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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, FRIDAY, SEPT. 19, 1930. PROFESSIONAL —_————————— 53 r Fraternal Societies i or - NOTICE OF AFrLICATION FOR PATENT SERIAL NO. 07546 the people, and probably wisely so. Parliamentary government is not at its best unless there is strong leadership—leadership that commands the voluntary " Daily Alaska Empire AUTOS FOR HIRE ————g | ) | & = e 5 o i : In the United States Land Offiss e & = support of the mass When every ma lead- A . JOHN W. TROY - - - EDITOR AND MANAGER supbort of the masscs, When cvery man 15 & 164" | “tor the Juncau Land District at | Gastincau Channel — e TP ol g v is separated| gy oporage, Alaska. Helene W. L. Albrecht — g Second’ ana Maln [iNf0 petly blocs with petty leaders, inefficiency rn tne Matter of the Application PHYSIOTHERAPY TR oS E Iprevails. But with representative government lead-| of CHICHAGOFF POWER COM- || Massage, Electricity, Infra Red , B0 s Meeting every Wednesday evening at 8 o'clock. Elks PANY, a corporation organized under the laws of Alaska, for erless periods are usually not of long duration Rev, Medical Gymnasticas, 410 Goldstein Bullding | Carlson’s Taxi e P e 5 1 .\ . tent to the AURUM NO. 13 SUBSCRIPTION RATES. | Someone has stolen Gen. Grant's pistol pa Phone Office, 216 | Betivered by carrler In Juneau, Douglas, Treadwell and | ang Dayy Crockett's bowie knife from the Tofte: Witz ng selalm. . GuPHEOER N O : 1t Thane for $1.25 per month, s ! U. 8. Mineral Survey No. 1575, S Visiting brothers By mall, postage paid, at the following raten: | Chicago Historical Society.—News item. situated on Chichagoff Island, in. welcome PS8 vanoe. $15.00; six ‘months, 16 adyancs,|' “micatlv samieotis | Wanted to.| BVCLRGL ©Himaslt itxe| | DRS. KASFR & FREEBURGER i e Smon| n advance, $1.2 Siply. - '8 protect himse Chichagoff Mining District, Sitka NYWHE o R. B. MART! 0 S o Recording Precinct, First Judicial DENTISTS | A RE IN THE CITY FOR 3100 el Talien against the gangsters and their machine guns. Now if he had stolen Gen. Grant and Davy Crockett {with the arms he might stand some chance. | : ibe il ‘confer a favor if they will promptly | e, Hwat ess Office of any fallure or irregularity | M. H. SIDES, Secretary. their papers. Sditorial and Business Offices, 374, 301-303 Goldstein Bldg. | PHONE 56 | Hours § a. m. to 9 p. m. ! Division, Alaska. | ; NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN | That the Chichagoff Power Com- |pany, a corporation organized und- Careful, Efficient Drivers—Call Us At Any Hour— DAY AND NIGHT—Stand at Alaskan Hotel Phones II and Single O notify the Bus in the delivery c Telephone for Co-erdinate Bod les of Freemasom ry Scottish Rite MEMBER OF ASSOCIATED PRESS. Major Maurice Campbell, former Prohibition d to the| The Associated Press is exclusively entitle er the laws of Alaska, whose T wee for (r'-’wim.,».a.[mn ‘of a1l nows dlspatches credited, to |Administrator in New York City, refers to Prohibl- cffice address s 424 Coldual " Dr. Charles P j g as ;“::‘:‘:; "o ot otherwise credite X | ] . Charles P. Jenne C , . 1 . arlson’s Taxi and Ambulance Service each month af 7:30 p. m. Boots tish Rite Templa WALTER B. E£ISEL, Becretary. LOYAL ORDER |tion Enforcement as a “sham battle.” That is as|Ruilding, Juneau, Alaska, has filsi; ~ |may be, but the number of persons killed by En-|its application in the U. S. Lnnd: ALASKA CIRCULATION NGUARANTEEP?JB‘LOCBfiOLP:HEER forcement Agents prove that it is not being waged Office at Anchorage, Alaska, foc THAN AT OF ANY OTHER ICA A |with blank ammunition ‘pa_tcnt for the Aurum No. 13 lode, \mining claim and included within' local news published herein. DENTIST Rooms 8 and § Valentine Sufjding Telephone 176 Graham’s Taxi ; i " & | That South American epidemic seems to bel - S Mineral Survey o I 5 OF MOOSE |spreading northward. Cuba fears rebellion if not | e ANAgY. g g s [District, Territory of Alaska, Sitka| | Dr. J. W. Bayne | gUIEND Lodge NOIRY Recording Precinct, First Judicial Division at Chichagoff Post Offies! | on Chichagoff Island, Alaska, and more particularly described as fol |lows: Meets every Monds® night, at 8 o'clock.™ TOM SHEARER, Dictator g W. T. VALE, Secy., P. ©. Box'820 —_— MOUNT JUNEAU LODGE NO. 147 Second and fourth Mon- DENTIST Rooms 5-6 Triangle Bldg. Office hours, 9 am. to 5 p.m. Evenings by appoinment. | Phont 321 L e —————— Phore 565 STAND AT ARCADE CAFE Day and Night Service We move that the name be changed from Wis- |consin to La Follette AURUM NO. 13 LODE | i { | | “Beginning at corner No. 1, | Unrest in South America. 4 i identical with location corner |H T T % : . day of each month ia (New York Herald Tribune,) S e Dr. A. W. Stewaft Any Place in the City for $1.00 Scottish Rite Temple | Successful revolutions in Bolivia and Peru and| cific Lode, survey No. 1045, DENTIST beginning at 7:30 p. . |rumblings of political revolt in Argentina and Brazil| whence U. S. L. M. No.7 bears | | Hours 9 &, m. to 6 p. m 3 —————| "%’ EVANS L. GRUBER |demonstrate a condition of widespread unrest in| S. 55 deg. 13 E. 13301 ft. SEWARD BUILDING Master; JAMES W. LEIVERS, Sec- A {South America. The Bolivian overthrow, nearly ;‘;hence N. 65 deg. 19’ W. 343.50 Office Phone 469, Res. ! X retary, : 5 4 L e y S\ |bloodless and apparently hardly disturbing to the . to corner No. 2. Thence N. i 7 BERRY TA. CO 4 A P MENT. ) 2 Phong . CAMPBELL ON ENFORCEMENT. | 00 0 (o0 iy, was clearly political In origin,| 41 deg. 55" W. 100750 ft. to one.2n ORDER OF EASTERN STAR corner No. 3. Thence S. 6 deg. PHONE 314 |But the ease with which President Siles was un- " = One of the mst striking condemnations of CON- {eyy"s, "quarre fargel persona, turning. on tne| 15 5 WIL . to corner Moy [’ . e 4 stitutional Prohibition and its enforcement—or 1ack |otticia] ‘prominence given to an Imported German| 1301 1t e eosner Ne<E Thones Dr. Geo. L. Barton | Stand at Burford’s Corner at 8 o'clock, Seottish of it—is contained in a series of highly informative |mjlitary ~organizer, undoubtedly had its power of | N. 6 deg. 03’ E. 4888 ft to CHIROPRACIOR | Rite Temple. LILY articles written by Major Maurice Campbell. For |suggestion in neighboring countries, where dissat-| corner No. 1, the place of be- N BURFORD, Worthy Y three years he was Prohibition Administrator of isfaction with political and economic conditions went| ginning. “ontaining an area of Hellntial Bksng Matron; FANNY L. b the Easten New York district, including the City | of New York, resigning July 1, last he served one year on a roving commission, cover- ing widely separated States. By reason of his| services in the field of enforcement, and the import- | ant position he occupied in it, he is well qualified | to speak as an authority on his subject. | When he resigned last Summer, Major Campbell | charged that the men in | Washington who are| charged with enforcement were not sincere about n., This charge he reiterated in his opening article, | all of which are appearing in the New York World. | He supports this by naming certain officials, Vice-| President Curtis and Assistant Secretary of the| Treasury Seymour Lowman among others Thei personal influence of the forrher, he declared: “Caus- | ed me to issue an alcohol permit against my better | judgment to a concern which my agents not long | thereafter caught in illegal diversion of alcohol.: The Vice-President's campaign managers in New | York, backed by his influence in Washington, made my life miserable with pressure to issue alcohol | permits to companies which in my view were dubious.” Regarding Mr. Lowman's activities, he, wrote: “Mr. Lowman, during the campaign summer | of 1928, ordered me to loosed up my brewery! supervision in New York City, while the Republican Party was campaigning against the wet Al' Smlth.f He frankly declared the voters of New York should have beer to soothe their parched throats belorei election.” | If these allegations are true, there is no cause | for wonderment that Major Campbell was disgusted | with “the continual pressure of machine politicians | which is exerted on every Prohibition office | in the country,” or that his experience was that “Prohibition enforcement is honeycombed with politi- cal insincerity, trickery and corruption, radiating from Washington to every State, city and town in| the United States,” from which ‘“seep back into the Prohibition system corruption and paralysis from every criminal source imaginable.” It is a picture of sordidness that he paints. Sin- cere workers were handicapped in their efforts at law enforcement. Crooked and inefficient agents were forced on administrators and kept there. After four years of this, it was inevitable that he reached the conclusion he announced long before he resigned that upon the reorganization of the National Pro- hibition Unit, “I would have nothing more to do with the enforcement of the Volstead law.” At heart a Prohibitionist who for years hadn't taken a drink before he entered the Prohibition Unit and is still a non-drinker, his education has taught him conclusively that “the dry law has subsidized crime and linked it indissolubly with politics,” and “contaminates everything it touches,” making en- forcement impossible and producing a situation that “never will be cleaned up except by repeal” of the Prohibition Amendment. IT IS EXPLAINED. ‘The Governor of Louisiana wore pajamas to greet a foriegn Admiral and received a General while wearing a union suit; but for a visitor of little consequence we assume His Excellency peels down to a wrist watch. —(Detroit News.) No wonder they just could not keep Huey Long out of the Senate after the Indian sign had been hung on Heflin and Blease. They had to have at least one clown from the South in Washington | and Huey is it IS REPRESENTATIVE GOVERNMENT IN DANGER. in Argentina, following revolu- and Peru and talk of revolution with dictato: ps in several European countries, testify to the unsettled condition of the world. BSome very capable observers believe that general changes from the parliamentary form of government are foreshadowed. The parliamentary government is not always efficient, but in the end it is probably the most stable. The great weakness of dictatorships is in getting the right sort of a man for dictator. If each of the countries could have a Mussolini there might be more progress in the recovery from the ills of the late war, but what will be Italy's fate when Mussolini shall break down from disease or otherwise? Poland’s recent return to Pilsudski and auto- eratic control after a short retrial of parliamentary government is interesting. It is admitted that Spain has been in troublesome waters since Rivera. However, the United States, the British Empire ‘The revolution tions in Bolivia Before that | |the animosity |a weapon before which he was powerless. much deeper. President Leguia of Peru had to contend wich of the old landed aristocracy, to! which he had long been odious as a bourgeois and a modernist. The Peruvian army leaders were luke- | warm to him because he was not a man of their class. Hard times had also overtaken Peru, taxes| were heavy and enthusiasm for the Legula program | of extensive public improvements was waning. With all his prestige and his achievements-as a progres- | sive statesmen, the three-term “distator” was ousted | from his post almost as abruptly and casually as Siles had been. In Argentina Dr. Hipolito Irigoyen, the seventy- | seven-year-old leader of the Radical Party, who in the last Presidential election put to rout a coalition of the Conservatives and the anti-Irigoyen Radi-| cals, has slipped back tremendously. This silemi and self-contained statesmen, a former schoolmaster, has been unwilling to share responsibility and power | with others. His policy of non-co-operation has led | to an administrative deadlock. Many offices have! been left unfilled and the President has quarreled | continually with Congress. He is also accused of having intervened arbitrarily in the operations of | the State governments. Above all, the general| economic depression has hit Argentina hard and | political antagonisms have been inflamed by busi- | ness distresses. Irigoyen, the former idol of the Argentine masses, is now depending on machine | guns to defend himself against violence and assas-| sination. { The demonstrations in Rio Grande do Sul prob- ably mean little to tranquility in the rest of Brazil. This extreme Southern State is chronically turbu- lent, but too far removed from the center of Bra- zilian activities to disturb them unduly. The trou- ble reported there may be just a local ebullition, significant only by coincidence of popular uneasi- ness in South American countries whose exporis have been curtailed in amount and have fallen sharply in price because of a slackening world de- mand for them. Business depression armed Leguia’s enemies with | It may compel Irigoyen to quit, or at least to come out of his strange isolation. It will perhaps get on the nerves of other South American Presidents, for most of them realize .that a revolutionist movement with real economic annoyances behind it is far more formidable than any purely political or military conspiracy could be. Dictators or near-dictators ride uneasily when the specter of hard times rides behind them. Under such circumstances a new “strong man” may come to the front-and think that he is going far on his own merit. But he is merely the beneficiary of the sort of underlying economic grievance which makes boom times for the dema- gogue and the revolutionist. 4 Mr. Hoover’s Story. (New York World.) It was to be expected that Mr. Hoover, when a little girl wrote him a request to see her and her brother, should accede at once: public men are invariably vulnerable to such requests and in secret probably like them. But it comes as a pleasant surprise that the story he told his young visitors when they finally appeared revealed so exact an understanding of the childish mind. The story was this: He had had a dog named Yukon. This dog came from the North Pole anq every time the iceman came with a cake of ice the dog would sit on it. That is all: there -is no more. And to grown-ups this may not seem like much of a story. But we have an idea that it was a perfect story for two little children from Texas. Children do not care for stories with point, for tag lines 'that bring a laugh because of the surprise they hold. They want- strange and outlandish facts, particu- larly ‘about animals. This story, unless we miss our guess, will be handed around to the other children at Tyler, Tex, and solemnly discussed, with the scoffings of some little doubting Thomas disposed of by physical force if necessary. Indeed, the spreading of the story has already begun. When little Miss Gertrude Windsor saw the reporters that was all she could talk about. Add embarrassing moments in the lite of a Boston book censor: When he finds that he has banned a volume openly listed in the private li- braries of several early Puritan leaders.—(Detroit |Free Press.) " | It required a long time to get the Hawley- Smoot tariff bill through, but once it was on the statute books it proved itself to be a fast worker. Tabulations of our exports and imports for July look like post-Volsteadian liquor statements.—(Rich- mond Times-Dispatch.) It was merely a coincidence that Mr. Firestone predicted great prosperity on the day that it be- came known that the racketeers were slashing truck tires with ice picks—(New York World.) Everyone thought President Coolidge intended to and France are seemingly permanently committed & to ' government through elective representatives o!l retire to private life, and here he is writing for the papers—(Cincinnati Enquirer.) |posed out-crop of bedrock 10x8x8 (L. M. No. 7 in latitude 57 deg | First publication, July 12, 1930. 12616 acis. 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 tled, consists of a cross on ex- ft. on the shorc of Klag Bay, Chi- chagoff Island and chiseled U. S, 29’ 40”7 N. and longitude 136 dez 05" 45” W. Magnetic variation 30 deg. 30’ E. The names ot the owners of con-| flicting claims are not known tq the applicant except as hereinabovy set forth. The total area embraced in the survey and clalmed 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- ‘od of publication, or eight months thereafter, or they will be barred | OFFICE SERVICE ONLY Hours: 10 a. = % 12 nooa 2pm t 3 p m 6p. m t8p m | By Appointment PHONE 250 Robert Simpson Opt. D. Graduate Angeles Col- ! lege of Optometry and I Opthalmology | Glasses Fitted, Lenses Grouna e bSO T N oy DR. R. E. SOUTHWELL | Optometrist-Optician Eyes Examined—Glasses Fitted | Room 17, Valentine Bldg. | Office phone 484, residence | phone 238. Office Hours: 9:30 to 12; 1:00 to 5:30 i D S U : Juneau Public Library by virtue of the provisions of the statutes. | J. LINDLEY GREEN, Register. Last publication, Sept. 24, 1930, e SUMMER RATES on all Alterations and . Remodeling Yurman’s Triangle Building [ e — | LUDWIG NELSON | Jeweler ‘Watch Repairing Brunswick Agency FRONT STREET LODE CLAINM NOTICES American or Canadian at The Empire. Free Reading Room City Hall, Second Fleor Main Btreet and Fourth Reading Room Open From 8 a m to 10 p. m. Ctrculation Room Open from 1'%0 6:30 p. m.—7:00,to 8:30 P. m. Current Magezines, Newspapers, Referencs, Books, Etc. FREEK TO ALL Our trucks go any place any time. A tank for Diesel Oil and atank for crude oil save s burner trouble. PHONE 149, NIGHT 148 RELIABLE TRANSFER | L] ——— 5 HARRIS Hardware Company Now located nuxt CONNORS GARAGE |4 — i v lic Featuring Frye’s De- Frye-Bruhn Company ious Hams and Bacon PHONE 38 Prepare for An Emergency Everyone should money for emergencies. knows what tomorrow may bring, either in opport pected calls for ready cash. —Start to build such a fund now—- The B. M. Be OLDEST BANK IN ALASKA have a fund of No one unities or unex- hrends Bank Prompt Service, Day and Night CovicH AuTo SERVICE i STAND AT THE OLYMPIC Phone 342 Day or iVight D e e ] P B A Eugene Permanent Wave Special Rate $10.00 AMERICAN BEAUTY PARLOR | THE NEW IDEAL | SHOPPE | 218 Front Street MARY HAMMER Alaskan Novelties—Swedish and Finnish Copperware — Knives and Linens I ! : | | | | ! : I T W. P. Johnson FRIGIDAIRE DELCO LIGHT PRODUCTS MAYTAG WASHING MACHINES GENERAL MOTORS RADIOS Phone 17 Front Street Juneau L.). Saaricx Joweler and Optician GARBAGE HAULED K O. DAVIS Phone 584 PHONE YOUR ORDERS TO US We will attend to them promptly. Our coal, hay, graih and transfer. business is increasing daily. There’s 2 reason. Give us a trial orde today and learn why. You Can’t Help Being 199 T axi $1.00 TO ANY PART OF CITY Phone 199 Gustinean Hote) [ THE JuNEAU LAUNDRY Franklin Street, betweem Frent and Second Streets ROBINSON, Secretary. KNIGHTS OF COLUMBUS Seghers Counc.. No. 1768 Meetings second and last Monday at 7:30 p, s Transient brothers urge ed to attend. Councll Chambers, Fifth Strees JOHN F. MULLEN, G. K. H. J. TURNER, Becretary. DOUGLAS AERIE 117 F. O. E. Meets first and th'rd &Mondays, 8 o'cloce, at Eagles Hail Douglas. ALEX GAIR, W. B GUY SMITH, Servetary. Visiting brothers welcome. . | THE CASH BAZAAR | Open Evenings FRONT STREET Near Coliseum Theatre FOREST WOO0D GARBAGE HAULING Office at Wolland’s Tailor Shop Chester Barnesson PHONE 66 DAIRY FERTILIZER Try it. Try the bread that is right in every particular. If you want a bread that is crowded with nourish- ment and always proves satisfactory here is the loaf you should order by name. Peerless Bakery “Remember the Name” [ — JUNEAU CABINET 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 COMPANY MOVING VAN ¢ A S Moves, Packs and Stores Freight and Baggage Prompt Delivery of ALL KINDS OF COAL PHONE 48 Mal;ry’s Cafe Regular Dinners Short Orders Lunches Open 6 a.m. to 2 a.m. POPULAR PRICES HARRY MABRY L. C. SMITH and CORONA TYPREWRITERS = Guaranteed by J. B. BURFORD & CO. “Our door step is worn by satistied customers”