The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, June 17, 1930, Page 4

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Datl§ fla ka Emplré Mr. Eastman as one whose catalytic powers JOHN w. TRO'X - .- EDITOR AND MANAGER have made his photographic chemicals into Published _every evening except Sunday by _the utions that have changed the face of | EMPIRE_ PRINTING - C! OMPANY at Second and Mair the earth by making mortals more sensitive Streets, Juneau, K e AN to its beauty. Giving the chemist’s medal " Entercd In the Post Of Juneau as Second Class| to him may be as a “lending of light to etier el __| the sun” but he has, after made the T SUBSCRIPTION RATES. light of the sun serve a new purpose on this Delivered by carrier in Juneau, Douglas, Treadwell and i Thane for $1.25 per mont | he fc ng rates S St - Six months, in advance.| poggiply the circumstances that Congress was will pr "“‘:'Y‘: about to adjourn and Congressmen would set out‘_ or irregularity |, ing places was responsible for the more or less| and_ Business Offices rial ASSOCIATED PRESS s exclusive focal news published herein {50 e h hurdles in his attempt to become @ citizen of |yIINIMIHINIDITNG o 1y T BE LARGER |their commonwealth | R Rooms 8 and 9 Valentine 1bst ial than illicit romance. } Gy s THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, TUESDAY, JUNE 17, 1930. ends. Among educator and recognition of [ “world-wide and universal these few the economist, the the chemist unite in their ensive advertising of leakless baggage R TR TR | While they have not done “much to him as yet | Florida authorities have kept Al Capone busy those Off for Home. (New York World.) Then man the capsan—off we go, As the fidler swings us round, | OPEN enings by appoinment. | | With a yeo heave-ho, | i Phone 321 | And a rumbelow, i 54 [ — { Hurrah for the homeward bound! Wednesday, Friday and :;' : — | —The Mikado. | Shndy : Even ) 2 A.W. S i During all thes months when the Byrd Ant-| Sunday Kvenings r. A. W. Stewart larctic Expedition has been shooting seals, thawing | i DENTIST | |out dogs, poking whales over the snout, flying over JOSEPH. * DEATH ()I The sudden death unexpected shock to the people of Oregon. occupied more of the for sometime He was recently Oregon for Governor than any other Court Judges had recommended his disbarment |day revealed how much they must yearn for: the Roller Sklllillg at l‘LIrrw\\;t:wnO:'bet)opazxclslt:ynlehn to the Supreme Court of his State. The J“dges‘prosa\c civilization that they left. That was the| | o caitetn .llacx.lnnon ‘W had been appointed by the Supreme Court to make |guiditv with which they pounced on their mail, A. B. Hall e s an investigation of charges filed against Joseph bY |once the City of New York had taken aboard her 7 = ? Thomas Mannix, another Portland lawyer. After his‘c;\rgo. cast off her hawsers and set sail for home.| S : | nomination, the Supreme Court issued an order Breakfast, sleep, duty—everything had to wait until Dr. Geo. L. Barton | disbarring him for life. 1t was stated, however, |they had sorted into piles the letters, newspapers Wednesday, Friday and CHIROPRACI2OR | that the penalty might be removed or mudmedwand pictures of little Susie that awaited them,| Sunday Evenings Hellentha! Building s if he would retract had made against| land settled down to read. Those of us who had d charges he two Justices of the Supreme Cour! and apologize. He had made no retraction or apology before his | they felt, and even envy them a little. Joseph was a member of the Oregon State death. Senate. The selection of another to take the place of | Joseph on the Republican ticket for the office of Governor now devolves on the State Committee doubt the committee will give consideration to Gov. Norblad who ran next to Joseph in the primary. It also, no doubt, will consider State Senator Harry Corbett, been a candidat 'lHF T \RII l \ETTl ED. the the Notwithstanding that measure may be deserving Hawley-Smoot appellation of left things in a disturbed condition. necessllevlted the preparation of a new tariff bill ::::lsil;:;w:uznnfr:anuylw&l;\a?grl\]s.ct)umge Wwhich thm{ WORK CO' Jun(,au Public Library next winter or by the next Congress, and that Mr. Harrison did not drag a wounded buddy|] Fromt Street, mext to Warmer Free Reading R would have unsettled the matter for several Years.|enrough the hell of No Man's Land, nor single- Machine Shop > mg hoom It has been bad enough to have Congress working handed capture an entire German detachment. His| City Hall, Sccond Floor on the tariff for a year. |feat was of stil sterner stuff—he made a_stable| CABINET and Main Street and Fourth There will be no general tariff bill before Con- of army mules keep on their gas masks through gress for three years at least. For that length of [a 12- hour attack, spite of the fact that he wus! MILLWORK Reading Room Open From time business may know definitely what to expect, as far as that is concerned. There may be amend- ments from time to time, but there will be no gen- eral overhauling of tariff schedules. FAMOUS ALASKA VISITOR. The presence in Alaska of George Eastman, famous manufacturer of photographic equipment, makes pertinent the following editorial concerning him that recently appeared in the New York ‘Times: Bestowing a medal upon George Eastman is, as an old Latin proverb has it, “lending light to the sun” or, an even older one, “taking owls to Athens” No man has less need of a medal. The science of chemistry is rather awarding itself a medal in recog- nizing the achievements of this sometime bank clerk, who in his spare time, when a young man, cooked his own emulsions, coat- ed his plates, took his pictures, developed his plates and made his own prints. Chem- istry might indeed proudly hang in its own laboratory the medal which it offers as leaves to a forest. Mr. Eastman is acclaimed not alone by the chemists. President Butler some time ago spoke of Eastman the man, who had very little formal education as a youth, as “a literally stupendous factor in the education of the modern world.” The chem- ist points to the great self-contained manu- facturing concern making acids, silver salts, solvents, gelatine, cellulose nitrate and acetate for all kinds of film and photo- graphic paper. The educator sees the product carrying information and educat- ing many people through their eyes. And Mr. Eastman has, in gratitude to science and also in hope of further benefits at its hands for mankind given generous support to research, especially in synthetic organic chemistry, incidentally contributing to the chemical independence of the United States. Dr. E. R. A. Seligman, in his introduction to Mr. Ackerman's biography, has char- acterized Mr. Eastman as a captain of ir dustry, a great employer, in whom have been notably and nobly illustrated the stages in the rise of a man to great wealth and his emergence from the “acquisitive” through the “possesive” to the “distributive.” Some men who acquire riches never get beyond the motive of acquisition. In most cases, however, they seek and enjoy the satisfactions of the possessive stage. In not a few instances those who have acquired wealth and enjoyed its possession enter the stage in which they find greatest satis- faction in making society as a whole better for their having lived, considering first those who have shared in the building of their great enterprises. Of these latter, a few, through the direct products of their business or through their benefactions, have been able to further of George W. Joseph was an|wonderful time of it. He had |But they have been in the frozen wastes a long, attention of the public eye citizen of that State.| nominated by the Republicans ol‘wl themselves off from all er a committee of Circuit No jone has, and none has been marked by finer spirit| the claims of | who ran third and| may have won the nomination if Joseph had not‘d.‘(“y_ tariff “Tar- iff of Abominations” that has been applied to it, it is probably a good thing that the President signed it. If he had vetoed the bill it would have caught the imagination of the country but it would ha\.e‘CUmral‘Y It would have |poles and naming peaks, bays and inlets most of {us have, probably taken it for granted that the | participants in such adventures must be having a In a way, perhaps, they were. ng time; it must be six months since they estab- shed their second camp in the Bay of Whales and news of the oustide| world except such as they might pick up by radio. And one little thing in the Times despatch yester- ltwo or three months’ mail catch up with us in| |some trench during the late war can realize ho\xf and 118 Seward St. | | ROLLER {c—— | | RINK Fancy Ball Room Dancing Taught Classes are now being formed’ S——————m g—— i [’R()F ESSIONAL ' FILMS b =L I | Helene W. L. Albrecht | PHYSIOTHERAPY Massage, Electricity, Infra Red | | Rev, Medical Gymnastics. Bl 41u Goldstein Building | Phone Office, 216 ] S | 8. KASFR & FREEBURGER DENTISTS 301-303 Goldstein Bldg. PHONE 56 | Hours 9 & m. to 8 p. m. Phone 25 | i—— i| Dr. Charles P. Jenne g g 3 ms 5-6 Triangle Bldg. > hours, 9 am. to 5 pm. Hours 9 a. m. to 6 p. m, SEWARD BUILDING. Office Phone 469, Res. P | Phone 276 | | e e Dr. H. Vance Osteopath—201 Goldsiain Bldg. | Hours: 10 to 12; 1 t0o 5; T to 9 | or by appointmené £ OFFICE SERVICE ONLY | Hours: 10 a. m. % 12 noom 2p m toD p m | Well, civilization will seem glorious to them for| % ia time, and they certainly have some such reward | coming to them. Few undertakings in modern times havu yielded as much valuable knowledge as this| single meals, dinner served 6:30 p. m. jon the part of its personnel. As for us, we extend‘ \our special congratulations once more to Mr. Russell\ |Owen, the Times correspondent, for the uniformly PRIVATE BOARDING HOUSE | 421 SEWARD STREET | Table board — weekly, { $10.00: PHONE 259 50 cents e & from 5:30 to |& : CARRIE A WALL 6p.m to8p m i ! By Appointment Robert Simpson | | | i each; | Jl | { |interesting way in which he covered his story. He |had a big opportunity, and he rose to it splen- Opt. D. Graduate Bos Angeles Col- 5 “Natvette” | Merit and Mules. | (Miami News.) | It has taken the War Department 12 years to| The Florence Shop | Croquignole Perm- | ansnt Wave BEAUTY SPECIALISTS | Phone 421 for Appointment | | il lege of Optometry and | Opthalmology | | Glasses Fitted, Lenses Grouna | — - " DR. R. E. SOUTHWELL i Optometrist-Optician get around to giving Curtis Harrison, a Columbus, | ‘<o = Ohio, veteran of the world conflict, the Distinguish- ed Service Cross “for extraordinary heroism,” but the story does not suffer by the delay. On the| it recalls, at a time when the years are| |dimming the doughty deeds of the doughboys, the ed by shrapnel, | It is not alone the fact that Mr. Harrison risked | his own life to save those of the animals Whlchw made this incident remarkable. Mules are tradi-! wounds, and you have an idea of the tremendous work which he successfully engineered. The situa-| — (Seattle Post-Intelligencer.) JUNEAU CABINET | and DETAIL MILL- !twice felled by the concussion of shells and wound-| { GENERAL CARPENTER WORK GLASS REPLACED Newspapers, nce, tionally stubborn, and we doubt that even armv| IN AUTOS pm;::“ discipline changed the nature of those in the serv-| . . y ice. Imagine getting one of the beasts to wear a EstlmstesRFurm;hed Up‘m gas mask for half a day, multiply this by a stable eques full, add the element of terror because of the|& <= e om—— PERSENL § bombardment, along with Mr. Harrison's own T CARBAGE tion should include not only “extraordinary hero-| ism,” but the working of a miracle among mules HA ULED Company as well E . Now located next AND LOT CLEANING 3 % It Actually Works. E. O. DAVIS CONNORS Phone 584 GARAGE e | @Eyes Examined—Glasses Fitted | Room 16, Valentine Bldg. 10:00 to 6:00. Evenings by Appointment. Phone 484 8 a m to 10 p. m. Circulation Room Open from 1 to 5:30 p. m.—T7:00,to 8:30 Pp. m. Current Muguuwa AUTOS FOR HIRE NOTICE! Beginning SUNDAY, JUNE 15th, Taxi Rates within the City of Ju- neau will be $1 :00 Per Call Qarlson’s Taxi ANYWHERE IN THE CITY FOR $1.00 Carefu!, Efficient Drivers—Call Us At Any Hour—‘ DAY AND NIGHT—Stand at Alaskan Hotel Phones II and Single O Carlson’s Taxi and Ambulance Service Graham’s Taxi Phore 565 STAND AT ARCADE CAFE Day and Night Service Any Place in the City for $1.00 [ l ‘1 oF - | Gastineau Channel oo o yral e s SN ¢ B. P. 0. ELKS Meeting every sec- ond and fourth Wednesdays at 8 o'clock. Elks Hall. Visiting brothers welcome. R. B. MARTIN, Exaltea Ruler. M. H. SIDES, Secretary. Co-oOrdinate Bod les of Freemasox ry Scottish Rite flegu)n.r meeting ! second Fridsy each month st 7:30 p. m. Scos« tish Rite Temple WALTER B. EEISEL, Becretary. LOYAL ORDER OF MOOSE f 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 I AG Scottish Rite Temple, beginning at 7:30 p. m EVANS L. GRUBER CHARLES ' E. NAGHEL, Master; Secretary. ORDER OF EASTERN STAR Second and Fourth 4 Tuesdays of each month, 5 at 8 o'clock, Seottish Rite Temple. LILY BURFORD, Worthy Matron; FANNY L. | ROBINSON, Secretary. KNIGHTS OF COLUMEUS Seghers Counc.. No. 1760 Meetings second and last Monday at 7:30 p. m. Transient brothers urg- ed to attend. Councll Chambers, Fifth Strees JOHN F. MULLEN, G K. H. J. TURNER, Secretary. DOUCLAS A¥RIE 117 F. O. E. Meets first and third &Mondays, 8 o'cluck at Eagles Hall Douglas. ARNE SHUDSHIFT, W. P. GUY SMITH, Secretary. Vis- iting brothers welcome. S Prompt Service, Day and Night CovicH AuTO SERVICE STAND AT THE OLYMPIC 199 axi $1.00 P ) '! Phone 342 Day or Night i | HARRIS Hardware Little experiments in good sportsmanship offer ;1 encouraging signs of inherent virtues in the human make-up. Consider the conclusions of a lady known only as “The Wick,” in Berlin. She is called “The Wick” because she smokes cigars incessantly. “The Wick” opened a little restaurant which was soon frequented by struggling artists and writers. The ‘word went about that in this one place a man could eat and pay when he happened to have money. No books were kept. There was always|!! food for a hungry artist. And now, after a long ltrial, the proprietor reports that, the enterprise prospers and the kindly policy of pay-when-you- can has been a commercial success. The hungry, she maintains, do not forget her when they finally| have morey. In fact, they return to pay up ani spend more for a celebration in honor of tem- porary prosperity. They say Mahatma Gandhi wanted to be ar- rested, and we can understand that after all this marching his feet must have been a little weary.— (Dayton, Ohio, News.) It will be a long time, doubtless, before another Presidential candidate promises an extra session of Congre: Hoover's case is the “horrible example.” ~—(Atlanta Constitution.) The fellow who voted for modification in the Prohibition poll will no doubt be surprised to learn from the wet and dry leaders that that means he voted for both sides.—(Macon, Ga. Telegraph.) Justice McReynolds denies he’ll quit the Su- preme Court bench. It's too hard to get a seat these days to think of quitting. — (Los Angeles Times.) In the good old days the neighbors used to drop in for a call. Now they call in for a drop.— | (Florida Times-Union.) ZEsssass: The answer to the question whether Mr. Hoover is wet or dry seems to be yes. — (Dayton, Ohio, ‘Newn Cuba has the liberty, America the statue.—(Flor- ida Times-Union.) “Jhe BANK 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— And the most important lesson to fnsure success in Jife— The B. M. Behrends Bank ssssesssssssaszyl | & To know the value of moncy REGULAR SAVING $1.00 or more will open an lcfl'lll‘ et e e T T Oldest Bank in Alaska 28 TO ANY PART OF CITY TELEPHONE 183 TAXJ Stand at Pioneer Pool Hall Cars for Hire—Drive Yourself Phone | DAY AND NIGHT SERVICE Watcdes “ Diamonds Y A Ivarw: W. P. Johnson FRIGIDAIRE ' DELCO LIGHT PRODUCTS MAYTAG WASHING MACHINES DAY-FAN RADIOS Phone 1 Front Street “We 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 youll find our ,rolls mighty tasty "and satisfying. Peerless Bakery “Remember the Name” Juneau e 1-3 Third and Franklin. 1-4 Pront and Franklin. 1-5 Front, near Ferry Way. 1-6 Pront, opp. Gross Apts 1-7 Front, opp. City Whart. 1-8 Front, near Saw Mill 1-9 Front at A. J. Office. 2-1 Willoughby 3t 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 Pire Hall, 3-2 Gastineau and Rawn Way. —— THE CASH BAZAAR Open Evenings S. Cable Office o) | ( GARBAGE | HAULING Opposite U. LOT CLEANING Office at Wolland’s Tailor Shop Chester Barnesson PHONE 66 DAIRY FERTILIZER By Load or Sack ‘COLOR. PRINTING increases the pullad power of any printing job.Weare equippedtohan dle colorprinting quickkr and satisfactorily _— mm For Your School Work | J. B. Burford & Co. | ] ’ “Our door swp is worn by Moves, Packs and Stores Freight and Baggage Prompt Dellvery of ALL KINDS OF COAL PHONE 438 L. C. SMITH and CORONA TYPREWRITERS Guaranteed by J. B. BURFORD & CO. “Our door step is worn by satistied customers™ a g LT [

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