Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, WEDNESDAY, JUNE 8 the restrictions ked Congress for all physi Association has s the Act the alcoholic LDI‘OB AND MANAGER Vntold the campaign amendment Volstead by removing upon use liquor by fans, the is causing worry to dispensers of Anti-Saloon | - funds. it QR e MPANY ui Secon - Some of our until all high tariff friends will never be whol- the United States the other countries | ly happy prohibitive ! world in tha Post Office in Juneau Second Class has a tariff and the trade in have | SUBSCRIPTION RATES free Delivered by ctrrier In Douglas, Thae for nrr month By metl, postige the following rates One year, {1 advance six mont in advance #sa month, In advar Bubwcribers will confe wvor i e |lusinees Office of any fallure Hiver: of their pupers Telephone for Editorial Treadwell and Juneau e the Chinese The leisurely In the one respect war beats the styla of They $6.00 Occidentals casualties and bull, hs are not so large fight dirt more like spend more time they will promptly notify or irregularity in the de- pawing a yearling tlying swimming the Eve and Business Offices, 374 n little while for! 1anLLC nel or going |doing it news | o 1 the At ‘nglish Chan body will probably like to a baseball game — across MUNMBER OF ASSOCIATED PRESS The Amsoclated | 11 rept blication of al uthe wise cred'ted publf ihed herein. e will be just it ely entitlec credite or be in this paper m ARANTEED TO AK OTHER PUBLIC \uu\ B frowowod dutlabaecs AC Sensible and Credible. (New York Times.) Roosevelt had come back from Dixie that the South is overwhelmingly in tavor of Governor Smith's nomination, his remarks could have been dismissed like those of the average | politician But Mr. Roosevelt, with his usual honesty and good sense, says simple that the Smith campaign! is making Southern friends, that many Southern leaders believe the Governor is the only possible winner, that Southern Democrats are like other Demo crats in that they want to win, and that the nom |ination of Governor Smith would not be followed by insurrection below the Ohio and the Potomac i This can readily be belieevd. It is ordinary _imon sense. It is the natural development of politics It springs directly from broadening knowledge of the fability, character and availability of New York Chief's Executive, It is a reasonable development of native American mind, following The Atlantic ly correspondence. It does not mean that the Gov- ernor is yet nominated, or will be, but that no considerable portion of the Southern mocracy will follow the wild asses of the party the deserts of dry third ticket if the Governor _should be nominated While in Georgia Mr. Roosevelt was at a dinn where hopeful mention was made of his own Presi- dential qualifications, mention quickly stified and dis- avowed by Mr. Roosevelt himself. In that incident account.i8 to be found, perhaps, the average Southern atti- N tude toward next year's nomination. 'Unquestionably 's evidence the South would prefer—if good sense prescribes the nomination of a New Yorker—that he be not wet, Catholic .and Tammany, al} three It would strike {out, if could, one of these descriptives. It expected to see the day when it would be voting for them all in one envelope. But here they all are in the person of a distinguished and meritorious | Democrat; it a fair political premise that, once the|nominated, he will be stronger before the {than any other Democrat; and to that set of facts,| Lumber Mills had | Y : 1 “"lor reasonable assurances, the South reacts as any gaanarios w'“”-sullmn of America would react. Despite all the taboos which Southern politic fans | Heflin have hung before the eyes of Dixie, des- preferances for a drier viewpoint and a |not unreasonable distrust of Tammany in national politics, the South honors a true Democrat, close to the people and respected by them. The South If Franklin with the statement an com A GRATIFYI that i SHOWING. the ts Mills num The circumstance Juneau Lumber 17 shooks estimates of the manufacture this Mr Rutherford produce 150,000 will exceed by ut of gratifying that per it winter will is box year ber estimated De Last shooks The hand box 192 now his company would 600,000 1927 boxes a in as with in compared orders are in Rutherford which Mr of more and for 702,000 made predicts| > for next now will number than 40 per cent a further increase year This of the important that the they situation not only on d Juneau inerea busine that has come this concern, but because it 1y pu all it Alaskans will their salmon packers ware not talking i that they It when they | pre- eant to chase that canneries declare in Alaska to supply it can pare the will have rket the packers can use, is fortunate of the Juneau to prepare to supply the line means needs they labor with ma for such products and a8 i8 that has Juneau in the circumstance management the enterprise their needs in one important | | | like pite THEY \I I, M \l\h 'EM honest The magazine, occeasionally weekly cur- mistakes the make of Time, They all rent numbr Bays: news Party sprang. “Al” Smith in his time and is a political descendant of these South- cratic community | erners, Queen, donned great King and of Wales, attended In 1897 the then Prince masquerade ball at Devonshire George V did not the death of Queen Victoria was Prince of Wales in 1897 until the death of his mother when he became King George V w Duke of York in 1897 when and Queen Mary, then Ducess of York, attended the great ball at Devonshire House. present and Princess costume and House a Trade Bdl"l‘l?r'd and World Credit. Prince of Wales until 1901 Edward VII| continued as such become in and (New York World.) The plea of Sir George Paish, a noted English economist mow visiting in this country, for a low- ering of the barriers on world trade so as to pre- vent a collapse of European credit comes at &n oppor- tune moment. France right now is preparing a gen- eral upward revision of its tariff duties; Germany he DRYS LOOK FOR SU ((ES\()R FOR M’ADOO The United States might also be added protection. for while the Coolidge Administration The Anti-Saloon League is just to« this group, of its time and expending large to circumvent the growing boom Smith for the Democratic Presidential nomination. The aceept- ance of the belief. that William G. McAdoo is fading| out of the picture, it ,indeed, he has mot already| fully determined not to be a candidate for ination, se blow to their Dispatches from Washing that they 2 that they will be in a bad way If they fail to bring forth a candidate that the public The Anti-Saloon now giving much sums in its effort for it it has been constantly tinkeiing with for three years and raising the duties piecemeal In spite of this tendency to ralse the barriers world trade has actually been increasing. Sir George Paish points out, however, that the export of goods in recent years has been enormously stimulated by the granting of credit. The United States has become |a creditor nation, but it still maintains a large ex- {port surplus because it has been lending abroad at the rate of about $1,000,000,000 a year. Europe also, though a heavy borrower in our market, has been extending private commercial credits on a con- Prohibition Board, siderable scale to forelgn customers. To liquidate is the head this great volume of indebtedness the debtor coun- S h 3 4 tries will need to expand their income—that is, they leaders of the South, according to New York papers.|yugt produce more and sell more. It is here that in an endeavor to bring forth a candidate to take the trade barriers offer obstacles; by restricting the the place of Mr. McAdoo. Gov. Angus McLean of circulation of goods they threaten a breakdown of North Carolina to be the outstanding man world credit. in the South since the announced retirement of S Yet the outlook may not be quite so gloomy as Undrewood, and is being considered. How- wll appears to the English economist. There is a fair the dry leaders Qisturbed by reports that ! possibility that the situation may eventually prove Gov. McLean Smith, and that he Is by self-corrective. If either trade barriers or credit s must collapse, the trade barriers seem the more like- no means enthusiastic Federal Prohibition if, }o"yo go. The immediate world tariff situation fs indeed, he s not inclined the other side of pot reassuring, but the fact that the elements of the question. At least, he to be a State future trouble have been seen and that a warning Rights advocate. has been sounded in a manifesto from the leading Cordell Hull, former chairman of the Demo- financiers and industrialists of sixteen countries gives National Committee, a Congressman from Ten- ground for the hope that correctives may eventually is looked upon as a man of large possibilities, | be applied. Bilsy o1t 19 shld, far interested in Demo-| y, poran nearly weeps at the idea of nullifica- cratic success in the next election than he is in yion of the sacred Eighteenth Amendment. Mr. Borah, Prohibition. |wp believe, is one of the leading enemies of reappor- Senator W. F. George of Georgla, one of the ablest tionment. It all depends on what part of the Con- of Southern Democrats and one of great popularity 'stitution onme is talking about. (Cincinnati En- in Georgia, has been eliminated by the drys because Quirer.) he is belleved to look with favor upon the candidacy of Gov. Smith. ‘ There is a group of Southern opposition to Smith construed to be antagonism to his religivus affiliations, and they are| free to admit that he has dirposed of the religious| question and that further agitation of it would helpful to his eandidacy. This élement favors bring- ing forth Senator Thomas F. Walsh of Montana, who is admittedly a National character, and who a Catholic but dry 8till others insist that the only out to resur- o v yoct the McAdoo boom, but to do’ that it would be| oo io%k) necessary to get the consent of Mr. McAdoo, himself, who, it is admitted, has lost interest if he has not determined nov to be a candidate at all.’ In the meantime the action of the forty good Churchmen, who have taken temperance vows and constitute the directorate of the Temperance Society of the Protestant Episcopal Church, in unanimously deciding that the Volstead Act is affecting the cause 1t only Senator Willis could be persuaded to of temperance viciously and f8 a menace to the take that Federal Court vacancy out in California. country, and the fact that the American Medical | — (Cincinnati Enquirer.) Gov the wom- | has been a re plans. | on say would have general appeal to | L of are ue leaders and the Baptist| which Bishop Barton of Ten- nessee conferring with Democratic a s said n-| ator he ever, are is for Gov. over toward {8 known cratic nessee, he is more Constantinople has an inhabitant who is 160 years 'old, it is stated. Maybe he's about 100 and just (thinks he's 60 years older after living in Constanti- nople.— (Jacksonville News-Times.) Jim Reed’s appeal to Cal for an extra session be of Congress having failed, it looks as if Jim will |have to get himself another lawsuit.—(Dallas News.) drys that fear the Gov may be i Visions of great throngs pushing their way (through the gates at $10 to $100 a head, makes !Jack Dempsey long to scarp again.— (Jacksonville is is The Chinese puzzle is something for the world to solve and is all that its name indicates.— (Los Angeles Times.) What we like about Chinese warfare is that both armies stop and wait to see what the other is going to do.—(Dallas News.) the, Month-| it does mean! into | never | people | nur- | tured the first great Democrats from whom the Demo-| and even Great Britain are also veering toward higher| is ostensibly opposed to any tinkering with the tariff| ALONG LIFE DETOUR Ly 8AM HILL More Modernism Among the many things That now are “blah,” think we recognize ar of the law." Observations of Oldest Inhabitant The old-fashioned girl who longed {for “protecting arms” now has a daughter who needs protection from |arms | The Ananias Club “My wife,” aid he, “spent the eve ining pointing out to me the advan |tages of poverty.” Power of Suggestion i “How'd you break yourself of lying | awake at night? I “On, 1 just set the [go off about halt an hour after to bed and then had my | at the foot of the steps and | velling it was late _and it 1| get up at once I'd be late to| office. I'd turn over and be | p in less than thirty secc Do They Keep the Doctor Away? (St. Paris, Route 5, Item in Urbana Democrat.) Peter Apple and wite wire guests of C. M. Apple and alarm clock to rdl gone wit | stand | start {didn’t | the |asle Sunday | wite | 3 | A Frapper We Know | We might admire her face—can't tell We never have seen it But certainly do not the paint She uses to hide it. Passing Observation | This is the season when monoxide gas turns over the job of reducing the population to the grade crossings and boat rockers. He Tries to Catch Drunken Driver | Used to be a chaser after a drink, now you take an ambulance—Sam | Hill Another chaser after a drink is !the speed cop.—Phil Armstrong, Jack sonville Times-Union | What's in a Name? | (Court note in Los Angeles Divorce suits filed JOY-—Dolores, against Times.) Mansfield, Jr 0dd Ones strangest girl I've Is Mary Ellen Leeds; For she knows the difference 'twixl | The things she wants and noeeds. Sam Hill, Cincinnati Enquirer. The met 1 ever knew McPlatt; "llu' strangest girl Was Mary Ann For she tells every one she She wishes she was fat Adam Breede, Hastings Tribune meets | Watch Your Eyes—Fellers Ol' summer time Draws nearer—when 1 We can look through Them skirts again. Wonders of Prohibition “How'd you like it?" asked man who was treating to some his own make. “Drinking it is as painful and dan | gerous as a major operation,” growl ed his guest, “and a man showid be given an anaesthetic before being in- vited to get on the outside of such stuff.” the of More or Le: The fat sisters ai ones going mightly light on !meals—many a family is on rations in order to keep the car gas The reason a kid is popular with other kids is because he isn't all the things his dear mamma thinks he ought to be. So far we haven’t heard of a soll True not the only their short inf NOTICE OF APPLCIATION FOR PATENT Serial no. 06350 In the United States Land Office for the Juneau Land District at An- chorage, Alaska, 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 corner No. 1 whence U.S.L.M. No. <4 bears N. 26 deg. 26' W. 26.88 chains distant; thence E. 19.09 chains to corner No. 2; thence 8. 5.74 chains to corner No. 3; thence by meanders along the line of In | can | money | the | FED ling order. 1927. " RS SRS SSRGS | R NN Sy O PROFESSIONAL FraternngvSocieties Gastineans Channel | EENE AT M B. P. 0. ELKS Meeting nings Elks' Hall. GEO. B. RICE, BExalted Rul M. H. GIDES, ik oer. Visiting Brothers welo ot Co-Ordinate Bodies of Freemasonry Scottish Rite Regular meetings Friday each at 7:30 p. m Fellows' Hall. ER B. HREISEL JOYAL OBDFR OF MOOSE Lodge No. 700 Meets every Mondas wight, 8 o'clock, Moove C. H. MacSpadden, Dictator; Stevens, Secrotary v— 5 nd ow who is letting ‘VNV 80 the price of shaves [ used to keep his wife’s bob trimmed and waved Nothing can make the average man madder than to hear the people ‘he always is knocking are daring to say mean things about him, too. | It takes a lot of love and courage for a girl to marry a poor man, but it takes a heap more of both for her to marry a son who is idiolized by his mothe The re friend wife knows | they’ll never erect a monument to her husband is because she knows ¥old fools never are honored that way. Nothing has more completely dis appeared than cotton stockings, un less it is the laces for women's high sho Every house never her h We | Drs. Kaser & l*reclxurgcr DENTISTS 1 and 3 Goldstein Bidg. PHONE 56 Hours 9 a. m. to 9 p. m. Wednesday | 8 o'cloch son ~&2 Dr. Charles P. Jenne T DENTIST Rooms 8 and 2 Valentine Bldg Telephons 176 1| -/ wife likes cleaning is s glad the d s don't know modern woman a sigh of we know it isn't getting out of the tightly laced straight ncket she! been squeezed into all | We don't ¢ to be millionair we'd be sat 1 if we had as much as w spent for the silk stockings w in just one day The old-fashioned woman would shop all day and then home a spc of thread, no Aanghter who does the same hrings home another box of instead of thread to know all her done, - but gk ordeal {8 over as month the Oad hn brine relief what Dr. A. W. Stewart DENTIST Hours 9 a. m. to 6 p. m. SEWARD BUILDING Phone 469 Res. Phone 27 Junea | Hall who RN bring has a but rouge Office l ‘ (& MOUNT JUNEAU LODGE No. 147 g o | #ERIE ad Lown Hull beginntn Daily Sentence Sermon “ When the tongue is overworked | brain is rusting out. Office—Second and Main Telephone 18 Orde_r of EASTERN STAR Second and Fourth days of each month, . L O 0 F WILLIAMS, Matron, News of the Names Club Paul Boast lives in Pittsburgh. e THEY CAN THEIR OWN - Dr H Vance Osteopath 201 Goldsteln Bidg. Hours: 10 to 12; 1 to 5; 7 to 8 or by appointment Licensed ostegphatic physiclan Phonss: Office, 106: Residence Gastinedu Hotel Tues at A " Hall Worthy Farmers ALICY BROWN own nradnee 1300 onerate their own RAL you n Washington Dairy their own condensal milch cows and and Cooperative Milk. Tt from interested hands ges of production anlin and quality fis with jealous personal in- terest by 1300 dairymen, whose liv- depends upon its consnmption You are interested in quality, and a natural color, creamy tasting| milk Ask ERAL retary. MIGHTS OF COLUMBUS No. 1760, and last Tran- reaches through The ¢l watehed Seghers Meetings Monday st 7:30 sient b oth tend Firth K H- Dr. Geo. L. Barton CHIROPRACTOR Hellenthal Bld, Office Horrs 10 to 12; 3 to b: 7 to and uppoln ) Phone CHIROPRZ CTIC is not the practice of Medicine, Surgery not Osteopathy. MCINTYHRN Q by Secretary AUX[LIABY P]ONEEB.S Ol‘ ALASKA, Igloo No. 6. Meeting every second Friday each month at 8 o'clock p. m. Cards and refreshments. At Moos. Hall Mrs. Fdna Radonich, President; Mes. Minnie Hurley, Secretary. FED- adyv your for MILK ol b Artifieial floral piec Mrs. H. V. Sully gorceryman ot gt Hf-lrrnr, ‘i’ L. A]l);echt PHYSICAL THERAPIST Medical Gymnastics. Massagn Flectricity 419 Goldstein P wo—oulu | T L AP Robert %mp%on Opt D. | Graduate Los Angeles uollege | of Optometry and Opthalmology | Glasses Fitted Lenses Ground Pldg. 423 ! | 1 THE JuNrao LAUNDRY Franklin Stree , between Front und Second Streets PHONE 259 DR. ANNA BROWN KEARSLEY Physician and Surgeon Oftice: 420 and 422 Gold- stein Buiding, Phone 582 Valentine's Optical Depnrtmem‘,= | | R. L. DOUGLASS | | OPTICIAN and OPTOMETRIST | Room 16, Valentine Bldg. J | Hours 9 a. m. to 6 p. m, and | by Appointment ] il RELIABLE TRANSFER Phone 149 Res, 148 COURTESY and GOOD SERVICE Our Motto R G s B, | v Old papers tor sale at The Empire. Tue Cuas W, CARTER MORTUARY “The Last Service is the Greatest Tribute” Phone 136 BurTERicK PATTERNS BLANK BOOKS Sheaffer and Waterman Pens R. P. NELSON’S Stationery Store INSURANCE Allen Shattuck, Ine. FIRE Property Loss Business Interruption Use and Occupancy MARINE Cargo Hulls Registered Mail AUTOHOBILE Fire and Transportation Collision Pro erty Damage abilit, CABUALT Compensation Public Liability Accident and Health LIFE All Forms Corner 4th and Franklin St . . PREPARE YOURSELF 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 THE SOWER The abundance of the harvest depends upon the seed falling on good ground. Care in saving part of your * ALLEN SHATTUCK,Inc. Insurance — Real Estate JAPANESE TOY SHOP H. B. MAKINO Front Street P. 0. Box 218 for Mail Orders mean high tide of Gastineau Channel as follows; N. 69 deg. Ca0r W, 226 N. 82 deg. 58" W. 10.:{9 N. 73 deg. 17" W. 2.22 N. 64 deg. 00° W. 3.03 N. 51 deg. 05" W. 1.95 N. 31 deg. 00" W. 0.57 chains to corner No. 1 the place of beginning, containing an area of 7.124 aci Any and all. persons claiming ad- versely any of the above described land should file their adverse claims eaurnings and placing them where they will mwuldply 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 ¢ Savings Account THE CLUB LUNCH ROOM 6a m to2a m PETE JELICH Pruprietor Open WELCOME CAFE Front Street HOME COOKING Mrs. A. Haglund, Prop. with the Register ofithe U. S. Land Office at Anchorage, Alaska, within the period of pu or thirty days thereafter or y will be barred by the prthou ot the| |lmute. Dated at Anchorage, Alaska, this 14th day of )lll‘cl. 1927. Rt INDLEY GREEN, Register. Il'h-n publication April l 1927, {Last publication Jume 8. 1927, I. J. SHARICK Jeweler and Dicuonss The B. M. Behrends Bank OLDEST BANK IN ALAS!