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|had been developed in the contest to gain a ma- ljority of the State Committee, and that the move- [ment ; D(filV Aidska Empirc had been started two weeks ago for the of Phil Metschan, the State Chair- in the interest of harmony. State Treasurer was Metschan's chief competitor, had identified with the anti-Joseph element. ation who been While hope is never lun;: absent from Democratic breasts there is a sort of ring about that announce- ment that Democrats are going out after a majority in the next Congress which indicates that hope may fortified by expectation this time. ice In Juneau as Secor SUBSCRIPTION RATES. Oetivered by carrier in Juneau, Douglas, Treadwell and Thane for $1.25 per month. By mall, postage paid, at the following rates One year, in advance, $12.00; six months, in advance, $6.00; one month, in advanc 25 Subscribers will confer a it they will promptly | notify the Business Office of any failure or irregularity in the delivery of their papers. i€ | Telephone for Editorial and Business Officds, 374. be As long as Oklahom and impeach Governors those |of candidates for that office |is a habit down there Texas continue to MEMBER OF ASSOCIATED PRESS. The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the wee for republication of all news dispatches credited to W or not otherwise credited in this paper and aiso the focal news published hercin Trying to come back e — It suggested t the agreed to help the United € gling of liquor across the |of compelling Americans their drinking. is C ALASKA CIRCULATION GUARANTEED TO BE. LARGER THAN THAT OF ANY OTHER PUBLICATION nadians may have | to stop the smug- border for the purpose to go to Canada to do The Treasury Department convict-made pulp will not come in permit Rus- the country nat helps some. | Election Psychology. “ (Cincinnati Enquirer.) It has long been true in the United States— |and elsewhere, for that matter—that popular elec |tions are less an opportunity for voters to choos2 TS i TS between important issues than a chance to censur» 2 > 7 FISHING PROFITS |political leaders for allowing unsatisfactory econ- Some stir was created by the report the other omic conditions to exist. Political figures may or day that trolling boats in waters in this vicinity ™Ay 1ot be responsible for such conditions, usually ARE MODERATE. |are not. But they are the most convenient per- had made as high as $300 a day. Fishermen very sons on which to place the blame, naturally feared that boat owners in other (llEXS‘ This autumn, as in other instances, this feeling would assume that this high mark was a common | {will doubtless predominate. That is, however, a ten- occurence, and that they would crowd into this dency to place blame, not so much on political lead- section and over-do the fishing to the injury or ers simply because they have occupied places of the fishermen that are here and themselves. |responsibility, but on those who have been lavish The interview of Wallis S. George, President!With public funds at a time when the public is | of the Juneau Cold Storage Company, that J])t)nared‘f”“;:jngtfis mr):si)etc? t“::‘ “O‘:m":ee;gt':’}“nm;l; LA in The Empire )csltrtjay is a rational and true to ha.stind. ‘ Rashtiess in goverrmehtal expendi- statement of the condition. We repeat Mr. George' % [ture is an error that cannot be forgiven a legislator, statement: |however much he needs the extra votes which gen-] There are numerous boats—both trollers lerous appropriations might win for him. If there| and buyers—and their average gain is mod- |is to be a spirit of revenge in the August primaries erate. On a rare occasion, of course, a {and the November elections—and there always is single trolling boat or possibly two or three |something of that spirit—it had best be directed trolling boats might meet with a large school at the men who have placed their political futures of fish, and the take might gross to a lahead of the urgent need for public economy. | boat, as was reported recently, $300 in one i day. But such' luck occurs very, very sel- | B rculosis: dom There are many days when there is no take at all or when it is so small (Manchester Guardian,) High | In England and Wales every week seven hundred | |people die of tuberculosis. This figure, which by |itself is terrible, becomes hopeful when it is seen las a stage in the history of the disease. This was |shown clearly by Mr. Arthur Greenwood and Sir George Newman in their addresses to the annual conference of the National Association for the Pre- vention of Tuberculosis. In 1847 the death-rate (from pulmonary tuberculosis was 3,189 per million | |of the population; by 1928 the rate had dropped as to be insufficient to pay expenses peaks of good fortune are invariably levelled by low dips of bad. ‘Waters in this neighborhood have been ylelding fair catches, but at all times there have been enough boats, and scarcely any have earned exceptional profits. SOIL AFFECTS RADIO. Placing a radio station seems utterly different to 709. In the non-pulmonary forms of the dht.w-n from planting corn or cotton, but the two have one |the death-rate since 1917 has been halved. Thz| point in common. The right kind of soil is import- |enemy. sald Mr. Greenwood, is on the run. This| great advance must be attributed chiefly to the| 7 E | preventive effects of the improvement in the general | of soil is important to the most effective operation | |standard of life—better food and clothing, more of the radio station. This face came out When & eanitary housing, cleaner and. better, ventilated work | representative of a large concern manufacturing|shops. But it is also the result of the frontal at-| radio transmitting apparatus visited the United [tack by medical treatment in sanatoria and village States Department of Agriculture and asked to ex-!settlements, and the speeches at the National As- amine soil-survey reports and maps as a guide to|sociation’s conference pointed hopefully to the ex- the placement of radio stations in the Middle Wostju‘ndvd powers given to the local authorities by the and Southwest. This use of the soil-survey records "eW Local Government Act. was new to the soil specialists of the department. | The radio expert explained that engineers have | found that radio transmission is better over soils| which are retentive of moisture than over drier soils. | ‘They believe this is because the drier soils absorb | the radio waves to a greater degree than do the| moist soils. He said that the soil maps and the detailed descriptions of the structure, the texture, and the arrangement of the layers of soil which | are included in the department’s soi rvey reports | have already proved useful in locating stations. ant to the corn or cotton,crop, and. the right kind Federal Power Board Nominations. (New York World.) There were good reasons why the nomination of Gen. Edgar Jadwin to be Chairman of the Federal Power Commission should encounter strong ! opposition in the Senate; his record was assailable | lon more points than one. However, by General| Jadwin's declination Mr. Hoover has been saved from the contest which in advance he had invited. In his later selection of three members of the S e 3 e settlers ¢Ommission—Claude L. Draper of Wyoming, Ralph Sy PROrei e 8 domand “by - sbltlers |B. Williamson of Washington and Marcel Garsaud Im, gearch of productive lands, by farmers seekinffo; 7, inana M, Hoover can Hardly have overlooke to make the best use of their fields, by engincers |0 tne warning previously sorved on’bir, n building roads, by bank and mortgage €ONCErns |jittle is known of them, but as a matter of course n estimating the loan value of farms. “These uses|the three nominations will be closely scrutinized. It are familiar, but it will be news to most soil sur-!is right that they should be. The new commission veyors that their work locates the spots on;\\'ill be clothed with great powers and wide the earth which provides the best sounding boards tion. Its decision will be of lasting effect on publ for radio transmission, also policy in the disposition of water-power rights. From |the start it it is important that it should deserve general confidence. The choice of General Jadwin, distinguished en- gineer as he is, indicated a very definite purpose jon the President’s part to shut the door against l\lThl) STATES IN CANADIAN POLITICS. The Associated Press dispatches indicated that|the possibility of public operation in any clrcum- the Conservalives in the Canadian campaign that‘stancu ended in a victory for their party Monday made a ! strong issue out of the American tariff. The Con-| servative leaders made the most of their case | Not Really Serious. against the United States on the tariff and other | (New York Times.) matters. Indicative of this is the following from| When his audience laughed at Senator Cope- the Victoria Colonist of a week before the elec- |land's prediction that good times in 1932 will be followed by the re-election of President Hoover, the Soothsayer exclaimed: “That's serious.” It might be from another Democratic Senator. But this one |has an engaging habit of not being bound one week |or one year by what he has said the previous. tion: . The real purpose of the present political campaign is not whether Mr. King will go to Europe to attend an Imperial trade conference, but whether Canada is to be used as a pawn in the' political affairs of the Hoover Administration. It means that Can- ada will decide next week whether or scene of vast desolation. Now he sees the sun half- way over the horizon and Republican success as- not sured. Mr. Copeland referred slightingly to Alfred she is to be “mistress in her own house” E. Smith as the “Venus de Milo” of party lead- or a handmaiden in that of United States {sha: Tnot: any ‘maths RS Re" arax hombariing Those Americans who regret the turn of events|giate delegations and touring the land in behalt in the Dominion ought not to blame the Canad-|of the same Smith. ians. If the relations between the United States It seems to refresh Senator Copeland to utter and Canada have been drifting into undesirable unexpected remarks like the Hoover prediction, and channels, Americans ought to lay the blame at|he appears to undergo no form of smental or moral the door ‘of Congress and its atrocious Hawley- |indigestion when he later swallows®them ket Tasit | some things may be settled by an election but MER(‘H,’\R’T 7“. AS TRUE TO HIS 'i“;tl \m the State of Pennsylvania.—(Milwaukee Jour- l RIE '\l) BECL: . AN 2 Things have gotten to that stage where a trip Julius L. Meier, \\lu: withdrew from the race for on the Graf Zeppelin has all the thrills of a ride the Republican nomination on a street car.—(Dayton, Ohio, News.) gon when the Republi to accept the platform W. Joseph won the primary nomination last May, is one of the owners and ma ers of the great Portland department store of Meier and Frank. Mr. Joseph was attorney for the firm and when he died his followers urged the nomination of one of his asso- ciatés.~ Mr. Meier was also, of course, a close per- sonal friend of the primary Late arrivals from Portland say that considerable bitterness for Governor of Ore- State Committee refused which the late George The town drunkard used to be considered worth- less, but now he's very valuable as a guide to where it can be got.—(Cincinnati Enquirer.) on The solution of the Lingle killing is going to be exactly the same as in the Rothstein murder.— (Cincinnati Enquirer.) What this country needs is a good five-cent tin —(Akron, Ohio, Beacon-Journal,) victor. States will not run outf |to compete with American pulp and paper makers. {Recording Precinct, Relatively | discre- | Only a while ago he was predicting a national | E THE B. M. BEHRENDS BANK THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, FRIDAY AUGUST I I930 NOTICE OF APPLICATION FOR PATENT SERIAL NO. 07546 for the Juncau Land District at Anchorage, Alaska. In the Matter of the Application of CHICHAGOFF POWER COM- PANY, a corporation organized under the laws of Alaska, for patent to the AURUM NO. 13 lode mining claim, emkt:rced in U. S. Mineral Survey No. 1575, situated on Chichagoff Island, in Chichagoff Mining District, Sitka Recording Precinct, First Judicial Division, Alaska. NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN That the Chichagoff Power Com- pany, a corporation organized und- er the laws of Alaska, whose post cffice address is 424 Goldstein (| Puilding, Juneau, Alaska, has filed its application in the U. 8. Land Office at Anchorage, Alaska, for patent for the Aurum No. 13 lode mining claim and included within U. S. Mineral Survey No. 1575, sj*- uated District, Territory of Alaska, Sitkx First Judicial Division at Chichagoff Post Offic> on Chichagoff Island, Alaska, and lows: AURUM NO. 13 LODE “Beginning at corner No. 1, identical with location corner and with corner No. 1 of Pa- cific Lode, survey No. 1045, whence U. 8. L. M. No. 7 bears S. 55 deg. 13 E. 133.01 ft.- Thence N. 65 deg. 19’ W. 343.50 ft. to corner No. 2. Thence N. 47 deg. 58" W. 1007.50 ft. to corner No. 3. Thence S. 6 deg. 03" W. 565.10 ft. to corner No. 4. Thence S. 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- cant. Entire area in conflict claimed by applicant.” United States Location Monn - ment No. 7, to which this survey is tied, consists of a cross on. ex- posed out-crop of bedrock 10x8x§ ft. on the shore of Klag Bay, Chi- chagoff Island and chiseled U. 8. L. M. No. 7 in latitude 57 deg 05" 45” W. Magnetic variation 30 deg. 30" E The names of the owners of co! flicting claims the applicant except as hereinabova set forth. in the survey and claimed by the epplicant is 12,616 acres. Any and all persons clalming ad- versely any of the above described veins, lodes or premises are re- quired to file notice of their ad- verse claims with the Register ol |the United States Land Office at| Anchorage, Alaska, within the per- lod of publication, or eight months thereafter, or they will be barred by virtue of the provisions of the; statutes. J. LINDLEY GREEN, Register. First publication, July 12, 1930. Last publication, Sept. 24, 1930. ["NORTHERN SALES | AGENCY | (W. W. Batcheller) i Selling “TRUPAK” goods. Un= ! excelled, take no one's word, | TRY THEM Corner Second and Main W. P. Johnson _ FRIGIDAIRE DELCO LIGHT PRODUCTS MAYTAG WASHING MACHINES GENERAL MOTORS RADIOS Phone 17 Front Street Juneau In the United States Land Offire ! in the Chichagoff Mining | more particularly described as fol 29’ 40” N. and longitude 136 degz 1 are not known to! The total area embraced " PROFESSIONAL IR T A R MR A 3 SRR ST, S DT Helene W.L. Albrecht | PHYSIOTHERAPY Massage, Electricity, Infra Red ' Re#v, Medical Gymnastics. | 410 Goldstein Bullding | Phone Office, 216 ! " DRS. KASFR & FREEBURGER DENTISTS 301-303 Goldstein Bldg. PHONE 56 I Hours § 8. m. to § p. m. e i Y e s Dr. Charles P. Jenne DENTIST Rooms 8 and 9 Valentine Bullding ‘Telephone 176 Dr. J. W: Bayne DENTIST Rooms 5-6 Triangle Bldg. | Office hours, 9 am. to 5 p.m. Evenings by appoinment. Phone 321 et 3 e Dr. A. W. Stewart DENTIST | Hours 9 a. m. to 6 p. m. | SEWARD BUILDING Office Phone 469, Res. Phone. 276 | L T E—— ] — — & | Dr. H. Vance i Osteopath—201 Goldstain, Bldg. | Hours: 10 to i2; 1 to 5; T to ® | or by appointment Licensed Osteopathic Physiclan | Phone: Office 1671. Residence, MacKinnon Apt, | ke & B (075,744 B Dr. Geo. L. Barton | CHIROPRACI2R Hellenthal Building OFFICE SERVICE ONLY Sours: 10 a. ™ % 12 noon i | . | 2p.m t)p m ) 4 6p.m t 8 p m By Appolntment\ 1 PHONE 250 RSB, TR T TR Robert Simpson | Opt. D | Graduate Eos Angeles Col- ] lege of Optometry and | Opthalmology | Glasses Fitted, Lenses Ground {” T DR. R E. SOUTHWELL | Optometrist-Optician |} Eyes Examined—Glasses Fitted | | Room 17, Valentine Bldg. i J Office phone 484, residence | t | phone 238. Office Hours: 9:30 | ol to 12; 1:00 to 5:30 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.—T7:00,t0 8:30 p. m. Current Mnmnes. Newspapers, Reference, Books, Ete. FREE TO ALL Our trucks go any place any time. A tank for Diesel Oll and a tank for crude oil save burner trouble. PHONE 149, NIGHT 5103 | RELIABLE TRANSFER — ©Oid papers for sale pire. The Em- | RICE & AHLERS CO. Plumbers “We tell you in advanre!'lut the job will cost” The following list of Ban | First National Bank, Cnase National Bank, 3ankers Trust Co., N Harris Trust Co., cisco. Wells Fargo Bank & P. Seattle. YOUR BUSINESS I Bank of Montreal, Val k Correspondents connects us with the outside business world: Boston. AUTOS FOR HIRE | Carlson’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 Graham’s Taxi A i s Phore 565 STAND AT ARCADE CAFE Day and Night Service ny Place in the City fer $1.00 ‘ { F R e U | Prompt Service, Day and Night CovicH Auto SERVICE STAND AT THE OLYMPIC Phone 342 Day or .light i $1 00 . l 1199Taxi — TELEPHONE | 183 S— TO ANY PART | OF CITY TAXJ Phone Stand at Pioneer Pool Hall - f?nfi::lf_ fprice | Gastinean Hote) DAY AND NIGHT SERVICE CARBACE ROLLER SKATING A. B. HALL Wednesday, Friday and Evenings HAULED AND' LOT CLEANING Phone 584 Sunday f-—_—-_-— Dime & Dollar Building and Loan Association Is under the State of Oregon. Can only loan depositors money on improved real cstate, first mortgages and State approved bonds. compounded semianaually 6% on deposits. Junean H. J. GASTINEAU EOTEL ¢ RS S TLE A ORRI o f LUDWIG NELSON || Watc-lvnfll’l?;:lrlng Brunswick Agency FRONT STREET supervision of the 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 Stert your account with Representative Eberhart i I 3 & I.). Smaricx Jeweler amd Optician * Watcdes Diamonds | Ulver ware -THE JuNEAU LAUNDRY Franklin Front and Second Streets PHONE 359 New York. ew York. Bank of the Manhattan Co., New York. Peoples Trust & Savings Co., Pittsburgh. Continental Illinois Bank & Trust Co., Chicago. Anglu London & I’nns National Bank, San Fran- Chicago. Bank of California, National Assocmtmm Trust Co., San Francisco. cific National Bank, Seattle. First Seattle Dexter Horton National Bank, ncouver, B. C. S RESPECTFULLY SOLICITED — — PHONE YOUR ORDERS TO US , We will attend to them| promptly. grain and transfer business; Open 6 a.m. to 2 a.m. is increasing daily. There’s a' Give us a trial order! today and learn why. reason. You Can’ Pleased D. B. PHONE 114 “Remember the Name” s e - |{ 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 Street, betweem Mabrv’s Cafe Reguk;r Dinners Short Orders Lunches Our coal, hay, POPULAR PRICES HARRY MABRY 1 Proprietor t Help Being You get results from FEMMER printing done by us Fraternal Sacieties or - Gastincau Channel B. P. 0. ELKS Meeting every sec- ond and fourth Wednesdays at 8 o'clock. Elks Hall Visiting brothers welcome, R. B. MARTIN, Exaltea Ruler. M. H. SIDES, Sacretary. ! ; ' ry Scottish Rite IRegulnr meeting each month at 7:30 p. m. Boos tish Rite Temple WALTER B. E£ISEL, SecretAry. LOYAL ORDER OF MOOSE Juneau Lodge No. 700 | Meets every Mondaw night, at 8 o'clock. ‘TOM SHEARER, Dictator W. T. VALE, Secy., P. ©, Box 826 b RO - it RN g 1MOUN’I‘ JUNEAU LODGE NO. 147 Second and fourth Mon- day of each month in Scottish R''» Temple beginning at 7:30 p. m EVANS L. GRI i CHARLES E. NAGHEI, % | Master; Secretary. —_— . ORDER OF EASTERN STAR Second and Fourth Tuesdays of each month, 4 |at 8 o'clock, Beottish | Rite’ Temple. LILY o BURFORD, Worthy Matron; FANNY L. o | ROBINSON, Secretary. 4 KNIGHTS OF COLUMBI! Seghers Counc.i No. 17¢ Meetings second and last Monday at 7:30 p. m. Transient brothers urg« ed to attend. Council Chambers, Fifth Strees JOHN F. MULLEN, G. K. H. J. TURNER, Secretary. —_—_— DOUGLAS AERIE 117 F. 9. E. Meets first and th*-d & Mondays, 8 o'clocs, | at Eagles Hail Douglas. ALEX GAIR, W. P. GUY SMITH, Serretary. Visifing Prothers welcome. THE CASH BAZAAR Open Evenings S. Cable Office Opposite U. FOREST WOOD GARBAGE HAULING Office at Wolland'’s Tailor Shop Chester Barnesson PHONE 66 DAIRY FERTILIZER Out job shop Is as near to you as your telep! Phone us to aall and we will be right on the | jobwg:nhz]obyeufilnfinfl JUNEAU TRANSFER COMPANY ) | MO VING ' Moves, Packs.and Stom Freight and Baggage Prompt Delivery of i ALL KINDS OF COAL PHONE 48 L. C. SMITH and CORONA TYPREWRITERS Guaranteed by J. B. BURFORD & CO “Our _door step 18 worn by satisfied customers™