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T SRR T R L S S PR 7 SO . i ) t 1 gold hoarding act and Pre: orders under it. The Government Daily Alaska Empire ROBERT . PENDER - - GENERAL MANAGER of the case in view of Campbell’s action in turning back to the Treasury the twenty-seven gold bars s m'r‘xr,:'.l‘, E&)")'&{A.\S;C?xz sf:(n(vlj;ynngy u:’:: he held. The gold was estimated by the Government Alaska. to be worth $200,000. (he Post Office in Juneau as Second Class SUBSCRIPTION RATES. Dellvered by carrier In Juneau and Douglas for $1.25 DeT A ar the following rates y mall, postage paid, at the follow! 3 On}z'y:-nu, 1, ad\-gnr», $12.00; nix months, in advance, $6.00; one month, in advance, $1.26. Subseribers will confer a favor if they will promptly notify the Business Offios of any failure or irregularity the delivery of their papers. ' = - Te?zpho‘ne for Editorial and Business Offices, 374. MEMBER OF ASSOCIATED PRESS. & he Associated Press is exclusively entitled to t wT!‘er Fepublication of all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited in this paper and also the local news published herein ASKA CIRCULATION GUARANTEED TO BE LARGER ALASIIAN THAT OF ANY OTHER PUBLICATION _|m The New York court held good, however, count, which charged him with violating the gol hoarding act by fal The United tes appealed docket it in the Supreme Court. in an effort to obtain an early opinio! idity of the Administration’s action C. Biggs, Solicitor General, explainin s, said that all the gold involve case had been delivered to the Governmen left nothing to be litigated. protest, Biggs said. Officials ted Campbell to bring new proceedings to the validity of the gold hoarding act and to reco possession of t¢he gold he has delivered EVERGREEN BOWL. The making of Evergreen Bowl a public play ground for Juneau children has won the he applause of citizens. Besides furnishing a plac where the children may congregate, off the stre 1 from traffic hazards, it has and employment to many men paid ree | furnishing CWA funds The speedy change in this bedraggled spot YOU CAN DO YOUR PART. of the Tonight, in the High School gymnasium the| Athletic Carnival for the benefit of the High School | pasketball teams, will be held. Everyone can help| If Europe s in this entertainment by simply purchasing a ticket, the United St even if one cannot attend. The receipts will go the hope is toward the fund to send the boys’ and girls' cage| teams to Ketchikan, with stopovers either at Wrangell or Petersburg, It is a worthy affair and here’s hoping over big. arts another rough and tumble wa s won't be too proud to fight bu will be too smart. goes | cars in one week, it {22 per cent THE CARNERA-LOUGHRAN FIGHT. | The championship fight at Miami, Florida, last pe known as Manchou Ti Kou night, is called a gigantic financial flop, for the|ming also the spelling. champion, Primo Carnera; the challenger, Tommy | Loughran, and the promoters, the Madison Square Garden. | Here is a brief summary of the Miami annual| Indignant Generation. (Omaha Worid Herald.) The newer generation is partly young heavyweight fistic festivals during the past few |but it contains many who are ripe with years ed| winters it is to be distinguished by an adjective it may be | 1929—Sharkey-Stribling—35,000 paid $405,~ |termed the indignant generation. | 000. | Its indignation is directed at a leadership which 1930—Sharkey-Scott—18,762 paid $193,252. |proved either false to its trust or incompetent. It 1931—Carnera-Maloney—9,543 paid $43,000; {is directed against philosophies that have beenl Walker-Risko—10,200 paid $35,000. |found hollow. 1932-33—Business suspended. it would prove to be & drawing card from the start e What chance has Loughran to take the title away | from the grinning man mountain from Italy, queried No such deep concern over the who yesterday were their leaders. ent Roosevelt's executive | had decided to ask dismissal One count in the indictment charging him with | possessing gold in violation of the President’s execu- tive order was dismissed in New York Federal Court apother ng to report gold he possessed.| the ruling dis-| missing one of the counts, but did not immediately | Campbell did so, Campbell returned ex- from will ute another welcome betterment to the credit| The economic machine is making the grade in | where games will be played.' high when the automobile factories make 75,000 S steel mill operations spurt to |40 per cent of capacity and bank clearings are up | Henry Pu Yi is to be known as Emperor Kanz‘ |Teh and the Manchurian Empire will hencetor:h; Just keep this in| in age | The indignant generation has observed, for ex- The fight last night did not seem to indicate ample, that many of the same bankers who are now ! national monetary policy have as yet remained silent at the revelations of profiteering by some of the men | BLOND A New Secrial SYNOPSIS Death by drowning »eems 10 be he fate of a curiously in order Kent. the Frank loves : the avintor. erippled to get out of the valley. and jured high priest of a savan® as tried to kill the othey d in flonting down am d river trying to reach n 2 d | DARK HORROR f, o chatter hims Frank’s teeth Fe had esti hours immer ance bear it? the phosphores ared. The water to ten nieter; then apparently rent became a scarcely per- >y d flow. t ed side-wall. H e " n not d him. The curre had indeed diminished. | A sudden fear contracted his | heart :d that he was at to the coast—perhay probab timate of time re that he had T Alan Gould, Associated Press Sports Writer. The indignant generation is aware that the | more than 10 to 1, he answered, and that seems|spme economists who seek to alarm the wage earn- | gupnosing that from this point on, to be the ratio of patzopage and interest taked lers by platitudes forget the platitudes they uttered | the current flowed s . in the event. to soothe and disarm the people in the hell for It is ficult to see how even so clever a boxer |leather period of the fraudulent boom . “swem him. as Loughran could score sufficiently on points to| The indignant generation notes that the same| 4o 1o cilashed forward, hoping offset the obuble damage he+ would absorb m’pohucians to whose lips come so readily the cheap to assist with the effort his down | close-range scuffling with his giant opponem_;phrases of the soapbox orator are attacking a Presi- | ji.o0p progress, he began to bel Loughran never has had. the hitting power and dent _wh‘)“ every public utterance, from the day|,y.re that ahead of him there endurance that marked Gene Tufiney's rise to the[0f his inauguration, has been free of demagogic| g;iowed a light that was not thef i " {hat | VOGS Of polifioal claptzap. greenish vellow of phosphorus. heavyweight heights but let it may be said thal The indignant generation is impatient with | no boxer of note has traveled quite so far as Tommy | ¢,q_hudget judges, technicality lawyers, pandering venal office holders, boss ridden poli- It is through with a group whose history has been an attempt to run benefit of the few with It won't have a leadership silent and inactive and incompet- ent in times of stress but vociferous and blatant It is through with on limited fighting equipment. Carnera, unquestionably, has learned much re- cently, improving his boxing ability, capitalizing on the sheer bulk of his makeup and making the most of his butcher-like blows. journalists, ticians, doddering diplomats. the Government for the the crumbs dropping down to the many. FAILS TO PASS ON GOLD HOARDING. For the time being, at least, the Supreme Court of the United States will not pass on the validity of the Administration's action against gold hoarding. Several days ago the Supreme Court dismissed a case carried to it by Frederick B. Campbell, of New York City, who sought a ruling on the Federal when the strain begins to ease. formulas that work only when everything is going well. of today's body politic. which men may find work, comfort, and be happy. If it destroys a few pet illusions in the process, so much the better. AT ALL GROCERS o o o STAR NON-ACID (Fresh Daily) SALT-RISING (Every Saturday) REA ® Made by Star Bakery ® Ask for it at your grocers Q The indignant generation is a considerable part It is courageously and con- | fidently bent on reconstructing a way of life in live in reasonable He could not let himself believe| that grayish dimness that suffused| the blackness ahead of him was t! end of the cavern. His disappoint ment, he knew, would be too keen | The clumsy life belt impeded h:»i progress; yet he dared not dispense with it lest some weakness over.| come him, or some mishap occur. | A vagrant eddy caught him and| hurried h.m forward. He was| whirled dizzyingly for an ins He bumped against a butt rock projecting fnto the ct i The stream made a twist to the left; then to the right. Suddenly he floated into day light! Sudden pain stabbed his eyes He shut them tightly for an tant; then slitted them against the unac customed light. He was in a cenote. It was not sc large as the one below the pyramid nor so high-walled as the exte: one where he had left Langton and | Janice Kent. | It seemed, however, deeper. The water flooded within it to a high| level on the cliffs. At one edge the clif had broken down; shrubbery and creepers grew upon it. With an ejaculation of hope he paddled to-| ward it. Perhaps from here be could | gain the level above. Instantaneously the tkought came to him that could he somehow get word to Billy and Janice that they could drift down to here on the raft and once above ground, could chop through the jungle to the coast. HE splashed into the shallows. As he did so there was a siuggish movemant in the tangle of water plants between him arnd the slope | ahead. Golden, blackslitted eyes ob | served him; a wide tooth-fringed | maw gaped. | Alligator! He stood still. The rep tile did not attack. Instead it slid | to one side and away from him. A' ant | alternatives, but three or more. | increased the odds against his be- | cenote. He saw the break | ward the exit | swirled under the three foot arch. N - AT, i 5 s — — i Il PROFESSIONAL | Fraternal Societies | { 7 [ | & | by Herber? Jense ! Prom The Empire Helene W. L. Albrecht | |: T ) e St s /SIOTHERAPY B. P. 0. ELKS mests | | Y ge, Electricity, Infra Red every Wednesday at : ling of muddy water marked Hs ' MARCH 2, 1914 ay, Medical Gymnastics. 8 p m Visiting arance into the cenote. J. W. Fraser, of the West 307 Goldstein Building brothers welcome. d a slizht, shud- ey 1o, e Phone Offlce, 216 L. W. Turoff, Exalt- | sometimes S | eg Ruler. M. H. Sides, | ttacked a man, but usually e RSP S # | secretary. |not. A g ledg GONS T~ " y | | ———— o bl ) Hor jon in Rose d,_\;P '}\}:}‘Lrp“s KNICATS OF COLUMBUR | not o popular beliet, never- |Procu: Electrio Cabinet Baths—Mas | Seghers Councll No. 1760. 1’ it of the reptiles al- & = sage, Colonic Trrigations Meetings second and lasy n that atavistic sensa- “Vfifl 1 gt 4 e hours 11 am. to 5 pm. | | Monday at 7:30 p. m. ] ng upon his back. Trcta NS SIOUC) gs by Appointment Transient brothers urg- [ w e footing firm beneath him |Faln, a maximum temperature Of and Main Phone 250 | |ed to attcnd. Counell I r and climbed up- |38 and a minimum of 32. Chambers, Fith Streci. | % ST JOHN F. MULLE of the cenote. | == = . . N, G. K. | | The Rochelle, Capt. W. B.I— Ty = 3 " |Knight, of the new Pacific Steam- |~ ~orv | > b b d Company, operating b [ E.B. WILSON MOUNT JUNEAT LODGE NO. 147 sily seanoh twhy is| | Portisnd Southeast A Chiropodist—Foot_Speclalist |} ;"1 fourth Mon- .m. It would be only & |Tived in Juneau in t 401 Goldsteln Building [} now 1t him. of zed the the co alte; Alligator! To attempt the coast on foot weuld y doubtless end with more success— chill that was not from the water| for himself. It might take him days to accomplish that; it would be too late, then, to rescue his companions upposing the rain continued and they were unable to get out of the valley. 4 sudden thought struck him at this point: Langton hinted that the high-priest knew a way to get out. Perhaps the ahkin had been but biding his time until he had but a crippled man and a helpless girl to put some sinister plan of his owp into operation. RANK wiped the dripping rain from his face. He thought with a slight bitterness that it was a trick of life to give a man not two It ing right in the one he chose. He looked down at the pool of the in the wall from whence he had floated. On the other side he observed that the roof of the continuing cavern was a scant three feet above the water | level. Doubtless driftwood had dammed that exit causing the water in the | pool to rise. However it would not be long before that dam would crack through and the whole system of the underground er would be gorged with a turmoil of floating brush, logs and debris. He descended to the pool and waded in. He gave no thought to the reptiles that might be lurking in its depths, nor to the possibility that the cavern might be choked at the farther end in which c#se he would never see daylight again. He had taken those chances de- liberately that morning when he had left Janice; the situation had not been altered. He splashed to- where the water Just before he made the plunge beneath the arch h2 suw the alll- gator again. He was lying on the bank. his malevolent little eyes fixed on Frank. Then there was only darkness. (Copyrighe, 1934, by Herbert lensen) Frank falls tomorrow, into tl maw of death. nie e THE HOTEL OF ALASKAN HOTELS The Gastineau Our Services to You Begin and End at the Gang Plank of Every Passenger-Carrying Boat The dim m from all i- a return to Jan- ven with com- and fire- | bringing a cargo of coa t and other materials It was the first of the Alaska | | The demand for houses in Ju- | neau was becoming every day more acute with the greatest need |that for small cottages from four to five rooms. One |agency reported a wai more than forty. | Ca c citizens and Do were making plar ig dance to be held in the |torium on March 17. nata- P. Hurd, of Mount Vernon Washington, former member of the Washington State Legislature and former prosecuting attorney for | PHONE 496 | IR | | DRS. KASER & FREEBURGER | | DENTISTS | | Blomgren Building | 1 PHONE 56 Hours 9 am. to § pm. RS T X t Dr, C. P. Jenne | DENTIST | | Rooms 8 and 9 Valentine | Building | Telephone 16 | | Dr.J. W. Bayne ] DENTIST | | Rooms 5-6 Triangle Bldg. | day of each month in Scottish Rite Temple, beginning at 7:30 p. m. L. E. HENDRICKSON, Master; JAMEE W. LEIVERS retary. 7} Our iru g0 any place amy | time. A tank for Diesel Ol | and a tank for crude oil save | hurner trouble. PHONE 149, NIGHT 143 | RELIABLE TRANsxru e s e NOW OPEN Commercial Adjust- ment & Rating Bureau Cooperating with White Service Bureau | manager ining C¢ from a body, be wh The Ladies' Altar Society wil & : D) serve dinner at the Parish Hall | Dr. Richard Williams { SABIN S Saturday, March 17, from 5 to 7 TR A |pm. Cards and social gathering DEI\TIST | L 3 g will be held after the dinner OFFICE AND RESIDENCE Everything in Furnishings Adults 65¢, children under twelve Gastineau Bullding | for Men '50c. SAVE THE DATE —adv. Phone 481 L g CS Skagit County, was in Juneau. He| | Office nours, 9 am. to 5 pm. | Room 1—Shattuck Bldg. |planned to continye to Chisana | venings by appolntment We have 5,000 local ratings {with several associates and was | Phone 321 (R on file iw spend the summer in Alaska. :; s J. R. Whipple, assistant general ompany, and of the Ken- Opl D Watch and Jewelry Repairing | sington Mines Company, returned i ! i i i Graduate Los Angeles Col- trip of inspection with y W very satisfactory reports. The ore lege of Optometry and RIGHT SHOPPE encountered lead, running parallel to the Eu- reka and Kensington lea had e =) TR, E. SOUTHWELL |been found in the Kensington ”‘O‘p[‘:,nfmfl‘;)p,_i‘c‘;an ‘ JUNEAU-YOUNG | e s the 3okinsh Hoiner ! | Sves Examinsd- Claxge miied Funeral Parlors | he said g Room 7, -Valentine Bldg. Licensed Funeral Directors USRI L0l LADIES' ALTAR SOCIETY L £ Daily Empire Want Ads Pay o v 1 of the Alaska-Gastineau Robert Sisapson || FINE l at very reasunavle rates i | i Opthalmology e Glasses Fitted, Lenses Ground it was hoped would PAUL BLOEDHORN | in the Johnson n Office Phone 484; Residence Phone 238. Office Hours: 9:30 to 12; 1:00 to 5:30 and Embalmers Day Phone 12 Night Phone 1851 DINNER {, LorLa Vocal Ci Studio opens March 1, Gold- | | | | | stein Bldg. see Mrs. | THE JunEau LAunpry | Franklin Street between Front and Second Streets Dr. A. W. Stewart | DENTIST Hours 9 am. to 6 pm. | SEWARD BUILDING | Office Phone 409, Res. * Phone 276 MAE ALEXANDER | || SOPRANO ulture-Coaching-Diction PHONE 359 For appoinments i J. C. Stapleton. ; | FORD AGENCY Il. (Authorized Dealers) Juneau FOOT OF MAIN ST, | : : JUNEAU F JUNEAU SAMPLE o B SHOP “Exclusive but not Expensive” The Little Store with the Coats, Dresses, Lingerie, BIG VALUES Hosiery and Hats | SRR TSRSy | SECHSFESESH | C. L. FENTON GAS CHIROPRACTOR olLs | e GREASES || ortics Hours: 1012; 28 Evenings by Appointment HOTEL ZYNDA Large Sample Room ELEVATOR SERVICE S. ZYNDA, Prop. | GARBAGE HAULED | Reasenable Monthly Rates | E. 0. DAVIS | TELEPHONE 584 1 Day Phone 371 3 Groceries—Produce—Fresh and Smoked Meats Front Street, opposite Harris Hardware Co. | CASH AND CARRY | Motors f L SR RO O HLLINE SYSTEM | ’ | | | | _ TELEPHONE 22 & ALASKA AIR EXPRESS FOR CHARTER Lockheed 6-Passenger Seaplane s N 7 //,r/(/’”//,””lfly I , MAYTAG PRODUOTS s W. P. JOHNSON | ! Your Interest in Better Business is direct and personal, for you know that your own prosperity depends upon general improvement in conditions throughout all this section. Just now, when industry and trade can use every dollar of capital that can be got gogether here, your bank balance becomes important to the whole Juneau district as ° well as to yourself. The B. M. Behrends Bank has been safeguarding the funds of Juneau people for forty-two years. It offers you assured pro- tection and service that has stood the test. The B. M. Behrends Bank JUNEAU, ALASKA