The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, November 8, 1929, Page 4

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Dmly Alasl\a Emptre JOHN W. TROY .- - EDITOR AND MANAGEB, Publighed ‘every _evening except: Sur by _the EMPIRE COMPANY at Second and Main | Stree \I pska | Entered in the Post Office in Juneau as Second Class | matter. SUBSCRIFYION RATES. Delivered by carrier in Juneau, Douglas, Treadwell and | Thane for $1.25 per month. By mail, postage paid, at the followi g rates: One year, in advanc $12.00; six months, In advance, | $6.00; one month, in advance, $1.25, Subscribers will confe favor if they will promptly | notify the Business Office of any failure or irregularity | in the dclivery { their papers. Telephone for Editorial and “l siness (‘(flfl! 374, MEMBER OF ASSOClATED FRESS | Th Associated Press 18 ¢ xelu 4 ed to the| 5 for republication news ais credited to| r not otherwise lyvv ] in this pape Ilnl also the I news published herc ALASKA CIRCULATION GUARANTEED TO BE LARGER THAN THAT OF ANY OTHER PUBLICATION THE BOY SCOUTS. The Boy Scout revival resuiwiig from the visit of Fred E. Baker, Area Scout Ficld Executive, is attracting great interest in Juneau, but not more than that most worthy organization deserves. The Boy Scout movement, which extends throughout the world, is a very promising institution. It stands for better and more useful boys and for the build- ing of better and more useful citizens. There is| nothing by which measurement of the good that must necessarily come out of this organization can be made, but it is easy to predict that a score years the effect will be apparent throughout the world. It would be a wonderful thing for the country and all of its communities if all the American boys who are eligible would become active members of the or- hence of men ganization. This is an appropriate occasion to commend the selection of H. L. Redlingshafer of this City | Redling- | of valuable time | to be District Scout Commissioner. Mr. has given a great deal and very intelligent service, backed by true Boy Scout spirit, to the institution The work that has been done under his direction and that of his associates in Juneau has already done much good.| A lot of boys in this community are better boys | and are well started on the road toward betler| citizenship through their work. The Boy Scouts and those who are directing their activities are entitled to the enthuslastic support of all the people of this section and Alaska | wherey shafer —and" ef people ev ECONOMISTS AGAINST SMOOT- HAWLEY TARIFF BILL. cent. of 196 of the Nation's leading opposed to the provisions of the Hawley-Smoot Tariff Bill, the New York University Bureau of Business Research revealed when it issued a summary of answers to a tariff questionnaire. Lewis H. Haney, Director of the Bureau of Busi- ness Research, commenting upon the economists, said: The economists to whom the question- naire was addressed are all members of the American Economic Association, and the great majority of them are professors of economics in the leading universities and colleges of the United States. Presumably they are among those best qualified to judge the economic merits of the proposed legislation. The sole purpose of the inquiry was to get an accurate summary. No effort was made to obtain extended discussions or arguments. Incidentally, it should be noted that the only selection used in mak- ing up the list was the care taken to insure the inclusion of all the best known names and the exclusion of those connected with agricultural colleges who might conceivably be biased in the interest of farmers. ‘The replies came from all over the coun- try. The largest number (thirty-eight) came from New York State. There were sixteen from the District of Columbia, fifteen from Ohio, eleven from Massachusetts, eleven from Ninety per economists are Illinois, eleven from Connecticut, ten from | _— | Pennsylvania, nine from California, eight Advertising is the oil that lubricates the ma- | from Wisconsin and six each from New | chinery of business.—(Seattle Post-Intelligencer.) in the affairs| recently | Were always on the side of the bulls. the verdict of the President nor the Secretary of the Treasury 1 Jersey and Oklahoma. Other States were | Missouri, Minnesota, Kansas, Arkansas, Colo- rado, Delaware, Georgie, Florida, Indiana, Iowa, Kentucky, Maine, Maryland, Michigan, Nebraska, New Hampshire, North Car North Dakota, Oregon, Tennessee, Tes Virginia and Washington. | | | AVOID A TIE RACE. | A buss full of school children was hit | by a train, at Chilliwack, Monday afternoon ! | Don't try to beat the train. Chances are, | youwll lose. And its the riskiest thing in the world to calculate the speed at which | | a train is approaching.—(Prince Rupert & Empire.) i But even worse than losing a race with a train| to a crossing is to make a tie of it. When an automobile and a train tie in a race the auto- mobile always gets the worst of it. By all means, thxov\ the contest if you see that you cannot win it| \Oaslly \ If the Boy Scouts will just be good Scouts no | fears for their future need be entertained. Those Democratic ‘majorities in Tuesday's ck-r—f Republi- 1‘ | tions will not discourage the Insurgent {cans in their Senate insurging. | New York voters apparently see no harm in| |having a little fun as one goes along Oregon Welcomes New Famili (Business Chronicle, Seattle.) During the month of Augist the land settle- ment department of the Oregon State Chamber | jof Commerce recorded the . establishment of 100 Inew families on Oregon lands. This means thatj /the State Chamber had more or less to do with| the advent of those settlers. It further reports assurance from several hundred more families that | they will come to make their homes in Oregon , The influx of arrivals was three times as great| as in August of last year. Investments (ntalin:" $406,000 were $100,000 larger. The new Oregonians purchased 7.000 acres of land, most of it already producmg farms. | Tor those interested in knowing results of the | jeonstructive work of this land settlement agency jover the period of the six years it has been func- | tioning: more than 4,000 new settlers have been‘ obtained. and these have invested approximately $1,000.000, chief in 142,000 acres of land. Mr. Hoover on the Business Situation. | (New York World.) Mr. Hoover's statement on the business situa-|° tion, after the spectacular break in the stock mar- ket, is carefully worded. One may search it in vain| for any indication of a purpose to affect the course of the market. His whole aim seems rather to; have been to prevent the demoralization in the| | speculative lof general business. lcensure of speculative excesses. first place of the construction and building indus- |® stock and induced by speculation,” < ment is concerned with the fundamental questions | | | Conditions inthis field he finds to be on a sound and prosperous basis. All this is in striking contrast with the repeated jefforts of the preceding Administration to stimu- late the stock market whenever it showed signs of growing stale. Both Mr. Coolidge and Mr. Mellon in 1927 and 1928 repeatedly intervened in the con- test between the bulls and the bears, and they The Street | still remembers how one day early in January, 1928, | after a sharp slump in the market following a huge increase in brokers' loans, the White House broke all precedents by issuing a statement that neither saw any danger in the increase of such loans, and how, on the following day, the market soared and the “big board” and the Curb both had the | most active day in their history up to that time. Mr. Hoover has wisely refrained from discuss- | ing the technical situation in the stock market. He has no intention of baiting the bears or of serving as picador to the bulls. The fellow who sings your praises never gets |as large and enthusiastic an audience as the B80S~ sip who spreads tales of your misdeeds.—(Cinein- | nati Enquirer.) i R AN A tourist is a person who caniname every town where he has had a puncturé or got stung on the price of a sandwich.—(St. Joseph, Mo., News-Press.) | e T Pat Burns, whose opinion is entitled to respect, s the time has come to give Peace River a |direct outlet to the Pacific. This is no snap judg- !m('nl He knows all about Western conditions. And what he knows, he knows.—(Prince Rupert Empire.) AT Special Bargains LU Plain Color Soiesette ... . Boys’ Rubber Boots—Storm King ... $3.95 Small Boys’ Rubber Boots—Storm King ... 345... Boys’ All Rubber Pacs ... 1.95 Men’s Heavy All Wool Sweater Coats, $15.00 values ... 7.50 Men’s Pendleton All Wool Blazers, $14.50 values ... 7.50 Men's Pendleton Mackinaws, $20.00 values ... 10.00 BIG REDUCTIONS IN CHRISTMAS TOYS .30 cents yard Evening to A Store Closed A Open Saturd: mmmqulll!llllll“Illl"ltlllllIIllllllll GOLDSTEIN'S EMPORIUM ccommodate Our Customers Il Day Monday L U |commercial and civic life oI city, |active business to devote more time to his real estate holdings in West |cer cipally. | my was constantly troubled with indi- |gestion and constipation. again he‘p.oporuon attributes the slump in grain prices to the behavior | the treatment, of the stock market. but the rest of the state-|Wwouldn't be without Sargon.” of ‘the production and distributipn of eommedities. ‘;‘C"“‘ from nc. —_— CAPITALIST SAYS SARGON BROUGHT BACK HIS HEALTH The following enthusiastic state ment was made by John C. Spen-| cer, of 498 Sixty-third Ave., West Allis, Milwaukee, who for thirty |vears was actively engaged in the JOHN C. SPENCER that but who recently retired from llis, Wis., and Florida. Mr. Spen- has lived in Milwaukee forty- Ifive years, is well-known and high- |ly esteemed. He said: “I am leaving for Florida in a few days and will take four bottles |of Sargon with me. |to be without this wonderful medi | | cine. | “For the past year I have been‘ |in wretched health, suffering from {rheumatism and other troubles on I don't intend account of an’inactive liver, prin- I lost weight rapidly and strength was ebbing away. I “I felt a marked improvement| 3 i markets from spreading into the field after my first few doses of Sar-|| pyos mxamined—Glasses Fitted He makes two references to 800 stock trading and both of these carry an implied | Wonderful condition. He speaks in the|IS splendid now, my digestion is! Three bottles put me in My appetite und. I have gained ten pounds itries being affected “by the high interest rates and my strength has returned m} I'm going to conunue4 for !‘ of course, Sargon may be obtained in Ju- Butler-Mauro & Ca, —adv. VICTOR RADIO 10 Tubes Complete $178.00 A Late Assortment of VICTOR RECORDS Now Being Demonstrated JUN U MELODY HOUSE Temporary location over Dr. Pigg’s Office We will have the newest and most up to date Perma- nent Waving equip- ment that can be procured on the market today. Watch This Space For Further Announcement American Beauty Parlor ALSIE J. WILSON Proprietor Nyal Hirsutone A stimulating hair tonic. Prevents dandruff, stops falling hair, restores luster, keeps the scalp healthy, 50 cents and $1.00 The Nyal Service Drug Store « Phone 25 We Deliver . LT T T T T T T T 1" PROFESSIONAL | e 3 i Helene W.L. Albrecht I PHYSIOTHERAPY | | Massage, Electricity, Infra Red Rev, Medical Gymnastics, | 41v Goldstein Building |1 Phone Office, 216 ! | DRS.KASER & FREEBURGER | i DENTISTS | 301-303 Goldstein Bldg. i PHONE 56 11 Hours 9 a. m, to 9 p. m. ! Di. Charles P. Jenne | DENTIST Rooms 8 and 9 Valentine | Building Telephone 176 2| E3-— Dr. A. W. Stewart DENTIST Hours 9 a. m. to 6 p. m. SEWARD BUILDING Office Phone 569, Res. Phone 276 Dr. H. Vance | Hours: 10 to 12; 1 to 5; 7 to 9 | or by appointment Licensed Osteopathic Physician Phone: Office 1671. | Residence, MacKinnon Apts. | Dr. Geo. L. Barton CHIROPRACTOR, Hellerthul | Building Office Service Only | Hours: 10 a. m. to 12 noon, 2 | {p.m. to5p.m 47 p m to 9 p. m. Phone 329 CHIROPRACTIC is not the practice of Medicine, Surgery nor Osteopathy. . Robert Simpson Opt. D. | Osteopath—201 Cold:ztein Bldg. | | | Craduste fae Angsis Cut- PO T T, PACKET HEADS DOUGLAS AERIE 117 F. O, E. | Meets Monday Opthalmology Ji e ‘ LETTER HEADS % ' | Glasses Fitted, Lenses Grouna lzompt Serv:e, DaySand Night INVITATIONS ::g;;‘;':. zi:]fil‘g:“: e m—— N [P e - 7 ~ ® OVICH AUTO SERVICE las. ARNE SHUDSHIFT, W. P. - GUY , 8 |" DR, R E SOUTHWELL ||{ STAND AT THE OLYMPIC 1 STATEMENTS Bmmmw n&‘!:cremw Visiting Optometrist-Optician i Phone 342 Day or Night i BILL HEADS Juneau, Alaska | —_— 8 i | 6, Valentine Bldg. | | WOMEN OF MOOSEHEART [ l(figgmtol 0:0‘3, erl‘iveleunl;s gby = =| ENVELOPES LEGION, NO. 439 ‘Appointment, Phone 484 n— ‘3 Meets first and third Thursdays p ! : RECEIPTS eacl: month, 8 p. m. at Moose | Reliable Transfer | Hall. KATE JARMAN, Senor | | Phone 149 Res. 148 | | DODGERS Rogont; AGNES GRIGG, Re- | | COURESTY and GOOD Eorae. | [ | SERVICE Our Motto | | FOLDERS 3 —& ! N KS i g T = 4| BCI:AAIFD g Brunswick-Bowling e — 1 i ; Alleys LUDW'/IIG I;IELSOI\ TAGS FOR md Annwom eweler } Stamd—Miller’s Taxi | Expert watch and jewelry re- | Phone 218 pairing. Agent for Brunswick [|2ess and guarantee your : | Portable and Cabinet Panatrope | | nfilficfion withourwork 3 Phonographs, Records and | - W. D. BROWN Radios. t 8 2 CANVAS 1 ~ - A rry L) Canvas Collapsible Beats PHONE YOUR ORDERS (F—commcr oo Mabry s Cafe oo £ROW ‘ON”DIsFLAY TO US | For Your School Work ¢ eef oz. canvas lead hose We will attend to them|| J.B.Burford & Co. ||§ Regular Dinners promptly. Our coal, hay,|| “Our door step is worn by Short Orders grain and transfer business satistied customers” |is increasing daily. There’s a | reason. Give us a trial order today and learn why. You Can’t Help Being Pleased D. B. FEMMER PHONE 114 Special Price On All Fur Garments SEAL SKINS MUSKRAT OTTER SILVER FOX and MARTEN . You get results from printing done by us \ CAPITALLAUNDRY Under New Management SILKS and LACES a Specialty DRY CLEANING AND . PRESSING We call for and deliver PHONE 355 T. E. HALL, Manager o i ! Juneau Public Library Free Reading Room Qity Hall, Second Floor Main Street and Fourth Reading Room Open From 8 a m to 10 p. m. Circulation Room Open from 1 to 5:30 p. m.—7:00 to 8:30 p. m. Current Magazines, Newspapers, Reference, Books, Etc. FREE TO ALL f Packord | e AUTOS FOR HIRE | BLUE BIRD TAXI Stand next Arcade Cafe Phone 485 Day and Night Service Bl | Fraternal Societies - [ or Gastineau Channel ot s e B. P. 0. ELKS | ’ Meeting every Wed- (({ [ nesday at 8 o'clock. | |Elks’ Hall, Visiting l brothers welcome. L 3 WINN GODDARD, Exalted Rules- Phone Packard De Luxe Service order it. ly healthful joyable. Hazel’s Taxi |, 456 Stand: Alaska Grill t | |+ e e i m e o o 0 o best time to buy needed printing is NOW LODE MINING CLAIM LOCA- TION NOTICES AT THE EMPIRE T e T T T iR Many big_industries are directly traceable to small You are unable to vision the outgrowth of your small savings in this or the next generation but the prudent saver is always able to grasp oppor- savings. tunity when it comes. 49 compounded semi-annually paid on Savings Deposits The B. M. Behrends Bank Oldest Bank in Alaska HERE s a reason for the popularity of our bread. It pleases the public taste and it is an economical loaf to buy. Remember to Our pastry is of quality supreme- and en- Peerless Bakery We Print Lunches Open 6 a.m. to 2 a.m. POPULAR PRICES HARRY MABRY Proprietor THE JuneAu LAUNDRY Front and Besond Streéts PHONE 359 M. H. SIDES, Secretary. Co-ordinate Bo# ies of Freemasor ry Scottish Rite Regular meetings second Friday each month g 7:30 p. m. Scote tish Rite Templs WALTER ¥B. HEISEL, Secretary. LOYAL ORDER OF MOOSZ Juneau Lodge No. 700. Meets every Monday night, at 8 o’clock. JAMES CARLSON, Dictator. | W. T. VALE, Secy, P. O, Box 024 | MOUNT JUNEAU LODGE NO, 187 \ Second and Fourth Mon- day of each month in Scottish Rite Temple beginning at ":20 p. m, <Y’ WALTER P. SroT: Master; CHARLES E. NAGHEL Secretary. ORDER OF EASTERN S'I'AI Second and Fourth Tuesdys ot each menth, at '8 o'clock, Scottish Rite Tomple. MAY- BELLE GEORGE, Wor- thy Matron; FANNY L. ROBINSON, Secretary. KNIGHTS OF COLUMBUS Seghers Council No. 1760. Meetings second and lash Monday at 7:30 p. m Iransient brothers urg td to attend. Councli Chambers, Fifth Street +EDW. M. McINTYRE, G. K H. H. J. TUKNER, Secretary. Windshields Sidelights FOR Autos Especially Cut and Fitted MORRIS CONSTRUCTIUN - COMPANY PHONE 62 = 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 CORNER “TRY A MALTY” PIG'N WHISTLE CANDY Non Better—Box or m IIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIHII NI R Oommrehl Job Dflnun‘ at The

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