The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, February 21, 1930, Page 4

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[sonal liberty cause would oppose it, just as now oppose Prohibition, I or dry, who what the true Prohibition the States. able wet would en he bein; anyone, travels status is There Daily Alaska Em piré JOHN W. TROY - - - EDITOR AND MANAGER|d > learn is cover that not Publish EMPI Stre d__every evening exc by PRINTING COMPANY Juneau, Alaska bootleggers a practi eau as Second Class | where | That Beedy of Maine who and % ened t who want: t be SUBSCRIPTION Delivered by carrier in Juneau Thane fo 25 RATES. Douglas, per month o followir Congressman Treadwell any n to stay in By mail of rates life erica of t League mus a dry is a sort political methods of One $6.00 m. Subscribe er a favor if will prompt notify the Busine ) iny e or irregularity in the delive s endor he the ere are indications in Washington that wild jackass may take its place with the donkey and the elephant as a political emblem.—(Boston Transcript.) That that old £ MEMBER OF ASSOC Ass ¥ e ESS, ihe IATED PR suggests: where's bull moose? ALASKA THAN CIRC TH RANTEED TO BE R PUBLICATION wave invented a sufficient room for many championship: in posing for pictures in ¢ has had something to do | i [with it | | variety f con make piece hing it the § The Gove | “degenerates Pennsylvania referred to | of the Senate” who refused to seat |Vare. Then he, presumably to regenerate the body, | |appointed lobbyist Grundy to be Senator | | The Education of Senator Norris. | (San Francisco Chronicle.) | One thing about those Senate Insurgents, they {are never too old to learn. Take Senator Nor | {for instance. On Monday of this week he was seve | days older than on Monday of last week, but s how much he learned in the meantime. On that day the President named the new Chief Justice Norris, interviewed as Chairman of the Senate | Committee, said: There is no objection to Mr. Hughes's appoinment. I think the Judiciary Commit- tee will recommend confirmation by a un- animous vote. I have not heard anything to the contrary. THE END. Eielson and The discovery of ‘the dead body of Col one of the sensational in Alaskan history. The search and Earl Borland continued almost| three months. It was more than two months before Joe Crosson and Harold Gillam, friends and asso- ciates of the missing aviators, discovered the plane went to their death. In ns and Russians had joined But in the following week Senator Norris learncd | D earch. Then came days on days|® lot of surprising things, which he proceeded to tell |¢ e o o temperature and|the Senate in his speech & e e .. l0f the new Chief Justice. The Nebraskan was | and the discovery of Barl|g eq to giscover that Mr, Hughes had once been |ag writes finis to most tragic events Col. Eielson for in which they meantime Cana Americans in the of shoveling wind and snow and ic2 ls Borland’s body. The task was finished Wednesday |y jember of the Bugrishs G0 R faore than | (n when the long days of lakor for nearly a score of |thirteen years ago resigned to become Republican |G Russians, who had hero:caily staid on the job, suf- candidate for President. Senator Norris also learn-|wa fering but endur in spite of the the rigors of |ed, much to his pain ang »sux-prise_ that Mr. Hughes Arctic weather, were rewarded by uncovering the IS one of the ablest of living lawyers and that con- ; | sequently body of Col. Eielson. ely prosecuted, | WhO have large stakes in the outcome of their|fu It has been a brave fight bravely prosec lawsuits. | with it has earncd the grabi-| 1t may be assumed that when Norris week tude of all who possess red blood. tentatively indorsed the appointment he thoug t The pity of it all is, of course, that Col. Eielson Mr. Hughes's law practice had been largely bef the | ans | snow Everyone connected last | resident. |58 |43 years old h against the confirmation tween eye lashes | was Laura Erickson, his services have been sought by clients|Astoria, Oregon, is supposed to be | the Governor's office on the above. e ——————= Y PROFESSIONAL ¥ z — Ielene W. L. Albrecht PHYSIOTHERAPY Massage, Electricity, Infra Red R#v, Medical Gymnastics. 410 Goldstein Buildins Phone Office, 216 " DRS. KASER & FREEBURGER DENTISTS 301-303 Goldstein Bldg. PHONE 56 Hours 9 a. m. to § p. m. & g Dr. Charles P. Jenne DENTIST Rooms 8 and 9 Valentine Building ‘Telephorie 176 Dr. A. W. Stewart DENTIST Hours 8 a. m. to 6 p. m. SEWARD BUILDING Office Phone 569, Res. Phone 276 Associated Press Photo Right of wives to maintain domi cile apart from husbands wa; held by court in dispute of Genn: Walska, wife of Harold F. McCor - mick, with customs officials. She claimed duty exemption as Parli R ¥ Dr. H. Vance Osteopath—201 Goldstein Bldg. | | Hours: 10 to 12; 1 to 5; Tto ® | or by appointment Licensed Osteopathic Physiclan Phone: Office 1671. Residence, MacKinnon Apts. - INFORMATION WANTED liries have been received at Governor's Office concerning 2 following persons: Charles McCodick Daniels, about years old nov 5 ft. 7 or 8 tall; ruddy complexion; fox s; sloping shoulders. McCodick Daniels, about 1 5 ft. 2 or 3 black hair; dark on be- Dr. Geo. L. Barton CHIROPRACTOR Hellenthal Building OFFICE SERVICE ONLY Hours: 10 a. m. to i2 noon 2p m tod p m 6 p.m. to 8 p. m By Appointment PHONE 259 es tall 1 mplexion; ar forehead Fred Irving, about 45 years ge now, auburn hair, five ft. 10 ches tall; cook for some overnment surveyors but later as doing some prospecting. Laura Yd, whose maiden name formerly of of was Robert Sim pson Opt. D. Graduate Ros Angeles Col- lege of Optometry and Opthalmology | Glasses Fitted, Lenses Grouna A @ !: i | r farming in Alaska. Information should .be given to Mrs. Carrie F. Farrar, of Brook- e AUTOS FOR HIRE Safety AND Comfort BY PACKARD TAXI TO ANY PART OF THE CITY Phone rm....fi. e 199 TAXI S0c¢ TO ANY PART OF CITY Phone | 199 | Gastineau Hote) " 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 Fraternal Secieties or Gastineau Channel R B. P. 0. ELKS Meeting every Wed- (({ nesday at 8 o'clock. Elks' Hall. Visiting brothers welcome. WINN GODDARD, Exalted Ruler M. H. SIDES, Secretary. Co-Ordinate Bo%¥ ies of Freemason | ry Scottish Rite , Regular meetings second Friday each month et 7:30 p. m. Soot- tish Rite Temple WALTER B. HEISEL, Secretary. LOYAL ORDER OF MOOSZ Juneau Lodge No. 700. Meets every Monday aight, at 8 o'clock. JAMES CARLSON, Dictator, W. T. VALE, Secy, P. O. Box 82( MOUNT JUNEAU LODGE NO. 147 1 Second and fourth Mon- day of each month in G Scottish Rite Temple, o beginning at 7:30 p. m. <y | Master; Secretary. S, % EVANS L. GRUBER, CHARLES E. NAGHEL, ORDER OF EASTERN STAE 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 Lhambers, Fifth Street. JOHN F. MULLEN, G. K. H. J. TURNER, Secretary. "DOUGLAS AxRIE 117 F. O, E. & Meets first and third Mondays, 8 o'clock Douglas. at Eagles Hall ARNE SHUDSHIFT, W. P. GUY SMITH, Secretary. iting brothers welcome. Vis- WOMEN OF MOOSEHEART LEGION, NO. 439 Meets first and third Thurs- | days cach month, 8 p. m., at | Moose Hall. JOHANNA JEN- | SEN, Senior Regent; AGIES | GRIGG. Recorder. Graham’s Taxi Phone 565 STAND AT ARCADE CAFE Day and Night Service i g ¢ |lyne, Mass., is inquiring as to the and Earl Borland are dead—dead at a time when Police Judges and consisted of traffic cases. Also whereabouts of Albert Edward they had a right to expect that life was just open- |the Senator may have been under the misappre- |Brainard last heard from in the ing up for them. Col. Eielson was one of the hension that Mr. Hughes's activity in public life|Cook's Inlet country. He is want- B began in 1928 when he stumped Nebraska ed for the settlement of an sstats slect few that make up the first rank offiaean . 0 Yeb Faen : d for the t of an estat . i . rough his | SCnator Norris’s Presidential candidate. | Anybody knowing his whereabouts aviators. He had became world famous through his|™“Tne Senator showed his magananimous spiric | oodY KnOWIDg his whereabouts achievements. He had won honors and distinction (by overlooking that chapter in Mr. Hughes's life retary of Alaska, Juneau that assured him a definite place among inter- national heroes. He had much to live for and much DR. R. E. SOUTHWELL Optometrist-Optician Eyes Examined—Glasses Fitted Room 16, Valentine Bldg. 10:00 to 6:00. Evenings by Appointment. Phone 484 - dee T/ R against very S lsoulipr i S0 N | — 5 But there are some things that your thoroughgoing | el to accomplish. But something occurred, and in a Insurgent will never overlook in a Presidential ap- | pointee. One is that he has shown capacity in his |, split second his plane crashed and he ‘“’““'f“flfiii’f’ihfi“'”ifif ik &’Sfli},;‘;‘,‘, The other is that The end apparently came quickly 3 It is not so odd that Senator Thousands of friends in addition to his ""1‘“’“’"5Jhscowr these things about Mr. Hughes until with- | will make the most of such consolation as is offered iin q week. The Nebraskan has been tertibly busy by the fact that his fame and the memory of his|defending the country almost single handed ~gainst friendship will survive. the wicked ogres that thr en to eat it uvp. i was ric Norris did no A POSSIBLE SOLUTION. Rising Federal Costs. (Providence Journal.) The tendency, appearing in the latter part of the b W ate use of light beer |C00lidge Administration, toward a rising cost in the would provide for the temper 5 {operation of the Federal Government has remained and wine it would be a long forward step in the |, pocceq during the first five months of the pres- | successful enforcement of the Eighteenth Amend-|ant fiseal year, according to figures just released byl ment. He proposed to the President that Congress|the Treasury Department. From July to November, | authorize the use of beer of 2.75 per cent. alcoholic |inclusive, expenditures exceeded the outlay in the| content, and wine relatively mild. He contended |corresponding period of 1928 by $46,000,000. ‘MDSL} that this would satisfy so large a percentage of of the departments and bureaus have contributed hat it would reduce the demand m”to the growth in expenses, although several of them the people that it would r {show a rise of only nominal proportions and some “hard likker” to such an extent that the task of exhibit a positive decline. * * * [ enforcing the laws against it would become 1ess| pleqged to a continuance in principle of the econ- | formidable. He urged the President to recommend omy program of the preceding Administration, Presi- | this as a temperance measure. jdent Hoover doubtless is bent upon checking this The advantage of the St. Louis Legislator's sug- |striking tendency of government expenses to increase gestion is that it would nou require a repeal of m(,‘whm'ever a feasible opportunity presents itself. The Eighteenth Amendment. At least two United States i;i;gg;‘lae‘ ri}]‘_“_ll‘[“’\l}){(fl:fn {\:?l:%s l?)fifp:;immtrsu::e":t;v District Courts have held that competent evidence ., "eyiiaing the President's special reference to proved that 2.75 per cent. beer Is not intoxicaling.|tne services in his annual message to Congress when This ruling has not been reversed by the Supreme he called attention to the necessity of reaching Court. The highest court upheld the one-half-of-|an international agreemnet on armaments in the one per cent. deadline not because it marked the |interest of economy as well as of peace. * * * point of division between intoxicants and non-intoxi- | One of the most hopeful possibilities for checking cants but because the Eighteenth Amendment provid- | 1€ 8rowth of government costs lies in the Presi- ed that Congress should determine the point. It was|d€nYS Policy of departmental reorganization. He ought to receive generous co-operation from Con- not a matter for the courts to decide. Following that reasoning, Congress, by being as liberal as it was in gress whenever he is prepared to execute this pro- gram. Upon this constructive endeavor, plus an the Volstead Act, but in the other direction, could legalize almost any brand of beer and wine that | unceasing insistence upon the elimination of de- structive extravagance in departmental expenditures, has ever been put on the market. the Administration must chiefly rely for keeping the It would that Congressman Dyer has started a movement toward a reasonable solution cost of operating the governmental machinery with- in reasonable bounds. of difficulties and the end of the bloody Eighteenth Amendment War. Congressman Dyer, Republican, of St. Louis has suggested to President Hoover that if Congre: | [ | | LTI seem Advising Mr. Edison. (New York Worla.) It seems that Mr. Thomas Edison is finicky about his morning paper; that he storms if anybody dis- arranges it before he has a chance to read it. What we don't understand about wealthy readers—how many of them say “I didn't see that, as I left the paper home for my wife,” or “He took the paper ATTACKI} THE PREME COURT. ‘While the attacks on the Supreme Court by the “sons of wild jackasses” from the “backward States” frritate the patience of most of us, it is well to remember that Abraham Lincoln attacked the Su-|{down town with him"!—is why they don't take two preme Court in his day almost as vigorously as\COPies of the desired newspaper, even though, in Senator Dill did. And it may be more or less slg-}““’ Edison household, it happens to be our volumin- ous rival, the Times. nificant that Theodore Roosevelt (the one that was| . President) advocated popular referendums on court decisions. The Colonel was not always reverant| when he talked of the Supreme Court, and he was very strongly in favor of giving the people power to “recall” its decisions and make them void. The, recent debate in the Senate by no means| Those Wall Street party hosts believe that out marks the first or most violent of the attacks;“wh‘fi°b3‘j““F°rS tell all they know that's where the on the Supreme Court of the United States. st beglns—(indianapolis Star.) [ R A Washington dispatch, describing a society function, says: “Some skirts were tight.” Does Brookhart know about this?. —(Louisville Courier- Journal.) Up in Maine there’s a new golf course with the links in the United States and the clubhouse in Can- ada. That, we'd say, is genius—(Cincinnati En- quirer.) NOT TRYING TO FORCE PEOPLE TO DRINK. A dry propagandist who is personally as well as politically dry, after a trip that took him into several States with large cities, declared that Pro- hibition violations were not visible to those who do not look for them. Which simply proves that bootleggers and those opposéd to Prohibitin are not trying to force those who do not want it to drink liquor. If anyone would propose a law to force everyone to drink, or to force anyone who . does not want it to drink, the leaders of the per- et It must be remembered that there is a great deal of difference between Prohibition and tem- perance.—(Florida Times Union.) A IR In drying up Washington care should be taken not to overlook Senator Heflin.—(Louisville Courier- Journal.) The asses may be wild, but they know what makes them wild—(Dallas News.) T T T L T T T T T O T T T T Boston ranks next to Ne the percentage of nufactures for the od. S| ] “pe.| | JOHN B.MARSHALL | | ] ATTORNEY-AT-LAW 420 Goldstein Building PHONE 483 ‘WE CAN GIVE YOU what you want IN PRINTING when you want it! Try us out with your next job | porrrrr e e Juneau Public Library Free Reading Room City Hall, Second Floor Main Street and Fourth HELENA RUBINSTEINS NEW Water Lily Face POWDER $1.50 per box 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 el P T | If you want superior | work call CAPITAL LAUNDRY We Deliver ] ¢ Drug Store BERRY’S TAXI BURFORD’S CORNER JIMMY STEELE, Driver Courteous and Efficient Service Guaranteed 50 Cents—Anywhere in the City Phone A 4 After 1 a. m. Phone 3101 Prompt Service, Day and Night CovicH Auto SERVICE STAND AT THE OLYMPIC Phone 342 Day or Night 50c AnyWhere in City v SAVE /orTHEM AN EDUCATION is the birthright of every child. Now, when they are young, is the time to think of their future. PREPARE FOR IT. Begin to save—for them. Just a few dollars each week will mean a lot in ten years. It will pay for a college education for them. And then you'll be proud. DON'T NEGLECT THEIR FUTURE. It 5 on what you do at present—SAVE Th; Try Our $1.00 Dinner and 50c Merchants’ Lunch 11 AL M. to 2 P. M. ARCADE CAFE Any Place in the City for 50 Cents Northern Lite TAXI 50c¢ TO ANY PART OF CITY Two Buick Sedans at Your Service. Careful and Efficient Drivers. Mabry’s Cafe Regular Dinners Short Orders Lunches Orpen 6 a.m. to 2 a.m. POPULAR PRICES HARRY MABRY Proprietor VICTOR Radios and Combination Radio-Phonographs RECORDS SHEET MUSIC JUNEAU MELODY HOUSE — L O LU U T B. M. Behrends Bank Oldest Bank in Alaska R T T T T T e L CULTI T UL T GARBAGE HAULING | W. E. TARR Inquire building below Cable Office. | | | A gy 1111 FOR GOOD, Cleaning and Pressing | CALL 371 Work called for and delivered | The Capital Cleaners l = Morris Construction Company GENERAL CARPENTER WORK ADVERTISE P ! THE CASH BAZAAR Open Evenings Opposite U. S. Cable Office GET A CORONA | For Your School Work | J. B. Burford & Co. “Our door step is worn by | | satisfled customers” JUNEAU TRANSFER COMPANY MOVING VAN g Moves, Packs and Stores Freight and Baggage Prompt Delivery of ALL KINDS OF COAL PHONE 48 HOTEL ZYNDA ELEVATOR SERVICE 8. ZYNDA, Prop. BURFORD’S CORNER TAXI SERVICE PHONE 314 Pign’ Whistle Candy Old papers for sale ai The Empire.

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