The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, September 20, 1930, Page 4

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e . sixty-four. The additional names were: D(Ill y Alaska Em plre JOHN "W. TROY - - - EDITOR AND MANAGER “Published _every evening except Sunday by _ the EMPIRE PRINTING COMPANY at Second ana Main Btreets, Juneau, Alaska. Fntered in the Post Office in Juneau as Second Class matter. SUBSCRIPTION RATES. Oclivered by carrier In Juneau, Douglas, Treadwell and Thane for $1.25 per month, By mall, postage pald, at the following rates: in advance, $12.00; #3.00; one month, in advance, $1.25 Subscribers will confer a favor if they will promptly Business Office of any failure or irregularity very of_their papers. hone for Edjtorial and Business Offices, 374. MEMBER OF ASSOCIATED PRESS. The Associated Press ls exclusively entitied to the owe for republication of all news dispatches credited to It or not otherwise credite: local news published he ALASKA CIRCULATION GUARANTEED TO BE LARGER THAN THAT OF ANY OTHER PUBLICATION. | ein. A TESTIMONIAL OF AFFECTION. Few, if any, men connected with Alaska and its development have gained for themselves and so well | merited the affection and high regard as that be- stowed by Alaskans upon the late Gen. Wilds P'| Richardson, United States Army Officer, who or-| ganized and was for 12 years President of the Alaska Road Commission, and who is very properly recog- nized as the father of the present road and trail system of the Territory. His long residence and activity here, and his continued interest in and | love for Alaska made him truly an Alaskan in every sense of the word. The formation of the Genal Richardson Mem- orial Association, having for its objective the erec- | tion of a monument commemorating his great work | here and as a testimonial of the affection of | Alaskans for him, is timely. The members of the| Committee, with Gov. Parks as Chairman and B. M. Behrends as Treasurer, charged with looking after this task are Indeed privileged in that their work : six months, In advance, | d in this paper and also the | {threatens to do it all over again next year | (Philadelphia Record.) |nificance the governmental executive today has one |keep right on {the chance to use them is over. THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, SATURDAY, SEPT. 20, 1930. the Corn Exchange Bank and Trust Company. Amadeo P. Giannini, founder of the Bank {of Italy and of the Transamerica Corporation, the | we s largest holding company of bank securi- ties William Green and Matthew Wolf, President and Vice-President respectively of the American Federation of Labor. Burgunder lf’\l’l](‘(' that the Federal Pro- | hibition Department has filed no “jointist ! cases in State Courts since the indictment of Roy C. Lyle and Willlam M. Whitney, | former dry heads. — (Seattle Post-Intelli- gencer.) i Sometimes a hickory rod has a restraining in-| | fluence on bad boys. | Bromley who has been just about to hop across Pacific all spring, summer and fall but got little further than talking about it, now | the very Tco Much Digging, Not Enough Building. To every problem of city, State or National sig- answer—appointment of a commision to find out the facts. Hoover's Admin: as one which devoted fact-finding. Sir Josiah Stamp, English railroad President and Director of the Bank of England, has just declared in New York that most of such activity in the field of private enterprise ends in the dust- bin. He said: Never before in history has there been such a mania for collecting statistics and information, but what the world reeds is a new technique of thinking. Many people have open minds today—so open that every- thing falls out And he further remarked that the mental equip- ment of business executives does not increase in ratio to the number of graphs, clerks and scien- tific economic inventions they assemble in their files. Many executives nowadays want to know. wanting to know the facts, ation will go down in history itself almost exclusively to They until They make colorless statesmen. Their response to any governmental challenge is: Go ahead and show me. It is a sound system, in that it makes few errors. But also it accomplishes little. The great leader steps out and makes new facts. He doesnt want fo know what the world is. He knows what it ought to be, and he works out his results while the issues are hot. And in calling for a new way of thinking, and| for more imagination in statesmen, Sir Josiah really NOTICE OF AF¥rLICATION FOR PATENT SERIAL NO. 07546 In the United States Land Offise Anchorage, Alaska. In the Matter of the Agplication of CHICHAGOFF POWER COM- PANY, a corporation organized under the laws of Alaska, for patent to the AURUM NO. 13 lode mining claim, emt:-ced 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 Chichagoft Power Com- pany, a corporation organized und- er the laws of Alaska, whose post cffice address is 424 Goldsteln Ruilding, Juneau, Alaska, has filed its application in the U. S. Land. Office at Anchorage, Alaska, foc| patent for the Aurum No. 13 lode; mining claim and included within' U. 8. Mineral Survey No. 1575, si%- uated in the Chichagoff Mlnlmzi District, Territory of Alaska, Sitka Recording Precinct, First Judicial (Division at Chichagoff Post Offies! on Chichagoff Island, Alaska, and more particularly described as fol 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. S. L. M. No. 7 bears S. 55 deg. 13° E. 13301 ft. Thence N. 65 deg. 19’ W. 343.50 ft. to corner No. 2. Thence N. 47 deg. 08 W. 100750 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. ty corner No. 1, the place of be- ginning. “ontaining an area of 12616 ac.>s. Total area in conflict with Pacific Lode, sur- vey No, 1045 owned by appli- cant. Entire area in conflict l claimed by applicant.” 05’ 45” W. Magnetic variation 30 deg. 30" E. means to say sthis: | | is a task of love. The Association’s plan, as disclosed in a recently | published statement, is to collect sufficient funds| to defray expenses of erecting a suitably inscribed bronze tablet, probably at the summit of the Alaska | Range on the road that bears the General's name —Richardson Highway. It is, apparently, not the| intention of the organization to solicit contributions. | The offerings will be purely voluntary. subscriptions have begun to come in to the treasury. Everyone desiring to have a part in this movement .can realize that desire by simply mailing a check for any sum wished to Mr. Behrends. Numbers o(i subscribers rather than large contributions is thel end sought. . | This is a cause that is, as it should be, very| dear to the heart of all Alaskans who were priv- ileged to know General Richardson. As each con- tributor to the memorial fund is to receive a cer- tificate of membership in the Association, the roster of its members is very likely to approximate almost every surviving Alaskan who was resident in the Territory in the years that he was organ- izing and directing the Alaska Road Commission and laying the foundation of the roads and trails| that today constitute our land communication system. A COLLECTOR OF PENNA When the Philadelphia Athletics beat the Chi- cago White Sox this week in the game that insured them the American League pennant for 1930, Cornel- fus McGillicuddy, better known to fandom and others as Connie Mack, ran his total of league champion- ship wins to eight, stretching over a period of 28 years beginning with 1902, Only John McGraw of the New York Giants has surpassed him, win-= ning ten National League buntings. Six 'times Mack | has sought to add to his team's laurels in World Championship series and in four he was successful. | Three times he matched strategy with McGraw and | came off victorious twice. The first meeting of these master minds of baseball occurred back in 1905, and Mack’s team acknowledged the supremacy of the great Christy Mathewson, who turned them back in three games. Mack had his revenge in 1911, and added another flag to his collection in 1913, beating McGraw's club in both years in base- ball's highest classic. The Chicago Cubs were twice victims of Mack’s baseball geni In 1910, the Athletics walloped the Chicago National League entry and repeated the performance again last year, after Mack had won his first Ame n League title in 14 years. The Cubs have a ting chance to be Mack's opposi- tion again t season. With seven games to play and two and one-half games separating them and| the St. Louis Ca s at the top, and tied with Brooklyn for secc it may take the final game of the seus e to determine the winner. Only a | son of a line of seers can pick the victor hoever is successful, the But winning team will find v it, the long, lank and laconic Cornelius McGillicuddy, his whole being concentrated in addi: to his pennant collection. GERARD ADDS TO HIS LIST. Yormer Ambassador Gerard started his estimate the ted States s in the ade of e for n tariff of the number of men who rule at forty. This is the number he pamphlet in which he endorsed Lord Beaverbrook and Viscount Rother PBritish Empire free trade and a high Bri against the rest of the world. Lat the New York Times asked him for the names the forty, he supplied fifty-nine names. They 1\. e been printed in The Empire. Still later, Judge Gerard telephoned the Times| five other names, making his list of rulers number wheh Sidney Z. Mitchell, Chairman of the Board of Already | ° | cupations. We could do with fewer moles among our lead-| ers, and with more eagles. The Women Wage Workers. (New York Herald Tribune.) William M. Steuart, Director of the Census, tells radio audience that more women than at any previous census period are engaged in gainful oc- The number of these between the ages of sixteen and sixty-four he gives in round num- bers as 10,000,000 The number of girls under six- teen galnrully employed is smaller than it was ten yéars ago. When more exact figures are available| they will apparently support the statement that in proportion to the total population the percentage of women wage workers has not greatly changed in ten years—or, for that matter, in twenty. The tendency of young women to enter gainful occupa- tions is no new portent in American life. Mr. Steuart points out that side by side with | this army of 10,000,000 wage-working women marches thc vaster army of 23,000,000 women within the same age limits who are listed as housewives. How many even of the 10,000,000 do light housekeeping besides their paid work we shall never know. In the face of these figures it can hardly be said| that the business woman is endangering the Am-| erican home. Another Incongruous Death. i (New York Times.) The publisher of The Baltimore Sun, Van Lear Black, became known as aviation's greatest ama- teur. He had flown almost the length of the world up and down its unknown air-lanes. He had crossed great spaces of sea and taken every risk there is in properly equipped flying. Only once had he experienced an accident of any importance, and then he was not hurt. Now the news comes that he fell from the rail of his yacht off the Jersey coast and was drowned. Some time ago one of England's great aces, a man who had brought down many German planes when aircraft were far less safe than they are now, was drowned after falling off a dock. General Smith-Dorrien, hero of the retreat from Mons, when the lives of Genérals were no safer than those of privates, was killed last week in a motor accident. Such paradoxical finishes to adventurous lives moved Dr. Johnson to speak of fortress and a humble hand,” marveling over the death of Charles XII of Sweden. There are especially pitiful aspects of a gallant the death of Mr. Black. Had the choice been given to him, undoubtedly he would have preferred to sink with his plane upon some lonely expanse of sea or land—an ending he proved repeatedly that he did not fear. There might be something in the idea of the White House letting the country work out some of its own problems. President Cleveland did, so did President McKinley—(St. Louis Golbe Demo- crat.) In his list of the men who rule the United States, James W. Gerard has left out Joseph R. Grundy and Thomas Heflin. — (Louisville Courler- Journal.) | Some day we expect to visit an insane asylum and meet the man who designs hazards for midget golf courses.—(Detroit Free Press.) “American youth does not lack backbone” says |a European visitor. There has been this summer an unusual display of it by our young people.— (Rochester Democrat and Chronicle.) It isn't hard to build a resort town. You just stock up with silly souvenirs and charge too much —(Akron, Ohio, Beacon-Journal.) | A baseball pitcher who explains that he never lls very good unitl hot weather arrives shouldn't |have had many excuses for defeats this season.— ! (Indianapolls News.) (the applicant except as hercinabovs | set forth. The total area embraced applicant is 12,616 acres. H | Anchorage, Alaska, within the per- |by virtue of the provisions ot the “a petty career so ended, and dual sorrow will be felt for| The names of the owners of con- flicting claims are not known o in the survey and claimed by the Any and all persons clalming ad- versely any of the above descrlbefl veins, lodes or premises are re. | quired to file notice of their ad- verse claims with the Register of the United States Land Office at ‘od of publication, or eight months thereafter, or they will be barred for the Juncau Land District at *F | I 1 PROFESSION AL ¥ PHYSIOTHERAPY Massage, Electricity, Infra Red Al Rev, Medical Gymnastics. | 41u_Goldstein Building Phone Office, 216 " DRS. KASER & FREEBURGER DENTISTS 801-303 Goldstein Bldg. PHONE 86 Hours § a. m. to § p. m. L S || Dr. Charles P. Jenne DENTIST Rooms 8 and § Valentine Sullding ‘Telephone 176 DENTIST | Rooms 5-6 Triangle Bldg. | Office hours, 9 am. to 5 pm. | Evenings by appoinment. | Phonc 321 & Dr. A. W. Stewart DENTIST | Hours 9 a. m. to 6 p. m. | SEWARD BUILDING Office Phone 469, Res, | Phone 276 " Dr. Geo. L. Barton CHIROPRACTOR Hellenthal Building OFFICE SERVICE ONLY | Hours: 10 a. ™ % 12 noon 2p m tdp m 6p.m to8p m | By Appointment United States Location Monn - PHONE 280 ment No. 7, to which this survey | §————~——— & is tied, consists of a cross on ex-|g ‘] posed out-crop of bedrock 10x i ft. on the shorc of Klag Bay, C;’E Robert Slmpmn chagoff Island and chiseled U, 8, Opt. D. (L. M. No. 7 in latitude 57 deg Graduate Angeles Col- 29’ 40" N. and longitude 136 deg ! lege of Optometry and | ‘Opthalmology Glasses Pitted, Lenses Grouna S 7 OGRS 5 R e Helene W.L. Albrecht BB A S S AR | | | n & fl—__ Dr. J. W. Bayne R BT e L —— ] G——————-—-———v———fi | | 14 DR. R. E. SOUTHWELL | Optometrist-Optician | Eyes Examined—Glasses Fitted | |‘ Room 7, Valentine Bldg. ,omce phone 484, residence | phone 238. Office Hours: | to 12; 1:00 to 5:30 Junean Public Library statutes. | J. LINDLEY GREEN, Register. First publication, July 12, 1930, | Last publication, Sept. 24, 1930. e e | Empire. : F rye-Bruhn Free Reading Room City Hall, Second Fleor Main Street and Fourth Reading Room Open Frem 8a m to 10 p. m. Circulation Room Open from 9:30 ot Company Featuring Frye’s De- licious Hams and Bacon PHONE 38 Prepare Everyone should the Electric Bond and Share Company, and a large owner of public utilities. ° Walter Edwin Frew, Chairman of the Board of The drought of 1930 will become another thing lfor which the Republicans were to blame, two |vears hence.—(Cincinnati Enquirer.) money for emergencies. knows what tomorrow may bring, either in opportunities or unex- pected calls for ready cash. for An Emergency have a fund of No one —Start to build such a fund now—: The B. M. Behrends Bank OLDEST BANK IN ALASKA SUMMER t ;mm?:aoc;:‘.m_lv :00,%0 8:30 RATES N"'p':"nu"n R:::'"“"" on all FREK TO ALL Alterations and Remodeling . - . Our trucks go any place any Y 9 time. A tank for Diesel Oil urman's and atank for crude oil save burner trouble. Triangle Building PHONE 149, NIGHT 148 | | RELIABIE TRANSFER | PR RN T X SO | . 7 LUDWIG NELSON [|-————————— Wateh Repairing i-_ HARRIS Hardware sy |l Company e e ey v Now located nuxt LODE CLATN NOTICES CONNORS American or Canadian at The GARAGE | ANYWHERE IN TH Carlson's Taxi and Oarlson’s Taxi E CITY FOR $1.00 Careful, Efficient Drivers—Call Us At Any Hour— DAY AND NIGHT—Stand at Alaskan Hotel Phones II and Single O Ambulance Service Graham’s Taxi Phore 565 STAND AT ARCADE CAFE Day and Night Service y Place in the City for $1.00 [ A BERRY TAXI CO. PHONE 314 Stand at Burford’s Corner Prompt Service, Day and Night Covica AUTo SERVICE STAND AT THE OLYMPIO Phone 342 Day or iVight D e e —— Xugene Permunent Wave Special Rate ; $10.00 AMERICAN BEAUTY PARLOR SHOPPE 218 Front Street MARY HAMMER Alaskan Novelties—Swedish and Finnish Copperware — Knives and Linens S J THE NEW IDEAL | | E | | W. P. Johnson FRIGIDAIRE DELCO LIGHT PRODUCTS MAYTAG WASHING MACHINES GENERAL MOTORS RADIOS Phone 17 Front Street Juneau LJ.Saaricx Joweler and Optician GARBAGE HAULED AND LOT CLEANING E O. DAVIS Phone 584 PHONE YOUR ORDERS TO US We will attend to them promptly. Our coal, hay, grain and transfer business is increasing daily. There’s réason. Give us a trial order today and learn why. You Can’t Help Being Pleased D. B. FEMMER PHONE 114 199 Taxi $1.00 TO ANY PART OF CITY Phone 199 Gustinean Hotel [ THE JUNEAU LAUNDRY Franklin Street, betweem Frent and Second Streets PHONE 359 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” s JUNEAU CABINET and DETAIL MILL- WORK CO. Front Street, next to Warmer Machine Shop CABINET and MILLWORK GENERAL CARPENTEF. WORK GLASS REPLACED IN AUTOS Estimates Furnished Upqn Request 3 Mabrv’s Cafe Regular Dinners Short Orders Lunches Open 6 a.m. to 2 a.m. POPULAR PRICES HARRY MABRY Proprietor J Fraternal Societies OoF ~: Gastinzsau Channel | B. P. 0. ELKS Meeting every Wednesday evening at 8 o'clock. Elks Hall. Visiting brothers welcome. R. B. MARTIN, Exalted Ruler. M. H. SIDES, Secretary. Co-ordinate Bod o . les of Freemason l ry Scotiish Rite | Regular meetinga second Friday each month at 7:30 p. m. Boot« tish Rite Templa WALTER B. E£ISEL, Becretary. 3 LOYAL ORDER OF MOOSE Juneau Lodge No. 700 Mecets every Mondavw night, at 8 o'clock. TOM SHEARER, Dictator . T. VALE, Secy, P. ©. Box 820 MOUNT JUNEAU LODGE NO. 147 Second and fourth Mon- day of each month ia Scottish Rite Templa, beginning at 7:30 p. m % EVANS L. GRUBER, Master; JAMES W. LEIVERS, Sec- retary. ORDER OF EASTERN STAR Second and Fourth 4 ‘Tuesdays of each month, ; at 8 o'clock, Beottish Rite Temple. LILY BURFORD, Worthy Matron; FANNY L. ROBINSON, Secretary. KNIGHTS OF COLUMBUS Seghers Counc.. No. 176¢ Meetings second and last Monday at 7:30 p. m. Transient brothers urg- ed to attend. Councll Chambers, Fifth Streed JOHN F. MULLEN, G K. H. J. TURNER, Secretary. DOUGLAS AERIE 117 F. 0. E. Meets first and third &Mondays, 8 o'clock, at Eagles' Hail Douglas. ALEX GAIR, W. P, GUY SMITH, Serretary. 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 Our job shop is as near t you s your telepl T.me.l’bommb ' all and we will be i jobogetthejob you ht on the i forus Moves, Packs and Stores . Freight and Baggage Prompt Delivery of ALL KINDS OF COAL PHONE 48 L C. SMITH and CORONA TYPREWRITERS Guaranteed by J. B. BURFORD & CO. “Our door step is worn by satisfied customers™ P ha/ b

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