The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, July 7, 1928, Page 4

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- b T A e IR o o 8 4 THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, SATURDAY, JULY 7, 1928. D .l l L ]‘1 . [sound political advice in the pre-convention cam- ?———*——;: Hef laws are or are not en- o —rd T R e A ' [paie ¢ these wore factors in his selecti forse PROFESSIONAL || 2 at YMPITe |vaien. AN of these were factors in his selection : ‘ s 3 J’ RO 7 ; ; Y = [to the chairmanship of the National Committee ALONG LIFE’S Shie mAkee N T e Seattle Fruit and: | |e ul r'awm"g;’fim“f’s s PR UR And sees to it they are enforced Produce CO [ e e R ‘ H‘ N W. TROY - - - EDITOR AND MANAGER| _ . . . e T LY, DETO ‘ s ¢ i3 ; JOH i ~| LEGIONNAIRES DESERVE COMMUN- | | i Fresh Fruit and Veeetables | | | 'BS KASER & FREEBURGER | Gastin Channel Published every evening eicept Sunday by _the ITY'S THANK ) By BAM HILL | "I always thought he was a no- Wholesale and Retail DENTISTS EMPIRE PRINTING COMPANY at Second and Main ——— & 2| hody but you say he’s had many Out of town orders given TS & Streets, Juneau, Alaska. The Fourth of July program which was ar- onors. §iver iR Y special attention | 1 and 3 Goldsteln Bildg. e - - Entered In the Post Office in Juncau as Second Class|ranged and carried through under the direction Museolini Has Right Job ‘I'll say, three times last night| ¥———. il iy l.’HO!\EtW’ ok g of the Alford John Bradford Post of the Ameri-i | want to he no king he got five in one hand.” bt} sl T R SUBSCRIPTION RATES. can Legion of this city, was one of the most And wear the erown— ahpiespeban Dellvered by cn'hrt" In Junggu, nouulna' Treadwell and|yaried and, therefore, of wider public appeal I'd rather be the Ace Passing Observations J- B BURFORD & C(’I By toall, postage Pald. at the Tolowing raten: than any like event in many years. The suc-| And on Kings frown, It seems to be as hard to elimi L C. Smith and Corona | | Dr. Charles P. Jenne || One year, in advance, $12.00; six months, in advance,| . ... (which attended it was remarkable. And T nate mud-slinging from a political . - 6.00; one onth, 1 advan $1.26. | 88 i K 8 b i v 1 ¢ N a1 . DENTIST O oo il aonter a faver {¢ they will promptly (while all of it was noteworthy, special mention Early Morning Observation |campalgn as it is to eliminate TYI.’EWRITI"RS ! n-?‘:'fi: ‘S.‘Tn\n..“r'; nr\u'»tm” ‘;f..'l”y faliven me‘um"y{dmum be made of the water sports section. This 1“(;:"-“& it Do) et R Public Stenographer | i snfin{l}«ll?lgv'le“m. B e for I nd Business Offices. 374. [\ o o new branch to the g zram @ clock!” ¢ i Telephone for I and Bu [\;M a ml“ ,lj“xnl h 'v L"\ l“_'u"lnl:"r,;‘:r.::r);d«:l::‘ SR Modern Tragedy e | Telephone 176 MEMBER OF ASSOCIATED PRESS. e crowds attending | gave i Cie e e N “PAULTY VISION" e — - The Associated Dress s exclusively entitled o thel i} oo 1t was popular. Future celebratfons will Forevupl e Hoadline. - BROWN’S use for republication of all news dispatches credited to : 3 Blinks: “It takes a heck of u —— it or not otherwise credited in this paper and also the|probably see it repcated on an even larger scale.f) "o 0" come bhack after you —_ DOLLAR STORE Stewart local news published herein. | Delegated several weeks ago by the Chamber|,.vo haq the flu.” “He is the most optimistic man Stationery—Notions— ENTIST ALASKA CIRCULATION GUARANTEED TO BE LARGER | of (ommerce, which supplied the funds, the| jink “Yes, it's hard to get|l ever met.” Gr b e < ) : B . eeting Cards—Toys— Hours 9 a. m. to 6 p. m. SEANGTHAT OF AN OTHER BUBCICATION Legionnaires with their usual efficiency and lack |over as a slight.” v, he oven thinks he can e ! e St I Visit : of noise, arranged and gave the community a — make a good living W Jhepk 6 Cents to One Dollar Oftice Phone 469, Res. DTS IR really enjoyable entertainment on the anniversary Modernized Proverbs agent. ¥ . Phone 276. 3t Fresmasonry of the nation’s natal day. They, deserve the Better a flivver paid for than a AR P, me— _— | A T TRETIT e coitlsh Rits thanks of the entire community for their work[Straight-cight with 51 installments Wi any Seran, ae 3 b i S 1 Resuiae. mbeti nd commendaticn for the public spirit which |Still due. 5t LE0he @ NGt S DaONp 10 A >b Dr. H. Vance ons Friday & k% e M a girl look like she hadn’t spen at 130 characterized 1 Ostec path—201 Go'd-tein Bldg. | Hours: 10 to 12; 1 to b5; 7 to 8 or by appolnment anything for clothes. Fellc When the bridge club meets ir Needs No Diagram A year or less—from now HAULED | | P it Some bridegrooms will, I fear, |the afternoon one husband’s sup Licensed Osteopntnic Edysictsn | Age Limit for Presidents. Bu wishing thib thefn eibs per is what is left over from thi AND LOT CLEANING o e Ol WL Sy fhaist o s . Gastineau H C 10, | (Barrow’s Natlonal Financlal Weekly:) Byl ahdsan $-ioRran. T o ohera gD G. A. GETCHELL, S s ~ LoxAL oRDL 4 Ja 8 Na a ina a 3 LI, pers are just as bad ! a L No. % If the public generally, and a large number of Ve sidia eotvesiskean Thé only thing a woman kicks |\, FEon; 1080y, ANS G e s every Winday newspapers which should know better, knew as| gy, “ugne knows her onions,|more about than doing the house.| = i Dr. Geo. L. Barton I : much as business knows about the avallabllity},, iopiwaq gets a date with her,”|work herself is the way the maid| ¥ = ¥ | | CHIROPRACTOR, Hellenthal Bldg. .;r x)vlbl;ln‘}‘{m'lhllg]\log:r-(‘, like u]:]m urlthr(;rlgr:;:‘l; Jim: “Yes, she no's her lemons, 'lw‘N it anell; she gets w)nv-. i Juneau Public Libr Omles Hours 10 to 12; 2 to 6 1 to 4 ; Te POBATIN AT demt of the United States, much waste o You usually can tell by the hu Library i and by appoimment, Phose 260. | | COUNTRY IS FORTUNATE. ink and paper might be avoided. More than one|‘%° RIS mor a man is in when he reaches and SHINGENAY! ‘\C‘ . | R e |serious newspaper, for instance, suggested the ourse|the office whether breakfast was Paer Osteopathy, | | jecond Mot Perhaps at no stage of its In~lux_‘\1 n“:il'.hvn Somination of Atdrew W. Milke on th Miedh Noslglzje;"r‘lf)'(“l\fi\::;ifrzH‘xTc urs el Free Reading Room 'y of jeach monch i country been so fortunate in the a '.'_’_"f‘lv"”"limnl ticket. That gentleman is 74, and looked ! o “urin o \Campy Neckwear doesn't have any ef City Mall, Second Floor choices offered it in the election of a President)conspicuously tired and frail at the Kansas City |y o) " 0uior Wipes Right Off!|fect on the driving unless’it hap Maln Street at 4th s B a8 is afforded by the respeotive ncminees of the|convention. The Presidency is an exacting job, SR et pina. To R ACTRIE DR anft Tinits oot 2 Helene W. L. Albrecht| | two big political parties. It is not usually the|requiring not merely ability but physique. Tof . =% FES BOF (OO0 Bt ms, . ,lm"‘:‘?loovg"m"’m PHYSICAL THERAPIST | case that both of them pick the best qualified hold the office, and still more to succeed himselt, |~ (R o S0 O S0P PRREIN Tt jqcal wite 1s one who thinks ATER it Sl Ml Bt aatton Mssseas TAR v re available to head their national'a President must be strong and wiry. Sesrpgrongand he love and devotion her husband | | ‘4 o Dlectricty Tmonth, & men who are available to hea ‘ o il 1 Har- | Words, but eyes. ol K 1 to 5:30 p. m—7:00 p. m. to G . o | month, & y at is what has been done this In the inauguration of Willlam Henry Har i B zives her is worth more than al 8:30 410 Goldstoin Bldg. 1. 0,0 & QR FOt Ehwe, f whot nas W ) rison at the age of 68, who was dead in exactly The Richay oIhaE” HsHaAY: v R i Phone—Office: 423 MILDRED MAR- year by both the Democrats and Republicans. one month, a lesson was learned which has not[Can Anybody Tell Us Why Men| e MO0 : g Ourranc tesgsxicse aspapire. | v 3 RROW i ir courage bl 3 ? eir wive: . & They are to be congratulated on thelr COUTAEE |y oqy | forgotten. Of the ffteen . Presidents in-| .. “,”m?\‘?'“KF Stk Bice. tha withx AAbANG. Bal Reference Books, Etc, bla- g e and wisdom. It did take courage fto nominatel,ygyrated since Buchanan, mot one was over 56 ATTIRE"—Headline, setting rid of him is a gain, not|y —_ PREE TRALE . Valentine's Cptical Dert. both Secretary Hoover and Gov., Smith. Each|a¢ the date of his inauguration, and four of these | R o a losk, there 18 Joah weaping. and| seepes IS e | R L DOUGLASS J had, and still has, opposition within his re-|were in the forties. Woodrow Wilson was 60 ; o wailing at a divorce trial than at| ™ ;o herun die Opticlan and Optometrist | spective party that is by no means negligible| when he began his second term. If Herbert Hoov-| . With v’f”‘;.’i‘:“",,:?}‘;‘f 5 HRRIAE bt Foea 14 Baved Room 18, Valentine Bicg. in its strength, Secretary Hoover was not|er is elected, he will be inaugurated at 55, and ). v v i 15 onlaal bf IomDE" &s" sotimn flours 9 a. m. to 6 p. m. and 8 strength, 4 9 i - P Eon b - But if 'twasn’'t for the wive he ordea oking ED Wy altogether acqeptable to an Important and influ-|If Smith is the successful candidate on the other| " ) 000 as an undertaker, uneau ential group in the big industrial States and ;ir;!il:vh“ will be. $87e0. comfemcing hia Weem o The saddest kind of lives. '[‘.);A--'v are !ime-l.« :vh ‘1!| it m:{-‘ms | ia re: ors | o ‘s i o i p | e — as ronscience had quit working financial centers in the t. Within the Middle Hors, than Hbaesin sotabitiists iatBl st jas ik sancy Iy gluitlv- g Bakery Rebinrt iy Western tier where farm relief has Erown|givc in effec candidite elés h All Wet, at That 1 g iy % says, in effect, that a candidate elected for the . It's 11¢ he hole th S Watiin: THE da . dDcewise - regardad with o e d 153 p “Thay voted unanimously| It's dollars to the hole in the Opt. D to be a fetish, he is likewise re ¢ first time shall be well within the fifties so that RSy _ 2 lough tha he kind ¢ T 0 Swedish Ry Pt. . Ees Lo 2] : o i Al Lo Pl A . ainst a resolution calling for the|doughnut that the kind of ry Our Swedis ve Brafiinte: 108 rARgilse - ook antagonism by a group that is always vociferous|he may have the encrmous advantage, with his . " il < b Bt % ra " it G b ehs Bt o Aaotod! s strictest enforcement of the Voi| who will press her husband's and lega of Optometry and oo R and was strong enough numer 1ly to force the|party, of being renominated when he is still in v 3 a9 trousers hasn't got the kind of a | Opthalmology | passage by Congress of the McNary-Haugen Farm |vigorous manhood. Charles 1. Hughes was prom- |Stead [““!"'. ~‘,““”"f‘y," i e in|hushand who grabs the dish towel|{ Real Pumpernickel Bread G‘p' es Fitted | ERICAN LEGION Reliet Bill. against the expressed desire of the|inently mentioned before the convention. But| “Yes, there wasn't a dry ay and helps her get through the Rl rgaigeegfpod el ! \ Ay g he would have been the time of his inaug-|the house. TR G %) e pRasey b Meets second and Soolidge administration uration and 71 if he had succeeded himself. No dishey korthey om0 10 4. e 3 = fourth Thursday The opposition to Gov. Smith in the Demo. one would question his ability to make good, for Polly Anna Sez — VI,‘un.g xklrls,‘ cotton h(lsll ',ryl .m,“ & each month {9 cratic ranks was not less outspoken. The Drys,|yo poc made good on every difficult job he has| 1f Worry paid bills it would pay|high shoes are not the only things unequ ks Dusc the religiously intolerant and the Ku Klux Klan|ypgertaken. But anno domini is an incurable|to WOITy. out ",{ lla!efll:e‘r.e] are ll)u" ) ;:oml. { ’.\’l’,\i\E-“h TOY elements went to Houston determined, if possible, |discase so far as Presidents are concerned, il P b bt W g T Bak SHOP to prevent his nomination evem at the cost of Healthy, middle age and physical resistance| This Is an Age of Speed i vl D i i GG a er*y‘ S s R Ao 2 party disruption., Seeing it was impossible to|are necessary where a President shakes 3400 “"r')h‘ll“"‘"': :’“‘;Tnl{“e hl?l'i';e Py i > H. B. MAKINC | WUM%gG?OI}‘IM;I)gSE:}]IQEAET' accomplish this, the more radical forces holdly|honest hands at a single reception and carries SORHY to o8l | )] ; e deliver Front Streec | 5 » NO. 4 roclutmed Ahat - they would bolt the party. and|1S 4TI N a siing for threo days atterward. That | Bul now his fastest gait THE WHITEHORSE | [§7""¢ 577 We deVerti[, o pox 218 tor Man onsom! | | diects 1st and' dra Thusaays | L b 5t i v this could be permitted does not speak highly| Would be like standing still. 7 ¥ - -3 f———————————————— 3 | | fach month, 8 P.M. at Moose l BN thind ticket. . |[for our eiticiency, much less our common sense. INN H s A BTG RN T KL r ¥ : lrn1 rlu,ilher (A:e wasl(hpl o|;|»nml:n:1 Nu(“|l;r" The Prince of Wales is not of Presidential age, Always in Eruption E The New Palatial Modern | v ‘f E nrA hlp;n.(anl. Sfi,a[or d}le— | n frightening the party leaders into yielding.|pyt we crippled <his right hand for a few days “Pa,” said Clarence, “are there| | n gent: Agnes Grigg, Recorder. e L . otel at Whi d In each party it was realized that the men|A President’s life is not a particularly good risk.|any active volcanoes in this coun- Thel{Nhlllehorse I{,",,",‘}::‘,“,t ll THE CHAS. W. CARTER MORTUARY : T —— S — . who were so quickly named as standard bearers|The Presidents elected in 1840, 1860, 1880, 1900 |try, now?” been built in keeping witk | 3 - » H were the popular candidates. And each party|and 1920 all died in office, three of them assas-| “The only one T know of is Tom} | yye™rooct™in hotel construe- “The Last Service Is the Greatest Tribute e demonstrated its courage in neither palliating nor [sinated. On that theory of cycles a successtul [ Heflin, son,” replied his dad. | tlon. All rooms with hot Corner 4th and Franklin St. Phone 136 5 | Brunswick Bowling parleying with those who would have set aside|candidate in 1940 might feel a trifle nervous. jand cold running water of | | Alleys this plainly evidenced demand on the part of 'N You Know What Those Gents| | which no other hotal in the | oL ST SO AT A P o5 RRR e iin o0 ai thneh e kol Mib ot 1ta mietiebie RS Throw § Yukon can hoast, private | Sy I or men and women | S madaelty o ; s Yale in the Blues. Harry Thrower is an auctioneer| | connecting and public baths, | | Stand—DMiller's Taxi | : e vy realtor of Houston, Tex. maid and bellboy service. | 18 Phone 218 { AUTO FATALITIES. (Manchester, Eng., Guardian.) Write or wire for reserva- S o ey 5 A tragie thing has happened to the famous No High-Hatting Them tions. " More than 100 persors meet death in the|¥ale University —so traglc that both the editor| Dame Nature asks not it by you |gp- i GEO. M. SIMPKINS (0. CRER | Jnited States eac r f every 100,000 motor | he ale Daily News a daily paper man- e S ’ | E - TP Lo e e ya o ey e ational |88¢d and issued by the students) and the editor / | THE IRROS CO. ars in operation, accarding e Natione of our own “Times” have agreed to do their best PRINTING and STATIONERY Ma n u facturers Carbonated :urezhy (rmm:»u.' Ten y:\rs ago tqh; re v:]n'; 157110 avert the results of the tragedy. There is a TOS FOR HIRE leverages. Wholesalers Can- eaths for each 100,000 autos. These dal dance, a modern dance—and, therefore, one may £ ic Li i dy, Near Beer, Carbonic G : 3 @ ¥ i 5 ice » Near Beer, Carbonic Gas. being studied by traff.c expefts of the Govern-|fear, a debased and demoralized dance,—which Phone 241 Opposite Alaska Electric Light O| PHO | ment at work on a national campaign to reducelis called the “Yale Blues”; and some people may OPEN EVENINGS ' traffic accidents. have derived the impression that it was in- |5 d St ks The traffic death rate increased slightly from |vented, or at least danced, at Yale University. | Prompt and Courteous Serv- | ~ i | 5 R L e it s Tk M6 the alitor of the. “¥als DRI, NANVE NAs Wil | ice Day and Night, Special | | G.A. BALDWIN but this is the first increase in this ratio|te" all the way from Connecticut to correct this|. | Rates for Trips to Menden- | |&—eoeewo. oot reenarr> | | Contracting and Genezal Car- cars, but this s the frst Increase In this ablollamentable Impression; and the editor of the | hall Glacter and Eagle River | | roooooorsos. “ereeeeeeeeeee—————q | | venter and Repair Werk since 1918. The 1927 ratio was 100.8 “Times" has leapt to his assistance by giving his 324 TAXI e BRI S 408 per 100,000 motor cars, while that of 1926 Was|sommunication a full headline of its own instead C. VAIL, Propriet 4LASKAN HOTEL 8. 95.5. In 1918 the ratio was 4. of consigning it to the “Points from Letters,” | Next :&renda’Ca!:ogh?::: 224 | t Ratio of number of deaths to population|where suffragan bishops struggle from time to ) shows a steady increase in the 10-year period|time with rear admirals for a little modest no- L = MODERN REASONABLE RATES 2 “ORRiS studied. In 1918 the ration of deaths to each ”flf- ale, we are assured, ‘‘assumes no respon- e g el DAVE HOUSEL PROP 2 CONSTRUCT{ON 100,000 of population was 9.3, while in 1927 |8ibility” for the Yale Blues; it “is a self-respect- b : S i i g - it was 19.6, or more than twice as large as in|iD8 educational institution, such as Oxford or BERRY’S TAXI COMPANY 1018 Cambridge,” and “not a cheap dance-hall where| | Our chief thought is service T T T e e TP PP e R PR T TP I L i ridiculous and sensuous steps are originated.” But i H SAND 0 0 . Beo o . —says Taxi Tad " - . an The commonly accepted method of measuring|qiaunvone ever swpposs: iat it intted. But ¥ Cadillac and Marmon Cars £ traffic hasard is to compare fatalities With popu-|na1 of that character—or, indeed, a dance-hall| | Our success is due to the real Stands at Gastineau Hotel H GRAVEL lation. Since 1918 the *auto population has|of any kind? It would be a strange thing it one| [effort we make to give prompt, d Burford’ 8 increased ervy much faster than the human|of the very oldest universities in America, found-| |efficient and courteous service an urford’s Corner 2 Carpenter fmd Concrete population. ml]nx custodian of the strictest tradition of||—at your disposal 24 hours PHONE 199 OR 814 t t o« o H Work. Calvinism and an institution which dismissed its| |each day—just call Single O I D ld l £l No j rector of 1722 because of his ‘“leaning towards nteres waen No job too large nor toa or 94. FROM COUNTRY DOCTOR TO [ e — | ," had ncw developed into nothing more episcop. small for us. CAMPAIGN BOSS. than an assembly of dancing masters. The thing MORRIS is not probable; it is not even i i ivi From a country doctor to manager of the|inem lift up thelr hearts at Yale"":“‘:’ler'em:‘n‘:f Carlson’s Taxi and The regular semi-annual interest dividend national campaign of one of the major political parties of the country is indeed a long step. And that is the record of Dr. Hubert Work, recently elected Chairman of ihe Republican National ber that though there is such a thing as a Cambridge sausage no one supposes that Cam- bridge is exclusively a center of sausage makers; while Oxford is smf famous for other things than CONSTRUCTION CO. BZILDING CONTRACTORS Phone 62 Ambulance Service MILLER’S TAXI Stands at Alaskan Hotel and Juneau Billiards will be credited to accounts in our Savings Department on July first. Phones 183 and 218 Depositers who SR initete; chnrged with the -responaibility . tor :;‘nusors r;m:‘lmala:ei and easy chairs. But for desire their dividend entered in their savings N X t ¢ present, though it *‘assumes no responsibility” % o . ;:"v’:'mb:‘;”e“ 1 the S HAMANRL, ERIT ABREor The - bluch Ml appears to be deeply e Ftise Biagle 0 and 04 book, may present or mail their savings book 8 mersed in t & His original political experience was gained .1'1!e‘| n them.. However, now that the dis- | a to the bank after July first. JUNEAU TRANSFER claimed has been made with full ceremony per- in Colorado, his home for some 40 years. He haps the depression will disperse. COMPANY : Moves, Packs and Stores Freight and Baggage Al deposits made ox; or before July fifth in our Savings Department will draw interest from the first day of July. Prompt Service—Day and Night CovicE Auto SERVICE, Juneau, Alaska STAND AT THE ARCTIC Phone—Day, 444; Night, 444-3 rings —— showed an aptitude for the game and evinced a liking for it that has kept him in more or less prominence for the past 20 years. In 1908 he was delegate at large from Colorado to the ‘Republican National Convention. He was Chair- man of the State Committee in 1912 and from 1913 to 1919 served on the National Committee. In that capacity he gained experience which will be of great value him now that he is its chairman. He was first appointed as First Assistant Post- master General by President Harding in 1921 and about a year later was made Postmaster General. He stopped in that post but a year, and then was elevaged to the position of Secretary of the Interior. He has a wide acquaintance with the country’s politieal leaders and members of Con- gress with whom he is credited with having a ~great deal of influence. He was one of the first ministration leaders who came out ‘advoeated the nomination of Secre- Day and Night Service PHONE 485 BLUE BIRD TAXI SHORTY GRAHAM Stand at Bill's Barber Shop In Russia, we see, they begin on vodka at the parties and finish up on kerosene and we think we enlightened nations would better con- tinue to shun the iuul:n influence and stick to our shoe polish when the white mule gives out, —(Ohio State Journal.) - 49, Interest compounded semi-annually paid on Savings Deposits A Hindu soothsayer predicts that a dark horse will be the next President. That eliminates Coolidge at any rate—he is only a draft horse. —(Rochester Democrat and Chronicle.) e In the Senate’s opinion, the time to un- scramble the campaign-expenditure omelet is be- fore it is scrambled.— (Boston Transcript.) — “The day of the flapper is over,” says a writer in the Sunday supplement, Yes; about 4 a. m.—(Atlanta Constitution.) to The Packard Taxi PHONE 118 Stand opposite Connors | Motor Co. John Borbridge : If brevity is the soul of wit the skirt design- er has about reached the end of his little joke. ~—(San rn?clm M)

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