The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, January 17, 1931, Page 4

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4 'OMPANY PTION RATES. J Douglas, per mont! SUBSCR Delivered by carrier in Thane for Treadwell and 1l_promptly sularity IN RIGHT PLACE lared Cross drou should used nation ¢ fearful might a number f of 4 for suffering all over the Director of funds n of t t rovernment be set. The ueeasions 1y of those of dole tl Feders precedent 1 Government has on unds for the nclud- of food, humanity. rican dolla When he was it Hoover expended d States Congress ction might Government such occ: under Congri times in this its humanity rs Belgis Appr an reasonably up on to expend funds Red Cross, ich exist ter, has acted many partiality, its efficiency questioned. If the call for relief it is currently depicted, C ne; d. And the Red Cross through which it should be extended. Its never been is as great as aid will the agency role LOSS OF 2SS FEARED. British Columbia is ed States Shipping Board take turn | transportation practices in with t industry which will al American fish f: to fear is founded on a cemment made by ping Board last November to the effect vestigating the practice of shipping Americs fish in Canadian bottoms between Canadian ports after the fish had been sold in Canada and put in bond for re-shipment to the United States. The custom has been for American to take their fares to Prince Rupert where they are purchased, frozen, put in bond and later trans- ported in Canadian to Vancouver, and later reshipped to the free American goods. T seeks to determine whether the Prince Rupert and Vancouver and between Van- couver and American ports constitutes a of the American coastwise Uneasiness is apparently over the effect the fish the Board's decision is that being violated. In ments 0 made wo adn that if tariff would have to fishermen fish bring be taken by Can ential represen lest the action wor to over- connection result Thi; Ship- may esent cold n its ports. -caught two ships as violation shipping laws felt in Prince Rupert business generally if the shipping laws are it might be that st be declared dutiable. It subject to duty, the of the price paid practices, American ince Rupert than those landed there, the diffe duty imposed by the United 1 brought into the country. on case ed were » come out present FOR WORLD COURT. rvey made by the has been announced that 66.65 per the United States fa of the World Court prc things, has led to a nt Hoover to call the after March 4, wake question Foundation queried editors pers all over the country, Of this num- cent of the whole, with a com- 3,006, 65.68 per cent of the finitely favor gatifica- expressed opposition. These of the number queried bined circulation, 10,557, rand circulation. There were no 1630 per cent of the whole, was 2,564,400, or about red stand and lassification was € in Senate mong ratification by tocols Thi: movement Senate other Presid in ssion to final act The ion on or publishers of 65 per 1 circ m ¢ combin, ti culation, 265 Only 13.01 of from paper: per cent cent plic but six 14 mpo: A clear papers, their circulati only per cent. Fif plied n -eight reg no othe that categerical preponderance of press opinion in favor a large one, is revealed Hampshire, and ithe are luded in this list. t arge newspapers in opposition are o Hearst chain of 2¢ in large cities from the Atlantic to the Pacific, and seven independent papers. is that the German language papers of the ies, such as the New York Staats Zietung, the New Y Herold, the Chicago Abendpost, the Rc Abendpost, Detrol post, Newark Freie Buffalo Cincinnati Freie Pre: others to American ratification The protocols now' rest in the Senate Com- mittee on Foreign Relations which voted not to take them up for consideration until the next ses- ' sion of Congress which convenes in regular ses- sion in December, 1931. The President being importuned to call a special meeting of the Senate to take up the matter immediately after the end of the current Congress on March 4. It is known he does not want to call a special session of Con- nois and New Col mbia not i located notable arger c! Zietung and are opposed be or | The | m- | United | in- fishermen | United States and admitted duty | Board's investigation | shipment between | is ~ growth of population. American | and | 25.69 per | re- | THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, SATURDAY JAN 17, I93| n extra session on busi- recovery. But no such if the Senate alone met position to dispose of any ! reasonably be expected to g the effect. of e o B A P QUE FV | PROFESSIONAL indu. ifiable be in might nd and ld be would not just bl . islation and the treaty | Helene W. L. Albrecht ourn. Unofficial observers : PHYSIOTHERAPY terient; that: there ;are | | Massage, Electricity, Infra Red -one opponents that body. | | Ray, Medical Gymnastics, inal disposition should not be long 410 Goldstein Building the treaty were before the Senate! Phone Office, 216 It good public policy to call ate in’ special {sion for this purpose hus end the ten-y | period of American non-participation in' this | for international amity and concord thority for twenty or in {On that bas! ! delayed if only onsideration. for be Mr. Hoover the Sena se: DRS. KASER & FREEBURGER DENTISTS 301-303 Goldstein Bldg. PHONE 56 Hours 9 a. m. to 9 p. m. gency the new capitol | e ism to offer and no And everyone clse| that it is a magnificent | Alaska and the —‘cdcrn!} be proud The grand ju reporis it for . ons . Charles P. Jenne $ DENTIST Rooms 8 and 9 Valentine Building Telephrne 176 ting it are ag tructure of which | Government may weil both l With the freque that money is being by the Senate Investig it wo is almost | | to investigate a Senator as to elect one. \ — — —_ i invitation,” Puffy says tol| to its mittee, 1 af DENTIST 7 Rooms 5-6 Triangle Bldg. | || Office hours; 9 am. to 5 pm. | EWRIRY | Evenings by appcintment. Phone 321 | “On the ice" lse ontire- | Bunny, “come to me— |1y in Juneau h irp! may something in Da mean but anding the anes s to ret Adventuring Over Alaska. i i i m;: ti?;‘n 1ot —_— imes.) the pants out at the waist.” Dr. A. W. Stewart e | [ DENTIST of The National Aeronau- Hours 9 a. m. to § p. p. Howard Gannett of Aug- SEWARD BUILLING Fo SLigs & Jivin, deaipR ol BUDIADE L T e Office Phone 469, Res. journey over Alas s wonderland. The Phone 276 photographs, as well as the text of the article L likely to thrill tourists the thought of v. SPECIAL JANUARY the Northland. It is one of the most valuable con- on all tributions Alaskan ture made in recent FUR GARMEN | years, at Mr. Gannett Yurman’s Aeronautical Asso urn m'l % > Eddie Cantor is in WHOOPEE. adv In the Decen r issue M are with Dr Geo. L. Barton CHIROPRACTOR Hellenthal Building OFFICE SERVICE ONLY Hours: 10 a. m. to 12 noon 2p.m to5p m 6 p.m to8p m By Appointment PHONE 259 LE to litera who is Governor of the National ation for Maine, began his aerial p from his home city to Santiago, the first American to make the round trip of South America by air. However, in the lofty mountains of the Southern continent, and| in its jungles and plains, he saw nothing to equal the-scenic wonders of Alaska. Particu was he struck by the fact that the Northern Territory was not a land of tundras and mountains. Concerning | & == that feature he said s To the average as a bleak region covered mountains ries grow as large berries attain the size almost devoid of acidity. Cauliflower and cabbage are of enormous size. Peas, sweet | and tender, grow in six-inch pods on vines cight feet tall; and rhubarb stalks grow as | targe as one’s arm, and are tender and of fine flavor. The secret of such remarkable growth in the unspoiled fertility of Al- a’s soil and in the fact that during the | summer months many parts of Alaska enjoy | an average of twenty hours of sunlight daily. | Mr. Gannett traveled also by boat and train, but he asserts that the greatest pleasure in loking down on Alaska’s glories from the snug fcabin of a plane, The photographs used to illus- te his article were taken by the United States Navy fliers, who mapped 10,000 square miles of crritory. Some of the pictures show mountains and gorges that remind one of the mountains of the moon. | . - One pathetic feature is found fn Mr. Gannets AN | account. His pilot of the plane which took off from | Seattle July 18, was Robin Renahan, lately lost in F }the wilds of British Columbia in October while YOU SAV 57 | searching for the Burke plane. When the article was written Mr. Gannett had no knowledge of Cap- tain Renahan's misadventure. voyaging by a t Chile. He was l_{ubcrt Simpson Opt. D. Graduate Los Angeles Col- lege of Optometry and Opthalmology Glasses Fitted, Lenses Ground MINERS HEADQUARTERS A Complete Line of BOOTS SHU PACS CAPS MINERS’ LAMPS . .‘ person Alaska is known | of glaciers I Yet | as peaches, and rasp- “ of walnuts and are | i] DR. R. E. SOUTHWELL Optometrist-Optician | Eyes Examined—Glasses Fitted 1 Room 7, Valentine Bldg. ! i Office phone 484, residense phone 238. Office Hours: 9:30 | to 12; 1:00 to 5:30 i | | —and— WATERPROOF CLOTHING . i Mike Avoian § 5 | | | W r ROOM and BOARD 7 Mrs. John B. Marshall PHONE 2201 FRONT STREET Opposite Winter & Pond GARB AGE HAULED AND LOT CLEANING E. O. DAVIS Phone 584 in j Na ing the Culprit. - Mflny Wfl,y WHEN YOU BUY A FORD Ask MOTORS, INC. “How” (New York Herald-Tribune.) i Human nature changes imperceptibly. Lord Kel- vin, in reviewing the entire historical period, has (remarked that morals today differ in no essential from those which were current in the earliest Egyptian dynasty. All of which has a bearing on the report of the Association Against the Prohibi- | tion Amendment respecting the violation of Federal statutes | Between 1920 and 1929, according to this report, the number of trespassers on the fundamental taboos |increased by a percentage less than that of the The number of Federal pris- oners, on the other hand, mounted by 50,000, sho ing the effect of a law without real social sanction. |We are familiar today with the congestion that affects Federal courts and Federal prisons. Sur- veys have been published to show that this was du to a post-war psychology unconnected with Pr hibition. Nonsense! Post-war psychology is not ssentially different from that which governs a na tion in the ordgnary course. The only explanation ! can be that of a statute which makes criminals| of those who in its absence would remain innocent.| | Consider the case of England, which suffered far| | more materially and in loss of life and spirit from | |the war than this country. In the twelve ye: |since the amistice it has become relatively a crime- "l'*s country. We, in the mean time, have multi-" | plied the population of our jails and increased the | violations of statutory offenses beyond anything | known in the annals of modern civilization. Why blink the fact that this is due to an “experiment’ whose decade of probation has proved it an utfer| ailure? | In any event, the Associated Against the Prohi- {bition . Amendment has provided us with the stat tics that clinch the argument Thanks - to its research organization, the fact is plain that national Prohibition at the bottom of our increase of crime, the collapse of our machinery of justice and the congestion of our jails. Is the institution worth| the price? HOTEL ZYNDA ELEVATOR SERVICE 8. ZYNDA, Prop. HARRIS Hardware Co. CASH CUTS COSTS Open until 9 p.m. Frye-Bruhn ‘Company Featuring Frye’s. De- licious Hams and Bacon PHONE 38 — About Thrift- New Jersey Prohibition authorities are breaking | up whiskey barrels to be distributed to the poor | for firewood. nd what a perfectly scrumptious aroma that will give off when burned in an open| grate!—(Philadelphia Inquirer.) 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 bnmilt a Sav- ings Account but no one has ever regretted the thrift habit. Today a Republican deplored the fact that many | Democrats bitterly assail President Hoover. Such | bitterness is a disgrace—in fact, lt is as outrageuuxi as the manner in which the Republicans assailed President Wilson.—(Atchison, Kan., Globe.) } For some reason, says a writer, the American | is unwilling to repeal the law he finds distasteful. He prefers just to ignore it—as if it were a guest towel.—(Detroit New.s) * B. M. Behrends Bank There isn't much to inspire the formation of a third party when one observes how the two vet- erans are living from hand to mouth.—(Ohio State Journal.) B | 3 | ! | | “Prohibition Solid as a Rock” All we need lnow. then, is the rye.—(Boston Transcript.) AUTOS FOR HIRE ————— e Graham’s Taxi Phone 565 STAND AT ARCADE CAFE Day and Night Service Any Place in the City for $1.00 Fraternal Societies OF Gastineau Channel SRR (InAnhet, ¥ B. P. 0. ELKS Meeting every ~ednesday evening it 8 o'clock. Elks Hall. Visiting brothers welcome, R. B. MARTIN, Exalted Ruler, M. H. SIDES, Secretary, Co-Ordinate Bod- fes of Frecmason- r ry Scottish Rite Regular meeting: second Friday each month at T PSS tPromxzt Service, Day and Night CovicH Auto SERVICE STAND AT THE OLYMPIC Phone 342 Day or Night [{STAND AT PIONEER POOL ROOM Day and Night Service AMERICAN LEGION SMOKER -3 S 3 TuEe Juneau LAuNDRY Franklin Street, beiween Front and Second Streets PHONE 359 February 10th e T U W. P. Johnson FRIGIDAIRE DELCO LIGHT PRODUCTS MAYTAG WASHING MACHINES GENERAL MOTORS RADIOS Phone 17 Front Street Juneau PHONE YOUR ORDERS — It tastes fine and it is a first class bread. It is the kind of food that should be served three times a day in your home. Remember to call for it by name. It is the bread that tastes like something very good to eat. Peerless Bakery We will attend to them CRmagither (e Nt promptly. Our COAL, Hay,'_ Grain and Transfer business . is i ing daily. There’s a| reason. Give us 4 trial order| | JUNEAU CABINET el S e 3 and DETAIL MILL- WORK CO. reet, next to Warner Machine Shop CABINET and MILLWORK GENERAL CARPENTER WORK GLASS REPLACED IN AUTOS Estimates Furnished Upon Request | You Can’t Help Being | Pleased } D. B. FEMMER | PHONE 114 Front Mabry’s Cafe Regular Dinners Short Orders Lunches Open 6 a.m. to 2 a.m. POPULAR PRICES HARRY MABRY Proprietor <+ the new Westinghouse sets just introduced. They are all ready now . . . in thisstore. The greatestradio that ever made a bid for the good will of your ears. Hear it... here. OW.E.&M.Co.,19% Radio PITAL ELECTRIC COMPANY Second at Seward SAVE MONEY Where It Grows FASTEST Your funds avallable on short notice. 6% Compounded Semi-annually. DIME & DOLLAR BUILDING AND LOAN ASSOCIATION H. J. Eberhart, Gastineau Hotel, Local Representative. A. J. Nel- son, Supervisor, S. E. Alaska . I | Garments made or pressed by “ us retain their shape PHONE 528 ) | I' TOM SHEARER l| ! PLAY BILLTARDS | it | BURFORD’S | Daily Empire want Ads Pay. THE CHAS. W. CARTER MORTUARY “The Last Service Is the Greatest Tribute” Phone 136 Corner 4th and Franklin St. 7:30 p. m. Scot- tish Rite Temple. WALTER B. HEISEL, Secretary LOYAL ORD OF MOOSE Juneau Lodge No. 700 ' Meets every Monday night, at 8 o'clock. TOM SHEARER, Dictator. W. T. VALE Secy,, P. O. Box 828 '\IOIV‘\T XU\EAU LODGE NO. M'I Second and fourth Mon- beginaing at 7:30 p. m k‘)/'/é&? EVANS L. GRUBER W) day of each mouth ir Scottish Rite Temple Axaster; JAMES W. LEIVERS, Sec: retary. ORDER OF EASTERN STAR Second and Fourth 4 Tuesdays of each month, at 8 o'clock, Scottish Rite Temple. ;, JESSIE KELLER, Worthy Mat- ron; FANNY L. ROB- INSON, Secrets KNIGHTS OF COLUMBUS Seghers Council No. 1761, Meetings second and lasy Monday at 7:30 p. m. y 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 %Mnndnys, 8 o'clock, it Eagleg’ Hall Douglas. ALEX GAIR, W. P. GUY SMITH, Secretary. Visiting brolhers welcome. o | Our trucks go any plav:e nny | time. A tank for Diesel Oil | and a tank for crude oil save | burner trouble. | PHONE 149, NIGHT 148 | | Re LIABLE TRANSFER FOREST wWOO0D GARBAGE HAULIN Office at Wolland's Tailor Shop Cliester Barnesson PHONE 66 DAIRY FERTILIZER JUNEAU TRANSFER COMPANY Moves, Packs and Stores Freight and Baggage Prompt Delivery of ALL KINDS OF COAL PHONE 48 e s = L. C. SMITH and CORONA TYPEWRITERS Guaranteed by J. B. BURFORD & CO. “Our door step is worn by satisfied customers” | t Northern Light Store GENTLEMEN’S FURNISHINGS Workingmen’s Supplies Cigars, Tobaccos, Candies TELEPHONE 324 s ATimelyTip ELL the peopls sbout timely merchandise with good printing and watzh your sales volume grow. Other merchants have proved this plan by repeated mw:’nuhmzhmm

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