The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, July 10, 1930, Page 4

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i ? % | _and addressed Daily 4laska Emplre work of saving souls for the religon of the Mastr, ___'In those days situations like that at Chic were ft to the sw jcers and the good citizens JOHN W. TROY .. EDITOR AND MANAGER left the sworn offi Anc ol 1 who would give them the f uppox Somy 1 lish eve evening except Sunday by the | f ] i s st EIan. EL‘{"!’"I’F‘(‘;Z‘P?"RIN : COMPANY at Second and Main es, when officials brazenl 1sed mf“H_ 1 Streets, Juneau, Alaska. some of the church members would co-operate u.x; 1 Entered in the Post Office In Juneau as Second Class individuals with other good citizens in forming| i matter. Sl vigilance committees or sir org HoTs ol g SUBSCRIPTION RATES. copewith the situation. But for a Cl Federa- | a Y 5 1 those By mall, pos paid, at the following rates: the premises would have been unthinkable. In those One year, in advance, $12.00; six months. In advance, | R el ok GRS behnes L tiy Jaonth. n advance s156 days there was respect for all the churches every-|| g Subscribers will confer a_favor it they will promptly where Il 2 he Busi Office of any failure or irregularity A1 ¥ B ey o s ooy B hose churches which are trying to run politics|| 2 Telephone for Editorial and Business Offic 4. and the country, forgetting ti njunction to “yield | 2 MEMBER OF ASSOCIATED PRESS. ‘'unto Caesar the things that are Caesar’s” are ;’ sociate ess exclusively entitled to the ks S or, Tepabhas r;' of a‘l’; m‘\ui&‘.\ \\mny. . nlr..llmrl )x‘ undermining the cause which they were organized | 3 credited in this paper and also the , : d herein to uphold (I3 ALASKA CIRCULATION GUARANTEED TO BE LARGER | 3 B OF SNV UTHER PUBLICATION Forest O'Brine and Dale Jackson of St. Louis, | g who held the airplane endurance record until it|| 3 HIGH HONOR FOR DR. SUZZALLO. |y proken at Chicago by the Hunter brothers, have | . T announce 2 ey endeavor to bring the B pedple ‘probably realize the magnitide of the ;2Dnounced -that SRyl entle gl ] 4 h RRAC wlis contetred upon Dr. Henry lo, Tecord back to St. Lou Their plans call for|[ 4. D niedhing University of Washing. Private subscriptions to the amount of $30,000. They | 4 {Ormm};‘ p; 3 i e \ave already received one check for $1,000 from | 4 on, when he was n President o p Car g | s X a snthusiast v ¢ s name Foundation for the Advancement of Education. The 40 ¢nthusiast who withheld his nan b best proof of the importance of his position is the | i 4 eminence of the whom he succeeds and the | John D. has just passed his 91st birthday and L great achievements of Dr. Pritchett during the still has dimes and nickels to give away YA quarter century he occupied the post | ok i The New York World, reviewing the retire- - ment of Dr. Pritchett and the selection of Dr. They Were Once Dry. Suzzallo to succeed him, said The retirement of Dr. from the Presidency of the C: dation for the Advancement of the election of Dr. post are events of importance It was in 1905 that Mr. Carnegie established the foundation with an initial 000,000. Dr. Pritchett, head, has served a quarter His policies have had on the trend of higher educati of his successor will be terest. All great foundations are potent for evil the directors of all as well as good, and are likely sometimes to err. ious that the great original scheme of the Carnegie Foundation for a pension system went badly agley. Dr. Pritchett years ago question whether thi lege giving” of the Carnegie and Rockefeller Foundations has not had som of an undesirable kind. In believed that they have helped produce an exaggerated college. social emphasis dictatorship, the great main Carnegie Foundation has been able. It has done much, by and publicity as well as by gifts, standards of education, increase salaries and instill right ideals into colleges and univer- | sities. Tt helped mightily to destroy the wretched profit-making medical school of ia Jo e erd ol SUNER scandalous standards which flourished a generation ago; Dr. Flexner’s reports will be long remembered. It attacked weak law |20d Morals and schools in the same way. Its heads have |S2Pizations never feared to point out colleges of inferior Dr. Pritchett has been an unrelenting enemy of commercial diplomas and commerciallsm in athleti late Frederick T. principal Dr. Pritchett has shown vision as | character by name. Like the long Mr. giving, well as expertness and efficier be missed. Dr, of heavy responsibilities and tunities. Rockefeller’s Henry S. Pritchett Henry Suzzallo to that taken from the Ma sachusetts Institute of Technology to be its of a perceptible effect watched with But with all its mistakes and faults, and despite much early fear of a moneyed Suzzallo takes a position arnegie Foun- Teaching and | 0yoriean Society to education gift of $10,- will be hortations. It a century. and those in- on, It is notor- himself some phangec e lavish ‘“col- e by-products ' situation. particular, he on going to would have been progress to work of the highly valu- investigation to raise \much of the wet \worst ‘respect for law !with that of the in Gates, ‘mg for guide so | in | ncy. He will rich oppori- { | tunity “YIELD UNTO CAESAR THE THINGS \Lnlulm THAT ARE CAESAR’S. Churches has begun a secret inquiry into gungslers'\“‘“ afr: activities that will be entirely apart from the offi- (Kik about—(Dayton, Ohio, News.) clal investigation begun by the G sald that 500,000 members of the congregations will particiate in the inquiry. Many old and middle aged ”» when the churches devoted all the Chairman Wickersham, forcement Committee, | | | (Fairbanks News-Miner.) | |support to the upholding \puxum]arly urging a campaign of education regard- ling the evils of liquor | It is not unlikely that the attitude of the press! much affected has |but it is a product of Ithe press was predominantly dry, lof a full measure of its attitude has been changed it has been because | of convicaion, borne of observation and experience. that Prohibition as we now pected to work out |¢hange its present view only when further observa-| tion and experience persuade it that it should be It is not likely to modify it by reason of the urging of any man, |1t is convinced, has less than its knowledge of the| | The dry leaders tax the so-called with ulterior motives. |by ulterior motives clearly not so large a part of it its present been so deliberate and halting. support of campaigns for forms of violation, and order will that can be laid with equal force against the Anti- !Saloon League, the Methodist Board of 'll-mpvmnc'- all the Education in these evils and a pe |suasive campaign to gein recognition for the virtue: of temperance and self-restraint they have com» |pletely lost sight of in their pliance with an unpopular law by constantly press- more drastic coercive measures. Warning farmers against overproduction is almost ! las effective as warning motor trains at crossings.—(Des Moir We love the Democrats. lo make against them. and then tear it talents to the of the Hoover Law En- asked the members of the of Newspaper Editors to lend their| of the Prohibition law,| by Mr. Wickersham’s ex- been arrived at hastily, slow growth. Ten years aga | and was hopeful | success with Prohibition. If! not have it cannot be ex satisfactory results. It wil or group of men, which' “wet” pres: If it could have been moved | dry in the first instance, and its position would not have| Also it may be said press has been undeviating in its the suppression of the and its contribution to stand comparison embattled Prohibition forces. If it has not undertaken the task of education that is an indictment® association Prohibition or effort to obtain com- sts to look out rul s Register.) We have only criticism They seize a glorious oppor- asunder.—(Atchison, Kan, | ' 4 2 Some of us are beginning to suspect that Borah The dispatches say the Chicago Federation of |supported Hoover in the last campaign because he rand Jury. It is | to observe a people le(,lSLATH E DEFEAT TO SEEK KENTl LEXINGTON, Ky., June .’ ‘Tall, angular, energetic and a tire- dess campaigner, Mrs. John David Allen, president of the Kentucky ‘Women's Republican League, is expected to wage a lively battle for the Republican nomination for Congress from the Seventh Ken- tueky District. Mrs. Allen won the Republican nomination for the legislature last fall from the candidate backed by the local Republican administra- tlon. She was defeated in the election by a close vote by her Democratic opponent. Beaten af- ter a vigorous speaking and bell- ringing campaign, she immediately began working privately in behalf of her congressional candidacy. The Kentucky primary will be held the first Saturday in August. The Women's Republican League is not affillated with the State Re- publican committee. The c¢om- mittee recognizes the Republican ‘Women's Club of Kentucky as the authorized group of women party | workers. The organizations work- | ed separately for Hoover in the| =, last presidential campaign, but unit- ed in giving a breakfast in honor of Vice-President Charles Curtis when he opened the Republican na- tional campaign in Lexington. Mrs. Allen is a friend of Mrs. Ruth Hanna McCormick, Illinois| senatorial nominee, who visited| at her home in Lexington last year local Republican women. Mrs. Allen in turn visited | Mrs. McCormick and addressed Mrs. Allen’s husband is a Lexing- insurance broker. They have announcement Mrs. Allen m not running on my I will match my oppon- in nbnlty, love of party, service ‘z;uspension of Sutro and Company, {built. |as-you-enter plan, with the chauf- SPURS WOMAN JCKY ("Or\(,RIu.SS SE /IT" to party, love of country and in- terest in my constituents.” ——.,e——— 1 Stock Exchange Suspends Firm For 3 Years NEW YORK CITY, July 10— The Stock Exchange announces tha of New York and San Francisco, for three years. The Governing Committee ex- plained the substance of the charges was “through the manner in which the New York branch office con- ducted transactiéns to buy and sell the same security, executed at the same time and same price, and this in the opinion of the Govern- ing Committee did not involve change of ownership.” >oe — BIGGER AUTO BUSSES DUE FOR HARASSED PARIS N PARIS, . July” 10—Bgger, e auto busses are coming for the harassed Parisian who longs for the good old days when progress hadn’t brought traffic congestion. One hundred low hung busses rolling quietly on pneumatic tires with the body so arranged that 42 passengers can be tucked in where only 38 now can ride, are being Deiter Express bus service, on the pay- ald Smith wouldn't give him anything to Once upon a time the Umted States endeavored | “safe and now it needs more of the same on any old week-| remember . ' ‘end.—(Indianapolis Star.) | Nebmka’s 84-Year-Old | feur as a one man crew, is to be reestablished. It was tried sev- eral years ago with a double fare, but the thrifty French refused to recognize the time saving as valu- able and hooted the empty busses. — P Britt’s Pharmacy is naving a SPECTLL on Stationery. adz. ~ sane” July Fourth, but: Candldate for Senate : i It’s send it to us. many years of experi- ence and careful study, we know just how to re- move spots without det- riment texture of the fabric. W. P. Johnson r—.—— | { - FIRE ALARM CALLS || 'Y -3 Thrd and Franklin. ™ S T T T, -4 Front and Franklin, ; Helene W. L. Albrecht -5 Front, near Ferry Way. | PHYSIOTHERAPY -6 Front, opp. Gross Apts | | Massage, Electricity, Infra Red -7 Front, opp. City Whart. R#v, Medical Gymnastics, -8 Front, near Saw Mill. | 41u Goldstein Building, -9 Front at A. J. Office. | Phone Office, 218 -1 Willoughby at Totem Gro. [ —— -3 Willoughby, opp. Cash'Cole’s [:“' T Barn. | | DRS. KASER & FREEBURGER -4 Front and Seward. i DENTISTS -5 Front and Main. | 301-303 Goldstein Bldg. -6 Second and Main. i PHONE 56 -7 Fifth and Seward. ! Hours 9 8. m. to 9 p. m. -9 Fire Hall. ) -2 Gastineau and Fawn Way. i o -4 Second and Goid. ~ -5 Fourth and Harss. i| Dr. (,h%r]es SE JenneT -6 Fifth and Cold. | ENTL -7 Fifth and East. /| Rooms 8 and 9 Valentine | -8 Seventh and Gold. | Building | -9 Fifth and Kennedy. Telephone 176 -1 Ninth, back of power house. || #————— il -2 Calhoun, opp. Seaview Apta. I 6 BERSRIS . Sl A DL ERST 3 Distin Ave., and Indian Sta. I 5 Ninth and Calhoun i “l' JDEX;IHSEZIYHC pbosiiey g | Rooms 5-6 Triangle Bldg. | 8 Twelfth and Willoughby, | om?n hours, 9 am. to 5 pm. 9 Home Grocery. Evenings by appoinment. -1 Seater Tract. 1” Phone 321 A ] Dr. A. W. Stewart | - DENTIST 1 Hours 9 a. m. to 6 p. m. SEWARD BUILDING | Office Phone 460, Res. Phone 276 a— ———=a "ANOTHER SPOT! No need to worry!— not ruined if you Through to the color or Phone 15 ALASKA LAUNDRY ‘manufacturer at moncy-sav- ing prices. Write teday for FREE il lustrated cat- A aoe. ILLI\X/O! le CORPN. s e FRIGIDAIRE DELCO LIGHT PRODUCTS MAYTAG WASHING MACHINES GENERAL MOTORS RADIOS Phone 1 Front Street Juneau directfromtbe || oo e Dr. H. Vance | Osteopath—201 Goldsiain Bidg. | | Hours: 10 to 12; 1 to 5; Tto 8 or by appointment Licensed Osteopathic Physician Phone: Office 1671. Residence, MacKiunon Apts. Dr. Geo. L. Barton CHIROPRACT R Hellenthal Building OFFICE SERVICE ONLY Hours: 10 a. m. %o 12 noom 2p. m to B p. m 6 p. m lo8p m By Appointment PHONE 259 Robert Simpson Opt. D. i Graduate Angeles Col- il lege of Optometry and I { Opthalmology | Glasses Fitted, Lenses Ground ® DR. R. E. SOUTHWELL Optometrist-Optician | E)rs Examined—Gilasses Fitted Room 7, Valentine Bldg. 6{“(:5 phone 484, residence | | phone 238. Office Hours: 9:30 to 12; 1:00 to 5:30 | m‘ i Juneau Public Library Free Reading Room City Hall, Second Fleor Main Street and Fourth Reading Room Open From 8a m to 10 p. m. Circulation Room Open from 1 to 5:30 p. m. m.—7:00,to 8:30 P. m. Current Mlkulm Newspapers, Reference, Books, % Ete. \ FREE TO ALL QOur trucks go any place any || time. A tank for Diesel Oil and a tank for crude oll save burner trouble. PHONE 149, NIGHT 5103 RELIABLE TRANSFER == . Ola papers row sale at The En.- pire. ©Oid papers for sale ii The Bm- pire. White-haired patriarch of Repub- lican circles, 84-year-old Aaron Reed (above) promises to give Senator Norris a close run for the United States Senate on the Re publican ticket. Reed, who is a wealthy retired farmer- -politician from Madison, Neb., is making the Senatorial race on a “wet” plat- form. { (International Newsreel) —_————— HAINES LAD ARRESTED | James Shortridge, year- nhl! Haines youth, was arrested lod.n‘ charged with burglary. He will be glven a preliminary examination before Acting Commissioner Shel- don at Haines. substantial citizen. are not saving, start tod by opening a savings ac- count and saving at least ten per cent of your earn- ings. open a savings account The B. M. Behrends Bank Oldest Bank in Alaska of character which make a If you One dollar or more will SYMBOLS LIBERTY A savings bank book con- Gastin:au Charnnel Carlson’s Taxi ANYWHERE IN THE CITY FOR $1.00 Careful, Efficient Drivers—Call Us At Any Hour— DAY AND NIGHT—Stand at Alaskan Hotei Phones II and Single O Carlson’s Taxi B. P. 0. ELKS Meeting every sec- ond and fourth Wednesdays at 8 3 Fraternal Societies ! | oF - ) | [ 1 o'clock. Elks - Hall, i Visiting brothers welcome. R. B. MARTIN, Exaltea Ruler. M. H. SIDES, Secretary. Co-oOrdinate Bo? les of Freemasox ry Scottish Rite Regular meetingy ! second Friday each month e 7:30 .p. m. Soos and Ambulance Service A Graham’s Taxi Phore 565 STAND AT ARCADE CAFE Day and Night Service ny Place in the | SR tish Rite Temple . WALTER .B. E£ISEL, Secretary. 3 LOYAL ORDE! OF MOOSE Juneau Lodge No. 700 Meets every Monday night, at 8 o'clock. ‘TOM SHEARER, Dictator W. T. VALE, Secy., P. 2. Box 826 MOUNT JUNEAU LODGE NO. 147 Second and fourth Mon- day of each month in Scottish R''s Temple, beginning at 7:30 p. m. \'\/ R e . Prompt Service, Day and Night CovicH Auto SERVICE STAND AT THE OLYMPIC Phone 342 Day or Night Master; TELEPHONE Stand at Pioneer Pool Hall Yourself DAY AND NIGHT SERVICE ROLLER SKATING A. B. HALL Wednesday, Friday and Sunday Evenings 183 TAXI Cars for Hire—Drive EVANS L. GRUBER, CHARLES E. NAGHEL, ORDER CF EASTERN STAR _I_ a 8 l Second and Fourth 4 Tuesdays of each month, 22 Rite Temple. LILY $1.00 Matron; FANNY L. ROBINSON, Secretary. OF CITY Seghers Counc.( No. 176a Meetings second and last Transient brothers urg- Chambers, Fifth Strees [ ! JOHN F. MULLEN, G. K. ] DOUGLAS AERIE 117 F. O. E Gastinean Hote) Meets first and thicd &Mofldays, 8 o'cloce, s at Eagles Hail ‘ ALEX GAIR, W. P. GUY SMITH, Secretary. Visiting ] brothers welcome. : | | Douglas. City for $1.00 { Secretary. : at 8 o'clock, Seottish BURFORD, Worthy ) TO ANY PART ; 3 i KNIGHTS OF COLUMBUS [ l)hone Monday at 7:30 p. m. ed to attend. Councld GARBAGE ——— e i i A e DA THE CASH BAZAAR 1 I Phone 584 e = Open Evenings L Opposite U. S. Cable Office if GARBAGE | | HAULING | | FOREST WOOD notes independence from days of want. The habit of thrift cultivates qualities ay ! TR T R T Dime & Dollar Building and Loan Associati Is upder the sppervision of State of Oregon. Can only depositors money on improved real cstate, first mortgages Lt [ THE JUNEAU LAUNDRY { Franklin Street, betweem | | Front and Second Streets ' PHONE 389 Office at Wolland’s Tailor Shop | Chester Barnesson | i PHONE 66 2 loan DAIRY FERTILIZER and State approved bonds. i 6% compounded semiannually Our bread helps to on deposits. s:{; your acoowt make strong, healthy children. Of course | Juneau Representative Vhi R R T 5‘ H. J. Eberhart about the quality of & the food eaten by L your children—so or- der our bread by {jll name and make sure 3 7 LUDWIG NELSON | ([ that vou get it Jeweler R Waich epaiing ' B Peerless ‘ | A o FRONT STREET | oo™ <l Bakery I e 1.).SeariCcx “Remember the Name” ot Pt om e | g owsler and IR | job g the b you bavefocus | Optician ik . Watches “ Diamonds | ks ’ JUNEAU CABINET | '} and DETAIL MILL- 1 WORK CO. Front Street, next to Warner * CABINET and TO US We wil attend to promptly. Our coal, grain and transfer reason. Give us a trial il today and learn why. You Can’t Help Being Pleased D. B. FEMMER PHONE 114 PHONE YOUR ORDERS is increasing daily. There’s a MILLWORK GENERAL CARPENTER WORK A g GLASS REPLACED IN AUTOS Moves, Packs and Stores Baggag: | { { Estimates Furnished Upon Trutgnt ang P } i Request Prompt Delivery of ALL KINDS OF COAL PHONE 48 Mabr~’s Ca.fe Regular Dinners - them Short Orders | hay, Lunches : o Open 6 am. to 2 a.m. ree 2| POPULAR PRICES i HARRY MABRY = i Proprietor L. C. SMITH and CORONA | TYPREWRITERS Al Guaranteed by | You get results from |{7. B. BURFORD & Co. |1 “Our ‘door step is worn by { satisfied customers” "

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