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i S RS S [ tions bHl to the. latest by her European &teditors. Things like permission to create a standing army PRESIDENT AND EDITOR |and recreate a navy, to expand her air forces, still GENERAL MANAGER | 'émain’ to be attained. If Germany ever expects «- |t0 b2 treated by the victor nations on an equality Fublished _every evening except Sunday by basis, she has first to realize that she must put into E:‘,‘.f,".‘f":V‘Y:}.{.’.’ITIA\;:?.-ui"MP'\NY at Second and “"’“’mactico at home the principles she preaches abroad. - If Germany under Hitler is to despoil racial minoritv {groups, of which the Jews are one, if she is teo goose-step to martial airs and parade defiantly with- out regard to her obligations, she cannot expect the ing down of accounts Daily Alaska Empire JOHN W. TROY - - ROBERT W. BENDER - - Entered in the Post Office ln Suneau as Second Class matter — SUBSCRIPTION RATES. Dolivered by carrier In Juneau and Douglas for $1.25 per month. ” world to placé confidence in any reconciliation she By wall, postage paid, at the following rates: y One year, In advance, $12.00; six months, In advance, 'may offer or look to her for aid in establishing 00; one in. advance, J1.25. e b bacribera will Confer & favor if they will promptly“as“m peace. notify lr;,‘l B lne{n“l\ e of o fallure or irregularity Hatred, revenge and militarism- are not qualities in the delivery of the a Business Offices, 374. that inspire confidence in any nation. And those are the qualities that seem to be enthroned in Ger- many today. Telephone for E EMBER OF ASSOCIATED PRESS. The AlMInfln(ml Press 1s exclusively entitled to the ase for republication of all news dispatches crpdned to it or not otherwise credited in this paper and aiso the local news published herein. A RECORD-BREA ING REGISTRATION. ALASKA CIRCULATION GUARANTEED TO BE LARGER THAN THAT OF ANY OTHER PUBLICATION Last night when the annual registration of voters for today's municipal election closed, a total of 1,426 persons had signed their names on the books at the City Clerk's Office. This is the greatest number of persons ever to register in the city for the election, and probably exceeds any that ever oc- curring in any other Alaskan town. It is a healthy 'sign, indicating that the residents of the town are actively interested in the administration of the com- munty’s affairs. The total is but 86 votes short of the record- |breaking vote cast here in the general Territorial election last November when interest in things political was the highest ever known locally as well as nationally. But registration is only half of the o e job.. To complete it, those who have registered must MLTF\‘&E;‘ TBBERE: | ote todsy.” Andtths 4tal sote odst (ahiouit, ‘as the o it registration has done, set a new record for municipal CONNERY BILL TORY'S EX B TR, i The Connery bill to establish a 30-hour week in|elections. all industries if made applicable to Alaska will bring B iiustries. olose down ite. mines, gold| The poling places do not close untll 7 pm. It copper and coal, its salmon canneries and probably | ou - who R ened IRER R O e O Rl all fisheries activity, put an end to prospe(‘tm':.‘:“"“) to do so. b ess and pauperize the 60,000 Americans | who trying to build up a self-supporting com-| monwealth in this, the last American frontier This | If anything it is an under-| stagnat Twenty Years On. (Manchester, Eng., Guardian.) statement of fact The King and Queen on Tuesday paid an official Our industries are 90 per cent. seasonal. They |visit to the “talkies” for the first time. The"wonder compress into a few short weeks the work for an!to most citizens will be that they have not done so entire year, and a majority of those engaged in before. For the sound film has ?or _long been suffi- them must in that space of time be pald a suffi- Zlfel:lymi;f:;eifii;n *; edrgie:;_stomJ;:ls;lfryn ;;wzfim;]o::el is not an exaggeration. cient sum to provide Lhcm and their .<lc]?elldcnl:1mme Back toan - earllar’ BAvantHEAIIE MERb R ment with the necessities of life for the entire year. If 4 0 0y memorable. He was the first English by Congressional fiat, some 66 2/3 per cent addi-|p, )oreh 4o recognize, over twenty years ago, that tional workers are required to be put on the PAy- the music-hall had become a family affair and that| rolls, it can be accomplished in but one Way—to|the dubious and wholly masculine atmosphere that reduce the average wage pald cummcn.surmcly.‘md prevaded it even in his father's day was dis- the industries could not COXIUHUC:s]pz\wd by men like Stoll and Butt, who had made | if wages are cut in any such it safe for all suburbia. The engaging tale by half of that amount, labor can-|Mr. Priestley that was yesterday “canned” for such not exist a disunguls}?cd audience coul](_i yield rnommg in csalst In the mining industry, most of the some 7.000:‘30“:}. v 1;‘;‘; ;h:;igalt;:wl’;ro:;:l:fige-a 203 persons connected with it must earn enough in about ‘ll\r(;ugh suc}m B M 0OSARdE = EATETE ek b | EbAgS 120 days of activity to subsist and provide for their| o8 ST L T Vesta Tilley, Little’ Tich, femilies for 12 To state the proposition wwiyie Bard, Harry Lauder, and Harry Tate among | thus ought to demonst reasonable Person them and with George Robey tempering (to suit a 0ssibil polite atmosphers) the robust witticisms of the annually to ap-|Mayor of Mudcumdyke opening the public baths. The Without so doing, to operate. And manner, or by one months. ate to any its utter im ‘The fisneries give employment . gt roximately 25,000 individuals. -That* work is -even |music-hall is in eclipse ‘at- present, and the screen e e - The average salmon|relens in its place, But will that dominance be i S5 Bnona cHien. Ihe mune it i R continued? Already there are signs that the public canning season is well under 60 days. That industry |is wearying of the pictured shape and the imper- iktices in inoeraal Mities - Hekween ‘48, 00000 z‘m‘llsonal attack. More and more the picture palaces $50,000,000 worth of canned salmon. For the past|ionq to wedge in between films the dance, the song, two years as a whole it has shown a net loss to the |¢he spectacle, the freshly played orchestral piece. packers. It could not inaugurate a 30-hour a week|yariety begins once more to show its head above the work system without drastically reducing wages and |flood that swamped it. if it did that so a profit could be earned the earn- ings of its employees would be less than some of the pittances paid in the sweatshops of Eastern cities. But if that were not true, even though the industry could afford to go on the proposed Connery system, Upon the wave of optimism stirred by the swift it couldn’t possibly comply with the requirements moves of the new President comes James Truslow during the coming season. To house the additional |Adams, in the final volume of his “The March of thousands of workmen that would be necessary “Democx‘acy," declaring that a true new era is.dawn- there are no existing accommodations. To construct P8 o He says: “The most interesting, the most im- Vi 3 3 s tas conditions :::;n ::::lei:" t:: ;,’::;m:\ tfl‘:g L::::‘E o inr portant and, let us at least hope, the greatest pages 2 % ., |in our history are those that must await the hands with them will readily recognize that it just couldn't Y of the historian of the future.” be done in time for this year's activities. This prospéct scems prima facie. The American Theoretically, the proponents of the 30-hour week |frontier has passed, but only to open up a more have solid ground on which to stand. They are prodigious one—the frontier of scientific, industrial, seeking to create millions of jobs for the millions|social and cultural progress. The possibilities are of idle men and women throughout the coumry.:so infinite that the people of the country need In a highly industrialized culture it probably can|only get oriented again and have the ' economic be worked out. Economists seem to think it can.|muddle untangled to start the new‘conqucst‘. This But it cannot be applied successfully to a wilder- conquest will not be one of spike driving, trail blaz- ness country, to a land where the untouched wlld““g or to such a grea; extent the rearing of 1t:olossal creeps down to the very threshold of the thin line factories. It will be pursued in laboratories and of industrial plants that have been planted here by clinics, in the sea, in the air, in the lecture rooms, - S the theatres and the concert halls, upon the play- far-seeing men with vision enough to discern a great State in the future and courage enough to battle ing fields and in the legislative chambers and in all the fields of leisure and recreation, adverse natural conditions that must be overcome before their dream is realized. First must come the untangling, the organizing, the buttressing against recurring chaos. This itself The United States was not made great, was not|offers possibilities of achievement the mere glimpse settled, did not become the world’s greatest indus-|of which in President Roosevelt’s program has struck trial nation, on a 30-hour week. It achieved its greatness because its pioneers were willing to work fire from the imagination of the nation and in- stilled a new hope almost overnight. A new era? There it lies ahead, ready for the S fon Mms wa YReE .aner Fo80, Shhting beck leadership which the rare creative genius of America the wilderness, conquering it step by step, and laying G siailuely sbis o e it the foundations of the United States of today on 3 just that spirit of willingness to labor, to endure hardships and discomforts that constitutes one of the finest heritages ever given to any people. Just so must Alaska be developed, if it is to develop. It cannot prosper, it cannot grow, it can- not even hold its own, it cannot possibly survive as an independent, self-sustaining entity under the Connery measure. The New Day. (New York World-Telegram.) Conquest of Fog. (New York World-Telegram.) An airplane took off from College Park, Md., in weather that kept all other aircraft on the ground. There were rain and murky clouds down to the trectops. Visibility was almost zero. The pilot, James L. Kinney, Government Research Bureau flier, with assistants, flew 200 miles to Newark without being able to see anything and came to within a short distance of the landing surface of Newark Airport before he saw the ground. Had the murk cloaked his vision to the ground he could have landed as safely. Kinney has made many similar flights in good weather," his vision completely hooded. But this was the first in thick weather. The extraordinary flight into the equivalent of black darkness from earth to sky was made pos- sible, first, by the radio beacon which guides planes from port to port and, second, by the “bent beam™ which the Government scientists have developed and on which the plane, reaching the vicinity of the airport, glides down, to the runway and lands. Conquest of fog has long been talked of. It GERMANY AND THE JEWS. Hitlerized Germany is not helping her cause with the world by waging war on the Jewish element of her population. Numerically, it is what might be termed a submerged minority. Financially and from a business standpoint, it is important. In 1931, the number of Jews in Germany was estimated to be 564,879. The total population of the.country is in excess of 63,000,000. It requires no moral or physical courage for a majority of that enormous proportions to despoil such a feeble minority. For the past 15 years, dating almost as soon as the Armistice was signed in 1918, Germany has been clamoring for what she terms fair treatment from the nations that conquered her on the battle- fronts of Europe. In and out of season she has préssed her cause, decrying those who have stood seems about completed. Probably it will not be long until transport planes on the regular mail, passenger and express lines will be taking off, flying and landing in any fog, with perfect safety. The end of progress is not yet! for a rigid application of the Treaty of Versailles. There is no gainsaying that she has made some fieadway. It is a far cry from the. original repara- It's simply amazing, the hoarded votes our VALI by Percival SYNOPSIS: Left unprotected » ameng the swirling intrigues of the Citadel of Mekazzen, Mar- garet Maligni wakes to find Raisul, son of the Kaid of Mckazzen, in her room. She frightens him away by pre- tending to have a pistol; later ¢he cannct find Jules, her hus- band, who has been made drunk by Raisul. Behind it. all is a sol of plots against France invelving the Kaid, Raisul, and Major Napoleon Riccoli, of the Fercign Legion, encamped not far away. Chapter 21 MARGARET PERPLEXED As Margaret approached the heavy iron-studded garden-dcor at the foot of the stair up to the apartments of the Lady El Isa Beth el Ain, who was also the Senora Maligni, an old man, clad in a dirty hooded cloak, rose fiom the great squared stone that was at once a mounting-block and a door-step. “I want to see . . .” began Mar- garet, and, as the man shook his head, realized that it to speak to him in English. “Je desire . . .” and again the man shook his head, and, with up- lifted out-spread hand, signed to with the other he pointed first to himself and then to the stairs. In the shadow of the vast wall of the courtyard, Margaret waited un- til Hassen el Miskeen, reappear- ing, beckoned to her to come with him. Followed by Margaret, the door- keeper climbed three stesp flights of stairs and traversed several dark and airless stone corridors. At another heavy iron door he halted, unfastened it, push- ed it open and held aside a heavy curtain for Margaret to enter. The conversation that ensued was difficult and unsatisfactery, both by reason of the ladies’ lack of proficiency in one of their mutual languages—which were English and French—and by reason of what Margaret considered the other’s un- onable attitude. “Yes, my son Jules 1s here,” Mar- garet understood her to say in her curious English and still more faul- ty French. “He is ill—very ill. It is your fault. If he could have stayed with me, have learnt these habits. And why are not obedient to Jules, as a good wife should always be to her ‘'husband?” In English where she could, and in French where she must, Mar-"! garet endeavored to point out that| it was only when he had returned to his own country that Jules had | developed bad habits, and that in England he had been as abstemi- | ous as the average English gentle-’ man and had never, on any occa- sion, so far as she knew, drunk more than was good for him. Whereat the mother shrugzed! and looked skeptical. Nor should El1 Isa Beth el forget blood in English wife held a position very different from that of an Arab; wife. They were not slaves, and it was not expected of them that i they should be unquestioningly obedient to their husbands. They were their husband’s partners, and ! equals—not their chattels. “Jules is not my master.” “Isn’t he your husband? you married?” “Yes, he is my husband.’ “Very well, then . . .?” “In any case,” Margaret pointed | out, “there is no question of my leaving my husband. I'm not talk- ing of my leaving here alone. Jules will accompany me, of course. We only came here on a visit.” “A visit,” smiled El Isa Beth el Ain. “Apparently Jules doesn't telll you as much as he tells his mother. It will be a long visit.” “Why?" “Why? Because this is his home, or at any rate, Morocco is his home. He has got to come into his father's business and that is here in Mekazzen and Tangier, and sometimes in Gibraltar where my mother came from, and in Mar- seilles.” nasty foreign Ain Aren’$ “I am certainly not going to live in Morocco,” said Margaret “Then it's & pity you marricd a man who is.” “Yes.” El Isa Beth el Ain shrugged (]o. quent shoulders. “Anyhow,” said Margaret, see Jules now.” “He is sleeping. He is very ij» “All the more reason why T should be with him. If he is i, T am the proper person to him.” “Mothers sometimes make nurses. T will nurse him.” “I'll help you then,” garet -diplomatically. “Sarah is helping me" reply. “Look here,” said Margaret grily, rising from the divan is all nonsense. Where's my “I will nurse good was the an- “This sist.” The Lady El Isa Beth ¢ Al smiled tolerantly: “People don't ‘insist’ here, child,” she said. “No one does n?z President has been able to shake out of Congress —(Detroit News.) except the Kaid—or Zainub and Raisul through the Kaid. Tnsisti” se that led * was useless her to stay where she was, while| he would never| And why are you so cold? ! that she too had English| her veins, and that an smiled Mar- | hus- | band? I'm going to him now. 1 in- in | ANT Dusr 307 Goldstein Building Phone Office, 216 e . = fighting back a slowly mmmdry man from Haines, bought the ide of fear, cold and horrible, ack Hayes property near the City | “Up here, in my husband’s bed-|D0CK from Mrs. Flora Fitzgerald. i | Christopher Wren -nuu cs-rz- ) From The Empire ! s | Helene W.L. Albrecht | te PHYSIOTHERAPY B 1,;;? gf,lmly'?a BN ‘md; Massage, Electricity, Infra Red | “Wnere is Jules?” asked Mar-| Fomer Banta, wen known laun-|| Ray, Medical Gymnastics. Where's that?” ; The recently organized Pioneers DRS. KASER & FREEBURGER e : ;a|0f Alaska, elected for their Mirst Through there,” replied El Isa|® r Mirst | Beth €1 Ain and pointed to a small jofficers J.. T. Martin, president; DENTISTS s in a moorish horse-shoe set-|3Tover C. Winm, ‘first vice-presi- Blomgren Building dent; James McKenna, second vice- PHONE 56 n opposite the one by which laioh e el vprvs~dent; E. L. Cobb, secretar; Without further remark, Mar-|Zmery Valentine, treasurer; Rev. ;arct ran to the door, only to find |1+ F- Jones, historian; Trevor Davis, it cntirely devoid of any kind Ot,ssrgeant -at-arms; J. M. D3V15< handle, latch, bolt or keyhole—and 2Pt Whitney and Martin George, 4 Hours 9 am. to 9 p.m. ——— e | | APRIL 4, 1913 ! Dr. Charles P. Jenne DENTIST R/)ms 8 and 9 Valentine Building Telephone 176 Atirely. immovable. |trustees. Ninety-seven persons had hes signed application cards for mem- , |bership in the lecal Igloo of Pio- neers. | ving pushed with all trength, and thrown herself against door as heavily as she could, | Margaret rushed across ‘o the oth- | p onz, determined to find a way | br, L, Or stiac i Mkss ind. Pulling back the curtain | Mayme Dean were married by tho 2 hung on the immer side of %y Father Brown. Royal Shep- thick wall,' she tried to open| ard and Miss Hubbard were wit- the door. This also was immov- | Yot Or oy pod el able, presumably locked from with.|4ing breakfast followed at the Al- St hka Grill. Dr. J. W. Bayne DENTIST Rooms 5-6 Triangle Bldg. | Office hours, 9 am. to 5 pm. Evenings by appointment that | Hammering upon the heavy mass| Gparles Carter had been voted|gs i - of wood, endeavoring to shake it |tne mayor of Juneau by the newly |—— o = Margaret realized that she was Pan- {olantad city council. b £ ricken; that the cold tide of | Dr. A. W. Stewart | was rising higher and higher.|. T walter Gaffney, pioneer of| | DENTIST This would not do. She must not Nome, but more recently a fire in- e control. Panic was mever any syrance man of Seattle, £:4 in 200d to anybody. She must be <90, | juneau on business and fraterniz- and wary and brave. Hours 9 am. {o § pm. | ~EZWARD BUILDING Office Phone 469, Res. | — {ing with the Nome 1 - xhone 276 She turned back into the room. | neau. Sgroone ;‘__ | “Is this a trap?” she said. | ! A “A trap?” smiled El Isa Beth ¢l'p p carmi e ol en was a passenger for T Ain. “Of course it's not. Don't be o I T st s eir }O‘"_‘Junmu aboard the City of Seacr,le.! own free will, and you can go| whenever you like.” ‘Jump over that balcony, do you mean?” asked Margaret. “If you wish. But it would be Dr. Richard Williams DENTIST OFFICE AND RESIDENCE Gastineau Building, PLone 481 | It was believed that the small |bcat in which Joe Juneau made his first trip to Juneau had been Ifound on the side hill just above | . high tide, on Franklin street near | &) santer to give the sig Ha an el Mlskgeen that \;em\lar:z Front., Wetkcisn employed 1 ex- & he door open. You knock twico lc)&n«a’un7 for the new hotel being quickly and three times slowly, and '2Ull% By McCloskey, Caro and Hook- hard, for Hassan is getting a little ¥ MR S e Tokle Ueh ly i Robert Simpson Opt. D. deaf and might not hear knuckles, O 7. Martin, president of e lo- | e it Use the handle of that dagger.” cal} order of Pnoneexrs. spied the | lege of Optometry and | relic and warned against removing Opthalmology And El Isa Beth el Ain pointed to where, on the table, lay a large it until certn'mA ‘historical facts Glasses Fitted, Lenses Ground dagger with hilt and sheath of COWd be authenticated. L isrm s heavy cut steel, the top of the han- le 2 dle flattened out into the shaps of ®~ || DR.R. E SOUTHWELL | Optometrist—Optician Eyes Examined—Glasses Fitted Room 7, Valentine Bldg. open fan, and the end of the ! >ath curved sharply round in a | | mall semi-circle. | a FINE " Watch and Jewelry Repairing | ! e i 560 | PROFESSIONAL I i Bhtecec o s ingline g Fraternal Societies | oF | Gastineau Channel | W B. P. 0. ELKS meets every Wednesday at 8p m Visiting brothers welcome. Geo. Messerschmidt, Exalted Ruler. M. H. Sides, Secretary. lGllTS OF (‘OLLMBUS Seghers Council No. 1760. Meetings second and last Monday at 7:30 p. m. Transient brothers urg- ed to attend. Couneil Y Chambers, Fifth Street. JOHN F. MULLEN, G. K H. J. TURNER, Secretary Our trucks go any place any ‘l time. A tank for Diesel 0il | and a tank for crude oi save | burner trouble. PHONE 149, NIGHT 148 l i RELIABLE TrANsrzr | n— CALL 14 Royal Blue Cabs 25¢ Anywhere in City o cein | JUNEAU TRANSFER | COMPANY ’ M oting and Stora ge Moves, Packs and Stores Freight and Baggage Prompt Delivery of FUEL OIL ALL KINDS OF COAL | “Thank you" she said. “Could'| &t very reasonable rates ||| Office Phone 484; Residence PHONE 48 You ghte me this? Mignt I take # | WRIGHT SHOPPE ||| P> 2%, Oftice Hours: 9:30 TR : | AUL B i € E “Certainly. Souvenir to take home I 5 i DHORN " 1= - T 7 —when yeu go.” ° o |Rose A. Andrews—Graduate Nurse Margaret hung in doubt for a'g—— = ELECTRO THERAPY MAY HAYES jmement, and then came to a de- | & Cabinet Baths—Massage—Colonic Modiste {cision, 1 . . Irrigations ‘Il tell you something,” she sm.1 ) Sméth Ele(firlc Co. | Office hours, 11 am. t¢ 5 p.m. Be;;l':‘)a;'sn :)';m i ;:md then perhaps youll undex-)ll “::,‘!n;‘“;“;‘;“o‘““ | Evenings by Appointment o I stand—if you didn’t before—why 11 ELECTRIC, | |second and Main. Phone 259-1 ring - jinsist on being with my husband. . o : P : “Last night, knowing that my| ¥ —%| | THE JuNEAU Launpry husband was not there, Raisul %— 5 ) Franklin Street between LR iR e ol Hazel James Ferguson TEACHER OF PIANO | DUNNING SYSTEM BETTY MAC | BEAUTY SHOP | ime unbelievably, unspeakably . . [ H 103 Assembly Apartments ( | | «Made love to me . . .” ’ “Raisul did?” i 430 Goldstein Building | “Yes, Raisul.” j Telephone 196 ] “He made love to you?” | PHONE 547 | 1 that he loved me, and that he— ol | | “Insulted me, I said. Told me] T R SR TR o &5 | DR. E. MALIN | Licensed Chiropractor and | | Sanipractic Physician | | State of Washington | | Phone 472 JUNEAU ROOMS ] Over Piggly Wiggly Store | . | “Only told you?” } "“Only? Yes.” | “How did you get rid of him, then?” | “It was quite dark in the room, jand T told him I would shoot him 1if he did not go. I pretended I had | a pistol. Could I get one?” “No, you couldn't. And you had | {better not take that knife if you're ,thinking of stabbing Raisul.” | “Thinking of stabbing him? Of course I'd stab him or anybody ielse who came mto my room in the |n1ghz and . . “Well, you'd better stab anyone lelse, then. Don't stab Raisul, unless \you want to suffer a more terrible death than you can imagine. The Kaid would . . .» “I'd rather suffer And Jules? And his father, my {husband? And I, his mother? Are we all to die, because you're a silly ‘,Enghah Miss, cold and flat and skinny? Can't you take a joke?” (Copyright, 1932, F. A. Stokes Co.) Spring Check-Up Harry Race DRUGGIST “THE SQUIBB STORE” YELLOW and TRIANGLE CABS 25¢ Any Plaos i Gty PHONES 22 and 42 I JUNEAU-YOUNG Have your car checked after the wear and tear of winter driving. REASONABLE PRICES Expert Workmen CONNORS Motor Co., the terrible | Margaret finds herself locked in El Isa Beth el Ain’s room tomorrow. — - GOODY SALE By Lutheran Aid Society at Am- | l erican Beauty Parlors, Saturday, Funeral Parlors I April 22, —adv. u.-a Faneral Directors | L i and Embalmers | : | Mgt Phone 1861 Day Phone 13 | | PROGRESS [ wuowe ymson | , LUDWIG NELSON l ' Established in 1891 this bank has | -.......""""""u-,"‘ ( continuously since that time assisted R i ! in the upbuilding of this city and Territory. Our customers value and appreciate our willingness and abil- ity to assist them in every way con- sistent with safe and sound banking. The advertisements are your gulde to efficient spending. PEERLESS BREAD ) Always Good— Always Fresh *“Ask Your Grocer” The B. M. Behrends Bank Juneau, Alaska 42 YEARS BANKING SERVICE TO ALASKA — r— e s Front and Second Streets PHONE 359 ) LOOK YOUR BEST Personal Service Beauty Treatments ' [ 'S | Donaldine Beauty Parlors Phone 496 ~ RUTH HAYES ot a ————— “Tomorrow’s Styles Today” “Juneau’s Own Store” | GARBAGE HAULED | , Reasonable Monthly Rates E. 0. DAVIS I TELEPHONE 584 il GENERAL MOTORS and l MAYTAG PRODUCTS | I W. P. JOHNSON e L Bl RSN i | CARL JACOBSON ’ JEWELER WATCH REPAIRING ’ | SEWARD STREET | | Opposite Goldstein Building | HAAS i Famous Candies The Cash Bazaar l ! Open Evenings | \. s )