The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, September 25, 1930, Page 4

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Eil y Alaska Empire MANAGER JOHN W. TROY - - - EDITOR AND AL 3 e Btreets, Ju cond Class | SUBSCRIPTION RATES. Delivered by carrier In Juneau, Douglas, Treadwell and Thane for $1.25 per month. By mall, postage paid the following rates: . in advance, $1 in advance, wonth, in adva months, or if they will promptly th ny falure or irregularity deli their papers 7 phone for Editorial and Business Offices, 374. MEMBER OF ASSOCIATED PRESS. Associated Press Is exclusively entitled to the ication of all news dispatches credited to ise credited in this paper and also the shed herein. local news pu ALASKA CIRCULATION GUARANTEED TO BE LARGER HAN THAT OF ANY OTHER PUBLICATION. FEDERAL AIRCRAFT NEEDED. instances of the efficacy of the North were given this week by flights captain of a trading schooner medical treatment Nome to Dillingham epidemi Additional the the ailing . Serdze to Nome from diphtheria air- plane i to brin from C and to ar in threatened for to combat a both practicabl For the mission to Cape Serdze the Circle on the Siberian coast, not be considered sufficiently advanced for the formation of large ice packs in the Arctic Sea. Ships cannot keep to a desired course now because of tne multitude of small Even if conditions favored cases, which is above dog sleds could floes in those waters, cither animals or vessels, neither could offer the igle to indulge rash hopes, for no commission short|mentioned this 18th day of Sep- relief that was demanded. ance between Nome and Cape Serdze is about 250 miles, making a total of approximately 500 miles for the round trip. Water route or ice trail would be much longer. flight of a few hours for a plane is a journey of days or of more than a week for a sled or a boat From Nome to Dillingham, which is at the head of Nushagak Bay, Bering Sea, the air course is close to 450 miles; any other way a great longer. Only a plane capable of affording timely ' assistance At considerable expense, Coast Guard and other vessels are maintained by the Government for var- sorts of patrol duty and for aiding shipping in time of peril. Such craft are essential. More rather than fewer of them are needed in Northern waters; ‘which wash island -and nfainland shores of more than 26,000 miles in extent. But these boats should be supplemented with airplanes. Often Federal bureau vessels lie in port because they cannot be operated in some tasks as cheaply or as effective as chartered airplanes In the North, as elsewhere, aircraft can serve as the eyes for water craft. The Nome plane th: succored the the trading schooner, sur- rounded by slush ice off Cape & ize, informed the quick The air dis was ious captain of deal | can be enforced only when the people are almost unanimously for it, and when that time comes there will be no need for armed enforcement agents \In fact, there will be no need for Prohibition laws. world being | What was that old song about the We had lupside down and everything topsy tur just got ourselves accustomed to the circumstance that a woman had won the King's Cup, repre- |senting the rifle-shot championship of Great Britain, |by defeating about a hundred crack marksmen |when along comes word that a 14-year-old boy wd defeated nearly 1,000 shotgun experts and won |the world’s clay pigeon championship. L Row it they have seen what happens in the | |premises we insist that farmers have no right| he future deliberately to raise more wheat and |cotton than the demand calls for with the expecta- [tion that the rest of us will ‘pay the losses when| |they ask for farm relief | i The New Tariff Comm (Cincinnati Enquirer.) { | Assuming that there really is something a Tar- iff Commission can do to mitigate the flaws in the |Hawlye-Smoot law, the two appointments made, |thus far by President Hoover suggest that the re-| |organized commission will make an honest attempt |The choice of Henry P. Fletcher, former Ambassador | {to Italy and a trained diplomat, for the Chairman- | ship is encouraging. i A Republican and a protectionist, as would be |expected, Mr. Fletcher is sufficiently versed in |foreign relations after nearly three decades in the| |foreign service to see tariff-making as an interna- |tional problem. This is precisely the phase of tariff-making that has been lost sight of in the |United States. | Now the President has appointed a Virginia Democrat as one of the members of the commis- | |sion, Thomas W. Page. This is an extremely hap- |py selection. Mr. Page has been on a tariff com- |mission before, serving six years in that capacity | NOTICE OF HEARING OF FINAL ACCOUNT In the Commissioner’s Court for the Territory of Alaska, Division Number One. Before A. W. FOX, Commissioner and ex-officio Pro- | bate Judge, Juneau Precinct, | In the Matter of the Estate- of| ALBERT PEDERSEN, deceased. | NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN That Jensine Pedersen, executrix of | the estate of Albert Pedersen, de-| ceased, has filed her final reporx' as executrix of the estate of the said Albert Peder: that a hearing will be had upon| said final report before the undem-| signed at Juneau, Alaska, on No= vember 15, 1930 at 11 o'clock Mk‘-f1 at which time and place all per-! sons interested in said estate may | appear and file objections in wrig-| ing to said final report and contest the same Y GIVEN under my hand and the! seal of the Probate Court this' 10th day of September, 1930. (Seal) A. W. FOX,, Commissioner and ex-officio Pro- bate Judge, Juneau Precinct. First publication, Sept. 11, 1930. Last publication, Oct. 2, 1930. NOTICE OF HEARING ON FINAL ACCOUNT the Territory of Alaska, Division Number One. Before A. W. FOX, Commissioner and ex-officio Pro- bate Judge, Juneau Precinct. EDWIN NINNIS, Deceased. That Edwin Elroy Ninnis, admin- Edwin Ninnis, deceased, has filed herein and rendered for settlement! his final accoun: or the admin-| istration of said estate, under Woodrow Wilson. He is an able economist, ' has written a book of some merit on the tariff,| . n transportation w: |same no other means of transportation Was|anq has been connected in recent years with the|juneau, Alaska, on November 20,! |Brookings Institute at Washington, a research foun- dation in the fields of economics and govenment. |United States Court House, at Ju- as they |neau, at which time and place all| ' for the winter season is not|existed under Coolidge, is put very aptly in his|persons interested in the estate| | Mr. Page’s opinion of flexible tariffs, book: “To regard the present tariff, therefore, as flexible, one must view it from a geographical! | standpoint.” Conceivably the tariff will flex more easily| |under Hoover than it did under Coolidge, but it is| |of one possessed of supernatural powers could make | |enough important changes in the thousands of rates |to alter the general character of our tariff law lOnly the flagrant cases of unjust zates tan be deslt| What constitutes a|With, and even they may have to wait a long time |First publication, Sept. 18, 1930. for action. 4 | The Veteran: (New York World.) | With regard to Mr. Wallie Schang, who was' |forty years old yesterday, and who is thus being described by the sport writers as one of the “grand lold men” of baseball, we wish to file a demurrer. | That is, we wish to ask these sports writers on {what authority they classify anybody as a “grand old man” at the age of forty. According to census |figures. there .are 22,112,069 persons in the country |more than fofty-four years old, and what is more,! {they are probably the ones who really run the lcountry instead of the fifty-nine, with five added | |as an afterthought, nominated the other day by | Mr. James W. Gerard. Are these influential citi- zens, these spry, active and shrewd ornaments to our civilization, to be placed on a shelf because Mr. | {Wallie Schang has caught 1,800 games and played in a half-dozen world series? | Possibly we give the impression that we are peev- | of Sport. | contest the same. a hearing will be had upon the! before the undersigned at| 1930, at 2 o'clock p. m. at the may appear and file objections in | writing to said final report and| GIVEN under my hand and the | seal of the Probate Court above tember, 1930. (Seal) A. W. FOX, Commissioner and ex-officio Pro- bate Judge, Juneau Precinct. Last publication, Oct. 16, 1930. Millwork, can be had OB R PR N T | | Helene W. L. Albrecht 'n, deceased, and | | In thé Commissioner’s Court for |/ In the Matter of the Estate of | NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN | istrator w. w. a. of the estate of |- and that| | " Opt. D. | Lt PROFESSIONAL ¥ PHYSIOTHERAPY Massage, Electricity, Infra Red | Rev, Medical Gymnastics. | 410 Goldstein Bullding | Phone Office, 216 801-303 Goldstein Bldg. PHONE 66 | Hours 9 a. m. to § p. m. | Dr. Charles P. Jenne DENTIST | Rooms 8 and 9 Valentine 3uilding Telephone 176 Dr. J. W. Bayne DENTIST Rooms 5-6 Triangle Bldg. | Office hours, 9 am. to 5 p.m. Evenings by appoinment. Phonc 321 i —_— Dr. A. W. Stewart DENTIST Hours 9 8. m. to 6 p. m. SEWARD BUILDING Office Phone 469, Res. Phone 276 o -—————-—E ¥ —_— Dr. Geo. L. Barton il CHIROPRACTOR | Hellenthal Building | OFFICE SERVICE ONLY Hours: 10 a. = % 12 noon 2p. m te 3 p.m 6p. m t8p m By Appointment PHONE 259 o Robert Simpso—l-l Graduate Angeles Col- lege of Optometry and Opthalmology Glasses Fitted, Lenses Ground DR. R. E. SOUTHWELL Optometrist-Optician Eyes Examined—Glasses Fitted | | Room 7, Valentine Bldg. i | Office phone 484, residence | phone 238. Office Hours: 9:30 | | to 12; 1:00 to 5:30 i —a at low cost direct. from the manu- Lo alsg FREE. 2229 1t Avess. Seattle Wash. ) SUMMER RATES on all 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.—7:00 to 8:30 p. m. Current Magazines, Newspapers, Referencs, ] AUTOS FOR HIRE I Qarlson’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 I1 and Single O Carlson’s Taxi and Ambulance Service Graham’s Taxi Phore 565 STAND AT ARCADE CAFE Day and Night Service Any Place in the City for $1.00 ; ' —_—————— BERRY TAXI CO. PHONE 314 Stand af’ Burford’s Corner 199Taxi $1.00 ! TO ANY PART Prompt Service, Day and Night CovicH AUTO SERVICE STAND AT THE OLYMPIC i Phone 342 Day or iight P e OF CITY Kugene Permaneut || Phone Gustinean Hote) AMERICAN BEAUTY |, PARLOR — [ THE JuNEAU LAUNDRY Franklin Street, betwees Frent and Second Streets — ' PHONE 359 THE NEW IDEAL SHOPPE i | 218 Front Street MARY HAMMER . Pinnish Copperware — Knives | and Linens | A AER | | | Alaskan Novelties—Swedish and | i 1" Fraternal Societies ?i ol 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-crdinate Dod les of Freemasos | ry Scottish Rite Regular meetinga 'second Friday each month at 7:30 p. m. Books tish Rite Templa WALTER B. EEISEL, Becretary. LOYAL ORDER OF MOOSE - Juneau Lodge iVo.p §00 Meets every Monkias night, at 8 o'clock. TOM SHEARER, Dictator W. T. VALE, Secy., P. ©. Box 820 MOUNT JUNEAU LODGE NO. 117 Second and fourth Mon- day of each month ia (b, Scottish Rite Temple, N beginning at 7:30 p. m. b 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 lest Monday at 7:30 p. m. Transient brothers urg- ed to attend. Councll Chambers, Pifth Street JOHN F. MULLEN, G. K. H. J. TURNER, Becretary. DOUGLAS AERIE 117 F. O. E. Meets first and th'rd Mondays, 8 o'clock, at Eagles' Heaill Douglas. ALEX GAIR, W. P, GUY SMITH, Serretary. Visiting brothers welcome. | THE CASH BAZAAR | Open Evenings FRONT STREET Near Coliseum Theatre o FOREST wWOoO0D GARBAGE HAULING Office at Wolland’s Tailor Shop Chester Barnesson PHONE 66 DAIRY FERTILIZER S ish at Mr. Schang in this matter; such is not the r Baoks, Etc. s crew of water leads that could be followed case. He is merely an illustration of something we | Alterations and | | to the open sea, thus enabling the free \have noticed before. Grover Cleveland Alexander, | R Yeling FREF TO ALL herself from the grasp of an Arctic winter. emodelng |Johnny Dundee, Willlam Tilden 2nd and Walter | SOt C U IS W P h By use of many Federal agencies can|Johnson have all been called “grand old men,” and . . JO n80n 2 ‘ elss expensively and ye re effi- [not one of them fs yet forty-five. Tilden, as a! Y often function elss expensively and yet more effi 2 y ive s 8 urman’s ciently than they do. Aircraft introduction by the|Mmatter of fact, is not yet forty. No, Schang has BN hwisnt 1 ureent |nothing to do with our complaint; he is merely an Triangle Building {illustration of a general trend. We think this trend | ~ |should be curbed. Men are not old when they turn & “+|forty, and sports writers should think of some other | e — - |way to celebrate birthdays. “Youthful Rookie Mak-| | The Coffee Shoppe ‘ | MRS. K. HOOKER | | | ship to planes, Our trucks go any place any time. A tank for Diesel Oil nd atank for crude oil save burner trouble. PHONE 149, NIGHT 148 RELIABLE TRANSFER FRIGIDATRE 2 DELCO LIGHT PRODUCTS || ) 4 coe ¥ & MAYTAG WASHING 0 »Z’mw” MACHINES GENERAL MOTOES RADIOS Phone 17 Front Street Juneau BALKAN S’i‘.\' ES SET F E EXAMPL establishment of free The purity of our bread is a real reason for its purchase. It is made in a clean whole- some way and appeals to folks who demand and always get the best eatables. Peerless Bakery “Remember the Name” The trade between Jugo-|ine Good With Athletics” in our opinion would Home cooked meals as you like | | ———-—o& Slavia and Rumania is a marked departure from |have heen a nice caption for Schang. the mode of the day. There has been no period e ke puplead yom e | || private parties. Rice & Ahlers | HARRIS Hardware | Bldg., Corner Third and Frank- | Company Adding to the Surplus. we have L. J. SmArick Jeweler amd Optician i Watches =i, GARBAGE HAULED AND LOT CLEANING E O. DAVIS Phone 584 Our job is as near to you as your telep Phons us to | call and we will be right on the | Jobto get the job you have forus purse among peoples, vote against in recent times when there was so much talk about | people as had during the last few years (Columbus Ohio State Journal.) | lin Streets. Now located next gration—in short, so many bars being erected against |Place for growing wheat. And because they are free inter American dele- |fitted for that production they will continue to plant| American or Canadian at The Empire. and the countries 111‘«'.\ represent the tariffs.ery States when the suggestion is made that cotton About the time our foreign commerce had reached |acreage be decreased. These people are familiar Fry Bruhn and not since John Bright, Richard Cobden and| Probably the winter wheat States will plant as Company international good will and free intercourse among | and no time when there has been so much actual| Political leaders in Kansas claim soil and climate e 24 gates, ag well as those from other countries, a(‘u“‘:c “\d}‘)l'( ‘;—‘(.;;" “‘h.“:; 1ém'(- s suphuf ahd. SRR Lo international trade for lower tariffs, |onas ® B Zoduciion. Ly planting. 5 SRR = its highest point we began making more and more |with the work of raising these crops, are less restrictions immigration and raising our (familiar with handling other crops and are not | S . 0 Featuring Frye’s De- licious Hams and Bacon increasing of tariffs, so much restricting of immi- there unite to make the vast prairies the ideal LODE CLATH NOTICES ooRnetle a, answer is made by the cotton planters of the South- ™ aise tariffs. Canada has just voted to raise her tariffs, |inclined to make the changes suggested | i%e obhikbe their great free trade victory in|Much wheat as usual this year, expecting to har- Great Britain have there been so many supporters|YeSt an average crop. The same line will be fol- | While there has been substantial progress toward |yoreqge. With an average season next year an? the elimination of peoples |average crop will pile up another surplus store of | of evidence national- |wheat and cotton. People can raise wheat and istic, advantages in trade more furious, [cotton, but when there are surplus stocks on hand | and it wages on both sides of Atlantic. Each [they will not make money from the crops. If there | country seems determined to hold fast to the home |should be a reduction in acreage and a consequent f | market, at while it battles for trade exten- J | s e = JUNEAU CABINET and DETAIL MILL- WORK CO. Front Street, next to Warner Machine Shop CABINET and MILLWORK GENERAL CARPENTEF WORK JUNEAU TRANSFER COMPANY won R conflict that was armed among for war never the least reduction -in total yield, there might be higher S |prices so that growers may reap profits. But sur-| The strange low prices, | the count 1 Prepare for An of them bu ¥ | mean none plus wheat and surplus cotton | t ituation is that all and that means small profits or freer trade, but all| France urged countries part of Moves, Packs and Stores Freight and Baggage Prompt Delivery of ALL KINDS OF COAL PHONE 48 profess to favor sher the barriers Midget golf is to be followed by pewee baseball Europe on an eight-foot diamond Soon we shall be But ‘there was no relaxation |pitching horseshoes in the breakfast nook.—(Min- of the artificial barriers they have erected against neapolis Journal) | commercial intercourse one with the other, though | I S ST | this may eve Iy if M. Briand's confed-| “Office Girls Fired For Drinkin says a head- eration of European States becomes an actu |line. Tonight youre' a stewed chicken; tomorrow | |a canned peach.—(Akron, Ohio, Beacon-Journal.) and all the GLASS REPLACED IN AUTOS . Estimates Fu;l;i'athed Upon PHONE YOUR ORDERS s TO US Mabrv’s Cafe We will attend to them oromptly. Our coal, hay, Regular Dinners Short Orders grain and transfer business s increasing daily. There’s & Lunches Open 6 a.m. to 2 a.m. ceason. Give us a trial ordet POPULAR PRICES today and learn why. You Can’t Help Being HARRY MABRY Proprietor responded favorably come Everyone should have a fund of money for emergencies. No one knows what tomorrow may bring, either in opportunities or unex- pected calls for ready cash. —Start to build such a fund now— MAKING PROGRESS. | The progress made American Prohibition law it upon the people with clear when we realize that a Looks like we mi Prohi agents bragged about the prac if the human race to kill suspects, the orders to kill first and explain Journal.) afterward, etc. Now people shudder with horror| when it is brought out in a court trial that Mr.| Governor Whitney gave orders of that nature. Americans millions of are returning to normalcy. They are learning that oo iwaukes it requires more than the will of someone bmx’h;l Dollsr: boaks I moanls ShaL Ktiowithouons it arms to make people refrain from doing what they ask the saleslady for something mote expensive.— pelieve they have a natural right to do. Prolnbnfn!|:4num~h Brate ‘Stop us, King Carol the insurance maybe if you've heard the story gent—the one that ends, like me."—(New York HOTEL ZYNDA ELEVATOR SERVICE B. ZYNDA, Prop. i) |about e e, Lo force lworid,) club is mad in the fight against the un. } ; she doesn't and the attempt pistol and have to abolish Sunday is to be preserved.—(Ohio State very condemned the old saloon and ans are denouncing the new Journal.) The B. M. Behrends Bank OLDEST BANK IN ALASKA L C. SMITH and CORONA TYPREWRITERS Guaranteed by J. B. BURFORD & CO. “Our door step 18 worn hy satisfied customers™ Pleased D. B. FEMMER PHONE 14

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