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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, THURSDAY, JUNE 12, 1930. . . Weather conditions last Summer, however, were [ NN & ———————— X =3 = D(uly ;1 I(lSl-'(l Emplre favorable, and late plantings of millet, corn,| To be SURE | PROFESSIONAL ] | Fraternal Societies B o 6 | beans helped somewhat to relieve famine con- is to be - A UTOS FOR HIRE il or gm RERW Y GER |ditions last fall.” SAFE T 5 bR TROY, BN e Don’t TH lene W. L. Albrecht l | Gastincau Channel | Published every except Sunday by t e 7 T 7 Play eiene rec) T B PRINTING C( \H NY at Second and M intendent A. E. Karnes of the Ketchikan | ay PHYSIOTHERAPY ~ ~ , Juneau, A schools, Democratic nominee for Commis- | “'":i Ao || Massage, Electricity, Infra Red B. P. 0. ELKS T Post_Of P - ioner of Education, has refused to permit politics | Sy ;""‘;;I"_don,' | Rev, Medical Gymnastics, Me;ting every sec- Al S |to interfere with romance. He was’ recently mar- experiment with cure:alls | 410 Goldstein Building %ledn::: fourth (3% SUBSCRIPTION RATES. |ried to Miss Wilkins, Ketchikan kindergarten but— | Phone Office, 216 ! ; s ays at 8 Delivered by carrier In Juneau, Douglas, Treadwell and . . . . ~ o'clock. Elks Hall, Thane for $1.25 per month. | her. Consult N I( ' ’Vlsmng brothers | _—_— Your —— wels 5 Former Gox. Cox has dec \zainst a con- Doctor DRS. KASFR & FREEBURGER g J[ D ° ‘}{O?MARTIN a wtion of Prohibition and its enfercement. He| First! DENTISTS R R i lis in line with the others that have discussed| If he writes a prescription B0l b o |the matter recently. No one, unless he has al bring it here fo have it | o :!:ogmgny o l 5 Co-oraimste Bes st ha G S . i | ille 15 & dvs T 1 1 SU i) (o4 les of Freemasom MEMBER‘OF As\solg\:\l\:xzs‘ol\f‘filsyss‘ AR v‘f,rmd that requires it, defends Prohibition any We' Bl sebbiiotione 1‘ 2 5 B(‘glnnlllg SUNDAY, JUNE 15th. btz PRSmAEbR T e S | promptly, carefully, B— - ) Tty SRR L : Regular meetings - In spite ‘of batile losses and execution walls| AUl Wish S !'| Dr. Charles P. Jenne Taxi Rates within the City of Ju- second Friday g drugs cbtainable. { DENTIST § each month s ALASKA CIRCULATION GUARANTEED TO BE LARGER [Mexico has shown a population gain of 2,000,000 in| 8-a0d ) Valsiitie neau will be 7:30 p. m. Boote THAN THAT OF ANY OTHER PUB |the last nine years i B‘:film i tish Rite Templa | ot ¢ f ALTER B. E£ISEL, Secretary. Telephone 176 1 00 P C ll s g Senator Jones Slaps Back at Wets. — o $ g er L.a ":’YAL ORDER & ! F MOOSE | (Portland Oregonian.) 118 Seward St. [)l'. [ Ww. Bayne Juneau Lodge No. 700. Senator Jones today returned the slap that was DENTIST Meets every Monday |given him by the Republican State Convention, when (I | Rooms 5-6 Triangle Bldg, | night, at 8 o'clock. | President Hoover nominated Charles E. Allen, Seat- { | office hours, 9 am. to 5 pm. TOM SHEARER, Dictator |te ;1\1101-{\ny, for United States Marshal of w::lstrerg i nings by appoinment, o o > 7 ey W. T. VALE, Secy.,, P. O. Box 826 Washington. More precisely, Senator Jones defie H P Gl T A |MOUNT JUNEAU LODGE No. 187 | Republican wets of King County, who ruled the| b j&_u aceer 1axu ssociation MOUNT JUNEAU LODGE NO. 18 State convention, and stood by Roy Lyle, Prohibi- ROLLER |= = = Second and fourth Mon- |tion Director, who s under indictment for con- b day of each month in spiracy against Prohibition. | Dr. A. W. Stewart || A Scottish Rite Temple, Several months ago Senator Jones chose Allen to R I N K i) DENTIST | e beginning at 7:30 p. m, |replace Ed Benn of Aberdeen, Marshal for eight {1 Hours 9 a. m. to 6 p. m. <y EVANS L. GRUBER B & s |years, and the proposed shift stirred and provoked | SEWARD BUILDING Master; CHARLES E. NAGHEL, AL AN AUTHOR. | Seattle’s wet Republicans. Benn and Lyle had been OPEN I ce :}:wne 469, Res. , . Secretary. —_ |in conflict, and the wet Republicans, notably Ralph tl one 276 TG I 225 S PN YR R One of the things that was urged against Gov. EA Horr, County Chairman, complained that Benn | r e [l ar SOn S axl g::;fi“nodrpusl‘f:" STAR Smith in the last clection, often by people whoWas being removed to protect Lyle and his chief || Wednesday, Friday and s —— Tuesdmsofeach‘:,:'n;m 4 pretended to be his admirers, was that he lacked a |assistant, William Whitney, who also is under indict- q lav Evonins 1 Dr. H. Vanee i ANYWHERE IN THE CITY FOR at " 8% 0'elnck + Beottiah i background of culture. Of course they made a poor |Ment. Sy Y | | Osteopath—201 Goldstain Bldg. | o Z Lk $1.00 Rite Temple, LILY i | Later, upon taking control of the State conven- | 4 3 & 4] \, Efficient Dri —Call Us At Any v 4 case of it. Even Ju Hughes, now Chief Justice, {1105, o wtd [afia" oblier ‘sritios. of Serixiofs Jaifks ;| Hours: 10 t0 12; 1 t0 5; T to 9 Careful, icien rivers a s ny Hour— BURFORD, Worthy who stressed the point in all of his political speeches, | oo™ 0 ook thy A | or by appointment : DAY AND NIGHT—Stand at Alaskan Hotel Matron; FANNY L. : | S Rppointiient ot (AUEKE SRR || Licensed Osteopathic Physician | ROBINSON, Secreta was convincing only to superficial c HOW- |E; Reed, Shelton lumberman, took the rostrum while | Fancy Ball Room | Phone: Office 1671 P’ II d S‘ le 0 Y sl skl ever, many votes were probably turned on that|the convention was in an uproar and submitted ! D o T h L o MAGEisnoa Al ones an '/ng ENIGHTS OF COLUMBUS very thinly coated special plea a resolution to commend Benn, which commonly was| ancing laught 85— : SR 5 2 : Seghers Counc.i No. 1760, It must be a shock to those who pretend to|regarded as a slap at the Senmator. The resolution| Classes are now 1= — “i Carlson’s Taxi and Ambulance Service | Motitlis seoond and las |85 ———— superior culture to learn that Harper and Brothers the aristocrats of book makers, have arranged \\'llh Hw\s declared passed amid catcalls, jeers and boos | for Jones. | Friends of Jones and Seattle dry forces regard- being formed | Dr. Geo. L. Barton {{ CHIROPRACIJR Monday at 7:30 p. m. Transient brothers urg- ed to attend. Council Gov. Smith for the publication of another book—| ; . : ; pene | “The Citizen and His Country.” It is expected | ;itifld:ismne":;;gxagf c\o:wx;n:;): :r:j“p:sy ;:"l‘: Hf Hellenthal Building 4 - et shla‘n‘;b:&"mém Ksmu that the book will be a very valuable contribution |gication that Senator Jones did not intend to Roller Skating at O ra am S a !(1 H. J. TURNER, Secrelary. to literature on the science of government. The | weaken before the wet attack. i || Hours: 10 a. m. %o 12 noom | < . J. , tary. unprecedented success of the two Smith books that | i g | A. B. Hall | ot O RAE | P, 565 DOUCLAS AfRIE 117 F. O. E. have already been given to the public encourage 2 3 | ! P I none Meets first and thirq this expectation. The book containing Gov. Smitk A Good Neighbor. | | o prmtfmm %Monday:, 8 ocloel STAND AT ARCADE CAFE Day and Night Service Any Place in the City for $1.00 ! at Eagles Hall Douglas. ARNE SHUDSHIFT, W, P. GUY SMITH, Secretary. Vis- iting brothers welcome. speeches knocked into a cocked hat all the balder- | BT [ dash about iack of education and culture. But| (Cineinnati Enquirer.) ol it was his “Up to Now" that established him as a| That the United States is a good neighbor to B Pl of tho laryest' calibre, sThe cribios iniversally!|(he. Reputllcs:of: the. Bouthern Hemisphieto ~fiuds ol AR : hought ang |OPJective exemplification in the splendid recent praised it, not only for its force of thought and|gsiy of the Government’s Army surgeons. breadth of knowledge, but for its technique Thc‘ Along the Costa Rican-Nicaraguan border, where | circumstance that he was paid $2 a word for its|United States engineers are engaged in their work! gy serial publication against $1 a word for the Presi-|of surveying the important route for the pruposedr | dent Coolidge book and $1 a word that marked the |Nicaraguan canal, an epidemic of smallpox had| 1or‘bi‘glln its time-old ravages. The situation becamfl“ PHONE 259 Wednesday, Friday and Sunday Evenings “Robert Simpson Opt. Graduate kos Angeles Col- | lege of Optometry and Opthalmology Glasses Fitted, Lenses Grouna L THE CASH BAZAAR Open Evenings The Florence Shop 1! livarae Y “Nalvette” Croquignole Perm- ! Prompt Service, Day and Night ‘ and others have habitually and there is no questioning his education and cul- |his researches to combat yellow fever, in line with ture. The New York accent of Gov. Smith is no|the work of Wood and Gorgas, in line with the more pronounced or provincial that Mr. Coolidge’s | |policy of interchange of intellectual and scientific Vermont accent. The circumstance that there is a Sgidnis, wiih tatset "Erquerghis - pSice ights . In this respect it may be said that the Army New York accent is no more indicative of ignorance | Medical Corps is doing a significant and most than the fact of broad Bostonese or that Southern |pe)ney) service, a service which should tend to bet- drawl. New York has as much right to an accent ter relationship and understanding between the of her own as have Massachusetts and Rhode Island ,peoples of this Republic and all the political sov-| or Virginia and Georgia. |ereignties of the South. |JGENERAL CARPLNTEH | -+ Surely Worth Advertising. [ GLASS REPLACED { SR IN AUTOS [ S, i i highest price ever paid President Roomelt 1 ansnt Wave ] B e rted b ety il oq [critical, serious. But the Army Medical Corps | . { : g : i SRR ) 703 ® |action with vaccine, serum and hypodermic. The| s { Dlé:t E: S?l(!)r{w:'i:m. STAND AT THE OLYMPIO { aterial okes of thi Grail ke his Sesk Eaiaborst - t ometrist-Optician | [ e The fact is that most of the charges that Gov ‘{:_’;,’lmb‘;“m;qm,;[edd'L" Ll B sty comr On L ey e e Fitted | Phone 343 Day or Night :s q;;l 00 Smith lacked culture; were: based.onis “raddio”} This ghould prove.to the peoples of the South Room 16, Valentine Bldg. | - - et s | SN GARBAGE pronunciation and the cireumstance of his New |that this Republic is a handy friend to have about. JUNEAU CABINET 10:00 to 6:00. Evenings by & | . York accent in his radio speeches. Mr. Coolidge The service is in line with the work of the great 5 ||, Appointment. Phone 484 | TO ANY PART HAI )LI]\G mispronounced words | Japanese scientist who so lately gave his life in and DETAIL MILL- 2 s 3 —& | ! N OF CITY Phone | 199 Gastinean Hote) LOT CLEANING Office at Wolland’s Tailor Shop Chester Barnesson PHONE 66 DAIRY FERTILIZER By Load or Sack TELEPHONE } | 183 TAXI | Stand at Pioneer Pool Hall Cars for Hire—Drive WORK CO. ‘E Juneau Public Library Free Reading Room » City Hall, Second Floor Main Street and Fourth Front Street, next to Warner Machine Shop CABINET and MILLWORK | ¥ Reading Room Open From 8a m to 10 p. m. Circulation Room Open from 1 to 5:30 p. m.—7:00,to 8:30 S —— ALDRICH MAY STAY IN CONGRESS. P. m. Current Magazines, Yourself - News] A Richard S. Aldrich, son of the late famous| (Seattle Business Chronicle.) P“gen;!n R;'Izrence. DAY AND NIGHT Senator Nelson W, Aldrich, recently reversed his The Washington State Chamber of Commerce | }@gtimates Furnished Upon ? 3 SERVICE COLOR announced intention of retiring from Congress with |proposes to raise a fund of $150,000 to be used m‘ FREE TO ALL Request PRINTING his present term. He will again be a candidate.|advertising the State nationally. Often in the past | 5 ! L 1| D ——— His change of mind was due to a petition ' from |has it been said that these States of the Pacific | ———— —_— Be— many members of Congress, including Speaker Long- |Northwest were not advertising themselves and _— CE tncreases the pullingd ; 4 their matchless resources as they should. In the ye wikih, < him to recede from his determination |[helF WIS TReHEES 88 U SR T et ‘ ARBA‘ E HARRIS Hardware Jeweler and power of any printing o retire. Representative Aldrich Is serving his | Babs this B e i sce:nimsgzrgngmeix::. th:e;r;l:isuou:honienroud‘ H LED Company Optician job.Weare equippedtohax S _ T of census tal is qui E r 41’ able, but it is admitted that it may take a lively ine State Chamber to seek the $150,000. Assuredly Now located next : {7 akele dlecolorprintindquickly campaign for him to win again as his district |nothing shore of treasonable for anyonone to say AND LOT CLEANING CONNORS &,."",3:‘"‘ and satisfactorily Is dangerously near being Democratic. On the Washington’s resources are not worth that much| E. O. DAVIS other hand it is admitted that he is a very worthy |advertising. g | Phone 584 GARAGE % son of a very di uished father. NO OUTSIDE HELP FOR FAMINE- STRICKEN CHINA. The Poet Laureate. W P J Ohnson i FRIGIDAIRE DELCO LIGHT PRODUCTS MAYTAG WASHING T GET A CORONA | | For Your School Work ‘ (Manchester Guardian.) one of half a dozen lving poets might Any fittingly have been appointed to the Poet Lnurealc»{ ship vacant by the death of Dr. Bridges, but the J. B. Burford & Co. ‘Our door swp 1s worn by Hope for relief of the famine situation in North- ‘We make the better kind of bread—the JUNEAU TRANSFER COMPANY cultural Commissioner at Shanghai, reports to the Bureau of Agricultural Economics, United States De- i partment of Agriculture. “Relief from outside the affected area,” Commis- sloner Nyhus says, “appears to be practically im- possible because of the primitive and costly methods | of transport in this part of China. The area in- cludes Western Honan ,Shansi, Shensi, and Kansu English life in the countryside and on the sea, and | they are creative poetry. The appointment, too, has a romantic appeal. Mr. Masefield’s life, so far, is a good story—the boy who ran away to sea, served before the mast, drifted hungrily about the | United States doing odd jobs, and then returned home to write and gradually, in the face of hard- | ship and disappointment, to win a foremost place | among the poets of his country. have finished your meal. And at break- fast you’ll find our rolls mighty tasty and satisfying. Peerless west China now centers largely on the crop harvests . B tisfled customers” this Spring and Summer within the stricken ares, |[66ling 18 widespread that the selection of Mr. John | i MACHINES kind that makes . PR O, o e g e i | Masefield is the right one. It Is, at any rate, a| H z | you go back to the nd also upon the subsidence of brigandage and |, . jar one. His poems are not aloof, they appeal | H DAY-FAN RADIOS i Yiead dish several military maneuvers, Paul O. Nyhus, American Agri-|{," averyman, they are imbued with the spirit of |! H ' real Lt ’ * H Phone 1 | times before you i ] i | H 1 Front Streef Juneau FIRE ALARM CALLS 1-3 Thrd and Pranklin. 1-4 Front and Franklin. Provinces. The area is bordered on the south by the Ts! range of mountains, on the east by N § i ; 3 1-5 Front, near Ferry Way. ¥ The administration saved its tariff bill by hav-| s ery : the Great Plain, on the north by Suiyuan Prov-li,o the vice-President cast the deciding vote, ngmn; 1-6 Front, opp. OrosllwAth" a Ince, and cn the r by the arid or semi-|proving the wisdom of sending Mr. Dawes to Eng- }'; g"”: opp. %:’ uu?" “Remember the Name” | aria apd inner Mongolia. The region 10 Pomt. at 4. 3. Office Moves, Packs and Stores Desert lation of about 25,000,000.” Nyhus reports that short crops, as land.—(Miami News.) | | Freight and Baggage Prompt Dellvery of 2-1 Willoughby at Totem Gro. 2-3 Willoughby, opp. Cash Cole’s ner If we could find a way to make voting a privi-| 50 The BA\’K BOOK the result of drought in 1928 and 1929, are the |lege, like belonging to a club, instead of a duty fundamental factors in the current famine situa- |like belonging to a church, the riddle would be} " 2-4 ?‘:‘:fi and Seward. ALL KINDS OF COAL tion. Milary operations and_brigandage have re- solved.—(Miami News.) if|{ 2-5 Pront and Main. PR]NTING PHONE 48 duced further the ady scant food supply. The 4 i flfl/] f/]{ DIPLOMA ||| -6 Second and Main. famine began in Shensi in the autumn of 1928 polgil():fl R T . e The bank book Is the first text-book in the new school of ||| 2.0 B n:.lnf o RESULTS :?dsf s ;:f“:, K;’;:"S:Mfxlfa,'f","el;“:erw:‘;flf; thon straddle on the Prohibition question—(Phila-|[ij Practical experience. (| 3-2 Gastineau and Rawn Way. The one big d\!u am, the c: o rensi, says there deiphia. Inquirer) | The diploma is an honorable discharge from the old school— 3-4 Second and Gotd. we are interested in excellent wheat crop on the Plain of Shensi in e — |il but the lessons in the new school are much more difficult., 3-5 Fourth and Harma. ‘when you come here 1927, but much of it was appropriated for mili-| oy jdea of a small crowd is the number of You are the teacher—and by giving your son or daughter a 3-6 Fifth and Gold. to buy plhdll is tary purposes perso'f who ever take the trouble to answer Tom |l bank book, you teach him or her 3-7 Fifth and East. *“The wheat crop in the Spring of 1928, Commis- |Heflid.—(Dayton, Ohio, News.) To be self-reliant—To be business-like and systematic— 3-8 Seventh and Gold. 3-9 Fifth and Kennedy. 4-1 Ninth, back of power house. 4-2 Calhoun, opp. Seaview Apta. 4-3 Distin Ave., and Indian Sta. 4-5 Ninth and Calhoun. 4-6 Seventh and Main. 4-7 Twelfth, B. P. R. garage. 4-8 Twelfth and Willoughby. 4-9 Home Groocery. 5-1 Seater Tract. sloner Nyhus says, “was about half a normal crop " due to lack of *]:m ¢ rains, and the autumn crops ”‘o were very poor. At that time there was so Lt rain that the planting of wheat in Sep- 1928, was confined principally to irrigated ? which represented only 5 per cent. of the Mn. There was, therefore, hardly any wheat op in the Spring of 1920. Spring rains in 1929 ¢ Jate and Spring crops were generally poor. | To know the value of money , And the most important lesson'to insure success in life— REGULAR G $1.00 or more will oph an account The B. M. Behrends Bank Oldest Danl in Alaska TEEEENETTEe = ST E R John D. Rockefeller is giving way nickels now, instead of dimes. Can't the Chamber of Com- merce do something about this curtailment of out-| ‘put?—\Dnllas News.) o T P S Sy S L. C. SMITH and CORONA TYPREWRITERS Guaranteed by J. B. BURFORD & CO. “Our door step is worn by satisfied customers” Henry Ford’s plan to discharge employees with a liquor breath should increase employment to the extent of an expert smelling department.—(Indi-| anapolis Star.) |