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é ! S R ARSI i } & £ Havemeyer, THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE; FRIDAY, JAN. 5, 1934, Daily Alaska Empire GENERAL MANAGER XOBERT W. BENDER Published every evening except Sunday by the EMPIRE PRINTING COMPANY at Second and Main Streets, Juneau, Alaska. Entered in the Post Office in Juneau as Second Class matter. SUBSCRIPTION RATES. { ©Oellvered by carrier in Juneau and Douglas for $1.25 per month. By mail, postage paid, at the following rates: | One vear, in_advance, $12.00; six months, in advance, 96.00; one month, in advance, $1.25 Subscribers will confer a favor if they will promptly | notify the Business Office of any failure or irregularity in the delivery of thei Telephone for Edito fices, 374. | MEMBER OF ASSOCIATED PRESS. The Associated Press is wxclusively entitled to the use for re f all news dispatches credited to it or not ot credited in this paper and also the published herein local new ALASKA CIRCULATION GUARANTEED TO BE LARGER THAN THAT OF ANY OTHER PUBLICATION | Mitchell was the Fusionist nominee. | be back again.’ aided by a revolt within the organization itself, resulted in the election of Seth Low in 1901. Two years later, with George B. McClellan as its candidate for Mayor, Tammany returned again :[0 power to remain until 1914. Charles F. Murphy | was then leader. Edward McCall was the Tammany candidate, ex-Mayor Willlam J. Gaynor was an inde- pendent candidate after having been refused an- other nomination by Murphy, and John Purroy Mr. Gaynor's death resulted in his following turning to Mr. Mitchell who was elected. But as usual, in the next election, Tammany was successful and seated Jolm‘ F, Hylan in the City Hall. After him came James| . (Jimmy) Walker, who resigned under fire in 1932 nn(l was succeeded by James P. O'Brien. Mayor LaGuardia starts his regime under mos'.] favorable auspices. He may strengthen his Fusion | organization to the point where it can for once, upset the Tx..ex s boast: “Well, next election we'll Senator Dickinson (Republican) calls the annual budget a record of “extravagant expenditures and | | 1 ! 1 | REPEAL INTRODUCED. The bill for the repeal of the Alaska Bone Dry Law iniroduced by Delegate Dimond on the opening day of Congress will meet with the approval of a BILL | years as a result of the Roosevelt budgeting. i sinful waste.” w let’s hear from the millions of | |men and women who have been put to work dndr | are getting real pay for the first time in severalk —i i Members of the Anti-Saloon League want to fire their Superintendent. What's the use of a keeper now that the camel is gone? | The FSRC. (New York Times.) | Among the newest of many new agencies in| Washington is the Federal Surplus Relief Corpora- | U RYNOPIS: Curt Tennysom, his artner Paul and his friend Ralph fave been marooned on a Canadiin island without provisions or a_ca- noe by the Klosohee Indians. Son- wa Volkov. whom Curt loves, has fled to Igor Karakhan, and Kara- khan is the crook Curt is trying to capture. Now Tenn-Og. a Klosohee whose life Curt had saved, brings them a canoe, and tells gheém how to avoid the Indians, Chapter 38 THE ESCAPE LL right,” Jurt agreed, “we'l try th: west. But understand this, it anything bappens it can't | happen too quick to keep me from | putting a bullet between your eyes, friend. You understand?” Tenn-Og nodded, without a flicker of expression on Nis dusky face. They went back past their camp “nd paddled on west toward island the mainland. They were not chal lenged. Turee hundred yards from the shore they swung south, they hearc no signals, saw no shad- owy mottles. ourt hardly knew what to think. Twice now the Indian’s advice had proved right, very right. By the route e had suggested they had got free of the nd and through the |tion, soon to be known, mo doubt, as the FSRC.| cordon of canoes. That didn't look |Its articles of incorporation, published yesterday in | like treachery. Furthermore it was |The Times, mark out an exceedingly broad field | Sonya who had sent him with tha within which it may function. It is to exercise | boat; and certainly she had not “any and all powers” that may legally be delegated | Wanted them. to meet harm. to it under the NRA, the AAA and the Emergency ! With the wind pushing them Relief Act. It may “purchase, store, handle and| along, they dropped down toward | process” surplus commodities of any kind. It may | the na s where Francois and large majority of the people of Alaska. It is squarely in line with their latest expression on the subject, and its provisions in accord with the| liberal policy of the Democratic Party as pledged | in Chicago in 1932 and as since translated mufl action by President Roosevelt. First, the measure asks for outright repeal of the Alaska Prohibition statute. Second, it asks Lhat‘ Alaska, through its Legislature, in the future be empowered to regulate and control the manufacture | and sale of alcoholic liquors within Territorial boundaries. Third, it asks for ratification of the by the 1933 Alaska Legislature setting Joard of Liquor Control to prescribe rules and regulations governing the traffic pending furth- | er action by the Legislature in 1935, or later. Fourth, it provides that the Governor shall have' power to pardon persons convicted under the Alaska Bone Dry Law. The Democratic Party in Alaska, in convention, adepted a platform pledging itself to repeal of the local statute. Mr. Dimond made it one of his plat- form pledges in his 1932 campaign. As to the second provision, that has long been advocated by Alaska | Democrats who contend that Alaska ought to have the same power to regulate and control the quuor§ traffic within its borders as all other Territories have had The third provision is in keeping with the second. If Congress is going to permit us to pass laws on * the subject ‘begirming with the next meeting of the | Legislature in 1935, there is no valid argument to be advanced against ratifying the statute it passed in 1933, in anticipation of repeal, empowering cer- tain officials of the Territorial Government to act | as a Liquor Control Board. That merely advances| the date of local control one year. ‘ As to the fourth provision, it is in the interests |, of justice. Although technically Alaskans are still bound by the National Prohibition Act and the Alaska Bone Dry Law, insofar as they can act, Lhny‘ have already wiped them off the slate. The local | Legislature, by an almost unanimous vote on two oceasions, voted to repeal the latter law. By their | ballots, Alaskan voters have said as plainly as they | could that they are disgusted with National Pro- hibition. Yet, it is up to officials to enforce these laws as long as they are on the books. As a result some individuals whose only offense is to do some-’ thing that a vast majority of the States voting have already declared they do not consider a| criminal or illegal act, will be tried, convict-| “ed and sentenced. Where such infractions| in7olve nothing more of moral turpitude than that, amnesty is certainly in order. More serious infrac- ticns, of course, might and can happen. By giving! th: Governor power to pardon, a dlf.crunmazingi‘ use of that power will free those who are not| crivinals in the real sense of the word. | The Dimond repeal bill is a progressive, liberal mcasure. It ought to pass Congress without debate or great delay. TIGER OUSTED BUT FEW TIMES. “ and 'doom say? attempt “to adjust the severe disparity between the‘ ! prices of agricultural and other commodities.” Sub-l ject to Federal and State law, it may “purchase, | hold own, mortgage, sell, convey or otherwise dis- | Ipose of” real and personal property of any sort, | ‘in general, carry on any and all business | necessary or convenient to” the relief of the “exist- | ing national economic emergency.” i This is a very broad prospectus, but it seems | | probable that, at least for the present, the cor- poration will use chiefly for two purposes such | powers as may be vested in it. Tt will act for the | Government in purchasing surplus beef, butter, | wheat, cotton and other farm commodities, for dis- tribution to agencies éngaged in relief of unemploy- ment. This is not a new assignment. The corpora- | |{tion has been making such purchases over a period | of several months. For, while its articles or in- |corporation were published yesterday for the first |time, | it was actually organized as early as October | 4—a date which gives it seniority in ranking over | such still newer agencies as the CWA and the | FACA. Shortly before its incorporation the Presi- |dent announced that the Administration hoped | through such an agency to deal a “direct blow “at | the economic paradox which has choked farms with | an abundance of farm products while many of | the unemployed have gone hungry.” The second function which the corporation seems likely to perform is nmew. According to the Wash- ington dispatches, plans are being made to use it | as the Government’s agent in retiring submarginal farmland from cultivation.. In his reeent report, Secretary Wallace recommended for this purpose | outright purchase rather than rental. run, “In the long Not So Bad. (New York World-Telegram.) And now what will the prophets of American The United States Treasury bond issue |for close to a billion dollars was oversubscribed three |fold within the first day. Of course, this sort of thing has happened be- fore. have the rocks. So doubtless within a fortnight the same old fear campaign will be in full swing again. The curious aspect of this same bankers behind the doom propaganda who rush to oversubscribe Government sceurities every time they get a chance. If President Roosevelt is half as irresponsible and dangerous as the banker | propaganda would have us believe, why do they bet |their money on him so heavily? The answers is not hard to find. The bankers know that the President, far from being an extreme currency inflationist, actually side- tracked mandatory currency inflation by the last 'Congress. Thanks to Mr. Roosevelt the printing- | press provisions of the law were left discretionary with the President. All of these months he has had that power and never used it. Now the fact that in Govern- ment refinancing he chooses to get money in the usual way, instead of manufacturing it, is addi- tional evidence that the President is not riding any |pet monetary theory off the deep end. If extreme currency inflation comes—and that is it would be cheaper for the Government to | |purchase farms than to lease them.” But always within a few weeks the opponents ! been shouting the Government credit was on | is that it is the| Jocku had been killed. The memory of that death cry was still vivid with Curt. As the dark bottle neck loomed up just ahead, “Any men guarding that?” Tenn-Oz nodded and held up six fingers. “When they call, 1 answer, you say nothing.” They skirled into the entrance. The dark timber flitted by, close ou either hand. Kive hundred yards down, down at the narrowest part, they were sudden]y challenged. The voice came from a clump of junip ers, ahead of them and on the right hand ban™. An instant later another voice rang out on the left, Two hid den parties, with less than a hun dred feet separating them —no won der Francois and Jocku had me: doom there. Tenn-0g stood up and answered. Curt held his rifle at alert, with the trigger salety on red. The canoe came in between the two parties Nothing “appened. It drifted past. Still nothing happened. | fore they could make themsel lieve it, they were th gh th e be nt let, safe — witk the open riyer a short-cut channel, Curt glanced Sheadr e " | back toward the lake head and hap- Yo | pened to see a colony of little black A mile down, when they breathdll | torns rise out of a slough and ex treely agaln and -were ~spoedifii | 1ooc (S O B O SO ith south as fast as three paddies could | iy enct 'oralarm, 1 take them, Curt crept forward dhd | gyidently something out of the or- laid his hand on Tenn-Og’s arm. | “1 make mista he said slowly in the jargon. “Tenn-Og talk straight, save white-man frientls I'm sorry. You understand?” Tenn:0g shrugged his shoulders and grunted, with no more expres sion on his claw-scarred face than OMETIME |9 came to an island where Curt's | party had camped on the up trip Whipping ashore, they ate part of the food which Tenn-Og had brought | and flung themselves down on the sand for a five-minute rest. i That camp site held memories for Curt, poignant memories of the cve ning his party had stayed there. A cluster of wilted anemones, the im print of a :mall dainty moccasin along the landwash, made him re call how 3onya had wandered lone- | somely about the camp, trying by a | dozen little kindnesses to friendly ‘Word out of him. As he stared up at the stars and thought of her going north with those three Indian guides, it came home to him that in sending Tenn- 0Og to them with the canoe she had run .. big risk, closely guarded as she had been. It was pretty fine of | her to do .ha. If it hadn’t been tor get a FORBIDDEN VALLEY stin | he touched TeanOg. | on | fter midnight they | Major Fiorello H. LaGuardia, seated on January a possibility after Congress meets—it will be be- cause blind bankers and NRA chiselers succeed 1 as Mayor of New York City, is the fifth individual | in the course of 62 years to have landed as Reform | Mayor in the City Hall of the nation's greatest | metropolis. William F. Havemeyer was the first in| 1872; William L. Strong, second, in 1894; Seth Low, . thizd, in 1901; and John Purroy Mitchell, fourth, | in 1914. In each case Tammany Hall was routed after years of growing corruption, after smouldering public indignation had been fanned to sudden fire and | after independent leaders of the city had joined forces. In each instance the reform movement was directed against the leader of the “Hall” instead of | against the candidate of Tammany. Every time, the Tiger ' demonstrated while it could be beaten it could not be destroyed, election it was back in the saddle again. who had been Mayor in 1845-46 and 1848-40, was called back at the age of 79 to head . the movement against Tammany after the exposure of Boss Tweed and his ring. He lived about 2 year after his election. “Honest” John Kelly, who suc- ceeded Tweed as leader, easily put the Tiger back in the City Hall in the next election. For two decades, a wiser and more cautious Tam- | ‘many Hall kept its men in the City Hall By 1894 Eic!mrd Croker was leader and things were again ' “on the loose.” The Luxow investigation, precipitated | by Rev. Charles H. Pankhurst'’s charges from the | Ly ‘pulpit, again put Tammany on the run and William | L, Strong, a bank president, became the second Croker, after having spent sometime | n Ireland, returned and piloted the Hall back to| in 1897. The Mazer investigation in 1899 @3 proyoked another storm of public wrath which, for in the next succeeding| in undermining the moderate Roosevelt monetary |experiment and the general recovery program. Permanent Farm Policy. (Milwaukee Journal.) Government farm subsidies cannot go on and on. If the farmers, feeling the satisfaction of better conditions, due to Government support and their own policies of crop retrenchment, think they can then beat the game by planting bigger crops, they |will beat themselves. A permanent farm policy is as necessary as this |present aid. That policy will have to center around the law of supply and demand. By that we do not | mean that the farmer should be compelled, in the | end, to limit his crops strictly to domestic con- \sumpuon. To do so would be to make agriculture | permanently subordinate to industry. There would | be no justice in that. In the restoration of our foreign markets, the |farmer should get his share. But to make this| |restoration possible, for both the farm and industry, |the farmer will have to do some thinking that | |differs from his sentiments of the immediate past ‘and even of the present. Oversubscription of the Government’s $950,000,000 loan will be a disappointment to those who thought |the Government’s credit had gone to boloney.—(Bos- | ton Globe.) | “What does Al Smith know about any kind of |money?” asks General Johnson. Perhaps enough ito know that one kind is enough.—(Chicago News.) For leading Democrats sc!‘aPPY days are her: again—(Toledo Bladel) ‘ | her, he would have gone across to | the Klosohees camp and likely got killed in his attempt to steal a boat. The incident made him look back on their wuole relationship with and he had to acknowledge that | with him. his help on the trip; teered it, that morning at the moun tain torrent. And later, when she saw he was falling in love with ber, she had | less bitterness and more honesty, from first (o last she had shot square She had not asked for he had yolun- liam Bynon Moweny stop him. Rosalle would have taken pride in having another scalp at her belt. joining Karakhan, flight;; tirely dominated by passion. son. !l iu her life; she was more mature, ful. not seem a girl who would ever let passion overrule her sense of right. Her association with Karakhan was simply out of harmony with all the rest of her nature. When they got up to go on, he was too far gone to talk, but he rec- what they said to him. Curt bent dow., encouraging: ing the Lilluars ard taking you out. Prince Rupelt ~nd there they’ll fix you up.” Twice more during the rest of the night Ralph came out of his stupor |for a few moments. The second time he tried hard to tell Curt some thing. Curt believed it was some thing about Sonya, for her name was distinguis whispers. But whatever it was, it went unsaid. smoke-mist curling up ‘}mnl trout breaking the surface ip silvery flashes. They stopped ten minutes to rest, and theu burried on all the faster now that they had light to travel by. With ennOg in the prow, guiding | them down the river that he knew so intimately, they shot over dan gerous white water without pausing to seout a course. Their hands were blistered from the paddle work, their arms ached intolerably, but tor Ralph's selves to the limit, One then five minutes of res hour and another five .minutes on nd—in that steady relentless ashion they reeled off the long | miles of the flight south. At noon they came to a sluggish lake of reed wh ts and geese and teal in s numbers had their sum- r rookeries. As they were thread- > ¢ ed them. ing he saw scattered ducks xl go up, lower down the h, indicating t the cause of alarm, whatever it might be, was { coming down stream. Suspicious, he and Paul stopped, backed into a thick clump of flags had f when they had suspected him of | 1ng waited. A minute later two ca- treachery and had threatened 16| noes came skimming around a reedy { shoot him. point and headed down toward | them. Traveling light, three stal- wart men to a boat, they had come south even faster than his party. To let them go past wculd only have meant an ambush and fight further down river. They had to be stopped. Waiting till they were within easy range, he and Panl opened on them with a sudden blast. The ricocheting bullets, smashing through the wind-water line of ‘the craft, sank them before the thun- derstruck Klosohees could realize that ambushing was a game which two could play at. With their canoes | foundering under them, the six | leaped out and swam for the near- est flags. Muddied and bedraggled, they stood on their bit of quivering bog and stonily waited to be shot, as Curt’s canoe nosed across toward them. Curt looked them over. Like Tenn-Og they were tall rugged men, hardy mountaineers as virile a type of Indian as he had ever seen. “Tell ’em we're not going to kill em,” he bade Tenn-Og. “Find out where the main band is and what girl is.” He listened closely as Tenn-Og talked with the six, but he could not understand a word of the clicks and grunts except the names of Siam-Klale and LeNoir. When the palaver was over and he had made sure that the six men \could get across to the shore, he backed the canoe off and headed his said and done everything that a gir| could do to balt it. At least she had | a conscience, a thoughtful regard for other people's feelings. Rosalie Marlin would never have tried to party down stream again. (Copyright. 1933, William B. Mowery) With their tfaglc burden, Curt and his men continue their flight tomorrow, The more he thought about her the more it seemed to clash with all that he had seen of her during two weeks of in- timate association. In Helen Mathie- son one could understand such a | Helen was blinded and en- But Sonya was not Helen Mathie- Sonya had gone through more | deeper of insight, far more thought- | the Alaska Gastineau Mining com- For all the fire in her, she did saw that Ralph had drifted back to | the borderline of consciousness; his | north, Judge R. W. Jennings made |eves half open, his lips moving. He ian order ognized his friends and understood | capling the order to Clerk of the “Don’t let go, Ralph. We're leav- ! Tomorrow at this time yowll be in | Gaciineay Heights. The old Ray- ble in the broken | [ \/ORNING came at last, with the | | the following night at Jaxon's rink | Y1 gray \ hour of merciless paddling, | ;. another | patches and sloughs | As he kept | they're doing, and where the white- | P 20 YEARE AGO PFrom The Empire e e d | Massaz | Ray, Medical JANUARY 5, 1914 { Albert N. Nadeau, one of the | neau a few days previously to mak: arrangements for a trip to | Paris, France. Things were looking | exceedingly bright for the Jualin Mine and also the Greek Boy | mines nearby, which he visited be- Rose - A. Office hours 11 Graduate Nurse Electric Oabinet Baths—Mas- sage, Colonic Irrigations R | PROFESSIONAL [ Helene W. L. Albrecht PHYSIOTHERAPY Electricity, Irnfra Red Gymnastics. | 307 Goldsteln Building { heaviest, stockholders m the Jualin ' | Fhotis Ofites; 310 | Mining Company, and superinten- dent of the mines, arrived in Ju- i i Andrews am. to 5 pm. Evenings by Aprointment | fore lcaving the section. | | Second and Main Phone 258 [+ 51 Géneral Manager B. L. Thane of —- —_— | pany had created a new depart- E B WILSON l \ment for the purpose of increasing Chiropodist—Foot Specialist | the efficiency in the company's af- | 401 Goldstein Building fairs here. The department of | PHONE 496 | land and surveys, as it was known, Ff—o—. + | was to have charge of all surveys. s TS While at Ketchikan on his way | pps KASER & FREEBURGER 5 DENTISTS adjourning the January Blomgren Building | term of court until January 7, | l;BONE' ”9 a. .m. | Court, J. W. Bell. e i A i Mr. and Mrs. H. J. Raymond had % {moved into their new home on | Dr. C. P. Jenne DENTIST | mond home had been taken by Mr. Rooms 8 and 9 Valentine and Mrs. Lock Mulligan. Building | | _— | Telephone 176 Judge J. R. Winn was a north- g— —_— a bound passenger for Juneau on | the steamer Spokane which was B————————f@ due to arrive fhe following day. Dr. J A W. Bayne DENTIST The first great basketball game Rooms 5-8 Triangle Bldg. | | between the Douglas and Juneau Ofice nours, 9 am. to 5 pm. \hwh schools was to take place on civenings by appointment, i Phone 321 | | beginning at 8 o'clock. One whole g- » de of the mammoth rink had | been set aside for the people of l—-——————————- | Douglas and it was expected that | the rooters would attend from the | | Island in force. Robert Simpson Opt. D e e . Jreduate Angeles Col- | NOTICE lege of Optometry and { | 5 thalmology | TO MASONS AND STARS Op! | Annual installation of officers | Glasses Fitted, Lenses Ground | of Gastineau Lodge No. 124 F. & A M. 0. E. S. will not take place Sat- and Nugget Chapter No. 2 Finding it necessary to liquidate on coal and feed accounts, on and after January 2nd, 1934, coal and feed will be sold for cash only. EY‘____ Office Pnone 484; Phone 238, Office Hours: 9:30 to 12; 1:00 to 5:30 | — 3 DR. R. E. SOUTHWELL g .ake they drove them- |urday, Jmnary 6, as planned. adv. Optometrist—Optician Il i R S Eyes Examined—Glasses Fltted | NOTICE Room 7, Valentine Bldg. | —adv. D. B. FEMMER, Daily Empire Want Ads Pay! OFFICE AND R A . SN O Dr. Richard Williams DENTIST | Gastineau Building, Phone 481 RESIDENCE i) Dr. A. | | —_— h W. Stewart DENTIST Hovss 9 am. to 6 pm. SEWARD BUILDING Office Phone 469, Res. Phone 276 Deep . . . JUNEAU SHOP The Little Store with the BIG VALUES understanding of hu- man feelings enables us to impart dignity to that service which Funerals, com- plete in every respect. Boutn ¥ront C. L. FENTON CHIROPRACTOR SAMPLE adds “Final” to life. We overlook no de- tail. 7 8t., next to 2-5 Brownle’s Barber oOrfice Hours: Evenings by Appointment 10-12; The Charles W. Carter Mortuary || HI-LINE SYSTEM | ’ Groceries—Produce—Fresh lI “The Last Service ¥s the | | Front Street, opposite Harris Greatest Tribute” | Hardware Co. | ; | CASH AND CARRY | . lag Phone 16 We Deliver UNITED FOOD CO. CASH GROCERS — Meats—Phone 16 [ SUSS S LUMBER ]uneau Lumber Mdls Inc. o A i Holding Fast to Established Principles S Through all the business changes of forty-two years, the management of The B. M. Behrends Bank has remained the same, and has adhered unfailingly to the established principles of sound and con- servative banking practice. Now, as since 1891, the safety of de- positors’ funds is the first consideration here, and the good will of customers is reg&rded as the greatest of the assets of the institution. ° OFFICERS B. M. BEHRENDS, President GUY McNAUGHTON, GEORGE E.CLEVELAND, Cashier Asst. Cashier JAS. W. MCNAUGHTON, Asst. Cashier The B. M. Behrends Bank JUNEAU, ALASKA Fraternal Soclettes I Ga.stmeau (,hanmzl } —_— - o B. P. O. ELKS meets every Wednesday at 8 p.m. Visiting brothers welcome. L. W. Turoff, Exalt- ed Ruler. M. H. Sides, Secretary. ————— KNIGHTS OF COLUMBUR Seghers Council No. 1760, Meetings second and last Monday at 7:30 p. m. Transient brothers urg- ed to attend. Council Chambers, Fifth Streci. JOEN F. MULLEN, G. K. H. J. TURNER, Secretary & Our iruks go any place amy | time. A tank for Diesel OM | and a tank for crude oil save ' burner trouble. PHONE 149, NIGHT 4§ | RELIABLE TRANSYER Wise to Call 48 Juneau Transfer Co. when in need of MOVING or STORAGE Fuel Oil Coal Transfer Konnerup MORE for LESS JUNEAU-YOUNG Funeral Parlors | and Embalmers Night Phone 1851 Day Phone 13 : | i i e B— SABIN’S | Everything im Furnishings | THE Juneau LAunpry ’ Frankiln Street betweem | JUNEAU FROCK SHOPPE “Exclusive but not Expensive” Coats, Dresses, Lingerie Hoslery and Hate ARBAGE HAULED Reasonable Monthiy Rates E. O. DAVIS TELEPHONE 584 Day Phone 371 MAYTAG PRODUCTS W. P. JOHNSON E A | — | McCAUL MOTOR COMPANY Dodge and Plymouth Dealers | Smith Electric Co. | | Gastineau Building | ‘! ELECTRICAL, | B o g e i i f— | BETTY MAC | BEAUTY SHOP | 102 Amembly Apartments i PHONE 547 l TIPEWRITERS RENTED ‘' | $5.00 per month , J. B. Burford & Co. l | | 1 “Our doorstep worn by satisfied - P