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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIKE, 'WEDNESDAY, JUNE 6, 1934. Daily ROBERT W. BENDER evening _ex COMPANY Alaska Empire by day TSUBSCRIPTION RATES. Delivered by carrier in Juneau and Douglas for $1.25 nt the following rate six months, i N‘ERAL MANAGER the ance, avor if they will promptly or u.u:umrm-l one else assume the responsibility. That, however, was not his way. And neither then, nor afterward, did he by word or act express regret for his course. He exhibited similar éourage in handling the appeals for pardons for Tom Mooney, serving a life | sentence in San Quentin penitentiary for the San Francisco Preparedness Day bombing outrage which occurred while Rolph was Mayor of that city. He | had instituted a policy of leniency toward certain | classes of convicts. He saved from the gallows men {who, he was convinced, killed without premeditation | or because of the “unwritten law.” Women prisoners who were expectant mothers were released and many R e e alr, papers. g | paroled men and women were restored to citizen- Telephone for Editorial and Business Offices, 374. |ship Yet the effort to get a pardon for Moon s MEMBER OF AssoCU]\TIED’ —PREvsfl.d O organized on a national scale and with the aid o' e p Do eatign of all news dispatches credited to| Mayor “Jimmy” Walker enlisted, was firmiy rejected. | B e . In this paper and also the | He had studied the case himself and was convinced ALASKA CIRCULATION GUARANTEED TO BE LARGER|of Mooney's guilt of a premeditated atiempt at __ THAN THAT OF ANY OTHER PUBLICATION. _ fynolesale slaughter. { For this as in the San Jose lynchings, he was | wideiy condemned. As in the latter case, he held firm to his course and never expressed any regret EXPECT SETTLEMENT TODAY. The tieup of Alaska shipping may be ended today or tomorrow. Last night, Seattle, saying in effect that the strikers would release Alaska vessels today. The wish is fervent that events prove this prediction to be correct. In releasing the cannery vessels from the tieup, the unions extended to the Territory a large measure of relief. In view of their former insistence that no shipping move, except an occasional ship loaded ! with foodstuffs for current necessities, we can appreciate that the concession on their part was not small by any means. It can only be understood on the ground that they have at last come to a realiza- tion to the seriousness of the situation which con- fronts the Territory on account of the blockade. But the release of the cannery shipping does not by any means completely solve our problem. This is evidenced by the appeal Gov. Troy received yesterday from Fairbanks, center of the Territory's greatest placer mining activities. That told of an acute condition of affairs that is as menacing, so far as employment and social welfare are concerned, | The interior and upon as the situation in coastal Alaska. far north are as dependent, in fact more so, mining as the Bristol Bay and Alaska ‘Peninsula| sections are upon salmon fishing. The people there can only be served through a release of the vessels normally engaged in transportation between Seattle and Seward, Seattle and Nome, and Seattle and the Kuskokwim River. This applies likewise to the Kodiak, Cook Inlet, Prince William Sound and Southeast Alaska areas which depend upon regular commercial shipping to| or just before this was) written, Gov. Troy was in receipt of information from | at i*. It was this courage, his magnetic personality and his ability to keep in close contact with the people of the State that made it possible 1o say that “everybody liked Jim.” | knows he is as good as dead.”—Cincinnati Enquirer. However, it is his obituary and not he that's in the morgue. One of the strange things about these kidnapers in California, they never seem to need any lawyer. It Pays to Advertise. (Boston News Bureau.) A good many years ago George M. Cohan wrote a popular play entitled “It Pays to Advertise,” in which the playboy hero starts a business rolling by flamboyant, amusing advertising that would have |horrified the elder generation. If the late Cyrus |H. K. Curtis, veteran head of the Curtis Publish- ing Company, ever saw the drama he must have chuckled, because advertising was his business creed long before cigarettes and automobiles were vying for public appeal in periodicals, newspapers and on | billboards. To a newspaperman who once sought to inter- view him on his journalistic career, he replied, 'm an advertising man.” No query could induce him to recount the story of his journalistic life which had ample background in the phenomenal {growth of his Ladiess Home Journal and Saturday Evening Post, and his later invasion of the Phila- delphia and New York newspaper fields. Cyrus Curtis, who died June 7, 1933, left an estate valued at $18,000,000, but the conservatism {of the valuations is apparent when it is realized that his Curtis Publishing common stock was car- |ried at 8 against a current market of 23 and the preferred at 45'% against 75 now. While holdings of the Philadelphia Public Ledgey Company stock accounted for two-thirds of his wealth, as ‘inven- toried, and Curtis Publishing stocks for most of the ‘remainder, it was the latter (publishers of the Saturday Evening Post, Ladies’ Home Journal and Country Gentleman) which put him in the multi- millionaire class and thus permitted him in his declining years to enjoy to the full, at Camden, | keep life blood moving through the arteries of |Me., during the summer, and at Miami, during the commerce. Halibut fishermen, salmon trollers, her-{wm“;"r‘ his pnl]hon-t;y;lar gac“k;"‘ g; I“»‘igd‘t’;‘a' % s son-in-law, : ring fishermen, small canneries, and our lode mines O LAY, N Wl i 11 years ago in “A Man from Maine” of Cyrus are served by panies. They do not own or operate vessels. the nature of their operations they cannot. The release of the cannery vessels, therefore, while a step toward relief, will not actually cure the evils incurred from the strike . As Gov. Troy has emphasized again and again, if we are to continue to exist as a going political unit of the United States, it will require all of the shipping normally occupied here to serve our needs during the short working season that is now opening in full blast. This season will not wait for strikes any more than the commercial transporfation com- tides will wait for man. Its movement is as inexorable as fate.. If advantage is not taken of it, there is no way of making good the losses after it has passed. This picture has been painted again and again for mediators, State and Federal authorities and for the strikers. If they have been brought to realize it, we believe there will be no question about reaching an immediate settlement. A MAN OF COURAGE. Tt was a proud assertion of Gov. James Rolph, Jr., that he was called “Jim" by more people than any other man of that name. He attracted a wide personal following in and out of the State and his personal mail at Christmas and New Year was voluminous, coming from all parts of the world. He [2 ated the system of extending official greetings to visiting dignitaries and once said he had shown New York how to welcome returning heroes. Medals and decorations reached him from many foreign nations whose distinguished citizens he had enter- tained But he was more than just a “greete He was In| Curtis’s faith in advertising. After Curtis had made a paying property of the Ladies’ Home Journal, he bought for a song the Saturday Evening Post, im- | mediately appropriating $250,000 to advertise the ‘new periodical. When this sum brought no results, he sent another $250,000 to bring the original invest- ment back. Before long he was in the red to the |tune of $800,000. . When that figure was reached his treasurer and associates began to reason with him, but he countered with an additional appropria- tion of $200,000, all made possible from the profits of the Ladies’ Home Journal. Finally, he spent another $250,000 and had a ledger loss of $1,250,000 on his new vehicle. After the expendture of $1,250,000 in the period of nearly five years on the Saturday Evening Post the tide turned, circulation suddenly jumped by leaps and bounds to 1,000,000 copies a week. From that time on up to the recent depression the only problem was to increase advertising rates rapidly. enough to keep pace with circulation. Now for some weeks the popular America weekly has again been on the upgrade. Looking at its established reading and advertising public, it hardly seems possible that the venture might once have been a failure and that it took $1,250,000 to put it over the top. Brand Whitlock. (Cincinnati Enquirer.) The death of Brand Whitlock in France yesberday terminates a career of extraordinary vitality and use- fulness. Mr. Whitlock, a native son of Ohio, was throughout his lifetime an eager student of human problems and a courageous fighter for his prin- ciples. In newspaper work, ifi politics and in diplomacy his clear thinking and forceful activities made him an outstanding figure. In his four terms as Mayor of Toledo Mr. an executive of vision and decisiveness. For 19 A years he served San Francisco as Mayor, having Whitlock did much to lay the foundations for ol O s '\__ " ¥ ° |nonpartisan municipal government. In his Pearly or five successive four-year Lerms,|vears as a newspaperman he became convinced retiring to become Governor of the State. As Mayor and Governor he kept in constant touch with his public, he was familiar with conditions in the State and because of that was a pioneer in work relief In the early days of the depression. Elected in 1930, immediately after his inauguration he per- suaded the State Legislature to advance the State's building program as a means of relieving unemploy- ment, then beginning to assume sizeable proportions. He also directed the establishment of 28 labor camps which provided thousands of men with food and shelter through the winter in exchange for work on roads and firebreaks, thus in a measure anticipating President Roosevelt's CCC program by two years. A man of intense convictions, he was possessed that national political parties have no place in city affairs, and his struggle against parties in Toledo brought a vindication of that point of view. Non- political city government was advanced. greatly by Mr. Whitlock’s pioneer efforts following the turn of the century. It was in diplomacy, however, that Mr. Whitlock achieved his great prominence. As Minister to Belgium, he was at one of the decisive points when the World War broke out. His labors for the Bel- | gian people brought him to deserved honors, and | his devotion to his ocuntry's service during the war added to his stature. Mr, Whitlock was one of those vigorous figures born of the great reform movements of a genera- tion ago. He never allowed the formalism of of the courage to back them up. Nothing so clearly |diPlomatic life to lessen his candor and realism demonstrated this than his actions at the time of |2nd initiative. Rolph the San Jose lynching of two kidnapers. Gov. was preparing to go to Boise, Idaho, to attend a confernce of Western Governors just before formed. He delayed his departure. Later he said: “If I had gone away some one would have called out indeed, should I call out the troops to protect those two|Utopia. the troops. I promised not to do that. Why, Mr. Whitlock was not simply one who did a job gracefully and 'skillfully. He was one of the rarer order of men who conceived ideas and then turned his energies to their realization. | the mob)ye was a prime mover in American politics and| in American foreign policy. We begin lately to glimpse the outlines of We'll arrive there by all working less kidnapers? The people make the laws, dont' they?|and less and getting more and more for it.—(Lorain, ‘Well, if the people have confidence that the soldiers|Ohio, Journal.) will not mow them down when they seek to protect themselves against kidnapers, there is liable to be swifter justice and fewer kidnapings.” Republicans seem to be exultant #ver: their suc- cess in carrying a Republican primary in Penn- sylvania.—(Boston Globe.) ‘He was roundly and widely criticised for that| " » 'statement as well as for his failure to call out the troops. It would have been simple for him to have |are you going to keep the farm down on the farm? Out in the dust storm country they ask, how made his contemplated visit to Boise and let some | —(Detroit News.) | “Dillinger may not be dead, but he probable; SYNOPSIS: Sergeant Harpen.. has found two bits of evidence to | support his theory that the two men found shot to death in Pierre Dufresne’s breakjast room did not slioot cach other, in spite ef ap- pearances. One 18 the fact that . certain bullet does not fit a certain dullet hole; the other is a drop of or in_a glass. Now he has found . e the murdered obtained the spent bullet he substituted for the one actually used. . Chapter 25 MISSING REVOLVER 43 T WAS a squat roll of old stair carpet., hole through the tough fabric and a further search showed a scar on the whitewashed boards where the spent hullet had hit. “We're on the right road now,” Harper exclaimed exultantly. “If we could only find that steeljacket bul let, we'd have our proof complete.” “I'm afraid the killer would hold on to that,” was Lafferty’s surmise. “There’s a natural urge to get rid of that sort of evidence,” Harper countered, ~“and I'm counting on that.” They swung their flashlight about at random. “What's in that little cubby-hole over there?” Lafferty poked his head down. “Logs for the fireplace,” he an- nounced. They moved those from one side of the narrow bin to the other but found nothing hidden beneath them, Harper flashed his light around the sides of the bin and the beam came to rest on a rough board barrier set flush into the wall. 4 The detective unfastened- the rusty hooks and pulled it free, after a struggle. A dark space filled with rubble was reVealed, greeting them with a damp, musty odor. “That must be the space under the front steps,” said Harper. Lafferty suddenly raised his hand. “Listen!” he whispered. “There’s some one on the stairs. I heard a board creak!” He tiptoed silently in that direc- tion, while Harper snapped «off the light and listened, waiting. In a little while Lafferty returned, disgrun tled. “There wasn't a soul in sight,” he growled, “but I'm sure somebody was listening in.’ m going to look in that hole,” Harper declared. “Gi up to the ledge.” With his assist- ¢ ant’s aid he scrambled on to the shoulder-high ledge. Thrusting the torch ahead, he crawled forward on | his knees. Lafferty heard a grunt of disgust as he brushed aside a black thing that crawled out from under a dislodged lump of mortar. | There was a cry, a scramble back- wards, and Harper slid down to the | cellar floor in a shower of small stones and dirt. His clothes were soiled with lime and the soft, mossy dirt, and-his hands were brushing at the thick cobwebs caught around his head and shoulders, but in his stained fingers he held a lump of metal. “Carlin was right!” he exclaimed. It was a discharged .45 caliber steel-jacket bullet! UT, Steve, I tell you I saw it— right there, buried under those handkerchiefs!” Lafferty pointed to the open draw- | er of the highboy n Pierre Du- fresne's dressing-room. There was palpably nothing there now but the neatly stacked handkerchiefs. “I couldn’t be mistaken about any- thing as important as that. It was not an automatic, but a heavy cali- ber revolver. Andrews was looking for Dufresne’s extra pairs of glasses and they were in the drawer on the | other side. The gun was not in a| holster, I'd bet a month’s pay the bullets would be .45's.” “I don't get this at all,” Harper mused. “We went off by ourselves and made an important discovery that has to do with the gun used for this crime. No one knew anything about our suspicions, yet when we return to this reom less than an hour later the revolver has been spirited away. That's more than a coincidénce!™ Harper lgoked through the other drawers in the highboy. The con- tents were in meticuldus order and it was apparent at a glance that nothing as bulky as the revolver !Lafferty had described could be hid- | den there now. To be doubly sure that Lafferty and he had overlooked nothing, !Harper went through the drawers once more, and gave the pleasant room a hasty general search before | either spoke again. There was noth- ing. “Don’t forget,” Lafferty advised drily, “that there was a noise on the BY WALTER C."BROWN. There " was a storched | Hlled. with some asperity. | criticizing, An-ls don't see why it would be left lying around all that time.” “But this gun was too blg to be carried around easily. It really need- ed’ a holster. I think you'd better tadkle Dufresne on the question.” “Not so fast. Let me think. If Du- ‘fresne did it and we tax him with it, he'll cerainly deny there ever was \[suth a gun. It Andrews difl it, he'll lie, too. But if he didn’t do it and Woesn't know it's gone—you stay here} Jack, and look through these two rooms for that gun.” Harper went. downstairs.. He met Officer Albright, who had stood guard over Dufresne’s room, stand- ing in the hall, about to go off duty. “Has any one gone up or down these stairs in the last fifteen or twenty minutes?"” "' “Not a soul, sir.” “I want you to do something for me. I want to find out if any one left this house in the last hour, and if so, where they went. Can you manage that without arousing suspicion?” Albright signified that he could, The officer at the front door in- formed Harper that no one had gone out by that way, whereupon the de- tective returned to the breakfast- room. He pressed the servants’ bell and signed to O'Connell to leave the field clear. When Andrews entered he found the detective bent over the table, carefully examining under the lens the fingerprints the dead man had left on the twin decanters. Sergeant Harper looked around, as if sur- prised, then said, “Oh, yes, Sit down, Andrews. I want to ask you a couple of questions.” NDREWS, ‘we are trying to trace the movements of this man who was killed here last night. | We know that he changed into some of your master's clothing. We as sume that he lit the fire in the hearth. By the way, was that al- s prepared for the next light ing “Yes, sir. In the season it would be cleaned early every morning and freshly packed.” “We noticed that there was quite an accumulation of ashes in the pit while the re-decorating was going n’ “I couldn’t say, sir. I have not been in this house for some weeks " “How long has Mr. Dufresn: been at the Austerlitz, Andrews?” “Mr. and Mrs. Dufresne spent the summer at Moose Head Lodge, sir. That’s on a small islahd off the coast of Maine. We came back early in October, but we had only been here a week or t\\o when we went to the » Dufresne has been stay- ing at Mrs. Morlock’ ~“Since the holidays, sir. The dec- orators have been very slow. Of course, I sometimes came up here with Mr. Dufresne to see how things were progressing. Donaghy was here much oftener to bring back things that were needed.” “Was the house closed up while the Dufresnes were at Moose Head Lodge?” “Oh, no, sir. The Whitmores looked after it all summer.” “How many keys are there to this house and who has them?” “Mrs. Whitmore has the only com- plete set of keys, I believe, but I suppose you are more interested in door keys. Mr. Dufresne has a set and so has Mrs. Dufresne. I have keys to the front door and back door. Donaghy has a key to the back door. That is all, sir.” “The household keys seem to be n&-]y well scattered around,” Har- remarked. ‘Not unusually so,” Andrews re- “Oh, I'm not drews,” Harper replied easily. “This man who was killed showed a sur- prising familiarity with the place. He knew, for instance, how to get hold of those liquor bottles without |turning the place inside out.” The butler looked at the twin de- canters.“ Then he must have found lis way to the wine cellar. Those bottles were not kept filled. They were empty last time I saw them.” “But your wine cellar is kept un- deér lock and key? When we searched down there we found the door se- curely locked.” © “Yes, but the key hangs behind a beam, easy to reach, but out of sight. You would have to know where to look for it.” “That’s what I thought. Now, An- drews, one more question. I must file @ report of whatever firearms are kept on these premises. Mr. Du frespe reports that he keeps a revol ver in the house, a .45 caliber, That stairs while we were poking around | the cellar. Some one in this housef i{s trying to keep an eye on us. I | think it's Andréws..That fellow can move around with less noise than a snake.” “It that was the revolvér we're! looking for,” Harper went on, *I is correct, isn't it?” Farper glanced up covertly but the butler's face was as impassive 88 lever, no# did he hesitate over his renly. *Yes, sir.” (Govyright, 1334, by Walter C. Brown, Harper turns up more punnnq In rmation, fomorrew. | SEE IT. Miles Air C stalled on any hot air f; Ham Mac A Miles Autorfiatié Air Conditioner is operating in the new Jensen Apartments. Heating Sheet uml onditioner can be in- urnace job. hine Shop | in the cellar. Was this hearth in use | 20 YEARS AGO !"rom\'rhe Emplre [ C ot mrrr s e S JUNE 6, 1914 To discuss the Fourth of July celebration, a meeting of the citi- zens of Juneau was to be held in the city hall. At the council meet- ing held the previous evening it was decided to hold the public ses- sion to discuss plans. ' Every mem- ber of the city council, and all business men approached, were heartily in favor of a big celebra- | tion, befitting the capital city. J. R. Willison and E. W. Grif- fin, of Fairbanks passed through Juneau on the steamer Spokane on their way inside after spending the winter outside. They were accom- panied by J. W.. Pett, capitalist of Chicago, who was going in with them to start operations on a large placer property located on the Big Chena River in which both Mr. Willison' and Mr. Griffin were | largely interested. The Gastineau-Juneau and Doug- Treadwell baseball teams were to meet for the fifth game of the series the following day at Recrea- tion Park in Silver Bow Basin. The game was called for 3:15 o’clock. Weather for the previous 24 hours was clear with a maximum temperature of 57 degrees and a minimum of 40 degrees. A pleasant outing was enjoyed by a number of young people of Juneau on the launch ‘“Cordelia.” They wen to Bear Creek where several caught fine strings of trout. Weather was perfect and everyone had an enjoyable time. Those in the party were, Mr. and Mrs. E. C. Hurlbut, Miss Gertrude Hurlbut, Miss Cordelia Davis, Brighten Hurlbut, Leonard Hurlbut, Law- rence Hurlbut, Mr. Fulton and Mr. Jenkins. Mrs. R. H. Stevens and daughter | Rae, wife and daughter of the as- sistant cashier of the First Na- tional bank, were arrivals on the Spokane. They planned to reside here permanently. S P R ATTENTION B. P. O. E. Installation of officers Wednes- day evening at 8:30 o'clock, or im- be played in Douglas. Lunch and beer. M. H. SIDES, —adv. Secretary. During my absence, Dr. W. J. B. McAuliffe, will be in charge of my practice and office. adv. DR. W. W. COUNCIL. The Florence Sho Permanent Waving a Florence Holmquist, Prop. PHONE 417 Behrends Bank Building —— N THE MISSY SHOP Specializing in | HOSIERY, LINGERIE, HOUSE DRESSES and accessories at moderate prices 2 i —z £ RYAN TRANSFER. CO Transfer—Baggage—Coal PHONE 29 Opposite Coliseumn Theatre mediately following ball game to | Helene W.L. Albrecht YHYSIOTHERAPY Massage, Electricity, Infra Red l PROFESSIONAL ] | Ray, Medical Gymnastics. | 807 Goldstein Building | Phone Office, 216 | [ — Rose A. Ardrews Graduate Nurse f Electric Cabinet Baths—Mas sage, Colonic Irrigations Office hours 11 am. to 5 pm. Evenings by Appointment Phone 259 Becond ‘andd Main & E. B. WILSON Chiropodist—Foot Specialist | 401 Goldstein Building PHONE 496 DENTISTS I DRES. KASER & FRELBURGER | | Blomgren Bullding } Gastineau Channel ), ity B. P. 0. ELKS meets 2very Wednesday at 8 p.m Visiting brothers welcome, L. W. Turoff, Exalt- ed Ruler. M. H. Sides, 3ecretary. Fraternal Societies or [ —— | » KNIGATS OF COLUMBUS Seghers Council No. 1768, Meetings second and lam Monday at 7:30 p. m. . Cransient brothers urg- »d to attend. Councll Chambers, Ffth Streel. JOHN F. MULLEN, G K H. J. TURNER, Becretary MOUNT JUNEAU LODGE NO. 12 Second and fourth Mon- day of ~wh month in L. E. HENDRICKSON, Master; JAMES W. LEIVIRS, Se retary. * PHONE 56 | Hours § am. to § pm. _{ —— ——— — { DPr. C. P. Jenne DENTIST | Rooms 8 and 9 Valentine Building | Telephone 176 Dr. J. W. Bayne DENTIST Rooms 5-6 Triangle Bldg. Oflice nours, § am. to 6 pm. brothers ‘welcome. W. P, Guy L. Smith, Secretary. Douglas Aerie 117 F. O. E. Mcets first and third Mondays 3 p.m., Eagles’ Hall, Douglas. Visiting R. A. Schmidt, RELIABLE TRANSFER ¥ o] Onrtruehmlnylbhceanyl time. A tank for Diesel Oil and a tank for crude oil save | burner trouble. I PHONE 149; NIGH{ 148 | ) ) —4 &venungs by appointment, I lsaottlsh Rite Temple, beginning at 7:2\ p. m. 1 DENTIST OFFICE AND RESIDENCE | Gastineau Building 1] | e 5 & i s +|| - NOW OPEN ‘I = .|| Commercial Adjust- ! Robert Simpson ment & Rating Bureau | 0 D Cooperating with White Service | t. . Bureau | Graduate Angeles Col- Room 1—Shattuck Bldg. i lege of Optometry and We have 5,000 local ratings | Opthalmology on file | | Glasses Fitted, Lenses Ground | | or— e a R S— o e i 8 24 g e DR. K. E. SOUTHWELL Jones-Stevens Shop | Optometrist—Optician LADIES'—CHILDREN'S | Eyes Examined—Glasses Fitted READY-TO-WEAR ’ Room 7, Valentine Bldg. Beward Street Office Phone 484; Residence Near Third | Phone 238. Office Hours: 9:30 | | — i to 12; 1:00 to 5:30 b —g e ——-L = = JUNEAU-YOUNG ! Dr. Richard Williams Funeral Parlors and Embalmers | ] ! Licensed Funeral Directors ] Night Phone 1851 Day Phone 12 J | || Dr. A. W. Stewart f DENTIST Hours 9 am. to 6 pm. SEWARD BUILDING | Phone 276 Groceries—Produce—Fresh and Smoked Meats WILLOUGHBY AVENUE CASH AND CARRY TOTEM MARKET i | PAINTS—OILS Builders’ and Shelf HARDWARE Thomas Hardware Co. U Mining Location Notices at Em- pire office. THE HOTEL OF ALASKAN HOTELS The Gastineau Our Services to You FRYE’S BABY BEEF “DELICIOUS” HAMS and BACON Frye-Bruhn Company t Telephone 38 Demonstrated Whether you require ice, or cooperation in the problem, an alliance with bank will prove its worth Our officers will be Gang Plank of Every Passenger-Carrying Boat 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. Begin and End at the Prompt Delivery Dependability Checking or Savings serv- ! solution of some business l Alaska’s oldest and larges*® to you. | Phone 481 R e SOy L e d SABIN’S Everything in Furnishings for Men | Office Phone 409, Res. B o e THE JuNEAu LAUNDRY Franklin Street between Front and Second Streets JUNEAU FROCK SHOPPE “Exclusive but not Expensive” Coats, Dresses, GARBAGE HAULED Reasonable Monthly Rates | E. 0. DAVIS l TELEPHONE 584 Phone 4753 | e — T | b o ————r, glad to talk things over [ TYPEWRITERS and to suggest ways in which: we might be helpful. . | RENTED | $5.00 per month "o{;-B' ord & Co. ‘ doorstep worn by satistied | customers” | * The B. M. Behrends Bank Juneau, Alaska