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s Daily Alaska Empire ROBERT \"." BENDER Published _cvery « . PIRE_ PRINTING ( trects, Juneau, Alask Editor and Manager the Main ning _except IMPANY at ind Entered In the Post Office in June matter. au as Second Class SUBSCRIPTION RATES. Dellvered by carrier In Juneau and Douglas for $1.25 per month By mail, postage paid, at the One year, i1 $6.00: one month Subacribe d, following rates if they will promptly failure or irregularity : Business Office, 374 MEMBER OF ASSOCIATED PRESS Thea Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for wepublication credited to it or not otherwise credited in this and the local news published herein. ALASKA CIRCULATION GUARANTEED TO BE LARGEF THAN THAT OF ANY OTHER PUBLICATION THE SERIOUS ASPECT. responsibility has been of the Alaska Mine 1dden action An increasin assumed by th Workers' Union night resulted iinating approximately 915 workers from payrolls of the Alaska Juneau Mine, and stepping a local payroll averaging around $5400 a ds which supported their families and dependents. It is presumed funds with which members whose us hers in the that the Union has accumulated to take care of the families of savings are small. these allotments which a Union can give out, are usually well under the prevailing wage scales, and barely sufficient to meet food demands, and what- Wednesday | THE DAILY ALASKA EWIPIRE. FRIDAY, MAY 24, 1935. | taining to the Territory the Washington and Alaska authorities have worked together, the Territory often taking the lead with the Federal authorities lend- ing assistance, especially financially, but in edu tional matters there has been a marked line demarcation, with two separate agencies workii from divergent angles. The result, as Dr. W. Carson Ryan, Jr, Director of Resedrch for Un, States Bureau of Indian Affairs, has duplication wnd waste. Here to make | the situation, Dr. Ryan in these words hit heart of the problem: I believe some type of coordination of the needs and r urces of the Federal and Territcrial governments is both advisable and possible for educational, social welfare and health wo: mong the natives in order to prevent duplication and waste, In th da of pted efficiency operation of all agencies toward a it logical that the twe educational syst now in vogue in Alaska be blended at least to the point of full co-operation. While the Indian Bureau has carried on its, work faithfully through the years the stem of the Terr been advanced until it is on par with any in the States. It is plain that duplication and waste, as Dr. Ryan says, is inevitable so long as the two systems operate entirely separate as they do, both for 'the | objective. Correlating of the two will not enly |give strength and greater facilities but it will ieliminate duplication of effort and money and tend | toward raising further the stands of education in |both the white and native schools the aptly a survey at ac and co- common goal is onmly ems educational ory has same red war on per take Police Chief Roy Hoffman has dec! speeders. Motori. will find it their time. There really isn't any ticular reason |to do 50 or 60 on Willoughby Aevenue. Everyb {will take your word for it, and the city will t | your money if you keep trying to prove it. che: to Another that recovery is something more | than word is scen in the report that Pacific Coast fcreign trade is running 15 per cent ahead ¥ already crossed the hundred sign a ar and mark. Another city, Craig, joins the Territorial Cham- Nevertheless | per of Commerce, bringing the number of cities|E. Robertson received word that two| |represented to 14. Alaska is becoming more and more a closely knitted unit which can accomplish |greater things. ever financial reserves a family may have accumu- | lated are rapidly reduced. When the considerable sum of more than five thousand dollars which has been going to nine hundred workers and their families every day, is suddenly cut off, a most sericus economic condition is created, particularly applicable to Juneau, where natural isolation and lack of other industries pre- vent the immediate obtaining of new iobs. Those who promulgated this drastic action most probably have the situation in hand and will take care of their idle They have maintained orderliness in able fashion to date, indicating similar planning in other phases of the situation. However, each day's lo of cannot, regained s far workers and the peopie Juneau are conces Heavy, and of those who have precipitated, hausting other of fellow workers and this community into an econo: conditicn which grows more dangerous with cach day’s idleness. A quick settlement is the only expedient that can save the people of this community from even- tual want and suffering, and the economic struc- ture from irreparable damage. commend- effective wage be as the of red zerious indeed is the responsibi without first settlement, every means BLENDING EDUCATION SYSTEMS. While Alaska continues its ‘progress materially, it is equally important if not more so that the physical well being of its people and their cultural advantages be advanced on an intelligent plane and it is with this in mind that Federal and Territorial authorities are now making a survey to determine how besi to establish co-ordination between the two governmental agencies. Through the years the education and social wel- fare of the native has been entirely a matter of Federal control. In virtually everything else per- | The Baptists in Ilinois are aroused by charges |that Communism is being taught in their churches We rather agree with them that its a false inter- pretation of brotherly love. The Gangdom Lure Has Faded. (Kansas City Times.) y young people who may be inclined to careers of lawlessness would find less encouragement frcm a survey of the Ameérican field today than previous time within their memories, if ni of much older pecple. It would be prof meake the survey. It could be done with labor and in brief order. ameur and the reasonable assurance of s once might have seemed a lure crime are no longer to be discerned, with the most careful scrutiny. Events of the last year or two ve dispelled the prospects with a most telling certainty. Practically without exception, the big shot L ave gone down in complete shame, dis- patched summarily ot the hands cf the law, con- victed and thrown into prison for extended or life terms, or executed without appreciable delay. The execution of Raymond Hamilton and Joz2 Palmer at Huntsville, Tex. is but one of a series |of events, all impressive in the lessons they should | offer the would-be beginners, not to mention those |already on the road of gangdom. The courses of these two were brief, covering only a few years. Despite the seriousness of their crimes, the two were small fry when compared with the large number of others who have besn disposed of in the varied effective ways. Yet they were about the best of the lot that had been left It will be much easier now to run down and to be finally rid of the scattered remnants of gangdom. Sporadic and individual crime there will be, per- haps for an endless period. But professional, or- |ganized and commercialized crime, much of it ap- | parently if not actually begun deliberately, has been Idealt a powerful blow. able seant ;l_!llllll—llhllIIIIIIIIIIiIIIiIIIlIIIIIl!IllHWIIIIiIIIIIIlIiIIHIIlIIfllllIlIIIIIIlIIlIIIIIIIII‘IIIIHI|7IIIHI|IIIIlIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlIllIIIIIII_! “Tomorrow’s Styles Teday” MILLINERY SPECIALS FOR SATURDAY A New Shipmcni of IMMER HATS on sale fer ONLY ¥ flalyorsers “Juneau’s Own Store” i AR R tod = IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIiIIIIIllllllllmlmllllllllllll e HAPP 0 YEARS AGO {| From The Empire 1 King Victor Emanual announced | that he would go to the fromt with- in a few days and that he would|, . sive all of his time and ability wi"'”‘ tions ~nd best wishes today, the: e cause of Italy in the war. Italians were already experienc- | ng numerous skirmishes with the | nemies. Major clashes of land | FPete Kirkebo s were expected to ocour With- | Paula Diane Brown a few days. Engagements at | - o> *a were expected momentarily. ) MAY 24 Mrs. Wallis S. George Mrs. 8. Guyot Having discovered a rich stringer ¢ lignite coal on the southerly end | #— of Admiralty Island . abont - forty miles from Juneau, J. 'C. Hyde,! Charles Gundlach, John Sandman and Peter Carlson’ left Juheau with equipment to start deéyelopment work. JUNEAU-YOUNG Funeral Parlors Licensed Funeral Directars and Embalmers Night Phone 1851 Day Phone 13 | 1 | { | Dr, L, O. Sloane successfully ur | derwent a major operation, per- formed by Dr. J. B. Eggleson in | Seattle. | PAINTS—OILS Builders’ and Shed HARDW R2I The Rev. A. P. Kashevaroff re- | turned from Sitka bringing with him a prized gift, a costly silver | piteher that had been given to Fa- ther Sergius Kostrometinoff by for- mer Governor A. P. Swineford. Mrs. | {George Kostrometinoff presented | the pitcher to Father Kashevaroff. ERAL MOTORS and MAYTAG PRODUCTS W. P. JOHNSON The Rev. J. B. Stevens, Burdett Winn and Simpson MacKinnon left S AT for a ten days outing trip near| | Sumdum. Fishing, general explora- : F INE |tion and hunting with a camera | were to be the order of the day for the campers, | Watch and Jewelry Repairing &l very reasonable rates || PAUL BLOEDHORN east one Juneau home recefv-' | FRONT STREET ad news as a result of the sink- | "—————— of the Lusitania. Mrs. Raloh| ceee ed |ing ITS Wise to Cali *8 |of a cousin’s four children were| drowned. Mrs. Robertson's cousin | |was going with her husband, an| | American surgeon, to the front to |act as a war nursi Juneau K. M .Bruce arrived from Se- v Transfer Co. attle to take a position with the! Pacific Coast Steamship Company. Weather: Maximum 71; mum 41; partly cloudy. .o iPIKE WANT ApS PAY! mini- Fuel 0Ol Transfer Coal DAIL CAPITOL BEER PARLORS AND BALL ROOM Private Booths Lanches Dancing Every Night PARIS INN PEARL and BILL ‘Beer Light Wines Lunches [— ?4-Hour Service Beer—if desired Merchants’ Lunch BAILEY’S CAFE SO “WHERE YOU MEET YOUR FRIENDS" GASTINEAU CAFE GASTINEAU HOTEL BUILDING French-Italian Dinners Wines—Beer _ Thomas Hardware Co. ' T | 2o'nt Lode; thence S 31° 55 E| BIRTHDAY The Empire extends congratula- ir birthday anniversary, to the follow- DAILY EMPIRE WANT ADS PAY: |Harris Mining District, Juneau Pre- i | | | J |Ocean Swell Lode; Thence S 88° | & i =3 |No. 1 Otter Lode, whence U.S.LM | NC TICE OF APPLICATION FOK UNITED STATES PATENT U. S. Survey No, 1492, Anchorage Alaska, March 6, 1935, Serial 08356 | | Notice is hereby given that, pur-| suant to an Act of Congicss ap-| proved May 10th, 1872, ADMIRAL- TY ALASKA GOLD MINING| | COMPANY, a corporation organiz- led and existing under the laws of the Territory of Alaska, whose post! office address is Juneau, Alaska,| has made application for a patent| upon the following described lodes lode mining claims and premises all situated upon “luiralty Island,| PROFESSIONAL Helere W. L. Albrecht PHYSIOTHERAPY Zlassage, Electricity, Infra Red Ray, Medical Gymnastics. 307 Goldstein Building Phone Office, 216 DRS. KASER & FREEBURGER DENTISTS Blomgren Building PHONE 56 Hours 9 am. to 9 pm. cinct, Alaska, and described by the official plat and by the field notes| | me file in the office of the Reg-| ister of Juneau Lana wisuricy, An-| chorage, Alaska, as follows, to-wit: | ! Beginning at Corner; No. 1 Point | | Lode, whence ‘US,LM. No. 10, cross on ‘exposed bed rock on small| Dr. C. P. Jenne DENTIST Rooms 8 and 9 Valentine Building Telephone 176 ssland. in Funter Bay, bears N 50° | i° 39’ W 32530f ft, and running| | {thenee N 67° 57 E along line of | | mean high tide of F. nter Bay, 87526 feet to Cotner N 2 Point | lode; thence N 25° 56" E 395.95 |teet to Corner No. 3 Point Lode;| | Dr. Geo. L. Barton CHIROPRACTOR | 201 Goldstein Bldg. Phone 214’ | Office Hours: 9 to 12, 1 to 5 Evenings by appointment |thence N 64° 00' E 31590 feet to| Corner 4 Point Lode; thence § 12° | 9%’ E 400.80 feet to Corner No. 5! | 176.20 feet to Correr No. 6 Foint Lode; identical with Corner No. 2| Dcean Swell Lode; thence 8. 31 35" E 8092 feet to Corner No. 3 19 E 19442 feet to Corner No. 4| Dr. Riel DENTIST OFFICE AND RESIDENCE Gastineau Building Phone 481 T ! | | | 8| KENIGHTS OF COLUMBUS J ward Williams | | | brothers | ] Fraternal Societies OF Gastineauw Channel B. P. 0. ELKS meets every Wednesday at 8 p. m. Visiting brothers welcome, P | John H. Walmer, Ex |alted Ruler, M. H. Sides, Secretary. | Seghers Council No. 1730. Meetings second {and last Monday at 7:30 p. m. Transient brothers urged to at- tend. Covre® Cham- | bers, Fifth St. JOHN F. MULLEN, |G. K, H. J. TURNER, Secretary. 1'% 1Y - MOUNT JUNEAU LODGE NO. 147 Second and Fourth Mon “ c day of! each month ‘ir | Scottish Rite Temple, | beginninz at 7:30 p.m. i HOV? ARD D. STABLER. Worshipful Master; JAMES w\ LEIVERS, Secretary. DOUGLAS AERIE 117, F. 0. E. 3 Meets first and third Mondays, & | pm., Eagles’ Hall, Douglas. Visiting welcome. Sante Degan, W. P, T.-W. Cashen, Secretary. |Ocean Swell Lode, identical with Coiner No. 1 Queen Bee Lode, whence US.LM. No. 10 bears N 64° 18" 30" W 445285 feet; thence N 118" 30" E 423.77 feet to Corner No. ; | |1 King Bee Lode, whence U.S.LM | No. 10 bears N 69° 46 10" W| Dr. A. W. Stewart DENTIST Iours 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. SEWARD BUILDING Office Pucne 469 1426.23 feet: thence N 44° 57 E 296.00 feet to Corner No. 2 King Bee Lode; thence N 35° 27" E 18450 |feet to Corner No. 3 King Bee Lode, identical with Corner No. 3| Tellurium Lode; thence N 8° 47’,‘ 30” E 33865 feet to Corner No. 4| Tellurlum Lode; thence N 18° 16'| | 1380.65 feet to Corner No. 5 Tellur- fum Lode, identical with Corner | Robert Simpson Opt. D. Graduaw Los Angeles Col- lege of Optometry and Opthalmology Glasses Fitted Lenses Ground No. 3 Lone Star Lode; thence N | el | time. A tank for Diesel Oil | and a tank for crude oil save burner trouble. PHONE 149; NIGHT 148 RELIABLE TRANSFER | | & ™ i Commercial Adjust- ment & Rating Bureau | Coperating with White Serv- ] | ice Bureau l | { We have 5,000 local ratings on file 50’ E 666.60 feet to Corner No. 4| Lone Star Lode; thence N 70° 00'| E 359.15 feet to Corner No. 3 Otter Lode; thence N 5° 50" E 666.60 feet| to Corner No. 4 Otter Lode; thence N 70° 00 E 1500.00 feet to Corner [No. 21, a cross un a granite boulder |5 feet square showing 12 inches |above gronnd, approximate latitude {58° 14’ 30”. North and longitude | 1134° 52 West, bears N-17° 46’ 10" W 252465 feet; thence S 5° 50° W 66.60 feet to Corner No. 2 Otter Lode; thence S 70° 000 W 359.15| eet to Corner No. 1 Lone Star Lode, whence U.S.L.M. No. 21 bears N 6° 32 W 3211.05 feet; thence S 5° 500 W 666.60 feet to Corner No 5 2 Lone Star Lode, identical with DR. H. VANCE OSTEOPATI Consu';ation and examination Free. Honrs 10 to 12: 1 to 5; T to 8:30 and by 2ppeintment. Office Grand Apts., near Gas- tineau Hotel. Phone 177 Room 1—Shattuck Bldg. i Alaska Transfer Co. GENERAL HAULING ED JEWELL, Proprietor PHONES 269—1134 DENTIST Rooms 5-6 Triangle Bldg. Office hours, 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Evenings by appointan.nt PHONE 321 < Bsprstt g | The Florence Shop | Permanent Waving a Specialty rlorence Holmquist, Prop. | PHONE 427 { Behrends Bank Bullding i | 1 | | {Corner No. 1 Tellurium Lode, | whence USLM. No. 21 bears N‘4° 25' W 3864.81 feet; thence 5718 e ey |16 W 75865 feet to Corner No. 2| S Tellurium Lode; thence S 70° (0 °|| whence Corner No. 1 Swamp Lilly WINDOW CLEANING PHONE 485 1 ! ¢ ¢ i ot i i ALASKA MEAT CO. FEATURING CARSTEN’S BABY BEEF—DIAMOND TC HAMS AND BACON—U. 8. Government Inspected WALLIS S. GEORGE, CP.A. Associates JAMES C. COOPER, C.P.A. WALLIS S. GEORGE & CO. CERTIFIED PUBLIC ACCOUNTANTS Juneau, Alaska SYSTEM TAX SERVICE | PO Sy Making Alaska Business GO! is just as'much a_part of our service as is pro- teeting the deposits of the Territory’s residents. In 1935, as since 1891, we are ready to suppl¥ funds for the temporary use of well- managed businesses of approved credit standing. Your requirements will be carefully con- sidered here. The B. M. Behrends Bank Juneau, Alaska D et T | i W 216.30 feet to Corner No. 4 King| Bee Lode; thence S 19° 22’ W 'rn,.ooi %feet to Corner No. 5 King Bee | Lode, identical with Corner No. 2‘ | Queen Bee Lode; thence S 21° 08'|. |W 74596 feet to Corner No. 3 | Queen Bee Lode, identical with Corner No. 2 Swamp Lilly Lode, {Lode bears N 170° 00 & 1500 feet,| | | from which USLM. No. 10 bears| | [N 54° 57 W 4573.01 feet; thence S | | HOTEL ZYNDA Large Sample Room ELEVATOR SERVICE S. ZYNDA, Prop. | ORAMAE HOLLISTER LADIES’ TAILORING AND DRESSMAKING 411 GOLDSTEIN BLG. Phone 564 132° 00’ E 613.40 feet to Corner No.| |3 Swamp Lilly Lode; thence S 70° 00 W 1500 feet to Corner No. 4 Swamp Lilly Lode; thence S 32° 00" E 31265 feet to Corner No. 3 Hid-' |den Rock Lode; thence S 52° 40' W 1500.00 ft. to Corner No. 4 Hidden Rock Lode; thence N 32° 00" W 600 |ft. to Corner No. 1 Hidden Rock Lode, | | identical with Corner No. 4 Valley | | Lode, whence U.S.L.M. No. 10 bears N | | 132° 00 W 42345 feet to Corner No.| ® |5 Valley Lode; thence N 73° 20’ E| Lode; thence N 5° 42 W 279.74 ft. to Corner No. 7 Valley Lode; thence |N 46° 15 E 30624 feet to Corner| No. 1 Valley Lode, whence U.S.LM. |No. 10 bears N 45° 41’ 30" W| 14129.65 feet; thence N 46° 03' W 324.11 fiet to Corner No. 1 Ocean ROSE SUAREZ | Modiste from New York City Dressmaking, Remodeling, Alterations TELEPHONE 277 35° 32’ 40” W 468545 feet; thence N“ l Feldon's House, near Moose Hall 21380 feet to Corner No6 Valley | pemes JUNEAU FROCK SHOPPE “Exclusive but not Expensive” 1 |Swell Lode, identical with Corner| I|No. 7 Point Lode, whence U.S.LM. | No.10bears N 45° 39’ 40” W 3805.58 | feet; thence N 46° 03'W 19243 feet |to Corner No. 8 Point Lode; thence IN 12° 05 W 36196 feet to Corner |No. 9 Point Lode; thence N 4° 11| |E 109.92 feet to Corner No. 1 Polntl |Lode, the place of beginning. { Adjoining clatms, as shown by| the plat of survey are: The Alaska No. 2 Lode, un- surveyed; Jumbo No. veyed; Jumbo No. veyed; Uncle Sam Lode, unsurveyed; King Bee, 2nd. Lode, unsur- veyed; Téllurium, 2nd Lode, unsur- veyud; ] Lone Star, end Lode, unsur- veyed; Ish Nik Lode, unsuveyed; Mill Site Lode, unsurveyed. FLORENCE L. KOLB, Acting Register. First publication, Mhrch 20, 1935. Last pubication, May 29, 1935. 1 Lode, unsur- 2 Lode, unsur- BETTY MAC BEAUTY SHOP In New Location at 12th anC B Streets PHONE 547 Maybe you'll have two or three dates, if you CALL 15 And have your Spring clothes put 1o first-class shape with our cleaning service. [ ] YOUR ALASKA Laundry | Ca_rdin’al | QCabs MARKET BASKET; Provisions, Fruits, Vegetables Free Delivery | —t PHONE 36 For very prompt LIQUOR DELIVERY R — 1 THE JuNEAu LAUNDRY Franklin Street between Front and Second Streets PHONE 35§ Juneau Ice Gream. Parlors SHORT ORDERS C. H. METCALFE CO. Sheet Metal—Oil Burners Heating—Air Conditioners General Electric Oil Burners Phone 101 Front Street .. | 1 | | | o DAILY EMPIRE WANT ADS PAYX! Our {.ucks go any place any |