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i | - THI Daily Alaska Empire ey T ROBERT W. BENDER - - GENERAL MANAGER shed _eve evening _except Sunday by the EI(PP‘;‘?R“E PRINTI‘;G COMPANY at Second and Main Streets, Juneau, Alaska. it dibeahstn S ansmen O TR Entered in the Post Office in Juneau as Second Class matter. BSCRIPTION RATES. Delivered by ea‘rl!{ler In Juneau and Douglas for $1.25 r month. mall, postage paid, at the following rates One’year, o adyance, $12.00; slx months, in ad ;. month, in advance, .26 0. bocribers will confer & favor it they will promptly notify the Business Office of any failure or irregularity 1i of_their papers. o "l‘z?eg:o::?or Editorial and Business Offices, 374. ©F ASSOCIATEL PRESS. The ArmEc'I‘nB!e!de’reu is exclusively entitled to tb ame for republication of all news dispatchcs credited to % or not olherlwlhs:dcmwd in this paper -nd also the ublisl erein. :’f:ls::wn RCULATION GUARANTEED TO BE LARGER THAN TMAT OF ANY OTHER PUBLICATION. nce, A CONCESSION THAT DOES NOT GO FAR ENOUGH. Longshore union officers in San Francisco have snown a realization of the seriousness of the situa- tion in Bristol Bay by recommending to the Seattle strikers that the cannery supply ships for that section be released from the shipping tieup that is paralyzing the industry and commerce of this Territory. Several days ago, San Francisco strikers granted a like concession to the vessels sailing out of that port. Surely the Seattle unions will not be less considerate. If they follow the recommenda- that will materially lighten the menace of the strike situation but it will lack much of removing all danger. It will enable the salmon canning industry of a small area to operate. It will like- wise permit food and other supplies to reach the residents of the same region. But there is a vast area lying between South- egst Alaska and Bristol Bay on the coast, including the towns of Yakutat, Cordova, Valdez, Latouche, Seward, Seldovia and Kodiak, to name only the largest, and many smaller settlements, Indian and white, the entire Alaska Railroad belt from Seward to Fairbanks, the river system of the Tanana and Yukon Rivers with numerous scattered towns and villages for which no provision has been made. Most of the region between Juneau and Fairbanks are on a weekly purchase basis. Merchants are accus- tomed to receiving regular shipments of foodstuffs once each week throughout the year. Although Juneau merchants received their shipments last week, there has been a shortage of produce and vegetables here since late last week. Communities west and north of here are undoubtedly facing a more serious situation. What of the salmon canneries of the Alaska Peninsula, Kodiak and Afognak, Cook Inlet, Prince William Sound and Southeast Alaska? Are they to be forced to do without supplies because they ship on commercial lines and are not operating in competition with them? The canning season is right at their doors. They must make many preparations before then. It is too late to do that after the fish are gone. As Gov. Troy has emphasized, Alaska is not taking side in the strike. It is not for or against either party to it. Of course, it is evidently going to be ended by mediation and arbitration. Neither side is probably all right or all wrong. Pending that settlement, the just thing to do is to accept the tender made by operators of vessels between Seattle and Alsska, that is, to declare a truce on Alaska shipping; permit it to operate as usual; and when a settlement is reached require that its terms be applied retroactively to Alaska shipping as of the day of resumption of operations. Such an agree- ment can injure no one. It will not weaken the strike front And it will prevent serious harm to Alaska it: ndustry and commerce. tio: NEITHER ABDICATION NOR QUARREL. Recenlly the ¥ ichikan Chronicle. which con- tinues se “hopped up” over liquor control, assumed that there is a quarrel between the Juneau City Council and the Board of Liquor Control. Editorially it accused the local municipal administration of “passing the buck” back to the Liquor Board. That is, of course, too silly to need refutation. If there is any difference of opinion between the local City Council and the Board, or any other agency of the Territory. none in Juneau has heard of it. Of more serious import is the charge of the Ketchikan publication that Mayor Goldstein's Ad- ministration is not concerned whether we have orderly or disorderly government. It intimates that the Ketchikan City Council will make no attempt to conduct an orderly government, wheh can hardly be credited by those who know Mayor Gilmore per- sonally. We cannot believe he would be a party to conniving at lawlessness for political or any other purpose. In this connection the Chronicle said: The Juneau Council is assuming the same position as the Ketchikan Council. The method of procedure is different. In Juneau the municipal government will make no at- tempt to conduct an ‘orderly town. It realizes that the Liquor Board wants to dictate the management of its business and agrees to abdicate rather than attempt a bothersome situation. In Ketchikan the Council will test the right of the Juneau Board to wreck its law enforcing system and its given right to conduct a lawful eommunity. ‘That sort of balderdash, whether conceived in malice of ignorance, will of course not be credited by a single person in Juneau, in so far as this city is concerned. We know nothing of, nor are we responsible for any conditions that may exist in Ketchikan. No action of the Liquor Board has deprived the City Council of its right to enforce Jaw and order within the corporate limits. If at Ketchikan municipal authorities have decided to run a wide open town without regard for decency, | * civic self-respect or law, it will not be long before the mass of law abiding, home-loving people, which is composed of a majority of its citizens, will act ~ decisively to mend matters. No such conditicn of affairs exists here. Juneau is the same orderly, decorous and law-abiding com- munity it has always been. It is a 100 per cent Alaskan town. Its City Council has not relaxed its law enforcement policy. It has instructed the City | Police Department to enforce all laws without fear |or favor. The Department is carrying out these | instructions to the letter and has the undivided support of the Councilmen and Mayor. There is no more law violation since the advent of legal liquor than there was under Prohibition, probably less. That is probably true of every Alaskan town, |even Ketchikan. At least we would like to include ithe First City in the list. | One doesn’t always know just what is behind some of these proposed reforms. Here's that plan of Senator Norris's to abolish the electoral college. Has he discovered “professionalism” among its foot- ball squad? As it isn't possible to redistribute brains as well as money maybe they'd just as well leave things as they are. In no time they would be right back where they were, anyway. Now it seems as if the Western boys on the Con- ‘gressional front will succeed in putting some silver |lining in the depression cloud. Perhaps They're Both Wrong. (Cincinnati Enquirer.) A championship bout that will not draw a very large crowd is one featuring Dr. Edwin Hubble, head of the Mount Wilson Observatory, and Dr. Albert - Einstein, revered for his delightful person- ality by millions who haven't the faintest idea what he means in his papers and addresses. Dr. Einstein seemed to have things his own way for several years. He said the universe was static and measurable. Either nobdy understood his reasoning or else nobody had time to dig up proofs to the contrary. Then Hubble found some facts concerning the fading of the spectra of distant universes, and convinced Einstein that the universe (all of it) is in fact expanding at a pretty good clip. : A new show-down is coming this week as Dr. Hubble faces a critical audience at Oxford. A num- ber of the English are pretty well up on their physics, and Dr. Hubble may have to back track before he is through. Naturally, the gate receipts at this show will be small. Most of us lack either the understanding of physical terminology or else the imagination to get a thrill out of light quanta and fading nebulae, 4 If and when these two and a few other physicists make up their minds and reach at least a tentative agreement, it would be nice to know whether the universe is static or expanding—or for that matter contracting. Not that we would do anything about it. But it would be nice to know. It's our universe, even if it is 3,600,000,000,000,000,000,000 miles across. And we've a right to know what it's doing. Alaskans First. (Anchorage Times.) With the appointment of another member to the high judicial bench in Alaska about to be made, the old ghost of the carpet bagger again looms in the offing. Many candidates for the poosition are appearing on- the horizon in States from Texas to Vermont and from Florida to the Pacific. Alaska wants no imported timber. She has men of her own who are eminently gaulified and who are entitled to whatever honors and favors the Administration is in position to bestow. The nam- ing of a Judge brings with it authority to name many Commissioners and other -minor officers. Alaska has no need of talent from outside sources. She has rich red blooded men of brain and brawn of her own, and there is no need of calling on politicians or others from the Texas ranges, Rhode Island, Madagascar, Hongkong or any other part of the world. How would men in the States feel if legal lights and others of Alaska should go plum hunting in their States. It would be as reasonable for Alaska to seek some of the political patronage of any State in' Alaska. Time was when the States of Oregon and Pennsylvania pulled down most of the official ap- pointments in this Territory. That day is past— and the ruling applies to all States. The carpet bagget is not wanted and will not be acceptable to any political or non-partisan element in Alaska. Republicans and Democrats may differ on political issues in Alaska but when it comes to Federal appointment, they are brothers—and of one mind. “Alaska for Alaskans” is a slogan that might well be kept in mind—and in so doing the powers who select the men for official positions in Alaska will be proving their wisdom and win the con- fidence and support of the people of Alaska. The CCC. (New York World-Telegram.) The Civilian Conservation Corps finishes its first year with a record of which the Administration might boast. It has been a life-saver for 600,000 men who have found wholesome outdoor work, badly needed wages and soul solace in the green mansion of the nation’s great forests. Of the $225,000,000 the project has cost, fully two-thirds have gone into buying power for families that needed it most. Fireproofing work has kept forest fire damage down to $235,000, which is less than 17 per cent of the annual loss during the five years preceding 1933. Its mass attack on white pine blister rust has checked a plague that threatens the entire white pine lumber industry of the Pacific Northwest. It has approached timber growing as an agricultural industry, and has planted 17,000,000 trees in the waste places left by careless lumbermen. But its greatest boon has béen in conserving the young foresters themselves, their health, morale and, self-respect. Congress can show its approval of this record by voting funds to finance the CCC for at least another year. A Minneapolis price war has driven one whiskey blend down to 29 cents a pint. Figuring the bottle and label at three cents, someone is making a quarter —(Detroit News.) When Japan warns other countries to keep hands }orr China, the idea she is trying to convey proba- bly is that one pain of hands on China is enough. | —(Philadelphia Inquirer.) | The knot-hole gang that used to peek at the |baseball games may expand operations to include nudist colony fences.—(Indianapolis Star.) Washington observers intimate that France may |become a second-class power. Well, it already has |lost first-class standing for debt payments.—(Indian- apolis Star.) As useless as a washing machine in a nudist camp.—(Ohio State Journal) as it is for men in those States to ask for positions [ SYNOPSIS: W hen Bergeant Harper finds that a policeman and a man who resembles the contrac- tor and political power Pierre Du- Jresne have been shot in the break- fast room of Dufresne’s house he yushes to the downtown hotel where he had left Dufresne an hour before, dead drunk. Dufresme is there. Harper returns to the house and finds the Headquarters experts at work. He asks for “Sheriff” Doyle, the reporter. CHAPTER 12 ENTER MRS. DUFRESNE “DOYLE left, Sergeant,” Clymer answered. “Did he do any telephoping ?”” “No, sir. We heard your ,orders, about that.” Harper nodded. He supposed that the reporter had become anxious and nervous about his “scoop,” and had gone out to try to find another telephone. As he turned to his work, there came the sound of hurried steps entering the hall, doors slammed, and a woman's voice cried out, hysterically. “Pierre! Pierre!” she wailed, “where i¢ he? Oh, where Is he?" The detective understood in a flash why Doyle had left the house. Laboring under the delusion that Du- fresne had been killed, the reporter had taken it upon himself to carry the news to the man’s wife. He nearly collided with the on- rushing figure. She was wrapped in a fur coat and out of its huge collar “her lovely nead rose, hatless, and with snowflakes glistening and melt- ing on her soft hair Her eyes were wide with terror and despair, the beautiful mouth twisted pitiably. Blocking the doorway, he laid his hand on her arm. “Steady, Mrs. Dufresne,” he said, trying to lead her back into the hall, “there has been a terrible mistake. Your husband is safe and sound. The man who was killed here is a strang: er. He wore a disguise that made him look like Mr. Dufresne. Do you understand me?” “Yes, yes,” she breathed, “there has been a mistake. Plerre is safe. But let me see—let me see!” “Are you sure you want to look | into that room, Mrs. Dufresne?” “I must see,” she declared, in a low voice. “I must see for myself!” Harper moved aside from the door. Mrs. Dufresne stepped into the room. “Oh!” she gasped when she saw the weird tableau of death. “I'll show you how it is,” Harper said. The detective stripped away the beard and moustache. When Mrs. Dufresne saw the na-| tural features of the man, she made strange, wordless sounds. Without warning, her knees buckled, she reached forth vaguely to support herself, then collapsed. As she fell. her face struck the sharp corner of the center table, opening a long gash across her cheek. Harper leaped to her side with a cry of dismay as he saw the blood pouring from the wound. Calling for Dr. Miller, he gathered the fin- conscious figure into his arms and strode from that ill-fated room. Dr. Miller gave a little grunt as he straightened up beside the bed where Mrs. Dufresne lay stretched out. “How is she, Doc?’ Harper in quired, anxiously. “Well, I've stopped most of the ‘bleeding, but these old hands of mine are too clumsy to attend to that cut properly.” “Will it leave a scar?” “That’s what we must avoid. Some of these new chaps do wonderfal work along that line. It'd be best to have one in, I think.” “We'd better get hold of her own doctor first and let him handle this. 1 hate to think of her being scarred or disfigured.” R. MILLER bent down and asked his question. He &cribbled the doctor’s name and initials on his prescription pad and handed the leaf to the detective. “Get his 'phone number and tell him to come as soon as possible. The sooner, the better.” ‘When Harper left Mrs. Dufresne’s room to go downstairs again, he found Howard Doyle waiting at the foot of the stairs. “How is she, Ser- geant?” he inquired at once, visibly perturbed. S Harper replied angrily. “It Mrs. Dufresne’s face is marred for life you ought to pick out a high bridge and throw yourselt over.” “Why didn’t you say something. then, before you left? This is Du- fresne’s house and the dead man certainly looked like Dufresne. You held us all back, locked the door. and went away without saying any thing.” Harper's face flamed with angen. “Listen to this, Doyle. I warned you not to release the story until I gaye the word. Hold on, now—i've ne time to argue. I'll talk to you later.” The detective looked up Dr. 0. C. A Miles Au Harri Plumbing [ 3°MOCKING BY WALTER C. BROWN Condil SEE IT. Miles Air Conditioner can be in- stalled on any hot air furnace job. Mathe Shop HOUSE Ulrich’s telephone number ‘nd‘ called it. Harper explained the| eituation briefly and described the| nature of the wound. If the doctor | had any curiosity about the cause| of the wound he gave no sign of it. He promised to be over in less than half an hour. | With that detail out of the way,|s Sergeant Harper turned his atten-| tion to the major matter in hand. He called together Officer Clymer, De- tective Lafferty, and the two plain-| clothesmen from Headquarters. “So| far we have found no clue to the identity of the man who has been killed here,” he began. ‘For Some unknown reason he, chose to impersonate the master of this'house. If this same man wrote: the threatening letter and shot at, Mr. Dufresne, the chances are that we are dealing with a lunatic. There will be traces and I want you to look for them. We haven't foun¥l this man’s hat and overcoat, for instance. Look for signs of forcible entry, too, but don’t go outside. I want the snow left undisturbed. The men scattered to their tasks. Harper and Carlin were alone with the dead men, and the investigation into their strange death was on in earnest. “Well, Professor; it's time we got down to brass tacks. What do the stars in their course tell you about this?” While he asked this ques- tion, Harper was carefully looking over the man in the armchair. The ballistics expert smiled at the pleasantry. “Dr. Miller has emptied the pockets,” he explained. “Over there you can see all that was found.” On a corner of the buffet was a folded, unused man's handker- chiet of good quality. On it was seventy-nine cents in change. | “What has taken place here, Ser- geant, is plainly written.” He point- ed to the body in the armchair. “That man is seated there. He has been drinking. He is smoking a ciga- | rette. The policeman enters. Two guns are lifted simultaneously and fired. Both men are dead—they have | killed each other. That is the story. | The reason why all this happened? That is your job, Sergeant, and you are welcome to it!” Harper nodded. “The reconstruc- tion of the scene is quite obvious. But suppose, Carlin, I told you that | I don’t believe everything I hear— and not always what I see?” “-A H, then, that makes a differ- ence. We can talk more about this simple story.” Carlin's flair for the dramatic was being “fed” by the | detective with admirable results. | “There are certain parts of this story | I find hard to swallow. The most ex- cellent marksmanship displayed, for instance—it is almost too perfect. “One shot—right through the | brain. It is true that the man in the chair needs two shots—but one goes straight to the heart, the other not two inches away. A man does not fire after he has been shot through the brain, nor after a bullet has gone through his heart.” “Yet each man died where he was found,” Harper mused. “There are the stains on the rug to prove it.” “Consider this,” Carlin went on excitedly, now at full tilt with his subject, “consider the absolute non- chalance of these men. This one did not rise from his chair, an instinc- tive movement where danger threat- ens. He did not even drop his ciga- rette. It burned on and on between hjs fingers until it was consumed, Searing the flesh.” He screwed a jeweler’s glass into his eye and examined a mis-shapen bullet under direct light. “This is a .38 caliber, and I have no doubt that the rifling will prove it to have is- sued from Officer Hamill's gun. And when the other two bullets are probed out I have no doubt they will prove to have come from this other gun, “Both deaths were instantaneous, yet we cannot readily admit so in- credible a thing as an absolutely simultaneous exchange of shots, for the man in the chair here fired twice. “But what disturbs me most is this,” he went on, pointing to the circular bullet mark in the strang- er's forehead. “The bullet went in through the left frontal, passed completely through the skull and made its exit wound in the base of the brain. If we did not have the bullet, and you asked me what had caused that wound, I would answer without a moment’s hesitation—a .45 steeljacket. But it seems that 1 would ‘be wrong, for there is that mark on the wainscoting where our .28 bullet lodged itself. “l1 have a strange reluctance to asserting that these men killed each other in the manner indicated, yet there are the facts staring us in the fac (Copyright, 1984, by Walter C. Brown) Tomorrow, Dr. Ulrich antagonizes Sergeant Harper. E DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, WEDNESDAY, MAY 23, 1934, B e PO PR MAY 23, 1914 At the second baseball game of the Douglas-Juneau series, the Isl- Massage, Electricity, Infra Red Ray, Medical Gymnastics. 307 Goldstein Building Phone Office, 216 PSR PROFESSIONAL ||| Fraternal Societies f‘ F £ i hannel From The Empire Hiclone W.L, Albbecht | |p. corinean Channel | PHYSIOTHERAPY e B. P. 0. ELKS meets | | every Wednesday a% |8 p. m Visiting g | | brothers welcome, 7| L. W. Turoff, Exalt- into camp with a total score of 2 to 0. The game was called at 4:15 on the island diamond, the weather was ideal and it was esti- mated that a crowd of 2500 wit- nessed the game. In the Juneau line-up were, Hester, Duggan, Cal- lan, Wurth, Molloy, McNevinsky, Hurlbutt and Fort. Douglas’ line- up included, Dahl, Kalal, Museth, ‘Woods, Mensor, Kertis, Johnson, Pitman and Coblentz. i — and boys took the Gastineau team E. B. The crew of the Al-Ki, mlvingf from Hoonah, reported four cases of small pox at that place with two additional suspect cases. A virtual quarantine prevailed there and Dr. Wilberforce served a written no- | tice that no passengers were to be landed or taken aboard. The seventh grade pupils enjoyed | their class picnic at Lemon Creek leaving town at 9 o'clock in the morning with the idea of spend- ing the entire day out of doors. Mrs. Struble, the. teacher, accom- ture of 68 degrees and a minimum of 39. Concrete foundations for the new home being erected by R. P. Nel- con, on Fifth and Harris Streets, was completed and work was to be pushed on the erection of the — Rose A. Ardrews Graduate Nurse Electric Cabinet Baths—Mas , Colonic Irrigations | Ofl;c.:' hours 11 am. to 5 pm, | | Meetings second and lam Evenings by Appointment Second and Main Phone 259 1 WILSON | Chiropodist—Foot Specialist 401 Goldstein Building PHONE 496 DRS. KASER & FREZBURGER DENTISTS Blomgren Bullding PHONE 56 Hours 9 am. to § pm. i E T O T i Ne, C. P. Jenne panied them. DENTIST Rooms 8 and § Valentine Weather for the previous day was | Bullding clear with a maximum tempera-| | Telephone 176 e .8 r Dr. J. W. Bayne DENTIST Rooms 5-6 Triangle Bldg. Oflice aours, ® am. to § pm. &venings by appointment, | +| ed Ruler. M. H. Sides, Secretary. R S | ENIGHTS OF COLUMBUS | | Seghers Counctl No. 1768, | | Monday at 7:30 p. m.4 | | Transient brothers urg- .+ ed to attend. Councll { Chambers, Fifth Strevl. JOHN F. MULLEN, G. K H. J. TURNER. Becretary Cad s anehol i i MOUNT JUNEAT LODGE NO. 142 |1 second and fourth Mon- lday of ~wh month in (Scottish i‘e Temple, beginning at 7:2% p. m. L. E. HENDRICKSON, Master; JAMES W. LEIVIRS, Sex retary. Douglas Aerie 17 F. 0. E. {Mcets first and third Mondays 3 p.m., Eagles’ Hail, Douglas. Visiting | |brothers welcome. R. A. Schmids, W. 'k, Guy L. Smith, Secrctary. ()lu''.fllchwu:yplm»l.ny1 burner trouble. PHON: 149; NIGH{ 148 | REVLIABLE TRANSFER and a tank for crude oil save ? & ____—___—nl time. A tank for Diesel Ol | 1 | | er Governor of Alaska. Members of the Senior class of the Juneau High School received their diplomas at commencement exercises held at the Elks Hall the previous evening. There was a large attendance to witness the import- ant event. Judge R. W. Jennings were presented by Judge J. B. Mar- shall. The Rev. George Renison gave the benediction. Members of the class were Miss Thelma Ninnis, | | = Dr. Richard Williams | DENTIST OFFICE AND RESIDENCE Gastineau Building Phone 481 | delivered a splendid commence- | & ment address and the diplomas| | Dr. A. W. Stewart | % DENTIST Hours 9 am. to 6 pm. SEWARD BUILDING Office Phone 409, Res. ! hone B 4 building proper as soon as possible. ,'_'____P__”l—u NOW OPEN L. J. Loussac, of the Juneau .E_ 4 C lzercm] Ad]ust' Drug store, announced that his n | ment & Rating Bureau store would send some fortunate Robert Sxmpson Cooperating with vgvmu Service customer of the store to the Pana- Opl. D. Bureau ma-Pacific exposition at San Fran- Graduate Los Angeles Col- Room 1—Shattuck Bldg. cisco at its expense. The trip was lege of Optometry and } We have 5,000 local ratings to include first class transporta- | Opthalmology on file tion both ways, good hotel accom- || Glasses Fitted, Lenses Ground | |z iy modations and sufficient cash for| s emonay = all necessary expenses. b 1 J S S Sh 3 Earle C. Jameson, who for th e T 0. :Des. s - 1‘ - ., r three tometrist—Optician ' ~CHILD) years past had been city editor of Em(g;m",‘m,d_m,pfm Fitted n;::;z-ro-w::: s | the Dispatch, announced his in- Room 17, Valentine Bldg. Seward Street Near Third tention of leaving that paper on Office Phone 484; Residence | {June 1 to take a position with the| | pnone 238. Office Hours: 9:30 - ] Mail, published in Charleston, West to 12; 1:00 o 5:30 (8 | cmmmsen Virginia, by Walter E. Clark, form- |z it Sl e JUNEAU-YOUNG i Funeral Parlors Licensed Funeral Directors | and Embalmers e Night Phone 1851 Day Phone 12 SABIN’S Everything in Furnishings for Men “Tomorrow’s Styles Today” CASH AND CARRY { PAINTS—OILS Builders’ and Shelf HARDWARE Thomas Hardware Co. eacs o B O Miss Nora Museth, Miss Alma Sow- Phone 276 | |52 erby, Charles Sabin, George Nel- Z—m0mn—m——m—— &2 | son and Edward Beattie. o = Daily Empire Want Ads Pay Franklin Street between Groceries—Produce—Fresh | Front and Second Streets , and Smoked Meats ] WILLOUGHBY AVENUE | e . ey JUNEAU FROCK SHOPPE “Exclusive but not Expensive” “Juneaw’s Own Store” pire office. Mining Location Noiices at Em- HOTEL ZYNDA Large Sample Room Gang Plank of Every Passenger-! FRYE’S BABY BEEF { Telephone 88 tomatic Air tioner is operating in the new Jensen Apartments. bank will prove its worth to you. The B. M Boat “DELICIOUS” HAMS and BACON Frye-Bruhn Company Prompt Delivery Demonstrated Dependability has enabled The B. M. Behrends Bank to earn and keep the good will of depositors from every part of the great district which this institution serves. Whether you require Checking or Savings serv- ice, or cooperation in the solution of some business problem, an alliance with Alaska’s oldest and larges’ THE HOTEL OF ALASKAN HOTELS The Gastineau Our Services to You Begin and End at the Carrying Qur officers will be glad to talk things over and to suggest ways in which we might be helpful. Behrends Bank Juneau, Alaska . ELEVATOR SERVICE 8. ZYNDA, Prop. P D, GARBAGE HAULED Reasonable Monthly Rates E. 0. DAVIS TELEPHONE 584 Phone 4753 l | n!ua"rmnum W. P. JOHNSON e T L ST b e e e — ?\a McCAUL ‘MOTOR i - <f 7, k- g B