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-~ THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, THURSDAY, JULY 24, l930 Dml 5. 4lusl.a Empu‘e Published EMPIRE Streets " Sunday the Main every c except by PRINTING COMPANY June ska at Second and cond Class SUBSCRIPTION RATES. Oelivered by carrier in Juneau, Douglas, Thane for $1.25 per month. the following rates: six months, in advance, Treadwell and $6.00; one Subscribe advance, $1.25 a favor if they will promptly ce of any fallure or irregularity Btorie] and Business Offices, 374. MEMBER OF A5SUC|A7ED FHESS The Associated Press is exclusively entitied to the wwe for republicatio: patches credited to 4t or not otherw focal news pu RGER ALAEKA CIRCULATION GUARANTEED TO BE THAN THAT OF ANY OTHER mr«ucnloN MINING CLAIMS IN NATIONAL FORE The Engineering and Mining Journal has broad- casted an alarm over the movement further to regu- late mining operations in the National Forests. This is a matter that is important in Alaska as well as elsewhere in the country. As the great mining publication intimates Federal regulation is one of the things that would scarce capital out of mining areas. A recent Engineering and Mining Journal edi- torial on this subject said: Probably the cause of the movement to restrict the rights of locators of mining claims and the owners of patents thereon within the National Forests, as expressed in Senate Bill S-3774, which has passed the United States Senate and has been referred to the House of Representatives, may be found in a decision by the District Court of Idaho, N. D, of February 11, 1928, which fully confirmed the rights of the lo- cators of mining claims, as allocated by the existing mining laws, as covering the loca- tions within the -National Forests Since then a movement to curtail those rights within the National Forests has started, and the United States has passed Bill S-3774, above mentioned, restricting those rights very severely in South Dakota; and we understand that a similar bill, cur- tailing the rights of mineral locators within the National Forests of the State of Cali- fornia, will be introduced in Congress, at the insistence of the Forest Service, unless a decided oppositon by the mining inter of California should prevent this action, .Senate Bill 3774 places the owners mining locations and of - patented mining locations within the National Forest at the mercy of the Forest Service. Rights are controlled by the term “reasonable.”” For in- stance . the right to occupy and use the surface as may be ‘reasonably’ neces- sary to carry on mining” . “no use of the surface of the claim or the resources therefrom not ‘reasonably’ required for car- rying on mining shall be allowed.” It is re- peatedly stipulated that operations shall be under the National Forest rules and regu- lations. As no provision is made in the law stipulating what authority is to decide what the term “reasonably” covers, this de- cision is in fact left entirely to the rangers, who are not competent judges of the re- quisites of mining operations. When starting the development of a min- ing project it is impossible to foresee what resources of the surface will have to be used. In nearly all instances water is required. According to the wording of the law under consideration, the locator is at the mercy of the Forest Service in respect to this important resource. ‘The application of the rules and regula- tions stipulated by this law will prevent any practical mining man from starting mining operations within the limits of the National Forests, thus stopping the development of new mineral resources within these re- of serves. The mineral products of the coun- try are of far greater value than the forest products. Their development, as a general rule, will only slightly development of forest products. Apparently the sponsors of this bill in- tend to introduce its system .through the entire United States. It is most important for those vitally interested in mining ac- tivity to take steps to prevent, if possible, any further move to curtail the rights of the locators of mining claims. impair the WEATHER MAN EXPLAINS “CYCLONE.” in the science of meteorology is not a violent and destructive twisting windstorm or “twister” so greatly dreaded in some parts of the TUnited States. That sort of storm is properly called a tornado. A cyclone, weather forecasters explain, is an extensive system of winds over an area of low atmospheri¢ pressure as measured by the barom- eter. It is represented on the synoptic charts pub- lished by the Weather Bureau of the Department of Agriculture by arrows showing the wind direc- tions and aseries of waving lines resembling the A “cyclone” in this paper and also the | the temperature will be higher than usual. After the cyclone has passed and the anticyclone has come on, precipitation of rain or snow ceases, the sky, as a rule, clears, the winds shift to a northeast- erly or westerly quarter. and the temperature falls. The northerly component of the wind continues for several days and then shifts to an easterly or quarter, thus indicating the approach of another cyclone.” southerly Alaska would like to sell some of her rains to those sun-baked sections that are sweltering under 100 degrees, plus, of heat for what they would |probably willingly pay for them if there were a way to make a delivery. However, we would noLI lexchange seasons with them. | One would think those gunmen who are every- busy would lay and let the heat-wave a chance to make a man-killing record. With!; | where low 'have { ; Puilding, Juneau, Alaska, has filed’ | DENIIPT |both elements in action people are likely to get|its application in the U, 8. Lanfl" Rooms 8 and 9 Valentine [stirred up and see what they might do to stop|office at Anchorage, Alaska, for! Bullding | the growing list of fatalities. If so the gunmen|patent for the Aurum No. 18 lodem“ Telephone 176 | |must beware, for nothing can be done with the|mining claim and included within & —— | heat-wave. U. 8. 'Mineral Survey No."1695, el ST onenT 0 S { AN kel uated in the Chichagoff Mining Dr. J. W. Bayne | Earthquakes in Ttaly, heat in the East, accldents s o TerHitory of Alaska, Sitki DENTIET . . | gl 2 e ecording Precinct, First Judicial 5-6 Triangle Bld { |In Germany and everywhere and American gun-|pyuicion at Chichagoff Post Offica! | 4R00m5 b e g |men are doing what they can to hold down Popu-|on Chichagoff Island, Alaska, and|| Olfice hours, 8 am. to 5 p.m. ;lnlnn gains. i A 1:,:‘50 particularly described. as fol-| Lvenlns;hl;fl:ggtlnmnent. | s A TR : P | Rival Claims in Antarctica. AURUM NO. 13 LODE — e I el “Beginning at corner No. 1, WM e AT R o ’ (New York World.) identical with location corner || Dr, A. W. Stewart There is certainly nothing premature in th: :1’;?0 “’mecor:‘f:vgo. b;oo’loP:S- | DENTIST |resolution of Senator Tydings authorizing and di-| (yence U.'S. L. M. No. 7 bears i | H;;“VSVAQRSI') mBU"I’LI“)I‘;{ m. recting the President to lay claim to all areas in| g 55 deg. 13’ E. 133.01 ft. ,\ Ph G | |the Antarctic which have been discovered or ex-| Thence N. 65 deg. 19’ W. 34350 | | Office Phone 469, Res. plored by American citizens. Two sectors of An-| ft. to corner No. 2. Thence N. .| | e ) |tarctica are now regarded by Great Britain as part| 47 deg. 58 W. 1007.50 ft. to fl"——"—f {of her empire: the Ross Dependency, administered| corner No. 3. Thence S. 6 deg. —_—— & |by New Zealand, and the Falkland Islands Depend- ency, administered by the Government of the Falk lands. The territorial waters of Antarctica have an immediate value for whaling and the minerg! lands have potential value. Any nation possessing |Antarctic claims is justified in maintaining them On the basis of exploration—and there is no| jother basis, for no country has tried to occupy |any part of Antarctica—a number of governments |can file claims. The intrepid Captain Cook was \the first explorer of Antarctica waters, but he found |no land. |Russian Bellingshausen, |1. Land in 1819. IN. B. Palmer, {Land. of who sighted Alexande.‘rr A year later an American sealer, discovered and landed on Palmer the Englishman Ross, who discovered South IMount Erebus and first described the Ice Barrier.| |In 1840 a French expedition under d'Urville founi |and named Adelie Land. In the same year the !American Wilkes was on the scene. None of these ;mml really did more than follow the coast. ‘hhtory of continental exploration may be said ‘b(;'m with the work of the British ship Dncuvnr-rl |under Commander Scott in 1901. Since then, |the whole - world knows, British, Norewgians and| |Americans have carried it forward tries. - Fortunately for |try can muster Antarctica. If value it is not international relations, the slightest excitement these bleak lands have for our generation. any | Chained to the Wheel. (Manchester Guardian.) lenergy and with little assistance from other coun-|veins, NOTICE OF APPLICATION ‘ A —————1: FOR PATENT | PROFESSIONAL SERIAL NO. 07546 “'* In the United States Land Olfl"g & for the Juncau Land District at Anchorage, In the Matter of the Apphcatlon of CHICHAGOFF POWER COM-] | PANY, under patent lode mining claim, emk sed in U. S. Mineral Survey No. 1575, situated on Chichagoff Island, in Alaska. PHYSIOTHERAPY a corporation organized | dstein Building the laws of Alaska, fo:t e to the AURUM NO. 13 Pl & s — Chichagoff Mining District, Sitka DENTISTS Recording Precinet, First Judicial| 301-303 Goldstein Bldg. Division, Alaska. PHONE 56 NOTICE . IS HEREBY G!Vm That the Chichagoff Power mew{ 03 W. 4. Thence S. 55 deg. 1301 ft. N. 6 deg. 03’ corner No. 1, the place of be- ginning. 12616 conflict vey No. cant. claimed United The honor of doing so belongs to the ment No. 7, to which this sux’vevl tied, consists of a cross on ex-| posed out-crop of bedrock 10x8xs | ft. on the shore of Klag Bay, Chi-! In 1838 came the far more remarkable wock |chagoff Island and chiseled U. S. L. M. No. 7 in latitude 57 deg || | Victoria Land, explored a long strip of coast, named |39’ 40” N. and longitude 136 deg | 05 45" W. Magnetic variation 30 deg. 30" E. The names of the owners of con- flicting claims i The | the applicant except as hereinabovs | 0 set tl‘;":r'.h The total area embraced | Opt. D. in the survey i 5 as [applicant is 12.616 acres. jil Craduste Aol Austies S Any and all persons claiming ad-| with great jversely any of the above described{ lodes or ‘qulrcd to file notice of their ad-| no coui- | | verse claims with the Register of regarding |the United States Land Office at| great \Auchora[,e Alaska, The problem |iod of publication, or eight months! Pirst publication, Last publication, Sepl 24, 1930. acres. Entire area in conflict Hours § 8. m. to 8 p. m. RPN | Helene W.L. Albrecht Massage, Electricity, Infra Red Rev, Medical Gymnastics. "DRS. KASER & FREEBURGER e e | 565.10 ft. to corner No. 13’ E. to corner No. 5. Thence E. 48388 ft. to Dr. H. Vance or by appointment Containing an area of i Total area in with Pacific Lode, sur- 1045 owned by appli- Phone: Office 1671. by applicant.” - States Locatlon Monn . CHIROPRACT 2R Hellentha! Building | 2p m toB p m 6 p. m. to8p m By Appointment PHONE 259 | OFFICE SERVICE ONLY Hours: 10 a. m. %o 12 noon Licensed Osteopathic Physiclan ;‘ Residence, MacKiunon Apts. g L pany, a corporation organized und«} . r the laws of -Alaska, whose post! | . office address g 424 Goldute&’ Dr. Charles P. Jenne Osteopath—201 Goldstain Bldg. | Hours: 10 to 12; 1 to 5; 7 to ® .——.4_,—.—._4 Dr. Geo. L. Barton | —L are not known to . T Robert Simpson and claimed by the| lege of Optometry and Opthalmology Glasses Fitted, Lenses Ground Premises aré-Yewpgs ' T g f tey— DR. R. E. SOUTHWELL Optometrist-Optician within the per-| Register. July 12, 1930. [ It is interesting but melancholy to notice the| steady progress of foolish fashions. Against all com- mon sense and convenience, and in flat contradic- tion to the expressed preference of most women, the skirt, after all, grows longer, fluffer, and less easy to manage. At first these difficulties wers admitted and excused on the ground that the change | applied only to evening wear; but the fashions for || Ascot have been as inconvenient as anything tha* could be arranged for the ballroom. Snobs and simpletons praise them—as they would praise any- thing that has been ordained as correct for Ascot, | even though it were elastic-sided boots and a well-| blacked face. On Wednesday some commentator< on the Ascot spectacle were praising the “quaint Edwardian touches” of the women's costumes and “the beautifully flowing draperies” that had van- quished ‘the long straight line” and now “finished at the angles in a foamy mass.” It matters little |that a year or two ago the same sort of writer | would have been exuding superlatives over the |chaste and distinguished simplicity of the short skirt; inconsistent fashions demand incoristent followers at a matter of routine. There was, how- ever, one note of criticism: the wearers of these “foamy masses” had not yet learnt to walk grace- fully in them; they were, in short, justly hampered | NORTHERN SALES | AGENCY | (W. W. Batcheller) 1 Selling “TRUPAK" goods. Un- excelled, take no one’s word, Corner Second and Main City Hall, Second Fleor Main Street and Fourth 8 a m to 10 p. m. TRY THEM i | | | | L] Pp. W.P. Johnson DELCO LIGHT PRODUCTS MAYTAG WASHING GENERAL MOTORS RADIOS Front Street m. Newspapers, Reference, Books, Ete. FREE TO ALL FRIGIDAIRE MACHINES I burner trouble. Phone 17 Juneau pire. Reading Room Open Frem PHONE 149, NIGHT 5103 | RELIABLE TRANSFER | B Juneau Public Library Free Reading Room Circulation Room Open from 1 to 5:30 p. m.—T7:00,to 8:30 Current Mngunnes. | e ———— Our trucks go any place any time. A tank for Diesal Oil and a tank for crude oil save 'l Eyes Examined—Glasses Fitted | {of sovereignty can and doubtless will be ap-|thereafter, or they will be barred{:l onfff""f) l;'o;':m;;;'“ ::;fi’nu‘ | proaghed . with - all the coolness which befits the |by virtue of the provisions of thai| ! phone 238. Office Hours; gAaa’ |chilly subject. | statutes. ; to 12; 1:00 to 5:30 { | J. LINDLEY GREEN, . & D e S § Oid papers for sals a: The Em- -’ Qarlson’s Taxi ANYWHERE IN THE CITY FOR $1.00 Careful, 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 Fraternal Societies { or - . ) Gastin:au Channel - | S ———————————— B. P. 0. ELKS Meeting every sec- ond and fourth Wednesdays at @ o'clock. Elks Hall g Visiting brothers welcome. R. B. MARTIN, Exaltea Ruler, M. H. SIDES, Sacretary. Ca-Ordinate Do3 les of Freemasom ry Scottish Rite Regular meeting second Friday each month al 7:30 p. m. Soos Graham’s Taxi Phore 565 STAND AT ARCADE CAFE Day and Night Service A AT Place in the City for $1.00 B U U U Prompt Service, Day and Night CovicH AUTO SERVICE STAND AT THE OLYMPIC t Phone 342 Day or Night TELEPHONE 183 TAXI Stand at Pioneer Pool Hall Cars for Hire—Drive Yourself DAY AND NIGHT SERVICE ROLLER 199Taxi $1.00 TO ANY PART OF CITY Phone | 199 Gastinean Hote) | GARBAGE | HAULED y ) ) ! i AND LOT CLEANING SKATING A. B. HALL Wednesday, Friday and Sunday Evenings Dime & Dollar Building] and Loan Association Is under the supervision of the State of Oregon. Can only loan depositors money on improved real cstate, first mortgages and State approved bonds. 6% compounded semiannually on deposits. Start your account with Junean Representative H. J. Eberhart GASTINEAU HOTEL terested by their absurd garments, but when “a slow, dig- nified mode of progress has been attained the 1930 dress pageant will approach the ideal.” To put the case more brutally, when the chain-gang has forgotten what it was like to be free their fetters will make a better line in the picture. It so hap- pens that yesterday's weather at Ascot provided a most notable warning against the folly of fet- ters; when the deluge came down the wearers of them" could not move fast enough to shelter, and their soaked and clinging draperies foamed in fact as well as fancy. This ought to be an object lesson against a senseless return to “quaint Edward- ian touches.” When even the idlers of a publlc‘ spectacle can be caught by the inwisdom of their own attire, what folly it will be if such fashions {can be foisted off on women who have a working place in the world's affairs. | Superlatives in Building. (Cincinnati Engquirer.) Chrysler Building in New York is now en- its momentary glory as the tallest of all structures. Beside its 1,030-foot spire the Woolworth Building and the Eiffel Tower are dis-! tinctly second rate. The Chrysler Building also |boasts other superlative features—the world's high- | The | joying | earthly contour lines on a map. These lines pass through |est restaurant—although we have no data as yer| points having equal barometric pressure at the (%0 tell us whether prices are in proportion—thc time indicated by the chart. Other similar sets|WOrld’s highest clubrooms, and so forth. of lines represent areas of high pressure or regions of “anticyclones.” A cyclone may cover several Btates, and as a rule moves in an easterly direc- tion across the country “The reason why the ‘lows’ and such an important bearing on weather forecast- ing,” says Alfred Judson Henry, of the Weather Bureau, “is because of the pronounced contrast in the weather associated with each. If it is known that a cyclone is advancing upon a region, it is assured within slight variations, depending on the season, that the winds will be stronger than the ;vm, the sky will be cloudy and there will be rain or snow according to the time of year. and yelones and anticyclones or ‘highs' of the weather chart have | The irony of this competition for record height is the fact that even as the Chrysler stucture opens its doors the shadow of Al Smith's taller, greater |edifice, the Empire Building, begins to cloud the brilliance of the Chrysler title. It seems to be a jcase of “he who laughs last,” and the last 1s not yet in sight. President Hoover, it is said, has just about de- cided not to take his proposed vacation trip through the West this year. Maybe we've been underestimat %mg the President’s shrewdness.—(New York World ) America is paying $73,000,000 in capital and interest to Germany for ships seized during the war. It grows more and more difficult to decide just who whipped who.—(Cincinnati Enquirer.) RICE & AHLERS CO. Plumbers “We tell you in advance what the job will cost” THE B. M. BEHRENDS BANK The following list of Bank Correspondents connects us with the outside business world: First National Bank, Boston. Chase National Bank, New York. Bankers Trust Co., New York. Bank of the Manhattan Co., New York. Peoples Trust & Savings Co., Pittsburgh. Continental Illinois Bank & Trust Co., Chicago. Harris Trust Co., Chicago. Anglo London & Paris National Bank, San Fran- cisco. Bank of California, National Association. Wells Fargo Bank & Trust Co., San Francisco. Pacific National Bank, Seattle. First Seattle Dexter Horton National Bank, Seattle. Bank of Montreal, Vancouver, B. C, YOUR BUSINESS IS RESPECTFULLY SOLICITED . mam—————————eee e ———— LUDWIG NELSON || eweler WIOC‘}'I Repairing Brunswick Agency FRONT STREET table. '1.).SmaricE Jeweler amd Optician Hea]th building in- terests every intel- ligent man woman. Getting in- in quality food brings you in touch with our vread, as good a loaf of browned goodness as ever blessed the family and Peerless tish Rite Temple WALTER B. E£ISEL, Becretary. el Taliog LOYAL ORDER OF MOOSE Juneau Lodge No. 709 Meets every Mondss night, at 8 o'clock, TOM SHEARER, Dictctor © % W. T. VALE, Secy, P. 0. Box §M MOUNT JUNEAU LODGE NO. 147 Second and fourth Mon- day of each month in Scottish R"» Temple, beginning at 7:30 p. m EVANS L. GRUBER CHARLES E. NAGHEI, Master; Secretary. e U ORDER CF EASTERN STAR Second and Fourth 4 ‘Tuesdays of each month, at 8 o'clock, Scottish Rite Temple. LILY BURFORD, Worthy Matron; FANNY L. ROBINSON, Secretary. KNIGHTS OF COLUMBUS Geghers Counc.i No, 176¢, Meetings second and las) 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. DOUGLAS AERIE 117 F. O. E Meets first and th’ =4 &Momluys‘ 8 o'clociz, at Eagles' Hail Douglas. ALEX GAIR, W. P. GUY SMITH, Serretary. Visiting brothers welcome. THE CASH BAZAAR Open Evenings S. Cable Office Opposite U. FOREST WOO0D GARBAGE HAULING Office at Wolland's Tailor Shop Chester Barnesson PHONE 66 DAIRY FERTILIZER | Watcdes ‘ . % frros e “ Diamonds lHlverware L o T TrE JunEAu LAunDRY Franklin Street, betweea . Front and Second Streets PHONE 359 : '| JUNEAU CABINET '{ and DETAIL MILL- | WORK CO. Front Street, next to Warner Machine Shop CABINET and . MILLWORK GENERAL CARPENTER WORK |l GLASS REPLACED ; IN AUTOS Estimates Furnished Upon | Request PHONE YOUR ORDERS| TO US i We wil attend to them| promptly. Our coal, hay,| grain and transfer business | is increasing daily. There’s a' reason. Give us a trial order! today and learn why. - | You Can’t Help Being Pleased D. . FEMMER PHONE 114 Mabr~’s Cafe Regular Dinners Short Orders Lunches Open 6 a.m. to 2 a.m. POPULAR PRICES [ HARRY MABRY i Proprietor Our job shop is as near to yo as your telephone. Phone nllmdwemflbenfil:t jobaogeu.hqobyw JUNEAU TRANSFER COMPANY Moves, Packs and Stores Freight and Baggage Prompt Delivery of ALL KINDS OF COAL PHONE 48 L C. SMITH and CORONA TYPREWRITERS Guaranteed by You get resuits from |{J. B. BURFORD & CO. “Our door step is worn by satisfied customers” i 1