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o Daily Alaska Emplr JOHN W. TROY - cond M . EDITOR AND MANAGER by the SUBSCRIPTION RATES. Delivered by carrier in June Douglas, Treadwell and Thane fo! 25 per month. ASSOCIATED PRESS entitled 1 MEMBER OF T A P x LICATION A POLICY OF WISDOM. of In portraying to the Chamber of Commerce Juneau the social service, being c: ed on by the Indians of Arctic Alaska, Rev. M. L. said it was the Church's cbject to make them best kind of Indians—not men.” That important ; Fraser ‘ The the ing lind resources which past ge wasted tonly | the low cause it all Nat the draw from A mental medical and religious work | need contented matters nature. In no section of labored wit] Ihead of the administatior Classes are now { DENTIST ent greatest resources, its . Rooms 8 and 9 Valentine ] voted IATaaly GF: Tie being formed | Building training to solving some of | ‘Telephone 176 ! lems confronting it. Realizi of Ehe=— e —&: |the fisheries to Alaska, recos of q . —— e |Alaskans as well as those Roller Skating at Dr. J. W. Bayne | money is invested in the ustr ’ ” I{(l” ‘DENTIST | (to be fair to them all in suce shbilag Rooms 5-6 Triangle Bldg. | lattempt to stop overfishing up the ce hours, 9 am. to 5 p.m. | |various runs to a point Te danger of ivenings by appoinment,. depletion is no longer even nace. Wednesday, Friday and Phone 321 l ‘ ! — Sunday Evenings e 4 | Until we find out whett Hoover ——— i |fishes with Wet or Dry sort of Dr. A. W. Stewart [ bait he uses, we reserve our whether DENTIST he is really Wet, Moist or I ——— Hours 9 a. m. to 6 p. m. L A NI R, I SEWARD BUILDING / G i . s | Office Phone 469, Res. America Lul\( to the Air. | Brots oA (Boston News Bureau.) 1 v S ey In belief that there is a public demand and CHRYSLER i e e for far- Fisherie leadership. price. the service sock River is being nego foregoing is but flung activiti s and the hig This service is c attempting e, to It ion, because it a supply of this It is of ser induces youth ar ages to get out nature ph poise. This m people whose bettered by is is the c h greater zeal can render in the aero- the the Episcopal Church among furthering our transportation airplane facilities, Williams | nautic industry has made tremendous strides in re- «the (Cent years. | progress in any art or science The has witnessed 1 so short a time. world never such | PLYMOUTH é YIT 1T It s certain that the airplane has a definite doubtedly is the pol om. Nature has fixed |;o)e jn the transportation system of the future. a line between the that is all too fre- |1t must be considered an important contributio: quently ignored in well-meant efforts to advance to both individual and mass transportation. A the status of the Indian. There have been too many |the New York Alr Show there was one plane a!unr" failed to recognize and physically there are sincere workers who have fact that physchologically certain fundamental differences between him white race which no amount of education can serve to obliterate. The Indian inhabitants of Alaska already are & ¢ the Tulsa, Okla., factor in the Territory's industrial were handled at Le Bourget, are possibilities in them for be- 3136 came in or went out of the Chicago airport. are properly |While Templehof, Berlin, was host to 658 passengers work such as that described by the Boston was host to 770 carrying the work that |Petween Boston and New York has become so brisk that an extra trip will soon be not unimportant life. But there coming a much greater one if they cultivated. It is Rev. Williams, or that which such schools as Sheldon Jackson School at Sitka is doing, Government industrial schools can or should per- form, that offers the best hope for their develop- | ment. The slogan of the Sheldon Jackson School, “Competent Christian Citizens,” a highly desirable objective themselves well and the Territory lowing such lead no 1 puts into a phrase |effective The Indians can serve 'thrilling s by fol-|and is tied in with various other forms of trans- hip, rather than allowing them- |Portation, the |Which carries 32 passengers A general Yet notice 1358 were arriving and great airpor been service, maki lly accepted belief these comparisons: In February, while departing from London's t at Croyden, 7373 flew in and out airport. While 1859 persons the Paris airport, And European lines have passengers for 10 years. Business added to scheduled ing four each way between these two cities each day. Only sul and to all a few years ago flying means of conducting sport. was considered warfare, or as a Today it has a specified place, ch as the motor bus and the railroads, the airplane 4s serviing as a |faster service. The planes that ply with passengers, mail and selves to be made the tail for the kite of self- seeking and designing politiclans who offer them no more than a mess of pottage for their birth-| right. PRAISES COMMISSIONER O'MALLEY. |tain whether it was | express are as made available. port compani being clothed with safeguards as fast A few months ago the trans- ies of this country determined to ascer- | “fear” or “fare” that held up | an link of | | is that the United; and the |States lags behind Europe in air passenger travel ' PROFESSIONAL | z) ROLLER | RINK OPEN PHYSIOTHERAPY Rev, Medical Gymnastics. 41u Goldstein Bullding Phone Office, 216 Helene W. L. Albrecht Massage, Electricity, Infra Red 23182 Wednesday, Friday and Sunday Eveni ; Tioidstai y [k venings 301-303 Goldstein Bldg. | PHONE 56 Fancy Ball Room 3 WS A e DRS. KASER & FREEBURGER | | Hours 9 a. m. to 8 p. m. Dancing Taught ',‘: Dr. Charles P. Jenne — MOTOR CO. Dr. H. Vance | Hours: or by appointment Phone: Office 1671. ence, MacKinnon Apts, World's Lowest Priced )y Res Full Size FOUR DOOR SEDAN Dr. Geo. L. Barton CHIROPRACTOR | Hellenthal Building OFFICE SERVICE ONLY F. 0. B. Juneau $875.00 Hours: 10 a. m. %o 12 noon S | 2p.m tol p. m | e M('CAUI | 6p. m. to8p. m. | Osteopath—201 Goldsiatn Bldg. | 10t012; 1t05; Tto 9 | Licensed Osteopathic Physiclan By Appointment MOTOR CO. PHONE 259 Service With Satisfactiom Robert Simpson Opt. D. Rk Graduate lou Angeles Col- | - lege of Optometry and l Opthalmology The Florence Shop “Naivette” Croquignole Perm- BEAUTY SPECIALISTS | | Glasses Fitted, Lenses Grouna S ——— . ||, S [" DR. R. E. SOUTHWELL Phone 427 for Appointment 8070 544 S PR AT T Optometrist-Optician i il e e | wider utilization of passenger planes. Drastic fare | . . e SRS |reductions were effected. Air travel immediately P‘r:nse S0 ey, Dney. L{HL(‘J ?llm“ Cor:]‘v)]umped adequately answering the question. ln-‘ missioner of Fisheries, marked a speech recently \dm‘d it is not an idle prediction that eventually delivered in Congress by Representative Francis D.| |planes carrying several hundred persons, Culken, New York, defending an appropriation bill iparable to ocean-going steamers, carrying funds for establishing fish cultural statioss |lantic on e throughout the country. The Commissioner was |of safety ared for. ablished schedules, with every factor The giant Dornier plane of | described as an outstanding figure in the field of [Europe is but a step in that direction, as is the | conservation. plication of scientific research to the fishes in developing program of fisheries conservation was cited. For 33 years he has been connected with the Bureau of Fisheries, and has served as President of the Pacific Coast Fisheries Society and the American Fisheries Society, both scientific fishery organizations. Commenting on some phases sioner's work, Mr. Culkin said: Mr. O'Malley has made important con- tributions to current fish cultural practices, especially with respect to the salmon, For three years prior to becoming Commissioner he spent the entire fishing seasons in Al- aska with Dr. Charles H. Gilbert, of Stan- ford University, in making comprehensive investigatiuns of the fisheries of Alaska, which have since become the basis for sound regulations. Since becoming Com- missioner he has continued his close super- vision over the salmon fisheries. Acting under the White law of 1924, the regula- tions have been greatly strengthened and the decline of the runs of salmon checked. Faced with much criticlsm of his vigorous licy at the start, most of his critics now recognize the soundness of his judgment. One of Mr. O'Malley's first moves on becoming Commissioner was to center the activities of the bureau's biologists on major scientific problems of the highly important fisheries. Regional directors in charge of operations have been set up and the work a of the Commis- of this division is now generally recognized necessary He as being highly practical and to a sound program of fish husbandry. has also developed a program of experi- mental fish culture to insure the bureau's spending its fu for the propagation of game and food es wisely. An ardent angler himself, he never loses an oppor- tunity to further the interests of the sports- men. He has been particularly interested in the adequate development of the Mis- sissippi Wild Life and Fish Refuge, to make of this region an angler's paradise The bureau's vessel service has been almost wholly rebuilt, antiquated vessels being replaced by modern ones capable of carrying out their work with safety and economy. In the’ field of foreign affairs the bureau under Mr. O'Malley has accomplished more in the past eight years than in the previous quarter of a century. An international convention with Great Britain for the sav- ing of the North Pacific halibut fisheries is being successfully carried out, on the Pacific Coast a federation of all scientific workers studying the salmon has been form- ed for the sake of closer cooperation and the avoidance of duplication. Coordinated studies between Canada and the United States with respect to the Great Lakes fisheries and the important bank fisheries of the North Atlantic are in progress and a new treaty with Canada with respect to the | four {more With the comfor units. This |which was planes capable of carrying 12 to 32 persons, whnle still another between the It would It years portation is |surface modes of travel. be enhanced by the encouraging fact that v\hne\ speed is the and thereby is not being that in a motor car. airplane desi guard, every way. cevery sense, will regard In order newspaper. Another will be by will prices. politics no ome good get -the be: quirer.) tion.) will supplant other forms of transportation, as the automobile, the railroad or steamships, each has its place in the general scheme, and is| dependent upon the other for its full strength. is obv: to the position Maine and Kansas continue to vote dry drink on the sly, “as usual”—(Atlanta Constitu- The length of his service in the ap-|Move to create a series of seadromes to bridge the | ries and |Atlantic. | growth of traffic and demand t, the tendency is toward larger flying was evident by the New York show, centered around six great transport ship under construction in this counny is designed to carry 40 persons per trip in soxvuw United States and South America. be far-fetched to suggest the airplane such for | ious, however, as the past three or| have demonstrated, that air trans- and will be easier to establish Lhun And in its progress will| essence of American life apd business, the life of air transportation, ety sacrificed for that speed. America has definitely taken to the air—a fact‘ very few years will make material changes in our conception of living, just as did the| No one appreciates this more than the gner, builder and operator. Their plans for the future, therefore, will embody every safe- if for no other than selfish purposes. To Aid Fairbanks. (Fairbanks News-Miner.) The News-Miner will put forth every effort to aid Fairbanks and those other communities and camps adjacent, It will be the paper of the people in| their interests by advancing in and as such, it is hoped, the people it, so that the News-Miner may work and continue to work in harmony for everything |{that will be to the advantage of all. to make the News-Miner one of the Territory’s best papers we must have advertising, and feel confident the business people of Fairbanks will be with us and give us their whole-hearted support by advertising in the columns of their local along We way to help the News-Miner giving us all your job printing treat you right—with quality of work and One of these days a President will name a man of Associate Justice as to whose whatever.— one has any information (Louisville Herald-Post.) Once in a while politico-social Washington gets The British Embassy has gone wet again.—(Indianapolis News.) news. Now that Chicago gangsters have called off hos- tilities among themselves, the public will no doubt En- nefit of the bullets.—(Cincinnati | for and |} Front Street, next to Warner and com- | will ply the At-| Room 16, Valentine Bldg. 10:00 to 6:00. Evenings by JUNEAU CABINET |~ Appointment. Phone 484 and DETAIL MILL- § ¥ WORK CO. Machine Shop Free Reading Room City Hall, Second Floor 1 CAB’NET and Main Btreet and Fourth | I”’LLWORK Reading Room Open From GENERAL CARPENTER SR i WORK Circulation Room Open from | 1 t0 5:30 p. m.—7:00 to 8:30 | GLASS REPLACED P. m. Current Magazines, New: , Refe IN AUTOS s SN Estiinates Furnished Upon e FREE TO ALL i S SN Tt | LI & E 614 RB AGE HARICHS Hardware | ompany | H A ULED Now located next | AND LOT CLEANING CONNORS E. O. DAVIS Phone 584 ‘ GARAGE EY | Eyes Examined—Glasses Fitted . ’ N Junean Public Library z N 2.5\ The BA\TK BOOK ' and the DIPLOMA The bank book is the first text-book in the new school of practical experience. The diploma is an honorable discharge from the old school— but the lessons in the new school are much more difficult. You are the teacher—and by giving your son or daughter a bank book, you teach him or her To be self-reliant—To be business-like and systematic— To know the value of money And the most important lesson to insure success in life— REGULAR SAVING $1.00 or more will open an account The B. M. Behrends Bank ()Itlpsl Rank in Alaska N’o‘mo‘m i AUTOS FOR HIRE Carlson’s Taxi an 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 d Ambulance Service Graham’s Taxi Phore 565 STAND AT ARCADE CAFE Day and Night Service Any Place in the City for 50 Cents " Northern Lite TAX] 50c¢c | TO ANY PART OF CITY Two Buick Sedans at Your Service. Careful and Efficient Drivers. Phone 324 Hazel’s Taxi Telephone 456 Twenty-four Hour Service Anywhere in the City for 50¢ Five may ride as cheaply as one Stand at Alaska Grill PIONEER TAXI JIM McCLOSKEY Day and Night Service Phone 443 Stand next to I. Goldstein) Front Street Mm."fi...mm 199 T axi 50c | TO ANY PART OF CITY Phone 199 Gastineau Hote) R ) f | | fr—— FIRE ALARM CALLS Thxd and Franklin. Front and Franklin. Front, near Ferry Way. Front, opp. Gross Apts Front, opp. City Wharf, Front, near Saw Mill. Front at A. J. Office. Willoughby at Totem Gro. Willoughby, opp. Cash Cole's Barn. Front and Seward. Front and Main, Second and Main. Fifth and Seward. Fire Hall. Gastineau and Rawn Way. Second and Gold. Fourth and Harms. Fifth and Gold. Fifth and East. Seventh and Gold. Fifth and Kennedy. Ninth, back of power house. Calhoun, opp. Seaview Apts. Distin Ave,, and Indian Sts. Ninth and Calhoun. Seventh and Main. Twelfth, B. P. R. garage. -8 Twelfth and Willoughby. 4-9 Home Grocery. 5-1 Seater Tract. i z § z i 2-4 2-5 2-6 2-7 2-9 3-2 3-4 3-5 3-6 3-7 3-8 3-9 4-1 4-2 4-3 4-5 4-6 4-7 4 € Carl’s Taxi PHONE 403 South Front Street Prompt Service, Day and Night Covica AuTo SERVICE STAND AT THE OLYMPIC Phone 342 Day or Night 50c AnyWhere in City Wé make the better kind of bread—the kind that makes you go back to the bread dish several times before you have finished your meal. And at break- fast you'll find our rolls mighty tasty and satisfying. Peerless Bakery W. P. Johnson “Ecmember the Name” FRIGIDAIRE P Pomr GooD ; DELCO LIGHT PRODUCTS f 4 ATiAY & sdntin Cleanmg amg" Fressmg |I MACHINES Work called for and delivered | PATRAN Mante The Capital Cleaners [ Phone 1 S Front Street Juneau o R S e —J) | | time. A tank for Dies2l Oil You get results from printing done by us and a tank for crude oil save burner trouble. PHONE 149, NIGHT 5103 RELIABLE TRANSFER | Fraternal Secieties or L_ Gastineau Channel = tw B. P ). les Meeting every W ed- nesday at 8 o'clock, Elks’ Hall. Visiti g g brothers welcome. R. B. MARTIN, )xalted Ruler. M. H. SIDES, Secretary. ———— - Co-oOrdinate Bo® fes of Freemasow | ry Scottish Rite Regular meetings & second Friday each month at 7:30 p. m. Beod« tish Rite Temple WALTER B. Ef£ISEL, Becretary. LOYAL ORDER OF MOOSE Juneau Lodge No. 700. / Meets every Monday night, at 8 o’'clock. TOM SHEARER, Dictator W. T. VALE, Secy., P. O. Box 826 MOUNT JUNEAU LODGE NO. 147 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. IR e TR W TR R 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 Counc.: No. 1760 Meetings 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 AeRIE 117 F. O. E. Meets first and thira &Mondnn, & oclock at Eagles Hall Douaglas. ARNE SHUDSHIFT, W. P. GUY SMITH, Secretary. Vis- iting brothers welcome. | ——— THE CASH BAZAAR Open Evenings Cable Office GARBAGE HAULING LOT CLEANING Office at Wolland’s Opposite U. S. Tailor Shop Chester Barnesson PHONE 66 DAIRY FERTILIZER By Load or Sack COLOR PRINTING increases the pullind power of any printind job.Weare equipped tohax dlecolorprintind quickly and satisfactorily oo S sabe, GET A l | J. B. Burford & Co. l | MOVING VA;N Moves, Packs and Stores Freight and Baggage Prompt Delivery of ALL KINDS OF COAL PHONE 48 HOTEL ZYNDA ELEVATOR SERVICE 8. ZYNDA, Prop. BURFORD’S CORNER Carnation Ice Cream TAXI SERVICE Phone 314