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fi_DaiI ¥y Alaska Empiré JOHN W. TROY - - - EDITOR AND MANAGER evening except Sunday by the G COMPANY at Second ana Main Alaska Published _every EMPIRE PRINT )treets, Juneau Entered in the Post Office in Juneau as Second Class matter. SUBSCRIPTION E Belivered by carrier in Juneau, Douglas, Treadwell and Thane for $1.25 per month. paid, at the following rates: )0; six months, In advance, advance, $1.26 a favor if they will promptly f any failure or irregularity One year, | #8,00; one month, in Subscribers will confe notify the Business Off! In the delivery of thelr © Telephone for Editorial rs. and Business Offices, 374. | MEMBER OF ASSOCIATED PRESS. entitled to the | long train of evil consequences that threat- en the stability of Government adminis- tration. yor Walker and the other leaders really in all of its ramifications mple w to go about it. Let them confer with Al Smith and follow his advice in letter and spirit. government California primary returns as furnished in the |dispatches would indicate that voters of the Golden State lost sight of the Gubernatorial candidacy of Mrs. Clara Shortridge Foltz, sister of Senator Samuel M. Shortridge, who had made her announce- ment with eclat. The Associated Press is exclusively | use for republication of all news Jispetchon <;}n-d;wd folhad been a permanent improvement in the fatal |er the laws of Alaska, whose post(s —————— ——— 4 R or not otherwise credited in this paper and alse the [Nac een @ erma pr 2 e fatal office address is 424 Goldsteln local news published here from accidents we get statistics to show |Ruflding, Juneau, Alaska, has filed] Dr. Ch%rles sl_: Jenne A CIRCULATION GUARANTEED TO BE LARGER tomobile casualties are increasing again. i i ENTI LAS:{:ANITH;Y OF kNVJO'!HER PUBLICATION. i 1 . “ 15 Sopivamse. 1 the A B L“n“ Rooms 8 and 9§ Valentine 3 foo o 5 o s Office at %nchorage, Alaska, foc ‘Butlding a0 x g patent for the Aurum No. 13 lode| Telephane 176 i | Three Men Gerard Forgot. {mining claim and included within| = o U. S. Mineral Survey No. 1575, sit- (New York Daily News.) uated in the Chichagoff Mining | & - | Pifty-nme men, says James W. Gerard, rule |District, Territory of Alaska, Sttka| | Dr. J. W. Bayne lthe United States of America. ‘Recording Precinct, First Judiclal, DENTIST | Mr. Gerard was American Ambassador to Gor-iDWl(s;::))‘ft fz“;‘;flg‘;’f;"si omc;_, Rooms 5-6 Triangle Bldg. {many before we went into the World War. He % CRICHE0T 'HEREs I eEs and| | office ‘hours, 9 am. to § pm. told Great Britain recently that her salvation lies l;:_"? particularly described as fol-| | gyenings by appoinment. in empire free trade and protective tariff barriers ‘o%’ | Phone 321 | |against the rest of the world. He added that “thel. AURUM NO. 13 LODE e {forty men who rule the United States” could make Beginning at corner No. 1, | \go—————— —— — @ — {to name ATTEND THE FAIR. people should support Alaska Fair It is entitled to that the Eighth Annual not The Southeast only beca ought to encourage a continuation of the Fairs.| Climatic conditions have not been favorable for the erican on the list chiefly because he is a General Motors but the officers of the Fair and man and only secondarily because he is Democratic | National Committee Chairman |left staesmen and politicians off {tionally, because their power comes from their posi- |tions and leaves them when they quit office. production of agricultural, horticultural and floral exhibits this year, those interesed have done the best they have been able to do under the circumstances. The managers and officers of the Fair have ar- entertainment for visitors, but it requires| ranged people and the carnival spirit to make any ‘“"‘pwerml than John J. Rackob, and we donm't fin If enough people would go to the Juneau this man's name on Gerard’s blue-ribbon roll. would make it an occasion to|refer to Bishop James Cannon, Jr, of the Metho- But |dist Episcopal Church South. As Democratic boss a success. Fair regularly they remember if there were not the exhibits will be well worth seeing. attend will not be disappointed It is up to the residents of this City to provide the crowds that will make the Fair worthy of the town and Southeast Alaska i a single exhibit i BN ST }nun is another distinguished American cleric—dis- |tinguished in several ways. case you haven't already guessed it, is to the Rev. Dr. Clarence True |Secretary of the Board of Temperance, Prohibition ORIENTALS AND THE QUOTA. of the Chairman Congressman Albert Johnson, I |over the British empire under such a system. 1and publishers. seems to us there are one or two exceptions to be| taken ise of what it is but because the people|ihree omissions. Those who |of Virginia, Cannon, during the away |them over to Hoover. magnates, bankers, railroad men, public utility chiefs It's an impressive list, so far as it goes. But it to it, and that Mr. Gerard made at least ance, one of Mr. Gerard's fifty-nine Am- For ins | John J. Raskob. Raskob is put| rulers is Gerard said he his list inten-| Mr wish to purify Tammany and New York's municipal there is a THE DAILY ALASKA About the time we had concluded that there| EMPIRE, WEDNESD. AY, SEPT. 3, NOTICE OF AFrLICATION ] FOR PATENT | SERIAL NO. 07546 In the United States Land Office for the Juneau 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“ U. S. Mineral Survey No. 1575, Chichagoff Mining District, Sitka | That the Chichagoff Power Com- pany, a corporation organized und-“' B— =8| PROFESSIONAL ¥ ——s ————n | Helene W. L. Albrecht | PHYSIOTHERAPY Massage, Electricity, Infra Red Rev, Medical Gymnastics. 41u Goldstein Building Phone Office, 216 lode mining claim, emt-cced lnln & = I situated on Chichagoff Island, in |t oe miare & TR FRBURGER i i DENTISTS Recording Precinct, First Judicial Division, Alaska. | 801-303 Goldstein Bldg. NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN| PHONE 56 Hours 9§ a. m. to § p. m. 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 Il and Single O Carlson’s Taxi and Ambulance Service Graham’s Taxi Phore 565 Day and Night Service STAND AT ARCADE CAFE | Asked to name these forty men, Mr. Gerard| e Lode, survey No. 1045, increased the number to fifty-nine, and proceeded| yhence U. S. L. M. No. 7 bears | | the Nation's leading industrialists, movie| g 55 deg. 13' E. 13301 ft. identical with location corner and with corner No. 1 of Pa- Thence N. 65 deg. 19" W. 343.50 ft. to corner No. 2. Thence N. | 47 deg. 58 W. 100750 ft. to corner No. 3. Thence S. 6 deg. Dr. A. W. Stewart | DENTIST Hours 9 a. m. to 6 p. m. SEWARD BUILDING Office Phone 469, Res. { Phone 276 e— e iiad Any Place in the City fer $1.00 ( || e e Prompt Service, Day and Night CovicH AUTO SERVICE £ 03’ W. 565.10 ft. to corner No. |&v 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 12,616 acres. Total area in conflict with Pacific Lode, sur- vey No. 1045 owned by appli- cant. Entire area in conflict Dr. H. Phone: But surely there is a man in the land more| We | 1928 Presidential | the Southern Democrats and handed How about that, Mr. Gerard?‘ Almost if not quite as powerful as Bishop Can- from The reference here, in Wilson. Dr. Wilson is General House Committee on Immigration, has & bill pend- ./ o" punic Morals of the Methodist Episcopal ing in Congress to repeal Oriental exclusion and chyrch put China and Japan on the quota basis with ‘hf‘lthe Prohibition laws, their text and their alleged from |enforcement, around in his hip pocket. rest of the countries. It is receiving support the National Council for Prevention of War various other organizations and newspapers people of disinction throughout the country. The supporters of Chairman Johnson’s measure contend that it would increase Japanese immigra- tion by only 120 a year and that 250 would prob- ably be the extreme limit of increase from | Japan under the law. This would include the 120 immigrants and those who are permitted to come‘ for other purposes. Exceptions under the Oriental Exlusion Act have permitted, it is said, 8,300 Japan- | ese to come to the country in a single fiscal year —that of 1928-20. They contend that under the| National Origins Quota Law only 66 Chinese immi- | grants would be admitted to the United States—| or a total of than 200 Orientals. Thus, they| say, if the Oriental Nations were placed on the same basis as other countries we should get fewer Orientals—which they contend is desirable—~and re- move the affront implied by exclusion We cannot agree In the first place, the argu- ments in behalf of the proposed quota basis for Orientals are as offensive to them as exclusion —or ought to be, and, from a practical viewpoint, they do not meet the real situation. The danger from repeal of the exclusion act is that some of these days the people may decide that the United States ought to have more popula- tion. It is not at all a settled thing that the| quota system will forever be a National policy. If | the bars were ever again let down to immigration, the repeal of the exclusion act would open Pacific less just Coast gates for incoming hordes of Orientals. It| ought not to be humiliating to Orientals to admit that it is not well for the races to intermingle on a fifty-fifty basis. Mixing races has caused much} of the troubles that have beset the progress of | civilization. It would be foolish for the Orientals and the Americans to invite repetition of that sort of trouble on the Amer Pacific Coast. IT HAS BEEN TRIED. States Senator endurance until a United enter one of these contests!—(New York Times.) It's been done. Many Senators have endured | beyond the endurance of the other Senators, mnot | to mention their constituents. Just wait decides to ILLINOIS TO VOTE ON PROHIBITION. Petitions containing more than 400,000 have been filed with the Secretary of State Tlinois asking that the following questions be sub- mitted to a referendum of the voters of the State: Shall the Eighteenth Amendment be re- pealed? Shall Congress modify the Volstead Act? Shall the Illinois Search and Seizure Act be repealed? The petitions were sponsored by the Cook Coun- ty Republican Committee and designed to alleviate the advantage it is believed on. account of the attitude of that party toward Prohibition. The Republican State convention prom- ised that the Republicans of Illinois would abide | by the decision of the referendum | Chairman Bernard W. Snow of the Cook County Republican Committee presented the petitions and made a statement in which he said: The greater majority of the signature had been obtained in_Chicago and Cook County but by request many of the peti- tions were circulated downstate. The Republican organization of in Cook County recognizes that Prohibition has not 1 only been a failure in accomplishing the and /in and |hands whenever we break those laws, as most of us loften do; and the Gearrd list should have included {Wilson’s name names |zens observe the provisions of the Democrats have | Wilson practically carries As such, Dr. Our lives, fact, are in Wilson's and sometimes in theory Last but by no.means least of Gerard’s omissions is one of the first citizens of Chicago. Gerard named Julius Rosenwald, mail order king and phil- anthropist, as a ruling Chicagoan. But isn't Scar-| face Al Capone an even more important person than Rosewald, important though Rosenwald is?| Doesn’'t Al loom the larger in the everyday lives; 4/ment No. 7, to which this survey s {posed out-crop of bedrock 10x8x5| |1t. on the shorc of Klag Bay, Chi- | | campaign, showed himself to be much more power-lfg‘, Ifo',, l‘l{?. :dinl Iat_lttu:e 13‘2 deg | | {ful than Raskob. Cannon snatched whole States| I ARg - Jocks bl dez. | | |flicting claims are not known to|;7 |the applicant except as hereinabova |set forth. The total area embraced | | | veins, |quired to file notice of their ad-;. {iod of publication, or eight months claimed by applicant.” United States Location Monm- tied, consists of a cross on ex-| | Hellenthal chagoff Island and chiseled U. 8.1| gourg: 45” W. Magnetic variation 39| deg. 30° E. | | The names of tne owners of con-',é:_. Vance 4 Osteopath—201 Goldstein Bldg. | Hours: 10 t0 12; 1 t0 6; Tto 8 | or by appointment Licensed Osteopathic Physician Office 1671. Residence, MacKiunon Apts. B s H Dr. Geo. L. Barton | CHIROPRACT 2R Building OFFICE SERVICE ONLY 10 a. = %0 12 noon 2p m tv 3 pm 6p. m t8p m By Appointment PHONE 258 STAND AT THE OLYMPIC Phone 342 Day or ilight s ol — Eugene Permanent - Wave i Special Rate* ' $10.00 AMERICAN BEAUTY PARLOR e in the survey and claimed by the| epplicant is 12.616 acres. | Any and all persons claiming ad- | I versely any of the above described | | lodes or premises are re- Graduate verse claims with the Register of{ Robert Simpson i Tl B s THE NEW IDEAL | Angeles Col- SHOPPE lege of Optometry and VLt 218 Front Street | Opthalmology | MARY HAMMER | | Glasses Fitted, Lenses Ground | | Alaskan Novelties—Swedish and the United States Land Office at|%¥ Anchorage, Alaska, within the per- | thereafter, or they will be barred DR. R. E. SOUTHWELL Optometrist-Optician Eyes Examined—Glasses Fitted | Finnish Copperware — Knives and Linens T ——- & |by virtue of the provisions of the! statutes. J. LINDLEY GREEN, + | First publication, July 12, 1930. |Last publication, Sept. 24, 1930. i Room 7, Valentine Bldg. | | Office phone 484, residence | , phone 238. Office Hours: 9:30 to 12; 1:00 to 5:30 Register. e e oL of Chicago people? | Mr. Gerard left out three of our biggest and| strongest wearers of the purple. Tut tut for him,| and he mustn't let it happen again. | English Are Waltzing Again. [ (Manchester Guardian.) ! The domination of jungle music and jungle | mime in our ballrooms seems definitely to be wan-| ing. The “Dancing Times” comments upon the fact that in a great many of the dan held in the late London season the Viennese waltz and the| quickstep shared the honors with the fox-trot.| What happens in the London season has, it is| 3 Juneau Public Library SUMMER Free Reading Room RATES City Hall, Second Fleor Main Street and Fourth on all Reading Room Open From Alterations and 8a m to10p m Remodeling Circulation Room Open from Yurman’s Triangle Building 1 to 5:30 p. m.—7:00,to 8:30 p. m. Current Magasines, Newspapers, Reference, Baoks, Etc. FREK TO ALL true, little effect upon the vast assemblages of | dancers who throng the promenade palaces of our seaside resorts. Blackpool, for instance, has re- mained faithful to the decorous grace of the Veleta | throughout all the aesthetically distressing years | when the farmyard antics of the Charleston and the bemused swayings and dippings of the Blues were the vogue in more sophisticated parts of Bri- tain. But it is none the less a welcome sign that the youth of Mayfair should revert to the more| graceful and not less spirited measures of its grand- mothers, and tend to renounce syncopation for f LUDWIG NELSON | eweler wfl'&:l Repairing Brunswick Agency FRONT STREET lfi LODE CLAINM NOTICES American or Canadian at The| Empire. time. A tank for Diesel Oil | and atank for crude oil save | burner trouble. PHONE 149, NIGHT 148 | ) | | RELIABLE TRANSFER | | o L] ' Our trucks go any place any | | | { ) Strauss and his successors. The slow and melan- choly shuffle that has passed for waltzing in the last decade has lamentably betrayed the sprightly tradition of that dance which held the European | ballroom from the eve of Waterloo to the eve of: Serajevo. Even over our more lively measures there has brooded something of the barbaric strangeness of the negroid runes and rhythms on which they have latterly been based. It will be a relief if| there is banished forever from the European scenei the spectacle of dancers recalling in their festivity | the movement of savages through a swamp. It is| high time we took pride and pleasure in the wealth | of civilized dance music Europe can boast. If we, cannot yet restore the minuet, Sir Roger, or the} quadrilles, let us at least be thankful that the waltz is coming into its own once more. When a larger proportion of United States citi- the Volstead Act,| it will be plenty early enough to ask the BrlLish‘ Embassy to do so.—(Philadelphia Bulletin.) | The census' will show about 123,000,000 people in the United States, most of whom may be| found any evening on Tom Thumb golf course | (New York Sun.) i | | There couldn't be a better Summer for the l’n»; istitute of Politics at Willlamstown to discuss the| ownership of the polar regions.—(New York Times ) { | All things considered, including size, we doubt | lif Carnera, the big fightalian, has much of an inferiority complex.—(Cincinnati Enquirer.) | Moonshiners are blamed for forest fires in In-| diana and we didn't think they raised a thing| |there but pillow cases and watermelons.—(Cincinnati | Enquirer.) | Between the Hawks and the Byrds who shall |say that America isn't airminded?—(Cincinnati En- quirer.) in New to be a Things seem to be reaching a pass York City where it doesn't pay to pay cbject sought but has been attended by a magistrate.—(New York Times,) Frye-Bruhn . Company Featuring Frye’s De- licious Hams and Bacon PHONE 38 You Will Be Made WELCOME There will be another World’s Fair in Chicago in 1933—the Southeatern Alaska Fair will take place in Jjuneau on Sept. 3,4, 5 and 6 of this year. Out of town visitors will be made welcome at The B. M. Behrends Bank OLDEST BANK IN ALASKA o — W. P. Johnson FRIGIDAIRE DELCO LIGHT PRODUCTS MAYTAG WASHING MACHINES GENERAL MOTOES RADIOS Phone 17 Front Street Juneau | BRGNS AR S ———— HARRIS Hardware Company Now located next || CONNORS | GARAGE o— L J. Smaricx Joweler amd - Optician fi. Watcdes Diamonds AUlverware T R THE JUNEAU LAUNDRY Franklin Street, between Frent and Second Streels | PHONE 358 PHONE YOUR | ORDERS| TO US We wil attend to them promptly. Our coal, hay, grain and transfer business| is increasing daily. There’s & reason. Give us a trial order today and learn why. You Can’t Help Being‘ Pleased D. B. FEMMER PHONE 114 Ola papers rov sate at The Em- pire. - » al $1.00 ‘ TO ANY PART OF CITY { Phone '+ 199 Gastinean Hote) GARBAGE HAULED |- AND LOT CLEANING E O. DAVIS Phone 584 e s the use of get- ting all heated up on baking day when there are more important things that should en- gage your attention. You'll decide that bread ~ baking is un- profitable w nen you try this loaf. Peerless Bakery “Remember the Name” L s JUNEAU GABINET and DETAIL MILL- WORK CO. Front Street, next to Warmer Machine Shop CABINET and MILLWORK GENERAL CARPENTER. WORK GLASS REPLACED IN AUTOS Estimates Furnished Upon Request Mabrv’s Cafe Regular Dinners Short Orders Lunches Open 6 a.m. to 2 a.m. POPULAR PRICES HARRY MABRY Proprietor | printing done by us ] | Fraternal Societies | WALTER or B. P. 0. ELKS Meeting every Wednesday evening at 8 o'clock. Hall. Elks Visiting brothers welcome. ) Gastinzau Channel |} e e e R. B. MARTIN, Exalted Ruler. M. H. SIDES, Secretary. Co-ordinate Bod les of Freemmsom second Friday each month st 7:30 p. m. Boot« tish Rite Temple OF MOO! SE B. EEISEL, Becretary. LOYAL ORDER Juneau Lodge No. 700 Meets every Mondaw night, at 8 o'c lock. TOM SHEARER, Dictator W. T. VALE, Secy., P. ©. Box 820 MOUNT JUNEAU LODGE NO. 147 Rite Temple. BURFORD, | Matron; ROBINSON, Secretary. = n Douglas. ALEX GAIR, W. P. GUY SMITH, Serretary. — Second and fourth Mon- day of each month ja Scottish Rite Temp!s beginning at 7:30? m. EVANS L. GRUBER, Master; JAMES W. LEIVERS, Sec- \V t 8 o'clock, Seottish LILY Worthy FANNY L. KENIGHTS OF .COLUMBUS Seghers Counc. No. 1762, Meetings second and last Monday at 7:30 p. m. Transient brothers urg- ed to attend. Councll Chambers, Fifth Street JOHN F. MULLEN, G » H. J. TURNER, Secretary. — e ORDER OF EASTERN STAR 199 T axil === Tuesdafys of each month, DOUGLAS AERIE 117 F. O. E. rothers welcome. H Visit] Open Evenings Opposite U. S. Cable Office —_— Meets first and th*-a Mondays, 8 o'cloei, at Eagles @il ing | THE cAsm BAZAAR FOREST wWOOD GARBAGE HAULING Office at Wolland's Tailor Shop Chester Barnesson PHONE 66 DAIRY FERTILIZER call and we will be right on ths | jdawguthejobyoufinnfit- JUNEAU TRANSFER COMPANY WOVING VAN Moves, Packs and Stores Freight and Baggage Prompt Delivery of - ALL KINDS OF COAL PHONE 48 L. C. SMITH and CORONA TYPREWRITERS i Guaranteed by “Our door step is worn by satisfied customers” You get results from |}J. B. BURFORD & CO. " o i ve v Vo oo 4} VE e LR LR v L ‘e A “ « v i . Y - A . ‘o (R ] . . e . . .o . L) o ‘. “ o v e ) ) o PR o v v ] Ry o oo . .