The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, May 29, 1928, Page 4

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4 ( a (made from constantly developing. wood pulp), automobiles, phonographs, radio and many other articles which require their construction all come into within comparatively ent years. Newsprint cabinets maily Alaska Empire JOHN W. TROY - - - EDITOR AND MANAGER wood in have wide use r Atlanta Constitution to announce that it will the Presidency. It says the he has been studied the greater is the confidence of the him, that the South strongly the rest {of the it he will | make the Mair Sund Second Published every evening except IMPIRE PRINTING COMPANY Streets, Juneau, Alaska — Entered ir matter. South- support The s the latest newspaper Smith for |ern | the Post Office in Juncau as Second Class| GOV more and declares for him as realizes that President people in SUBSCRIPTION RATES. Dellvered by carrier in Juneau, Douglas, Thane 25 per month. t the follow is rea as Treadwell and country because rates: By mail in advance, One year $6.00; one mont Subscribers will notify the Busine In the delivery ¢ Telephone { a great leader and at thirty-three Re- Secretary That fact taken with Mellon’s approval to indicate vote that hey will promptly lure or irreguiarity ness Offices. of Pennsylvania’s ngressmen have endorsed Presidency Nineteen | publican Cc | Hoover for [ the the | Of 374 circumstance ry MEMBER OF ASSOCIATED PRESS. entitled Commerce ought will of Pennsylvania s City the the at s exclusively to Secretary tches credited toypq delegates it or not otherwise 1 in this paper and also the 8 local news published herein way Kan to the credit of Harry F. Sin- made restitution to his stockholders llar that was lost in connection with Teapot Dome affair. He stood for the entire himself-—something more than $8,000,000, to Eastern newspaper accounts LATION GUARANTEED TO BE LARGER T OF ANY OTHER PUBLICATION, Let it said clair that he of i the ALASKA CIRC T every | 10s: | according A Great Federal Judge. (New York Grand Old Man of the bench H. Sanborn of the United of Appeals, who died at St. Paul on Wed- [mesday. In his thirt vears of service in | Federal courts he probably worked harder and [more continuously than any Justice of the United |States Supreme Court at W hington does today. ™ the District and Circuit courts there is lly a driving pressure of busin and it v strong man with an orderly mind to dis- it. Litigation is speeded, for the dockets crowded he presiding Judge must be ac-| well as learned. Judge Sanborn, declin- retire when 70, said that he was “too consider growing old through inactiv- Times.) | ¥ | Walter | Cou was Judge States Circuit COL. LINDBERGH WILL STICK TO HIS|usu LAST. [take pose Col. Charles 9 the cepted an |busy t ny formed by some t terprises, the Wright |itY Curtiss Airplane | was National Air| that ente are tive ing tc Th Lindbe airplanc dispatches A h has dec r commercls field L important : 0 with leadin 1 ( Compa position of our rai N, = Be With a Born in the little town of Epsom, dedicated to toil from his youth judicial mind and. unflinching industry, he was destined the bench from the time he began te practice law. Celebrated cases in which great corperaticns figured were dispatched in his court, Judge Sanborn is said to have written more than 1,200 opinions. Chief Justice Taft has said of him, “His record shines in the judicial history of his countr) Aeronautic the and Motor Transport hat tion of lime-light talize ment Corporation yrporaticn and - the 1y to with the After sorts of « general concep- the | eping 1bergh a year in pportunities to capi his achieve- the with large immediate profit and popularity, in the movies, on other than the one his and several lines stage which or in sev in | decided to| he had trans- arned he has stick last, the selected for himself before his sensational Atlantic flight attracted to him world In other Col. Lindbergh, of the attempt rld to him, to be spoiled has again that “‘straight It is Lindbergh has chosen companies that bear the names Those world and of Lindbergh he ¢ fame Thrill. to hi follow career (Engineering and Mining World.) Heroes of this age and time claim our homage |not through success at arms, or politics, or sport. | the eyes of the in refuses he words, spite He spoil proved of a w Their’s is no country and no people. They belong to all the world. These sons of Man and of the Spirit are dear to the hearts of every nation by virtue of a quality that bespeaks the brother- that he will |hood of nations. | They rise into the Unknown, |their journeys’ end—their destiny—hid in the veil of Time. A world waits in suspense. From cut the ether a word flashes: they are safe. The peoples of the earth rejoice. Pessimism, Doubt, Hate, and all unloveliness dissolve‘in joy awak- ened by valorous accomplishment. “An ‘inner light illumines and gives voice to what is worthy in the emotions of men. Beggar and Croesus are on common ground In the now of the epoch- making conquest of the air, and of the subjuga- tion of Time and Space by the magic touch of captive Force and Light, all humanity has part. Von Huenefeld, Fitzmaurice, Koehl! Welcome, seed of Germania and of Erin! is goods.” appropr too, that in the career <'n1§ and won fame be associated wit and are gone, of the Wrights magic words companions and the with the Curtiss. names fitting are in aerial AT name A WET DRY \A\'il) A DRY WET. New A publican said that Senator Frelinghuysen made a wet cellar the politically Democratic preferred dry clared that his politics sistent drink wet And that Representatives C as they believe rather than through fear of Anti-Salocn the modification of the Act would quickly come. However, opposition the Anti-Saloon League sufficient organization more to talk like they think. Consequently more Senators and Representatives and other politicians are Also consequently, the has become less complacently frequently caught whistling for Re- speech Jefsey woman worker in former Republican a dry campaign over personally dry but Edwards, she She de- very prominent politician and dry a ix years ago, when against wet the Senator personal Democrat A Good, Short Speech. nd habits were more con- than those of men who vote dry and Ta., Tribune.) the candidacy of Al an indication that the a period of hypoerisy, head of the National Fraternal Congress in an addres in the Elks Club, Mil- waukee, the other da aid tersely: “It is good to know that there is one great political party that has the courage to run a Catholic for the highest office in the land.” He was loudly ap- plouded when he concluded: *“I was born a Pro- testant, but we ought to thank our Creator that there is one country on earth that is not afraid of having any worthy man head its government, be he Protestant or Catholic.” That was a good, common sense talk. (Dubuque, u that if the Senators would actually and vote the Vol- the de- Smith for U. 8. is Mr. E. J. Pointing to President emerging from Dunn, Chicago in 1gress as League stead to has veloped people to induce aining courage. Anti-Salocn League cocky courage Getti back New Jersey, she Anti-Saloon and is to the woman dry worker of than the average Anti-Saloon League is more honest League leader Alaskan Ice. THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, TUES — e T | ALONG LIFE’S PETOUR By SAM HILL —_—— l o— Would Save Us Many'a Ducking “Into each life some rain must tall—" N Alas! Too true, as most of us have learned; But e’en at that 'twouldn’t be so bad loaned umbrellas always were returned. ) 4 Observations of Oldest Inhabitant In these days of knickers they have had to quit saying of a Rirl who is crazy to get a Mrs, in front of her name that she would marry anything that wore pants. The Ananias Club “I try to drive carefully,” said the motorist, “but if I do hit a chicken 1 always stop and pay the farmer for it Speed Out of His Line “That fellow is forever getting through with his work,” com- plained the Boss. “If there was a fire I don’t be- lieve he even could get through a door in a hurry,” grinned his Stenog. Modernized Proverbs Better an empty head than a homely face. Come On, You Hot Weather Of shoveling in the coal I'm tiring— And strain my ears to hear— “Cease firing!” He Saw Was Nearer the! Ground His Wife: “She goes around with her head in the clouds.” Her Hub: “Oh, has she got a head?" What Beating the Barrier “SUIT FOLLOWS CRASH."— Headline. Little isn't it? early for a crash suit, The Evening at Home talked of many things, money, churches and bath salts; But, course, most of the SHE talked about his faults. They ot time many Also the First Thing “The least thing amy nice girl would do—"" mother was raying. “Would be to powder her nose,”’ butted in the wise kid, of the fam- ily. Modernism “Will you love me when I am old?" she cooed. DAY, MAY 29, 1928. Hints on How to Tell 'Em Apart If it thinks a can opener is all that is needed to get a meal, it's a female; if it thinks it takes a lot of pots and pans and hours of cooking, it is a male. Helpful Fraternal docieties or Gastineau Channel Ry | — = Dr. Charles P. Jenne DENTIST Rooms 8 and 9 Valentine Buildin ‘Telephone Produce Co. Fresh Fruit and Veretables Wholesale and Retail Out of town orders given special attention DRS. KASER & FREEBURGER DENTISTS 1 and 3 Goldstein Bidg. PHONE 656 Hours § a. m. to § p. m. Passing Observation It is strange to think there actually are more happy, success- ful and even really great people in the world before this word in- telligentsia began appearing regu- larly in the news More or Less True The average man is one who would feel like a fool wearing a high hat and would expect the guards from the nut factory to grab him if he walked down the street carrying a cane. Some things are colorful—and then there are flappers whose faces not only look like they were full, but simply running over with color. K It isn't until after they are mar- ried most men discover they are in no position to support a wife. Nerve doesn't deperl on fat, and some skinny girls give us the impression that if they wore trousers they'd even risk the belt and pass up suspenders. Outside of being soriething to boast about rich relatives are about as useful to their other re- lations as a deck of cards would be to a cootie. The reason daughter doesn't let mother pick her dates for her because she doesn’t care for church socials and would be bored to death listening to a nice young man talking sense all evening. The upkeep of a home wouldn't be so bad if it wasn't for the keepup with the neighbors, This is the time of year when a man begins thinking about where he would like to go on his vacation—and wondering where his wife is going to take him. A wife's idea of the finest thmng get for the kitchen is an ef- ent maid. Probably the hardest thing about being a stenographer these days is that the expensive clothes she has to buy are pretty apt to €0 out of style before she can gef all the installments paid on them and there is no trade-in values on new models, either. ——————— ATTENTION It you neea a good carpanter phone 498. Hardy Andy’s Shop. A. P. LAGERGREN, Prop. adv. Juneau Lions Club Meets every Wed nesday at 12:30 o’clock. Lester D. Henderson, President H. L. Redlingshafer, Secy-Treas. 1.'B. BURFORD & CO L. C. Smith and Corona TYPEWRITERS Public Stenographer [ monrs B. P. 0. ELKS Mecting Weds day even. s at § o'clock, B Hall, H. Messerschmidt, Exalted Ruler, M. H. Sides, Secretary Visiting Brothers welcome, nes- — t BROWN’S .DOLLAR STORE Stationery—Notions— Greeting Cards—Toys— Novelties. 5 Cents to One Dollar ) GARBAGE HAULED AND LOT CLEANING G. A. GETCHELL, Phone 109 or 149 R s BT A e Dr. A. W. Stewart DENTIST Hours 9 a. m. to'6 p. m. SEWARD BUILDING Office Phone 469, Res. Phone 276. Co-Ordinate Bodles o1 Freemasonry Scottish Rits Regular meetings second Friday each || month_at 7:30 p, m. 04d Fellows Hall, WALTER B. HEISEL. Dr. H. Vance Osteopath—301 Go'dotein Bidg. Hours: 10 to 12; 1 to §; 710 8 or by appoinment Licensed Osteopathiz Physiclan Phone: Office 1671. Gastineau Fiotal b 3 “Becretary. LOYAL ORDLa OF MDOSE Juneau Locgs No. 78 Meots every Wondep night, at * e'cloce, WALTER HELLEN, Dictator, C. D. FERGUSON, Secretary. MOUNT JUNEAU LODGE NO. 4 F. & A Second and Fourth Mon- g day of each month In Odd Fellows’ Hall, be- ginning at clock. HARRY I LUCAS, Mas- G ter. CHAS B NAGHEL. "o/ Secretary. Restdence, 4 5 l Dr. Geo. L. Barton CHIROPRACTOR, Hetien*' | B Office Hours 10 to 12; 3 & §: 7 to 9; and by appointment. Ph.ne 36% GCHIROPRACTIC is not the practice of Medicine, nor Osteopathy. — Juneau Public Library and Free Reading Room City Mall, Second Floor Main Street at 4th Reading Room Open From 8 a m to 10 p. m. Circulation Room Open From 1 to 6:30 p. m.—7:00 p. m. to :30 p. m. zines, Newspapars Reference Books, Etc, FREE TO ALL is n —2 Helene W. L. Albrech: PHYSICAL THERAPIST Medical nastics, Massage Fiectricity 410 Goldstein Bldg. Phone —Office: 423. Order ot EASTEKN STAR 8econd and Fourth Twe. days of each month, st 0. 0. ALICE BROWN, KNIGHTS OF COLUMBUS Seghers Council No. 1767, Meetings. second and last Monday at 7:30 p.. m Transient brothers urged tc attend. Councll Cham- bers, Fifth_Street. EDW. M. MCINTYRE, 3. K. H. H. J. TURNER. Sceretary. | . Valentine's Optical Dept. '! R. L. DOUGLASS Optician and Optometrist Room 16, Valentine Blds. I Hours 9 a. m. to 6 p. m. .“1 by Appo!ntment TR R ! . D. { Graduate Los Angeles Ccl- lega of Optometry amd Opthalmology Glasses Fitted Leneses Ground te 1l DOUGLAS AERIE 117 F, O. E. meets Monday nighta Eagles' Heall, Douge las; third Wednes- night each Hall_in Juneau W. P; Guy L T. H. THORKELDSEN LOCKSMITH Phonograph Repairing Juneau, Alaska Box 1015 &-—-—-a 4 p— | SCHOOL OF PIANO | | | PLAYING ALL GRADES ACCEPTED Mrs. Ruth Messerschmidt Phore 4501 THE EMFIRE HAS THE LARG- BST, MOST UP-TO-DATE AND 'BEST EQUIPPED JOB PRINTING PLANT IN ALASKA. impson menth, 1. O, Thos. Cashen, Smith, Secretary. AMERICAN LEGION Meets second and fourth Thursday each month Jju Dugout. Twom OF MOOSEHEAET | | obert S t. % & = P Dr. C. E. Beatty Chiropractor Cases Accepted only after | complete analysis. Hours: 12 to 8 and by appoinment. | 207 Seward Bldg. Phone 536 | e — xR — FIRE ALARM CALLS Third and Franklin, Front and Frankiin. Front, near Ferry Wey. | 1 - o s - LEGION, NO. 439 ) Meets 1st and 3rd Thursdays each month, 8 P.M. at Moose Hall. Esther Ingman, Senlor Re- gent; Agnes Grigg, Recorder. e G0 <3 dyén ‘Willouzghby at Totem Qro. ‘Willoughby, opp. Cole Barn. Front and Seward. 09 00 1 ot 1 it o wee THE CHAS. W. CARTER MORTUARY “Probably more than I will thej seventh or eighth, or whatever} number wife it is I have when that time comes,” he assured her. Interesting Information “Canadians ate 10,400,000 pounds of American berries last year.” Americans probably evened up by drinking about that many gal- lons of Canadian stuff, which we understand they considered the berries. A Dernli Oh, once I took A long, long tour, Not once did I Have to detour. Huh! She—Oh, John, isn't awful the way these motorists talk to each other about who was to blame for jamming up traffic this way! it do what he leaders usually might drink votes dry League to who spent e, not care how much a dry ht do so long as he gulp apiece for the Pinchot and Smith, $3,000,000, in the aggre- to become United in Penn- to sup- and in Smith’s the his or 1t swallow than unsuccessful i@ (Seattle Post-Intelligencer.) Ketchikan, Alaska—or, at any rate, a large and important part of it—has been bought out by W. B. Foshay, a Minneapolis capitalist, for $2,000,000. Among the varied industries taken an ice plant and distribution system. It will be hard for Mr. Foshay to convince his Minnesota friends that if you want ice in Alaska you must make it yourself. It may help to emphasi. the fact that Alaska has many hundred miles of harbors and rich littoral where residents do not know cold such as each winter brings to most of the United States. only took a Pepper more in attempts tates sylvania port the Illinois tainted Senate election Senators. Dry money Pittsburgh dry Senator with fund him was used over are to subsidize saloons politically it Pepper Frank that caused seat after joined hands fund to campaign to refuse ve a A THRILLI G BOOK. — They call him “Silent Cal,”” but why? It is Herb Hoover whose Egyptian silence in this campaign is making a deaf and dumb asylum sound as noisy as a boiler factory.—(Akron, Ohio, Beacon-Journal.) We that ator Hef at lea Journal.) That book about de Alabama t} ator Hetlin Senate cl lose that to have his free in the must have UNITED T mystery story last would get the Pope (Ohio night Sen- for State we elieve mind off must have Kansas City, Mo.—“I didn’t raise my boy to be a candidate” is a popular song on sale here, written by mothers of favorite sons.—(Seward Gateway.) contained something Klux Klan in of Sen- his seat in that it he would ud opportunity printed it Ku it would rivet ) the It the of terrible Ve attention t nsecurity A large quantity of dynamite was at the home of an alcool gang leader. is what Star.) would found So that makes the stuff potent.— (Indianapolis nst Rec the Pope ord Anyhow, HAMPION WOOD USER. You're right, Mr. Borah; one rotten egg doesn’t spoil the whole dozen. But it ddes when e scrambled. (Akron, Ohio, Beacon- Journal.) bulls and some are bears centers, while the rest of a thousand miles away. - § More wood is in any other o consumed in this « combined. Although the United cent. of the world's cent. of the railway tation facilities alone as much timber 18 used as is required for all purposes Britain, France, or Germany. This country con- sumes more paper, most of which is made from weod pulp, than the rest of the world combined. * Although from time to time substitutes are found A boat a da PW take the place of wood, new uses for it|ard Gateway.) United States than iy Some are speculation packhorses News.) in the us are (Dallas e timber is ountries States has only on, it has and for 6 per It both leading political parties have any dark horses they ought to bring them into the light—(Florida Times-Union.) populat mileage 5 per transpor- per person in Great R What will the paragraphers do when the Question of Mr. Coolidge’s third term is definite- Iy settled?—(Cincinnati Enquirer.) y will keep poverty away.— (Sew- He—Yes, sounds just like am argument between a husband an@ wife about which was to blame, " AUTOS FOR HIRE WHEN DAD WAS A Boy Glad we are that the days are gone® forever —says Taxi Tad. THE OLD ONE-HORSE SHAY SPEED WAS TIMELY — but NOW, with the rush of modern business—the taxicab is a ne: cessity. Call Single O or 9 Carlson’s Taxi and Ambulance Service Stands at Alaskan Hotel and Juneau Billlards Phone Single 0 and 94 Front and Main. Second ¢nd Main. Fifth and Beward, Fize Hall Gastineau snd Wawn Way. Second and Gola. Fourth and Harris. Fifth and @old. Fifth aud East. Seventh and Gold. Fifth and Kennedy. Niunth, back of power house Calhoun, opp. Juneau Apts. Distin Ave., and Indian St. Ninth and Calhoun. Seventh and Main. Twelfth, at Northern L'dry. Twelfth and Willoughby. Home Grocery. “The Last Service Is the Greatest Tribute” Corner 4th and Franklin St. Phone 136 we fopit b s ICE CREAM DELIVERED ANYWHERE IN THE CITY Brick or Bulk SLegREs GEO. M. SIMPKINS CO. PRINTING and STATIONERY & e ER8S Juneau Billiards Phone 94 Carlson Taxi Stand - Phone 244 Opposite Alaska Electric Light Office OPEN EVENINGS HOTEL ZYNDA ELEVATOR SERVICE 8. ZYNDA, Prop. [ W ALASKAN HOTEL MODERN REASONABLE RATES Dave HouskeL, prop. MORRIS CONSTRUCTION CO. ALL KINDS OF CABINET MILL WORK Plate and Window GLASS MORRIS CONSTRUCTION CO. BZILDING CONTRACTORS YOUR WELFARE , The Behrends Bank feels that it is “serving” only when the things it does for its customers are helpful to them in their financial affairs, business or personal. F BERRY’S TAXI Cadillac and Marmon ‘Cars Stands at Gastineau Hotel and Burford’s Corner PHONE 199 OR 314 ST REENESRURNESNRN RSN NERTANRRRT S RRTN RN AR} Rendering banking service along broad and extensive lines for more than thirty-seven years has estab- lished this bank in the confidence and esteem of business men and citizens throughout the Territory. MILLER’S TAXI Phones 183 and 218 Juneau, Alaska CARS WITHOUT DRIVERS FOR HIRE Day and Night Service PHONE 485 BLUE BIRD TAXI ARE WE_ SERVING YOU? The B. M. Behrends Bank Oldest Bank in Alaska

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