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Daily Alaska Em plre - EDITOB AND MANAGER the barber rand places to meet the ladies. Another pathetic figure rl who is good 'because n't the face to neek. Mother's nose doesn’t need pow- lering as much as dad's needs a hance to get off the grindstone, it mother’s nose gets powdered, |, Mr. }h,\n‘» 1s like it. 1 summarize’ for me, and let anse continue to boast if he feel sad and outraged n— l Fraternal Societies 0F —— Gastineau Channel PROFESSIONAL | n DRS. KASER & FREEBURGER | | DENTISTS 1 end 3 Goldstein Bldg. PHONE 56 Hours 9 a. m. to 9 p. m. Seattle Fruit and Produce Co. ‘ Fresh Fruit and Veretabies Wholesale and Retail Out of town orders given special attention is the she ALONG LIFE’S DETOUR By SAM HILL WHERE WAS MAYOR BILL? Where was Mayor Bill son when cently the Lady Godiva pageant was staged the city of Chicago in which the battle between : Ne - - Jig Bl and King George has raged so hotly ver Knows When to Go 15t the same. We would not mind s 0] The cause B “UESCRIJPTION RATES. since the former’s ascension to the may ty? winter came B o ‘:():l\. i:“(.hi ;’;n;‘“?:d);:::ymfi; s Oslivered by carrier In Juneau, Douglas, TR o4 o . 4 o8 is the vay ¥ i b e e ok e a1t SHat tho Houshty Mayofreiows (s Tr fiies skos Taiest MbnabERE., . | SRR Sk whe Mt s BRBURF OREN G CO; | kind of English propaganda to be foisted upon L. C. Smith and Corona e paid, 4 . ; ; 4 rek no learned heir vegetables, but only know the public which chose him to fight the British 'Twill overstay snough to serve them out of & o , ik TYPEWRITERS Public Stenographer <1mns now are ’ i { ‘ JOHN W. TROY Publizhed ove day by th EMPIRE PRINTING COMPANY ond and Maln Btreets, Juneau, Alaska i Entered in the matter. re- in fhom Post Otfic ass | P, ] Meoting Wednes- day evenings at o'clock, Elks' Hall GEO, B. RICE, B: ed Rulen Treadwell and Jing rate.: M. , in advance Brothers w its welcome an Visiting Dr. Charles P. Jenne DENTIST Rooms 8 and 9 Valewtine Building Telephone 176 or irregularity hang around ran. f Lady CGodiva, wife of a Saxon, noble, so the Until long after all our coal i When you see a woman who| 7. !legend goes, rode ungarbea through the’ burned. thinks she is hetter than her (of Coventry to gain from her spouse a rem ighbors, you have seen the oneq tolls Lis that is more unpopular than 1 she mission. Wearlediyy e gove in the d reed to ting the pipe t uld maki throv thefaven the most mild-tempered sain She lnuk at word| cuss a blue streak a proclamation that withiin and Co-Ordinate Bodies of Freemasonry Scottish Fits Regular meetings second Fridey each month_at 7:30 . Otlxl Rellows’ streets T L R BROWN’S VARIETY STORE Stationery — Notions— Greeting Cards—Toys— Merchane b sion O™ Observations of Oldest Inhabitan tenants, ! T kin remember when “settin’’ MEMBER OF ASSOCIATEL rRESS, Associated Press | wely entitled te s credite and also levied led ve. ag ‘The Dr. A. W. Stewart DENTIST Hours 8 n. mi to 6 p. m. SEWARD BUILDING Phore 469, Rew. Phone 276 Bowtaa Pkl | ple for e to have from suppers Most an ry 1ce ning her impertunit local newe D ALASKA CiRcit ARANTEED TO _ARGER |ller request if BLICATION grant | she would r e » swell afte e hu them are ice the issuing keep made of town, LOYAL ORDPER OF MOOSE Juneau Lodge No. 701 Meets every Mond nuight, at 8 « SPADD 1 them to. of tue if they oda after The to keep the he harber a1l shut after per The Anani Merit “I ‘must congrati the intelli electing my the defdated Club o the public show declar doors thei get movi b 1 the ride clothed anly in her i jwl\\l\r\ll o that remit the i men remem I nails in perfec » the mani “hop on in ce it opponen cand} reason TGARBAGE = No Smotcc atty H_/l UI‘ED 0";3:3'."3’]’«;“««. 125 1 to :z;m.. Goldstein wife smok A e . 2 7% 8 or by appolnment e a1 and detis _-AND LOT CLEANING PR G. A. GETCHELL, Phone 109 or 149 TURN HAIR DARK | WITH SAGE TEA 1 't Mixed wnln sulphn\' It Darkens So Naturally Nobody Can Tell mixture for darkeaing' |1 faded hair i and - foll hair wuhby . R H. MAC H. STEVE MOUNT JUNEAU Lobas No, & & cond ,.mx Fnurm Mori~ of each month in 01 ellows” Hall, | bas ginning “at T3y o'l \yd MIZE, Maa- AL PrC 1 NAGHEL % ber b ondition is in the ways pretty. word about burdensom st One man R gy & There's and “Do you iadies of her . but she ind ation.” Licensed Osteonathie Physician Phone: Office 1671 | Residence, Gastineaun Hotel Oraer of EASTERN STaR Second aud Fourth Tues: duys of umh month. 8} assing Obcervation spoil parking lot of mj; RIS Dr. Geo. L. Barten | CHIROPRACTOR, kHiellsnthal Bldg. Office Hours 16 to i2; 3 1 §; 7 (o |$: una by appuintm . I'hane ‘\5' CHIROPAACTIC is mot the wr M Surgery have to seok omewhere funeau Public Library| | and I'ree Reading Room City Mall, Second Floor Main Street at 4th LY TR e gy Reading Room Open From pir AL gy A | | Helene W. L. Albrecht PHY3IC . Cireulation Room Oven From to 630 p. m.~T7:00 p. m to Medical 8:30 p. m. Currert Magazines, Newspapers feference Beoks, Ete, FREE TO ALL MAKE d il mo remark he ) wien HE ri s In the Dec lished in New article “Shot In The written by States Senator K 1 1. Bdwards of New sey. It o plain, unvarnished tale ofaffESR ings by Prohibiti Federal, it q Municipal, of author claims, there fs]they no way to obtain accurate cownt, g "‘ hed h listed a total of 152 by Federal agents gud|lucted mostly 84 by State and municipal officers, s*/N@Sfston-| . Dook wide search has heen made,” he “hut it s my opinion and the opinion of others who hav been followin the situation that " Prohthition|rapidit the road to reflective thi slayings mu run into figures—and theselcither p suts or unduly postpones | slayings brought about the officers the| A fair criticism and difficult to deny. law.” ;wr,rrwn\ exists to prove it The All through the article the {assuming ectual the back” runs like a sinister reached the ting that Senator Edwards is no b The Lack of Refiective Thinking. G ¥ e U : ; A L ; ers Council No. 1760, Mectings second and last Mouday at T:20 p. ansicnt brothess urgpd el Cham- Un ng and second where a ditto; hit i Je re »oet wuld be addicied inforn the aid pitive popu little 3 nally ¢ and 1 that there s Americ are i officers, the Tea old-time of and Sulphur streaked which, nd ; Interesting Infarmation Have ever mentioned Shivers lives he popula tion says, and wzine tures of duhiou N venture that) wequired with t s and wo 410 G Phone—Office: of ing i good, ev ensible, when a of reshments. BDNA RADC paper MINNIE HURL !\‘mn : ay well 1 tion n as we writes, " Valentine's Ouncnl- Dept 3 vouthfui . R. L. DOUGLASS greatest n Optician and Optlometrls’ . g Rcom 16, Valentize Bldzg. Fruit Cake | Mcn Don’ Iri s 2 Why Somsz s quite Mking Wnd knew an old . sxplained he had bachelor hecause would have wo ad the girls v “im the old boy have. four the by Much k2 of heer Hours 9 a. m. to 6 p. m. aad | by Appolntment of don't of e uglas ¢ And the th month, 7 Hall, Juneau, brothers welcome, wwadays, though, the troublesome ng the sage and the mus home. ANl drug i dy-to-uge prod iaet, for onl ts, improved by the addition of other ingred- lients, called “Wyeth's Sage and| Sulphur Compound.” It is v popular because nobody can dis cover it has been applied. Simply ! moisten your comb or a soft brush o/ with it and dra this through your hair, taking one small| strand at a time; by morning the ray hair disappears, but what delights the ladies with Wyeth's all birds |Sage and Sulphur Compound, is, to that, besides beautifully darken-/ ing the hair after a few npplu.w {tions, it also produces that soft GWM lustre and appearance of abund- l ance which u s0 attractive. adv. HEADACHE mist have of educa a show ofl phrase */ task refraip. Admit-| 3 advoehte of Pro- | tion the erowded schools 1o% hibition, that he is one of its bitterest officia l,k"”“'”w‘ SWENL the e . Sm’, AR i ity with various facls of spec ular inventior foes, he is m?t u.n irresponsible individual unh-l and achievement these are quite misleading out standing in his own community or the r Thedi of learning betokens merely .a capac And the charges he brings against the lity for absorbing facts, not the ability to think " ghackled about the counts neck are ! reflectively. enough to disturb any conscientious cit | 1t the people is concerned about the manner in which the they be so easily tion is governed and its laws enfored. K weay He admits frankly that occasions have prei and will continue to do so when Prohjbition s LR ofticers, like all others charged with law en-}. .., ot g gociety’s members to management by fofcement, will find it necessary to shoot. Butl,.e yppointed autocrats; or the blind acceptance he charges that no officer compelled to shoot| principles fm,,mm\d in the interest “r y fow his man in the back in self-defense. He charges Failure to think is not limited to that the avera%e Prohibition agent is unfit toftjcular stratum of the social gtructure hold any official position, declaring pointbiank|in the highest products of the colleg that “few self respecting men would have any-lpe mnoted. Of more immediate concern, thing to do with the enforcement of Prohibition visible in the theory that an intensive ¢ He has depicted what probably are the worst|tion in the memorizing of facts will insure abil phases of enforcement. But that such a side does ity to solve the practical problems of life. i What would happen if the majority began tc exist, that men such as he describes are per- think? The results would be incalculable. How mitted to perpetrate the deeds he recites, not only then, may men be persuaded to . practice think with the sanction of law, but defended by public|ines’ Adversity would help. Prosperity breed: prosecutors when they are charged with crime,}houghtles Schools of reason might be es- -is proof that Prohibition has developed a ph tablished, ¢ 1g the educational structure, Intc phy of law enforcement which was never known|them the graduates from helow, stuil 1 with before in the history the United States. faets, might go to learn to use their brains. Space prevents extensive quotation of Senator T Bdwards’ article. But his concluding paragraphs are revealiug. In them he said: When Prohibition Commi Haynes wrote a book he greatly the sportsmanship and aim of the Pro- hibition agents. On one page he tells how an agent held a mother at bay and threatened to kill her boy if she made a move. On another j of the book he writes this pastoral bit: “It is night The moon shines down on a lonely road that winds from hills to sleeping city. From far down the roadway comes the growing roar of an unmuffled motor. An automobile whirls into view, flashes past, and is ‘gone. The bootle; hot “in o : popularity himself w 1 colleges; Robert “impsou Opt. D. Graduate Lm Angeles Col- | lege of Optometry and Opthalmolcgy ,Glasses Fitted Leneses Ground - gell the Certainly If 1 had a bald head I'd surely feel that 'Twag something I wonld want To keep under Lucky Things st be great to be a bird.” because birds can fly without breaking the[rl Minee Cranberry Pies T Pumpkin " WOMEN OF MOOSEHEART | LEGION, NO. 439 Mects 1st and 2nd Thursdays | ach month, 8 P.M. at Moose | all. tion. gerious who for Thanksgiving for themselves would iy st swayed by propaganda? Coul¢ his spell? Witness the powe! w0 of much nonsemsical ad i the cinema to make Witness the acquies- en thought Bodding, Senior Re- | nt; Agnes Grigs, Decorder. | "3 — THE CLUB LUNCH ROOM 5 Open 6 a. 12 t0 8 p. m. Dally | PETE JELICH, | e R Y TS “It m “Why. wnd land 1ecks?” “No, because ugh have bills, they never have worry about paying them.” ari | - ——— | heroine JUNEAU BAKERY PHONE 577 Automobile Insurance NSURANCE such as Fire and Theft, and Collisiom, safe- zuard the investment repre- sented by your car, of Proprietor More or Less True we look at galoshes we know the only reason girls never have worn wooden shoes is Dbe-| canse Dame Fashion never told| them it was the style. It fat people were as liberal as| they wish they could he thera! wouldn't bhe an san people ex. cept the former ones. | Some women look so thuch like | pain unpleasant 1 headache that you wonder if| effects, They relieve the eystem of co they don’t have to live on aspirin. | mm&”‘m““m" It the man who used to shave | m himself now has the barber do it | Al Deassists 35¢ and 7 for him be is a wow if he vunl make his wife believe it isn’t be- AUTOS FOR HIRE When TaE Coas W. CARTER MCRTUARY “The Lost Service Is the Greatest Tribute”™ Corzer 4th and Franklin £1. Phone 138 . Insurance such as Propertv '?m and Fublic Liability guud you as an owner— damage claims rnd ]udzmentu, losses that so Zre- |' quently total many times the original cost of a car. 50+ SEE US FOR YOUR---- Loose Leaf Supplies Office Supplies Printing and Stationery GEO. M. SIMPKINS CO. Front Street Phone 244 Juneau, Alaska ALASKAN HOTEL MODERN REASONABLE RATES of _We offer you as an automo- bile owner policies that cover “The American Reinforcement.” every loss conmtingencs. (New York World.) The participation of the United States which, in Ludendorff’s phrase, “‘became the decisive pow- er in the war” is described by Capt. Thomas G. Frothingham, U. 8. R., in a book entitled “Th American Reinforcement in the World Wa which will be published Friday. To this volume an introduction is provided by Newton D. Baker, who, as our very efficient Secretary of War, was charged with the duty of organizing the supreme national effort. It is a vivid picture which Mr. Baker draws of a jon wedded to peace and unprepared for umllul with a (ieneral Staff provided by ‘‘the mer 1ted Allen’ Shattuck, Inc. INSURANCE / Fire, Life, Liability, Mavine Prompt Service—Day and Night CAB WAIT/N SiR !/ MORRIS CONSTRUCTION CO. Covica Auto SERVICE Juneau, Alaska STAND AT THE ARCTIC Phone—Day, 444; Night, his fellow eriminals are on thei Another roar—the enforcement un‘um\ are in pursuit. Presently the bark of a rifle; then pistol shots. There are dead, dying or wounded.” Within a week after the publication of this thrilling drama a young boy on his way home from church with two companions was shot by such gallant men as Mr. Haynes describes. This may seem rather glorious to Mr. Haynes, but to me it seems very sad. These activities are nothing short of czarism. 1 look over an Incomplete list of 236 killings in the United States by Prohibition officers. Ten persons lie in Arkansas. Fifteen in Texas, Five e been killed State in w Jersey. Four are dead in Maryland Ten have been fatally shot in West Virginia. Nineteen gave up their lives in Geor- gia. Twenty-three are dead in Virginia where George Washington kept his own still. Seven have perished in Mississippi Three have died violently in the i State where William Penn declared ~ eternal love to humankind. Thirteen rest in New York grave- their graves in in my own Fourteen ave forever still in Florida, Eight are dead in Alabama. The “dark and bloody ground” of VWI leads all the other States 27, are only a few figures of the , established number. Only & mere 1 up hie_portrayal in “Shot In The { impossible. Even the author for, in closing, he wrote: _this article I bave been \ . summary at the somehow seems ?II let you A o genius of Secretary Root,” but kept by Congress with insufficient numbers for its work, and with fewer trained military men in the country than would suftice even for instructors. It is an ab- sorbing recital how the national achievement in selence and industry was made to serve the war; |’ how daily production charts were soon making it possible to see at a glance the effectiveness of the work done; how for the first time in history a great army was transported aeross the sea, in- fested as it with hostile submarines; how Pershing was chosen and given a free hand-—ex- cept in one respect: that the American forces must be kept together, a direction that fitted his own desire; and how in the end an army was sut -in line that confounded all the expec- tations of the German General Staff and of our associated nations. Mr. Baker's introduction to Capt. Frothing- ham's authoritative volume may appropriately be studied in connection with any book descriptive of the American effort, With President Wilson dead, Mr. Baker is the surviving ecivil commander of our millions of soldiers so lately in arms. Aal the facts become known in their true perspective, the country has come to realize how fortunate we were in having in his post an intelligence ml keen, a talent so adaptable, a character so de- voted and so strong and so seldess. History will not fail to do justice to the eivilian chief who called the armies of the Republic into being and| in his own character exemplified their noblest spirit. Love of interference is what inspires most reformers, declares Brand Whitlock, thus provid- ing an interesting topic for -discussion during the long winter evenings.—(Milwaukec Journal.) At least “Big Bill” Thompson gave Wash- ington something to talk about in the dull sea- son.— (Boston Transcript.) Booze is the cause of 50 per. ccnt of the auto accidents, claims a Cinclnnati Judge. How about short skirts?— (Jacksonville Times-Union.) indi-! over there —_—_— Philadelphia has ®n. 'g tlon scandal, cating that everyth al again.—( lldlnupolu Our motto is — - to serve you well —says Taxi Tad. {—As a pleasant climax to a | delightful evening entertain- |ing your friends—you can in- sure their safety en route to their home by providing a Carlson taxi—and the cost i8 small. Carlson’s Taxi and Ambulance Service Stands at Alaskan Hotel and Noland’s Corner Phones Single 0 and 314 BERRY’S TAXI Agents for SUNOCO Motor Oil AR S IR 444-2 rings Phone 183 Juneau, Alaska CARS WITHOUT DRIVERS : FOR HIRE and Night Bcrvleo PHONE 486 BLUE BIRD TAXI SHORTY GRAHAM Stand at Bill's Barber Shop | Headquarters for Plai luuanery. Sh Dave HouseL, PROP. Without A Definite Plan - A bank account is always a step in the right direction, but unless you have a definite plan or goal in view, its progress is slow. In order to make your account wonh while, set a mark to xeach Pnt ALL KINDS OF CABINET MILL WORK Plate and Window GLASS MORRIS CONSTRUCTION CO. BUILDING CONTRACTORS o