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. abilities and the highest integrity R M R 5 i N S M 500 P A Y P S D I THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, TUESDAY, APRIL 12, 1932. Daily Alaska Empire -J_O}IN W. TROY - - - EDITOR AND MANAGER Published every evening except Sunday by the EMPIRE_PRINTING COMPANY at Second and Main Streets, Juneau, Alaska Entered in the Post Office in Juneau as Second Class matter. SUBSCRIPTION RATES, Delivered by carrier in Juneau, Douglas, Treadwell and Thane for $1.25 per month. By mall, postage paid, at the following rates: One year, in advance, $12.00; six months, In advance, $6.00; one month, in advance, $1.25 Subscribers will confer a favor if they will promptly notify the iness Office of any failure or irregularity hapers. in the delivery of their d Business Offices, 374. Telephone for Editor MEMBER OF ASSOCIATED PRESS. Associated Press Is exclusively entitled to the The publication of all news dispatches credited to use for local new ALASKA CIRCULATION GUARANTEED TO BE LARGER THAN THAT OF ANY OTHER PUBLICATION THE EMPIRE HAS ALWAYS FAVORED LAW-CONTROLLED PRIMARY ELECTIONS The Empire has always favored law-controlled pri- maries that would prevent the old boss-ridden back- room or closet caucus from controlling conven- tions. It has always favored legislation that would provide for primaries in which every voter—man or woman—would have an opportunity to cast a| ballot. By this means representative men and women could be selected to attend conventions to | speak for the party. A convention made up in that way would not only be representative of the party | but it would be able to draft candidates for pub- lic place from among those who are not office- seekers if it believed it desirable to do so. It would make it so that the office might seek the man and permit him to obey the call from the people. Under the primary law as it has worked out in‘ Alaska the candidates usually nominate themselves, or they are hand-picked by a very small bunch | of people. Then at the primary and general elec- tion the voters have the choice of picking and choosing among these hand picked or self-selected candidates. The informal Divisional and Territorial conven- tions held by the Democrats this year in Alaska | were largely responsible for inducing men to file for various offices in the Territory. If the con- ventions could have been held under a good law that would have guaranteed representation of all party members they would have done better. At that, the conventions were approximately representative of the party. No one or set controlled them Nn‘ one tried to control them. The delegates met, | discussed the issues, and adopted platforms that represented the composite judgment of the dele- gates. Where there was evidence that there would be candidates to file for the respective offices, no one was endorsed or suggested for the places. ‘Where there was evidence that the ticket might not be filled out unless the delegates requested filings, they sought suitable men for the nominations. The Alaska primary law was not repealed in the last Legislature because there was no agreement on a satisfactory law to take its place. The Empire believes that if the members of the Legislature from all four of the Territorial Divisions would get together they could frame a primary law v.ha:t would be better than the one we have now. Until they do that, if they ever do, we shall have the primary law as it is with all its ffl.ulls,. The Em- pire is not in favor of its repeal until a better law is prepared to take its place—one that might appeal to the intelligence and fairness of the peo- ple, and it believes that is the majority attitude. It ought always to be remembered that party members are the proper persons to control the party organization and select the candidates of the party organization for office. A party primary ought to be an election in which the members of that party vote. Otherwise, the primary elections should be thrown open to all parties as they are in those units where they have non-partisan elections. It is not fair for Democrats to select Republican tickets or Republicans to select Democratic tickets. The party primary ought to be the source of authority of the party organization and the candidates selected for nomination as party nominees ought to be the se- jections of the party. The primary law in Alaska does not work out that way at-all. It ought to be changed or party government discontinued. 1t also should be borne in mind that the selection of Democratic and Republican tickets do not end matters. Other parties might be formed or candi- dates might run as independents. Judge Wicker- sham ran for Delegate to Congress as an independent candidate five or six times, and served most of his Congressional years as an independent. He was fre- quently elected over both Democratic and Republi- can candidates. There have been sessions of the Alaska Legislature when most of the members were elected without party nominations. Most of the Leg- jslatures in the Territory have had independents in It would be & lot fairer and more consistent to do away with party primaries and make the primary election a free for all in which people of all parties or no party might particigate freely and let the two high men in the primary, no matter whether they belong to separate parties, the same party, or no party at all, run it off in the general election rather than to continue a system that is not at all what it pretends to be. SEATTLE LOSES FINE CITIZEN. The death of Scott Bullitt in Seattle was a se- were loss to his adopted City and irreparable to his ' family and associates. He was a man of very large Independent in ‘thinking and courageous in action, he was a force for good in his town and the Northwest, and he was among the most companionable of men. He ‘made and held friends. His sincerity and forthright- pess were outstanding. Mr. Bullitt was a speaker of exceptional merit. ‘He made what was probably the most effective Mhflvued in the meeting of the platform | committee &t the Democratic National Convention _at Houston, Following his speech, Senator Glass rew a resolution he had introduced for the |less than $10,000. {be very easy to conceive of a man worth a mil- report on the Prohibition question. His influence in that meeting was marked. Mr. Bullitt was the Democratic leader of the |State of Washington. His death was a serious blow |to his party in that State and the country. He was |elected as a Roosevelt delegate to the Chicago Con- i\’cntian by his State in February. | PUABEING A1 S P10 T | Those much touted gangster leaders who went out midst hozanas to get the Lindbergh baby seem {to be about as inefectual as the New Jersey Police and the Federal sleuths. War much was heard about Recent developments in Ger- the famous old General still During the World | the Hindenburg line. imany indicate that |holds a strong line Alfalfa Bill talks as if he were taking his Presi- 'dcntml candidacy seriously. He has accused the |Roosevelt men of buying the Nebraska delegation. | What Price Solon? (New York Herald-Tribune) One of North Carolina’s Representatives ,Mr. Charles L. Abernathy, who warmly opposes all talk of Congresional salary cuts, rashly and illogically argues that because his home community paid him |legal fees amounting to $20,000 per annum his This is illogical because it would | {worth to the nation as a Congressman cannot be | i lion a year—to Hollywood for instance—who would be worth so much less than nothing to Congress that his minus value could be only technically expressed. It is rash because the feeling has been sweeping over the American people at least two or three times a year, ever since the Continental Congress drove General Washington to tears of vexation, that the great show on Capitol Hill is an inordinarily expensive burlesque upon democra- cy, and because this is one of those times. Every intelligent American knows that the leg- islative business of the nation could be far more efficiently transacted by a twentieth of the mem- bership of the two houses at a fraction of the cost if the members were selected for their ex- pert knowledge of our various national problems. The major constitutional function of the two leg- islative bodies and of other groups of Federal gov- ernment is, however, to work as automatic brakes upon tendencies toward autocracy, obligarchy, bu- reaucracy or demagogery in each or all of the others. But when such spokesman as Mr. Abernathy reminds the American people of the price they pay, in salaries, office expenses, mile- age, frankage, government literature and seeds, for the pettifoggery and recaltrance that characterizes Congress,’s discharge of its functions he is also reminding them that as brakes the legislative bodies have come to be many times more ponder- ous, unwieldy and expensive pieces of machinery that the authors of the Constitution could possibly have foreseen. When Mr. Abernathy talks, in such times as these—and with Congress in the head lines—of the specific worth of a Congressman he drives the public to pad, pencil and simple arithmetic; and the legislative Cassius who thinks too much is far less dangerous to his colleagues than the one who starts the people reasoning. End “Lame Ducks.” (Olympic Olympian) The legislatures of four states have already i- fied the “lame duck” amendment to the Constitu- tion, which would advance the inauguration of presi- dents from March to January and would do away with the archaic short sessions of discredited con- gresses. This speedy response indicates that the amend- ment will not be long in getting the necessary rati- fication by three-fourths of the states. That is quite as it should be. Once ratified, the amendment will make the gov- ernment at Washington much more responsive to the will of the people, and will end a great deal of lost motion in Uncle Sam’s federal machinery. May the remaining 32 ratifications come through as speedily as the first four did! Business Waiis on Elections. (Cincinnati Enquirer) 1t is an unfortunate but apparently infallible rule of democracy that people insist on the right to choose their public officials, and then mistrust their own judgment. Just now Germany, France and the United States are engaged in general election cam- paigns. Germany is nearly finished, the outcome certain, France will vote in another month or six weeks, The United States has a long and turbulent road to follow before a new President and Congress are determined upon. The popular decisions to be made in these three major nations have a tremendous implication for the economic future of the world. France and America are the only large countries in a strong financial position. Germany is the great question mark in the capitalistic world. Great Britain, six months after a general election and a Tory landslide, has set her course for an indefinite future—the only important industrial nation with no popular decision to reach this year. ; Waiting has become the universal pastime in all these countries—waiting for business to turn the cor- ner, waiting for revolution, waiting for a sign from Heaven, or just waiting for “something to happen.” This tendency, bad enough already in its stultifying influence on trade, is becoming worse as the elections draw nearer. It appears that people as a whole have little confidence in the ability of the people as a whole—in their own ability—to choose their leaders at the polls. . The happy outcome which now is certain in Ger- many on April 10 is at least an index of what may be expected from the other elections of 1932. Con- servatism and sanity dominated in the Reich, al- though extreme radicalism and reckless nationalism gained a little. It is not unlikely that in France and the United States the popular response wm be much the same. If this is true, there surely is no reason for the hesitant waiting that has supplanted the confidence and action needed in business. PSRRI, o e The Democrats never had so fruitful an oppor- tunity to elect a President as now, and never so many knives carried up ambitious sleeves with which to cut opposing aspirants’ throats.—(Lexington, Ky., Herald). Maize is what the British call our corn. A lot of us will laugh at this, forgetting that we ourselves call it by numerous other names, including Scotch and rye—(Los Angeles Times). U ERENEY, T ST The new President of Manchuria would be called a bigamist in this state, a polygamist in Utah and a cat's paw in ‘Washington.—(Dallas News). Having before it only the bill for the costs of the Shanghai expedition and not for thg damage done, Japan ain't seen nothin’ yet.—(Philadelphia Bulletin). -_ Efforts of lords of the underworld to find the Lindbergh baby do not give the impression that they are all-powerful —(Boston Transeript). G e In the old days it was Diogenes hunting for an mn:m&bechmgeverybodylslwkingror laying the foundation for & minority | 2ot BN T0 10" ax — (Lexington, Ky., Herald). SYNOPSIS: Disagreement entangles Kitty Frew and her husband’s half-brother, David, for David wants her to live her own life and Kitty clings to her husband, Gar. Her on- ly demand of Gar, that he must not live on his mother's money, causes a temporary separation, but makes Gar agree to support her. CHAPTER 25. OVER-STUFFED APART- MENT AN to insgtant denial. swer he would make, head, gether. “I haven't thought of offending his brows contracted to- one way or another what I said Of course I don't want you to go away, in fact, I have missed you quite a bit more than I like.” He kept his voice flat. “Oh, that's nice, that you have missed me! David, because Gar's a little, well, prejudiced, is mnot going to make a bit of difference in the way I feel. Do you think I can ever forget how kind you've been to me? And I'm going to see you often. You must tell me things about what youre doing. You can't throw your manuscript away, you've got to finish it so that I can read it. Why, David, think how thrilled I'd be when I hold a book in my hands and know that my brother David wrote . He laughed at her genuine ex- citement. “Even if I finish it, I might not find a publisher who wants it.” “Of course you will. You must not hold that thought. It's your old fear of ridicule, David! I _ktnow it's good.—Dorcas believes it is.” “Oh—Dorcas. She’s turned out so well.” “David!” impulse. “David, why don't you marry Dorcas?” little at her daring. “Why? her? agreeable, earning a paltry amount “Then gtand up!” Kitty borrowing Dorcas’ ner. “Finish that book.” He smiled at her. “If you talk to Gar like that I have hopes for the boy.” But he had put here interest in himself aside; Kitty felt si- lenced. And when she left him, a block or two from the, Tudor Arms, he did not say anything about hoping to see her soon. She would, though, she told herself as she went on. Shed see Dor- cas, too. She and Gar had sub-let the apantment in the Tudor Arms the day after Gar had met her out- side of Stratton’s. It was an over- gorgeous thing of three rooms and a bath, a cubicle of a living room paneled in black and green and hung with orange silk draper- ies and seemingly padded with solf fat orange and black pillows scat- ttered over ithe chairs and the floor and the legless divan. Where ithere ‘'was space in the clutter of orange and black pillows were big and little tables and lamps on standards end lamps without the standards. And Ttalian table and buffet, designed for a state din- ing room, were crowded into the limited dimensions of the dinette and the tiny bedroom was smoth- ered in green and orchid pleat- ings. “The agent said we could move into today.” That settled their choice. “Did you ever see such a lit- tle stove, Gar? Il cook our sup- per on it ltonight. It'll just about cook enough for two.” “When we get settled we'll have the crowd in Kit.” Tt hadn’t been possible to set- tle for Kitty had to puzale and scheme and pack and repack to The sure way to get fast. compounded Her threat did not move David|the desk For a moment |Say he seemed to consider what an-|in ab: his eyes |ad leveled on a spot beyond Kitty’ ,cer you—thalt it makes any differenceand cigarette stumps with a pall believed {by, and thinking of Carol. other things of me that haven't|he Kitty yielded to an|day ended their acquaintance? She flushed a|part of next day to restore order What have I to offer|worked cheerfully. I'm Ibhirty, more or less dis- [his evening. a week, writing stuff that any-|her every thought, every task. one could write, that she calls Her pride in Gar, her belief dribblffi g that he could do anything, was ‘But Dorcas—’ wholly restored. She shared his “You know ner well encugh to|imj ance when he talked about understand that compromise is the|his work. last thing Dorcas would consider.”{ferred to his office one Jonathan cried, {Drew who, in one capacity or an- ' words and man-fother, had served Walton and Win- stow away even their personal be-| longings. The crowd hadn't wait-| 107 Main St. ed. They had come in a few ev- " GETTING ALONG to save some money ALL the time. It isn’t necessary to make large deposits, as small and frequent additions to your account will make your bank balance grow amazingly We pay four per cent on savings accounts . B. M. Behrer!ds Bank OLDEST BANK IN ALASKA enings aftter Kitty and Gar took possession of the place. Marge and Diana and Isobel Peters and Red and Tubby and Sewall Buck, and a little later, Paul Somerset. They'd been riotously gay. Red had brought a satchel filled with the makings for cocktails and he and Gar had mixed them, shaker after shaker, until Kitty's neat kitchen was cluttered with peelings end bottle tops and empty bottles. Kitty had assembled sandwiches and cakes and olives and coffee. it half-past one the operator at in the lobby called to a complaint had come th& noise and everybody wieked at that-—everyone ex- that Kitty. The party was a suc- cess! They wgnt at three o'clock leaving the living room in a sorry mess of emply glasses and plates Jof cigarette smoke hanging over everything. “Now that’s the kind of even- ing 1 like—I hope the crowd. sort of makes our place a headquar- ters” Gar had declared with im- mense satisfaction. don’t like Paul Somerset, Gas Oh, he's all right for his kind. Marge is just having a little fun ~TI've talked it over with her.” Gar's friends had seemed more friendly. Or, perhaps, Kitty had thought as she fussed in the kitch- en over the refreshments, it was that she felt different toward them now, in her role as hostess. Tub- by had seized a chance to squeeze her hand and ask her if he wasn't Mr. Fixit? “You can count on me, Kit. I'm mot going to breathe a word about it.” She wished she couwld tell him that she wasn't ashamed of working at Straiton’s ‘but there had been no time, then Tubby thought of it as Gar did. She's hated having Paul Som- erset come, she'd caught herself watching him with Margery Cros- ‘Was seeing Carol now? Or had their quarrel at the Hoffman that It had taken her the greater to their doll's house. But she had Gar had liked Pleasing Gar gave glamor to His father had trans- ‘ters for fifteen years. Gar called him Old John. Gar said he was as faithful as an old shepard dog. He had laughed at Kitty's dis- |may one morning when they both overslept. “Old John can talk to that man who ‘was coming in at ten o'clock. What have I got him for?” And she had lost her alarm lin a little rush of pride that Gar ihad important conferences and Old Johm under him to take care of thém until he had got around. Gar was the lover of those first. weeks of their marriage. She felt no jealousy when the Players demanded his time. Frqueently he telephoned that he’d be late for dipner, he had to see Decker or someone else, sometimes Mar- gery Crosby. Now and then a {committee met in the evening. iBut she had not felt left out, as she had at his mother’s home; there was always his homecoming, a moment apart from all others in the ectasy of closeness. WOMEN ‘Wear Attractive, Be- coming Apparel Dresses and other garments made to give individual charm { and distinction. Freshen the appearance of your old garments by having them altered at the - Shoppe | | Phone 219 | i given you. Of, if David could only know Gar had telephoned earlier in the day that he would be late, ‘tonight. There was some trouble with the lighting at the Little theatre. She mustn’t wait dinner for him. She wouldn't cook anything for herself. When Gar came she'd make a mushroom omelet. And as she stitched on a hand- kerchief she was making for her father’s Christmas box she thought of David and the pleasantness of her encounter with him. He'd ried very hard to be disagreeable. Almost as if he wasn't glad things bad straightened out with her and Gar But it was silly to think he really felt that way, he'd said so often that he wanted her to be | [ - '] half how happy she was, she OF AL thought as she opened the door, l PR ESSION I‘ returning from having tea with David. * Helene W. L. Albrecht PHYSIOTHERAPY Massage, Electricity, Infra Red Ray, Medical Gymnastics. 410 Goldstein Building Phone Office, 216 "DRS. KASER & FREEBURGER DENTISTS Blomgren Building PHONE 56 Hours 9 am. to 9 pm. Dr, Charles P. Jenne DENTIST Rooms 8 and 9 Valentine Building Telephone 176 | Fraternal Societies oF 3 * } Gastineau Channe® | B — N 4 B. P. O. BLKS Meeting every Wednesday night at 8 p m, Elks Hall. Visiting brothers welcome. GEORGE MESSERSCHMIDT, Exalted Ruver. M. H. SIDES, Secretary ) » . | Co-Ordinate Bod- . les of Freemason ry Scottish Rite } Regular meeting second Friday o each month at =25 7:30 p. m. Scot- tish Rite Temple. WALTER B. HEISEL, Secretary happy, he'd only seemed half- hearted because' he was low in|, spirits, discouraged. . “I'm glad T talked straight from the shoulder to him,” Kitty mus- ed. “And Il do it every chance I ge!” Her own rosy security| | made her the more compassionate for David. She'd seen him clften. £he'd invite David and Dorcas up to the apartment for supper some|® = - night. 5 :::UNT JUNEAU LODGE NO. 147 Of course David was too proud ond and fourth Mon- %0 ank Toweas. o Rty Bl el | D TALWe Sthvart day of each month in had said Doreas “wouldn't icom- DENTIST Scottish Rite Temple, promise. That's all he knew about Hours 9 a. m. to 6 p. m. | | beginning at 7:30 p. m. women—But at. this point in her|| ;}fiWMP"P‘ Bu.ldx;lpr:?n JOHN J. FARGHER, thoughts Kitty felt a sharp prick ice Paone d ¥ Master; JAMES IVERS, o of memory. That day out in the Phone 276 | ) cetary. s i little home, David had said to her: | ®——— s, “The most you can do is com-|e - ®| ORDEPR, OF EASIERN STAR promise and then you won't be Robert Simpson Becond and Fourth b anywhere.” That was David's feel- ‘Tuesdays of each month, ings, now, that she’d compromis- Opt. D. st 8 oclok. Boo ed, with her self-respect, perhaps Graduate Angeles Col- Rite it piah he thought, or with her ambi- lege of gpwm]etry and | el 1m1p$- EI;“ITE tions. Opthalmology 'ARD, Worthy £ A ron; FANNY L. ROB« (Copyright, Jane Abbott.) SN T A Teyee el INSON, Secretary. ahK;thy :e;- m“, untroubled life | ° ENIGHTS OF COLUMBUS ead of her, but Marge Cros- Seghers Couneil by :hnwsGhe,r d‘:f‘:mdnatwn to Dl'.m(;fioo-"L.-CTBoa:t s Me‘:flngs se—cigd’:z}llm ::;urc ar's rest, tomor- Hellenthal Building Mondf-.y at 7:30 p. m. N Ll e Gamin QTN ot © shant Comtik ¥ Hours 9 am. to 7 pm. i unc 01d papers for sale at The Emplre. et 0s Chambers, Fifth Street, s " JOHN F. MULLEN, G. K. NOTICE TO CREDITORS In the Commissioner’s Court for the Territory of Alaska, Division Number One. Before Charles Sey, Commissioner and ex-officio Pro- bate Judge, Juneau Precinct. In the Matter of the Estate of EUGENE MANNING. NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN, that the undersigned was on the 21st day of Mareh, 1932, duly ap-|$ pointed Administrator of the estate of Eugene Manning, deceased. All persons having claims against the estate of said deceased will present them with proper vouchers and duly verified to the Undersigned in care of Frank A. Boyle, . Box 2390, Dr. J. W. Bayne DENTIST Rooms 5-6 Triangle Bldg. Office hours, 9 am. to 5 pm. Evenings by appointment Phone 321 A S S e T DK. R. E. SOUTHWELL LOYAL ORDER OF MOOSE, NO. 700 Meets Monday 8 p. m Ralph Reischl, Dictator, Legion of Moose No. 2§ mee's first and third Tuesdays G A. Baldwin, Secretary and Herder, P. O. Box 273. H. J. TURNER, Becretary. Juneau, Alaska, within six (6) months from the date of this notice. Dated at Juneau, Alaska, 21st day of March, 1932. JAMES MANNING, Administrator. First publication, March 22. 1932. Last publication, April 19, 1932, this .. e Optometrist—Optician Cur tru Eyes Examined—Glasses Fitted | u::e .:k:a:; ;::.y ll;ll::l ‘(l)llyl I Room 7, Valentine Bldg. ||| and a tank for crude oil save Office Phone 484; Residence burner trouble. ’ Phone 238. Office Hours: 9:30 [ PHONE 149, NIGHT 148 1 tenm1mwiN ||| ReLiABLE TRANSFER | i .. . id JUNEAU-YOUNG Funeral Parlors NEW RECORDS Licensed F 1 Directo g -t g i NEW SHEET MUSIC .ngMPhonelasl DayPhonelz.L RADIO SERVICE [ Ny ® 1| Expert Radio Repairing Dr. C. L. Fenton Radio Tubes and Supplies CHIROPRACTOR Colonic Irrigation for Constipation (Il JUNEAU MELODY Phone 581, Goldstein Bldg. FOOT CORRECTION Hours: 10-12, 1-5, 7-8 | HOUSE NOTICE 10 PAY SCHOOL TAX NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN, that the uyndersigned has been duly appointed School Tax Collector for Juneau, Alaska, in conformity with Chapter 29, Alaska Session Laws, 1919. All male persons between the ages of twenty-one and fifty years, except soldiers, sailors in U.'S. Navy or Revenue Cutter Service, volun- teer firemen, paupers and insane persons, are subject to tax in sum of Five Dollars ($5.00). Should you be living in Alaska on or prior to the first Monday in April, 1932, said tax shall be due and payable on said first date and shall be delinquent after May 1st, 1932, Should you arrive in Alaska later than first date above men- tioned, tax will be delinquent thir- ty (30) days after your arrival, or within ten (10) days after notice is All persons, firms or corporations, employing labor shall furnish list of employees to collector and are authorized by law to deduct amount of tax from wages of employees. Fines and imprisonment are pro- vided by the Act above quoted for those who fail or neglect to pay tax or furnish list of employees. Dated, Juneau, Alaska, April 5, 1932. H. R. SHEPARD, School Tax Collector for Juneau, Alaska. First publication, April 5, 192. Last publication, April 16, 1932. along in this world is bl twice a year SAVE HALF WOOD CLEAN HEMLOCK 14 in., 16 in., 24 in, Single Load, $4.25 Double Load, $8.00 GEORGE BROTHERS Telephones 92 or 95 CHESTER BARNESSON Telephone 039, 1 long, 1 shert “SEE” C. HEGG TELEPHONE 235 KALSOMINING PAINTING HOME DECORATING Estimates furnished free DON'T BE TOO Ny D. B. FEMMER Phone 114 JUNEAU CABINET and DETAIL MILL- WORK CO. Front Street, next to Warner Machine Shop cents 4 rmriatTar || CABINET and LEAVE ORDERS WITH GENERAL CARPENTER WORK GLASS REPLACED IN AUTOS Estimates Furnished Upon Request < if it comes from our goes farther and gives a more even and satisfying heat. If your coal bin is running low, better have us send you a new supply to prove our statement. Our draying service is always the best and we specialize in Feed. JUNEAU -TRANSFER COMPANY M " s Moves, Packs and Stores Freight and Baggage Prompt Delivery of ALL KINDS OF COAL PHONE 48 1T PLAY BILLIARD | BURFORD’S THE JuNeEAUu LAUNDRY Franklin Street, between Front and Second Streets PHONE 359 W.P. Johnson FRIGIDAIRE DELCO LIGHT PRODUCTS MAYTAG WASHING MACHINES GENERAL MOTORS RADIOS Phone 17 Front Street Juneau e oy FINE - Watch and Jewelry REPAIRING : at very reasonable rates WRIGHT SHOPPE PAUL BLOEDHORN