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D(ul ROBERT W. BENDER - - thirds interruption | in wor necessary, and. consequently no was caused To the minority a majority of wo Alaska Em pzr(’ Editor and Manager| are holding up and causing remain idle in the present that s to Publis T xcept Sunday the | Alaska Juneau situation this action should again re-| i e ""\”\‘" COMPANY at Becarid Main| 0031 the fact that practically all regularly established d recognized unions has written in their constitu- d i Post ( au as Second Class ns that a two-thirds majority vote of the members| SUBSCRIPTION RATES. is ssary to call a strike, and that the wide-| Delivered by carrier In Juneau and Douglas for $1.25 h and success of organized labor has per month. it the following rates x months, in advance, to a connsiderate degree on this very f they fallure will_promptly or irregularity o Could it be possible that the sudden interest 1 . of the Senators are showing in the Matanuska | prompted by the idea of a sum-‘ to Alaska? iny Business Office, "OF ASSOCIATED PRESS. Press 1s exclugively entitled to the news dispatches credited tc d in this paper and the one | so | project might junketing trip MEMBER be | mer alsc | JLATION GUARANTEED TO BE LARGER Primo Carnero appears to have lost the prim HAT OF ANY OTHER PUBLACATION and dropped into the has-been cla and some have |been unkind enough to suggest never-was. ! From One Day to One Hour. (New York Times.) A | Twenty-five years ago Charles K. Hamilton flew from New York to Philadelphia and return to win a prize of $10,000 offered by The New York Times and the Philadeiphia Public Ledger. It took him, all told, a day. Yesterday Captain Eddie Ricken-| backer commemorated the anniversary of that per- formance by completing the same double journey in 58 minutes and 35 seconds. Hamilton's achievement was of such news in- terest that on the following day The New York Times devoted eight columns to it. It was worth the| space, as the comments of Glenn H. Curtiss prove.| That pioneer—it was a reconstructed battered bi- iplane of his that made the historic flight—was| bfl"d?d!m'crcmne with admiration. “It was not only the| t flight ever made between two cities and return, but one of the most dangerous that I know | of.” He dwelt on the peril that lay in flying partly over water, in following railroad tracks over “wild country,” in trusting to a tricky 50-horsepower en- 'gine that might break down at any minute. The WHEN LEADERSHIP FAILS. Since the beginning of time have themselves together in groups and organizations fo purpose strength it simple logic that united effort greater accomplishment than single individuals working at different angles but al ard a common goal. It is a well known fact that a well-trained and organized body of men men of for is is able of to! will get twice as far as the same number of n\an‘il’;“'“‘“’ s ""’l ;‘i“"d‘;_‘"‘w"ih ?“ "i‘f dre_turn b:gfi:fi; i 1 ._ithere was a forced landing that resuited in a 3 discrganized, and each attempting his own leader- L | t AR e B tting _'propeller. Such were the difficulties in holding the ship, though all may be hopeful of getting vlu the course that Hamilton had to keep his eye on a same point. On this premise has been built the ltrain comp of cars with roofs painted white. principle of unionism, and a sound principle it has |He could smell the locomotive gases. been proven | For Rickenbacker, the duplication of Hamilton's But to maintain a closely knit organization not |double journey was about as safe and exciting as a only must the purpose of the group be worthy but|ride in a taxicab. He reached Camden in less time its leadership must be beyond question and capable [than it takes a clerk in downtown New York to| of co-ordinating ‘for the -common good of the|travel home. Instruments guided him, Before his en- gines could warm to their task he had returned to group and not for personal grandizement. It is {his starting point on this premise that modern unionism has failed | o needed this comparative demonstration. So 80 many times in the past. The leadership has 00| accustomed are we to the drone of the airplanes ihat often become biased and self-conscious of power and we g ly look up at them, forgetful of the risks overicoked the common laws of organized scciety. taken in an earlier day, of the vast amount ot When this condition sets in the organization dis- research that had to be conducted before air travel integrates and trouble many times follows oefore couid be brought to its present scale. Superposed | re-organization is established and a going thing wings of wooden fabric on the lower of which a man sat and watched the world swim past between The test of leadership is its ability to lead and ¢ legs; an uncertain engine; wooden propellers that when it falls to live up to that there 0 had been known to drop off—it was with such Plrpose in battling blindly on with nothing in view. contrivances that we learned the way of an ecagle The thing to do when leadership fails is supplant in the air. T e W no gibes. A derisive urchin it, as the American people did two years ago in might advise pioneer automobile drivers to get a ' | the political arena. Similar conditiens arise from horse, but he had only respect for the Wrights, the |~ thne to time within labor organizations and in- Hamillons and the Curtisses. Perhaps he knew that| __ variably there is resistance on the part of ihe ‘eS¢ men were the heralds of a new day. faltering leadership to step aside for, human £ TR we all think first of our own selfish ends. But, Mr. Baldwin Again. | when new leaders arise that are better able to i @pe with the problem in hand it is only 300! (New York Herald Tribune,) APgrismanship o, let. them: lead and it is the v The Stanley Baliwin who has again become Prime foundation on which organized Y 13 d. Minister of Britain is a more experienced—and pre- | When the leade are able to get the following sumably a wiser--man than the little-known Member of the majority by all laws of good government | uf Parliament whose appointment as Prime Minister they are cntitled to function, for only chaos can tv\cl\'c years ago was welcomed because he was a come from failure of tize majority to rule 'successful business man. In those days a “business 'man” was believed to have the sturdy qualities of commen sense, which so many politicians seemed to and out of the battle for leadershi s e dnd out of the baitle for leadership has come.), . ~uy " paigwin was avowedly a Conservative— Viplation of the rights of others that the forces of |which at that time was in his favor—and had had daw, which are the majority of all the people, have lgycficient * political experience to be not altogether been called upon to fulfill the duty of keeping the|q “greenhorn,” peace. | In his two terms as Prime Minister—he was forced out in 1924 after only a year in office, but returned to power a few months later following the campaign “Such a situation is now confronting us in Juneau The evidence is that the majority of the work- ers a as] jLrea ine a sirous | o par tne Alaska Juzeau gold mine are deStOMiyn which the famous “Red” letter was used to lnk| Sining to: work pad have: began wians up the Laborites with Moscow—Mr. Baldwin was| doing so. It is their inherent right and they arelug,een The Liberals and Laborites looked upon him |as & reactionary. Some of his own party regarded |him as too radical. A few of his friends felt that he was too prone to take advice from his associates.| Many of them deplored a certain lack of aggressive-| |ness. ! For five years he remained in office—five years which in retrospect appear to have been rather calm, entitled to the protection the law allows. It is not their fault that the leadership of the central prganization has fallen on evil days and the mem- bers of the organization have drifted from it. That is the shortcomings of adership itself and it is upon that leader 11l anust rest the responsibility | i) for such troubles ‘as ise until it steps aside to| ; the will of the majority as is our common law wrldcspne the general strike which paralyzed England good government and god sportsmanship [dn 1089, WIGH Rnd Ourzon and, later, Sir Austen » N ’ y sbade i |Chamberlain as Foreign Secretary a conservative | policy was followed on the Continent, in the course | |of which the Locarno agreements were signed. Rela- tions with the United States were none too friendly, | las a result of the circumstances surrounding the CLE/ \Rhl) ()F INNUENDO. Character and reputation are the most sacred fallure of the Geneva conference on naval limita- | things that men and women have, and most of US|yjons in 1927. It was Mr. Baldwin's good foftune guard them zealously. By our works and deeds g, retire just before the great economic debacle which we are judged and if there is indication that some!started in 1929, When the Vationalist” ministry | g of our works are not above board we suffer in'was formed three years ago he became a member account lof it as leader of the Conservatives In Juneau, Mayor Goldstein naturally and right- His years of active political leadership have !doubtless been of great benefit to him |by nature, he has become self-confident Diffigent by ex- fully felt that he had been falsely presented befo: the world in an article appearing in a local labor & i A PF g perience. No longer can British cartoonists show paper and brought action against the editor ON " Liure of Stanley Baldwin the boy gazing at grounds of criminal libel. Twelve Juneau citizens granley Baldwin the man, saying, “Prime Minitser? have upheld the Mayor's contention that his repu-|you? Good Lord!” No longer need he feel as he tation was his. most sacred possession and thelis said as a youngster to have felt, that he was the of the article must face the consequences of |least gifted in a family group which included |Rudyard Kipling and the artists Burne-Jones and It*is a difficult thing to be forced to call upon |Edward Poynter. one’s neighbors and friends to tak | He comes to the Premiership still somewhat of another because lat has blacke! {an enigma \'u]lba leader who seems often to hesi tation. 1t takes a man of courage and unsullied|tAe t0 assert his leadership. But he is now ¥ % L {prepared for his difficult task, with a wide k: character to follow \hruugl? There has been xn“ed‘u. of affairs and mature judgment of po question in the minds of the big majority of lhe‘p,m(”m Even in England this is a hard time citizens of Juneau as to the reputation of Mayoriio pe a conservative. Much easier is it to advocate Gold-t prominent in ihé a New Deal or to control through a di rship, city 1 even hint of one.|whether on the Russian or the Italis model. It xomm iendo and J\-‘E\l Mr. Baldwin is a man of faith, integrity and picion as a result yesterday |a high sense of service. He will not finish, there- St L S e L R {fore, under the heavy burdens that will rest upon It him is perhaps his good fortune tha \TR“\F VOTE RUL h.u ceding Mr. Ramsay MacDonald he takes G the third time after a period when the dis THE TWO-THIR[) Scol In a recent s vote he Morning evangelist-politician has apparent Mine, at Mullan, Idaho, by an local of the{languishing. By contrast, almost any posit International Union of and Smelter Which Mr. Baldwin may take wili seem to Workers, George Myott, Sec £ local union, | sive—and Great Britain today aid that the sirike su okt quired | active, aggresive leadership. < rity n ry to call the strike | e v PR 1 two-thirds m’”’" B DROsoRNT. . % ; Week-end Lrips to M are predicted the More than 500 men are em in the mine, yo.r 9035 The objection is that we shall e and 310 cast votes, and while the umbers VOUDE {15 carry every drop of drink with us, for natural for and against the strike. were not eased by the|prohibition p union secretary, he stated that they lacked the two-|script.) evails on that planet.—(Boston Tr: | physician. L e e HAPPY ——BIRTHDAY = rhe &mpire extewds congratula- tions ~md best wishes today, their pirthday anntversary, o the jollcw- 20 YEARS AGO From The Empire JUNE 26, 1915 The Russians had driven the ™ i 1. Austra-German forces back across JUNE 26 the Dniester river. Germans were| Henry Meier falling back toward Stanislaus and | V. F. Williams the Russians were strengthening, Ernie Ro: their regained positions. Official | 4 > | dispatches from Berlin admitted the! wiLpES IS RETURNING | German reverses. ith Wildes, with the Federal| Ke: Miss May Otteson, who had been | : Administration, who has | ng i and busi- I the U; outh on pleasure a“dmmgt_ M q ?W‘E,rsn'y of Wash-| e returning to Juneau aboard ington, returned to Juneau to spmm”m ottt Gou the summer vacation with her par- & ents, Mr. and Mrs. C. E. Otteson, MRS, P-\l'LSOV RLTURNING Mrs. Eric Paulson, of the Uptown‘ | | A son was born to Mr. and Mrs. John W. Padgett of Thane. Dr; H C. DeVignne was the attending The: aboard the North Sea a business trip to Seaitle. B V. S GOING TO FAIRBANKS Mrs. Katherine Tewkesbury, wife Dave Tewkesbury, of the Fair- banks News Miner, is a passenger or the interior city, accompanied young son Bill. > STABLER RETURNS | FROM MASON MEET Mrs. Grover C. winn left on the | Jefferson to make the round trip to! Skagway. She was joined at Haines|" by Mr. Winn who had been spend- |ing several days ere on business. Miss Lenore Hyde, who had been; nief clerk in the office of the Surveyor-General, tendered her res- ignation. oo § | Mrs. J. B. Marshall entertained at a reception at her home in honor of Mrs. A. B. Dodd. ward D. Slablm'. Worshipful of the Juneau Masons and known attorney, returned to last night as a p: enger uver, B. C, on the z | N | N ! % Alex Chisholm, Henry Jobe, Carl Johnson and Carl Holmquist, all o s ZORIC DRY CLEANING doit Water Washing Your ALASKA LAUNDRY PHONE 15 T 0 TEM Grocery James Ramsay & Son FRESH FRUITS and VECIZTABLES ! FRESH MEATS zPhnne 182 Free Dellvery\ i Treadwell, left for a day’s outing at Lake Turner. Before returning here, Stabler vis- ed briefly in Seattle. James Kern and Joe White of TNITED STATES O actt Jor & Prospecting| ,pp\RTMENT OF THE INTERIOR | ’ : : GENERAL LAND - OFFICE * District Land Office D — N. GRAVES “I'hr ( lothing Man Home of dart Schaftner and Harx Clothing Gowey Shepard of Thane and Rufus Lindsay of Juneau, planned to leave early in July for a month’s prospecting on Chichagof Island. Anchorage, Alaska. June 10, 1935. Notice is hereby given that Harold PAINT—OILS Builders' and Shelf i J. Grimstad, entryman, together HARDARE i A % with his witnesses, Oscar Oberg and Weather: Maximum, o7 i) | S0 WS VISese SRR O A Thomas Hardware Co. ’ mum, 48; cloudy. A .——.——_—a‘ . aska, has made final proof on his e BG T homestead entry, Anchorage 07227, G————— i 3 B. P. 0. ELKS for a tact of land siuate on , GARBAGE HAULED || Regular meeting tonight at g Hump Island, Lynn Canal, latitude f Reasonable Monthly Rates | o'clock, —adv. |58 30" N. longitutle 134 ° 58 - ey i 100" W. embraced in U. S. Survey l E' 0 [)AVIS No. 2099, containing 15036 acres, | | TELEPHONE 584 Phone 4753 | + ~-assage, | Helene W » PHYSIOTHERAPY Ray, Medical Gymnastics. 307 Goldstein Building Phone Office, 216 DENTISTS Blomgren Hours 9 am. to 9 pm. 'BURGER . L. Albrecht | | Electricity, Infra Red 12 Dr, C..P, Jennie DENTIST | Rooms 8 and 9 Valentine Puilding Telephone 176 Dr. Richard Williams DENTIST OFFICE AND RESIDENCE | Gastineau Building | Phone 481 Fraternal :Societies OF | Gastineau Channel ) B. P. 0. ELKS meets every second and fourth Wednesday at 8 p. m. Viciting brothers wel~ come. i M. E. Monagle, Ex- alted Ruler, M. H. Sides, Secretary KNIGHTS OF COLUMPUS Seghers - Council No. 1760. Meetings second and last Monday at 7:30 p. m.-Transient others urged to at- tend. Cemwa®' Cham- {bers, Fifth St. JOHN F. MULLEI, |G K., H. J. TURNER, Secretary. | DENTIST Hours 9 am. to 6 pm. SEWARD RUILDING | Off’>e Pncne 469 Dr. A. W. Stewart t. D. Graduate Los Angeles Col- lege of Optometry and | Opthalmology | Glasses Fitted Ttobert Simpson Lenses Ground | DR. H. VANCE OSTEOPATH Consul’ation and examination Free. Hours 10 to 12; 1 to 7 to 8:30 and by appointment. Office Grand Apts, near Gas- tineau Hotel. Phone 177 Rooms 5-6 Triangle Bldg Office hours. 9 am Evexings by appointanent PHONE 721 te 5 pru 5 —*land it is now in the files of the m o U. S. Land Office, Anchorage, Al-) FOSS | i 3 in O | |aska, and if no protest is filed in' ¥ CONSTRUCTION COMPANY | |the local land office within the! | Old First National Bank Bldg. PHONE 107 | period of publication or thirty days ;| thereafter, said final proof will accepted and final certificate is sued. | FLORENCE L. KOLS, Acting Regist First publication, June 26, 1935. ! Juneau Alaska MAY' -— er. % | “ --"vofl"‘)r")wy£ Styles 2 Last publication, Aug. 21, 1935. ’J ! Todav” ?'; = ' | | | Night Phone 1851 | | JUNEAU |zece W |\ DrugCo. |} j “THE CORNER DRUG STORE” ‘ ! P. 0. Substation No. 1 | Ji:neau’s Own Siore” | | { FREE DELIVERY _ i ey "’l",} 5 el e O A s | QR T 5 R T T e A S e 1| BAILEY’S "“suirie. g Merchants’ Lunch | Short Orders | CAFE s “WHERE YOU MEET YOUR FRIENDS” | Fuel GASTINEAU CAFE | GASTINEAU HOTEL BUILDING I | GENERAL MOTORS and TAG PRODUCTS I JUNEAU-YOUNG Funeral Parlors Licensed Funeral Directors and Embslmers Day Phone 12 se to Cali 43 Juncau Transfer Co. en in need of MOVING or STORAGE Coal 0il Transfer TYPEWRITERS RENTED | $5. J. B. Burford & Co. “Our doorstep is worn by satisfied customers” 00 per month P. JOHUNSON French-Italian Dinners |5 ALASKA MEAT CO. R S AR T || Hollywood Style Shop 3 | Formerly COLEMAN'S || Pay Less—Much Less Front at Main Street FEATURING CARSTEN’S BABY BEEF—DIAMOND |, _ BEULAH HICKEY TC HAMS AND BACON—U. 8. Government Inspected WALLIS 8. GEORGE, C.P.A. Associates JAMES C. COOPER, C.P.A. WALLIS S. GEORGE & CO. HARRI MACHINE SHOP { “ELECTROL —Of Course” f- CERTIFIED PUBLIC ACCOUNTANTS Juneau, Alaska SYSTEM TAX AUDIT - 5 e SERVICE | 2 i McCAUL MOTOR COMPANY Dodge and Plymouth Dealers ) g The Greatest Business Convenience ® A Checking Account protects your cash on hand, enables you to pay bills by mail, makes personal hookeeping easier and is a WT __4 | | Wi e GARLAND BOGGAN i Hardwood Floors Waxing Polishiag Sandi PHONE L J recognized basis for personal credit. In the United States, nine-tenths of all busi- ness is handled by check. The advantages of the plan are even greater here in Alaska. Let us demonstrate how make this service to you. valuable we can “MUSICIANS LOCAL NO. 1 | Meets Second and Fourth Sun- days Every Month—3 P. M. DUDE HAYNES, Secretary The B. M. Behrends Bank Juneau, Alaska BE | i . . | | : ! In gt e b . TTY MAC BEAUTY SHOP New Location at 12th anc B Streets PHONE 547 Harrv Race DRUGCINT } Vhe Squibd Stere Cigars Cigarettes Candy Cards The New Arctic Pabst Famou Draught Beer On Tap “JIMMY” CARLSON HOTEL ZYNDA Large Sample Room ELEVATOR SERVICE S. ZYNDA, Prop. | l ROSE SUAREZ Dressmaking, Remodeling, Alterations TELEPHONE 277 Feldon's House, near Moose Modiste from New York City 1 | | all | . THE MINERS' Recreation Parlors and Liquor Store BILL DOUGLAS M9UNT JUNEAU LODGE NO, 147 Second and Fourth Mon \ day of each month ir ! \41/( Scottlh Rite Temple, ’ beginning at 7:30 p.m HOV”*RD D. STABLER. Worshipful Master; JAMES W. lLl‘lVERS Secretary. DOUGLAS i AERIE 117, F. O. E. Meets first and third Mondays, # 1 p.m., Eagles’ Hall, Douglas. Visiting brothers welcome. Sante Degar, W. P, T. W. Cashea, Secretary. | | | Our (.ucks go any place any [ time. A tank for Diesel Oil | | and a tank for crude cil save | burner trouble. | PHONE 149; NIGHT 148 | RELIABLE TRANSFER l Commercial Adjust- | ment & Rating Bureau | Coperating with White Seiv~ | ice Bureau | Room 1—Shattuck Bldg. | We have 5,000 local ratings on file JUNEAU FROCK 1 SHOPPE “Exclusive but not Expensive” Coats, Dresses, Lingerte, Hoslery and Hats PP | i =% Wilson-Fairbanks & Co. All Local and Pac Northwest | Stocks and Bends Bought, Sold, Quoted | GRAND APTS. PHONE 177 | | Mrs. H. Vance, Agent The Florence Sho Permanent Waving a Specialty | rlorence Holmquist, Prop. { PHONE 421 | Behrends Bank Building Phone i |1 | Cardinal Cabs SO SRS SRS el St L SR P TSRS P S THE MARKET RASKET Provisions, Fruits, Vegetables Phone 342 Free Delivery — | 8] | o | PHONE 36 For very prompt L.IQUOR DELIVERY t— THE JUNEAU LAunDRY Franklin Street between Front and Secend Streets PHONE 358 WARRACK Comtruchon Co. i | Junea hfi i Phone 4 —_— Juneau Ice Cream Parlors | mmom ORDERS L__ Intain Candy e i e e SHOP IN JUNEAU FIRST! * [ 314 e