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‘ 1 | | Daily Alas?.a Empire Jmm W. TROY - - - EDITOR AND MANAGER — 1ehod rory ening ex by 1 RIE_PRINTING COMPANY at § i and s Jur Alask r il Oftice in J Second C' SUBSCRIPTION RATES. Delivered by carrier in Juneau, Douglas, Treadwell and Thane far $1.25 per month By mail, pos ' wing One yea v vance $6.00; « nont N " will pre mmvl \ATE | | ALASKA CIRCULATION N BE RGER THAN THAT OF ANY OTHE ICATION Upon recommendation of Henry 0'Malley, Com-| {missioner of Fisheries, Herbert Hoover, Secretary {of Commerc yesterday issued orpders to sloj commercial fishing in the Southern district of | Alaska at 6 o'clock last night, the regulation pro = 'viding that this rule should be effective until COOLIDGE WITHDRAWAL HELPS 1“"""""{'" r 14 of course, does not apply G | to trollin h{‘““_‘- I Henry 0'Malley, in this, as in his past recom- e Apihibn shents 'l” e S bwike e Ak Bast|™ ndations to the Secretary as correct ] @51 was ample justification for his action and he will that the announcement of President Cooidge that!y, j1aydeqd snera by those in the industry he does not intend to run for President next year),s well as by those out ». Particularly is the is encouraging to the candidacy of Gov. Smith,|order to be a source of g ification to the people the leading candidate for the Democratic nomina-|of Ketchikan, for first and above all, the future tion The Boston News Bureau, financial daily,|supply of fish must be conserved recently said It is unfortunate for the canneries, the trap Bacs' Gnhtnale abrertere. who b |men and for the seiners. They will lose in a Shias that: J8a - WACKEsAal fof Gooildge | financial way, some of them heavily, but if they floth the neadl of. the Hepubilean ticket | keep in the business they will in the long run g s Gedkosald fob the: poasibiitty ‘ot | gain by the closing. As Henry O'Malley has said Section. of Gov. Altred E. Smith very heretofore, his first interest is in conserving the) much &tronger than they would with | fish that the industry may be perpetual and that Dublidse his opporisnt ’ the great food supply may not be lost to the Smith can win by combining the solid fauon Bmoanatie Bouth Wit New York, | For many years the Ketchikan area has en vty Endibrhas: Ksptern and New Ens {foyed prosperity, has never known a failure in land States. His supporters never have |the run of salmon which is used for canning Moon ABla 6. f%urd where He could by | purpose For some unknown reason they are not any. probabilicy” get ‘the electoral votes here this year. It is not reasonable to suppose! to put him in the White House against | that all the fish could have been wiped out in Mr. Coolidge. What Smith might be able | & Year in view of the fact that the escapement in to do against another Republican may | and. 1925 ‘was Whatever the cduse B St Snsehiey: dtony the fact remains that the fish are not here but s R W iy Jusess. New ‘Haven,| IRefe s We good reason to suppose that they X g | wil not run well next season or thereafter. Conn., business men, both prominent club men Borite ' twenty connerles 3n° the district wilf and Yankees, declared that Gov. Smith would|ype pis quite hard, With one or two exceptions carry M achusetts, Connecticut and Rhode|tyese cannery operating companies re strong Island inst any Republican except President|financially and their bad luck of this year will Coolidge. They were inclined to prefer him to|not prevent their resumption next season. With President Coolidge, as far as they were concerned,|one exception they are all financed in the States but thought New England business men, who re-|They have made their financial outlay for this gard the President as one of their own kind,|Season and will have to repeat it next year might be able to get a majority for him in ai| The independent trap owners are hit hard the New England States. They believed, how-| Ot more than one or two of these will come out B Now Dugland could. not /be. Lned mp]¥hole fnancially and some of them will lose ' quite heavil However, the majority of them a candidate from any other/( v. Smith for { against G gection of the country, and they believed that the effort to do so would be, at best, only half-| hearted. ND THE WORLD. HEYWOOD BROUN / New York Readers of the World will miss the ; R ) o ie ot of Heywood Trann that| L isvtat e halbag AdNeriusn Here badajpron able season so far the business of Ketchikan has added so much to the interest in that great| yiy yo¢ guffer so greatly as might be imagined newspaper, though readers of the Column Wwilll guginess will go an as usual and conditions gen- not blame Editer Ralph Pulitzer for repudiating|eraly will be better than they were in 1921 when the xtray nee’” of Mr. 'Broun's comment on|none of the canneries operated and when many the )-Vanzetti case and his indictment of the|of them were in bad condition financially judiciary and government not only of Massachu- Further sunshine appears. For the first time gsetts but of all the States Mr. Pulitzer could|@ couple of large shipments of fresh salmon, done not well have refrained from doing as he did.|up in individual filet packages were sent East It 1s & pity that Mr. Broun occaslonaly loses| They Were o popular and in such demand that P ¥ | big orders were placed in Ketchikan for further faith in the American people and their system i A Hr. 14 g shipments. This business will increase a thou- of government and feels that it is mecessary t0]g,yq fold in the next few years and it will mean consign modern civilization to an unmourned|an all-year-round empioyment for scores of grave, for he is one of the most brilliant of| worke our living writers and literary critics” He has Despite what appears to be a momentary been a bold and effective Knight in the battle|setback, Ketchikan will profit generally by the Bgainst sham and humbug. Usually he is a per-| new conditions. sonification of sanity with a passion for truth. His In meeting the new conditions one may stop long enough to realize that it is fortunate that daily column has contained high education value as well as being a thing of joy. However, Mr. Broun is a young man, talents will find a vehicle for expression and his He his old Tribune will be followed with interest by and World readers. ‘And in the course of time he will discover that laws and regulations are necessa He will find out that if it were not for rules that control action there would be no newspapers to employ him; he would not get satisfactory meals or clothing or adequate trans- portation between his domicile and office.» His beloved evolution would have to begin over again WOoOoD . PERSHING. GOV. Here and there someone endeavoring we find to revive to the discredit of President Wilson the controversy over the treatment of Gen. Leon- ard Wood in the war. One newspaper writer has gone to the point of trying to make it ap- pear that there doubt about the good faith of the explanation that Gen. Wood was not is some gsent to France because Gen. Pershing did not want him there. The same writer proceeds with not heavily veiled criticism of the President for wot sending Gen. Wood to France in supreme command instead of Gen. Pershing—'so much his junior.” “So much his junior!” Gen. Pershing was born September 1860, and Gen. Wood was bern October 9, 1860, Gen. Pershing became an officer in the United Staes Army, after gradu- ation from West Point, in 1886. Gen. Wood be- came an officer in the army in 1898, In the thirty years of his service before his selection to command the American armies in France, Pershing had served with distinction in practically every miltiary campaign in which the erican army had engaged—in Indian wars in Southwest and Northwest, in Cuba, the Philip- pines and in Mexico. He spent eight years all told putting down Philippine insurrections and :( hronicle |+ Rongh Riders, m that he was quickly | ppointed Brigadi 14 Major-General Tt rd of the American participation in| e World War fu justified the selection of Gen. Pershing to commanc Ge Wood never questioned he explanation for not'being sent to France. He knew it was authentic. And let it be 1 to his credit thag¢ he made the most of his disappointment omplained not at all in public, and rendered fin rvice at Camp Funston training troops for Blizzards in Ch cording to the ne columi thin neve 1 to do about the W | e it.— (Buffalo | ier ) | If it could te done Alaska’s chief exporl w be weather President Coolidge has had his picture taken| number of rigs but he has never yet worn| the hood and sheet of the K. K. K i Those German fliers had hard luck with the| weather but fortunately they knew when to stop] and turn back Endorses Commissioner (Ketchikan Chronicle.) the canneries who will be com- pelled to carry the losses until another year The seiners w lose their season’s earnings bul in the Ketchikan district there are not nearly so are in other were financed |..\ many in this line of work as there parts of Alaska. In view of the fact that the trollers have had the greatest year in history, and the further control of the fisheries are in the hands of a bureau the power of which are sufficiently elastic to permit the promulgation of regulations which will save the industry. They are not left a polit cal football to be knocked about a year or twi hence after ‘all damage is done without chance of repair. And likewise it is good fortune that a man in charge of the bureau who has breadth of vision, long experience and great courage. is In Maryland, Too. (St. Louis Post-Dispatch.) A baseball game at Fredrick, Md., was inter- rupted Sunday by law office who loaded twen- ty-six players and two umpires into trucks and haled them before a Justice of the Peace. They were charged with the awful crime of baseball on Sunday, in violation "of the laws. We wouldn't be surprised if this should hap- pen in cranky Kansas, or in Georgia, the home of the Invisible Empire; or in California, where bigotry outshines the sun; or in the backwoods of New England. But think of it happening in Maryland, which proudly calls itself the Mary- land Free State! Maryland may be free six days of the week, but on Sundays it certainly relapses into lugu- brious mediaevalism, Nebraskans, headed by Governor Adam Mec- Millen, visited Frank O. Lowden and urged him to be a candidate for the Presidency. Previously Frank had been urging himself to do that little thing.— (Pittsburgh Chonicle-Telegraph.) Notwithstanding the success of airplane flights to Europe steamships will not be put out of busi- ness. They'll run in order to bring the flyers home.— (Pittsburgh Gazette-Times.) If the truth could be discovered, probably it would be found that Calvin Coolidge prefers hay- ing in Vermont to staying in Dakota.—(Dallas’ News.) manded the final successful campaign against the Moros. On the other hand, Dr. Wood was a friend 0( Col. Roosevelt who picked him to command playing| blue IR I | A ey Useless Information ‘. e — - o B Il The poorest place to keep your| | PROFESSIONAL I’l\()l IJSSI()\ H ALONG LIFE’S | |mind is on your trouble | i i3 e B ~ T No Joke DETOUR ‘ X bl F LT Robert Simpson 2 five- iece is nickel, the other ().( D By SAM HILL B ] e - . . : , per cent being copps And e l.vn- Angeles Col- | | | T B to spend it you'll think of Optometry and I 1 ond 3 Goldstein Bldg. it's just a copper. Opthalmology | larm Clock’s Curfew for Flaming 5 Glasses Fitted | By Aot More or Less True Leneses Ground ~ When I peep o’er the hills a8 th>| Tne sad part of it is that a % - - . day ‘breaks,” ) good many of the middl . - BN R : Said old Sol, with a grin maa bt Tosk 2y you : | Charles P. Jenne 4.‘m:. old folks getting out of 1 in& they wear Miss Caroline Todd ’ DENTIST | R i A An ideal wife is one who doesn’t PIANO-——HARMONY | R 7 I ones getting In have any more trouble sceing (lass and Private Inst { Fooms 8 and .9 Valentine | husband’'s good qualities than | gixth and Gold Strects | Bullding i servations of Oldest Inhabitant |d0es his fauits Phone 5703 ko, st dbiiisg: Bin ,-4" kin remember when a girl hag| 4 iy 6fhee thing some s ~ - O’'Malley. | Mo Astonishing as it may appear, somebody will be found to take the Ambassadorship to ){exlcu] ~—(Milwaukee Journal.) ould 1 wish I'd been born t New Sto uncle’s heir. And Some wealthy E « Attractive Revenge “But why are you determined fo divorce so sensational Prices Good Values ke 5 AUTOS FOR HIRE Night Covicn Avuro A CALL WILL BRING US e Prompt Service—Day and Juneau, Alaska STAND AT THE ARCTIC Phone—Day, 444; Night, 444-2 rings make your ! when there really isn't any cause il | for it?” demanded her dearest | friend I : ! “Because,” she snapped, “when | THOMAS ‘ 1 married, the society editor ign HARDWARE CO. | ored the wedding and I am going | = to see to it that the divorce gets — — ! front page.” 1. J. SHARICK | Not That Our Opinion Makes Any Jeweler and | Diff— Optician | jut a girl in white duck trou Watches [ sers always looks like a goose to 5 Diamokos us. éh’ Silverware | ettt ittt ot et SERVICE 1irs. A. Haglund, Prop. Front Street Ask the man who hires one —says Taxi Tad. MILLER’S Phone 183 CARS WITHOUT -—A friend remarked, ‘“Your drivers are giving the public what they require in the taxi line, a few minutes before they Juneau, FOR HIRE TAXT Alaska DRIVERS expect it—so prompt do you answer calls — it might be truthfully termed SUDDEN Day “l‘a’*‘}om"" Service SERVICE.” This liberal sat- isfaction of service awaits all who call Single O or 314. Carlson’s Taxi and Ambulance Service NE 485 BLUE BIRD TAXI SHORTY GRAHAM Stand at Bill's Barber Shop Stands at Alaskan Hotel and Noland’s Corner Phones Single 0 and 314 rean Daugipgan Phone 251 Marmon and Cadillac Enclosed Cars at Your Call Day and Night SATISFACTORY SERVICE GUARANTEED BERRY’S TAXI Stand at Gastineau Hotel PHONE 199 | PHONE 3 Daily service to the uh‘ulor leaving the GCastinean Hotel at¥1 P. M. Fare $2.50, 251 TAXI Night Call 269 HOLMES TAXI PHONE 342 Ih.nd at Olympic Pool Hall GreeN RiBBon Taxi z “BEN PHILIPS, Prop. | Day and Night Service Stand at Senate Rooms igar Store 232 ~I|n-mn HAS THE LARG- UP-TO-DATE AND nflm Fours 9 a to 6 p. by m. Tue Cnas W. CArRTER MORTUARY “The Last Service Is the Greatest Tribute” Corner 4th and Franklin St. SEE US FOR YOUR Loose Leaf Supplies Office Supplies Printing and Stationery GEO. M. SIMPKINS CO. Juneau, Alaska Phone 244 ALASKAN HOTEL MODERN Dave HouSEL, PROP. AN EXPERIENECED . BANK Experience is a prime requisite of successful banking. For more than a third of a cen- tury Behrends Bank has been rendering financial service to Alaskan business affairs. Its accumulated experience is your assurance of satisfaction. COMMERCIAL The B. M. Behrends Bank OLpEST BANK IN ALASKA Appointment Phone 136 REASONABLE RATES SAVINGS 1 m. and o join a chorus if. she wanted ta™Men do to make their w i ket i L St | b e whiskers A. W. Stewart had been to her in the matter o ; underpinning always a bright side DENTIST i and it at least is some consolation LOVAL ORDER Hours 9 a. m. to 6 p. m OF = MOOSE o know that it comes natural and SEWARD BUILDING Juneau Lodge No. 700 The Ananias Club irls don’t have to 2 a specinl, 5 e R g ind Meeis every Monday Sy b h )fftice Phone 4€9, Res. Phone 276/ TRt fa % otclovh Oh, well aid his wife, xpensive college education to ~ e v i h fsn't a garage on the placc |learn how to powder and paint — — hy § e ML Chas we'll sell the car and buy the The good old days were those — p YO, i 2 '8 o ¥ e a hole in a girl's stocking 7 'Y ’]Moum’ JUN!AU LODGE NO. 147 a ' | P - b mvx\h in Happens in Every Home , PHYSICIAN | 432 Hey ik pp\.w i yh‘”” had a| Father thinks he is smarter than [fPoa 8 4\,,‘\( < lot of excitement at your house SO but you never see father driv- Oftice-~Second and Maim | |Ehing ol exciteme at yo ¢ s B e Telephone 18 || e i el gu S i gt A0 |“!;h‘ ;»u hvltf:l \\‘h;an) mother | The dire 1»2;1\ e 18,7 | [ cF ¢ Vs 2 s on the front seat with him. fharbiooper e | — ke Yes, almost as much as| Imagination is what makes a e ) pAs G Shaa o : r summer fur around the neck feci 4] sccona and Fourth Tuesd we” do when my wife sees a ; . H. Vance & e oo Qi B moth miller and sicks the whole'| 38 €00l @8 a chunk of ice | =N § oo 5 Marriage may survive a platea (lshhp.l”x 201 Goldstein Bldg. | el family on it | . surs: 10 to 12; 1 to B; | Worther | wedding ring, but it never can||__ to 8 or by appoinment | BROWN, Bissint Obakrsatien survive a plated love, FIRE ALARM CALLS| || 1icensed Osteanutnic Physician : PR bl ] AR We reckon if men always acted Phone: Office 1671 KNIGHTS OF i ,“;‘, "‘. £ [“‘,’:':.I:‘ “‘[;“L:“’ ‘x’m\“-r lout in company the way they d. Third and Franklin, Residence, Gastineau Hotel COLUMBUS spected but a ! at BABEE Shoto e Wi % Front and Frankin, ! » y 8. resig p ¥ S | Front, near Ferry Way. LT s 3 . esigned to what they've got Front, opp. Film \ieng | = - > B e | e v S R e ey e 1 Font, oo Gite whart | L1 2D Geo. L; Barton o Bha hns twe. 1ow: i3 ease place your orders w}rl.l.\ Front, near Saw Mill, | | CHIROPRACTOR, Hellen*hal Bidg. Ml NTYRE, Bot ki ghe’ don’t 1::| motc on \.‘uhn‘u from VWillonghby at Totem Gro. | Office Hours 10 to 3 to 10 TURNER, Secpotary. And ‘she's a neck Seattle For further Witloughby, opp. Cole Barn. and by appointment. Phone 269 S jr g eV o v information phone Agent Femmer Front and Seward. I CHIROPRACTIC AUXILIARY, PIGONEEKRS OF But neck she wont. {“, We save you money. adv. d Main. | is not the vractice of Medicine, ALASKA, IGLOO No. 6. - | ‘oo o0 S nd Main Sl,"“::’,’,“,m Oste n|m|hy )’,“””: ““ ”\ " Ouch! LET A\)mq!h\( Press Your Suit lwnh nd Seward. B S 0GR “Huh!"” growled Mr. Grouch, “s| We call and deliver. Phone Fire Hall - —— — g R \]1], ,\[nl \\‘ fool scientist says insects talk ! 4 S Gastineau and Rawn Way. | | *03 UR “Of course they do,” retorted | Second and Gold i ‘H( slene W. L. Albrecht 5 - : pis i -5 Fourth and Harris, | PHYSICAL THERAPIST lhave his wife, “I've been listening to W ; 1 SICAL one talk for thirty years.” OUR FALL STOCK :;' ““'h"}'_”“[ [ 1| Medical Massage Ly Pifth ang East. i ; ' of Sevenih and Got. ||| Automobile Sad Fact Fifth and Kennedy. 111 Phone—Office: 423 “There are about 160 hairs to ~ 7 : Ninth, Back of power house | | £2————— = the square inch on a man's face.” | sr() V | Calhouff, opp. Juneau Apts. | | LR o l 1T 2] News item K |43 Distin Ave, and dian St.| | q nsurance » A [ | Ninth and Calhoun. | Dr. Anna Brown Kears ey | And that's about 160 more than| I wosin mgg A1y ey | sictan and Surgeon . | some of them have on the whole | ana | 47 Twelfth, at Northern L'dry. | | |omice and Residence, Apt. 4, top of their heads. Vel nle] 1] 4 Twelfth and Willoughby. ' Nugget Apartments | NSURANCE such as Fire and i l\/l]\()’EAS Bonie After August 2 Theft, and Collision, safe- L IPI’:: Dream St 2 o } 2 Night: Call 436 g'uard] bthe investment repre- An ideal vacation would be oue P 3 sented by your car, on which only the time was spent l 2 - \ N OAT - v o such 2 v b | WELCOME CAFE Valentine's Optieal Dept. Insurance such as Property | That's the Life | { |} Damage and Public Liability | Front Street | R. L. DOUGLASS | To earn a living is | Heis and Optometrist | ' safeguard yon as an owner— . job, Tl swes | HOME COOKING e elentiaa - Bial inst damage claims and A tiresome job, I'll swear, | Hirom 16, Valentine Bldg. ||| a2 8 : ¢ | [ Fraternal Societies oot B hperan Gastineaw Channel Co-Ordinate Bodies of Freemasonry Scottish Faty judgments, losses that so fre- quently total many times the original cost of a car. We offer yousas an automo- bile owner policies that cover every loss contingency. Allen Shattuck, Iae. INSURANC Liability, Marine Fire, Life, MORRIS CONSTRUCTION ALL KINDS OF CABINET MILL WORK Plate and Window GLASS MORRIS CONSTRUCTION CO. BUILDING CONTRACTORS CO. Tae Juneau LAunpry Franklin Street, between 1 Front and Second Streets PHONE 359 CITY CAFE WE SERVE ALL KINDS OF CHINESE DISHES -Catering to Private Parties LOWER FRONT STREET . SRt BurTERricKk PATTERNS .BLANK BOOKS Sheaffer and Waterman Pens R. P. NELSON'S | Stationery Store Non Bcttor-.—Box or Bulk | eAnuom 'rAXx SERVICE