The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, January 20, 1934, Page 4

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{ R 2 ; B N AT S AR e b s 7~ = | THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, SATURDAY, JAN. 20, 1934. Daily Alaska Empzre ROBERT W. BENDER - - GENERAL MA.\A(:LR 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. Dellvered by carrier in Juneau and Douglas for $1.25 per month, By m:ul postage paid, at the following rates: ar, in advance, $12.00; six months, in advance, month, in advance, $1.25. ers will confer a favor if they will promptly he Business Office of any failure or irregularity slivery of their papers. " I<|r\|une for Editorial and Business Offices, 4. MEMBER OF ASSOCIATED PRESS. The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for republication of all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited in this paper and also the local news published herein. ALASKA CIRCULATION GUARANTEED TO BE LARGER THAN THAT OF ANY OTHER PUBLICATION. TRAP CLOSURE CRITICISM. Last week, representatives of the seine fishermen | voiced criticism of Commissioner Bell of the United States Buraeu of Fisheries saying that his closure of 93 fish traps meant nothing because the traps were dummies. That does not seem to be a fair statement of the case. The Commissioner published widely a list of the traps that were closed. The official records show that thoy averaged more than 4500000 fish each season. In other words, the average take per trap for each season was approxi- mately 48,500 fish. This is far from being a dummy trap. Some of them undoubtedly were better than the average shows, some unquestionably caught less. The total take of the gear abolished is impressive, and if the seiners- can sell all of the fish required to make up that loss to the canneries, their earnings next season years last past. The Ketchikan meeting also declared that the opening of a large number of bays and inlets to seine fishing wus meaningless. Perhaps so. But that remains to be demonstrated. Until tested by actual opcrations next season, no one can say just what dezree of Lenefit will accrue to local fishermen from that step. Undoubtedly the Commissioner be- lieves resident fishermen will be able to boost their takes from it. If the experiemce of next Summer proves that it was not effective, additional openings can be made either for the 1934 season or for the one to follow. Local fishermen, we believe, will be ill-advised if they lail to respond to the policies of the new administration now controlling the Bureau of Fish- eries. It is, apparently, seeking to aid resident fishermen of Alaska. It is trying to help them develop a market for their takes as well as to open for them grounds from which they can take fish enough to earn at least enough money to live on. _If the 1934 regulations do not accomplish this, at least a long step has been made in that direction. And it still has to be demonstrated that they do not do it. IMPLICATIONS OF THE GOLD PROFIT. The chief economic effecus of the gold profit to be realized by the devaluation of the dollar are, first, the aid given in meeting the budget deficit and, second, the inflationary effect on bank credit. In 1933-34 the Federal Government will have a de- ficit of perhaps $7,000,000,000, counting its expendi- tures in the emergency recovery program. This is| vistly greater than in 1932-33 and probably larger than in 19234-35. If several billions of dollars are realized on the Nation's stock of monetary gold, when the dollar is revalued, and this “profit” is used to pay current obligations of the Government, the result will be to cut in half, approximately, the budget deficit for the current fiscal year. This means the avoidance of bond issues in a comparable amount. We should remember that a bond s of $3,000,000,000 usually means taxes of $2,000,000,000 by the time interest is paid for 20 or 30 years .n addition to amortization. Even more important than its effect on the budget is the possible inflationary effect of the spending by the Government of the gold profit. When it checks against its gold credit to pay its bills, the Government does not actually pass out the gold. The checks are deposited in commercial banks, which in turn send them to the Federal Reserve banks for collection, and there the sums are entered as credits of the member banks of the Federal Reserve, building up their cash reserve. If the Government should spend $4,000,000,000 in that « fashion, it means that member banks cash reserves are augmented in that sum, and this makes pos- sible the increase of bank loans to business totaling perhaps ten times $4,000,000,000. Thus a colossal expansion of credit it made possible, without printing paper money or issuing bonds. This is inflation, but it is a form that is dis- creet and can be done without the baneful effects of “printing press” money, because after bank credit has expanded under the stimulus of increased re- serves, it again becomes subject to the normal control of the Federal Reserve bank discount rates. Up to a certain point it is uncomtrolled, except in the meas- ure of devaluation and Government spending, and after that point control is automatically restored. In having a flexible range of 10 per cent in the devaluation plan now before Congress, the President is making it possible to limit credit expansion if it should prove that such a step is necessary. HEALTHY MILWAUKEE. '-_ Perhaps the finest compliment from the stand- point of sanitation ever to be paid to a city of the first class was that given to Milwaukee recently . by the United States Chamber of Commerce. An- 4,_“|mauy that organization conducts a contest on ‘health standards and conditions, Twice in the last four years Milwaukee has won it hands down. Early this month, Dr. Carl E. Buck, field director of the American Public Health Association, notified { A vill be much higher in 1934 than for several| Milwaukee health authorities that because of this record that city would be placed in a special honor class and barred from further competition for the yearly prizes. To be notified that it is too healthy | to be permitted to compete in such a contest is no mean praise for any community, large or small. The Government, which has urged those who can afford it to spend money for all sorts of Anceded things, is certainly setting a real example of practicing what it preaches. The President’s forecast of a $10,000,000,000 deficit by the end of the fiscal year 1934-35 is said to have shocked Wall Street momentarily. Unless all signs are misleading, that notorious is due for more than momentary shocks F. D. R. completes his recovery program. before | Some of the Republican leaders are President Roosevelt to put the country the hands of practical men. Wonder if calling on back into they want __|it put back in the same ones as before. The President’s Message. (New York World-Telegram.) |country to greater effort for recovery. His message confirms the faith and renews the hope of the ipeople in his leadership. The message reports the state of the nation and broad lines. Following his precedent of last spring, on separate subjects. By far the most significant part of this message | is its repeated affirmation that the President will | not turn back. There is to be not less but more of | the New Deal. | Ten months of ‘txperiment has confirmed the | President in the belief that the old economic and ) financial system has destroyed itself beyond repair— | even if he wanted to salvage it, which he does no& And the experience of these months has 1ncreased his confidence that the new way is not only more just but more practicable and profitable for all |classes. The issue is whether the recovery program shall | take the form of temporary tinkering, to be scrapped when we are lucky enough to pull part way out of the depression, or whether it shall be a basic and permanent reform. Enemies of the New Deal dare not fight it openly, but they are trying to limit it to emergency measurés which can be wiped out the moment the sun shines and thoughtless persons forget the last | istorm and the next. 1 From this message it is clear that the President understands this issue and that he is determined {to fight it out on this ground of permanent change versus temporary expedient. | In discussing the Tennesee Valley power and ' land development he talks in terms of a vast and growing national plan, immediately helpful but com- !ing to full fruition only afier a generation of ! continuing government initiative. In the banking field he knows that a return to nation. He classes unethical business practices, alongside crimes of organized banditry, |lynching and kidnaping, as violations calling for suppression and prevention by the Government. “I am speaking,” who have evaded the spirit and purpose of our tax laws, of those high officials of banks and corpora tions who have grown rich at the expense of their stockholders or the public, of thnse reckless speculn- tors with their own or other people's money whose operations have injured the value of the farmers' | crops and the savings of the poor.” larity of Mr. Roosevelt throughout the country—prob- ably the strongest public support ever accorded a peace-time American President after a year in office. But there is no mystery. The President, as in this message, voices the people's own dis- trust of the old system and their own determination to build a better, safer, fairer America. The Best Face-Saving. (New York World-Telegram.) One of the things we like best about President Roosevelt is the way he reverses a decision when he is convinced that he has been wrong. He does not seem to be troubled much about that bane of politicians, face-saving. Perhaps it is because he is smart enough to know that the way to save face is to wipe out the damage done as quickly andl graciously as possible. His foot slipped recently when he instructed his delegation at the Latin-American Conference in | Montevideo not to vote for the treaty guaranteeing equal nationality rights to women—an instruction which apparently was not approved by Secretary of State Hull and which certainly was not repre- sentative of public opinion in this country. Following protest from many sources, the Presi- dent took another look at the question. Then, without hemming and hawing, he cheerfully changed his policy. There is no doubt that necessary Congressional action will be taken to make the treaty effective. This incident is not an isolated case. Mr. Roose- velt changed his mind on outright repeal of Pro- hibition. He withdrew his unjust regulations for administration of the veterans' economy legislation. There have been other instances. At any time this would be a pleasant trait in a President. But in a national emergency when courageous experiment is the only way out and when mistakes are inevitable the ability to correct | blunders quickly is one of the most important attributes of leadership. In far-away India, Sarwan Singh beat a camel in a 122-mile race in 21 hours, after which the camel died. It took speedy America 13 years to outpace the Prohibition camel and it is only half dead yet.—(Chicago News.) The experts find a 10 per cent increase in pro- duction and trade in 1933 over 1932. If the same rate can be kept up, just think where well be in another decade.—(Indianapolic News.) Assurance comes from a feminine authority that the modern girl doesn’'t really care how little she has on, which makes it just about O. K. with ‘us.— (Lexington, Ky., Herald.) They say that many of Gandhi's hitherto ardent followers have swtiched to other parties—the turn- sheets.—(Detroit News.) Washington observers forecast that the dispute in the Sixth District may cause Louisiana to 8o unrepresented in the seat. Even more unrepre- sented than in the Senate?—(Dallas News.) Down in New Orleans they apparently sing it, Who's afraid of the big kingfish?—(Buffalo Cour- ier-Journal.) How to win a war? Stay out of it.—(Akron Beacon-Jonrnal.) thoroughfare | | Again the President has stirred Congress and the ( lays down the Administration’s future policy along | the President leaves specific and detailed recommen- | dations for legislation to a series of later messages | the old racketeering would mean destruction of the | he says, “of those individuals | Politicians are mystified by the increased popu- ! | Chapter 49 THE KISS URT knew something was troubl- | ing A-K deeply. He had been noticing it ever since the old officer | arrived six hours ago. “What i8 it, A-K?” he asked. | Marlin turned to him with a reso- I lute air. “1 might as well get it over | with, I suppose. She, 1 mean Rosalie, told me to break you the news. ] should have, before now, but it's a dismal duty.” In a flash Curt guessed the trouble. Rosalie had landed a more suitable candidate than himself! He won- | dered sardonically whether the gen- tleman was the Edmonton banker or the Seattle ship owner. “l believe 1 know what you're going to tell me, A-K." For Marlin's sake he hid his sheer delight over | the unexpected good news. “Rosalie came to the conclusion that she and I just weren't suited for each other, and so she—" “You're being generous,” Marlin interrupted, more sharply than he had ever spoken of Rosalie. “The conclusion she came to was that she wanted to marry money; and she went after it, and—well, she got it, got a whole steamship line!” He made a weary gesture and stood up. “Well, you know now. I don’t think it's altogether a surprise to you. Nor,” he added pointedly, “very much of a disappointment.” “No, it isn’t,” Curt admitted hon estly. “1 was intending to have a frank talk with her when I was in the city a month ago, but she wasn't there. Rosalie and I can be a lot bet ter friends as things stand than if we'd have warried.” “Yes, you're right. She's got one idea of what life's all about and you've got a different idea, and the two would’ve been oil and water.” When they went out to old John's camp, the company had already gathered. On the packing box Sonya sat talking with Mrs. Hodkins and Paul and a girl. The Indians and prospectors were there, and the young trapper had brought his two wolf cubs, still fuzzy and playful but now grown too big for his pocket. One person of that former eve | ning was missing, though; and Curt felt the loss keenly. As his glance occasionally met Sonya's across the | , | fire, he knew that she too was think- shooting, | ing of Ralph Nichols and a lonely | lobstick up the Lilluar. Like some wild creature brought in from the mountains, Teun-Og | hung back at the edge of the fire- glow, trying to understand all those | strange tongues and strange peopla one hundred and twenty years. Klosohee had returned at last to the ancestral home o. his tribe. Curt felt a proprietary interest in that proud little band which had | fought him so fiercely. They were his clan, and he wanted to give them | a helping’hand and some desperate- ly needed counsel. Even in that iso- lated country they could no longer hold out against a changing world. Now that the primitive Siam-Klale was dead and Tenn-Og’s half brother was leading them, he believed he | ‘could wean them from their unso- | cial ways. | Curt noticed how tired Sonya was, too tired to talk or even listen to the otkers. The long trip out of the Lil- luars, ended only yesterday, had been hard on her; he himself still felt logy from it. A LITTLE before midnight she looked across at him with an understanding glance, excused her- self and went up toward the factor’s house. After a decent interval he got up and left, as inconspicuously as pos- sible. In the moon shadows of the trading post he found her, waiting for him. “You were so long, dear,” she whispered, “I thought you weren't coming.” Curt disarmed her with a kiss. “1 had to wait several minutes, and then I swung out around the Indian tepees so those folks wouldn’t know I'd followed you.” He linked his arm through hers and they started out the path toward | the old fort. “Does A-K still think I'm an ad- | venturess, Curt?” “When I told him how you trailed Karakhan, he wanted to sign you up for the Mounted.” “Oh, that'd be fun! I think I'll do 1" “You will not! You're going to cast your lot with the Provincial Police.” of the outerworld. After an exile nri al FORBIDDEN VALLEY by Witliam Bynon Mowerny he mused: “Commissioner, wife of the Provincial Commissioner— that’s an awfully high position for me to live up to, Curt. I don’t know not.” “But think of what I'll have to live up to, sweet. Look”—he took her hand and laid it upon his own, her slender tapering fingers upon his rough calloused ones. “Don’t!” Sonya stopped him. She ed his hand to her lips. “This hand fought for me, and was wounded. Do you remember”—they were passing Curt's tent—*“remem- ber the evening when I came by here and Paul said ‘Bon soir’ to me? I didn't know you were in the tent or even that you existed. Six weeks ago —It doesn’t seem possible, Curt.” A thousand yards from the post th sat down on a lichen-covered rock near the wave edge. Sonya nes- tled against him, her tired head against his shoulder. She was motionless and silent so long that he believed she must have dropped off to sleep, but when he glanced down he saw that she was looking up at him, studying him, “You're sorry, aren’t you, Curt?” “Sorry—for what, dear?” “That we're not going to live in a country like this. That we're going | back to the cities.” “I am, a little,” he admitted. can't help being, dear. But my place s down there. You helped me see t. And besides, we'll have all thie summer for our honeymoon in the Lilluars. I'm being honest with you, Sonya—I1 don’t want to go back down north. This work I'm taking | on is a responsible position, and I'm egoist enough to believe that even tually I'll climb on past it.” OHE twined her fingers with his, as though she had been worrying about his happiness and now was reassured by his words. In the distance he could see the back and forth in front of it. A night wind rustling in the woods behin¢ brought him the purl of an overfalls and the sad elemental song of the pines. Low in the southwestern sky red Antares, Sonya's tryst star and the star -he had watched at Raiph’s death, was sinking out of sight in & notch between two mountains. When he glanced down at Sonya again, long minutes later, he saw that her eyes were closed. He did no! stir, or wake her; it was coo pre clous to have her asleep in his arms She seemed so different at heart from what she had been on their trip north—more cheerful peace. With the death of Karakhan a black load had fallen away from her. She could begin to forget that tok, and start to live again. He marveled at the strange des Siberia, China, Canada, to this north. ern wilderness where he and she had met. He thought of the night when he had seen her lookiug out into the rain, lonely and mobdy, with that fearful trip ahead of her. Far away across the lake a wo!f lifted its wailing crescendo, its voice laden with the loneliness and sav- agery and beauty of the Northland. He would miss all that, Curt thought sorrowfully—the Arctic prairies, the Nahanni Mountains, the happy free- dom which had been his for a year and which he would put behind him irrevocably that fall. It seemed to him that when he had sent his plane crashing into Karakhan’s ship, it had been like folding up his wings and bidding good-bye to adventure. From the very beginning of the Karakhan hunt intangible bonds had been tightening upon him little by little. drawing him back to his destined course of life. But he did not feel that he was leaving the wilderness for good and all. They could come back to it, he and Sonya, and live for a while in it. There would be times when they would need to come back—to keep their perspective and get a new hold on their strength. What it he did regret the musk-ox prairies and the white-wolf hills? One could not have everything. He felt, as he smoothed a wisp of hair from Sonya’s cheek, that he had received his full share, and more. He had health and courage, and a position that challenged all his powers, and the vista of still more chalienging heights toward which he and Souya could climb together. (Copyright, William B. Mowery) THE END. ORGANIZATION OF MARKSMEN 62 YEARS OLD WASHINGTON, Jan. 20. — The nation’s original N. R. A, the Na- tional Rifle Association, has now entered upen its sixty-third year as the national governing body of the | oldest of American sports, rifle shooting, a bulletin from the asso- ciation relates. | ‘The association was founded No- vember 24, 1871, marking the turn| in rifle competition from an unreg- ulated to a thoroughly organized and nationaly administered sport| ing a movement which resulted in/ | enroll under the new N. R. A. and | eagle of the National Recovery Ad- the institution of rifle practice as a training requirement in the mili- tary services. The first organization of national significance to bear the N. R. A. monogram and the eagle as its insignia, the rifle association has always been known simply as the “N. R. A" to the sportsmen of the country. Incidentally, it was; one of the first organizations to ministration. Today tne association heads the activities of 2,800 rifle and pistol clubs, twenty-four State associa- tions and upwards of 250,000 indi- vidual followers of the target sport, which, in addition to its place as a national pastime, has played a vastly important part in American history in war and in the early There is only one way.|and, at the same time, imuzurat-?upml’on beyond the narrow bor- ders of the thirteen colonies. whether 1 can make good at it or || | “ | ruddy glow of old John's campfire | and the twinkle of figures passing | and at | tragedy in distant foggy Vladivos | tiny which had brought her to him— | from the Volga of old Russia, across | YEARS AGO | Prom The Empire 2(\ L — o | | JANUARY 20, 1914 Trevor Davis was to leave the south on the Princess to accompany his siste: delia Davis, back to Juneau. Davis had been attending in Portland, but ause of tro {with her eyes, was forced to dis- | continue her studies. | for The benefit dance for the basket- | {ball team of the Juneau High | School was to be held in che‘ | evening in the FElks' Hall. The| | dance was sponsored by Junmus‘ best people and Juneau society both old and young, was to be out in force to make it a success. | Juneau Igloo No. 6, Pioneers of Alaska, was to meet in the evening at the Odd Fellows' Hall. There| was to be a social session follow- ing the meeting. All over the Ter- | ritory the meefings of the Pio- neer Igloos were becoming more { important in the social life of Al- | aska. | | The weather for the preceding ltwemv four hours had been clear, ‘vu:‘) a maximum temperature of |25 degrees above zero and’a mini- mum of 17 above. | The Juneau Liquor Company | filed amended articles of incorpor- | ation with Secretary Charles E. Davidson, providing for an m- | crease in the capitol stock from | 615,000 to $25,000. 1‘ ‘Mrs. Robert W. Jennings, wife of | Judge Jennings, returned on the Princess Sophia from the south Judge and Mrs, Jennings had spent the holidays with their daughter. | Miss Cordelia, who was at school in Seattle. Judge Jennings pre- ceded his wife north by two weeks in order to open the term of court. .- A pass gate attendant at a hock- ey game in Tulsa, Okla., was arre: | ed on charges of ‘‘resisting an offi- | cer” when he refused to admit three plain clothes men tickets. . | FINE | | Watch and Jewelry Repairing ' | at very reasonable rates I | WRIGHT SHOPPE PAUL BLOEDHORN | | | | i | | ™ | | | - Real i THRILL! Nothing like the thrill of a ten-strike! Develop your game on the finest alleys you ever played on. Brunswick Bowling Alleys Pool Billiards Bowling Cigars Tobacco Soft Drinks H Barber Shop in connection Lower Front Street, opposite ‘Winter and Pond ?: PROFESSIONAL [ i | Helene W.L. Albrecht ? | e without ' | eyt B8 PHYSIOTHERAPY Massaze, Electricity, Infra Red i | Ray, Medical Gymnastics. | 307 Goldstein Building Phone Office, 216 Rose A. Andrews | 1 Graduate Nurse Electric Cabinet Baths—Mas- | | sage, Colonic Irrigations { Office hours 11 am. to 5 pm. | Evenings hv Appointment | Becond and Mamn ¥hone 259 E. B. WILSON Chiropodist—Foot Specialist 401 Goldstein Building | PHONE 496 3 [ - | —_——n DRS. KASER & FREEBURGER | DENTISTS Blomgren Building | PHONE 58 Hours 9 am. to 9 pm. | | | | | % ; Dr. C. P. Jenne | DENTIST Rooms 8 and 8 Valentine Building Telephone 176 Sl — 8 | Dr.J. W. Bayne DENTIST | Rooms 5-6 Triangle Bldg. || Ofice nours, 9 am. to 5 pao. ‘ cvenings by appointment, Phone 321 [ » — Robert Simpson Opt. D. | Jrzduate Angeles Col- lege of Optometry and ©pthalmology | Glasses Fitted, Lenses Ground | —_— = SR . PE. R. E. SOUTHWELL ¥ Optometrist—Optician 1 Eyes Examined—Glasses Fitted | Room 17, Valentine Bldg. | | Office Pmone 484; Residence Phone 238, Office Hours: 9:30 | to 12; 1:00 to 5:30 ——t e e —— | Dr. Richard Williams | DENTIST ) OFFICE AND RESIDENCE Gastineau Building, Phone 481 T l | Dr. A. W. Stewart | DENTIST Hovss 9 am. to 6 pm. SEWARD BUILDING Office Phone 409, Res. | Phone 276 LSRRI e JUNEAU SAMPLE SHOP The Little Store with the BIG VALUES C. L. FENTON CHIROPRACTOR South ¥ront St., next to Brownie's Barber Shop orfice Hours: 10-12; 2-8 S R | Fraternal Societies | oF | Gastineau Channel L G R B. P. 0. ELKS meets every Wednesday at 8 ppm Visiting brothers welcome, 1 L. W. Turoff, Exalt- ed Ruler. M. H. Sides, Secretary. KNIGHTS OF COLUMBUS Seghers Counctl No. 1760. Meetings second and last Monday at 7:30 p. m. Transient brothers urg- ed to attcnd. Counell Chambers, Fifth Btreed, JOHN F. MULLEN, G. K. H. J. TURNER, Secretary s "Onr iruks go sny pl.u-e‘uny? | time. A tank for Diesel Oil | | and a tank for crude ofl save burner trouble. ’ PHONE 119, NIGHT 148 RELMBLE TRM\SEEu i ! i Wise to Call 48 Juneau Transfer y Co. when in need of MOVING or STORAGE Fuel Gil Caal Transfer - P e TRe. Konnerup a3 MORE fer LESS i JUNEAU-YOUNG Funeral Parlors Licenged I'uneral Directors and Embaimers | Night Phone 1851 Day Phone 12 | 8 3 B 2s | SABIN’S Everything in Furnishings { for Men Ls N TeE JuNeau LAuNDRY / Frankiim Street betweem ) | Froat ap2 Secomd Streets 1 | PHONE 350 ! —_— e T e JUNEAU FROCK SHOPPE } “Exclusive but not Expensive” Coats, Dreases, Lingerie Hoslery and Hate 5 P e o e Evenings by Appointment P HI-LINE SYSTEM Groceries—Produce—Fresh and Smoked Meats Front Street, opposite Harris Hardware Co. CASH AND CARRY laaa o U e W VL sz b4, Holding Fast to SN/ P RO 2Z2225%G [ . . . ” Established Principles [= S Z = 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 4 here, and the good will of customers is regarded as the greatest of the assets of [y the institution. < OFFICERS = B. M. BEHRENDS, President GUy McNAUGHTON, GEORGEE.CLEVELAND, | Cashier Asst. Cashier = JAS. W. McNAUGHTON, Asst. Cashier a \ [ ] ° \, The B. M. Behrends Bank JUNEAU, ALASKA 7/ e TR Y 3 HOTEL ZYNDA | Large Sample Rooms ELEVATOR SERVICE 8. ZYNDA, Prop. I GARBAGE HAULED ' Reasonable Monthly Rates | E. 0. DAVIS | i TELEPHONE 584 Day Phone 371 B -~ .—-—-—._T GENERAL MOTORS and MAYTAG PRODUCTS W. P. JOHNSON { P McCAUL MOTOR COMPANY Dodge and Plymouth Dealers ! — I R Smith Electric Co. Gastineau Bullding l] EVERYTHING | ELECTRICAL | boeeah | | BETTY MAC | BEAUTY SHOP | 107 Assembly Apartments { PHONE 547 { = T R RIS TYPEWRITERS RENTED | $5.00 per month | J. B. Burford & Co. | i “Our step worn by satisfied customers” [; The world's greatess courage—show yours by LY e o

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