The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, November 11, 1930, Page 4

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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, TUESDAY, NOV. 11, 1930. Daily Alaska Em})ire JOHN W. TROY - - - EDITOR AND MANAGE! Published_every _evening _except Sunday by the EMPIRE_PRINTING COMPANY at Second and Main st Office in June Second Class SUBSCRIPTION RATES, Dellvered by carrier in Juneau, Douglas, Treadwell and Thane for $1.25 per month. By mall, postage paid, at the following rates: in vance, $12.00; six months, In advance, in advance, $1.25 1 any failure or irregularity par nd Business Offices, 874 nm‘ndmi over any considerable period, the taint results _ |from the introduction of deleterious foreign substance vor if they will promptly | it cannot be kept hermetically sealed. Occasionally canned products are said to be tainted In such |cases, almost invariably, where preservation has ex- {into the contents of the can after it has been opened. Canned food is nutritious. It has all the vitamins that there are in the alphabet To canned goods, Ala: ns are glad to pause to pay a tribute of gratitude. All the wholesome pro- ‘duus of the temperate zone, the myriad delicacies | |of distant tropical climes weigh down the tables iof homes and hotels in Northern cities and of lonely |cabins and widely separated roadhouses in the far |reaches of the Territory. Without the infinite var-| | | liety of canned goods, life would not be so pleasant Have You Tired Feet? TRY "RADOX 85¢ BUTLER-MAURO PROFESSIONAL Helene W.L. Albrecht PHYSIOTHERAPY Massage, Electricity, Infra Red Ray, Medical Gymnastics. 410 Goldstein Building Phone Office, 216 DENTISTS 301-303 Goldstein Bldg. PHONE 56 Hours 9 a. m. to 9 p. m. . * DRS. KASER & FREEBURGER 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 | Fraternal Societies [Tt S g | Gastineau Channel B. P. 0. ELKS Meeting every Wednesday evening i at 8 o'clock. Elks Hall. o Visiting brothers welcome. R. B. MARTIN, Exalted Ruler. M. H. SIDES, Secretary. L ¢ Co-Ordinate Bod- ies of Freemason- ry Scottish Rite Regular meetings second Friday each month at 7:30 p. m. Scot- Telephone rial : L = jor so healthy, and probably not so long, as it is DRUG CO . . Ph 11 d S’ MEMBER OF ASSOCIATED PRESS. Jasd n o . 52 lng The Associated Press s exclusively entitied to the nov. 1o thilspece (0fCHIBTARERA) B e s ones an e e for re ation of all news dispatehes credited to | — . e se for repy e L (oIl baper ‘and also the| The Prohibition enforcement war has continued WIEN WE SELL IT Dr. Charles P. Jenne Carlson’s Taxi and Ambulance Service Disottiidil okl ot e e S WA S A e s |throughout the country notwithstanding the elec- IT'S RIGHT 2 BDEn"dImg 3“ % ALAs_KA“ 12(:1\;;:.1)\"h;\“(;y,‘gfi?‘ELEE?JEYL?CETEVQL'fRGER |tion. Among the latest to run amuck was a Deputy Express Money Orders oo Bauudmg AR heog 1 2 United States Marshal in New Jersey. Perhaps he| Telephone 176 | L |took the Morrow victory too seriously and was | e ) ’ ! AT SO I O ‘ . . |9 ‘ | In the late election the Democrats not only re- 1 DRESSMAKING !' Dr. Jézx&sgayne |claimed the Old Solid South but they put dents in/ gl Ph 565 fthe solid south of the North. They TG i P et o 1 | Off?g:mh’ous: ;":”:f”éon;dg'm one bl silbthe et =] | , 9 am. .m. o |iuicy Senatorship in South Dakota and South Phil-| | gl i ok Evenings by appointment. STAND AT ARCADE CAFE |adelphia went Democratic hell-bent. Davis Apts. 6th and Seward % Phone 321 . . : le a al Day and Night Service | ——— | . . 5 | — |7~ Df. A. W. Stewart Any Place in the City for $1.00 e iver ahastan, wil 3. bl 3 s pehacon OB Ex i O L ' s situa vi e of e ncipal [ | i jmatters to be studied at-the joint meeting in Van- PIANO TUNING Hg‘l:;;’ADR; nx;uwu.nfllgiom s o D o Gl - couver, next month, of the British Columbia Division Phone Geo. Anderson | Office Phone 469, Res | '[ER TWELVE YEARS |of the Canadian Institute of Mining and Metal: 3 i Phone 2716 | T . Al B ARS. lurgy, and the Mining Association of British Co- Anderson Music % . 18 ! l 9 > lumbia. | ! a X l Twelve vears ago today, the great World War| "y, "o connection, the views of the Stewart Shoppe [+ 7 TA XI Il - 1 —heralded m‘ 2 »wm' tfi ex?d W‘}T—Cflmv to a 5‘:“}News comes as timely, informing and Interesting. Alaska representative: Kokiler Dr Geo. L. Barton - ! < | den and in . x5 unexpected end. On that) " The Portland Canal weekly says: pr e R CHIROPRACTOR < 1.00 e by the chaos of the arma- Working West from Eastern and Central right Planok ;;:r ,:;; ":; i STAND AT PIONEER}| i geddon through whick had passed celebrated in Europe our agressive civilization, employ- .rcnt | oy;{xglgents‘:;,v?ggdlgh‘l | | hilarious abandon, or, as in the case of the Germanic| ing gold as a basis of wealth, has suddenly ANBRRSON: MUSIO heleat Hob b 10 % 1 Ao a5 oans | POOL ROOM 3 TO ANY PART alliance, rested in sullen silence while it awaited found itself face to face across the Pacific | 2p.mto5p m | | Y the next steps for the peace terms of a defeated :::‘]g:t ":‘}’1;‘1 pr?:ul?:s :Tdfldir ?:‘001“0‘ 5 = Ak 8p m to8p m. | Day and Night | OF CIT ousands of years has 1 5%, Dl ! confedartion. | ] | By Appointment 1 3 s employed silver as a basis of wealth. With SEE BIG VAN | ! | Service ! And while that peace carried all too ha.rsh'terms the Western civilization basing its wealth on | BN AN DI | PHONE 259 | One in some respects—terms later to be materially soft- gold, and that of the Orient on silver, it is {1 Rubber Boots, Shoe Pacs | | e L] P e ) = ened by common consent of the conquerors—it also only natural that the increasingly greater H ‘ and Raincoats « | ; 5 i ‘ o undertook to set up for the first time in hls!ory‘1 interchange of trade and commerce made AR X —e | | R b S machinery designed to lessen causes of war, to re-| ptx_\'smle as a result of the tremendous quick- BB SRRy e I obert 1mpson Prompt Service, Day and Night tard warlike preparations, and to penalize aggres-| ening of communication and transportation . Opt. D. sions of belligerent nations. Although lacking the| during the past two decades, should produce MINERB’ | Graduate E:s Angetes col- | |{ CovIcH AuTo SERVICE active participation of the United States, itgorig-| & Movement for o universt) bagls o HEADQUARTERS }j| 1ege of Optometty and STAND AT THE OLYMPIC Gastineau Hotel inal sponsor, that machine—the League of Nations ste ng il % r;nox.‘ledaggr;sswc‘ o o e“’em ! J Il Opthalmology Phone 342 Day or Night —in the time that has elapsed has rendered services it b sl o & L A Complete Line of | | Glasses Fitted, Lenses Ground PUSSSSSUSSSUSSSSSSP TS | 'hllHDn people in the Orient changed their . o SR :] so worthwhile that they more than com.pensate ror‘ policy of years standing, and, comparatively BOOTS ) o all of the trouble accompanying its birth. It 18| speaking, suddenly declared gold as their SHlbO: R T T TrE Juneau Lauspry now generally recognized as one of the major, first- basis of wealth. L | o‘pbo‘me‘mst-omlclan Franklin Street, between line defenses against war. No shock absorber seems to have been ‘} Eyes Examined—Glasses Fitted | AMERICAN BEAUTY Front and Second Streets Hardly a year has passed since Armistice Day,| Prepared by our world leaders of finance | MINERS LAMPS | Room 17, Valentine Bldg. PARLOR PHONE 359 1018, that some forward-looking step has not been| fo soften this sudden and drastic change | 7 || Office phone 484, residense i taken toward the outlawry of war. The Washing- g;)i!:nta a;:(llve; s';.(;tefl ;ofi:a:ti:‘;zd]:ywo‘xgg | —and— | phone 238. Office Hours: 9:30 H Q 7 ton Disarmament Treaty, the Locarno Pact, the : > ' | | to 12; 1:00 to 5:30 L4 M d o T Daot tar 06’ Tamiter] standards of wealth seems to have resulted. ‘VATE ROOF 1 . aris, i [ As the United States and Canada are the CLOTHING OIL SHAMPOOS tion of Armaments, are all designed to lessen the two greatest potential traders with the 74 e s Tt ¥ chances of combat. Individually as citizens and col- lectively as nations, the various ))eoplc_:s of the world are trying to understand more fully the problems of one another. Through understanding there comes sympathy. that develops into friendship, the an- Orient, why in the name of common sense should they await the results of protracted international negotiations to stimulate the price of silver. There are 130,000,000 people for whom it is safe to say in these two nations some | Mike A”Oifln {Juneau Public Library FRONT pposite Winter & Pond Free Reading Room City Hall, Second Floor Main Street and Fourth STREET Corrects Abnormal Scalp Conditions MRS. RUTH HAYES WATCH For Nexu SMOKER tithesis of hatred which is the product of ignorance e s % cireifatien ey v ¥ ol . d and indifference. The march continues to be ror-vl Basni: bmcslvr i‘; a“m mzre. ecaumzlmzhe:e I The Florence Shop Reading Room Open From ward, and the progress of the next decade may bills and in their stead issue & more con- ‘Naivette” Croquignole Perm- 8 a. m. to 10 p. m. with reason be expected to be as great as that of | yenjent-sized silver dollar, each dollar to anent; Ware Circulation Room Open from the past dozen years. contain an ounce of silver, and in each silver BEAUTY SPECIALISTS 1 to 5:30 p. m.—7:00 to 8:30 “War is Hell” said Gen. Willlam Tecumseh con below the value of a dollar, a silver | Phone 427 for Appointment p. m, Current Magazines, Sherman. A preacher in his stead might have content in proportion as one ounce is to L b Newspapers, Reference, phrased it “War is Evil” Yet out of evil can one dollar. Such a margin of safety should . —lc Books, Etc. come good. Probably the greatest good that eman-| be ample. Issue no paper money below 4 1 2 ated from the great conflict that ended on Novem- that of a five dollar bill, and it is safe to { Try Our $1.00 Dinner SRR ik 11, oib] s " chatalnadsinall’ of - these mBVeSH], - (1. thav allver; Willgoome Bk LEECO and 50c Merchants’ Lunch - prices that would enable mines and attend- 11 A. M. to 2 P. M. 7 ments to shackle the martial gods. ant industries to again operate at capacity. Today we celebrate the termination of that war. The purchasing power of our own people and ] ARCADE CAFE Our trucks go any place any . R e It is significant that there is no clang of sabres or rattle of weapons in our observance. Everywhere the nation pauses for a short space to honor its dead heroes, pledging that their supreme sacrifice will not be in vain, and consecrating anew this people to preserve the peace, if it can be done honorably, which they bought with their- lives. CANNED GOODS WEEK. This is Canned Goods Week. It is promoted by trade interests in Alaska as well as in other parts of the United States. Its purpose is to increase sales by encouraging consumption of preserved foods. At first thought, to some persons, the occasion, pal- pably commercial, seems devoid of sentiment, and at least some modicum of sentiment is deemed es- sential to enlist participation of the general public in any sort of observ 1 Canned goods abou ‘n sentiment. They teem with roma Without thei the fortunes of war might h heen reversed in many instances, the hazardous ochievements of explorers in remote parts of the earth made impossible and the advancement of civilization to torrid and frigid regiohs delayed, if not entirely stayed. Preservation of 1 beyond the natural period of decomposition b n a constant occupation of mankind. To makec plentitude of one season supplement the scarcity of another occurred to the earliest of humanity. Meat and fish were dried, smoked and salted; milk turned into cheese and butter, and grape juices fermented into wine. Until science determined the causes of decay, however, means of preservation were limitd to comparatively few commodities and were incapable of much im- provement. When sterilization of food was reduced to & principle, the problem of preservation was solved. Against non-sterile edibles, civilized man had always Meats are cooked, so are most and those that shown an aversion. vegetables and likewise some fruits, those in the Orient would be re-established time. A tank for Diesel Oil and a great step forward would have taken in solving the world's present unemploy- ment. Federal Cooperation.- (Cordova Times.) So much is said, and certainly with reason, about Federal bureaus in Alaska and the detriment which they are to Alaska, that we may be inclined to overlook the good which desireable bureaus do. Our observations of the Forestry Department and its Alaskan activities impresses us that this is one Federal bureau which strives consistently to cooperate in the building up of the Territory. W.P. Johnson FRIGIDAIRE DELCO LIGHT PRODUCTS MAYTAG WASHING MASTINES Hardware Co. | GENERAL MOTORS RADIOS Phone 17 CASH CUTS COSTS Front Street and a tank for crude oil save burner trouble. PHONE 149, NIGHT 148 HARRIS Open until 9 p.m. ! Juneau The creation of five-acre home-site tracts in Alaska, which, after permanent residence is estab- ilshed, provides the dweller with access to a title to his ground, impresses us as.one recent indica- tion of the cooperation given Alaskans by the Forest Service of the Department of “Agriculture. Under former regulations the only way which |a man could obtain ground, nominally owned by | the Government, was through taking up a home- | stead tract and fulfilling certain requirements for acreage clearing and tillage. It is obvious that not every man or family wish-| ing to acquire title to ground in the Territory would want to become a homesteader, and that this law was not particularly adaptable to the con- ditions peculiar in Alaska. There are many cases| where a man might wish to locate near his fish- ing grounds, or near his trapping activities, where a 160-acre homestead would be a burden impossible to assume, and where agricultural possibilities might be extremely limited even if he were inclined to arm. Under the new ruling a permanent resident who wishes to acquire an actual home-site and establish| residence may file for title to five-acre tracts. Since | title may be secured only to land within thel| bounds of public domain and not within forestry reserves, the Forest Service withdraws such tracts from its own reserve, turns them over to public| are not are usually washed or pealed béfore con- (domain and makes them available at approximately sumption. But food temporarily or otherwise soon becomes active again if exposed to the living organisms of the air. The scientific process of preserving food by ster- jlizing it and keeping it sterile by hermetically seal- ing it, is accredited to Francois Appert, a French- man, who was prompted to his accomplishment by demands for wholesome, easily transportable sus- tenance stores for troops in the Napoleonic wars. Original methods have been bettered in many ways, but yet the early practice of heating food in a can and then piercing a hole in the lid to permit the escape of expanding alr is followed extensively, as evidenced by the drop of solder used to close the sterilized by heat [two dollars and fifty cents an acre. Certainly, this is more than a gesture of co-| operation. It is cooperation which has met with | hearty reception in Alaska, as is indicated by more| than three hundred applications for homesite tracts «" Frye-Bruhn . Company " Featuring Frye’s De- licious Hams and Bacon PHONE 38 Harold Thorpe Says- If you want to win, stick! If you want to succeed, then keep it up! Don’t quit. The world has no use for q’uitters. The iailures_ in the ‘world have bhe: the quitters—they who began all right BUT DID NOT HOLD OUT. in Southeast Alaska. Irish lace from Philadelphia: Louisville.—(Detroit News.) What fine Democrats those Chi would make! npermmmdnptlcadanlomwumthesed-y:. Canned ‘food is pure, If not properly preserved, to his country than a dead stunt Moines Register.) Swiss cheese from Wisconsin: A “Canadian whiskey” plant raided in They always start their best wars with pleas for peace and unity.—(Boston Herald.) A careful airplane pilot is of much more use inese Generals flyer. — (Des IT UP. Begin to savé money and KEEP The B. M. Behrends Bank 7 OLDEST mmé IN ALASKA RELIABLE TRANSFER | — Daijly Empire Want Ads Pay. (ST 1931 STYLES i Guaranteed on all fur || work done by Yurman’s Order that new Fur Gar- ment for Christmas now PHONE YOUR ORDERS 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 Our bread is a good food. It is well made of the finest materials obtainable and is bak- ed by master bakers in a modern sanitary bakery. It is a bread that never disappoints. Peerless Bakery “Remember the Name” tish Rite Temple. WALTER 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, €ecy, P. O. Box 8z MOUNT JUNEAU LODGE NO. 147 beginning at 7:30 p..m. Second and fourth Mon- day of euch month in C Scottish Rite Temple, "% EVANS L. GRUBE: ; R, Master; JAMES W. LEIVERS, Sec- retary. ORDER OF EASTERN STAR Second and Fourth Tuesdays of each month, 4 at 8 o'clock, Scottish Rite Temple. LILY BURFORD, Worthy Matron; FANNY L. ROBINSON, Secretary. ANIGHTS OF COLUMBUS Seghers Council No. 1760. Meetings second and last Monday at 7:30 p. m. Transient brothers urg- ed to attend. Council Chambers, Fifth Street, JOHN F. MULLEN, G. K. H. J. TURNER, Secretary. DOUGLAS AERIE 117 F. O. E. Mects first and third &Mundays, 8 o'clock, at Eagles Hall, Douglas. ALEX GAIR, W. P. GUY SMITH, Secretary. Visiting brothers welcome. | THE CASH BAZAAR | ? Open Evenings I | FRONT STREET ] Near Coliseum Theatre i FOREST wWOOD GARBAGE HAULING Office at Wolland's & Tailor Shop Chester Barnesson PHONE 66 DAIRY FERTILIZER COMPANY JUNEAU CABINET and DETAIL MILL- WORK CO. 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 ’__—____T.__;—_— UNITED FOOD COMPANY JUNEAU TRANSF. ER) | [4 Moves, Packs and Stores Freight and Baggage Prompt Delivery of ALL KINDS OF COAL PHONE 48 PESRGL T RN, L. C. SMITH and OORONA ; TYPEWRITERS Guaranteed by J. B. BURFORD & CO. “Our door step is worn by . satisfied customers” > we empley the latest ideas of the £y -

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