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nt to the animal husbandry wnicable to man? of the If the 3 ‘Dail y Alaska Empire latter and com I . . EDT T Ithe cc roblem involves both the economic and Uit e LANA—GE]?‘W public health aspects Published every evening excopt Sunday by g with affections which are transmitted e e e i the animal to man, the veterinarian is in i ¥intered In the Post Office In J pe to lend a helping hand to his confrere in matter, human medicine, not only by actually reducing or " SUBSCRIPTION RATES. Delivered by carrier in Juneau, Douglas, Thane for $1.25 per month. , postage paid, at the following rates e, .$ urces of infection, but also by co- es where the sources of the disease are obscure and where the veterin: in cas Treadwell and n ,‘”} months, in advance, I cial training in tracing infections to their v will promptly 1 origins.” otify the Business Offic ny fa or irregularity i > 2 B G Gelivary of ey pansre o | the discases of animals which are of 1 and Business Offices, 3 | Telephone for Editorial ect menace to the human family Dr. Mohler men- MEMBER OF ASSOCIATED PRES: tions tuberculosis, glanders, The Associated Press exclusively entitled to the | ? « tches credited to (undulant fever, rabies, trichinosis, tularemia per and also the 0 fover, swine erysipelas, cow pox and mea ALASKA C ULATION GUARANTEED TO BE LAR THAN THAT OF ANY OTHER PUBLICATION — |of cattle and swine GER | | {ceived so many favors and so much protection from {the Chicago Government that gratitude ought o | dicta that they advance the municipality fund to meet the emergency. | | Besc R v 1 | Alaska’s Airmen. | | b o | THE THIRTEENTH ELECTION. | (Anchorage Times.) | | 2 : Sy _ = O Without les appreciation of the splonuuli The coming one will be the thirteenth regular| oo " B et who came to Alaska to election of Ter ide extent to be held In oo in the search for Col. Ben Eielson and Earl Alaska. That does not count, of course, the special |Borland, Alaskans will find a lot of satisfaction | : election in 1919 when George B. Grigsby was chosen in the knowledge that it was the Terri rvv‘x.‘; 3 to fill the vacancy in Congr caused by the searchers, friends of the missing airmen, who made ) zer e iscovery of the wrecked Eielson monoplane | death of the late Delegate Charles A. Sulzer. The !the discovery of | a i ¥ along | 1906 and there has been one in bleak Siberia. The Times has felt all Pigs diection mas in that the personnel and equipment of the Alaskan |Airways could handle the situation if given the each biennium While the number of the election apparently,qpnorqunity, without aid from the States, and the| ( has no terrors for those,who would like to win 'syccess which has rewarded the persistent efforts| 3 the offices, one man has been heard from who lof the company's fliers, justifies all the canrmcncr’; 3 has taken . of it. The Valdez Miner recently /which Alaskans long have placed in them. | following H Airmen accept hazards as a natural part of | ; {the flying game but the Siberian flights of the last contained the Probably all the old-timers Will TEMEM® | goyerg] weeks, with cold and fog and sudden storms| ber George Flowers, one of the early day |exposing the searchers to constant peril, are out- residents of Valdez, George is now engaged | standing in the ananls of aviation; they required | {more than skill at the controls, more than willing- | |ness to take a chance with the elements in an in hunting and trapping near Long Lake, i in the vicinity of McCarthy, and has been very successful. In a letter to the Miner inhospitable, forbidding region; they demanded the George says he cast his first vote in Valdez |sort of stubborn endurance which has characterized | | in the year 1906, and has been figuring it up the search from its start, ability to stand up under | and finds the election this year will be ireal Arctic hardship. Alaskans should be proud of the 13th time he has had the privilege of | their airmen, and they are. going to the polls, but as he is somewhat b na tn paying homage to the brave men who| that. 13 does not appeal to thinks he will skip one elec- superstitious, him and he irefused to let the darkne them from their task, Al of the Far ans are North turn | not unmindful tion. He also said that the lvhrrmumowr of the grief that is in the hearts of the relativ registered 44 below zero on the day he of the two lost airmen, now that they cannot longer | wrote and for one day, anyway, he was going to let his trapline take care of itself. will be found alive and safe. As long as the search continued there was the chance they had escaped disaster; the finding of the wrecked ship in such a desolate region, with temperature far below zero, DIFFERENT IN MEXICO. | | foot-and-mouth disease, | | give encouragement to the hope their beloved ones |8 ALASKA EMPIRE, TUESDAY, FEB San Franciscan Heads B T o L — | In consi g ways and means to reduce ihe |homicide casualties in the United States it might | |be a to consider the advisability of | anging the Pr ition lay- costing a lot PP changing the F ion lay-out. It is costing a lot | The Philipptnd; IVABMA wiitk ove B | Americans to know about this far- | e ’f'lxmg possession of the United | The Chicago Government is out of funds and | States. So they have organized a {very much embarrassed. Those gangsters have re- | Foilippine Tourist Association under the aponsors]\i;;)of Governor- General Dwight F. Davis and ap- pointed James King Steele, phote above, of San Francisco, as man- ager and executive secretary. Philippine Tourists | | PROFESSIONAL o Helene W. L. Albrecht | PHYSIOTHERAPY Massage, Electricity, Infra Red | R#v, Medical Gymnastics. 410 Goldstein Building Phone Office, 216 1 sy IR, DRS. KASER & FREEBURGER | DENTISTS 301-303 Goldstein Bldg. PHONE 56 Hours 9 a. m. to § p. m. Dr. Charles P. Jenne DENTIST Rooms 8 and 9 Valentine | Building ‘Telephone 176 ! Dr. A. W. Stewart | DENTIST Hours 9 a. m. to 6 p. m. SEWARD BUILDING Office Phone 569, Res. Phone 276 (International Newsresld | o NOW FEELS 20 YEARS YOUNGER - liver and kidneys began troub- ng me. No medicine seemed to reach the cause of my constipation my - S e i _lcould mean only one thing. But with the sorrow An amnesty for political’ prisoners in Spain Wil there will come, at least, an end to the suspense, | let hundreds of people out of custody according relief from the long period of uncrtainty and per- SALEM H. FOSNAUGH to the dispatches. Apparently Spain has dif: ba?sfla lhr“nthuv of polon(l Eielson puts it, the | \vy kidneys got me up sometimes g ferent system than that in vogue in the second bereft will find even a measure of comfort now many as ten times a night. I ; Iargest Spanish speaking Nation. In Mexico po]ll:calrl;:.u‘::‘l SORTmation ot that whih (they Iodgcetis-by frarad Lartly il pminsitn the ) offenders are not put in jail. If they cannot make 3 |small of my back. Of cour ¢ the international border and escape into the United | R dragged me down and exhausted States they are quickly and safely lodged in graves Oregon’s New Governor. {my nerves, and I had no inclina- g " Y E 1 — |t r hand to a thing. re they can never again be troublesome. They 2 tion to turn my ! ; ;h\‘v‘mr lot of soldiers i’nm whom to form firing! (Pacific Fisherman.) | “After taking three bottles”df ' Parh A g The fishing industry of the Pacific Coast can |Sargon and one bottle of Pills I squads south of the Rio Grande and there are 100l walls everywhere to serve as back-stops for b““(‘LSmNDrblad to the office of Governor of Oregon. The squads industriously. He the walls and the bullets are used brings to his executive position a keen interest in the fisheries, a wide acquaintanceship among factors I lin the business and an understanding of its prob- VETERINARY SCIENCE AIDS IN !lems acquired through long years of residence at T T T " | Astoria, and as counsel for fis acki % > D o . as S r fishermen and packing GUARDING PUBLIC HEALTH. | companies. k with gratification upon the elevation of A. W. |feel as well and strong at seven- ty-five as I did twenty years ago. |My liver is active and my consti- | pation is gone |back doesn't land my muscles | stiff. 18t bother pain in my me any more are' not sore and 1 never have to get up more | \ | SO than once in a night. My nerves Public health and the health of wild and m).},‘s b o Sapebis. puply f e sunjend By and Th ks o o g4 bisniny )8 e Governor I. atterson is always a |things. hope my experience wii stic animals hav any interconnections, Dr.! 8 . k | Faestic ’”"”A’. g h“"! ml‘l"\ l“s l‘(’)”D‘”"f( “mdttcr for regret, but in this case the fishing in- |start many people ito taking this‘! o R Moller, of “the nited. Btafes ‘Department | dushgidan feel that o Chief' ExecubiVe ot the State |frielons’ medicinelt - ‘Salgm B of Agricul points out, and the fields of human has a real grasp of its problems. Upon taking of- | Fosnaugh, R. F. D. 10, Seattle, medicine and veferinary medicine have passed the fice Governor Norblad declared one of his primary }W’nsh. point where they: are little concerned with each {aims wou_ld be fostering a constructive policy toward | Butler-Mauro Drug Co., Agents. other. Dr. Mohler, who is Chief of the Bureau| Oreson fisheries | dv. of Animal Industry, says the maintenance of human | T l L i hezlth and the preservation of human life are com- | Conundrum for Mr. Borah. BOTICE TC SIIPPERS :}cuu;, be m“u and mvx)x‘v “1 (.;(‘:X[l;(“:::nof th: Tuxt:‘:xt:‘ (New York World) | ; s ractitioners of anima dicine. e is often | ‘ { The “ 2 l 1. You believe, Mr. Borah, in enforcing the 9 MARC called to serve in consulta fon with practitioners of | gighteenth human medicine in investigating baffling cases of | Constitution. human disease and death 1 Amendment because it is part of the | 2 If you find, on examining the Wickersham | “In instituting any measures for the control of |report, ‘that in order to enforce the Eighteenth | animal diseases,” says Dr. Mohler, “the people most| Amendment you have to violate the Fifth and intimately concerned in formulating a program uf?x’fl({‘h (A_""I‘“S‘PC_“*S of the Constitution, which guar- control must immediately answer an important|*"c® ‘rial by jury, what will you do then? question: Is the disease one such as hog cholera or | Go to work, Mr. in which the incentive for to work, the people s| suppressing it lies almost wholly in the economic!cinnati Enquirer.) S T T T T T T LT L R L Hoover tells the people. Go foot-and-mouth hout back at Congress.—(Cin- disease RAW FURS We are in the market for Blue, Silver, Cross and Red Foxes, also LLand Otter and Mink. T L Lynx are in very good demand, prices about the same as last vear. If you have any furs BRING or SHIP = £ them to us, if out of town we will wire vou our bid on them. We are sure that we will satisfy you, if vou have not shipped to us before give us a trial. | | GOLDSTEIN'S EMPORIUM HlllllllllllIlllllllhllllll“.l._. cept freight | sailing date TN \ after 1:30 p. m. on —adv. J Dr. H. Vance Osteopath—201 Coldstein Bldg. | | Hours: 10 to 12; 1 to 5; T to ® or by appointmeat | Licensed Osteopathic Physiclan | Phone: Office 1671. | Residence, MacKinnon Apts. | —_—n Dr. Geo. L. Barton CHIROPRACTOR Hellenthal Building OFFICE SERVICE ONLY Hours: 10 a. m. to 12 noon 2p mtobp m 6p.m to8p m By Appointment PHONE 259 Robert S—impson Ogt' D. Graduate Pos 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. Evenings by Phone 484 | Appointment. 3 ! “1 JOHN B.MARSHALL ATTORNEY-AT-LAW 420 Goldstein Building PHONE 483 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, Ete. FREE TO ALL ——— e l 1 | A" win not s6. | | CAPITAL LAUNDRY = If you want superior work call Phone 355 | i child. them. college educ be proud. NOwW! SAVE /or THEM AN EDUCATION is the birthright of every Now, when they are young, is the time to think of their future PREPARE FOR IT. Begin to save—for Just a few dollars each week will mean a lot in ten years. ation for them. And then you'll DON'T NEGLECT THEIR FUTURE. depends on what you do at present—SAVE The B. M. Behrends Bank Oldest Bank in Alaska LTRSS TR T L T U It will pay for a L T It Fraternal Sccieties or Gastineau Channel | | | e e Safety AND Comfort BY PACKARD TAXI TO ANY PART OF THE CITY 50c¢c Phone 199 TAXI ' Slc TO ANY PART OF CITY Carlson’s Taxi ANYWHERE IN THE CITY FOR 50 CENTS Careful, Efficient Drivers—Call Us At Any Hour— DAY AND NIGHT—Stand at Alaskan Hotel Phones II and Single O Carlson’s Taxi and Ambulance Service TAXI BURFORD’S CORNER JIMMY STEELE, Driver Courteous and Efficient Service Guaranteed 50 Cents—Anywhere in the City Phone A4 After 1 a. m. Phone 3101 (OSSR Prompt Service, Day and Night CovicH AuTo SERVICE STAND AT THE OLYMPIC 1 Phone 342 Day or Night 50c AnyWhere in City can advertise profitably... Thefirststeptoward success proper medium. If you decide upon special folders or circular Em. let us aid you in the choice of paper, ink and type. product that will attract attention and be read by YOUE PrOSpects. « ¢ o s o o H. R. SHEPARD & SON, Inec. GENERAL INSURANCE { “Absolute Security” i Valentine Building b()m- 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 LA Mto2P. M ARCADE CAFE | VICTO Radios and Combination Radio-Phonographs RECORDS SHEET MUSIC JUNEAU MELODY HOUSE Northern Lite TAX] 25c TO ANY PART OF CITY Two Buick Sedans at Your Service. Careful and Efficient Drivers. Phone 324 o~ pen Mabry’s Cafe Regular Dinners Short Orders Lunches Open 6 a.m. to 2 a.m. POPULAR PRICES HARRY MABRY Proprietor [ . FOR GOOD | | | | Cleaning and Pressing | | CALL 371 | Work called for and delivered | | The Capital Cleaners €3 Morris Construction Company GENERAL CARPENTER WORK Phone 62 B. P. 0. ELKS Meeting every Wed- (" nesday at 8 o'clock. Elks' Hall. Visiting brothers welcome. WINN GODDARD, Exalted Rules M. H. SIDES, Secretary. Co-Ordinate Boa- ies of Freemason ! ry Scottish Rite Regular meetings second Friday each month et 7:30 p. m. Seot- 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 821 MOUNT JUNEAU LODGE NO. 117 Second and fourth Mon- day of each month in Scottish Rite Temple, beginning at 7:30 p. m. EVANS L. GRUBER, CHARLES E. NAGHEL, Master; Secretary. 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 AXRIE 117 F. O. E. &Meeta first and third Mondays, 8 o'clock at Eagles Hall, Douglas. ARNE SHUDSHIFT, W. P. GUY SMITH, Secretarr. Vis- iting brothers welcome. *WOMEN OF MOOSEHFART LEGION, NO. 439 | | Meets first and third ’I‘hurs-f | days each month, 8 p. m,, at | | Moose Hall. JOHANNA JEN- | | BEN, Senior Regent; AGIIES | | GRIGG. Recorder. | o— — —— = THE CASH BAZAAR Open Evenings Opposite U. S. Cable Office ;luq of cuts on hand T om which you ma; GET A CORONA | For Your School Work '( | J. B. Burford & Co. | | “Our door step is worn by | | satistied customers” JUNEAU TRANSFER Moves, Packs and Stores Freight and Baggage Prompt Dellvery of ALL KINDS OF COAL PHONE 48 HOTEL ZYNDA ELEVATOR SERVICE 8. ZYNDA, Prop. et ADVERTISE your merchandise and it will sell! BURFORD’S CORNER TAXI SERVICE PHONE 3814 Pign’ Whistle Candy ? e O S Ml S —_—— T Te—— Old papers for sale at The