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ey ~ Daily Alaska Empire e JOHN W. TROY PRESIDENT AND EDITOR ROBERT W. BENDER - - GENERAL MANAGER e AT o B e e its personne! days of the waters, such cott, down 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. most but good to arm of defe Y SUBSCRIPTION RATES, Dellvered by carrler 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 movth, in advance, $1.25. ubscribers wiil confer a favor if they will promptly gotify the Business Office of Any tailure or irregularity in the delives their papers. g Tebephone"or Editorial and Business Offices, 374. dent Hoover, G e MEMBER OF ASSOCIATED PRESS. {Upshaw. Furth The Assoclated Press is exclusively entitied to the|if he is about t use for republication of all news dispatches credited to| it or not otherwise credited in this paper and also the| local news published herein. dential Bishop James THAN THAT OF ANY OTHER PUBLICATION. He had already is little Upshaw {election. It is b Bl | ( | There was a !people. But in |been steadily dot VICE-PRESIDENT IS A LONELY [{rroush somry DIE-HARD. Senator Borah says candidate this year and it —~—a levery opporunity to sacrifice it. THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, SATURDAY, AUGUST 20, 1932. ce, and congratulations, thanks and good wishes from every quarter, Here in the Pacific Northwest little need be said in praise of the Coast Guard. The nature of its service, the fine character of 1, are known to all. From the oldest revenue cutters in these as the Shubrick and the Wol- to the present time, the record of faithfulness, efficiency and high courage stands without blot or break. Not even the flaccid pacifist can have anything say of this, the Nation's oldest nse. he has picked his Presi- is not Presi- ov. Roosevelt, Mr. Thomas or Mr. er he said nothing. One wonders o write his own name in. Cannon of the Methodist Episcopal ALASKA CIRCULATION GUARANTEED TO BE LARGER Church, South, who contributed importantly to Presi- |dent Hoover's majority in 1928, is now against him. attacked the Democrats. ' Well, there Vice-President, Curtis was notified yesterday that 'he hdd been nominated by the Republicans for re- elieved in well informed circles that |he had suspected it for sometime. ither from Butler. Cincinnati Enquirer.) time when Smedley D. Butler held {a high place in the admiration of the American recent years he has grasped almosc His progress has wnward to a lower level of esteem, evidences of bad taste and poor |judgment in one holding so honorable a rank and {through a regrettable tendency to draw the spot- by bluster and ill-advised talk. In his talk to the bonus army at Washington he his latest venture into profane ] The successive waves of sentiment that swamp-jight to himself 1 ed Prohibition in the country and finally carried | ' President Hoover off his feet never disturbed Vice- finally descended to the level of sheer demagoguery. Y President Curtis who, still surveys the political field Every word of from the viewpoint of piously dry Kansas. Vice-President’s 72-year-old" feet “will' stand “firmly } ©/0, B0 o on the diminishing exposed part of the dry rock taryythougil;a ts that was so long and so valiently guarded by lhc‘valiantly served L lent in his word: He stands and talks at the old stand whence|en o sincere nearly all but him have fled. rades are in the ranks of the enemy now. was the last to fly. Hoover | 1If it is true, The oratory was designed to please his hearers, and !can serve meo purpose except to intensify an al- situation. If he gave one momen- the welfare of the nation he so in 1917 and 1918 it was not appar- s. He had an opportunity to per- and valuable service, but he chose Many former COmM- the part of a tub-thumper, flatterer and demamogue. as Butler declared, that every man He was preceded by Watson who wore:the uniform is better than anyone else, and Steiwer and Shortridge and Davis and others.!it is encouraging to see that most have adopted Almost alone with Curtis now among leaders is Fess, |better and moe two years ago head and front of th Republlcan; Party and now referred to by a paragrapher as| the “forgotten man.” Even Jones has shown signs; of weakening. | Changes are coming so fast that one would | hardly dare to include other G. O. P. Senators Most readers find them wet. # With the Desmocrats that it would be safe to classify as an undiluted fairly tried. Prohibitionist is Texas's Sheppard. Others have| The Times not wholly recanted, but most of them have got given. 3 themselves in bad with the Anti-Saloon League. |Profoundly impr So, among high officials, Democratic and Re-;pases that lent | ] with only two simon pure Prohibitionists, Fess and !good to the col Sheppard, as die-hard supporters of a lost cause. the two great p tof the people. COAST GUARD BIRTHDAY. TR But the end While people discuss pro and con the question of increasing the Navy or the Army, there is but the pro side to all discussion of the United States Coast Guard which has just celebrated its one hun- dred and forty-second birthday. There is no sug- gestion that it be decreased. The demand for en- largement is always insistant. There is a reason. The Coast Guard is one of the most useful of all the public service institu- tions. It has served the country in time of peace and war with a singleness of purpose that has won for it the confidence of all factions and all sections. The Seattle Times on the recent occasion of the birthday of the Coast Guard commented: As men and women get along in years they would willingly let recurring anniver- saries of their birth slip past without much attention. Not so, however, with institutions that serve them well, as they have served generations gone by. As an example, the 142nd birthday of the United States Coast Guard is an important event, of special interest everywhere along' the nation's far- flung waterfront. This event has just been modestly observed by the officers and men Virtually every will be arrayed | he simply plow: And the needy Globe.) keen observers. to prove which Inquirer.) ville Herald-Post. |incalculable harm. |prejudiced admit that now, comport with good sense and good morals. of true temperance will and with far better chance of effective results than can ever be hoped for from the compulsory impli- |cations of the law as it now stands. An expert says that party estimates of the trend of public opinion made by productive ways of proving it. Temperance. (Seattle Times.) will remember that The Times, at |the outset of the great experiment, gave its support to the Prohibition law. This was done in the belief among the drys in fear that press time would‘[hm since the country had been committed by lacts of Congress and the Legislatures of a suffi- about the only Senator {cient number of the States, the system should be believes that fair trial has been Of recent years this newspaper has been essed by accumulating evidences of ithe system’s failure to achieve any of the good pur- color of reason to its institution. publican, Vice-President Curtis may be very lonely, \That was but half the story; so far from doing any untry, prohibitory law has worked All save the most narrowly The recent actions of olitical parties reflected the temper Prohibition must go. of the present system does not |mean the inauguration of an era of intemperance. influence now laboring for repeal to resist any plan that does not Advocacy be everywhere resumed, Man in Kansas didn't believe he could make a profit on his 900-bushel crop of potatoes, so ed them out of the ground and invited the needy to come and help themselves. came—in motor cars! (Boston platforms are mere But it takes a November election group guessed right.—(Philadelphia Every unsuccessful candidate in Latin-America has to make two races. and then he makes a race for the border.—(Louis- PFirst he runs for office ) :x w|LLA cATHER’s when Bryan and Free Silver sep- = arate them. Miss Cather’s grateful public will {not mind, however. Miss Cather's LATEST sTuRY feeblor efforts are more important A lman many another major opus. 3 tc The young Alberto Moravia lives a1 in a dirty and bitter world in e which deprivation, depravity and a Italian Writer Produces deseneration are staples. et al- > z for this youthful horror : Book—~Work on Chma comolex there still remains beauty i x |in his recently translated novel, 2] IS Imeres“"g “The Indifferent Ones.” He proves bl |again the ancient saw that it is ¥ By JOHN SELBY the doing that determines art, for NEW YORK, Aug. 20.—The three |certain passages -written around pieces that make up “Obscure Des- |unpleasant events have vividness tinies,” which is Willa Cather’s|rarely achieved nowadays. B Iatest, are indicative of a trend| The foreign contingsat offers in the Cather mind not to be over- lalso two French books, one called looked. sts_Cather has dfscrbed‘“mg;v,_ Flight,” the other *Saint the uncongenial medium of “Shad-|Saturnin.” The two together con- ows on the Rock” for the simpler |stitute the August choice of the effort of “My Antonia,” “The Lost|Book-of-the-Month Club. In “Night Lady” and comparable works. | Flight". Antone de St. Exupery sets She is back in the “country|off the loss of a mail plane in the .‘ong the Bur_lmgton and happily. | Argentine against the necessarv “Neighbor Rosicky” is thg best ex-|harshness of the man who caused ample of the writer's ability to im- its loss in a burst of highly imag- ply emotiom;:e:lmws ;:mef than inative writing flecked with genius to describe t] she has given inhere and there. recen: years. Her style is stlll joi; scnjumberger's “Sant Sa- spare but r;:sment':h ”C:‘l}‘y sir‘pgf,mrn-n is typical of the modern and beautifully, rather than hig |Frenca novel, competent and quite b.m R ferier Tite uninspired except in certain fresh hem: |troubes of S 5 of the first story she continues to| ohpTatn the tale of a Tennessee family! ABOUT CHINA transplanted in W:ebgz‘d:d"gg Quite the most interesting of there by a '“m‘flBom:“oZmr Tt 1s|Teceut books on China is George mkA{red Jew e i .| E. Sokolsky's “The Tinder Box of tm..emmedflme o iy nosSiAsia.' written from the unusual but bfc‘\ln of 1 restra; S jbut sound ground of an Ameri- scarcaly less dfm. . The - _th]can with a Russian background, piece is entitled “two ffl"“dh:; marricd to a Chinese woman, who friends being two Mfl:o Cm ActeTs | still can see Japan's side. His who never quite come ¢, eVen lconclusion is not an optimistic one GANG BULLETS WOUND LITTLE GIRLS PLAYINE Guns Blaze on Street in Brooklyn Late Yes- terday Afternoon NEW YORK, Aug. 20. — Gang- sters blazed away at each other in a Brooklyn street late yesterday and two girls were wounded. Three-year-old Frieda Fatlis was shot in the stomach and her sister, {Rose, aged 10 years, was grazed on the left arm. The two girls were among a doz- en playing on the sidewalk when ;wo men began an argument near- Y. Several men from a passing ma- chine began firing. Later, Cosmo Castagna, aged 30 years, was killed by four men from an automobile in another part cf the city. (- SRR SN IR O —_— S0 far as Chinas future is con- cerned. Or eise one might read Lowell Thomas' book about Sergt. Dan Edwards, adventurer, called “This Side of Hell” The book is like the title. v ———— e ‘The white race stands nearest the ape, the monogoloin next and the negro farthest away in the factor of hairiness, Dr. Carl E. Guthe of the University of Mich- igan, has found. SYNOPSIS: Having married Mark Mcrriman secretly before he left for the Congo, Sondra is surprised to find herself worrying because John Ander- son no longer seems a firm friecnd. She is suddenly thrown upon her own resources, when her sister Flora leaves her hus- band Ben, and Ben refuses to look after Sondra. CHAPTER 21, A MESSAGE FROM MARK There was nobody she wanted to talk to, Sondra decided, except Anderson and he seemer to be engrossed with other people. It was queer how upside down everything had turned. A short while ago it had boréd Sondra, because as a matter of cour-e she had always been Ileft to Anderson; “it had irritated her becans» people seemed to take it for granted that she more or less belonged to him, and yet now— when for the first time things were utterly reversed, she was restless and unhappy. It scemed strange that she should ever feel afraid to approach him. Flora’'s car was no longer at her disposal, and she had arrived at; the licuse that evening in an un- romanvis taxicab which was draugh- ty anl smell of straw. She felt that she almost hated Anderson as she watched him across the room talking to the red haired Pathalia. Why had he changed so towards her? She had been so sure of his love—so sure that she ™ad not really valued it. He was the most distinguis..ed looking man in the room andonee again Sondra felt like a poor re- lation—a Cinderella whose satin: 1 the bill was' being presented? ‘When she got home she found Flora’s maid in her room. The girl looked scared and apol- getic. «The housekeeper had told her 10 pack, she said nervously, but she had not liked ‘to touch anything without permission. She saw Sondra's tear-stained face, and she broke out with real feeli: “Oh, Miss 'Sondra, I'm so SorY. Sondra tried to smile. “It’'s @ll right, yes, please ‘pack my things. I am going away in the morning.” b ( “If you would take me'’with you Miss; i- would serve you well.” Soncra laughed. “I'm afraid I" $shan't be able to affor1 a maith!; she “said. ' In the morning she took rooms in an hotel which was far more expensive than . she 'could ' really afford, and' before’ lunch ishe drove away from Lomax’s house forever, with nobody to see her off, nobody to regret her going. She looked back once before the taxi turned out of the big digni- fied street. A maid was already pulliny down the drawing room blinds——“As if ' someone had died” Sond-a thought with a pang. first Sondra found her new freedom amusing. People came to see —more out of curiosity than genne friendship, and she re- ceived the wusual invitations to dine and dance. Then—quite suddenly things be- gan (0 change. For a time Sondra clung to the thouzht that it was an over sensi- tive imagination that warned her she wa: being left out of things— loneliness that made her restless resentful if for a day she At The maid saw Sondra’s tear-stained face, andlshe broke out with real ceeling, “Oh, Miss Sondra, I'm so sorry. gown had turned to rags. If only Lomax had indeed been generous; if only she could repay Anderson the money he had giv- en her; it would he wonderful to write a little note and enclose a check. ... She asked one of the servants to get a taxi for her, and she slippei awy;, only bidding her hostess goodnight. Sie hid her face in her hands and cried as the taxi carried her homeward. It was not often that Sondra allowed herself the luxury of tears—she had not wept for longer than she could remember until the night Mark went away. Sha thought of him again, try- ing to recapture her love for him, ! and yet deep down in her heart| she krew it was not so much the| man himself she wanted, as just| someone¢ to love her and give her back her lost self-confidence. She and Flora had so often sneersa at people whom they call-| ed “poor relations"—well, now she was on¢ of them. It was a night- mare thought. “I suppose it serves me right,”| she told herself with new humil-| ity. “I suppose life is trying to' teach me a lesson.” But what lesson? Was it her fault that she had been brought up a prodical spendthrift, was it her fault if life had given her ev- eryth:ng she wanted without pay- ment, and'that now all at once was left to herself. Then quite by chance she heard that Beat®ce Taylor and her fam- ily had left New York for Massa- chusetts. She bad telephoned to Beatrice to enguire why she had not been to see her lately, and was inform- ed by a maid that the entire fam- ily was away. She heard her own voice ask faintly— “They've gone setts?” “Yes, miss.” “Thsck you.” Sondra turned away from the telephone feeling as if someone had struck her. There were letters lying on her table which she had not yet trou- bled tc open, and she found her- self mechanically sorting - them through. There was one with a foreign _stamp, and addressed in a strange handwriting; she broke it ‘open . without interest, glancing to — Massachu- Lérog--" Miss Kent: “I am writing' a line for Mark Merriman who is laid up with a SABIN’S Everything in Furnishings for Men Large or small, we We are equipped with ample facilities for the transaction of all branches of legitimate banking. invite the accounts of individuals and corporations, promising the utmost liberality of treatment, consistent with prudent business methods. ° B. M. Behrends Bank Oldest Bank in Alaska mild attack of fever. at the moment, ‘write himself. | messages. Yours sincerely:” they were mostly bills, long over- due, and there were also a cou- ple of invitations to dull parties, offered by kindly, uninteresting people who felt sorry for her lone- liness. Thex was also the weekly hotel .|bill, the amount of which made her catch her breath. She had certainly entertained friends rather lavishly during the two weeks of her stay, but $300 for' one week seemed a colosossal sum. : Panic seized. Sondra’s heart. The moneéy which Ben had giv- en %o her was too rapidly vanish- ing. (Copyright 1932by Ruby M. Ayres) | News of a death, Monday, brings Sondra both shock and a changed attitude. e Old papers for sale at Empire Office. ONITED STATES LAND OFFICE LCHORAGE, ALASKA Jury 23, 1932, Serial 07028 NOTICE is hereby given that the Alaska Juneau Gold Mining Co., & corporation, whose postoffice ad- dress is Juneau, Alaska, has filed an application for patent for the Relief No. 1, Relief No. 2, Rellef No. 3; Eva No, 1, Eva No, 2; West- ern Relief No, 1, Western Relief No. 2; Chester No. 1, Chester No. 2 lode claims, and the Chester No. 1 millsite, situate near Taku River, in the Harris Mining District, Ju- neau, Recording District, Territory of Alaska, and designated by th field notes and official plat on file in this office as U. S. Mineral Sur- vey No. 1589 A & B. which said claims are described with magnetic declination at all corners of 31° ¢ E, as follows: Relief No. 1 lode. Survey No. 1589A. Beginning at Cor. No. 1, jwhence US.LM. No. 1589 bears S. 49° 30’ E. 665.80 ft.; Thence N 69° 0’ W 1500 ft. to Cor. No. 2, Thence N 20° 0’ E 600 ft. to true point for Cor. No. 3, Thence S 69° 0' E 1500 ft. to true point for Cor. No. 4, Thence S 20° 0' W 600 ft. to Cor. No. 1, the place of beginning, con- taining 20.658 acres. Relief No. 2 lode. Survey No. 1589 A. Beginning at Cor. No. 1, whence U.SLM. No. 1589 bears S 49° 30’ E 665.80 ft., Thence N 20° 0’ E 600 ft. to true point for Cor. No. 2; thence S 69° 0’ E 1500 ft. to Cor. No. 3, Thence S 20° 0’ W 600 ft. to Cor. No. 4, Thence N 69° 0’ W 1500 ft. to Cor. No. 1, the place of beginning, containing 20.658 acres. Relief No. 3 lode. Survey No. 1589 A. Beginning at Cor. No. 1, whence U.SLM. No, 1589 bears N 83° 177 W 90030 ft. Thence N 20° 0° E 600 ft. to Cor. No. 2, Thence 8 69° 0’ E 1500 ft. to Cor. No. 3, Thence S 20° 0° W 600 ft. to Cor. No. 4, Thence N 69° 0' W 1500 ft. to Cor. No. 1 containing 20.658 acres. Eva No. 1 lode. Survey No. 1589 A. Beginning at Cor. No. 1, whence USLM. No. 1589 bears S 67° 2" W 119117 ft; Thence N 20° 0’ E 600 ft. to Cor. No. 2; Thence S 69° 0’ E 1500 ft. to Cor. No. 3; Thence S 20° 0° W 600 ft. to Cor. No. 4; Thence N 69° 0’ W 1500 ft. to Cor. No. 1; containing 20.658 acres. Eva No. 2 lode. Survey No. 1589 A. Beginning at a true point for Cor. No. 1, whence US.LM. 1589 bears S 16° 49’ E 1040.71 ft.; Thence from true point for Cor. No. 1 N 20° 0’ E. 600 ft. to true point for Cor. No. 2; Thence S 58° 0" E 1500 ft. to Cor. No. 3; Thence S 20° 0° W 600 ft. to Cor. No. 4; Thiex:ce’N eg;ro' gv 1500 ft. to true point for .. No. 1; containing 20.658. acres. Western Relier No. 1 lode. Sur- vey No. 1589 A. Beginning at Cor. No. 1, whence U.S.LM. No. 1589 bears 8 63° 2’ E 2139.17 ft.; Thence N 69° 0’ W 1500 ft. to Cor. No. 2; Thence N 20° 0' E 600 ft. to true point for Cor. No. 3; Thence S 69° !first at the signature — “Willlam |o’ E 1500 ft. to true point for Cor. No. 4; Thence S 20° 0’ W 600 ft. W PIGGLY SAVE HALF WOo0D | CLEAN HEMLOCK 14 in., 16 in., 24 in. Single Load, $4.25 Double Load, $8.00 A discount of 50 cents per load s made for CASH LEAVE ORDERS WITH GEORGE BROTHERS Telephones 92 or 95 CHESTER BARNEsson He just wishes me to say that he is get- ting along famously and hopes to be about again in a few days, but he is unable to He also wishes me o say that he sends the usual Sondra laid it eside and opened the other envelopes one by one— Fraternal Societie. S e Casti Ch y ¢ e B 7 S B. P. 0. ELKS Mests second and | |fourth W e d nesdays | at 8 pm. | | visiting brothers welcome, I - PROFESSIONAL i Helens W. L. Albrecht 410 Goldstein Building Phone Office, 216 GEORGE MESSERSCHMIDT, Exalted Ruler. M. H. SIDES, Secretary. LOYA LORDER OF MOOSE, NO. 700 Meets Monday 8 p. m. C. H. MacSpadden, Dic- tator. Legion of Moose No. 25 meets first and third Tues- days. G. A. Baldwin, Secretary and ‘Herder, P. O: Box 273, KNIGHTS OF COLUMBTD Seghers Council No. 1760, Meetings second and last Monday at, 7:30 p. m Transient brothers urg: ed to attend. Councy Chambers, Fifth Strees 1 Dr. Charles P. Jenne ‘ E Rooms B-68 Triangle Bidg. Office hours, 8 am. to 5 pm. Evenings by appointment | Phone 321 3 Our trucks go any place amy | thue. A tank for Diesel O | and a tank for srude ofl save ) burmer trouble. PHONE 149, NIGHT 148 | RELIABLE TRANSFER —— @ | Dr. A. W. Stewart DENT)ST Hours 9 a. m. to 6 p. M. Ctfice Phore 469, Wes. Phone 276 NEW RECORDS NEW SHEET MUSIC RADIO SERVICE Expert Radio Repairing ! Radio Tubes and Suppiies JUNEAU MELODY Robert Simpson Opt. D. Graduate Angeles Col- lege of Optometry and Opthalmoiogy Qlasses Fitted, Lenses Ground Dr. C. L. Fenton CRIROPRACTOR Electric Treatments Hellentbal Building FOOT Hours: 10-13, 1-5, 7-8 Moves, Packs and Stores Freight and Baggage Prompt Delivery of DR. E. MALIN CHIROPRACTOR Treatment for Rheumatism and | Nervous Diseases ! Juneau Rooms, over Piggly | Wesly Store, Phone 472 ||| ALL KINDS OF COAL f i PHONE 48 Smith Electric Co. SEWARD ' STREET | {e o EVERYTHING | | ELECTRICAL I PLAY BILLIARDS m oo TR SR —at— } \ BURFORD’S | .. o McCAUL MOTOR COMPANY THE JunEAU LAUNDRY Franklin Street, between Front and Second Streets PHONE 359 o A LI R N L A e to Cor. No. 1; containing 20.658 acres. Western Relief No. 2 lode. Sur- vey No. 1589 A. Beginning at Cor. No. 1, whence USLM. No. 1589 bears 8 65° 30 E 363438 ft.; Thence N 69° 0° W 1500 ft. to Cor. No. 2; Thence N 20° 0’ E 600 ft. to Cor. No. 3; Thence S 68° 0’ E 1500 ft. to point for Cor. No. 4; Thence S 20° 0° W 600 ft. to Cor. No. 1; containing 20.658 acres. Chester No. 1 lode Survey No. 1589 A. Beginning at a true point for Cor. No. 1, whence US.LM. No. 1589 bears S 87° 57 W 567.712 ft.; Thence S 69° 0’ B 1500 ft. to Cor. No. 2; Thence 8 20° 0 W 500 ft. to Cor. No. 3; Thence N 69° 0’ W 1500 ft. to Cor. No. 4; Thence N 20° 0’ E 500 ft. to Cor. No. 1; con- taining 17.215 acres. Chester No. 2 ioqe. Survey No. 1589 A. Beginning at true point for Cor. N. 1, whence U.S.LM. No. 1589 bears S 87° 57 W 567.72 ft.; Thence S 20° 0° W 500 ft. to Cor. No. 2; ‘Thence N 69° 0° W 1150 ft. to Cor. No. 3; Thence N 20° 0" E 500 ft. to Cor. No. 4; Thence 8. 69° 0’ E 1150 ft. to .Cor. No. 1; containing 13.198 acres. Chester No.. 1 Millsite. - Survey No. 1589 B. Beginning at Cor. No. 1, whence U.S.LM. No. 1589 bears N 43° 14’ 30" W 3840.73' ft. and whence Cor. No. 3, Chester No. 1 lode bears N 24° 44’ 30" W-1993.75 ft.; Thence S 54° 11" W 430 ft. to | Cor. No. 2; Thence S:35° 49’ E 506 ft. to Cor. No. 3; Thence N'54° 11’ E along the meander-line of Taku River 430 ft. to Cor. No, 4; Thence N 35° 49’ W 508 ft. to Cor. No. 1, the place of beginning, containing 4.995 acres. The lode claims above referred to constitute -one contiguous group and are surrounded and adjoined by vacant and unoccupied land ex- cept that the Western Relief No. 1 claim is adjoined on the north- east by the Western Relief No. 1 claim unsurveyed; the Relief No. 1 is adjolned on the northeast by the Western Relief No. 3 unsur- veyed, and the Western Relief No. 2 is adjoined on the northeast by the Western Relief No. 5 unsur- "'fi\‘; millsif te is adjoined b southeast on Taku River ln’d ‘: all other sides by vacant and un- occupled public land. J. LINDLEY GREEN, First publication, Aug, 3, mm' Last publication, Oct. 13, 1932, —_— W.P. Johnson FRIGIDAIRE DELCO LIGHT PRODUCTS MAYTAG WASHING MACHINES GENERAL MOTORS RADIOS Phone 17 Front Street Juneaw FINE Watch and Jewelry REPAIRING at very reasonable rates WRIGHT SHOPPE PAUL BLOEDHORN Goodyear Tires Full Stock of AUTOMOBILE ACCESSORIES Juneau Motors Authorized Ford Agency o COMMERCIAL PRINTING BINDERY i Gro, M. SmvpkiNs Co. Old papers for sale at Empire - il .