Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
f 1) 7 ‘I 5 R I{w e tt at the time UNITED STATES LAND OFFICE, | e aily Alasca fmpre | vience has shown Ar Alusk, {| PROFESSIONAL . H | ces go up and Sept. 24, 1930. {1 15 RS Hive BReR. AoUNaY NOTICE 1S HEREBY GIVEN JOHN W. TROY - - - EDITOR AND MANAGER! i10¢ some of will be advanced That the ALASKA PACIFIC SAL-l-e d ; {*viite Wil as o teedlt of |MON CORPORATION, a corpora-| | Helene W. L. Albrecht X s Y A n organized under the laws of ) I M t why objec : o PHYSIOTHERAPY Mi : ) |the State of Delaware and quali-{| A e | ff. We object fied to engage in business in the | Massage, Electricity, Infra BRed | h are borne Territory of Alaska, has made ap- Ray, Med)ca]_ Gymngst}cs. he wage earners of the country. [ plication, Serial 07472, for a Soldier's| | 410 Goldstein Bulldin, TIPS just r Bennett is in power | Additional Homestead, as assignee || Phone Office, 216 e SURSCII =T id is pledged to |of Wm. J. O'Neal, a beneficiary — LBl B A s el 5y ot 06 and 2307, U. 8.5 s ’ regard at the rf"" a tract of |’ pps KASER & FREEBURGER B and we con- ilcd "{‘)‘f}“"{;‘\‘fl'““‘:gg DENTISTS ;. tent t If pri are not 4 x!l‘lz‘v:'p it éh*cha: 301-303 Goldstein Bldg. 5 adva goods as a result one and one-half miles | ELE 2 Offices, 374 ot pro fied, but if it of Point Lucan, Alaska,|| Hours 9 a m.to9p. m ER OF OCIATED PRESS is fou that the manufacturers of the in U. 8. Survey No. 1809,{® A ¢ 1 to t [& itage of the situation to corner No. 1 MC.|e S 1 T b d gouge more mon from nlw . ;zr\?' 10”"'\2‘3;'_‘5(‘“22 5185°M )r. Charles P. Jenne workers w ha! very strenuously o o oy e N - - P were wrong in our, opposition ' 00" N. Longitude 136° 20 26| R ¢ E F s e o 1 b s and which is more patricularly, | Rooms 8 and 9 Valentine L EF to riff Time will tell. It is useless 8" eowibs ]‘ Building to discuss the theory when we have before Commencing at Corner No. 1, | Telephone 176 us a practical example will soon prove JadhtiaaL With Oorar. oR T E g the theory Deep Sea Salmon Company's | —— e do not like fighting elections all the Tradé and Manufacturing site, |$ round veral months since Mr. U. §. Non-mineral Survey No. | | Dr. J. W. Bayne | Bennett was el E we had almost for- , 1657, Anchorage, Alaska, Serial DENTIST gotten that there was a contest. Just now No. thence north 5.05 || Rooms 5-6 Triangle Bldg. | he is C n \d we are ready L o N_N"fT‘d“"“- Office hours, 9 am. to 5 pn. | to supn f s s Thy ! with Corner No. ongass | gy i appointment. | to ! PP as possible. Why National ‘Porest eloninatien; Evenings by app me; | hark ba % > -6 , Phome 321 i Augu . 1925; thence east® = e ro¥ o | 888 chains to Corner No. 3, Hoover's Law Enforcement Commission is re-| identical with Corner No. 2, Mr H. Condit up their residenc: and one- (Im(l service here, ely given to ducational wel- of t Territory's aboriginal races. In the out- he held two white pastorates and since thi neral missionary first and I at the educational t he pointed out the |’ to “competent citizenship” by both precept and exampl those entrusted to his care. n to what unswerv- His devc tiring he proy 1 as a good cause was ing ewarded by the stan- 1 progress of particularly in recent And while s regret to see him go from among them, they will ee that I hs ll-merited rest from further labors and Condit eve good thing SAV 1\1.\ I)E ’()\l'l. ROW. and trust companies history he Am- « he latest statistics. Tota n tar E: $28,484 992,000, showing a gain of the " laste: twelve-month : i se: pesiod for which f are ava as compared midst to a loss of 8195 1 the of the recent boom times Couple with this the fact that 11,000,000 mem- bers of 8,000 Christr savings clubs soon will re- ceive $632,000,000, another record-breaking figure, and we have convincing proof of the basic sta- bility of the American people and reassurance as to this nation’s future. More people are saving now, than ever bef The nation tten ba to the old thrift ide n insanity of 1928-1929. Christmas vings clubs cent. of the $632 tp be expended in as compared to the speculat Deposi in this for 000,000 the useful ch tance 62 per INTEREST IN AMERICAN ELECTION. FOREIGN An Associated Press dispatch says Italian wine producers are displaying great interest in American electic resu id are lool forward eagerly | toward es in the American laws as the los market has’ had important effect We ) magine other producers in that an ) cour Ar unmindful f the pro: clection United States' may result in ff ¢ that would open A ican pressed hard ant school of condition through as we tting But apid rate more ve a broader of American ble for foreign- inspires them an intensive se Canadian cam- goods ¢ not possib t ted States Northern British ion to prevail [ ed for those W I Central Am- : g place to those of T} to use as little American American that s etu Cana Canadians ¥ re me importations to the exte of $500,000,0¢ vear; which mean: that they 1 to I i No fair minded A ians for t att an unsurmountabl meet like However, foreigr ¢ ¢ committed to high ta Americans that we them if we should go n ck of the Underwood Tari The Prince Ruper upon the Canadian ta of the present Canadia more ago, commen home pol ion, said Some anonymous iel f this paper claims that we have not been in favor of buying Canadian goods. but they are wrong. At different time paper ¥ has advocated it. What the interested reader is king to the protec- of 1s the opposition put up ted to have arded any idea of recommending repeal of the Eighteenth Amendment. If it waits two more years to make its long-deferred report, maybe the people of the United States will attend | to the entire matter The Report of the Wickersham | Commission. (New York World) } For several wecks various dispatches have come from Washington attempting to outline the plans‘ Commission on Law Enforce- ment with respect to Prohibition. Mr. Wickersham | describes Hu se reports as premature. “The com-| mission has reached no conclusions which are ripe for publication at the present time” he says. “Itf cannot state when its report will be ready. There e certain phases of investigation which the com-| jon has not yet completed.” No doubt the field of the commission's work is ough for it to carry on its investigation for A large part of the| that the great of the President's broad e many months if it so chosses. public is likely to believe, however, difficulty which now confronts not lack of facts, which it has been gathering for| eighteen montt but a lack of ideas about how to present these facts to the public. The commis- | sion has been uncertain of its responsibility since the day of its creation. It has never seemed to know whether it was appointed for the purpose of conside: the enforceability of the Volstead Act| lor merely for the purpose of tinkering with ways of trying to enforce this legislation. In its first Ireport, a year ago, the commission raised formid- able questions, only to dodge these questions entirely when it submitted its recommendations to the Pr(‘si-; dent | We believe it is fair to say that the country no longer expects the second part of the Wickersham | commissi sober, scientific piece of re- 1 to be a arriving at such conclusions as are shaped ) acts themselves. The country has. become convinced, and has had good reason to become con- vinced that the Wick m commission is less in: terested in scientific research than in rescuing the| President from a trying political situation as best| it can. If the country is wrong in this judgment, there is a very simple way in which the commission can prove that it is wrong. That way is to write |a report which really comes to grips with Prohibi- Ition as a problem in government | ; | ot S5 i i | | New York’s Noises. (Manchester Guardian.) rather hackneyed incentive to effort| | which observes that if a thing is worth doing it| lis worth doing well, and that seems to have been |the attitude of a Noise Abatement |which has just presented New York with some thrcev {hundred pages of recommendations for the silencing | | There is a |of urban uproar. Confronted with innumerable \constituents, large and small, of a horrible row,| the commission seems to have taken the line of | k the lot.” It is not enough that shipping should | be equipped with a softer siren for sounding within| range of city streets; loud speakers which dispense | the wircless programs should also be toned down.| |Trams should be abolished, there should be rubber | tracks for the elevated railways, and even the horses should have padded<hoofs. Barking dogs should be suppressed, and so should all” motors with noisy horns and stertorous engines. One would almost| expect to find recommendations for the encour- agement of sore throats, so that all citizens might be forced to speak in a whisper. The program seems too thorough to be practical—or even pleas- ant. Those who asked for a little less noise have been presented with an outline for a sound-proof | sanctuary, which is not quite the same thing. It would be uncanny to dwell in a city which had suppressed noise so thoroughly; one might casily‘ find the residents escaping to the country for thci welcome sound of a crowing cock or a horse’s hoofs | or a mowing-machine at work. It is one thing to| k for a little quiet; it is another to be offered a desolation. One suspects the commission of mak- ing a counsel of perfection in despair of their abil- | v to achieve any real relief at all. Their ideal is| to suppress everything, from noisy trams to barking | | 5, because the general tumult will continue as bxl,u- If you are very doubtful about your ability to move anything at all, it is at least a grand gesture to demand a clean sweep of everything. | | SR - ik i S | And the world’s champion in the field of useless is the fellow | effort, while were on the subject, who recently established an endurance record by ! playing miniature golf for 146 hours. — (Boston lobe.) The public will now be given the usual resting -plenty of time waiting for the performance paign promises.—(Milwaukee Journal) From the way the Congresswomen stuck to their positions one might think that women's place is in the House rather than in the home.—(Buffalo Cour- ier-Express.) The country escapes a petticoat Senator, but gets | a pajama one that is much worse.—(Atlanta Jour- Perhaps it doesn't hurt particularly psychology on thugs, but the use of a good whip would help a lot more just at this stage of the proceedings.—(Detroit Free Press.) The Nation’s birth rate is revealed to be at the i CAPS I Commission | - 1 to use A WG Tongass National ination, August 22, 1925; thence, following the meanders of mean gh tide line of Port Althorp, ” = Forest eiim: | T ), A, W. Stewart | DENTIST | Hours 9 a. m. to 6 p. r. SEWARD BUILDING ! Carlson S THXI 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 ‘ Graham’s Taxi ( Phone 565 STAND AT ARCADE CAFE Day and Night Service Any Place in the City for $1.00 B 183 199 axi $1.00 TO ANY PART OF CITY TAXI ! AT PIONEER’ POOL ROOM || 2 Day and Night Service . e} South 26'%° E. 302 chains, || South 60':° W. 436 chains to | Office Phone 469, Res. Corner No. 4; thence W. 685 || Phone 276 chains to Corner No. 1, the |e — claiming | ¢ & the above de-|| Dr Geo. L. Barton 1 file their ad- v il thetr 2421| CHIROPRACTOR Bt or days there- | Hellenthal Building after or they will be barred by the{| OFFICE SERVICE ONLY provisions of the Statutes. Il Horrs: 10 a. m. to 12 noon J. LINDLEY GREEN, | 2 p. m. to’5 p. m. = A < _R°§§§t0“~ | 6 p.m to8p. m. irst publication, Nov. 5 , <5 o 4] o By Appointment Last publication, Jan. 7, 1931. | PHONE 259 = = . Old papers at The Emplre. | = w5 ot . “Robert Simpson Opt. D, Graduate Los Angeles Col- lege of Optometry and i Opthalmology ! MINERS { HEADQUARTERS A Complete Line of BOOTS sses Fitted, Lenses Ground | i ———— Phone | 199 Gastineau Hotel D et ! Prompt Service, Day and Night CovicH AuTo SERVICE STAND AT THE OLYMPIC s Phone 342 Day or Night { \ 3 DR. R. E. SOUTHWELL Optometrist-Optician Eyes Examined—Glasses Fitted | Room 17, Valentine Bldg. SHU PACS | MINERS’ LAMPS THE JunEau LAunDrY Franklin Street, between g \ ) 3 MERICAN .BEAUTY PARLOR Front and Second Streets PHONE 359 e H. Q. Z. andse ;Olficc phone 484, residense | | phone 238. Office Hours: 9:30 WATERPROOF | to 12; 1:00 to 5:30 CLOTHING ! ! Mike Avoian FRONT STREET Free Reading Room LM..,..M----M-I Juneau Public Library H OIL SHAMPOOS Corrects Abnormal Scalp Conditions | MRS. RUTH HAYES WATCH PEERLESS ORANGE RYE 28"‘”“.‘,,‘_1"}3,{‘ PO"d_J ! city Hal, Second Floor i it Main Street and Feurth | The Florence Shop l Reading Room Opea From “Naivette” Croquignole Perm- 8 a. m. to 10 p. m. anent Wave { Circulation Room Open from BEAUTY SPECIALISTS § 1 to 5:30 p. m—7:00 to 8:30 | Phone 427 for Appointment | 2 p. m. Current Magazines, hd 4 R = ® Newspapers, Reference, [ '- ; Books, Ete. | A FREE TO ALL | Try Our $1.00 Dinner | | and 50c Merchants' Lunch | ¢ | 11 A. M. to 2 P. M. ] ARCADE CAFE I Our trucks go any place any time. A tank for Diesel Oil and a tank for crude oil save Vo2 burner trouble. PHONE 149, NIGHT 148 RELIABLE TRANSFER W. P. Johnson FRIGIDAIRE BREAD Fresh Every Day For Nexu SMOKER Daily Empire want Ads Pay. 1 . At Your Grocers DELCO LIGHT PRODUCTS MAYTAG WASHING HARRIS MAGHINES Hardware Co. GENERAL MOTORS RADIOS T Phone 17 CASH CUTS COSTS Open until 9 p.m. Juneau Front Street 1931 STYLES | Pecerless Bakery “Remember the Name” | Guaranteed on all fur work done by Yurman’s Frye-Bruhn Company Featuring Frye’s De- licious Hams and Bacon PHONE 38 53 3 Order that new Fur Gar- ment for Christmas now JUNEAU CABINET and DETAIL MILL- WORK CO. Front Street, ncxt to Warner Machine Shop CABINET and MILLWORK GENERAL CARPENTER | WORK vt e rreeed PHONE YOUR ORDERS TO US | GLASS REPLACED Harold Thorpe Say. If you want to win, stick! If you want to succeed, thengkeep it upf Don’t quit. The The failures in the world have been the qllittf'rs-they- who began all richt BUT DID NOT HOLD OUT. IT UP. ! world has no use for quitters. Begin to save money and KEEP e The B. M. Boh;rends Bank OLDEST BANK IN ALASKA |lowest level since 1915. The Republican Party is to blame. —(Washington Post.) IN AUTOS Estimates Furnished Upon Request We will attend to them promptly. Our COAL, Hay, Grain and Transfer business is increasing daily. There’s a reason. Give ug a trial order today and learn why. Mgbry’s Cafe Regular Dinners Short Orders You Can’t Help Being Lunches Pleased Open 6 a.m. to 2 a.m. POPULAR PRICES HARRY MABRY Proprietor D. B. FEMMER PHONE 114 UNITED FOOD ! COMPANY — ,,; Fraternal Societies | ——— OF Gastineau Channel ) B. P. O. Meeting every Wednesday evening at 8 o'clock. Elks Hall. g Visiting brothers welcome. R. B. MARTIN, Exalted Ruler. M. H. SIDES, Secretary. Co-Ordinate Bod- ies of Freemason- | ry Scottish Rite Regular meetings second Friday h month at 7:30 p. m. Scot- tish Rite Temple. WALTER B. HEISEL, Secretary AL 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 8zd MOUNT JUNEAU LODGE NO. 147 Second and fourth Mon- day of each month in Scottish Rite Temple, beginning at 7:30 p. m. EVANS L. GRUBER, JAMES W. LEIVERS, Sec-~ G v, Master; 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. ROEINSON, Secretary. | ANIGHTS OF COLUMBUS 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 P. MULLEN, G. K. H. J. TURNER, Secrelar DOUGLAS AERIE ll'l F. 0. E. Mects first and third %Monca)s, 8. o'clock, at Eagles Hall, Douglas. ALEX GAIR, W. P, GUY SMITH, Secretary. Visiting brothers welcome. Bpan . THE CASH BAZAAR | | Open Evenings | FRONT STREET | Near Coliseum Theatre FOREST WOOD GARBAGE HAULING Office at Wolland’s Tailor Shop Chester Barnesson PHONE 66 DAIRY FERTILIZER JUNEAU TRANSFER COMPANY Moves, Packs and Stores I'reight and Baggage Prompt Delivery of ALL KINDS OF COAL PHONE 48 SMITH and CORONA | TYPEWRITERS Guaranteed by N J. B. BURFORD & CO. “Our door step is worn by satisfied customers” S e L. C. o Art o Im every plece of job work we de, we empley the Iatest ideas of the printing art te de= velep your sales arguments and te ,emphasize your selling peints. It inereases your re- turns materially.