The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, December 28, 1928, Page 4

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| the marketing sn of cotton goods down South that the need \anship is beginning to and th produc and knows at Ddfl_)' Alaskd Empire | o o T - - EDITOR AND MANAGER|ior high-power iles be felt | the leading cotton| closely \ul”l\ ll\ he p The '8 50 gl ed JOHN W. TROY - - g excer by _th AV BMI MPANY At Ma South Carolina . e followed by in closing the i.mmvl:. wring State, ich is a of the Maussachusett it a manufacturing in they Caro gap betwe {the PTION RATES. |ing neau. Dougi readwell and v Enter na, wi matter. is Georgia that output two States. rac- | behind her t short suesc speed will | »d by carrier in Thane fo Canig | make he third cotton ite | rates | a time if cont 1S are nths, in advance, | going will promptly | ) e notify the Busine « ire or irregularity aF e | in e Democrat, who ition It wet the was ofr ot Senate to T he Prohi enforce $34,000,000 to more Most of the dry the drys in there Bruce enforcement that tried to give the people. Senate apparent why Anti-Saloon League work | al nt appropriation from than bill dollar TED PRESS, |4 usively | 5 quarter on Sen or it or 1 Jocal ne il his paper tors opposed and the ed urging “) % 4 House its rejection Senator of law u ALASKA CIRCULATION ARANTEED TO BE LARGER THAN THAT OF ANY PUBLICATION e Gov wa the sort Smith would have debate the makes ind the politic the T8 bootlegge [ together on this Prohibition question. Department Service $10,000,000 a y The the 000,000 as Sury appropriation bill Guard than compared with ago The increase efficiency in serving and saving life, the Service giv Coast more to a not f rt t greater nt the It i in rum- coun try due to the merch marine incre pd activities of chasing iy every doctor After to have a obe.) party somebody (Atchison, Kan., n AL MAN ABOQ “DANDY coPr.” Whalen, Ne who GOTHAM'S OFFIC TOWN NOW Sometimes the undertaker serves all needful purposes new | the | millionuire W Grover Cleveland w “ork’s Police real Gotham’s in maker's at a he is Mavor of fashion wise, he standing ways Mayor hand on the at About the ¢ eagull? Commissioner, after the vAg How in one criminals metropolis, picturesque characters. A ttle concerned fish and feathered game s linterested learning Times.) na for the chief soid to be Walker's witty irman of the Committee his own r the executive of Everyon perpetuation of along our coasts will be that their worst enemy lis the seagull. This is the conelusion reached, or's |after many years of intimate observation, by al Munro Wyckeff of Port Townsend and various Mr. Wyckoff reveals what he believes cause of incalculable losses in roe, fry as well as in eggs and young to the voracious appetite $100,000 a year, Jimmy rival as a gla in ready and stated Chq Rec epeeches 1 and speaker Like May was the unofficial on he from the Hall home, H wis Walkerer ung and handsome Mayor's boon L 18 M 1lker influence the points, we to be ‘the A% Miand mat Mayor st et famous | of the guil It Mr estion that gulls be lif uly shred n made notables when was absent ri City steps when the w acrificed ccracks are al a Wyckoff’s conclusion is correct, his Federal restrictions against kill- d becomes very pertinent. About of reputation for usefulness now gull is as a scavenger, and even question. Certainly, if put wle would speak for the full far more useful fish and game as the and the It toc Grover to the head nt that he for w 5 Tuge post New York had to that k i lenging accept of lice I partment It to sice, t | protection of t ad [ birds, has the| Federal he|runs back the [just why pest | It mé k sacrifice u $100,000 a year £10,000 whic he Howover m e pay a T at law so far it forbidding the killing that no one was thought nec due to appr of gulls emes to remember y or desirable. siveness of a for the na such as pur- Mariner after he bronght down cousin of the gull, with cross- iever having missed fire what y th ping fame repu under does Mayor, when dev known of all the ing at some real job and makin things came from the spare moment No that he Among the manifold & missioner Whalen is training. Dandy Like of the was wo story been uck ne men about town, B he pl will job now compll . i his way ed during one question the 1 thut when he first was called “a nut.” » more geneval public I'les trusts that Mr. Wyckoff reference to himself in terms more harsh than that. But we would not |venture to predict what out busy humanitarians {and nature lovers will have to say. pro- In pub- has anothier real f Com-! with | lic should | ™MaY luny hments bringing th attention \ not hear said to be a fine Thie Cop voice good amateur next number b Iy of be the Broadway Hguad.” HU RRI( \\'F ()Bh\\ \() LAW. | X e L Woli Control. best - — United ran Mit- who facls in th the ane according 1t avuailable in Agriculture, in eycles. « Tropical ' scientific information States Department of according to rule or chell, Meteorologist of the Weather has made study of all the regard to anes ulong the coasts of the South Atlantic Gulf States for the last 50 years, says: “No rule law of regular recurrence of periods of maximum or minimum frequency has| been established It doubtful if such pe- riodicity ex VIherefore, no prediction can be made to the number of hur that will occur in a given year ¢ e nor as to the States that will | them. A comparison with records of shows that during the lasi 10 the East Coast of Florida has experienced unusually large number hurricanes. Hence, it may be assumed that future will rarely show | 80 high a frequency hurricanes there as has| the last one.” reliahle (Petersburg Press.) in Petersburg and Alaska realize the importance of by R. Stewart for the Few people general seem to work being done logical Survey predatory lived in in the Bio- do not a iarles L. Bureau, a available hur and animal a wolf pests. Anyone who or coyote country knows the tation that only a small band of these troyers can do. Cattle men have lost as much s ten thousand dollars worth of stock from the depredations of one or two animals, Mr. Stewart reports that while the country not bheen completely infested by wolves and it is becoming so with the prospect that the next two or three years much of game and fur-bearing animal reserve is going be materially decreased. And these animals have been known to attack human beings when sufficiently aroused by hunger, or other causes. It is more than time to get busy and the |resoluticn adopted by the Commercial Club ask- |ing tie appropriation of $50,000 instead of $12 000 originally sought is a worth while movement in this direction. The Petersburg district is wide- ly known for its bounteous supply of game and fur-bearing animals but it will not be so kuown if the wolves (no coyotes are known among the slands yet) continue their devastating work In the meantime, Mr, Stewart is preparing a pamplet of instructions on how to go about trapping wolves and every hunter and trapper In the district should obtain a copy as soon as ks (.lu- are ready, probably about the first of the yea 18 has ever or de is a res od of affected 1 lier y the to years an decades of fact arlier to hurricanes is record, no one June One regard ot in all on it the year than later than Uctober. No tropical cyclone of hur- ricane intensity, Mr. Mitchell, has ever far as is known, reached the Gulf or (e South Atlantic Coast in any of the other en mthe of the year. to buildings by minimized by stronger construction, at the Weather Bureau believe As from dam- age from high tides in low coastal sections and along large and shallow lakes, they say, damage by hurricane winds to buildings can be minimized it the walls and framework of the buildings are sufficiently strong to withstand the wind pressure when the wind attaing velocity of from 100 to 125 miles an hour. Few well-constructed buildings collapse and either kill or endanger the lives of the occupants, except possibly in the greatest of hurricanes. ¢ NEW or says 80 hurricanes the cal exp L SRS, o 8 de Never Too Old. (Seattle Post-Intelligencer.) Elihu Root tells us that he has quit politics because he is too old. The time comes, he says, when every man should step out of the field of |activity, and Mr. Root adds that he has reached that time and is not foolish enough to deny it, even to himself. Mr. Root is eighty-thibe John R. Voorhis, President of the Buuni of Bections of New York City, says he intends never g to retire. He has found his life as interesting in the last decade as when he was a youth, He finds t his example and his advice n;‘e of help w Lis associates, and with each passing year new political laurels are twined round {his venerable brow. Mr. Voorhis is ninety-nine. Commissioner Voohis wins the argument, in opinion. Youth posse the strength, ‘hut the wisdom, and wisdom m'('umlilales v The greatest philosophers, music- writer "8 and judges arrived at the peak of power in old age. The law bars the GLAND MAY BECOME SILK CENT Fll The removal oI sil} to Pawtncket, R. 1., buildings and cquipmen “mills is significant. Tt is said that many “the old cotton mills of Rhode Jsluud and Massa- | ., ehusetts will be turned into sik mills, This does {mot mean that ther all will house former New highest offices in the mation to youn \ |dersey industrivs, for such is not the plan so|Youth believes. Age kno % P, -}mch as the csiablishment of new enterprises. . _— — mills from Paterson. N. J. they will occupy| formerly used by cotton re . wns of The removal of most of the cotton industry ‘from New Eanglani to the South hus caused New WIndeu to sot about finding somethinz to ] (the place of cotton. Silk and ray 1 ing are proving to be attractive. The m mills may be turned into silk and ro without sacrificing all of the mack ‘the bufldings sre said to be satisfactory In the meautime the cotton manuiucturing 5 Wry 4in the South coutinues to progreds with If you let sweet One of tue ironies of fate would be for that Chicago reporter who inherited $6, 000,000 ¥ lu.p ~m.anupun'u for newspaper interviews * that of Gene Tunney's.— (Seattle Times.) ong there will be so many ss that the male members put t] feet on their to women will be desks,.— cider have its own way is[a bache! i in the extermination of dangerous gd dg. However, the South is mow!f0r a short time it the Volstead will violate tion about which New En.,-lA"‘“(TUledfl Blade.) y THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, FRIDAY, DEC. 28, | ALONG LIFE’S [ DETOUR | By BAM HILL —— Not So Good Yes, cold December, too Like April, has showers— But ‘they bring sleet and snow Instead of lovely flowers. Sez Granddad— Used to he another baby husband instead of another Record of Her Trips Blinks—Gosh! You gotta dents in those fenders. Jinks—Yes. Count ’em and you will have the exact number of times my wife has driven the old bus. lot of of a Married Man a married man wakes up T tion that as far as concerned he'd still be she hadn't so hated ng an old maid. Musings Many the his wi 2 idea of Spoiled Her Jack-—Where's that pretty little date yon had the other night? Bill—huh! She is an oil can, Jack—'Smatter with her? Bill—The little thing thinks she has to take her conscience along with her every place she goe Rhymes of Youth “If T didn't pet,” said Sue, “I'd have to date with dad™ And when Sue's clder she, You bet, is gonna wish she P ma and had. have thrills,” humdrum life 1 “To live 1 must Said Nell, dread” ventually she'll wish That had chills and died in- stead. she oo “You bet I'm a good sport, And drink my gin,” sweet Alice br: But it is u Warn her old hags eless to good sports die oft Knew His Slang | “He was going 70 when T c:lughl him, Your Homor,” said the speed cop. “You pulled a fast one that time, all right,” grinned the Judge. If That Much A sclentist says the average man doesn’t use more than about 20 per cent of his brain. Some of the nuts driving cars evidently use only about one-half of one per-cent of theirs. Another Thing— What good did it do old Argus| to have a hundred eyes when he lived so long before there was any- thing really worth straining the eyes for? We'll Bite, Has It Been? cautious man is one who 's suspenders. A cautious wom- is one who wears bloomers. um Hill in Cincinnati Enquirer. Changing the subject, Sam, was the old discussion, as to what hap- pens when an resistible force meets an immovable object, ever settled? A A Burned Chile About ‘what's doing in Wall Street He says he does not care a dam; For after one experience, he says, He ne'er again will be a lamb. More Or Less True If they have quit knocking birth control and quit talking about the blessings of children it means they too, are now lying awake nights wondering where their young folks are, what they are doing and if they'll get home alive. Nobody can acf more important than a who is as useless as a checkbook when the account is overdrawn. A family quarrel ends when friend husband gives in and apolo- gizes for something he didn't start and promises a mew hat to square himself for having been such a brute. No man likes a wife who is so intellectual that he knows every- body is wondering how she ever came to fall for such a dumbbell as he is. A pessimist is an old married guy who thinks when he hears of a girl studying home economics some poor boob's life is going to be made miserable with meals of the things that are good for him. The idea of the modern girl seems to be that she'd be a chump We Wish All Our Friends and Cus- tomers a Hnbpy New Year. of a woman having| oy t around home and keep her wcred for a fellow who gets kissing and necking all girls and wants a wife vas too good to let other fel- neck her. work basket now ather lefi it the wed on a button ng makes a w hat to lip W lo is usually last time man madder the get- next eing a s been b the ng about kitchen mechani of the living room it doesn’t to be towed that ave aft ey < down an * you have ning in it wife you don't husband to be bad a case has miles or more the most of um 11 just how of complex he - FADA ALL-ELECTRIC RADIO Come in and hear che New All-Blectric Seventy. Last in radio. Open evenings Demonstrations in your home if you wish. Telephone 429, Radio Electric Company adv MARTIN LYNCH. CLUB CAFE R. T. Kaufmann, Prop. Recently of the Bergmann Dining Room SPECIALIZING IN Home Cooking S LUNCH to 2 p. || MERCHANT'S R a. m. m. Short Orders and Regular Dinners CLUB CAFE Rayon Bedspreads Colored Sheets and Pillow Cases {{Sheets and Cases with Colored Borders in Gift Boxes Reasonably Priced JARMAN’S Second Street AUTOS FOR HIRE Carlson’s taxi drivers are cheerful and contented -—says Taxi Tad. This contentment smooths the path of courtesy and stimulates willing, efficient service for you — at your disposal every hour of the day — just call Single O or 11. Carlson’s Taxi and Ambulance Service Phone Single O and 11 P e o A Berry’s Taxi PHONE 199 Stand at Gastineau The Packard Taxi PHONE e 1928. LU DT T T PLACE YOUR ORDERS|8— T_PROFESSIONAL e — T OW FOR DENTISTS 301-308 Goldstein Bldg. PHONE 56 Hours 9 a. m. to 9 p. m. New Year’s Fruit DRE KASER & FREEBURGER -5 y i Cakes ! DENTIST Plain and Decorated Rooms 8 and 9 Valentine Bullding Telephone 176 JUNEAU BAKERY Phone 577 We Deliver Dr. A. W. Stewart DENTIST Hours 9 a. m. to 6§ p. m. SEWARD BUILDING Office Phone 469, Res. Phone 276. P VMBS, L% i 3 Reliable Transfer | Phone 149 Res. 148 Dr. Charles P. Jenne iy 7 5 COURTESY and GUOD SERVICE Our Motto Dr. H. Vance Ostecpath—201 Go'datein Bld. Houra: 10 to 12; 1 to to 8 or Ly lDDfllmlent Lhonufl Osteovathic Physic'an Phove: Office 1371. Residence, Gastineau Hotel —_ Dr. Geo. L. Barton Office Service Only Hours: 10 a. m. to 12 noon, p. m. to 5 p. m. and 7 to 9 p. m. Phone 529 CHIROPRACTIC is not the practice of Medicine, 1 Surgery nor Usteopathy. o MUTUAL ICE CREAM CHIROPRACTOR, Hsllenthal Bidg. p. m. 2 Robert Simpson Opt. D. Graduate Los Angeles Col- leage of Optometry and | Opthalmology 75¢ per quart We Deliver | | JUNEAU BILLIARDS | Glasses Fitted, Lenses Grnund " GARBAGE HAULED AND LOT CLEANING G. A. GETCHELL, Phome 109 or 149 Janeau Public Lihrary and Frec Reading Room City Hall, 8eccad Floor Maln Street at 4th Reading Room Open From £ a m to 10 p. m. i o e e e -« Circulation Koom Open Frum « to 6:30 p. m.—7:00 p. m. to 6:30 p. m. Current Magazines, Newspapers Reference Books, Etc, FREE TO ALL L. C. Smith and Corona TYPEWRITERS J. B. BURFORD & CO Public Stenographer 0B b s e AR Just what yca want—Christ- Daintiest of mas greetings. See display of Cards at Empira. e o o BT B S IHE CHAS. W. CARTER MORTUARY “The Last Service Is the Greatest Tribute” Corner 4th and Franklin St. Phone 136 Empire. GEO. M. SIMPKINS CO A HAPPY AND PROSPEROUS NEW YEAR ALASKAN HOTEL MODERN REASONABLE RATES Dave HousgL, prop. 4 Per Cent Interest On All Savings Accounts New interest. period begins January 1st. Deposits made between now and January fifth draw interest from January first. Open your account here today and resolve to 444 Stani at Arctio s e {rompt Service, Day and Night CovicH AUTO SERVICE STAND AT THE OLYMPIC Phone uni Day or gain a competence during the com- ing year by depositing to you‘r ac- count as often as possible. The B. M. Belirends Bank Oldest. Bank in Alaska Christinas cards. Sumples now on display at the ] y i Fraternal docieties l —— o Gastineau Channe’ -— . LT SR 07 ] nesday at 12-3@ @ o’clock. Leater D. Henderson, Presidess H. L. Redlingshafer, Secy-Treas TR e, Oy AR W Meeting Wadnesday ing at 8§ Co-Ordinate Bodles of Freemasonry :\l uneau onm Cluh Meets every Wes ever Biks' Hall, Messerschmidt Scottish Rite ar meetings second Friday each month at 7:30 p. m. Scottish Rite Temple. WALTER B. HEISEL, Secre- tary. LOVAL ORD. A MOOS%E Junclu Locge No. & Moets every Mondes \ night, at # Yeloow WALTER HELLAN, Dictator J. H. HART, Secretary. MOUNT JUNEAU LOSGE NO, nd_and Fourth Mon- of each month tish Rite_Templ ginning at HARRY I 1 ter; CHAS, Secretary. X 141, CAS, ‘M: BE. NAGHE! EATERN STAR Second and Fourth Tuess weh month, k. Scottish Te mnl- MILDRED MAR- TIN. Worthy Matron; BROWN KNIGHTS Ow COLUMBUS Seghers Councll No. 1769, Meetings second and lasr Monday at 7:30 p. m. Transient brothers urged te attend. Couneil Zham- oers, ¥ifth_Street. ZDW. M. McINTYRE 3. K. H. H. J. TURNER. Secretary. ALIC 117 F. 0. ®. Meets Mondag nights 8 o'clock hagles’' Hall Couglas. William Ott, W. P. Guy [.. Smith, Secrelary. Visiting Brothers welcome. PRSI SE AMERICAN LEGION Meets gecond am tourth Thursday eacn montd 13 Dugout. DUGLAS AERIE A S AR SRR WOMEN CF MOOGEEEART | LEGION, NO. 439 Meets 1st and 3rd Thursdays each month, 8 P.M. at Mooss Hall. i Esther Ingman, Senlor Re- | gent; Agnes Grigg, Recorder. | Brunswick Bowlir;g Alleys lor men and women | Stand—Miller’s Taxi Phone 213 i 2 — —a " JAPANESE TOY t SHOP H. B. MAEKINO Front Strest P. 0. Box 218 for Mall Orders MORRIS CONSTRUCTION COMPANY SAND and GRAVEL Carpenter and Concrete ork. No job too large nor too small for us. MORRIS CONSTRUCTION CO BZILDING CONTRACTORS Phone 62 JUNEAU TRANSFER COMPANY B e - BAW u:m. WO00D Oftice ncg.l.l 89 Residence Phone 443 T'Se;-vwe Transfer Co. I

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