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4 Daily Alaska Empire black in the face, but unless you spend your money where you make it you a: a home- town ler e AN It is not only buying that this holds irue. JOHN W. TROY - - - EDITOR AND MANAGER|, "0 oo e ay to employment of | " Published ning except Sunday by _thelhome labor. Every year we have in the north :nore o i T e S K “floating” 1 Some one has called it S — oz "birds of passage” who come morth with the Sioc b R i in the spring and fo em south in the fall. In 3 SUBSCRIPTION RATES. T {normal times therc many of this type in Delivered by carrier in Juneau, Douglas, Treadwell and | Alaska. In years of pression such as is now ot e R i o i RO ! being experienced in the States, the number in- ; A R ““\""N"zr‘l‘lvziacs ord ly, seasonal jobs are plentiful 4 "will ‘cc favor if they will promptly | enough to care for all labor both local and “float- h felivery Y 1y fadlure or Irresuatity o " Byt there are times when this does not hoid T 5 gon 1 isimess Offices, 374, 1good. ~And where this is the case, the first duty of 78 MEMBER OF ASSOCIATED PRESS. local employers of labor is to the workman resi- " ity ol AT feptches crediiea to | dent here, “See that he is taken care of first. He 0 s “{owns his home here in most instances. His family | : - - |resides Here. His wages are cxpended here. To AT OF ,, E“ "fic:f‘ofi]\kbw give preference to the “floater” and force the :esi- |dent to remain idle is as destructive to the com- munity as is the practice of buying foreign mer- | |chandise to the exclusion of the local business man, | the names of ihe the Senate’s request to rest | | Federal Power Commiss was the only cOurse| ao cpelters when a man and maid| ] Office !mursi)Q a.m.iog 5 ;:m : { consistent with the honor i dignity of the high| in love might linger long. Evemngsphy fll;g;”\ ment. | |office he occupies. If he had ylelded, it would Some day Il write & verse or two! e ! |have been at the expsnse of the cxecutive ower in which T tell my views i that is vested solely in him because it would nave|On how ideal the palm trees are as ®— — - marked the transfer of that power to the legislativa| shelters for a snooze.” {J Dr. A. W. Stewart authority which reposes in Congress alone. | o SR T it DENTIST ! —_ Play Indoor Gol at Tre Alaskan | Hours 9 a. m. to § p. r=. ’ 5 2000 0 1 N | Hotel. (advy | | SEWARD BUILLING NATHAN STRAUS, SAVIOR OF Another $2,000,000 added cost in Prohibition en- 5 3 o { i Office Phone 469, Res. BABIES forcement for 1931-32 is, of course, proof that the| " Phone 276 | B R {law is being enforced | ) ® M % . thousands of b owed their 1 e ! e mnt B D pem g e wrophy .x]ud ‘m'u].’ of 2 Europe’s Fog Breaders, 1 2 J? Dr Geo. L. Barton | patriarch whose ded b | CHIROPRACTOR { . | Y 3 videspread rough- rark Feraids 1 E, 9 4 g i cau .)n( W d:(‘m:lx)« ”‘ ‘ M, e J (New \m}(”«xnldfl;{‘rlb\l}ximvt et PACKET HEADS P SR Tnding | omehow, and no one knows j eports of renewed fog in the valleys of Belgium !l OFFICE SERVICE ONLY | { that the use of raw milk {where deaths occurred under similar circumstances LETTER HEADS B e oo ret 107k . to 12 ndun & | babies. One account has it that onja few weeks ago are sure to be accompanied by | 11 2p.m to5p m one occasion he was passing through a dairy ,«mblr\wam)xl'ehvmmn if not by panic, oh the part of the | INVITATIONS 1 6 p.m. to 8 p. m. in the Adirondacks, heard the cows coughing, nnd |local population. The exact causes of the former| STATEMENTS | By Appointment became convinced that they had tuberculosis, Des- |d€aths remain mysterious, the reports of the ex i PHONE 259 | ad blic {on: HE decidad that o iperts being still unissued. What has been eluci- BILL HEADS it i Ve ""”:‘ ‘m‘pd' lhm\‘m“; nilk, (dated, however, is the cause of the fogs themselves, man tuberculosls was' transm rough MK 1o these are disclosed by the European weather | 7 Soon afterward he formed the conclusion that|mane for the week In question, now at hand i ENVELOPES ! Robert Simpson babies were the worst sufferers from this source) American laboratories. Two oyclonic storms seem | RECEIPTS i Opt. D. of dise He caused extensive bacteriological to have co-operated to cause the fog blanket 011 Graduate Los Angeles Col- vestigation to be made and, in 1892, originated milk | December 3 to 5, which was one cause of the| DODGERS | lege of Optometry and pastuerization in New York City. In that y he |deaths, if not their only cause. What may be hap- | i Opthalmology launched his system of pastuerization laboratories,|Pening :\m.s week u: c:x\lxs:»1 {f\petmonlot lh(\; iog. FOLDERS izleaes Fitted, Lenses Grouad ispensing to the poor of the great city milk that |danger American meteorologists can only guess, for | [» — . had been heated to 145 degrees Fahrenheit and ]f)‘,t{{':dorrcé):é\‘li_“:‘a‘ O“n‘:)r&dh“l*’(;“gfimi?{ee;;oclt ‘{fi;g;‘:: BLANKS = BT at that tampes ; g ons | Piet b g 2 5 i{| DR.R. E. SOUTHWELL SRR Ry That gt for 30 minutes. - COUPODS | peforn more complete data come by trans-Atlantic! CARDS | Optometrist-Optician good for one day's supply were distributed in_enor- mail, i Eyes Examined—Glasses Fitted | mous numbers A week or more before the beginning of the| TAGS | Foom 7, Valentine Bidg, This enterprise. was greeted by a storm of pro- 1]01’")(‘1" fogs a series of more or less violent cyclonic 1| office phone 484, residense i test, and he was iled by many critics who as-|storms crossed the United States and disappeared| -, , o o and guarantee YOUr | | hone 238. Office Hours: 9:30 serted that sterilization devitalized milk in such a|over the Atlantic. It is hard to follow the uceamcl satisfaction with our work | to 12; 1:00 to 5:30 y as to make it less nourishing. Undaunted by|course of such storms exactly, for weather data| __ it sl . this attitude, Mr. Str persisted in the work |from the oceans depend on the chance position o!“. = which was later characterized by the R(»rknfrllvrih”"‘ :”“' o }{‘k“x' to be Hitager Aypal";““i' any il _, east two of the American whirls coalesced about | { ol e g g 0 Gl g K ROOM and BOARD e o aore e T Tpor o |double whirl, with its twin center covering the | | Mrs. John B. Marshall | | roviding absolutely safe milk for articificially | . 12 s i =4 | island of Iceland. The normal thing for such a| ks i fed infants. \ | northern cyclone to do is to progress slowly north- | il PHONE 2201 This work alone would be sufficient to Dver-|eastward and to vanish in the polar ocean. This| petuate his name as a great benefac or to the human [one did not do so. On December 2 its center, now race. But it furnished only one outlet for his|become single instead of twinned, did move east- philanthrophies. He made many contributions to|Wward, apparently as usual, until it was situated areas abroad devastated by war and disaster. Dur- | @PProximately over Spitzbergen. On the following however, it started back slowly toward Iceland | ing the Spanish-American War he sent a plant for : procedure rare but not unique. manufacturing ice and cooling water io Santiago : £ Jour days 7 2 it : g P American cyclonic immigrant to the Icelandic | for the use of the United States troops; at the Havelen. hatvosniia i Gl e et el time of the earthquake in Italy in 1909, he des- | ay, gradually losing force until by December 1 | patched a physician with clothing and medical sup- | it wag virtually extinct, | and during the World | nwhile the other parent of the Belgian fo‘lx] plies for sufferers in Naples; M War he contributed to the relief of war orphans|was proaching from the southwest. Bred some- | by giving them the proceeds from the sale of his|where 'in the tropical Atlantic Ocean, where there B ivaLe acht |are few ships and almost no weather reports, a Natur of course, he was deeply interested [S¢ond cyclonic storm advanced on December 2| in the Zionist movement in Palestine. After a|toWard the coast of Spain. This storm, as is \x.\u“l.; personal survey, he established health centers in|¢2used 2 "‘f"?hwam (il ot warm, UCUR Aic on lis Jerusalem, costing approximately a quarter of u‘“"’“‘m_i DART dte Joaand whit) A iereously | E |caused a southeastward drift of cold, dry air from| m n dollars, to combat malaria and trachoma ' |its western edge toward England and the Continent. | and installing soup kitchens where 1,700 people were |Belgium chanced to be the battlefield where these | fed daily without regard for race or creed. In 1925, |contrasted air currents mixed. The cold northern | when Rabbi Stephen S. Wise resigned as Chairman |draft precipitated the moisture of the warm south- of the $5000000 United Palestine Appeal because|ern one. Being far from both cyclonic centers, the of severe eriticism following an alleged statement|air currents over Belgium were feeble. The fog that Jesus was not a myth but a man and that|formed by the mixture remained to kill the Jews must embrace His teachings, Mr. Straus, | g T | who had contributed $500,000 to the appeal, im- | A Real Treaty. | med ade a new donation of $150,000 as an | . A evid of his faith in Rabbi Wi loyalty 1o | (Cincinnati Enquirer.) Ju | Arthur Henderson, British Foreign Secretary, cal honors, almost always open to l‘,\m‘“ms sald in a broadcast to America that it his S spifal scoeiad: Chtine ha- o mmwrmw[hopc that within a year or so from now the nations nominee for Mayor of New York, but was defeated. | Agpae. Unock (A weRal, (e P BiETbY. Al tthe| | armies, navies and air forces in the world shall be He served as park commissioner and also as Presi- | jimited and reduced dent the Board of Health. It was in the latter| It is a good hope. It could be realized. Tt will| capact hat he first received his inspiration ror |be realized if the nations sincerely desire the pe the campaign for saving babies, |they claim to be their objective. A S Mr. Henderson says that England and America {now must choose between peace and war, the two SLOWING UP LOCAL PROSPERITY. |nations prim: for there can be little hope for successful conflict by any nation or nations that Under the above caption the Daily - Olympian, |have not the approval and assistance, directly or published in Olympia, Wash., recently had the fol- |indirectly, of England and America. If, he s the lowing to say world relapses into the barbarism of the past it arly every community may be found |will be because Britain and America will be at P s who consider themselves “leading |fault. Together they should be able to hasten citizens,” but who in truth are really hold- |and secure the era of peace. ing back their town, slowing up its pro- The Secretary points to the London Treaty and gress. They do it through their failure to the Kellogg Pact as steps made toward peace rt the institutions which make the during the past year. And such they are. But the 1wk it is, by sending away for things Secrets should remember that it has not been which might be. bought with equal advan- America that has stood in the way of the disarma- tage at home. They do it through thought- | ment he would like to see. Geneva is his answer lessness through sheer di: rd for to that. America is ready and willing to meet and the welfare of the community of which go with England and all other nations in the ef- they are a part fort to approach an international accord, in this as The doctrine of buying at home is not {in all other matters. She has proved it by her advanced solely in the interest of vidual merchants. It is advocated because every local citizen is to a certain extent . dependent upon every other citizen for his indi- | commitments at London and in the presentation of |xhu pact agreeing to the outlawry of war, and in | other ways. America is the only nonbelligerent na- tion on the face of the earth. prosperity. If other members of our city prosper you are more liable to prosper. Robert H. Lucas says President Hoover knew If the banker sends away for his print- nothing about his effort to defeat Senator Norris ing and the printer sends away for his shoes, in _Nebraska for re-election, which might be con- and the shoe dealer sends away for his automobile tires, and the automobile man sends away for his groceries, and the gro- cery man does his banking elsewhere, and s0 on, how can they expect to build local prosperity? X All the fine talk about local pride that we may indulge in will never make a city, so long as the life-bloocd of that commun- ity—the cold cash—is sent elsewhere. You mav make boosting; speeches until you are sidered bad discipline among the crew on the Ship of State—(Boston Globe.) A society has been organized ing to adult males. destined to be listed waukee Journal) to restrict This is another organization among the also rans.—(Mil- . Senator Heflin wants to stop trading in stock margins, and we've begun looking around for the lmluw who hasn’t.—(Dayton, Ohio, News.) President Hoover’s firm refusal .to comply .A:vh}'h PROFESSIONAL 410 Goldstein Helene W. L. Albrecht | PHYSIOTHERAPY Massage, Electricity, Infra Red Ray, Medical Gymnastics. Building Phone Office, 216 PHONE Hours 9 a. m. t . | DRS.KASER & FREEBURGER DENTISTS 301-303 Goldstein Bldg. 56 09 p. m. . DENTIS Rooms 8 and 9 Telephr e Dr. Charles P. Jenne T Valentine Building 176 s Puffy been ext palms have led in poem and songy i DENTIST i Rooms 5-6 Triangle Bldg. | smok- | Westingh «..the new Westinghouse sets just introduced. They e e { GARBAGE HAULED AND LOT CLEANING E. O. DAVIS Phone 584 are all ready now ... in - — HOTEL ZYNDA thisstore. The greatestradio that ever made a bid for the good will of your ears. Hear it here. ,OW.E.&M.Co.,19% 8. ZYNDA, Radio CAPITAL ELECTRIC COMPANY Second at Seward Hardware CASH CUTS ELEVATOR SERVICE Prop. HARRIS Co. COSTS Open until 9 pm. ' o e just - B2 licious Hams and PHONE 38 Frye-Bruhn Company Fe:i__turing Frye’s De- Bacon e i) About Thrift- A knowledge “that you are thrifty and prudent insures employment and’ enables you to face old age without alarm. It takes character, determ- ined effort and at times per- sonal sacrifice to bnilt a Sav- ings Account but no one has ever regretted the thrift habit. B. M. Behrends Bank maen AUTOS FOR HIRE Fraternal Societies [ ——— OF | Gastineau Channel ) Graham’s Taxi Phone 565 STAND AT ARCADE CAFE Day and Night Service Any Place in the City for $1.00 = ! B. P. 0. ELKS Meeting every ~ednesday evening at 8 o'clock. Elks Hall. Visiting brothers | welcome. | R. B. MARTIN, Exalted Ruler. 2Prompt Service, Day and nghc?i | STAND AT THE OLYMPIC | Phone 342 Day or Night | ——— ) i Covicn AuTo SERVICE J NEXT AMERICAN LEGION SMOKER February 10th e S —— e 183 TAXI STAND AT PIONEER POOL ROOM Day and Night Service M. H. SIDES, Secretary. Co-Ordinate Bod- | @ ies of Freemason- /XN rv Scottish Rite uw Regular meetings %’YE‘ second Friday o1 each month at 7:30 p. m. Scot~ tish Rite Temple. WALTER B. HEISEL, Secretary LOYAL ORDER OF MOOSE Juneau Lodge No. 700, 'S Meets every Monday night, at 8 o'clock. TOM SHEARER, Dictator. W. T. VALE, Secy, P. O. Box 82¢ MOUNT JUNEAU LODGE NO. 181 Seeond and fourth Mon- day of each month it Scottish Rite Temple beginaing at 7:30 p. m e | Tue Juneau LAunpry Franklin Street, brtween Front and Second Streets PHONE 359 EVANS L GRUBER %% 7| h:asier; JAMES W. LEIVERS, Sec: retary. ORDER OF EASTERN STAR W. P. Johnson FRIGIDAIRE DELCO LIGHT PRODUCTS MAYTAG WASHING MACHINES GENERAL MOTORS RADIOS Phone 17 Front Street Juneau PHONE YOUR ORDERS TO US 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. | You Can’t Help Being | Pleased | D. B. FEMMER PHONE 114 - o JUNEAU MOTORS, Inc. Adthorized Brake Service | Garments made or pressed by | us retain their shape PHONE 528 I | | . | | TOM SHEARER | | . Jexeeper Our bread is “just as good as can be” and that means that it Second and Fourth 4 Tuesdays of each month, at 8 c'clock, Scottish Rite Temple, JESSIE KELLER, Worthy Mat- ron; FANNY L. ROB- INSON, Secretary. ANIGHTS OF COLUMBUS Seghers Council No. 1760, Meetings second and last Monday at 7:30 p. m. Transient brothers urg- ed to attend. Councl] Chambers, Fifth Street, JOHN F. MULLEN, G. K. H. J. TURNER, Secretary. VOUGLAS AERIE 117 F. O. E. Mects first and third Mondays, 8 o'clock, it Eagleg’ Hall, ALEX GAIR, W. P, ; Douglas. GUY SMITH, Secretary. Visiting brothers welcome. Our trucks go any place any time. A tank for Diesel Oil BEIER THE CHAS. W. CARTER MORTUARY “The Last Service Is the Greatest Tribute” Corner 4th and Franklin St. ° . q | shouldbbe used fby the and a ‘;ml hr!cfll:? oil save ‘ h"‘ofis’;‘hnfif s You yg,‘l-llll PHONE 149, NIGHT 148 | ) be complimented upon RELIABLE TRANSFER I = your choice if you se- —~ 1) | lect this bread. ~ Peerless FOREST | Bakery WOO0D : “Bemember the Name” GARBAGE HAULING Office at Wolland's Tailor Shop S : | Clester Barnesson JUNEAU CABINET PHONE 66 ‘ and DETAIL MILL- DAIRY FERTILIZER g WORK CO. = o e ine oy Worer } || JUNEAU TRANSFER CABINET and COMPANY MILLWORK GENERAL CARPENTER ! | WORK a GLASS REPLACED ¢ IN AUTOS Estimates Furnished Prompt Delivery of ALL KINDS OF COAL J 2 Mabry S Cafe PHONE 48 - Regular Dinners " Short Orders L O %MFI;'?VR snd CORONA Lunches Guaranteed by Open 6 a.m. to 2 a.m. J. B. BURFORD & CO. & POPULAR PRICES “Our tdl:!‘]i:dswp 1': worn by HARRY MABRY B i) ) Proprietor af e ‘{ Northern ] E . I Where It Grows ! nght Store s Your mnfsAnSleES;r on skort GENTLENIEN’S ; notlce.se G’% Col::upmmded FURNISHINGS 4 mi-annually. DIME & DOLLAR BUILDING Workingmen’s *i AND LOAN ASSOCIATION : | H. J. Eberhart, Gastineau Hotel, Supplies / regtie i gl iy ol Cigars, Tobaccos, ! el Caudies i . > TELEPHONE 324 | PLAY BILLIARDS | e | —at— | urrorps || ATimelyTip - = 5 ELL the people 1 sbout timely merchandise with {| goodprintingandwatch your sales !| wolume grow. Other merchants i bave proved this plan by ted EbapaiiBp- ; s, We'Tl helo'ih you wopy; ‘