The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, September 25, 1929, Page 4

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" Dail y Alaska Empire JOEN W. TROY - - - EDITOR AND MANAGER pt Sunday by the Second and Malr Publiched every evenmg ex EMPIRE_ PRINTING COMPANY a dtreets, Juneau, Alaska in Juneau as Second Clase Entered In the Fo: matter. o SUBSCHIPTION RATES. Dellvered by carrrer in Juneau, Douglas, Thane for $1.25 per month. mall, postage paid, at the following rates: Onemy-»ar, in advance, $12.00; six months, in advance #6.00; one month, In advance, $125 Subacribers will confer a favor if t notify the Business Office of any fall in the dellvery of their papers : 5 Telephone for Editorial and Business Offices, 374 | MEMBER OF ASSOCIATED PR e or irregularity | he Associatea rress v exclusively er ‘I for rep 1 news d s credited tc it or not o d in this paper and also the Tocsl news ALASKA CIRCULATION GUARANTEED TO BE LARGER THAN THAT OF ANY OTHER PUBLICATION | TIME AND ECONOMIC LAWS USUALLY SOLVE PROBLEMS. | A publicity cir recently issued by the West- | ern Division of the Uni States Chamber of Com- merce declare Shall the West cc |incre | the tinue to prosper or be a ce of world checked in its importance by of the forestry lands? his is one 1 of great im- portance which the leg to the West- ern Divisional Meeting of the United States Chamber of Commerce at Ogden, Utah, September 30 and October 1 will consider. Walter Mulford, Professor of Forestry, University of ifor; who has said that the West st rise or f ccording to our management of our forested lands, will lead the discussion on this topic. Leaders of fore y thought om every .one of the eleven Western States, as well as National Washington, D. C. will to bringing about a plan authorities from lend their thought sure - it} tellige ::;viil‘m of ‘\": u’x“‘:“l(:’:xlm(\:' :: ”,) T was a guest of leading educators of the State and There is no good reason why the delegates to the Chamber of Commerce at a banquet at the o ol padh : Olympian Wednesday noon. He didn't look much the Utah meeting should not discuss the QUEStion|qirtrent from the average high school lad, although of reforestation To do so might do some good.|the strain he has ben subjected to by an enthusiastic However, there is a danger that the people Will|public in the last few weeks has left its telltale become overly wrought up about such matters. marks. People do not always take into account that the After attending the banquet and listening to all private owners of timber lands are not going to :“'l‘-;l'L’::l'l;)\::"lll::;v(‘:rllt(:'rhfl:\-fi.lri'c“dntok;::;;lf Z:fi:;ge}?:r::: [T S values of thelr lauds. ThBLHOMders L0 5 o caiit Himsalr o thie bkl or il o sl quali- RN Beoln of timber lands In the couRWNY 8F8 DOW\geqiions thie best thing that oah Bikppen Would be providing for reforestation. The circumstance that|for the public to forget all about him for at least standing timber is worth from six or seven to twelve |four years. It is tough living up to a model, when or fourteen dollars per one thousand board feet is|your attention is continually called to that model taking care in large measure of the situation.[NO one knows that Huston has the qualifications | People were careless about preserving standing tim- |t f0llow in Edison's footsteps certainly he will not ber when stumpage was only twenty-five to fifty "““l“ S ‘:}‘"k Inithe, el 5 (i priniic cents, or even one dollar, per thousand feet. But |con ooy Polnts its finger at him and says “there it is different now. And that suggests that people wor time. In fact, through the natural No matter how much theorized about they The law of protect the than all the that many of the problems are in the end solved by all such problems disappear operation of economic laws. they usually demand is doing the about nearly are discussed or are work themselves out supply and forests, more to that end reformers. and hub-hub of THE DEATH OF CHARLES BROWN. The death of Char Brown, senior member of the pioneer Se d firm of Brown and Haw bankers ants, 1S, and mer removes a man who he contributed lai y to the development of a large section of Alaska, Mr. Brown was a man of fine abilities and delightful personality. He @ host of friend residence in it accumulated in the Territory during his long | who will sincerely mourn his un-| timely demise. Mr. Brown closed out most of his Alaska in- terests sev years ago and soon thereafter left for New York where he has since resided. Howe: here is where most of his active and constructive years were spent. And until the end he claimed 1 to be and was recognized as an Alaskan, | ARBITRATING PROHIBITIO} The commission to arbitrate the differ- ences belween Canada and the United States over the sinking of the rum runner “I'm Alone” in the Gulf of Mexico last March has been appointed. If the proceedings take | their usual course, the “I'm Alone” case may attain as ripe an age as the sedling dis- putes of the early '90)s—(Seattle Times.) If the Commission is not in too great a hurry| DISPUTES| and 15 anxious for enough work to keep it busy | the “Shawnece” case might be referred to it. And this leads to the thought that while we are about it we might have a permanent arbitration commission 1o pass upon troubles between the| United States and Canada rising from our Pro- | hibition enforcement. PANACEAS ALMOST EXTINCT IN INTERSTATE DRUG TRADE. | “cure-al; Panaceas, or ago have s0 popular a generation in medicinal pre ations, according to the Drug, and Insecticide Administration, Department of Agriculture. Enforcement of the Federal Food and Drugs Act during the last 22 years has resulted in 208 ‘“cure- alls” being removed from interstate trade while countless other ‘“cure-alls“ were voluntarily taken off the market by their makers. “Curative Marvel,” “Olive Branch,” and “Swayne's Panacea,” are the names of some of the “cure-alls” which were offered for curing everything from tooth- | ache to falling hair, pyorrhea, rheumatism, dys-| pepsia, Bright's disease, and every recognized and | unrecognized aiiment in man. | Allied to the “cure-alls“ are the blood remedies| and the kidney and bladder remedies. They too| were sold as being effective in treating and curing Treadwell and ¥ will _promptly | trou: t disappeared from interstate traffic| Food, | United States | | 192 d remedies received the attention of the | ; officials, who obtained 373 notices inst them. ed blood remedies, these products to be little different from the edients and in the claims made cating the blood, the makers s liscase and aflment led and treated remedies for the treat- d bladder diseases have been rstate drug trade. Science recog- 1 drug cure for all ailments of the these remedie and therefore ed. -Gen of and an- for five years editor ouver, B. C, Star, has ed the that paper to George Bell, and publisher of the Calgary Albertan. Mr, underst will give his personal atten- to the publication of the Star. American Legion Convention and why the Allies won the t couldn’t lose. Faster Ships For Pacific. Post-Intelligencer.) ry in shipping speed may spread k the Pacific. Our oceun, earth’s t, floats many fine vessels, but they do not ate the waves going between ports. Their both passenger and freight, would be ade- quate for a world which is not in a hurry. But the traveling world is in a hurry. Shipping men can't change this fact, so they will have to change their ships. Passenger traffic agents for shipping lines con- necting Seattle and other Pacific Coast ports with the Far FEast observe that there has been little in tourist travel in recent years, this in face of vast' growth in such bus Atlantic. The Orient is as interesting as Europe so these agents hav reached the conclusion that tourists must be encouraged to cross the Pacific by making the crossing in less time. It will mean a great deal for Seattle, closest Am- erican port to the Orient, if the tourist tide can be turned toward Asia. We should welcome and en- courage any measures calculated to bring this about. Faster ships will do more in this direction than any- thing els Forget Him For a While. (Olympia Olympian.) Wilber Huston, winner of the Edison contest to eclect a young man scientifically minded to perhaps fol in the footsteps of the genius of Menlo Park, goes the winner of the Edison prize.” and give him a chance to make good. Forget him Where Woman Leads. (Boston Globe.) 1sider woman'’s record of recent years: she has ened her skirts, bobbed her hair, put herself shor operating to |into a one-piece bathing suit and then taken the back out of it; experimented with knickers, adopted silk stockings as standard, and now threatens to dis card stockings altogether; eliminated hooks and e; butons and an untold amount of underwear from her clothing and taken up smoking in a seriuos way. And not one retreating step in spite of all the oppo- |sition roused by each of these innovations. During the same period man has widened his leg slightly at the bottom and taken it in ain; has half-heartedly tried out double-breasted coats and has gone into soft shirts. Daring fellow! He knows he is a poor worm, too timid even to dis card his woolen coat on summer days hot enough to parboil him. But he also knows that his only hope to retain a trace of individualism is by trail- ing along with the opposite sex. So, in this com- ing struggle, if woman ties fashion into a double bow-knot and then does as she pleases, man will gloat hoping that his day, too, will come. Now that Mrs. Coolidge also writing,” why does not some magnetic editor beg has gone in for John Coolidge to write a piece? We, for one, want to know just what John's job with the New Haven road is, and how long he is going to remain in the railroad business. New Haven stock has risen many points since John's connection with the com- pany, and some of us want to know whether it is a coincidence.—(New York World.) Highway improvements completed by 48 States in 1928 extended over. 29252 miles, an increase of Bureau of Public Roads of the Department of Agri- culture. States spent $764,648,134 for State high- ways and bridge work—(Boston News Bureau.) We all can and ought to be rich, writes John Raskob in a ma ne. But we like the Repub- lican attitude better—they have told us time and time again that we actually -are.—(Port Angeles News.) 't wise enough to buy fifteen years ago are still copy of the Ladies’ Home Raskob’s Anybody-Can-Be- York World.) Some of eral us who we Motors stock 'ying to borrow a | Journal that had | Rich article in.—(N It may comfort Mr. LaGuardia to recall that local Republicans were noticeably cool to a recent Republican candidate for President who managed to do very well in New York.—(New York Times.) Mr. Raskob has been asked to state what sum invested at the beginning of the present era at 5 per cent. would now be sufficient to carry Penn- sylvania for the Democrats.—(New York Times.) A tourist is a person who can find out more about & town in 10 minutes than the oldest resi- dents learn in a lifetime —(Port Angeles News.) This is the season when vacationists are re- turning to their usual vocations to get rested from their recreational activities—(Seattle Times.) e R We are told that Mussolini never fell down on anything he attempted, but then the Duce never @ wide range of diseases and ailments. A total of tried to enforce a Volstead Act.—(Dayton News.) THE DAILY ALAS “cure- | | known could 2530 miles over the previous year, according to the | ( e | ! | THE FIRST FIRE By dary Grabam Bomser || . DENTIET e little black clock had cer- PHONE 56 ta succeeded in turning the Hours 9 a. m. to 9 p. m. time way back, thought John and 5 21 Pegg = T wore the skin of some animal about his body. His hair long. He DENTIST | wore no shoes, no stockings. He Rooms & and 9 Valentine |had a beard. He looked very rough Building wild they believed. d v 2 fire | John and Peggy thought of going |- decided they would wait for the little black toward him. But. they clock to make a suggestion. It was the little black clock who the magic which it possible for hima to turn | |had been given v time he wanted at all. It was the little black clock who|— z ad- | *F ed them to come on ith him. |took them off at evening, |their realizing it, evening and, off. | Perhaps some would have man they had been noticing He was just start- ne little black clock who bedtime every rought them back without the next let them begin their ad- !ventures just where they had left sald | z; ss on the | these adventures interrupted sleep. PHYSIOTHERAPY i Massage, Electricity, Infra Red | ! Rev, Medical Gymnastics. | 41v Goldstein Building | Phone Office, 216 ! DRS. KASER & FREEBORGER, | Dr. Charles P. Jenne Telephone 176 | Dr. A. W. Stewart DENTIST | Hours 9 a. m. to 6 p. m. SEWARD BUILDING | Office Phone 569, Res. Phone 276 | —— £ Dr. H. Vance Osteopath—201 CGoldctein Bldg. | | Hours: 10 t0 12; 1 to 5; T to 9 or by appointment | Licensed Osteopathic Physician Phone: Office 1671. Residence, MacKinnon Apts. Dr. Geo. L. Barton | Sk the It was all part| | CuIROPRACTOR, Hellerthil | |of the litt ack clock’s miagic. He Building | could make up their s ing time | Office Service Only for them—just making hour || gours: 10 a. m. to 12 noon, 2 {into twc 1 two hours into four. . m. to 5 p. m and 7 p. m. So thi ed for the little % 9 p. m. Phone 529 i | black clock to speak. However, i:E CHIROPRACTIC was not the little black clock Who | | 5 not the practice of Mediclue, | spoke It was the wild look- | ry nor Osteopathy. {ing man. And he began to shout; |g: = 2y I his eye parkled with excitement Neit Peggy nor Jim could un- | dersta what he said, but as he | shouted there came up a second |flame. They had seen the fire Istart. Then the wild man rushed {into his ca Other members of ‘!hr* came out T as small cited | “It's the fire black clock answe: has v We Prin PACKET HEADS LETTER HEADS INVITATIONS STATEMENTS BILL HEADS ENVELOPES RECEIPTS DODGERS | FOLDERS l BLANKS * CARDS | TAGS o'« » and guarantee your |- satisfaction with our work —_— || See Dempsey Lewis {| Tnird and Seward Streets { FOR '| Cleaning, Pressing, Re- pairing, Alterations All work guaranteed. Orders taken for the GOOD- YEAR LINE of Made-to-Meas- ure MEN'S SUITS, OVER- COATS AND RAINCOATS, Pictures, Picture Fram- ing and Tinting under supervision of Mrs. Dempsey Lewis, successor to Coates Studio. WE CALL FOR AND DELIVER T \ The Arcade Cafe | Special Dinners on Bundays and Week Days 8cda Fountain in conmection. Come In and listen to the radio. Mary Young, Prop. i Phone 288 — | | Reliable Transfer | Phone 149 Res. 148 COURTESY and GOOD SERVICE Our Motto | = in Stock Correct Fashlons and Fabric F. WOLLAND N Merchant Tailor Juneau P. O. Box 861 AT TR e — Foreign and Domestic Woolens | “Robert Simpson | Opt. D. Graduate Los Angeles Col- ] lege of Optometry and | ! Opthalmology ses Fitted, Lenses Grouna DR. R. E. SOUTHWELL Optometrist-Optician es Examined—Glasses Fitted | Room 16, Valentine Bldg. | 10:00 to 6:00. Evenings by | % Appointment. Phone 484 | Is made of the best ma-: terials money can buy— Baked in Juneau and is a home product. Peerless ‘ Bakery YURMAN Has just received a complete line of new FURS for trim- ming garments of all Kkinds, Call and see them YURM!/ TRY OUR FACIALS The finest of everything in the line of beauty culture. EXPERT OPERATORS | Consultation Free ;‘ THE: .. | American { Beauty | Parlor “Helene W. L. Albrecht :,‘ | ALSIE WILSON, Prop. USSR ST L R R Prompt Service, Day and Night CovicH Auro SERVICE STAND AT THE OLMPIC T | LUDWIG NELSON ||} THE Juneau Launory | . Packard BLUEBIRD Day and Night Service Stand at Arcade Cafe Hazel’s Taxi PHONE 456 Stand: Alaska Grill Expert watch and jewelry re- | pairing. Portable and Cabinet Panatrope Phonographs, Records and | Radios. i — -~ — ] ] " SINGLE O or 11 balmy day, Phone | Packard De Luxe Service and Ambulance Service Whether it’s a nice and or stormy and terrifying makes no difference—we will be at your door in a [Mfy any time you wani a taxi, and give you efficient, polite service at the low- est standard ratea. CARLSON’S TAXI TAXI Phone 485 Responsible Drivers To or from any place in the city for I 50 cents Five can ride as cheaply as one 199 Taxi Cab l[ Fraternal Societies { or - | | Gastineau Channel B. P. 0. ELKS Meeting every Wed- (¢ ty day at 8 o'elock. Hall. Visiting brothers welcome. Visiting Brothers Welcome, WINN GUDDARD, Exalted Rale~ M. H. SIDES, Secretary. Co-Ordinate Box ies of Freemasor ry Scottish Rite Regular meetings second Friday each month at 7:30 p. m. Scot- tish Rite . Temple WALTER . HEISEL, Secretary. LOYAL ORDER OF MOOSZ Juneau Lodge No. 700. Meets every Monday night, at 8 o'clock. JAMES CARLSON, Dictatcr. W. T. VALE, Secy, P. O. Box 828 Second and Fourth Mon- day of each month in Scottish Rite Temple beginning at 7:20 p. m WALTER P. SCOT: CHARLES E. NAGHEL Master; Secretary. ORDER OF EASTERN STAR Second snd Fourth Tuesdys ot each month, at 8 o'clock, Scottish Rite Temple. MAY- | BELLE GEORGE, Wor- thy Matron; FaNNY L. ROBINSON, Secratary. ENIGHTS OF COLUMBUS fl Seghers Council No. 176¢ Meetings second and fast Monday at 7:30 p. m Iransient brothers ury td to attend. Counci! Chambers, Fifth Street. EDW. M. McINTYRE, G. K. H. H. J. TURNER, Secretary. DOUGLAS AERIE 117 F. O. i}‘ Meets Monday %mghm 8 o'clock at Eagles’ Hall, Doug- las. ARNE SHUDSHIFT, W. P, GUY SMITH, Secretary. V'siting Brothers welcome. WOMEN OF MOOSEHEART EEGION, NO. 439 Meets first and third Thursdays eacl mionth, 8 p. m. at Moose | | Hail. KATE JARMAN, Senior | Regent; AGNES GRIGG, Re- | 2 | | 1 ‘bcorder, .| Compan~y |2 - * | Brunswick Bowling Stand at Gastineau ! Alleys Hotel [ e My et | | Phone 218 ] 3 2 = = Mabry’s Cafe [‘ Russian Steam Baths | Lunches Phone 342 Day or Night Proprietor Juneau, Alaska Jeweler | [} Franklin Agent for Brunswick PHONE 359 Regular Dinners Short Orders Open 6 a.m. to 2 a.m. POPULAR PRICES HARRY MABRY Street, between Front and Second Streets D e +y- 8t The Empire. Commercial Job printing at The Thrifty Women Nine times out of ten the women are , the money savers of the family. Men mean well enough. They know the value of having money in the bank but they haven’t the knack of saving. Our tellers are pleased at all times to assist ladies who may wish to open a bank account, make out deposits, checks, or give any information in reference to our commercial or savings departments. The B. M. Behrends Bank Oldest Bank in Alaska Open Wednesdays and Satur- | days from noon till midnight, “Business 1s Good” I MRS. JOHN "ORRL, Prop, | . } z + Windshields AND Sidelights FOR~ Autos Especially Cut and Fitted MORRIS CONSTRUCTIUN COMPANY PHONE 62 JUNEAU TRANSFER COMPANY Moves, Packs and Stores Freight and Baggage Prompt Delivery of ALL KINDS OF COAL PHONE 48 HOTEL ZYNDA ELEVATOR SERVICE 8. ZYNDA, Prop. — [ BURFORD’S GORNER “TRY A MALTY” PIG'N WHISTLE CANDY Non Better—Box or Bulk \ S VS Commercial job printing at The Empire, «

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