With the remains of the Princess Pocahontas the zealots were, in a way, more successful; at least they got permis- who had urged that the Pugitive Slave Law be given the support that a law enacted and held to be valid under the Constitution, said: The world liberty in the mouth Webster sounds like the word love mouth of a courtezan And this for the great was due of Mr. in the Rufus Choate: Mr. “hoate, whose talent cvonsists in a fine choice of words which he can hang sion to look for them in the London clay, and were indiscriminately on any oifender, has pushed duly phoographer while engaged in their fruitless the privilege of his profession so far as to task. It is quite clear that some people would ran- ask, “What would the Puritans of 1620 say | sack the grave of the author of the ‘‘Faerie Queene" to the trashy sentimentalism of modern re- without the slighest hesitation it only they could formers?" receive permission to do so. There are also a great And for Edward Everett: many other people who are much better pleased at Mr. Everett, a man supposed to be aware the withholding of that permission. of his own meaning, advises pathetically a reverence for the Union * * * Union is a dele ble thing, and so is wealth, and so is life, but they all cost too much if they cost Cracked Ice. (Seattle Post-Intelligencer.) “Breaking the ice” didn't disturb Edward Kehoe of Fairbanks, Alaska. Prior to last Saturday Ed collected garbage. Because the waters of the Tanana River broke the ice and rang an electric bell on shore at 5:42 a. m. honor. NI(‘;\!(A(H'.»\:;J iNTEl!\'E TION AS A PRECEDE? The success of President Coolidge's intervention gd is richer by $35,000—the amount of the annual in Nicaragua -will -make it difficult for Americans|ice pool, one of Alaska’s most spectacular spring to find it in their hearts to criticise their Govern- displays. ment hereafter if it should make it a rule that Latin If the jam had gone out at any other time Ed would still be collecting garbage. Maybe he 1s, any- American statesmen must submit their claims and| WOUIC B 00 o8 S0t have to. aspirations to the Presidency -to the people at an o 3 election where citizens might vote without military Pollcs liave begun to drive the bid el out ‘ot interference. Of cour this country has extra-|Chicago, we are told.. It the work 1s diligently ordinary concern in Nicaragua and Panama on ac-|kept up Chicago will not be able to blow about a count of her interest in the Panama Canal and thejgain in population for a long, long time.—(Milwaukee prospective Nicaraguan Canal. But we have interest|Journal.) n all the American countries and we have responsi- o RN N € A ) 0 1n. & ’ The Los Angeles has achieved a new triumph for bilities, for xh;‘ rmnux;n}e:\'?‘ll lhul;\;nr‘l!lll\mr( to us B dirigible, it Micoseddn tn Tnlihbin Inud nl Kbter to Jead in affairs of the Western Hemlsphere. only 16 hours maneuvering.—(New York Sun.) However, the Government has not set up its course in Nicaragua as a precedent for future action “Find gangland victim with his tongue cut out” is the headline of a story that comes not from the Orient but from Chicago.— (Buffalo Courier and Ex- press.) SUGGESTION TO MR. MELLLON. About $1,700,000,000 of Liberty Bonds will fall The Budget allows nearly $700,000,- 000 to apply on their payment. Now since the President and Mr. Mellon were so good as to accept The Empire’s adyice last fall about using the sur- Before commenting further on the Chinese we should like to know definitely whether there are 300,000,000 of them or 400,000,000. (St. Louis Globe-Democrat.) Senator Borah is studying the Spanish language. plus to reduce the National debt, we venture to sug-|And some folks can't quite make him out when | that the $500,000,000 surplus in the treasury he’s talking Ensnm—(ne- Molnes Register.) {Last publication Juze 8, 1927, , 1927. B ————— she'd only make them last as long as he does his clothes. We don’t know how many feet of It hundr NOTICE OF A¥PLCIATION FOR PATENT Serial No. 06350 In the United States'Land Office for the Juneau Land District at An- chorage, Alaska. In the Matter of the Application of J. M. DAVIS, of Juneau, Al- aska, for a Soldier's Additional Homestead. NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN That J. M. DAVIS, a citizen of the United| ——————" States, and resident of Juneau, Al- aska, has filed application serial No. 06350 in the United States Land Office at Anchorage, Alaska, for patent for a tract of land embraced in U. 8. Official ‘Survey No. 1565 situated on the east shore of Gas- tineau Channel, approximately four (4) miles northwest of the Town of Juneau, Alaska, in Latitude 58 deg. 20’ 10” N. and Longitude 134 deg. 29° W., and particularly described, as follows, to-wit: “Beginning at eorner No. 1 whence US.L.M. No. --4 bears N. 26 deg. 25° W. 26.88 chains distant; thence B. 19.09 chains to corner No. 2; thence S. 5.74 chaind to corner No. 3; thence by meanders along the line of A GREAT MANY PEOPLE think they should have a STARTING First National Bank Only Requires The Will To Act ed dollars before they can open a bank account $1.00 WILL DO IS THE SECRET OF ACCUMULATING THE OF JUNEAU The abundance of the harvest depends upon the seed falling on good ground. Care in saving part of your mean high tide of Gastineau i 1 Channel as follows: b snd placn.xg L (L) N 69 deg. 40" W. 2.2 them where they will chains \ - < 3 L (2) N. 82 deg. 8" W. 10.99 Nealdply contains the chains L3 N 73 deg 17 W. 2.22 — et seed of your future chains x4 . VDN 64 dor, 00 W. 203 financial success. As you ‘sow, so will you reap. chains : . (5.) N. 51 deg. 05' W. 1.95 Now is the fyme to save. chain WD (6.) N. 31 deg. 00° W. 0.57 (0] chalns to corner No. 1 the place of beginning, containing an area of 7.124 acres.” Any and all persons claiming ad- versely any of the above described land should file their adverse claims with the Register of the U. S. Land Office at Anchorage, Adaska, within the period of publication or thirty days thereafter or they will be The barred by the proyisions of the statute. \ Dated at Anc , Alaska, this 14th day of March, 1927. J. LINDLEY GREEN, First publication April 32, 1927. ne Dollar or More Will Open ¢ Savings Account B. M. Behrends Bank OLDEST BANK IN ALASKA —— e ,u FIRE Property Loss Business Inteituption Use and Occupancy MARINE Ca Hulls Registered Mail AUTOMOBILE Fire and Transportation Collision Property Damage Liabilit; CASUALT 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 THE CLUB LUNCH KkOOM ) Open 6 a. m. to 2 a. m. Daily PETE JELICH I Pruprietor FREE d Employment It looki or Tk for s fob, eal o PETE HAMMER papers for sale at m

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