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4 THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, e — -~ — Daily Alaska Empire and Manager Long-Range Fears. | Iy o tmey 1120 YEARS AGO The Herald Tribune Senator | alarm about next year's Presidential | From The Empire has heard rumors—as have others, | for that matter—that a Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States may be nominated for 'the Presidency in 1936. Two names, the Senator | writ without identifying them, are already underl The uppermost question in Lon- serious consideration. A guess at these personalities/don was when Warsaw. would be could hardly go wrong. If either of them is made|evacuated, not whether or not it a candidate next year it will be because his opinions| would. There was no other feeling as a judge have been satisfactory to the political anywhere than that the Polish posing to nominate him, and are likely to|capital was doomed and would fall ™. it a platform calling for the defense of the Con-|into the hands of the Germans ATED PR |stitution and of the Supreme Court itself. Senator|The Teuton drive on the Russian Ty ol B maintains that such a course as he|lines such that there seemed r and also the describes would be very damaging to the prestige no possibility of its being stem- _|and integrity of the court, and would be a demoraliz- | med. TO BE LARGER ing thing in our political life. He does not refer| - ICATION. _ to the fact that Mr. Hughes was taken from the| Fresh outbreaks of forest fivos |Supreme Court in 1916 to run against President|that the previous week had played |Wilson; nor does he argue that evils of the kind | havoc with standing timber on the {he now dreads followed that event at that time.|Government road to -Mendenhall |He, perhaps, was content to let the reader infer lh'«\!‘(‘dacier about nine miles from Ju- {its re ilts were not of a sort to encourage repe-|neau had called out fire-fighters tition of the experiment |for a new battle. For two days the That it will ever be tried again is strongly im-|Treadwell company had had a crew probable. If the defense of the Constitution is to|of men fighting the fire at Knud- |be made a political isue, there are plenty of men son’s farm. Forest Supervisor W. outside the Supreme Court able to lead that fight. G. Weigle ordered out a new force| Should there be a turn in popular sentiment lead-|of rangers to aid the Treadwell ing to attacks on the Supreme Court, and to at- crew. tempts to alter its personnel or restrict its juris- Sl jdiction, the couniry would not lack for trained and| Over 100 Masons attended the !disinterested lawyers volunteering to repel such special communication of Mt. Ju- an invasion. It would seem, in fact, that Senator|neau Lodge, F. & A. M., and the Borah's fears, while doing him credit, are really banquet that followed. Speeches y. Political gossip a year before the were made by John T. Reed, M |r onal conventions is often wide astray in the|S., Whittier, Caarles E. Naghel, th building ordinances, matter of predicting who will be nominated and for |Rev. John B. Stevens, John R ity Council and | what reasons. One would say that the likelihood of |Jones, Edward Haggerty, Sidney fire hazards the Republican Party choosing its Presidential can-|Terry and Dr. L. P. Dawes. vholehearted support didate next from the Supreme Court is so| small as to be negligible in alt our political cal-| there are “i\unlmns. 1 close proximity | ee that every | ar as possible. | cussing the mat- | buildings were ( ROBERT BENDER Editor In a letter utters a ery of campaign. He e the Main by ind July 22, 1915 s, Douglas for $1.25 wing rates: ! nths, in advance, | ey will promptly | lure” or irreguls '”"‘rpnn_v pr one ss Office | " FIRE HAZARD. GUARDING \GAILNS Milton Winn, John Winn, Earl |Naud and Cy Wright left on the launch Klohone for a short trip to Auk Bay where they expected to deplete the streams of their sal- mon trout supply 1. Fire is the worst More Abundant Recreation. (New York Herald Tribune.) and that ! The man who put on a Punch and Judy .show fire in the hotel parlors; the maiden lady who exhibited | water-colors of local scenery in the card room: the the om0, violin and clarinet that tuned up about dinner —— the'iime and with eauxiliaries played “Therell Be The Gastineau Hotel was filled |Hot Time in the Old Town Tonight” at the Sat-|t® overflowing, according to Man- t G. H. Canfield, Forest Ranger, arrived in Juneau and was at the New Cain escap ty were a contended remedy to us in Alaska yrday hop; these were about all the art and the conflagration 'artists any one could see at a typical American year. While summer resort in 1899. The croquet grounds, the wont to do, shuffle-boards, a tennis court or two, maybe, were ter usually the only side dishes served with the piece fire de resistance of recreation—bathing, boating, fishing, tramping. It was a big d when the hotel waiters who were working their way through college played 3 ball against the guests, one of whom had pitched of them ¢5 vgle in eighteen-ninety-what-not rates al| what would the good old days say of art and loss from gport at a modern summer resort; symphony orches- tras playing in natural amphitheatres, summer stock the city of- in easy driving distance of hundreds of resorts, art Juneau a safer schools everywhere and numerous summer exhibi- Building owners tions of painting where beginners, amateurs, and great and minor reputations rub frames and elbow? against HOW about these forums and conferences where Let experts and celebrities tell us how to save the hworld or, with .all'its faults, accept it and love it? €%~ There can be no sneering at uplift, for these are (now things that people really want to enjoy; just las sincerely as they enjoy golf or sailing or riding or the sun and the water on an amount of bare |skin that would have been a scandal among the ¢ attractions is|fast set at Long Branch in '99. and from| But the change that has come over life at Amer- indication that it|ican summer resoris does not need to go back a | generation for strong contrasts. It has occurred s the rifle range 5 ¢ ; 4 mostly in the last ten years; much of it in the last cted by the |y ee’or four; and argues a swift and sane devel- using the syment of the American people; an extension and re and when the soldiers|yarying and balancing of interests that follows the too, will make use of the Old World pattern somewhat but already improves jupon it in scope and strength. “I'll tell you what | : Mendenhall Lake in the shadow |it is, Mister, when we take up culture we'll make such a di resent that Every large its building ordi- 1 result mar 1 insurance serious 1ould b en to make law will not only ling mmunity loss ‘;.{ Nome watch as rienced. week compl lemen are by experts to be one 1,000-yard range in few ranges of that] " "old Warld, even in more or less casual sum- the attractive logl| ructed at 100, meeting the Association. Flory about under actual Service doing direction of after de- bland smile; and while our theatre, music, paint- m 5 have been cor 1,000 National Rifle ional Forester C. H brought Forest nder th struction foreman, Dan Moller. possibility that the Tange| e gop'y know who will have the biggest sky lon pldce. There|neay when the air race is over, but the aviation an ice skating|concerns will have the profits—(Dallas News.) amusement. — el But in the mean- available for the rvice has pri which sense of humor in better order than those of some folks we could mention, who went in for art here and abroad in the good old d yards, 1 e If adrenalin experimenters w to bring back to life, they mi tion to the G. O. P. elephant Express.) ant a tough subject it turn their atten- ~(Buffalo Courier- e by St Ulti will bec for outdoor Huey Long has so many rivals for publicity {there is doubt whether he can long hold his posi- tion as the life of the party—(Toledo Blade.) asset it e —— As a get-rich-quick scheme the dime-chain letter has one advantage over the old bucketshop—it Inot so easy to get poor quick | News.) fective about these in our waterways. Sunday while looking at “They look so business Junes put it \ i royers in Auk Bay any more, the big jump would be List to White House.—(Detroit Ne from Welfare s.) Juneau has searchlights playing over the splays This seems to consist of rolling China.—(Dallas News.) up the map of ~ SEBRINGS AND COATS GET TOGETHER = i Fulfilling a vow that they would marry twins, Lois and Louise Coats, twin sisters, scored a “double” when they applied for marriage licenses with Roy and Ray Sebring, United States marines stationed at $an Diego, Calif. (Associated.Rress Photo) is| way.—(Chicago | As scarcely anyone is being born in log cabins| Headline says Japan is unfolding its China plan. | |ager Glen Bartlett, with every one |of the 35 rooms taken. Weather: Maximum, 80; mini mum, 52; Clear £l i e — SORENSONS MAKE RETURN HERE WITH MRS. C. A. EVANS After an extended visit at Kim- shan Cove, Mr. and Mrs. K. M. Sorenson and Mrs. Charles A Evans returned to Juneau aboard the Estebeth yesterday. Mr. and Mrs. Sorenson have been visiting with their son, Paul, who is manager of the Hirst-Chichagof Gold Mining Company plant at |Kimshan Cove. Mrs. Evans has been visiting with her daughter, who is Mrs. Paul Sorenson. Anchornge, Alaska. September 10, 1934, Notice is hereby given that the Northwestern Herring Co., have filed an application for a trade and manufacturing site, Anchorage | 07840, for a tract of land situated |at the head of Port Conclusion, Baranof Island, embraced in U. S.| Survey No. 2150 from which corner it hum!” We can echo the old jeer with a very\No' 1 said US.LM. No. 2150 bears Was held in the Moose Hall last | S. 3° 13 W. 259 chains distant, ling begin to feel not the least inferiority to those °Ontaining 5.906 acres. Latitude 65° Al Nygren, Rex Herman, Sam El-| 15’ N. Longitude 134° 40’ 30" W. 'mer manifestations, well keep our muscles and|?d it IS now in the files of the Mrs. Maud Leonard, Mrs. Charles |U. 8. Land Office, Anchorage, Al-| | aska. | Any and all persons claiming ad- |versely should file their adverse| claims in the U. S. Land Office,| |Anchorage, Alaska, within the| period of publication or thirty days! thereafter, or they will be barred} by the provisions of the Statutes.| FLORENCE L. KOLB, Acting Register. First publication, “June 18, 1935, Last publication, Aug. 20, 1935, MONDAY, JULY 22, 1935. BIRTHDAY| == | The Empire extends congratula- | tions nnd best wishes today, their birthday anniversary, n the jollow- | ing: JULY 22 Frank L. Garnick Frank A. Metcalf Albert F. Tucker Fred Campen Miss Gladys Forrest STEWART WHITE, NOTED AUTHOR, LOOKS FOR SUN V eteran Alaskan Traveler ZORIC DRY CLEANING e Sott Water Washiag ~ Your ALASKA LAUNDRY PHONE 15 Arrives Here on Cruise Yacht. Kuru o Just like a great many people in Southeast Alaska today, Stewart Eiward White, noted author, “is waiting for the sun to come out.” Hopefully expecting a sight of Old Sol, White maneuvered’ his wrim 70-foot cruising yacht, the Kuru, alengside Keeny's Float af o'clock yesterday afternoon from| tte. The, Kuru will stay here,| n all; to await the arrival of a, cruise guest on the northbound Al-| TOTEM Grocer y James Ramsay & Son FRESH FRUITS and VECEZTABLES FRESH MEATS rch of the sun—and, incident- || Pbong 182 Free Delivery —— acka—until late tomorrow. But White, whose writings are known the world over, has been to Alaska too many times to let a few clouds bother him greatly. This is trip No. 14 for him, but he is back i | | GRAVES 1 “Tue Clothing Man” Home of Hart Schaffner and Marx Clothing again for another summer of fish. |&————————— ing, picture taking and plain, ‘‘everyday” rest. True, the clouds have upset the author's attempts at photography. He said he had been “fooling, around a bit with some of this| ‘new color film,” but did not report | | | PAINY Builders’ and Shell HARDARE . Thomas Hardware Co. PROFESSIONAL \C | DRS.KASER & FREEBURGER Helene W. L. Albrecht PHYSIOTHERAPY assage, Electricity, Infra Red Ray, Medical Gymnastics. 307 Goldstein Building Phone Office, 216 DENTISTS i Blomgren Building PHONE 56 Hours 9 am. to 9 pm. Dr. C. P. Jenne DENTIST Rooms 8 and 9 Valentine Building Telephone 176 Dr. Richard Williams DENTIST OFFICE AND RESIDENCE Gastineau Building Phone 481 Dr. A. W. Stewart DENTIST Hours 9 am. to 6 p.m. SEWARD RUILDING Off:2e Pnonc 469 ~ Kobert Simpson Opt. D. Graduate Los Angeles Col- lege of Optometry and Opthalmology Glasses Fitted Lenses Greund Y R S SRR T : and last B, P. 0. ELKS meets every second and fourth Wednesday at 8 p. m. Visiting brothers wel« come, M. E. Monagle, Ex- alted Ruler, M. H. Sides, Secretary KNIGHTS OF COLUMPUS Seghers Council No. 1760. Meetings second (fl}'\ : Monday at ‘l S |7:30 p. m. Transient E_‘?)f7 brothers urged to at- ‘.\}// tend. Conrrs' Cham- { bers, Fifth St. JOHN F. MULLEN! G. K, H. J. TURNER, Secretary, | MOUNT JUNEAU LODGE NO. 141 Second and Fourth Mon day nf each month ir Scotti,h Rite Temple, beginning at 7:30 p.m. HOW*RD D. STABLER, Worshipful Master; JAMES W. LEIVERS, Secretary. DOUGLAS AERIE 117, F. O. E. Meets first and third Mondays, 8 ip.m.,, Eagles' Hall, Douglas. Visiting brothers welcome. J. B. Martin, W. P, T. N. Cashen, Secretary. i i A | Our tiucks go any place any | time. A tank for Diésel Oil | and a tank for crude gil save | * burner trouble. | | CE OSTEOPATH Consultation and examination Free. Hours 10 to 12; 1 to 5; 7 to 8:30 and by appointment. Office Grand Apts., near Gas- tineau Hotel. Phone 177 much luck. However, the fish have been biting well, and several nice| messes of salmon and trout havci been pulled aboard. ‘ While in Ketchikan recently, the Kuru added two more passengers\ when Mr. and Mrs. Laurence Scott | [ T GARBAGE HAULED Reasonable Monthly Rates E. 0. DAVIS TELEPHONE 584 Phone 4753 joined Mr. and Mrs. White. The| Scotts, who reside in San Fran-| cisco, are to leave the Kuru here tonight to take a southbound steamer. Scott is in the marine in- surance business. y Tomorrow, Barnaby Conrad is | scheduled to arrive here on the Al- ™ aska to join the Kuru. Conrad is + Burlingame, Cal., neighbor of the Whites. The Kuru, which resembles Camptell Church’s charter yacht | Westward somewhat, was built in| | 1931 expecially for Alaskan waters. | | “Captain” White is his own skip-| GENERAL MOTORS and MAYTAG PRODUCTS W. P. JOHNSON GARLAND BOGGAN | Hardwood Floors | Waxing Poli Sanding PHONE 582 U MASS MEETING IS HELD SUNDAY | | A mass meeting sponsored by the | | Alaska Miners' Defense Committee! | night. Among the speakers were stead, Roman Ellers, Jack Harris,| Lesher and Simon Graner. Irvin Goodman, Portland attor- ney, representing the International Labor Defense, also addressed the meeting. Goodman will sail on the Yuken tonight, but plans to return to Juneau next fall to assist BETTY MAC MUSICIANS LOCAL NO. 1 Meets Second and Fourth Sun- days Every Month—3 P, M. DUDE HAYNES, Secretary I | . BEAUTY SHOP | In New Location at | 32th an¢ B Streets | PHONE 547 | Henry Roden in the defense of the men arrested on riot charges who have been bound over to the Grand Jury. —————— GERMAN BEATS , U. S. NET STAR LONDON, England, July 22.— Baron Gottfried von Cramm scored a three-set victory here today over Wilmer Allison to enable Germany to draw level with the United!| States at one match all in the inter-zone Davis Cup tennis elim- ination. IT°S Wise to Call 8 . Juneau Transfer Co. when in need of MOVING or STORAGE Fuel Oil Coal - Transfer The Teuton star trimmed Allison in straight sets, 8-6, 6-3, 6-4, e SHOP IN JUNEA and Juneau has the for the officers and men of the warships engaged in grand m waters. Alaska’s oldest bank joins in the commun- ity’s greeting to the v Territory’s has been privileged to The B. M. Behrends Bank JUNEAU “THE FLEET’S IN”. satisfaction recognition of the military and economic importance of the great district which it warmest of welcomes aneuvers in Alaskan G JUNEAU-YOUNG Funeral Parlors Licensed Funeral Directors and Embalmers Night Phone 1851 Day Phone 13 — TYPEWRITERS RENTED $5.00 per month J. B. Burford & Co. “Our doorstep is worn by satisfied customers” r LA isitors and shares the in this national serve since 1891. Hollywood Style Shop Formerly COLEMAN'S Pay Less—Much Less | Front at Main Street BEULAH HICKEY JUNEAU Drug Co. “THME CORNER DRUG STORE” P. O. Substation No, 1 FREE DELIVERY Harry Race DRUGGIST “The Squibb. Store” CONSTRUCTION COMPANY Old First National Bank Bldg. Juneau Alaska PHONE 107 Cigars Cigarettes Candy Cards The New Arctic Pabst Famous Draught Beer On Tap “JIMMY" CARLSON Large Sample Room ELEVATOR SERVICE S. ZYNDA, Prop. | | | | . i SRR ROSE SUAREZ ] Modiste from New York City Dressmaking, Remodeling, Alterations . TELEPHONE 277 Feldon’s House, near Moose Hall | . Recreation Parlors and Sore Liquor Store PHONE 149; NIGHT 148 RELIABLE TRANSFER g Commercial Adjust- I ment & Rating Bureau | Coperating with White Seirve l ice Bureau | Room 1—Shattuck Bldg. | We have 5,000 local ratings | on file | ———H JUNEAU FROCK SHOPPE “Exclusive but not Expensive” Coats, Dresses, Lingerie, Hoslery and Hats McCAUL MOTOR | | COMPANY | | | Dodge and Plymouth Dealers l oo re e oae FORD AGENCY, (Authorized Dealers) GREASES JUNEAU MOTORS GAS—OILS Foot of Main Street Phone L e Cardinél PHONE 36 For very prompt LIQUOR DELIVERY