The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, November 12, 1928, Page 4

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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, MONDAY, NOV. 12, 1928, A flapper” UNITED STATES n which Department of the Interior ath GENERAL LAND OFFICE I I to kee U. S. Land Office, ) days is Anchorage, Alaska, : September 19, 1928. By BAM HILL } e Notice is hereby given that e Bista friend [Anton Kahne, entryman, togeth- Passing Observation g b b ts help wash |[er Wwith his witnesses, William Nothing seem smaller than Anderson, and Henry Vermeire, small salary. ks all of Haines, Alaska, has sub- mitted final proof on his home- Question stead entry, serial 06121, for lots APEOrd &, car® ] ¢ : . 1 and 2, secticn 12 and lot 1, What kinds do 3 N1%NW1%, section 5% enables a|R- 59 E. C.R.M. and it is now flivyy |In the files of the U. 8. Land 1929 | Office, Anchorage, Alaeka, &d “"|if no protest is filed in the lgeal |land office at Anchorage, Alaska, within the period of publication, thirty days thereafter, said Y ProFEssionar, ! -2 a [+ e DRS. KASER & FREEBURGER DENTISTS 301-303 Goldstein Bldg. PHONE 56 Hours 9 a. m, to 9 p. m. the natural relationships betwe It forage varfous factors as much timber| } X neighboring that ! JOEN W. TROY - - - EDITOR AND MANAGER een a onf | ? — will live longer than in commercial for-| | e n altered will not prod as much as areas ~ Daily Alaska Empire Fraternal >ocieties SlETI Gastineau Channel placed under forest management. About th [ \ DETOUR are ( before and allows decay the finished preserved | ALONG LIFE’S ‘ - t down nature checks ! and Main . £5 8 o 3 p 'l_ | man 1 of the trees with be ond Class make product that of nature, learning how |a nst her. of the as direct usefulness| that the| will | eau as way will Entered in the Post Office .|nx|| matte:. al area for- tudy t with T s0 Juneau Lion: Club Meeta every Wes nesday at 12:38 : o’clock Lester D. Henderson, Presidend H. L. Redlingshafer, Secy-Treas SUBSCRIPTION PATES, Defverec by carcier in Juneau, Douglas, Thane for $1.25 per month. 5 By malil, postage paid, at the following rates: One year, in advar 2.00; six montas, in advance $6.00; one month, i Bubscribers will ¢ potify the Business Office . the delivery oi t Telephone for Editor MEMBER =7 The Associated Press Is use for republica { it or not otherwise cred local news published her can Treadwell and ' [to work ather than age example far it This | natural will Natural “No, I can't “Yeah? drive?” area an natural - 1 of waste,” so fore o rroEulasity concerned, but it is believed Dr. Charles P. Jenne DENTIST Rooms 8 and 9 Valentine Building Telephone 176 you| S il ssons science can 1 from such an area W Pessimistic Thought the ads of th Democrats ought not to forget that if he had will 'SOPDAMEA Dere iwhen e furnace fire will be going out . e {every night like the rest of the he not a Democrat and would | g e {lead to much greater gains elsewhere | D PRESS. g | y entitled to the| ches credited to| er and also the ASSOCIA exclusiv news disp! 1 in this p i new B. ® 0. ELKS ¥ 73 Time \ e ithout b 0w e in not discover shortly before that conventions - —t ANTEED TO BE LARGER | g Py 1920 wa o ALASKA CIRCULATION THAN THAT OF ANY OTHER PUBLICATION | | would | SUPPORT THE RED CROS | [ Re | ought d Cro to be in th to The rican began complete call for t Juneau roll today There hearted Cress 1 in whole co-operation d ought and The Re everyone organization there in drive. one and ATe the which to belong no citizenship or residential qualifications premises. The right might trite. of the by profound respect now it and increased death other West Mississippi doing | good work this or ation s o well known in its f: at anything that fail every v alo be said not to be We situation have so ma nples ar | it could not be met the Just it mee the anizatic it has n any won and admirat everyone vould mean ruin Rico relieving distress that in Florida, Porto ar Indian flood re disaster and many othe body to place time ago it knows where it Let ever best of his ability. of the or that d Cr adwell. every A short No one ing reliance in the nd next was Doug may be one support the Red Cr to the| All of us ought at least to be | members nization | HESK LEAVES THE WEST. “BOB” H “Bob* Hesketh, for ber of the Seattle City Council, has resigned and left for Cincinnati where he will be the head executivv officer of the bakers and caterers branch of the American Federation of Labor. 1t is not surprising to those who knew the grizzled baker that became one of the most useful mem- bers of Seattle’s municipal government, that the days before his departure were filled with many things that reminded him that the people of that City were fond of him. Of course, his elec- tion and re-election to three-y terms City Councilman, the last several terms almost unanimously, were evidence of that, but before he got out of Seattle he had more suit-cases, traveling bags, trunks, watches, etc., than the Prince of Wales would know what to do with. The Seattle Times gave “Bob” an editorial under the heading, “Good wishes Go With Him,” which seventeen years a mem- six Par said: Seattle will For seventeen years tinuously concerned with Seattle's mu- nicipal business and for a still longer time has been prominent in civie af- fairs. No man in the city is more widely known by name and reputation and few can compete with him in the number of personal friends. Mr. Hesketh had established himself as a trusted leader of the labor move- ment long before his first election as a member of the City Council. At the beginning, no doubt, his connection with city government directly resulted from his standing with organized labor and from general community desire that organized lalbor be given represen- tation in the Council. As his service ran on, however, he soon won recog- nition on his own account, as well as because of his union affiliations. Mr. Hesketh's resignation from the Council and pending departure for a dis- tant field of residence and activity will be regretted by many. Only the best wishes of Seattle will go with him and his family. “Bob” Hesketh. he has been con- miss TO KEEP TURAL FORESTS FOR OBSERVAT10N, Some of the thing natural processes en nature that she things man wants. of scientific for 1an has learned about sle him to direct and assist will more of the This is one of the objectives stry. T forester tries to man- age the forest so that it will produce more than Svirgin tinberland However, as G. / arson, Service, United State 80 produce of the Forest rimeant of Agriculture, says, before man ¢ direct and assist nature he must learn nature “It is of utmost importance,” he says, “to work in harmony with rather than in opposition to biological laws. Biologists are coming more and more to recognize that if they would comprehend the laws govern- ing the intricate rclationships between living things and their natural environment, they must study these relaticnships as nearly as possible under natural conditions. The action of plant upon plant, of animal upon animal, of animal upon plant and vice versa, and the interaction between plants and animals on the one hand and natural environment on the other are still but vaguely understood.” Mr. Pearson was speaking at the dedication of the Santa Catalina Natural Area on the - Coronado Naticnal Forest in Arizona. This tract of more than 4,460 acres will not be logged or grazed, but will be preserved in its natural ‘condition. No effort will be made to increase ‘its productivity, because in a managed forest wa only accept a Presidential nomination from the Herbert Hoover would probably have Democratic nominee to succeed President They ought to concede, further, that his of the last qualifications for to boost Republicans, Wilson experience eight years has added the office into which they him . to his werg ready Jorrowing no hard Divisicn Hill lending a Judge i when Judge The hip on First Coke for jurists as Judge E. ailable believe, | and Lomen are Divislon, w to conclude arrangments| of be very a for the both of t permanent proprietorship either or hem | There should | membership Join the American Red be as nearly a 100 sible in Cross. per cent in| those | | of the| Juneau as pos which exciudes only not are call town or know nothing in Novels. (New York World.) | Many of us wil v with a great deal of | uneasiness the suit which has been filed against Edna Ferber in the amount of §$25,000 by a man who bears the same name as ome of the char acters in “Show Boat.” He makes no effort to prove that the character in the book was intend- ed as a portrait of himself, but merely sets forth that he the character’s name and that he has been subjected to a great deal of annoyance a result. And should he recover, obviously should face a situation sim to that which obtained in Engltnd some yea ago, and perhaps still does to some extent, Persons who found names the same as their own in words of fiction allowed to collect in court, and thus auth- ors who were quite innocent of any intention to cast aspersions om particular persons either had to settle or defend a suit. The result was that English authors had to provide their char- ters, in order be safe, with preposterous and implausible names, to the great detriment of the artistic value of their work. Is the person name happens cide with the a character in much harmed thereby? Ome doubts. Certainly there is no more withering portrait in Ameri- can fiction than the portrait of George F. Bab- bitt by Sinclair Lewis. And it so happens, there was a real George F. Babbit, a distinguished newspaper man, who lived in Boston and only recently died. Yet, so far as one knods, Mr. Babbit never took any action against Mr. Lewis and the coincidence never cost him any part of his reputation. The grievance of a person in these circumstances, one suspects, is largely imaginary. as w were whose name of to coin- a book a Strong Language Among the Ladies. (New York Times.) Shortly after the arrival in England of Mrs. McPherson and the “Four Square Gospel” another branch of religious labor, also headed by a woman, sped from our shores. The English ami- ably listened to the preachments of the leader of the “Church of the Pillar of Fire.” They were particularly diverted by her statement, as soon as she landed in London, that Mrs. McPherson as a sorceress, As epithets go, that is rather charming. What red-haired, bouncing and filled with good cculd resent it? There is no record that the lady in question did. The intention ob- viously was to denounce her, hut she appears perversely to have been pleased. In going off the beaten track in search of mames to call people, it is dangerous to use any but the simplest terms if ambiguity is to be avoided. Some of the good old-fashioned lost their early and unpleasant especially true of the things call another. A hundred sorceress and siren we works, words have force. This is one woman may years or more ago re not softened evem by a smile. As for witch, the unlucky female who acquired that title was in danger of her life. Now these words are terms of admiration and endearment. The only unmistakably approbrious epithet which a lady can now use of another is “that woman." Poverty Unknown. (Seward Gateway.) One of the striking impressions that impigned upon the consciousness of the new pastor of the Seward Community Church when he arrived two months ago was the lack of evidence of poverty, He looked for it but just couldn't find it. He was so pleasantly nonplussed by the fact that he told the Seward Chamber of Commerce of it. Going on the well-preseribed formula that “the poor we have always with us” and. actuated by sincere desire to give aid on behalf of :I:N church if aid be needed, he looked about him. All he could see was a well-clothed, prosperous-looking, happy people poorer than others, it is true, hut poor. More than that, everyone priceless asset of well being, » tion and an abiding faith in the well-fed, Some were none was very cargied that cheerful disposi- future, ident of the New as urged more whis- widespread current for the whiskey.— Dr. Samuel W. Lambert, Pry York Academy of Medicine, h key for the aged. Another demand is for more age (Brooklyn Bagle.) R e A S Canada exported whiske: Yy of the value of $18,000,000 to the United States last year. Looks ]‘: itrl ’Ihers must have been much more sickness 118 country than many people oy (Boston Tran ipt.) pons E R L RGN 1L TS 3 .)’l‘he In(ema! Revenue Bureau reports that the ve-cent cigar is coming back. It has not really been away. Only the old pri y ce has — (Brooklyn Eagle.) p e G tol serontology is the new science that ¢ » may en- able one to live long enough to see bunk taken out of politics.— (Buffalo Courier-Express.) the | | ‘A Mean Brute the paper,” “tuat a a divorce from husband, claiming that the ;u\in: he's given her since | marriage is a black eye.” “Huh, the stingy cuss. might at |least have been liberal enough to have given her two,” grinned |husband, L ve by { Mrs. Grouca man wants remarked Duluth wo- her only their her Helped Some One advantage a balky had over a balky motor car that you could beat it as well it relieve your hor was as cuss to feelings, Tough Luck Beneath a skiri cnce was A lovel ace to hide, the mouse did And might be still, but ‘twould Make me too dizzy to climb up so high Nothing Just As Good Custome Have you any varnish remover? Druggist drinks, but speakeasy in No, you the we sell only might try next bleek. soft the What Every Wife Knows Being headstrong often is a sign of intellectual weakness. It'e Getting You! u should wink their eyes, will, old top, it/ you're It ever Potato You surely Quit see wise Course It Never Happened Teacher: “Give a sentence using the word molasse mart Ras “Der was s than lads at de party.” mo las; Combined Success and Mator Ob- servaticn AN" gets you where you want to go, and so does the other “Can”—if it doesn’t have a flat or the engine doesn’t die on you. We're Lucky They Aré Not 1f all men had wiyves like those o fthe gents in ‘he cartoons, the manuzacturers of courtiplaster would be paying the largest income taxes. A Modernist “It always makes me sore,” Remarked young Mr., Weegal, “When I discovered what I'm enjoying ain't illegal.” Expecting A Bawling Out “Say, old man, what makes you so darn fidgety?” demanded the host. “Well, Bill,” confessed his guest, “I always feel that way after I have used a guest towel.” Question of the Hour Can we hold off the next pay- ment on the car so we can have a turkey for Thanksgiving? Real Courage Our idea of a man entitled to the biggest medal given for brav- ery is one who has the courage to interrupt the conversation of two department store princesses by asking them if either has time to wait on him. More Or Less True Some women give you the im- pression that to live with them would be as hard as it would be to live without money. A wife 'whose husband is only dead from the neck on up always envies the full-fredged widow who is enjoying her life insurance money. No matter how long people live, they never reach a time when they enjoy being given advice or cas- tor oil. Mabry’s Cafe Imperial Building Front Street Regular Dinners Short Orders Lunches Open 6 a. m. to 2 a. m. POPULAR PRICES Merchants Lunch served from 11:30 a. m. to 2 p. m. daily. 50 cents HARRY MABRY Proprietor law that would has family ge mem- s a hanker- hard time himself. S S TSN final final certificate st Last publication, | | MUTUAL ICE CREAM JUNEAU [SUSSTS S S SR S, proof will be accepted and sued. J. LINDLEY GREEN Register. 13, 1928, 16, 1928. DENTIST Oct. Nov. publication, Dr. A. W. Stewart Hours 9 a. m. to 6 p. m. SEWARD BUILDING Office Phone 469, Res. Phone 276. Seerctary Visiting Brothers welc: Co-Ordin ot Freemasonry Scottish Rits r | =i Regular meetings second Friday each Hours 7T to8 N ) Phone: Offico R A Dr. Hours: p. m. to 5 p. m 75¢ per quart We Deliver Dr. H. Vance Ostecpath—201 Goldatein Bldg 0 to 12; 1 or 1y appoinment Licensed Osteovathic Fhyaic'an 1671, Rosidence, Gasi'neau Hotel to §; Geo. L. Barton CHIROPRACTOR, Hellenthal Bidg. Office Service Only 10 a. m. to 12 noon, 2 and 7 p. m. to 9 p. m. Phone 529 CHIROPRACTIC is not the practice of Medicine, Surgery nor Osteopathy. BILLIARDS CARLSON TAXI Phones Single O and 94 Medlcal Gymnastics, e & '|Janean Public Library Circulation Room Open From 1 to 6:30 p m—7:00 p. m. o A oo wa | Hysen, brother of newly en- lhzoncd King Zogu of Albania g Free Beading Room Current Magazines, Newspapers lectricity st Maesage 410 Goldstein Bidg. Phone—Office: 423. e sl LOYAL ORDLA ¥ MOO0SE Juncau Locgs Me. 78 Meets every Monde; night, at » J'eclocw HELL! HART, Se WALTER D:.(‘tntol H. . 9% Second and Fourth Mon- e {day of each rl:iu::;n b\l;n //\,\\ Fellows" all, - - | ginning at 1:30 o'clock. ‘Qfl\,\f i”.\ltf{y 1. LUTAS, Msas- ¥ [|ien CHAS E. NAGHEL vy BicrOTRFY, Order :1 EASTERN STAR Second and Fourth Tusa ' B days of cuch month, & Hulene W. J.. Albrecht| ! 8 pelocie 'L 0.70" B PHYSICAL THERAPIST ‘ | all, | T ! - —— | KNIGHTS oF | COLUMBUS ¢ Seghers Council No. 178 Meetings second and lagh | Monday At 7:30 st | Translent brothers urged and City Mall, Second Floor Main Street at 4th Reading Room Open from a3 m to 10 p. m. | optictan | | Valentine’s Optical Dept. R. L. DOUGLASS and Optometrist Itoom 18, Valentine Bld Hours 9 2. m. to 6 p. m. by Aprointment | te attend. Co | bere, Fifih W. M. gt oll Zbam- D/ UGLAS AERIE 117 o'clock 8 Meets Mo Bc. o B * hagles nights 8 : " Hall, £:30 p. m. I Opt. . Reference Books, Etc, ‘ FREE TO ALL d who becomes a prince of th’t blood by reason of his brother’s elevation to the throme. The photo was made on the steps o the royal palace. “International Newsreel) S e Christmas Cards—Emplre. P BURFORD’S CORNER | ] R e — i Robert Simpson Uraduste Los Angeies oclk- legke of Optomstry snd Opthalmslogy Glasses Fitted ieneses Grouad ¥ | Douglas. William Oft, |L. Smith, Secretiry Brothers welcome. W. P. Guy Visiting " AMERICAN LEGION Meets second ane tourth Thureday eacn moacth iw Dugout. PIG'N WHISTLE CANDY None Better—Box or Bulk Phone 149 COURTESY and | | | [ia e e T— Reliable Transfer Res, 148 GOOD SERVICE Our Motto WOMEN OF MOOSEETART | LEGION, NO. 439 AUTOS FOR HIRE —says Taxi Tad. of some- by call- A ride —and the problem where to go is solved ing Single O or 94. through the country can be enjoyed at this time of the year. Reasonable rates. Carlson's Taxi and Ambulance Service Phone Single 0 and 9'4 — Berry’s Taxi PHONE 199 Stand at Gastineau The Packard Taxi PHONE 444 Stand at Arctic Prompt Service, Day and Night Covica Auto SERVICE STAND AT THE OLYMPIC Phone 342, Day or Night Juneau, Alaska John Borbridge TAXI PHONES REEDER'S TAXI PHONE 182 _ Day and Night Serrice THE CHAS. W. CARTER MORTUARY “The Last Service Is the Greatest Tribute” Corner 4th and Franklin St. Phone 136 GEO. M. SIMPKINS (O. PRINTING and STATIONERY SCRIPTO LONG LEAD PENCILS FILING CABINETS Phone 244 QOpposite Alaska Electric Light R ALASKAN HOTEL OFFICE EQUIPMENT Office MODERN REASONABLE RATES DAvE HouskiL, PROP. | Meets 1st and 3rd Thursdays ; each month, 8 P.M. at Mooss l | Hall. Esther Ingmgp, BSenlor no—’ geni; Agnes Grigg, Recorder. f Pt — Brunswick Bowling Alleys for men and women Stand—Miller’'s Taxi Phone 218 i A H. B. MAKINC Front Street P. 0. Box 218 for Mail Orders MORRIS CONSTRUCTION COMPANY SAND and GRAVEL Carpenter and Concrete Work. An Interest Account ADDS to your income, standing and self-respect, MAKES you independent and thrifty, GIVES you protection and the good things of life, ,OP'ENS the way to opportunity and success.’ We welcome your Interest Account 4% Paid Semi-Annually The B. M. Behrends Bank Bank in Alaska CONSTRUCTION CO. BZILDING CONTRACTORS No job too large nor too small for us. MORRIS Phone 82 JUNEAU TRANSFER COMPANY Moves, Packs and Stores Freight and Prompt Delivery of ALL KINDS OF COAL SAW MILL WO0OD and Oftice Phone 389 Residence Phone 443 a8 THB EMPIRE THE LAR( 5 e A COAL

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