The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, December 28, 1929, Page 4

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r!‘—‘“' > ' SR SRR TR EE AT R TR ERERTRERRE RS PERE RS S LS L - - |the seizure has been lawfully made as an i Daily Alaska Empire | e cnicoion st e o v to b 3 the man arrested and further confessions that he JOHN W. TROY - - - EDITOR AND MANAGER |had transported the liquor, ete, must be cxcluded st - os evidence. He held, further, that Congress meant o R 1 b ey Mf),‘!,‘;mc Jones “Five and Ten Law” for old offenders Streets, Junea H ___|A careful reading of the decision will make it clear = d in the Post Office in Juneau ns Second Class |that, if the Court has not erred, many people ¥ matter. throughout the United States have been ito convictions regardless of their rights SUBSCRIPTION RATES. i Delivered by carrier in Juneau, Douglas, Treadwell and' i lent roaded D A o LT o Pt ok T e for $1.25 per month. | Dry Senators are very indigant because they A WHITE CHRISTMAS v » t e following rates: . & N o-v.!hwl:'x “ i “:.‘(.]‘\,\’_Lu'\‘u(u\'nn(w‘ ‘hnw not received a report from the ’14’2(1(‘1“&3‘ By Mary Graham Bonner $6.00; one month . |Law Enforcement Investigating Committee, usually| The Little Black Clock had Subscribers will confe hey will promptly | s 4 | g i notify the Business ( gularity |called the Prohibition Committee. Wouldn't it be plan all in readiness. in the delivery of ) T hone for F ry funny if they days and become even more indignant? MEMBER OF ASSOCIATED PRESS. The Assoclated Press is .xclusively entitled to the use for rept n this paper and also the s publisk RAGKA CincULATION GUARANTEES wo o Lanog [(be Obregon Preidency. In fack ghe scems to bel, oty S Sogt Sortll S0 THAN THAT OF ANY OTHER PUBLICATION. Ipatterning after the Irishman’s sick g that| ¢lowed the Little Black Clock st oo G |and all got on a sled, which was | IR LT 3 RSN, | waiting for them. | So we are not to have the Grar Zeppelin in| The sled was drawn by a person Alaska for that scientific research after all. Well,|something like a snpw man. Yet we are Sorry. he seemed able to move more | "R |quickly than any, snow man ever 1 , could. [ Western Hemlock. They moved rapidly over the ; (Aberdeen, Wash., World.) A e T Lo | Timber, under modern forestry methods, wisely islm"g;r’:; o ;’;fir‘};';:x‘]‘-sasfi‘e':ing snow |regarded as a crop. If it were not for that .n}n;'llm\ “YouTl Hatto sk Sk AT [present high regard bestowed on the anco = y_all over again the Liciie BIARE hemlock might be found a very close analogy to b 4 . F o Ak Clock said. “It will please her. some phases of the history of copper minin Many o £ i solel or the| John didn’t understand at all, but a gold mine, worked in early days solely for ; tx thil warbEaxT | precious metal and very often without profit :here-::r:)flg:,‘;rlnoir}:in ;DHD“&;“ APk T ) AS {from, later has become a notable copper producer |U fore the lovelie LHEE R Last: |through application of modern mining :nvumds.lgzl‘;ceeS-qs I;e:;ys lgllsda;:;gey:;\ux ; ng: |But a mineral, whether gold or copper or other, | se, @ said, [k s pciaday rinie b Sohrine !nnco taken from the ground is gone, by no alchemy | Was m_uch too wonderful for a SMITH AND VARE {may it be replaced—even though there be plenty [house—it was indeed a palace. Two years ago, in discussing the refusal | 704" rochectors who, defiant of the dictum of | It was decorated with icicles, and of the United States Senate to admit Frank | geology, still insist that gold “just grow it was very firmly built. The sun L. Smith of Illinois, The World said: Perhaps a betetr analogy may be found in the}wns shining, and the palace seemed “The ultimate question is whether a |things that do grow, in the fields. As, for example, ja mass o{ jewels. In fac?. it was majority of a quorum of the Senate may the succulent tomato. Fox: a long time known |50 glittering and so dmzzh_ng that reverse the decision of a plurality of the simply as “the love apple,” it was cultivated in they could hardly luu_k at it. et s f Illinois on a question not of law Europe as an ornamental shrub, appreciated for its| “I've turned the time back two Zztfl;asr ?.he prop:"wues. The State of Illinois |beauty alone. It is only in a comparatively recent |days,” the Little Black Clock said, has no law against the Smith-Insull tran- |era that the tomato has become a highly \x\luf?d;und just, at that moment, a.beau- saction. The United States has no law 'fuod. As to the hemlock, no question as to its!tiful lady appeared at the great against it. A plurality of the voters, after |beauty. None of the conifers excells it in sight-|front door of the palace. full warning and full debate, have consented liness. “The murmuring pines and the _hrmlocks, “Have you come to make the to it. By- what right, then, does a majority beared with moss,” long ago evoked the poet’s‘gmm yearly request?” she asked. of the Senate presume to declare that the jrapture. 2 b | “We have!” the Little Black offense is great enough to warrant a re- But the hemlock lefi the enterprising loggericmvk said. fusal to seat Mr. Smith and thus to deny jcold. He had eyes, in Acadia or elsewhere on the| «Come inside,” the lady urged, Illinois the representation to which it is Atlantic seaboard, for the pine. And so it Was and to herself, she added, “I know entitled? It is acting upon the theory of {out in the P‘ucmc Northwest, even with that very —_they want a white Christmas!” Senator Reed that in admitting members superior species, the western hemlock. The logger | B DR Gl o ‘the power is absolute’ He does not merely }-;Bw put ll:)e Il:r. tAhef sx)ruc;lel, tthhc ccdar‘k\mctljl tbmmn‘ ate may b, ew years back. ‘ew mills then awakened to the f;:v"“,',xm,‘,‘};’ 3{,’,‘,‘1‘“;23?0,:;‘ eofseé“e,f.,m_y HZ possibilities of the once despised western hemlock. | Succeeds Murray claims that the Senate may in each in- | ; stance, without previous notice, for reasons 1-5[0 | (Christian Science Monitor.) undeclared and unexplained, invent ex post its lightness, easy workability, freedom from pitch : facto such reasons as it chooses. and resin, length and toughness of fiber, its ability | “This claim to absolute power is, in our ‘tu take nails without splitting. Besides its merits" % opinion, lawless in spirit, dictatorial in |as building material, it has been proven excellent| f °° character, in violation of the Federal char- |pulp material. i acter of this government and a direct | e —————rt | challenge to the principle of representative Whales, Whither Away. ! b government.” J % 3 1 Now, after the Senate has left Penn- | sylvania without representation in the Senate | for two whole years and has in the end barred finally the man who got the most votes, The World announces that ‘“the Senate has denied justice to neither Mr. Vare nor Pennsylvania, but has simply taken a stand in defense of the integrity of Senatorial elections.” ‘What's the Constitution 'when Virtue is in peril? The Sun should not be too hasty. Since The World's earlier editorial was written fraud was disclosed in the election. Mr. Vare was rejected because of fraud in the election. Nobody has ever asserted that the Senate could not reject a man whose elec- tion was fraudulent.—(New York World.) bowl thrown in; few animals are more difficult to study than these great mammals of the sea. But information regarding their number and habits is important, and another research ship, the Discov- ery II, recently was launched at Port Glasgow under auspices of the Crown Agents of the Colonies. Whale research work, which was started in 1926, was actuated largely by the hope of forestalling [the extermination threatened by modern methods of hunting the whale. The results, ultimately, are |to be laid before the League of Nations with the expectation that necessary restrictive measures may be adopted. The whaling industry has come down through the centuries for nearly 1000 years. It became an The World is by no means harsh in its judg-important and romantic industry in the eighteenth | ment of itself. The Senate unquestionably has|and nineteenth centuries, when Newfoundland ports a right under certain circumstnces to reject a and Nantucket and New Bedford maintained great man whose election was fraudulent. It has a rightfleets wherever the whale could be found—in the to reject him if it is established that his majority |Atlantic, the Pacific and the Antarctic Oceans. over an opponent was due to fraud or if he can|WaS not Herman Melville's “Moby Dick” inspired be held personally responsible for fraud or was by the adventurous phases of life aboard a whaler cognizant of it at the time it was committed, and from New Bedford where precious relics of the call- made no effort to prevent commission, even if the|IN§ Aare preserved? The whale was pursued re- fraud was mot the controlling factor in his ma- |lehtessly by British, Dutch and American ships Jority. unul_tthe fmld:hle of Lgeunineteem}(] century, when T scarcity of whales ane he use of substitutes for Jor::y e ';‘::e ef;“h}ii‘;? ‘;‘l’“ “M;ad"“;:; ma- | whale products caused the industry to wane. opponent, Wiliam B. Wilson, would have Ibeen In the present century the introduction of : machinery and modern methods of handling, in seated. Nor was Mr. Vare's personal responsibility |some measure have brought about a revival in the in the frauds, that were not material as far as|industry. Hence the worthy efforts to determine the final results were concerned, establised. The not only the effect of the industry on the whale truth is that Mr. Vare was refused a seat in the |POPulation, but also all conditions bearing upon Senate because of the enormous expenditures in his !¢ Whale and its movements. behalf in the Republican primary election that | , AR gave him his party’s nomination. It may be that, NeW Edition of “Pacific Salmon Fisheries.” the Senate had a right to eject Mr. Vare but not to reject him. | (Pacific Fisherman.) Notwithstanding his serious illness during the past six months, Dean John M. Cobb of the College of Fisheries, University of Washington, recently for- MANUFACTURING STATE. warded to the United States Bureau of Fisheries the manuscript of a new revised edition of his “Pa- Alabama recently passed Rhode Island as the|cific Salmor Fisheries,” and it is announced that fifth State in the production of cotton goods. 1It|it will be published within a few months. This is has been only a few years since the latter State STatifying news, as the last edition, published in was second to Massachusetts's first. Massachusetts 1921 has been out of print for some time; while the is now third to South and North Carolina, first Bndlwork‘ OO 1 4o [most authoritative in existence second respectively. Georgla is fourth and is SAma jon historical, technical and other phases of the almon industry, is in constant demand. The new closing the gap between her and Massachusetts {edition will contain much new matter, covering A recent Department of Commerce report showed |\modern developments in fishing and cannery prac- Georgia less than 30 per cent. behind Massachusetts tice, as well as recent statistics, results of scientific and South Carolina and North Carolina each nearly |investigation, regulatory measures, etc, in which 50 per cent. greater than the New England State |UNere have been many important developments since South Carolina continues to lead North Carolina| ¢ Previous publication appeared. When printed, for first place by a small margin. More than 701}:; bi)fk Smay be purchased at a nominal price per cent. of the cotton manufacturing of the Um(edfpr),:““; Oafiln&en?m tor Documents, Government States is now done in the South. | o i i L } It should be said of the millions of prominent ENFORCEMENT OUTLAWS MU | persons who knew a year ago that the Wall Street |bauble could not endure that their insight was only OBSERVE THE LAW. |equaled by their sense of public duty—(New York Gradually the United States Courts are curbmy\!T”"“*’ . the ruthless lawlessness that for so many years| g R S SRS s tymem e . has characterized Prohibition enforcement in the| M@¥be Sir Thomas Lipton visited Sing Sing United States. In another place on this page is P G the hope that he might find there someone : Ao ' {Who could “lift” the America’s Cup for him.—(Se- | article taken from the New York Herald Tribune |attle Post-Intelligencer.) P m.—(Se ALABAMA BECOMES COTTON —— £ {)h newspaper in the United States, setting forth| Temperature figures are off about 20 points decision of United States District Judge Thomas | (rom the seasonal norm, but the general climatic ‘Connecticut which holds that there must be|condition is regarded as sound.—(New York Times.) ‘more evidence than the seizure of liquor to make | B WS DO N " a lawful basis of arest, that the selzure of liquor| This would probably be a better country if t rather th |we heard more about the other seventeen amend- Lt ol 240 the | 1yonts and less thout the Eighteenth—(Atlants Gon. stitution.) should get a report one of these news dispatches credited to More trouble brewing in Mexico! Mexico has W Rerel; . made little if any progress toward civilization sincé And now many more are following in their foot- | capitalizing the striking merits of the wood, Whales cannot be inspected in aquariums, nor bought at 10-cent stores at a dime apiece with a | | Peggy asked him. Itaken to see a special person.” Associated Press Photo The Right Rev. Charles Palmers- ton Anderson, bishop of Chicago, was elected presiding bishop of the Episcopal church succeeding the late Bishop John Gardner Murray. .- LET Aimquist Fress your Sult, We call and deliver. Phone 528 Morris Construction Com pany GENERAL CARPENTER WORK Phone 62 Printing IsBufa Small Part . @ g¢he Cost D 4 lIN getting out a circular, circular letterorother pieceof printed matter...the paper, the address- ing, the mailing easi- ly total more than the printing. Yet, in a large measure, the Results Depend Upon the Printing. | “Where are we going?” John and “I've got a sled . outside—it will hold three—and we're going to be That didn't mean much of any- & reason. i Helene W. L. Albrecht PHYSIOTHERAPY Massage, Electricity, Infra Red Re#v, Medical Gymnastics, 410 Goldstein Building Phone Office, 216 ! RS AR e _& DRS. KASER & FREEBURGER 301-303 Goldstein Bldg. | Hours 9 a. m. to 8 p. m. s P ‘Telephone 176 PSR Dr. Charles P. Jenne | Rooms 8 and 9 Valentine 2 S5 | Dr. A. W. Stewart Hours 9 a. m. to 6 p. m. SEWARD BUILDING Office Phone 569, Res. i) Dr. H. Vance Osteopath—201 Coldstein Bldg. | Hours: 10 to 12; 1 to 5; 7 to » or by appointmeat Licensed Osteopathic Physiclan Phone: Office 1671, Residence, MacKinnon Apts. Dr. Geo. L. Bartor CHIROPRACTOR Hellenthal Building OFFICE SERVICE ONLY Hours: 10 a. m. to 12 noon 2p. m tobp m ~ | Hazel’s Taxi PHONE 6p. m to8p m By Appointment PHONE 259 13 i Robert Simpson | PACKARD TAXI And Ride in FRONT STREET Now Operating 2 Stands STAND AT ARCTIC POOL L 456 Stand: Alaska Grill | O e SN I! Fraternal Societies AUTOS FOR HIRE 199 TAXI 50¢ TO ANY PART OF CITY F A SRR T PHONE 199 Gastineau Hotel 314 Burford’s Corner BLUE BIRD TAXI Stand next Arcade Cafe T l Phone 485 Day and Night Service | Mabry’s Cafe Graduate Los Angeles Col- lege of Optometry and Opthalmology Glasses Fitted, Lenses Grouna | DR. R. E. SOUTHWELL Optometrist-Optician Eyes Examined—Glasses Fitted | Room 16, Valentine Bldg. 10:00 to 6:00. Appointment. [N Prompt Service, Day and Night Covice AUTO SERVICE 3TAND AT THE OLYMPIC Phone 342 Day or Night Juneau, Alaska e T Open 6 a.m. to 2 am. TOur trucks go any place any A tank for Diesel Oil and a tank for crude oil save Evenings by Phone 484 | PHONE YOUR ORDERS We wil- saztend to them Our coal, hay, grain and transfer business is increasing daily. There’s a Give us a trial order today and learn why. | You Carn’t Help Being promptly. D. B. FEMMER PHONE 114 1. Yurman’s {{ Buy your wife or sweet- |{heart a new FUR COAT for Christmas. that will last a lifetime. | CAPITAL LAUNDRY Under New Management SILKS and LACES a Specialty DRY CLEANING AND | | | |'JOHN B. MARSHALL ATTORNEY-AT-LAW H Short Orders Lunches POPULAR PRICES HARRY MABRY Proprietor Regular Dinners 3 { 3 i time. PHONE 149, NIGHT 5103 RELIABLE TRANSFER —— 420 Goldstein Building Radios. [ LUDWIG NELSON | Expert watch and jewelry re- | pairing. Agent for Brunswick Portable and Cabinet Panatrope Phonographs, Records and We call for and deliver PHONE 355 T. E. HALL, Manager - S - e Juneau Public Library Free Reading Room City Hall, Second Floor Main Street and Fourth Room Open From 8a m to 10 p. m. Circulation Room Open from to 5:30 p. m.—7:00 to 8:30 THE CAPITAL CLEANERS Bureau of Information Bldg., Lower Front St. Cleaning, Pressing, Repair Work, Pleating UPTOWN AGENCY ° BRITT'S PHARMACY Work Called For and Delivered, Phone 371 You get results from printing done by us s’flie;§AS) ur Wants It’s the dollar, 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 § ney i ofyo « .+ of five. you besides. Save and have . . . spend and want. The B. M. Behrends Bank Oldest Bank in Alaska At compound interest it is earning money for yt7e Is our bread appe- tizing? My good- ness, yes! The very smell of it as it comes from our modern sanitary bakery invites your immediate attention. Peerless Bakery “Remember the Name” A | oF i Gastineau Channel | i z B. F. 0. ELKS Meeting every Wed- ({ tw nesday at 8 o'clock. Elks' Hall. Visiting - brothers welcome, WINN GUDDARD, Exalted Ruler M. H. SIDES, Secretary. - Co-oOrdinate Bo} les of Freemasor ry Scottish Rite Regular meetings second Friday each month & 7:30 p. m. Soot- tish Rite Temple 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 02( MOUNT JUNEAU LODGE NO. 141 Second and Fourth Mon- day of each month in Scottish Rite Temple beginning at ":30 p. m, WALTER P. S°QTI Master; CHARLF3 E. NAGHEL Secretary. A0 VRIS e ORDER OF EASTERN STAR Second and Fourth Tuesdys of each manth, at 8 o'clock, Scottish Rite Temple. MAY- BELLE GEORGE, Wor- thy Matron; FANNY L. ROBINSON, Secretary. KNIGHTS OF COLUMBUS 8eghers Council No. 1768 Mretings second and las \ Monday at 7:30 p. m Transient brothers ure :d to attend. Counch Chambers, Fifth Street EDW. M. McINTYRE, G. K H. H. J. TURNER, Secretary. 4 DOUGLAS AxRIE 117 F. O, E. Meets first and third & Mondays, 8 o'clock at Eagles' Hall, Douglas. ARNE SHUDSHIFT, W. P. GUY SMITH, Secretary. Vis- iting brothers welcome. " WOMEN OF MOOSEHEART l LEGION, NO. 439 Meets first and third Thursdays | each thonth, 8 p. m. at Moose | Hall. KATE JARMAN, Senicr Regent; AGNES GRIGG, Re- | corder. | o & 7 s Brunswick Bowling | Alleys | FOR MEN AND WOMEN | Stand—Miiler's Taxi : Phone 218 | —— THE CASH BAZAAR Open Evenings Opposite U. S. Cable Office — A Fine Assortment of JAPANESE and CHINESE EMBROIDERIES Reasonably Priced Jarman’s GET A CORONA i For Your School Work | | J. B. Burford & Co. | “Our door step is worn by | | satisfied customers” | JUNEAU TRANSFER Moves, Packs and Stores Freight and Baggrge Prompt Dellvery of ALL KINDS OF COAL PHONE 48 HOTEL ZYNDA ELEVATOR SERVICE 8. ZYNDA, Prop. e ——————) BURFORD’S CORNER TAXI SERVICE | PHONE 314 Pign’ Whistle Candy S A o St st A, | Old papers for sate at The Em- pire office. i

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