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{ R i —— s I 4 - ARG TR THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, SATURDAY, SEPT. 3. 1932. Daily Alaska Empire JOHN W. TROY - - PRESIDENT AND EDITOR ROBERT W. BENDER - - GENERAL MANAGER Pul every evenin; PRINTING C®] Juneau, Alaska. Entered In the Post Office In Juneau as Second Class matter. xcept Sunday by _the ANT &t Second and Main SUBSCRIPTION RATES. Dellvered by carrier In Juneau, Douglas, Treadwell and Thane for $1.25 per month. By mail, postage paid, at the following rates: One year, in advance, $12.00; six months, In advance, $6.00; One month, in advance, $1.25. Sufseribers will confer a favor if they will promptly notify the Business Office of any failure or irregul in the deliv of_their papers. Telephone for Editorial and Business Offices, 374. MEMBER OF ASSOCIATED PRESS. Amsociated Press is exclusively entitled to the cation of all news dispatches credited to it or not of ise credited in this paper and also the local news published herein. —_————— e ALASKA CIRCULATION GUARANTEED TO BE LARGER THAN THAT OF ANY OTHER PUBLICATION. Monday, Labor Day, there will be no issue of The Empire. In accord with its usual custom it will take a holiday. THE OTTAWA FIASCO. Correspondence in tne New York Times from Ottawa says the Liberal Party of Canada, under the brilliant leadership of former Premier W. L. Mac- kenzie King, will go down the line against the rati- fication of the concords of the late Imperial Con- ference at Ottawa. They say that if the effort to prevent ratification fails, the results of the conference will be made an issue between the parties and taken to the people by the Liberals. Already war has been declared against the con- cords in England. The old Manchester Guardian, tion of Canadian high Protectionist Minis- ters—all this has been told not only in the prejudiced columns of skeptical Free Trade newspapers but in those which are devoted to the Protectionist ideas which Mr. Ben- nett and Mr. Chamberlain hold in common. It is a sordid story. The Canadian Prime Minister, urged by his Bitish well-wishers to become the Canadian Peel and to quali- fy himself for a place in the “Valhalla of Imperial statesmen,” flounders between de- stroying his Government and breaking up the Conference. It would not be unnat- ural for him to reflect that Peel's great change of front finished his Premiership and his party, and that Valhalla’s specialty was its offer of sumptuous rest to the souls of those who fell in battle. ‘Young Teddy will not come from the Philippines to campaign against his cousin for the Presidency of the United States. That will not cause the Demo- crats to waste a lot of breath cheering. In other words, it is not important. The vote for McAdoo and Wardell and Tubbs |and Shortridge in California compared with that |for Joe Crail and Bob Shuler would indicate that |the Golden Gate State has also become emphatically wet. If Cornelius Vanderbilt Whitney runs as fast {for Congress as his Equipoise can run for a big handicap purse he will trouble, make the grade without Why Break Atoms? (New York Herald Tribune.) Although hope graauaily has waned of making useful power from cracked atoms, the scientists con- tinue no less eager to accomplish the feat, as is evidenced by last week’'s Berlin dispatches on the laborious and costly experiments of Dr. Lange and Dr. Brasch with their 5,000,000-volt vacuum tubes, said to demand all the power of the German Gen- eral Electric Company while in operation. A few 'weeks ago Professor Lawrence, of the University of California, announced another procedure for obtain- ing high-speed atomic projectiles, one prospective duty of which is to crack other atoms into bits. Physicists of the Carnegie Institution of Washington have described still another method of obtaining 5,000,000-volt forces, although only for an instant instead of for the periods of minutes or hours said to be attainable with the new German apparatus. Laymen may wonder why all this effort and ex- pense is justified, since the best informed of the physicists no longer believe that parts of cracked which has fought the battles for free trade for more iatoms could be sold or used to build new atoms than a century, has taken up the cudgels and is opposing them with all its masterful acumen and powerful editorial ability. Commenting upon the work at Ottawa, just be- fore the final agreements, the Guardian said: Ottawa must be a sad disillusionment to those who took the opening speeches serious- ly. How much ink and speech was poured out on the theme that Ottawa was the hope of the world, the turning-point in the great depression, the dawn of a new era. As Mr. Bennett put it at the first meeting three weeks ago, “We have a common pur- pose. We have a supreme desire to achieve it.” And so said everyone. “The Empire,” Mr. Bennett perorated, “is at the cross- roads. Which way point faith and hope that way we shall follow.” But now, within a week of the date on which the Confer- ence should close, the guiding star of faith and hope has mysteriously disappeared. A lower level of metaphor is in vogue. Phrases about poker parties, horse-dealers, humbug, are bandied about. The common purpose is lost in a war of discrimination about sta- tistics and the difference between British and Canadian rules of arithmetic. And, what is worse, the Conference has ceased to be an earnest and decorous assembly of the heads of the self-governing States of the Commonwealth and has become mixed up with the dissensions of a Canadian politi- cal calcus. “It is clear,” writes a leading British Conservative and Protectionist paper, “that the fortunes of the Conference have become deeply involved in the whirlpool of Canadian politics.” The question now is not what can each give to strengthen the Em- pire but what is the least that Britain can accept without disrupting the Canadian Con- servative Cabinet. " So far Ottawa has justified everything that Free-traders have said about the folly of aiming at Imperial economic unity and of staking the interests of this country on economic bargains with the Dominions. We do not know yet how much Mr. Baldwin is proposing to give away as the price of saving the face of the Conference, but the discussions have revealed, even more clearly that earlier Imperial Conferences, the di- vergence between the objects and methods of Britain and the Dominions. Nothing has been more remakable about Ottawa than the fact that, although Britain has ceased to be a Free Trade country and is repre- sented by Protectionist Ministers, ‘she should still be unable to strike a rapid bargain with the Protectionist Dominions. However much we may try to avoid the huckstering spirit, we are driven into it against our will. Imperial sentiment is all very well, but it does not transcend econoic inter- ests. One has only to look at the history of the Bennett offer to see how Protection- ism and economic nationalism are one, and how impossible it is to reconcile them with movements for freer world trade. Mr. Ben- nett began on July 21 with the “outlines” of the proposals by which the Canadian Government was to find a way for Can- adian exporters into Empire markets by giving a return way into Canada for the rest of the Empire. Britain was asked to tax food and raw materials in return for unspecified concessions in the Canadian tar- iff. As soon as he began to prepare the details of his offer his Cabinet began to jib. The Protectionist manufacturers—apparently the most powerful element in the State— pesieged the Government and cried ruin if . any concessions were made to British manu- facturers. Mr. Bennett was the more dis- posed to listen to them because, faced with his supporters in the he could not afford to alienate the ? of the East. A patched-up - plan was finally launched, and the Can- . adian Government, throwing modesty to the let it be known how generous it was, or put to industrial service in any other way. | One reason for the activity is the hope of |stronger or safer X-rays; as is promised, for ex- |ample, by Professor Lawrence’s method and already !attained by Dr. Coolidge, of the American Teneral Electric Company, in his giant vacuum tubes built on the same general plan as the recent German ones. One of these tubes is in use, in fact, in the Memorial Hospital in New York. Another possible object is to learn something about the nature of the cosmic rays, for these elusive radiations appar- |ently are matched, or nearly so, by the rays emitted from these high-voltage tubes. The chief motive of Dr. Lange and theother physicists, however, is to discover, if they can, exactly how atoms are built. Science is not quite so sure today of the struc- ture of an atom as was imagined a decade ago, yet one fact seems more and more clear. This is that atoms are electric structures embodying in some manner the positive electric particles called protons, the negative ones called electrons and prob- ably a more recently discovered neutral variety called neutrons. It is probable that these are not taken singly by the atomic carpenters and built one by one into the structure. Instead, they seem first to be asembled into pairs or larger groups, not unlike the way that masons sometimes put small mosaic blocks together into slabs and then lay these compound slabs as floors or stand them up as walls. If atoms can be hit and fractured they are likely, the theorists assume, to braek up into these partly assembled aggregates rather than into the ultimate electrons or protons. Knowledge of just how each kind of atom splits into such pairs or trios or other group of particles might provide significant clews to the whole mysterious problem of the nature of matter. A Job for the Unemployed. (Ketchikan Chronicle.) Although this may seem to some an awkward time to propose it, the matter of a place for the children to coast during the winter months is a problem that can best be considered and acted upon now. It is true that we have comparatively little cold weather and snow here. Yet that is no reason to deny the thousand odd youngsters and a few hundred grown-ups the pleasure of having a good place to coast whenever the weather is favorable for it. Futhermore, the very absence of snow in winter months makes the danger to life more acute when a snowfall is in order. Without question, the extended use of city streets by automobiles makes it absolutely impera- tive that city authorities rigidly endeavor to keep children with sleds off the streets. That there have been few accidents is due only to blind luck. That cannot continue. The presence of some safe place to coast at all hours of the day would make the job of clearing city streets of coasters an easler and less unpleasan: task. We should like to see the proper authorities study this subject now. Doubtless with all the hills and gullies almost in the center of the town there should be no difficulty in finding a place off the streets—even bodering the city limits—where unemployed persons might this fall be put at work. ’!‘hek project might well be embraced in some city park. A Good Selection. (Seattle Times.) Jouett Shouse succeeds Maj. Henry Curran as President of the Association Against the Prohibition Amendment. This will appeal to the American sense of the fitness of things—the very name of the new executive will ring the bell for many people. The change also gives fresh evidence of the non- partisan character of the association. Mr. Shouse literally worked wonders in reorganizing the Demo- cratic Party and should work even better in a cause now supported by all parties. The Stock Market may be “artificially inflated,” but if it is, let’s try the same dose on commodities and employment!—(Seattle Times.) Things seemed to have reached the pass in Asia where a Chinese and a& Japanese cahnot meet without starting another war.—(Seattle Times.) Western farmers to have lost faith in the Federal Farm Board and to have given prefer- ence to shotguns.—(Cincinnati Enquirer.) R i, Notices for this church column must be received by The Empire not later than 10 o'clock Saturday morning to guarantee change ot sermon topics, etec. R R 3 L) | The Salvation Army il Public meeungs: Sunday—2:30 p.m. Sunday--7:30 p.m. Tuesday—T7:30 p.m. Sunday services will be held at 11 am. in the First Church of Christ, Scientist, Juneau, on Fifth and Main Streets. The subject will be, “Man.” 12:15 p.m.—Sunday School. ‘Wednesday. 8:00 pm. — Testi- monial meeting. Christian Science Reading Room in church building. This room 1s open to the public Wednesday after- noons from 2:30 to 4. The public is cordially invited to attend these services and visit the reading room. f Bethel Pentecostal Assembly fin —_ 121 Mam Street CHARLES C. PERSONEUS, Pastor. Sunday services: 11:00 a.m.—Morning worship. 12:15 p.m.—Bible School. 6¢30 p.m.—Young People’s meet- ing. 7:30 p.m.—Evening service. Tuesday, 7:30 p.m. — Prophetic Lecture on Book of Revelation. Friday, 7:30 p.m. — Evangelistic Service. day of each month. e e e Northern Light Presbyterian Church Corner Fourth and Franklin Sts. 10:00 a.m.—Bible School. 11:00 a.m. — Morning Worship. Solo, “The Silent Voice,” Mrs. J. C. Stapleton. Address by H. L. Faulkner, “The Trial of Jesus from a Lawyer’s Standpoint.” Mr. Faulkners’ remarks will be based upon the well known hook bear- ing this title and written by Walter M. Chandler. 7:00 p.m.—Intermediate Christian Endeavor. Resurrection Lutheran Church [J — - 4} Corner of Third and Main Streets REV. ERLING K. OLAFSON, Pastor. “The Friendly Church” 10:00 a.m.—Sunday School. A gratifying number turned out last Sunday for our first session, and a number of others have signified their intention to come this week. We are proud of our Sunday School, and invite you to send your children. Do not neglect this im- portant character training. 11:00 a.m. Morning service. Sermon, “God's Sustaining Provid- ence.” Come and worship with us. Holy Trinity Cathedral The Vy. Rev. CHARLES E. RICE, Dean. 8:00 a.m.—Holy Communion, 11:00 a.m.—Holy Communion and Sermon, No Sunday School tomorrow. Evening service at Douglas. Choir rehearsal Wednesday night. Metropolitan Methodist T J‘_ Episcopal Church —ee N8 Rev. HENRY R. CROSS Fourth and Seward Sureets “The church with the cordial wel- eome.” The Lord's Supper the first Sun-| /) 11:00 am. — Morning worship. As Labor Day comes to us, it is well for us to think of what work means to self and others. Thomas Clark in his poem “Deaths” pre- sents a side we are called on to prevent. Theme for service: “I Will Make a Man More Precious than Gold,” Tsa. 13:12. 12:05 p.m~—Sunday School. Bal- ance your children’s education by an hour of thought in the church ¥ ———————— 7 | school. J First Cl::;cht ’«‘:l Christ, 1 8:00 pm. — Evening Worship. I entist & Theme, “Metal Mike.” + IR ERERIP RIS RO RCCIREE D il SRF, 1 ' H i | Seventh Day Adventists Corner Second ané Franklin Sts. VERNON GYES, Pastar Sunday evening, 7:45—Lecture. Tuesday, evening, 7:45 — “Know Your Bible,” study. Sabbath, September 10: 1:30 p.m.—Saopath School. 2:30 p.m.—Regular services. The public is invited to all meet- ings. H - =il | Catholic Church ! Church of the Nativity e o il URLIESEL | | Fifth and Gold Streets Rev. WM. G. LeVASSEUR, 8J., Pastor 6:30 a.m.—Holy Mass in Sisters’ Chapel. 8:00 am—Holy Mass and In- Istruc',icon in the Church. 10:30 am.—Holy Mass and Ser- mon, followed by Benediction of the Blessed Sacrament. Ll L Presbyterian Native Church | HARRY WILLARD, Lay Worker. l 10:30—Morning service. i 11:30—Bible School. 7:30—Evening service. 7:30 p.m.—Wednesday, Midweek prayer service. AMERICAN BEAUTY PARLOR OPERATOR BACK FROM STATES Mrs. Jack 'Wilson, who owns and operates the American Beauty Parlor in the Valentine Building, was a returning passenger on the M. 8. Norco which arrived in port early this morning. wuring her vacation in the States she| combined busingss with pleas- ure and acquired the latest point- ers on beauty culture and has brought kack many new ideas for the benefit of her Juneau patrons. ‘While she was away, her business was conducted by Mrs. Gene Ewart assisted by Mesdames Ruth Coate and Carl Edmunds. — LANDS 450-POUND FISH FANN(N, Tex., Sept. 1—Ross Hanley, Fanning sportsman, caught a June fish measuring 7 feet 4 inches ‘ong and weighing 450 pounds. 1i took four hours to land the monster. 2 ——l e Certain mountain sections of the rodd which Chile has bullt as its part of the Pan-American highway are passable only in good weather, | Tn 1931 raw furs exported from {Canada had a value of $13,544,089. . —e |- OLYMPIC ROOMS | FRONT STREET | Clean—Comfortable—Close in Mrs. F. Hayden. Phone 534 | il FOR INSURANCE See H. R. SHEPARD & SON Telephone 409 B. M. Behrends Bank Bldg. Large or small, we individuals and corporations, promising the utmost liberality of treatment, consistent with prudent business methods. B. M. Behrends Bank Oldest Bank in Alaska’ Commerce We are equipped with ample facifilt)ies for: the transaction of all branches of legitimate banking, invite the accounts of [LIBBY KNTS LAYETTE FOR | LITTLE SMITH Expected Arrival of Baby Takes Mind Off Rey- nolds’ Tragedy CINCINNATI, Ohio, Sept. 3. — Mrs' Libby Holman Reynolds is in seclusion near Baltimore, the Times said, spending much of her time knitting clothing for the baby she expects in [February. And, whether it is a boy or girl, the child will be named Smith Reynolds in memory of Libby's husband, for whose death she has been indicted by a North Carolina grand jury. She is at liberty un- cer $25,000 bond. Reynolds died July 5 of a bullet wound at his Winston-Salem, N. C. estate. Reynolds’ friend, Albert Walker, also has been indicted on charges of murder, but Libby has consistently asserted the death was a suicide. Preparation for motherhood has taken Mrs. Reynolds mind from the tragedy, the paper said, and Ter only interest now is the child. ‘With her are her mother and father, Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Hol- man. Mrs. Holman is expected to stay with her until the child is born. .- Express train passengers in Ger- many can now dispatch telegrams all over Europe during journeys. UNITED STATES LAND OFFICE {3ICHORAGE, ALASKA Jury 23, 1932, Serial §7028 NOTICE is hereby given that the Alaska Juneau Gold Mining Co., & jcorporation, whose postoffice ad- dress is Juneau, Alaska, has filed an application for patent for the Relief No. 1, Relief No. 2, Reliet No. 3; Eva No. 1, Eva No. 2; West- tern Relief No. 1, Western Relief No. 2; Chester No. 1, Chester No. 12 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 the ifield notes and official plat on file in this office as U. S. Minzral Sur- vey No. 1589 A & B. which sald claims are described with magnetic declination at all corners of 31° 0 E, as follows: Relief No. 1 lode. Survey No. 1589A. Beginning at Cor. No. 1, whence U.SLM. No. 1589 bears 8. 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 66580 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. Rellef No. 3 lode. Survey No. 1589 A. Beginning at Cor. No. 1, whence USLM. No. 1589 bears N 83° 177 W 90030 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. 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 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 20.858 acres. Eva No. 2 lode. Survey No. 1589 A. Beginning at a true point for Cor. No. 1, whence USLM 1589 bears S 16° 49’ E 1040.71 ff Thence from true point for Cor. No. 1 N 20° 0’ E. 600 ft. to true point for Cor. No. 2; Thence 8 59° 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 true point for Cor. No. 1; containing 20.658 acres. Western Relier No. 1 lode. Sur- vey No. 1589 A. Beginning at Cor. No. 1, whence US.LM. No. 1589 bears S 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 8 69° 0’ E 1500 ft. to true point for Cor. No. 4; Thence S 20° 0’ W 600 ft. SAVE HALF wWOOD CLEAN HEMLOCK 14 in., 16 in., 24 in. Single Load, $4.25 Double Load, $8.00 A discount of 50 cents per load Is made for CASH GEORGE BROTHERS Telephones 03 or 0§ PROFESSIONAL | 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 58 Hours 9 am. to 9 pm. Dr. Charles P. Jenne DENTIST Rooms 8 and 9 Valentine Building Telephone 176 | | Dr. J. W. Bayne DENTIST 1 Rooms 5-6 Triangle Bldg. Office hours, 9 am. to 5 pm. Evenings by appointment Phone 321 Dr. A. W. Stewart DENTIST Hours 9 am. to 6 pm. ! SEWARD BUILDING | Office Phone 469, Res. Phone 278 . L] ’ 4 Robert Simpson Opt. D. Graduste Los Angeles Cal- I lege of Optometry and Opthalmology I Glasses Pitted, Lenses o= -e - 4 { Dr.C.L. Fenton | CBTZOPRACTOR Plectric Treatments Hellentbal Bullding | FOOT CORRECTION | Hours: 10-12,1-5, 18 Room 17, Valentine Bldg. | Office Phone 484; Restdence Phone 338. Office Hours: 9:30 to 132; 1:00 to 5:30 DR. E. MALIN CHIROPRACTOR Treatment for Rheumatism and | Nervous Diseases ! Juneau Rooms, over Piggly ‘Wiggly Store, Phone 472 | o— . ». o Smith Electric Co. SEWARD STREET | EVERYTHING ELECTRICAL °. L] .. McCAUL MOTOR COMPANY 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 S 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 69° 0’ E 1500 ft. to point for Cor. No. 4; Thence 8 20° 0’ W 600 ft. to Cor. No. 1; contalning 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 567.12 ft.; Thence S 69° 0’ E 1500 ft. to Cor. No. 2; Thence S 20° 0' W 500 1t. 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 17.315 acres. Chester No. 2 iode. Survey No. 1589 A. Beginning at true point for Cor. N. 1, whence U.S.LM. No.- 1589 bears 8 87° 57" W 567.72 {t.; Thence 8 20° 0 W 500 ft. to Cor. No. 2; Thence N 68° 0' W 1150 f$. to Cor. No. 3; Thence N 20° ¢’ E 500 ft. i OF | Gastineau Channel | Fraternal Societies . 0. ELKS Meets second and fourth W ed nesdags at 8 pm. Visiting br o thers welcome. GEORGE MESSERSCHMIDT, Exalted Ruler. M. H. SIDES, Secretary. LOYAL ORDER OF MQOSE, NO. 700 Meets Monday, 8 p. m. C. H. MacSpadden, Dic- tator. Legion of Moose No. 25-meets first and third Tues- G. A. Baldwin, Secretary ““KNIGHTS OF COLUMBUS Seghers Council No. 1760. Meetings second and last Monday at 7:30 p. m. Transient brothers urg= ed to attend. Council Chambers, Fifth Streeb. JOHN F. MULLEN, G. K. H. J. TURNER, Secretary. Our trucks go any place any time. A tank for Diesel Oil and a tank for crude oil save burner trouble. PHONE 149, NIGHT 148 | RELIABLE TRANSFER L — e NEW RECORDS NEW SHEET MUSIC RADIO SERVICE E: t Radio Repairi Ra:l(il:)e r'l'ubgs l:ndegl::‘;g;gu JUNEAU MELODY HOUSE JUNEAU TRANSFER COMPANY Moves, Packs and Stores Freight and Baggage Prompt Delivery of ALL KINDS OF COAL PHONE 48 | PLAY BILLIARDS —at— # BURFORD’S * | THE JUNEAU LAUNDRY Franklin Street, between Front and Second Streets PHONE 359 W.P. Johnson DELCO LIGHT PRODUCTS MAYTAG WASHING MACHINES GENERAL MOTORS RADIOS Phone 17 Front Street Juneauw FINE : Watch and Jewelry, | REPAIRING | at very reasonable rates WRIGHT SHOPPE PAUL BLOEDHORN