The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, September 11, 1928, Page 4

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4 Datl ) 4laska Em pm) JOKN W TBOY ... EDITOB AND MANAGER the Sund -) lv PRINTING COMPANY Juneau, Alaska E Streets, Entered in the F Juneau as Second Class matter. st Office in SUBSCRIPTION PATES. Delivered by caerier In Juneau, Doughas,” Thane $1:25 per month, past following rates: ady months, in advance Treadwell and By mail One year. $6.00; onc Subscribers will motify the Business Office 3 the delivery of their papers. ™ Telephone for Editorial and Business Offices, ASSOCI D PRESS. Press s exclusively entitleds to the use for republication of all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited in this paper and also the local news published herein in x montk { they will promptly failure or irregularity 4. MEMBER The Associated ALASKA CiRCULATION ARANTEED TO BE LARGER THAN THAT OF ANY OTHER PUBLICATION THE MAINE ELECTION. Statistics of the war- the elections have Maine no this former Al saying the Prohibition naturally would want be in with her of Democratic quarreling never ranted Nation." would apply has been a years, Nation been’ a saying The to s 80 goes circumstance Maine seventy the e under situation State year. nearly the and for and rest of to lot two However, in State the local of two-and-a-half to one that the Republican Party the doldrums that the riding the It is that a two-and-a-half to one Republican majority in Maine not unsual thing. Coolidge carried it by than three-and-a-half to one and the last tion for United States Senator gave lican nominee about two-and-a-half to one. Hard- ing carried it by half to one. But usually, in Democratic the Republican majorities have been much smaller Of course, the fact that the Republicans flood- ed Maine with orators of National renown while the without hope of carrying ‘the State and full knowledge that the Republican majority there would large, wasted pow- der, probably had some influence in bringing out larger Republican than Democrtic The circumstance that the Democratic Party Maine is vexed with factional differences, that the State leader of four y ago has bolted the party, also probably lot to do with keeping the The returns thus far re. that the big Republican to light Democratic than voting , all things concerned that there lot satisfaction and Democratic faction in that State at least If the there has any National significance at in favor of the Republicans there has there step for a year or Maine be | majority an indication| in New England is in Democratic Party that when matter Republican it not none can deny a election, no what might issues, gives a is or is crest true is an better special elec- the Repub- two-anc years, Democrats, be no a votes in s had a ic vote down ceived would majority was due more to a heavy Republican indicate However, as sai has given e publican Maine of Re- dissatis- election all it is dence is GERMANY KEEPING THE FAITH. The circumstance that Germany has met in full the reparations payments provided for in the Dawes plans up to September 1st, provided in the budget to care for those which fall due before September 1, 1929, indicates three things: the good faith of Germany, the efficiency of her Government and the emergenc of that country from the burdens of war. The reparations pay- ments for the year just ended amounted to $420,- 000,000. Those for the current year, already provided for, will amount to $600,000,000. The total payments since the beginning of 1925 have been $1,350,000,000 It is no longer continue, taxation, to make, for the reparations sight is the question of the to care for the the money to transfer to foreign countries, has been made possible the past from large investments of foreigners, particulaly ericans, in Germany. But German securitie not now being offered for foreign investment as abundantly as they were, and the belief is that they will be as time At the present Germany's exports are ex- ceeding her imports by $700,000,000 a year. However, to maintain the exchange balance and retain enough gold in the to sustain the value of the the and dividends on foreign inless reinvested, must also be It is evident that there may bhe hard sledding ahead unless the foreign investments in Germany are kept up at a rather large amount annually In the mean the eountry are increasing pect is that the excess will increase rather and feared that Germany will not the imposition of rather high on at le enough to The only cloud ability of the banks the country and spare This the Am- are through paper care needs of less at and less least, goes on. about country mark investment a burden on thi interest surplus ome me physical assets of that value, and the pros- of exports over imports than It also probable that most the profits from foreign investments will be wvested in the country ‘The determination o keep the faith, so plainly in evidence, and German industry, efficiency and thrift wil!, without doubt, find a way to negotiate any rough places that might arise. GOV. SMITH'S Attorney-General Albert Ottinger York, the sole successful Republican for a State office in the last election, be slated for the Republican nomination for Governor thig month. The New York World says the Democratic nominee to run against him will be Herbert H. Lehman, New York banker and philanthropist who was Gov. Smith's cam- paign manager in 1924 and 1926, one of his pre- in decrease. is \l CCESSOR. of New candidate is said to ond and Main | in 1 THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, TUESDAY, SEPT. 11, 1928. convention ination and Finance Committee The lafbter charitahle managers for the Presidential nom- chairman of the Democratic joth Ottinger and Lehman has been liberal and educational present are Jews |of tions a Hebrew v have splitting the the another for the the D enou yerats | down offices in New Mexico did to go without and nominating one man next 4th of March and term to begin that day. Of course Mexican got the short term. | Dr. MeBric | emphatically the League Gov. Smith is a Catholic true, but the circumstance that Dr it to suspect, Tribune McBride 48 a [ not h round Senatorship for term to end poor head of that the Anti-Saloon League, is opposing It may be McBride The Chicago crook and that denies because he as- serts causes Dr his word is worthless one Philadelphia Yankees in that Saturday but they By winning day, the Yankees are to be a The Athleticd got of the American League pennant race staid there for ope day only. games from the Athletics Sun- aggin in the lead. This is month for those two teams ahead two going busy Arrange dates so during the last four given to the Fair of time might be that a goo§ deal days of the week Viscount Haldane. (Prince Rupert News.) is my spiritual home.” The avowal the late Lord Haldane, ex-Minister r and ex-Lord Chancellor, some years before the Great War, in the course of a discussion con- fined merely to matters philosophic. Quite nat- urally, though, the phrase was remembered very quickly when the German legions began to march. Lord Haldane was then occupying Woolsack. On this utterance there was based an attack upon him by a section of the English press, perhaps as bitter and relentless as any which has assailed any public character in Great Britain. Probably Lord Haldane’s cast of mind would have enabled him endure with equanimity any ult of this sort There were many, not of Hald- ane's way of political thought or po reat appreciation of his school of ho condemned the onslaught as mere dened scream of mob propaganda. public poinion on the whole agreed that Lord Haldane's German affinities rendered it inexped- ient that he should remain prominently identified with the prosecution of the War The King bestowed upon him the Order of Merit, and Lord Haldane limited his-further services to the State henceforth to sitting as a member of the Judi- cial Committee of the Privy Council. Thus ended the active political career of one of the most prominent champions of Liberalism in a period of over thirty years, except that for a brief period he was a member of Ramsay Macdonald's Government The Haldane “Germany was made by of W, to a Lord ssing gny philosophy, the mad- vertheless family and its connections have in the last few generations given to Scotland in particular and to Britain at large several men of note, who divided themselves equally between the Law and the Prophets. Robert Burdon Haldane, the subject of this memoir, received his early education at Edinburgh, and later studied philosophy at Gottingen. It was here that he first acquired his eagerness in pursuing German thought, both ancient and modern; perhaps no student in his day had a wider acquaintance with the metaphysics of Hegel and the writings of Schopenhauer. Possessed of ample private means Haldane also devoted himself assiduuously “to the study and practice of the law.” His early work lay at the Chancery Bar and in the Privy Council Chamber. There was a goodly array of eminent counsel in Haldane's days as an advocate, but few could excell him in the ability to mar- shal facts and to deliver a long argument lucidly. His capacity for work was always prodigious, and the manner in which he would address their Lordships, literally for days upon end, without ever the slightest reduction in the speed of his argument, was a really remarkable exhibition in advocacy. Women and the Olympic Games. (Vancouver, B. C., Sun.) The International Amateur Athletic Federation has voted wisely to retain the women’s track and field events in the programs of the Olympic Games, s It is true strenuously in that women, sports, may by unfit indulging too themselves for the duties of motherhood. But for every girl who injures herself, through this opening of athletics to women, there are a thousand girls who will be inspired to take just the right amount of exercise to save themselves from an unhealthy life and an early grave. The Victorian type of girl, languid and help- may have been an adorable person in her early days At least the novelists say she was. But she must have made life a merry hell for herself and her family when her later years turned her langour into indigestion and her de- muren into bad temper. The novelists have neglected to tell us about that. No person, male or female, mal, kindly and useful life open air exercise. The old Greeks played a big part Games, ¥ If the peformance of women in these modern Olympic Games can encourage girls all over the can live a nor- without adequate knew in that their And women original Olympic patron | organiza- | | ALONG LIFE’S DETOUR By SAM HILL —— Not to Be Envied Of this you can be sure— Lots of folks you meet Who live in Luxury Don’t live on easy street Pascing Observation Among other things that a lot unrest at t time are of How Times Have Changed! Mayme—Does . she really lov him? Alice en up his sake She smoking must and She has g drinking for Store. Life's little tragedies— Having the cob before you can eat it. Gallantry Unrecognized “Here, lady, take my seat,” the man with old-fashioned tions about women. “Thanks. I'm getting off at th next too,” she frigidly no- corner the has One for Which trouble caused moonlight men mor or moonshine? Don't Shoot Officer, Down. Gentlemen prefer blondes anc if the gentlemen happen to be motorists they want their lights green We'll Come Useless Information There will be more heated pol tical arguments than heated apart- ments during the cool days of this fall. Something He's Overlooked This modern sucis we must Confess never learned like; He makes us wonder if The darn fool killer's strike. we've on Early Bolter Gets the Publicity Blinks—Aren’t you going to bolt your party this year? Jinks—No, it's too late, bolting is so common now the papers have quit printing the names of those who do it. Another Seasonabie ubservation The trouble with this stuff you buy to keep the mosquitoes away is that the pesky things don’t seem to understand what it's for. Journalism Also Has Changed “Ever have any desire to get back to earth? asked the Shade of ireeley. “No,” snapped the Watterson, “I could write als but I couldn't draw strips.” editori- comic Way to Get Obituary Notice His foot was on the gas, His arms around the maiden’s e Don’t take a chance— take a Carlson taxi —says Taxi Tad. Little tots — alone—hurrying to school — always face the risks of the busy streets. Your little ones can ride safely em- trusted to the care of a Carl- son taxi driver. Our “daily call service” solves the prob- lem of getting them to school safely. Carlson’s Taxi and world to get out and indulge in vigorous open air exercise, even the ruination of a few Olymptc contestants will not be too high a price to pay for such a hygenic and eugenic benefit, As Heflin and Norris belie\'u the world is out of step, let them *head a mugwump national ticket. It will cure them of their ego.— (Atlan- ta Constitution.) Sven if the politicians do make the issues, the voters still will have the privilege of keep- ing their minds on something else.— (Toledo | Blade.) The serious thing about this campaign of edu- cation is that a whole lot of other people have (0t to be foolad, in addition to the customary farmers.—(Ohio State Journal.) When Scar-Face Al Capone travels about the country he doubtless refers airily to his Chicago residence as his “‘shooting box."— (Seattle Times.) Nobody has forecast the end of the world for November. But if Texas goes for Hoover that will be the next thing to it.—(Toledo Blade.) Democratic dilemma is how to get derbies on the rah-rah boys who never wear hats.— (Milwaukee Journal.) The real brown Ambulance Service Stands ayv Alaskan Hotel and Juneau Billlards Phone Single 0 and 94 The Packard Taxi PHONE 444 Stand at Arctic THE JUNEAU LAUNDRY Franklin Street, between - Front and Second Streets Prompt Service, Day and Ni CovicH AuUTO SERVICE STAND AT THE 'OLYMPIC ! Phone 342, Day or Night i Juneau, Alaska — e the the cussed skeet- When the Grinders Come From the to have the corn cut ofl replied | Debating Societies| e 3 ,| “To keep from going into bank- Shade of neck; ¢ headlines said next day; A Youth and Lass Killed Wreck. ’lhl‘ [ in 1 Forgotten Pleasure " said Clarence, “what sersonal liberty?” ‘I gan't remember, son, I haven't had dny since I was married thirty ago,” sighed his dad. is A Fable A mule stood looking over the fence at a motorist working over his stalled car. Alas,” he “l1 always thought I was but I never was able to inspl uch language. Moral—The berries of one gen- eration is the oil can of the next Add Similies— nervy salesman wh to sell pr ent of an company electric refriger sighed, good As tries as a the an ator. | Got 'Em Up a Stump {These are the melancholy days | When it you hear great states | men sigh, | You know that they are thinking of An ary.” issue known as “wet and Too Much Scenery gods! Why did you ditch queen you had and get a homely mug like that old hen for your stenog?” exclamied the ol triend of the boss. ‘Y that ruptcy,” he grinned, “the homely Imut does six times as much work as the queen did—and the clerks: |—and I—are doing six times more i\\m‘k than we did while she was | here." More or Less True When a woman reaches the end her life there’s nothing she has that is quite so worn out as her vocabulary. The great trouble with most |children is that they insist on fol- lowing their parents’ example in. stead of their advice. You can nearly always tell by merely looking at a couple wheth- er their home is a love nest or a squared circle. The* old-fashioned boy who was content with one lock of his sweet- heart's hair, now has a son who brings away a sample of his |sweetie's complexion every time calls on her, The cook books of the future will contain nothing but a list of different canned goods and a de- scription of the best can opener Every wife reaches the pla where she thinks there ought to be a law compelling the husband to take the family either to a hotel or restaurant for the Sunday {dinner. The restaurants in the business districts would be doing a neap bigger business if girls considered it as important to be well fed as they do to be well dressed. The reason friend hub never is greeted by friend wife at the door when he comes home from work is because he always arrives before she gets back from the af- ternoon club. e — he 0ld papers for sale at the Empire AUTOS FOR HIRE MILLER'S T. Phones 183 and 21! Juneau, Alaska CARS WITHOUT DRIVERS FOR HIRE John Borbridge TAXI NES Nights—3877 REEDER’S TAXI PHONE 182 Day and Night Service Seattle Fruit and Produce Co. Fresh Fruit and Veeetables Wholesale and Retail' Out of town orders given special attentiom J. B. BURFORD & CO L. C. Smith and Cofona TYPEWRITERS b Public Stenographer Y ProrFEssionar, | il e o SN &3 DRS. KASER & FREEBURGER DENTISTS 301-303 Goldstein Bldg. PHONE 56 Hours 9 a. m. to 9 p. m. Dr. Charles P. Jenne DENTIST Rooms 8 and 9 Valentine Bullding Victor Orthophon das arrived. Your inspection | invited. ) Radio Ortho‘phonic | | Anderson Music Shoppe Telephone 17¢ Radiola | Dr. A. W. Stewart DENTIST Hours 9 a. m. to 6 p. m. Phone 143, | 4 city { GARBAGE | HAULED AND LUOT CLEANING G. A. GETCHELL, Phowe 109 or 149 J aneau Public Library and Free Reading Room Mall, Main Street at 4th Reading Room Open From £ 1 m. to 10 p. m. Circulation Room Open From m.—7:00 p. m. to 8:30 p. m. Current Magazines, Nawspapers Reference Books, Ete, FREE TO ALL 1 to 65:30 p. 3EWARD BUILDING Office Phone 4 Res. Phone ° H. Vance 201 Go'dstein Bldg. 0 to 12; 1 to §; or by appolnment Licensed Osteouathic, Physic'an Phone: Office 1671. Gastineau Hotel idence, r 4 [ o T S A T SENDEE Dr. Geo. L. Barton CHIROPRACTOR, Hellenthal Bidg. Office Service Only Hours: 10 a. m. to 12 noon, 2 p.m to 5 p. m. and 7 p. m. to 9 p. m. Phone 529 CHIROPRACTIC s not the practice of Medicine, | Surgery nor Osteopathy. Second Floor g VHL»lenc W. L. Albrecht PHYBICAL THERAPIST rf; tion. Yukon malid tions. | DA I3 been bu THE WHITEHORSE INN The New Palatial Modern Hotel at Whitehorse The Whitehorse Inn has just in keeping witk ; the latest in hotel construe- ' rooms with hot and cold running water of | which no other hetal in the t All can connecting and public baths, and Write er wire for reserva- Medical Gymnastics, Massage | ‘lmtrlclu 410 Goldstein Bids. Hm—()fl'leo: 423, = 1 “Valontine' Optle-l Dept. R. L. DOUGLASS Optlchn and Optometrist Valentine Bldz. Boull m. to 6 p. m. and , hy Appointment uben qimpson [ Uraduate Lol Anlole- ook | leme of Optomnry and i } Opthalmols " boast, private bellboy service. F MR Wrecking Contractor - LEE ROX Houses and buildings razed P. 0. Box 298 [ THE CHAS. W. CARTER MORTUARY Glasses Fif Leneses Grouad I — -y Miss Caroline Todd ; Piano Harmon: | Special Rates Beginning September 1st' ks .L PHONE 2754 - JURSERDEDE | ——— “The Last Service Is the Greatest Tribute” Corner 4th and Franklin St. Phone 136 GEO. M. SIMPKINS CO. PRINTING and STATIONERY SCRIPTO LONG LEAD PENCILS FILING CABINETS Phone 244 OFFICE EQUIPMENT Opposite Alaska Electric Light Office ALASKAN HOTEL MODERN REASONABLE RATES ‘Dave HouseL, PRroP. A Useful Bank _We realize that the well-being and growth of this bank depends on the extent of its usefulness to a business or individual. We do not merely “accept” deposits but solicit them, however small. to We therefore strive at all times please our customers and give them all the service and courtesy expected of a well managed bank. TheB M. Behrends Bank BO()ST FOR m FAIR— | | \ | | 5 Fraternal >ocieries. SRR Gastineau Channel i —a Juneau Liong Club Meets every Wes nesday at 12:39 o'clock. Lester D. Henderson, Presidest H. L. Redlingshafer, Secy-’l‘reu T G Meeting second an§ fourth = Wednesds, evenin at o’clock H H Mumrnhmld".‘ Exalted Rulen M. H. Sidee, ary. - __Visiting Brothers welcome, Scottish Rits Regular meetings second Fr'day olc‘h nonth mc¢ 7:30 d Fallows f LOYAL ORDLA, OF MOOSE WALTER B. HEISEL Seccretary, un u Locge No. 78 every Monds @ A - WALTER HELLEN Dictator. C. D. FERGUSON, Secretary. MOUNT .I‘UNAEAU LODGE N®. \J ‘er. CHAS M. Secretary. hAt)HEL Order ot EASTERN STAR Second and Fourth Twes days of each month, & 8 e'clock, I. 0. O. "wll WMILD’I’RFDuHQAfl» thy Matrew AL]LE BROWN, Secy KNIGHTS COLUMIU Seghers Council No. 1764, Meetings second and last Monday at 7:30 p. m Translent brothers urged te attend. Council fham- oF D1 8) M. h, H. J. TURNER, s«-n -tary. DOUGLAS AERIE 117 F. O. &, Meets Monday nights 8 o'clock Eagles’ HHall, Douglas. William Ott, W. P. Guy L. Smith, Secretary. Vigiting Brothers welcome. AMERICAN LEGION Meets second and fourth Thursday each month Is Dugout. | e P RSP, WOMEN CF MOOSEHEART LEGION, NO. 439 Meets 1st and 3rd Thursdays each month, 8 P.M. at Moose Hall. Esther Ingman, Senlor Re-, gent; Agnes Grigg, Recorder. . I AT NIRRT 12 Brunswick Bowling Alleys for men and women Stand—Miller’s Taxi Phone 218 THE IRROS CO. ‘M anufacturers Carbonated Beverages. Wholesalers Can- dy, Near Beer, Carbonic Gas. PHONE NO. 1 eSS MORRIS CONSTRUCTION COMPANY SAND and GRAVEL Carpenter and Concrete Work. 'No job too large nor too small for us. MORRIS CONSTRUCTION CO. BYZILDING CONTRACTORS Phone, 82

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