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e . =3 L 5 . economic issues were not aired at Chicago is that‘ v \ |elemental struggle which occurred | & ——mm——————— . ST Dally ‘41(]3’{([ EmI)lre the convention was “nonplussed at the gravity and | last_evening?” , PROFESSIONAL I Fraternal Societie. ! Koo magnitude of the country's plight” and that the| am er S ro VV rThg effect of the heat anc;“bhc o . or |delegates had “no penetrating analysis of the enforcing propinquety, too, g . : o [ y . _ . PRESIDENT AND EDITOR [ . o ° £ e o : by Fustace L. Adasmas. a study worthy of much consider-|® o Gastineau Channet ! | JOHN W. TROY 3 MANAGER situation to guide them. | stion. Five catetully elected m"n‘ Helene W. L. Albrecht P BOBXRT W. BENDER - - GENERAL A5 The Republican Party is short on leadership| his knees. If he noticed the quiet and one woman. Out of the lot| PHYSIOTHERAPY TR iy Uy At in his opinion and the Democrats have a \-muali SYNOPSIS: A new brand of ™Man on the beach who lounged|only you and Mr. Hamilton appear | | Massage, Ele.cmcny, Infra Red Meets second and nra.)r]-:ltskbv?‘“r‘:_%_r‘.‘;fl;"\ o hd and Main /monopoly of Presidential timber, and he quotes Elihu | kidnaping is introduced by a ar a machine-gun tripod, he Was:to have withstood the strain with- Ray, Medical Gymnastics. fourth W e d nesdays Streets, Juneau, Alaska Root, famous New York Republican, as being of the| mysterious gang, who abduct i out cracking. And I have my 410 Goldstein Building at 8 pm. — Y Clm‘\;ur- mind. Two years ago, he said, Mr. Root| Nancy Wentworth, a popular in a simple |doubts about Mr. Hamilton.” Phone Office, 216 J| vistting brothers 3 = cau as Secon : | 3 X a s ol b mjl“.'vl“v‘-rrvd in the Post Office in Juneau as Sec wanted to know “What has happened to our party?| musical comedy star, Lucei, a brown organdy, appeared A’h“ml_ prorl}u.».d & gold and) T el — — | Twenty-five years ago we had all the talent. Now| notorious gangster, and four door. Her go'den hair|PMetinum cigarette case and care-g,__ A R SUBSCRIPTION RATES. and|the Democrats have it all” wealthy business men. Rela- t0:catoh all the light jn|TUHY Belected anolier Sbrde. DRS. KASER & FREEBURGER | GEORGE MESSERSCHMIDT. i au, Douglas, Tre SR : 3 E chy,” an Vancy, Dellvered by carrier 1 ¥ 25 per month ; Dr. Butler charges that the delegates bowed to| tives of the kidnaped persons dy corner of the porch. ..didB'y';u “pl:f,'( e i T o 1 DEN"]I‘I:“IE"N M fix‘:;fi’,g;‘“;"g on B mall, postage Dall, & ‘aix B the® in" advance, |orders from Washington in adopting the wet-dry-| 2°¢ “"‘l:‘)""":d that they must saw Ashwood and hesitated. | S YOU PICK, M B O O0€ O e | g Pl vy 2600; one month, in advance, §1.26 Ty |moist Prohibition plank. With no hand on the e el e T il Fipple Smapped oUt o o b |Wealthy. There must be hundreds| | Fours 9 am. to 8 pm. | LOYA LORDER OF b sy Office of any failure or irregularity |reins, it will be interesting to see what kind of a| amoun, ST p“my'wmc;:i s ) gl ® €T3 | 1nd hundreds of women who could'. i MOOSE, NO. 700 e dellvery ol P ira Business Offices, 374 _ [plank the Democratic Convention evolves on the| with Nanecy when she was ‘Good morning, Miss Went-|PaY you more than I If you have|— 3 Meets Monday 8 p. ra, § T f g Lasie isate, Xidhsved, his trk 5 5 atin ight e already collected $600,000 from our = C. H. MacSpadden, Dic- ped; iy friend Emory Bat There's a delightful breeze. |y ¢ “my share would have been| | Y)r, Charles P. Jenne tator. Legion of M MEMBER OF ASSOCIATED PRESS. R e tles, and Stevens, a detective. n me?” H d e A . d i g o 008 g Ut AenaE) B o e gl chea credited to| S0 far the Roosevelt forces have had things their| pick up the trail of the gang | She looked at him in frank cur-|¥100000. And 1~_‘»’"°$;’ b peNTST 31:525 rgeeti sk nd third Tues ) Ji"or ot otherwise crediicd in’ this paper and also the |own way in the Democratic Convention in Chicago.| Where the money is collected, [0sity, then fook the chair he had D A e glhe A v Ronms ';““;dl: Vs AR s Y W AN T They dominate the various committees and selected| and follow the hydroplane in indicated. egaddhot s ki { s i1 KL 10 ALASKA CIRCULATION GUARANTEED TO BE LARGER |jhoth the temporary and permanent chairmen. The their new airplane. The cap- “I am simply bursting with con- | My Wik Atiss Wenbworth1Eiksh- ['e Pl « | MOUNT JUNEAU LODGE No. @1 THAN THAT OF ANY OTHER [PUBLICATION real test will come Thursday or Friday when bal- tives find themselves in some ceit,”” he said, easing himself into d's sardonic voice was shocked Second and fourth Mon- g ting for the ‘Presidentiall nominationt Begins; The| Coliom [place, whers SHe . /ins [Shalja, i Tust Orgendy, dress TO Nt - think I am tuaking | e —® |day of each month in \ A ity by which they seated. Semator o | CCrtainty and heat undermine perfect. The arrogant Saleslady| > Wi Sn oL Dr. J. W. Bayne Scottish Rite Temple, 5 B ANRICE S ARY “““I they seated Senator J.| their nerves. The leader of the ed to tell me I should have!hope,)?,ay Esy WL ke DENTIST beginning at 7:50 p. m. G . Valsh s Dermancnt chamoan is a) faic augury| S edug: Afloweod, W culluSigiy en_green. She was wrong. I|“uypn 4 paying it, then?” Rooms 5-6 Triangle Bldg. | (JOHN J. PARGHER, < for their candidate’s nomination. who is very lame, watches their knew it then, and I'm positive of | (Copyright, Dial Press.) Office hours, 9 am. t0 5 PM. | |\, 4or JAMES W, LE: 5 _ | strained emetions. Lucci and now. You are very beautiful, Copyright, Dia 3 Evenings by appointment refa‘ry [ - LEIVERS, Sec Why Grow Old? Mallory, a millionaire stock- Miss Wentworth.” | ~ f us Phone 321 2 o, broker, in rivalry over Namcy, | ‘Do you mean to tell me?" she| o “HOW ‘:.’;'f,‘,‘,‘ ;"‘fcci'“"; o 13 ¢ | ENIGHTS OF COLUMBUS « - e York Herald THbite) ! l::;;‘in to quarrel. lncir'ed by demanded, “that you picked out| w““u“‘w ok mmmw.”"‘“h_ . . Hartions Conricli i 1708 ¢ | There is nothing new scientifically in the facts | wha,:'m:lda;nr';'hegell?vae? m“t:'“: (.I"?’ I B ana Tn ty olos wood sees the first threat to Dr. A. V. Stewart Meetings second and last | emphasized last week before the Medical Society of| . ¥ » A Ak 2 } his kidnaping project. . DENTST Mondey at 7:30 p. m § Ithe State of New York by Dr. David J, Kaliski| ~Pattle to the death. e M LAl bl HHodra. 0 b, ThA0 855, 1A Transient brothers urg |about the increasing death rate among older frac-| % ey ORI DIe ond ol e ¥ SEWARD BUILDING ed to attend. Councy |tions of the community. It is only laymen who still S ¥ vEnge to Siihe, s JUNEAU SAMPLE | Ctfice Phone 489, Wes. ! Chambers, Fifth Street are shocked by the discovery that all of the hoasted A FIGURE IN G!'\NGDO{W 5 uvf‘r\vheln‘flng the "salespewxe \vxihi | SHOP Phone 276 1 | JOHN F. MULLEN, G. K. + |medical science and sanitation of the last three| Lucci and Mallory went down in my unerring taste. I - H. J. TURNER, Secretary. ; R BIG ONE decades has done nothing more than to decrease the % reverberating crash. * The gang-| “What a strange person you are, | The Little Store with the i 5»‘ LET’'S MAKE THE FOU RTH A 3 ONE. | Ganger of death or disease among the young; that|Ster: clinging to his adversary's Vfi: Ashwood,” she observed medl-i BIG VALUES % ole 'j' 3“ i & middle-aged and elderly people are dying even throat erl a bull terrier to a bone. tatively. ig ST .. Robert Simpson Our trucks go any place any The American Legion post of this city has ar-)o . oo ", the average, than they did a genera- Mallory’s knees came up in a There was a half-mocking light | time. A tank for Diesel Oil “ ! % ranged a fine and appropriate program for the lyion ago The increase, experts agree, is probably [SPASM of pain. His face became in his eyes as he met her somber' SR e ) Opt. D. and a tank for crude oil save Fourth of July. Not only will the community cele- |meangingless, When more people died in childhood |MOttled, his jade green eyes pro- o % A New, Compliete Line o @raduate Los Angeles Col- 1 | burner trouble. prate fittingly the nation’s natal day, but it will lor youth weaklings tended to be eliminated. Ac- truding like fhose of a gargo; “How penetrating,” he murmer-, W. L. DOUGLAS lege of Optometry and | PHONE 149, NIGHT 148 1 this year observe again the bicentennial of the cordingly, the minority of persons who lived beyond His h?"dé beat ineffectively aga ed. | . L J Orthalmology I RELIABLE TRANSFER , Birih 'of. George. Washiigtor, BAt of the program [forty wére Ngrdier than now and livelt longer. The|l 0006 Higd s as Hin fepter's| Gho Ghished st her own cliche.| SHOES | | Glasses PFitted, Lenses Ground | | o ; 13 3 '_“ be devoted to the latter as is most proper for [truth is—and it is significant enough—that science |thumbs pressed down into the He did mot push his advantage,; -~ # wx] e devo ;.Ono 4 has not lengthened the expectation of life for the windpipe. His arms and legs be- but lay back in his chair and re-| Has Just Arrived 1 A% § such an occasion. 3 2 | A g ‘i (middle-aged. § The Legionnaires have shown their usual civic NGt DEB Sgo. Dr: Alexls (Cairerfion the . Ficke 4 $5.00 to $7.50 Dr. C. L. Fenton NEW RECORDS spirit in taking charge of the preparations for the |geyer Institute, formulated an idea of what he called 1 CHIROPRACTOR ! P! ) | N { Chamber of Commerce and the city generally. It |physiologic time. There go on in any living organ-| | MEN'S SOCKS, GLOVES, | mfi‘:;:‘ l EW SHEET MUSIC I\ aonk P . o 2 . " : : | ps i i only remains for the people as a whole to co-lism, he said, certain biochemical processes which ! BREECHES, ETC. p operate with them in order to make it an un-|seem to move progressively from birth to death, like | | FOOT CORRECTION ! RADIO SERVICE { % i lock d vhich t th dow i At Reasonable Prices | Hours: 10-13, 1-5, 1-8 : qualified success, rain or shine. The celebration will |2 clock wound up which mus en run down. ! 3 E g o { s There is no visible hope of stopping this clock and . e xpert Radio Repairing K be on as large a scale as in former years, in fact| - Taay Yoo Th 3 ! Radio Tubes and Supplies ¥ the program is more varied and covers a wider Living rakelosay Tocevar. at part of the dream H SAM S pplies re is & ressl oht (ridat, and, | °2 ronee;ce Leot Ay et e droa, | |77 DR. B E. SOUTHWELL | N scope. If there is any depression In our mids, ANd,| © Goyg it be realized, indeed, it might prove to | Optometrist—Opticlan due to a surplus of labor that has ‘;:ran'mled here |,o o nightmare. Yet the very facts which Dr. Car- | THE | | Eyes Examined—Glasses Fitted | JUNEAU MELODY in.recent months some effects are felt, it will not iye] and other physiologists cite disclose a hope and } | Room 7, Valentine Bldg. ! HOUS be readily discernable next Monday. problem, for one meaning of these facts is that | TAILOR : Office Phone 484; Residence E the physiologic clocks in different individuals run | | Phone 238. Office Hours: 9:30 '0). 1 N ' at different rates. Some persons do live to be cen- to 12; 1:00 to 5:30 s £ TWO-THIRDS RULE RETAINED. tenarians or older. Some do stay young in mind | 3 2 e T T L] 2 " . d body years longer than others of the same The Rules Committee of the Democratic National |41 e : d 3 ot tning for its own procedure the nation, ramgly or race. These differences must m@sk : JUNEAU TRANSFER Convention in retaining a secret which laymen properly may ask the medical H DR. S. H. rule requiring two-thirds of its vvotmg strength to profession to seek. " DRUGLESS PHYSICIAN COMPA nominate the Presidential candidate acted Wisely.|" one way of attacking this secret is that dis- i 5 Behrends Bank Building NY Not, necessarily, that the rule is sound or workable |cyssed at the medical assembly before which Dr. Phone 259 Hours: 9:30-12; 1-8 from a standpoint of practical politics. Too often |Kaliski spoke. What are the causes of aging? Why pol p : it has operated to a great material hurt to the |is there a physiologic clock at all? What regulates | 4 . g ] S L i e i its rate? One oldtime theory, that of aging as an | o IZ, FRESTE, party itself. The theory behind the rule is that |l 0 o : COMMERCIAL PRINTING > where any candidate can obtain such a preponderant t’}f]r:c'}a’;’uri“:‘r ‘:’)f:c“s“’:“);::'j:‘ls :gnc?lfesixp;?dendla:; | BINDERY DR. E. MALIN i f general ; | . | ACTOR majority of the delegates he is fiieg ol g germ infections to lengthen lives for those who pass qeosyy s,A1ecioApe siy 03 Buybuid Geo. M. Smvekins Co. CH'!R.OPR 0! dl 4 support, and is more likely to be the real choice |y, gangers of youth. Lack of vitamins in the food . . - - | Treatment for Rheumatism and | s vention th ne who possibly by clever g Y : . 4 493sBued 3y} ‘usesd Buizedaquanas | Nervous Diseases | of the convention an ol _Pv~ too much food, too much stimulation by -civiliza- B u| umop juam KJojjely pue |07 M C L | Reslanit Bath House | Moves, Packs and Stores manipulation gains a mere majority vote at the tion heredity—all have been suggested 4s causes C AD PHONE 349 Freight and Baggage . convention. of the fact that some people grow older than others|gan to flutter, rapidly losing his|sumed his indolent waich over sea ! -~—s e i . That has not always been the case. In notable [in the same span of years. Decision between these |strength as the life-giving air was|and sky. MOTOR Prompt Delivery of instances candidates with slightly less than the |theories clearly is impossible at present, but here denied his labored lungs. . “I can't imagine the same man | b Workmanship Guaranteed it required two-thirds vote have failed of nomination |certainly is a problem ;rf ntlfidlcaghre;ea{;h which bel- Then suddenly, he became limp |enjoyed shopping for feminine ap- | Prices Reasonable ALL KINDS OF COAL q b i i comes even more pressing than the further conquests|Lucci held on, obvious to all the|parel one d: d ducti a . through the implacability of the minority, and the Ry y | pare ay and conducting . : convention after almost endless balloting was forced |Of disease: :&ré"{le f‘?:ep't that inhuman faco|kidnaping expedition the next.” Smart Dressmaking PHONE 48 to select some compromise candidate. In these cases Ao SYSe. SR f:: “;ii ?:;::’;:gdhg d:):i: 3‘3‘:‘1 P e Shoppe splits i lted. It is true that the P] . X s enough! shwood’s . ) 5 | 109 Main St. Phone 219 . party splits vi_rt:vnnbly resn e bR st £ Platform Changes. voice snapped through the silent|man who looked and spoke like a| 3 el 1 candidatp with a majority ually 3 ? room like a pistol shot. Lucci held [scholarly sophisicate despite the ob- SAVE HA.LF I g [ which should be an argument for abrogating the (New York Times.) on. vious fact that he was a desper- : I 71| PLAY BILLIARDS | rule instead of retaining it. If the rule is to be| Except for its plank on Prohibition and its| “mo oypple hobbled across the|ate criminal. “Mr. Lucci tells me ON I 2 J ol dropped, however, it ought to be decided upon before ap;ll?gia f“‘; ;‘a:d edm“es' 1‘:1;:]“::‘; “la&l‘“m ‘g }:e‘; floor with amazing speed. His|that you are one of the greatest| VENETIAN SHOP ‘ —at— | the convention meets at which the step is taken. fnust :v::;(g:t‘r é‘hfmg;’x‘:fie noyt' se:mp " c:‘r:n; :gfl;_ face still bore an expression of [figures in gangdom.” WOOD Dry Goods, Notims, Men's ‘ BURFORD’S ! It must be done as a matter of general policy |’y “qirfer greatly from that of four years ago, | iSiterested enjoyment. A blue-| “Mr. Lucei is too flattering” he Furnishings ; . s and not to gain an advantage for some special [The promise to establish agriculture on a “parity:| 2k streak cut a half circle|replied drily. ‘It is true, of course, Mrs, Mary: Glovanettl, Mgr. candidate. In the present convention, the movement |with industry is repeated in the same vague language through (he air as the butt of his|that we both come under the gen- CLEAN HEMLOCK . l i : ] i i i to abrogate the rule was started to benefit one of the candidates for the nomination—Gov. Roosevelt. For that reason, the Rules Committee was well advised to make no change at this time. CAPT. CARL WILEY NOT IMPLICATED. Local people who became well acquainted with the Wileys during their attempted salvage of the Islander wreck were astounded at the news, con- tained in an Associated Press despatch Tuesday, that Elbert H. Wiley had been arrested on a charge of holding up the Seattle postoffice during the holiday season last year. He and his two brothers, Capt. Carl and Raymond, spent months here during that work. The press reports of the arrest of Elbert and his brother Raymond and the identification were slightly confusing. It was Capt. Carl who invented the diving bell used, who did most of the diving, and who resided here with his wife. No charge was made against him for complicity in the robbery. Mrs. Elbert Wiley, so far as is known, was never here during the period of the salvage effort. DR. BUTLER IS FRANK. In a copyrighted interview appearing in the New York World-Telegram just after his return from the Republican National Convention as a delegate and where his own plank for submitting a resolution to repeal the Eighteenth Amendment was defeated, Dr. Nicholas Murray Butler, President of Columbia Uni- versity, predicted that the looking-both-ways Pro- hibition plank finally adopted would defeat Presi- dent Hoover and carry the Republican Party “over the dam” next November unless the New England and Middle Atlantic States repudiated it in their State conventions. This few of them will do, as has already been announced by various State leaders. The approved plank, “every word of which was passed on by the President,” he declared to be “political blunder of the first magnitude. . . . sired by Muddlehead out of Cowardice. . . . violates every tradition of the Republican Party. . . . the only redeeming feature is that there is no possible chance of it being adopted by the people.” Not only did he criticize the Prohibition plank but he condemned the convention for its failure to deal honestly with the country’s present econ- omic condition. Disputing the theory that the na- tion and the world will recover automatically from used at Kansas City. The party once more pledged itself simultaneously to remove “impediments” from the path of international trade, yet to retain them. The apparently irresistible impulse which compels platform-makers to include a long series of axioms on such non-controversial quetsions as “Indians,” “Crime,” “Alaska,” “Narcotics” and “Hawaii” is once more in evidence. In its closing passages, reaffirm- ing the traditional superiority of Republicans, the document borrows heavily from its predecessors. Nevertheless, there are at certain points signifi- cant omissions, changes and additions. Four years ago the Republican Party specifically discussed the war debts and admitted no doubt of its ability to collect them. This year it is silent on that ques- tion, which implies a commendable desire on the part of the Administration to avoid impossible com- mitments in a rapidly changing situation. Four years ago the party “commended the action of Congress in further liberalizing the laws applicable to veterans’ relief.” It was such “further liberaliza- tions” which imposed on the Govrenment a charge of more than $400,000,000 annually on account of disabilities in no way conected with war service. This year the party says, on the subject of “disability from causes subsequent and not attributable to war,” that “a careful study should be made of exist- ing veterans' legislation, with a view to eliminating inequalties and injustices and effecting all possible economies.” There are other innovations. For the first time the party urges that authority be granted to the Federal Power Commission “to regulate the charges |for electric current when transmitted across State lines.” It discusses in more specific terms than it used four years ago the problems of the railways, |and favors regulation of competing forms of trans- |portation “under conditions of equality.” It raises the question of bank regulation, a subject overlooked at Kansas City, and recommends revision of existing |laws “so as to place our banking structure on a sounder basis,” protected by “more stringent super- vision and broader powers vested in the supervising authorities.” Times change, and the slow-moving machinery of party government accommodates itself to new conditions. ‘When Chairman Fess ordered the Stadium elec- tricians to turn out the high-powered lights, some Democrats audibly wondered if he wasn't getting reconciled to the soft glow of twilight.—(Chicago News.) Come to think of it, legalizing beer wouldn't be treating the speakeasies just right.—(Florida Times- ‘Union.) It is better to straddle than not to have a leg the depression, he believes the reason the paramount /to stand on.—(Boston Transcript.) heavy automatic crashed down on Lucci's head. Without a sigh -or groan, the ‘intent, rigid figure slumped down like a bundle of old clothes tossed across the insensi- ble form of his enemy. Ashwood turned away negligent- ly, whistled a shrill, birdlike note and said: “Put them to bed.” Four burly guards who had ma- terialized out of nowhere at all, picked up the two unconscious men and bore them from the room. ‘Then, for the first time in her life, Nancy Wentworth fainted. The long porch, under the caress of a faint morning trade wind, was almost endurable. Ashwood lounged in a deck chair smoking a cigarette and idly gaz- ing over the turquoise water to- ward the tiny segment of horizon between two islands to the west- ward. A copy of “Soldiers of For- tune” lay open but forgotten on | eral term of gangsters, but there| is something direct and forceful about One-shot's work that I could never hope to equal.” Again that mocking gleam flash- ed from his vivid blue eyes. “I would be more successful ir my chosen career,” he continued comfortably, “if I could be more like the worthy One-shot, who is downright, persevering and unim- aginative. Ome of my little foibles is that bootlegging per se, does not stimulate me.” He offered her a cigarette, then went on in a dry, almost pedantic tone. “My own efforts, as you may have observed, run to more un- usual things. This guest house of mine, for instance; you must ad- mit that it offers a marvelous op- portunity for profit, as well as a most intriguing laboratory for the| study of human psychology. Where else might one have witnessed the will promote happiness ECONOMY~— A Watchword of the Times does not mean miserliness; it does mean prudent spending and prudent saving. Compared with years past the purchasing power of the dollar is greater and affords an opportunity to save. Our Savings Department Will Help You Grasp that Opportunity The B. M. Behrends Bank OLDEST BANK IN ALASKA LT T T and independence. It 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 GEORGE BROTHERS Telephones 92 or 95 CHESTER BARNESsoN Telephone 039, 1 long, 1 shert FIRE ALARM CALLS Third and Franklin, Front and Franklin. Front, near Ferry Way. Front, near Gross Apts. Front, opp. City Whart. Front, near Saw Mill Front at A. J. Office. Willoughby at Totem Grocery. Willoughby, Seventh and Main, Fire Hall. Home Boarding House. evunnnn and Rawn Saloum’s IN NEW LOCATION Seward Street, near Second SABIN’S Everything in Furnishings for Men Canvas and Leather Goods MADE TO ORDER E. McClaire, Prop. 223 Seward Street DON'T BE TOO THE JUNEAU LAUNDRY Franklin Street, between Front and Second Streets PHONE 859 W.P. Johnson FRIGIDAIRE DELCO LIGHT PRODUCTS MAYTAG WASHING MACHINES GENERAL MOTORS RADIOS Phone 17 Front Street Juneau FINE Watch and Jewelry REPAIRING at very reasonable rates WRIGHT SHOPPE PAUL BLOEDHORN Goodyear Tires Full Stock of AUTOMOBILE ACCESSORIES Juneau Motors Authorized Ford Agency