Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
< THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE , MONDAY, JULY 28, 1930. Dail v _»!lfiska Empire |and early November '97. JOEN W. TROY - - EDITOR AND MANAGER ‘Ru:\'h of '97 and '98.” of the time until they arrived at the gold city, and thousands arrived at that place in September, October It would be more appropriate to call it the “Gold NOTICE OF APPLICATION FOR PATENT SERIAL NO. 07546 In the United States Land Offise for the Juneau Land District at : a v xcept Sunday by the | EXP PRINTING C NY at Second and Main| ¢ — Anchorage, Alaska. s au, Alaska s | A few years ago people were all heated up over|In the Matter of the Application & Tice in Junesu as Sccond Class the abandonment of farms in the Eastern States.| 0f CHICHAGOFF POWER COM- iR iNow they are sorry that more of them had not| PANY, a “]‘k’ffifmgf"mgs’)f:mzd APTION RATES. {been abandoned. ~Which suggests that one way| ; e 2 as, Treadwell and h r irregularity ces, 374, ESS. ¥ entitled to the s credited to and also the cumstance that American Admirals were not, gener- y speaking, in favor of the ratification of the i val Treaty. It is edifying to know that English Admirals, looking at the situation from the English viewpoint, are opposed to ratification in that coun- ltry. Admirals Lord Beatty and Lord Jellicoe made speeches against ratification. CIRCULATION GU NTEED TO BE LARGER THAN THAT OF ANY OTHER CATION Senators and Representatives who took to their homes to do during the recess of will probably put off its consideration luntil after the November election. Most of them will likely work at fence building for the next three months. Those work Congress The Northwest and Russia. (Olympia Olympian.) Rufus Woods, Wenatchee publisher who went to 3 Russia with a brief case and an unsatisfied curi- & | osity as how the Soviets were progressing, apparently FARMERS REFUSING TO HELP {carried his typewriter along with him, He has been THEMSELVES. {sending his paper a lot of copy about Russia and ! | | | | |recently discussed wheat and lumber exportations| The Farm Board is not pleased because of the!anq the probable effect upon the Pacific Northwest. failure of its efforts to induce cotton planters to He writes: curtail cotton planting this year to 40,000,000 acres | What is going to be the effect of Rus- —which would be a reduction of about 7,000,000 sian development on the Northwest? There r proximately 15 per cent The acres | seems to be little doubt but that Russia is A iy 0 5.815,000, a re-| going to have a tremendous effect upon the iRl iatec D40 WU s sl | wheat market and the lumber market. In duction of less than 1,800,000 or 2.7 per cent | fact these ' tworiGommadlties " HryB il cakad When one takes into account that the exports shown their influence on the American . of cotton this year up to July 4 were 1,331,890 bales markets. cant., less than last year and that considergbly less cotton Millions of bushels of Russian wheat thrown on the markets of the world last fall brought down the price of wheat in United States. For years the Pacific North- west has sold untold millions of feet of lumber to the Japanese. What now has happened? The Japanese have gone into the lumber regions of Russia and are now getting their supply there. And that is not all. Lumber from Russia in Japanese ships is now being sold in Eastern United States at $12 a thousand. In wheat and in lumber the Russian development is almost certain to have a de- leterious effect. On the other hand this same development in Russia is going to make markets for other commodities which will run into a billion dollars. I know one technician who was followed by orders from America for $17,000,000 worth of machinery. This is only one small de- velopment. Readjustment will be necessary in the United States. It is a job for the leaders is going into domestic consumption than in 1929, it would seem that the Southern planters were defying the winds when they refused to comp]y: with the suggestions of those chosen by President | Hoover to advise on farm relief. The situation is| one that demands the production of a great deal less cotton than the indicated 1931 crop. | This failure of Farm Board cotton plans seems about to be repeated in the winter wheat districts. | The Kansas farmers not only refuse to decrease | the wheat acreage, but they are demanding a change of the personnel of the Farm Board. The farmers seem to be “sot” on having the Government get into the cotton- and wheat-purchasing and price- | fixing business. | If the Government is going to purchase wheat | and cotton, why not purchase hogs and apples | and copper and newspapers? Why not fix the prices | of everything so that all concerned might make a | profit? Why not distrribute doles to all those | who find business depressed? | |of bringing about farm relief would be to plant | There has been a lot of comment on the cir-| NOTICE |That the Chichagoff Power Comi- | pany, a corporation organized und- ' patent to the AURUM NO. 13 lode mining claim, emk-sed in Recording Precinct, First Judieial Division, Alaska. IS HEREBY GIVEN (er the laws of Alaska, whose post its application in the U. 8. Lanq Office at Anchorage, Alaska, for patent for the Aurum No. 13 lode {mining claim and included within| U. S. Mineral Survey No. 1575, sit~| uated in the Chichagoff Mining| (District, Territory of Alaska, Sitka | yRecording Precinct, First Judicial | |Division at Chichagoff Post Office on Chichagoff Island, Alaska, and more particularly described as fol !wws: AURUM NO. 13 LODE “Beginning at corner No. 1, corner No. 3. Thence S. 6 deg. 03" W. 565.10 ft. to corner No, 4. Thence 8. 55 deg. 13’ E. 1301 ft. to corner No. 5. Thence N. 6 deg. 03' E. 4888 ft. to corner No. 1, the place of be- ginning. Containing an area of 12616 acres. Total area in | conflict with Pacific Lode, sur- vey No. 1045 owned by appli- Entire area in conflict claimed by applicant.” United States Location Monu - ment No. 7, to which this survey i tied, consists of a cross on ex-| posed out-crop of bedrock 10x8x8 ! ft. on the shore of Klag Bay, Chi-| chagoff Island and chiseled U. 8. | L. M. No. 7 in latitude 57 deg.| 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 are not known to! the applicant except as hereinabova set forth. The total area embraced in the survey and claimed by the | epplicant is 12.616 acres. + Any and all persons claiming ad- | versely any of the above described | veins, lodes or premises are re- | |quired to file notice of their ad-| the United States Land Office at |Anchorage, Alaska, within the per-! cffice address is 424 Goldstein' Puilding, Juneau, Alaska, has filed} verse claims with the Register or‘ll’ 3wt PHYSIOTHERAPY Massage, Electricity, Infra Red | R#v, Medical Gymnastics, i ] 410 Goldstein Building %] Phone Office, 216 | | ! i * 301-303 Goldstein Bldg. ] PHONE 56 i Hours § a. m. to § p. m. ¥ PROFESSIONAL ———— lelene W. L. Albrecht | AUTOS FOR HIRE Fraternal Societies ! or - | ) \ Gastin:au Channel | L e ——— R 1 . Saten: |forests on a large part of the farms and reduce| U. S. Mineral Survey No. 1575,{s: rfiT——fl . in advance, | i Si. i DRS. KASFE FREEBURGER | foodstuff competit fifty years or so while| situated on Chichagoff Island, in | NYWHERE IN TH O will_promptly |they grow a cl:gp ;"triirq i PR ! Chichagoff Mining District, Sitka DENTISTS A ERE E CITY FOR $1.00 DENTIST Rooms 8 and 9 Valentine Building Telephone 176 3 DENTIST Rooms 5-6 Triangle Bldg. Office hours, 9 am. to 5 p.m. Evenings by appoinment. Phone 321 identical with location corner and with corner No. 1 of Pa- DENTIST | cific Lode, survey No. 1045 Hours 9 a. m. to 6 | i ) . m. p. m. whence U. S. L. M. No. 7 bears ! S. 55 deg. 13’ E. 13301 ft. ! S naAnh ZODING 2 | Office Phone 469, Res. Thence N. 65 deg. 19' W. 343.50 ft. to corner No. 2. Thence N. Phons 216 47 deg. 58' W. 100750 ft. to |[&———————=m - | Hours: 10 to i2; 1 to 6; T to ® or by appointment Phone: Office 1671. Residence, MacKiunon Apts. CHIROPRACTOR Hellenthal! Building OFFICE SERVICE ONLY PHONE 259 Robert Simpson Opt. D. Graduate kos Angeles Col- | lege of Optometry and Opthalmology — | Dr. Charles P. Jenne {" Dr.]. W. Bayne | Dr. A. W. Stewart ; e s Dr. H. Vance Osteopath—201 Coldstaln Bldg. | Licensed Osteopathic Physiclan | & L Ten — —_———— g Dr. Geo. L. Barton | R —— Glasses Fitted, Lenses Ground | Carlson’s Taxi Careful, Efficient Drivers—Call Us At Any Hour— DAY AND NIGHT—Stand at Alaskan Hotel Phones Il and Single O Carlson’s Taxi and Ambulance Service B. P. 0. ELKS Meeting every sec- ond and fourth i Wednesdays at 8 |o'clock. Elks Hall - Visiting brothers welcome, R. B. MARTIN, Exaltea Ruler. M. H. SIDES, Sacretary. Co-ordinate Bod les of Freemason 20\ { ry Scottish Rite WY N Regular meeting ’A'! second Friday — each month m 7:30 p. m. Boot- Graham’s Taxi Il Phore 565 STAND AT ARCADE CAFE Day and Night Service Any Place in the City for $1.00 tish Rite Temple WALTER B. REISEL, Becretary. LOYAL ORDER OF MOOSE Juneau Lodge No. 700 Meets every Mondaw night, at 8 o'clock. TOM SHEARER, Dictator W. T. VALE, Secy., P. 2, Box 826 —ee MOUNT JUNEAU LODGE NO. 14 Second and fourth Mon- %\({ Prompt Service, Day and Night =1{ CovicH AuTo SERVICE i} STAND AT THE OLYMPIC || ! Phone 342 Day or Night TELEPHONE 183 TAXI | Stand at Pioneer Y AND NIGHT SERVICE ROLLER 199Taxi $1.00 TO ANY PART OF CITY Phone 199 Hlours: 10 a. m. %o 12 noon , Pool Hall | 2p m toB8p m l c for Hi Dri 6p. m to8p m i ars for Adire—Jurive By Appointment i Yourself Gastinean Hote) GARBAGE | i HAULED AND LOT CLEANING E. O. DAVIS Phone 584 day of each month in Scottish R''a Temple, beginning at 7:30 p. m EVANS L. GRUBER, Master; CHARLES E. NAGHEI, Secretary. AR RS SR B S % ORDER OF EASTERN STAR Second and Fourth Tuesdays of each month, at 8 o'clock, Seottish Rite Temple. LILY BURFORD, Worthy Matron; FANNY L. 4 ROBINSON, Secretary. KNIGHTS OF COLUMBUS Seghers Counc.i No, 176¢. Meetings second and las) Monday at 7:30 p. = Transient brothers urg- ed to attend. Counch Chambers, Fifth Strees JOHN F. MULLEN, G K. H. J. TURNER, Secretary. DOUGLAS AERIE 117 F. 9. Meets first and th*~d &Mondays, 8 o'cloc, . at Eagles Hail Douglas. ALEX GAIR, W. P. GUY SMITH, Serretary. Visiting brothers welcome. THE CASH BAZAAR 2l SKATING DR. R. E. SOUTHWELL Optometrist-Optician | Eyes Examined—Glasses Fitted | A. B. HALL x s i 2 2 |iod of publication, or eight montns A ! e, fataey f the f yetinh 10 of thought and action in the United |l , Or ¢ i1l Room 7, Valentine Bidg, | f i tie St XSRS L e Qhen el States. American enterprise must take |thereafter, or they will be barred || 8 enhe Wednesday, Friday co-operate to help themselves? Do they propose | & i datt o i BN AR o [by virtue of the provisions of tha'% Office phon e 484, residence | to hihg out”until they are starved off the farms? | ‘L’“m“e P ;‘ ’-‘m Mt i | statutes. | [phone 238. Office Hours: 9:30 | and Sunday ou e problem 3 1 J. LINDLEY GREEN, to 12; 1:00 to 5:30 | . S . f : ] C Evenings OWEN D. YOUNG ATTRACTS | Register. i P e oo ATTENTION. ‘The other day Edward A. Filene, the famous (Cincinnati Enquirer.) economist, named Owen D. Young at the head of | With the final report made by S. Parker Gilbert, a_ short list whom he declared could easily earn|Agent-General for Reparations, the national re- & million dollar a year salary. Now comes the |ceivership for Germany comes to an end. It is following from the Boston News Bureau: astonishing to review the progress of a decade in Admiral Carey T. Grayson, returning from ‘Lhe management of European finances. After the Europe, says Europe generally considers first years of futile effort on the part of France Owen D. Young the outstanding figure in seconded by England, to make Germany pay far American life; Lloyd George told him he more than was humanly possible, the Dawes Plan would not be surprised to see Young Presi- |worked out a temporary system of transferring dent and that the reparations adviser “is reparations payments in such amounts as were not only a great American figure but a economically feasible. growing international one.” Then the Young Plan was established, which ) fforded a final and conclusive basis for Germany's If Gov. Roosevelt’s physicians continue to insist |2 ) that he must not be a candidate for President, |'cParations payments. This plan, including the com- i f uch of Germany's obligation do not be surprised if the Democrats should name |TMercialization of m Y 0Ny ¢ |and the creation of the Bank of International Set- the great lawyer-engineer as their Presidential nom- |y enis to handle the transfers and bond issues, inee in 1923. now takes effect, and the work of the Agent-General If—another IF—President Hoover should be un-|is over. For five years Mr. Gilbert has stayed able to land a renomination, keep your eye on on in Berlin, watching carefully the slow and Ambassador Morrow. Then there would be two [painful reorganization of German industry candidates who are alike in many ways. The (finance. chief difference is that Morrow is a Southerner| His final warning as he leaves that office is and a Republican while Young is a Northerner |VerY significant. Public expenditures, he says, hav2 Sxd k- Demotrat. risen out of all proportion to the needs of th: country and its ability to'pay taxes. If retrench- ment follows in this direction, then he is confident DO NOT EAT RAW PORK. of the future -of Germany, alleged loser of the i Y World War. One may naturally wonder who really Reports that trichinosis has caused the death of |qid lose, when he notes the painstaking efforts of three persons and illness of 30 other residents oflme allled Powers to place Germany back on her Reading, Pa., recently has led the United Btntes}reec again economically. Department of Agriculture to remew its warnings The lesson of these trying post-war years is against eating raw pork. In Reading the disease Pplain enough for all who can read—that no attempt was the consequence of eating raw-pork sausage. to break the strength of any nation is profitable Trichinosis is produced by a minute, parasitic |fOr Other States. The prosperity of other nations worm that infests the meat of swine without notice- is vital to our own, and victory in war must in- i i sbly injuring the animals. This minute worm 1s evitably be followed by international cooperation taken into the human body by eating raw or under- to reestablish the integrity of the vanquished na- cooked fresh pork. In the human body these tion. It is not an application of the Golden worms. or trichinae, produce a disease known as Rule, or an injection of Christian ethics into in- ternational affairs. It is simply an extension of trichinosis, which somewhat resembles typhoid fever. Trichinosis is a painful and dangerous disease which the principle of “live and let live” which makes does not respond to treatment. All fresh pork in all nations partners in a close-knit world economic system. The final resolution of the reparations whatever form should be thoroughly cooked to make it safe. problem is a triumph for the unbiased common- Leaflet 34-L, “Trichinosis,” prepared by the Unit- sense handling of a question that arose out of the bitterness and hatred of armed conflict. ed States Department of Agriculture to explain this disease and methods of avoiding it, is available free to anyone requesting it. A New Era in Germany. What constitutes an Oldtimer in Alaska might be termed a moot question for out at some of those districts to* the West of Seward there are oldtimers whose fathers were Oldtimers—(Seward and | First publication, July 12, 1930. | Last publication, Sept. 24, 1930. | AGENCY (W. W. Batcheller) Y | Selling “TRUPAK” goods, Un- | | | excelled, take no one's word, | | TRY THEM | Corner Second and Main | . || NORTHERN SALES 1 | | | W.P. Johnson FRIGIDAIRE DELCO LIGHT PRODUCTS MAYTAG WASHING MACHINES GENERAL MOTORS RADIOS Phone 17 Front Street Juneau { Junean Public Library Free Reading Room City Hall, Second Fleor Main Street and Fourth Reading Room Open From 8a m to 10 p. m. Circulation Roem Open from 1 to 5:30 p. m.—7:00,to 8:30 ‘p. m. Current Magazines, Newspapers, Reference, Baoks, Etc. q FREK TO ALL time. A tank for Diesl Ofl and a tank for crude oil save burner trouble, PHONE 149, NIGHT 6103 RELIABLE TRANSFER Old papers for salé a: The Em- ! pire. e 0 Our trucks go any place any e 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 e 3y T LUDWIG NELSON | W-tc:"!':el;:lflnl A -Brunswick Agency RICE & AH LERS CO. Plumbers “We tell you in advance what the job will cost” The following list of Bank us with the outside busines; THE B. M. BEHRENDS BANK Correspondents connects s world: “THE GOLD RUSH OF ’97 AND ’98.” Why do people always refer to it as the “Gold Rush of '98?” The gold rush was well under way months before '98. Skagway and Dyea and Bennett were populous towns in '97. Skagway and Dyea had large stores, and other institutions, including news- papers, before the beginning of '98, and thousands reached their goal at Dawson in '97. It is true that the rush reached its peak in the winter of '97 and '98 and the early spring of '98. | Most of ‘the peak of the rush of the winter of 97 and '98 and the early spring of '98 broke into ‘Dawson in the late spring and early summer of 98, Litefally thousands of small boats and barges ‘a5 well as & fleet of river steamers fairly littered lakgs and rivers between Bennett and Dawson May. June and July '98. But a large part of rushers had started in '97, and were rushing most lm') s Gateway.) Education does not begin until one is twenty- five and continues until eighty-five, if it ends at all, says a British novelist. Tell that to the sophisticated youth of the present. — (Anchorage Times.) Add similes: As emotional as a girl who couid swoon with excitement after reading one of Mr Coolidge's syndicated articles—(New York Sun.) Every city has its own official responsibility In New York it's the wide open saloon; in Chicago, the close-curtained sedan—(Philadelphia Inquirer.) . A corporation has paid a New York church $50 {for a strip of land 20 feet long and five inches wide. They must be going to erect one of these Efficiency Suits for newlyweds.—(Cleveland Plain T R —————— 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., Chi Harris Trust Co., Chiéa b St Anglo. London & Paris Bank of Calif : ank of California, N iati o Bar:l?’ National Association, Pacific National Bank, a ttle. First Seattle Dexter Horton National Bank, Seattle. § Bank of Montreal, Vancouver, B. C. YOUR BUSINESS 1S RESPECTFULLY SOLICITED x ational Bank, San Fran- & Trust Co., San Francisco. 1.).SaAricx Joweler and Optician . .. _Watcdeo “ Diamonds o Stlverware’ .Tm: JuNEAU LAUNDRY Franklin Street, betweem Front and Second Streets PHONE YOUR ORDERS TO US We will attend to them promptly. Our c¢oal, hay, grain and trnngferTl;::&,leul easing daily. 8 & Irsul:ocl:. Give us a trial order today and learn why. You Can’t Help Being Pleased D. B. FEMMER PHONE 114 Just think of the name as you bite into a slice of our delicious bread and your tongue will re- member it with pleasure and repeat it with unction when ordering food. Peerless Bakery “Remember the Name” JUNEAU CABINET and DETAIL MILL- WORK CO. Front Street, next to Warner Machine Shop CABINET and MILLWORK GENERAL CARPENTER WORK GLASS REPLACED IN AUTOS Estimates Furnished Upon Request Open Evenings Opposite U. S. Cable Office FOREST WOO0D GARBAGE HAULING Office at Wolland’s Tailor Shop Chester Barnesson PHONE 66 DAIRY FERTILIZER huwbyfl“‘ as your telephone, Phone us to "\’ aall and we will be right on the | Our job jobtoget the job you have forus Moves, Packs and Stores Freight and Baggage Prompt Delivery of ALL KINDS OF COAL A PHONE 48 Mabrv’s Cafe Regular Dinners Short Orders Lunches 0 6 a.m. to 2 a.m. P%;ULAB PRICES