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T —— ey i R idney N. Sands, Administrative Chairman of the sociated Dress Industries of America, who de- ared that the habit of many women to pn;:pom’ ) EDITOR AND MANAGER | pavment of their bills has been a serious obstacle | 0 business revival. JOHN W. 'r'néy i l“”‘\'n ANY i Cash payments by women with charge account r-’“*kl\( would contribute greatly to liquidity of busines tered In the Post Office In Junes 4 Ciass | Whosesale and retail, would be of great help to he manufacturer and would stimulate opportun Sands declared. He continued: Too much emphasis camnot be laid on matter. SUBSCRIPTION RATES. Oellvered by carrier in Juneau, Douglas, Treadwell anc h. 2 " Thane f 1.25 per r';on‘“mk PaBhks the importance of this request. I have months, In advance found by extensive observation that it is ribers wiil a fav they will promptly the habit of many women of the middle and notify the Business ( e of «:y tailure or irregularity higher classes to use the charge account tn the delivery of their Telephone for E privilege for practically every purchase made 'and Business Offices, 374. and then to permit their bills to run past MEMBER “OF . A*SOUATED PRE®S, ! iysiy. ontTelea A n due sixty or ninety days. Analysis further use for rep dispatches credited t« hows that only in rare cases are these it or not ot ir s paper and also th women actually unable to pay their bills local news published herein A ne. This condition may be attributed GUARANTEED TO BE LARGER to oversight and thoughtlessness OTHER PUBLICATION a result, owners of shops and depart- stores are placed in a delicate position | in their dealings with customers. They re- frain from deliberately asking payment, being aware of the sensitivity of -their patroms bill collecting” and do not wish to d them. As a consequence, the mer- | has a big problem on his hands, a which rapidly envelops thz whole- | ALASKA CIRCULATION ANY employment | | ence ISTATESMEN nF | “Dry” (,oes “Wet™” "IN GGNFERENCE% |Layal and Briand Are in Berlin—Parley Held with Germans : 'FRENCH CAPITAL ¥ MAY AID. GERMANY Economic Cooperation on | Large Scale Subject of Discussion BERLIN, Sept. 28.—French Pre- | I* | mier Laval and French Forelgn { Minister Briand today shook hands | with President von Hindenburg and; magnate immediately went into a confer- ' many with German statesmen on| law, measures for cooperation to restore | S Vauclain (above), steel of New York, and for years a supporter of the dry has definitely reversed his d and advocates repeal of the : samuel nufacturer and textile houses. ation is a complicated and in- but I am confident every woman on be eager to assist in its solution. The can woman cannot be too strongly | to pay cash for her purchases. We | to recall the magnificent service | nen in other times of stress for to feel thoroughly confident that 1l again come forward with their of helpfulness and patriotism and CONFESSING THE CHARGES. rders of Col. W ock a tion " The orders of Col \Mxydcx‘kv that Prohibitior do their bit” to help' us overcome our enforcers must quit drinking; that women must Dresent. businessueatt IHIREI P dirHouitiae! not be used to induce men to commit crime so they! flow of cash resulting from the abandon- ¢ be arrested; that the enforcers must not b the ‘chae R R A e crimin; d similar orders constitute a confes- vould “HANS B iasiukare sbtect s on. thiay sion of h of the charges of official crime he problem of monay scarcity, which | in Prohibition enforcement that have been made in matebial Gxiianks ”‘1 stimulating H‘e‘[ N iR Qenles heels of trade and industry ten yea there is one beneficial thing BRAY suggesta th annon has returned from a long Euro- | C that has been derived ough Prohibition 1{ ha. n for the purpose of fighting against served to bring into the light of day a whole lot of Gov. Roosevelt to the Presidency. of sanctimonious hypoerites who in the name > has run short of ch:mge. of been committing many different are abhorent to plain business righteousness have sorts of things that York Legislature seems to be getting men. Take those who make the clipsheet of the s AiSoReeal to Tent ubior) o Methodist Board of Temperance, Prohibition and Ro s hand. His unemployment program was| Public Morals, for instance, that has defendzd mur- Adsoted without dissextion: | der, even, among other criminal practices when i3 committed in the name of Prohibition! Also Bishop Wheat for China. | Cannon, the stock gambler and campaign funds juggler, who posed as the defender of the Lord (Seattle Post-Intelligencer.) | in the 1928 campaign! And so on down a long list Pacific Northwest is warranted in a feel-| of those who have been humbugging the public for optimism now that negotiations have been a dozen years under the pretense that they were completed whereby China will buy 15,000,000 helping to make the country dry and righteous bush of the “wheat man’s burden” It is also R R T pl to know that Seattle will be one of the, FINANCING THE NEXT WAR. largest and most benefited centers in the opera- ‘ e tion | If Europe ever gets into another war who will These benefits will be both direct and indirect | she get to pay the bills? The national 1. O. U.s Di because much milling will be done here| not very reliable. If it should de- and much of the shipping will be over Seattle| veloj at the United States must cancel all or most B Indirect, b:cause 'th‘ magnitude of the| of Lk ney she loaned when military disa assure ased employment in many parts| e e : of the Pacific Northwest, of which this city is the| faced the borrowers she dught to make it plain th ot dnd lradecenter. hereafter all tradés must"be on a cash basis. The ™' “deal may have a collateral ‘effect even “No Credit” sign should be hung out. Then where more encouraging. Private wheat and flour export-| would the money to finance a war come from? ers believe that, since the sale of 15,000,000 bushels | 11 this suggests that it might be a good thing will all but wipe out holdings of the Farm Board in| the world that she this section, cooperative and independent operators for the United States to notify will not and that her banks and citizens shall not ‘\\xll be placed more largely on an equal basis. finance another war between or among Nations. | However, the almost immediate effect will be We certainly would lose nothing by so doing and full time work for 5000 flour mill employees in Washington, Oregon and Idaho, and extra lahor such a notice might have a discouraging effect on those countries that like to fight. There are peoples that would like nothing better than to mobilize an additional 10,000 workers. The flow of wages from this activity will help greatly in the economic recovery of many com- armies and navies if Uncle Sam would furnish the ities and thus have a psychological effect cash with which to pay the bills. They seem to take cxtending far beyond the immediate bounds of the it for granted that if we furnish the funds there affected nayrol will be no need to repay. It would not at this time be difficult to convince the American people that | good busin demands that we keep our soldiers, cash and credit out of war. for Fewer Americans are touring Europe this year, but they are probably enjoying every drop of it— (Port Angeles News.) Purple lips is not an unhealthful indication AGAINST | Ithese days in Alaska, but one of vigorous appetite DRESS INDUSTRY CHARG . | —eating blueberry pies.—(Seward Gateway.) An appeal to women to abandon their charge! Jimmy Walker threw a party for wefficials in in stores and to pay cash to help relieve ggachos: ssion was addressed recently by akia. His Czechs t . oi —Ol)mma OIympl‘mr accounts the business de were probably equal New Smgles Champ | 3 TIME GOLF - CHAMPION AT ~ LAST ROUTED 3 Twen!y-Yea_r-_(id Girl De- thrones Glenna Col- WASHINGTONU DEFEATS UTAH BY SCORE 7-5 Twenty - four Thousand,| Witness Opening Game Played in Seattle | lett Vare SEATTLE 8 —In & BUFFALO, N. Y., Sept. 28.—Glen- tacular, de ope intersectional | na Collett Vare's reign as National Saturday after- | | Women's Golf Champion, has been y of Washington | football game he: noon the U conquered 7 to 6. Twenty-four a record ope veled at ing of th shifting pla two rugged e. terms. Mer! kicked goal for t - Helen Hicks, 20-year-old Long Island Girl, defeated the five-time champion last Saturday on the 35th green of the final round, 2 up and 1 to go. — .- susand spectators game crowd, x | Berlin Salvation Army to Maintain 300 Relief Stations BERLIN, Sept. 28.— Anticipating 2 Alask: s | $i i .| increased demands on its resources Bl\sllu.l)‘(»f 11(‘“/\11_ 1 Zssoolated Fress Photo |this winter, the Germap division - Officially Confirmed| Eisworth Vines, young tennis0f the Salvation Army is getting —_— | sensation from California, with his ready to maintain 300 relicf sta- DENVER, Cal., Sept. 28.—The ac- | trophy after vanquishing George tions. tion of the House of Deputies of | Lott of Philadelphia to win the - the Episcopal Church Convention :““’"" singles championship at TWO ARE in electing the Venerable John B.| Forest Hills, N.v, Election of Suffragan - TE KETCHIKAN ED AT DRY LAW () Bentley, Episcopal Archdeacon of . Bt the Yukon, with headquarters at; Adirondack Park, with 4,804,000 Two offenders against the Alaska || Nenana, to be Suffragan Bishop of 'acrea iy ha Sm!.e‘ of New York, |Bone Dry law were sentenced Sat- urday in the United States Court by Judge Pat Gildea who is re- i | placing Judge W. C. Arnold while Household Note. Tons ©of sugar | the latter is absent in the States. are wasted annually in the bo".a)lI'NlCK Hyde was sentenced to pay Alaska, has been ratified by the House of Bishops. Suffragan Bishop Bentley will be assistant to the Right Rev. Pm—| is the largest park in the United | { States. | confidence in Europe. Eighteenth Amendment. The The parley is understood to re- \nxln})‘n:llf ;roa:u];‘y should collect " much of the millions now going to volve around the gquestion of! pootleggers, avers Mr. auclain, whether frank German economic ywho supports, to some degree, | capital. MAINE'S OLD | cooperation is possible on a large. Senator Morrow’s plnn to leave dry scale by financing Germany's sur- legislation up to the States, | plus of labor with France's surplus e ———— RECORD MADE INDIANAPOLIS, Ind., Sept. 28. nmcumvhwmwmwm PASSES AWAY :--ex St. Louis to Indianapolis, a of 240 miles, in 52 min-| “ {utes. The previous record was 70 Melln:i IDunhmm, DFlddler LtT0tes, madei ity Ounidl izary and Inventor, Dies Hawks After Operation y’{"""“'“ Ty LEWISTON, Maine, Sept. 28.— ! FOR RANGES Alanson “Mellie” Dunham, aged 78 i years, Maine’s oldtime fiddler HEATERS AND champion, who achieved national prominence when invited to play F]REPLACES HEMLOCK for Henry Ford at Detroit, died in a hospital here after he failed to! rally from an operation. | Telephone 92 or 95 and leave your order with Dunham, who had been a farm- GEORGE BROTHERS er and shoemaker, as well as a| Full Half Cord, $4.25 fiddler, claimed he invented the diamond weave widely employed m I} \ § i ) Chester Barneson s e ——— the manufacture of snowshoes. | Dunham made the snowshoes Peary carried with him on his das‘x‘ tD the North Pole. - BURDICK LEAVES SUNDAY FOR TRIP TO CHICHTGOF Ranger Charles Burdick Un:\‘,fld{ States Forest Service, left Sunday | on the Ragger VIL, for a trip,to{ | Port Frederick and other points son the north shore of Chichagof Ts-, land. He was accompanied by Har- ry Sperling and W. C. Ellis. They will return in about three days. PANATORIUM CLEANERS | ! I “We Call For and Deliver” | PHONE 355 i Will Get You lf You Don’t Watch Outl The American Beauty Parlpr Where ladies will find perfect n*netlon in their search for There is no chnrn for consuftation. Telephone 397 foF an appointment, beautification, in a pleasant ntmu’.here. 1921 Graduate of Cosmetology and Hairdressing ALSIE J. WILSON VALENTINE BUILDING TELEPHONE 397 Pioneer Pool Hall Telephone 183 POOL—BILLIARDS EMPLOYMENT OFFICE Chas. Miller, Prop. BE PREPARED “Real Opportunty Comes Only to the Man W ith Ready Money.” -Joun D, Rock .ER. Mr. Rockefeller began life in a small way and was prepared when opportunity came his way. It is the small things of life that lead to the big. Start your savings account today no matter how sm.lll l BY DOOLITTLE,: record by flying i The B. M. Behrends Bank OLDEST BANK IN ALASKA Trimble Rowe. | ————————— 14 papers at The Empire, of cups. This information should a fine of <$50, and Simon Booth | create quite g stir, | was given & six months' jail tepm S sSssTieesr niin orSMALL 002 Pinemulsion Soothing and Expectorant Recommended for the relief of coughs due to simple colds and minor bronchial irrita- tions. 75¢ Juneau Drug Company Free Delivery Phone 383 Post Office Substation Ne. 1 “We Never Close” SERVICE MOTOR CO. “Jim” and “Marvan” & THIRD and MAIN STS. hiison W.P. Jo I PROFESSIONAL | . . . Helene W. L. Albreche PHYSIOTHERAPY Massage, Electrizity, Infra Red Ray, Medical Gymnastics. 410 Goldstein Building Phone Office, 216 | .. L] . | DRS, KASER & FREEBURGER | DENTISTS | Blomgren Building | PHONE 56 Hours 9 am. to 9 pm. .. —— L] . Dr. Charles P. Jenne | DENTIST I Rooms 8 and ¥ Valentine | [ Butlding Telephre 178 2. e . . Dr. J. W. Bayne DENTIST ! Rooms 5-8 Triangle Bldg. | Office rours, am. to 5§ pm. Fvenings by appointment. Phone 321 | « | Dr. A. W. Stewart DENTIST Hours § a m, to 6 p. v, SEWARD BUILDING Officc Phone 469, Res. L | '» | Phone 276 { iRty Drs. Barton & Doelker | CHIROPRACTORS ) DRUGLESS HEALTH SERVICE “Maintain that Vital Resistance ") Hellenthal Bldg. Phone 25 | Hours 10 am. to 9 p.m. i S g o alair i i L {] Robert Simpson t. D. [ Graduate Anggles Col- lege of Optometry and Opthllmulogy | Glasses Pitted, “onses Grownd | | FRIGIDAIRE DELCO LIGHT PRODUCTS MAYTAG WASHING MACHINES GENERAL MOTORS EADIOS Phone 17 kront Street Juneaw | | You Can Save Money at Our Store SEE US FIRST Harris Hardware Co. Lower Front Street WHY Not Only Cheaper but Better RICE & AHLERS CO. GOOD PLUMBING “We tell you in advance what job will cost” i See BIG VAN THE GUN MAN New and Used Guns and Ammunition OPPOSITE MIDGET LUNCH DON'T BE TOO LIBERAL With the coal if it comes from our place. For our coal gocs farther and gives a morc even and satisfying heat. If your coal bin is running low, Better have us send you & new supply to prove our statement. Our draying service is always the best and we specialize in Feed. D. B. FEMMER Phone 114 HAAS P | Btudio, 206 Main St. -a i | Fraternal Societies oF Gastineau Channel B. P. 0. ELKS Meeting every Wednesday night at 8 pm, Elks Hall. Visiting prothers welcome, M. S. JORGENSEN, Exalted Ruler, M. H. SIDES, Secretary. ' second Friday each month at 7:30 p. m. Soote tish Rite Temple WALTER B. HEISEL, Secretary LOYAL ORDER OF MOOSE, NO. 70¢ Meets Monday 8 p. m. Ralph Reischl, Dictator Legion of Moose .No. 3§ meets first and third Tuesdays G. A. Baldwin, Becretary and Herder, P. D. Box 273. T W Rl IR Rl e MOUNT JUNEAU LODGE NO. 14 Second and fourth Mon- Gy day of each mouth in Seottish Rite Temple, RV LEIVERS beginning at 7:30 p. m. H. L. REDLINGSHAF- ER, Master; JAMES W. Secretan’ e T DA TR ORDER OF EASTERN STAR Second and Frurth Tuesdays of each month, at 8 o'clock, Scobtish Rite Temple. JESSIF KELLER, Worthy Mat« ron; FANNY L. ROB- INSON, Secretary. KNIGHTS OF COLUMBUS Seghers Council No. 1708 Meetings second and lasl Monday at 7:30 p. m Transient brothers urg- ed to attend. Councll Chambers, Pifth Street JOHN F. MULLEN, G. K. H. J. TURNER, Secretary. 4 DR. R. E. SOUTHWELL Optometrisy-Optician | Eyes Examined—Glasses Pitted Room 17, Valentine Bldg. Office phone 484, residense phone 238. Office Hours: 9:30 to 12; 1:00 to 5:30 '1 | | | DOUGLAS AERIE 117 F. O. Meets first and third Mondays, 8 o'clock wt Eagles Hall Douglas. W. E. FEERO, W. P, GUY BSMITH, Secretary. Visiting brothers welcome. Hazel James Madden Teacher of the Pianoforte and cxponent of the Dunning System of Improved Mausic Study Leschetizky Technic—Ailchin Harmony Phone 196 3 | JUNEAUYOUNG Funeral Parlors Licensed Funeral Directors and Embalmers Night Phone 336-2 Day Phome 12 Dr. C. L. Fenton CHIROPRACTOR Kidney and Bowel Specialist Phone 581, Goldstein Bldg. FOOT CORRECTION Hours: 10-12, 2-5, 7- . HEMLOCK WOOD ' | Full Cord Half Cord “—W Five Cords or over, $7.00 cord E. O. DAVIS TELEPHONE 584 GARBAGE HAULED AND LOT CLEANING E. O. DAVI® Phone 584 0 | ! HOTEL ZYNDA ELIVATOR SERVICE 8. ZYNDA, Prop. JUNEAU CABINET and DETAIL MILL- WORK CO. CABINET and s MILLWORK i GENERAL CARPENTER ; WORK GLASS REPLACED IN AUTOS Estimates KFurnished Upon Request The Florence Shop | RINGLETTE and NAIVETTE CROQUIGNOLE and SPIRAL Famous Candies | The Cash Bazaar Open Evenings R ‘WAVES Beauty Specialists location no- ana pracer ‘The Empire. | PHONE 149, NIGHT 148 RELIABLE TRANSFER | i —n NEW RECORDS NEW SHEET MUSIC RADIO SERVICE Expert Radio Repairing Radio Tubes and Supplies JUNEAU MELODY HOUSE Moves, Packs and Stores Fpeight and Baggage Prompt Delivery eof ALL KINDS OF COAL PHONE 48 I ————— L O and CORONZ Guaranteed by J. B. BURFORD & CO. “Our door step is worn by Garments made or pressed by ' us retain their shape | PHONE 528 TOM SHEARER | . 1 " . PLAY BILLIARDS —at— | BURFORDS | . ) Juneau Auto Paint Shop Phone 477 Verl J. Groves Car Painting, Washing, Polishing, Simonizing, Chassis Painting, Touch- Up Work, Top Dressing. Old cars made to look like new Come in and get our low prices B