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Daily Alaska Empire | THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE. TUESDAY, JULY 8, 1930. I — r i(he Republican primary in which Morrow was nom- inated by a plurality of more than 300,000 and a | clear majority over all of 250,000. Dr. Wilson tries | JOHN W TROY ... ED]TOR AN’D MANAGER | to make people believe too much. Published every evening except Sunday by _the EMPIRE_PRINTING COMPANY at Second and Mai a Streets, Juneau, A t Office In Juneau as Second Cl SUBSCRIPTION RATES. Delivered by carrier in Juneau, Thane for $1.25 per month. , postage paid, at the following rates: dvance, $12.00; in advance, $1.25. month, notify t in the delivery of their papers. Telephone for Editorial and Business Offices, 374, _|the G. Douglas, Treadwell and noyw Jersey Dries do not six months, in advance, 21 bers will confer a favor if they will promptly | Business Office of any failure or irregularity | n New Jersey Dries a mdunurmp to ‘| former Representative Franklin Fort, who was de- in that primary by Ambassador Morrow for O. P. Senatorial nomination, to try it again| as an independent in the November election. The like Messrs Morrow and and Democratic Senatorial induce s | feated | simpson, nominees. Republican A difference between Lobbyist and afterward Clarence True | | Senator Joseph R. Grundy and Dr. i MEMBER OF ASSOCIATED PRESS. The Associated Press is exclusively mse for republicati #t or not otherw local news put e ed herein. entitled to the of all news dispatches credited to ited in this paper and also the that he was a Lobbyist. Wilson and his Board of Temperance, Prohibition | and Public Morals is that Mr. Grundy has admitted ALASKA CIRCULATION GUARANTEED TO BE LARGER THAN THAT OF ANY OTHER PUBLICATION ) Democratic primary campaigns cost little or BETTER CO-OPERATION NEEDED. Our attention has been called to the circumstance that lumber is not the only Outside cargo the Boxer brings north on her regular trips. Groceries, hard- ware and other things are purchased in the States and distributed on the craft throughout Alaska. And this suggests that the Government only partly did the job when it moved branch of the Bureau of Education to Juneau and left the purchasing agency in Seattle. The whole thing ought to have been moved here so as to make purchasing in Alaska more convenient and more | general. And that suggests that it might be a good thing for the Bureau to sell the Boxer and patronize | the steamers that ply Alaskan waters on regular schedules and thus aid them to improve their freight and passenger service. If Alaskans would co-operate in these matters it would promote devel- opment and contribute to comfort and happiness. COCKTAILS FOR THE RICH. One of the objections to Prohibition has been | that it makes class distinctions. It is contended that it deprives poor folks of stimulants they crave but the rich are permitted their cocktails with old time regularity. The following from the Seattle Post-Intelligencer of recent date would indicate that the objection is well-founded: A little cocktail now and then Is relished by the best of men— and women Such was the decision of New York so- cial leaders today, when confronted by a demand that they bar cocktails at their functions. More than a dozen ing Park Avenue, matrons represent- Sutton Place, and the exclusive sets in Westchester and Long Island, turned a cold shoulder on the plea of Mrs. George H. Strawbridge, Eastern leader of the Prohibition League, that they “set an example” to hoi polloi by giving bone dry parties. “It can't be done,” was the reply of the four hundred to Mrs. Strawbridge's letters, addressed to each woman listed in the New York social register. The famous Prohibition Easter party giv- en by Mrs. Edward B. McLean of Wash- ington, a newspaper account of which was enclosed in each letter, aroused no enthusi- asm on ‘the part of New York's social mentors. Mrs. Charles H. Sabin, National Chair- man for Prohibition Reform, said: “I would not be interested in joining or forming a committee for any purpose com- posed merely of women of so-called social standing.” Mrs. Courtland Nicoll wrote: “The hypocrisy of these people who, while proclaiming that they serve no wine on theity table, permit it to be served in a side room fills me with profound disgust.” Mrs. R. Stuyvesant Pierrepont said at her home in Peapack, N. J., today: “I telephoned to twenty of my friends in regard to this matter this morning. Eigh- teen had received Mrs. Strawbridge’s pro- posal. Not one of the twenty will comply with it.” Mrs. Beekman J. Delatour said: “Everywhere I go cocktails are served, and I suppose they will continue to be served. It will merely be parties as usual.” Mrs. E. Roland Harriman wrote that every woman she knows is opposed to the Prohibition law and is doing her to bring about its repeal. utmost POLITICAL STRAW. An interesting political straw is the circumstance AN INTERESTING that Parson McBride and the other Illinois dries are counting upon the Chicago gangland vote to elect Mrs. McCormick, bone dry, to the Senate. They figure that the Chicago racketeers think more of sustaining Mayor Bill Thompson's machine than they do of delivering a black-eye to Pro- hibition. In fact, it is thought that the racketeers and murderers prefer Prohibition to regulated liquor traffic. It is only under Prohibition that their trade can be made to continue to yield large, if bloody, profits. At any rate, it is said, the gangs and gangsters, racketeers and machine gunmen are lining up to carry Chicago for the dry candidate for Sena- tor, and Parson McBride is welcoming their support with joy and thanksgiving This does not eminate from Col. James Ham- fiton Lewis's headquarters. It is from the stanch, rock-ribbed, Republican New York Herald Tribune. DR. WILSON TALKS T0O MUCH. Dr. Clarence True Wilson is quoted as saying in Seattle that Ambassador Morrow carried the New Jersey primaries because only one-fourth of the voters of the State had registered for the primary election. Hoover received 926,000 votes in New Jersey, Coolidge got 676,000 and Harding received 611,000. There were nearly 600,000 votes cast in the Alaska nothing in comparison with the Republican costs. But then usually Democratic nominations in recent |years have not been very useful { Deliberative and Deliberate. { { (New York Times.) | Don't yield to first impulses and accuse the United States Senate of taking an unconscionable |time in framing a tariff bill. It is all a matter of | comparison. True it is that the extra session for writing a tariff bill met on March 5, 1929, and that if we are lucky and get a bill before July 4, the| {work will have taken sixteen months. True it is| |that in sixteen months the following tasks might have been accomplished: Four Constitutions of the United States could have been written. The Convention of 1787 sat })ust four months. | John Milton might have written three books of |“Paradise Lost.” Christopher Columbus could have discovered seven continents the size of North and South |America. Eight creeds of the importance and endurance lof the Nicense Creed of A. D. 325 might have been framed. | Napoleon could have returned nearly five times |from Elba and met his fate at Waterloo. Abraham Lincoln could have composed and de- | livered 480 Gettysburg Addresses. The Graf Zeppelin could have flown nearly! |twenty times around the world. | Let it be admitted, then, that compared with ]other events of warld-shaking importance the | |progress of the Hawley-Smoot bill has been a mt" |leisurely. But, on the other hand, it has moved almost with Twentieth Century Limited speed com- ‘pared with— i The speed of the average Republican Senator at Washington coming to the support of Mr. Hoover. The triumphant solution of the Arnold Rothstein |mystery through the joint efforts of New York Po- | lice Commissioners and District Attorneys. | The establishment of harmony and cooperation ! between Democratic Governors and Republican ch-‘ S. | of labor in Washington has been mentioned as a possible choice tc| succeed Secretary Davis, can senatcrial candidate in P.nw“ sylvania, EILER HANSON United States Experiment Station with headquarters ! here Sunday on the steamer North- | western for that place. been here since late last week when |he arrived from the west after a |stay of several nuska. H | MRS. Mrs. C. M. McGrath, wllknown! Sitka resident, who has been visit- |ing at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Northwestern for Sitka. remain there all summer and spend the winter in the south. £ - e —— 4 Ola papers rc: sale at The Em- | pire office. For Labor Post Associated Press Rhoto Grace Abbott of the department republ|- RETURNS TO SITKA HEADQUARTERS Eiler Hanson, fiscal clerk of thel at Sitka,* left He has weeks at Mata-| g M'GRATH ENDS VISIT HERE AND RETURNS SITKA; Hellenthal, left Sunday on thej She will islatures at Albany. | And as for progress made toward providing everv‘ |subway passenger in New York City with a seat— | |why, compared with that the tariff bill has been! l traveling at the speed of light. | Advertising Has This Pulling Power. i & SON, Inc. GENERAL INSURANCE “Absolute Security” Valentine Building | (Seattle Business Chronicle.) lm { By means of advertising, Atlanta, Ga., is said to| have added annual payrolls totaling $30,000,000 in | the short space of four years. ‘This gain is only| one of many attributed to a four-year campaign“ of National publicity. Greater Atlanta gained 734 per cent. in population in the past decade—much of effective advertising. What that Southern cnyw has done may be a criterion for cities and States of the Far West. The Tacoma News Tribune has ipresented a succinct report of the Atlanta adver- tising crusade so stimulative of thought that we {borrow it: o [ A period of business depression was grip- pring Atlanta in 1925. Some bold spirits concluded that the thing to do was to adver- tise. A fund of $250,000 was raised, repre- senting a dollar for each resident. Returns | were 50 good and so immediate that in 1926 | a four-year advertising campaign was fram- ed at a cost of $683,000 The power of advertising is shown by | the results achieved. The period of stagna- | tion came to a sudden end soon after the of this also doubtless attributable to the potency.!!————————— CALL 371 Work called for and delivered The Capital Cleaners | —=n | Cleaning and Pressing | | 14 | W. P. Johnson FRIGIDAIRE DELCO LIGHT PRODUCTS MAYTAG WASHING MACHINES GENERAL MOTORS RADIOS Phone 1 Front Street Juneau advertising started, and in 1925 71 new business establishments were attracted to the city. The average for the previous four i years was 48 newcomers a year. For the | four-year period beginning in 1926 an aver- i age of 170 business enterprises were brought in by advertising in newspapers and maga- zines and through well-prepared booklets. — PRIVATE BOARDING HOUSE | Table board — weekly, $10.00; | 421 SEWARD STREET | | | single meals, 50 cents each; dinner served from 5:30 to . 6:30 p. m. CARRIE A WALL i \T PROFESSIONAL | e S | ¥ f Helene W.L. Albrecht PHYSIOTHERAPY | Massage, Electricity, Infra Red | Re#v, Medical Gymnastica. | 41u Goldstein Buildins | Phone Office, 216 e v | DRS. KASER & PREEBURGER DENTISTS Dr. Charles P. Jenne DENTIST Rooms 8 and 8 Valentine Building . Telephone 176 o P Dr. J. W. Bayne | DENTIST | | Rooms 5-6 Triangle Bldg. Office hours, 9 am. to 5 p.m. Evenings by appoinment. Phone 321 A. W. Stewart DENTIST - | Hours 9 a. m. to 6 p. m. b i e e TR AUTOS FOR HIRE E Fratemal Societies I or - \ Gastinzau Channel ‘ L —— S Y Carlson’s Taxi ANYWHERE IN THE CITY FOR £1.00 At Any Hour— DAY AND NIGHT—Stand at Alaskan Hote] Phones II and Single O Carlson’s Taxi and Ambulance Service Careful, Efficient Drivers—Call Us Phore 565 STAND AT ARCADE CAFE Day and Night Service Any Place in the City for $1.00 | — Graham’s Taxi B. P. 0. ELKS Meeting every sec- ond and fourth ot Wednesdays at 8 / o'clock. Elks Hall, Visiting brothers welcome. R. B. MARTIN, Exaltea Ruler. M. H. SIDES, Sacretary. Co-Ordinate Boa fes of Freemasow ry Scottish Rite Regular meetingy 'second Friday each month s 7:30 p. m. Soos- tish Rite Temple WALTER B. E£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. 2. Box 820 MOUNT JUNEAU LODGE NO, 147 | Second and fourth Mon- I day of each month in Py Scottish R’*» Templs, beginning at 7:30 p. m SEWARD BUILDING Office Phone 469, Res. Phone 276 L ———— Dr. H. Osteopath—201 Gloldstein Bldg. | Vance Hours: 10 to 12; 1 to 5; T to 9 | [ e S Prompt Service, Day and Night CovicH Auro SERVICE STAND AT THE OLYMPIC Phone 342 Day or Night or by appointment Licensed Osteopathic Physician | Phone: Office 1671. Residence, MacKiunon Apts. | - T Dr. Geo. L. Barton v | CHIROPRACIOR | Hellenthal Building OFFICE SERVICE ONLY Hours: 10 a. m. %o 12 noon 2p. m to 5 p m ) 6 p.m to8p m i By Appointment | | TELEPHONE i 183 TAX] | Stand at Pioneer Pool Hall Cars for Hire—Drive ! Yourself 199Taxi $1.00 TO ANY PART : OF CITY { Phone 199 Gastinean Hotel DAY AND NIGHT s SERVICE PHONE 259 —_— Robert Simpson Opt. D. Graduate kos Angeles Col- lege of Optometry and ! Opthalmology | Glasses Fitted, Lenses Ground | [ e ——————— e —n DR. R. E. SOUTHWELL Optometrist-Optician | | Eyes Examined—Glasses Fitted | Room 16, Valentine Bldg. | 10:00 to 6:00. Evenings by | | Appointment. Phone 484 Juneau Public Library Free Reading Room City Hall, Second Fleor Main Street and Fourth Reading lloom Open From 8a m to 10 p. m. Circulation Room Open from 1 to 5:30 p. m.—T7:00 to 8:30 | P. m. Current Magazines, Newspapers, Reference, Books, Etc. FREK TO ALL Our trucks go any place time. A tank for Diesel and a tank for crude oil burner trouble. PHONE 149, NIGHT 5103 any oil The Atlanta Chamber of Commerce has Jjust announced that the 679 establishments induced to locate in Atlanta in the past ; four years employ 17,421 persons and have ! an annual payroll exceeding $30,000,000. At- H lanta is one of the fastest growing cities i in the Nation because its leaders had faith H in the power of advertising and backed that i faith to the extent of amost a million dol- H | lars. They realized their aims and at the H same time set an example for others. il Both Ways. f H | (Springfield Republican.) | ! Pennsylvania wets are still hunting for a can- | |didate who might have a chance of beating the [ | |extra dry Mr. Pinchot, and Ambassador Morrow'’s |supporters in New Jersey, it is understood, look upon the dry Mr. Fort as the Ambassador's mos |formidable rival. What do, you make of that | Watson? We stick to our story that nobody will ever make | the appeal that the Lone Eagle made. In the Singer ‘Bulldmg elevator at 12:40 P. M. yesterday one girl said to another, “Did you see Lindbergh—I mean | Byrd?"—(New York World.) | They say that Crown Prince Michael sings him- self to sleep nights with a song to his papa—"I was a4 King in Rumania, and you were a wow i France."—(F. P. A. in New York World.) The Grundy tariff begins to shape up as the barbed wire golf pants that go with the Hoover hair shirt.—(Detroit News.) In India it is the salt cellar, but over here it is just the cellar—(Dallas News.) Alaskans can see a similarity between red theorie. and red tape. They both retard development.— (Anchorage Times.) able more girl students to enter so that its male students won't desert. That shows what coeducation can do for a college.—(Washington Post.) H H i Stanford University is seeking $10,000,000 to en- z & A savings bank book con- notes independence from days of want. The habit of thrift cultivates qualities of character which make a substantial citizen. are not saving, start today by opening a savings ac- count and saving at least ten per cent of your earn- ings. One dollar or more will open a savings account The B. M. Behrends Bank Oldest Bank in Alaska If you —of— LIBERTY | i | | | Fri — Dime & Dollar Building and Loan Association Is under the supervision of the State of Oregon. Can only loan depositors money on improved real estate, first mortgages and 6% on deposits. Start your account with l fi Silvarware | Home cooked meals as you like | them.” Featuring Chicken Din- | ners every Thursday. Rice & | | | PHONE YOUR ORDERS We wil attend to them prompfly, grain and transfer business is increasing daily. There’s a reason. today and learn why. You Can’t Help Being ROLLER Phone 584 | GARBAGE HAULED AND LOT CLEANING 1 E. O. DAVIS Z| Y’ EVANS L\ GRUBER, Master; CHARLES E. NAGHEL, Secretary. e PR s rw Gy ORDER OF EASTERN STAK Second and Fourth 4 Tuesdays of each month, at 8 o'clock, Secottish Rite Temple. LILY BURFORD, Worthy Matron; FANNY L. ROBINSON, Secretary. KNIGHTS OF COLUMBUS Seghers Counc.s No. 1768 Meetings second and last Monday at 7:30 p. m. ed to attend. Counci Chambers, Fifth Strees JOHN F. MULLEN, G K. H. J. TURNER, Secretary. DOUGLAS AERIE 117 F. O. E Meets first and third & Mondays, 8 o'clocs at Eagles Hall Douglas. ALEX GAIR, W. P. GUY SMITH, Secretary. Visiting brothers welcome. { { THE CASH BAZAAR SKATING A. B. HALL Wednesday, Friday and Sunday Evenings State approved bonds. c¢ompounded semiannually Juneau Representative children. H. J. Eberhart GASTINEAU HOTEL the food Jeweler that you get it. ‘Watch Repairing Brunswick Agency FRONT STREET LUDWIG NELSON ( M et = 2y L.).SmAricx B akery Towslés and “Remember the Name” THAT'S TRUE i- Our bread helps to make strong, healthy Of course you are particular about the quality of eaten | your children—so or- | der our bread by name and make ‘sure Peerless Open Evenings Opposite U. S. Cable Office GARBAGE HAULING FOREST WOOD Office at Wolland’s Tailor Shop Chester Barnesson PHONE 66 DAIRY FERTILIZER Out job shop is as near to you as your one. Phone us to «all and we will be right on the jobto get the job you have forus Watcdes ) Diamonds s e The Coffee Shoppe MRS. K. HOOKER Ahlers Bldg., Corner Tkird and Machine Shop e RO CABINET and MILLWORK WORK i Request JUNEAU CABINET and DETAIL MILL- WORK CO. Front Street, next to Warner GENERAL CARPENTER ! GLASS REPLACED IN AUTOS |{Estimates Furnished Upon MOVING VAN Moves, Packs and Stores Freight and Baggage Prompt Delivery of ALL KINDS OF COAL TO US Our coal, hay, Lunches Give us a trial orde: Pleased D. B. FEMMER PHONE 114 -+ Mabr+’s Cafe Regular Dinners Short Orders Open 6 a.m. to 2 a.m. POPULAR PRICES HARRY MABRY Proprietor PHONE 48 L. C. SMITH and CORONA | TYPREWRITERS Guaranteed by You get results from |{J. B. BURFORD & CO. yrlntlng done by us “Our door step is worn satisfied customers” i Transient brothers urg- - | 4 ] i