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British Heiress to Wed | Noted Sportsman Peer’ PROFESSION A . o . |of the Nation is close to $30,000,000, the B Dall)’ AlaSk(l Enlp"'e [says, and at least $20,000,000 of this is lo | curing es leave the dairy | ¥ T a JOHN W. TROY - - - EDITOR AND MANAGER| large city, junk men loft the city 20,000,000 milk bottles w | Helene W. L. Albrecht ks ove | | Massage, Electricity, Infra Red | " Entered In the Post Office In Juneau as Second Class | —— }! '| Rev, Medical Gymnastics. matter. | By a unanimous vote the Republican c | | 410 Goldstein Bullding, | ~ SUBSCRIPTION RATES. _ House Elec nmittee has decided } i Phone Office, 216 : o2 mail, postage paid, at the foll e late William Jenm‘nga Bry: Umm‘c $6.00; one month 5 eat in Congress. Her right to is DENTISTS Subscriber ot ‘5‘3\-‘\;.“”51““‘5 1y m the ground that she was disc 301-303 Goldstein Bldg. e mle s he had been the wife of an En PHONE 56 T i . officer who died several years ago. ' | Hours 8 a. m. to 9 p. m. s MEMBER OF ASSOCIATED PRESS. iy ) = i Ph II d S l 0 e R S rhe’ Briitins o 0 P e — e ones I and Single it or not otherwire cred BAver 150 the | ocigned. Before he did 4t, however, the insurgent Dr. Charles P, a . Rocel news published here s )5 arles P. Jenne s i i ——— |jeader had captured the capital of the little coun- i DENTIST Carlson’s Taxi and Ambulance Service ALASKA CIRCULATION © D O PE o CER ltry. There is usually a reason when a Presi Rooms 8 and 9 Valéntine — e — e resigns Building | | iy ‘Telephone 176 | , . | —& | e v | Graham’s Taxi PR e Dr. A. W. Stewart - tie ootk O SR TR . s pmTIST Phone 565 | s S 5 2 e g Hours 9 8. m. to 6 p. m. [not possible to say for the past sixty-five years SEWARD BUILDING Office Phone 569, Res. Phone 276 that it will not contain a single member who f with either the Gray or the Blue. Major Charles Manly Stedman of North Carolina has finally per suaded his constituents to permit him to retire from public life. He is 89 years old and has been in the House for a number of years. Several times before, this former staff officer of General Lee has signified a wish to spend his day under his vine |and fig tree, but the Fifth Diistrict would not hear " yin >: T : x of it. The surest way to be socially ostracized around A BELOVED PIONEER IS DEAD. |Greensboro was to suggest running for the Demo- A well beloved Alaska pioneer passed away when |cratic Hulmlm'UOnl for Congress. | Charles Hoxie died early yesterday morning. He, 'Be[’)frf‘ i Fiigpond C'fU Senator dWBrren of Wyom- B e artn in the| sarly days and had)lved ay{S there wero ane: GRicnfNHH B\ Contederste | 3 gress. For several months Major | Dr. H. Vance | | Osteopath—201 Goldstein Bldg. || Hours: 10 to 12; 1 to 5; Tto ® [ or by appointment Licensed Osteopathic Physiclan H Phone: Office 1671 || TResidence, MacKinnon Apts. A o eorhlaemeia el Miss Loelia Ponsonby, heiress to| = it vn‘:qof the great Engflsh fortunes, | ;. - Dr. Geo. L. Barton . b > S8rV . thal to the Duke of | i Nome, Ruby, Juneau and other places. He served greqman has been alone. His appearance and de. | ;\)fi;\:gzg hoted Epartatar, | H gbly and faithfully on Lm;m(ilrt:;LC;)ll:n?inil“ Nome, |portment well qualify him for the distinction. In| was recently announced. % i CHIROPRACTOR and always took a live affairs. |bearing, figure and physiognomy the Major much | 'as P s sym- |Tes: les General Lee. He was by nature a philanthropist, and his sym- e embl B e AN agains a iform and likeness would be striking. His gentle, | PATRYMAR ¢ athetic interest in those against fate had [unt 8. gentle, | . i s e C ever failed to yield substantial|0ld-fashioned courtesy has made him the favorite AN AID IN QUARANTINE stacked the cards never failed to } Ridbibier ‘af the' House, ! Sans assistance. Few people, if any, in the Territory To friends in the press gallery the Saalor " tor LANSING, Mich., March 5—The have been Santa Claus to more down-and-outers Or lyears has been saying: “As an education in style |Michigan Milk Producers assogia- | (Interna tional Newsreel). | | Put him in his old gray | S SRR i Hellentha! Building OFFICE SERVICE ONLY Hours: 10 a. m. to 12 noon | 2p. m tobp m | |} whom i i 6 p. m. to § p. m. helped moré people to get on their feet to a new lyou should read Alison's ‘History of Modern Eur-|ton has established an insurdnce Bym'g’fi"g' z;‘;em | start. ope’” He has undoubtedly added to the circulation | fund to protect members against]| b Charlie Hoxie never had cause for shame. He|of that hornbook of his own generation. As he l0sses if their farms are quarantined | - always was on the square and he treated everyone!BO(f_S l}llo_x'ellrexllent mansfi _wm wish that, like Ten- |during an epidemic of contagious S - right. Of that there is not a doubt. Few people |BYSOMS Clysses, he may “find the happy isles and |disease ¥ A Robert Simpson incerely mourned. 1° e great Achilles,” whom he knew. Financed by an assessment of | Opt D e B | two cents a hundred-weight on! pt. U. ) e Britain Abolishes Blasphemy Laws. milk sold by the association, the in-| | le-adun: mogtixu.fl- | MASSACHUSETTS AND NEW YORK | surance wtmild axl-)e:mhurse L’nelfnbtim ege Opr.h:lmolugy , B > e (Ma approximately per cent of e | | 4 G. 0. P. CANDIDATES. The Blm)hpx:nz::f:e;a?:B;‘::“i:een anomalous, | Amount they would have received | |, Glasses Fitted, Lenses Grouna | Former Senator William M. Butler, who Wasiand the House of Commons has now very properly | [OF thelr milk L | =i Chairman of the Republican National Committee decided to sweep them away. Mr. Thurtle's Bxll‘b;‘]i;,':"m““;ge el ;Jymrax'- " DR. R, E. SOUTHWELL | during the Coolidge regime and was appointed g?:ieielr;s skclit;nss;g;c;ix;rg] by a_substamial maJorn:\'lwu""or"m]:\f atEibtor. W et Optometrist-Optician Senator upon the death of Senator Lodge and was and‘ pm nyh Bt be mat a serious Sel’]lls.lso unu:m:nl the crganization does business. Eyes Examined—Glasses Fitted | later defeated by Senator Walsh, has announced &b offer g_ p f)e e 8, TeRardeC e Room 16, Vn]entmg Bldg. | ; . nse as very seldom to make its appearance 10:00 to 6:00. Evenings by his candidacy for the Republican nomination fOr{yn tne law courts. The last case was in 1921, when | AT THE HOTELS ! Appointment Phone 484 Senator from Massachusetts. Former Gov. Eben S.ig public blasphemer was sentenced to nine months' | 2 S iz F, Baes con e s 8 Draper is also a candidate, and it is said that|imprisonment, not so much because he was tech- | H Cl (;n“;“dg S. Rubber| £ former Gov. Alvan T. Fuller may enter the contest.!nically a blasphemer as because he was not pome\CO % : o I\J'l]lih“‘sl;'l . ‘(-'. Fd‘wa;:;‘ r———-—-(; ’ ¥ el v . in the way he phrased his blasphemy. It may be| o " St B ¥ Foeen Pl ] 3 T e g e s, ateh maving |that he would have been reasonably prosecuted for |FIAAdIn: Seattle; E. F. zuern, Port- | | JOHN B. MARSHALL he Republicans of New York are also having| ' $ . P 10 | 1ond: Frank Scully, Seatt Peter P /3 % Pyt . where the principal|tNdangering the peace, but to imprison him for| °Gi THETE P A fo ATTORNEY-AT-LAW a rather hot factional row, W saying no more than is said without offense in|ostrometinoff, Sitka |- 420 Goldstein Building bone of contention is the wet and dry question.|phigeopnic and religious books smacked somewhat | : Alaskan | PHONE 483 Former Senator Wadsworth and Dr. Nicholas Mur-|of persecution. To defend anomalous statutes on| X Dickerson, city; J. E. Mac- ray Butler are among the big guns for the wets and [the ground that they are seldom invoked but may Donald, city; C. E. Robbinson, Se- the original Hoover organization leads the drys.(sometimes come in useful as a weapon against an|®ttle; G. G. Evans, city; Bert Ar- The aristocratic Union League Club is taking a|objectionable person is to act on a thoroughly |XOUr: city; B. Howard, city; E. Mc- plebiscite of its members on the wet and dry |Vicious principle. The law, like other institutions, |Cl2ire: Seattle; J. L. Erickson. i R Juneau Public Library . : (3 should be honest, dnd if we want to keep it honest VRN X7 ; question. The leading candldntcj of the drys rox: e must bring it into lne with the inlellgctua] (ree:. PO TR T LR AN Bree Rcadmg Roots the nomination for Governor is U. 8. AUWOrNeY |qom and moral valuations of At aRen lstant hes uner. Hotel Gastineau. —ady, Charles H. Tuttle. Attorney-General Hamilton Ward, the only successful Republican on the State ticket in last year's election, is also being urged for Governor. The Democratic nomination is conceded to Gov. Roosevelt. City Hall, Second Floor Main Street and Fourth e e | WADE and BUTCHER TRIPLE WEAR RAZOR BLADES for t éAF ETY RAZORS An Armed Border. (Portland, Maine, Press-Herald.) It is the proud boast of the United States and | - Canada, big friendly neighbors of the Western world, i that for more than 100 years they have lived in FARMERS BECOMING MORE peace and amity without a gun or a fort or a soldier | EFFICIENT. on the thousands of miles of border between them. | That is a situation that leads to friendliness and One of the interesting developments of agricul-|insures peace. ture in the United States today is that fewer farm- But Prohibition has changed conditions and now | ers, with less labor, on fewer acres, continue to in-|the United States has an army of armed guards| crease production. along the entire border from coast to coast. Wher- g ! In the past four years, says the Bureau of Ag- ever the border is water, fleets of armed boats ply back and forth. Killings are frequent and in some ricultural Economics, United States Department of |coces men have been shot by quhibltlon Agents on - Agriculture, agricultural production has averaged |suspicion, with no liquor found in their possession. ¥ % 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 e i ) If you want superior about 16 per cent. more than in 1919-1922, due True, the guards do not belong to the army. % work call chiefly to better farming. The farmer knows more|They are Customs officers and Prohibjtion Enforce- Phone 2> We Deliver about his soils and the plants and animals with _’}‘}:‘m Agents. The boats do not belong to the navy. The Nyal Service Drug Store CAPITAL LAUNDRY which he deals. He is in better position to combat um‘?{:fl""& i‘:‘:‘ t(e;e‘:?\rdmc::ni:r But thelse forces are l Phone 355 ¥ $ B e g pests and to apply his labor more efficlently so as g .. along, ths. horded y on relentless war: St to secure larger returns in volume of production per unit of labor or capital employed. He is using more fertilizer; expenditures for fertilizer in 1924 were more than double those of 1909. (New York World.) The farmer is feeding his livestock better, as indi- From Mr. Charles Y. Taylor comes a piece about cated by an increase in feed purchases. He bought, |our alliterate Presidents, with stress upon Woodrow | on the average, nearly 70 per cent. more feed in|Wilson, Calvin Coolidge, and Herbert Hoover. It 1924 than in 1909, He is learning not only better 15 Possible that Mr. Wilson dropped the Thomas to feed his land and his livestock, but also to select [{OF alliterative purposes, and Mr. Coolidge, if he was christened and plant better seed, and to breed and feed better Mr. Taylor ncte:O:‘lx;c cl:c"“;‘oll‘i‘f:g“i::f:de;:; ::’:ls animals. in Theodore Roosevelt, and the m's and I's in Mil- lard Fillmore; but it appears that success and al- literation are linked. Political reporters tell us that candidacies for 1932 are bothering the party man- agers. Offhand, we offer as possibilities, Alfred Senator Burton K. Wheeler of Montana, here-|Adler, Bruce Bliven, Fabian Franklin, Garet Gar- tofore classed as a leading dry, declares that after [fett, Herman Hagedorn, Joseph Jastrow, Karl Kitch- ten years of trial it must be admitted that Pro-|¢™ Ludwig Lewisohn, Marilyn Miller, Paul Palnier, hibition is a failure. In explaining his resumuon.ki‘]’g“§;al‘l‘_“393"l-‘ Simeon Strunsky, Titanic Thompson, providing for an inyestigation of Prohibition en- s forcement and results, Senator Wheeler, among other things, said: I have in the past voted for Prohibition laws because I felt if we had Prohibition and it was erfforced, it would confer great benefits upon the great mass of people. But I must confess after ten years of Pro- hibition there has been for some reason or other a complete breakdown of the law en- forcement machinery. You cannot go into ‘any city of any importance in this country and not find as many places where liquor is sold as before Prohibition. — Alliteration and Success. MBI DRY SENATOR TURNS AGAINST PROHIBITION. Senator Brookhart said that he was confident that the writer of the letter from the Century | Club is either a member of the club or somebody ‘lclse Wwho has been there on many occasions. We | are willing to hazard an even shrewder guess. He is somebody whose proposer was asked to withdraw his name from the list of applications for member- ship—(New York World.) —_— Experiments on sprinters conducted by the Pharmacological Institute of Hamburg University have shown that caffeine helps the runner if taken two or three minutes before a race, SAVE /rTHEM 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 dellars each week will mean a lot in ten years. It will pay for a college education for them. And then you’'ll be proud. |fi|!lllllllllllllllll|l T Coffee would seem to be the ideal brakf: b T S Ore] x . “MONEY” LOST IN MILK BOTTLES. |for those who have trains fo catch. - (London DON'T NEGLECT THEIR FUTURE. It Punch.) Do you use milk bottles for jam, kerosene, paint, — ¥ g other household articles? Perhaps you use With a Quaker in the White House, another oc- for flower vases, or in numerous other ways.|cupying Pennsylvania's junior seat in the Senate they too dirty, probably they are thrown|and a third wearing a Major General's insignia e pic ::: ashes “yu:‘h in the Marines at forty-eight, we feel that in due o oy 1 S e 1s far too common, says the|c0Urse the meek will indeed inherit the earth.—(De- S ) Burean of Dairy Industry, United States Depart. | Free, Press ment of Agriculture, and adds materially to the| Ope way to succeed at writing is to become consumer’s milk bill. The annual milk-bottle bill|President first.—(Buffalo Courier-Express.) ge(;))s\rv\gls on what you do at present—SAVE The B. M. Behrends Bank Oldest Bank in Alaska AN R LI e TSSO NI g T L T T 8 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 Day and Night Service TAND AT ARCADE CAFE Any Place in the City for 50 Cents Northern Lite TaXxi | 50¢ TO ANY PART OF CITY Two Buick Sedans at Your i@bTfiXi 50c TO ANY PART OF CITY Phone 199 Gastineau Hotel Service. Careful and Efficient Drivers. Phone i it S Prompt Service, Day and Night CovicH AUTO SERVICE STAND AT THE OLYMPIC E Phone 342 Day or Night 50c AnyWhere in City 11 A M to 2 P. M. ARCADE CAFE known. I and 50c Merchants’ Lunch Mabry’s Cafe Regular Dinners Short Orders HARRY MABRY - Proprietor - VICTOR Radios and Combination Radio-Phonographs RECORDS time. Peerless { Bakery “Remember the Name” The materials that go into the making of the superior loaf of bread 3 o] produced by us are of i ! the highest standard Try Our $1.00 Dinner | of values and the pur- ity of our loaf is well Lunches ! FOR GOOD Orpen 6 a.m. to 2 a.m. Cleaning and Pressing POPULAR PRICES CALL 371 Work called for and delivered The Capital Cleaners B — & h SRR N R L Our trucks go any place any A tank for Diesel Oil and a tank for crude oil save burner trouble. PHONE 149, NIGHT 5103 RELIABLE TRANSFER pr————————————lf [']‘ Fraternal Societies | oF | Gastineau Channel ! i & B. P. O. ELKS Meeting every Wed- ({ 39 nesday at 8 o'clock. Elks’ Hall, Visiting 3} < brothers welcome. WINN GODDARD, Exalted Ruler M. H. SIDES, Secretary. Co-Ordinate Bo% > .. les of Freemasom ry Scottish Rite Regular meetings & second Friday each month et 7:30 p. m. Seot- tish Rite Temple WALTER B. EEISEL, Secretary. LOYAL ORDER OF MOOSZE Juneau Lodge No. 700. Meets every Monday ’ 4 aight, at 8 o'clock. JAMES CARLSON, Dictator. W. T. VALE, Secy, P. O. Box 82¢ 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. <. EVANS L. GRUBER, Master; CHARLES E. NAGHEL, Secretary. ORDER OF EASTERN STAR Second and Fourth 4 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, 11eetings 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. Meets first and third &Mandays. 8 o'clock at Eagles’ Hall Douglas. ARNE SHUDSHIFT, W. P. GUY SMITH, Secretary. Vis- iting brothers welcome. 3 0 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; AGIES | GRIGG. Recorder. ! & |8 I THE CASH BAZAAR Open Evenings Opposite U. 8. Cable Office SHEET MUSIC JUNEAU MELODY HOUSE JUNEAU CABINET ° and DETAIL MILL- WORK CO. Front Street, next to Warner §![ 37 CABINET and {|| ©3 Gethounop. Seavien Apta. 4-3 Distin Ave., and Indian Sta. MILLWORK i| 4-5 intn Ay Calhoun. || 4-6 Seventh and Main. GENERAI‘;VO%AKRPENTER i+ 1'1;’::;&. B. P. R. garage. 148 Tw!ltthGM ‘Willoughby. 4-9 Home Grocery. GLAIS}.? l;EPLACED Prog el oy Estimates Furnished Upon Request —~———y fice. o FIRE ALARM CALLS 1-3 Thad and Franklin. 1-4 Front and Franklin. 1-5 Front, near Ferry Way. 1-8 Front, opp. Gross Apts f ———"‘I" 1-7 Front, opp. City Wharf. 1-8 Front, near Saw Mill | GARBAGE HAULING ! || 1-5 Front at A. J. Office. W. E. TARR 1 1] 2-1 willoughby at Totem Gro. r Inquire building below 2-3 Willoughby, opp. Cash Cole’s | Cable Office. i Barn. | | ({ 2-4 Front and Seward. ! it el e e Old papers at The Empire of- can advertise profitably . you decide upon special folders or circular qunid,whfiudmk‘ of paper, ink and type. t will attract attention and be read by yous prospects. « » O GET A CORONA | | For Your School Work | | J.B. Burford & Co. | | “Our door step is worn by ! | satistled customers” o JUNEAU TRANSFER | COMPANY {I"OVIRG \ VA;N ’ Moves, Packs and" Stores ; Freight and Baggage Prompt Delivery of ALL KINDS OF COAL ELEVATOR SERVICE 8. ZYNDA, Prop. BURFORD’S CORNER TAXI SERVICE PHONE 314 Pign" Whistle Candy — e Old papers for sale at The e d Pl