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4 THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE TUFSDAY JULY 24 1928 PROFESSIONAL the gallant progress which Governor Smith has made in his life and join in the applause which greets today the cul- mination of his career. Think Its Smart A very modern lassie is Tais flapper Lottie; She’ll Jo mcst dxl\!h AT Sure it is na Some men find pleasure in sitting in e the sun and whittling aimlesly, while Nuff Sed others find the same entertainment and “Does your sor make profit in taking straw ballots.— (Seattle of his opportunities?” Times.) Forty Years Ago— old friend of father. Apparently the results of some of the straw| Those who went up into the| “Well" sighed the ballotting are not pleasing to the Times. Arctic regions had to leave it to|business was a qulng” il, p 1id, at the followl B M their failure to return to let the|would be way up there. Onc Vear $1 X mor Many old timers are glad to hear words of world know they were-lost. Pissing ORMIVALISH 3 3 il promptly se for Warden John W. Snook of the Atlanta| 0. s"mu i Numb" L 1t miy be & year without @ sums Snook began making good Things, Then wée . BaE 1t oertaitly.’ wasn't' o in Alaska, and he has you ever seen -ome . of |spring without a rain. nce. these horned rabbits reported from s : _— your state?” we asked an Arkan. More or Less True il i If she belongs to an afternoon ELMER REED’ “No,” he replied, “I've been on|bridge club her kitchen probably v Dr. A. W. Stewart SHOPPE DENTIST the water wagon all my life.” gets about as much wear and Genuine Curios Hours 9 a. m. to 6 p. m. ——— tear as the old-fashioned parlor of may de- Winter & Pond Bldg. 3EWARD BUILDING Firms Is Firms a farm house used to. Justice and Wolfe have a gro- A shoemaker's succ Ay o :a Ofttss Photis 465, Rés. the sign of Phone 2786. cery store on the Beaucatcher|pend on sticking to hi Mountain road out of Asheville,|sticking to the St 18 GE HAULED and Lyon and Fox are in theja successful marriage AND LOT CLEANIN( T o Phone; Office 1671. same kind of business at Smith.| The modern wife doesn’t have to field, N. C. get half dozen kids ready before A Real Peace Parley. - they started for wherever they G. A. GETCHELL, Residence, Gastineau Hote Phone 109 or 149 s s s s s L D e e A Y — e p Dr. Geo. L. Barton Yet Once It Had Plenty Companyjare going, but friend hub has If T should want to find to wait just as long for her as ]meau Public Libl‘ll'y CHIROPRACTOR, Hellenthal Bidg. K Office Hours 10 to 1 to and 269. The thing that’s now most lonely. | his father used to have to wait for I think I'd start a hunt his mother. For something for “Men Only.” It may be more important to 2 to 9; and by appoinment. Phone . CHIRGPRACTIC Free Reading Room is not the practice of Medicne, City Mall, Second Floor - Main Street at 4th 3 A blow than powder the nose, but In It—Sometimes it isn't as proper to do it in pub. “There’s nothing in allic. all. It's funny that the peopie who Surgery nor Osteopathy. i - participating it may be expected that the rela-|two es of hread with a thinner An optimist is the husband of a Reading Room Open From tions between the United States and the South-|slice of ham hetween ‘em. tlapper who buys a kitchen stove € a.m to 10 p. m, i . |ern republics still further will be improved and _— iwim an oven on it. Circulation Room Open From Eagle."" | advanced, because of his acquaintance with Latin- Watch Your Step, Men. Putting on a gauay shirt and o | |1 to 6:30 p. m.—7:00 p. m. to tie can make the average man 8:30 p. m. feel like the kind of big fool his | Current Magazines, Newspapers wife rays he is when she is good l Reference Books, Eto, | and sore at him. FREE TO ALL An old-timer is ore who can’t be made to believe that a girl who wili consent to be petted in the rumble of a roadster that is travel- ing through the public streets, men hereafter will skip the seven.|will make a wife worth living fif- ty-sixth and do no celebrating be- |ty years with in order to celebrate tween the seventy-fifth and sev-|a golden wedding. enty-seventh A woman has the right to change her mind, but when she is going to do it at a busy street inter- section she at least ought to have some way of warning the drivers back of her that she is. The reason mother objects to a camp in the woods where there are no conveniences is because she hates getting three meals a day even at home where there are plenty of them. ‘Dail‘v Alaska Empire : Seattle Fruit and JOHN W. TROY - - - EDITOR AND MANAGER Produce Co. the Main inday by nd and Out of town orders given special attention J. B. BURFORD & CO L. C. Smith and Corona TYPEWRITERS i Public Stenographer the - asked most tlis 1 and 3 Goldstein Bidg. PHONE 66 iSoars § a. m. to § p. m. Second Class J uneau Lione -« Club Meets every Wew nesday at 12:30 @ o’clock. lester D. Henderson, Presidemd H. L. Redlingshafer, Secy-T: u. SUBSCRIPTION RATES. livered by carrier in Juneau, Douglas, i) ¥ I Wane for $1.25 per month By father, party “if Treadwell and he rates: in advance Dr. Charles P. Jenne DENTIST Rooms 8 and 9 Valentine Building ‘Telephone 176 frregularity | poyitentia Johnny thirty years ago up ASSOCIATED PRESS. been working at it vely entitlegs to = g g o All the countrie meeting Nations ferees 1 Business Offices, ore “ | i here Have ever in faver of a treaty which all hope that the con- those at the late B, P 0. ELKS Meeting second and evenings at o'clock, Kiks'* Hall H. Messerschmidt, o Ixalted Ruler. M. H. Sides, retary. fourth V\r'cfl'wld em S \lllllllr{ Brothers welcome, to be an anti-war sign. Let better to consider might co-operate Geneva conference. us than ARANTEED TO BE LARGER ASKA CIR LABIES: OTHER PUBLICATION THAN fun is poked at Mayor Walker being late. But he can stand the because always manages to catch up. Co-Ordivate Bod.. ot Freemasonry Scottish Rite Regular meett second Friday ng month At 7:30 p. d Fello H . WALTER B. HEISEL. Becretary. | A lot of s0 often for Jok- ing he Dr. H> Vance Ollupl'.h—lol Oo'd‘taln Ildl‘ Hours: 10 to 1 T8 or by lvpoinmnnt Llelnled Osteovathic Physl (Cincinnati Enquirer.) | Secretary Kellogg has invited tions to a session authorized voted at Havana He and former Secretary ('hmh\ E. Hughes will represent the United E the delegates will convene early in Fortune I K Blinks: \’\lnn this important body has assembled|name, after there will be effort made to negotiate a conven- Jinks: “Ras tio for obligatory arbitration of juridical dis-|lunch room George |putes in the Ameri for a sandwich, call iz a Coffee|eat with the pigs, will pass up the There is mmuhmg Shoppe and you get fifty and|books worth while to read con- practical idealism. seventy-five cents for the -umplrllsflinn ‘magazines and sex novels, twenty-one na- by a resolution LOYAL ORDiA OF MOOSE g ve! . nighty at eelort, WALTER HELLEN, Dictator. C. D. FERGUSON, Secretary. T e A r MOUNT JUNIAII LODGE 'NO, « “lu'nnd n F'nllflh Mon- day of each month gs|Odd Fellows' Hall, ginning at o' HARRY I. ter, AS LONE EAGLE. AL Ty jes! Call it a(would be shocked at any ons pass. Y S zberries! Call it afwou 3 R O‘ prees s and you get ten cents|ing up a fine mecal to go oui and The enthusiastic tion of Capt. H. Wilkins Ben Eielson at the latte one to recall that the world between celebrations and mourn- are still e worth while; it suggests With Charles Evans Hughes home and causes seems to be alternating ing periods for mourning the Emilio Carranza bergh, had other aviator. It he and Col. Lindbergh they joint sonal friends the dead fession wa Lindy. It attached most remarka Emilio Carranza as a token of Mexico's Christmas that country E. NAGHE] Helene W. L. Albrecht| | == : PHYSICAL THERAPIST Medien! Tty Moserr 410 Goldatetn_Bldg. Phone—Office: 423. People “Lone to Col than aviatoms Mexico’s heroic of probably loss Second and F‘ourth 'l'lll. Lind-| American problems and his high standing with d-y- of each month, # any |all the nations of Central and South America. that Hughes is to these countries what Morrow. is to Mexico. They are two Americans who have done more for better understanding with these sovereignties than all the statesmen above or be- low the Rio Grande and the Isthmus in fifty years At this impor next According to an item in Boston Globe a Whiteshurg (Ky.) man became the father of twins the day he celebrated his seventy- sixth birthday. Whoever would there was any such risk in cele- brating a seventy.sixth birthday To be on the safe side cautious the alone fair to say rivls Rather They alike The devotion stive of flown more miles would not be were were glory were per- ™) modesty of to his traits of our possessors of “""“ Seghers Council No. 1769, Mcetings second and |ll’ Monday at 7:30 5. Transient brothers uPIM and much RN - RSV R P BRRaE have thought Vlll;unel Optical Dept. L. DOUGLASS Optician and Optometrist Room 16, Valentine Bldg. te attend. Council Cham- Hours 9 a. m. to 6§ p. m. and . - 9y it e R TYRE, by Appointment J._ H. J. TURNER, Secretary. .| DOUGLAS AERIE 117 F. O. &, Meets Monday &mghm 8 o'clock. Eagles’ Hall, Douglas. William Ott, W. P. Guy Or e omtomery ang. | |L. Smith, - Secretary. Visiting Opthalmology Brothers welcome. e AMERICAN LEGION Meets second and Every Bite Is a Delight k o fourth Thursday TRY MY%E%ASDKMTK each month is Dugout. and his pro- Carranza rikingly may Sugg ant conference it will be been this similiarity that|to adopt an arbitration treaty which will Mexico's dead, hero in a|out with reference to this hemisphere the manner embodied in the movement of Se ry the United States|to have the United States adopt as many arbi- appreciation of the|tTation and conciliation pacts as possible with Col. Lind-|the nations of the world, and to obtain in addi- ik A his task,|Hon several adherence to a multilateral treaty bergh, nobly he |nl!vulm‘\1 hi renouncing war as an instrument of national and then was by lightning on his policy home died as he had lived [ This 1s did much to the similarity of preferable to races in spite of all that Borah and all contrary he result of surd altruism, intriped Mexican The l[u\.ulul (‘nnfn-rol‘n-v, under which the Sioarned o present conference is being called, defined the Mexico's sought carry ideals Kellogg have Americans to ble came to Robert Simpson Opt. D. visit to by right: struck as bravely Useless Information Bath, Me., isn't any cleaner than any otner city. Not Perfect Yet We know airplanes have been im. proved, Yet it can't be denied, Some still are fine for falling, but Are not so gnnl for flying. and way He the said to the that the deeply his own good-will was only and the proper the the approach; it weird suggestions pacifist is infinitely of Senator organizations of ab- i demonstrate ! flvflm”ir““ has been il the is in visit wasg was as and a JAPANESE TOY this country as he peace-tim hero minimum limits which the pan-American nations 22 vy the country He Mexico, the grand-nephew of a former was educated was equally His relations ears of age, President of his in Texas and his at home on either potential value to between America and Rio Grande better unmeasurable. native side of the and cause of Mexico was DIGNIFIED CAMPAIGNING. The New York Herald leading Republican daily try, blazed the way for a rational campaign The day after the Houston, this stanch Republican journal, pub- lished its lea editorial a fine tribute to Gov. Smith and Franklin D. Roose- velt. It is worthy of principal owners of L. Mills, who Governor against Gov. Smith in 1 The Herald Tribune for the Republican porting him for the to say of Gov h New Yorkers are doubly proud of the ernor Smith, presented at Franklin Roosevelt Th tinguished sons of the have been the dominating figures at Houston, the one absent but potent by reason of his record and ,personality the other present and persuasive through an elogeunce of extraordinary nobility and sincerity. As a New York news- paper we tender our congratulations to both. The larger political Govgrnor Smith’s candidacy are one thing. The Herald Tribune has strong convictions with respect thereto which it must present to its readers. The per- sonal success of an t Side boy, ad- vancing by » of character and . to his present dom- t party, is a matter for non-partisan cheers and the applause of his entire home town Governor Smith tunate in sceuring Roosevelt in his ago the speech of the high spot at Madison Square Gar- den. It is safe to say that not during the entire campaign will a more moving and effective utterance be made in the Governor’s behalf than was this brief presentation of his name on behalf of the State of New York Mr. Roosevelt chose an instinctive good and fairness, He made no flamboyant claims for his candidate and attempted no sweeping in- dictment of his opponents. Focusing his speech upon the outstanding ability of his candidate, his human appeal, he p sented him at his best What he said in this respect was unanswerable. There can be no denying the Governor's rare ability to interest the voter and to pre- sent himself as his champion and friend, Through this capacity for leadership he has acieved his extraordin: gress. For it the Democratic Party names him for the highest office in the land. The high quality of Mr. Roosevelt's speech bears testimony both to his own fine instincts and to the type of support with which Governor Smith has sur- rounded himself. Advocating strongly as we do the candidacy of Mr. Hoover for the Presidency, we are glad to praise AT Tribune, newspaper in the coun- has némination at as ding his sponsor, note, too, that of the the Herald Tribune is Ogden the Republican for one was nominee Mr. Hoover and is still sup- but it had this Roosevelt: entitled to feel candidacy of Gov- Houston by two dis- mpire State supported nomination Presidency, and Mr issues raised by was pe the uliarly for- voice of Mr. behalf. Four years this nominator w: his words with taste perhaps the | political the task of the pre seek to enlarge this So there is nt conference will as much as possible. hope for the rational abolition of war so far, at least, as the Western Hemi- sphere is concerned; and that should be enough to satisfy the prating pacifists of America. be to A Narrow Reas (Seattle Times. ) deprecating the methods that have marked some efforts to enforce the dry laws in various parts of the country, Dr. James M. Doran, Federal Prohibition Commissioner, calls upon all agents to be more circumspect in their use of apons. As a new measure of prohibition he innounces, in an official order, that the ‘“‘prom- iscuous flourishing and display of firearms is pro- hibited.” The order goes on to say: The unwise and unwarranted use of firearms by officers In the past has ised the burean considerable embar- rassment and resulted in much unfavor- able and harmful publicity. The T s feels sure that it will not be mis- understood in saying that so much of Dr. Doran's order is about as cold-blooded and cynical as any- thing that has ever been promulgated by an offi- cer of the Federal Government. The fact that such use of firearms has brought bereavement and grief to many seems to be but lightly re- garded. Agents are adjured against misconduct not so much for the harm that may be done to others, but merely to spare the bureau from em- barrassment and unfavorable publicity. The order itself goes to the point that has perturbed the minds of many sincere supporters of the prohibition law, but eevryone will wish that it might have been based on the broader ground of common decency, rather than on the narrow reason that the bureau must be sheltered from criticism. Pretty Much Alike. (Savannah News.) We are all simmering down to pretty much the same sort of folks. There was a time when some of us did not think much of the man who could afford to play golf; we thought that was were ready to accept as a basis of a treaty, and ¥ an expensive waste of time. It was a rich man’s game and the poor man did not shine at it unless he came up from caddyhood But now- adays golf is everybody's game. The small towns have golf courses and the salaried employee in the city talks about his ‘“game” as if it were the most important thing in the world. And the city man no longer drinks cocktails and fizzes while the rural dweller has to put up with moonshine—they are all (those who do) drinking moonshine now. So the cleavages are away. And that’s a good thing. We are learn- ing to like each other because we are learning that we are like each other. We used to think We were irrevocably different. We are learning that our similarities outweigh our differences, True, everyhody is different from everybody else, and some of us, whether Pharisees or not, are mildly and privately glad of it, but in so far as classes are concerned, the differences are small indeed and getting smaller. Great Partles: Large political which keep one another’s accounts.—(Detroit News.) organizations campaign expense You'd never think from the late Houston confab that oratory is on the decline.— (Cincine nati Enquirer.) Hoover's campalgn manager l« named Work. He will have it cut out for him, all right.— (Milwaukee Journal.) Campaign keynoters are close of kin to pmln- issory notes.— (Boston Herald.) passing In Rare Form 2 say the pitcher got in a hole once?" inquired the listener. “Yes,” replied the fan describ. ing the game, “but he got out of it as vasily as a flapper does step. ins."” “You What Most Days Need Is— Less rain— Fewer disappointments—and To he fuller of pleasant prises. Sur- Sickness a Blessing (Jacksontown Ttem Paper)— A. J. Green is improving after 10 days’ illness of flu. in Disguise? in Newark oo LET Almquist Press Your Suit. We call and deliver. Phone 528. ! A. B. CHAUVIN, | | Reliable News Stand | Mail orders taken for all ! publications. Tobaccos, Can- | dy, Miners’ Supplies. | —5 — | | SCHOOL OF PIANO ‘ PLAYING ALL GRADES ACCEPTED | | Mrs, Ruth Messerschmidt ' | Phore 4501 | AUTOS FOR HIRE A thought in time may save a doctor bill —says Taxi Tad. Changeable weather of the sea- son. Rain and snow—are like- ly to catch you unawares— there’s always the danger of sickness due to exposure. Halil a Carlson taxi—you can rely on being carried to \uur des- tination “safe and dry Carlson’s Taxi and Ambulance Service Stands at Alaskan Hotel and Juneau Billiards Phone Single 0 and 94 e — | [ S S Prompt Service, Day and Night CovicH AuTo SERVICE STAND AT THE ARCTIC Phone—Day 444; Night, 444-2 rings Juneau, Alaska The Packard Taxi PHONE 118 ' Stand opposite Connors Motor Co. THE JUNEAU LAUNDRY Franklin Street, between Front and Second Streets ?Prampl and Courteous Serv: | ice Day and Night, Special | Rates for Trips to Menden- | hall Glacler and Eagle River | 324 TAXI C. VAIL, Propriétor Next Arcade Cafe Phone 324 | Phone 571 Juneau Bakery We deliver SHOP H. B. MAKINC Front Btreet F. 0. Box 218 for Mail Orders oo Phones 183 and 218 Juneau, Alaska CARS WITHOUT FOR HIRE Day and Nlcht Service PHONE 485 BLUE BIRD TAXI SHORTY GRAHAM Stand at Bill's Barber Shop ) REEDER’S TAXI PHONE 182 Corner 4th and Franklin St. Phone 241 THE CHAS. W. CARTER MORTUARY “The Last Service Is the Greatest Tribute” PRINTING and STATIONERY OPEN EVENINGS Phoue 136 GEO. M. SIMPKINS (O. Opposite Alaska Electric Light Office o ALASKAN HOTEL MODERN REASONABLE RATES "Dave HousgL, PRoP. Keeping Pace With the Times Modern business requirds the high- est standards of efficiency in banking as well as in other present day essentials. A banking service that suits peo- ple is an appropriate banking service and our management aims at all times to render such service for the people of this community. , T | The B. M. Behrends Bank 7 WOMER OF MOOSEHEART 1 Meéts 1st fia lrs 'rhumn;i each month, 8 P.M. at Moose Hall. Esther Ingman, Senlor Re- geni; Agnes Grigg, Recorder. ‘ » e — — " Brunswick Bowling Alleys for men and women Stand—Miller’s Taxl Phone 218 4 THE IRROS CO. M an u facturers Carbonated Beverages. Wholesalers Can- dy, Near Beer, Carbonic Gas. PHONE NO. 1 P oo oo MORRIS CONSTRUCTION COMPANY SAND and GRAVEL Carpenter and Concrete Work. No job too large nor toe small for us. MORRIS CONSTRUCTION CO. BZILDING CONTRACTORS Phone 62