The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, June 24, 1930, Page 4

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P —— e ——————— THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, TUESDAY, \JUNE 24, 1930." so many old timers who prospected up and down P PROFESSIONAL e Sl the North Pacific as this rugged old navigator. .. Dml\ 4laska Empire % He has earned over and over again the right to TROY .- EDITOR AND MANAGE]% wealth that would make the remainder of his days {easy and enable him to take again the place he fl A | Fraternal Societies | | or - | | *"Castinsau Channel | o el sl A N JOHV w "~ Published T Helene W. L. Albrecht " except /by _the qundn) dthof July | d s orably among those who . PHYSIOTHERAPY — T EMPIRE PR NY at Second and Main |filled so well and so honorably among | : Streets Alaska. S ________|do big things. May good fortune attend him! And pecla S Massage, Electricity, Infra Red aetlng e\%r;'sg-ELxs T Entered in the Post Office in Juneau as Second C may he come again! R#v, Medical Gymnastics, ond and fourth Wednesdays at 8 41u Goldstein Building, Phone Office, 216 Welcoming Byrd seems likely ‘ Hart Schaffner | | York habit. [ = | SUBSCRIPTION RATES. o h”F”!Hl’ a New Carlson’s Taxi o'clock. Elks Hall rri a d £y 9, Deilvered by carrier v'r:”.l::\ez;uiu?n’;%l:‘l';‘Treadwell an, &M — Visiting broth ers ge paid, at ‘the following rates: { ) G N Marx _____.__.? welcome. x months, in advance, p . e The Chicago Medical Society has joined a lot| S || DRS. msg:&mmn ANYWHERE IN THE CITY FOR $1.00 R. B. MARTIN, Exaltea Ruler. confer a favor if they will promptly |of other medical organizations in the assault on| SUITS NTISTS Y M. H. SIDES, Secretary. . 5 Office of any fallure or irregularity | Of OLher ! { 301-303 Goldstein Bldg. Careful, Efficient Drivers—Call Us At Any Hour— o me for Editorial and Business Offices, 374 | and Stetson’s and . DPHONE':G’ DAY AND NIGHT—Stand at Alaskan Hotel Co-orainate Bos e — - B v yi gk i ours 9 &. m. p. m. les of Freemuson MEMBER OF ASSOCIATED PRESS. | Notwithstanding that Dr. Clarence True Wilson's| 3 Pho II d S l O Scottis d e et ioa'le |middle name is True Ralph Horr is another that Dobbs’ nes an '«ng e R’:m"l'l'f ,‘:n':;';. t ted this ser and also the thinks it is not true. 'y . . seco! il news pibllhed hercln. ” " 128 il O HATS t| Dr. Charles P. Jenne Carlson’s Taxi and Ambulance Service Gt o . DENTIST LASK RCUL. N GUARANTEED TO BE LARGER faa ! 7:30 p. m. Scos % AS;’:AZ THAT OF ANY OTHER PUBLICATION: Census Casualties. | at Rooms 55‘1‘; 9 Valentine tish !';.Ile Dpis diskiacd o z ey i Tem, (New York Times.) aiag | eléliond: 278 WALTER B. ESISEL, Secretary. HALF PRICE | | How terrible must be the sensations of the guodJ Graham’s Taxi ! communicate, a Pariah, an Untouchable. | Rooms 5-6 Triangle Bldg. When editorials proudly comment on the growth | Office hours, 9 am. to 5 p.m. of the American people from four millions under | 3 i | BOOTERY Evenings by appoinment. George Washington to 122 millions under Herber! | | night, at 8 o'clock. TOM SHEARER, Dictator W. T. VALE, Secy., P. O. Box 826 LOYAL ORDER citizen who, despite his utmost efforts, has been iy OF MOOSE overlooked by the census enumerators. From now R IS June; until the census of 1940 he can hardly help feeling | il Dr. J. W. Bayne Meet:“ev!gr‘;vgeu?:% u7:n, and acting like a.man without a country, an ex- ARNOLD S ) DENTIST \ one 5 ; } STAND AT ARCADE CAFE Phone 321 \ z . MOUNT JUNEAU LODGE NO. 147 Hoover, the forgotten citizen will sign at the' ¥ e W D, Y and nght Service Second and fourth Mon- thought that he has made no contribution to thac|| Goldstein Bldg. Phone 45 = T | W 2 day of each month in marvelous progress. Dr. A. W. Stewart A Y Place in the Clty for $1.00 Scottish Rite Temple, When commencement ofators invoke the Spirit | * DENTIST | beginning at 7:30 p. m. of America, he will sob to think that his soul has 1! Horn 0.8 a0 5 = oot “Q’ EVANS L. GRUB - __|no part in the common total. T || “SEWARD BUILDING | Master; CHARLES E. NAG = £ When the band strikes up “The Star-Spangled i1 Office Phone 469, Res. ! 4 Secretary. { FRED JOHNSON OF WYOMING FOR |Banner,” he will wonder whether he is entitled M I ’ C ; i s me' 3 Prompt Service, Day and Night T ® | RN SENATOR. to stand up with the rest of the audience. aorv'svare |, & Y - ORDER CF EASTERN STAR He will suffer in countless other ways. He will| . Covica AuTo SERVICE 1 aXl et Second and Fourth Fred W. Johnson of Rock Springs, Wyoming, 1s’be unrepresented in the annual per capita con- 4 : B iy STAND AT THE OLYMPIC Tuesdays of each month, f et 1o o i i) Dimodvadic: nominaRan forlsumptlon of sugar and pig-iron east of the Missis- Regular Dinners | Dr. H. Vance Phohe 342 Day or Night at 8 o'clock, Seottish : his State. Alaskans who attended the|SiPPL. He will have failed to do his bit to push Short Orders | | Osteopath—201 Goldstain Bidg. ! $1 00 Tite, demhe.y BILX Senator in - Fred Johnson with |Uhe center of population in the United States seven- {'V Hours: 10 to 12; 1 to 5; 7 to # e & BURFORD, Worthy Houston Convention remember Fred Johnson teen miles westward from one spot in Illinois Lunches i or by appointment H Matron; FANNY L. affectionate regard. He was the head of the "West- ¢, gpother spot. He will have no share in the | Open 6 a.m. to 2 a.m. 1| Licensed Osteopathic Physiclan | TO ANY PART ROBINSON, Secretary. ern States for Smith” movement in 1928 that Ye-lquift from the farm to the city. He will have done | POPULAR PRICES t Phone: Office 1671. I sulted in 100 per cent. Al Smith delegations from Inothing toward lowering the birth-rate or still more | Residence, MacKinron Apts. TELEPHONE | OF CITY the fourteen westernmost States and Territories. His decisively reducing the death-rate. organization arranged for a special train that started at Portland and was fully made up at Denver in which the fourteen delegations with every vote for Al To the extent of his absence from the count, he will have in- validated the figures for the ratio of horsepower to population employed in American manutacmrefi Proprietor HARRY MABRY || H ! Phone KNIGHTS OF COLUMBU% Seghers Counc_i No. 1760 Meetings second and last Monday at 7:30 p. m, CHIROPRACTOR Hellenthal! Bullding || OFFICE SERVICE ONLY Transient brothers urg~ ed to attend. Council Chambers, Fifth Strees JOHN F. MULLEN, G K. 183 TAXI Stand at Pioneer | |He will derive no thrill from the enormously in-| Smith crossed Colorado, Kansas, Oklahoma and creased per capit: Texas. The train was given impressive receptions at | per capita expenditure on education. On LU TR TR LT I {the other hand, it must be confessed, he will es- all important towns along the route. There were‘ 199 Hojcens personal responsibility for the greatly in- Hours: 10 a. m. % 13 nooa Pool Hall H. J. TURNER, Secretary. stops at Kansas City, Dallas and Waco where t ercreased er capita denud: n of the f ts. And 0 s P pi lenudatio: e foresf 2p.m toBp m S R Chambers of Commerce and other organizations!|when foreigners write hooks about the imminent Cars for Hir Drive Gastinean Hotel ICLAS AZR! A nm' (; E. greeted the Westerners. At Kansas City and Dallas’Americanlanon of Europe he will not have to de-| 1 | 6p. m to8p m i Y e—“ :ee; ;n len: the Chambers of Commerce provided automobiles cide whether to feel proud or apologetic, since anda \ By Appointment | ourse | gy | “ODE:Y;,lea‘ocm to give the Smith men opportunities to view their | {in either case he will not be personally responsible. S . PHONE 289 DAY AND NIGHT Douglas. ARNE BHUDSHD’I‘H‘Wm ¢ One _erroneous popular impression must be cor- F I | R R [ SOSS. J ' W, towns. R e ARy mnis ung SERVICE P. GUY SMITH, Secretary. Vis- The campaign that was carried on by the organ- 4 er: 5 overlooket v e census enum- i = G : p‘ 'gh Mr. Jok n was President and|¢rators are not ipso facto exempt from duty of 2 Rob. { _{ |iting brothers welcome. ization of whic L ; |paying income tax or from the provisions of the 24-Hour Service 'l obert Slmpson l' i E the more or less spectacular railroad journey "’ivmmad T r & b . 0 s D — HA LED the Texas metropolis did as much as any one thing | ATRET T ) TS ey 1 ey, L. J. SmARicx to demonstrate beyond question the popular char- The Greates . araiints o Angeles Col- aND Lot creanrva V|| THE CASH BAZAAR acter of the Al Smith movement throughout the | ¢ Gregtest of Them Al lege of Optometry and Jeweler and E. O. DAVIS i ! | Opthalmol Optician Pho N country. “ (Cincinnati Enquirer.) 3 ) Glasses Fitted, u:z Ground I Phone 584 | Open Evemnp Without knowing who are opposing Mr. Johnsvnj On the fifth anniversary of his accession to the! - {;___&*é Watcdes = " 3 for Senator, as Republicans or Democrats, it is|Presidency of Germany, General von I{indenbur!::. Diamonds = || Opposite U. S. Cable Office b R —— = o easy to say that thousands throughout the West faced the world as the rugged and impeccable rep-| 118 Seward St. Phone 25 DR. R. E. SOUTHWELL R Ay, | PRIVATE BOARDING HOUSE | A would be pleased to see the young Rock Springs|resentative of a new Germany, of a national new Optometrist-Optician & a2 | 421 SEWARD STREET | lawyer in the United States Senate. They favor |erd. Coming to guide the affairs of ‘the Fatherland, MIINIIINNMINIMINIMIIRINGIN L} goos 00 ined Glasses Pitted him because ‘$hey like him and have great confidence {the old imperial order, not without reason, expected | ithough Hindenburg to revive the imperial state. tionally administer the affairs of the State in com- | e Front and Second Streets Room 16, Valentine Bldg. | | single meals, The Coffee Shogpe |J MRS. K. HOOKE] Ahlers Bldg., Corner Third and | Table board — weekly, $10.00; | 50 cents each; | GARBAGE LOT CLEANING Y ea { 10:00 to 6:00. Evenings by | dinner served from 5:30 to in his ability’and character. It is probably not i Home cooked meals as you like | | | & s |Doubtless they were overwhelmed with surprise to| Appointment, ' Phone 484 i , i {1980 Do mm. ALL l H ULI N G necessary to say that he is for the repeal of theifng one of theif own order Who considered hls‘ TraE JunEAu LAUNDRY ! jlhem.’ Fentl;‘rk:ng dchl;ke;] Dlx;—' i CARRIE A W. i 4 Eighteenth Amendment. [oath to support the constitution and to constita-| Prisiitin “Strsok. botwien s g S s 5 ! —= | PRESERVE INDIAN MOUNDS. There is nothing new of prehistoric Americans left to be discovered in the Mississippi Valley in the opinion of Gerard Fowke, 75-year<old archaeologist | of Madison, Ind, after tramping 100,000 miles study- ing and collecting Indian relics. Fowke, who will spend the summer rearranging the archaeological pliance with the wish of a majority of his country- | men of superior obligation to the traditional de-| mands of his class. President von Hindenburg iever the idol of his people. remains more thaa | As a leader of armies jand the loyal servitor of the former Emperor, he won world renown for his military genius, intre-| \Pidity and personal worth. When he realized that |the Kaiser's mighty dreams of conquest had been | PHONE 359 ——— e} - JUNEAU CABINET and DETAIL MILL- {| Juneau Public Library Free Reading Room | Franklin Streets. City Hall, Second Fleor Main Street and Fourth Reading Room Open From 8a m to 10 p. m. Circulation Room Open from C Office at Wolland’s Tailor Shop Chester Barnesson PHONE 66 DAIRY FERTILIZER By Load or Sack collection of the Missouri Historical Soclety, thinks dissipated before the armed forces of civilization he | WORK CO. {3 1 to5:30 p. m—7:00 to 8:30 that future desecration’ of Indian mounds is mere :’5““’:’3’0;" h‘]"“‘ rd“f:et b“" “keh“:e mv? ot B s Wlitot uicss 40 Warets P. m. Current Magazines, vandalism, for their exploration can result/in the > &9 hy%iri!; °:r"a t‘r’ng“zc“h:l'"“ i night comay Machine Shop Ne“mg‘e:k", R:!:em discovery of Ql\l,\' more of the same relics which In the light of these facts the recent utter-‘ - are now plentiful. He says: . e |ances of General Ludendortf, Quartermaster General | CABINET and FREK TO ALL Indian mounds ought to be guarded as of the German army under the Kaiser, appear priceless historical monuments. So manyn(‘)f trivial, ridiculous, bitten with fanatical venom—for | MILLWORK them have already been destroyed that the Ludendorff still is a mad monarchist. - e — | | few remaining ones can yield up nothing But the people of Germany do not so regard GENERAIV‘VO%I}{RPENTEB HARRIS Hard PHONE YOUR ORDERS new. o diaviin 2 their present elected ruler. They see in him the | o C ardware TO US [ To. tear them down ‘'would be like wreck- greatest Republican of them all, a man who, though | LASS REPL. ompan N 2 PR Lo ing an ancient Greek temple with the hope |grown old in imperlal services, was ablo to s GLAS ACED ) PALLY-os We wil attend to them M T suits mother; Tt Rt IN AUTOS Now located of discovering a few new gold coins in its |the runes of Fate, and to read them correctly. ow located next promptly. Our coal, hay, (MR suits me — breakfast basement. The field of Indian archaeology Incidentally, the officers of the old army repudiate Estimates Furnished Upon CONNORS gram and transfer businesa‘ dinner or tea” — so has been so v.humug:nly covei‘ed ml ic Cen- the slanders of a malcontent of dead imperialism Request GARAGE is increasing dm]y. There’s a| sings the thtle tral States that historical archives are and give full credit to the man who has provel| . s 5 us al order Our job shop is as near to you practically complete. himself bigger than caste, and a true patriot. A o [reason. Give us a tri ||l Housewife. Mother Jobshop 4 CROP MOVEMENT UNDER WAY. One American railroad company announces that it already has stored in the Southwest 1,500 new cars of 50 tons capacity each for handling the brief notice. The residents of Alaska manage to D. B. FEMMER ‘|l it that way. wheat crop this year. The 100,000-pound freight |extract more real enjoyment out of social life thaa! PHONE 114 § car is another evidence of growth. It does not seem (Comes to the greater number of people in much | Alaska Social Conditions. (Anchorage Times.) The social conditions in Alaska invite more than 1 today and learn why. has explained to her how this particyar bread happened to be so particularly good. \ We take pains to make You Can’t Help Being . Pleased N Peerless as your telephone. Phone us to «all and we will be right on the jobtoget the job you have forus long ago to those who have reached or passed |°lder communities. The summers in Alaska are I middle life that the average freight car held five |Periods of strenuous work, but the winters afford FIRE RM CALLS JUNEAU TRANSFER tons. Then came the tenfon and the twenty-ton |OPPOrtunity for relaxation and recreation, and the ALA . cars. Now we have the fifty-ton car for handling grain and other commodities. The movement of the 1930 wheat crop is now under way in the South and is expected to reach Herbert Hoover surprised all the Senators by e ”, 1-6 Front, opp. Gross Apts its peak early in July. Then will come the move- submitting the London naval pact with a note 1-7 Front, opp. City Wharf. ment of the crop farther north. The movement |containing only a hundred Presidential words. The 1-8 Front, near Saw Mill. of corn will follow that of wheat. The distribution |Sleepier solons awakened with a start, probably 1-9 Front at A. J. Office. natural trait of Anglo-Saxon initiative has devised many forms of harmless enjoyment during th: winters in all Alaskan towns. thinking they had caught Cal Coolidge in loquacity? Bakery 1-3 Thxd and Franklin. “Remember the Name” 1-4 Front and Franklin, 1-5 Front, near Ferry Way. COMPANY 2 . R 2-1 Willoughby at Totem Gro. 4 of money among the farmers for the delivery of Cash Cole’s wheat, corn and other fall crops is expected to|—(Toledo Blade) =3 me“‘““'m"" onm- THEQE 3 improve the demand for manufactured products, Mahatma Gandhi ur + ges his followers to refuse 2-4 Pront and Seward. lumber and copper and help to improve markets|to pay taxes as a part of his program of clvil 2-5 Front and Main. 15 BUT ONE Mm&ai::l“‘s:;:fl and make business more active disobedience. But folks who have tried that over | 2-6 Second and Main. Bag Ambassador ‘\‘lu'xu\\ fared bu.'u in the New Jersey primary than Ambassador Houghton did in the last New York election. Houghton resigned as : ‘ you to come PHONE 48 Ambassador to Great Britain to run for Senator | Without a jury, serious violations with a jury. This 3-5 Fourth and Harsis. Bam' New York AHV “‘lum‘z rlu England as|Means that there will be ever so many more con- afld tfi( A 3-6 Fifth and Gold. here for ”‘“ B e 2t wnothes serves 1o ited States |Victions for a gallon of liquor than for ten thou- e herk bosk T N R s i achios) od 3-7 Fifth and East. printing. WG - Ambassador and another served in the Unit ates | and gallons.—(New York Times.) e bal ook is the first text-book 0ol of 3-8 Seventh and Gold. T “ ¢ Senate. However, Houghton lected to declare practical experience. 3-9 Fifth and Kennedy. ‘believe ! H - in favor of the repeal of the ghteenth Amend- One has to look twice these early June days The diploma is an honorable discharge from the old school—, 4-1 Ninth, back of power house. are eqnlpped OTEL -\ ment. He ran as a ¢ in the newspapers to make sure whether a column|[l but the lessons in the new school are much more difficult. 4-2 Calhoun, opp. Seaview Apts. \go give your ZYNDA 5 21 R of names in small type is Congressmen overriding You are the teacher—and by giving your son or daughter a 4-3 Distin Ave., and Indian Sta. Wk t‘”m ATOR ERRYIOR ~ “CAPTAIN JOHN” FORTUNE IN [the President’s veto or young women graduating bank book, you teach him or her Sexy ] ALASKA from Bryn Mawr.—(New York Times.) To be self-reliant—To be business-like and systematic— ‘er ;t::ntion\’ 8. ZYNDA, Prop. i ———— | To know the value of money an at we polel . B A e PR, Capt. John Irving. once one of the wealthiest It is gratifying to be assured that the dollar i And the most important lesson to insure success in life— are able to =5 [T S of British Columbia citizens who probably has books contemplated by‘seveml publishers will be [|i REGULAR SAVING 3 : B el frichds than any singls peion. f|FEeUY. 8000 books: nab ;'ike Shah 8 e ok {onia S0 o maore oiLE R s turn out a’ L. C. SMITH and CORONA {4 the Northwest, is going out to Valdez hoping to| °CBlS 8t $3 and $5—(New York Times.) i satisfactory Tgmi‘d"‘;’;s 3 develop mining interests there. Thousands Of ‘rhings have come to a pretty pass when Senators [ The B M B ’ ds B k _ pleceof work, -] pioneers of the North and of the Canadian and|are grateful to a high official of the Anti-Saloon E - »: e lren an J “EurligrREf;)H?nrf CO. : American Puget Sound region hope that he|League for permission to confirm a nominee to the Ohiest B k 2 Alaska 5 by ¥ may strike it rich, No man has probably befriended |Supreme Bench.—(Loulsville Herald-Post.) |!. &t qf_'&z!@ma LMMM custamer: ; on this. side say it wont work.—(Macon, Ga., graph.) Tele- Minor violations of the dry law are to be tried e BANK BOOK - T T T T T T T T T T T T T T T T T T LT T T T T LT T REASON 44 WHY we ask 2-7 Fifth and Seward. 2-9 Fire Hall 3-2 Gastineau and Rawn Way. 3-4 Second and Gold. Prompt Delivery of ALL KINDS OF COAL [

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