The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, October 20, 1927, Page 4

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o -Daily Ala;ka Empiré JOHN W, TROY - - - EDITOR AND MANAGER Published _every evening FMPIRE PRINTI “OMPANY Streets, Juneau, Alaska. Entered matter. in the Post Office in wu as Second € SUBSCRIPTION RATES. It also records, | $1,200,000. |and that returns, the p of charged other except the irensus taking were not turned over to her suc- ceseor. Mrs. Knapp admits that she took awa they The office, but she documents and files. Knapp were made by protested that there count in Manhattan were in her sonal lette against M conimittee which been an accurate charge: citizen had Borough a no! Dalivered by carrier in Juneau, Douglas, Treadwell and 'Mrs. Knapp's defense sounds fishy. I Thane for By mail, §1.25 per month f g rates: ke | , in ad in advance 6.0 month, i Subscribers will « notify the Business Office in the delivery of their Telephone for Editorial and Businoss Offic CIATED PRESS. wwely entitled to tspatches eredited t puper - ASSO! this MEMBER OF The Associated Press use for republ it or not other local news publi ALASKA CIRCULATION G THAN THAT OF ANY OTHE BLICATION S MAKE THE CASE FOR GOV. SMITH OPPON The keener that might Gov. Smith hey e unifying the who are opposed to the Volstead Act manner in which the Government is trying enforce it Th whisper something about ki religious affiliations and ascertan that to whelming majority the Constitutional and fundamental erican principle ligion nd connections are individual have no pl American scheme of government or political tests, is a live and thing, and th-y arouse the indignation Gov. Smith’s mill of Protestant supporters. They try to fasten upon him the sins of “Wall' Street” and “Tic Interests” and disclose that Union Labor and th working men and women of New York City an¢ State, where he has been clected Governor fou: times, arg behind him almost 100 per cent. Ther they try the other horn of the dilemma and ac- cuse him of being radical and find that, the commercial organizations and business men arc his enthusiastic supporters. Lastly they how! “Tammany,” and try to force upon his shoulders the burden of ‘that organization’s shady past That results in investigation of Tammany's sta tus, methods and performances and it is revealed that New York is ‘the best governed large city” In America, if not, indeed, in the world. They discover that fine, earnest, able and enthusiast'c college graduates are directing the organization-— men who are gs sincerely attached to the great American Repubhe, its treasured traditions and lofty aspirations, as might be found anywhere in America. They find men at the head of things who take unbounded pride in making Tamhany a great facior in behalf of the welfare of the masseses—men whose greatest interest right now is in putting the poorest of Gotham's millions into comfortable, sanitary, mod ments and houses at rental rates they ca If it had not been for the attacks of Smith’s opponents it would have been a difflcu matter to get all these things before the people 80 long before the conventions and the elections that they might view them in the light of reason unhampered by the heat of partisan confiict, die 1s awork to find Pre ng injure the shout idential make him e caml die they the ca at and majority fo discover the pec ind the sirong the ple, reat of church conscience, and n the con vital alse of teeming WHO WON THE FIGHT? The Tunne a lot of Tunne Dempsey fight pictures convinced men that the best man awarded the decision. It likewise convinced a lot of Dempsey supporters that Jack won by a knockout and was rohbed of his victory by a bad decision. So that arguments which started with the “slow count” will continue to wage fiercely. Seeing the pictures apparently settled nothing more than reading the of Referee Bar- ry's decision. In time the question “Who won the fight?,” may become famous, and in some instances as provocative, as “Who won the war?” was account as STEWART EDWARD WHITE WRITES OF ALASKA. Stewart Edward White, noted author of out- door stories and annual visitor into Alaska and British Columbia, “Practical Hints on Northern Cruising” in the October Pacific Motor Boat. Mr. White, beside being the well known author of many novels whose scenes are laid in the Pacific Northwest, enthusiastic yachts- man who has cruised extensively in the waters he describes. gives is an According to the article Mr. White was this year merely scouting out the waters he wished to explore more thoroughly at another time. Next year he will return in his new boat, the #8imba,” and cover the route leisurely. Accompanying the article, which is the fea- ture of the magazine, are several photographs of, * + this vicinity showing the scemic route which Mr ‘White covered this summer.” Another feature of this number of Pacific Motor Boat is an article and photographs of the *“Nora Jane,” a new logging camp tender which will operate in Hecate Strait and around the Qm Charlotte Islands. - MRS. KNAPP'S COUNTER CHARGE kol SOUNDS FISHY. nd also the ANTEED TO BE ll‘-!’ul:l’l} ~ women i g n apari-fto J afford,| tard to to about It might be well say the ) to see the late 'l'llllnvy»lh-lllhno)’\ anyone no law to compel ftness to event or to pay was voluntarily eontributed by those there was the a cent Th who owned it | That mueh alibi for m minister ha de. orgia families of amnesia novel and vietim loss | memiory Dolends Jesse James, (Walter Britt, writing in The recent procs {fricnds of Jesse James i his mem and to 1 fconlirm pinion 1 i ve of York World.) announeing tiat ct a monument at Kearney, Mo. long have held, There ig the present which deserve than the long-ngo persecu The crimes with which he 1t are pale in com ch society and posterity A dignified stene in New diepateh were to e hono! an inis weeptig amend James. even those 1w illu al | mor ton of Josse { was charged, it | parison with Jcommitted against him the village churehyard is the very least he- un'‘ng which we should make toward restorin memory thus far abandoned to the lurid fancie jof those who write two-cents-a-word thriller [for train-butchers to s 1. | To understand the later career of J Lit ix necessary to picture the Misscuri- | der of Civil War days, K Jayhawker {the Union flag were maRing forays across State line, shooting men who sympathized with the South, driving off burning houses it night over the haads of women and children outrzging civilization Southern fighting men rticularly Quantrell’ made reprisals in k'nd and with good mes Tere the youn: Jese Jdames went to school and learned his les Ysons, It was irregular and isagreable, but i was war, | When Gen. Lec r James s hor under the horses, s surrendered young Southerners demobilized. There have tent belligerency at Aguinaldo, for instance; but he was absorbed and exalted as an elder statesman of the Philippines. Denekine, Kolchak and the other Russian bitter-enders were ranked as heroes by all the allied nations. In many of the South- ern States the veterans came back to virtual armed resistance in that original and honorabl Ku Klux Klan which settled local problems in spite of Federa! Provost Marshals, Young Jesse James, full of patriotism and fight, simply refused to haul down his flag. There were bitter local grievances which the defeat of th> South did not cure, and he applied himself industriously to them. He was received gladly by hundreds of his oppressed neighbors, just as Robin Hood had been in his day. 1If thd repu- tation of Robin Hood had depended upon ac- counts by King John it would have come down to us not quite so glamorous—be sure of that. Elderly folk of the Missouri border counties still remember Jesse James with affection, telling how he was brought up religiously, never swore was devoted to his family, generous to the poor, gallant in battle, honest in personal dealings. He was the hunted quarry in a war of extermina- tion. His mother was wounded and nearly killed when his pursuers bombed her home. He took the only course of self-defense left open to him. I venture the prediction that this monument e James will be followed by many another 1itice to his memory. His personal toism will shine through the roman- <h has been flung against him. He in his true role as an artist who urilllant scenes in the pageant of our de- He will be acquitted by history of the criminal indictments and recognized as a great, tragic hero, struggling manfully against the jugernaut of fate. Reporting Cabinet Ministers. at did Appomattox a not consider been such | the close of W1 wars, will pain velopment. (New York Timos.)” Sir Austen Chamberlain wrote a good-natured letter to The London Times to say that the sten- ographer must have misread the notes of a speech in which Sir Austen was reported to have said that the League of Nations ought not to become “a meddlesome mother.” What he ac- tually said was ‘‘a Meddlesome Mattie.” Possibly the stemographer thought this too undignified for la Secretary for Foreign Affairs. Once there was an English Minister for BEdu- cation who made an address In the Provinces and was reported in a London newspaper as dis- cussing what the Government should do for the “kids,” in the schools. This word, it appeared, . was only a telegraphic code word for “children” —the actual word used by the Minister—which the night editor omitted to translate. Not always have public men reason to com- plain of what the reporters do to them, Sir John MacDonald once protested to a C: nadian newspaper that his speeches ‘were too much dressed up in the office. Thereupon the editor agreed to show him an exact stenographic report of what was said by the Prime Minister and let him decide whether it shoald be printed as it stood. Sir John, atter glancing at the fatal cecord, with its lapses in grammar, its sentehces that would not parse, its stammers and hesita- tiong, turned to the. reporter and id, with a wink: “Young man, don’t ever again try to take down a speech of mine when you are drunk.” However, he cheerfully assented to having his. remarks suitably corrected for the press. " Prohibition Graft. (Mismi News.) Former ‘Assistant Attorney General Crim's al- legations of wholesale bribery of Prohibition enforcement officers by bootleggers has brought protests from leaders of the drys. Such alleg: tions, some have sald, ‘‘are hurting the dry cause.” and later burned a large quantity of files that | 54 were per- those who are 0 nearly $3,000,000| Who faithfully did work full i/ ftw an ideal marriage all right a for marry.ng of a ALONG LIFE’S DETOUR By SAM HILL y ] s | s | Alco Its Own Rewlrd‘ | Devotlon to one’s duty listens nice, But note the case of Ezra Neep. | years To get a heap. * Observations of Oldert Inhal I kin remember when pasents were allowed to, do some deSiei their children, The Ananiag Club has fiery red hair, but celect and most even of any girl I know,”. caid chum. 1 | “she {has the s | lemper e | A Married Man's View Blink “Would you care 1o live as long Melhuselah did? Jinks: “No, I'd hate to-get that {deep in debt.” as Reason | "I said Clarence, “why do we y many -seasons I "ta provide a little variety, for the people who knock the weatl; |l son,* replied his dad o guess, Modernism While wa'king down’ the street I passed Miss 1l Weggs: | 1 did not her face, But knew her by her le o6 What Evcry Man Thinks “Can you live on ~what you arn? “p conld if T got what I earned,” Passing Observation- iusband runs his home like tail wags Fido. A the Passing Observation Ignorance isn’'t bliss when it's ot knowing how to make money. That's the Height of Something H or Other “Pneumonia kills three men me woman a news item. Men better start wearing their rousers bobbed off above the tnees, cut out the sleeves anl ghed everything underneath. to More or Less True Tho reason daughter doesn’t ‘earn anything from mother is’ be- cause all mother can teach her are things about Dbeing modést, :ooking and raising children. Another reason why father “lever discusses economy with mo- | 'just as expensive silk hosiery Yor place on th ‘;yan] t he ' its tail-end team at the end of the |&F | season. One of the saddest things about how legs is that a girl has to buy /them as she would it they were | really worth looking at. We're all human and that's why !we don't care what people say about us—as long as it's some- | thing nice jif after ten years he knows he still is as important to as“a flapper's powder puff is to {her. The honeymoon i3 over whea his wifo | they quit making up after quar rels and begin letting them ! wear out. | | woman' | and if They used work was never to say a done, housework and cooking still ars. | Eatow's1 cousidered a woman's work you''l find - plenty of homes where 1i- ien't done. { Back in the days when flappers were called kens they atl leagt didw’t_fook like they had as Jittlp m ag a dressed chicken. 5 “YOUR DOCTOR fake Salts to Wash Kid- neys if Back Pains You ' or Bladder Bothers F4g Flish your kidneys by dvink'n: a t of water each day. algo take salts occasionally. says a noted authority, who tells us that too much rich food frrms ac'ds which almost paralyze the kid-| néys in their efforts to exvel it| from the blood. They become! sluggish and weaken: then you y suffer with a duil misery : in the back or sick headache, d'z- ziness, your stomach $OUTS, | tongue is coated, and weather is bad you have rhau- natie twinges. The urine clondy, full of sediment, channels often get sore and ! tated, obliging you to seek reli two or three times during the night. To help neutralize these irri- tating acids, to help cleanse the| kidneys and flush off ‘the hody's; urinous waste, get fouf ounces of. Jad Salts from dny pharmacy her is because the first thing she wuggests is that he cut out smok- 'ng and save that much as a start- or. Among other pathetic creatures of the day are the parents of mar vied children who know (Hey haven't any more chance than a rabbit of ever having JAny grapd- children to spoil. 4 When they are first married she shows all the enthusiasm a na- tion does for a first, lone trams- atlantic fiyer for him; later all the enthusiasm a city does far L ’ €rs 1 The go-getter nnor% ) any time i h —says Taxi ’l'ul.;‘ Let's get there—is the Amerj- can spirit, all’ the way from| the word “‘G0O.” The objective in mind must be reached: quickly as possible. Appoints| ments MUST be met on time —Ilet us serve you. Carlson’s Taxi and | Ambulance Service Stands st Alaskan Hotel and Noland's Cormer - Phones Single 0 and 314 | BERRY'S TAXI PHONE 199 Agents for AUTOS FOR HIRE SRS CUUSRRLSERAS e here; take a tablespoonful in a glass of water before breakfast for a few days, and your kidneys may then act fine. This famous salts is made from the acid of grapes and lemon juice, combined ‘with lithia, and has been used for years to help nush and stimu- late sluggish kidneys; also to neutralize the acids in the sys-i tem ko they no longer irritate, thus often relleving bladder weaknegs. Jad Salts 15 inexpensive; can not injure and makes a delight- ful effervescent lithia - water drink. —adv. Prompt Service—Day and Night CovicH AuTo SERVICE Juneau, Alaska STAND AT THE ARCTIC Phone—Day, 444; Night, 444-2 rings. MILLER’S TAXI | Phone 183 Juneau, Alaska CARS WITHOUT DRIVERS ! FOR HIRE Day and Night Service PHONE 48 ' BLUE BIRD TAXI . SHORTY GRAHAM ‘Stand at Bill's Barber Shop ) Pen and n Sets, Christmas Cards A | [+ PROFESSIONAL PROFESSIQNAL ;T‘: P Lencses Ground e 5 Robert Simpson Op Graduate Los Angeles Col- lege of Optometry and Opthalmology Glasses Fitted DRS. KASER & FREEBURG! DENTISTS 1 snd 3 Goldstein Bldg. PHONE 66 Hours 9 a. m. to 9 p. m. t. D. . MRS. JANE BARRAGAR { PHONE £31 i Just | P VARIETY STORE HORN CAMERA, ALBUMS pape Mer: — HAVE KIDNEYS | i ! 1 the kidney region, sharp pa'ns|| when the| § EXAMINED BY — Junecan Public Library and I ree Beadi I GARBAGE | HAULED- AND LOT CLEANING G A Phone City Hall, Main Street Rending Room Open From to 10 p. Room Open From m 8.20 p. t M.gazines, Newspapers Refere ce Books, Etc, FREE TO ALL 8 a tirculstion to & %0 m dise G 109 or Dr. Charles P. Jenne DENTIST Rooms 8 and 9 Valentive Building Telephone 176 —— prom . Dr. A. V. Stewart DENTIST Hours 9 a. m. to 6 p. m. SEWARD BUILDING Ofmes Phore 460, Res. P v Linen, boxed 65 cents ¢t Merlt . Fraternal Societies OF Gastineau Channel —_— ELKS 8. P. O Mecting Wedners day evenings at § o'clock, Elks' Haill GEO, B. RICE Exalted Rulen M. 1. SIDES, Secretary. ‘ Visiting Brothers Co-Ordivate Bodics of Freemasonry Scottish Fity Regular meetings seconad Fridny. esch month st 7:80 m 04d Felly Haull. WALTER B. HEISEL. Pt ————— LOYAL ORNER OF MOOSC Juneau Lodge No. 700 Meets every Manday night, at & o'clo H. MAC SPADDEN, Dicteiar: £ R H. STEVENS Secretary. Dr. W. J. Pige PHYSICIAN Main Office-—Second and Telephone 18 | TCHELL, Tes . H. Vauee 201 Golds‘ein Blds. D40 to 12: 1 to B 7 %0 8 or by aFpolnmen Physicinn e 1671 Gastineau Licensed Orteopste Phene: Residence, Hotel ¢ Roo Second Floor at 4w Barton al Bldg. r. Geo. L. ‘GflIROPlABTOR. kil ! 10 o to 6; 7 to S abainrment. Phone 269 CHIROPRACTIC is wot the pra of Madivine, ‘Surgery nor m. ~T7:00 p. m. o m. Helene W. L. Albrecht PHYSICAL THERAPIST | Medical Gymnastics, Massage Electriciy 410 Goldstein Bldg. Phoue—Ofts B : Valentine’s Optical Dept. R. L. DOUGLASS Opt'clan and COptometrict R-.om 16, Valentine Bldg. Hours 9 a. m. to 6 p. m. aad by Appointment THE CLUB LUNCH ROOM Open 6 a. m, to 8 p. m. Daily 1, Proprietor - —a8 Tue Cuas W. CARTER MoRTUARY “The Lot Service Is the Greatest Tribute™ Corper 4th and Franklin St. Phone 136 SEE US FOR YOUR Loose Leaf Supplies Office Supplies Printing and Stationery GEO. M. SIMPKINS CO. Phone 244 Juneau, Alaska ALASKAN HOTEL MODERN REASONABLE RATES Davz HouseL, PROP. e vom———— . Saa;ifig for Opportunity Financial success is achieved mostly by those who have savings to invest a good business opportunity when it presents itself. Day dreams carry you nowheres. Begin to save ~ today and with-constant additions, . no matter how small, you will be surprised by the results. One dollar or more will open a Savings Aoccount Four Per Cent Interest ‘moun; JUNEAU LODGE \NO. 1) ' " Hocond wnd Fourth Mon- Wy of —each month i “ v 2N\ Ddd Felfows® Hall, be. /@~ . nibg at 7140 o'clock. \/G\‘(’ Riirn . e Ma 4 GHAS. B NAGHEL g7 Order of EASTERN STad Second and Fourth Tus days of each month, sl 8 o'ela L0 0 Hall, LLYAMS Worthv Matro ALICE W 8 ton KNIGHTS OF coLuMBUS scher 3 Council No. 17 Maonda at 7:20 p.m ‘Transient- brothers urged te attend. Councdl Chams bors, Fifth Street. IDW. M. M YRE, 3 K. . Secretary. AUXILIARY, ALASKA, Gur every second rth at 8 o'clock p. Sresident: . Beeretary WOMEN: OF MOOSEHEART LEGION, NO. 439 Meets 1st and 2nd Thursday each month, 8 P.M. at Mouvse Hall. : Anna Bodding, Senior Re- | gent; Agnes Grigg, Recorder. | Automobile - Insurance SURANCE such as Fire and Theft, and Collisiom, #afe- guard the investment repre- sented by ‘car. Insurance such as Propertv Damage and Public Liability safeguard yov as an owner— against damage claims and judgments, losses that so fre- quently total.many times the original cost of a car. We offer you as an automo- bile owner policies that cover every loss con 5. Allen Shattuck, Inc, INSURANCH 1 Fire, Life, Lia®llity, Marine MORRIS CONSTRUCTION CO. ALL KINDS OF CABINET MILL WORK Plate and Window GLASS . MORRIS CONSTRUCTION CO. Taat is the wrong attitude. It there is gratt| | SUNOCO. Motor Ow in Prohibition enforcement—and everybody knows there is—the best thing that can happen to g Prohibition is to have it exposed. Prohibition, if it can be enforced at all, cannot be enforced until the graft is out'of it senforcement. The. graft cannot be got ‘out of its enforcement till it is known;; and how cam it be known if it isn’t exposed? E ¢ The charge of Mrs. Florence E. Knapp, former retary of State for New York, that the accusa- her in connection with the so- ¢ York census frauds are due to desire y politleal capital is not corroborated Gov. Smith referred the whole flice in the State for investi- . It is declared that the “graft” 1926, under the direction Liberia has pald-its entire debt to the U: States, and we might add, with business oflf delicate, ladylike cough, it shows Europe tbat it} can be h‘i——-—fiw Post-Gazette.)

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