The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, October 25, 1938, Page 7

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

BRINGING UP FATHER _ BY GOLLY- IT'S BEEN RAINING FOR A WEEK- N S NOW -REMEMBER -DON'T YOU DARE SMOKE THAT HORRID PIPE IN THE HOUSE -1 DON'T HOME AND_FIND ED WITH THE FUMES P\\: OF THAT DIRTY PIPE- THE R WELL-WELL- THE SUN CAME OUT AT LAST- THIS WILL PLEASE MAGGIE -~ SHE'S BEEN MOANIN ALL WEEK ABOUT HOW WE T IT- IS+ IVE JUST GOT TO SMOKE - I'VE GOT_AS MUCH FREE- DOM IN THIS HOUSE AS A STANDING COL. WANT TO COME THE HOUSE FiLl- DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, TUESDAY, OCT. 25, 1938. By GEORGE McMANUS IT STOPPED RAINING AND IT 1S WHAT'S ALL THIS ABOUT? § | SHOULD HAVE THOUGHT OF THIS BEFOKE-- / 4 50 NICE AND BRIGHT=-DAUGHT ER AND | HAVE DECISED TO RUN OWN TO THE BEACH AND TAKE A DIP- DO YOU LIKE OUR SUITS? i WANT AD | INFORMATION | Count five average words to the line. Daily rate per line for consecutive insertions: One day ... Additional days : Minimum charge ..50¢ Copy must be in the office by 2 Folta Points Out Defects in Just_icg System Speaks on Woman’s Club Crime Prevention Hour WANTED PARTY IN business in urgent need of $100 for emergency. P.O. Box 1501, Following is the summary of ar GOOD .COOK wishes work in cafe . : B or hotel or will do housework Attorney George W. Folta Sunday Call or write 307 Hotel Juneau. carge W Boli BUER afternoon on the Juneau Woman's Club crime prevention program: “I admire the courage of Juneau Woman's Club for tackling. in conjunction with the General WANTED TO BUY: Wo(xl-wux'km; power tools. Write P. O. Box 1713. | WANTED TO BUY-Large circu- address given by Assistant District | the | sclock in the afternoun to insure| lating oil heater. Phone Black 246 nsertion on same day. | Federation of Woman's Clubs of ¢ WANTED TO BUY—House, mcome the United States, a problem as FAGGED OUT WITH THE EFFORT weighed 1'% ounces at birth cuddles near cigaref in 2:1!1'.0: ‘rln::“cs We accept ads over telephon fom persons listed in telephone Mectory. Phone 374—Ask for Ad-taker. [ S G R s | In case of error or if an ad | has been -stopped’ beiore ex- piration, advertiser please noti- fy this office (Phone 374) at | once and .same will be given attention. AILY ALASK# EMPIRE N 4 FOK SALE cash. PIANO SALE, Phone $70 143. Expert piano tuning. Gmrge[ Anderson Music Shoppe. SPECTACLES, reading or distance, $3; bifocals, $6. Haven rooms un- til Oct. 30. Day Optical Co. FOR SALE—Craig Dairy. A bargain. Communicate with Lecnard Pitcher, Craig, Alaska. | property preferred; furnished or unfurnished. Address L. Empire | WANTED—Small acreage near Ju- falter when they begin to meet | neau. aska. LOST AND FOUND LOST — Round - bottom rowboat; painted black inside, rust out- side. Finder please notify Carl Floridan, off Douglas Highway. H. Hamsom, Fanshaw, Al- LOST — Wallet containing check, driver's license and cash. Keep cash and return check and wal- let to Empire. 'LUTHERAN SEWING ‘ GROUP WILL MEET | | . Thursday afternoon at 1:30 o'clock a meeting of the Lutheran Ladies’ | Sewing Group will be held at the e s i home of Mrs. Harry Stonehouse on FOR SALE—5-room house in Doug- West Twelfth Street. las. Apply Warner’s Grocery. : Al ladies who wish to attend ithe gathering are cordially invited. S e—— Today’s News Today.—Empire. FOR SALE—Canaries. 202 6th St. FOR SALE—U & I Lunch, Owner| quitting business. Write P.O. Box 2274 or phone 334. | SUMMONS No. 4275 FOR SALE—City Float Beer Parlor. In the District Court for the Terri- Phone 541 after 4 p.m. tory of Alaska, Division Number > e One, at Juneau. FOR RENT [GOLDIE DIVEN, Plaintiff, e ‘ CHARLES DIVEN, Defendant. 5-ROOM FURNISHED house. Over- The President of the United States stuffed, oil heat, frigidaire, oak| of America. floors. Windsor Apts. 'To the above named defendant, greeting: You are hereby required to ap- pear in the District Court for the Territory of Alaska, First Division, within thirty days after the last VS. FIVE-ROOM _unfurnished _house. | Oil burner and garage. Vacant! about Nov. 1. Phone 451. complex and difficult as that | crime prevention, and I sincerely |hope that its members will not with disappointment and rebuff ywhich are inevitable because the amifications of crime are not only unbelievably extensive, but more- over reach into apparently re- spectable places. “Alaska is fortunate in not hav- ling organized crime to cope with. | Nevertheless, since our system of criminal jurisprudence is patterned after those of the_ States, it is just as vulnerable to the depredations of organized gangs, and just as much in need of reform through simplification and speeding up of | procedure. That branch of crim- inal law which prescribes the prac- | tice and procedure in criminal cases has been under fire because it is utterly out of step with the times. Much of it has undergone no hundreds of years. |Eighteen years ago, when ex-Pres |dent. Taft was Chief Justice of the United States Supreme Court, he |branded the administration of crim- {inal justice in the United States as a disgrace. bt Laxity in Alaska “Though the enforcement of criminal laws begins with the de- |tection of crime and apprehension of offenders, no such work is being done outside of incorporated towns in Alaska because there is not a |single officer assigned to any of [the districts oulside of incorpor- ated towns. For every mile that is | policed, 10,000 square miles are un- | policed. This constitutes a vast no- |man’s land in which the criminal |is unmolested today. In the early |days, many a miner disappeared change for of | ROOM with bath in private home; publication of this summons, name- With his poke of gold soon after | ly within thirty days after the 8th | hitting the trail through this no- gentleman preferred. Call Black|gay of November, 1938, in case this|man's land for civilization. In re- 427, after 6 p.m call Green 427. or within cent years there have been numer- L AR = T T ¢ /summons is published, FOR RENT-Two office rooms in|forty days after the date of its First National Bank Bldg. Irguire |S€rvice upon you, in case this sum- ous disappearances of men which cannot be explained on any theory at bank. COZY, warm, furn. apts. water, dishes, cooking utensils and bath. Reasonable al Seaview. MISCELLARFOUS JOIN OUR Dollar-a-Week Club Channel Apparel Shop. WOULD EXCHANGE blue fox and mink for substantial trolling boat. Write Empire G 86. Learn WELDING. Largest, best equipped school in west. Free cata- log. DUNN WELDING SCHOOL, 2033 N.E. Union, Portland, Ore. FUARANTEED Realistic Perma- nents, $450. Finger wave, 65c. Lola’s Beauty Shop, telephone 201, 315 Decker Way. TURN yvu-r old gold in‘o value, cash or trade at Nugg=¢ Shop. BROKERS RETURN HERE Earl Clifford and A. Van Mavern arrived on the Alaska after com- mercial calls on merchants in other Southeast Alaska cities, Light, 'the above named plaintiff on file — solution of the bonds of matrimony but that of murder. “Though aware of this condition, neither Congress nor the Legisla- ture has seen fit to remedy it. Antique Procedure mons is served upon you personally, and answer to the complaint of in the said court in the above en- titled action. | The said plaintiff in said action demands the following relief: dis- between the arrest of an of(ender} now and heretofore existing be- and the final determination of his| tween plaintiff and defendant, and that plaintiff be awarded the cus- benefit only the defendant. The| [tody of the two minor children, tortuous course of a criminal pro- | the issue of said marriage. |ceeding is beset with many tech-| And in the event you fail to so nicalities, for the existence of which appear and answer, the plaintiff |there is no longer any reason. Wit- will take judgment against you for nesses die, disappear and forget, want thereof, and Will apply to the while the inconvenience to which court for the relief demanded in|they are put in being required to her complaint and as hereinabove appear during successive stages of |stated. !a case is so great that it is be- Witness, the Honorable Geo. F.|coming increasingly difficult to ob- | Alexander, judge of said court, and tain even unwilling witnesses. The |the seal of said court hereunto af- method of handling witnesses is the \fixed, on this 10th day of October, same now as it was 400 years ago 11938, |when people lived and died at the ROBERT E. COUGHLIN, |place of their birth and when it Seal) Clerk. |was an event to make a journey By PEGGY O. McLEOD, (of 30 miles. Deputy Clerk. “In the Justice Courts where First publication, Oct. 11, 1938. ‘most misdemeanors are tried, juries ; (Court Last publication, Nov, 1, 1938, often - convict defenders, but the |Bu | “So paralyzing is our antiquated | criminal procedure that years elapse | case. Needless to say such delays one in that body ‘crimlmu procedurs,” Jorgensan-Snow | | conviction doesn’t count unless the defendant is satisfied. It goes with- out saying that he is not satisfied with a conviction. On the contrary, no such indulgence is shown the prosecution. Most of the rules work only one way—the defendant’s. For pure, unadulterated asininity, it would be impossible to excel this| method of handling cases in the Nuptials Will Be This Evening justice courts. It is the Bearded o S Lady of the Criminal Procedure Circus. It a verdict of a jury is|Ceremony to Take Place at worth so little that it doesn't count Sea“er Tl’aCl HOmC only when the defendant chooses S |to make it count, the power to of Bride’s Parents such cases should be taken away from the justice courts. Alaska Jury System “Although in theory the jury is selected from hon intelligent and upright citizens, and though Joe Snow, son of Monte Snow, will the Supreme Court of the United take place at 8 o'cloek, with the States has repeatedly called atten- |Rev. John A. Glasse reading the tion to this, the Alaska jury law, service. passed at the behest of someone | At the wedding, to which only | This evening at the Seatter Tract home of Mr. and Mrs. George Jor- genson, the marriage of their daugh- ter, Miss Gertrude Jorgenson, to clients than in securing juries that present, Miss would be fair to both sides, requires |genson, sister of the bride, will be that the names of nearly all the maid of honor. Emett Botelho voters be placed in the jury box.|will be best man for the groom. Thus the element of selection was[ Following the ceremony a recep- |done away with, so that now thetion for friends of the couple will names of ex-convicts, crooks, gam- be held at the Jorgenson residence. |blers, underworld characters, pros- e \titutes and other petty offenders BISHOP CRIMONT RETURNS contaminate the jury boxes and Bishop R. J. Crimont returned to make mockery out of the funda- Juneau aboard the Alaska. He has mental concept of a trial jury. been on a trip to Holy Cross, Fair- From these the prosecution is ex- banks and Anchorage, and went pected, after the defense has chal- |sotith on a recent boat on business. lenged to the limit, to secure a jury | of twelve that will favor the protec- tion of life and property. No one would argue that G-men or a police force should be selected as juries are selected under our law, and yet (it is more important to have hon- est, intelligent and upright jurors | than officers, Law 1s Vicious “The Alaska jury law is vicious. It was passed with the object, con- cealed undoubtedly, of assisting the | ilty to escape punishment, and it without a parallel in the United States. [ “The Legislature cannot be de- pended on to remedy any of these evils, because there is always some- 0 is opposed to any measure calculated to speed up or simplify the administration of justice. It is only through a mili- tant organization with a large mem- bership and an efficient lobby that Today’s News Toaay.—Emplre. lany remedial action will be ob- tained. “The efforts of the General Fed- eration of Woman's Clubs to pre- vent crime through education is commendable, but it is approachmg' the problem from a distance. More- over, it ignores the present unsat- isfactory conditions and in effect denies the existence of the obvious | as well as assumes that our system of criminal procedure is not sus- | ceptible of substantial improvement. | Education should supplement and | not supplant needed reforms in In a Hartford, Conn., relief sta sleeping baby. They, with man; home in the lower section of the t who was more interested in his close friends and relatives are to be | Millie Marie Jor- | » toy fox terrier pup that Harry Colvin of Niagara Falls, What Would You Say? We Would Say WOW! What would you say if you held 1500 trump, your partner held 300 pinochle, and in the playoff you took every trick? This is what happened last Sat- urday night when George Schmidt and Ken Ferguson engaged in a game with their wives at the Fer: | guson residence. Over 2,000 points | were scored in the one hand. - Try The wmmpme crassifieds fot resul | NOTICE TO CREDITORS In the Probate Court for Sitka Precinct, Territory of Alaska, Di- | vision Number One. In the Matter of the Estate of HANS ANDERSON, deceased. The undersigned having been ap- | pointed administrator of the estate lof Hans Anderson, deceased, all persons having claims against said |estate are required to present same |to the undersigned within six |months from the date hereof, at {his office in the Alaska. Dated this 10th day of October, 1938. HENRY RODEN, Administrator, estate of Hans Anderson, deceased. publication, Oct. 11, 1938, 1938. First |Last publication, Nov. 1, i élup;énd Dry Feet tion, a young mother watches over her | thousand others, were forced from their own by the raging Connecticut River which, fed by ten days of rainfall, overflowed its banks. BEAUTY SALON OPEN EVENINGS “If your hair is not becoming to you — You should be coming to us.” % EBEEL o GARBAGE HAULED Reasonablc Monthly Rates | E. 0. DAVIS | TELEPHONE 212 Sanitary Meat Co. | FOR QUALITY MEATS AND POULTRY FREE DELIVERY Call Phones: 13 and 49 Phone 4753 il | | Jones-Stevens Shop LADIES'—MISSES’ H - i iwrrowa: || Pay’n Takit Seward Street Near Third | | § PHONES 92 or 95 LA Free Delivery¥ & Il Fresh Meats, Groceries, Tlll‘lft CQ'OP ! LiqL\IOrS, Wines and Beer Ve S * LESS BUY FOR CASH We Sell for LESS Because We Sell for CASH! and SAVE the PROFITS George Brothers on your own spending. PHONE 767 ED A. ZINCK, Manager | The Juneau Laundry Franklin Street betwass Front and Second Striwe PETER PAN BEAUTY SHOP—Triangle Bldg. Telephone—221 o BODDING TRANSFER MARINE PuaNE BUILDING 0 Rock—Coal Hauling Stove—Fuel Oil Delivery When in Need of DIESEL OIL—STOVE OIL YOUR COAL CHOICE GENERAL HAULING Thomas Hardware Co. . PAINTS — OILS Builders' and Shelt STORAGE and FRATING b CALL US JUNEAU TRANSFER Phone 48—Night Phone 696 JUNEAU - YOUNG Hardware Company & PAINTS—-OIL—-GLASS Shelf and Heavy Hardware Guns and Ammunition “Smiling Service” Bert’s Cash Grocery PHONE 105 Free Delivery APIENIR SRR T GENERAL MOTORS DELCO and MAYTAG PRODUCTS e HOME GROCERY AND LIQUOR STORE 146—Phones-—152 AMERICAN CASH GROCERY and MARKET SATISFACTION IN FOOD QUALITY AT UNITED FOOD CO. TELEPHONE—16 COAL 'PHONE 412 W. P. JOHNSON “The Frigidaire Man” PHONE 36 ' For very promp’ LIQUOR DELIVERY | g If 1t’s Paint We ave It! IDEAL PAINT SHOP FRED W. WENDT FAMILY SHOE STORE | “Juneaw’s Oldest Exclusive Town of Juneau, | Shoe Store” LOU HUDSON—Manager Seward St.—————Junean .- e L s e RELIABLE TRANSFER | || Qur trucks go any place any time. A tank for Diesel OB and a tank for Crude O save burn.r trouble. PHONE 149, NIGHT 148 PACIFIC COAST COAL CO. i e— McCAUL MOTOR COMPANY I |D“¢OIMMM‘| | | Home-Grown Vegetables | Daily — All Kinds ® California Grocery THE PURE FOODS STORE 3 Telephone 478 Prompt Delivery . FOR INSURANCE See H. R. SHEPARD & SON Telephone 409 B. M. Behrends Bank Bldg. WINDOW CLEANING PHONE 485 LUMBER o ———— .

Other pages from this issue: