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laws, old and new, before repealing them. TED STATES LAND OFFICE, | e — g1 | Daily Alaska Empire iu” i that staute booka 1n Americt and Burope| . Anchorage, Alasks. PROFESSIONAL " Fraternal Societics | gt g Sept. 24, 1930. |/ 3 b re still cluttered with long nullified laws. which,| oo 15 HEREBY GIVEN ' * 1!]1‘05 FOR IIIRE r e 1 J_—U‘(N W TROY - - - EDITOR AND MANAGER|'f one would sugeest that they be enforced, would|rhat the ALASKA PACIFIC SAL-|e- cause the suzgester to be laughed out of reasonable|MON CORPORATION, a corpora-| Helene W. L. Albrecht & society fon organized under the laws of | PHYSIOTHERAPY R T s s = 3 B. P. 0. ELKS TING COMPANY L Mal SN2 the State of Delaware and quali- | Massage, Electricity, Infra Red Meeting every u, Alaska INCHE fied engage in business in the . “BUY NOW” nm\ E LAUNCHED. [fd to eneage o o e mads apc,| Ry, Medical Gymnastics. Wednesday evening = 3 at 8 o'clock. Elks t ¢ of Jungau as Sccond Class ation, Serial 07472, for a Soldier’s | 410 Goldstein Bullding y Now” campaign has been started by Col.|additional Homestead, as assignee Phone Office, 216 - al Son b aXl S SUBSCRIPTION RATES, rtk Woods, Director of President Hoover's Un-)of Wm. J. O'Neal, a heneflciarylo»— Visiting brothers Delivered by carrier in Juneau, Douglas, Treadwell and ; i 2 s | under Sections 2306 and 2307, U. S. = welcome. Thane for $1.25 per month T ent Commission, who is seeking by this|! o i ok -0 v X e fiov Jod to put into beneficial circulation funds|/*¢Vised Statutes, for a tract of{ 'pRS.KASER & FREEBURGER ANYWHERE IN THE CITY FOR $1.00 R. B. MARTIN, Exalted Ruler. h.lnd consisting of apporximately DENTISTS M. H. SIDES, S t: I ¥ who have & feferring r- i 4 i fv Tons: R, , Secretary. by those who have been deferring pur-iqgy acres, situated on the west 301-303 Goldstein Bldg. Careful, Efficient Drivers—Call Us At Any lour— : s waiting for still further price declines. Col.|shore of Port Althorp, on Chicha- PHONE 56 DAY AND NIGHT—Stand at Alaskan Hotel Co-Ordinate Bod- Joods is convinced that the price recession has zofihlslmdv »0r;’c _undl?ne-halrmmiII:A‘ Hours 9 a. m. to 9 p. m. % Y .. ies of Freemason- iched the bottom and in this bellef is in agree-|Southeast of Point Lucan, Alaska,| 3 Ph 11 d S l 0 ] {fl! ry Scottish Rite st with many careful students, manufacturers,|TEraced in O N S = 3 ones an lng e Regl;l}sr moctlmhs merchants, banke nd industrial leaders. | U.S3.M. No. 1657 bears S. 34° 15'| 5 g 4 Coynd seco) Friday (USEM. ars S. ! g 5 Service What 15 needsd right xiow, OO Wobds maln-|26° &, - 3133 eBhind, TAgEENEsel | DT Charles P. Jenne Carlson’s Taxi and Ambulance Se each month at i s a return to normal buyitg, By this, he|08 007N, Longitude 136° 30" 38* DENTIOE S ——————— et 7:30 p. m. Scot- tained, is a return to norma ying. b I . A el T ke Al m:, e };urchas‘nv‘w“ and which is more patricularly Rooms 8 and 9 Valentine tish Rite Templs. e s oo sl L el R 108 | jeseribed as follows, to-wit: Building ! WALTER B. HEISEL, Secretary within the means of the consumer rather than a Commencing at Corner No. 1, Telephone 176 - 1 L G ST ylurge of credit buying beyond the power of the| identical with Corner No. 3, b Xl LOYAL ORDER purchaser to cover. Cor apparently, are now| Decep Sea Salmon Company’s 7 ra al Il S 2 OF MOOSE | PR e e i . who| Trade and Manufacturing site, || Juneau Lodge No. 900, a0l Sy RS Wik 9 | U. S. Non-mineral Survey No, Dr. J. W. Bayne have accumulated some s may find it to their & » ) Meets every Monday oo x A : 1657, Anchorage, Alaska, Serial | DENTIST Phone 565 e et advantage to make their pu es without rurtlm" No. 08519; thence north 5.05 Rooms 5-6 Triangle Bldg. TOM SHEARER, Dictator. delay, serving the double purpose of meeting their| chains to Corner No. 2, identi- Office hours, 9 am. to 5 pm. STAND AT ARCADE CAFE W. T. VALE, Secy., P. O. Box 82d | L S . . y . . Box 2 MOUNT JUNEAU LODGE NO. 147 needs and T g unemployment to some extent.| cal with Corner No. 3, Tongass Evepings by appointment. | National g elimination, Phone 321 thence east ju2d Day and Night Service In electing Charles J. Curry, Jr., to succeed his to Corner No. o= Second and fourth Mon- father in Congress, the voters of the Third Cali-| jdentical with Corner No. o & K day of each month it Dr. A. W. Stewart Any Place in the City for $1.00 ‘&(’ Scottish Rite Temple, fornia Distfict not only paid a tribute to the elder| Tongass National Forest elim- " 2 Curry, who represented them so faithfully and long, | ination, August 22, 1925; thence, DENTIST beginning at 7:30 p/am, EVANS L. GRUBER, | + following the meanders of mean but showed they recognized the sterling worth of the| 0 Hours 9 a. m. to 6 p. 2. ; o Ve n jed|| - BT Uikie olEviE SRR, SEWARD BUILDING | & Ma ter; JAMES W. LEIVERS, Séc- [son. He acted as chief aid to his father for several| ¢ %e 2" dhal Soull 20 Office Phone 469, Res. retary. years, during the latter’s illness, and became fam-| South 60'2° W. 4.36 chains to 2718 ° GEN. BLI 3 CAREER COVERED WIDE 1 with most of duties and work in Congress.| Corner No. 4; thence W. 6.85 Phone ! 183 ' ’ l \ o ORDER OF EASTERN STAR _ _l zl Xl Second and Fourth TA XI Tuesdays of each month, 4 Gen. Tasker H. Bliss, whose death occurred in Washington last week, had a notable career during|Ployment Commission for relief. scribed land should file their ad-| CHIROPRACTOR chains to Corner No. 1, the e i NPT o i seeviea1h b sonity, islnE 10 — [verse_claims within the period of | A Tl j STAND AT PIONEER| 5 oo s} at 8 o’'clock, Scottish $1 00 Rite Temple. LILY > BURFORD, Worthy Matron; FANNY L. POOL ROOM ! TO ANY PART ROBINSON, Secretary. | 2 FIELD: o e place of beginning. e Z7T publication or thirty days there=| | Anyway times could be some worse. The racket- . SR Any and all persons claiming cers have not called upon the Presglents Unem- |ydversely any ot e Sabove dec| | Dr Geo. L. Barton the highest rank, General, and Commanding Gen- | No More Trust-Busting. Dtar or they will be barred by the|| OFFICE SERVICE ONLY eral of the Army. His was more than a purely| R TR provisions of the Statutes. ' Horrs: 10 a. m. to 12 noon (Philadelphia Record,) J. LINDLEY GREEN, 2 p.m. to5p m 5 S0 B Where's the Big Stick now? Register. 6p.m. to8Dp m. Sl anlliasy dn. el nadirs ware| Less than a generation ago it was waved threat- |First publication, Nov. 5, 1930. His active service carried him through two WArs|oninojy against large corporations, Big Business. | Last publication, Jan. 7, 1931. and the Philippine and Mexican disturbances. Com- | anti_trust, legislation, such as the Sherman Act of | i i missioned from West Point in 1875, his first ap-|1890, was turned to in the effort to keep compen-j old rlmcr" at The Emp]re ntment to the artill corps where, in five [tion from being destroyed. it e e s, he earned the strips of a first lieutenant| The public feared the trust. In the popular mind | For=r=roo——-— and an appointment to the military school. He be-|it was the octopus, stifling business freedom and| MINERS came adjutant of the school upon graduation, where |Initiative, heralding enslavement of the masses by | S > > e {monopoly. , || HEADQUARTERS || That popular dread is gone. Industrial combi- | | ; : nation, leading to a greater efficiency, less duplica- | A Complete Line of | dential board to report on the military value of in-lyio, of effort, better service, is a part of American | | i OF CITY ANIGHTS OF COLUMBUS Seghers Council No. 1760 Day and Night Service military career, embracing duties at iimes more By Appointment PHONE 259 Meetings second and las¢ One Monday at 7:30 p. m. Transient brothers urg= ed to attend. Council 7 i 7 Chambers, Fifth Street, Robert Simpson { Prompt Service, Day and Night| | JOHN F. MULLEN, G. K. O t. D l} H. J)TURNER, Secretary. Graduate Los Angeles Col- CovicH AUTO SERVICE | DOUGLAS AERIE 117 F. O. E. lege of Optometry and STAND AT THE OLYMPIC Gastineau Hotel wMe:ts first and third T | He next acted as recorder of a special Presi- Opthalnology Phone 342 Day or Night A Glasses Fitted, Lenses Ground = at Eagles Hall, terior waterways, and later served three years as pusiness, soundly intrenched. | BOOTS A T B T -~ Douglas. ALEX GAIR, W. P. professor of military science in the United States — president Hoover recognized that fact when he! SHU PACS B —" TrE JuNeEAU LAUNDRY {|CGUY SMITH, Secretary. Visiting War College. He, also, served as aide de camp to|spoke to the American Federation of Labor at.Bos- DR. R. E. SOUTHWELL | > brothers welcome. Franklin Street, between Lieut. Gen. Scholfield, Commanding General of the|ton. Competition, he pointed out, cag be as de-| CAPS H Optometrist-Optician *MERICAN BEAUTY adies e Army, and later as inspector of rifle practick. He structive as monopoly | MINERS’ LAMPS | Eyes Examined—Glasses Fitted | ront and Second Streets - X o P ' was fol| The eéxample he used strikes home. The bitu- Room 7, Valentine Bldg. PARLOR PHONE 359 sl ,;'1“:;1( % “:'\‘“:‘;"x.,j::[”“im",,\;‘n]‘t( I:m‘,‘\"'\_l[:"lx.unm«m, industry, with 7,000 mines owned by 6,000 | ands “On‘ice phone 484, residense | i ‘ THE CASH BAZAAR f B L s Taoed on speinliassignident with ithe | oo o 0ie, (TS heentiaksing 0Ncugh SRpDetios Of 2 Ar . | pnons 28 pCeice e S H. Q. Z — = Open Evenings | e “ o s I destructive competition in the form of price cuts, WATERPROOF i to 12; 1:00 to 5:30 . . | d Spraddato. ar Departmen wage cuts, unbridled production and instability, | LOTHING |- . i . e | In 1897 he went to Madrid as Military Attache which has brought it mear to ruin CLOTHING - s OIL SHAMPOOS ~ He Ooane, Thmun ‘ of the American legation there, and left there with| Hoover advocates removing hampering Pastrics | 1‘1 k | I, 0 : & the American Minister in 1897 when all represen- tions on industrial combination. The A. F. of L., Mike A’[}()lan Juneau Public lerdry Curnctscuz;t:;g::::l Scalp : R | | tatives of the United States were handed peremptory 'has been of the same mind for years. FRONT STREET Free Reading Room passports by the Spanish authorities. He was ap- Industrial combination is inevitable. is wise ; MRS. RUTH HAYES : 3 ) 3 4 S bl B City Hal, Second_Floor VESREE FOREST = Main Street and Fourth e e e % to recognize it as such—and to see to 1t that it pointed Major, Lieut. Colonel and Chief Commiss remains the servant, not the master, of the Nation. | of Volunteers when the Spanish American War ' K a El Vel I' 4 e ' ca | TS i * 1::(:“, m"', fn? i s (‘h( I?L:m’ fn_,mf Too Much and Too Muny } The l‘lnrvnce Shop | Reading Room Open From g WOOD ampaign as Chief of Staff to Maj. Gen. Wilson, | i e RO R i commanding the First Division of the Firlt Army (Boston News Bureau.) anent Wave ] Circulation Room Open from I GARBAGE HAULING Corps there. Later he served on a board of officers| y4 remaing to be settled whether there is more| BEAUTY SPECIALISTS ’ b R | ! 5 e | selecting camp sites for American troops in Cubi.|than a variance of definition round the world as|| Phone 427 for Appointment | Ot etk nce WATCH | PEERLESS Office at Wolland’s From 1898 to 1902 he acted as Collector of Customs'between over - production and under - consumption. | R : Tailor Shop 2 e Newspapers, Reference, in Havana, as Chief of the Cuban Customs Service, Would there be any excess, it is asked, if ihe e e P R R R A, > Books, Etc. t For Nex1 ORANGF Chester Barnesson | » rising to rank as Brigadier General of Volunteers. were able to satlsfy all its consumptive needs. | | Vi PHONE 66 Upon leating that service he was made a Brigadier | ~Our motor industry languishes, yet millions desire i ] FREE TO WAL MOKER 5 2 L At Sl Sy S Awmy |automobiles. We writhe under a burdensome surplus Try Our $1.00 Dinner S DALE Y EEREIUIZER General in the regulars and attached to the Army and 50c Merchants’ Lunch &ar ‘Colléoe Bogr i R oh ‘of wheat, while vast numbers of Chinese are in ar College Board. After this he was appointed |o W0t B0t T king purchasing power 11 A. M. to 2 P. M. special envoy to Cuba and negotiated the treaty Y | these g0 hungry; those walk. And growers of wheat ARCADE CAFE of reciprocity between the island republic and the |anq makers of automobiles suffer from under-con- RYE v BREAD JUNEAU TRANSFER Our trucks go any place any time. A tank for Diesel Oil United States after which he was returned to regu- |sumption e —— and a tank for crude oil save PHONE 149, NIGHT 148 Daily Empire Want Ads Pay. RELIABLE TRANSFER | lege. His next active assignment was to the P]llli])-ll‘l(‘flt theories. We cannot ship prodicts abroad pine service and after that he took over the Cali- When there is inadequate return or none. Agricul- W 1 Ohnson fornia department. In 1911 he commanded the pro- |lurists and manufacturers are not engaged primar- RSN At Your Grocers P lily in philanthrophy. FRIGIDAIRE visional brigade in Southern California at the tln“?‘ rywhere thes§ i8 to0 much of. this and .of rwhe n DELCO LIGHT PRODUCTS of the Mexican troubles. Upon demobolization of Y By ‘lln: In 1920 we made too many automobiles, too| the brigade he was made Commander of the West- n‘mn\ radios, too many airplanes, and raised tOOi MAYTAG WASHING ern Department, and in succession, Eastern Dcp'\rt-‘mu(h cotton and wheat. Brazil raised too much| MACHINES L 7 1 STYLES | HARRIS i { P eerless Guaranteed on all fur Hardware Co. oIk dors by Bakery ment, Southern Department and the cavalry divi- coffee, Cuba too much sugar, the Far East 00|l GENERAL MOTORS RADIOS sion. |much rubber. He was promoted to Major\General in 1915, and| Not a few industries date the beginning of their| Phone 17 CASH CUTS COSTS “Remember the Name” Moves, Packs and Stores in 1917 made a General—temporary rank—and Com.- |OVer- -expansion back to the war. Its exigencies E & 9 Open until 9 pm. ! Yurman L3 Prei manding General of the Army, having previously |Passed, but enlarged plant facilities remained. || Front Street Juneau P p | Freight and Baggage been 'made Chief of ‘the General Staff. In 1017 he| * Bub there are other industrles which can offer) Sk Order that new Fur Gar-{|r .i Prompt Delivery of . Jar duty, assuming the presidency of the War Col-| But we are dealing with brute facts rather than burner trouble. 5 COMPANY { Fresh Every Day NY ras o & member g e ) e - no such alibi. R:}dw.s remarkable life really began " b was made a member of the Allied Conference where;m 1920. By 1926 mass production of sets glutted ment for Christmas now |{ JUNEAU CABINET ALL KINDS OF COAL e remained unil the end of the year, when he|y, mgrket. The airplane industry, likewise, can- I was retired at the age of 64, after 42 years of it attribute its over-expansion to the war. It| SEEREEE service. |laid the foundation for its present difficulties in Frye-Bruhn This, however, did not close his military activi- {1928, and DETAIL MILL- | PHONE 48 K CO. ties. He continued on active duty with the rank| There is a crying need for a scientific scaling of | PHONE YQUR ORDERS'\ WO t0 : i % of General and as Chief of Staff until 1920. During |agricultural and industrial production to consump- | Company Front Street, next to Warner . those years he was a member of the Supreme War tive demand. Admittedly, obstacles beset the way. : Machine Shop L. c. ;;ggmand REJEORONA Council in France and an active member of the|Human greed is one. Another particularly in the . s ITE American. Commission to. negotiate peace. He was |Industrial realm is the average business man's superb : Featuring Frye’s De- CABINET and Guaranteed by 3 B s oA Ar-Brisident™ Wilson whb '_N“,dmmmdenco in his business ability. He invests capital | ; . licious Hams and Bacon - MILLWORK J. B. BURFORD & CO.‘ /in an over-crowded industry quite convinced that| % i “Our door step is worn by to d large xtent upon him for guidance in ‘he he can fiuCCL‘SSfllU\ meet the most keenls -competitive | H military provisions of the Versailles treaty. In 1820, |ounditionn. : , PHONE 38 g : GENERAL CARPENTER satistied customers | WORK Gen. Bliss relinquished active duty, following the| When an industry has obviously expanded to| completion of his duties with the Peace Com-jor beyond a point where its product can be readily | mission, and was appointed Governor of the Na- |absorbed, isn't further capital investment folly while | o~ GLASS REPLACED tional Soldiers' Home in Washington |that condition lasts? | IN AUTOS Estimates Furnished Upon Request DARROW FOR NULLIFICATION. | Working Students. Clarence S. Darrow, world-famous lawyer, so-| (Anchorage Times.) 1 H(lrol(l Th(’r,’e Says-- Eibidaist. Toskurer, -6bs ringing wet but says he| Those students of the Alaska College Who are does not c whether the hteenth Amendment | PAYINE for their education with money earned by| We will attend to them is repealed or not. He declares it is not necessary|tocm during vacation periods and ln spare hours|| Jf.you want to win, stick! If you want to promptly. Our COAL, Hay,| Mabry9s Cafe e during the college terms will be interested in know- to repeal it. He says all that is necessary i 0|ing tnat there are two hundred thousand “working”|| succeed, then keep it up! Don’t quit. The Grain and Transfer business quit trying to enforce the law. In his joint debate|students in six hundred American institutions cf I p: q is increasing daily. There’s a : at Seattle with Dr. Clarence True Wilson, thehigher learning and that their total earnings dur-| world has no use for quitters. The failures * ||reason. Give us a trial order Regular Dinners man who said Ketchikan was the worst .sink-hole|ing the year 1028 amounted to the large sum of | today and learn why. Short Ord of iniguity in the world, Mr. Darrow said thirty-three million dollars. It also s of interest| in the world have been the qultters——-they - : ort Uraers Refusal o enforce bad laws has aiways |in this conneciion that there are one mundred || b pouun all right BUT DID NOT HOLD You Can’t Help Being Lunches we .Td’eln.’d‘(:: been a favorite method of getting rid of {student loan agencies throughout the country which | them. Every State in the Union has laws |are helping to finance ambitious students and that|| OUT.. Begin to save money and KEEP Pleased Open 6 a.m. to 2 a.m. printing art te de= on its books that nobody ever thinks of |the sum of four million dollars was advanced in IT 1 POPULAR PRICES '.l.’ your nales % enforcing. All we have to do is get a wet | 1928. [ UP. majority in Congress—which I believe well | — ; D. B. FEMMER HARRY MABRY arguments and te have in 1932, and certainly in 1934—and | What the German Reichstag needs is a flying PHONE 114 Proprietor .-"-lll. your- there simply won't be any more appropria- squadron of burly American Prohibition bouncers. —_— . . 4 { e selling peints. It tions for enforcement. —(Indianapolis Star.) == - This position of Mr. Darrow agrees With that| o —omomten The B. ]‘1. Behrends Bank UNITED FOOD dley, President-Emeritus of " of Dr. Arthur Twining Hadley, e gress means nine points in their bring-back-beer vale, who declared that nullification is the onemsx‘ o 4 3 used and most logical road toward progress. In a UGS (Mwaskos JONHNE OLDEST B \V‘K IN ALASKA COMPANY series of articles he pointed to reform after reform A South American election is complete when throughout history where the people first disre-|the last bullet is in—(Dallas News.) p I _...——.-———-—-——-—-——-—-—-———————-—J e et @ . S cmeees mtm— l