The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, December 27, 1929, Page 4

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Hbail ¥y AI&SI:« Em piré JOHN W. TROY - - - EDITOR AND MANAGER Its members are lawyers, wr i itects, physicians, and manufa urers, been claimed that the formcr Pit |dent is distantly related to the Boston and Low [the famity It has - Coolidge: evening — o 8 . Mbin| Tt may be worth mentioning that Senator Walsh,| Streets {the Democratic leader in Massachusetts, s “Entered in the Office as Second Class {former President Coolidge will be defeated he S es the Republican Senatorial nomination. But matter il_ B RATES Delivered by carrier in Juneau, Doug Thane for $1.25 per month. following r SUBSCRIPTION enator Walsh is a Democrat and might be bis Treadwell and | vostage pa rates: | The Alaska Airways, Incorporated, is Year, in ndvance six months, in advance, | . ; one month, in o ne $1.25 % i 4 ‘(!mu(-lmd in hard luck. With its other troubl e Tasinels Offie oY Will Drompiy Ihas lost a hangar and airplane at Fairbanks t wilure or irregularity | ha Property ed at $40,000 went up in and Borland can only Offices, 374 |However, if The A e BER O A SO mivdly antitled to the |cucd the sun will shine brightly for those con- usge for repu’ v SR *l“'i"”‘”" ted with the company in spite of the it or not pap nd also the local news luck. ARANTEED TO BE LARGER R OTHER F ICATION Congratulations to our former townsman, J. H.| £ T Hart, whose nomination for United States Attorney| |at Nome was confirmed by the United States Sen-| ate. His friends predict a successful ad: tra tion Page Sinclair Lewis. f | (New York Times.) | But unquestionably the surest way to ward off {business depression and usher in a period of un- |precedented prosperity is to engage Mr. Sinclair |Lewis for a very large fee to write a novel depict-| |ing the future of American business in th Ty | ! darkest color. | | This recommendation is made after a thorough| — |examination of the social effects of Mr. Lewis's| NG N N AN N WHEAT. iwriting up to date. | f b D ('\El)l'\ ) |""Tn 1930, he wrote ‘s satirioaiBEhenl’ about Main| that Street. This made the people on Main Street so It has been said t it is an ill wind A g P . certainly had given them a 2 blows no good. While the Canadian wheat pool has ;:'[‘;‘:“‘F “st:]’;t“]‘]‘““‘ -‘h‘:i"g‘ n“";jnlr‘;fi“eslh;w “‘j;*";“:rbcauum 533{.15‘;:?}\. (n‘mtiwz”ex:fl — E" not been able to sell Canadian “;““-’" 1‘«“ the P (was_born on Oliver Street, and elected Herbert |}y o6 e S few nansbMal| Dr. Geol La B i demanded it has succecded in aiding the people of gooyer because he was born in West Branch, Iowa ¥ L A v South America to get rid of the surplus of thelr| " 'In 1022 Mr. Lewis wrote the enormously suc- |22 ook M e Cor Cfi‘r‘) CHIROPRACTOR | last spring's crop. The Prince Rupert News com-|cessful “Babbitt,” in which the American business ’h‘fi (?,m” i s Hellenthal Building plains that while there are a million bushels of man was held up for public ridieule. As a result|"U% WIPL oy gt | OFFICE SERVICE ONLY wheat in the Prince Rupert elevators that cannot 'm-‘ vglumo of American business increased [hrmumww »pn oAby Santa Claus did| Tours: 10 a. m. to 12 noon | be moved and hu “of millions of bushels in|f0ld in the next six years, the number of six- M PYECRSL - PR 0 T 2 p.m to 5 p m. e moved and hun: cylinder cars increased fourfold and the number|RO! seem to ca 8 o 13 cars and bulging warehouses between Prince Rupertmf Dhiaitib of Commerce twentyfold. }!hankx. He was glo 'l< they had Op. A b b ol bl and the inland wheat ficlds, England has bccn‘ Subsequently Mr. Lewis wrote “Arrowsmith,” in |liked the presents—but S.Antfl C]au,? By Appointment : loading up with the cheaper wheat from Argentine.|which he denounced the doctors and the research|Was so unlike everyone else that PHONE 259 This illustrates the main difficulty in the way of laboratories. This was followed by the discovery he didn't care for a whole lot A TR 2 — the proposed Imperial commercial union with free of n1“_.e.ulln and the $25,000,000 New York I.l»nllcal‘i'-hl’::](‘;-men e Crege o — = trade among the British peoples and a tariff against |Ce the rest of the world. England wants her food-| Under the circumstances it is fair to contend| that at least one reason for the crash in Wall stuff and raw material at the lowest possible P”C(‘-:s“-(.(.t and the resultant nervousness about busi- She does not wish to pay extra to promote Im-;m.h is a recent widely circulated statement perial unity. On the other hand, Colonial manufact- | Sinclair Le urers do not want to be forced to compete on an|a much nicer even base with the English producers. They want| If, then, the advantage of a protective tariff to hold their ®nce Lew local markets. And consumers in the colonies want |21 Tis cou to be able to trade with foreign countries if by to say that means they might expand their markets. | AT | The Prince Rupert News is sceptical about the | possibility of ever forming a British Commercial | The Tariff Grab. [ in which he said that Babbitt was| fellows than most people supposed s busin has been slowing up e was reported as saying kind things rymen, the situation obviously will| ed until Mr. Lewis can be persuaded | hing terrible about America. and Industrial Empire. Apparently, it does not —_— | believe that even a preferential tariff is within| oy (Philadelphia Record.) the probabilities. Commenting upon the English resident Hoover, in fulfillment of personal and . \party pledges, asked for tariff revision which pri- | * |marily would aid agriculture and secondarily would | ibenefit, through limited changes, those manufactur- {ing industries which could show “substantial loss- | e jes” through inadequate protection - against foreign | | competition. ! purchases of South American wheat the News says No one blames England, but the incident simply makes clear how great are the dif- «ficulties in holding together more or less artificially affiliated nations geographically separated and whose interests are so di- His program was od aside. | vergent. Very little has been said about Guard, responding to lh(\"iln(xl:;)ox':‘xl:fiui:nzhro ?111?1 this big struggle because of its Empire swarming Grundi organized a drive for general significance. Some statesmen have started and wholesale revision, distributing favors lxw’ishiy‘ to urge an Empire preference but it is to influential industries regardless of m”ricultuml‘ doubtful if even a preferential duty would protests and the interes ' ¥ of the consumer, ners inte a corner, goad- keep the business within the Empire at such a time as this. They drove th them Weste: {ed : into active resentment. The result was| SR A, |formation of a coalition so strong that it is re- HOOVER AND HURLEY. !\vrnnm the whole measure. | it On S Rogers thinks President Hoover.and. his ngw:nnmlmn to deal with the tariff on the basis of | Secretary of War, Pat Hurley, are alike in one f'fumlny and the welfare of the whole Ppopulation. thing: While they believed “the Democrats “““‘H“,)Lp Weapons now are not reason and cooperation, | always right, they were seldom President.” So, he| but self-interest and sectionalism. says, Hurley “relinquished his social standing” in| Oklahoma and joined the “great unwashed major- | neither side is there any longer a dis-| — | Wanted—A Panacea. i ity.” Hoover quit the Democrats and joined the! (Seattle Post-Intelligencer.) Republicans ten years ago. | James Bran 1 il ; | ames anch Cabell, who writes - Rogers, who hails just twenty-eight miles inings, is pow fifty years of aEvC: ol lmage| In his most he sums up his in America. He be- | from where Hurley was born, thinks his Okhlhunmill‘(‘mt book, “The Way of Ecben,” friend will make such a good Secretary of War recent attitude toward letters that he may make the Presidency just as Hoover|leVes the writing people of this age have, above| made it from his Cabinet position. He thinks the|"l: tried to convince thinking people that all is not well wi ilizati men much alike in efficiency and general attitude ..,”l““_;l With civilization. Indeed, he declares the spectacle has become comic—with our writers poised in the posture of Ajax defying the lig A g ghtning under i?) cloudless sky. He invites the youngcrgwrilcrs o ’ | come along and supply s ' A 3 “There is no such fish says the New York | perplexed intellect cflnp?,{‘w;:m};li?r:ng n z‘;:emx:egfic Times of the so-called sardine. “Sardines are made | time, Mr. Cabell will recline on his Virginia estate, not born,” it continues. In other word: ardine” |tongue in cheek, twiddling his Lhumbs—knowmg‘ is a method of preparation and not a fish. The|9Uifc well, perhaps, that thinking people are, an fact is that the “sardine” always have been, i THERE IS NO SUCH FISH. is usually a mehaden,| ™V quite perplexed. And ever a little herring, a young pilchard, or some other|“'! be little fish “painted in oil or, as sometimes is his| happier fate in the Midi, drowned in red wine." | Here and Elsewhere. Even the English law which prohibits the im- (Chicago N portation of any fish labeled “sardine” unless it| 1y (ho United States o by be a “real sardine” is made unmeaning by the|rifice rights, 1% 18 ndt hecogpaty. 0. sacs liberty, due Initiative in order and economic progress brought about, and Ita such economic recovery achieved since the armistice was pense of civil liberty, new Oxford Dictionary, the latest English authority, process of law and private which says of * ardines” A small fish of the Herring family, Clupea pilchardus, abundant off the shores of Sardinia and Britiany, or a young pilchard In Russia as has been gained at the ex- free institutions, private in- of the Cornish coast, when cured, preserved itiative and all constitutiona principles. The con- in oil, packed in tins or other cases for trast may be interpreted variously but it exists, A g o and it should challenge the attention of intelli gent persons in all lands. interesting to recall that the controversy | rdines” caused so much conflict among | Despite the d i ritannice 4 " ; e dire proph o suthoritics that Britannica, the most famous of limentalists, there i ror av,.p-~°r the old sea sen- encyclopedias, does not mention it at all 4y anger of the windjammer becoming extinet so long (Philadelphia Inquirer.) ——t It almost makes one smile when Congress criti- clzes the Farm Board for being slow at getting anything done.—(Des Moines Register.) e T R 'IT MAY BE COOLIDGE V It is possible that both the Republican and Democratic candidates for United States Senator in Massachusetts next year will be named Coolidge.| S. COOLIDGE. ciz " Republican leaders are urging former Preside m’p“:"" moment may bring the news of the partici- Goolidge to run for Senator for the purpose of | bure o l‘,‘]“ recent parachute wedding landing saving to that party a seat in the upper branch|(New York Tumes ot ¢ 518 or in the movies.— ) s . Pf Congress that it is feared may othcrwise be lost is extremely high have agreed , manufacturer and |to terize the amily Association, for|38ainst the Chinese feeling prevails that he|'De Peasants at h . Many Democrats, it said, | Bidney Coolidge, Lowell, Mas: President of the Coolidge nomination, and the - imay be elected. | " The Coolidge family, of which Sidney Coolidge | gy, is just now the official head, is one of the most mnoteworthy in Massachusetts. Many of its members dre directly descended from Thomas Jefferson, through his daughter and the Randolphs. The late Thomas Jefferson Coolidge, diplomat and promin- upon An { [ effi 3 . degree of efficiency seems in Manchuria and a; : gainst ome.—(New York Times:) of those who throw stones igham live in mighty flimsy glass cinnati Enquirer.) Many & of censure at houses.—(Cin- ~ Maybe the elephant that w; ing a human being had been reading the papers and got the idea they couldn't d hing you for that.—(Macon Telegraph,) g & as executed for kill- | | stockings |tree and toys underneath it. Well, | relatior that prosperity may be preserved | as we have the Senate— operations of the Soviet army PROFESSIONAL i) 63 | 83— Helene W. L. Albrecht PHYSIOTHERAPY Massage, Electricity, Infra Red | R#v, Medical Gymnastics, 41v Coldstein Building Phone Office, 216 — THANKING SANTA By Mary Graham Bonner The Little Black Clock took the| | k very quickly after! | Santa Claus start off It hardly seemed = DRS. KASER & FREEBURGER DENTISTS 301-303 Goldstein Bldg. PHONE 56 Hours 9 a. m. to 9 p. m, i before they were 1e next morning when| | ey awoke they found the presents | | they had most wanted had been left onderful day it had t they had opened their and they had found a Dr. Charles P. Jenne | DENTIST Rooms 8 and 9 Valentine H Building i Telephone 176 ! bright penny and bright ten cent piece in the toe of each, a big fat orange, some nuts, some raisins and some little toys. Then they had put up a tree in the living room which Santa Claus had trimmed for them. What won- derful taste he had! No one could [ Dr. A. W. Stewart trim a tree as he could. And he did such jolly, funny little things, too. He put a little toy Santa Claus right at the very top of the tree—so close to the top that his head touched the ceiling. He had put candy animals on the of his great open fire and his dog, f Great Boy, gave John and Peggy|: rides on his lovely broad back while | | Santa dozed a little. i Peggy noticed, and so did John, that when Santa Claus was sleeping there were smiles just all over his| face. When he awoke he told| | DENTIST ] | Hours 9 a. m. to 6 p. ra. | | SEWARD BUILDING | Office Phone 569, Res. | | Phone 276 Reésldence, MacKinnon Apts. | Glasses Fitted, Lenses Grouna T Dr. H. Vance | Osteopath—201 Goldstein Bldg. | | Hours: 10 to 12; 1 to 5; 7 to or by appointmeat | Licensed Osteopathic Physician Phone: Office 1671. | I | Robert Simpson Opt. D. Graduate Los Angeles Coi- lege of Optometry and 1 Opthalmology them he had been having the most P ful of dreams—all about chil- i | beauti ] il iren asleep in beds and stockings| | ik L ™ ing to be filled! e t Farm Income Reflects Degree of Management AMES, Towa, Dec. 27—A striking hip between methods of management and the income from | the farm is found in a study of the records kept by 25 farm Webster County in cooperatior Towa State College The four high farmers made @ management return, margin of profit above interest on invested capital and hired man’s wages, of $2078. The lowest farm showed a'| management loss of $94: | Economists found five definite standards on which efficiency of | the farm 1 be judged—acres operated, return per §1 on feed fed to livestock, value per acre of crops, crop acres per man, and power and machinery cost per acre { e LONG DISTANCE PRECINCT HONOLULU—A voting precinet | on Midway Island is 1200 miles | from the seat of Honolulu County, ! to which it belongs. !p Ir Responsible Men , Wanted to represent the Woodmen of the World Life Insurance As- sociation of Omaha, Nebraska. 'PHONE YOUR ORDERS - grain and transfer business |is increasing daily. There’s a|- | today and learn why. DR. R. E. SOUTHWELL Optometrist-Optician Eyes Examined—Glasses Fitted Room 16, Valentine Bldg. 10:00 to 6:00. Evenings by | Appointment, Phone 484 ’ 420 Goldstein Building PHONE 483 TO US We wilr aztend to them romptly. Our coal, hay, eason. Give us a trial order You Can’t Help Being Pleased D. B. FEMMER PHONE 114 All forms of life insurance { | written by our company, which has assets of more than $135,000,00 0. If you are interested, please write to | | W. A. FRASER, Presicent | Woodmen of the World | Life Insurance A i z 5 | sn. | Omaha, Neb. 1—— o o . Printing || EsBut e Small Part @~ the Cost D l‘N getting out a ecircular, circular letterorother picccof prlnl»edmaurr...vhe paper, the address ing, the mailing easi- 1y total morc than the printing, Yet, in a large mcasure, the Results Depend Upon the Printing, — Let us show jou some les to illusirate our statement | | | | | | | ‘? ‘ent in politics and diplomacy, was a member of 3 Yurman’s Buy your wife or sweet- heart a new FUR COAT A gift that will last a lifetime. for Christmas. SIS PST SSUIRIRE ST ON N | CAPITAL LAUNDRY | Under New Management SILKS and LACES a Specialty - i T—Onr trucks go any place any Lty DRY CLEANING AND PRESSING We call for and deliver PHONE 355 T. E. HALL, Manager Juneau Public Library Free Reading Room City 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.—T7:00 to 8:30 p. m. Current Magazines, Newspapers, Reference, Books, Etc. FREE TO ALL e e e ree—— 3 ] Ip Fraternal Societies ) oF | Gastineau Channel II ud B. P. 0. ELKS Meeting every Wed- ({ nesday at 8 o'clock. Elks’ Hall. Visiting brothers welcome. ty WINN GUDDARD, Exaltea Rules M. H. SIDES, Secretary. Cu-Ordinate Bo} ies of Freemasor ry Scottish Rite L ! Regular meetings L second Friday each month o 7:30 p. m. Soot- tish Rite Temple WALTER B. HEISEL, Secretary. TO ANY PART OF CITY - Tow Operating 2 Stands IOYAL 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 02¢ PHONE 199 Gastineau Hotel ) FOR A PACKARD TAXI And Ride in WALTER P. SOQTI Comfort Master; CHARLF3 E. NAGHEL STAND AT Secretary. MOUNT JUNEAU LODGE NO. 11 Second and Fourth Mon- day of each month in Bcottish Rite Temple beginning at ":30 p. m. RESRREG R SR SR O C B S S U S 314 ARCTIC POOL HALL RONT STREET ORDER OF EASTERN STAR Second snd Fourth Tuesdys of each month, at 8 o'clock, Scottish Rite Temple. MAY- o ———— ST ;| BELLE GEORGE, Wor- ? 9 . | | |thy Matron; FANNY { Hazel’s Taxi {|| BLUE BIRD TAXI | |1 ROBINSON, Secretary ! | Stand mext Arcade Cafe | KNIGHTS OF COLUMBUS { Phone 435 Il Seghers Council No. 1768 PHONE || 456 Stand: Alaska Grill Meretings second and jas Monday at 7:30 p. wm Transient brothers urw td to attend. Counch Chambers, Fifth Street EDW. M. McINTYRE, G. K H. H. J. TURNER, Secretary. DOUGLAS axRIE 117 F. O. E. Day and Night Service 11 | (2 Lt ik Mabry’s Ca P fe ) Regular Dinners Meets first and third - e e = %Mondays, 8 o'clock i Short Orders at Eagles Hall, Prompt Service, Day and Night Covica AuTO SERVICE STAND AT THE OLYMPIC Phone 342 Day or Night Juneau, Alaska ST SRR ST £ {Douglas. ARNE SHUDSHIFT, W. GUY SMITH, Secrctary. Vis- iting brothers welcome. Lunches Oren 6 am. to 2 am. ! POPULAR PRICES HARRY MABRY | Proprietor B s R WOMEN OF MOOSEHEART LEGION, NO. 433 | Meets first and third Thursdays | eacti month, 8 p. m. at Moose | Hall. KATE JARMAN, Senic | Regent; AGNES GRIGG, Re- | corder. =4 TJ | time. A tank for Diesel Oil | and a tank for crude oil save Lurner trouble. PHONE 149, NIGHT 5103 | RELIABLE TRANSFER | | ] z Brunswick Bowling Alleys FOR MEN AND WOMEN Stand—Miller’s Taxi Phone 218 LUDWIG NELSON Jeweler - ' | Expert watch and jewelry re- | pairing. Agent for Brunswick | Portable and Cabinet Panatrope | Phonographs, Records and | Radios. ) THE CASH BAZAAR TheLie Fhowseecper Open Evenings Opposite U. S. Cable Office - ——rly THE CAPITAL CLEANERS Is our bread appe- o Bureau of Information §! tizing? My good- A Fine Assortment o Bldg., Lower Front St. {! ness, yes! The very ! 1 smell of it as it JAPANESE and CHINESE EMBROIDERIES Reasonably Priced Cleaning, Pressing, Repair Work, Pleating UPTOWN AGENCY BRITT'S PHARMACY Work Called For and comes from our modern sanitary bakery invites your immediate attention. Delivertyz_d;l’;gnf 37}*”4 Peerless Ja,.man7s You get results from printing done by us — Bakery “Remember the Name” 5 | GET A CORONA | | For Your School Work i J. B. Burford & Co. | “Our door step is worn by | satisfied customers” | | 1 | Moves, Packs and Stores Freight and Baggrge Prompt Delivery of ALL KINDS OF COAL PHONE 48 ney is the BAS)S of your Wants It’s the doliar, after all, that enables you to secure all your material wants. And after all, it is those things which make life worth while. But you can’t get rich quick over-night, and money doesn't accumulate unless you help it . . . by regular saving. Just a little each week means a lot at the end of a year L T LT HOTEL ZYNDA ELEVATOR SERVICE §. ZYNDA, Prop. —_— e —— . . . of five. At compound interest it is carning money for e - you besides. ) Save and have . . . spend and want. BURFORD,S CORNER The B. M. Behrends HAR—— PHONE 314 Bank . Oldest Bank in 'Alaska Old papers for sete at The Em- AP i | Pire office, Pign’ Whistle Candy SRR i

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