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trife during the intervening decade, on to what Congress would of the s as any g Daily Alaska Empire . {have done wit proposed hteenth Amend- | 128 IS ) ' Suppose Congress had been bulldozed into|T'o Be Surveyed i R e S T 7 Lo D MANAGER Pupk & i ¢ * 3 & JOHN W. TROY EDITOR AN passing the buck to the separate States, is there| L i | Helene W. L. Albrecht " Published _overy _eventr ept Sunday hl.\' MR¢ any doubt abou at then would have been theje SEATTLE, Feb. 24—Ar- e | PHYSIOTHERAPY {_'\Ill gt LR B L OMPANY at S p ot oads s e e PR : > We doubt if one person|e thur W. Henderson, Special e | Massage, Electricity, Infra Red ; ¥ q I « y as Second Class in on have knowingly rushed m»;m.‘fl Assistant Auurtmvg(‘:mm}L . }z:v. l(v}lefi;c“:l3 Gy:xlx;:tlu. | Entered in the Post Off 1 Juncau as Second ss in or Z _ ° o Scattle to e 10 Goldstein Buildine - 1 ) ur at came f in- | matter long in I turmoil that came from [» oF e Do o Phone Office, 216 | SUBSCRIPTION RATES. consi cti © hibition administration in e - £ nea 8, adwell and n Dellvered by carrier A;LPJ;IIWJUN?‘:‘L‘”‘W Bt bl Bl - o Alaska, Washington and e RN RO By mail, postage paid L g - (SR The A can L erman, a Chicago periodicalie Oregon. This is according e | DRS KASER & FREEBURGER BB oo idin R evted b 1t industry, commenting on'e to a notification received e DENTISTS Comfort Subseriber “ hey - ““' ey o May B on’s reference to Chicago's| e here by Anthony Savage, e 301-303 Goldstein Bldg. B 1he Seilv ¥ ¢ lebt" of $280,000000, says: “What does he|® United States Districts At- | PHONE 56 ng? It's not floating. It looks like|® torney for Western Wash- e Hours 9 &. m. to 9 p. m. BY an, floatin t's not floating. Lo/ Highon. A LT B | we're nk ‘. . H br. Charles P, Jonne ||| PACKARD p W N4 e 9 8 000000000 e ] d Wcal ‘news pablished T |} Sorter Bresident Coolidge visited HorywoocRct { Dr: (,lx%lg:%sl;, Jenne e e Yo BE 1 “ w talkies de. If he had those wmm ALASKA CIRCULATION ( E 3 4 | Rooms 8 and 9 Valentine THAN THAT OF ANY OTHER PUBLICATION use years to it is possible that Butlding / would not be so Death of John N. Cobb. | | | (Pacific I‘!\h(‘rmflnr i In the passing of John N. Cobb, Dean of the College of Fisheries, University of Washington, the | Pacific hos lost a firm friend | worker for its advancement.| | fishing industry of the jand an indefatigable and went south in hope of recovery. | a native of Dean Cobb was 61 years of age, the air 9 hours 5 minutes and 27 fl; gytnnpolgltmer;;: i n! . P INNING T . s Mng v 1 3 . riow: /9 eopathic ysician | S S RUNNING FOR New Jersey. During his early Iife he engaged in cooongs, His previous record was! | Licensed Os ¢ ALASKA ‘l\.:‘:]\(v){{'l‘()l{ ; newspaper work; his activity in the fisheries dating|q 1 ours and 19 minutes. I Phone: Office 1671. | al L . A from 1895, when he entered the Bureau of Fisheries | Residence, MacKinnon Apts 1 Phone 276 Dean Cobb died January 13 at La Jolla, Calif,, after Over Nine Hours i e an illness of many months. After spending most i : of the summer in a Seattle hospital, he undertook| sAN DIEGO, Cal, Feb. 24 —Haw ¥ ~ to resume his work at the University for the fall ey Bowus, American glider endur- | Dr. H. Vance k | 2 one term, but was soon stricken with a heart attack|,nce record holder, landed at 2:43| | Osteopath—201 Goldstein Bldg. I THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, MONDAY, FEB. 24, 1930 Prohibition in | Alaska, 2 States, PROFESSIONAL Telephone 176 : TO ANY PART OF THE CITY 50c¢ GLIDER FLIGHL Beats Own Previous Rec- ord—Remains in Air Dr. A. W. Stewart | DENTIST Hours 9 a. m. to 6 p. m. SEWARD BUILDING Office Phone 569, Res. o'clock this morning after being in| ' Hours: 10 to 12; 1 to 5; Tto ® | Bowlus took off from Point Lo 1 » re- service as field a t. In following years he con- ail plane of hi — ongressman L. Dickinson, who will be re-iservice as field a a sail plane of s own e > ! Ct)L .simx.,\ll fans ne head of the sub-com- ducted many fishery investigations along the Atlantic I of. 5:35 . D, yestaiiE anc = T | saembered by Alaskans 2 s P : e i P the Great Lake: covering in articular the | 3 ‘ re: t 75 e i - > P mittee on | avpropriations which e e ol R e landed in the- pacwes teEt %5, | Dre Geol . Barton || the Territory last summer, has announced hi 4" shad of North Carolina. In 1901 and 1904 he made The. workis -gier Sadil Ao 14 | CHIROPRACTOR | didacy for the Republican nomination for United|gne’ firct investigations of the Hawaiian fisheri i bor HAllatieR Eutiding States Senator from Iowa. He will be opposed (and in 1904 was appointed Assistant Agent in charge O & OFFICE SERVICE ONLY { the 1oin by Gov. John Hammill whose third of the Alaska fisheries. His annual reports while | ‘18 ihe el Hours: '30.6 5k to 14’ Hoon 3 Chief ve of his State will terminate in this office did much to stlmulxluc the bse- h t of the time but a 2p m tobp m | quent remarkable development of the industry in|™™ £ i north: and AL 1t {tle 15 alrcady interesting. Both | the Territory. y ‘1;’"“;7 the ground. &vim To'e b in; il ANYWHERE IN THE . Se e betde 1o gircady Intares .| Leaving Government service in 1912, Dean Cobb e s By Appointment | mei are popular and both are first-slass Cam-lggq gor four years editor of Pacific Fisherman, be- | PHONE 250 i paiiers. Gov Hammill admittedly has the advan-|oomine’ ascictant Cieneral Superintendent of the Al ‘ the fruits of six years of e patronage, aska Packers Assoiation in 1917. For a long time, ! S ir. Dickinson has a well established Con-also, he was associated with the Union Fish Com- B erossional record that is pleasing to Towa farmers. |(pany in Alaska codfish operations. : Robert Sin ps! 3 7 ill be his party's can-{ ©On the establishment of the College of Fisl osiE: Sleck, Demdgont, yllile. his pasty's can jeries at the University of Washington in 1919, diaate for re-election. ithe only institution of the kind in the world except in Japan, he was chosen as the man most eminently ifitted to organize and direct its activities, and later ireceived the title of Dean. The success, value and constructiveness of his work here have been widely recognized; but only those who studied under him |fully realize the close personal attention he gave to the welfare of his students. This was not limited to ing ‘the Eighteenth Amendment. academic accomplishments, but included much help- urged the repeal in order: |ful guidance in the selection of their life work, and | to preserve the purity of Am- |extended to an active interest in their subsequent {advancement. The results are attested in the fact| ;lhm many graduates of the College of Fisheries now oceupy positions of prominence in Government serv- | ices and commercial fisheries throughout the world. i Probably only his intimate friends have IuRI)\ N an Af the annual meeting of the Bar Association the lawyers by mowa vote passed a resolution most unan! of repeal- resolution in favor The erican institutions and to relieve the Federal courts and other Federal agencies of an un- natural burden which impairs their utility for the important purpose of their creation. CENSORING BOOKS. appreciated the concentration and unremitting ef- fort that marked his career, or the earnestness with | Today it is illegal to mail certain books and Which his life was devoted to the development of ‘lets that can still be shipped anywhere by the fisheries along sound and permanent lines. He A e |was an authority of world-wide standing on fish- | e and sold over the. counter everywhere ex- a ery matters, and it is doubtful whet! Boston without fear of arrest. There are L RIpa any othep | man of his time had as thorough and compre»‘ hensive a knowledge of all aspects of the fisheries land fishing industries as was possessed by Dean Cobb. His untiring energy and forceful, yet kind- ly personality qualified him for leadership in many activities which have been of widespread benefit, |In relation to the operating as well as the educa- ! tional field he truly occupied a unique position. | Among his recent activities were an investiga- | of literature that are prescribed reading in 4 University courses in literature and yet cially indecent and unsalable in Boston. But t 5 at least one book that is officially obscene | *boten in New York which has escaped Bos- too long list of banned books. Such are the vagaries of the law; but they are fi the wagaries of taste and judgment: Oontra- |y, e Theers’ o carrying fish over obstructions | dictior s may after all be healthy. For standards of i spawning streams, and membership of the ad- Gbscenily, like standards of literary taste, of gram- committee of the International Fisheries Com- | mar, of good breeding, are subjective and changing; | |mission studying the North Pacific halibut fish- an is better that official rulings should defy eries. one another than that society should be riveted| 'Dean Cobb was author of many valuabe tech- T |pical articles and reports ,and a number of books | That 15 obsence which shocks; that shocks which |0, WIdely recognized importance, among which his |\“Pacific Cod Fisheries,” acific Salmon Fisheries,” | | and “The Canning of Fishery Products” may be | mentioned s the mast comprehensive and authori- (tative works on those subjects. His leisyre during is amiliar. of obscenity or mind There can be no absolute standards profanity; they arc relative,to the of the listener. Hence it is inevitable that fudgments should differ from éity” to city ‘and” frdm the last’ ar of ‘His life, even upon His™ fihal in- | ye ) year, ness, w spent in a revision of “Pacific Salmon | why make an issue of book censorship? |Fisheries”; the new edition of \which, soon to be Wherever it has been tried no reader has been Published by the Government, will stand as the final deniec the privilege of reading to his own*taste and |WOrk f @ most active and useful career. %00k bans ha 7(:“\ served to whet humA *| Caunt_ Keyserling says we have no sense of curiosity for the forbidden. CenSofship in any ‘form humor. Evidently a lot 'of the Count’s best stories ! y y defeats its own purpose flooied.—(Philadelphia Inquirer.) ST SUPP | An architect could draw a model city, but it JUST SUPI would still be imperfect when populated.—(Toledo it e | Blade.) Suppose someone had been able to present to and the people of the United States an Senator Smoot says he would not know a boot- ture of the Prohibition situation that!'legger if he saw one. Some policemen are like that. 1 ten years afterward and an authentic —(Toledo Blade.) b r‘l]lllIllllllllllllllllllllllllllllblllllllIIIiIIlIlIlIIlIlIII T T T L L T L L] Final Clearance ”Prices Men’s Hart Schaffner and Marx Men’s Hart Schaffner and Marx Men’s Hart Schaffner and Marx Men’s Hart Suits, . $50.00 values $35.00 values $65.00 values haffner and Marx Overcoats, reg. $50.00 values ... reg Suits, reg, Suits, reg. Men’s Hart Schaffner and Marx Overcoats, reg. $45.00 values 22.50 A few Men’s Mackinaws, reg. $10.00 values . ... eI 3.95 Men’s Soft Collars, Van Heusen. 25 cents oal S dok 1.00 Men’s Goodrich Kingfisher Boots, Rip. phipiiia Bl g 60.45 Boys’ Long Cord or Wool Pants, pdlr 145 All Piece Gooc —\llk“oul (,uruuh Serims, Draperies, \i‘l\'cls and Velours at HALF PRICE. Ginghams, in plain colors, 45¢ to 60c values, 5 yards -$1.00 GOLDSTEIN'S EMPORIUM lllllmlmlllllllllllllllllllllllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII-.mlllllllIlllllllllulllllllmu- L TP P AT T T TR » Wmlmlllllllflli-lllllllllllmllll" AT Opt. D. Carlson’s Taxi and Graduate Angeles Col- | lege of Optometry and ! ARE HOMELESS ATHENS, Greec., 24.—8ix Fab. Carlson’s Taxi Careful, Efficient Drivers—Call Us At Any Hour— DAY AND NIGHT—Stand at Alaskan Hotel Phones Il and Single O Graham’s Taxi Phone 565 AND AT ARCADE CAFE Day and Night Service TO ANY PART OF CITY Phone 199 Gastineau Hotel o CITY FOR 50 CENTS Ambulance Service City for 50 Cents ned and 600 fam- Biiikimology are homeless as torrential| Glasses Fitted, Lenses Grounda rains undermined their homes. The 2 P Government has t immediate | .5 SIELN S I steps to help the victims. DR. R. E. SOUTHWELL | e ik Optometrist-Optician | Cabin passenger planes makel, p .o puymined—Glasses Fitted & nine round trips daily between Bt 0 silontine Hitg -} Hrangiece Aol Lok ADaele: || 10:00 to 6:00. Evenings by S The 'm;;\nl-;._;I in Texas of| | Appointment. Phonc 484 | the common carrier bus and truck| e industry totals about $29,000,000. | - : 2o o i Any Place in the Try the Five oClock Dinner JOHN B \L\RSHALL Specials at Mabry’s. —adv | ATTORNEY-AT-LAW e = ! 420 Goldstein Building E= BERRY’S what you went IN PRINTING when you want it! Try us out with your next job o " “ TAXI BURFORD’S CORNER JIMMY STEELE, Driver ]um-an Public Library Free Reading Room City Hall, Second Floor . HELENA Main Street and Fourth Courteous and Efficient ELEN/ ’ RUBINSTEINS Readting Roon Open Brem Service Guaranteed bl O 8 a. m. to 10 p. m. ~ : 50 Cents—Anywhere |l; Circulation Room Open from . . NI‘J 1'1:05309 m.—7:00 to 8:30 in the City Water Lilv Face : p. m. Current Magazines, e it s | Newspapers, Reference, POWDER : gt Phone 314 ‘ FREE TO ALL : $1.50 per box | weeeem || After 1 a. m. Phone 3101 z | _ A A D02 5155 L /flM Prompt Service, Day and Night 4 G If you want superior CovicH AuTo SERVICE Phone 25 We Deliver work call PREND- AT THE SIS MED Phone 342 Day or Night CAPITAL LAUNDRY 50c AnyWhere in City Phone 355 The Nyal Seivice Drug Store V l 1 | 55 and 50c Merchants’ Lunch 11 A. M. to 2 P. M. | ARCADE CAFE L i HuRnnns Northern Lite TAXI 50c¢ | | | Efficient Drivers. | | B e Try Our $1.00 Dinner | TO ANY PART OF CITY Two Buick Sedans at Your Service. Careful and | e3 o Mabry’s Cafe Regular Dinners Short Orders Lunches Oren 6 a.m. to 2 a.m. POPULAR PRICES HARRY MABRY Proprietor VICTOR Radios and Combination SAVE /o THEM 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 Radio-Phonographs them. Just a few dollars each week will ECO! mean a lot in ten years. It will pay for a RET ill)JSSIC college education for them. And then you'll SHE be proud. DON'T NEGLECT THEIR FUTURE. It depends on what you do at present—SAVE NOW! The B. M. Behrends Bank Oldest Bank in Alaska QLU R B U BT T TR I (T T T L L L L JUNEAU MELODY HOUSE GARBAGE HAULIN W. E. TARR Cable L L L L L L L T =1 FOR GOOD | Cle.'mmg and Pressing I 31 | || Work called ior and, delivered | || The Capital Cleaners | Construction Company GENERAL CARPENTER WORK * | Rite Temple. L e — | Fraternal Societies ! or | Gastineau Channel ! e e R B. P. 0. ELES il Mceting every Wead- ; ty nesday at 8 o'clock. > Elks' Hall. Visiting ] brothers welcome. WINN GODDARD, Exalted Rulss M. H. SIDES, Secretary, Co-Ordinate o1 les of Freemason ry Scottish Rite H i | Regular meetings 'JJ“\‘Q“"' ffi second Fridey V,_ each month o 25 7:30 p. m. Boot- tish Rite Templs WALTER B. EEISEL, Secretary, LOYAL ORDER OF MOOSZ Juneau Lodge No. 700. Meets every Monday aght, at 8 o'clock. JAMES CARLSON, Dictator, W. T. VALE, Secy, P. O. Box 82¢ MOUNT JUNEAU LO;)GE NO. 147 Second and fourth Mon- day of each month in G Scottish Rite Temple, \\’ beginning at 7:30 p. m. Master; Secretary. EVANS L. GRUBER, CHARLES E. NAGHEL, ORDER OF EASTERN STAR Second and Fourth 4 Tuesdays of each month, at 8 o'clock, Scottish LILY BURFORD, Worthy Matron; FANNY L. ROBINSON, Secretary. ENIGHTS OF COLUMBUS Seghers Council No. 1760, Meetings second and last Monday at 7:30 p. m. Transient brothers urg- ed to attend. Counch Chambers, Fifth Street JOHN F. MULLEN, G. K. H. J. TURNER, Secretary. DOUGLAS AaxRIE 117 ¥. O. E. Meets first and third %Mondnys, 8 o'clock at Eagles Hall Douglas. ARNE SHUDSHIFT, W. P. GUY SMITH, Secretary. Vis- iting brothers welcome. WOMEN OF MOO | MOOSEHEART*? | LEGION, NO. 429 | Meets first and third Thurs- | days cach month, 8 p. m, at | | Moose Hall. JOHANNA JEN- ; SEN, Senior Regent; AGIIES | | GRIGG. Recorder. | 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 | satisfied customers” Y JUNEAU TRANSFER COMPANY MOVING Moves, Packs and Stores VA N Freight and Baggoge Prompt Delivery of ALL KINDS OF COAL PHONE 48 HOTEL ZYNDA ELEVATOR SERVICE 8. ZYNDA, Prop. Lt [T, BURFORD’S CORNE TAXI SERVICE i PHONE 314 Pign’ Whistle Candy ! 3 / Empire, —_—— T Old papers for sale at The i i