The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, July 19, 1934, Page 4

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e T e T U A TR 1 e 35 S A Daily Alaska Empire ROBERT W. BENDER - - GENERAL MANAGER lll.hed eve: evening except Sunday by the iR l'NTlr'{l‘ L'\)MPA\Y at Second and Main Alaska. J\m?au. Entered in the Post Office In Juneau as Second Class | matter. SUBSCRIPTION RATES. @elivered by carrier In Jmn;nh and Douglas for $1.25 per_month. By mall, postage paid, at the following rates: year, n advance, $12.00; six months, In advance, | one month, in advance, $1.25. cribers will confer a favor if they will promptly nmry the Business Office of any failure or irregularity tnthe delivery of thelr papers. A Tolephone or_Editorial d_Business Offices, 374. MEMBER OF ASSOCIATED PRESS. 1'=_A-odatea ‘Press is exclusively entitled to the republication of all news dispatches credited to or not oth jcdited in’ this paper and also the news pul ALASKA CIR( herein. THAN THAT OF ANY OTHER PUBLICATION. ULATION GUARANTEED TO BE LARGER ELECTED. IF HOOVER HAD BEE} Ignoring all of the events that have transpired | since the national election of 1932, former Clerk of | Court John H. Dunn advised the Gastineau Channel Republican Club to turn its face backward in its effort to rehabilitate the shattered ranks of Alaska's G. O. P. If the voters had re-elected Hoover instead of electing Franklin D. Roosevelt the country would | now be almost back on a normal basis, he declared to ringing applause from the 37 present. That asser- tion was almost as foolish as his declaration that the stand of President Roosevelt in favor of col- lective bargaining is responsible for the labor troubles the country is experiencing. For the latter assertion he was challenged by Alaska's former Delegate to Congress—Judge James Wickersham. The premise that the United States would have |M emerged from the greatest depths of depression it has ever known if the regime were continued in power under which the catastrophe had occurred and which had not only demonstrated its helpless- ness to combat, but also its complete inability to comprehend, is just so much empty bombast. It| is, however, typical of the G. O. P. organization | from the National Committee to the weakest State organization. It is so full of emptin that it is hard to avoid a grin when the scarecrow squad begins to trot out its specters of fascism, com- munism, revolution, dictatorship and what have you. It has remained for Mr. Dunn to erect the latest scarecrow—collective bargaining. And when it is dragged out of the ghost closet of the Republicans, the grin becomes a horse laugh. Trade unionism has been the most effective agency employed in raising the status of America‘s laboring men women. Without it, their lot would be pitiful indeed. It hds beeén a bulwark of Democracy. It is to labor what manufacturers' associations are to industry. Its only effective weapon is the right of collective bargaining. Politicians who condemn it, those who applaud its condemnation out of partisan | zeal, must live in a vacuum into which no informa- tion ever penetrates. The Democratic Party has sponsored by law the right of labor to organize and bargain collectively. The Democratic Party in Alaska has formally en- dorsed that policy. They will be glad to accept the issue that the Republican Club here last Tuesday raised when it charged that President Roosevelt's favor of the system is ill-advised, unsound and at the bottom of present labor difficulties. The major- ity of Alaskan workers probably are not affiliated with unions, but undoubtedly most of them are strongly pro-union. We are certain they will not knowingly cast their lot with any political organiza- tion, no matter what it is labeled, nor their votes for its candidates. Collective bargalning, however, is but one phase of the existing regime. The great difference between Mr. Roosevelt's conception of the duty of govern- ment and his performance of that duty, and Mr. Hoover's concept and acts is that the former holds that the Government of tige United States is du-ectly‘fnopubhcnn powers? responsible for the physical well-being of its citizens while the latter held this to be the duty of the local and State governments. Mr. Hopver was willing to give aid to great financial, transportation and industrial corporations, but none to the indi- vidual. He so stated plainly. The community, he declared, was responsible first and if it failed then |head and rank-and-file of the Borah Republican {they think that the old fellows have made a mess and | Committeeman. expt-ctec‘!o octus sihce seasonal mdus‘nes were all in operation by the first of June. Although all indust mal groups combined showed Ja' cecrease of unemployment from April to May, |unempleyment in two groups increased as follows: manufacturing and mechanical, 10,000; and domestic | and personal service, 12,000. These increases were overcome by decreases in such other groups as ex- | |traction of minerals, 32,000; transportation, 18,000; | {trade, 48,000; and miscellaneous occupations, 2,000. | In addition it was estimated that 27,000 new workers | | became available for employment during the month. In this estimate the workers employed through| |the Public Works Administration were counted as! employed. Emergency workers employed under Gov- | ernment expense, usually part time, in lieu of jdirect unempioyment reiief S Wwere codnted as un- employed, The showing of t hese 14 months must be regdrded as remarkable. It partly explains the epidemie of strikes and. near strikes that spread across the | country which isinitself one of the greatest handicaps to the Administration's recovery program. It is a real evidence of growing economic recovery which is of record the period of greatest labor unrest. Maybe Gen. Johnson's speech at the University of California wasn't exactly diplomatic but he de- picted the real nature of a general strike in easily understood phrases which will not be forgotten in a long time. Former District Attorney Stabler told the Re- publican Club he never knew a decent liquor dealer. And the latter might retort in kind they are not responsible for Mr. Stabler's associations. A Diversity of Republicans. (New York Times.) Mr. Henry P. Fletcher, Chairman of the Re- publican National Committee, has lived in many countries and habituated himself to many changes of physical climate. In his present function he is exposed to many and sharp variations of intellectual | and political climate. Last week, after being clos- eted with that paleozoic boss, Mr. J. Henry Roraback of Connecticut, he was admitted to the cell of Mr. Borah, the solitary of solitaries. Mr. Borah is the Farty. How many other differentiated species has r. Fletcher run across in his search of a concord- ance of Republican opinion? Old Guard, Young Guard, straight Roosevelt Re- publicans, straight Republicans who want to bang Mr. Roosevalt, straight Republicans who think it wiser to be tender to him, stern and rugged Smoot- | and-Hawley, Grundy-and-Home Market Republicans, | Republicans who scorn the sincere milk of protec- tionism and believe no longer in jug-handled trade— long is the catalogue, too long to read in the fervors of July. Young Republicans are often roughly class- ed as a unity. They may be that in the sense that of their job and that young fellows ought to be in charge, waiting and preparing for a turn of fortune and a whack at office. It must be admitted that the elders are slow to take a hint and seem to invite a Kkick. Down in Maine the Republican State Committee has nominated Mr. Daniel F. Field as National | Out of the old Field, cry the young- | sters, cometh no new corn. “The younger element,” | says & reprresentative of the Youth Front egards Mr. Field as the exponent, if not the advocate, of the policies which wrecked the party two years ago.” The “reactionary” course of the State committee is “probably fatal to the hope of a Republican victory in Maine.” Turn sadly from Maine to Kansas. The name of John Hamilton, Sunflower National Committeeman, was written on the bright shields of Midwestern Republican expectation in that council of sages and young hopefuls at Chicago which gave Mr. Fletcher his thankless job. If Mr. Fletcher was an Elder Statesman, John Hamilton must be made Assistant Chairman to gratify the progressive Republican juvenals of the West. Alas! at a meeting presided | over by a young Republican, John Hamilton smote Mr. Roosevelt hip and thigh; for instance, I don't believe we will get back the rights we have given up by abolishing the judiciary and putting it in the hands of the auto- cratic bureaucrats in Washington, giving the duties of Congress to a single individual and selling our free inalienable rights for thirty pieces of silver. Our Mr. Mills can say Amen to that. Our Mr. Macy can't—at least in a State campaign, such as the Kansas Republicans will soon have on their hands. Can even Mr. Fletcher’s diplomatic skill bring about a treaty of peace among so many babbling Bennettism in Decline? (Manchester, Eng., Guardian.) Rarely does the political tide turn with such force as it has just done in the two Canadian Provinces of Ontario and Saskatchewan. In the the county or State had to assume the charge. |former the Conservative Party, who numbered eighty- And under him the Federal Government did ‘not do|four at the dissolution, have dwindled to sixteen, or pretend to do anything. :vhtuthhe Lx; als who }:’eld‘mw!en ssea;slilr: the N % as! louse, ave now sixty-six. n askatchewan BRY iterdniadrom President Foosivell. 1 0N the Liberals and their allies now hold the whole of own words his program consisted ‘of three related lipo ggpy.five seats, including those of the Pramier steps, the first and most vital of which was relief: [anq of all his Cabinet. These results can leave “Because the primary concern of any government |y Bennett in little doubt what his fate will be dominated by the humane ideals of democrgcy is{when the Dominion Parliament is dissolved next the simgple principle that in a land of vast resources |summer. He had an unmistakable warning last no one should be permitted to starve. Relief was and continues to be our first consideration.” And it was made necessary by that very period that Mr. Dunn characterizes as “normalcy.” It was the period of Harding, Coolidge and Hoover. The era depicted so aptly by Mr. Roosevelt as “that unfortunate decade characterized by a,mad chase for unearned riches and an unwillingness of leaders in almost every walk of life to look beyond their own schemes and speculations.” We are very certain that the voters of the United States, and that includes the voters of Alaska as well, will not be frightened by the ghost chasers into recalling those leaders to power so that they can restore the system which produced what the Republicans blindly hail as -“normalcy.” UNEMPLOYMENT CUT 40.2 PER CENT SINCE MARCH, 19 Estimates recently made public by the National Industrial Conference Board show that unemploy- ment was reduced by 5,304,000 from March, 1933, to _ the end of May of this year, or in 14 months. It October, when three widely spread Dominion by- elections—one in the east in New Brunswick, another in Quebec, and a third in the Prairie Provinces— went against him in quick succession. The Provinces have their special concerns, and a Provincial vote cannot be taken as an entirely reliable guide to what will happen in a Dominion general election. t both Mr. Hepburn and Mr. Gardiner, the Lib- eral leaders in Ontario and Quebec, have been vigorous in denouncing Bennettism, and in the result have secured triumphs for their party more striking even than those already achieved in British | Columbia and Nova Scotia, which have already returned Liberal majorities. This tremendous swing to the Liberal ranks has occurred despite the com- petition of a new party, the Co-operative Common- wealth Federation, whose program is frankly and fully Socialist. It would seem that the bulk of the Canadian electorate are in full agreement with the contention of Mr. Mackenzie King, the Liberal lead- er, that what the Dominion needs is neither that shortsighted economic nationalism of which Mr. Bennett is the prophet nor-a revolution leading to a bureaucratic State, such as the Co-operative Commonwealth Federation -urges, but above all a release from the stranglehold of high tariffs and a return to the Liberal outlook in home and foreign . put the number of unemployed on the latter date at 7.899,000. This represented a decline of 06 per cent the month of May. ‘While the .;»wm; dmsnhe rate of increase, 65 Was | ced by a-cottiparison of the, ég:reue of “m'fith the April decrease of March ‘decrease of 569,000 this was affairs. Some time the weatherman is going to get downright_realistic, throw official, formal restraint to' the winds, and instead of predicting continued fair and warmer, remark laconically, ‘“Another one 1ot “as-hEll =(Ohio State Journal) - Chapter 53) <= RECONCILIATION HARPER put Aline Croyden’s ring away in the pocket that held the little key to Richard Croy- den’s piano. The artist’s renuncia- tion of his beloved instrument had been a poignant gesture. Indeed, justly or unjustly, the dead ride bard! Harper meditated sourly to himself as he mounted the stairs to spread his thankléss pews through the house. He tapped on thé ddor of Mrs. Dufresne’s room, deciding that she was entitled to be told first. After that painful interview he sought out the master of the-house and found him in the upstairs il brary, the scene of his mocking ehal- lenge of the evening before. Plerre Dufresne was staring moodily out the window when the detective en- tered. His face, too, proclaimed the stress and strain of restless hagrs that should have been devoted to sleep. In plain, unadorned phases Ser- geant Harper told the story of the murders. As he talked, Pierre Du- fresne paced up and down, exclaim- ing, interrupting with questions, struggling over details with a brain tagged from its own unjust but hard- spurred woes. At times he could bardly credit the tale. “Wait! Wait!” he cried, poured bimself a drink and downed it at a gulp. Then he resumed his nervous pacing, firing questions again and again at the detective, When he had finished his story, Harper said, “Now, Mr. Dufresne, perhaps you will explain your own movements after you got out of the Austerlitz? 1 know you had every intention of murdering the man whom you suspected was meeting your wife in this house. What hap- pened?” Dufresne fiung himself into a chair. “You were right, Harper. 1 got out of the Austerlitz as you de- scribed. Between the alibi I had pre- pared and the letters I had written to myself I felt quite certain that 1 would never be suspected, no mat- ter what happened. “I took a taxi and got out some distance from here. I had been keep- ing watch on that sand-urn and 1 knew a meeting had been arranged for that night. I walked past the house, There’' was no light, no sign ot life, and there were no foot. prints leading up to the door. I hid behind a wall, watching. It was quite dark. “I waited, but nothing happened: I was furious because I had been outwitted again. Then I saw a police- man coming along the street. He was the first person I had seen in the street at all. To my astonish- ment, he turned in at the gate as though he had business here. .1 “He went up the steps and en- tered the house, although I couldn’t se8e who had opened the door. I was greatly puzzled. I watched and wait- ed, but the policeman didn't come out. I don't know how long I hid behind the wall, but it must have been quite a while, for I began to get stiff with cold. “Suddenly, the front door began to bang in the wind. When that kept up I grew frightened at the pros- pect. I knew that something un- usual must have happened and I wanted to keep clear of it. How could I have explained my absence from the hotel? So I left my hiding- place and walked until I caught a (taxi that brought me back to the center of the city. I had not been in very long before you arrived. | “When you brought me up here to view the bodies I couldn’t under- stand hal? ot what I saw and heard and I'va been trying ever since to figure out what really took place in that room.” ARPER nodded. “That shows what totally different meanings can be drawn from the simplest things. The notes left in that urn were construed in a different man- ner by every one who found out about them. “Only Mrs. Croyden and your wité. knew the real truth abont them. At any time a frank discussion would have cleared it all up. Instead, it was allowed to fester in secrecy. Richard Croyden, the real victim of the whole intrigue, didn’t know of their existence until much later.” The detective looked Pierre Du- fresne squarely in the eyes. “I am going to lay aside my role as police officer for a few seconds,” he stated,. “and take the liberty of talking to you as man to man. You may resent what | am going to say but I shal not apologize for my presumption. GEORGE BROTHERS WHOLESALE AND RETAIL GROCERS Phones 92—95 MO-C_:KI'NG ‘Ho:bs: B8Y WALTER C. BROW You know now that you grnveldml&‘ judged your wife. Had you acted’ with the slightest degree of sanity and understanding both of you would have been spared a great deal of suffering.” Harper flung out his hand to check Dufresne’s rising retort. “Wait until I have finished. I talked with her just before I came to this room and she explained to me all' that she knew. She had brooded and worried over her sister’s plight until she was’ nearly frantic, not knowing what would happen next. Loyalty to her sister’s secret kept her silent and your unaccountable attitude made it impossible to turn to you for help. Knowing the truth of it herself, she pever dreamed that you had found out about the notes and were accus, ing her in ynur mind. “When you telephoned and told her about the ambush she was terri- fied. She thought that this H.D. was at the bottom of it. From her sis- ter's account she knew that he was capable of nearly anything. She saw that a terrible crisis was at hand, but she didn’t know what to do mor which way to turn. She knew about the meeting that night, but this I other thing arose too suddenly for her to formulate any plans. “Then came the fire at Mrs. Mon lock’s house and she saw the oppon tunity to slip away unobserved in the confusion. Without thinking, she dashed blindly out of the house, not even properly dressed against the storm. It was a gesture of panie¢ aud it came to nothing. The wind, the snow, the cold were too much for her overwrought state. “She floundered in the storm af- ter a short distance and had to turn | back. That is her story, Mr. Du- fresne, and it is clean and clear. I leave it to your own conscience to point out what amends you owe her tor your unwarranted lack of faith.” 'y/OU know a devil of a lot of ! things, don’t you, Harper?” Du- fresne asked in a surly voice. reach- ing for the decanter and glass. “Forty-eight hours have revealed more to me about what was really | happening in this house than any ' of you could discover in months ot suapicion, quarrels, and jealous ac- | cusation,” Harper answered quietly. | “And if you were half a man you would not be silting there now brooding, trying to dn'g your con- | seience with liquor.” The glass stood poised, halfway, | to Dufresne’s lips. “Do you really thihik s0?” he queried sardonically, | “What would you suggest?” (\ “I'd suggest that you go fmme- | diately and make your peace with/ your wife. She’ll probably be gens'' erpus enough to forgive and forget eyerything and kill the fatted calf, over the prodigal’s return to sanity, That's @il I have to say, Mr. Du-, fresne. I shall not step out of ChB.h“ acter again.” i Pierre Dufresne frowned, then he; laughed, and the smile that Harper| had seen but rarely transformed his face. He put down the glass un- tasted and rose from his chair wnh ill-concealed resolution, “Will you wait here for a few]‘ o minutes, Harper? I want to go down.| town with you, to arrange things for Richard and give him what help' Ican.” ! “I'll wait for you,” ised. Although the “few minutes®| lengthened considerably and the master of the house had not re-| turned, the detective was not fme| patient, The delay, he mused, was| in a good cause. ! He browsed along the book- shelves and taking out one of the! valumes, sat down on the broad win-| dow-seat. The morning sun began to edge its way through the leaded glass panes as he idly turned the pagea. - l Harper looked up at the sound of footsteps, but it was old Andrews, and not Dufresne, who entered the rqm The gray-haired butler had a measage for him. “Mr. Dufresne said he would be ready in a minute, | Harper promfll B !gndrevu hovered over the tray by the armchair, where Dufresne’s last pk stood untouched. “Shall I re- e this, sir?” 'es, Andrews—and | think it will uite all right to take the decan- tef“along with it.” They smiled at each other in sud-! den understanding. Then the old man bowed to Sergeant Stephen Harper and it was not the stiff nod by which he drew the line between | h}L 4 master's world and everything | t lay outside. ,?",mm.“ 2934, by Walter C. Brown) ’ Tue Exp Free Delivery IDEAL PAINT SHOP If It's Paint PHONE 549 FOR INSURANCE . . See H. R. SHEPARD & SON Telephone 409 B. M. We Have It! Wendt & Garster | —~—— E 20 YEARS AGO i Prom The Emplre Eaaaaaaade o So e o o s uh S JULY 19, 1914. The Gastineau-Juneau baseball team evened up the series with the Douglas-Treadwell nine L A T ~inning the game the previous day 5 to 0. The game was fast and well played with excellent work by Ford, pitcher for Johnson, of Douglas. Juneau and The game swas almost errorless to the eighth inning and the score was one to, nothing to that time. There was' a large and enthuslastic attend-! ance. et The Juneau Gun-Club members had a good turnout for their shoot the preceding day with Mort Trues- dell making the omly perfect score of *25. Others who took part .in the. shoot at Recreation Park and their scores were, King, 21; Long, 21;° Banbury, 20; Carrigan, 20; Carter, 19; Cleary, 18; Shattuck, 16; Wuldron, 15; Bell, 9 and Davis 6. 13; Lynch, R. P. Nelson had just completed 2 new water tank to furnish a high pressure service for the residents jof Nelson's Park addition to Ju- * neau. The mains were being laid to supply the people of that sec- tion and also sewers were tuilt. The streets were to be re- graded shortly. | Weather for the preceding 24 hours was cloudy though the tem- perature reached a maximum of 66 degrees. The minimum tempera- ture was 49 degrees. Mr. and Mrs. H. J. Raymond, Mr. and Mrs. George Butzer, Mr. ind Mrs. George Kohlhepp, M Stewart, Jack Drury, J. H. Kissler Frank Cook and Dave Evans, made & up a merry fishing party that spent Saturday evening and Sun-, day near Bear Creek. They chur» tered the Grubstake II, Capt. E. D. Beattie, and procured several hundred trout. Mrs. R. W. Jennings, assiste® hy her daughter, Miss Cordelia Jen- !, nings, entertained the previous af- ternoon at her residence in honor of Mrs. 8. E. Jameson and Miss Ida Parton. John Berg, one of the world's ramuus wrestlers, was a visitor in | Juneau. He came north seeking recreation and for the purpose of hunting big game. thorized the announcement that he would be willing to meet a bunch of the local wrestlers, though he was not hoping to get a match and had not come for that purpose. | ——— JUNEAU Drug Co. “THE CORNER DRUG STORE" P 0. Substation No. 1 FREE DELIVERY FINE | Watch and Jewelry Repairing at very reasonable rates PAUL BLOEDHORN FRONT STREET L i e e ] GOODRICH MEN'S SHOE PACS ‘ 1 $4.50 " See BIG VAN ,l ! | being ' PROFESSIONAL Helene W. L. Albrecht FHYSIOTHERAPY Ilmm Electricity, Infra Red Ray, Medical Gymnastics. 307 Goldstein Building Phone Office. 216 | Rose A. Ardrcws Graduate Nurse Electrioc Cabinet Baths—Mas sage, Colonic trrigations Office hours 11 am to 5 pm. | ' Evenings by Appointment ! LSecond and Main . Phone 253 ' = tH | : ! | E.B. WILSON Chiropodist—Foot _ Specialist I 401 Goldstein Building PHONE. 493, DR:S. KASER & FREEBURGER DENTISTS | Blomgren Building PHONE 53 | Hours 9 am. to 9 pm. | Dr. C. P. Jenne DENTIST Rooms 8 and 9 Valentine | Building | Telcphone 176 | Dr. J. W. Bayne | DENTIST i Rooms 5-6 Triangle Bldg. Oftice hours, 9 a.m. to 5 pm. Evenings by appointment PHONE 321 | Robert Simpson t. D. Graduate Angeles Col- lege of Optomctry and Opthasnology | Glasses Fitted, Lenses Ground 4 3 DR. R. £. SOUTHWELL Optometrist—Optic: = i Eyes Examined-—Giasses Pitted | Room 17, Valentine Bldg | Office Phone 484, Residence | | Phone 238. Office Hours: 8:80 | ) to 12; 1:00 to 5:30 e — Dr. Richard Williams | DENTIST l OFFICE AND RESIDENCE Gastineau Bullding | Phone 481 | l Dr. A. W. Stewart DENTIST | Hours 9 am. to 6 p.m. SEWARD BUILDING | Office Phone 408, Res. Phone 276 | e ——-] - TOTEM MARKET Groceries—Produce—Fresh and Smoked Meats | WILLOUGHBY AVENUE q CASH AND CARRY e PAINTS—OILS Builders’ and Shelf HARDWARE Thomas Hardware Co. Mining Location Nutives at Em- pire office. THE HOTEL OF ALASKAN HOTELS The Gastineau s Chainbers, Fifth Street.’ "3 l& B.P. O. meets v every sccond and ‘Q‘} & Dourth Wednestays at 2:00 p. m. Vising L& brothers welcome Jahn IO Exalted Ruler. M. H. Sides, 5 Council No.1760. g5 second and la Mpnday at 7:30 p. Tranmsient broihers urgH® cd to aitend Council ™ JUHN ¥ 'MULLEN, G. K H. J. TURNER, Screlary T L e . MOUNT JUNEAU“LODGE; NO.} u. 1Second and fdurth Moaw day of each moutb- in , Scottish R te Yemple, ' heginning at 7:30 p. m. HENDRICKSON, «; James Wi LEIVERS, Sce- & Douglas Acrie 17 F. 0. E. Mcets first and third Mondays 8 p.m., Eagles' Hall, Douglas. Visiting brothers welcome. Sante Degan W. P, T. W. Cashen, Sccretary. Our trucks go any ilimn. A tank for Diesel cu) | and a tank for crude ol save | i . burner trouble. | PHONE 149; NIGIE 148 '- RELIABLE TRANSFER ; e | NOW OFEN Commercial Adjust- | ' . i ment & Rating Burcau | | Cooperating with White Service | | Bureau Room 1—Shattuck Bldz We have 5.060 local ratings on f'le s-Stevens Shops ! | LADIES' —CHILDREN'S ' READY-TO-WEAT | Beward Street Near Third | ~—— S R M JUNEAU-YOUNG Funeral Parlors Licenctd Funeral Directors i and Embalmers ; Night Phone 1851 Day Phone 12 | SABIN’S Everything in Furnishing: for Men — | Tue JuneAu Launpry | Franklin Street between . | Front and Second Strects l | ')L PHONE 35§ 1l 3 JUNEAU FROCK SHOPPE “Exclusive but not Expensive” HOTEL ZYNDA Large Sample Room 4 '\ ELEVATOR SERVICK 8. ZYNDA, Prop. GARBAGE HAULED Reasonable Monthly Rates -.‘m o3 L2 — Our Services to You Begin and End at the Gang Plank of Every Passenger-Carrying Boat FRYE’S BABY BEEF “DELICIOUS” HAMS and BACON I l E. 0. DAVIS TELEPHONE 584 | Phone 4753 | a- foe ] *? GENERAL MOTORS ' Frye-Bruhn Company Telephone 38 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 sery- ice, or cooperation in the problem, an alliance with Alaska’s oldest and larges* bank will prove its worth to you. Our officers will be and to suggest ways in which we might be helpful. The B. M. Behrends Bank ' MAYTAG PRODUCTS W. P. JOHNSON [ — Prompt Delivery McCAUL MOTOR | COMPANY Dodge and Plymesth Dealers | The Flo'renee Shop l solution of some business glad to talk things over

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