The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, May 21, 1930, Page 4

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B G gl vy e THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, WEDNESDAY, MAY 21, 1930 g : | . in s centers offers a solution. And it seems F A ¥ 4 1 R £ B VD GRET § . .| French Aviatrix New | R T T e o H Daily Alaska Empire | " v en svesss | French xNew o r FESSIONAL T e v \ this connection ndurance Champion |~ """ 7 77 5 AUTOS FOR HIRE A \ urvey made by a larg dwestern manu- ¥ 3 Y A . . - EDITOR AND MANAGER A survey made by a large mi fr JOHN W. TROY | concern shows that $3,250,000,000 will be % Helene W. L. Albrecht Gastinau Channel | ; er: : except Sund by _th G § o % 9 : iAot oo ke oed : B e R T e GO lE AT "Rt geonnd” and Mair the construction of public utilities this PHYSIOTHERAPY — E i Streets, Juneau, Alaska __|vear, a goodly proportion of it in small towns. It Massage, Electricity, Infra Red | . P. ). ELK! Entered 1n the Dost Office In Juneau as Second Class|was also shown that, while the population drift to Rev, Medical Gymnastics. Meeting every W ed- w ! matter. 2 the large cities was not checked, the productive 410 Goldstein Building, , & ne.sd‘ay at 8 o'clock. ¢ B SUBSCRIPTION RATES. |capacity of the city population is not increasing : s 3 4 Phone Office, 216 I Elk:m!::ll. Visitlog ¢ Oelivered by carrier 1n Juneau. Douglas, Treadwell and ;"\, onortion to that of the inhabitants of smaller . : e e ar Son S ax l rothers welcome. i By nuall, postage paid, at the following rates: T and that in numerous instances industrial ] One year, in adys $12.00; six months, In advance, . . ———————T R. B. MARTIN, }xalted Ruler. 9 o 0 26, rship was being transferred to the rural com- z « DRS. KASER & FREEBURGER i BBt scribara. wii ’."..:13‘,»"'" L they will promptls |, P " DENTISTS ANYWHERE IN THE CITY FOR 50 CENTS M. H. SIDES, Secretary. i he €4 Offic f ny fail ) irregularity - ¢ g . e s . - B oy e napes ) "vlurs orjires ribution of electrical energy even to the 301-303 Goldsteln Bldg. | Careful, Efficient Drivers—Call Us At Any Hour— Co-Ordinate Bod | Telephone for E torfal and Business Offices, 374 DAY AND NIGHT—Stand at Alaskan Hotel ies of Freemasom est hamlet has furn red rural communties MEMBER PHONE 56 Hours 9 8. m. to § p. m. ASSOCIATE ith abundant facilities for operating industrial Ph II d S' le 0 ry Scottish Rite i Associated Press 1s exclusi f X o for Fepublication Of all news dispatches credited to The marked improvement of freight trans- = ones an lng Re-gular meeting oy not "'“‘{‘,”)'_.afid’ ¢d in this paper and also the |~ ..iion as the result of better highways, and an ""_‘__—I—T mn;nd Frtl:.{ tocal news publish erein. OTLaul . s s, » o 9 : ° eac! mon [ ) e neULATION GUARANTEES o 5r oz |fcceleration of railroad traffic have been other Dr. (‘h::)rzg_quf_;. Jenne Carlson’s Taxi and Ambulance Service gty ! THAN THAT @F ANY OTHER PUBLICATION reasons for the small town's forward march in Rooms 8 and 9 Valentine | — — — gy tish Rite Templs A v N e e ndustrial importance. Buflding | N g WALTER B. EEISEL, Secretary. | ‘Telephone 176 | Many advantages are to be had by the wage earner, as well as to industry itself, in this de- |centralization of industrial operations. Lower rents, . LOYAL ORDER 1 Graham’s Taxi @m ] \ connection Mr. Colby recalled a remark made by dirigible balloons. His greatest achievement, how- & || Two Buick Sedans at Your Gastineau Hotel E DOUGLAS AsRIE 117 F. O. E. Meets first and thirg &Mondnys. 8 ocluck ’ at Eagles Hall | 6p.m to8p m P ER 5 f cheaper foods, escape from city co ion, all offer X 7 Meets every Monday b i |inducements to small town living. Possibly this will Dr. Jfiz&risga e Phore 565 night, at 8 o'clock. | |be the eventual salvation of the rural town, the U Rooms 5-6 Trianglak HInG ! £ TOM SHEARER, Dictator [village that in the past decade receded perceptibly {"Office hours, 9 am., to 5 pm. | . " W. T. VALE, Secy., P. O. Box 826 {trom its long-held place in national life Evenings by appoinment i STAND AT ARCADE CAFL g g g e | A Phone 321 x | VlOUNT JUNEAU LODGE NO. M') L i | 0 | e . | Secretary Mellon, whose Department is about to : s Day and Night Service :’”"“‘}““dg’“"‘h t‘:""" llose jurisdiction over the Prohibition Unit, prob- e - sard " . i Secitish Rith (Tetibie | ably faces the loss with the same emotion that a " Dr. A. W. Stewart A“y Place in the C“y for 50 Cents beginning at 7:30 p. m. g l(undemned man greets an executive pardon. " DENTIST ‘L__ & EVANS L. GRUBER | i T RS Hours 9 a. m. to 6 p. m, Master, CHARLES E. NAGHEL & VERDICT IS FOR MANKIND. | Mussolini says he never has met a practical SEWARD BUILDII;IG ! Secretary. i 5 S |woman. It's a safe bet that he hasn't made the | Office Phone 469, Res. f In an address delivered recently before the Mi |acquaintance of Mrs. Ruth Hanna McCormick. Phone 276 | e soel:;!fi“ar?di‘l‘l:)‘usri‘:::n STAR i souri Historical Society, Bainbridge Colby, last Sec- | s . | a X l Tuesags of each okt 4 !‘ retary of State in the Wilson Administration, as a | Lionel M. Woolson. e — Ort wern ',te at 8 o'clock, Scottish i i witness of events and colleague of President le.son; S k“w A Dr. H. Vance l — Rite Temple, LILY ‘Qi gave an intimate picture of the closing scenes ox‘} A h:"l o : grf' D W [ Osteopath—201 Goldstatn Bidg. ~ BURFORD, Worthy ¢ the Administration and the last days of Mr. Wil-| o/ ERERIQT ety ot Twing 3o “‘elr WILED | yrile. Lena Bernstein, French air ! Hours: 10 t0 12; 1 t0 5; 7 to ® T/IXI Matron; FANNY L. ] Sigen 3 Bresadht. o one whoss | 1Eals probably recognize Lionel M. Woolson, who Haa! Kool ‘the 7 or by appointment i ROBINSON, Secretary. § son’s life. He depicted the Pres |was killed Wednesday near Attica, N. Y. as one woman, has broken the women’ Licensed Osteopathic Physiclan | TO ANY PART ¥ impaired physical health had not affected in ”“’!or the greatest men in the field. He was, to| endurance record by remaining h " Phone: Office 1671, 1 KNIGHTS OF COLUMBUS slightest his mental processes. He directed govern- 'pegin with, an excellent flyer, having helped set| the air more than 30 hours. Sh' Residence, MacKinnon Agts. OF CITY Seghers Counc_i No. 1760 mental activities with undiminished forcefulness and |a number of records, although as a rule he seems| thus wrests the championship fron sy ~— R Rl Meetings second and last unusual clearness of mental vision. He was free to have gone along merely to tend the motor| Miss Elinor Smith, of New York | ) Monday at 7:30 p. m. g e : e — ‘ § from rancor toward his enemies and bore his own |cquipment and to have allowed others to take| who remained in the air 26 hou ! Dr. Geo. L. B i OI le Transient brothers urg- H personal afflications without complaint. {most of the credit in the headlines. But it was| 21 minutes and 82 seconds & | r. Geo. L. bartomn | ed to attend. Counctl - i He had no criticism for those who destroyed & @ designer of engines that he attained his main| Reosevelt Field in April, 1980. || CHIROPRACTOR TO ANY PART ] Chambers, Fifth Street. 15 5 |usefulness. As chief aeronautical engineer for the \ 1 JOHN F. MULLEN, G K. i; his dream of the United States as a vital factor in —— e | Hellenthal Building fs 18 tsation & it heaeTil Hebibrs. |Packard Motor Company he built thousands of dif- | OFFICE SERVICE ONLY F CITY H. J. TURNER, Secretary. ’f a world organization for promoting p ferent engines, some of them for speed planes,| South Carolina led the nation in | . o oo "0 0f 19" ooy OF C | 12 tion of disputes and averting war by eliminating cono of them for the combat planes of the Navy,|active spindle hours during March, B o to & v i | 8 causes of armed strife between nations. In this|some of them for ordinary planes, some of them for |with a total of 1,779,909,677. i S b ! Mr. Wilsord after he left the White House, as fol- lever, came only a short time ago, when he suc-|%* —_—— | . i s R B; Appoint E 4 ! | lows: jcecded in bullding a Diesel engine for airplanes.| | 5 ! Y Bervee. Cargil and ‘ Douglas. ARNE SHUDSHIFT, W. | i The poison of untruth has gone so deep (When less than & year ago he flew a plane| | Try Our $1.00 Dinner | | Efficient Drivers. PRI P. GUY SMITH, Secretary. Vis- into the wells of popular thinking, that it equipped with this engine from Detroit to Langley | | and 50c Merchants’ Lunch | | iting brothers welcome. i will be thirty years, at least, before a ra- |Field Va, burning oil fuel that cost only $468 | 1MWA Mto2P. M [ f FIRE ALARM CALLS TR i i tional public opinion as to the true founda- [for the trip, aviation engincers knew that their| | ApCADD CAFE [ Robert Simpson e e L S S ¢ tions of our security and as to our national industry was in a fair way to being revolutionized. | | q‘ Opt. D. 1-3 Thad and Frankln. TIE CASH BAZAAR dirty is. restofed. Whether it will be remains to be seen, but if it is,| & . RO i i {4 Pront and Pranklin: 1 s . £ And again, Mr. Colby recalled Mr. Wilson speak- it is extremely hkel_y that the revolution wxl? S])lj(!.‘HJ | €3 n‘ i lege of Optometry and '| 1-5 Front, near Ferry Way. g Ik ing before the New York Press Club as saying *I{!0 the automobile industry too. The advantages of (| The Florence Shop | ! Opthalmology | 1-6 Front, opp. Gross Apts Open Evenings f 5 S Veriint iot TRnkinas |an engine that burns cheap fuel and that requires “Naivette” Croquignole Perm- 1-7 Front, opp. City Whart. am playing for the . | ) | Glasses Fitted, Lenses Grouna | = |in addition no ignition system whatever are ob- | snt Wavi 1 & || 1-8 Front, near Saw Mill bl < The rancorous resentment displayed toward Presi- | ; BF GhAR i anzn e i | . . Opposite U. S. Cable Office e Ly f his lead o e Ivious, and if such an engine can be bullt to pul | BEAUTY SPECIALISTS i 1-9 Pront at A. J. Office. —J dent Wilson by some of his leading opponents S lan airplane there seems no good reason why it | Phone 427 for Appointment | ‘:}‘Dfiffiovrnwnu 2-1 Willoughby at Totem Gro. ——- e — Optometrist-Optician { 2-3 Willoughby, opp. Cash Cole’s and more there is being shown a willingness to con-|change comes about it can be ascribed chiefly to B g g g v ik Eyes Examined—Glasses Fitted ' [ g‘::é and Seward. GA RBA GE cede much to him that was denied with great | Woolson, and from that may be judged how great ; abated to a great extent in the last few years. More [should not be built to pull & car. If this great! ~ dustry from the urban areas and its establishment |pandits.—(Dayton, Ohio, News.) Oldest Bank. in Alasku | q 2-4 ¥ : { Room 16, Valentine Bldg. { 4 venom in the last year of his Administration, and (& loss his untimely death represents. : | £ 10:00 to 6:00. Eveni ‘ 2-5 Front and Main. | o i o o e whe e e | Mo & e st emiendomn, . s ve | JUNEAU CABINET | |/ 0000 PR | -7 | 6 Second ana bain HAULING i " . . . |noted, to lose his e within a week. ersey | 2 - o . 2-7 Fifth and Seward. < i I YA e (glvays . comes TA Grucr pere |City only a few days ago Count Henry de la and DETAIL MILL- e Hazel,s Taxl 1] 2-9 Fire Hall LOT CLEANING ¥ pective, a sifting of the gold from dross metal. And | vaul f Fi P P ith thi th | A i H to Mr. Colby and multitudes of the admirers of |JriX 0 FHRE O W8 ot Wire. He had been | { WORK CO. e 3-2 Gastineau and Rawn Way. Office at Wolland’s i i . - tudes f|when a plane hit a high-tension wire. He had been Juneau Public Library Pelashone 156 }'| 3-4 Second and Gold. Tailor Sho il Mr. Wilson, the thought is common that the fulfil-|an active pioneer in the air since the days of bal-| § Fronu Street, next to Warner F Readi R P 3-5 Fourth and Harss. 4 P i i ment of time will read his name and achievements loons, and held office in various aeronautical or- | Machine Shop ree Reading Room hALtY four: Hour Service § 3-6 Fifth and Gold. Chester Barnesson i and his ideals “from a fair and enduring page” | ganizations. He too is a real loss to flying. City Hall, Second Floor 3-7 Fifth and East. PHONE 66 '{ ‘f when even the names of his most violent detractors | SRR T CABINET and Main Street and Fourth Anywhere in the City for 3-8 Seventh and Gold. DAIRY FERTILIZER " § will have been forgotten, buried unnoted and un-| Europe’s Danger Spots. MILLWORK i 3-9 Fifth and Kennedy. By Load or Sack l i £ heeded under the dust of dead yesteryears. | —_ Nk Reading Room Open From 5OC 4-1 Ninth, back of power house. | H | (Manchester Guardian.) GENERAL CARPENTER 8a m to 10 pp mi - 4-2 Calhoun, opp. Seaview Apta. ) How far is the estrangement of France and i \;VOR K 4 Circulation Room Open from Five may ride as cheaply as one % Distin Ave, andutan Sia; { OUR NEW CO-OPERATION. Italy dangerous to the peace of Europe? An article 1 to 5:30 p. m.—7:00 to 8:30 sm{:d F TALLike pGrm 4-5 Ninth and Calhoun. m 14 1 {by our Paris correspondent which we give suggests GLASS REFLACED p. m. Current Magazines, S elgin A M. 3 & A new economic age based on co-operation and|that, while there is no fear of a direct conflict, Newspapers, Reference, 4-7 Twelfth, B. P. R. garage. g | ¥ guided by comprehensive research was foretold re-|France is to some extent imperilled by her Balkan ' IN AUTOS Books, Etc. 4-8 Twelfth and Willoughby. COLOR { i cently by President Butterworth of the United friendship with Jugo-Slavia. The post-war vears|{pq(iinates Furnished Upon £ Home Srwmr | H States Chamber of Commerce in a speech to some have witnessed a dangerous grouping of Powers in Request FREE TO ALL PRINTING B 1 ing of that organization. He forecast “greater des- it TAUNEE | Gt = e St el = 1l tinies” for American business and warned against :fit?:sy f:a;; ::‘:sm’lr ol'r;t;?:clilsuslgoxge: hfii: 2 —& T A XI increases the pul'tod 4 3 “business baiting” by lawmakers and governmental |posibility of an accidental conflict. In the Balkans. | G A RB AGE * HARRIS Hardware power of any printing authorities. “incidents” are common, but, given goodwill anl’t Company JIM McCLOSKEY job.Weare equippedtohawn " “The one-man show, the self-willed Napoleon of lcommon sense, they can usually be explained away. HA LED igh ervice 1§ industry whose whims and prejudice influenced af- |Unfortunately goodwill is not abundant, and the! b Now located next Day and Night § dlecolorprintingquickly " 1 fairs, is today an anomaly. Domination with its|common sense of dictators is apt to vanish in a| AND LOT CLEANING CONNORS P, 4 4 3 and satisfactorily " B | order-giving and decrees is giving way to an intel- | CFisis. ‘;I‘he df“t “"h“ both "“t“'sm"‘;‘n and TItaly E. O. DAVIS GARAGE ne : Sigent, ' po- $38 Taadarahin’ L wil are under despotic government magnifies cnnsldu Phone 584 RA $ of(:;l A ea' e .,p WO <pakes. for ] erably the peril of every unfortunate incident. How | § wwe. Stand next to I Goldstein 3 y well-planned advance,” he pointed out. Front Street { 3 Mobllization of facts about all industries will aid |\o", 080 the occurrence of mmf ASR g bo preg) BB IDREEEY T'_‘———f |vented? Most of them arise from the ill-treat-' i largely in the new economic order. Referring to n'::n! of m‘fimr?&tes whose rights areenlomi:u‘l'i GET A CORONA n ' y For Your School Wark efforts along this line begun last Fall by Presi-|\guaranteed by the Minorities Treaties. Unfortunate- [} o | ¢ dent Hoover's business survey conference, he said:|ly that safeguard is in many cases a dead letter, [ J . B. Burford & CO. | “These are facts which give businessmen the|The fact that it is not binding on Italy, which [} C l’ T > “Our door swp 1s worn by ! knowledge and the vision and courage which must(is a Great Power, makes it additionally irksome | ary's axi satisfied customers” | ‘ always characterize business in its mood of uchieve~<t;’ "“50'51‘:"‘“- T:lec;em;%lfl. of pourse, ;“‘ b"‘"”““ h ment.” he competence o e wers concerned, ut HII: PHONE President Butterworth also stressed the import- i‘;‘of_':; ‘fh:heézu::; “;“'b'&e"'n'e“:;::""gi ‘°Na':"“:‘°'§ ance of a high standard of living and a mOre|g,14 make a more open and vigorous asser;?ot? i P P equitable sharing of business profits. He pointed|of its authority than it has yet ventured. i When .you think of out the dangers to business itself accruing from a b bre‘,‘d 3 ,satmf‘“:t’on disregard of rights of others, saying: “If our future, Communistic Admission. youwll think of our near or remote, holds a season of business-baiting - bread. 'I;lé"s will h?p' by lawmakers and other government authorities, that (Cincinnati Enquirer.) Front Street pen atter you've relatively small part of the business community| Paul Harrison, of the National Editorial Asso South ta§ted the first slice. which, either through short-sightedness or disregard |ciation, having recently interviewed W. Z. Foster It's good through of its larger interest, breaks the canons of fair play |asserts: “Communism accepts responsibility for the | (o it and through,_ loaf ® to which the vast mafority of the business com- :f":ggi‘;’;;::":u;;‘“;’e‘u‘;:l‘f ';tki;‘wsl:fi :;:‘md,“ff": Prompt Service, Day and Night aftetr loaf. So’s our g munity gives hearty allegiance, will be responsible. . sy pastry. As long as our public understands that business, observa”nce oo RN T direoted - from COVICB AUTO SERVICE 3 Russia. STAND AT THE OLYMPIC Moves, Packs and Stores itself, realizes that it holds its tenure of liberty| Specifically quoting Foster, Mr. Harrison says: | » 343 Day ar Night eeriess Freight and Baggage } on good behavior, the public, realizing the partner-|“The Trade Union TUnity League certainly is the| \ . ¥ ! ship in the economic enterprises of the nation, will | American section of the Red International of Labor =) 50c AnyWhere in City B l Prompt Delivery of i not raise the hue and cry for reprisals which will |Unions which leads the world struggle of the work- %e BA N K BOOK P ry ALL KINDS OF COAL 2 abridge a legitimate business industr, ers. We fight shoulder to shoulder with the work- H “Remember the Name” E This is a doctrine of common sense. Business|€rs of the world against the war anger, for the H PHONE 48 ol it : defense of the Soviet Union and for the over-| nd th i 4 K and industry-baiting belong to an older day, am|fSSuse OF HhE SoF ks | i W P Johnson . talism. ; H g ™ era that is fortunately almost entirely vanished. Tts| ™", O WO SROEVEOR o 0 arouse Am- | The bank book is the first text-book in the new school of [ bl ; il gradual disappearance has Pwn brought about bBY |erican business and labor, one would think; , but ||ij Practical experience. $ H FRIGIDAIRE ?—— ¥ a common realization of business and industry and|these mighty threatened forces continue to func- The diploma is an honorable discharge from the old school— |} CTS FOR GOGD ! _ the public at large that the very extensive common |tjon with overconfidence and somnolent complac- but the lessons in the new school are much more difficult, H DELCO LIGHT PRODU | C]eaning and Preasing | 1 ¥ . interests they all possessed were suffering unneces-|ency. Isn't it time for a national alert awakening You are the teacher—and by giving your son or daughter a ! MAYTAG WASHING | CALL 371 | 49 i zyfl;vfifl;bxch could be eliminated if the baiting|in this respect? bank book, you teach him or her i’ MACHINES i | Work called for and delivered | ¢ . ' To be self-reliant—’ business-| e - RADIO! * pic Senator Simmons, who hopped out of the cor- Ta:nnkn':: :’:e o i d":o::: systomatio ; DAY-SAMN The Capltal Clenners i ! < 5 {ral in 1928 and voted inst Al Smith, attacks 4 © PUBLIC UTILITIES IN SMALL TOWNS. (M1 1o 1038 and voted ag o repaiariy, e And the most important lesson!to insure success in life— | ” Phone 1, ; : ut we REGULAR, SAVING H ront Street Juneau & Will Rogers, humorist and philosopher, _|seems to be the height of something, but we're . A Our m any piace any . g recently 0 the possble dissppearance of the| P TRt sure what—(Mason, Gs. Telegraph.) $100 or more will open an sccount i tme. A tank tor Diest 0t | | |BURFORD’S CORNER & 2 \ and s tank lw -I- oll : * rural communities throughout the country, remark-| wqnines have reached the stage where banks |l Th B ‘I B ’ nd B k i Carnation Ice Cream i ed that something ought to be done about it before shauldn‘;nve special doors for patrons, so that i e & 1 * enre $ an i YOII ‘et mult’ fl‘Ol!l PHONE !ll. NIG! TAXI SERVICE i : it was too late. Possibly a decentralization of in-|they can come in without interrupting the busy a lli " ks printing done by us RELIABLE Tmsnr:n Phone ' 814

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