The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, May 5, 1930, Page 4

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) e T A o N . e R S e v is very similar to Russian roads. He : lc'.——————————T, o o a to reconstruct the Russian system along the ‘ PROFESSIONAL PR 1 and the standards of American railroad prac- £ - ‘IZTOS FOR I{IRE ] Fmterna(l)'Socteues ,' Budd started his ¢ 2 rodman in T T; ) Gastineau Channel | I'| Helene W. L. Albrecht A y shed every evening except Sunda by _ the | . ¥y o Sreat ) he: i ¥ e i = b2 B h o CaInE ST Lt Hasond and -Main | oy of the Great Northern in 1899. Three ‘ PHYSIOTHERAPY 1 Bl 2 . Y later he joined the engineering staff of the R0C Island System and during the next four promoted to roadmaster and division , | Massage, Electricity, Infra Red )| Re¢v, Medical Gymnastics. 410 Goldstein Building L e Carlson’s Taxi 5 RS EARRS S PR o ANYWHERE IN THE CITY FOR 50 CENTS | :'g 301-303 Goldstein Bldg. | Careful, Efficient Drivers—Call Us At Any Hour— | B. P. 0. ELKS Meeting every Wed- ({” Y nesday at 8 o'clock. Elks’ Hall. Visiting brothers welcome. Entered in the P matter. | e T T DI [P SUBSCRIPTION RATES. i g In 1906 he went to Pa na with John Delivered by carrier in Juneau, Douglas, Treadwell and ens, chief engineer of the Canal. There he Ih o N i sdtea |rebuilt the Panama Railroad, double and triple six months, In advance, | iracking it. He remained in the Canal Zone until { they will promptly | 1909 d fallure or irregularlty | Next he went to the Spokane, Portland and tle Railway with Mr. Stevens. In 1919 he suc- R. B. MARTIN, Exalted Ruler. M. H. SIDES, Secretary. T ———m Co-Ordinate Bod les of Freemason ' ry Scottish Rite siness Office of any 1 v of their Telephone for oria PHONE 56 | DAY AND NIGHT—Stand at Alaskan Hotel Hours 9 a. m. to § p. m. | MEMBER OF ASSOCIAT! | Louis J. Hill as President of the Great ¥ - . B Phones II and Single O fine The Associated s exclusiv n. In his sclection by the Soviet and his { g e Regular meel 90t republl Il news dispatche 2 v e g T ;.lflnr' r:d' c v a"in this ;vu‘n; and also the | ance, the Russians get one of America's fore- T Dr. Charl P ? = . o paladidl ! focal news published berein. st rail engineers and executives. His task in ¢ N “::;:]s:,s.r' Jenne Carlson’s Taxi and Ambulance Service E=) ;:??c: f‘::';n:.' ALASKA CIR uLAZv:j\hr"n.omm R R ia is a gigantic one, but given authority and i Rooms 8 and 9 Valentine | e — tish Rite Templa bl il L ; | func it should not tax his genius greatly to Building | WALTER B. EEISEL, Secretary. produce for that nation a modern and in every Telephone 176 efficient s LOYAL ORDER Graham’s Taxi | & 'm of railroads. J Our idea of a good w S e — Juneau Lodge No. 700, | y not to s d | Q e . wmmer ‘vatition 18 4o adosmpans ‘HIEAEHIREG el '] Dr. A. W. Stewart Meets every Monday 1m 9 £ accompany Sir Hubert Wil- i DENTIST P’ 565 night, at 8 o’clock. 3 kins on his submarine trip across the polar re- Hours 9 8. m. 0 6 p. m. i J "one JII\MES OARIEbN Dictator. glons of the Arctic Ocean. . G 4 ' SEWARD BUILDING 2 W. T. VALE, Secy, P. O. . BT b s Paone ER B R STAND AT ARCADE CAFE S e T “Hip slapping” being barred by the Customs Phone 276 { i MOUNT JUNEAU LODGE NO. 147 vice, larger hip pockets in men's trousers are T _:: Day and Night Service Second and fourth Mon- |due to become fashionable for travelers between Bl T e day of each month in |American and foreign ports. ‘ Dr. H, Vafies Any Place in the City for 50 Cents Scottish Fite Templaw® ¥ Assoclated Press Photo | | o iy ' ! beginning at 7:30 p. m ! [ | Osteopath—201 Goldstein Bldg. EVANS L. GRUBER, p The Oregon Cenienniai. Tony Is just a pet cat but he | Hours: 10 to 12; 1 to 5; 7 to § saved life of his chum, Peggy, fox Master; CHARLES E. NAGHEL, terrier, and was awarded a medal Secretary. or by appointment : ot NG | (New York World.) efomia ! | | Licensed Osteopathic Physician 5 i e O T C'\‘\A\”I‘}lk)\l\t\\‘l{l‘i:{:“h\ll{.\l LOOKING \‘ Heralded by a serles of exercises in public %.:‘yum::&l:gm:ykme:k:';d'&fg Phone: Office 1671 I b || ORDER OF EASTERN STAR / AKU. |schools and elsewhere, the mule-drawn prairie| seized Peggy. Cat and dog are || Residence, MacKinnon Apts. || . L a X 1‘ Second and Fourth 4 : — P AT |schooners which are to retrace the route of the first| Pets of Mrs. A. B, Collier, Alameda. ——— Norther'l the 2 Tuesdays of each month, 4 A Victoria pres d\'\ln-m'h recently l--)‘m‘ g |emigrant party to use the Oregon Trail have begun s i i { at 8 ovclock, Scottish the Prince Rupert Daily Empire predicts "an Im-ithejr jong trek. The plan is that in route and i __4__._“? | Rite Temple. LILY [ s i w0 Lt 35\ RADID MERGER [Dx oo EBamon T pgxy I SO0c¢ |l s early this month. It told of many prospectors at!just 100 years behind the pioneer adventurers, So : CHIROPRACTOR | | Matron; FANNY L. ’ Prince Rupert and Stewart and other Canadian |until the snows of Dec. 26 have covered the moun- Hellenthal Building § \ TO ANY PART ‘ ROBINSON, Secretary. towns awaiting the opening of the season of navi-|tain passes there will be a constant succession- of BEING PLANNE04 OFFICE SERVICE ONLY | [ KNIG B 5 gation on the river jgreetings in town after town which have grown | || Hours: 10 a. m. to 12 noon | | OF CITY A m‘sse'g:“?:ox:m:(,s“m To be on the conservative side, the Provincial|UP 8long the way. : L ! 20 m. o8 il ] Mfeun 5ou C:il:.fllm Behinent of M e Bl T sty Before 1830 wagon caravans had dared hunger, Stockholdars of Th Rl A | | ) | 85 secon 8 ; d ~|thirst and hostile Indians as far as Santa Fe, but|>tOCKhclders o ree Blg | Gpmto8p m | \ n Monday at 7:30 p. m. to stampeders calling attention to the fact that OPer- (it was not until April 10 of that year that & ten- (. . A { By Appolnm’ent‘ | | Transient brothers urg- ating companies in the district are able to @bSorb |yagon train headed by Jedediah Smith, Dave Jece. ompanies Are to i el e | ed to attend. Councll ¢ { only a limited number of workers, and that those son of “Jackson Hole” fame and W. L. Sublette of Meet Tomorrow £l 8 & 7O ANY PART Chambers, Fifth Strees. going into the district will need to be self-sus-|St. Louis set out on the longer journey upon which R i o =1 % | g;)I;lNTI!"].RMNgLLEN. G K. . taining |they were to be followed by numerous parties of| WASHINGTON, May 5—The De- | | Robert Si T OF CITY BBl bl . Of some importance is the Department’s an.‘au al settlers m(hmc _Or;gon lsndsl for whose pos-|partment of Justice will not inter-/ 0 gt llx)npson DOUGLAS AfRIE 117 F. O. E. nouncement that the Nippising Mining Company of [Session we were then in dispute with Great Britain, |fere with the meeting of the stock- | t. i 4 L F § Ry (B Cobalt, Ont., will put an exploration party into the | dlfpli;e which such ;sctt!e,«s were to have a yoe- | holders of the Radio Corporation.|| Graduate {O, Angeles Col- Two Buick Sedans at Your B astineau Hote) %xfiggfit ;ng}m Taku field this season, and that new American M2I'S share In deciding | General Electric and Westinghouso | lege of Optometry and Service. Careful and at Eagles Hall Douglas. ARNE SHUDSHIFT, W. P. GUY SMITH, Secretary. Vis- iting brothers welcome. The Sublette party used the Santa Fe trail well|tomorrow to act on the proposed| Opthalmology into what is now Kansas, then turned upon a more | unification of radio facilities of the | Glasses Fitted, Lenses Grouna northerly course to the South Pass in Wyoming. companies ———— - and so persevered through to the garden lands The Attorney General's office de-ifl_ capital is showing an interest there. Efficient Drivers. OTHERS MAY SEE LIGHT. i St the Pacific slope. Of what hardships might be met | s it 1t & ‘} Ex-Senator Joseph S. Frelinghuysen, Republican, by the way thers have been descriptions in many [n‘”fgnxf:;ff; ng:u;alfgst:::m: zi_ Dgp:zmiuz‘z_%gx:,u ? 3 who is secking Tenomination for the United States|books; of the trail in a somewhat later period the|der to prevent action toward a. ] Eyes Examined—Glasses Fitted | THE CASH BAZAAR : Senate from New Jersey, in a recent statement an-[movie director's art has given a somewhat fanciful|merger be filed by the Department | | Room 16, Valentine Bldg. f 4 nounced his recantation as a Dry disciple and his|Put not wholly unfaithful picture in “The Covered |or justice 10:00 to 6:00. Evenings by | | Eveni conversion to the Wet cause. It had been generally | VA8on" It is well for the present generation to — e | Appointment. Phone 484 Open bz |be reminded, in the centennial celebration of the [ part played by the trail in history, of the valor| Mrs. H. S. Caulfiled, wife of the == and devotion and stark strength of the men who Governor of Missouri is weaving a expected he would make his campaign as a Dry since he was noted for his Prohibition advocacy | | Opposité U. S. Cable Office i during his {0;'11\01‘ mn;rn in the Senate. Fr311k11)'4}1,,-51 used it Ipicture of the State Capitol and Juaeau Public lerary | % however, he has repudiated that position and de- | ekl 7o the IGovArngrs HATMGN rfiie sl o ! clared his intention of making his race on a wet| Support Home Industries |rug. Free Reddlng Room G/4RB.4GE i platform. | i b B [ — — s ——— City Hall, Second Floor | T In announcing his change of viewpoint, Mr.| (Prince Rupert News.) Main Street and Fourth | Hzi lJ LING’ I ¢ Frelinghuysen calls attention to the fact that as| The Daily News has been accused of su | a \LL L mj TaY | C l’ T * i ¢ aily s has accused support- Reading Room Open From b p a member of the Senate he voted in 1917 for the|ing the monied interests because it believes in the | M. £/ FH! % D'q 8 a.'m. to lop;‘ m. i art’s Laxi LOT CLEANING * Eighteenth Amendment and two years later cast policy of supporting home industries as against for- | =5 oF JHLPIANO - ey 2 { When you think of Office at Wolland’s ok * his vote for the Volstead Act. “Ten years of ex-|eign, of supporting home merchants as against| rculation Room Open from 1} | ONE $ : : Tai i 9. o4 | # 2 X % ! ad - satisfs ailor Shop* 3 perience and study have modified my views” he mail order houses, of keeping the wheels of indus- | Learn the Modern Way 1 to 5:30 p. m.—7:00_to 8:30 PH ?gi‘,‘l‘; th;:lihg?cgzfi Ch BS D i e declares now. The saloon has been eradicated from |{rY running instead of sending those we now have | > % . ) !:st ncm::mm’;h“m‘es' ‘ | bread. This will hap- ester barnesson national life but a greater evil has appeared in l"sltl:)x:eheb broneym:ghn]ong with the hundreds that hBVC} Ilfly Real Jazz Piano pgsolgx E':rence. | s " aft r 'ou'\ll)e PHONE 66 place. “I have therefore concluded that the policy |57 beore. “He north s too full of the skeletons | in 3 Month s ! Lot A DAIRY FERTILIZER ; of Prohibition must be modified” If clected, he|°f UnWise Investments or unsupported industries, A S FREE TO ALL | tasted the first slice. By Load or Sack | | declared, “I will support all reasonable measures Let us try to forget this petty policy of pulling It’s good through . i . rag vz, f [down and try to build up. There are over a dozen| QUL Tepresentative in Juneau i for enforcement” as long as the Dry Law remains meal and oil plants using the herring in Alaska, Until May 15. Call 1534 for ?fihfi: in force, but he will endeavor to aid repeal of the|yet we are told this north B. C. coast will not sup- | FREE DEMONSTRATION 3 Eighteenth Amendment, or substitute for Prohibi- |port one. Possibly a dozen is too many, but shall| tion some form of Government control of alcoholic |We let the Alaskans have everything and not sup- + beverages. par_t one on this Canadian coast? We have very Whether or not it is Mr. Frelinghuysen's per- i;rs‘"“e"“{”;m“(’“ that the herring run this year 4 sonal experience and study of Prohibition and its a very large one and that the taking of 5000 g tons from it could hardly be noticed. effects, or his study of the Wet sentiment of New Usually our sympathies are with the fishermen and through, loaf after loaf. So’s our pastry. Peerless Bakery South Front Street COLOR ., ° PRINTING 3 '| If you want superior work call SEpepmeanrerrsaneerones CAPITAL LAUNDRY | |} P70 Servie, Dey and Nighs W. P. Johnson Phone 355 Sl oo Srmnes Phone 342 Day or Night Front Street 3 Jersey as revealed in the Literary Digest and other byt Jike othe: " FRIGIDAIRE = “Remember the Name” current polls that led to his change of conviction|They sre a speindid 10t of peaple. na we i || DELCO LIGHT PRODUCTS /! 50c AnyWhere in City 7 increases the pullind : is of no moment. What' is of significance is that them very much but we think they are wrong in MAYTAG WASHING HARRIS Hardware Sttt | power of any printing conditions are such that his conversion was the only |this and we ll:Iswet the courage of our opinion. It MACHINES Company 1 ————=|= = | Job.Weare equippedtohan 1 local result. It need not be cause for astonishment|iS as reasonable to say we must not make meal % ?————-—fl i M if there are many other such switches between|[TOM herring as to say we must not make pulp RANHR . RADIOG Now located next Try Our $1.00 Dilmel‘l »FORQoID 3 || dlecolorprintingquickly ‘ now and next November. More and more it is|TOM timber, just because timber is used more Phone 1 CONNORS and 50c Merchants’ Lunch | l Cleanlng and Pressmgl and satisfactorily ¢ becoming evident that the sentiment of a great 1rupxdly there thaniiyisny jother kind of mill 11 A M to 2 P. M. CALL 371 I Juneau ] tion of the people is f b from the GARAGE ‘ARCA 3 section o he people i or a change from e ! & AR DE CAFE | et s s —_——— | The Capital Cleaners A | g—— o GET A CORONA | | l 1 | | | 3 g | present system of Prohibition and toward some"_ Regulating the Styles. | kind of recognition of the right of Americans to | the use of alcoholic liquor as beverage if they desire | | to do so. (New York World.) 1t is a somewhat naive view of things, of course, which is indicated by the resolution passed the other day by the Women's Club of Forest Hills calling FOREST SIGNS MUTILATED BY on the Federation of Women's Clubs to devise a THOUGHTLESS PUBLIC. |method whereby a few women of taste and judg- —_— |ment may consult with the “fashion trust” as to Because so many persons see the road and trail | the styles that women will wear. For there is no 2 and boundary signs on the National Forests as handy |such fashion trust as this resolution posits; all that o targets for a display of markmanship, as suitable exists is a group of designers offering wares that i places for carving their initials, or as objects for|they hope women will buy. Furthermore, even if some other form of mutilation, the Forest Service,|there was a such a trust, it is hard to see how a i resenting women customers United States Department of Agriculture, is put to|Censorship board, rep . o @ " could exercise much control over it. All that such added expense in maintaining its signs and mark- a board could do, in the nature of things, would | ers on the National Forests for the benefit of thelpe to pccept this model and reject that; so long public. as the creative function was exercised by the trust A sign survey just completed on the National|it could still dictate what would be worn. | Forests of the Eastern District showed as high as Nevertheless, this is not the first complaint 89 per cent. of the signs mutilated on one forest|{of its sort to be volced. Another, identical with two years after they had been erected. For 13 Na-|it, was made in New York some time ago; such || N f |things show the way the wind is blowing. The tional Forests in the district, the percentage of signs | = | t wholly satisfied wit! found mutilated at the end of the second year|'Tuth is that women are nol f-ppusiied with y the styles that have been offered them recently BNARed 20 per oent, for ToRd (signs, Al per oant,| ;4 particularly since the long skirt has been again for trail signs, 50 per cent for gibbet’ boundary|placed on sale. Many of them have refused to | signs, and 18 per cent. for other signs. wear it. So that one wonders whether dress de- At the end of the first year, 16 per cent. of the[signers are well advised in the trend they have road signs were mutilated, 9 per cent. of the trail|taken. In the long run, it would seem a good | signs, 47 per cent. of the gibbet boundary signs, |plan to give women clothes that they want rather and 14 per cent. of the other signs. than clothes which designers want them to want | For Your School Work JUNEAU MELODY /| time. ‘A task for Diesi 08| || J B Burford & Co. | | Durner: tzonbis | “Our door swp is worn by HOUSE I e P i | satisfled customers Special Attention Given to || ! RELIABLE TRANSFER e = PHONOGRAPH, R\ADIO i JUNEAU TRANSFER and RADIO-COMBINA- TION REPAIR WORK Keep Your Valuables SAFE In Our F ireproof { 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. 2-1 Willoughby at Totem Gro. 2-3 Willoughby, opp. Cash Cole’s Barn. 2-4 Front and Seward. 2-5 Front and Main. 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. 3-5 Fourth and Harms. 3-6 Fifth and Gold. 3-7 Fifth and East. 3-8 Seventh and Gold. 3-9 Fifth and Kennedy. 4-1 Ninth, back of power house. 4-2 Calhoun, opp. Seaview Apts. 4-3 Distin Ave., and Indian Sts. 4-5 Ninth and Calhoun, 4-6 Seventh and Main. 4-7 Twelfth, B. P. R. garage. 4-8 Twelfth and Willoughby, Building Safe Deposit boxes of various sizes may be rented by the year, or for a shorter period, at a nominal fee. | The Florence Shop | “Naivette” Croquignole Perm- ‘ anent Wave | BEAUTY SPECIALISTS | Phone 427 for Appointment | Built entirely of steel and concrete, 3 our bank building is classified as an A-1 risk by insurance companies. No com- bustible material was used in its con- struction. Our vaults are of the heav- iest and finest steel and concrete con- struetion possible. Moves, Packs and Stores Freight and Baggage Prompt Dellvery of ALL KINDS OF COAL PHONE 48 { s s JUNEAU CABINET and DETAIL MILL- WORK CO. Front Street, next to Warner Machine Shop CABINET and MILLWORK GENERAL CARPENTER " WORK B Y o If Congress were as far-sighted in other mauers‘ RALPH BUD]})‘A'I;(I)RIE)?:}JLU RUSSIAN as in considering the nationality of babies born in submarines, this might be a better governed country | Ralph Budd, President of the Great Northern —(Philadelphia Bulletin.) Railroad, has been obtained by the Soviet Gov- We may remind the Soviets, who are going to | ernment to head the rehabilitation of Russian rail|“extinguish religion” that that is the devil's ownj‘ systems. He will sail from New York on June 1,|job—and he hasn't been able to do 1t.~nBosmn‘ for Europe on his way to Moscow. ‘Transcript.) l The rebuilding of Russian railways is part of ettt The B. M. Behrends Bank S e o e ) | | H i 3 the Soviet five-year industrial program now under ?“"w;“b":fi“ge learnh:: ;l“:s l:l:lng aC.Zia‘;'ct fll!'\"é GLAISS IZEPIE)ASCED ! ;:: Hfl:;flm. BURFORD’S CORNER confront wi task ele- l I Sea xl.‘*’ . Srattng American enineers for much of the work |Phove—(Mivaukee Journal) | Oldest Bank in Alasku Estimates Furnixhad U S e e H ° Mr. Budd is believed to have been picked as adviser and song, b H Od, pon TAXI SERVI CE 4 It used to be wine, women g, but now |} R«lm od pai 7 i - because the Great Northern, as regards climate and|it’s rum, rackets and radio—(Ohlo State Journal.) i ! pers m‘m. = Phone 314 % e rceroceeneossasssd 1IC6 s R IR [ ¥ ot ).

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