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Daily Alaska Empire ;(ENV"W,A TROY - - - EDITOR AND MANAGER iblished APIRE PRI ets, Jun, Sunday by the Second and Main evening exc COMPANY at nd Cla SUBSCRIPTION RATES. Delivered by carrier in Juneau, Douglas, Thane for $1.25 per month, il, ¥ 1 he following rates iths, in advance, cribers will co notify the Business Office ire f will promptly f any f or irregularity in the delivery of their papers for Editorial and Business Offices, Telephone 374, MEMBER break-down in Prohibition enforcement, but been a gratifying and tremendous success from standpoint Now the question is: what doe ator Sheppard call a “success?” A recent visit to a | town of about 50,000 in the Senator's State of Texa found not { them less than 150 wide-open saloons paying fees. Perhaps that tremendous success. It was distillers, brewers and wine: none of license might be called a uccess | bootles | Treadwell and sers ker encouraging or 10 are outbursts less destructive d the unemployed it for other cause than that they are nitwits. The unemployment cannot be improved by destroying or dis- industry and business. It can only be opinion and more in Yhe tions name of are doi either some | pretended ' or | situation couraging 1ggravated ASSOCIATED PRESS. The Associated is exclusiyely entitled to the use for republication all news dispatches credited to it or not oterwise credited in this paper and also the local news Pblished hereir The G. O. P. ought to be careful about fighting too hard to hold those half dozen Southern Statc | She might lose the North by it. ALASKA CIRCULATION GUARANTEED TO BE LARGER THAN THAT OF ANY OTHER PUBLICATION. Monument for (New York World.) John James Audubon, the naturalist whose cov- eted title was “The American Woodsman,” was born in Louisiana and spent the last years of his busy. {useful life in New York City. But some of his formative years were passed in Kentucky; and if a |bill introduced for that purpose in Congress shall |become law, it is in Henderson in that State that |a national memorial costing $100,000 will be reared It was in Henderson that Audubon built his little log cabin and the mill he was so eager to leave for |exploratory work. There he had his general store | and there he built the second steamboat in Ken- | THE FAILURES OF SUCCESSFUI, tucky, a small engine and paddle wheels fitted to a LIVING. keel boat, to bring in the stones for the foundation |of his mill. There three of his four children were A5 2 ST 2 con |born and the two girls died. And ther ts Ed Howe, who earned fame as editor imud~ o PR e R el '“},,fif}f [l)?d(‘ fortune as proprietor of the Atcheson Globe, re- | 5oV completed for the work he was afterward cently said in Ed Howe's Monthly: |to engrave in England There are so many things I wish to do; | Audubon’s is the great name about Henderson so few I am able to do. And the selections |1t is borne by a church, a school, a street, When I make to work at are not very satisfactory :hls ninety-nine-year lease on river-front property And that suggests that few people ever accom- expired the city dedicated the site to his memory plish big things they have wanted to do. Ed Howe as Audubon Park Mill. It is there on a high bluff got fame, not through doing the big work that |Overlooking the river and the town that a memorial he always viewed in the offing and often k;ddnd;““n‘:"d‘;‘;fi:fl'l’:)\:st'u;n 1s trgmposeq to house an increas- himself into thinking he was about to begin, but by [0 "% O OI] o x:]’:‘,:‘ L’:fi; ;'“cg;lrl:;rp;mbs and other | doing the little things that were pressing for atten- |)overc everywhere. ear to naluxu; tion at the moment. He dreamed great stuff but | he worked from day to day as a daily newspaper- | man, commenting upon the daily doings about his | town and on the National and world news of the | (Fall River Herald-News.) time. i\ Connecticut is trying out a new plan to curb And, after all, the real heroes of the world are reckless motorists which will be watched with in- the Ed Howes. They are not the men who win | terest the country over. spotlight by some brilliant plece of work or some Massachusetts was the pioneer in compulsory au- | fortuitous circumstance but by doing painstakingly tomobile Insurance. Connecticut is seeking the same | B s, ek Thiy dn nct ah win e enq, bul.along. different lines. While the prime pur- ; el ’ % pose here was to make every driver financially re- | as Ed Howe did, but they earn the right to it. And [ sponsible for any injury he might inflict by forcing | probably none of these heroes who conscientiously { him to carry personal-llability insurance, it was be- do their duty throughout the routine of a long life | lieved also that the plan would help reduce the ever approach the end without feeling as Cecil | number of accidents. It has not been a conspicuous Rhodes did when he, on his deathbed, said: “So |SUCcess in the latter regard. | Bch 5 so s doks Connecticut is going about it differently. There tundef a new act of the Legislature, motorists, for | Insurance purposes, will be graded in three c ses. | | Those who have a clear record will pay the lowe premiums, those who have had only minor lapses will pay a slightly higher rate, and those guilty of ‘mure serious offenses will be charged an ex emely | high amount, which will be almost prohibitive, r The plan appears logical as it has been outlined. | How effective it will be is problematical. The chief difficulty, as we sce it, will be to grade the motor-1 ists into their proper classes. Those charged with | tkrgt duty will have no easy task, and ohviuusly‘ serious abuses will be possible, S R U A Hopeless Ideal? Audubon. — Connecticut’s Experiment. CIGARETTE BOOM CONTINUE Cigarette production continued its upward trend during January and reached a total of 10,208,231,- 000 or 47,969,000 more than for January 1929. Mod- ern methods of manufacturing to remove harmful irritants and impurities found in cigarettes manu- factured in the old-fashioned way are largely re- sponsible for this increase in the use of cigarettes in the United States, say manufacturers. Women smokers too are reaching more frequently for cigar- ettes. Total production of cigarettes in the United States last year was a little more than 119,000,000, 000 or almost 1,000 per capita. This increasing use of cigarettes is not only giv- ing more employment in the factories and more money to the farmers, but it is a golden harvest for the Federal Government. Cigarette taxes are second only to income taxes as a source of National revenue. (Seattle Post-Intelligencer.) A young minister, twenty-five yeares of age, after one year of preaching, writes anonymously in Scribner’s Magazine, to say that he is tired of raising funds for bowling alleys in church basements and trying to transform religion into a reform or- ganization. The ballyhoo of evangelists, he says, gives him “a pain in the neck” He contends that the Protestant Church is on a rampage of reform, teaching a moral code instead of religion, “If there was anything Christ taught,” says this young man, “it was folly of trying to ram Christianity down a man's throat or legislate it down or club it down. The church was not founded to set up anti- societies, but to implant in man’s heart a love for right. PROFIT IN GROWING TIMBER. An example of profits that can be derived from growing timber on abandoned farm land was re- cently reported to the Forest Service of the United States Department of Agriculture. Earl Keene, a farmer near Golden Hill, Md., cut 62 cords of wood last year from an area of less than 2 acres which Was under cultivation in 1898. Since 1898 several cords of wood has been removed in thinnings. DEPENDS | Investigator who spent five months investigating | says he discovers children prefer movies to school | books. Ain't investigators wonderful?—(Macon, Ga., Telegraph.) WHAT 1 JCCES: S ‘REGARI)E D AS Scientists say there is no such thing as pure air, but Lhe_re hardly will be a boycott against’ the kind we have.—(Cincinnati Engquirer.) Senator Sheppard of Texas, who divides the honor [if that is what it is] with Senator Jones of Washington of being the driest dry Senator, de- clared in the Senatc: “not only has there been no RADFORD TELLS OF MAPPING IN AR IN ALASKA Commander of Navy Map- pérs Writes Fine Arti- cles for Magazine The land of the free and the home of the brew. —(Florida Times-Union.) Aircraft Corporation. Several are |very striking, one showing three {planes of the expedition in forma- ‘nun passing over Twin Glacier Lake jon lower Taku River, is notable. Photographs of mountain scenery, fishing resorts, with fishermen en- Jjoying the sport among whom are Gov. Parks, Commissioner of Fish- |eries O'Malley, and members of the | expedition, several towns including |Juneau, make up the list of illustra- tions. | Referring to this city, Comman- |der Radford wrote: “Juneau, the {Capital of the Territory, is a thriv- |ing city located at the foot of “Three months at 11,000 feet|sheer mountains on the shores of above Alaska” is the title of an in- |Gastineau Channel For sheer teresting, human-interest, article by beauty it excels anything in Alaska, Lieut. Commander A. W. Rradford, except, perhaps Sitka." U. S. N, appearing in the De-| ————— cember number of the Aeronautic MARGNITA SAILS FOR SITKA Quick MosT folks, when they decide to have a piece of Review. The author, commander i printingdonewnntlt atonce of the Navy-Alaska Aerial Expedi-| The Margnita, Capt. Severin Wi ell 'ppcdm . tion which mapped thousands of |Swanson, left last night for her e, g square miles of Southeast Alaska |weekly trip to Sitka and wayports. prompt service on your work summer, is well remembered |Mrs. Blankenburg, bound for Tena- ) hh:e. {keen, and H. B. Carbray, on his way Furthermore, “@ e look The article covers il a non-tech- [to Sitka, were the only departing like a burry up job, since our nieal style not only the expedition’s |passengers. work in Alaska, but also, the events | —-.‘.r leading up to the expedition, the EXPLORE 'S USES WASHINGTON Establishing flight north from San Diego and its return trip. It is well written |further uses for tin to stimulate and very readable. the industry’s output is the pur- Many photographs, most of them |pose of a plan of research to be aerial, illustrate the article which conducted this year by American has been reprinted in full and is|manufacturers in cooperation with being distributed by the Keystone British industry. ability to handle rush work enables us to give it the same careful attention that is given less hurried work. : i That's Us e Helene W. L. Albrecht ! PHYSIOTHERAPY Massage, Electricity, Infra Red Rev, Medical Gymnastics. 41u Goldstein Buildine, Phone Office, 216 for 301-303 Goldstein Bldg. PHONE 56 Hours 9 a. m. to § p. m. _— 3 Dr. Charles P. Jenne DENTIST Rooms 8 and 9 Valentine 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 Service Carlson’s Taxi and Ambulance Building Telephone 176 f Dr. A, W. Stewart DENTIST Hours 9 a. m. to 6 p. m. SEWARD BUILDING Office Phone 569, Res. Phone 276 RS AR P Associated Press Phott = - The Right Rev. Sheldon Munsol E H Griswold, elected suffragan bisho| Dr.¢ll. Vance of the Episcopal diocese of Chicag( to succeed the late Bishop Charla P. Anderson, bt T Romance Shattered Osteopath—201 Goldstein Bldg. | | | Hours: 10 to 12; 1 to 5; Tto § | or by appointmeat Licensed Osteopathic Physician Phone: Office 1671. TResidence, MacKinnon Apts. — e - Dr. Geo. L. Barton CHIROPRACTOR Hellenthal Building OFFICE SERVICE ONLY Hours: 10 a. m. to 12 noon 2p m tob5p m 6p m to8p m. By Appointment PHONE 259 Robert gimpson Opt. D. Graduate RBos Angeles Col- lege of Optometry and | Opthalmology | Glasses Fitted, Lenses Grouna P DR. R. E. SOUTHWELL Optometrist-Optician Eyes Examined—Glasses Fitted | Room .16, Valentine Bldg. | 10:00 to 6:00. Evenings by Appointment. Phone 484 Associated Press Photo Victor Boisserie of white parent- age and Miss Lee Tai, Chinese, of San Francisco were stopped by Seattle officials as they started for British Columbia en route to China to be married. Boisserie was re- turned to California on charges of non.support preferred by a former wife. — et NOTICE IPPERS { The “MARGNITA” will not ac- cept freight after 1:30 p. m. on sailing date. —adv. JOHN B. MARSHALL ATTORNEY-AT-LAW 420 Goldstein Building PHONE 483 | a I Junean Public Library Free Reading Room Phone [ SUSSUST ST Prompt Service, Day and Night CovicH AUTO SERVICE Graham’s Taxi Phone 565 STAND AT ARCADE CAFE Day and Night Service Any Place in the City for 50 Cents B B i R Northern Lite § 199 TaXi S0c TO ANY PART OF CITY Phone 199 Gastineau Hote) TAX] S50¢C TO Y PART OF CITY wo Buick Sedans at Your = Fraternal Societies | or i Gastineau Channel | » B. F. 0. ELKS Meeting every Wed- ({ W nesday at 8 o'clock. Elks' Hall. Visiting brothers welcome. WINN GUDDARD, Exalted Ruler M. H. SIDES, Secretary. Co-Ordinate Bod ies of Freemason ry Scottish Rite second Friday each month =t 7:30 p. m. Scot- tish Rite Temple WALTER B. EEISEL, Secretary. IOYAL ORDER OF MOOSZ Juneau Lodge No. 700. Meets every Monday aight, at 8 o'clock. JAMES CARLSON, Dictat W. T: VALE, Secy, P. O. Box 02 MOUNT JUNEAU LODGE NO. 14} Second and fourth Mon- day of each month in Scottish Rite Temple beginning at 7:30 p. m. EVANS L. GRUBER, Master; CHARLES E. NAGHEL, 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, 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 AZRIE 117 F. O. E. &Mefla first and third Service. Careful and Efficient Drivers. STAND AT THE OLYMPIC Phone 342 Day or Night 50c AnyWhere in City D e The materiais that go into the making of the superior loaf of bread City Hall, Second Floor Main Street and Fourth Reading Room Open From 8 a m. to 10 p. m. WADE and BUTCHER TRIPLE WEAR Circulation Room Open from 1 to 5:30 p. m.—7:00 to 8:30 | Try Our $1.00 Dinner | —_— produced by us are of the highest standard of values and the pur- ity of our loaf is well known. and 50c Merchants’ Lunch 11 A M. to 2 P. M. ARCADE CAFE RAZOR BLADES ~ [fW@ b cumt Maiguine Books, Etc. for SAFETY RAZORS ey FREE TO ALL L e e ) | | If you want superior @ Phone 2 We Deliver woek call The Nyal serviee Drug store 4 | CAPITAL LAUNDRY Phone 355 Peerless Bakery “Remember the Name” Mabry’s Cafe Regular Dinners Short Orders Lunches FOR GOOD Oren 6 a.m. to 2 a.m. Cleaning and Pressing POPULAR PRICES CALL 371 Work called for and delivered HARRY MABRY The Capital Cleaners Proprietor L Mondays, 8 o'clock at Eagles’ Hall Douglas. ARNE SHUDSHIFT, W. P. GUY SMITH, Secretary. Vis- iting brothers welcome - Y‘ 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; AGIIES | | GRIGG. Recorder. | o L) ———— THE CASH BAZAAR Open Evenings Opposite U. S. Cable Office can advertise profitably... Thefirststeptoward success in advertising is the choice of the proper medium. If you decide upon special g £ let us aid you in the choice of paper, ink and type. The result will be a finished uct that will attract r::nim and be e il GET A CORONA | ) 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 L T A T T T T T T T The B. M. Behrends Bank Oldest Bank in Alaska LU T TR TR AT T T 3 TR T R L LTV E RO LA, e GARBAGE HAULING Estimates Furnished Upon od Our 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 VICTOR Radios and Combination Radio-Phonographs RECORDS e ] | J. B. Burford & Co. “Our door swp is worn by satisfied customers” | For Your School Work | 1 | | JUNEAU TRANSFER SHEET MUSIC JUNEAU MELODY FIRE ALARM CALLS 1-3 Thrd and Franklin. 1-4 Front and Franklin. 1-5 Front, near Ferry Way. 1-6 Front, opp. Gross Apts 1-7 Front, opp. City Wharf, 1-8 Front, near Saw Mill. \ | 1-9 Front at A. J. Office. . | W. E. TARR 2-1 Willoughby at Totem Gro. | Inquire building below ’ 2-3 Willoughby, opp. Cash Cole’s or | Cable Office. i| Bam. | | {] 2-4 Front and Seward. —— -~— —=2|[ 2-5 Front and Main, - Sepiegt 2-6 Second and Main. 2-7 Fifth and Seward. 2-9 Fire Hall, 3-2 Gastineau and Rawn Way. 3-4 Second and Gold. JUNEAU CABINET and DETAIL MILL- 3-5 Fourth and Hara's, them. Just a few dollarslteacl;l week will WORK CO. 3-6 Fifth and Gold. mean a lot in ten years. will pay for a xt to Wi 3-7 Fifth and East. college education for them. And then you'll o, sm Shop i || 3-8 Seventh and Gold. be Droud. 41 Ninth, ek of power house. DON'T NEGLECT THEIR FUTURE. It CABINET and :-: g;h;u:.wzinfle"&fl g vh 4 e | o ve., El\vegf‘rv\«!ls on what youido at present—SAVE MILLWORK o e e mm | GENERAL CARPENTER/ || 4-6 Seventh and Main. WORK 4-7 Twelfth, B. P. R. garage. 4-8 Twelfth and Willoughby. 4-9 Home Grocery. 5-1 Seater Tract. GLASS REPLACED IN AUTOS COMPANY Moves, Packs and Stores Freight and Baggage Prompt Delivery of ALL KINDS OF COAL PHONE 48 HOTEL ZYNDA ELEVATOR SERVICE 8. ZYNDA, Prop. R ke BURFORD’S CORNER TAXI SERVICE PHONE 314 I Pign’ Whistle Candy Request cooes fice. Old papers at The Empire of- ettt Old papers for sale at The * | Emplire. PRI RECEAE T