Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
4 Ld oung lawy: Most of the Solicitor-General’s prac- Daily Alaska Empire [ v o Sieme comt o i AR J JOHN W. TROY - - - EDITOR AND MANAGER| Co ng b for public works a ¥ 5 & unpr nted rate. The January list shows an R R A O Tt deenad” and dal |imcrense over ago of 100 per cent. Tt Streets, J n ought to help the unemployment situation, 1 in the Post Offic r 1 as Second Class | 3 oy S A Wyoming youth is applying for a copyri SUBSCRIPTION RATES. n En alphabet that will eliminate w Dsiivered by catrier in Juneau, Douglas, Treadwell and He 1t ab She ikbie’ Moab wpply for a it the following rates ht for a new dictionary. )0; six months, in advance, G ; tailare of ltrogutanity | Notwithstanding th have rounged up more han 3,000 su i criminals in Chicago, the crime 1 with undiminished Old-Fashioned. MBER OF ASSOCIATED PRESS. ated P € . . ly en Decidedly local news published hereir ALASKA CI THAN = (New York Times.) LATION HAT OF AN uld childr nd in the way of their par- future? on-wide discussion is su »w upon the n of Charles E. Hugt in resigning his pc us Solicitor General o United St in order to make things easicr his Chief Justice of the U State: most hear the son firml solving that, cost what it may, he would do naugl to interfere with his father’s obviously promising dif e upon a time it would not have been ficult to pass judgment on the younger Mr action. We refer to the time when it w lered axiomatic that parents were obliged to m sacrifices for their childen. But those da |gone for the truly civilized persons. i I y |established that parents owe nd obligations to their |children, and that the sole duty of parents, as of leverybody else, is to seek and practice self-expres- sion. Scattered over the United States there*m. — WASHINGTON'S BIRTHDAY. February 22 is the second most important Am- [still be thirty or forty million parents who have fai erican patriotic holiday. Next to the Fourth of |ed to emancipate themselves from outworn moral v W tor's Birthd ¢ the fact of the codes and who continue to make sacrifices for their Pl rens BEL S " aoe children. But it need hardly be stated that such United States of America. Of no man of any age parents are not. pepresentative of the new spirit in or continent can it be said with greater aptness: | ayerica and certainly do not quality as civ i “He was the fa of his country.” The success Of | That being the case, 1t would seem to be oven he Revolutionary War was due to the genius, (mili- |more obvious that modern sons must under no cir- tary and otherw patriotism, persistence and pa- lcumstances attempt to make sacrifices for th ir | tience of Washington. Therc was more than one Parents. Charles E. Hughes, Jr, has subscribed A $ {to a principle which is obsolete in itself and which occasion during the and bloody ye of the| 4 2 is certain to lead to dire consequences. Once you Revolution when he was about all there Was 0|, 41 sor sacrifice, there is no telling where you which the Fathers of t Republic might pin their gy jang, They are already talking of sacrificing faith and hopes. |young Mr. Hughes for the benefit of the Republican Not only was Washington the “Father of His|Party in New Yo! by nominating him ior Gov- Country,” but he was the only man of his time |ernor. who had the ability and stamina to be its father.| No one else could have led a defeated army of a rewi hundreds of under-fed, almost unclad and woe- | fully ill-equipped men from the depths of m=sp:.ir‘i to triumphant victory. Someone else than Jeffer- son might have risen to have directed the expansion Another Victory for the Young Pian. (New York World.) The collapse of the referendum which the Cer- man Nationalists staged against the Young p last December has been followed by another s ed Sta ghanies the 3 " ?J"" Upied WU fraal the A”‘“‘h patih f stantial victory for the presnt Government. By a Pacific and to have guided his countrymen into|yote of 48 to 6 the Federal Councll, or Reichsrat, the channels of practical democracy. meone €lse g the upper house of the German Parliament is than Lineoln might have risen to lead successful |called, has approved the plan as modified by the war to put down rebellion in 1861 and to have recent Hague agreements. The 6 votes in oppo- struck the shackles from the slaves. But only|sition were cast by five of the smaller States in Washington among all the Americans of his time | ¥hich the o !;'u“\k;re ’"2§§f‘£fw . fsml st 4 n ary ar @ o avaria, wi votes, rom voting could have won the Revolutionary War and forced pipili®, PHE 1 voles absaned trom vatng from George III recognition of American independ- ence. Hence we say, without fear of successful contradiction, that next to Independence Day, com-|of the Reich were reorganized, and that financial memorating the Declaration of Independence, the reform measures should be adopted simultaneously birthday of Washington more nearly represents this With the plan. Finance Minister Moldenhauer great Nation than any other day in the calendar, Made the effective answer that the Young Plan and financial feorganization would be tied together | in the budget | TAMER NOW. The next contest over the plan will be staged |in the Reichstag, where the oppositon will prob- | When the Seventy-First Congress convened there |01y be more vigorous. The prestige gained by were two veterans of the Civil War in its member- ‘¢ Government through its previous victories and Its spokesman, Herr Held, insisted that the Young | Plan could not be made effective until the finances |the patent advantages for Germany which will ship. When the Seventy-Second convenes there will follow the st - y e superseding of the Dawes plan e be none, for Senator Francis Emroy Warren, of |y - ® o | Young Plan seem certain now to outweigh all the | Wyoming, is dead and Representative Charles Manly | objections which can be marshaled by the extrem- Stedman, of North Carolina, will not seek election. |ists of both the Right and the Left, The Warren death and the Stedman retirement are reminders that an era in American politics | has ended. In fact, the Civil War ceased to color | and dominate National politics years ago, Senator | Warren and Representative Stedman having New Tires at Uniform Traffic Rules. | | | | | | | | (Philadelphia Record.) A compendium of the traffic rules of all the many years been close friends whose associations|States bound in one volume would equal the old and respective outlooks contained nothing to re- family Bible in size, mind this generation of the bitterness and lm))l.’w-‘ The motorist who ventures across State borders‘ ability they remotely represented. !——juml often county borders—takes his safety and | Yes! The days of the bloody-shirt are over. It ;:_‘l'l:m“b";f‘ ;;¢\):::I ';]““:% At home he knows the has been a long time since the halls of Congress |lignes mean. wpoy Ly, MoVl duite sure what the were madhouses of intersectional hatred and mer- | cedury oen IS b indicatdddwhal it e A " 3 {cedure to follow when the fire siren sounds. | ciless intolerance. Thaddeus Stevens, Andrew John- Petty in: tions of unknown rules make for son, Charles Sumner, Roscoe Conkling, Oliver P, scrious delay Morton ariah. Chandler, Carl Schurz, Allen G.|uniform; there is for Iraffic conditions are pretty much ; no reason why traffic rules in Thurman, Thomas A. Hendricks, Thomas F. Bayard | &% /{.lg\' of standardization should not be uniform. and Daniel W. Voorhees are no longer remem ““ir“;;‘f‘di‘_t(“k""‘ y-five States have adopted a single | as leaders in the angry controversies of the n-cuu»‘, ade to swi of lcsulations. Efforts are being : 0 made to swing the other States in line, The change | struction period. Only those informed on the his-|would cost mones Exist 3 . v st ey, Existing signal apparatus would tory of the post v years realize the extremes to have to be altered. But the change would also which these controver went. |5ave money. Exponents of the plan placing it be- Compared with the word battles between the |{Ore Secretary Lamont on behalf of the National “liberals” and the “radicals” in Congress during the |COnference on Street and Highway Safety, put the | Administrations of President Johnson and President [5*V1"6 2 $1,000,000,000 annually Grant, the outbreaks between “sons of the wild| T RS TR et jackasses” and the reactionaries are as tempests | The South Pole, in a teapot. If a moral must be taken from this — it is that Congressional feuds should not be taken | (Manchester Guardian,) too seriously One does not quite know whether Commander Byrd by virtue of his tip-and-run flights over the :Norlh and South Pales ranks as an Aretic explorer. |The shades of the old explorers who perished in a |hand-to-hand struggle with the terrors of ice, bli: zard, and darkness might be disposed to dispute i s by Prohibition Agents{But though Commander Byrd and Rlrita (itratoe out the suffering, and by means of |broke the isolation of the Poles, - TOO MUCH FOR ADMINISTRATOR The shooting of two nurs was too for Dry his crew cut much even wireless even Doran. He ordered the agents that did the shooting Buse | reat Hek, ‘sad o Rl they bravely took pended pending an investigation. This is an un-|jheir safe ro yoody was relieved o' ‘hear of B { r safe return to their base at “Little America.” usual procedure. The high-ups in Prohibitin en- This is the third human visit - : ation which th forcement usually follow a shooting with a declara- (Pole has received. Amundsen dea tion that it was in self-defense. Apparently it was|in 1911 and Captain Scott felt that it would be fruitless to ask the public to| i believe that two men Prohibition enforcers had to| 1he Parls dressmaker shoot two unarmed girls to protect themselves {and the In the meantime the Eighteent casualties continue to pile up. got there by sledge L few weeks later, on the long skirt, } termined on the | and in the end, to argue from a famous they will compromise on the 1 g 3 y s the lon, t— York Times.) B | insist women of America are del ___|short skirt, h Amendment War | parajje) | (New ZANE GREY AND LITERATURUE. 0 thousand lobby constantly watch the e 41.)1&.5 of Congress,” and that ought to support G HIR 10 journalist ever be- two or three first-class Washington hotels.—(St, Louis Globe Democrat.) Mr, Possibly not, though Mark Twain and Edgar Allan Poe, not to mention Charles Dickens, got pretty clese to the top.~-(Toledo Blade.) | came a literary ure of the first rank.” l We suggest srundy Lobby Investigating Committee Perhaps visibility was not good in the Zane Grey |°mething about it.—(Cincinnati for a place on the least he knows quirer.) valley and his telescope weculd not permit a clear vision of the summits. Tires are to be made from [{ @ man has been tired by quirer.) oldenrod, but many spinach.—(Cincinnati En- The filial devotion that caused Charles Evans ‘Hughes, Jr., to resign his high and attractive office as Solicitor-General of the United States in order not to embarrass his father as Chief Justice ought This,would probably be a better country if we heard more about the other seventeen amendments and less about the eighteenth —(Atlanta Consti- | | Actress Stricken 1(1"“— On Airplane Tri» | e — PROFESSION AL L . i e — | Helene W. L. Albrecht PHYSIOTHERAPY | Massage, Electricity, Infra Red | R#v, Medical Gymnastics. | 410 Goldstein Buildins, i Phone Office, 218 | —T | DRS KASER & FREEBURGER | i DENTISTS | 301-303 Goldstein Bldg. | PHONE 56 Hours 9 a. m, to 9 p. m. AND Comfort BY PACKARD TAXI TO ANY PART . Charles P. Jenune | DENTIST | Rooms 8 and 9 Valentine Building Telephone 176 Zelma O'Nt'aLhof tl;e screen and MRISIRNIE! 2777 171 Y — i who is the wife of Anthony| o 3 i L i Buchnell, is in a hospital at %os, | Dr. A. W, Stewart | OF THE CITY Angeles for an emergency opera-; | DENTIST tion for appendicitis, She was re- t rming to Los Angeles from San | | Hours 9 a. m. to 6 p. m. | SEWARD BUILDING | | | Francisco with her sister, Bernice O'Neal, in an airplane, when she‘ ricken. They made a forced ing and the sufferer was rushed to a hospital. (International Newsroel) Office Phone 569, Res. Phone 276 | 50c¢ Phone AT THE HOTELS tineau—R. Brown. n—Nick Ejiatros. Osteopath—201 Coldstein Bldg. | Hours: 10 to 12; 1 to 5; Tto ® | or by appointmeat | Licensed Osteopathic Physician | Phone: Office 1671. | | TResidence, MacKinnon Apts. — \ Dr. H. Vance ; | Zynda—M. Mathison, ax 2 e ee = L, e 'EN v v ey 1] A stated communication of Mt CHIROPRACTOR eau Lodge No. 147, F. & A. M., ill be held in the Masonic Temple 30 o'clock Monday evening. Ju Hellenthal Building | OFFICE SERVICE ONLY | Hours: 10 a. m. to 12 noon Carlson’s Tax1 | TO ANY PART ‘ OF CITY Phone 199 Leotu Supper will be served in $50 00 5 D, | the banquet hall at 6:30. Visiting ot : : Brethren are cardislly invited to be A o } ANYWHERE IN THE CITY FOR 50 CENTS gt bl il By _ Appointment {|l Careful, Efficient Drivers—Call Us At Any Hour— - OHAR E NAGHEEL. |\ SUEEICNE 399 i DAY AND NIGHT—Stand at Alaskan Hotel adv. Secretary. - — - 2 P II 2 . DT RS | B PRRRESICER Y o hOnes an lng e NOTICE OF RING FINAL Robert Simpson T /| Opt. D. Carlson’s Taxi and Ambulance Service The undersigned, having on the| | Craduf o Aogelse cal- | — o o ? 3 " is ! | ege of Optometry and | 6th day of February, 1930, filed his | el ‘ final account as administrator with | _ . the will annexed of the estate of || C1asses _F‘nEd' Lenses Ground | : ) John W.-Clark, deceased, in the = J’l a am S aXl Probate Court for Juneau Precinet, e o Y Al notice is h given to ol Sotet Ontiitin all heirs, creditors or other per- prometrist-O P’lone 565 | Examined—Glasses Fitted | Room 16, Valentine Bldg. | | | sons interested in said estate, that Saturday, April 12, 1930 t 10 o'clock in the forenoon of said day, at the office of the ited States Commissioner, in the United Stats Court House, in the City and Pre- 10:00 to 6:00. Evenings by Appointment. Phone 484 cinct of Juneau and Territory of ! | ) | Alaska, is the time and place set. | JOHN B. MARSHALL 1 | for the hearing of objections to' | ATTORNEY-AT-LAW ! said account and the settlement 1420 Goldstein Building theredt. PHONE 483 / H. B. LE FEVRE, i BERRY’S A Administrator with the will annex- pp— oo ed of the estate of John W. - Clark, deceased. First publication, Feb. 8, 1930, Last publication, March 8, 1930. TAXI BURFORD’S CORNER JIMMY STEELE, Driver Juneau Public Library ‘Free Reading Room u £a > City Hall, Second Floor et g IIELENA Main Street and Fourth ourt (’.l?ll“!» and 1cien RUBINSTEINS Roading’ Riooi Open Wi Service Guaranteed 8 a m. to 10 p. m. 50 Cents—Anywhere in the City NEW Circulation Room Open from 1 to 5:30 p. m.—T7:00 to 8:30 o ik g p. m. Current Magazines, Water Lily Face Newspapers, Reference, | Books, Etc. POWDER I $1.50 per box i | FREE TO ALL ‘ R ) I After 1 a. m. Phone 3101 e ettt Prompt Service, Day and Night CovicH AuTo SERVICE STAND AT THE OLYMPIC Phone 342 Day or Night 50¢c AnyWhere in City If you want superior woek call CAPITAL LAUNDRY Phone 355 .IIIIITHIIIIIiIIIIIIIIII Phone 25 The Nyal Serviee We Deliver 1 Drug Store | Try Our $1.00 Dinner | and 50c Merchants’ Lunch 11 A M to2P M ARCADE CAFE = Comeiy | STAND AT ARCADE CAFE Day and Night Service Any Place in the City for 50 Cents TO ANY PART OF CITY Two Buick Sedans at Your Service. Careful and Efficient Drivers. | | Regular Dinners Short Orders Lunches Open 6 a.m. to 2 a.m. POPULAR PRICES HARRY MABRY Proprietor VICTOR SAVE /forTHEM AN EDUCATION is the birthright of every . child. Now, when they are young, is the time to think of their future Radios and Combination PREPARE FOR IT. Begin to save—for Radio-Phonographs them. Just a few dollars each week will RECORDS SHEET MUSIC JUNEAU MELODY HOUSE mean a lot in ten years, It will pay for a college cducation for them. And then you'll be proud. DON'T NEGLECT THEIR FUTURE. It depends on what you do at present—SAVE NOW! R D ! R L R CH TR T U T T T DT TR not to detract from the popularity of the talented |tution.) ldest Bank in Alaska 0 R R TR T T T TR T T O T I‘h(’ B. M. Behrends 'I’GARBAGE HABULING! Bank TR i Cable Office. | = ADVERTIS 1 FOR GOOD g Mabry’s Cafe || g and Pressine | { | | Work called for and delivered | !l The Capital Cleaners J Mmagi Morris Construction Company- GENERAL CARPENTER WORK Phone 62 P 'your merchandise \and it will sell! i -3 W | Fraternal Societies i | or | Gastineau Channel ! B. P. 0. ELKS Meeting every Wed- (({" nesday at 8 o'clock. Elks’ Hall, Visiting 0 i brothers welcome. WINN GODDARD, Exalted Rules M. H. SIDES, Secretary. Co-Ordinate Lot ies of Freemason i itish Rite meetirpy Friday ch month 7:30 p. m. Seog. tish Rite Temple WALTER B. EEISEL, Secretary. o LOYAL ORDER OF MOOSZ funeau Lodge No. 700. Aeets every Monday iight, at 8 o'clock. JAMES CARLSON, Dictator. W. T. VALE, Secy, P. G. Box 3M MOUNT JUNEAU LODCE NO. 14 Second and fourth Mon- A3 day of each month in £ G Scottish Rite Temple, ’\‘v\’ beginning at 7:30 p. m. by EVANS L. GRUBER, Master; CHARLES E. NAGHEL, Secretary. ———— ORDER OF EASTERN STAR Second and Fourth Tuesdays of each month, é’%*? at 8 o'clock, Scottish A Rite Temple. LILY iy BURFORD, Worthy v Matron; FANNY L. % 'ROBINSON, Secretary. KNIGHTS OF COLUMBUS Seghers Council No. 1760, Meetings second and lasl 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, 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 MOOGSEHEART i LEGION, NO. 439 | Meets first and third Thurs- | days each month, 8 p. m, at | Moose Hall. JOHANNA JEN- | | SEN, Senior Regent; AGIES | GRIGG. Recorder. i [ ————— THE CASH BAZAAR » Open Evenings Opposite U. 8. Cable Office rom which you pick the oacs ycou GET A CORONA | For Your School Work | | J. B. Burford & Co. , | “Our door step is worn by | satisfied customers” | — TN Moves, Packs and Stores Freight and Baggnge Prompt Delivery of ALL KINDS OF COAL PHONE 48 HOTEL ZYNDA ELEVATOR SERVICE 8. ZYNDA, Prop. —————————————— I e S BURFORD’S CORNER TAXI SERVICE \ PHONE 314 Pign’ Whistle Candy e e Old papers for sale at Tha pire,