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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, SATURDAY, SEPT. 17, 1932. A — e “win the Prohibition fight for the wets. . Daily Alaska Empire PRESIDENT AND EDITOR ROBERT W. BENDER - - GENERAL MANAGER JOHN W. TROY - - Published every evening except Su EMPIRE_PRINTING COMPANY at Sec Streets, Juneau, Alaska. nday by the ond and Main Entered In the Post Office In Juneau as Second Class matter. SUBSCRIPTION RATES. Dellvered by carrier in Juneau, Douglas, Y “Thane for $1.25 per month mall, postage paid, at the following OD;.YYenr, in advance, $12.00; six months, $6.00; one month, in advance, $1.26 Subscribers will confer a favor if they notify the Business Office of any failure in the delivery of their papers. Telephone for Editorial and Business Treadwell and rates: in advance, will promptly or irregularity Offices, 374. MEMBER OF ASSOCIATED PR The Associated Press is exclusively use for republication of all news dispatch It or not otherwise credited in this paper and also the tocal news published herein. entitied to the| ESS. i hes credited to | ALASKA CIRCULATION GUARANTEED TO BE LARGER THAN THAT OF ANY OTHER PUBLICATION. | | NATIONAL CONVENTIONS. Sam Blythe, who has written so much PONLICS eq in avacuum. He knew it was impossible to light|Put the ring on i, his was hot |He will 1$25,000 people are agal inst Prohibition, and presents sta- tistics to prove his claim. He accounts by the. fact that the young voters are familiar with|{ |the devastating failures of Prohibition, while they ‘have no first hand information concerning the old days when the for this condition, in part at least, saloon was an institution. Of course, Mr. Sullivan is cognizant of the fact that there has been a very significant swing from dry to wet among those who are older and who have observed the working of both Prohibition and the legal manufacture, wholesale and retail of liquor, and prefer the old system to the new. Tonight is the last night of the 1932 Fair. Every- body ought to who have not point to attend be there. yet attended ought By all means all those to make it a Mayor Joseph V. McKee of New York has cut off the $15,000 t! at try to hat was added to the Mayor's salary the beginning of Mayor Walker's second term. get along on the old salary of The circumstances that Japanese newspapers de-|of clare that the United States is preparing to make|married war on Japan proves only that they have sensa-|Eartholomew's church. ‘Outside it | |tional papers with hair-trigger imaginations over|1s @ peculiarly ugly church. And there also. Electricity Celebrates. It was in 1 ducing his first successful incandescent lamp. what use was it without electric energy? |tion had occurred to him long befors he embarked (New York Times.) 879 that Edison succeeded in pro- of The ques- on the experiments that led to a carbonized cotton {thread which glowed when it was electrically heat- about the twenty National conventions which he has | whole city with batteries or even with the crude attended, has become confused. He is now convinced | dynamos of the day. From the first he had decided that conventions are not representative. He declares {to invent not merely a lamp but a system of elec- that they have become howling mobs and are carried | tric lighting as well suited for the home as for the this way or that by other hypnctic demonstrations. The writer has not attended tions as Sam has but he has been them to know that the marching of with State banners and pictures and flags and music has little to do with final results. 50 many conven- at enough of the delegates ballyhoo, noisy parades and street and factory. With characteristic boldness and imagination he planned the Pearl Street station a precedent to |and thus became the first electric engineer, in our Isense of the term. Dynamos, switches, safety fuses,| | junction boxes, fixtures for lights—everything came lout of that fertile, restjess mind of his. Without guide him he laid down principles, The disCUsSIONS | o ‘whioh the burying of cables underground is but among the delegates as the conventions proceed areé o, that have served central-station engineers ever far more effective than the shows. since. Of course, most conventions are chiefly settled the first electric public utility. He created, therefore, not merely a lamp but And the wonder in the primaries down among the people at their |of it is he created it single-handed. homes. Gov. Smith and Gov. Roosevelt were nom- | When the 1 ights of fifty-nine customers were inated in the State primary elections and State con- ‘lturned on exactly half ‘a century ago in a square ventions. President Hoover was likewise so nom- mile of downtown New York Edison declared that inated in 1928. In 1932 he won the nomination by |the occasion marked the transition from one epoch dafault. might have been nominated anyhow, went into State primaries and contested with him. No one else of prominence wanted it. conventions He | , but no one| Probably Sam Blythe had different ideas than| the conventions about the party choices and is | alibiing himself. were better representative of public sentiment than | ety Sam. They nominated for President the cnndulates;Edisun lamps in place of kerosene and gas, motors | the larger percentage of the Republicans and Demo- driving everything from sewing machines to bat- | crats of the country wanted them to nominate. to another. At tributed to the prise. The | tleships, energy on tap everywhere, the time the observation was at- natural enthusiasm of an inventor and |0 his thirty-fifth year, the sort of flourish that | |one expects at the completion of any public enter- | But now his greatest achievement is to be celebrated it is| evident that he saw more clearly than any of his| If so the Chicago conventlons|.oniemporaries how electricity would transform so- Trolley cars and subways instead of horses, | that the fiftieth anniversary of like water—a Chicago conventions were actually representative of |new epoch had indeed dawned when the switch was the people's desires. nothing. to .do, .with _it.. . They. were .the nuuu'all result of the yen for a show. They were even less‘) effective than rooting at a baseball delegates knew what they meant to Occasions when been representative of the people when they have been deadlocked. Then the con- ventions became deliberative bodies. talked things over and nominated candidates after There were great demonstrations for John W. Davis or Warren the convention shows were over. G. Harding. Convention demonstrations are often simply tri-| butes to the personal worth and popularity of those More States par- in whoss honor they are made. ticipated in the Ritchie demonstration other candidate placed in nomination at Chicago. | All, or nearly so, of the State banne: That was the case when Gov. Alfred placed in nomination at San National conventions have not | Francisco Neither of these men had a chance of being nom- game, for the do. have been | They then no | than for any rs were in it. E. Smith was in 1920 The Senate’s most recent mountebank, Hughey | |P. Long, continues his “soak-the-rich” campaign in| Louisiana. He employs the threadbare words of| % the demagogue of all ages. “We will have evloution | Jervis Weare was married to Nan Forsyth, his $10,000 bride, in St or revolution in the next five years” he shouts| Bartholomew's. v to his-credulous hearers. big fortunes.” And he has a “plan”"—they all have a plan that,'knowing. Tears stung in her eyes, stared. |like the nostrum of the quack, will cure all msAjche register disappeared in a mist. “If Congress would adopt my plan,” he asserts with She closed her eyes for a moment fierce vehemence, “nobody would have to pay taxes hard, The noise and ballyhoo had|thrown in Pearl Street on Sept. 4, 1882 Soak the Rich. (Cincinnati Enquirer.) “We must break up the but these big fortunes.” Just like that. Alas, Senator Long seems not to have learned the sexton signed. the fact that wealth is not, and can never be, a| static gnantity. He is one of those queer individuals lence. Jervis' room was not dark, |who seems to believe that if all the wealth of the like the church, and the two win- about Mr. Leonard, but T've go| It is very simple—soak the rich! world were equally distributed all would be well. Let Mr. Long look to Russia, where this idea inated at the times mentioned but they had the|p.¢ peen more fully tried out than anywhere else. love and respect of the delegates. PROBABLY WILL FAIL. It is said that a tremendous effort by those Wall Street and Broadway c times called the “International Bankers” will be made | oncerns some- to “put Hoover over” if they should become convinced that it can be done It is said that was the real purpose of the recent visit to the United States of Ambas- sador Mellon and the President of England. However the “International Bank the Bank of | er connec- tion with the proposal may become too well known Yo make success possible. The people of the country are not very friendly with those bankers who were admittedly responsible for floating billions of dollars of foreign securities in this country—a for themselves—securities that are now few cents on the dollar, if anything worthless loans contributed not severity of the depression that three years. a has AND SAFE. There seems to beé a disposition in the East to mccept as true the representations of Federal officials that the brown bears pot in danger of extinction, and t Island might continue to be used for useful pur- poses. While somewat facitious, the following editorial paragraph from the New York Times, time lent encouragement to the Hol ganda for a bear sanctuary on Adn 15 significant: According to a Government official, the Alaska brown bears on Admiraly Island are safe from extinction. The bear-hunt in Wall Street, even around election, never seems wholly successful either—to the point of extermination. YOUTH OF LAND WET. Mark Sullivan, famed political writer on the ;’fil! of the New York Herald Tribune, says the t largs profits only worth a These almost little to the prevailed for | recen {of the achievement by the result. |talist fashion, and, human nature being what it is, is the normal method. | The Soviets have had to compromise with the capi- [mnsuc system. Fire and blood, and a tyranny un- |equaled, have not been able | |to accumulate for oneself. And so Russia has em- to crush out the desire |braced a new plan, a plan which judges the value| This is the capi- But, of course, the “Kingfish” probably has his ‘slel-mng mind clothed in purple pajamas, and isn't quite responsible. Keep Out of Politics. Friends of ti with respect to for the Army (Seattle Times.) he Salvation Army will hope that t declarations of Commander Evangeline Booth Prohibition do not sound a call to get into politics. An attitude against return of the saloon is easy to understand; tolerate return for anybody or that score. With or wit |but since no political party has suggested or would of the saloon there is no occasion any organization to take sides on hout Prohibition as a party issue, L‘hc Salvation Army would be sadly misplaced in ALASKA BEARS AND ADMIRALTY | | Alaskans and of Alaska are | at Admiralty which at one zworth propa- miralty Island, party politics. the World and ‘in land ohter -prop: organization, tainted by political partisanship, a political not do as wel seeks to ald. —(Cincinnati Ei little mustache Enquirer.) A “hunch” stinet.” and Chronicle.) young voters of the country, men and women, will that an overwhelming majority He de- of the young Borah reminds us of some one taking a mgh“ % & dive who discovered half way down that of all parties and none. nobly; and since winning such ‘high favor during War substace, Its mission is to reclaim the erring It has served that mission it has waxed 'stronger in spirit with m ial gains in buildings erty for use in its good work. As or as one in any way the Army could itself or for those whom it 1 for It's enough to make one's blood boil to think| of all that money being paid to crooners when it} could be used to buy gas for the cars of the poor!| nquirer.) We haven't heard anything of Charlie Chaplin lately; maybe that German fellow with the funny | isn't Hitler, after all—(Cincinnati is defined as “an undefinable in- If some people could get hold of some of| the hunches they had two years ago they would| call them by harsher names.—(Rochester Democrat he had Nothing Venture " by Patricia Wentworlh SYNOPSIS: Nan Forsyth demands ten thousand dollars to marry Jervis Weare,. who must find a wife within three days or lose a great fortune to his fermer fiancee, Rosa- mund Carew. Rosamund has jilted him at the last moment because his grandfather’s will makes her his heir if Jervis fails to marry at a stated time, Considering the arrangement a matter of business, Jervis has agreed to pay Nan, who again conceals her secret love for him. She wants the money to make pessible her sister's mar- riage. vis Weare's self-absorption. He reacted with a feeling of acute annoyance. H “Do you mind considering my position for a moment? Do you really expect me to marry a girl| and leave her penniless? Why should you have married me if you were going to take up a position like this?” Why? Nan could have laughed and wept at the question. If they had been in the Palace of Truth she would have said “Oh, my| dear! Why? To save you from' being robbed. To save you-from the sort of girl you might have married. To save you.from pick- ing. someone up oOff the streets.” But since these were things to be hidden at any cost, she frowned, looked at him bravely, and said: “I hadn’t thought of it like that.” Her heart said, “Oh, my dear!”| when Nan passed fro et lips spoke quickly. s 8 W it ‘“I quite see your point of view, | morning sunshine into the dusk i " of the interior she found it smell.- [Put it is too much. ed of musty pew cushions and var- | The hurt, angry child disappear- nish—a very depressing smell. ed A rather lofty stranger said Mr. Page gave her away disap- |in tones of icy politeness. provingly, and he and the sexton| “The deed is already signed. I were the only witnesses. She look- | would prefer not to discuss the ed once at Jervis and saw him as |Mmatter any more.” a tall, aloof shadow. She could| Nan gave a little nod. guess at the frown she could not| “Very well she said. see. When he took her hand and |bye.” He said “Good-bye” with an air of relief. Then, with her hand still in his, she looked past him and saw the photograph. It hung CHAPTER | 6, MYSTERY FROM THE PAST At nine o'clock on' the morning August 16 Jervis Weare ‘was to’ Nan - Forsyth in St “Good- and dry. He rammed down, and there it was. They got up from their knees the ring and went into the vestry. She|with other groups above the man- wrote herself for the last time|tlepiece. Nan did not ses the {Nan Forsyth. other groups at all. She saw a “And now your father's name|)lawn set about with trees; an here, Mrs, Weare.” old man in a chair, a woman standing beside him, and a third figure—a man walking across the It was the two things coming together that took her off her |balance. Mrs. Weare—and her fa- [lawn, his back to the camera. I¢ ther dead in a far country, not | was at the third figure that Nan “Who's that?” she said. | “His name is Leonard—Robert then, opening them, bent}Leonard — a connection of — |and wrote, “Nigel Forsyth,” and my grandfather’s. I don't think :swod aside while Mr. Page and you are very likely to have met | him.” “You are thinking it's very strange that I should ask questions They taxied to the house in si- idows were open to the gurden.Js reason. Will you please tell| |Non stood by the windows so as to get as near to the garden as | possible. | “What did you want to talk to| me about?” she said. “I wanted to tell you that Mr. | Page is seeing about that ten thou- sand dollars. Have you a bank- last ten years?” “Because I think I saw b once about ten years ago.” “Why, the photograph doesn't even show his face!" Nan wasn't remembering a face. ling account?” She was remembering just that He saw her smile for the first|square thickset figure, and just| Ai“li:)h?r;‘;nmh | time. that turn of the head o ucT | “Oh, no,” she said. | “Tell me,” she said. “You will have to have one.| “What do you want to know?|$ AR You'd better see Mr.” Page about | Ten years ago—ten years ago. . . |it, and when you have opened Lheiwell. exactly ten yeaTs ago he was account he will pay the money in. up on a visit from Latin America Then, as regards yourself, I have staying with my grandfather. 1 signed a settlement which gives remember that because I know {you five thousand a year." |he was staying in the house when The color flamed into Nan's face |I nearly drowned myself out on “I don't want 'you to. I can; Croyston rocks.” iget a job." | Nan had turned very pale. Mr. Jervis Weare assumed a; “Mr. Lecnard found you?” lordly tone. b “Oh, mo. It was a British fel- “As to that, you can plelse.low who was taking photographs.” | yourself. Twelve hundred and fif-| Ferdinand Francis rushed into ty dollars a quarter will be paid Nan's mind—important, efficient, into your account. and immensely talkative. And “I can't take it,” she said in a then he was gone again, and she !me where he has been for the| “Why do you want to know?” | coming from behind the Croyson|e. rocks and walking away towards the headland. He was walkiag away from her and he was walk- ing away from Jervis, who lay bhalf in and half out of the pool with a hole in the back of his head and the tide coming up. She said breathlessly. “I want to know about Mr. Leonard. What happened to him after that?” “He went back to Latin Amer- ica.” “Where is he now?" “Down at Croyston. chicken farm.” “Thank you,” said Nan She put out her hand again. “Good-bye,” she said. wanted to add something— what? (Copyright, 1932, Lippincott) He's got & but Nan overhears a terrible plot, Monday, and recognizes one of the conspirators. CONITED STATES LAND OFFICF £2CHORAGE, ALASKA Jury 23, 193% Serial 07928 NOTICE is hereby given that the Alaska Juneau Gold Mining Co, a corporation, whose postoffice ad- dress is Juneau, Alaska, has filed an application for patent for the Rellef No. 1, Relief No. 2, Reliet 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 Distriet, Ju- neau Recording District, Territory of Alaska, and designated by the field 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. 11589A. Beginning at Cor. No. 1, whence U.S.LM. No. 1589 bears S. 49° 30’ E. 665.80 ft.; Thence N 69° 0’ W 1500 ft. to Cor. No. 2, Thence 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. 811589 A. Beginning at Cor. No. 1, whence USLM. No. 1589 bears S 49° 30' E 665.80 ft.; Thence N 20° ¢’ 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.S.LM. No. 1589 bears N 83° 17" 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° 21’ 'W’ 19117 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 U.SLM 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 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 U.S.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 S 69° |0’ E 1500 ft. to true point for Cor. No. 4; Thence S 20° 0° W 600 ft. il s it Yo FS A e JUNEAU DAIRY ICE CREAM UPMOBILE voice whose distress pierced Jer-|saw the thickset figure of a man ot ettt i~ ittt { SAVINGS i The Wise Man Saves for Future Days TODAY can take care of itself, bub you do not know what tomorrow will be like. If you are young you save for your tomorrows, when you will no longer be young, ‘ | and when you are old all the yesterdays that you saved will take care of your present. Money saved in youth is & boomerang that comes back to bless you in | e. Save for future safety. M. Behrends Bank JUNEAU, ALASKA | TheB. SERIES 222 THE NEW Hupmobile 8 IN TRUTH A CAR She had|e. N 20° 0’ E 600 ft. to true point for( *» | 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 56 Hours 9 am. to § pm. | 1 Dr. Charles P. Jenne DENTIST Rooms 8 and 9 Valentine Building ‘Telephone 176 | o . . 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 276 Robert Simpson Opt. D. @Graduate Angeles Cal- lege of Optometry and Orthalmociogy Qlasses Pitted, Lenzes Ground (O — Dr. C. L. Fenton CRATROPRACTOR Electric Treatments Hellentbal Building FOOT CORRECTION Hours: 10-13, 1-5, 7-8 . -_ r—— 0 DR. R. E. SOUTHWELX: i Optometrist—Optician [ Eyes Examined—Glasses Fitted | Room 17, Valentine Bldg. | Office Phone 484; Residence Phone 338. Office Hours: 9:30 | o 12; 1:00 to 5:30 | o ° . — DR. E. MALIN | CHIROPRACTOR | Treatment for Rheumatism and | Nervous Diseases | Juneau Rooms, over Piggly Fraternal Societies ————. OF | Gastineau Channel B. P. 0. ELKS meets every Wednesday at 8 p. m. Visiting brothers welcome. Geo. Messerschmidt, Exalted Ruler. M.H. Sides, Secretary. i 1 i ] \ LOYAL ORDER 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. D. Box 273. 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 Strees. JOHN F. MULLEN, G. K. H. J. TURNER, Secretary. D L S s S S Our trucks go any place any time. A tank for Diesel Oil and a tack for crude oil save burner trouble. PHONE 149, NIGHT 148 | RELIABLE TRANSFER L] NEW RECORDS NEW SHEET MUSIC RADIO SERVICE Expert Radio Repairing Radin Tubes and Sugpiies JUNEAU MELODY HOUSE JUNEAU TRANSFER COMPANY ! (T Moves, Packs and Stores Freight and Baggage Prompt Delivery of ALL KINDS OF COAL Ve Wiggly Store, Phone 472 PHONE 48 [ 13 e Smith Electric Co. | |1 7 SEWARD STREET | PLAY BILLIARDS EVERYTHING * [ ELECTRICAL ; —at— 3 2 l BURFORD’S . ——e McCAUL MOTOR COMPANY o to Cor. No. 1; containing 20.658 acres. ‘Western Relief No. 2 lode. Sur- vey No. 1589 A. Beginning at Cor. No. 1, whence US.LM. 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 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 USLM. 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 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 iode. Survey No. 1589 A. Beginning at true point for Cor. N. 1, whence U.S.L.M. No. 1589 bears S 87° 57" W 567.72 ft.; Thence S 20° ' 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 S. 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.L.M. No. 1589 bears N 43° 14 30”7 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 506 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 adjoined 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- veyed. FOR A NEW AGE! JAMES CARLSON forgotten to fill the tank~—(Ohio State Journal) | W’W‘"”‘“fll . Juneau Distributor i Register. First publication, Aug. 3, 1932, Last publication, Oct. 13, 1932, old papers for sale at Empire GEo. [ THE JUNEAU 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 Juneauw 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 SUppLI COMMERCIAL PRINTING BINDERY M. SivpkiNs Co. ta