The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, March 13, 1931, Page 4

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P ‘ anticipated for It includes stu L4 R » the near future. les Dml y ;fluska Empire | oo avorts by sinis, vy secions o e = b b AN 1 B T and by groups of cities segregated TR to their population sizes TRJY - - - EDITOR AND MANAGER |- > amount of expenditures planned for expan- JOHN W. Sunday by the|Sion of airport facilities is shown by the survey COMPANY cond” and Main |to be $20.225,000. This figure includes cxpenditures e e S ! which the airports were preparing to make during Post Office In Juneau as Second Class the last half of 1930, while the study was beinz el LN ___ |completed, and those which they expect to make SUBSCRIPTION RATES. during 1931. It does not include money to be spent Delivered by carrier In Juneau, Douglas, Treadwell and | on proposed airports as the survey covered only Thane for §1.25 per mont PR : Yo 4 " o mail, postage pa wing rates: airports in existence up to the first of this year. In 3 six months, tu advance, | Gommercial airports, it was found, accounted for , $1.26 T favor if they will promptly (nearly half of the total capital investment in these failure or irregularity et has been ev building of air commercial air- projects despite the interest that | denced by municipalities in the terminals. The survey showed that g ] THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, FRID\Y MARCH 13, !93| : GOMMISSION TO STUNY OLD AGE PLAN APPROVED McDonald Imasu re Unani- mously Recommended for Passage to House trom Page Oned Nominated NEXT AMERICAN LEGION SMOKER MARCH 14TH A. B. Hall (Cuntinuea W.P. Johnson|: tions cunduc.mg fur fairs, and car he steady It has been gains growth of industrial cities financing of stock market operations. decided to Among the losers are Mis- study, in addition, Towa, Kentucky, Alabama, and |Reserve System with member and associated banks ral States. Masachusetts and Penn- an' of these have suspended in the current de- ania are the only losers among the industrial |PreSsion. Any study of the causes of this partial 3 {failure of the systes ible asures to States, and their losses are relatively small. he tem and of possible measures to| the relations of the| Company DENTISTS 301-303 Goldstein Bldg. | i PHONE 56 1 Hours 9 a. m. to 9 p. m. e = SRR L AT iy T e e gt | Helene W. .L. Albrecht | PHYSIOTHERAPY | Massage, Electrioity, Infra Red Ray, Modion! Ciymnast 410 Goldsteln Butldin, Phone Office, 216 Wetieniidkion i i DRS. KASER & FREEBURGER | Fraternal Societies OF ) Gastineau Channel } B. P. 0. ELKS Meeting every weanesday evening i it 8 o'clock. Elks Hall. Visiting brothers welcome. R. B. MARTIN, Exalted Ruler, M. H. SIDES, Secretary. N Co-Ordinate Bod- ies of Freemason- ry Scottish Rite R(-gular meetings second Friday epach month at 7:30 p. m. Scot- tish Rite Templs WALTER B. HEIBEL, Secretary LOYAL ORDER OF MOOSE Juneau Lodge No. 700, Mects every Monday night, at 8 o'clock. TOM SHEARER, Dictator. T. VALE, Sec,P O. Box 82% w. '\fl)l T JL\EAU LODGE NO. pLY] Second und fourth Mon- [ day of each month in Scottich Rite Temple, beginning at 7:30 p. m. H. L. REDLINGSHAF- ER, Master; JAMES W. LEIVERS, Secretary. ORDER OF EASTERN STAR Sccond and Fourtn 4 Tuesdays of each month, at 8 o'clock, Scottish Rite Temple. JESSIE KELLER, Worthy Mat- ron; FANNY L. ROB« INSON, Secretary. AWNIGHTS OF COLUMBUS Saghers Council No. 1750, *4cetings second and last Monday at 7:30 p. m, Transient brothers urgs ed to attend. Councl Chambers, Fifth Street JOHN F, MULLEN, G. K. H. J. TURNFR, Secretary. DOUGLAS AERIE 117 F. O. E. Mects first and third &Mondays 8 o'ciock, tt Eagles Hall Douglas. ALEX GAIR, W. P, GUY SMITH, Secretary. Visiting brothers welcome. i Our ur trucks Ko any place | time. A tank for Diesel Oil | | | | and a tank for crude oil save | burner trouble. PHONE 140, NIGHT 148 l FOREST | wWooD | GARBAGE HAULING Office at Wolland's Tailor Shop Chester Barnesson PHONE 66 DAIRY FERTILIZER JUNEAU TRANSFER COMPANY Moves, Packs and Stores Freight and Baggage Prompt Delivery of ALL KINDS OF COAL PHONE 48 notice. 6% Compounded Semi-annually. DIME & DOLLAR BUILDING AND LOAN ASSOCIATION H. J. Eberhart, Gastineau Hotel, Local Representative. A. J. Nel- son, Supervisor, 8. E. Alaska [T — 1 taws. laparnes. credited o 5 outnumbered municipally owned airports by (vied a request for $4,000 for the bi-| FRIGIDAIRE | Dr. Charles P Jenne ed in this paper and also the |15 or that there were 564 commercial airports and “‘“““m\" Aar - a5 e i S | DENTIST ! : A _ |549 municipal airports. The total investment in| MI- McCutcheon also introduced, DELCO ‘LIG C | Rooms 8 and 9 Valentine g 7 P . |2 memorial similar to that of Mr. MAYTAG WASHING “ULATION GUARANTEED TO BE LARGER |commercial airports was $56856,500 and for muni-| g in the Senate yesterday | Building i W AL B el s | cipal airports, $58,212,000, a difference in the amount 7 requests the Bureau of Bish- MACHINES [ Telephre 176 of investments devoted to city airports and the| to permit unregulated taking GENERAL MOTORS RADIOS || L amount used for commercial projects of about|by fur farme of salmen for feood | 1 $2,000,000 in more than $115,000,000. purposes. | e A £ - Phone 17 RS T Pk R | RS 5 Tne House received and read for | |pmmms WS G Front Reaot - Tutigan !l Dr. J. W. Bayne | Someone has suggested marriage by radio. That's[the first time Se B:llh g Associated Press Photo SR o | DENTIST { e e et e e ean move. G| 214 NO. 3, amendatory to the G- waiter H. Evans, presiding Judge — || Rooms 5-6 Triangle Bldg. | Babal S k : 1] s i thogt | Piled 1av | of the Multnomah ecircuit court | - = | | Office hours, 9 am. to 5 pm. | {Nevada for two weeks and get a divorce withor Portland, Ore, was nominated by DEONE Y 1 Svaifigh by AEpBRGRIE ;| jhaving to meet the other and go through the| President Hoover as judge of the PHONE YOUR ORDERSJ Phone 321 | | inconvenience of quarreling. R Ll LU AR TO US | e— . | = ; N = | There was a time when we could properly class ilitaton and mainten- | ! s i {it as free education. But today the taxpayer knows |ance of the Tenana-Kaltag-Unala collateral security in the | 7 | this 15110 <leet telephon: line, Senator Dunn, | G ety ,“ | Dr. A. W. Stewart is for the misn 5 wpe of readi > bonds ! | easure introduced in the : G DENTIST ! | in a measure intro e niead of surety comp ont | e S heiise e it v P i 9a m to§p 1 - upper house this morning, asked 4 lbanti 4 | Hours y 2 as y for Territorial bank de: SEWARD BUILLING ST RIS ! “Home Option.” for $7,000 for next (WO eauS. | poqi The second repeals an f Gfits Photis” 160, Fre i WHAT COMES NEXT? | il - This line, which was formerly the i e in the school code which su- ] tice e A o L SR (New York World.) telegraph > of the United States'y, \.,.. the formation of normal | ‘ Phon¢ X N t the eme] the laska Ral { N N s ' 5 was aba tel R ey That the gement of the Alaska Railrodd} of the yarious documents submitted to the Sen-|Signal Corps and was abandoned | g0t ot © the outlook for the immediate ate by the Wickersham Commission only one has Thé Government S¥as i to visiz the future under lh" new regime of higher tariffs, se | been published at any length. This is a report pre-|ago, forms the oniy. meas ShiEee 1d mine wil Y —a to reasonable inference from the interview lpared for the benefit of Mr. Wickersham and his|mMunication between Tanana and la’ moraing Drs. Barton and given The Empire by Col. O. F. Ohlson, General colleagues by Colonel Woodstock, Commissioner of |the lower Yukon and ton Souna in bcth ‘ Ma this week. He said it “is problematical” Prohibition. For the most part, this report reiter-)com o i el O d{:w te. It is expected thai a ma- Doelker f eceints from higher rates will be sufficient|ates Views which Mr. Woodcock has often expressed| The 1920 Legisiaturé appropriate ' hoth heuses wil taks the ! CHIROPRACTORS o e D b miade by |Congress £ |during His elght months in office: MHugh thé Pro- 46,000 Jor its maintenances glE | Drugless Health Service | to make up the 8500000, cut made by Congress i|yuyon Byreau is notoriously understaffed, Mr.|the past biennium. The line, ?‘Q“‘;fi . | We will attend to them| | Hellenthal Bldg. Phone 259 the Federal appropriation to cover the road's anticl- | wooqe0ck does not think that the Federal Govern- . Eun e J‘\‘)"‘ s in very bad] o1 papers at the Empire office promptly Our COAL, Hay,| Hours 10 am. to 9 pm. | pated deficit ,ment “should be stampeded toward the appronri:\-1"1“"1)e and 8. E cor it ‘T‘: - = = T “1Grain and Transfer business{*————— ————_—_——°* As an experienced transportation man, Col|tion of huge sums of money” for enforcement. He | Xeep it in »wrkm,r‘ condition. B A:.. — ~ lis increasing daily. There’s a|+ 5 hls knows, of course, tha igher rat re not ” - P P rati money is not a direct appropria- 1 .1 o 2 novs, of orme i ITaien She DOVINERS UL for Inbinoi eRiE ronperaticn SOUREERIE S ok nni i SRR s .9 s |lreason. Give us a trial order| Robert Simpson W The M IR to increast freight tonnage or boosting |the States to manifest itself, and to believe that fund allotted to the Second and ! e Merrimakers today and learn why. | business. 1f, and that's a big IF, the|the effort of the Federal Government should be lim-| D¢ &FOUEC - ! 2 | Opt. D. 15 as many tons of freight and as many |ited to such ‘“steady pressure” as can be exerted | Except for. Maintenance ARt e 4 FIEOE ORCHESTRA Y. Car’s Help Bein || Graduate Los Angeles Col- | during the next fiscal year on the DY @ staff which has one agent to every 1300( ., "o no expense connected Telephone 402 ou Cant Help bewng H lege of Optometry and | rate levels ‘as it dld last year on the lower Sduare miles of territory. At one point in his re-|Tiy o All use is free, | Music furnished for all occasions |/ Pleased il Opthalmology i then its revenues will be sufficient to cover |POTh: however, Mr. Woodcock advances a new sug-|p, charges being made fo Scandinaylan-American or Am- || || Glatces Fitted, Lenses Ground | ot Saif i sy oS gestion. The s tion consists of a policy which |, erican Jazz Music i D. B. FEMMER . S —— . the half n dollar cut. Very properly he might |, = describes as “home option.” | ru uman:rnm\” e Featuring Midweek Dances every . D. 2SS V) e 5 term eventuality as ‘ix“.(\mpl"v problematical Embarkir upon this policy, the Government] :]f «ham] ;) L nsabler Al Wednesday—Moose Hall i PHONE 114 j} DR. R. E. SOUTHWELL i e will be no inducement to open UD lwould “make no effort to overcome the difficulties!yunr saiq i ; S i ol | Optometrist-Optician { and those already in the field are that legally exist in getting evidence as to violations| dhev Bille Advidbaa ; | Eyes Examined—Glasses Fitted | t going to pay for any more traffic than is neces- in the' home The Government would recognize| genate Bills Nos 5 and 11 W B = Room 17, Valentine Bldg. | continued operations. + |that such ions a commonplace. It would|,eaq for the secc time and ad- o g i;omce phone 484 residense stion of vital import to Alaska is: What interfere with no man who made liquor in his|yanced on the calendar. The HAAS | phone zss.. omce Hm‘x‘x:s: 9:30: ep Congress will take if at the | home in violation of the law, provided he made/ first .authorizes tt to Famous Candies \. to 12; 1:60 to §-~0 i ? shall be found that such a way as not to be observed by the| - - A o o despite the increased tariffs, the road has failed The Government would interfere only in| ~======rs-smrr-rrm The Cash Bazaar ‘. .l o cover its operating expenses? Will Congress then | Uhose cascs in which a violator of the law “breaks Op: Tvening. o cover its operating exp n‘r‘? ‘\\".n.gn‘m:" h; (Ko’ fiaba it s any ks & el 3 Have e ob 1 E i Ipen Evenings ROOM and BOARD | compel further ralses, or Will 1t reyerse Itself and |, nun or «fails to keep himself fit to perform { i g about a reduction to levels which will act . 5 Ot oV i Mrs. John B. Marshall | mulant rather’ thari a deterrent to industriat " “The virtue of *this policy would consist of its| { | FIRE ALARM CALLS 2201 | ment? Of course, there is another alter-|frank admission that it is impossible for the Gov { | | ft. It can shut down the property and ernment to enforce the law where it is most fre- ! 1-3 Third and Franknn. ) . let the natio: investment go down to ruin with 'quently violated. Adoption of the polic) o \ e 2 3 N A { | 1-4 Frcnt and Pranklin. e the country to which it could and should be the would require the Government to become \ 1-5 Front, near Ferry Way. | 1 greates tor for settlement and reclamation from Spirator in thousands of violations. To what use- { | 1-6 Front, near Gross Apts. GARB 4GE ! e ilernbag ful purpose? If the Government can “enforce” a ] 3 {17 Front, opp. City Whart, & ! _ ;1;\\- lu[nl{{ bywconi,\(‘x!Eng to see it 1dmbesr:.d{ why ]‘/IID(,ET s 1-8 Front, near Saw Mill HAl ]LED ! S £ ) % {should Mr. Woodcock or anyone else wish to see «1-9 Front at A. J. Office. CONGRESS ON A NEW BAS ’U“' law retained? % 2-1 Willoughby at Totem Gro- After you have found AND LOT CLEANING . . bt sk cery. out how.good our E. O. DAVIS Washington's new Congresstonal district align- GOIJF A < b N - | 2-3 Willoughby, opp. Cash Cole’ s sprea Phone 584 ment, the first for the 73rd Congress, served as a| A Useful Investigation. | ! Jioughby, opp: sl . bread is spread the 3 " sl | 54 Barn. news around your reminder that there are 11 States which will gain | e | 25 | 2-4 Front and Seward. i ’hb Hood You'll a total of 27 Representatives under the new dis-& (Cincinnati Enquirer.) | / C s 2-5 Front and Main. {;elg L ofn g thou'll pensation. The next Congress, which is the 72nd| The character of recent Congresslonal probes,| {1} 26 Second and Main. e a(;;;rge‘clh‘tlgogureey NEW RECORDS will not differ in apportionment from the sessions|with committees flitting about the country and! 21 nl G /\“F | 2-7 Fifth and Seward. b . which have met since 1910, as there was no reappor- | Poking their collective noses into all sorts of petty PER G { ] 2-9 Fire Hall enough. NEW SHEET MUSIC tionment in 1920 despite the constitutional require- Private affairs or making themselves extremely { |l 3-2 Gastineau and Rawn Way. ) ment for a new division in accord with the natl()n's““’““"h in Washington, have given the very word o t [} 2a ecnd anit Golil, Peerless RADIO SERVICE = il “investigation” a bad name. In this light the plan! uneau 1] 3-5 Fourth and Harris. : o Bpuialion as anowrr by, the statfstiss GESSRCE de- |t the Workings. of the {|] 36 Fitth ana Gola. Expert Radio Repairing cennial census. The 20-year period in which there|pojora) Reserve. System through & special Senate M-d tGOli {1] 3-7 Fitth and East. Baker Radio Tubes and Supplies :;as‘ no change [If“"kp\ ‘nm ncx;d a:‘!erntlgn MOre | sommittee is likely to cause uneasiness. \ v ge V] 3-8 if‘vcl:lnth and Gold. . ecisive in its effects than wou! ave been the| This inquiry, however, promises to be a strictly! i 3-0 Fifth and Kennedy. case had the change heen made in 1920 in accord |different sort of investigation, free of political op- C \" A $Ttih, back Of HowEr MY s e Wt JUNEAU MELODY with the Constitution. , excited speech-making and the usuail ourse t 4-2 Calhoun, opp. Seaview Apts. The reapportionment is far more than a demands for this, that or the other 18 i’; gi‘l:;‘ AV; C“]‘g Indian Sts. HOUSE 8 nt of the voting o reform. The committee is heaed by Senator Carter . ¢ inth and Calhoun. | e SRR R LR T re-alignment of the voting power of the States. It lais e ol g yu- i Elltlre znd Flom‘ ) 4-6 Seventh and Main. . is a new deal in the distribution of political power |G1ass, of Virginia, who did more than any other {|] 4-7 Tweitth, B. P. R. garage. 3 | e+l A irel The cleavage of Man to create the Federal Reserve System, and is < A | 183 | ke S 8¢ O now perhaps more familiar with its workings than Goldstein Bdg. 11| 49 Home Grocery. ! e these two is the basic divergence in American politi- { (| 5-1 Seater Tract. | . g g any other man in Congress. He may be trusted SAVE MONEY cal life today. It means more than the differences |, v i o i g v Rkl icah “And Damorhiis: tabke: o % 0 lead in a survey that will sift much needed ! b gt Regublicay oa e » more than |infommation, and to do the job calmly and sin- Wkere It Grows tiberals and conservatives, e 2 . e e FASTEST by the new allocations ars| The investigation was first planned to learn | F B h ROOM | Texas, New Jersey, New York | just what part the Federal Reserve plays in the| Tye ru n Day and Night Service Your funds available on short M (] It @ 3 e ot i ’ bring about greater stability is important. | . [t means a new deal on many points. If the| gince the stock market break many voices have Sta do justice to their populous districts in re-|peen raised against the Federal Reserve System districting for Congress, the compiexion of the TBrd}Much of the talk has been demagogic in the ex s to meet in 1 will mirror with more |treme. The best way to silence it is to bring semblance of accuracy the opinion of a nation in which | facts clearly to light han half the people live in the cities, The: tempo of urban life will show itself in the | deliberations of Congress. The note of socialization | gests starting a list of of law, or co interest appearing in -cities | Along Without, and for ill spread enactments, replacing the |torial. We submit any historic America. —(Philadelphia Inquirer.) Raymond Daumont in the Louisville Times su Ten Words We Could Get a beginner offers guber word from Senator No nunity into Federal of individualism A new Congress will convene next December. It,| T 0 however, will not be greatly different in character| IN some respects this country has improved since from the 7lst, which recently passed into history not | 1789: The first Congress had one Representative for greatly lamented. That of 1933 will be vastly dif- | c2c? 60.000 people, which would give us now o ferent, perhaps not so much in party division as .”‘Col\gressmenvtllosmn b A the curren of its reasoning and philosophy of | Mahatma Gandhi's followers re said to be government, omic interests {rabid Prohibitionists, which may account for their Sy ful determination to have their own way or COUNTRY BU ll D& M()Rh .\lRl’()R’l —(Macon, Ga., Telegraph.) ; A capital investment of sll.:.()b&::l)u omprises| The crocodile lives 100 ; the elephant, 150 the financial foundation for 1,113 airpbrts that have |to 200 years; the turtle, over 100; the eagle, a cen been established in the United States by cities, busi- | tury, but Congress talks on forever.—(Los Angel ness corporations, and individuals up to January Times.) 1, 1931, it is revealed by a comprehensive 2conomic study and survey of the municipal, commercial, and | _ F8Ving acquired a chateau in France, Alfonso | will not need to worry quite so much about re- private airports which has just been completed by | taining. his castle in Spain-—(Detroit Free Press.) the Aeronautics Branch of the Department of| e SN Commerce. Talking puppets are the latest thing in films. The survey, undertaken early in 1930, was de- |although we have had them for years in both signed to ascertain the amount of the Nation’s Houses of the National Legislat ure.—(Lexington, Ky. p‘esenz investment in alrports and the nxpnndnure.,iflerald) Featuring Frye’s De- kg o D i neal | [ licious Hams and Bacon PH;II;E 528 i ‘ TOM SHEAR PHONE 38 | | S | PLAY BILLIARDS 1 g | <Al Our Savings Department | .BURFORD'S ; We wish to call your attention to the fact that this bank main- ——— -‘; tains a first class Savings Department. accounts any amount from one dollar wup. we compound the interest semi-annually, adding the interest to the account without any irouble on the part of the depositor. Additions may be made at any time. On these savings accounts we pay 4 per cent interest. We recommend this kind of ac- count to persons who have money for which they have no immediate use and which they want kept in a safe place until needed. The compounding of interest is automatic. We receive on savings On cach account CLEARANCE SALE *Men’s Wool Shirts élazers Stag Shirts Sweaters and a complete line of Furnishings for the Workingman Mike Avoian FRONT STREET Opposite Winter & Pond for you, accumulating for the rainy day or the day of need when other sources fail. We would be pleased to have you call and open a savings account with wus. "The B. M. Behrends Bank Oldest Bank in Alaska Juneau Public Library Free Reading Room City Hall, Second Floor Main Street and Fourth Reading Room Opea From 8 a. m. to 10 p. m. Circulation Room Open from 1 to 5:30 p. m.—7:00 to 8:30 p. m. Current Magazines, Newspapers, Reference, Books, Ete. FREE TO ALL EMILIO GALAO’S Recreation Parlors NOW OPEN - Bowling—Pool LOWER FRONT STREET | t e s e s e AR haahaabe bl Lot e o] —— ) ) ) | \ \ ) ) N ' l The money is not idle, but is constantly making more money SMITH and CORONA TYPEWRITERS Guaranteed by J. B. BURFORD & CO. “Our door step is worn by satisfied custom Old papers at the Emplre office. IsBut & Small Part #Z the Cest b 4 IIN getting out a circular, circular letterorotherpieceof printed matter...the paper, the address- ing, the mailing easi- ly total more than the printing. Yet, in a large measure, the Results Depend Upon the Printing. Let uzs show gon some | samples to ilinstrate our stetemnent l

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