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he lives, his abode own dwelling place, the house in which one lives,"| etc. The New Century says it is residence,” abides, place of residence aska Empire Daily Al Whether not the * tion might th rea WS or not or whether wz‘ in newspaper deserved rapn!w.x-} discovered by any one who would N e ND MANAGER | successfully search for files, We know this: no JORN vi TREY_’_" EDIT,QR {\ — | one of the papers survives. All long ago ceased t cening except Sunday by _the | eyist O ARY ht Second and Main | X! Juneau, Alaska e : E s s v R = FORMER ALASKAN HAS FIRE. Entered in the Post Office in Juneau as Second Class matter. SUBSCRIPTION RATES. Delivered by carrler in uncau, Douglas, Treadwell and Thane for $1.25 per month. By Jostage paid, at the following rates. One vear, in advance, $12.00; six months, in advance, .00; one month, in ad $1.25 A ‘Aubscribers will confer a favor if they will promptly aotify the Business Office of any failure or irregularity he delivery of their papers. 3 o E"h:k;jvll-“\: )!nv Editorial and Business Offices, 374. MEMBER OF ASSOCIATED PRESS. is exclusively entitled to the all news dispatches credited to also the The Associated Press se for republication it or not otherwise credited in this paper and local news published herein A CIRCULATION GUARANTEED TO BE LARGER LA R TAAT OF ANY OTHER PUBLICATION looked Aviator Patterson at Mayo. H tt te ile, and before long they ' | 1ooke ator Patterson 3 owever, that while, and r v {may be an exception that proves the record, oL (:;lptflw country we naw” Licens:; gt::g:::::‘;;:ymhn‘i ABOUT MR STEEL'S “HOME,” ETC. | 1ne name Roosevelt that still appears in the! “There they will settle down, and | i Lol | £ B gl €| ccause the land will be called|] Residence, MacKinnon Apts. | g = '+ from win |Papers with much frequency usually has only a re- ise’ R e lts < The Empire is in receipt of a letter from mote connection with the Great Colonel. Gov,|ESYP! they Will be called Egypiians, | o e = A. Steel, declarant for the Republican nomination| oo TR R FEL e P;_Ndmt"”f"‘. ,,’m, people are now called after |if : = for Territorial Senator, written at Juneau, January |/ e O 0 N shiout s of the countries in which | | Dr. Geo. L. Barton | 2, in whicn is the folowing: g fihey lre & vt mkel] CHIRDIMCTOR In the Jan. 21 issue of the Daily Empire, Canada in the Air las they have, camping here, camp- Hellenthal Building referring to my filing declaration of can- . O OFFICE SERVICE ONLY didacy for renomination on the Ropubl:;n‘n (New York Times.) ‘n.‘mw‘ml ;.;ypsiés. %0 1' Hours: 10 a. m. to 12 noon | ticket for Territorial Senator, among other A country for flying is Canada. An area of 3,- “In fact the world gypsy comes || 2p.m tosp m things the statement is ‘““f“‘. b aevha 1684,723 square miles and three-fourths of it still from the word Egyptian and these || e 1 T AL Y00 hfr-r(bn 3‘ making |lacking railways and good roads! Lakes are almost very first gypsies of all were named || 0'p:meto 8 p. m I from Seatile where he has bee i |as thick as stars in the sky. River systems, the he people who wandered in- By Appointment | RS fon 0 a0 oW TN St. Lawrence, Hamilton, Moose, Albany, Severn, to Egypt, camping along the road || b2l it declaration, ele.” = een making |Nelson. Fraser, Coppermine, Mackenzie, and net- as they went, and taking a long,|% e 3 The statement that T have beeh MUCTE | works of other rivers are everywhere south of the long time about it & e e ok my home in Seaitle for the st ' YT |Arctic Circle. Salt water gulfs and bays, basins,| “Now, when people are wander- | Robert Simpson is unqualifiedly false : years past I have been a resident and in- habitant of Juneau, and during that period registered or attempted to I have never vote in any other precinct than Juneau, where I have yearly for the past eight years registered or voted, so far as I can now | recall Since coming to Juneau nearly nine years ago I have annually made a trip to the | States, going as far fast as New York and | south to New Orleans, including a trip once or twice each year to California. At all places I have registered as a resident of Juneau and at no time have I ever repre- sented that I was a resident of Seattle During the past three years I have done much work on the All-Alaska Review, which has required much time in San Frapcisco and Seattle. During the past,year I have been associated with some people from Los Angeles in establishing the Alaska Siberian Fur Company and also a company that expects to drill for oil in the Katalla field the coming season. Recently I have also been occupied in making the necessary arrangements to start a daily newspaper in Juneau, when the time seems propicious [sicl. A real NEWS paper for all people, that will be enterprising and truthful Having always been an unfortunate batchelor, [sic] and since leaving the home of my parents in Pennsylvania, I have al- ways lived at hotels and have had no occasion to establish a real home, otherwise I would have one in Juneau, where I expect | to be continuously for some time to come. I am giving you certain FACTS about my legal [sic] residence so that if you have been misinformed and have unintentionally | done me a wrong in harping about my al- leged non-residence, you may make the proper correction in the columns of the | explorers, land freight. Pittman is a former Alackan gold fields. [in the State of Washington. After roaming career he took root that State | nomination of Senator tories Committee. Democrats were in power. The New York Times, spcaking of aviation in|iy our time > | car ays that “in six years of flying not a man They have been camping like Dr. H. Vance | |has been killed.” The Times seems to have over- | this and traveling like this for|| Osteopath—201 Goldstein Bldg. | | The news of the destruction by fire of the Wash- | ington home of Senator Key Pittman of Nevada |entailing a loss estimated at from $50,000 to $75, 000, will cause general regret in Alaska. Senato a more or les: in Nevada, and has been four times elected United States Senator from |g The Alaska delegation voted for the |or Pittman for Vice-President |ten at the famous Madison Square Garden convention. | they At the Houston convention Senator Pittman was OF more pleasant surroundings fur- Chairman of the Platform Committee. In the Senate\ he is the ranking minority member of the Terri- He was Chalrman when the Gulf of St. Lawrence as and Nova Scotia, Ungava, St. James Bay, and the great sheets of Territory; landplanes, and quiet down. No aviator, the ice is out for on every reaches of side river where part of Canada is now and skiis when it is ice is forming and when it is break temperatures do not dismay him. | War, commercial aviation portation in Canada prospectors, foresters, fires. work.” ave been photographed. Mr. to Frobisher, Hudson and Davis.” flying not a man has been killed. have been laid down coasts and in the great river basins Is 61,021911 acres. Mail contracts kenzie Valley. The remotest parts by airplane. Daily Empire. Your paper to-night states that “The Empire has no primary choices.” If this be untrue and you are seeking to prejudice my candidacy in the eyes of the voters then I know there will be no cor- rection Just why I should be made the target of misrepresentation in a Republican pri- mary by a Democratic Organ [sic] may not be clear to some readers, but-to others it will need no elucidation. If your statement were true I could not legally be a candidate for Senator, as the Congressional law re- quires that a Senator shall have the quali- fications of an elector in Alaska and must have resided in the Division from which he is elected for at least two years prior to the date of his election. | | The usual dictionary definition of “home” is that| Webster says of home, “one's | etc. An abode ‘is a place where one| which may be a permament or the “act or fact of abiding,” where one “actually lives.” people have a winter home and a summer home One may have more than one home. Some| Others have a town home and a country home ‘We learned the other day that Senator Pitt- In not Changes in Tennis. (New York World.) Tennis, official publication of the Lawn Tennis Association, undertook cently to find out what ranking pl three proposed changes in the rules, 1. Substitution of some other “love” to denote a zero score 2. Restriction of the serv instead of two. 3. Playing the poiut in the course of a rally, before going over; giving this that is, the same status as a * service, channels, straits—Hudson Bay 500 miles across, the large as Newfoundland Bay, Frobisher water In Canada seaplanes are used more than the pilot sees in Franklir he may come inaccssible to the In the Far North he uses pontoons when are |two short periods when he does not fly—when the Arctic Since the World has made in. There ing up. a remarkable |record in Canada. There is no better authority jon the subject than J. A. Wilson, Controller for |the Dominion. In an interview in the current | Aviation, “Canada,” he says, “is made for avia- tion.” So far there has been little passenger trans- The plane is used chiefly by | lumbermen, graphers, Government officials and carriers of mail | The Air Board, organized in 1923, is using the plane to prevent and extinguished forest | “The service has now grown so that it covers all Northern Canada and serves not only for forest | protection but for a great. variety of other useful | To date 300,000 square miles of territor: photo- v Wilson declares that | the pilots in the Far North are “fitting successors In six years of Caches of fuel in many places along the | Air-mail con- | nections with the United States have been made The forest area in the prairie Provinces have been let for the Gulf of St. Lawrence, the Yukon and Mac- | of Northern Canada are within a day or two of civilization | United States a survey re- layers thought of as follows: words for er to one try over when a ball, touches the net occurrence, “let” on a And what did the niuety-two players who re- of plied these changes? ity. So that's that. them up to the players. If football many of the evils that beset it A Diterary critic aged 33 accomplishments of his neration a cause for gratification. 'Why not c a couple of extra years, and see what can be man’s Washington home burned to the ground.|about it?—(New York Times.) His Nevada residence is presumably intact. b e <R one of five dictionaries have we found it said that | Say what you wui, lre isn't alw p They were over- it is the place where one dwells, the place where|Whelmingly against all of them. Some of the pro-| posals received more votes than others, but none | |of them received anything like a favorable major- ) The moral, we believe, is that “one's abode or|gny gport, simplifies its problems when it puts| lakes patrolled = & i C A HISTORY il i Graham Bonner Mary He resided and prac- | | ticed law at Nome in the early days of that camp.! He went to Nome from Dawson to which place he| | had gone shortly after the discovery of the Klondike | ¢™M¢! From Nome he went to Tonopah, Ne- vada, after mineral discoveries had been made down ( there. He came from Mississippi to the West, locating a rode along on theil % new and followed the firs d of them was quite a pro. 1 of camels and people, with | | DENTIST S | tents and other belongings. f Rooms 8 and 9 Valentine | e people,” said the Little| | Building Clock, “are never long in| | Telephone 176 | They put up thei ther on, so they move again. | where as towns and do not have any specia 1| gypsies But this was the b their name, and the their history!” Little Black Clock and John | | the days when the world 1 stay for awhile and then 1ink they will find more food “They do not travel very far in a day, but they can stop almost any- no ‘one expects them to|| Phene 276 a certain time or by a train, as we expect people and camp on the outskirts of: place in which to live we call them or beginning ci o 1 PROFESSIONAL | | Helene W.L. Albrecht | PHYSIOTHERAPY Massage, Electricity, Infra Red Rev, Medical Gymnastics. | 41v Goldstein Building Phone Office, 218 DRS. KASER & FREEBURGER DENTISTS 301-303 Goldstein Bldg. PHONE 56 Hours 9 8. m. to 9 p. m. |l X —23| 63 £ ——— 1 t | fADr. Charles P. Jenn—e-‘ | Dr. A. W. Stewart DENTIST | Hours 9 &. m. t0 6 p. m. SEWARD BUILDING Office Phone 569, Res. Hours: 10 to 12; 1 to 5; Tto 9 | Opt. D. | Graduate Los Angeles Col- lege of Optometry and Opthalmology Glasses Fitted, Lenses Grouna | 1| | \ \ | fl TOWER OF PISA ATZ 1 THERE ARE FOUR OTHER LEANING TOWERS I EUROPE. NAME THEM NOT AND YET THEY SAY IT DOESNT PAY 0 ADVERTISE DR. R. E. SOUTHWELL Optometrist-Optician y Eyes Examined—Glasses Fitted | RETURNS JANUARY 27 | JOHN B. MARSHALL ATTORNEY-AT-LAW 420 Goldstein Building PHONE 483 ;'_' B R R “\_“)-i PO 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 ) HARRIS Hardware Company ELECTRIC HEATERS $1.90 | | | | | — —hif If you want superior | work call | | CAPITAL LAUNDRY Phone 355 e — N had followed | temporay such a plan instead of making the spectator su- Both “home” and “residence”|preme it would probably have not only beeq the | cover rather wide ranges. Usually they depend upon | Victim of less tinkering but would now be free of | looks back over the nd finds little heer up, take done ays the same. one’s home or abode is the place from which he|In the old days, good and bad, the free lunch % counters offered special attractions when cold weath- registers at hotels. i and if one is interested he may pursue the matter further. | resident (The Empire did not raise that question), we know that he has not lived in Juneau, except | very brief visits, for several years. Our miorma-i - the last few years in Seattle. that he was absent from Juneau to attend school B Everybody has access to one or more dictionaries, | ‘Whether or not Mr, Steel is technically a legal the biennial legislative sessions and one or on is that he has lived most of the time during| It is not claimed | of the public service. The Empire said that Mr. Steel had lived in He had lived here two or three times. He been connected as cditor or publisher or both er came creaking across the countr Blade.) Y (Toledo It is understood that Senators Borah and Jones are in favor of a Committee Law to the President's Committee on ment.—(New York Times.) The Flint Journal needed in the Senate. —(Detroit Free Press.) thinks that And the tough part of it is, Mr graph.) to Lay Down the Law Enforce- new blood is Yes, a complete transfusion. Vare doesn’t & to serve in the army or navy or any other get any of his $780,000 back.—(Macon, Ga. Tele- Uncle Sam is not quite in the World Court yet. He is at the threshold, with the Senate sitting on the step. And when United States that dignified in Nome, Cordova and Juneau.|pedy is “sot” it is a long sitter—(Toledo Blade.) AN EDUCATION is child. Now, when t time to think of the college education for be proud. NOwW! The B. M TR T TH A T T H LTI T T PREPARE FOR IT. them. Just a few dollars each week will mean a lot in ten years. DON'T NEGLECT THEIR FUTURE. depends on what you do at present—SAVE Bank Oldest Bank in Alaska l“lllmwll’luw‘w‘ the birthright of every hey are young, is the ir future Begin to save—for It will pay for a them. And then you'll It . Behrends i Carlson’s Taxi AN 'WHERE IN THE CITY FOR 50 CENT: Careful, Efficient Drivers—Call Us At Any Hour— DAY AND NIGHT—Stand at Alaskan Hotel Phones Il a Car n’s Taxi and nd Single O Ambulance Service Comfort’ BY PACKARD TAXI TO ANY PART OF THE CITY 50c¢c 444 BERRY’S TAXI BURFORD’S CORNER JIMMY STEELE, Driver Courteous and Efficient Service Guaranteed 50 Cents—Anywhere in the City Phone 3 A4 After 1 a. m. Phone 3101 | Hazel’s Taxi PHONE 456 Stand: Alaska Grill 1 O Prompt Service, Day and Night CovicH AuTo SERVICE STAND AT THE OLYMPIC ;‘ Phone 342 Day or Night You get results from printing done by us 50c AnyWhere in City sassas-zesasns e — H. R. SHEPARD & SON, Inc. GENERAL INSURANCE y “Absolute Security” i Valentine Building A T R Our trucks go any place any time. A tank for Diesel Oil and a tank for crude oil save burner trouble. PHONE 149, NIGHT 5103 RELIABLE TRANSFER ) Try Our $1.00 Dinner and 50c Merchants’ Lunch 1A Mt?P M ARCADE CAFE VICTOR Radios and Combination Radio-Phonographs RECORDS SHEET MUSIC JUNEAU MELODY HOUSE TO ANY PART OF CITY Phone 199 . astineau Hotel Northern Lite ? TAX] | 29¢C ! TO ANY PART OF CITY Two Buick Sedans at Your Service. Careful and Efficient Drivers. | Phone { Mabry’s 2'1;,1;; Regular Dinners Short Orders ! Lunches Orpen 6 am. to 2 am. POPULAR PRICES HARRY MABRY Proprietor P USSR 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 | | | g::’vhkb you pick the ones ycu m Fraternal Societies or Gastineau Channel B. P. O. ELKS Meeting every Wed- ({ nesday at 8 o'clock. Elks' Hall. Visiting brothers welcome. WINN GOUDDARD, Exalted Ruler M. H. SIDES, Secretary. Co-ordinate Bod les of Freemason ry Scottish Rite ! Regular meetings ' second Friday each month st 7:30 p. m. Boos- 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 8 MOUNT JUNEAU LODGE NO. 147 Second and fourth Mon- \ day of each month in G Scottish Rite Temple, ‘V] beginning at 7:30 p. m Master; Secretary. EVANS ' L. GRUBER, CHARLES E. NAGHEL, ORDER OF EASTERN STAR Second and Fourth Tuesdays of each month, at 8 o'clock, Scottish Rite Temple. LILY BURFORD, Worthy Matron; FANNY L. ROBINSON, Secretary. KNIGHTS OF COLUMBUS Seghers Council No. 1760. Meetings second and last Monday at 7:30 p. m. Transient brothers urg- ed to attend. Council Chambers, Fifth Street JOHN F. MULLEN, G. K. H. J. TURNER, Secretary. DOUGLAS ARIE 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. o 1 Ty WOMEN OF MOOSEHEART LEGION, NO. 439 Meets first and third Thurs- days each month, 8 p. m., at Moose Hall. JOHANNA JEN- | SEN, Senior Regent; AG!IES GRIGG. Recorder. Fa | Brunswick Bowling | Alleys | FOR MEN AND WOMEN Stamd—Miller's Taxi ' Phone 218 THE CASH BAZAAR Open Evenings Opposite U. 8. Cable Office Ifit is Printin we cando it anddoitright CORONA For Your School Work | J. B. Burford & Co. “Our door step is worn by satisfied customers” GET A l | l ! JUNEAU TRANSFER COMPANY Freight and Baggzge Prompt Delivery of ALL DS OF COAL PHONE 48 BURFORD’S CORNER TAXI SERVICE PHONE 314 ’ Whistle Candy