The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, November 19, 1930, Page 4

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1928. i Republican policies so proudly proclaimed in It was President McKinley who once said 2 have observed that majorities rise with prosperit tial industry, and radio broadcasting has hecumo‘They sink and disappear when the prosperity which such. Ten years ago sales of manufactured sets Republicans boast that their party alone has created grossed nothing. Today they aggregate some $800,- and can maintain breaks and crumbles in the eyes of miles ws A decade are in common use is as a moment in the life of an essen- m : E, the Imperial Government and for the support of |[UNITED STATES LAND OFFICE, = | gk w " Dail y Alaska Empire |u: oo oo s s vy o anenorus, Asga PROFESSIONAL lqaditered” with boundaries to enforce beace. Sept - —— A i ber boundarics o eiorce DESES | Nofron 18 HERERY . GOV JUHN W. TROY - - - EDITOR AND MANAGER | “scesments are made without sanction of popularly | phat the ALASKA PACIFIC SAL- I- — = i Indian represe ves. If the levies were | MON CORPORATION, a corpora»[ Helene W. L. Albrecht ¥ 3 ex s b uh,mmt to vote in India, they might be reduced|fion organized under the laws cf| PHYSIOTHERAPY 1 PA [to the loss of English bondholders and to the bur- [the State of Delaware and (Juall- | \iassage, Electricity, Infra Red 5 R | jden of English taxpayer A i AR ! y Ent : r - <cond Class |9¢ 1 of English axpayers, Territory of Alaska, has made ap- Ray, Medical Gymnastics. ’ mat The India problem recently occupied the efforts|plication, Serial 07472, for a Soldier's 410 Goldstein Building 5 AT T e TR of the Simon’s Commission, consisting of represen-|Additional Homestead, as assignee| Phone Office, 216 ar Son Bsiiverst by carrier In Junea Douglas, Treadwell and tatives of all political partics in England, and that{0f Wm. J. O'Neal, a beneficlary| e ——— * Thane for § onth s conclusions offered no real solution is evidenced |under Sections 2306 and 2307, U. 8 — 0 3y p paic | ) e g ; {revised Statutes, for a tract of DRS. KASER & FREEBURGER Tine e six 8 i he assembling of the oresent conference. and consisting. of apporximately DENTISTS ; 2 nering in London, there are high ulm‘,uiu‘ acres, situated on the wem' 301-303 Goldstein Bldg. i o of any f s and new polit leaders of the disturbed |shore of Port Althorp, on Chicha-| PHONE 56 g r papers. N g jatic possession, but the meeting has been boy- |S0ff 1sland, one and one-half miles || 2 : ot T Tiians et minoenagL el DS DRV soHEe: o BOIBR R LIGRK] TOUED i 108 0. 10 50 MEMBER OF ASSOCIATED PRESS. sl s iy o ecliher are arrayed With|empraced in U, §. Survey No. 1809, ! ® SN et kloll bl e Gandhi in his demand for virtual independence or|from which corner No. 1 M.C.|s e W es er 1 to |sympathize with that of his program which (USLM. No. 1657 bears S. 34° 15'| | [)r. Charles P. . ) 8 ale > - ! r. Charles P. Jenne : : corresponds with the principle of “no taxation!26” E. 3232 chains, Latitude 58° I DENTIST J without popular representation 08" 007 Lot iCe 180 ek 28 4 8 and 9 Valentl: ALASKA EED TO BE, LARGEF s et i T ‘ |W., and which is more patricularly Rooms 8 an alentine e SRS Whether the vast British possession with almost |geseribed as follows, to-wib: ! Building . 250,000,000 population, divided among 45 races, con- | Commencing at Corner No. 1, | Telephone 176 ning 2,400 castes and tribes and speaking 170/ identical with Corner No. 3, l- 4 language® is capable of orde self-government is | ];g‘r“ Sm! \T"lmnll'] .(Co‘mmn:y‘s He E . l doubted by not a few eminent students of state-| 4 Non-mineral Survey i Dr. J. W. Bayne cra: In many quarters English rule, irrespective 11,37 Anchorage, Ala y Seriaf i DENTIST of its faults, is deemed worthy of the approval of thence north 5.05 Rooms 5-6 Triangle Bldg. | civilizaztion. All of which may be true. | orner No. 2, identi- fice hours, 9 a.m. to 5 pm. Yet, like a presentation of “Hamlet” without | h Corner No. 3, Tongass || — gvenings by appointment. Hamlet, the Londen conference lacks its. greatest| B g thennt R Phone 321 need—utterance from India's restless millions. ! 888 chains to Gorner No. 8, |® TS T - | iSe s oo HOT, g identical with Corner No. 2, - 3 | High tariff makes jobs, avers Senator Reed| LOnSass National Forest elim- Dr. A. W. Stewart || T 4 E _ p ination, August 22, 1925; thence, DENTIST | Smoot. Yes, for the foreign manufacturer who 8| following the meanders of mean A eee— — = building plants to supply the markets that Ameri-| high tide line of Port Althorp, Houis 0 & 0.9 b e — — Ll can-made goods formerly dominated. | South 26%° E. 302 chains, || SEWARD BUILDING [ S e R N RSO | South 60%° W, 436 chains to || Office Phone 469, Res. TEN YEARS OF RADIO. ‘ = : Corner No. 4; thence W. 685 || Phone 276 183 —— The Republican Debacle. | chains to Corner No. 1, the e A little more than ten years ago—on Noveml e place of beginning. i Rt 2, 1920, to be exact—the first radio broadcasting in | (New York Times.) Any and all persons claiming M | TA XI i 5 was accomplished, The feature| ' Tor such general and crushing defeats as the|ddversely any of the above de-f | Dr Geo. L. Barton ! ha first ed program were the national | Republican Party suffered yesterday, general reasons (S8 0°C SPC SIHET (8 SRS AC CHIROPRACTOR ! TAND AT PIONEER tion The station ch ploneered the Tust be sought. The widespread discontent With| g pyeqfion thirty days there- | Hellenthal Bullding ||{STAN . sy i was KDKA of Plttsburgh. The 1{1« Hoover Administration and with a Republican |;eior or the y will be barred by the ]! OFFICE SERVICE ONLY | P()OL ROO\[ \ Beourd bt radio Bi Lon Whais Mo Congress, which exploded in the face of wmm'ml,],”,\ sions of the Statutes. Horrs: 10 a. m. to 12 noon | i\ . e pnl:uumx“ in the Congressional and State elections, | J. LINDLEY GREEN, 2p. m to5p m | { .‘1““ passed seems prE SN0 10 TLORRIEE de-could not have been produced or inflamed by any | Register. | 6 p. m. to 8 p. m. Day and ’\‘gh' ‘ tail would require a I volu A single item [single set of circumstances, or by the acts or mis- |First publication, -Nov. 5, 1930. By Appointment | Service will serve to indicate how gigantic has been its stride. |deeds of any individual actor on the political stage. |Last publication, -’«m 7, 1931 PHONE 259 | The first transmitter of KDKA would be considered :Inevitably the heavy blows dealt Republicans by | 5 iy -~ — — e ‘ small today. It is a far cry from it to the 400,000 the voters will everywhere be taken as a repudia-| Old papers at The Fmp!re - g e —_— ' watt transmitter for which the same plant recently tlon of Presdent Hoover's leadership of his party.|———— it i 7 Bl s R was granted permission from the Federal Radio|f€ Will, undoubtedly, have vitriolic remarks poured Robert Slmpson Prompt Service, Day and Night} | i b Yeperat over him by prominent Republicans who never liked | MINERS Op Progress has not been confined to transmitter: n, and who will rejoice, secretly or openly, at| el t' COV](‘H Avuto SERVICE Tog LS > UrAnSmMItters. wyat they think his hopelessly shattered prestige. | HEADOUARTERS | Graduate L"S Angeles Col- | 4 i It has been equally eat in receiving The Byt that is only a part of the story. It is true| e ol lege of Optometry and | STAND AT THE OLYMPIC || fir: ts were fashio from odds and ends of that the President has commited grave political| A Complete Line of | Opthalmology Phone 342 Day or Night H equipment that a live-wire Pittsburgh dealer adver- faults. But if he had been the most adroit | | | Glasses Fitted, Lenses Ground = G A R T B tised, when assembled, to bring the KDKA broadcast |mans of his party ever known he could not BOOTS 3 LT 4 = 2 i : returns into the home. Today the original battery- ve saved it from yesterday’s disaster. That com- SHU PACS et —— i §, operated receivers, first to appear, are obsolete. All-[ing event cast its unmistakable shadow before in CAPS | mé :" Et ??%T'tmu f iRAt i cal Sela copabls icking ienal thousands |the utter discrediting last year and this of the SADR | ptometrist-Opticia; Y TAUTY clectrical sets capable of picking up signal thousands { Eyes Examined—Glasses Fitted ERICAN BEAUTY ) L 000,000 annually. There are almost 14,000,000 re- of the whole nation. This was unquestionably the ceivers in use. Thousands of persons obtain em- (main cause of the terrific Republican upset on Tues- ployment in broadcasting. stations alone, in addition |day. One must add the effect of Prohibition, with to the great number of people employed in the the Obvious eagerness' of millions of voters to manufacturing and sales end of the trade. ""”'”ll l]ul*;r (h.s;zu;l. with in )As an issue, be »:I.\'- magisterially ruled out of the campaign by the On the outposts of the world, from Point Barrow . ° ; st *OW | Republican Chairman. The President himself was Mike Aveoian FRONT STREET pposite Winter & Pond (6] ANYWHERE IN THE CITY FOR £1.00 Careful, Efficient Drivers—Call Us At Any Ilour— DAY AND NIGHT—Stand at Alaskan Hotel Phones 11 and Single O Carlson’s Taxi and Ambulance Service s Taxi ’s Taxa Phone 565 STAND AT ARCADE CAFE Day and Night Service Any Place in the City for $1.00 Fraternal Societies -~ OF | Gastineauw Channel | = B. P. 0. ELKS Meeting every Wednesday evening at 8 o'clock. Elks Hall. Visiting brothers velcome. R. B. MARTIN, Exalted Ruler. M. H. SIDES, Secretary. Co-Ordinate Bod- > s _ ies of Freemason- Lj '1 ry Scottish Rite | Regular meetings 3 second Friday each month at 7:30 p. m. Scot- 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, Secy, P. O. Box 8z1 NT Jl‘VLQU LODGE NO. Second and fourth M day of each month iu Scottish Rite Temple, beginning at 7:30 p. m. \«\‘ EVANS L GRUBER 147 MINERS' LAMPS —and— WATERPROOF CLOTHING Room 17, Valentine Bldg. | Office phone 484, | phone 238. Office Hours: 9:30 to 12; residense 1:00 to 5:30 to the farthest south, from the farthest east to mn‘dm”v uhderstood o opposs GIVIE Udby Dromits | P remotest west, men and women gather around their [ence. But irrepressibly it broke through party lines, 1 | ° | a i ‘ receivers and hear the same artists that entertain manifested itself in overwhelming strength when-| | | “Naivette” Croquignole Perm- Phone 427 for Appointment The Florence Shop | anent Wave BEAUTY SPECIALISTS p. metropolitan audiences. Here is an entirely new ever it was offered a referendum, and scattered politi- | force in the world, and how great its achievements|cal ambitions and promising candidacies as if they will be in the future no prophet has yet appeared |Were thistledown. ~The general reactions caused ; to foretell |by the Eighteenth Amendment were undeniably one | L AL A P AR of the major causes of yesterday’s Republican 5 $ S ¥ i wreckage. GLIDERS SOAR BY SLIDING DOWN AN |~ Atier the event it is easy to see all this. mn‘ |there were those who saw it before. They issued UPFLOWING WIND. RS T their warnings of what would happen to a party| Tobogganing on air is the way a meteorologist [which in the present condition of world commerce | of the United States Department of Agriculture land of American industry passed a tariff bill that | ; describes the art and sport of soaring in a glider. |was regarded by all foreign nations as a menace| - 1 Try Our $1.00 Dinner | and 50c Merchants’ Lunch ARCADE CAFE City Hall, Main Street and Feurth Second Floor Reading Room Opea From ¢8 a. m. to 10 p. m. m. Newspapers, Reference, L Juneau Public Ilbrary Free Reading Room Circulation Room Open from 1 to 5:30 p. m.—T7:00 to 8:30 Current Magazines, Books, Ete. FREE TO ALL 11 A M to 2 P. M. DELCO LIGHT PRODUCTS GENERAL MOTORS RADIOS | 1 L W.P.J ohnsonl Our trucks go any place any time. and a tank for crude oil save PHONE 149, NIGHT 148 RELIABLE TRANSFER J A tank for Diesel Oil burner trouble. FRIGIDAIRE MAYTAG WASHING MACHINES Phone 17 Front Street Juneau HARRIS Hardware Co. CASH CUTS COSTS Open until 9 p.m. “Soaring,” says W. J. Humphreys, of the anther*fl“d a challenge, and that our own economists and Bureau, “is tobogganing down an upflowing wind |industrialists at once declared to be a gigantic, just as surf riding is tobogganing down the rmnhb]““d“ In insensate pride the Republican Party | and rising side of a traveling wave. Supporting |[°3Ped error upon error, anq‘thony, Was e ek A the crashing to earth of all its theories and pre- breezes are above the crest and on the windward|giitions Nature - herself took a hand by adding! de of every hill and mountain, beneath the forward |calamity to miscaleulation. Finally, the whole un- portion of the cumulus cloud, and even over the wieldy Republican structure topped to the ground.| waves of the ocean, as the matchless albatross un-|It was a bitter and painful lesson for the party | wittingly reveals. But, except in the case of the|that has long plumed itself on being the only| cumulus cloud, these supporting currents are rather one fit to rule. Now it sees that the people of shallow and dependent entirely on the direction |this country are able to reach out their. hands and intensity of the surface winds.” ‘:‘md strike it down by a revolution which is Peaco- Doctor Humphreys points out that a knowledge ful but none the less decisive and politically de- of the air and its ways is helpful and useful to ;u:y\{“‘s“‘""m' aerial pilot, but in soaring it is absolutely essential. N . . Successful operators of gliders who are able to stay Gridiron ffximiel)lamond. aloft for hours must know where to hunt for ascend- | (Cincinnati Enquirer.) ing currents of air and to glide from one lifting| Eyen before the World's Series had run its course | the colleges were breaking into the sports picture | with their early games, few of them exciting, how- ever, and more in the nature of a warming-up pro-| cess. But now that the baseball parks are being| rolled up and put in moth balls for a winter that| current to another without losing too much altitude in the change AD CHARACTER. DRAMA LACK There seems le likelihood that India’s troubles|is supposedly on the way, the attention of fans will be composed by the conference which convened |turns instinctively to the gridiron. i this week in London with officials of the Briuish| Baseball certainly is the national game. It has Eoescamieat & epresentatives of some hereditary a wider and larger following than any other sport. 3 : YiIts devotees number street urchins and million- and newly orga ical interests of the Asiatic |ajes and a composite picture of America’'s base- possession. present ues are economic. As inlpa)l fans would”surely be a fair cr section of | most other instance volving disagreements of like |the population, with a large emphisis, of course, |% and subject peoples, thie|on the male element. Baseball is peculiarly well| ible of settlement to the |adapted to its premier place in America's favor, | nt since it is a game of personalities, rather than are ‘.““_m[ loyalties to cities or clubs or localities. (mr,,[.,\ Many p of \sh com.| Yet recent years have seen a constant broad- merce are dependant for prosperity on India. To(cr:ng Of the country's interest In sports. ik A » e yacht races attracted more interest than ever be- promote, maintain and direct such commerce, there (goo * The international polo matches on Long is no lack of parliamentary legislation, and it 1S|1and were patronized enthusiastically by many influenced to the adyantage of Englishmen |thousands who couldn't afford a mallet, much less than to Indians, for English lawmakers and a pony. | ministers rely for political e wce on English, not| Footballers, then, need have no fear. Ameri-| Indian voters. Before commercial ills of which cans are not fickle, precisely, but they know that| Indians complain can be remedied, a large section|their baseball heroes, like bears and crickets, in- of English business must sac its own interests— |variably hibernate until the spring. So they | . £ give their full attention and enthusiasm to the in some case bankruptey, for a great commer- 4 AR 1 Sl e |gridiron for quite some weeks to come. The only| cial structure in England is erected on favored trade| e, ganger is that this baseball weather may | with India. carry on into a season when it is wholly inappro- | Taxes are another contentious matter India’s priate. Crisp, clear days are in order from now | bonded indeb ss and consequent inter obli- lon—at least each Saturday until Th:mksginm:‘ gations are heavy. She was charged by England After that it doesn't matter—it's winter then. with the expenditure necessa to pay the mone- s g e et ! tary demands of the trading company that dom- Well, anyhow, it'll' probably be some time before | bandits leave their airplane standing in front of the bank with its engine running while they hold up the cashier.—(Indianapolis News.) inated the possession before it passed to the crown, for the outlays necessary in the suppression of sub-| sequent revolts and rebellions and for propor- tionate share of the cost of defending the Brxmn Empire in the World Way. India is taxed to defr: the expense of the administration of her affairs by a The next reform in the calendar should be the imination of useless off years—(Boston Tran- eript.) Frye-Bruhn Company Featuring Frye’s De- licious Hams and Bacon PHONE 38 Harold Thorpe Says- stick! succeed, then keep it up! If you want to win, world has no use for quitters. Don’t quit. If you want to The The failures in the world have been the quitters—they who began all right BUT DID NOT HOLD OUT. Begin to -IT UP. save money and KEEP The B. M. Behrends Bank OLDEST BANK IN ALASKA PARLOR H. Q. Z. OIL SHAMPOOS Corrects Abnormal Scalp Conditions MRS. RUTHy HAYES v For Nexu SMOKER Daily Empire Want Ads Pay. PO o 1931 STYLES Guaranteed on all fur work done by Yurman’s | | 199Taxi $1.00 TO ANY PART OF CITY | Phone 199 Gastineau Hotel Tur Juneau LAUNDRY Franklin Street, between Front and Second Streets PHONE 359 PEERLESS ORANGE RYE BREAD Fresh Every Day At Your Grocers Peerless Bakery “Remember the Name” ORDER OF EASTERN ST \u. Second and Fourth Tuesdays of each month, 4 at 8 o'clock, Scottish Y Rite Temple. LILY 4y BURFORD, Worthy Matron; FANNY L. i ROEINSON, Secreta: A(‘HGHTS OF COL[“\"“ S Seghers Council No. 1780 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 & fTondays, 8 o'clock, at Eagles Hall, Douglas. ALEX GAIR, W. P. GUY SMITH, Secretary. Visiting brothers welcome, { ik { THE CASH BAZAAR [ Open Evenings | FRONT STREET | Near Coliseum Theatre { FOREST wWOoOoD GARBAGE HAULIN¢ Office at Wolland's Tailor Shop Chester Barnesson PHONE 66 DAIRY FERTILIZER R Moves, Packs and Stores Freight and Bagzage Order that new Fur Gar- now ment for Christmas PHONE YOUR ORDERS| TO US JUNEAU CABINET and DETAIL MILL- WORK CO. Front Street, next to Warner i Machine Shop L. C. SMITH nnp CORONA CABINET and MILLWORK GENERAL CARPENTER WORK GLASS REPLACED IN AUTOS Estimates Furnished ‘Upon Request Prompt Delivery of ALL KINDS OF COAL PHONE 43 TYPEWR: Guaran! by J. B. BURFORD & CO. “Our door step is worn by satisfied cistomers” 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 Mabry?s Cafe Regular Dinners Short Orders Lunches Open 6 a.m. to 2 a.m. POPULAR PRICES HARRY MABRY Proprietor /Art o In every plece of job work we de, we empley the latest ideas of the selling points. It UNITED FOOD COMPANY S m-mm-m imereases your re=- turns materially. O

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