The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, June 13, 1932, Page 4

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N 3 B P 0 A T B B R e L b e N v T ¢ PR e . THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, MONDAY, JUNE 13, 1932. TR o ,m Vl;vcr’x;am)'nul law; industrial peace; science; - 9 1 eep—— fl————: .—4, Dailv .4108ka Eml)lre American historical literature; outdoor life; national ‘ I PROFESSIONAL : I Fraternal SOCIGM * & defense: international affairs; administration of Ou an larr . . or . R S SIDENT AND EDITOR |public office; conservation of natural resources; ad- R AR T TR Gastiniatis C g T.ROB‘F\.DFR TR_E GE:’ERAL MANAGER | vancement of social justice; expression of the pioneer z Helene W. L. Albrecht | harine -l Sl virtues; leadership of youth, and the development of by Julia Clefl-Addama PHYSIOTHERAPY L A S e A [t —— very _evenin; Sunday by _the American character. EABTRE PRINTING COMPANT Rt Second and’ Main In 1923 the medals were awarded to Miss Py Junsan, Al Louis: Lee Schuyler, to Dr. Henry Fairfield Osborn and to General Leonard Wood. CRI‘PTION BATES ! In 1924 the medals were awarded to Elihu Root, Dellvered by S Fuheau, Douglas, Treadwell and |Oliver Wendell Holmes and Charles W. Eliot; in " Thane for $1.25 D'e)r“""fi{;fy*‘;mg batins (1915, to Gifford Pinchot, George Bird Grinnell and e M 5 - 'six months, in advance, |Martha Berry; in 1926, to William S. Sims, Albert D avar it they will promptly |J. Beveridge and Daniel Carter Beard; in 1927, to siness Off o of any ailure or irregularity | jonn J, Pershing, Herbert Hoover and John Bassett O Editorial and Business Offices, 374, | Moaore; in 1928, to Charles Evans Hughes, Frank M. MEMBER OF ASSOCIATED PRESH. :chapm(nn and Charles A. Lindbergh; in 19:.29. to The Ass: wl:‘fltd Prs-s'e 'fi ;:{;\:x nEx'(:\y:}s\tr:raedit&dtlt(e’ Herbert Putnam, Owen Wister and Owen D. Young; B I D merwise credited in this paper and also the |in 1930, to Richard E. Byrd, William Green and tocal news published herein. Hornell Hastings Hart; in 1931, to Benjamin N. P in Juneau as Second Class ered in t matter. ALASKA CIRCULATION GUARANTEED TO BE LARGER |Cardozo, Hamlin Garland and C. Hart Merriam. THAN THAT OF ANY OTHER PUBLICATION | | While transoceanic transportation concerns are Americans persist in going to Canada despite hard times? |x he circumstance that the Morgan bankers have Iraised $100,000000 to invest in securities is more | {pool H At least New York occasionally investigates charges against its ruling political machine of the BUREAUS AND THE REMEDY. piness must be sacrificed for that of her cousin Georgie, Jenny Revell decides, for Geor- “Because he's the Old Man!" Georgie's laugh was curt, as her'my e - voice. “He never actually accused c | me of selling those figures to the complaining about the baleful effect of the de-|Gortenx crowd, so he feels he I've pression on the tourist traffic, Canadian statisticians |needn’t apologize. But he wants O declare that the tourist business hasbeen less affected |me to know I'm vindicated, all the B than anything else in their country. Wonder why |same.” I m “I do not like him so much,” said o' | Jenny softly. “Is he very ill? After Per S eft he was going to see some. paused, then added. “But }doccors' before the coffee you'll “He's been ill for years, off andc but that won't stop him living The waiter came back, and they interesting just now than the fact that somebody | forever if he wants to, the old b made some millions a few years ago through a stock |beast!” Georgie’s manner was ab- s | strated. “Look here, kiddie, I'm i b 151 R ST |going to send you home in a taxi.|c You're not fit to go on foot. And'enemy to be afraid of. when I get in—I don’t expect to!demand more than she gave Gill,| eney beside her, tomorrow. Phone 276 be late—I'll come to seé™f you're |but not more than she could af-| . It'll be like old times ford. But she must be bold on, {day. We have not heard of investigations in Phxla-‘nu SCR\S\=ows W\ = ma= s SYNOPSIS: Her own hap- luded corner of all. She studied him as ¥ but, really.” ion to you.” afford to quarrel ing, by a table in the sat down and discussed their dinner.|side the lining, very crisp and gle has been kind to her. |He had the small eyes and the clear. ), and pretty well, the « we've got to our coffee,you and that little baggage of 2 / net want to bz under anjcousin of yours can learn to be i not,” smiled Tallas. long| “And no good saying that Match- *cause I1 give the news to the to eat. Georgie found that as hungry, opposition alwa mulated her and this was, it seemed, B. P. 0. ELKS Meets second and fourth W e d nesdays i Massage, Electricity, Infra Red | Ray, Medical Gymnastics. | most hidden there after the ceremony, ’ 410 Goldstein Building at 8 pm. Phone Office, 2i6 Visiting bro thers % ® | welcome. !but the outline of it was clearly |Visible. And the check was out- — ¢ ? DRS. KASER & FREEBURGER GEORGE MEBSERSCHMIDT, Georgie is secretly married to 'mean mouth of her xecgnection,] “Well?” snapped Tallas. He DENTISTS Exalted IRuler. Eddie Townsend, but to pre- 'and he looked worn and shabby assounded extremely nervous, but she | Blomgren Building | M. H. SIDES, Secretary. vent her employer discharging well 'knew that he would not yield an PHONE 56 i - FAE her, tche has told him that Do you want to see me on a]imh of his advantage. “I may say| | Fiours 9 ara. to 9 p.m. Co-Ordinate Bos. Jenny is Eddie’s wife. Dr. Tal- matter of business??” she demand-|that I don't intend to wait about | g. Sadg des of Freemason las suspects this trick. ed as soon as the waiter had left [while you make up your mind. T . ry Scottish Rite them. mean, I'm not going to give you|$ oo T o o Regular meeting CHAPTER 36. ) “you can call it business.” His|three days or three weeks, or even Or. Charles P. Jenne ‘ second Friday BLACKMAIL? ha worked nervously. three hours, I want that infor- DENTIST 3 each month at 4 /4 7:30 p. m, Scot- n youll please let me pay;mation here and now or well go | Ronms 8 and 9 Valentine . 4 yn bill,” announced Georgie, straight; away to Matching and tell} { Building .. 3 Y ¥ tish Rite Temple. “It's a rule T made years him all about last Saturday. No| | Telephone' 176 || WALTER B. HEISEL, Secretary one good saying that if I do that, I'm| @ “© - i | killing the goose that lays the gold- (g P l.zggs:on:;:nm(zp en eggs—I'll kill it, all right, and Dr. J w. Bayne ‘ ! Mox;d&y s . i DENTIST Rooms 5-6 Triangle Bldg. Office hours, 9 am. to 5 pm. Evenings by appointment Phone 321 C. H. MacSpadden, Dic- tator. Legion of Moose No. 25/ meets first and third Tues- days. . G. A. Baldwin, Secretary and Herder, P. O. Box 273. = | MOUNY JUNEAU LODGE No. 141 |more civil in your manner to mere angers. ing probably knows, already, be- press and he'll have to take no- tice of it, then. And—" .. | Dr. A. V. Stewart (Copyright, Julia Cleft-Addams) Second and fourth Mon- ) day of each month in [ DRI Scottis Fite Temple, o f(3 B e mnoG | |beginning at 7:30 p. m. v;& EE | [yoHN 3. PARGHER, % Ctfice Phone 469, Res. Ma.ter; JAMES W. LEIVERS, Sec- —a |retary. Georgie prepared to defy the doctor—and finds Garth Av- R AT e ICE CREAM SOCIAL e| ORDER OF FASIERN STAR FOOT CORRECTION There is a tendency among Alaskans to concen- delphia, Pittsburgh or other metropolitan centers|just you and me—" | firm, ; The Martha Society will give an) 9™ — % Siate tob mich obpr‘)smon on bureaus and not |[of late | “Nox sald Jenny unexpectedly.' She finished her chop and no- jce cream social Friday, June 17, , Rubert Slmpson i Sevond and Fourtk enough to the support of complete Territorial and “It won't be like old times. Don't ticed that he had hardly touchediat the home of Mrs. Joe Kendler Opt. D. ‘Tuesdays of each month, Tocal. w”_gow;mmom As long as the powers 0‘: Dangers at Home, let's pretend it will. I went to hi Opening her bag, she asked, on Glacier Highway. Public invited ey Angeles Col- ‘ at 8 o'clok, Scottish & . i ¢ e & Mrs. Bigger's on my way to Ro- t any preliminary |to attend from 2 to 5 and 7 to 12 @Gradu; Aoy “ind i Rite Temple. EDITH government remain in the National Government e chester Gate and ‘Eddie has ‘gone let’s get on with it! How 1pm At lege of Optometry 0 HOW, g there will be bureaus to attend to details in Alaska. | (Manchester Guardian.) ‘Where m'?‘_ S i L e y Orthalmology I i ARDFA}iNYmh ROMB- That must be so, for Congress cannot function as a| A National Safety Congress has been this week| .gha thinks to the airfield, but gulped, gasped and took some| Ola papers = sale at Emplro | | Glasses Fitted, Lenses qund: INSON, iy Territorial Legislature and as County Commissioners |Meeling In London. It is hard to Imagine such a|g g nop sure. He left word that minutes to recover. Then, to her|Office. without the assistance of bureaus. Even a Terrx-f&ifig:gw;&klgg .m”:]c:r ’:aa‘:yhm_‘” a%e,b rNO do"?[“he would write. To me. Il go renev dismay, he smiled again| o - o . KNIGHTS OF COLUM!U% torial government with a Legislature to|qyc™qinne Uil bt B :‘}‘I’Mnoy Georgie dear. I hope youll and shook his head. | Dr. C. L. Fenton | *::g;?;ss;—’;fiél::dxm cover the entire Territory must be aided by agents made life moderately safe for some of their mem-|cioY YOUT chop. | “Youre offering me money not‘ GOO(lyear CHIROPBACTOB'. | Mond&: e that are far removed from the people. In order t0 bers they were apt to make it highly unsafe farf | . Electric ‘I‘rutllll:m font rottiohs g get real self-government there must be some sort quite a number of other people. The world, indeed, | | i Hellenthal Building l er’"m“ sorpargr i g i Chambers, Fifth Street of County or District governments. The municipal |has been too full till very recently of greater perils| governments help the situation some, but there are|—Plague, famine, and the sword—for men to con-| many things that are of local concern where it is ider too narrowly the smaller ills. It is hard to essential to exercise local control beyond municipal ] Fhe Elizabethans gathering gravely to dis- cuss taking the perilous edge off furniture. They | lmits. {might not have thought it worth while. Yet if it| As a whole the bureaus that are operating in is now thought possible in our still not completely | Alaska are doing the best they can do under the fool-proof world to start organizing security, it is! laws and distant executives that control them. Time perhaps not a bad thing to start on furniturs. | has proved that Alaska troubles have not been due |National safety begins in the home, or it should do. | to the personnel of the public service. The diffi- | What else does the word mean if not safety? But | culties lie deeper. It all depends upon who makesapz)arenlly. so Miss Margaret Bondfield showed, the laws and controls the natural resources. The |OUF homes are more dangerous than our roads. And 8 this ignores Mark Twain's calculation that bed is| important thing is who has the last word tne post dangerous place of all. Injuries in the There was a time when some people thought OUr home last year accounted for 8,000 deaths. More | troubles would be over if a few of the ministerial than four hundred women alone were killed by | officials were made elective by Alaskans. That [falling downstairs. So the swift menace of lhfl“ was tried, but it has not reached the source of highway is rivalled by narrow stairs, ill-contrived | the trouble. The clective officials cann cr the furniture, and buckets left in dark corners. Plainly, | details of government throughout a Territory of Some of all this can and should, be remedied. No| nearly 600,000 square miles and provide self-gov- doubt we cannot- yet dispense with buckets. No ernment to the people. That cannot be done with- {9°UPt: also, people will always exist who must leave S rerially Jab/AaANE 1 them for others (or even themselves) to fall over.| out local organizations. The remedy for aska 1S | Nevertheless, there is no question that many of our| full Territorial. government. Otherewise Wwe shall homes are not as well planned nor our furniture| have bureaus or other non-resident agencies from and tools so convenient or so safe as they might ‘Washington or Juneau, or some other place. |be. In spite of all that has been done, the ideal {home—at a price most of us can afford—is still ito seek. May we hope that with the growing num- THE ROOSEVELT MEDAL. iber of women architects we shall see a nearer ap- Georgie bit her lip as the s Robert A. Millikan will receive the Roosevelt Proach towards it? der phoned for a taxi for “Mrs. Town field of science, according to an announcement made| Helief Work, Not Charity, for Cordova. |send” and then, as anafterthou ] | —_— for recently by James R. Garfield, President of the a5 16 56 nateh B¢ fhaven tawe Lo The work of aiding those in need of relief in|cluded city grillroom, and rdova and vicinity was carried on admirably dur-|wanted to be early. Her host was medals annually. Only one award, however, has ing the past year by the various civic and fraternal | Dr. Medal this year for distinguished service in the (Cordova Times.) Roosevelt Memorial Association. It has been the | custom of the Association hitherto to award Lhree’cO been made this year. the Association at a banquet at Roosevelt House, |continue its work for the present and future. the Roosevelt birthplace, at 28 East 20th Street, That those who find it necessary to call upon|“You'll come, won't you? I really| “Money isn't of so much use in New York, on October 27, the seventy-fourth an- |UDiS committee may do so with full understanding|think you must come. By the way,|the end, Mrs. Townsend—T beg of the work being done, however, and that the|how {world at large may know that Cordovans seek no|Townsend? By an odd chance I|is only an end in itself. “I‘ll nev-| charity and accept no charity, it is well at this|came across a chap who's clerk|er ask for money i I could have niversary of President Roosevelt's birth. The Roosevelt Medal, which is three inches in| diameter and of solid gold, shows on one side a|time to restate the precepts on which this work at the City Hall, where they were |—information.” head of Theodore Roosevelt, and on the other a has been instituted and is being conducted. married. Talkative sort of chao.| “Information?” .'Shall we say seven? Some-| “I'd refuse five thousand if I between righteousness and peace, I choose righteous- |the able, no help to those who can and will not|where quiet? I'm a talkative sort | thought T could find out what the of a chap, too, you see, and I've |estimate was that old Matching s Soontiitas et on i racarafaenidations th: For those to wh‘umv fi?e world has been mostlgo: one or two things to say.” sent by air. Townsend took the) harsh, who in the infirmity of age or the blight Georgie frowned. Fear and hat- | document, you'll remember. And! |of illness can no longer bear the yoke of labor, the|red were in her heart. Squaring | you’ll remember, too, what the fi- |heart of Cordova will provide succor—but this is|people like Gill and Mrs. Bigger | gures were. . . Well?” 1 crusts of |was one thing — that voice out of the air was quite|long, strange silence. “What were ‘Wister. But for those who are sound of body and for|another. Blackmail, Dr. Robert Andrews Millikan is recognized byithe moment victims of conditions which they can-|with those narrowest eyes and thin flaming sword with the motto: “If I must choose Cordova offers no dole for the idle, no gifts for ness.” It was designed by James Earle Fraser. | elp themselves. Trustees of the Association made the award consists of the following: Mrs. Grant La Farge, Chairman; Dr. Alexander Lambert, Guy Murchie, Albert Shaw, 'the creed of humanity, not the dry E. A. Van Valkenburg, William Allen White, Owen |charity. authoritative minds in t one of America’s most distinguished scientists, His |JSArning for the good feel of honest toil, whose |price. beings cringe, humiliated at having ask for researches in the field of electricity have been epoch-{oo e o) i & e sk for elhy making. He was the first to isolate the ultimate sustenance, enough to keep the proud spirit un- electrical unit, the electron, and measure its charge, |broken and the flesh unwanting. establishing one of the basic facts of nature, a| And this carries with it no stigma. no taint and quantity second only to the velocity of light as a [no disgrace. It serves to establish confidence of fundamental constant and essential in calcula- |Man in himself; it carries him on until he is able \past and will continue to do in the fj r work Dr. Millikan received the Nobel prize for | % e future, physics in 1923. His measurement of the speed of | Prohibition Low-Down | electrons in photo-electric cells was “acknowledged | e a " | gratefully” by Dr. Albert Einstein for the conclusive | (Seattle Post-Intelligencer.) | proof which it offered “that the emission of elec-! Chairman O'Connor of the Shipping Board says trons from solid bodies under the influence of to the Merchant Marine Committee of Congr light is associated with a definite period of vibra- People have told me that they would tion of the light itself.” The discovery of the rather travel on foreign lines, where they “cosmic rays” and the presentation of evidence that did not feel they were breaking the law these rays come from outside the earth has been| ‘Yhe“ they. haught iand. drank liquor. % . < | O’Connor-me-lad, they were only kidding you. an achievement equally brilliant. The people who travel on foreign lines in order Dr. Millikan was born in Illinois in 1868. He|ty drink make no bones whatever about’ drinking graduated from Oberlin College in 1891, received the in their home towns. Breaking the Prohibition law | degree of Ph.D. from Columbia in 1895 and for is all applesauce to them. | twenty-five years taught at the University of Chi-|{ The Prohibition law has fallen into such wide- cago. Since 1921 he has been the head of the Spread contempt and is violated so universally an California Institute of Technology at Pasadena. |s0 naturally and so matter-of-factly that anyone | Dr. Millikan combines in a striking degree the| Y02 Wanted & glass of Deer and gok it and then | ¥, Iworried about having broken the law g! 8 qualities of a scientist, an administrator, a teacher, |, ceum. & 0 AR LI00ee, Inm 2 philosopher and a public servant, hlgh-apiribed.‘ Those people travel on foreign lines becauseI disinterested and eloquent. He has taken a leading [they get a bigger and finer assortment of drinks | part in the activities of American scientific organi- and they don't have to keep the bottle under ths ations and in the affairs of his own community table. and has. stimulated international co-operation on sclentific problems. — Add similies: As lost as a dry delegate at Chi- The Roosevelt awards, which were established[caga without a corkscrew.—(Detroit News.) orl, TR A . Many a basbeball manager has found out that €lvela player who hits the bottle at night can't hit | Engquirer.) by the Roosevell Memorial Association in 1923, are annually given, as a rule in three out of tw fields, associated with Mr. Roosevelt’s career: public {the ball next day.—(Cincinnatj Blackmall. Tallas would ask a heavy price. “Well,” said Georgie, “how much?” e 'hearing, she said: Leslie Tallas. ey.” organiations through the directing head of the Cen-| As she made ready to leave the| “Can't you?” The medal will be bestowed by the President of |tral Relief Committee, and this committee will|building she thought of the way to tell old Matching that you mar- figure vanished. She tele- ried Townsend? That's not very intelligent of you. You evidently have courage, but not intelligence.” another for herself. The chop| Georgie waved away the waiter.| When he was once more out of, ! “I can't give anything but mon-| Georgie pulse began to race. She his voice had come over the phone. | waited. 1 Tires !| Full Stock of AUTOMOBILE | ACCESSORIES Juneau Motors Authorized Ford Agency Hours: 101315, 78 || JoEN F. MULLEN, G, K. R, H. J. TURNER, BSecretary. DR. R. E. SOCTHWELL | tometrist—Optician Eyes Examined—Glasses Pitted | | Room 7, Valentine Bldg. ! | Office Phone 484; Resldence , . Our trucks go any place any time. A tank for Diesel Oil and a tank for crude oil save burner trouble. PHONE 149, NIGHT 148 RELIABLE TRANSFER Phone 238. Office Hours: 9:30 | to 12; 1:00 to 5:30 - e t Drugless Health Institute CHIROPRACTIC | Painless, Scientific and Effective NEW RECORDS NEW SHEET MUSIC RADIO SERVICE Expert Radio Repairing Radio Tubes and Supplies JUNEAU MELODY HOUSE | Dr. Doelker and Associates | { | oY | | i Phone 477 Night or Day L Front and Main Sts. I | | COMMERCIAL PRINTING . L] BINDERY Geo. M. Smvpkins Co. DR. S. B. JORDAN g DRUGLESS PHYSICIAN MOTOR . o TR o e R CO ? Workmanship Guaranteed . Prices Reasonable Smart Dressmaking Shoppe 109 Main St. Phone 219 JUNEAU TRANSFER COMPANY SAVE HALF wWO0D Saloum’s country and abroad as|POU control, whose strong and idle hands are|{mouth. Tallas would set a heavy | She had left it open—not because 0 Absorbed in her thoughts, she would accept her money after all. {work will be given—work of some kind, enough for |went driven downtown. The grillroom |as she sat, she started down on her was certainly secluded. It held no|weekly check and her wedding one she knew. She thought she ring; and it seemed so significant would choose a table not too much that just at this moment they ; 3 B in a corner—and then she fmmdj‘ tions of content and space in the infinitesimal !0 better himself. This is the work that the Cordova|that, early as she world of the molecule and the atom. For this CchUal Relief Committee has been doing in the|was CLEAN HEMLOCK 14 in., 16 in., 24 in, Single Load, $4.25 Double Load, $8.00 A discount of 50 cents per load is made for CASH LEAVE ORDERS WITH is your cousin’s husband.|your pardon—Miss Ievell. Money | ignificant| “Well?” repeated Tallas after a GEORGE BROTHERS no less. And,|those figures that Townsend took?" Telephones 92 or 95 Georgie stared down into her bag. |she had any hope that the man|| CHESTER BARNESsON down to the taxi and w Telephone 039, 1 long, 1 short s|Just because it so happened that, FIRE ALARM CALLS 1-3 Third and Franklin, 1-4 Front and Franklin, 1-5 Front, near Ferry Way. 1-6 Front, near Gross Apts. 1-7 Front, opp. City Whart. 1-8 Front, near Saw Mill, 1-9 Front at A. J. Office, 2-1 Willoughby at Totem Grocery. 2-3 Willoughby, opp. Cash Cole's Garage. 2-4 Front and Seward. 2-5 Front and Main, 2-6 Second and Main. 2-7 Fifth and Seward. 2-8 Seventh and Main, 2-9 Fire Hall 3-2 Home Boarding House. 3-3 Gastineau and Rawn ‘Way. 8-4 Second and Gold. 3-5 Fourth and Harris. 3-6 Fifth and Goid. 3-7 Fifth and East, Seventh and Gold. d Kennedy. should be together in the little was, Tallas|leather compartment. The ring, He was stax1dmg.lm~t.ainly, was inside the lining, earl GETTING ALONG The sure way to get along in this world is to save some money ALL the time. It isn’t necessary to make large deposits, as small and frequent additions to your account will .make your bank balance grow amazingly fast. We pay four per cent on savings accounus compounded twice a year B. M. Behrends Bank OLDEST BANK IN. ALASKA Next to Kann's SABIN’S Everything in Furnishings GENE EWART The Painter Telephone 397 T B R IR Canvas and Leather MADE TO ORDER E. McClaire, Prop. 223 Seward Street DON'T BE TOO LIBERAL i Moves, Packs and Stores Freight and Baggage Prompt Delivery of ALL KINDS OF COAL PHONE 438 TTPLAY BILLIARD BURFORD'S | o TeE JUNEAU LAUNDRY Franklin Street, between Front and Second Streets PHONE 359 W.P. Johnson FRIGIDAIRE DELCO LIGHT PRODUCTS MAYTAG WASHING MACHINES GENERAL MOTORS RADIOS Phone 17 Front Street Junean Watch and Jewelry, REPAIRING at very reasonable rates WRIGHT SHOPPE PAUL BLOEDHORN i |

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