The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, February 4, 1933, Page 4

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Daily Alaska Empire successful JOHN W. TROY ' ROBERT W. BENDER FRESIDENT AND EDITOR | GENERAL MANAGER | | membership of | house. Published every eyening Streets, Juneau, Alaska. except EMPIRE PRINTING COMPA\Y at Second and Main ity of 88 votes tion to contest Sunday by the Entered in the Post Office In Jun: matter. | torial Canvassini eau as Second Class | | Third Division. SUBSCRIPTION RATES. Dellvered by carrier In Juns=au and Douglas for $1.25 per_month, mall, postage paid, at the following rates: One year, in adyance, $12.00; six $6.00; on: onth, in advance, $1.26 Subscribers will confer a favor if they will promptly overturn the expressed will of the Third Division notify tiie Business Office of any failu in the delivery of their papers. Telephone for Editorial and Busi ,m the absence lof fraud, the c months, In advance, or irregularity MEMBER OF ASSOCIATE The Assoctated Press is exclusiv ase for republication of all news dispatches credited to | it or not otherwise credited in this local news published herein. w)(ms are not ness Officen, 374 a1 in favor of D PRESS. |March 6 and ser ely entitled to the to 1937. paper and also the | ALASKA CIRCULATION GUARANTEE! THAN THAT OF ANY OTHER PUBLICATION. D _TO BE LARGER'qoing business, AN INCONSITENT POLICY. The resolution adopted by the such a policy should Such purchases avowed deter! at its last meeting opposing the purcrhase and for the Alaska Railroad outside of y was not only timely, setting forth what seems to us impelling are directly {anything else. | anything. | powerful as the i H f ‘Word comes f gate-Elect dents of the stit over. local Chamber of They had 3 . who wa: i it was right to V0O Was put in put him in ¢ 1 1t not be allowed to Mr. Dimiond reat domain in that he wanted the main- ington. devel nent of” National Forests in . b St 2 . Knowledge is ska, which by reason of lack of market “are to dispose of mature timber comazx.xed the cause of his a sult y millions of feet of high .50 ;::'ade mo hemlock rot and fall each year,” it declared ington that of Alaska which purpose defeated railroad b_\' is sound, z to the markets of right to it adjacent it pla e very serious handicaps upon for economically successful operation. along the Alaska Railroad are not given a chance to earn a stakes and living they will have move to some other can have that opportunity. And if they move out,i s-so well known here and in Wash- no proof of its correctness the failure of the management of the tilize local labor and materials where logical reasoning. at its doors, |to answer every the representativ we feel, is being | supply Mr. If the the States to get /i one thus depriving nitsory. of the its own chances | If the people |Support of their in helping him the capital in an to pull up their spot where chey|mun for many a there will be few people for the road to serve. The request of the Chamber of Interior to cancel the contratcs such contracts - is it be granted. MISTAKES WILL OCCUR. edited and published by human although that classification of newspaper like them inevitably This apropos of one recently made by the Anchorage Times, a carefully and compet- ently edited daily that holds high rank in Terri- Newspapers, beings, people is sometimes disputed, make mistakes. torial publications. In a story movement of recently elected officers heading for the capital, it said Senator Rober J. R. Campbell, a member of the House, would leave Anchorage in the near future for to the Secretary already awarded made it, and a total of 2415 (there was actual !smallesc nine in During its cour: | of- the upper branch of the Territorial Legislature. His term expires in 1935. | candidate last November for the junior He defeated L. V. | dent of the first Alaska Senate in 1913, by a major- |time to examine returns from five precincts in the the grounds upon which he intends to contest, but The constant and consistent advertiser ,Inst year and the year before, {do any more with his advertising than he does with A party of African explorers reported discovering snakes that barked in (make out of fermented cocoanut milk must be as Di Dimond happily has surprised the resi- the realm by upsetting all precedents in actice of elective officials by visiting his con- ts of remote localities after the election is before election but this is the first time the man long tour immediately after the votes were counted o be hoped his plan will be adhered to by others in the future may be chosen to represent this When in Anchorage recently Mr. people of Alaska and more thoroughly understand y their problems and their needs in order that he might all the better present their case at Wash- about it the right way to strengthen himself and Nothing so disarms any ruling body or indi- vidual as for the one making an appeal to be able is neces- phase of information in support of his case. jno plea is more convincing than that which has the avowed purpose of the construction the support of the people. ska Railroad was the development of the| Mr. Dimond is doing his part. uals with the good of their country at heart to Dimond with all information and resolu- tions or other material that will help him in his task at Washington. He, and that means Alaska, must act de= has induced to migrate to lands!cisively and promptly. is bound to make it almost im- possible to develop that section of the Territory and /times he who first gets in his thrust.” Now is the time for all Alaskans to rally to the |armed is he whose cause Fai Mr. Campbell was the the Third Division in the same Ray, member and Presi- Mr. Ray has given notice of inten- and, upon his petition, the Terri- g Board has set February 18 as the While Mr. Ray has not made public of any official or unofficial reports hances for any successful effort to very bright. ~The chances are Mr. Campbell taking his seat on ving out the full length of his term, is still in fact, moré business ‘than he did The quitter doesn't It takes a stayer to succeed at trees. That stuff that they famous Admiralty Island hooch imond’s New Idea. (Anchorage Times.) rom the vast Kuskokwim that Dele- béen visited many times by others office took the trouble to make the office. has set a worthy example, and it the councils of the nation. Dimond said to get better acquainted with the power, and Mr. Dimond is going counstituency when he pleads her question or present instantly every And It now behooves e bodies of Alaska and all individ- He will apear before Congress most trying periods of American An old adage says “Thrice is in the just, but ten energetic member, and lose no time put over the cause of Alaska at hour when results are more needed SYNOPSIS: arranges to faint just as he Mark Lodely arrives at Farrell Armitage’s house. He and an actress, Patsy Raoul, quarrel, vehem- ently, and then Mark, again faint, appropriates Farrell's own bedroom. Farrell endufes all, having promised to estab- lish Mark as an artist if Bar- bara Quentin, Mark’s fiance, will postpone their wedding a year. Farrell hepes to win Barbara’s lcve; Leila Cane and Patsy have a plan of their own -—as yet a mystery. CHAPTER 23. UNPREDICTABLE PATSY Miss Raoul's fury was short lived. Before she had 'crossed Brandish Place she was laughing. ‘“Whose fur flew first?” she de- manded in perfectly easy English “His, I think, but I can't be sure. The chattering little ape!” “Mark—or you?” “Mark, of course! the face of a monkey but he has the soul of one if it was our souls we were discussing.” | “I heard you.” “It is a great pity I lost m,‘ temper in front of the other man. “But I'm not paying you to| work up an affair with him,"| pointed out Leila sweetly. “In' any case—he wants to marry some | one who doesn't want to marry him and nothing makes a man more blind and deaf to every oth- er specimen of exquisite young wo- manhood. . .. No, not meaning me. I intended to marry him, but I never thought I cared about him. Neither did he. So we're friends, instead.” “What is this girl of his .llke? Beautiful?” ¢ 1 “Yes,” admitted Leila. “She's the most beautiful girl I've ever seen. And clever. And good. And a fool” “Any clever woman is a fool to be good,” declared Miss Raoul, turning briskly into the Park. “Why won't she - take Armitage?” “She loves Mark Lodely.” Miss Raoul emitted a screech or laughter. “And whom does Mark love?” “Mark.” “Hurry up!” commanded Miss! Raoul. “I have to go to Val before the theatre. I hope heRas finished your Mark’s studio be- cause my place much be re-donc at once. I've just decided it.” “That day we first met, in Ne York, you told me it was perfect “That Was because I was in New York. ~ I¢'was hoestck. I was in a cm.ldluon to say anything. The moment I got back I saw that the whole atmosphere was wrong. | It tries to tone me down. It al- most apologizes to me. That's fa- year. ir Year for Print. (New York Times) Nineteen hundred thirty-two took a lighter toll to outside tie making interests and to place no more in the publishing world than in most other fields. altogether . reasonable. not to have been necessary to have certainly the equities of the situation demand that almost exactly 2 per cent. in the United States and Canada, In weekly publications ly an increase, though of the very a total of nearly 12,000 publications. se the depression laid low some important newspapers, chief among them The New York World. that have fallen fields, an exceptionally relati to the clegre they spoke with t 8. Bragaw and it e in finance, cannot be said that the newspaper world has been Yet when one thinks of the giants to the axe of hard times in other in business, in the theatre, it heavy sufferer. In the good old days when they talked of “suds” respect, not in ‘derision.—(Detroit Nineteen and Juneau. home week with thirty-three should seem like old 50 many things scheduled to come Senator Bragaw is one of the senior members back.—(Atlanta Constitution.) NOSTRAND GETS LAW EXAMINERS' OKAY ON TESTS Passes Examination for Bar ‘Admission—Others Unsuccessful Garrett W. Nostrand successful- ly passed the tests required for admission to the Alaska Bar in the examination given here last| November by thé Territorial Board of Law Examiners, it was made | known this morning. Two other applicants, George Baum and Mrs. Mildred Herrman, failed to achieve the required cred- its. The decision of the Exam- iners on all three applicants was unanimous. Three members of the Board, John Rustgard, Attorney General, Chairman, R. E. Robertsan, First Division member, and A. J. Di- mond, Third Division, conducted the examination last October and marked the papers. This work was completed this morning prior to the departure of Delegate-Elect Dimobnd for the south. All three of the aspirants are local residents. Mr. Nostrand is Chief Clerk in the office of Ter- ritorial Auditor. He read law with dent of the Juneau Women's Club and legislative representative for the Federated Women's Clubs of Alaska. Mr. Baum is connected with the Juneau Business College and has been employed since No- vember by the Attorney General's office in assisting to codify and compile the Laws of Alaska. JUNEAU LUMBER MILL SENDS OUT CREW ON DRIVA TO RED BAY men, the tug boat Driva, of the Juneau Lumber Mills left here at 10 o'clock this morning for Red Bay on the east coast of Prince | of Wales Island to begin opera- tians. ' A. E. Owens is in charge of the W which will cut pilings for e various canneries to fill con- tracts obtained by the local com- le { With a crew of about fifteen Ann’s Hospital suffering with a broken leg. Both bones of the left leg were broken below the knee in an accident while Mr. Pearson was on shift at the Alaska Juneau mine about 9 o'clock last evening. ———————— JOHN GUERRERO iS PATIENT AT HOSPITAL John Guerrero ‘entered Sf. Ann’s Hospital for medical treatment yesteray. He is employed at the Alaska Juneau mine. e, {MRS. RAY WHITE AND CHILDREN LEAVE FOR HOME Mrs. Ray White and three chil- \dxen who have been spending the | winter months in Juneau, left on |the Estebeth for their home at Gustavus, | e HERBERT CARBRAY LEAVES ON NORCO FOR KETCHIKAN - | spired. It ought Forty-seven daily newspapers disappeared out of pany. They will be working at Red Bay for approximately two months, This is the first crew which has been sent out by the local lumber {company this season. ————— A. J. DISHAW RETURNS ! FROM BUSINESS TRIP Herbert Carbray, representative of the Seattle. Hardware Com- pany, left on the motorship Norco for Ketchikan, - e MRS. GEORGE FRANKLIN LEAVES HOSPITAL TODAY Mrs, George Franklin, who has been a patient in St. Ann's Hos- pital, left for her home this morn- ing. A. J. Dishaw, of Dishaw and Son, Builders’ Supply Company, re- turned on the motorship Norco this morning from a business trip of several weeks to Seattle, Ta- coma, Bellingham and Everett. — o ——— MRS. MARY ERWIN LEAVES ON VISIT Mrs. Mary Erwin left on the Henry Roden. Mrs, Herrman is widely known throughout the Ter- “gitory for her activities in women's club actwities and is now Presi- FRED PEARSON INJURED AT THE ALASKA JUNEAU motorship Norco for a visit in Petersburg of several weeks. Mrs. Erwin is stenographer in the office Fred Pearson was taken to St.jof Hellenthal and Hellenthal, tal. I want a setting that will make the most of my ugliness.| They say Malavie's might be able to do it.” “I don't think so. His studio for Mark was not particularly in- Divans, screens, all the| usual clutter. Patsy, I wish you'd| try this girl, instead.” “Which girl?” Leila tried to recapture discre- tion. “The girl who furnished and dec- orated my home in the country, It's been enormously admired. And she did our flat in Town or some of it. She's the cleverest kid—she designs my clothes, t00.” ¥ “I wondered where you got them. I felt sure you couldn't afford them from the big shops and you need a lot of dressing.” Miss Raoul tossed her pochette into the air and caught it again. “I am efn-spee-ration have, as I so very quainly say it in my jargon. The money you're paying me to vamp Mark is just about what Malavie's will ask for during the whole of my house. Pay me half and the girl's fee, instead. What's her name?” “Barbara Quentin.” “Is that her real name?” To her own surprise Leila threw up her head. “Quentin has been a west-coun- try name for centuries. So has Lodely. They don't need to as- sume them.” ‘The next instant she regret?d the flash of spirit. “Well now, my name isn't Raoul. It isn't even Patsy. I long for London when I'm in New York uying Barbara bymmfi--OA.n.d-vonunmv- I may have| !nnd for Paris when I'm in Lon- don—I'm at cept on the boards and I've been | pelted off them, twice, and shall be again.” | Miss Raoul seized the door of a taxi which happened to be cruis- ing past, and hurled herself in- ie. Before Leila could move ay, her scarlet-helmeted head s thrust out again. ‘Don't forget to write to that tsy, I didn’t mean—". | | bad to walk on alone. Odd—odd | —odd—clicked her heels on the pavement. * She .envied Patsy, and | Patsy, or ja part of Patsy—envied her. Envied the security, Secur- ity? Leila, wondered whether Miss Raoul considered the friendship at an end. Probably, so Leila |would have to move. “Well, now, |Mrs. Lodely’s there; I can stay at | Farrell's.” She turned and | steps, telling herself that she would phone Farrell. Though she needn't do that, either; she could just stroll in, Better return to Patsy's home nowhere ex-| tht taxi swung off and Leila retraced her| qprov!sion for the expense of the PROFESSIONAL —— e Helene W. L. Albrecht PHYSIOTHERAPY | Missage, Electrility, Infra Red , Ray, Medical Gymnasties. | 307 Goldslein Building Phone Office, 218 Fraternal Societies oF Gastineau Channel 20 YEARS AGO From The Empire B. P. 0. ELKS meets every Wednesday at 8 p. m Visiting brothers welcome. Geo. Messerschmidt, Exalted Ruler. M.H. Sides, Secreta'y. ) Februay 4, 1913 The steamer Yukon arrived in port from the South with a num- ber of men for the mine at Tread- well. Milo Samovitch and family were passengers for Treadwell where | g DRS. KASER & FREEBURGER KNIGHTS OF COLUMBUSN Mr. Samoviteh is to be shift boss DENTISTS Segh for the mine and L. B. Adsit was| | Blomgren Duilding ’ ueeg;;f:g:ud):ga‘;':n a passenger for Juneau. PHORE 58 “fonday at 7:30 p, m. Transient brothers urg- ed to attend. Councll Chambers, Fifth Street. gOHN F. MULLEN, C. R. Hours 9 am. to 9 pm. According - to S{’x!ney Smith of the Algunican Deve]opment Com- pany, the Marconi Company plan-| { > J. TURN ned to install a perfect and com-l Dr. Ch';';gff "’I: senne _\&m; plete chain of stations along the ki ot \____. Pacitic Const’ thaf’ would give un-|| Reoms & anu 0 Valeniine ror tracks g0 any place suy ' interrupted service between Alaska o tank for Diesel Off Telephone 176 ! B & - | lndll-ulklwuudcollun trouble. points, San Francisco, PHONE 18, NICHT 148 Portland and Vancouver. Seattle, [ — Ruby City, with five saloons, two D-. J. W. Bayne ! | RELIABLE TRANSFER | blacksmith shops, two bdth houses, DENTIST 11 . two laundries, two shoemakers, a Roons BGAHARLS Blg... - | | oo LR T hospital, a school, a machine shop,{ | Off'ce hours, § am. to 5 pm. {one livery stable and one meat "'"mph:y“lg.z;)m'mm' ’ NEW RECORDS shop was reported to be the largest i camp on the Yukon, second in size!| —_ < g NEW SHEET MUSIC only to Dawson, which boasted)$ ° 3 ! twenty-five places where liquor was Lr. AL W. Swewart RADIO SERVICE I sold to retail trade. DENTIST s i | Hours . am. to 6 pm. { Expert Radio Repairing The Governor's Office was ad-|| SEWARD BUILDING ‘ ! Bags 3 vised by the Senate of the legisla- Oftice Phane 160, Res Radio Tubes and Supplies ! 'the, executive and judicial appro- one | { [pnannn bill' containing, by anj”—— ———~—— d JUNEAU MELODY ! s , ; :flmer;‘dment msgr'.ed :;n t;xecmeas::se PR R s R HO USE Ifirst Alaska Legislature. Opt. V. Graduate Los Angeles Col- Robert Coughlin, of Douglas, was| | lege of Optometry wnd 3 1 | i JUNEAU TRANSFER a Juneau visitor. Orpthalmoiogy | | Olasses PFitted, Lenscs Ground ; COMPANY Classified ad: Found—On Salmon | &~ | Creek road, a lady's coat. Inquire: q __ _ s il | at Burford’s. Great progress was reported n Drén%o%fi,\gggltgon , the Sheep Creek division of the Hours: 10-2; 2-5 3 Alaska Gastineau Company’'s de- LELLENTHAL BUILDING [ 1 velopment work, by General Man- 1 Douglas 7-9 P. M. ager B. L. Thane. He said the| . Moevs, Packs and Stores “1 may have the face of a monkey but t soul of -one and it wi i R souls we were allcuulnn.' She con- tinued ‘to tell herself that she would do better to go away and house, first and pack. pack—and she walked steadily back to Armitage's house. Through the Park, over ihe bridge, down Brandish Place. And all the time she knew well enough that she would not invite herself to stay in any house that sheltered Mark. She walked up to the house and put her foot on the step. She had better go in and see Armit- age and tell him she couldn't af- ter all, earn that emerald. She was inevitably and eternally on Mark's side—because between her and Mark there was an emerald, too. . . . She might be a provin- cial and a gate-crasher and an accessory after a very crooked fact, but she could be straight in just one respect—Mark. She stood there, her hands damp he was operating a bakery at Sitka Chinese agitation of 1885. | public library and urging the need moderated weather made it possible to resume activities on the beach. Freight and Baggage Prompt Delivery of W. L. Smith, who was aboard the Yukon, on his way to Port Valdes, | | .’:omm?mcd;u?::n‘:“ns‘m FUEL OIL had a 150-ton outfit in the ship’s| | Office Phone 434; Residence ALL KINDS OF COAL hold which he was taking to his|| pPhone 3238. Office Hours: 9:30 Mineral Creek property. In con- | to 13; 1:00 to 5:30 PHONE 48 sisted of 40 M. feet of lumber, a three-stamp mill and a ton of| " o Pennsylvania coal. Rose A Andrews—Graduate Nurse ELECTRO THERAPY | J 1 China Joe, who had lived in Ju- neau since 1881 planned to hold PLAY BILLIARDS his usual open house on Chinese om";v::l‘;z‘; ;; aA‘:;oL:ftmsenxz' mf, gt New Year’s day in his home on | i Main Street. Joe endeared himselt|Second and Main. Phone 259-1 ring | | BURFORD’S to the white people of Alaska when 1 THE JUNEAU LAUNDRY Franklin Street, between Front and Second Streets PHONE 359 Gl DONALDINE BEAUTY PARLORS Telephone 490 RUTH HAYES L PIGG‘I.Y. and during a flour famine there he refused to raise the price of flour though he might have made a stake by so doing. Joe was the only Chinese allowed to remamn when the Chinese laborers were driven out of Treadwell and other Alaska points during the anti- Dr. Richard Williams DENTIST OFFICE AND RESIDENCE | . | | Gastineau Building, Phone 481 | | | o . YELLOW and TRIANGLE CABS 25¢ Any Place in City PHONES 22 and 42 | L. C. SMITH ana GOIONI J. B. Burford&Co Wmupmwm An editorial containing the plea of a young man of the town for a of such an institution in a town the size of Juneau was givan first place on the editorial page. A number of Douglas business men gave Dr. H. C. DeVighne a surprise party. Dr. and Mrs. De Vighne planned to leave on an early steamer for the States. The two bears, Dooly and Susie, were out of their cave on May- flower Island taking sun baths. | Pay day at the Alaska Gas- tineau Company arrived and $42,- 00 was disbursed among 375 men for the current month’s wage pay FINE s Harry Race ::::;hed freely and sauntered DRUGGIST Wat ch an d Jewe‘r, No loyalty to Mack, no such non- sense. She could grin at the thought. No loyalty to Armitage except for the sake of an emerald. Finish with Patsy Raoul, if Patsy desired it. And the dust-heap at Kings Mallard? Rather fun to blackmail father about that. Why has that never occurred to me be- { “THE SQUIBB STORE" REPAIRING at very reasonable rates WRIGHT SHOPPE PAUL BLOEDHORN Smith Electric Co. Gastineau Building EVERYTHING ELECTRICAL and her chin trembling. Then the mood was lifted from her. The whole chaotic misery lightened and passed...... She 1891 . to the Peopl COMMERCIAL JUNEAU, OLDEST BANK IN ALASKA 1933 42 YEARS’ BANKING SERVICE e of Alaska. and SAVINGS The B. M. Behrends Bank ALASKA ! |. .. ! l fore? She lit a cigarette. (Copyright, 1982, Julia Cleft- Addams.) Mark makes the most of a very profitable situation, Mon- day. MICKEY FLORIDAN TAILOR Cleaning and Pressing Next to Alaskan Hotel MAYTAG PRODUCTS W. P. JOHNSON | | r —,— Call Yellow Cab, Phone 22. adv UPHOLSTERING MADE TO ORDER Ahollewmhngul HAAS Famoue Candies The Cash Bazaar Open Evenings Call Your RADIO DOCTOR for RADIO TROUBLES A MtdP M Juneau _IQdiQ Service SAVE YOUR HAIR NU-LIFE METHOD Valentine Bldg. Room 6 Dllhsw Bldg PHONE 419 | | CARL JACOBSON | JEWELER WATCH REPAIRING SEWARD STREET Opposite Goldsteln Building ! o p— More For Your SABIN’S Everything in Furnishingy for Mea

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