The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, November 23, 1929, Page 4

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[ D ameaARSeEARes Y A L e AARARE r B0 Daily Alaska Empire JOHN W. TROY - - - EDITOR AND MANAGER Published every evening except Sunday by the EMPIRE PRINTING COMPANY at Second and Main Streets, Juneau, Alaska. Entered in the Post Office in Juneau as Second Class matter. SUBSCRIPTION RATES, Dellvered by carrier in Juneau, Douglas, Treadwell and Thane for $1.25 per month. ss Office of any failure or irregularity of their papers. sditorial and Business Offices, 874, notify the Bu: in the deliver: Telephone for MBER OF ASSOCIATED PRESS. The Assointed Press is exclusively entitied to the use for republication of all news dispatches credited to THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, SATURDAY, NOV. 23, 1929 country, that does not account for the nearly 70,000 majority in Virginia when we consider that religious intolerance, the K. K. K., Rakobism, etc, in short issues that caused the State to go Re- the very _|publican last year, were the controlling issues this lymr The evidence seems conclusive that there |is larger significance in the Virginia election than |the Hoover Democrats and Republicans of the South want to admit. | Even if Senator Sheppard ment to the Prohibition laws should be ado) anti-purchase | the country. It did not take the Senate long to stop those night sessions. Two nights were enough to bring WATCHING THE ‘SUN By Mary Graham Bonner 2y mail, postage paid, at the followl.ig rates: would not bar one from making his own. Prob- i DI | On: ’\)-«Tr'f',x\‘;(|\1;hxc{i"'x‘1-» Jix months, In advauce,| 1€ ce with the law would multiply the| “Where are we now?” asked John. i st MGnldsiii‘i W J TO ANY PART M S, s dsary, ; th, in advance, '$1.26, y o e e e 3 2, w;‘fifisg’r‘x&be’r‘?" i confer a favor if they will promptly| rhe o brewers, wine-makers and distillers in| T'm sure you've turned the time PHONE 56 1 OF CITY T AR {way, way back. The world looks very new and there aren't so very many people about.” [ones we do see?” Peggy asked . | “What are the people doing—the |’ [ PROFESSIONAL ¥ - ——— | Helene W. L. Albrecht | PHYSIOTHERAPY | Massage, Electricity, Infra Red | R#v, Medical Gymnastics. | 410 Goldstein Building | Phone Oftice, 2168 ! —i | DRS. KASER & FREEBURGER | Hours 9 a. m. to 9 p. m. oy Dr. Charles P. Jenne 199 TAXI 50¢ - Now Operating 2 Stands Fraternal Societies y =i Gastineau Channel ty [ l B. P. 0. ELKS Meeting every Wed- ({ " nesday at 8 o'clock. Elks’ Hall. Visiting - brothers welcome. WINN GODDARD, Exalted Rules les of Freemasor AU} ry Scottish Rite A | Regular meetingx : ’A’f second Friday e oot ‘btherwise credited In this paper and also thelforth protests. Working all the afternoon and at| «They're telling the time,” the DENTIST PHONE = each month ot local news published herein. i |night was the “pace that kills,” declared Senator |Little Black Clock said. | Rooms 8 and 9 Valentine .l,:l:l(: p. m. Soot- ALASKA CIRCULATION GUARANTEED TO BE LARGER |wajch of Montana, and he got a nine to one| “But they're looking up at the Building 199 Rite Temple THAN THAT OF ANY OT HER PUBLICATION vote to stop it. | No danger but that the proposed tax cut bill {will pass said a dispatch. Certainly not. No | Senator or Representative who hopes to be re- | elected would dare to vote against reducing taxes. & A Political Superstition. 1 (New York Times.) If Governor Smith had been elected President, and if a Democratic Congress had been discussing sun,” Peggy insisted. “Yes, and seeing the shadows, too. They're telling the time by the sun. They are going to make sundials, and you might say the sun-dials were my great, great, great—and then a few more greats —grandfather. | “But wait a moment—or rather a |few moments. I'm turning the time on now. You'll see!” As Peggy and John watched they |saw the scene change and a boy Telephone 176 et Dr. A. W. Stewart DENTIST Hours 9 a. m. to 6 p. m. SEWARD BUILDING | Office Phone 569, Res. Phone 276 e i Dr. H. Vance FOR A PACKARD TAXI And Ride in Gastineau Hotel 314 Burford’s Corner SAVE An additional 5 per cent by purchasing 199 TAXI CO. Coupon Books WALTER B. HEISEL, Secretary. LOYAL ORDER OF MOO! Juneau Lodge No. 700. Meets every Monday aight, at 8 o'clock. JAMES CARLSON, Dictater. W. T. VALE, Secy, P. O. Box 02 | MOUNT JUNEAU LODGE NO. 147 Second and Fourth Mon- day of each month in a tariff bill, and if then such an unprecedented |was arranging a way of telling the | | Osteopath—201 Cioldsteln Bldg. Comfort Scottish Rite Temple crash in the stock market as we have been witness- |nours of the night by letting water | Hours: 10 to 12; 1 to 5; 7 to § N beginning at ":20 p. m, ing had occurred, it requires very little imagination |qrip slowly from a tiny hole he had | or by appointment STAND AT 310 00 f 39 50 " WALTER P. S°QTL to know what would have been said, or shouted, | made in a very large jar. Licensed Osteopathic Physician ARCTIC POOL | B or D Master; CHARLES E. NAGHEL MEXICO SETTLING DOWN. all over the country. That hopelessly incompetent| .rnat's the first water glock!” ex- Phone: Office 1671, 5.00 for $4.75 Becretary. R p Democratic Party! When will this Nation learn|caimed the Little Black Clock. Residence, MacKinnon Apts. HALL $5. or $4.75 When Mexico can have a Presidential election in which the people throughout the country freely participate with a life loss of only sixteen, we must conclude that the country is reaching a fairly settled condition. It has not been so long since soldiers were required at every polling place to maintain order—and to do most of the voting. President-elect Pascual Ortiz Rubio is said to be a man of great energy and strength of character, of sound judgment and fairness. It was vouchsafed for him by his supporters that disorders and intol- erance will disappear under his administration of that it cannot be trusted even for a single term in the Presidency? Before its first year of office |1s out, it has inflicted financial losses greater than |those of the World War. Anyhow, we have learned !our lesson. Never again! The business and in- dustry of the United States are safe only in the hands of the Republican Party. That would have been fallacious and unfair. It would be just as fallacious and unfair now for Democrats to hold President Hoover and his Ad- | ministration responsible for the unparallelled break {in stocks. Its causes and course have been well |understood by trained economists and financiers, |and have little or nothing to do with politics. |But that fact has not in the past prevented an “You see they could tell time after a fashion with the help of the sun but when night came they had no idea of time until the sun appeared once more. This boy has |discovered how to tell the time at night. “As the water becomes lower in the huge jar so much time has passed, and he is going to divide the night into hours which he will | measure by the time it takes the water to drip out of the little hole in the jar.” !fi £ FRONT STREET Dr. Geo. L. Barton CHIROPRACTOR Hellentha! Building OFFICE SERVICE ONLY Hours: 10 a. m. to 12 noon 2p.m to5p m 6 p. m to8p m | By Appointment PHONE 259 I 5 | Hazel’s Taxi PHONE 456 ORDER OF EASTERN STAR Second and Fourth Tuesdys ot each manth, -1at 8 o'clock, Scottish | | BLUE BIRD TAXI | Stand next Arcade Cafe | Phone 485 Day and Night Service Rite Temple. MAY- BELLE GEORGE, Wor- thy Matron; FANNY L. ROBINSON, Secretary. | KNIGHTS OF COLUMBUS | Seghers Council No. 1768 | Mretings second and [ast Monday at 7:30 p. m Iransient brothers ury td to attend. Counch affairs. extremely partisan use of every setback in the! It was l’ascinamnghu:; wa;ch t}t‘e = = EDW. M. lt\!(h;;mbers, r%m:n:n g R . e markets. It was so used in 1913 against President /boy. ~He was much too busy to|'f 2 + SN b 8 INCREASING GOLD SHIPMENTS. [\, " e was subjected to ridicule for saying notice them. But above all it was | Robert Simpson Stand: Alaska Grill H. J. TUKNER, Secretary. The circumstance that Nome has increased her gold output this year by fifty per cent. is a matter |that the slight depression in the stock market was “psychological” But only yesterday a spokesman {for President Hoover declared at Washington that | exciting to see how thrilled the Little Black Clock was to see this |old, old, old, ancestor of his—the Opt. D. Graduate Los Angeles Col- lege of Optometry and e ) DOUGLAS AERIE 117 F. O. L. Meets first and third & Mondays, 8 o'zlock at Eagles’ Hall, for congratulation. She has added a half million (the great trouble during the past week has been water clock! Opthalmology Prompt Service, Day and Night dollars to Jast year's production. |due to “mob psychology.” Let one explanation | ————— Glasses Fitted, Lenses Grouna CovicH AuTO SERVICE Douglas. ARNE SHUDSHIFT, W. However, a Nome paper mistakes when it flfl_-“!’;l““gfi‘e‘rhe ‘g“bfl'-l cLelt one political charge cancel | ATTENTION ffme—————————— 11|} STAND AT THE OLYMPIC P GUY SMITH, Secretary. Vis- clares that this increase will give the Second Divi- - But let it not be forgotten in the ) Phone 342 Day or Night { iting brothers welcome. ~ sion first place in gold shipments. We have one mine at Juneau that will have shipped before the year is over more than twice the total amount |future that the worst crash in the history of Wall Street took place in the first year of a Republican President who, together with a Re- {publican tariff in the making, was held up to| ]\ Painting, Paperhanging and Dec- |orating. Gauaranteed First Class work only. Max H. Mielke, Phone 1191, —adv. |7 DR. R. E. SOUTHWELL Optometrist-Optician b | | Eyes Examined—Glasses Fitted i Juneau, Alaska i l WOMEN OF MOOSEHEART LEGION, NO. 439 al that has come from the Nome country. HoWever,|the country as the sure guarantor of continued | L o o e . o | | Our trucks go any place any | | Meets first and third Thursdays Seward Peninsula will probably lead all the Divisions /and ever mounting prosperity. One thing that | | Ap‘polntmex;t i Phidine “i | | time. A tank for Diesel Oil eacl: month, 8 p. m. at Moose | in the percentage of her increase if not, indeed, in | should have l_)een forever wiped out, clong with | e 3 g2| | and a tank for crude oil save Hall. KATE JARMAN, Senior the total value thereof. It is a splendid showing|millions of private accounts, by the stock market | | burner trouble. | Regent; AGNES GRIGG, Re- 3 than | disaster, is the old tradition, or superstition, that | PHONE 149, NIGHT 5103 || corder. and none rejoice on account of it more Rn‘Repuhllcan rule always spells prosperity, and D xpert | 3 ! s A Juneauites. cratic only calamity. ! o i | RELIABLE TRANSFER [ | OUR bread is an ev- = Automobile [+ g ery day in the week and every week in Brunswick Bowling S FATHER OF EAGLES American Charity Trustees. i L 5 - e e 1 Wt LUDWIG NELSON | |[] the vear loaf. It is Alleys i (Cincinnati Enquirer.) | e palrmg Favelor | the kind of food you FOR MEN AND WOMEN John Cort, for years a leading theatre owner| When Conrad Hubert, inventor of the electric ikt Sokbots arid* fewelzy 16t |5 need and you'll get Stand—Miller’s Taxi and theatrical producer, who died the other day|flashlight, died he left a huge trust fund, three-| ;pnmng AGeft for Brinswick | into the h;xbxt of ik Phone 218 { in New York, was the father of the Eagles Lodge,|quarters of his residuary estate, with instructions| and OVERHAULING 7 - never ordering any : L a fraternal organization that has spread through- out the United States. The order was launched in Seattle, and Mr. Cort was the first President of Seattle Aerie No. 1. The Eagles have not only grown and prospered but their good work is recog- that it be administered to benevolent, educational and religious institutions for the benefit of human- ity by a Protestant, a Jew and a Catholic. This triumvirate selected for the offices of this remarkable philantrophy is composed of Calvin| Coolidge, Alfred E. Smith and Julius Rosenwald, Nothing Too Small Nothing Too Large PHONE YOUR ORDERS Portable and Cabinet Panatrope | | Phonographs, Radios. Records and || | other once you've tried it. Peerless W. D. BROWN Prospectors’ Supplies Blankets and Quilts for nized everywhere. mgx'chant philanthropist of Chicago. They are plan- | . . | Real Service For many years Cort was a variety theatrical [ning for the use of the $8,000,000 dedicated by the Wrecking Car Service TO US B. Burford & C Baker e rival in Seattle of John Considine, and their rivalry |d¢ad humanitarian to the purposes indicated. "J . B. Burfor 0. 3 x ; s Here is, as Governor Smith has defined it, Lo d We will attend to them|| “Our door step is worn by | i became political and personal. Both operated in “a labor of love for us three.” satisfied customers” | * . h the borderline between the underworld and re-| = ooniaq Hubert bi % promptly. Our coal, hay,|m—— & ubert was bigger than creeds, super: d t £ b ln 8 le A 8 spectability. However, both of them graduated from jor to the religious prejudices and alignments which | McC A UL LNl enC transdeq us".less the old variety theatres into nation-wide theatrical for centuries have halted the spiritual progress of {18 Increasing daily. 'Itheres a Mabr ’s Cafe AND . affairs of the highest class. Cort was big in the|the world. He recognized the quality of his stew- MOTOR CO reason. Give us a trial order The . . ... y legitimate dnd Considine, as a member of Sullivan and Considine, was one of the largest vaudeville ardship of great wealth and the needs for institu- | tions helpful to the interests of mankind. He had Service With Satisfaction itoday and learn why. | best time to Regular Dinners You Can’t Help Being faith that Protestant, Catholic and Jew were in Sidelights FOkR theatre owners and producers of the country. reallty working to one great end; he trusted to Pleased buy needed Short Orders 4 S e moral triumvirs to be selected for this duty — Lunches MAYOR HAGUE VINDICATED. to look beyond the bonds and barriers of creed D. B. FEMMER "lntln‘ is Autw e s and do the Almighty's will for the betterment of New Shipment of ' PH {nenx6 ko B The Legislature of New Jersey has been trying|His people. PHONE 114 POPULAR PRICES to make things unpleasant for Mayor Frank J. There is inspiration here, and -hope—hope that VICTOR RECORDQ Now Especially Cut and : % | Hague of Jersey City, Democratic State leader, for gt nmel all :en :lslll bi brought together in the and ! SPECIAL PRICES e S ¥ HARRY MABRY Fitted sometime. One of the busiest members in the|doing of good works without regard to the fashion | MINING CLAIM LOCA-! Propriator crusade 1o get Mayor Hague behind the bars was[Of thelr political or religious belifs: that they SHEET MUSIC On All TION NOTICES AT THE EMPIRE L2 MORRIS CONSTRUCTION ¢ : e beauty of human service a rewar : b Z::;ef“‘“I‘X‘l"'lh?“ffi‘“m"" “:“‘:;:;r OlfiayM::ldEZ:: more to be desired, richer than any material Late Numbers i COMPANY e s “Wasony S€ | guerdon which can come to one in a; F i friend of Mayor Hague, running on the Demo- PNl of JUNEAU MELODY ur Oats PHONE 62 the most momentous achievements, nentousachle -4 ——— JUNEAU TRANSFER COMPANY cratic ticket, defeated Mr. Watson who was a candidate for State Senator. People are now wonder- ing whether Mayor Hague managed the affair or whether he was simply lucky. (Séaltle Times) s Mayor Hague's ticket carried his home county,| } Hudson, by 91,000 majority, beating his Pfe'*“‘f'iv.or:: n;};irlzgrl;‘:‘l\v:ferfim:;‘:? “owfiii"fi"&‘;’ Paris | tion estimate by 1,000. He believes the people have | newspaper Midi, has rnlséd his voice In a stirring vindicated him of the charges of graft and elec-|appeal to the manhood of France. With compelling tion cheating that were made in the Legislature. |simplicity he has called upon his fellow citizens to consider the wishker, once the hallmark of the glory that was France but now, alack, under a grow- HOUSE ‘Temporary location over Dr. Pigg's Office Made-to-order for Christmas A Plea for Whiskers. Repairing and Remodeling Yurman’s MOVING 3 VAN We are now able to give the beautiful MORE ABOUT THE VIRGINIA ALIBL | You get results from |ing American influence, fallen upon evil days. REALIQTI(‘ Appropros of the contention of the Anti-Smith ,M' w"t‘_s“'”?-"t submits moncieur, “form a part of g n prhflngdmwbyus Democrats and Republicans that the Virginia elec- |27 Pational type. Our young men, aping Ameri- PERMANENT > B eni of & feaction towsnd the | 405 have abandoned whiskers. We do not want WAVES { > |to become standardized Americans. Let us be R H =y Moves, Packs and Stores Democrats throughout the country is the fact that|Prench!” Bravo and an immediate vote of con- i' CAPITALI IUT‘DRY = N = 7 ight and in New York up-State the Democrats won a dozen fidence from the Old School. Let the tricolor wave PHONE FOR H . =" L Freight and Baggage cities from the Republicans and lost only three proudly at the words and every beard of noble pro- APPOINTMENTS L e low Managenath o LIS T R = = Prompt Delivery of %o that party and they cut the Republican Assembly |POrtions be tossed to the breeze. Let us be French! i LR e & Spectalty | |2 |y~ T 7 { W\ ALL KINDS OF COAL majority from 28 to 18. They increased their leg- cry“‘;;e t‘;‘ar';“w;‘ "lze:" in M. de Waleffe's patriotic e 9 v absolut PRESSING = 0” : . He s bacl a t ' solute H fslative majority in the Kentucky election in|PW. & - to a time when the Republic's ute cure We call for and deliver = o, PHONE 48 = loyal sons went in for magnifeent facial - o the face of a terrific campaign by the GoOVernor|.qomment. The firm swade’ btk for Baldness. Twelve treat- PHONE 355 b~ - — 8 i the elegant van dyke, and the flowing full ‘beard were repre- sentative of character. By their whiskers you might know them. They were men of sturdy stuff and when they wagged their chins in solemn conference it meant something. America too has had her age of whiskers, long since past. Now, it appears, having taken so much from France by way of fashions, she is returning evil for good by playing the Delilah with the facial strength of her ally. Something ought to be d‘m n’bout it, though just what doesn't appear qui clear. Maybe we ought to o mission—with beards. i e (AT RN G W e One reason why so many “don’t k" signs are ignored is that they are hidden bel;’:d parked cars and so escape notice.—(Cleveland Plain Dealer.) Federal officials and State organization to give the Republican Governdt a majority there. In Harlem district of New York where a large majority of " the voters are Negroes a white Democrat was elected to Congress over a Negro Republican, indicating| that a very large percentage, if not' a majority, of the Negroes voted for the Democrat just as they voted for Mayor Walker. In Indiana practically all ‘the State showed Democratic majorities in municipal campaigns, the Republicans carrying only the steel towns in the Chicago suburban region—including T. E. HALL, Manager [ e —— e — . B ettt ittt Juneau Public Library Free Reading Room City Hall, Second Floor Main Street and Fourth Reading Room Open From 8a 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, Ete. FREE TO ALL It’s just like taking it oue of one pocket and put- ting it in another. It’s always yours—there when you need it—the safest kind of an investment. Do you realize that money earns money—that every dollar you deposit accumulates at 49, com- pound interest? At that rate money doubles itself in sixteen years. Begin now—save at least 109, of your salary. Keep saving regularly. The B. M. Behrends ‘Bank Oldest Bank in Alaska ments for ten dollars, This scalp treatment works, HOTEL ZYNDA ELEVATOR SERVICE 8. ZYNDA, Prop. American Beauty Parlor ALSIE J. WILSON Proprietor BURFORD’S CORNER | TAXI SERVICE PHONE 314 Pign’ Whistle Can 50,000 majority when he ran for Congress. m, conceding that the Democrats 8gain| The air in the vicinity of Wall Street might the better of off-year elections throughout thelbe described as bumpy.—(Philadelphia Bulletin.) printing at Ihe

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