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. take shape. It was just an interesting subject about _nological education,” said - Dr.» Thompson. THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, TUESDAY, JULY 17, 1934. e . Daily Alaska Empire ROBERT W. BENDER - - GENERAL MANAGER every _evening except Sunday by the "blghgnmnzfl COMPANY at Second and Main Juneau, Alaska. Entered in the Post Office In Juneau as Second Class matter. SUBSCRIPTION RATES. @eMvered by carrier in Juneau and Douglas for $1.25 BelaTor the followt t mall, tage paid, at the following rates: e yonr i wdvance. $12.00; six months, In advance, one month, in advance, $1.25, Bubscribers will confer a favor if they will promptly motify the Business Office of any failure or irregularity In the delivery of their papers. Telephone for Editorial and Business Offices, 374. MEMBER OF ASSOCIATED PRESS. Assoclated Press is exclusively entitled to the republication of all news dispatches credited to or not otherwise credited in this paper and also the 1 news published heréin. s ALASKA CIRCULATION GUARANTEED TO BE LARGER THAN THAT OF ANY OTHER PUBLICATION. ROADS CHIEF BOOSTS PACIFIC Yl']\'ON‘ HIGHWAY, D i One of the most valuable boosts yet given to| the Pacific Yukon Highway project to link Alaska through Canada to the United States proper was ‘| and.social life. The sédond is the increasing neces- riehge. Fige G e AL i Mr. Astor and his bride have given up an Alaska honeymoon to end the publicity that at- |tended their appearance everywhere. Too bad, | that. If they had made the grade, they could have an evgr-increasing, role in determining our economic sity for organized cooperation, with économic and ,social controls, along the lines of the “New Deal” or on some different basis, but which in any case, creates an urgent demand for men with an en- gineering training and a broad conception of | | relative social values and economic processes. The | |third of these considerations, he said, is the de-| ismabilil_v of developing a co-operative approach to| ezonomic problems by the engineer and the econ- omist in somewhat the same that has been so 1Iruiv,ful in the cooperation of the engineer with the physicist, the mathematician, the chemist and lhc] biologist. 2 | In the pas{-it has been predéminantly - true that i social and economic llr«‘yhave jbeeft in many respects transformed by the womk of 'the scientist-and en- gineer. The ana of -these changes and the attempt to direct them, has, however, been made Ly @0, admost entively .separate group of men clas- sically trained in principles of economics or perhaps trained only through business or political ex- spent a whole summer in the Territory without more than casual notice. Now that -scientists are planning things and getting them under control, how about a little weather regimentation so we'd have less rain and more summer sunshine? The Incubation of War. A «New York Herald Tribune.) The ingenicus schemes which the German Nazis contained in a feature article written by Thomas| H. McDonald, Chief of the United States Bureau of | Public Roads, and appearing early this month in| the New York Herald Tribune. The article dealt] with the International Highway that some day will! link together all of the nations on the Western Hemisphere. Work is already progressing on sectiom'] of the route in the United States and Mexico which | will eventually tie into roads in Central and South America. In concluding his article, Mr. McDonald quoted from the recommendations of the special commis- | slon which a few years ago investigated the en-| gineering feasibility of the Pacific Yukon project. | Commenting on it, he said: | As the plans for the highway through | Latin-American coutnries move forward in- | terest also is being evidenced in the sug- | gested project of an improved highway con- necting Seattle, Wash, with Fairbanks, Alaska, a distance of 2250 miles. A special Federal Commission, appointed under an Act of Congress to investigate the prac- ticability of such a highway, has submitted its report to the President. It has been studied by the War Department and other Federal agencies. All indications are that | the project is feasible, can be carried out | at a reasonable cost and is justified from an economic standpiont. Further studies | will, of course, be made. | The_estimated cost for building a high-____not to be sent tq Africa and Asia; that there must | way connecting with the U. S. system at Beattle and the Canadian system at Hazel- | ton, British Columbia, and ending at Fair- | banks, Alaska, is around $2,000,000 for the Alaskan section and $12,000,000 for the Canadian section. There are two general routes suggested for the northern end of the highway, either of which would serve to open new Alaskan territory and contribute to the general development. Benefits to be gained from such a high- way are clearly set forth in the report of the special commission. Such publicity as this is invaluable. In itself, coming from the authority it does, it will create more publicity of the same kind. It will interest more and more people in the undertaking. That is what it will take to finally get Congress to pro- vide the necessary funds. Just now the most serious problem seems to be getting the proper enthusiasm worked up in Canada for the portion of the highway that lies within its borders. Canada is becoming more and more highway-conscious as it recognizes more fully the part that they play in development, in attracting motor car tourists, stimulating settle- ment and industrial enterprises. It is-.planning east and west highways across the continent. A north and south highway that would open ‘Northern British Columbia and Yukon Territory as part of the most northerly link of a Highway reaching from the Arctic to the tip of South’ Ameriea would be equally as serviceable and valuable to her, but it may require some time to convince the Dominion of that fact. AN ATLANTIC SEADROME. A few years back aerial enthusiasts were pre- dicting the day, usually far in the future, when seadromes anchored in midocean would span the or Hoover on the Rapidan, ever inspired such lyrics Atlantic Ocean and form links in a chain that would bind the New World and the Old World through regular and dependable air navigation. That it was a feasible scheme was not denled, but &8 a practical business proposition there was less (cabin of the giant cruiser will loaf the President | unanimity of opinion. Not until recently, however, did the project which to write, tp discuss. Now, according to some Eastern newspapers, the dream is about to Anaterial- ize. It is said that thé PWA is nearing ‘a fidal approval of a $7,000,000' advancement for that pur: pose. It is said that the Department of Commeérce has asked for that am , of money for a seadrome —a floating platform t 1500 feet long—to be anchored midway between Bermuda and the Azores. PLANS COURSE FOR FUTURE BRAIN TRUSTS. The Chairman of President Roosevelt’s National Science Advisory Council, Dr. Karl T. Thompson, who is also President of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, announces the establishment in that institution of & five-year course to meet the demand for engineers with a thorough understanding of the| social and economic implications of their profession. The purpose of the course will be to train men for future “brain trusts” for the particular work of evaluating technical advances in terms of social and economic values. : “Three ccnsiderations point to the importance and timeiiness of this mew development in tech- The |their homes, have Leen designed to appeal to the |affluent married couples for each child up to five |who is even vaguely aware that unemployment is as have evolved for penalizing celibacy, for getting young women back from industry and into domestic servicg, or into homes of their own and for putting premiums on -big . families are all inspired by one ambition. That is to raise the birth rate and in- crease the popllation. Most of the ‘devices employed 50 far, like direct loans from the State to young couples for the establishment and furnishing of | | poorer classes; but substantial deductions from | income-tax payments are now offered to relatively | that they bring into the world. These are not at a fixed rate, like the American allowances for “dependents,” which offer no inducement to the wealthy to have large families, but in an ascending scale, according to the income, thereby making it clear that the increase of population and not the relief of the taxpayer is the end in view. Now Germany is not underpopulated; she has | no overseas colonies left; she insists that she wants none, and the policy of the National Socialists is to discourage emigration. In the mind of any one critical a problem in the Reich as it is anywhere and that Germany's export trade has gone into an alarming decline the question that must immediately arise is this: “Supposing that the Hitlerites and | their policies persist long enough to bring about a marked increase in the birth rate, what do they | propose to do with so many more Germans?” In | “Mein Kampf” Chancellor Hitler says that they are | be no more Cameroons, no more Tsingtaos. Ger- many’s surplus must be seitled on contiguous ter- ritory in Eastern Europe. For this room must eventually be made by conquest and clearance, by taking up the work of the Teutonic Knights where they dropped- it six centuries ago. But this means | war, and if, with these conceptions of Germany's destiny in mind, the Nazis hasten the day when Germany will be swarming with humanity and bursting for expansion, aren’t they encouraging the production of war material in the home just as deliberately and with as cold calculation as though they were subsidizing the manufacture of howitzers and high explosives at Essen? There is no other way of interpreting this policy. It gives ominous significance to the ten-year limit put upon the truce to frontier disputes that was recently signed with Poland. With a population density of thirty-six to the square mile, America’s economic troubles have lately impressed the fact |upon all thoughtful citizens that the unlimited mul- tiplication of the unemployable would soon result in political chaos and social demoralization. But the density of population in Germany is 348 to the square mile—nearly ten times our own; the balance of trade is untavorable, while ours is favorable, and Germany is an importér of food, ahile we are exporters. Yet the impdverished Nazi Government of the Reich is remlmpg taxes and paying out subsidies 'so that each apd every German girl will mate, nest and bear cHildren ‘as quickly and as often as possible—children of a generation that will face from infancy the . alternatives of statvation | or the rsumption of the medieval Drang nach | Osten. 1 The Happy Fisherman. | (New York World-Telegram.) Presidents and their fish have made reams of | purple copy, but none of them, not Cleveland in the Canadian woods or Coolidge in the Black Hills as this jaunt of the Houston should draw the color writers. Paul Bunyan's adventures may be dwarfed by this cruise through two oceans. Comfy in the | from turned fisherman. With him are deep-sea tackle, shelves of mystery thrillers and sea .tales, reels of motion . plctures, a sea-goin’ swimmin' hole and a cook that serves food fit' for the gods. Behind him are the cares of the world; ahéad, across 2,400 myles, of placid blue beyond the canal, lie eight mAgic fslands. that call fhémselves the paradise of the ic. ¥ Chapter 51 P + COLLAPSE — - ° ‘QO0 THIS man hounded you?” asked Harper. “Followed you sack to the city and forced you to sontinue the affair? He made you meet him in this empty house—in :his room? Then he is the one wha put the mnotes in that sand urn on ‘he hearth?” “Yes. How did you know that?” she asked, surprised. “Youw'd be surprised how many persons in this house knew about those secret notes. But why did this man buy a disguise so that he would look like Mr. Dufresne? We have raced that purchase, back in Oc- :ober.” Aline Croyden shuddered. “He iurned into a beast, a manifac, once 2e had me in his clutches. I think it first he got the disguise to avold ietection should he be seen here, sut later it pleased him to strut up ind down dressed In Pierre’s slothes, sneering and cursing at our money and social position. I saw :hat his madness would bring ruin wnd disgrace anyway once this ouse was occupied agaln.” She squared her shoulders. “I was Jesperate. It was too much to pay for my folly. I saw plainly that it was simply a question of his death or my ruin—" the words trailed off Into significant silence. “Was he blackmalling you?” N “Oh, {f it had only been a ques: tion of money—but he'd only laugh at me when | tried to buy him off. [ began to plan. It had to be carried out here in tbis house. He would meet, me nowhere else. He made me give him a key for the side door., “He kept his address a secret. He would call me up from pay :‘atio:s and tell me to look for the note In the urn. I built up my plan, tested every detail, went through every motion a thousand times. The first time there is snow on the ground, | swore to myself, he should die.” “Did this H.D. write those threat- ening letters to Mr. Dufresne?” Har- per interrupted. “Idon’t know. [ hadn't heard about them until after—it would have been like him, his idea of a joke. | put off the next meeting until the night of my husband’s concert. I knew it would be easy to slip away then.” “Weren't you mervous, when the time came?” Mrs. Croyden shook hef head. “Ev- erything was arranged, rehearsed. 1 had no need to think, just act. When it got dark enough I slipped out of our house and came over here to put up the rope. Then [ went down town with my hasband, “It was nearly eight o'clock when I drove back. I left my car two blocks away. I tested the rope by reaching the house that way. It worked perfectly.” “Oh, so you came by way of the rope? I hadn’t thought of that.” LINE CROYDEN mnodded. “Ile was waiting in this room. We quarreled again. [ think he enjoyed those sceaes. It was then that | pounded angrily on the table, stand- ing opposite him down the length-of it. He went on calling me ugly names, so | raised my gun and shot him. 1 was amazed at how easy it had been. afraid, “First [ wanted to be sure no one | heard the shot. I looked—and there was & policeman just turning in at the gate! The next thing | knew, I was standing with the front door open, telling the policeman that | had shot a burglar. He seemed to recognize me and came in without' the least sign of suspicion.” “What brought him to the house?” Harper questioned. “He said he had seen sparks com- ing from the chimney, and, knowing that the family was away, came to investigate. He had not heard the shot. I had been stirring up the logs in the fireplace to make a better light in the room.” The detective felt a pardonable pride in the accuracy of his previous deductions about Officer Hamill's movements and motives on that fatal night. “It wasn't until the policeman was actually standing here looking at the body that I realized what an error | had made—that 1 couldn't possibly explain any of the details, my own presence, the seated body, the disguise, the two liquor glasses, anything, All this time I had been holding the gun. | '“He made a step toward me and |1 figd—twice. That is the horror of |it,” she burst out. Harper nodded understandingly. “That is true of every crine. The victim rides you harder in death MOCKING H BY WALTER C. BROW Y e . than he did in life, What did you do/ then?” “I sat down and forced myself to be calm. It seemed hours, but I sup- pose it was really only for a few minutes. Then I began to consider Low to make it look as though the two men had killed each other. Their position, one at each end of the table, gave me the idea. be able to contradict the evidence eor even suspect their separate deaths. I thought I had covered up every trace of my presence. Then comes a tiny thing like the marks I of -‘my ring to spoil it all.” “When the police got here, the front ‘door was banging,” Harper prompted. “Did :you leave it that way?” “Yes, when I, was ready to go I, opened it and dropped the bolt. 1 thought the bodies would be discov- ered quickly and my alibi would hold good.” “You got away safely by going back over the rope, carryiag this man’s things with rou? You went back to Orpheus Hall to listen to your husband’s concert? Is that cor- rect?” | “Yes. I was late and I stayed in the ladies’ lounge until the first number was over, then | went to | my seat. There were lots of late- comers, 80 no one paid any atten- tion to me.” “ AT what point did Joseph Don- 4X aghy enter into the picture?” Thoe lines about Mrs. Croyden's | mouth deepened. “Extortion and | blackmail,” she-stated crisply. “He | had become suspicious that some- thing secret was going on in this house. He watched and waited until he finally caught a glimpse of us. ‘! bowling tourney between an Elks’ 20 YEARS AGO From The Empire s e rrert o e JULY 17, 1914, Construction of an immense dock with a frontage of 600 feet involv- ing the expenditure of $100,000 was contemplated by the Pacific Coast Company, according to At- torney W. S. Bayless, of the firm of Shackelford & Bayless, attor- neys for the company. Construc- “I didn’t see how any onc would . tion was to begin immeQiately, A. M. and A. W. Clare, brothers of Mrs, Chris Krogh, and for 15 years residents of Alaska, had op- ened a store which they affirmed would be a factor in reducing the cost of living. The first series of a preliminary Club team ‘and ' the Brunswitk team was played on the Brunswick alleys the previous evening. On the Elks' team were, Sim F‘reim:m,| Kaser, McNaughton, Hunter and Barragar while players on the| Brunswick team were Ziegler, Roth- fus, Moeser, Brennan and Momb. ! The Elks 2291 to 2286. Seattle’s Golden Potlatch was to! close the followthg day in a blaze of glory. Among the attractions| was to be a flight over the city by Mayor Hiram C. Gill in Silas Christofferson’s hydroplane. Thou- sands of visitors crowded the city. carnival to be held on the final evening was a great open-air kall for which Second Avenue was to be converted into a ballroom with canvas spread over the strest for dancing. | The disguise misled him into think- ing that I was meeting Mr. fresne.” ! “You had to buy his silence then?” | “Yesterday he came to me and | demanded money. | gave him all | | had In my purse. He was fnsolent | and demanded that [ get more and bring it to him last night. In des- peration | promised—and | kept my promise!” she concluded grimly. For a few moments there was | | dead silence, then a racking scb, | and the woman, overcome by the | flood of memory, stood swaying. | With a dull thud the hidden gun | slid down inside the coat, bounced as it struck, then lay flat and still on the,rug. Mrs. Croyden caught her breath with an audible gasp, but the detec- tive made no move to spring for the weapon. Instead, he looked somber- at the woman. “Now 1 under- | stand,” be announced, rising slowly. You meyer meant to run away.” As Mrs. Croyden made a quick, but belated, movement toward the gun halkfcked it across the floor. “Don’t totich that,” he warned. He backed toward the wall and pressed the ser- vice button. “What are you doing?” Aline Cipyden cried, and he noted the | tenseness, the tightly coiled physi- cal mechanism of her body. Harper came over and stood fac- fng her. “That was an interesting recital, Mrs. Croyden, but you haven't fooled me one bit. You had no Intention of fleeing, in spite ot your words and your gun. You wanted to confess. You wanted to be arrested for these murders!” # “What do you mean?” she stam- éred, wide-eyed. “That was a fine story you told, but it was not the truth!"” _ She stared at him, stricken numb. 'There was a discreet rap at the Joor. Keeping one eye on that stat- ‘deJike figure of despair, Harper turned the key in the lock and :g‘zpcd the door part way. “Andrews, Detective Lafferty at the garage a%fell him to come here as quickly Du- | ‘as’he can.” » @ detective closed the door again. Mrs. Croyden held her place. Only her eyes moved, following his movements. “I did it,” she repeated_ “I'lf swear to it. You can't prove that 'L didn’t do it!” r looked at her steadlly. “That's quite true, Mrs. Croyden. If you, swear to it Il have trouble 'rz{n‘ otherwise. But 1 know you didn't do the actual killing. Those magks on the table were not made e night of the murder, because | that ring was not in tkis room then, nor-the wearer of the ring. I've bad a susplcion that some one was com- ing into this room in my absence and looking over the evidence as it accumulated. When you included those ring marks in your story, I knew you were not the actual mur- r.” i , (Copyright, 1934, by Walter C. Brows, » RTomorrow, the case takes ane other dramatic turn, . | hours was cloudy with rain. 24 The maximum temperature was 52 de- grees and the minimum was 48. Weather for the p-essdiny Precipitation was 40 inches. Miss Gertrude = Hellenthal and Mrs. A. Hellenthal were among the Juneau arrivals on $he Humbolat from the South. Mrs. Graves and Miss Mona Graves, wife and daughter of J. P. L. Graves, manager of the Ju- neau Music House, arrived on the Admiral Sampson joining Mr. Graves here. This was their first trip to Juneau and they declared themselves delighted with their new | home. They were staying at the Occidental Hotel temporarily, ———-———— B. P. 0. ELKS Special Meeting Wednesday, July 18th. Ballot Initiation. —adv. JUNEAU Drug Co. | “THE CORNER DRUG STORE® P 0. Substation No. 1 FREE DELIVERY i JRS— FINE | Watch and Jewelry Repairing at very reasonable rates ' , PAUL BLOEDHORN l y FRONT STREET I DTkl S e oy i GOODRICH $4.50 won with a total of! | among the features of the! * N1 | OFFICE AND RESIDENCE _PROFESSIONAL Helene W. L. Albrecht rAYSIOTHERAPY , Massage, Electricity, Infra Red Ray, Medical Gymnastics. | | 807 Goldstein Building | J. Phone Office. 216 I = Weiasa SN S Rose A. Ardrews , Graduate Nurse l Electric Cabinet Baths—Mas | aage, Colonfe lrrigations | | Office hours 11 am. % 5 p.m. ; Evenings by Appointment L { Becond an«. Main' ' 'Phone 259 3 ] 5] st E. B. WILSON Chiropodist—Foot 'Specialist 401 Goldste'n Building PHONE 496 ; ¢ f “ | | DRS. KASER & FREEBURGER DENTISTS o Blomgren Building PHONE 33 Hours 9 am. to 9 pm. | Dr. C. P. Jenne | DENTIST Rooms 8 and 9 Valentine Building | Telephone 176 1 Dr. J. W. Bayne ! DENTIST Rooms 5-6 Triangle Bld3z. | Office hours, 9 am. to 5 pm. | Evenings by appointment i PHONE 321 | & T i Robert Sitapson | t. D. ' | Graduate Angeles Col- lege of Optometry and | Opthalmology Glasses Fitted, Leuses Ground — % 3§ DR. R. E. SOUTHWEL | Optometrist—Optict = Eyes Examined—Glasces Pitted Room 17, Valentine Bldg. Office Phone 484; Residence | Phone 238. Office Hours: 9:30 to 12; 1:00 ® 5:30 | PRI ) M SRR i Dr. Richard Williams i DENTIST | Gastineau Building | Phone 481 Dr. A. W. Stewart DENTIST Hours § am. to 6 pm. { SEWARD BUILDING | Office Phone 409, Res. Phone 276 [ s —_ — & TOTEM MARKET Groceries—Produce—Fresh and Smoked Meats { WILLOUGHBY AVENUE CASH AND CARRY | ——— PAINTS—OILS [ Builders’ and Shelf HARDWARE Thomas Hardware Co. MEN'S SHOE PACS ! | | See BIG VAN Telephone 88 Demonstrated TA rman’s paradis¢ fhey are. On the Kona coast, called “the home of fishermen’s souls,” George afiwia” witl Be ‘waitirig" fof the Houston’s dapper | launch. George, a one-legged Polynesian who knows how to hook the big ones, may ask the President to go native with him and fish the turquoise water from a Japanese sampan. There, in the exapnse looking out toward China, they'll find the gamey wah-loo, the fighting barracuda, the hard-boiled yellow-finned tuna and the king of all the waters, the swordfish. Malahina, or tenderfoto, as he'll be out there in the mid-Pacific, the President calls himself a tough guy. Well, he’ll meet the toughest brethren of the deep on this trip. What a vacation for a King or President! As we sit under the willow tree casting our bait for |catfish or bass we can dream of what we'll do |when we get to be President. But none will be- |erudge F. D. this glorified fishing trip. He's earned it The scientists are still in the dark about the nature of the common cold, and apparently the problem will never be solved until some mathe- first of these is the certainty that science will play matician draws up a formula—(New York Times. L WHOLESALE AND Phones 92—95 RETAIL GROCERS Free Delivery - IDEAL PAINT SHOP . If It's Paint PHONE 549 . FOR INSURANCE - See H. R. SHEPARD & SON ne 409 B. M. Bek : Telepho We Have It! Wendt & Garster Behrends Bank Bldg.. - Whether you require ice, or cooperation in the problem, an alliance with bank will prove its worth Our officers will be FRYE’S BABY BEEF “DELICIOUS” HAMS and BACON Frye-Bruhn Company has ‘enabled The B. M. Behrends Barik to carn and keep the good will of depositors from every part of * the great district which this institution serves. and to suggest ways in which we might be helpful. _ The B. M. Behrends Bank Mining Location Notices at Em- pire office. THE HOTEL OF ALASKAN HOTELS The Gastineau OQur Services to' You Begin and End at the Gang Plank of Every Passenger-Carrying Boat Prompt Delivery Dependability Checking or*Savings serv- solution of some business Alaska’s oldest and larges’ to you. glad to talk things over |1 ReninLe Trassren ‘Fraternal Societies — OF Gastineau Channel } B. P. 0. ELKS meets \ cvery second and g fourth Wedncsdays at £:00 p. m. Visiting brothers welcome. . I~hn H. Walmer Exalted Ruler. M. H. Sides, Sceretary KNIGHTS OF COLUUMBUS Seghers Council Na1760, Meetings second and I Monday - at 7:30 p. x;l Iransient brothers urg- ed to attend “Council Chambers, Fifth Street. JOHN F. MULLEN, G. K. H. J. TURNER, Scretary . , . | &F ) s i, MOUNT JUNEAU LODGE NO. 17", ‘,Sycond and four Mon- * day ol each momth. in: 4 Sgottish Rite’ Temple, heginning at 7:30 pi m. E. HENDRICKSON, v ; James W. LEIVERS, Sec- ‘w Douglas Acerie 17 F. 0. E. Meets first and third Mondays 8 p.m., Eagles' Hall, Douglas. Visiting urothers welcome. Sanie Degan W. P, T. W. CaShen, Secrctary. ks go any jlace time, A tank for Diesel €1 a tank for crude oil save | i burner trouble. J | PHONG 119: NIGIE 18 ! i) B8 | i Commercial Adjust- ! | ment & Rating Burcan | Couperating with While Servics | | Bureau f ¥ Room 1—Shattuck Blde i | We have 50060 local ratings : on fle i e e— Jones-Stevens Shop | | | LADIES—CHILDRENS | READY-T0-WEA® | Beward Street Near Third | -2 ?— _{Ii JUNEAU-YOUNG Funeral Parlors Licenced Funeral Directors | and Embalmers ] | Night Phone 1851 Day Phone 12 SABIN’S | lvery'lunz' m-::m.um ! Franklin Street between Front and Second Streets ! Tue Juneau Launory | I } PHONE 356 Fr—— SHOPPE “Exclusive but not Expensive” Coats, Dresses, Lingerie, Hoslery and Hats HOTEL ZYNDA | _Large Sample Room i \ ELEVATOR SERVICE 8. ZYNDA, Prop. GARBAGE HAULED Reasonable Monthly Rates TELEPHONE 584 E. 0. DAVIS { Phone” 4753 | JUNEAU FROCK ' '