The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, October 6, 1930, Page 4

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; : : i THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, MONDAY, OCT. 6, 1930. Duvil_\l A_I u;'ka_E mpi re : 3 +p [forming of the K. K. K. and the wets and drys g < alm R AND MANAGER VN, TROT EDITO] " 77" land the campaign of Alfalfa Bill for Governor for cxcopt Sunday by _the|the antics of the Charleses and Franceses Publ Al ;COMPANY at Second and Main EMI OMPANY at P _— wealthy sportsmen from the States| Massage, Electricity, Infra Red v { The announcement of the official betrothal of|cn a hunting trip to Kenai Penin- Ray, Medical Gymnastics. 1in ¥ of n Juneau as Second Class Ring Boris and Princess Giovanna will be welcomed [sula, John W. Harris of this city 410 Goldstein Building - — —— |by all who love romance. It will be remembered returned home the other day, re- Phone Office, 216 SUBSCRIPTION RATES. Delivered by carrier in Juneau, Douglas, Thane for $1.25 per month. at the following rates advance, that their courtship began, according to apparently good authority, when neither knew of the royal status of the other. oty land a young woman who became mutually attracted. arity ‘The affairs of State and Church had to be adjusted ]‘m fit the love affair. Treadwell and | months, in That was rather a grim joke on the politicians ,|When the baseball players at St. Louis tied up the World Series and made them start it all over again. The politicians are just craving the spotlight IRCULATION GUARANTEED TO BE LARGER for themselves. T OF ANY OTHER PUBLICATION ited ALASKA ¢ The World’s Longest Highway. (Washington Post.) A trip by automobile from South America to the plishment that it commands general attention. Long |stretches of undeveloped country must be negotiated jon such a journey. An ax with which to carve a {pathway through the jungle is an indispensable in Europe when []1(\7_\11\(‘]7 began had been cxtcnded'HUNTERs SHOOT b to Oklahoma, and if the toads know what is within their vision they might very well mistake the per- | : They were just a young man‘”““ he has ever experienced. |United States today is such an adventurous accom- ' GAME LIMIT AND |, PROFESSIONAL RIDE OUT GALE|. — After having guided a party of | porting a successful expedition, suc-| i Helene W.L. Albrecht PHYSIOTHERAPY AUTOS FOR HIRE ceeded by the roughest sea voyage r DRS. KASER & FREEBURGER | Mecmbers of the party that had DENTISTS |engaged him to guide were A. C. 301-303 Goldstein Bldg. {Barrow, millionaire chain store PHONE 56 jowner, of Lynchburg, Va.; F. C.|| Hours 9 a. m. to 9 p. m. | Scruggs, Jr., A. M. Hill, C. R. Dol- 24 |an and J. R. 'Priese, business - | o - g v iSs g sociates of Mr. Barrow. Charles| | Madsen of Kodiak, and Thomas O. | Dr. Ch;gl:%sg' Jenne |Daly of Kasilof also joined the | Rooms 8 and 9 Valéntine party at Seward. From Seward the| Bullding party went to Kasilof and thence! ito the hunting grounds. | Telephone 176 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 11 and Single O Carlson’s Taxi and Ambulance* Service OF L Gastineau Channel Fraternal Societies | 1 . P. 0. ELKS o Meeting every ‘Wednesday evening - {at 8 o'clock. Elks Hall. Visiting brothers welcome. R. B. MARTIN, Exalted Ruler. A M. H. SIDES, Secretary. | The sportsmen shot the limit of | moose, goats, sheep and small game. f {They did not seek any brown bear.| | For the round trip voyage between turn trip, 140 miles south of Ko- Dr. J. W. Bayne DENTIST Seattle and Seward, Mr. Barrow Rooms 5-6 Triangle Bldg. chartered the yacht Westward,| Office hours, 9 am. to 5 pm. Capt. Roe Dykeman. On the re- Evenings by appointment. Phone 321 Graham’s Taxi Phone 565 STAND AT ARCADE CAFE Day and Night Service MOUNT JUNEAU LODGE Co-Ordinate Bod- ies of Freemason- WA rv Scottish Rite ') | Regular meetings VUL second Friday each month at 7:30 p. m. Scot- tish Rite Temple. WATER B. HEISEL, Secretary. LOYAL ORDER OF MOOSE Juneau Lodge No. 700. ' Meets every Monday night, at' 8 o'clock. ‘TOM SHEARER, Dictator. W. T. VALE, Secy., P. Q. Box 826 . 147 {adjunct of the adventurer's equipment. But the diak, the craft encountered a gale| ®— i3 Second and fourth Mon- day is coming when the nations of this hemi-|that swept waves over the little e . A Pl . he Ci £ $1 00 day of each month in |sphere will be linked with broad smooth highways. vessel, even down her funnels. Dr. A. W. Stewart ny ace 1n the (ity for B Scottish Rite Temple, * |The United States is now setting in motion a force|Everything moveable on deck, such DENTIST | i G beginning at 7:30'p. m. |that will speed the dawn of that day. as tool boxes and frigidaire, were Hours 9 a. m. to 6 p. m. | = > EVANS L. GHUBER, Mé S Ry Seven years ago, at the fifth lnzernational_ con- carx'te::l overboard. Almost all thel SEWARD BUILDING | Master; JAMES W. LEIVERS, Sec- e jference of American States at Santiago, Chile, a|yacht’s company were seasick Office Phone 469, Res. Eah b d Night retary. 2 PRES TS ADVICE |resolution was adopted suggesting the desirability|Some prayed and sang hymns to Ph 276 Prompt Service, Day an 4 L] b THE PRESID S . | ] ORDER OF EASTERN STA ey e jof a Pan-American highway econference “to study|be saved; others rather hoped the|e. s s aXl AR President Hoover declared in his speech to the 'measures best adapted to developing an efficient|boat would sink and end their 3 Covica Auto SERVICE 2 j_ Seccllmd arnd l;‘lourthh pankers at Cleveland that if we were to lower [Program for construction of automobile highways misery. The rough weather per- || Di Gev T Bhvt i{ STAND AT THE OLYMPIC "Z‘Ei "y?‘l’ ‘;‘“ s‘;mt‘:fl; 4 i 5 jepres- | Within the different countries of America and be- |sisted until shelter was reached off T 0. L. barton Phone 342 Day or Night | a o’'clock, ottis] our standards of living on account of the depres- | 4 s | i Rite Temple. LILY g I to | UWeen these different countries.” In 1924, 38 lead-|Kyak Island. CHIROPRACI‘OR ple. sion we would prolong the depression and help to ‘ t i & d oth £ . BURFORD, Worthy £ s i that |In8 government engineers, economists and other of-| Al in all, however, the hunters Hellenthal Buildin A 2 s bring about a cess-pool of poverty. He insists that ..., 20 Latin-. i i ¥ ., ;. g | | Matron; FANNY L. L e P | icials representing 20 Latin-American countries, vis-|were delighted with the expedition, | OFFICE SERVICE ONLY | i b we ought to increase the standards rather than de-|jteq the United States, made an inspection tour of |and are hopeful of coming North Sode: 30k 0 13 foen | | TO ANY PART ROBINSON, Secretary. crease them. American highways and, subsequently, organized the|again next year. 2p.m. tobp. m i Eugeene Permanent OF CITY " KNIGHTS OF COLUMBUS Perhaps he is right. He is at least an optimist |Pan - American conference for highway education. | gt 00 6 p.m. to8p. m. | W KNIGHTS OF COLUMBUS and has the daring and courage of his optimism.|They also resolved themselves into a committee on SR Sl ! ave Seghers Council No. 1760. : : v | BAN STUDENT AUTOS By Appointment ! Yyasinga Becond and ask It is true that curtailment of living standards re- [program for the first Pan-American highway con- iy Its i tailment of employment and that ac-|8ress, which met at Buenos Aires in 1925 A oM . Special R | poncayt Su {10 pont. B S 1 2 Y 2 3 ' 4 2 4 -2 o ' ." ¢ ltn c':_lre?w“lom and delays recovery. More | From these beginnings there developed in La""!bni?h::%;?ififigs?i?dcm:::fioe e 2 il e i Lilaly i . i e e s s |America a strong sentiment for road improvement|_ . Ui & i ed to attend. Council buying aiwags makes more employment and more:am] for the construction of an international high- | business. |way linking the capitals of the nations of the The President has determined to act on the old‘AanmsA Finally, in 1929, the Pan-American High- | rule: “Let the tail go with the hide.” Gamblers’way Congress adopted a program calling on all the had a similar system, “let it ride” He wants the South American countries to prepare complete studies people to risk what they have left in a gamble of their highway system plans in order to meet that things will improve. Well, the precedents the needs of intercommunication of their political | are on his side. Depressions have usually m)‘;’su_bdl\'xsions and to provide con\_lenient connections continued for long in the United States. The Yith the highway systems of neighboring countries. & likely to do so. pnrlmularlyl“m I)Fogram suggested was given impetus by a| esnieone 115 non RS 3 resolution adopted if we proceed as if it were not a depression. However different the President’s advice might seem from the doctrine of thrift that was so earn- |a few months prior to the 1929 meeting, authoriz- iretary of State to cooperate with the several gov- estly preached by President Coolidge, it must belernments, upon their requests, in the reconnais- | s to develop the facts as to the feasi-| ible routes, the probable cost, the econ- | they who could best afford to follow that given|Omic service, and such other information as would | permit a visualization of the whole undertaking of | admitted that the times are different. Those whojsancc survey: followed President Coolidge's advice to save are bility of pos by President Hoover now. jrumncmg and building an inter-American highway. | In accordance with the resolution, engineers of DODGING THE QUESTION. Panama, where they will open a field office to co-| Former Federal Prohibition Administrator Major operate with South American governments in the“ Maurice Campbell for New York City, who resigned work preliminary to construction of a highway link | last summer because, he said, the enforcement unit between the capitals of the American nations. Guate- was honeycombed with hypocrisy and worse, has been mala, Costa Rica and Panama have bespoken their naming names and places and dates in the exposure assistance, and South American nations are expected of Prohibition enforcement he is writing for the|to follow suit. The projected highway, when com- New York World. Those whom he accuses of lack [Pleted, Will be the longest, most picturesque, and of good faith in support of Prohibition enforce- potentially the most important thoroughfare in the ment include Vice-President Curtis, Assistant Sec- poeles retary of the Treasury Lowman and others. Low- man, head of Prohibition enforcement, Major Camp- bell said, had directed that he be more liberal| with the breweries so the anti-Smith voters might have “beer with which to soothe their parched completion in Telegraph Creek, we recognize a| throats.” commendable achievement. It not only perpetuates | In answering Major Campbell, Mr. Lowman, in-|the memory of a fine man and a true Canadian| stead of meeting the charges, made counter charges.|Pioneer; it fills a long-felt want in the social life He said the former Prohibition Administrator had Of the community. been a veternary surgeon during the war and had | Telegraph Creek is one of the few towns in theI 1 Northwest that up until now had no place of recrea- | killed the army mules. Later, he said, Campbel tion. In the old days the saloon was a meeting | was a motion picture magnate and went broke. place for the prospector, the trapper, the packer Then he was appointed Prohibition Administrator and the voyageur; when the saloon passed out of and after three years' service failed to dry up New |existence there was nothing to take its place. The York. little metropolis of the upper Stikine had not a Ti was Mr. Lowman who appointed Major Camp- |single pool table other than the one provided by bell Prohibition Administrator, and he made the|the Hudson's Bay Company for its employees. appointment after Major Campbell had been in the| Telegraph Creek is a frontler settlement where Prohibition enforcement service long enough for |the men of the Cassiar foregather at various sea- v A sons of the year, and it was essential that some pl sy yhat Eo, wos dolpg, meeting place other than the stores and restaurants Mr. Lowman's answer connects up about like the | song, “Yes, We Have No Bananas.” A Commendable Achievement. (Wrangell Sentinel.) In the Simpson Memorial Hall, now nearing be provided for them. The Simpson Memorial Hall undoubtedly will serve that purpose. Commander Hodgson's endeavors have accom- THE SLEEP OF THE TOADS. plished a worthwhile purpose. If those toads that were buried in Oklahoma four centuries ago and just woke up when liberated the other day had understood conditions when they The Japan-Tacoma Flight. (New York World.) by the United States Congress] ing an appropriation of $50,000 to enable the See- | |the Bureau of Public Roads are’ now enroute to| will be forbidden after June 1931 by a new ruling of college authori- | ties on the ground that ‘“the pos- session of motorcars or motorcycles nearly always prevents undergrad- |uates from making the best use of | their residence.” —e |® Graduate Los | | Glasses Fitted, . Robert Simpson Opt. D. Angeles Col- lege of Optometry and Opthalmology Lenses Ground [ $10.00 AMERICAN BEAUTY ‘ PARLOR THERE IS BUT ONE REASON 44 WHY we ask you to come here for your printing. We to 12; er atter.:tion and that we piece of work. ¥ P T A O L S e AT | DR. R. E. SOUTHWELL Optometrist-Optician Eyes Examined—Glasses Fitted Room 7, Valentine Bldg. Office phone 484, residense | phone 238. Office Hours: 9:30 1:00 to 5:30 i . e e 4 Juneau Public Library Free Reading Room ben ll!fitw City Hall, Second Floor are equ’PPed Main Street and Fourth to 8” e your | Reading Room Open From work the prop= 8a. m. to 12 p. m. Circulation Room Open from 1 to 5:30 p. m.—T7:30 to 8:30 4 Dp. m. Current Magazines, are .ble to [ Newspapers, Reference, turn out a Books, Etc. satisfactory FREE TO ALL HESSC SO A S R (|| THE NEW IDEAL ! SHOPPE 218 Front Street MARY HAMMER Alaskan Novelties — Swedish and Finnish Copperware— Knives and Linens | | . . 183 TAXI STAND AT PIONEER POOL ROOM Day and Night Service | PUT US TO THE TEST - » | Our trucks go time. A tank any place any for Diesel Oil and a tank for crude oil save GARBAG =] « " Frye-Bruhn Company went to sleep and again when awakening, they would have been astonished animals. Four centuries ago Columbus, Cabot, Vespusius and the others that followed were still discovering America. While de Pineda may have touched the waters of the Mis- sissippi eleven years before it was another eleven years before de Soto made the voyage that gave him credit for discovering the Father of Waters and almost another third of a century before Joliet and Marquette journeyed from the mouth of .the Wisconsin to the mouth of the Arkansas and gave the world a real glimpse of the great river that drains most of the United States. While a few Spanish and French explorers had attempted to make settlements in the South, it was nearly a century later that the English settlers in Virginia began to spread out and set in motion the west- ward course that finally swept over Oklahoma where the toads were fast asleep. Charles I, son of Mad Joan and grandson of Ferdinand and Isabella, was _King of Spain and Francis ruled gaily in France and both of them through intrigue, diplomacy and otherwise were attempting to set up rulers in the other countries of the Continent. Henry VIII had failed in his efforts to be the dominating monarch of Europe and set in motion the policy that soon made England great by attending to her own busi- ness—a policy that fructified in Elizabeth's time and enabled that great Queen to humble Spain be- fore the beginning of another century. During the long sleep of the toads there were almost constantly wars and rumors of wars among the peoples of the world, but such progress in ~fndustry, commerce and soclety as to enable the world to go further in four centuries than in all . /the ages before, but the turmoll that vexed crowns Bromley and Gatty displayed not only common sense but true courage in turning back to Japan from their Tacoma flight when fog threatened the! success of their undertaking. With a course °f more than 4,500 miles to complete they could not afford to spend any of their gasoline supply losing " their way in a Pacific fog. And the islands upon | one of which they might have been forced to land| are not as well prepared for that use as they will be in the days to come, when the transpacific flight has become a daily routine. Even as it was, the flight that failed furnished a good test of the navigating skill of the men and of the power of their plane. They stayed aloft more than twenty-four hours, traveling how far they probably do not know themselves; far enough, cer- tainly, to have carried them across the Atlantic from Newfoundland. They have a good plane at their command; but plane and men and weather must all be right to make possible the first non- stop erossing of the Pacific. We were opposed to a President’s having more than two terms, but after reading Cal Coolidge's column for some time we are rather in favor of a President’s having four or five terms. Anything to keep him from writing a daily column.—(Chicago / Featuring Frye’s De- f licious Hams and Bacon PHONE 38 Tribune.) It is just possible that France considered Hearst a professional writer and editor and barred him on that account.—(New York World) About this time two years ago Mr. Hoover was promising to give unbounded prosperity to the United States—(Louisville Courler-Journal.) Let not the Europeans repine. Our tourists will spend with them more than our tariff takes l[rom them.—(Dallas News.) « l " Prepare for An Emergency Everyone should have a fund of money for emergencies. No one knows what tomerrow may, bring, either in opportunities or unex- pected calls for ready cash. —Start to build such a fund now—- The B. M. Behrends Bank ™ > OLDEST BANK IN ALASKA | | 199 Chambers, Fifth Street, JOHN F. MULLEN, G. K. H. J. TURNER, Secretary. Gastineau Hotel Tue Juneau LAunNDRY Franklin Street, between DOUGLAS AERIE 117 F. 0. E. Meets first and third &thdays. 8 o'clock, at Eagles' Hall, Douglas. GUY SMITH, Secretary. brothers welcome. ALEX GAIR, W. P. Visiting ¥ Front and Second Streets PHONE 359 t‘ i | - THE CASH BAZAAR | *' Open Evenings | ¢ FRONT STREET w Near Coliseum Theatre, i 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” SUMMER Pnogflz, ‘X:‘;‘:}hllle'i' 48 H A ULE D on all T P R S P Phone 584 Alterations and HARRIS Hardware ot i T g 1 Tiiangle Bullaiug GARAGE | MODERATE RATES I SO I |- ! J PHONE YOUR ORDERS TOUS . We will attend to them promptly. Our COAL, Hay, Grain and Transfer business is increasing daily. There’s a reason. Give us a trial order today and learn why. You Can’t Help Being Pleased D. B. FEMMER PHONE 114 Daily Empire Want Ads Pay. UNITED FOOD COMPANY JUNEAU CABINET and DETAIL MILL- WORK CO. GARBAGE HAULING Office at Wolland's Tailor Shop Chester Barnesson PHONE 66 DAIRY FERTILIZER A JUNEAU TRANSFER COMPANY Moves, Packs and Stofes Freight and Baggage Prompt Delivery of ALL KINDS OF COAL PHONE 48 Front Street, next to Warner Machine Shop CABINET and MILLWORK GENERAL CARPENTER WORK GLASS REPLACED IN AUTOS Estimates Furnished Upon Request Mabry’s Cafe Regular Dinners Short Orders Lunches Open 6 a.m. to 2 a.m. POPULAR PRICES HARRY MABRY Proprietor L. c gfi.fifi and CORONA TYREWRITERS Guaranteed by » J. B. BURFORD & €O.{ * “Our door step is worn by | satistied customers” e S ‘o Art o In every plece of Job work we do, we employ the Iatest ideas of the emphasize your selling peints. It imereases

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