Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
TH Daily Alaska Empire v e R TR DT T B shed vening _except Bunday by the M R INTING GOMPANT at Second and Main Streets, Juneau, Alaska. e Entered in the Pest Office In Juneau as Second Class matter. BSCRIPTION RATES. { Delivered by J’ghf in Jllntl'll" and Douglas for $1.25/ per _month. ‘mall it pald, at the following rates: Onna’yeu.l'ln:.,::dl:::.c;. $12.00; six months, In advance, #$0.00; one mn'{ n VI!IMQ- .26, i Il confer a favor if they will promptly ot s Business Office of any fatlure or irregularity of_thelir papers. e eie Yor Editorial and Business Offices, 374. ER OF ASSOCIATEL PRESS, The MMEM.?” Press is exclusively entitled to th nse for republication of all news dispatches mdlt.ledu:o * or not ntber“'ll:ea ;5 r:::fl in this paper and also the #cal news published herein. ULATION GUARANTEED TO BE LARGER ALASKT‘NA%‘“?NAT OF ANY OTHER PUBLICATION. CHANCE FOR AGREEMENT SLIGHT. While the conference called of principals in the longshoremen's strike by Mr. Reardon, Director of | Industrial Relations of California, will be watched | here with deep interest, the indications are that its | chances for success are slight. The Director proposes to submit to the delegates of the strikers and the| shipping intersts the question of settlement by direct negotiations betwgen local unions and shippers in each port. A similar recommendation was made last week by J. H. Ryan, President of the Interna- tional Longshoremen’s Association and was passed almost unnoticed by the unions. It is hurdly likely that they will be more amenable to Mr. Reardon’s suggestion. The departure of Edward F. McGrady, Asst. Secretary of Labor, for Washington and his public | announcement that the situation was beyond media- tion is convincing vroof that without intervention by President Roosevelt it will be a finish fight. “Both sides have reverted to the law of the jungle,” he declared, predicting bloodshed, destruction of property and untold damage to commerce. It is evident that the longshoremen will not consent to individual settlements, nor that the operators will consent to a closed shop agreement with the unions. The proportions of the tieup, involving as it does the very existence of the industrial and social exist- ence of Aluska. justifies the appeal to the President | to persounliy i vene. It is not a trifling matter. The peace, happiness and welfare of 60,000 residents | of this Territory are at stake. All other recourses have been cxhausted. Our one chance now is that President Roosevelt will act promptly and effectively. CAUSING ;DLENE. S TO THOUSANDS. Last year, according to a statistical bulletin Just | published by the United States Bureau of Fisheries, 21,695 persons were employed in the various branches of the fisheries industry of Alaska. Last year was an off year for the salmon fisheries in that a large number of canneries, operated in normal seasons, remained closed due to the unsatisfactory condition prevailing in the markets. This year all of these have planned to re-open, thus furnishing employ- ment to additional thousands. The longshoremen’s strike threatens to prevent cannery operations. If it is permitted to develop into a finish fight, these thousands of persons, & majority of them Alaskans, will not get a chance to work for if the fisheries industry is shut down there is no other source of employment open to them. The thousands, too, who are brought to the Territory to work in canneries and as fishermen, will naturally be added to the unemployment lists of ‘Washington, Oregon and California. In fishing alone in 1933, there were 8,656 indi- viduals engaged; 1,263 in tranportation; and 11,756 in wholesale and manufacturing industries. There were 507 vessels and 4,218 boats used in fishing and 292 vessels operated in transportation. There were 618 other craft, such as scows, houseboats and pile- drivers. ‘The raw value of the 1933 cash was $9,088,984. The value of the finished product was estimated to have been $32,126,588. The strike menaces this employment, the income received by the workers and the revenue derived from the industries by those engaged in it. It deprives the world of some of its most valuable food, thus causing a loss not only to individuals and corporations but to the nation as well. LEGISLATIVE EXTRAVAGANCE. An ihcrease of 586 per cent in the debts of State . |tectural distinction among the cities of the earth. debt bufden is ‘not yet beyond the capacity of the States. It is| the rate of increase that provides serious food for thought, and, in the opinion of The Index, “graphically demonstrates the need for entirely new fiscal policies on the part of many States.” The whole question of governmental ex- travagance is all the more grave in view of the fact that State debts are a less serious problem than Federal and municipal indebtedness. Debts must be paid or repudiated. Without going into the com-j plicated question of the incidence of taxation, it is obvious that the burden is felt even by those who pay no direct taxes; and the need for common- sense fiscal policies should be beyond gquestion at a time when 24 per cent of the national income is absorbed by taxation. A New York whiskey control official says beer will never become the national drink again until a fellow can get a quart bucket full for a dime. And when whiskey can be again purchased for a dollar a quart it will be restored to popularity with the masses. . The announcement that France is about ready to declare the fourth default of her war debt payments: suggests that the next war that comes along will find us needing a new salutation. How about “Lafayette, we are deaf?"” : Gilbert. (New York Times.) New York City has lost the prophet of her archi- The topless towers of Ilium which furnished a set- ting for the Homeric epic were but as Bedouin huts by comparison with the structures which his genius lifted high above Manhattan Island. Coming up the bay, one still sees outstanding the queenly tower that gave him his first world fame. Seeking his monument, we look toward the skies in New World pinnacles more aspiring than the tower zig- gurats by which the ancients climbed toward their commerce with the gods, or the “geometrical enormi- ty” that “peaked true” in the pyramid. There are many other buildings of his that we see looking about us on the levels of Sir Christopher Wren's buildings. And not alone here, but in many cities of the United States, especially in the valley of his birth—from the State Capitol in Minnesota to that of Arkansas and to the University of Texas. A man of the Middle Border, he bequeathed lasting gifts of his art to the prairies beyond the moun- tains. Nature's wild landscape was transfeatured by the sovereignty of his mind, and, as the Laureate has written, what he wrought comforted mortality with immortal grace. His closing years were crowned with the highest honor that his country could give him in his selection as the architect of the United States Supreme Court Building. He once said in explanation of the long time it would be in the building that it was designed to last for all time. His fame will live with it. Mr. Gilbert had every honor that his profession and kindred arts could give. If he had lived in Athens in the age of Pericles, he would no doubt have been chosen with Ictinus and Callicrates to fashion the “greatest gem on earth’s zone.” In is day he was a leader among those who have given America a prime place among the nations in the art that “aims at eternity.” Sir Christopher Wren could have said with especial fitness of the build- ings of Cass Gilbert that, being an ornament of his country, they help to establish a nation, draw | people together and make them love the morei their native land. The splendid bridge over the Hudson, of his designing, is a symbol of that draw- | ing together of a people by man's highest art. | Above Our Confusion a Dream Arises. | (Daily Olympian.) When the history of these times gets written, it is probable that the last couple of years will seem | a lot less confusing than they look just now. Sometimes it seems that our chief diversion of late has been to run fround in circles. We have fondly anounced that we have ‘“come to the end of an era.” but we haven't made any clear forecast of what the next era is going to be like, and we have put in a lot of time gazing fondly back on | the high old days of the 'twenties. But once we get far enough off to get a decent perspective, it is likely that the present moment will look more like a momentary halt, a breathing space between two great adventures, than a time of bewilderment and chaos. Our first great adventure had to do with the exploitation of the physical resources of a con- tinent. An incredibly rich land was thrown open to human occupation, and all the old rules were abolished. One man was as good as the next one, and the prizes could be won only by the doers. And this adventure—for all its waste, its brutal- ity, its injustices and its greed—brought great human values. It did set many men free, it did nourish | & sturdy spirit of self-reliance and determination, it did make heppiness possible for many people who would not have been happy otherwise. The depression that began with the 1929 crash put an end to this adventure—or, to be exact, to one phase of it. The get-rich-quick era was worked out; the continent was filled up, the period when free-and-easy exploitation was desirable had ended. The job remaining to be done was just as big as ever, but the method of doing it had changed. All that is happening to us right now is that we are fumbling around for the new method of doing the job. We have plenty of work ahead of us—enough o keep us busy for a century. The governments during the 20 years ended with 1932 Is a clear warning against an extravapgance which threatens the taxpayer with a burden greater than he can bear. The average per capita debt of States is now $19.17, compared with $2.77 in 1910. The increase has been greatest in the South Atlantic States, which have an average debt of $27.71 per|’ capita, and least in the East North Central group, where the debt per capita is $10.94. These averages do not give an altogether true picture of the situation, as the debt ranges from 43 cents per capita in Wisconsin and 44 cents in Connecticut to $86.07 in Arkansas. and the greatest increases have . been in States which are least able to bear the burden of interest and amortization charges. Though Arkansas alone was forced into default, many States " have been compelled to make a frantic search for * pew forms of taxation, such as State sales taxes,|; . to offset a declining revenue from other sources. The rate of debt increase in New England was é ; & _ below the average of the States as a whole. From |which Mickey Mouse plays opposite Mae West.— © 1922 to 1922 Massachusetts was able to reduce its|(Newark, Ohio, Advocate.) " debt by 184 per cent and Connecticut by 98.2 per " gent; hut Maine iucreased its debt by 464.7 per cent, . Vermont by 3519 per cent, and New Hampshire by |U " 1155 per cent. The Massachusetts Federation of Association points out that new expendi- ’m‘auuwhed by the Massachusetis Legislature ‘will necessitate an increase of almost 20 per cent ‘, ~ the State tax, and it condemns the “evident mmm!mhnewmtme\ncrnud of 0 Blade.) ww‘.-m‘ of the Southern States, the|born mJlum.—(DflIE News.) continent is as rich as ever, the people are as energetic and as determined as ever. The great American dream—that in this land men shall be freer and happier than they have been elsewhere—is still as possible of realization as it ever was. Beneath the seeming confusion of today is a rising “determination that we shall go forward and help make the dream come true. PO s RO R “I have no doubt that part of the Recovery Act will be permanent,” Geneérgl Johnson told the United States Chamber of Commerce, “but what part I don't kwow.” And that's the hell of it.— (Macon Telegraph.) ¥ ot An alleged nudist camp in Indiana's lake region was said to have been only a group of scantily ttired bathers. And, admittedly, there isn't much | ifference.—(Indianapolis Star.) A theatre owner’s idea of heaven: A film in Seems never to have occurred to China to put p the well-known sign, “No Trespassing."—(Toledo SYNOPSIS: Apparently & lNczman and @ stranger have shot . each other dead in the breakf room of Plerre Dufresne’s house, Yet Sergeant Harper does mot be- lieve it is 80, although the only evie dence 8o far that he is right seema to connect the beautiful Mrs. Du- fresne with the deed. With Deteo- tive Laflerty, Harper is cagefull reconstructing the murdere siranger's actions’ on the fatol night, Chapter 21 . HELP AT LAST | TRE man seemed to be quite fa- f miliar with the house,” Harper continued, “for he disturbed noth- 1ing. He started a fire in that hearth, Ivery likély as sobn as he arrived, for it was chilly. The logs were pret- ty well burned when we arrived on the scene.” ) “Wouldn’t some one have noti the smoke from the chimney when he started 1t?" Lafferty questioned. “The Whitmores, for instance?" “We can inquire, but I think the chances were against It. It was a (gray, lowering sky, and with the snow coming down so thickly I doubt it 1t would have been noticed. Our man set out a decanter of whiskey and one of brandy, took a glass from the cabinet yonder, and sat down at the head of the table, as comforta- ble as you please. He lit a cigarette, threw the match in the fireplace, and relaxed. Doesn't that suggest that he was there to meet some one? “He smoked five cigarettes, for there are four stubs in the grate and five matchsticks. The fifth cig- arette burned itself to ashes be- tween his dead fingers. As he smoked, he carelessly flipped the ashes toward the fireplace. Some fell a little short. He is still sitting there when Officer Hamill enters the room and the shooting begins.” Lafferty made a wry face. “That brings us right back to the mystery of why they did it. What made them ‘go for each other’ simultaneously ?” Harper said, “It's all very puz- zling. If our unknown man had been trailing Dufresne, he must certalnly have realized that Dufresne would guard himself in the Austerlitz, last night of all nights at least. What made him come up here and dress himself like Dufresne? The mystery of this man’s clothing is going to give us plenty to think about. The outfit must be part of his mas- querade, his own clothing must be hidden somewhere in this house.” Harper turned out the {nner breast pocket of the jacket. An em- bossed silk label turnished the mak- er's name—Barr, Tompkins & Barr, one of the exclusive tailoring firms of the city. “Look here, Jack, thig tellow was 00 customer of that firm. There s too much discrepancy between the quality of his under and outer cloth- ing. Nor did his hands exactly Indl- cate the gentleman of leisure. These nose-glasses were put on, along with the false beard, to make his resem- blance to Dufresne more striking. The pincers of the glasses made deep red marks on the sides of his'l nose. “Was he so anxious to conceal his identity that he removed a ring worp so long that he had to skin his knuckle to get it off? There are some leading questions for you.” “Well, Barr, Tompkins & Barr should be able to give us some in- formation about the dress suit.” “1 think we can get the same fn- formation much nearer home,” Har- per replied, rising and pressing the service bell. “QTEVE,” Lafferty began, “I've been mulling over what you said about that man having shaved here in the house. That suggests just one thing to me—he was going to meet some one—and that some one was a woman. You can't escape the deduction.” Harper nodded. “Yes, but you can’t be so positive about a woman being mixed up in it. Every time you see a man shaving it doesn't mean that he's going to a ren. dezvous.” “Steve, you're certainly bent on throwing a screen around Mrs. Dufresne. Why are you so sure she had nothing to do with 1t?” Harper answeréd patiently, “That inference will not be overlooked. ! hold no brief for the lady, but I have an instinctive feeling that she is entirely innocent. Not, as Doyle suggested, because of her air of fra. gllity or any chivalrous duty to beau. ty in distress.” “Mrs. Dufresne fainted when she saw the dead man unmasked,” Laf- ferty contiuued doggedly. “Perhaps that was from shock or the sudden reliet from' straln=but I think she knew that man! And I'm going to take that as a working basis,” “That's quite all right,” Harper answered good-naturedly. “Mrs. Du. fresne's movements last night will be looked' into thoroughly. Don't for- get that this pow-wow began with MOCKING HOUSE 8Y w‘llll C. BROWN. E DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, MONDAY, JUNE 4, 1934. the idea that there may have been a third person in this room last night—even,” he pronounced slow- 1y, “that these killings did not take| place as suggested by the evidence.' A dozen watchers beyond the gar- den wall wouldn't alter that, it they| didn’t enter the house—" Harper broke off short as the door| opened and Andrews entered. “Andrews, can you tell us the name of Mr. Dufresne’s tailors?” The butler showed no sign of sur- prise at the seemingly irrelevant question. “Barr, Tompkins & Barr.” Harper picked up the coat, trous- ers, and walstcoat. “1 want you to examine these carefully, Andrews, and tell us if these are part ot Mr. Dufresne’s wardrobe.” Andrews looked closely at- the various articles, fingering the seams, examining the linings, turning out the inner pocket for the label. “Yes, sir, I am quite sure this is one of Mr. Dufresne’s suits.” Harper handed over the nose- glasses, with their black silk cord. “How about these?" “I think they are his. Mr. Du- fresne has all his glasses made up in duplicate pairs.” “Can you identify any others of these clothes?” Andrews obediently picked over the shoes, socks, underwear, shirt, collar and tie. He put the last three articles aside. “I believe these came from upstairs, sir. I am sure the others did not.” “Has Mr. Dufresne awakened yet, Andrews?” “Oh, yes, sir. He Is having break- fast now.” “Have you been in Mr. Dufresne’s rooms since you came up from the Austerlitz last night?” “Naturally, sir, several times. Both last night and this morning.” “Did you notice any sign of dis. | turbance, anything to indicate that | this man had been in those rooms? | Or did Mr. Dufresne mention any thing of that nature?” “No, sir. So far as I could see nothing had been disturbed. 1 can- | not answer for Mr. Dufresne, buf | doubtlessly he would have men tioned it to me.” Harper put the clothing back on a | chair. “If this man changed Intc some of Mr. Dufresne’s clothes he'd | do it right there in the room, An- | drews, take Lafferty here up to the dressing-room and help him look | through the closets.” AFFERTY went out in the wake | ~ of the butler, and Harper, left alone, began to walk up and down ——— 20 YEARS AGO Prom The Empire t : - o rod o~ JUNE 4, 1914 George Robblee, Assistant Secre- tary in the Governor's office, won the prize of $20 worth of meals offered by A. T. Spatz of the Alaskan Cafe for guessing within two minutes of the time of the departure of the first steamer leav- ing Whitehorse for Dawson. Mrs. J. E. Barragar guessed witHin eigh- teen minutes of the correct time, the next nearest guess. A prize of $50 worth of meals was being of- fered by Mr. Spatz for the most nearly correct guess as to the time of arrival of the first steamer at Dawson, John T. Spickett had received a new five-passenger Ford automobile ordered through the local agent, William F. Merchant. The Royal Players Compim.v.l which was to gpen a theatrical | season in Juneau was to leave Ket- chikan within a few days for this | city. lays to be presented by the company here included, “The For- tune Hunter,” “The Girl of the Golden West” and “The Lion and the Mouse.” In spite of threatening weather an attempt was to be made to have a baseball game at Recrea- tion Park between Juneau and | Douglas. game of the series. Batteries were | to be Ford and Duggan for Juneau and Johnson and Coblentz for Douglas. Mrs. Paul Bloedhorn, of Douglas, had left for Spokane, Washington, ' to attend a meeting of the Re-| bekahs. Following the meeting she was to visit her’ former home in Michigan. J. H. Guffey, of Nome, was to arrive here about the first of July to open a first class drug store in the Guffey Building on Front Street. He had visited here a year previously and erected the building in which the store would be lo- cated. Weather for the previous 24| hours was cloudy with a maximum temperature of 55 degrees and a minimum of 41. Precipitation was .05 inches, | It was to be the [QurthLI— Helene W. L. Albrecht PHYSIOTHERAPY Massage, Electricity, Infra Red , Medical Gymnastics. | 807 Goldstein Building | Phone Office, 216 .\‘ s s g Rose A. Ardrews Graduate Nurse Electrio Cabinet Baths—Mas Colonic Trrigations | Office hours 11 am. to 5 pm. Evenings by Appointment Second anJ Main Phone 259 | @ e b S | _E.B. WILSON Chiropodist—Foot Specialist 401 Goldstein Building K PHONE 496 s DRS. EASER & FREEBURGER | DENTISTS Blomgren Bullding PHONE 56 Hours 9 am. to § pm. 1 e I' Dr. C. P. Jenne | DENTIST DENTIST | Rooms 5-6 Triangle Bldg. | Ofice nours, 9 am. to 6 pm. Robert Simpson t. D. Graduate Angeles Col- lege of Optometry and Opthalmology | Glasses Fitted, Lenses Ground Bl DR. R. E. SOUTHWELL Optometrist—Optician Eyes Examined—Glasses Fitted Room 7, Valentine Bldg. Office Phone 484; Residence Phone 238. Office Hours: 9:30 | to 12; 1:00 to 5:30 S————————_ Dr. Richard Williams Help Kidneys It poorly functioning Kid the room, his eyes turning again| @ gllsfierézkcym‘xm::nner o Cettog | ¥ p Nights, Nervousness, Rh atic and again to that armehalr in which | Pling, Stilluese, Barens, Soamns| the baffling intruder had met his| @ Itching, or Acidity try the guarantecd death. Duclrw‘nPre;;:rlm;m é!l‘fl (Siss- ] iy : He came to a stop before the |CYSB@R fack Oniy 75t of drugeinis, walinscoting at the vertical panel | that bore the bullet mark. The bul- let had not wedged itself lato the wood, but had been found on the floor, whence it had dropped after | the impact. The detective used his Florence Holmquist, Prop. Phone 276 magnifying lens on the scarred PHONE 427 T S — place. ! Behrends Bank Building — 3 Carlin’s puzzled suggestion that |® TR the bullet wound bore all the mark- | Y GTMM—OEMHWET Ings of a heavy caliber ateel-Jacket THE MISSY SHOP oo~ Freth had stuck in his mind. The lens af- ang Sipskad Moal | forded a much clearer view of the | | Specializing in WILLOUGHBY AVENUE jagged dent in the wood, from which tiny particles had fallen to the floor. This enlarged scope of the eye gave the detective a sudden and startling insight into the matter. He fitted the bullet into the rough-edged cavity. It matched very badly. He tried the bullet trom various angles but with no better success. Harper squatted back on his heels, the ight of discovery dawning on him. The center depth of the bul- let mark in ths wainscoting was un- doubtedly deeper than Officer Ham- ilI's bullet could account for. Fur- thermore, the maik in the wood ran to a distinct conlcal pit, while the nose of the policeman's bullet was distinctly bluat! Here was the first tangible bit of evidence to give col- or to his suspicions. It looked as if the sharp-eyed Car- lin’s hesitancy over acceptance of the callber of the fatal bullet as & .38 was going to be justified. If this unidentified masquerader had not died by this particular .38 bullet then Officer Hamill had not killed him. The attendant corollarfes of this thought leaped fnto Harper's grasp, full-armed and clamoring for attention. It meant that the bullet which had really killed the man in the chair was definitely missing! It had been cartied away. Some phantom third presence had dislodged it from the wall and substituted a bullet fired from the policeman’s gun. Officer Hamill had not killed the unknown man. Then the dead man In the armchair could not have killed Hamill! i (Copyright. 1934, by Walter C. Brown)' Harper, tuaorrow, finds still other exciting ciua. " T A" Jf HOSIERY, LINGERIE, HOUSE DRESSES and accessories at moderate prices —_—u RYAN TRANSFER. CO Transfer—Baggage—Coal | PHONE 29 Opposite Coliseum Theatre DENTIST OFFICE AND RESIDENCE Gastineau Building Phone 481 1 Dr. A. W. Stewart DENTIST Hours 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. SEWARD BUILDING Office Phone 409, Res. | CASH AND CARRY | PAINTS—OILS Builders’ and Shelf HARDWARE Thomas Hardware Co. | | f Mining Location Noiices at Em. pire office. Telephone 38 FRYE’S BABY BEEF “DELICIOUS” HAMS and BACON Frye-Bruhn Company THE HOTEL OF ALASKAN HOTELS The Gastineau Our Services to You Begin and End at the Gang Plank of Every Passenger-Carrying Boat 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. I Whether you require Checking or Savings sery- The next thing Japan may be asking China to pay for protection.—(Buffalo Courier-Express.) Just how does a girl tell nowadays if she has among Legislators toward those prop-|outgrown a bathing suit?—(Detroit News.) The new Tokyo is Asla for the Asatics, A Miles Automatic Air Conditioner is operating in the new Jensen Apartments. SEE IT. Miles Air Conditioner can be in- stalled on any hot air furnace job. . Harri Machine Shop " Heating j Sheet Metal ice, or cooperation in the solution of some business problem, an alliance with Alaska’s oldest and larges’ bank will prove its worth to you. Our officers will be glad to talk things over and to suggest ways in which we might be helpful. The B. M. Behrends Bank Juneau, Alaska = IMcets first and third Mon Fraternal Societies | OF — 1 Gastineau Channel 8 p. m. Visiting = brothers welcome, L. W. Turoff, Exalt- ed Ruler. M. H. Sides, Secretary. KNIGHTS OF COLUMBUS Seghers Counell No. }768. Meetings second and las Monday at 7:30 p. . Transient brothers urg- ed to attend. Councll Chambers, Fifth Strecd., JOHN P. MOLLEN, G. K H J. TURNER, Becretary - MOUNT JUNEAJ LODGE NO. 142 Second and fourth Mon- day of ~wh month in Scottish ®'*e Temple, beginning at 7:2" p. m. L E. HENDRICKSON, Master; JAMES W. LEIVIRS, Sece retary. / A R Douglas Aerie 1i7 F. O. E. ays 3 p.m., Eagles’ Hail, Douglas. Visiting brothers welcome. R. A. Schmidt, W. P, Guy L. Smith, Secretary. o "Our trucks go any place nnyn time., A tank for Diesel Oil and a tank for crude ofl save | burner trouble. PHON: 149; NIGH{S 148 | RELIABLE TRANSFER o R j‘ R o e e s NOW OPEN | Commercial Adjust- | ment & Rating Burean | Cooperating with White Service | Bureau | I i Room 1—Shattuck Bldg. We have 5,000 local ratings on file a -——a — T | Jones-Stevens Shop LADIES’—CHILDREN'S READY-TO-WEAR Beward Street Near Third L — e e — | o = JUNEAU-YOUNG Funeral Parlors Licensed Funeral Directors | and Embalmers Night Phone 1851 Day Phone 13 ! SABIN’S Everything in Furnishings for Men | THE JuNEAU LAUNDRY Franklin Street between Front and Second Streets JUNEAU FROCK SHOPPE “Exclusive but not Expensive” i Coats, Dresses, Lingerie, d Hoslery and Hats & | B ,f - HOTEL ZYNDA Large Sample Room ELEVATOR SERVICE 8. ZYNDA, Prop. | GARBAGE HAULED | Reasonable Monthly Rates E. 0. DAVIS TELEPHONE 584 Phone 4753 _ >