The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, April 6, 1933, Page 4

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Idaho, and Nevada), however, aropped to from 5° — Daily Alaska Empire to 10° below normal. From two-thirds to three- { PROFESSIONAL l Fraternal Societies | | fourths of all the winter days in the United States IA 20 YEA.RS AGO ) OF | JOHN W. TROY - - PRESIDENT AND EDITOR east of the Mississippi topped the normal in the A Author of — : ROBERT W. BENDER - - GENERAL MANAGER various regions. by Percival Christopher Wren -siAuceste: | | From The Empire Helene W. L. Albrecht | | Gastineau Channel ! R In New York, N. Y. this was the sixth consecu- | - PHYSIOTHERAPY 1 b o e . & = ve! i b " " o - % . » 0. el Y COMEANT R stcond and’ Majn (tive winter warmer than normal. Of the last 13| SYNOPSIS: Ralsul, som of |thwart Raisul, she actually threat- ey G Massage, Electricity, Infra Red ;"vefy e s Streets, Juneau, Alasks. winters there, only three have been below the normal| the Kaid of savage and remote |cned him. ! e “Ainkks DrocUtRs. 1" dis: Ray, Medical Gymnastics. 85 iy i"s ahyj % ne Post Office In Suncau as Second Class | temperature. In Washington, D. C. this was the| Mekazzen, has made Jules Ma- Whet, SE0E L 18 TR 0L 1k organization of the Presby- 307 Goldstein Building brothers welco:ne i thirteenth winter in succession to be warmer than| lsni drunk so he could anmoy those, and of (he family of those, !'T¢ J Ay Phone Office, 216 o g & | O Jules' Engli e 5 cerful terian Church, was scheduled to = | Geo. Messerschmidt, ! i BSCRIPTION RATES normal. In St. Louis, Mo., 12 of the last 13 winters| Julcs' English wife, Margaret. who fhus oifend great powerfu H = 4 Celivered by carrier In Juneau and Douglas for $1.25 per month. When Mirsiret. oomplatiis =6y and kaids and sultans?” meet the following Monday in Sit- | 52 Exalted Ruler. M. H. have been warmer than normal. 3 ® ka. Rev. L. F. Jones was in at-|§—————————————"|Sides, Secretar 81 iboatine. B e followl tes: Jules mcther, she that . bs ned?” asked Jules \ % y. e mi‘\fi:w‘~3.?’;’{z_7fl‘.“2,‘x 1;,,]‘1;11:7};:,‘ l;sn‘d'vnnoe. These temperatures, added to those already re- Margaret mnsld::“igfeits frina, e picastirig tendance from Juneau. DRS. KASER & FREEBURGER o KNI e . in. advance, §1.26. g |corded by the Weather Bureau, United States De-| . " o e bt . , NIGHTS OF COLUMBUS I confer a favor if they will promptly | e clder woman coniemptuous- you know what Raisul is.| wihake DENTISTS Seghers Council No. 1760, Office of gn fallure or lrregularity | partment of Agriculture, some of which go back 100| 1y locks Margaret in a room | Can' leave any girl alone, Not| J: R. Randle withdrew his appli- Blomgren Building Meetings second and last 1 ditorisl and Busineas Offices, ¥74. _|years, show that seasonal weather conditions from| while she goes fo advisé Jules | that thoy want mim to leave them Cation for a saloon license for the PHONE 56 S ! ildi Monday at 7:30 p. gy the Mississippi to the Atlantic have changed from| againet the machinations of Fitzgerald building on Front Street, Pransiat brof.herspm: MBER OF ASSO That Sara! You keep her . 9 0 D ol ed the W V% Hours 9 am. to 9 p The A ed Press 18 exclusively entitied to the jafter a petition with several hun = |year to year in long, broad swings. Raicul. The citadel is a tangle of Raisul's way.” { [+ % led to attena 1 * n of all ne dispatches credited to |~ y £ dred names of most of the leadi ke AT 0 attend. Council | oot Bilturwise creditca in thin baper and also the| In the Minnesota region, for example, the aver-| ©f intrigue, mostly against es Maligni laughed. Grasiness ‘matt’ 4B Lowa WEHRIAHE |es ;| Chambers, Fifth Street, I local news published hereln. gpt temperature for the 20 years ended in 1839 was f}:’“"";l and ";"“{:‘"8 not only. | “He's=a gfi“‘:‘,&fl‘; e, said agli“"ta;amst the granting of the lcense, | JOHN F: MULLEN, G. K. Al‘ ALAS CULATION GUARANTEED TO BE LARGER|]3° ghove the long-time normal. These first reliabl e Noors. of Meknsson, . Suh T T A S 2 H. J. TURN . ‘ ‘\LAS"(TAHAEJFTP\\JA" ©OF ANY OTHER PUBLICATION S 4 A et Tt w?n ”A bl cven Major Napoleon Riccoli |some day—and you can be a greAL;“ad Boe pEREEEE D T Dr' Char]es P. Jenne ER, Secretary | . e - — records were taken on what is now seen to be the i 4 N as R. Lyons. DENTIST I ! foe 7 cof the Foreign Legion, en- rime minister, vizer, chief coun-| H = down swing of a warm period. That is, from 1839 camped nearby. g M ” R-)ms 8 and 9 Valentine Our trucks go any place any T a smoothed temperature curve gradually dropped to Keoper of the king's conscience| ~W. W. Shorthill, secretary to Building |1 | time. A tank for Diesel 0il | an’ average of 1.° below the long-time normal for Chapter 23 —and treasury—what?” laughed Governor Clark, disbersed pay Telephone 176 | and a tank for crude oit save the 20-year period which ended in 1876, Then the BEWARE OF RAISUL . “The latter would be more |checks to me};‘;lbefs °fht£‘e l;:fo‘i; 2 = burner trouble, | | temperature started up again, and it has risen fairly| “That Raisul!” continued El Isa h keeping.” ‘1:::“2 iflnnd o R‘"t“g;;‘:u:es Stanei T = | PHONE 149, NIGHT 148 j ’ regularly ever since. The temperature for the 20-|Beth el Ain. “He is without cen- - yea; Governor of a gr_ea:]sOkm:ywhfixe the smiles were plene Dr. J. W. Bayne 1 |year period ending in 1932 averaged nearly 1° above |Science, heart, soul or bowels of |Province, a fat province, yieldmg}mul i 2 lsENTiST y 3 et compassion. Raisul fears neither |twice the taxes that the governor 3 Rooms 5-6 Teiangle Bl | z ‘ X man, nor beast, nor fiend, nor Al-|has to send to the treasury,” con- oy e 8. Superimposed on the [Jong-time temperature lah himself. Raisul is a devil in !,m 1ed E] Isa Beth €l A, “All de The School Board and the City|{ | Office hours, 9 am. to 5 p.m. "?“d“’ ey '&‘“’"“' IIlfcluaLlons. A $emporary | ornate, and would spit upon the |pendent on the countenance and)fi;’"mu l!n'imng ::‘;:2 b};DTthlCIZ Evenln&sm:w agglolntment | CALL 14 swm‘g upward in the eastern t:(-xnperatures. as shown |peard of the Prophet.” |tavor of this Raisul—some day. And {”bey! 003 d ml' i h:x{l sl Y one !'_‘. 1Dy 20-year averages, began in 1906, only to drop| ~Hey, Lady Mother,” yawned meanwhile, your wife must quarrel ;“ih’“” “1’“ o(r’ bmd: ding | & : back in 1917, 1918, and 1919. Tt started up again|Jules. “Let's talk about Raisul,{with him, insult him, threaten|P¥ the sale : | IR RS & Royal Blue 3 e ————— | in 1921, however, and has been rising more or less|shall we?” {him. Would you believe that she g | Dr. A. W. Stewart ROOSEVELTS FIRST MONTH. steadily ever since, “I am talking about Raisul” !came and asked me to lend her a CAT‘;:‘Y c“l’;ii?n ‘"g;‘fifd s(::;:%i DENTIST Cabs | — 3 “Not” knife to stick in him? Think of it!" [ : 2 : i f the activitie y E 5 Bruner, Senator Freeding, J. J. Hours 9 am. {0 6 pm. of the activities l?f President f.looscwlt It is reported that,Babe Ruth finally signed his ‘And 1 say, beware of Raisul.{ “But what }_uappened? . Cole, manager of the le:ers Yind _SWARD BUILDING i J month of his tenuré stirs ONCS|yunyee contract calling for $52,000 for the seasons|Flacate him, consider nim, and| “Why a certain fool got drunk in Merchants Bank of Nome, and Lafe | Oftice Phone 469, Res. | 25(} 1 i for the amazing ‘rapidity and "unpre-;g The wk. depression isn't going to bother the [P1ease him In everyihing. For be-|front of the man whose respect ¢! Spray made an excursion to Oliver's rhone 276 | i cedented vigor with which he has tackled & bad job. | p,ue uch this year, at any rate fore long, he will rule this Castle should keep. Got so drunk and in- Inlet to inspect the fish traps of | im— -~ S i rch 5, few days elapsed in the next! ; ; S e Sawn, of Mekamen) #ud capable Wit Hisiown faher said (o O S NEEER B N & Anywhere in City | 4 s Brasiient, din nhr ot Mptidkdwy 1| < - this Country of the Gun—and,|it would be wrong to take him to e e 5] | | 4 L bl Since the special session of Congress got under some day, he will rule Morocco. |his wife's apartment and let her aboard the company's; splendid i ttack on s he emergenc roblems | ... P " » o e of v . 112 P— v e oy Lo | ey the Record lsn't being used to kindle 85 many| “Eyen now, when orders are giv-|behold is shame. Thus was his [PORer BOst Dr. Richard Williams = | tl N4 . ires as formerly. rificant dates of the first month of his administration are: —Called special session of Congress for; N March 9. It isn't as dry as it used to be. The German Scene. en, the voice is the voice of the| Kaid but the words are the words | of Raisul. And Zainub, his mother, ! has influence with him—much in-| wife left alone with none to pro- tect her, or to give her good coun- or to keep her out of mischief. So she got into mischief. She in- Thomas E. Williams, engrossing clerk, and J. M. Ousby, doorkeeper, of the Senate office force, presented ! DENTIST OFFICE AND RESIDENCE Gastineau Building, PLone 481 D JUNEAU TRANSFER I | (New York Times.) fluence. If the Kaid ceased to in ilted and angered and threatened 1::;& fxfi;zsb;nlfilssm::nwv Mu::::u, COMPANY ; | March 6—Proclaimed national bank holiday. Clvilized opinion thoughout the world finds itselt | dUlge Raisul, to obey Raisul; if the [her husband's patron and employ- W50, /W €6 OV 0S8 : | rch 9—Sent emergency banking legi contemplating with mingled bewilderment and horror |Kaid thwarted him in any matter |er, the source of his wealth, his Ve ; - { s—passed and signed on the same day. } the course of events in Gremany today. The scenes upon which he had set his heart, (honor and his future greatness.” Z. R. Cheney, Democratic Nation- Robert Simpson M oving and h 10—Sent budget message to Congress—|of violence and outrage following upon Hitler's vie- |04 Raisul decided that his fa‘thergb ';Wmlyou T'fu me what happened, |5 Commsttontian T ront - Adsks, Opt. D. Stora e saving of $500,000,000 provided for in economy act tory are like the riot and looting after the capture|Nad lived long enough, Zainub(before I . . .? . |threatened with an attack of ap- Graduate Los Angeles Col- g % |of a beleaguered city. It is an upflare of evil pas-|“ould help Raisul T am telling you. The fool's wife i signed on March 20. | y. a I evil p: “It Raisul brought A o A% ool dful pendicitis while attending the in- | lege of Optometry and | 1 stagger [sions and an exhibition of insensate folly. For the SN TOUELYL | Dolson, . sage e igger sepmmingdial .of March 13.—Banks began plan March 13—Seventy-two word message asked Vo]»‘ stead Act modification—light wine and beer legalized reopening on |moment the worst sufferers from Nazi violence may be the defeated “minorities,” amgunting to 48 per cent of the German people. But can there be the slightest doubt that ultimately the price will have ing, with that smile of his, ‘This will give the Kaid, my father, won- derful dreams—long, long dream: Zainub would put it in his coffee, her Husband's happiness and wel- fare, behaved according to her fol- ly.” “I suppose you mean young Rai- auguration of President Wilson, was | Opthalmology able to be up and about, accord- Glasses Fitted, Lenses Ground ing to telegrams from Baltimore. |gz T+ | Moves, Packs and Stores Prompt Delivery of Douglas- -|& " FUEL | with President’s signature March 22, effective lto be paid by the German people and by the regime |°F his wine.” sul went to give her a counsinly Juneels akid jelie glas-Tread DR. R. E. SOUTHWELL UEL OIL | v 5 ) € the reg “Scheher. i Jon're | gocdnight i s . |Well team played a tie game of Optometrist—Optician | April 7 which permits or encourages such outrages? Herr| ‘Scheherazade, my soul, you're|gocdnight kiss, and overdid it, and|oover on the Juneau field. The ined—Glasses Fitted ALL KINDS OF COAL 1 March 16.—Sent farm relief message to Congress. Hitler calls himself the leader of a national revolu- |S€tg morbid. These things posi- (ot his face smacked? players looked pretty mifty in their | | ey, Lramine tine Bld t House passed it March 22. tion. But the question which first leaps to the|UVEY are not done nowadays. You| “It is all very well to put it like Foom. 7, NEIeRHne Se March 21.—Sent unemployment relief message to Congress. Senate passed Reforestation job bill March | 28, since signed by President. tongue is whether he is not giving us one more instance of the traditional German inability to| |understand and take into account the sentiments of are old-fashioned, absolutely Vic- torian.” “I have dwelt in the dark rooms of this castle for a quarter of a {that. It's all very well to make little of it, but it’s a very serious | matter—as you'll find out, my son. {AIl very well to say, with a laugh. bright, new uniforms. The Ilocal team wore white pants and scarlet sweaters and the visitors wore blue sweaters with their white pants. C. Residence 9:30 Office Phone 484; Phone 238. Office Hours: to 12; 1:00 to 5:30 & A }: 3 | PHONE 48 —_— Freight and Baggage l arch 27.—Farm credit administration created civilized mankind. Is Nazi blindness in 1933 to be|® M1 . i hat Rai £ ) |King of the Juneau team was in- o a reptition of German militarist blindness in 1914,|°€0%Ury, my son, and I— bea eloul got his feoe smacked: |y oq‘cnd ‘attended Yy Dr. Sloanc,|Ros A, Andigws—Graduste Nures ! ! seyt 4 legislation to regulate security|With Germany in the scquel complaining of being o Want e kflflfln‘we- darling. You h‘(:tlr;-;ni;qf ersuls sort 1ilom like ELECTRO THERAPY 1 ced legislal eguld § 3 winle ol vant a week end at Brighton.” 2 eir faces smacked, and ths—Massage—C . i \n(‘::c\sl:f::fl?()t(xlz: Nazi irregulars against their| - - - 0d T know what I know.[they are apt to return a smack| The Alaska Gastineau on pay-| Cabinet mlrrlnfiom o Modiste y \ Ordered yeductions from veterans' allgw- |, : b b et {Listen to me, Jules, my son; that|W¥ith a thrust—or a knife; or with |48V distributed $60,000 among the : Bergmann Hotel | I |late political opponents, the persecution of so-called o A A bl 59 s 1400 men who were employed in the | Office hours, 11 am. t¢ 5 p.m. PHONE 205 | ances totaling $400,000,000. {dangerous minorities and elements make all the|YOUr days may be long upon the (a; blow—of a, et DG o el st or Bhe Tratha Evenings by Appointment . | April 5—Sent message to Congress proposing re-more ironic reading when one thinks of Hitler's [€4rth, and those of your dear fath- "fi‘;; "’_f).“, . D Ko ;2 Second and Main. Phone 259-1 ring 4 § financing farmers’ indebtedness. own long campaign for power. It has been the|®™ MY husband and lord, also. I ian'”o‘l ld.holthlhoned! Vietor- | P — ’\?} All of this work was primarily connected with heart of his case that Germany must be relieved |S3V 10 you now, and I say to you|ian!” laughed Jules. ®ec00e0000000e =%#| | THE JuNEAU LAUNDRY the emergency program of the Administration. Few, if any, Chief Executives of this country have ever exercised such bold and distinguished leadership. And not many have ever aroused such widespread admiration President Roosevelt has done since he assumed office. TOO EARLY TO SHOUT. from ‘the penalties of the Versailles treaty because | Germany must not be made the scapegoat of a world war which all the nations have on their conseience. Hitler made it his mission to 1ift the German people from the pariah status imposed by the victors to full equality with them. But no sooner does he secure a narrow popular majority at home than he proceeds to make scapegoats and pariahs out of nearly one-half of the German people. His defeated |daily, evén though you come to hate the sound of my voice, “ ‘Raisul rules; beware of Raisul; offend him mnot; obey ~him, please him and placate him’.” “And why all this fuss, just now oh, my mother “My son, mever be a kna oh, ten thousand tim but I say, never “So don't get drunk again, my son,” continued his mother, “or if {¥ou must, see that your wife is in @ ‘safe place—where she cannot mischief and danger.” news to me, my mother, that et is much of a mischief- maker, or given to pursuing young men and leading them on, for the | | |® NORTHWEST NEWS BRIEFS o Hazel James Ferguson TEACHER OF PIANO 1 DUNNING SYSTEM 430 Goldstein Building ‘Telephone 196 ] —_— . OF 25 YEARS AGO . S0 o0 0000000000 Bremerton—The battleships Wis- consin, Oregon and Nebraska, and l the cruisers Pennsylvania, Colorado, |- St. Louis and Milwaukee, are at Franklin Street between | Front and Second Streets , [} PHONE 359 (2 L LOOK YOUR BEST 2 o . Personal Service Beauty opponents are made responsible for the “shame”|P® @ fool. Listen. This Raisul, your |fun of turning them down—at the |the navy yard here. DR. E. MALIN *‘ Treatments Michigan, the first State to hold a conventioniof fourteen years, for the consequences of a war[°0Usin, the son of my brother, is ps‘y.'fhzl_(;gwal Ashep 4 ! Licensed Chiropractor and Donaldine Beauty on the question of repeal of the Eighteenth Amend-|catastrophe that was really brought about by the DOt only the greatest of knaves id not say that your wife i Sanipractic Physician Feallp but so clever that he thinks all|PUrsued Raisul. Do not put falsel OlMPla—State Auditor C. W. Parlo nt, is certain to vote for repeal. Thus the cam- |elements now supporting Hitler. The new German e thinks all 7 b alse i State of Washington rs ‘ment, > g I other men are fools, He think. ‘accusations against your wife ini Clausen announced his candidacy Phone 496 RUTH | paign to take Prohibition out of the Federal Consti- [regime has set itself to rebuilding German unity RA el ueloo;nols L my mouth, my son yI did nsb 10 for re-election. He was first elect-| | Phone 472 JUNEAU ROOMS Froas i3 tution and to divorce the Federal Government from [bY outlawing one-half of the German people. It At I s . nk)flou Wi i b Y led four years ago. Over Piggly Wiggly Store —— enforcement of a law that never should have been [Proposes to cement the spirit of German nationality g le you drunk. . sal hat . o other than a State statute gets under way with an initial victory for the wets. This is but a skirmish, however victory never won any campaig: stimulate the winning side witl in its cause. This will inevitabl, Michigan results. It is too early for the wets to b:gin to shout. These days of beer and wine about to come are the most parlous days that have thus far come in their long fight to the forces opposed to Prohibition. Lib- eral organizations, apparently realizing the danger of too rollicksome a celebration of the return of beer, are wise in urging people to greet this beverage with thankfulness rather than riotousness. The re-advent of beer is of minor importance. The major battle is yet to be fought and won. Already the dry forces are beginning to score. The W. C. T. U. has issued a bulletin comparing conditions in Finland before and after Prohibition and concluding that every wet promise made in Finland has proved to be false. It matters little And a single ough it can new enthusiasm ult from the by invoking the spirit of religious and race hatred, and adding the modern varieties of class hate. It is an extraordinary spectacle for a nation so proud of its Culture, so bent on maintaining and enlarging its place among the leaders of civilization. For the Nazi regime deliberately to excite the basest passions of the multitude as an instrument of high| policy is to sink to the level of Czarist policy and the pogrom. It is a spectacle so repellent that the mind hesitates to accept it as capable of enduring long. The hope persists that a great nation will not permit itself to play traitor to its own past and to the cause of civilization, but will make the necessary effort to wrench itself out of a condition of mo- mentary madness. A Great Railroad Man. (New York Times.) The carcer of Sir Henry Thornton, whose death in this city yesterday we much regret to record, was sufficient evidence that the Age of Romance has not forever gone. His varied executive positions and achievements in the railroad world constituted one of the marvels of his generation. Of American “Well, that amused me more than it did him,” smiled Jules Ma- ligni. “Did it?” inquired his mother dryly. “Well, he made you drink, for your father, watching, saw. And in that my son, you were a ool.” “I certainly gathered in a head and a mouth, my love, and that Wwas a foolish thing to do.” “That is nothing . . .» “Oh, is it?” “Nothing and less than nothing. You were a fool in that you let Raisul make a fool of you. You let Raisul get the upper hand and take the higher ground. It is not for sultans to make vizers drunk, and mock them and despise them, and get the better of them. “It is for vizers to make sultans drunk and bend them to their will; obtain mastery and influence and she threatened him.” “Threatened to do what?” “She threatened to shoot him.” “To shoot him? What for?” “What for? To get her husband, and her husband’s father and his | mother put to death, T should think, What do you suppose would be the result of Zainub's thearing of the mere threat—the threat to kill her |son? And here, when you are back again, and Zainub’s fears and sus- picions dead, your own wife threat- ens to kill Raisul. To kill her son Raisul, whose heir you are!” (Copyright, 1932, F. A. Stokes Co.) Jules’ mother succeeds in im- pressing him with her story, tomorrow. e There’s big news for you in the advertising columns, Ellensburg—Harry Williams, com- poser of “Under the Old Apple Tree” is here visiting an old col- lege chum. Harry Race DRUGGIST “THE SQUIBB STORE” Walla Walla— Farmers declared ‘war on the warehousemen and de- cided to build and operate their own warehouses. Last fall the ware- housemen advanced storage rates from 50 cents to 75 cents a ton. YELLOW and TRIANGLE CABS 25¢ Any Place in City Mount Vernon—There is lots of spring building activity here. Twen- ty-five homes are under construc- tion, the Eagles have started a two story brick hall and cement side- walks are being laid on First street. sl Read the ads as carefully as you read the news articles. - BERGMANN DINING | ROOM | Meals for Transients | Cut Rates Chicken dinner Sunday, 60c I MRS. J. GRUNNING i Board by Week or Month | e B Sl U R — Large Sample Rooms ELEVATOR SERVICE F;ARBAGE HAULED | | | f power over them; make sultans| " | ! = § birth, he began on the lowest rung of the ladder | k 8 e whether the bulletin presents an accurate picture of .the Pennsylvania Railroad and climbed steadlly sign what vizers have written; [ WE HAVE 11 | BE’I‘PY MAC l ! of conditions in that country; it constitutes a chal- R i e beGus Genen Buperrtandene. o make sultans say what vizers think. | at the Right Price ] o. ’ . GENERAL MOTORS lenge that must be met and cannot be met by mere u{: >/ e Ry 4 led later|\t 18 for vizers to guide them and A BEAUTY SHOP l ' JUNEA [ and e Lang Island. His repute and’ recor BLeT |10ad them and drive them and ride ' Harris Hardware Co. 103 Assembly Apartments MAYTAG PRODUCTS 1] shouting. John|{0 tbe amazing offer of the management of theliher"ay the weskenr o ¢ | |1 ‘Lower Frout st PHONE 547 Funeral Parlors | Then, too, there is the statement of Col. Great Eastern Railroad in England. That work he g iy et stauio’:““< S| T X Licensed Fumeral Directors | W. P, JOHNSON . } E. Edgerton, former President of the National AsSo-|yngertook .in the teeth of much opposition, due|cuice e iy 8 the | = Jp— and Embalmers | | T i ciation of Manufacturers, that the nation has been|jargely to what some embittered Britishers called Wik ok this P e | Night Phone 1861 DayPhonel§ | |&— | # ; shocked by the lack of a constructive program ON|his heing “an undesirable alien,” to say nothing drunk again, or ill will come(‘m )"w i {| e part of opponents of the Bighteenth Amend-|of the enormous difficulties thrust upon him BY | oroos Il 11 great matteer s e | — CARL JACOBSON % ment. This is putting it a bit strong, but it is|the Great War, but he grs.dually( won his Way|as ligtle in in little things.” ‘ JEWELER ‘ X enough to set the opponents of Prohibition thinking.|to confidence and respect. For “his war services| raqy m) 1sa Beth el Ain paused LUDW IG NELSON ' WATCH REPAIRING l | The battle has hardly got under way. The guns|in particular he received the highest recognition|in the torrent of her speech ang JEWELER ! SEWARD STREET | g fired to date serve as little except as range-finders.|and many honorary awards. Having become & Brit-lin her fanning of her soln E % - 0 Watch Repairing E campaign 180t going to be won by o saturnalia |'sh sublect and been knigbted, he was next invited| 4 litle i1l hath by bera. stablished in 1891 this bank has Brunswick Agency ; The m’nkn It can be helped considerably,|!® the headship of the Canadian National Railways.|ien” she said quietly. contin 1v ai that time assisted 1 FRONT STREUT of beer drinking. g n of|The administration of that large company, With| “If you call this head ‘a 1ty uously since — however, if the liberal forces bring the strengt more than 20,000 miles of railroad lines, he re- their organizations to bear on and restrain the elements who may through greed conspire to defeat their purposes. THE SWING IN TEMPERATURE. tained for ten years, resigning only last year. His success in bringing up the Canadian National from annual deficits into operating profits was regarded at the time as one of the wonders of skillful rail- way management. Personally, Sir Henry was a modest and genial Temperature records for December, 1932, and|gentleman who easily made and kept warm friend- January and February, 1933, the commonly coldest ships. His wide experience and quiet sagacity caused ths of the year, give a weather picture almost|many to go to him to seek advice about their own exactly Jike that for 1931-32—a winter warmer than |difficult problems. mafldmmmwldertmmu west of the Rockies. Average thermometer readings in the South were from 1° to 5° above normal and those in the Northeast and in the central valleys were from 4° to 9° above. The averages in the Great Basin (Utah, If he had lived longer, there can be little doubt that his energy and intelli- gence would have been sought for other large af- fairs. As it is, he had a full and rounded life which remains an example of what may be done by native ability, industry and firm character to show m, ., “I don' call it even th: my son. A far, far worse ill than that befell; for that pale English gir), your wife, insulted and angered Raisul, our master; Raisul, in the hollow of whose hand lie the for- tunes of your father, yourself and me.” “What?” cried Jules, suddenly sit ting upright on the divan. “Yes, you may well ask. Now you are taking some notice of what I say. Through your drinking this befell. Had you been with your wife, as you should have been, it that the romantic element has not yet passed out of the modern world. would never have happened. Not lunly did she insult and anger ang. | ity to assist them \ 42 YEARS BANKING —— e e in the upbuilding of ,this city and Territory. Qur customers value and appreciate our willingness and abil- sistent with safe and sound banking. 'The B. M. Behrends Bank it Juneau, Alaska The advertisements are your gulde to efficient spending.. - PEERLESS BREAD Always Good— Always Fresh “Ask Your Grocer” in every way con- SERVICE TO ALASKA - Famous Candies The Cash Bazaar . Open Evenings

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