The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, February 1, 1929, Page 4

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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, FRIDAY FEB l 1929. ard of health and endeavor constantly Dtul ) 4'(18’u a Em plrer m W TROY - - - EDITOR AN’D MANAGER S I to inday ond by _ the e Published ry. ever | and Main & ! EMPIRE PR Streets, Juneau Jold And is But If winter weather Entered in matter. the ¥ st Office neau . it's a tage SUBSCRIPTION RATES. out Delivered by carrier in Juneau, Douglas, $1.25 per month. 1, at the following 2 x months, $1.25 Treadwell and rates e year, in in advance, 96.00; one month, i n 2 Subscribers will conf vor notify the Pusine Y ANy in the delivery Telephon for MEMBER OF AsSOCIAY’ED PRESS. The Associut E clusively entitled to the use for repu dispatches credited to 1t or not oth this paper and also the tocal news publ ALASKA CIRCULATION GUARANTEED TO BE LARGER THAN THAT OF ANY OTHER PUBLICATION. f they failure will promptly mercury is too dog:|t or irregularit | Tutter I8 any B. °. 0. ELKS Meeting ever Wednesday even g at § ¢ cloc Eikee “raft H. Messerschmidt pPxalted R 1 i cretary.,” Co-Ordinate Bodles of Freemasonry Scottish Rite . Regular meetings i second Friday each repitit| | J. W. WOODFORD | Dr. H: Vance e HiLs other one. Repreczenting the Northern | . Safeoth R Life Insurance Co. | H ayes Shop Ostogoath—3nl, Goldateln Bide: 8 CR o B L, Secre- Last Way They Want 'Em our new Tower | g R AL If eformers are just trying accident and Opposite Coliseum Theatre Livensed Osteonathic Physic'an to make things safe and sane to| | health insurance. Phone 2| Phone: Office 1371 Teu membsra of . tHN i gs on Salmon Creek, Even- Phone 54 Bigidenos; Gastindnn, Hotet generatior are wasting their ings by appointment. - time 3 T ness Oftices, 374. wast and Bus , Huh! he Blinks - That real knows his business. Jinks—Yes, he knows not much else estate Washington’s Birthday lots—but Also New Shipment PLEATED PARCHMENT SHADES ;,__._..____, g maintain it. Have high ideals of physi- ALONG LIFE’S R T e LA AR Form Health Habits — Good health he I habits of eating, elimination, sleeping, The deld. teutiton HUEPL 1ol Physician and Surgeon -fl breathing, bathing, and posture will Ber 1 16 BMIE of & min | |'Rooms’ b1 1718 050KS ‘aid. | | |DRE. ns%!;:'r:g;nnuncm Gamnequ ‘Channe’ _of your eyes, teeth, hair, and feet. Also Sleet with his wife and mother-inlaw| | Special attention given to di- — Correct Your Defects—Seek to find gIveR /U8 Dep, envying a Mormon. seases of Eye, Ear, Nose PHONE 56 and remedy causes of all allments. Have of flu a deadly foe— All canned goods taste pretty and Throat. Hours 9 a. . to 9 p. m. Cl fl'\‘l\”fl :v)\.':“dn:»‘: exp (@b the best wants to cut our suo'w,,l“l'- 1 a man can see in being|.s s Meets every Wee = 089 - invitec t I s at ] - 39 Daily Exercise —Exercise daily in the 3 faed, oLl it he 4 nesday 238 ¥ Don't Stay in One Place Long | be expected to wipe the § Dr. Charles P Jerine Mastor. tyo gamee. Bn S duREES L ou L T g6~ Wit i funny when you come to ; " " penmisr L Bt dor Have s Bonby aisiA Hnariya T o ol .- shout 1t btk s tast wt e || - NEW ' PLACE and H. L. Redlingshater, Secy-Treas né cardenind. areHItER 8 weather is the k about it, € RETT TR T e e line gardening, architecture, or me R reati 16" othar SRoR epuld TALLY CARDS Rooms 8 and 9 Vi Rest-—-Get sufficient sleep with win- : & Telepnone 176 dows open, but avoid oversleeping. Learn mjp 1t shii R Valentine Day B to relax. Stand and sit erect. agentinst I of e "”"”“f;. i Jver woman knows i e could D A W anger, firritation, over-excitement, and Stewan other woman does she could show R 2. ey o . m. p. m. SEWARD BUILDING Oftice Phone 469, Res. rcek than hen-pecked hus-[gz- ] | a wife who has been fool-| | | PROFESS]ONAL cal, mental, and emotional fitness. [ ish enough 10 let her husband boss | | R. J. ALCORN, M.D. | Fmternal aoczenu | { ! f ake your life happler and richer. Take who has lived in the same heuse | | stein Building. Telephone 423 | 301-808 Goldstei | |4 stein Bldg. " Juneau Lions & Boha Clasd a regular health and dental examina- sl L 1o alike ARl OBARONE CE s i ohily | ' ———————————— open air. Fresh air sharpens the mind. | ELbugh 3 ; o’clock. | al chanics. Plan your vacation carefully Hina Matestite b n Buillding Mental Hygiene—Avoid fear, worry, Jig e spend as much on clothes as some DENTIST Phone 276. other emotional excesses. Cultivate laughter, optimism, and constructive them off to better advantage. thinking % Anything Possible Now “Some things are simply impos- sible,” hotly decl 1" the first arguer. 8 “Not since can,” retorted WE MAKE ESLARGEMENTS Alaska Sceric views adv What to dn with Ex-Presidents is again a live of discussion in the newspapers and maga- The suggestion that all Ex-Presidents of the United States Senate topic Texas went be | the | zines | made life members |is being revived. i pik; One is certain. entered it, majority tigate Policy, also Inves L Senator Reed fighting is for him will quit regardless or “agin” | the of whether him LOYAL ORD:LA OF MOOSE Juneau Locgs No. 7 Mects every Mondai ® Yeloc™ WALTER HELLAN, Dictator J. H. HART, Secretary. MOUNT JUNEAU LODGE NO. 147, Second and Fourth Mon- doy of each month in Scottish Rite Temple, be- ::‘hmh\l'. 'E“R 30 oclar‘k VALTE M: ’Ilt'r: CHA RL%(; E GHEL, Secretary. Senate as he the e Dr. Geo. L. Barton cnlnoflnAcTon. Hellenthal Bidg. lcrvioo Only Houn 1 m. to 12 noon, 2 p.n.wlp.n4ald7p.m. to 9 p. m. Phone 529 CHIROPRAGTIC s not the practice of Medicine, Surgery nor Osteopathy. a temperature of 25 degrees below zero in I Washington Juneau’s cold snap does not after all. Thus far 12 above zero has been our coldest. Names that Ind. With Names le word Brazil, TRY A Hot Toasted Sandwich LOOSE LEAF SUPPLIES OFFICE EQUIPMENT Stationery, Printing and Binding stern W. S Wiggle lives in sends Laura been so cold PUBLIC LIKES BARRETT WIL- LOUGHBY’S NEW BOOK. The flare for read books, that a few ago, With But a Single Thought and I go there; where; 1 shouid see me! Many Minds Congress Mellon enforce: seems disposed to give Secretary extra .000,000 for Prohibition P I go here ment whether he wants it or not. In fact, I go ev But where I be y How all the men stare at that bicgraphy those who broke among with renewed vigor promises to stay with us as a| ¢ steady light. That is due to the circumstance Gold Producers and the Farmer. lha.( S0 l|.lurn of the biography that is»nnw being | (Engineering and Mining dourasl.) { Some ar written is literature, and teeming with human The | Some int t A 1 Ir ital ¥ sl i RdoR farmer must have relief, indeed, irre- p b ST es 3 g e 10T | bective of political considération. One must | But the nctable people, with catalogues | whether A ] recoguize that the state of his wellbeing has too 1 of their manifold virtues, no longer suffice. People |important a bearing on the prospemity of the Na-|When I sit down want to know something of the real facts sur-|tion to be ignored. Continuance of the national knees together. rounding the subject of the biographer and|prosperity is difficult to imagine if the large| (And do vou?) something of intriguing interest about the results|agricultural class suffers from financial difficul- of his efforts. Writers are supplying the demand|ties. Everything possible should be done to B0 Gening thetr insure to it a fair share of the wealth flowing| Under intc the pockets of other large units of thej iy opulation All that remains is to find a way among those who have read Barrett Willoughb. to do it book, “Gentlemer. Unafraid,” to learn that it i8] guryeying the agricultural sitdation of the in large demand throughout the country. Word last six years, the National Industrial Conference comes from the East that the publishers are de:|Board finds no fundamental improvement; and lighted with the returns from the book, which{eurrent indications warrant no expectations of is an account of the Alaska work of five sturdy Such a change in the near future, it declares. men who have lived close to Nature and overcome [Average prices (weighted) for 30 representative SRRt oty UnAtiRid GaIA darh farm products at the farm have increased but 28 Sucpkingid (0 iBaeyedrl s per cent. in fourteen years, whereas the prices|provement in your friends since| 23 m to 10 p. m. tackle. ‘‘Sandy” Smith, “Scotty” Allan, Geor8e|;e (no machinery, feed, fertilizer, and other|they made all those New-Year's| Orictlatidn Hoom ik’ Fiia Watkin Evs Capt. Syd Barrington and Dr. g rodnety - 1 S | ¥ i ‘ oods used in production are 45 per cent. higher|regolutions? i to 6:30 p. m—17:00 p. m. to Georgeson Barrett Willoughby's heroes. - Inign the average; the wages paid to farm hands are BTN 5 £:30 p. m. recounting their experiences and those of her own |68 per cent. higher, and the cost of family main- Ye Bookmaker | { When you buy PEERLESS Gurrent Magazines, Newspapers people the author makes graphic pictures of mmw‘h‘fl;}l}(‘;‘ i m;r (w*[)‘l,lt}:;txl‘.l\ are _1;;6 per cent.,| «phere goes a man who profits | BREAD Reference Books, Etc. of the most interesting phases of Alaska condi-{and interest on farm indebtedness is per cent. | o others' mistakes.” It ; S an | o y . ¥ s’ mistakes. is better, Bread .- High FREE TO ALL tions, life and development. Andishe has given ;m“" ;1"'" in 1914. These five' items' tombined, | ugyn! What kind of mistakes? | in- Public' Faver el : us an entertaining ‘volume, 4 : i;f‘r’:" ng to the' Conference Board, represent an| .rpe migtdkes of betting on the 3 i » The eritics F{i\‘l' the book a r.nmalhl(‘ send operation. off, and the author's many Alaskan friends are of 65 per cent. in the ccst of farm wrong horses E'very Bite a Delight . The gold producer-—particularly the quondam 1 c delighted that the public has responded so sat-|groducer—surveys the agitation in behalf of the Remember the Name | Hall. isfactorily. i ; THE CHAS. W. CARTER MORTUARY farmer ‘with rueful interest. He, too, has suf- insist upon it from | Kate Jarman, Senior Re- | Barrett Willoughby fered from increasing costs of labor and supplies. your grocer “The Last Service Is the Greatest Tribute” | gent; Agpas Grigg, Recoraer ers,” that is now app aring serially in a monthly |Unlike the farmer, he has received for his product gy 2. Corner 4th and Franklin St Phone 186 } magazine, will, it is understood, come out as a|DOt 28 per cent. more than in 1914 but exactly A5 Datlptiors PEERLESS BAKERY o 18 B ck book in April. The mnflm Bowllng Al]eya gkt i iy large |the same price as then. Unlike the farmer in| FGOTIST—One whose head ls - e S |the aggregate, he has been unable to attract the |88 full of brains as a church is of Cnfal i and w i W R Phone 218 attention of the general public to his plight, |EORETeRation on a cold sleety Sun- and even if he had succeeded, the public, neither |42y morning. REFORESTING OLYMPIC PENINSULA SPRUCE LANDS. loose years Second and Fourth Tues- Robert Simpson T Temple, i Opt. D. CHORGE Warth, Graduats lnu Angeles Col- ;nn\; F‘é\NNY ) leage of Optometry and | S, Reoretary Opthalmology KNIGH' Glasses Fitted, Lenses Grouné | lop at l young, some are old, ODKIN shy and some are bold; M. SIMPKIN J } i | [ i | all seem to be wondering GEO. COMPAN JUNEAU ICE CREAM| PARLORS Hot Drinks Served PHONE 94 W . or I'll keep my COLUMBUS Serhers Council No. 1769. M.etings second and lasv. hons sonday at g'ar;llendl ?:rm attend. Couna Dr. R. E. SOUTHWELL bers Fifin_ Street Optometrist-Optician EDW, McINTYRE 1. K H. J. Tl"RNER Secretary. Bo. Wet Goods More Profitable “How did you happen to go into| the bootleggzing business?” asked | | Eyes Examined-Glasses Fitted | | € an old ry»ml ; | Room 16, Valentine Bldg. BUGLAS AR I B B R “Well,” replied the other one, “1 . . 10:00 to 6:00 Evenings by Meets Monday was in the dry goods business for Janean P“bhc F"lh'n) | &nlghu 8 o'clock kagles’ Hall Appointment a good many years and there and Couglas. Willlam Ott, W. P. Guy | Successor to Dr. R. L. Doug- didn’t seem to be any great prox g | las, Optometrist-Optician pect of getting rich that wa | Free Readmg Room | Juneau L. Smitn, Secretary. Visiting City Mall, Second Filoor Phone 484 Brothers welcome. Neither Have We I Main Street at 4th - A Have you noticed any great im-| Reading Room Cia From - | | books the circumstances it causes no surpri obstacles men ! 3 Meets second and J. B. BURFOGRD & COr tourth Thursday L. C. Smith and Corona eacn momtl iz TYPEWRITERS Dugout. Pablio Stemographer et i s ns, agsid g | WOMEN OF MOOSEEEART | LEGION, NO. 439 | | Meets 1st and’ 8rd Thursdsys | Safety First Proverb | each month, 8 P.M. at Moose | Better the moon in the sky than in you S0 new book, “Trail Bat- expect a readers eating gold nor understanding it, would have been ,L‘JTOS FOR HIRE mystified as to why anyone producihg the prec- ious metal should not be in affluence. His few champions in Congress failed to secure the pass- Cheer Up Before we know it Up will be hobbin’ Westinghouse Mazda Lamps THE LONG LiFE MAZDA o The Zellerbachs, who have al paper mill at Port Angeles, \\'u»hfuglnn‘ and other pulp and paper enterprises at Port Angeles and Port Townsend, and are prospective Alaska paper makers, are reforesting with spruce their Olympic Peninsula lands as fast as they gut the timber off. Most of their lands yield hemlock, but they are planting spruce on all of that which operations make availabe for reforestation. figure that Olympic Peninsula forest lands will produce three crops of spruce in a century. In support of the theory that three crops of spruce can be raised each 100 years they have examples from natural reforestation. A portion of Quillayute Prairie that was under cultivation in the early of farming in that 'section was last plowed in 1893. Almost immediately after cultivation of the property ceased spruce seedlings began to spring up. In 1928, 35 years after the Jand had been last plowed, about a quarter of an acre of this former cultivated prairie was logged for pulpwood. § eight trees were cut and produced 321 cords. The Zellerbachs pay the Indians $1.25 a sack for gathering spruce cones in the woods. Each sack produces abcut two pounds of spruce seeds. These are planted in a nursery where they remain for at least three vears before being replanted in the cut-over lands. Only healthy trees are replanted. The circumstance that the Quillayute Prairie reforestation was through natural processes would suggest that it took several years for the distribution of, seeds. In spite of that the trees were ready for the axe and saw within | 35 years. It would appear that if the lands had been planted with trees three or more| years of age«in a single season the development! would have’ been even quick days probably the WOULD YOU BE HEALTHFUL? Since Ponce de Leon and his search for the fountain of youth, and even before then, man has been in gearch of the road to health times not wisely but always with avidity. And not inconsiderable progress has been made toward| of the youth work yet of . #uccess even though the fountain remains to be discovered despite Serge Vironoff. In more recent years it has come to be recog- nized that health is a very large factor in hap- piness, and that it is the result of mental as well as physical fitness, attainable only through| consistent individual effort, Among the numerous formula for keeping healthful, there has come to our attention the following six more or less simple rules which could be observed with profit by almoest everyone. They are: Set a Goal-—Have a personal stand- large nowsprlnb} their | They | Some- | | age of the benus bill, apparently the only sug- gested remdy, and so he took the only possible course——he carried on unitl he could no longer do so0. The survivors are those who either hayve had an exceptional grade of ore, or else by means of improved large-scale operation have heen |able to reduce costs in spite of rising prices. The gold miner's plight is the penalty ex- acted in periods of rising commodity prices from |those who seek to produce the standard by which |wealth is measured. 'To recoup his loss, or get his revenge, he must wait until prices fall once {more, if haply he can survive or his reserves |hold out. He apparently has a long wait ahead of him. lps and Downs. [ (Manchester cruardian.) | Theugh we live in a world of three dimensions we make very little use of one of them—existence would be a startling business if we could move up and down with the freedom that we travel |backwards and forwards or from side to side. For one thing, we should have much more choice in the matter of weather; there are times when one can walk across half a county without ex- tricating omeself from a thick fog, whereas a slight ascent of fifty or a hundred feet would see the volatile voyager just above the fog level jand bathed in sunshine. Goldsmith’s picture of the mountain— Though round its clouds are spread, Eternal sunshine settles on its head— is to some extent overdrawn; it would not need |a leap of mountain height to rise above the level lof many ground mists that have been turned |by urban smoke into the most desperate and |desolating fogs. Nevertheless, we have just had (an interesting reminder that “the higher, the better” is by no means an infallible recipe for those who would improve their weather, for a few days ago an air liner flying from Paris to Lon- dou found itself involved, at only 1,000 feet high, In a snowstorm that never reached the earth at vnll A little lower down the snow had to pass |through a layer of warmer air and it reached |ground level merely as rain. It is curious to think of such vicissitudes of weather within a |distance that could be covered in two or three minutes’ walking if it happened to lie in a horizontal direction instead of the vertical plane. ‘Pvrhnps, after all, it is just as well that one {aspect of our three-dimensional space is not, re- latively, so very much use to us. We complain about our incalculable climate when we move through it on the flat, but its fickleness would be vastly increased if we were under any meces- sity of sampling its very closely adjacent ups {and downs. Highness in_the meteorological sense |is closely associated with flightiness, breast the rolling Perhaps one of the reasons Il Duce suffers from indigestion is because he ecats up all the Cabinet portfolios.—(New York Times.) That welcome guest The early robin. Appropriate “Why do the girls call that young man skirt?” asked her moth- er. “Because fthere's little him,” explained her daughter Another Great Need of the Day— A trouble exterminator 80 to More Or Less True if Nature had reversed the pro- cess and made it easy to think and hard to talk a lot of folks would | have more friends. The difference between a mid dle-aged woman and a flapper is that a middle-aged woman thinks | it is simply absurd to shiver in| winter just to be able to show the full length of silk hosiery It is next to impossible for a modern family to respect a father who thinks it is more important to keep ahead of the bills than it is to keep ahead of the neigh- bors. : Some flappers give us the im- pression mothing could surprise them miore than to learn the hands can put to other uses besides| that of wielding a lipstick Jmli holding up a mirror. The only person who GARBAGE HAULED AND LOT CLEANING G. A. GETCHELL, Phome 109 or 149 can bel e e Mabry’s Cafe Regular Dinners Short Orders Lunches Open 6 a. m. to 2 a. m. POPULAR PRICES HARRY MABRY Proprletor —-— Let us serve you well —says Taxi Tad. . With the economy of reason- able rates in mind you can choose the Carlson taxi and be sure of courtesty and comfort. Hail them anywhere. Carlson’s Taxi and Ambulance Service Phone Single 0 and 11 7 A Berry’s Taxi PHONE 199 Stand at Gastineau The Packard Taxi PHONE 444 Stan? at Arctio Prompt Service, Day.and Night CovicH AuTo SERVICE STAND AT THE OLYMPIC Phone 342, Day or Night Juneau, Alaska '~ BURFORD’S CORNER? None Better—Box or Bulk .g',g—.-—v——-m -l Buy Them by the Carton Capi Radio Supplies ALASKAN HOTEL MODERN REASONABLE RATES Dave HousgL, PRoOP. PHONE 416 Fertile Soil THRIFT is the good soil in which the seeds of success are sure:to fall and grow. The man or woman with a growing bank account need never worry about future financial troubles. The B. M. Behrends Bank Oldest Bank in Alaska tal Electric Company House Wiring eI | JAPANESE TOY SHOP H B. MAKING Front Btrest P. 0. Box 218 for Mall Orders S N et MORRIS CONSTRUCTION Carpenter and Concrete Work. No job too large nor too small for us, MORRIS CONSTRUCTION CO. _ BYILDING CONTRACTORS Phone 62 JUNEAU TRANSFER COMPANY Moves, Packs and Stores Freight and

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