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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, TUESDAY, FEB. 6, 1934. Daily Alaska Empire GEN’ERALV MANAGER ROBERT W. BENDER blished every evening except Sund by _the RM?:\LE 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 f per month. By mail, postage paid, at o 0% year, in advance, sr-m‘s 6.00; one month, in advance, Subseribers will confer a favor if they will promutly notify the Business Office of any failure or irregularity the delivery of their papers. i 1‘.‘«?p;‘.hn‘n for Editorial and Business Offices, 374, or $1.25 e following rates: months, in advance, MEMBER OF ASSOCIATED PRESS. ss 1s exclusively entitled to th I news dispatches credited to it e d in this paper and also the local news published herein. ASKA CIRCULATION GUARANTEED TO BE LARGER ALASKA AN THAT OF ANY OTHER PUBLICATION — | i FEDERAL-AID HIGHWA ! Substantial progress is being made on the $400- 000000 Federal aid road program under the Public Works program which is headed by Secretary HArold| L. Ickes, Public Works Administrator. He has overcome all kinds of obstacles in getting this section of the President's recovery program into operation and deserves a lot more credit for it than is ordinarily given to him. A survey on a nation- | wide scale shows that 500 PWA projects have been completed, and projects representing inore than 64| per cent of the entire allotment have either been begun by day labor or advertised for contract. A total of 5337 projects all over the country, advertised for contract or begun by day labor em- ployed directly by State highway authorities, are estimated to cost $276,197,000. This includes day | laber projects estimated at $20,207,000. Contracts | have be awarded for 4,587 projects, involving an estimated expenditure of $238,003,000, which is 55.8 per cent of iLhe total allotment. Most encouragmg; of all, nesriy 3,000 projects are under actual con-| struction, cmploying 130,045 men. SUBMERGING GERMAN LABOR. a northeast wind and her on her course. About 375 miles off Cape teras the steamship “Trent” picked up the Even then the “America” had broken the world record for time and distance sailing dirigible. Considering the trip a failure, Wellman returned to New York to find himself a hero. So were the men who accompanied him—Melvin Vanniman, chief engineer; P. M. Simons, navigator; J. K. Irwin, wireless operator, and A. L. Loud and Jean Aubert, assistant engineers. The ship’s mascot, a small gray kitten contributed at the last moment by Mrs. Vanniman, was brought home safely. Wellman always considered his airtrips in Arctic regions as the most dangerous of his career. The first one, in 1906, was commissioned by Frank B Noyes, then publisher of The Chicago Record-Herald It enlisted also the enthusiastic support of President Roosevelt, but it had to be abandoned when a 1,000~ ton store of provisions broke loose. The 1909 polar expedition ended when its airship collided with icebergs. Dangerous as were all of Wellman's undertakings, | he came through them unhurt and without the lo of a man from any of his crews. His first expeditions to the North were by land In 1894 he reached 81 degrees at a point northeast| of Spitzbergen and in 1898-9 he led an expedition to Franz Joseph Land which attained a latitude| of 82 degrees north it was impossible to keep Hat- crew xisting It begins to look as if those people who had been expecting Congress to furnish some excite- ment during the long winter evenings are due to be disappointed The dollar may be worth only one-half as much| as it was last year, but the chase after it has lost none of its enthusiasm. The Irresistible Neutron. (New York Times.) Still ignorant of the precise nature of the neutron, physicists already see its possibilities both | in battering the atom to pieces and in competing with the X-rays as a therapeutic agent. Un!ik{'I the positron, the electron and the proton, the | neutron is electrically dead. For this reason it has penetrating powers possessed by no other material particle. Hurl an electron, a proton or an alpha particle at a bit of matter and it must penetrate wall after wall of energy. The odds against piercing these intangible yet very real electrical defenses are very great. Electricity is pitted against electricity in the unequal battle. What the physicist obvigusly a projectile which has no electrical pre- and which will therefore dash through the protective walls of energy and strike the nucleus vithin full and fair. The neutron meets the requirements. To hurl it is another matter. There is no way of pulling it or pushing it at high speed toward the target, So, as we learned in yesterday’s account from the University of California, Dr. Ernest Lawrence uses it indirectly. With a kind of electric sling he whirls Nothing could more forcibly illustrate the gulf between the policies of the Roosevelt Administration | and those which actuate the Nazi regime in Ger- l many than their respective attitudes toward labor.| Under NRA, the American workman has come into his own and the right of collective bargaining is more | firmly established than ever before in the country's | history: ‘Here labor has an equal right with capital | in the setup of wages and hours of work. Its voice | is as powerful as that of the employer. In Germany labor has been reduced to a virtual| serfdom. Under the Nazi rule, a law has been passed, effective next May, which abolishes labor unions altogether, imposes fines and other penalties on workers who disobey factory rules, gives the| employer complete mastery over his employees and | wipes out entirely the right of collective bargaining. | The German worker, after May 1, is to take what| is handed to him whether he likes it or not. The State, of course, i¢ presumed to look out for the interests of the German workingman. But in the word of the Nazi Government, capital is the corporal and labor the private. The private must| do what the corporal tells him to do or be dis- | ciplined § as if both were in the army. That doesn't offer labor much encouragement. It is at the mercy of the man at the top of the heap. What a contrast between him and the American laboring man! WELLMAN SAW DREAMS REALIZED. ‘When Walter Wellmon, explorer and journalist, undertook to fly the Atlantic Ocean in an airship and later to explore the Arctic regions in the same manner, he was made the butt of cartoonists and ridiculed by newspapers and the public. And, al- though he failed in his own attempts to prove he| was correct, he lived to see others do the things| he had dreamed of doing and had the courage to try to make them come true. Savants were inter- ested in his experiments, but the lesser informed thought him queer. He took off from Atlantic City for London in| 1910 in the strangest airship on record. The airship| America was a dirigible of the balloon type with a gas bag 228 feet long and 52 feet wide. The silk and cotton fabric bag, enclosed in a triple sack of rubber, held 345,000 cubic feet of gas generated by | combining sulphuric acid with iron filings. Under the bag, and attached to it by heavy| hickory struts and steel wire laced through a wide | tuck in the envelope, was a long car of inter-laced steel tubing, enclosed with a casing of rubber, silk and cotton canvas. Below the car swung a torpedo shaped gas tank, 150 feet long and two feet in diameter. Beneath the gas tank was a lifeboat containing 30 days’ supplies, wireless instruments and equipment for navigation And duisling below all that was an “equilibrator,” a long ‘v made up of 30 steel drums filled with gasolinc L1ley were strunk on cables and put together in such a way as to insure high flexibility The “Ainerica” had three engines capable of send- ing her along at 25 miles an hour. The ship had a twelve-ton lifting power and Wellman figured he had fuel and provisions enough for a ten-day voyage in the air or a 30-day trip on the sea if he and his five companions had to take to the boat. The start was made in a dense fog. But for | several hours messages came back regularly from the airship’s wireless set, reporting good weather | and steady going. ‘Then the atmospheric change from day to night o to affect the ship’s progress. The “America” _sailed high by day when sun heat expanded the gas ~ in her bag, but she slumped at night when the temperature lowered. . Eventually the ship was blown relentlessly before at tail” |name of something that we may never understand. ihe borrowed. charged deutons—the cores of the newly discovered heavy hydrogen atoms—until at least they acquire! speed enough to penetrate the walls of energy by |which the atoms of lithium, beryllium and other |elements are defended. A shower of neutrons frém {the target is the result, a shower that passes | through most matter as light passes through glass. | Given this new powerful weapon in his assault lon matter, it is clear ~that: the physicist stands on the brink of great discoveries. Transmutation, the release of energy—these have ceased to be | merely romantic possibilities. Indeed, they are | almost by-products. It is the secret of matter that | lis of vital import—the secret held by every stone and star. Fathom that and the cosmos becomes an open book and assumes a deeper meaning. The only doubt is the ability of the physicist to under- |stand his own discoveries. Thus far his atom- smashing has served more to perplex than to en- lighten. Protons, positrons, electrons, alpha par- ticles, deutons, neutrons—they have not aided him much in comprehending what we mean by the solid- |ity of a brick or the fluidity of water or what we |call the real nature of things. The truth about the atom may be unknowable. We expect at least a working formula which will partially appease the questioning mind—all that science can ever do for us. The neutron is the But it is also an aid in devising the formula that | we have been seeking ever since we began think- ing about the universe. Creditors and Workers. (Omaha World-Herald.) Revaluation means simply a move to bring t.he! inflated dollar back to normal proportions—and so to bring commodity and real prices back to a normal level. The objective is the dollar value and the price level that prevailed during the very con- servative administrations of Calvin Coolidge. It is |to enable the debtor to pay with dollars, on the average, of the same buying power as the dollars And, Senator Glass to the contrary notwithstanding, the creditor who receives in re- payment money with the same buying power as the money he loaned is not “robbed.” If prices rise to the level hoped for it means a restoration of profitable production, profitable commerce, encouragement to new investment and enterprise. And out of “good business,” new enter- prise, there grow an increasing demand for labor, extended fields of employment, and better pay for the worker. An Adaptable Constitution. (The St. Paul Pioneer Press.) A majority of five judges have decided that the Minnesota Mortgage Moratorium Law of last year is valid. The court in effect declares that the Constitu- tion is not to be regarded as a dead hand of the past ‘on the shoulder of legislative authorities, but as a living body of fundamental law which shall adapt itself to the necessities of the times and not inhibit the Legislatures from ‘socially useful acts so long as these are consistent with the fair intent of its limitations. It is equivalent to an assertion by the ‘|Supreme Court that the Constitution is flexible enough to allow the proper authorities to take whatever measures may be considered reasonably necessary to meet an emergency. Far from weakening the Constitution, such a rule of interpretation strengthens it. Had the decision been the other way, then indeed the fundamentals of the American political structure would have been |in danger. What is hard and brittle beaks; what |1s tough and yield stands. Vermonters may have a new deal, but it will have to run on the Republican ticket.—(Detroit Free Press.) War- to save civilization taught men how to kill and made nations careless of their obligations, —(Toledo Blade.) SYNOPSIS: Janice Kent, the movie star, and her company are plunging into the jungle to make a picture. guided bu the treacherous Ortega. From another point, Frank Grahame. the explorer, is entering the wilds in search of his aviator pal Bill Langton who has disap- peared. Grahame and Juan, Mez- ican boy, are trying to avoid a party that has gone to the Oriega ;u adquarters to get contraband guns Ortega has furnished them. Chapter 23 THE SHOT Tnm‘ started forward. Juan's arm was aplifted to push aside a tree branch. A rifle spat viciously from across the swamp. Grahame | glimpsed the fiash and saw Juan plunge sidewise into the brush. The American drovped to his knees and crawled toward the boy. “Hurt, son?” he called softly. For an instant there was silence, then: “1 do not think so, senor. The | bullet hit my pack and knocked me down.” For a quarter of an hour they lay juiet. Their position was embar- rassing. Ahead ot them was the open swamp. Behind them the jungle, but there was a space between, and it looked inpossible for them to cross it unobserved by the hidden rifieman. They should walt until dark, but again, it was impossible to tell when the party that ha“. been to the coast would return. rifleman could war: them with a| shot, and Grahame and the boy would be neatly caught. It would be better, thought Frank, to bolt for cover and chance the marksmarship of the ambushed | man. He .old his thought to Juan. “But surely,” Juan agreed. “Readv then.” They arose and plunged toward the screen of jungle behind them. But no shot followed them. They lay panting behind a log and peered | through the screen of hanging vines. Grahame thought he heard a call,—a cry coming faintly across the swamp. He saw a flash of white as of clothing from the far side of the| muddy causeway. Juan flung his gun te his snoulder but Grahame|' nocked the muzzle into the air. “Wait,” he comn.anded. A man came irto sight, and head- ed toward them. He lurched be tween the upflung branches of the felled trees. His chin was sunk to his chest and he dragged a rifle by its muzzle with the butt scraping in the mud. “It's a white Frank. He halt caught bis arm. “Wait.” This time it was Juan who spoke the word. “It may be a trick. 1 do not trust this country.” The man came close. It was ap parent io Grahame that he was stag- gering, whether purposely as Juan | had suggested, oi from some hurt. The man ciossed the causeway: he was now within yards of the two men hidden by the trail's-side. He plodded wearily up to firmer ground. Then without warning, his knees buckled. He wao so near that the hidden two heard his breath whistle In his throat. The stranger fell for- ward on his face. imed ! Juan mafi!” rose, exc! but RAHAME leaped to his side and | half rolled him over. Mud and blood smeared the face, but the man was white. Sweut trickled thrbugh the stubble of several days' growth | of beard. The eyelids twitched and two blue eyes glared into Grahame’s The stranger struggled to speak. “Take it easy, old man,” cau tioned Grahame. “I'm done for,” whispered the fal low. “I know it. I can’t breathe any With the help of the boy Grahame lifted the inert white man and car- ried him away from the trail. He commanded Juap to build a fire and heat water. He drew his sheath knife and swiftly cut at the torn and stained clothing of the stranger. Once he whistled softly beneath his breath. The man was badly wounded; Grahame wondered at the vitality that kept him alive. There was a bullet hole in the man’s abdomen at the right side. not far above the line of the hip bone. The back was a mass of torn flesh where the bullet had passed through. Grahame compressed his lips. Dum-dums. A brutal wound. " There wasn't a ghost of a chance for the fellow. Probably the lung was nicked 00, since he had com- plained of his inability to breathe. Frank took his first-aid box from his pack. He spread his hypodermic kit before him. The stranger’s eyes followed his movements. “Thanks,” he whispered. “But | don’t need the shot. Don't waste If it were soon, the | "GODDESS 1 by Herl:er! Jensen anyway, and I've got some- He closed his thir thing to tell you.” eyes. “Listen!” Grahame leaned over him. The words came slowly, twisted, as if they were strangled before they passed his lips. Grahame stored the broken sequence of words and made no attempt to prompt or question the man. His name was McGrath, he said. He was from Hollywood and had come to Yucatan ‘“on location.” Other people were to follow him. He hope’ they would not, and thought that they could not since Orte his guide, no doubt had been captured when they were fired upon irom ambush three days be- fore. Without Ortega they would not know where he, McGrath, had Who did it? Indians, McGrath sht. He saw one while he lay trail’s side. He thought Or- a had been captured because he had heard his voice talking with the others. Buf he couldn’t be sure. He'd been nearly unconscious: they had taken him for dead. They went through my pockets,” whispered McGrath, “Then they threw me into the brush like . . . like a hunk of meat!” “My gun bad fallen in a swamp I remeinbered that and fished it out wien | came to. The; had gone—" Juan crashed through the brush crouched, panting, beside hame, enor!” He spoke swiftly. “They I went back to watch and 1 them. They are just behind d boy,” breathed Grahame. \l.'-IUS'[' with one gesture he emp- £ tied the pan of water upon the smouldering fire, and heaped dirt over the steaming embers. He glanced toward the trail and was satisfied that they were sufficiently screened from the company of men which would pass within the next few nutes. Alread~ he could hear their vague shnfling trail noises. It was late afternoon. Grahame sed the luck that bhad given | this emergency when shadows deep. Any tell-tale sign they being over-lookea in that deceptive baze of pre-dusk. He saw white moving through the screen of brush and trees; then they were abrerst of him. Almost he held his breath. On the other side of the wounded man, Juan lay. Studiously the boy kept his eyes fastened upon the moving feet that padded the | 50 few yards av ahame smiled. It is said that jungle-wise folk can feel eyes upon ‘l taking no | dhem, and Jvan was thances. s1cGrath’s breathing too, seemed quieter. . Mosquitoes and gnats whined at the sweat on Grahame's face. He ached to brush them away—to grind | that | | his palms against the skin twitched in protest against the pun ishment it was taking. The column of figures that passed them seemed to be without end. He saw patches of waita drifting by— | the ammunition cases upon the backs of men. Once the line halted. His hands tightened over the stock of his rifle. There was a faint call trom ahea? and the fragments of white moved again. Then suddenly the last figure passed. Still Grahame and the boy lay immobile. All sound ceased. For minutes the American remained without movement, then slowly he began to draw one leg forward, pre- | paring to rise. He felt Juan's hand grip his ankle. Again he relaxed. He heard his wrist watch ticking a yard from his ear. Then came a soft sound from the trail,—the breathing of men. It sounded as close as if he were locked in a closed room with several sleepers. He saw nothing although his eyes ached from the intentness of his gaze. Then a shadow drifted by between him and the trail's edge, and van- ished. It seemed hours later when some- where off to the left sounded the call of a brush turkey. A small ani- mal darted into the tangle ahead of him, moving to> swiftly to be iden. tified. Again the ‘turkey called, nearer ‘this time. Juan arose. Wings fluttered in the branches about as if his movement had dis- turbed them. “It is all right now,” said the boy. “It was very curious that no birds moved or called after the main com- pany passed. I knew then that oth- ers followed to protect the rear.” He drew a breath deeply. “We were very lucky,” he concluded. “That’s right” said Grahame simply. He turned and looked at McGrath. “McGrath!” he called sharply. (Copyright, 1934, by Herbert lensen) Tomorrow, Frank and Juan your morphine. I can't feel any plunge deeper into the jungle. y have left h 4 good chances of | THE HOTEL OF ALASKAN HOTELS The Gastineau Our Services to You Begin and End st the ® Gang Plank of Every Passenger-Carrying Boat [ Juneau Cash Grocery CASH GROCERS Corner Second and Seward Free Delivery Phone 58 20 YEARE AGO ! !‘ From The Empire .-y “Chief of Police J. T. Martin an- nounced that in turning in a fire alarm the discoverer of a fire city hall, who would cause the alarm to be given to the proper officers of the fire department. On Friday afternoon the Seward Society, newly organized high school literary society, presented a program at the high school. The program was: Roll Call—quotations from Lincoln; Waino Hendrickson, current events; Paul | Tincoln’s Gettysburg Address; Klon. |da Olds, Life of Lincoln; Harry ‘Sahm recitation; Efizabeth Hop {per, Adjective letter; Dawn Dav Ougm of Valentine’s Day; Har- lan Herner, two-minute falk; Mar- garet Dudley, humorous reading Cyril Kashevaroff, original basket ball story; Lawrence Hurlbert, con- | | undrums, and Professor Enoch Perkins, critic. The Douglas Island Elks' bowling team won a decisive viclory over Treadwell club alley, when the i second game of the series was play- |ed. The score was, Dougias, 2298 |and Juneau, 2085. M. A. Snow, of ‘Trcudwcll, made high score with 188. About fifteen Juneau bowling | fans made the trip across the chan- | nel to cheer for their players. Fol- lowing the game the Island Elks| |gave the visitors a fine feed, in| | which the Juneauites ate circles |around their hosts. : | At a meeting held in the resi | | dence of the Rev. A. R. Drathman, the previous evening, The first steps | — | were taken toward the establish-! ment of a Juneau council of the Knights of Columbus. A temporary organization was completed with the creation of an executive com- | mittee made up of E. J. McKanna, president; Oren F. Hill, secretary- | treasurer; Fred Hebert, Treadwell; William McCormick, Douglas; Jer- | ry Casey, Douglas; R. C. Hurley, | Juneau, and H. Ward, Juneau. | e NOTICE TO TAXPAYERS The final installment on |real estate and personal property taxes will be delinquent after March 5, 1934. Payment should be made by that date to avoid pen- |alty. Statement of the delinquent ! tax roll will be published on or| | before March 19, 1934 as required | by law. A. W. HENNING, CxLy Clerk. -adv. NOW OPEN Commercial Adjust- ment & Rating Bureau CDoperatmg with White Service Bureau Room 1—Shattuck Bldg, We have 5,000 local ratings on file | | | i f Lora MAE ALEXANDER | | SOPRANO | Vocn.l Culture-Coaching-Diction | Studio opens March 1, Gold- | stein Bldg. For appoinments see Mrs. J. C. Stapleton. | Jones-Stevens Shop | | | LADIES'—CHILDREN'S | | READY-TO-WEAR ' | Seward Street = Near Third | FINE Watch and Jewelry Repairing ' at very reasonable rates WRIGHT SHOPPE PAUL BLOEDHORN 1 | | | | , 21 should call the night jailer at the ! Fhiome, QRS 10 Thompson, ' I PHONE 56 the horned tribe of Juneau in the 3 — d PROFESSION AL ’5 e Helene W. L. Albrecht PHYSIOTHERAPY Massaze, Electricity, Infra Red Ray, Medical Gymnastics. | 307 Goldstein Bullding | = ® — e —a Rose A. Andrews | 1 Graduate Nurse Electric Cabinet Baths—Mas- | sage, Colonic Irrigations | Office hours 11 am. to 5 p.m. Evenings bv Appointment Second and Main Phone 259 £ ] E. B. WILSON | Chiropodist—Foot Specialist 401 Goldstein Building | | PHONE 496 VER A S S DS i | AR RIS RS, DRS. KASER & FREEBURGER DENTISTS Blomgren Building Hours 9 am. to 9 pm. | e : ==—=n { Dr. C. P. Jenne DENTIST Rooms 8 and 9 Valentine Bullding Telephone 176 5 — | B—— Dr. J. W. Bayne DENTIST Rooms 5-6 Triangle Bldg. Oflice nours, 9 am. to 5 pm. «venings by appointment, Phone 321 Robert Simpson t. D. Sreduate Angeles Col- lege of Optometry and ©pthalmology | Glasses Fitted, Lenses Ground 2 AT ) . DR. R. E. SOUTHWELL 8 Optometrist—Optician | Eyes Examined—Glasses Pitted | Room 7, Valentine Bldg. | Office Pnone 484; Residence | Phone 298. Office Hours: 9:30 | to 12; 1:00 to 5:30 | —n = Dr. Richard Williams DENTIST i OFYICE AND RESIDENCE Gastineau Building, Phone 481 B -— Dr. A. W. Stewart DENTIST Houss 9 am. to 6 pm. SEWARD BUILDING Office Phone 409, Res. Phone 276 P JUNEAU SAMPLE SHOP The Little Store with the BIG VALUES C. L. FENTON CHIROPRACTOR Soutn ¥ront St, next to Brownle's Barber Shop Orfice Hours: 10-12; 2-8 Evenings by Appointment B S HI-LINE SYSTEM and Smoked Meats Fraternal Societies oF Gastineau Channel —s B. P. 0. ELKS meets every Wednesday at 8 p.m Visiting brothers welcome, L. W. Turoff, Exalt- ed Ruler. M. H. Sides, Secretary. KNICHTS OF COLU’DflU!< Seghers Council No. 1760, Meetings second and lasy Monday at 7:30 p. m. Transient brothers urg- ed to attend. Couneil Chambers, Fifth Streed, JOHN F. MULLEN, G. K. H. J. TURNER, Secretary = Our trutks go any place any ) time. A tank for Diesel Ol | | and a tank for crude oll save | burner trouble. PHONE 149, NIGHT 148 i RELIABLE TRANSWER g MOUNT JUNEAU LODGE NO. 147 Second and fourth Mon- day of each month in Scottish Rite Temple, beginning at 7:30 p. m. L. E. HENDRICKSON, Master; JAMES 'W. LEIVERS retary. Genuine Swedish Massage MRS. J. M. MALILA GASTINEAU HOTEL Phone 10 for appointment “For that Million Dollar Feeling” Konnerup’s ' MORE for LESS JUNEAU-YOUNG Tuaneral Parlors Livensed Funeral and Embalmers Night Phone 1851 e THE Juneau Liunpry ' Franklin Street betwees Front an” Becomd Streets PIIONIIH JUNEAU FROCK SHOPPE “Excluai vobutnotl:xpcnnn" (o o | L | HOTEL ZYNDA Large Sample Rooms ELEVATOR SERVICE 8. ZYNDA, Prop. 1 | "GARBAGE HAULED Reasonable Monthly Rates E. 0. DAVIS TELEPHONE 584 Day Phone 371 Front Street, opposite Harris Hardware Co. | Groceries—Produce—Fresh \ | CASH AND CARRY | 777722722253 (4/47 7z with employees. Conservative business friend. NS4/ AN AL management, sources and an experience which covers four of the five decades of Juneau’s history make this institution a dependable depository and The B. M. Bank JUNEAU, Juneau Will Profit Largely @ by the upward trend of business in the States, for the mining, lumbering and fish- ery interests of the district will not fail to respond to improved conditions there. This bank has developed its facilities and shaped its varied services to meet the stead- ily expanding requirements of these indus- tries, working alike with management and adequate re- Behrends ALASKA GENERAL MOTORS and MAYTAG PRODUCTS W. P. JOHNSON McCAUL MOTOR COMPANY Dodge and Plymouth Dealers ARSI { Smith Electric Co. Gastineau Building EVERYTHING Harry Race DRUGGIST The Squibb Store