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Ddil,y Alaska VE;npireV JOEN W. TROY - - - EDITOR AND MANAGER 3 every evemnz except Sunday by the PRINTING COMPANY at Second and Main uneau, Alaska. Intered in the Post Office in Juneau as Second Class matter. SUBSCRIPTION RATES. Dellvered by carrver In Juneau, Douglas, Treadwell and Thane for $1.25 per month. By mall, postage paid, at the following rates: One year, in advance, $12.00; six months, in advance $6.00; one month, in advance, $1.26 Subscribers will confer a favor if they will promptly wotify the Business Office of any failure or irregularity the delivery « papers. ud Telephon= al and Business Offices, 374. MEMEER or ASSOCIATED PRESS. The Associated Press 1s exclusively entitled to the use for republication of all news dispatches credited to It or not otherwise credited in this paper and also the published herein ALASKA CIRCULATION GUARANTEED TO BE LARGER THAN THAT OF ANY OTHER PUBLICATION “LITTLE MISS TROUBLE.” “Little Miss Trouble the nick-name Washington newspaper writers have bestowed upon Mrs. Mabel Willebrandt who quit her post as Assistant Attorney- General last week. While she has high authority to back up her statement that she retired voluntarily, the belief is general that she would not have re- tired if President Hoover had not made it plain THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, MONDAY, JULY 1, 1929. | Fifty per cent. of the baryites of the country come ;Imm Missouri. And, next to Pennsylvania, she leads |in fire brick and other clay. Not only is there a |large brick production but a large part of the |chinaware of the country comes from the Show Me State. The mineral resources, it is believed, will |more largely used when the potential water power is developed and put to work. It is estimated that 6,000,000 horsepower will be developed from the per- mits that have been recently issued—most of it from Osage and other mountain rivers. The Osage River dam, it is said, will be completed within two and a half years. It is expected to carry between 200,000 and 250,000 horsepower into St. Louis, and much more will be taken into the lead district. Miss Megan Lloyd George, daughter and political assistant. of former Premier and Liberal Leader |David Lloyd George, was elected to the new Com- mons from a Welsh district, and is one of the group of 58 which her father commands. R. B. Bennett, Conservative Party leader in Can- announced that he will oppose British He is in favor of a higher he contends, British prefer- hurtful to Canadian in- has preferences. tariff, but, would be ada market C ential dustries. adian tariffs The Cost of Printing a Newspaper. (Port Angeles News.) Anyone wanting to get into the newspaper game will be interested in what publishers of “The Brem- erton Broad Axe” have to say editorially regarding the do ri me necessary to keep the sea serpent from the canoe. The “Broad Axe” is a mushroom in the field,| flourishing intermittently prior to the Bremerton ‘Pli‘(‘(lul\, Its purpose is to condemn private power Icompanies and boost the $750,000 municipal power project. It has no pride of ancestry or hope of posterity | as a journal of advanced thought, but does sLm.eE this inter#sting truth. ! be, WILLIAM BRITT BACK FROM TWO-MONTH TRIP After being absent from Juneau for two months, during which time Britt and he attended |e ation exercises at Annapoli Md., when their son Jacob Britt, was graduated, William E. Britt re- turned to Juneau on the Queen this morning. Mrs. Britt, who accom- panied him east, left New York City on June 15 for her home in Kjopsvik, Norway, where she wil! remain for the next year. Mr. and Mrs. Britt stopped in Se- attle and Chicago on their way to Annapolis where they spent 14 days attending the graduation exercises and the brillians social functions which acompanied June Week at the Naval Academy. During the time they were in Annapolis they visited Washington, D. C. several times and were entertained at the Norwegian Embassy, where Mr. Britt was personally congratulated by the Minister on receiving the Order of St. Olaf for his services to the Norwegian Government. When they left Annapolis, Mr. |and Mrs. Britt, and Ensign Jacob Britt visited in Baltimore and New York City for several days before the family separated. Mr. Britt left New York City on June 17 for Montreal, where he spent several days before continu- ing west through Canada. Ensign Britt left by automobile with En- sign John Raby, son of Admiral J. J. Raby, for a leisurely trip across the continent to San Pedro, where they are to report for duty on the U. 8. S. Saratoga on July 15, Mr. Britt said. They went first to Pensacola, Fla., to visit Ensign family and from there in- the |° turned to Juneau on the Queen this morning H. L. Faulkner and James Wick- ersham, local attorneys, who left for Petersburg in connection with the possible purchase of the cold e plant, and the power com- there by the Foshay interests, ed here on thé Queen. Charles M. Jones, merchandise broker, left for Kodiak on the Ad- jmi Evans. The Rev. B. R. Hubbard, with Frank Klatt and Charles Bartlett, students at Santa Clara University who are spending the summer in Alaska with Father Hubbard, and two pack dogs, left for Kodiak on the Admiral Evans. W. H. Boston and Mrs. Boston left for Seattle by way of Skag- way, on the steamer Alameda. They are touring Southeast Alaska and spent about a week in Juneau visit- ing the places of interest in this vicinity. .- — PIONEER DIES AT ANCHORAGE Charles Freemont, life member of the Anchorage Igloo of Pioneers, early stampeder to Dawson and then to Fairbanks, died quietly while sitting at his table at An- ge. He was batching and dpparently had finished his meal and pushed his chair back a few nches when death came. He was still sitting in his chair when he s discovered. He had heen ac- tive until the end. Relatives in Colorado were notified of the death f the aged man D Try the ¥we o'Clock Dinner Specials at Mabr7’s. —adv. P S L S Fresh roasiea peanuts and pop- orn. Juneau Ice Cream Parlors. UNITED STATES Department of the Interlor AUTOS FOR HIRE Call A Packard Phone Packard De Luxe Service ENJOY A COOL Avro RIDE! We may summarize these days by saying—some are good—some are bad and summer best of all. And now many pleasant rides can ke enjoyed by your family ~v guests—the cost is small. Carlson’s Taxi and Ambulance Service '"T" PROFESSIONAL —8 — 0= Phone Single 0 and 11 DRS. KASER & FREEBURGER DENTISTS 301-303 Goldstein Bldg. PHONE 66 Hours 9 a. m. to § p. m { i | Fraternal docieties or Gastineau Channe® | B R 22 PR P e A | B. P. 0. ELKS v Meeting every first * and third Wednes-* days, June, July, August, at 8 o'clock. £lks' Hall. WINN GODDARD\ Exalted Rules M. H. SIDES, Sen- retary. Visiting Brothers Welcome. i Co-Ordinate Bodles of Fieemasonry Scottish Rite Regular meetings second Friday each month at p. Rite WALTER HEISEL, Secre- ———ee LOYAL ORDER OF MOOSE Juneau Lodge Nc. 704 Meets every Mondaj night, at 8 o'clock. JAMES CARLSON, e Dictator. J. H. HART, Secy, 206 Seward Bldg —_— MOUNT JUNEAU LODGE Second and Fouzth Mon- T day of each month In Scottish Rite Temple, be- ginnipz at 7:30 o'clock. WACWTBR P. TT, Maste -, CHA E NAGH YL, Secretary. m. Beottish gem le. o 4 Order of EATERN STAR Second and Fourth Tues- days of ‘each month, a1 R o'clock, Scottish Rl femple. MAYBELL GEOI}FA”;‘IV‘V"“”’ At ron; NY L. ROBIN SON, Secretary. e ENIGHTS 0 coLUMBUS Serbers Council No. 1760, M setings second and last. The editor pleads that the four-page newspaper | is costing them $250 an issue to produce. The GENERAL LAND OFFICE N —" U. S. Land Office, tend to proceed to the West Coast. he said. BLUEBIRD | that she would not have charge of Volstead en-; forcement after the transference of Prohibition ad-| ministration to the Department of Justice. Her title of “Little Miss Trouble” comes from the admitted fact that she made more trouble than any other Cabinet assistant. Not only did she insist upon being the whole thing in the Prohibi- tion business but she determinedly used the axe on all subordinates who did not quickly obey her “thumbs up” or “thumbs down.” Her fight with former Warden John W. Snook over admitting | snoops into the penitentiaries is said to have been | one of the main causes of her down fall. When Senator Borah declared in the Senate he would be pleased to vote guilty on impeachment charges against a Federal Judge who would commit to the pen an innocent man that he might play the pzu‘ti of a stool pidgeon, no matter from whence his orders, Mrs. Willebrandt was doomed. Even "Litllc’ iss Trouble” saw that the time had come to carry her trouble-making elsewhere. Her Aunty Saloon League credentials had become tarnished. TURN-OVER IN S\SKAT_(‘HEWAN. paper pleads for funds. And so will any mush- room paper with an axe to grind have to plead for funds. The newspaper game is a man's game, costing American currency to produce. The estimate of! $250 an issue for the Bremerton pilgrim is about | correct. We haven't an interest one way or the other | in the Bremerton election, or the right or wrong of the Broad Axe editorial policy. We print the editorial plea to illustrate to newspaper aspirants that pockets should be lined with silver and gold before entering the portals of the Fourth Estate. Cornelius Vanderbilt, with his millions, could not keep his chain of newspapers afloat. A wealthy chain announced retirement from the Montana field the other day. Papers are growing fewer and more costly to produce. University Studies in Crime. (Manchester Guardian.) American universities already enjoy great fame for the diversity of the courses of study they pro- After twenty-four years of continuous Liberal rule | atchewan will have a coalition Government at ie head of which will be Dr. J. P. C. Anderson, | Yhe Conservative Provincial leader. The Conserva- tive members and ten Independents and Progres-| ” sives have united to form the new Government. It| has been agreed that all parties in the coalition | will maintain their identities and that there shall be complete freedom in the matter of Federal pol- | itics. Reform of the Provincial civil service is the | mainspring of the coalition. | The Conservatives throughout the Dominion are predicting the downfall of the Liberal Federal (;ov-! ernment as a result of the turn over in Saskatche- | wan, while the Liberals say that it was the result| of purely Jocal issues and that the Province is still strongly Liberal on National matters. | D WATER POWER IN MINERAL / vide. In addition to such subjects as the classics, history, and the moral and physical sciences, it is, | as Mr. H. L. Mencken has shown, posible for the | American undergraduate to study such exciting and | practical subjects as ‘salesmanship, public speaking, | osteopathy, and even “How to become a deacon.” Chicago University, it is now announced, is em- barking upon a course of instruction in yet an- other field of knowledge unfamiliar to similar edu- cational institutions in Europe. Chicago has in recent years earned fame in the world press by the cxploits of her gunmen. She is now determined to show how much she has profited from her ex- perience of crime by establishing a Chair of Police Administration. Crime in the University is no longer to be a matter for the somewhat aloof | studies of the sociologists. It is to be studied in its most severely practical aspects, and the first chair is to be occupied by a former Chief of Police from California. His classes should at least be assured of an extensive patronage among gangsters and gunmen anxious to be warned against the “It was a marvelous trip, one I wouldn’t have missed for anything, but I am truly glad to be home once more. The weather in An- apolis was perfect, but it was un- comfortably hot in New York City Anchorage, Alaska, April 1, 1929, Notice is hereby given that Jgeorge Danner, entryman, togeth- r with his witnesses John Bur- wash, and Klaus Grondsman, all and Baltimore,” Mr. Britt said. AT THE HOTELS Gastineau Dr. J. F. Petritsch, Seattle; John Pierce; Dell E. Sheriff, Juneau; E G. Thompson, Seattle; S. Main, Port Althorp; F. Tarry, Tenakee; N. E. Sagstad, Port Althorp; C. F. Soloman, Tucson, Ariz.; Richard Wakelin, eattle; Donald Armour; E. F. Zucrin, Portland, Ore.; Mrs. A. J. McIntyre, Hoquiam, Wash.; Ed Holcomb, city; Glen Carring- ton, Seattle; Mr. and Mrs. Russell Smith, San Francisco; Marjorie Smith and Russell Smith, San Francisco; Mrs. August Buschmann and Mrs. O. A. Larson, Port Al- thorp; C. J. McNaughtan, Mrs McNaughtan and son, Port Angeles, Wash.; Arthur J. Ela, Byron Ela, Speel River; Capt. and Mrs. C. E Ahues, Taku; Mrs. D. H. MacDon- ald, Portland Island; Olof A. Lund- berg, Vancouver, B. C.; George A. Lucas and Louis Juren, Haines; Donald Macaclay, City; Charles Draper, James Davis, James Bar- ber, Albert Greene, and Donald Reid, London, England. Zynda Chester C. Roys, Moline, Ill.; Reginald Parks, New York; Mrs. Janson, Seattle; Mrs. E. Kane, Skagway; Gus Foyelin, Sitka; Miss Gladys Duncan, Douglas; Charles O’Connor, London England; Will- jam Lawler, London England, and |latest methods of crime detection. For a policeman | five boys of the Westminster Glee of Juneau, Alaska, has submitted final proof on his original entry serial 04848, and additional entry, serial 06886, for lands situate on the north shore of Gastineau Channel, containing 71.26 acres, HE.S. No. 174, New Series No. 1568, from which cor. No. 1 and M.C. U.SLM. No. 381 bears S. 12’ 30” W. 60.86 chiins; HE.S. No. 204, New Series §852, from which cor. No. 6 USLM. No. 381 bears S. 60 50" 04” E. 60.17 chains; longitude 134° 34 W. latitude 580° 21’ 13” N. and it is now in the files of the U. 8. Land Office, Anchorage, Alaska, and if no protest is filed in the local land office at An- chorage, Alaska, within the period of publication or thirty days there- after, said final proof will be ac- cepted and final certificate issued. J. LINDLEY GREEN, Register. irst publication, May 6, 1929. "ast publication July 5, 1929. ——— —— | * The Arcade Cafe | | Special Dinners on Bundays | | and Week Days | | 840a Fountaln in conmection. | Come {n and listen to the | | radlo. Mary Youmg, Prop. | [ Phone 288 | Stand at Arcade Cafe Prompt Service, Day and Night CovicE Auto SERVICE STAND AT THE OLYMPIC e e e Mabry’s Cafe Dr. Charles P. Jenne DENTIST Roome § and 9 Valemtinme Bullding Telepnone 176 Day and Night SERVICE Phone 485 5 and 7 Passenger Cars Ostecpath. Responsible Drivers Dr. A. W. Stewart DENTI3T Hours 9 a. m. to € p. m. SBEWARD BUILDILG Oftice Phone 469, Res. Phone 276. Dr. H. Vance 301 Goldsteln Bl 10 to 13 Bours: Tt 8 or Livensed Phone 342, Day’or Night Juneau, Alaska I | | —tned Regular Dinners Short Orders Lunches Open 6 a. m. to 2 a. m. POPULAR PRICES o— Residence, Gastineau Hotel —_—— e Dr. Geo. L. Barton CHIROPRACTOR, Hellanthal Bidg. O%ice Bervice Only Hoars: 10 a. m. to 12 noom, 2 p. m. to 5 p. m. and 7 p. m. to 9 p. m{Phone 529 CHIROPRACTIC Is nc the practice of Medicine, Burgery nor Osteopathy. Robert Simpson Opt. D. Wraduate Los Angeles Col- leage of Optometry and Opthalmology Glasses Fitted, Lecses Grou Osteopatnic Physic'an Phone: (%M 1671 st Mouday at 7:30 p."a T-unsient brothers u-ged tc attend. Counell Zham- bers, Fifth Street. EDW. M. McINTYRE 3. K. H H. J. TURNER, Becretary. DOLALAS AERIE 117 F. O, 2. Meets Mondas nights 8 o'clock kagles’ Hal) Louglas. Willlam Ot(, W. P. Guj Bmreh, Secretary. Visitiag Rrolhers welcume. AMERICAN LEGION Meets second and fourth Thursdey of each month in Dug- out, on Second St LE ROY VESTAL, Adjutant, J— ‘E LT 13; 1 to §; by appoinment e ———— WOMEN OF MOOSEEEART s LEGION, NO. 439 “deets 1st and 3rd ThurcSays each month, 8 P.M. at Moose | Hall. { Kate Jarman, Senlor Re- | gent; Agpas Grigg, Recorder. T S S S ——— e Brunswick Bowling Alleys FOR MEN AND WOMEN Stand—Miller’s Taxi Phone 218 SRANI A o ST l Russian Steam Baths 1 | Open Wednesdays and Satur- | | days from noon till midnight, | “Business Is Good” MRS. JOHN SORRL, Prop. ’ or. R E SOUTHWELL COptometrist-Opticiaz Eyes Sxamined-Glasses Fitted e e e MISSOURI Room 16, Valentine Bldg. I 10:00 to 6:00 Evenings by | Ayppointment Fhone 484 |to tell all he knows is 1 i | surely to give the game gers | away. Whether students of a more innocent type‘sm[’cm A statement issued by the Industrial Club of St.[would be equally drawn to these classes is less Louis places Missouri among the leading mmcrnl‘“l“ar- They might consider that the streets of producing States of the Union. In the thirty years Chicago provided a more valuable object-lesson between 1896 and 1926 the annual mineral nulput"gg::_‘d anything that could be shown on a black- of that State increased from $13,000,000 to $92,-| g 000,000. This includes the $30,000,000 annual lead | production of the St. Francois district, 45 per cent.' of the total zinc output ‘of the country, besides silver, tungsten, nickel, copper, HARRY MABRY i Proprietor t GARBAGE 1 i MORRIS CONSTRUCTIO COMPANY SAND and GRAVEL AND Carpenter and Concrete Work No job too large nor too small for us MORRIS CONSTRUCTION CO. Building Contractors PHONE 62 Alaskan Carl Christiansen, Juneau; Ford Butler, Chichagof; J. W. Bixby, Se- attle; Dr. F. W. Rising, Trinity Center, Calif.; Clang Lock, Taku; Horig Toon, Funter Bay; D. Rose, Ketchikan; Mr. and Mrs. Dick Har- According to the Wall Street Journal cork is |ris, Sitka; Carl Sater, Steve Lurmo, selling at the highest price since 1919, And what |Ole Lurmo, John Abrahamson, S. do you spose Mr. Volstead makes of that? (Macor: ol 1, @ @ & 4 ! iron and cobalt ores. Ga. Telegraph.) 2 Xl ‘;/;::u;’) “;‘rco:xN!;;:(ll‘j 3:::(1 1);2:). ris, Seattle. Home Office, Seattfe, Washington J. W. WOODFORD Resident Agent 2 Rings on Salmon Eveuings by Appointment Helene W.L.Albrecht PHYSIOTHERAPY Massage, Electricity, Infra Red Ray, Medical Gymnastics. 410 Goldstein Building Phone Office, 216 b S N L | AND LOT CLEANING Alfred 8. Hightower Phone 584 ! I I IIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlllllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIImIIllilifllllllilillllllllg >-ee | WHO'S WHO 1 AND WHERE, | = Nick N. Kashevaroff was a through passenger for Kodiak on the Admiral Evans. He is re- turning to his home from the States where he has been for some time, and while the steamer was in Ju- neau he visited with the family of his uncle, the Rev. A. P. Kashe- varoff. Mrs. Karl Theile, Karl Theile, jr., and Mrs. Theile's mother, Mrs. Ann McLaughlin, of Seattle, were pas- sengers on the steamer Queen for Wrangell, where they will spend the summer. Henry Roden, Juneau attorney, who went to Petersburg on the Ad- miral Rogers on legal business, re- “ANY WHERE IN ALASKA” Strength in Savings This bank pays over $60,000.00 a year in Dividends®on its Savings Accounts. 'JUNEAU TRANSFER COMPANY If you want a guarantee Heating Plant or a first ition to do We buy Boilers, Fittings, Heating Specialties, Oil Burners direct from factory. This enables us to give you MORE FOR YOUR DOLLAR than you can get els and you have the guarantee of an old established Alaska firm. class job of Plumbing we are in pos work “ANY WHERE IN ALASKA.” Plumbing Fixtures and Pipe in car lots. Are you participating in these Dividends? If not, now is the time to start saving. SATISFIED CUSTOMERS We invite you to see letters we have: received from ladies whom we have made fur garments for during the past few months. We can satisfy you, too. YURMAN’S Remodeling and Repairing at Summer Prices Many of our Savings Accounts have grown to good proportions through small but systematic de- posits. ewhere Have Y our Mattress Renovated OLD MATTRESSES— Re-shaped, re-covered and made like new Alaska Mattress Co. PHONE 443 We call for and deliver Willoughby Ave, You may open an account with + One Dollar or more. WE GUARANTEE EVERY JOB Juneau Public Library Free Reading Room City Hall, Second Floor Main Street and Fourtk Reading Room Open from 8 a m to 10 p. m. Circulation Room Open from it to 5:30 p. m.—7:00 to 8:30 p. m. Current Magazines, Newspapers, Reference Books, Etc. FREE TO ALY e P o e e RICE & AHLERS CO. PLUMBING HEATING SHEET METAL Juneau, Alaska “We tell you in advance what job will cost” HOTEL ZYNDA ELEVATOR SERVICE 8. ZYNDA, Prop, r— . a The B. M. Behrends Bank OLDEST BANK IN ALASKA New, select lne of visiting cards at The Empire. fillllllllll!lllllll!llIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIAIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIfllIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIHIIIIlIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII!IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII 0 !mmmmlflI|I||||l||||||I|III|I|IIIIIIIIIIIllll||IIIIII!IIIIIIIII“I|l|IIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII 144§ DL e b R e e