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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, THURSDAY, MARCH 8, 1934. 1 ! . | | nually mulct the public out of millions. Their own |served Uhat Tour whlforng. like many other WAL\ pgy with fatigue—wavering with i;"‘l'he“:;'fd,':::zia':,t;‘;‘;:d";"ve';e:g: }h‘m M onan. 8 cleaias DAoL | to 12; 1:00 to 5:30 | o i feat'ure s thelr .l:aplpsél f&c:l}iy f: lpo:"-\cusloms and dress of the courts and members of cnlx.nna:sxcm : | square. | LADIES' ALTAR SOCIETY | B g & Cty = ing this money back Into circulation through 1aYIN€ |tne aristocracy of Europe.” What the Secretary did | “Afraid not, Janice. If Frank had| . Langton made an fnarticulate | oo “° = % Saturday, Mareh | F———————i————& ‘ the ground work for more plundering. not realize was the intensity with which that desire | E0Lten to the coast—and it badn't | sound. “God, what fiying! See, they |V 1| scrve dinner e {| Dr. Richard Williams 2 A rained—there might bav > 117, Parish Hall, from 5 to 7 pm.| r. Richarg ilha jburned within the simple’ republican breast; the | %! Ent have been & |‘catter. but they close up again. ot and: soetss Mot el Solire i THE PRETZEL. Navy kept its epaulettes, and a time was to come | falnt chance, but | They'lt never give way long enough | Gards and soclal eventng will follow. | | DENTIST e cupmin when the remotest country school teacher was to| ¢ made a little gesture of de- | to let the plane down. |Adults 65¢, children under 13 80c.|| opmeog AND RESIDENOE | Everything in Furnishings haen | Save the dat dv. | | Now that the 32 brew has returned, the pretzel [clothe herself in the fashions of Euorpean aristo- | P2 “Janice! We must do something! |Save the date. st 1 Gastineau Building for Men has also staged & comeback, a most successful one. |crats, rushed by express steamer from Longehamp | . A "“““’“Sd“"z‘d'y satflod upRl I MERECRUEAE Seo, Shotel LUPD. {oie T N Phone 481 | | & 3 retzels |10 the mass-production dress factories of the new |Janice's min jects about “fier |'Space on the eastern side. It we |~ = 8= - Céfh - you—imagine- people—teday p‘“‘““;;zamy’demwmcy_ became unsubstantial, fllusory—as | could run for it .. . divert the guards | | SHOE REPAIRING | —| % 5 SUBSCRIPTION RATES. |infected plants to healthy plants by the splashing She was aware that Langton was M. Behrends Bank and the mer-! brothers welcome. N D .l § ka Em ire biit {n the Skagit Valley it seems to be the secrét | 5 P roq P——— e i at of success, the factor that gives. these growers an ad- | | PROFESSIONAL I Frate T { T ocie y Alas D e e sl T A a8 s s GODDESS ||| ;0 vpare AGo |4 1! nal_Societies | ROBERT W. BENDER - - GENERAL MANAGER | diseases affecting cabbages are known as black leg H. . v A P = ’ G % ! —|and black rot. Seed from the Skagit Valley has| [ A New Serial by Herbert Jensen Prom The Empirs T Helene W. L. Albrech astinequ Channel Published every evening except Sunday by the ..,o ... coe from infection. | — ! | e < L. recht | R S EMPIRE PRINTING COMPANY at Second and Main y . | & e e | | PHYSIOTHERAPY Streets, Juneau, Alaska. J. C. Walker of the United States Department | g 55 i Massage, Electricity, Infra Red | B. P. 0. ELKS meets Tntered in the Post Office In Juneau as Second Class of Agriculture has discovered that the organisms Chapter 48 ing as bits of information were MARCH 8, 1914. | Ray, Medical Gymnastics. | | €very Wednesday at matter. that cause these diseases are usually carried from | 4 passed between its individuals. | [ B. M. Behrends, head of the B. | 307 Goldstein Building |8 p. m. Visiting BIRD OF RESCUE | | Dellvered by carrier in Juneau and Douglas for $1.25 per month. By mall, postage paid, at the following rates: |of rain, and rarely if ever through the soil or by the wind. The Skagit Valley has an adequate | HEIR story was quickly told. The setting sun found Grahame talking to her—rapidly, incoherent- ly. She lifted her head; her eyes L cantile establishment of that name! ), Broge CoU o arrived home from an extended — L. W. Turoff, Exalt- ed Ruler. M. H. Sides, One year, In_advance, $12.00; six months, In advance, sprawled across the cockpit il- | focused; from out of that queer | |Visit to Pacific Coast cities. Mr. ¥ & Secretary. ; ol th, in advance, $1.26. S v S i hs | P! Pit penc oc! 3 q 3 P 3 e : O T anfor & faver if they will promptly | SUPPIY m""om"rf but 16 "_‘"EIY rains in the ’“.“”_’““ ing a note that was to be sent from | state of unreality her mind began | Béhrends brought optimistic re-' | Rose A. Ardrews | el the Business Offioe of any failure or irregularity | from May to September when' cabbage is maturing. | the rearest cabls ofice: to function normally. ports from the cities he visited.| | Graduate Nurse | ENIGHATS OF COLUMBUS n e delivery of_ their papers. Telephone for Editorial and IMTER OF ASSOCIATED PRESS. ated Press 1s exclusively entitled to th " Business Offices, 374. This accounts for the fact that seed produced there is free from these two serious cabbage diseases. | Within an hour or two, he hoped, | duplicates of this message would be The litter supporting the high- the pyramid’s steeply slanting priest had been carried halfway up | of the Alaska Railroad| | | Office hours 11 am. to 5 p.m. passage sage, Colonic Irrigations bill and all of Alaska was receiv- Seattle was very happy over the| | Electric Cabinet Baths—Mas Seghers Counci! No. 1760, Meetings second and last Monday at 7:30 p. m, The As in Myberg’s office and at Spin Win- X : | | uee for reput ica of all news dispatches %redll!tedu:: Cuba’s new President, we read, dresses informally | ¢jow's apartment in Hollywood, two | Steps. The jaguar cage was being |[ing attention from the Coast cit-| | Evenings by Appointment | | Transtent brothers urg- B ey | DADS S in keeping with the traditions of the office. Ah,| thousand airline miles away. slowly advanced up the slope. ies, he said. Second and Main Phone 230 | led to attend. Gounct - = |yes. Running shorts and spiked shoes, we presume.| Grahame gave the pilot parting|, S'e Sturmbled a little as her feet L ——#i| Chambers, Fifta Btrevk. LA N YRR FUBLICATION. e s ey a0 | tound the irst step. The hum, 8he| | Mrs. J. F. Malony entertained| 7 - JOHN F. MULLEN, G. K. THAN THAT O 3 s tions. - « : f e ; If tomato sauce and sauerkraut juice with a; counts. This beach here is about realized was tangible. It was louder | the members of the Ladies Musi-!fl———E B ON = H. J. TURNER, Becretary | dash of fresh horseradish is the new morning pick- ‘me-up. they can leave us lay. |the stratosphere. fifteen miles long. Good landing | spot for a land plane. | Il be here at the northern | Get going, now. and thanks.” —a deeply cadenced drone that was curiously familiar, Then quite suddenly she under- stood !.angton’s shouted words. focused on a point above the east- ern jungle almost in the eye of the cal Club at her home at Harris and Fifth Streets the previous af- || Chiropodist—Foot Specialist ternoon and a delightful program | 401 Goldstein Building The Juneau High School bas-| | DRS. KASER & FREEBURGER | | i | 3 MOUNT JUNEAD LODGE NO, 1;1 Second and fourth Mon- day of each month in ; 3 2 g 1 5 .| |was presented. Recherche re-| | PHONE 496 and it is still headed for a record ascension into| % it e She glanced skyward. Her glance i e 3 : | smaller and taster at short notice. hostess, gy | RELIDING 8O3 D, . L. E. HENDRICKSON, Master; JAMES W. LEIVERS, Sec- | There's changing rhythm in Wall Street, says a| it(‘r'(;:‘;(iz Slfflini:;’nortagsz.n‘;;l‘l:m;x: 5‘;‘"5,5"21 it;zzse;‘zsfi:;sir::: :éle- ketball team defeated the Douglas| | DENTISTS retary, | FioRnolRh SELCR B SR R ndw (o) ottt nky Rihe vl | tore sioxtananiEng, High School team in Jaxon's rink | Blomgren Bullding i o ooy E e play the second fiddle for awhile. la writeup that will make your| The dark lumps of the three||Wiih 8 declsive scare of 20 to 6. | PHONE 56 Our trucks go any place any | | | worst enemy proud to know you” Badial MbIOrE e a aNttdatEad This was the ; seventh and lasL(J Hours 9 am. to 8 pm. ‘!_ | time. A tank for Diesel 0il Decline of the Republican Virtues. | The pilot grinned broadly. He|sharply. It was approaching with | |S3me of the series between the two | Wy *1 | and a tank for crude oil save | said to Grahame: amazing rapidity, slanting in a long | | 1ams. | — ]| burner trouble, (New York Herald Tribune.) “What's this guy do? Own a|power glide toward the pyramid. .+t Dr, C. P. Jenne PHONE 149; NIGHT 148 Now that the late Mr. George Harvey’s ambas- | newspaper?” Above the growl of its engines she | The Juncau Dramatic Society,| | - DENTIST RELIABLE TrRANSFER MODERN ROBBER BARON {sadorial breeches have long ceased to wave above| Frank chuckled. “He's a press |heard tho .oice of the ahkin |Composed of home talent, Was s00n| | poymg g and 9 Valentine = : SPELR ‘ S |the clash of party, now that even Senators may |agent.” screaniing to his guards. {;0 m"“:’" its fustdiflppea;f;]nce be-| Building 3 o Five years ago millionaires, financial wizards, \wear spats and the black string tie is no longer| The man reached for his controls.| She saw the body of the column |fore a Juneau audlence. The man-| one 16 R —31 industrial giants, patrons of art, benefactors of ldemocracy’s defense against the enemies of n;r"-on_ so that's it. Funny, he doesn’t 51"';‘,':‘“ ;’I‘l"'mTr:‘:“arm?gj;:r:B;’:;: ‘f:"';“:::m:‘f,‘dac:g:::mi;‘l;;wrunM:;s,':, s | NOw OPEN l T L VR o unity, builders people, the silk hat remains almost the only article | look « , but now I get it. So|[racing b4 o b | s | i) 81 3 J: gl P-\UO“Or“fl}\)“’]L“cmm‘]];‘ ul—ariC:aTem wealth; today |Of apparel about which there still cling some faint | long. .. appeared .l;ke tiny pawns on a huge ;Hl}lSXCfll comedy in three acts, f_Ol': a 1 ’ Commercxa!] Ad]‘mt' :‘ from fustice, indicted for de-|Vestiges of political significance, They are, alas!| The roar of the motors drowned | chessbeard. |its debut. There were to be fit-' | Dr, J. W. Bayne | ment&Rating Bureau | it 5 ded to be-|Very faint indeed. Mr. Walter Brown once attained | Greene’s indignant expostulation. Some still ran; the nearer ones |teen in the cast. ! DENTIST | Cooperating with White Service | very persons they pretended to |a reproving notoriety by ordering a new official | knelt, holding their rifles before | || Rooms 5-6 Triangle Bldg. 1 Bureau H friend. posed rulers by force of sharp Prac- |y, qne to accommodate the lofty altitude of his| l.\' THE great square before the | them pointing at the approaching | U. 8. Marshal H. L. Faulkner|( | oftice nours, 8 am. to 5 pm. | | | Room 1—Shattuck Bldg. | tices of a totterd mpire. That, in sort, is the|i,hhar and now a diligent United Press reporter |* pyramid, the column of priests | 2/'P!ane: |Teft for the south on the Humboldt evenings by appointment, | We have 5,000 local ratings ' strange hist f the Insulls. {has sought to shake the foundations of the Re-|and guards began their slow march | _ 10 rifies began toicrack sharply. |the previous day taking patients| Phone 321 | on file = But the Insulls did not create a new role inmub,lC with the rumor that Senator Smith, of | measured by fiat drum beats vibrat | Suddenly the plane was over the | ommitted to Morningside Sani 57| Gs a new type of American business nan, Pe 3 were a little bolder, a trifle more reckless than some others. They pyramided a higher and they poured a little more water into their stocks but that is about all the differ- or héy trifle { ” i o | & s | Los Angeles Col- | 5 s ik ir lit just barely gets into the paper. One is conscious|in by a scuare of guards walked G i | Capt. A. H. Ross, popular com-|| Graduate | ence. The depression merely hastened their fall, | % ) "o ooner “favor hasp all but faded from |Janiceand Langton. | \\?TOV cried out h"‘““‘y" {mander of *he Alaska Juneau | lege of Optometry and | WRIGHT SHOPPE for the financial structure of their building wa.s:om public life, Janice threw u beseeching glance They have a machine gun! | Opthalmology PAUL BLOEDHO bound to sag down to ruin eventually. Their game was not new in big business and frenzied finance in the United States. Others have played it with the railroads, in land, in coal, in power and in other lines. Not content with robbing the rate-payer they also robbed the stockholder. Robber barons of old exacted small tribute com- pared with these modern robber barons, who an- in a grave as tokens of love and memory? when you think of pretzels you immediately form a‘ mental picture of rich brown heaps of them being | served with a nice cold bottle of beer. However, to| the early Romans goes the credit fo: originating the “grave placing ceremony.” They also gave pretzels to their children for being studious in their religious studies. An interesting fact regarding pretzels, associated with for their unusual shape, is that the Romans used them as a symbol of the sun-wheel whereby the seasons of the year were determined. Another explanz , according to one authority, is that the word ~pretze)” hos the same derivation as the word South Carolina, lost a rented silk hat at the White |House. The Senator has been compelled publicly to |confess that the hat was actually his own. There was a day when he might as well have been caught l\1u|.h Credit Mobilier bonds in his office safe; now | Every schoolboy knows how Benjamin Franklin |heroically preserved our diplomatic service from the {immoral gold lace of European tyranny. More than half a century later our Navy could still be (torn between the “republican simplicity” of caps and sleeve badges and the insidious dangers of mon- archical cocked hats and epaulettes. It was after the Civil War that Secretary Welles severely ob- served that “our uniforms, like many other mat- It cut the ground from under the sartorial states- men. “Sockless Jerry” Simpson is forgotten now; Magnus Johnson, who not only figuratively but sometimes literally “wore no man's collar,” is no longer in the news, and today one can turn up only an occasional Congressman who boasts of never having owned a dress suit. The brown derby has lost its power; and when Huey Long received a representation of a foreign power in flowered silk |pajamas it was not the fact that they were silk |but the fact that they weren't a morning coat which |caused the scandal. The silk hat, tall pillar of nine- teenth century elegance and unloveliness, may still stir a ripple upon the political waters, but only a ing through the steamy air. The up-borne litter of the high | priest led the procession. The cage | of the jaguars vas Immediately be. | hind it. Side by side, and blocked at her companion. “Billy,” she whispered. “Is there any chance at all? Have you made any plan?. . ” Langton’s eyes ware red-rimmed Obviously his nights had brought him little sleep. His face was drawn with lines of impotence and baffle ment. He answered with a voice | if she walked in a balf dream Vaguely she remembered that it was said that drowning persons re- viewed their lives in one queer il luminating flas® before oblivion swallowed them. It was like that with her at this instant. But it was not her life that parad ed before the mirror of her memory, but the web of circumstances that had been spun about her since that drizzly night in Hollywood when Frank Grahame had forestalled her abduction by the mad priest of the square. I* zoomed and lifted. She saw a body hang out of one of the ports. pointing something that looked lize a rifie downward, yet was bulkier than a rifle. Why don’t they shoot? Don't they realize—" Then in the next breath he shouted with despairing anxiety: “They ca1’t! They don’t dare. The ahkin knew! A fallen body in their way would wreck a landing!” The plane made a steep bank over the western buildings. Back it roared, the wheels of the landing . . ship can land—" ""He pivoted on his sound leg. There was a dull smack as the near- er guard of the six went down. Janice heard scream from the abkin drowned by a riot of snarls of the jaguars as the bearers of the caged dropped it. She felt the hand of a gaard roughly grasp her arm. She twisted away and flung her- self at a man whose upraised rifle was poised over the blond head ot her companion. Again the motors roared overhead. The sound of rifle- tarium. Mrs. Faulkner accompan- =— {led her husband and it was their & e |plan to visit relatives before re-| | Robert Sxmpson | turning %o Juneau. i Opl D | Company's ferry launch Amy, re-| {turned on the Admiral Evans from | Glasses Fitted, Lenses Ground | an extended trip through the East- jern States. While in New York| 3 | he had become infatuated with the ! DR I K. SOUKENTY 2 1] Optometrist—Optician tango and under the best artists|! ¥ © ¥ in the city, became an adept in! Eyes Examined—Glasses Fitted |the latest dance. His friends| Room 7, Valentine Bldg. {c]aimed they had prevailed upon | | Office Phone 484; Residence | Phone 238. Office Hours: 9:30 | | Watch and Jewelry Repairing at very reasunavle rates JUNEAU-YOUNG | | Funeral Parlors Licensed Funeral Directors | ! and Embalmers | | Night Phone 1851 Day Phone 12 We do with the latest ingenious | | & shoe machinery, restore them || | to their newness in a marvel- ous manner at a fraction of | cost of a new pair. A trial will | convince you. | | | See BIG VAN | Dr. A. W. Stewart DENTIST Hours 9 am. to 6 p.m. SEWARD BUILDING Office Phone 409, Res. Phone 276 SEWARD STREETS FORD JUNEAU SAMPLE SHOP The Little Store with the THE JuNeau LAuNDRY Franklin Street between Front and Second Streets PHONE 359 ], JUNEAU FROCK SHOPPE “Exclusive but not Expensive” Coats, Dresses, Lingerie, i . : Hosiery and H; B i 50d (he wnaph of he pretesl s seld m%Shght one; and soon there will be none but the| Mayan Rain God and his emissary | fire grew. nos | 'Mf:..“.d %, :;\ ; el Ge ik e wnh;cartoonlsts to cherish it as the symbol of pluto- | Don Raoul Ortega. The man she clung to went limp | 3 S S S AP ave been symbolical of a cl At prayer, |cratic sin. Cartoons, happily, never change. A vicious plan, and a daring one | under a slash from Langton's fist. its arms crossed over the breast. In early Grecian times, pretzels were used as ornaments or beads, strung about the neck on feast days. They were supposed to ward off the evil influences of witches and demons. Another long- standing tradition maintained that pretzels strung on cords or willow switches and fastened to fruit | trees would ihsure good crops. After the death of a relative or friend a three-day feast would be held and only pretzels would be eaten during this time. One of the most interesting of all these early | This Naval Defense Against Japan. (Portland Oregonian.) A secret treaty between Britain and the Nether- lands has been signed, guaranteeing the Dutch East Indies the protection of the British navy. is a response to the aggressive policy of Japan, which casts a covetous eye on the Dutch islands, from which it imports much raw material. Japan lacks a domestic source of oil and depends on Dutch Borneo for a large part of its supply. surely—to attemnt with such an | elaborate scheme the luring ot a prominent and wealthy girl into hid. den jungle fastnesses just so that she might enact the death role of the Daughter of Ich-Kin, the Sun God. What a sequence of horror had this priest of a dead race re- vived in his madness! HOGABTH, her director, dead. McGrath, (he advance man, murdered as were the two camera- She saw a knife upraised in a brown fist. Langton's sinewy hand darted out and twisted it away. A lunging na- tive knocked her down to the steps. Her wildly roving glance fell upon a discarded knife a foot from her hand. She snatched it up as Langton of the guards toward her. He gaspea, “We can't get away! Try to reach the ahkin and—" « burst through the twisting bodies | | (Authorized Dealers) GAS OILS GREASES C. L. FENTON CHIROPRACTOR Soutn Front St., next to Brownle's Barber Shop orfice Hours: 10-12; 3-8 Evenings by Appointment Groceries—Produce—Fresh and Smoked Meats oG R L HI-LINE SYSTEM HOTEL ZYNDA Large Sample Room ELEVATOR SERVICE 8. ZYNDA, Prop. e SO —_—— ————— — — GARBAGE HAULED | Reasonable Monthly Rates E. 0. DAVIS { | TELEPHONE ¥ customs obtained in Austria, where the early Bavar- | Japan has been reaching north and south for | men. Greene and thé boy Juan| His sentence ended in a moan as Front Street, opposite Harrls | Phoneoflsssm jans used pretzels as money prior to the iron 'more islands. She took Formosa from China in | gone. a clubbed rifle hit him behind the POOT OP MAIN ST, | Hardware Co. | . | o R ST period. 1895 and the south half of Saghalien from Russia Frank, too, was gone—gone as|head. He -‘tched toward Janice. | CASH AND CARRY | L S —— Now, I suppose you wonder why salt is placed on pretzels. According to one historian, the salti on the pretzel is to interpret an old Bavarian belief | Sumatra, Celebes, Borneo and smaller ones, also | little while she and Langton would Slowly—it seemed almost slow: that the salt was to redeem the souls from .. New Guinea. But the Dutch islands are | join them all. motion—be reversed his rifle. The MAYTAG PEODUCTS Hades. now defended by the British fleet with its new Janice brushed her wrist across | girl knew in that instant he intend: Good luck seems always to have been associated | with the pretzel. In some European localities, pretzels were distributed to the poor, and to school children, particularly on feast days. One legend has it that by pulling a pretzel apart while making a wish, one's fondest desire would be attained. In later years the pretzel was made in the form | of rings, bracclets and even hair ornaments. They were called “typus” (bracelet) and from bracelet | the word “Bretzel” was derived. Although today pretzels have taken a number of new forms, the mejority of them are still true to the early bracelet in 1905. The Philippines are asserted by some to be next in the line of her advance southward and beyond them are the great Dutch islands of Java, base at Singapore. A Homer of the East Side. (New York World-Telegram.) Montague Glass had the perception, humanity, good humor®and courage to write into popular stories the fact that the Jewish “clucks and soof mer- chant is a funny character. To the amazement of timorous editors, instead of being offended, the Jewish people were his proudest appreciators. He wrote real stuff. His Abe Potash and Maw- russ Perlmutter were drawn from the wood, sprouted surely from her life as was Ortega who had lost his life on the pyramid top hy the hand of his master. In a her forehead. Her gesture could not sweep away the unreality. This was a dream; no, it was a part she was playing on some realistically ap- pointed studio set at home. She _elt that if she listened in- tently she would be able to hear the hum of traffic on the streets beyond the lot—comforting sounds, sounds that would assure her of the proximity ot civilization. ‘There was a hum undoubtedly The noise insistently overbore the flat monotone of the altar drum. The guard who had struck him turned his eyes, crazed with excite- ment, toward Janice. ed to shoot her! She struggled backward up the steps. She was barely conscious that she had backed against the jaguar cage. Her ears were deaf t¢ the savage growls behind her. The rifle was raised—still with native’s teeth bared, the muscles of his hand tightened over the trigger gnard. A spurt of flame darted from the muzzle. (Copyrizht, 1934, by Herbert Jensen) that illusion of retarded action. The J Your Interest in Better Business is direct and personal, for you know that your own prosperity depends upon general GENERAL MOTORS and W. P. JOHNSON | | Smith Electric Co. Gastineau form. 2 in native earth, as authentic as any folk characters| Perhaps it existed only in her mind improvement in conditions throughout all I lmvrgxu:m During the time the Renaissance spread Its en-|from the river steamboats or the cattle range. Abe| —or else it was the crowd murmur-| ypee the Jungies or Vacateacend® this section. I mcn.wue ] lightening gleam over Europe, apparently the pretzel land Mawruss talked, gestured and behaved like the 3 began to lose some of its earlier mystic significance. Since then they have been known simply as some- thing good to eat, a nice delicacy to be served with beer. While once famous in their own right, it was beer that brought their more recent popularity over the past four or five centuries. Perhaps the next time you are enjoying a bottle of beer and munching pretzels you will have a moment to recall what an interesting and unusual life the pretzel has had. CABBAGE SEED FROM SKAGIT VALLEY. In recent years commercial production of cabbage seed has shifted more and more to the a relatively small area only a few line where growers »d ‘& serfous handicap in farming, people who make the subway rush hours. Mr. Glass had the eye to perceive them, and his jot- tings belong in the great pageant of American history. It is sad that he has died in his lively prime at 56. He lived a rich and grateful life. The world will be a more drab place, a less brave and colorful place, now that he has gone. Millions will mourn him and for years hence will turn back to read him. What air-mail subsidy arrangers need is some sort of business letter-head that will ignite spon- taneously 15 minutes after, opening. (Destroit News.) One thousand optimists, the thousand Americans who have filed claims against Russia.—(Chicago News.) The modern theme song is “When the Blend Comes Over the Counter.”—(Ohio State Journal.) Worse than winter is depression lingering in the 1ap of prosperity.—(Boston Globe.) 100 THE HOTEL OF A LASKAN HOTELS The Gastineau Our Services to You Begin and End at the Gang Plank of Every Passenger-Carrying Boat Just now, when industry and trade can use every dollar of capital that can be got together here, your bank balance becomes important to the whole Juneau district as well as to yourself. The B. M. Behrends Bank has been safeguarding the funds of Juneau people for forty-two years. It offers you assured pro- tection and. service that has stood the test. ALASKA Al R EXPRESS FOR CHARTER Lockheed 6-Passenger Seaplane TELEPHONE 22 J. V. HICKEY Old Papers for Sale at Empire Office The B. M. Behrends Bank JUNEAU, ALASKA BETTY MAC BEAUTY SHOP 162 Assembly Apartmemts PHONE 547 | TYPEWRITERS RENTED $5.00 per month I | J. B. Burford & Co. | “Ourdooutepmbym.‘ | | customers” e v s Y DRUGGIST The Squibb Store