The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, May 25, 1935, Page 4

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

~“lim_ly Alaska Empire fact that the principle has been lived up to gives| urance of its future place in social welfare. Any ® i ” M organization or movement that can instill into ROBERT W. BENDER - - Editor and Manager . ., 1. suaightforward precepts that will Published _cvery evening except Sunday by the make them good citizens is one of merit, and the| EMPIRE_PRINTI NY at Second and Main g W wver failed in this respect. | Strects, June: Scout movement has never failed in I Entered In the matter. Post Office in Jur can well be proud of today’s Boy Scouts, srinc bl ko substantial ~citizens, | tomorrow's money or effort well spent to become time, and it will be SUBSCRIPTION RATES. Dellvered by carrier In Juneau and Douglas for $1.25 provide every encouragement to prompt the cause. per month | SERRE i oh: B | The Navy has a device that will allow the| $6.00; ane month, in advance, $1.26 President’s voice to be heard a mile while ad- Bubacribers will confer a favor if they will promptly | notify the Business Office of any failure or irregularity dre: e crowds. Roosevelt has been addressing | " e SE thelr papers, " - ees Oftice, 74, ithe crowd on earth for the last two years| ~— and his voice has been heard around the world. | MEMBER OF ASSOCIATED PRESS. i e wolle I Y [ The Associated Pr s exclusively entitled to the e : il use for republication « news dispatches credited to It bids fair to be a dandy baseball season in| B e e T paper and also the 5,00y Only two games played and the boys i o already up and at 'em with the fighting spirit. The| ALASKA CIRCULATION THAN THAT OF GUARANTE! ANY OTHER STILL KEEPS THE Considerable this sesston of popularity of Pres cated there was speculation has Congress as to ident Roosevelt a. as compared with two years ago. e R agelinmey bels ying out, such an "y Ceith he could have drawn up an almanac rjxu-xmve program as has the Px'mlden‘L could help forecasting weather 10,000 years in advance. from making certain political enemies, and he That's what the rocks show. One may take it prebably has. Opposition movements are expected or Jeave it. There is a recent book, written by | to capitalize on that angle, and it cannot be over- E. E. Free and Travis Hoke for the layman, which looked that there a political campaign in the ‘is calculated to upset all of his theories about offing for next vhich has no small bearing weather. Probably it disturbs the weather . sharks But the fac 1t Roosevelt still has heavy at Washington also; but bound up in department indoresment is reflected from time to time, and red tape, there isn't much they can do about it. particul T siticant | when it comes: from One learns from this compilation that until the sources honestly ¢ for his downfail but admit in p FAITH. is to say, it is not a normal condition on the earth’s surface. been made during It seems that back of all history excepl that a certain waning of his popularity ed to him, who hope and work ED TO BE LARGEF [ PUBLICATION fans will see some real games this summer. A circus elephant gored a man to death in Lo. Angeles but he won a reprieve on grounds that| his record had been good and he never killed a man before. It is assumed, of course, that an| elephant is worth money. | . | UnAmerican: That ~overworked word in the| Hoover vocabulary whenever he refers to F. D. R. T | Earth Wrinkles Make Weather. | e | | (Kansas City Star.) We do a lot of talking about the weather. ably more words are piled up about that in the course of a year than about any other. s0 the savants say, weather is not natural Prob- | subject Yet, That | for at least nine-tenths| no such thing the strength and nd some have indi- written in rock formations, of the earth’s existence, there was as “weather,” as we understand it. There were no variations of temperature, no storms; cvery day was It hardly seems 7 the same, and if there had been a man on the face earth cooled sufficiently to wrinkle its surface the whole year was just a fine spring day. The wrinkles, the hills and valleys, the seas and deserts, with the| rivate conversation | MAY 26 Austria along a line extending 40 Tom W. Haines miles north from the Gulf of Tries- ' Pasco Lucy driving of 3,000 feet of tunnel. | Steamship Company arrived in Ju- | 2 | that they had permanently located THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE SATURDAY MAY 25 I935 HAPPY ——BIRTHDAY The Empire extends congratula- | tions nnd best wishes today, their birthday anniversary, to the follow- ing: 20 YEARS AGO |, From The Empire - MAY 25, 1915, The Italian fleet under the com- | mand of the Duke of Abruzzi, en- countered, engaged and defeated the Austrian fleet the previous night ! in the Adriatic. The Italians sunk | three of the smaller of the Austrian warships. Two struck their colors and were captured. The Italian army had invaded MAY 25 Dr. W. W. Council William Maier Malcolm Faulkner Robert Sommers, Jr. te and had already captured four towns. There had been mo serious attempt to check the advance of Lhe Italian army. Walter C. Peterson Henry E. Baman Mrs. John Rungquist Aline Ann Goldstein The Mackeever interests of New NC TICE OF APPLICATION FOR UNITED STATES PATENT U. S. Survey No. 1492. Anchorage Alaska, March 6, 1935 Serial 08356 Notice is hereby given that, pur- uant to an Act of Congicos ap- proved May 10th, 1872, ADMIRAL- TY ALASKA GOLD MINING JOMPARY, a corporation organiz- »d and existing under the laws of the Territory of Alaska, whose post office address is Juneau, Alaska has made application for a patent upon the following described lodes, lode mining claims and premises, all situated upon ~.lLuiralty Island, Harris Mining District, Juneau Pre- einct, Alaska, and described by the official plat and by the field notes me file in the office of the Reg- ister of Juneau Lana wistricy, An- chorage, Alaska, as follows, to-wit: Beginning at Corner No. 1 Point Lode, whence U.S.LM. No. 10, a cross on exposed bed rock on small island in Funter Bay, bears N 50° York were prepared to spend thou- S 0 |sands of dollars in opening up the I B:‘Alsfi. and q'::'su | Nelson-Lott claims in Stcep Creek | HARDW _BZ | Basin it was announced by A. B. Dodd, managing director of the company who called for bids for the Thomas Hardware Co. !| | The Redondo of the Alaska PSR I S Rib-Cone Ball Mills to 250 tons capacity. Use, less power and water. All steel,\\ ening and [gl screenless types. Get— Mere Gold From Your Ore Send for Bulletin No. 300, de- ibing Rib-Cone Mills; also crushers, concentrators, portable stamp water wheels, plates, sectional boilers, etc. Get low pric direct from factory. Straub Mfg. Co. Sinee 1902 8 Chestnut St., Oakland, neau on her maiden voyage, bring- ing 150 tons of coal for Gastineau Channel ports. Mr. and Mrs. H. H. Townsend arrived on the City of Seattle to make their home here. Drs. White and Jenne announced in Juneau and opened dental offices in the Valentine Building. Mr. and Mrs. Lee H. Smith, who were recently married in the East, returned to Juneau from their hon- eymoon trip. Cal. Fred Hamburg, manager of the Goldstein Emporium shoe depart- ment, was ill at his rooms over the I. Goldstein establishment. GENERAL MOTORS and MAYTAG PRODUCTS W. P. JOHNSON e The 16th episode of the Perils of | Pauline was at the Orpheum. | 5 J. Tom Banbury was declared the | feet 39° W 325301 ft, and running thence N 67° 57" E along line of {mean high tide of F. nuer Bay, 67526 feet to Corner N 2 Point lexle; thence N. 25° 56’ E 395.95 t to Corner No. 3 Pomnt Lode; hence N 64° 00" E 31580 feet tc Corner 4 Point Lode; thence S 12 E 400.80 feet to Corner No. 5 thence S 31° 55° I 16.20 feet to Corner No. 6 Foini| Godle; identical with Corner No. I/ Pl Swell Lode; thence S. 31° )5’ E 8092 feet to Corner No. Ocean Swell Lode; Thence S 88° 19 E 19442 feet to Corner No. 4 Ocean Swell Lode, identical with Corner No. 1 Queen Bee Lode whince USLM. No. 10 bears N 64 18’ 30" W 445285 feet; thence M | 18" 30" E 423.77 feet to Corner No 1 King Bee Lode, whence US.LM | No. 10 bears N 69° 46’ 10”7 W 442623 feet; thence N 44° 57 E 296.00 feet to Corner No. 2 King Bee Lode; thence N 35° 27 E 18450 to Corner No. 3 King Bee Lode, identical with Corner No. 3| Tellurium Lode; thence N 8° 20" E 33865 feet to Corner ‘No. 4| 5 Tellurium Lode; thence N 18° 16'| 380.65 feet to Corner No. 5 Tellur- ium Lode, identical with Corner No. 3 Lone Star Lode; thence N ar| | 5° 50’ E 666.60 feet to Corner No. 4 that he is the sirongest political figure in American gggistance of the sun and the polar regions, create | life today. the weather. The wrinkles compare somewhat with | Hugh Wade, Alaska NRA chieftain, brings an the scratches on a billiard ball, but they are suf-| interesting angle from Iowa where he visited on ficient to cause movements of the air and those his recent trip from the national capital. He ran movements cause weather. = There you have it across an old boyhood friend, now a Republican Simple, isn't it? leader in the corn State of Towa. The Juneau man, $ R AT having heard much about rumbling of farmers llow Far “l" It Go? against the Agricultural braced his friend on S the subject. The Towar y was: “If the el (Kansas Oity, Star,) tion was tomorrow Roosevelt would carry Iows The setting up of elaborate machinery for ad- a larger majority than he did two yea 2go.” ministration of the vast work-relief program and There is more than political significance attached the spending of nearly 5 billion dollars raises the question as to the precedent this type of govern- hampion shooter of the Juneau Gun Club, having won the coveted Jupont rs had ceen shooting for the last two months. Banbury qualified with ore of 95 out of 100. Dickinson was next with 92 out of 100. Weather: Maximum 5 13; clear. ALASKA'S PROSPERITY CHAIN ‘etters for sale at Empire office. All yeu do is to fill in names and letter is printed. Two dozen for| :wen(y-flvc cents. fld\h poon for ‘which club mem- | FINE Watch and Jewelry Repairing 11 al very reasonable rates !j PAUL BLOEDIORN FRONT STREET ITS Wise to Cali '8 Juneau 1 | i | | to these reports that trickle in from time to Ume on gopivity will afford and, mare dmportant, how as to the positicn nt Roosevell. TREre for 4 js to be carried in the future. Even for Is the direct evidence nisiakable faith of {he imaginative mind it is not easy to conceive the the Amcrican people t enly unbounded faith in scope of this undertaking. Both in magnitude and the 1 Jimseld, a magnetic figure, but faith in a in_principle it exceeds anything heretofore as-| program and a policy which points the way to sumed as a government enterprise. It will enter better times for indiyidual Politics, while new fields and it will entail possibly new and| always potent, has become secondary in the minds varied alignments of public and private initiative. of the millions in this country during the bleak In the attention given to this program as a years. Many have looked not only for recovery but means of relief and employment, its s:gnmcance_ have been battling for actual survival They are in relation to %ho a.mbmous national planning ideals| N of the Administration has been but little noticed. convinced of the incerity and honest effort of Roosevelt to help them, his count The greatest single thing that But a glance at the functions of the works allot- ment board of twenty-two members now appointed to aid the President in the selection and carrying ry and himself. the President has done is restore faith and hope in the hearts of out of projects is.enough to suggest the broad under- individuals, and it is from this undying foundation takings and the new departures that are in pros- that the constant reports of his strength emanate. pect. There is political bickering, skirmishes over this Here are to be launched not merely projects of and that and wild speuting of the third party the kind that have become familiar through opera- cannonaders but it is still plainly evident that tion of the CWA, PWA and other new deal agencies, the American people of whatever party or creed ut broad plans of rural settlement, meaning the are still convinced, ing thing: Roosevelt ha: A WORTHY PUR and rightly so, kept the faith. probable shifting of millions of people from one outstand- | it |region or one occupation to another; the provision of housing and other aids to subsistence that go! with such an effort; low-cost urban housing, that may involve the expenditure of hundreds of millions | of dollars; rural electrification; added reclamation | of one PO States, nearly all of which are prompted by worthy|formation of farming methods; forestation on o© purpose, but here in Alaska wi limited and facilities meager th versed and the main, or virtually group is the Boy Scouts. of civic leaders and those parents citizens who have the interests future at he the Scout developed and is battling valiantl In Juneau the activity h spring and re summer enca art al b npment plans Through concerted effort | SUPethwn movement, Two troops are being formed There are many crganizations for boys in the projects; soil protection, and the related trms‘ nere population is|greatly widened scale, situation only, with millions of acres of land | being taken over by the Government; ventures into| industry of hundreds of kinds, all under Government educational, public recreation and still| ! and public sp“m,d‘“ther experiments, Federally directed and all m\ of boys and their| |the name of relief and employment. Yiis. bhan In reality, the works-relief program is the init-| iy ial flowering of an ideal that the Administration has‘ to keep BOINS. |cperished for some time. It began to take visible | revived this|form with the naming of a national resources! made for the board more than a year ago, then proceeded with| a comprehensive survey of the whole country and | is re-’ strictly boys y been ing and the ranks bolstered by new members. A new with a recommended reordering and reconstruction | Scout Executive, Wayne Young, has been chosen of the country along basic lines that ultimately | to take general charge but there is still need for | Would cost eight to ten times the 5 billion dollars other leaders to help involved in the program now being started. There are few more ladable human under-| —How “",Ls“c"d S e takings than the Boy Scout movement. Founded on |j ¢AN be stopped once 1t has been fully begun,| R nd ainainies 1t 1 RES SIOE A ket e how many additional billions it will cost, what! sound principles it has carried along through the|y vy g0 to the private initiative of the country ye ever gaining momentum. Its fundamental purpose of helping to equip you citizenship ha REPORT §700,000 RANSOM ASKED BY ABDUCTORS 9-Year Old Son of Wealthy ch er h aeuser P‘anlily Disappcars on Way Home (Continued fx om Page One) the fear endal it is to comment is based on be the boy's life mi if they interferred b that special Gove ent given it reason to progress and the and how increasingly expansive are to become the | activities of government, all are tremendous ques- | | tions ror the Amenc[nn people to think about, ! ng boys for better the country enacied at the 1 d Session when (he snalch-racket wha | lUmber industry since the start of | at its height. Penalties for first|!Ne century. George's father is degree kidnaping include the death |the Vice-President of the compdny penalty or life imprisonment, as|Which has’holdings from the Can- the jury determines, also holds|2dian line well into Oregon. that for two or more persons to conspire to commit kidnaping, is a | WASHINGTON, May 25 s falony | Edgar, Hoover said the Department F jof Jusuce agents were “working” |on the Weyerhaeuser case. Beyond |that he could say nothing. The Chief of the Bureau of Investiga- tion would not say there has been a kidnaping but indicated official silence was demanded by disclosed details of the disappearance. NGRTHWESTERN HERE DURING AFTERNOON Steamer Northwestern, due in The disappearance of the youth recalls that when the lad's grand- fether, John Philip Weyerhaeuser, Sr., died a week ago, the family's vast timber and other holdings were estimated at one billion dol- lars. Weyerhaeuser, Sr., succumbed to pneumonia. He never recovered | from the shock of his wife’s death | in 1933 after 32 years of married | life | Widely Known Family | There have been only two other | Transfer Co. when in need of MOVING or STORAGE Fuel 0il Transfer [ JUNEAU-YOUNG Funeral Parlors Licensed Funeral Directors | and Embalmers il Night Phone 1851 Day Phone 13 | BAILEY’S CAFE o oo “WHERE YOU MEET YOUR FRIENDS" B ?4-Hour Service Beer—if desired Merchants’ Lunch GASTINEAU CAFE GASTINEAU HOTEL BUILDING I'rench-Italian Dinners Wines—Beer S Fer———— WINDOW CLEANING PHONE 485 s _.....d - ALASKA MEAT CO. FEATURING CARSTEN’S BABY BEEF—DIAMOND TC HAMS AND BACON—U. S. Government Inspected WALLIS S. GEORGE, C.P.A. Associates JAMES C. COOPER, C. WALLIS S. GEORGE & CO. CERTIFIED PUBLIC ACCOUNTANTS Juneau, Alaska AUDIT SYSTEM -:- TAX SERVICE | —_— ] —— Making Alaska Business GO! is just as much a part of our service as is pro- tecting the deposits of the Territory’s residents. In 1935, as since 1891, we are ready to supply funds for the temporary use of well- managed businesses of approved credit standing. Your requirements will be carefully con- sidered here. ! Queen Bee Lode, trained in the technique and ransom kidnapings in which $200,000 ran- port this afternoon at 3:30 o'clock, is scheduled to discharge freight, ! | ‘o0 to Skagway and return here Sun- tion cases are con- som was asked, They were the centrated in Tacoma. Bremer and Urschel kidnapings. Drastic State Law s The State has one of the ost West from St. Paul in 1914 but! drastic laws agains! kidnaping in has been active in the timber and | The Weyerhaeuser family came day afternoon at the scheduled ti me | 30 o'clock, via Sitka, of, attle southbound to Se- The B. M. Behrends Bank Juneau, Alaska | E | Lone Star Lode; thence N 70° 00" E 359.15 feet to Corner No. 3 Otter Lode; thence N 5° 50' E 666.60 feet to Corner No. 4 Otter Lode; thence N 70° 00’ E 1500.00 feet to Corner No. 1 Otter Lode, whence USLM | No. 21, a cross un a granite boulder 5 feet square showing 12 inches above gronnd, approximate latitude 58° 14’ 30” North and longitude 134° 52 West, bears N 17° 46’ 10” W 2524.65 feet; thence S 5° 50° W 666.60 feet to Corner No. 2 Otter Lode; feet to Corner No. 1 Lone Star Lode, whence U.S.LM. No. 21 bears| N 6° 32 W 3211.05 feet; thence € 5° 50° W 666.60 feet to Corner No 2 Lone Star Lode, identical with Corner No. 1 Tellurium Lode, |whence U.S.LM. No. 21 bears N 4° 25 W 3864.81 feet; thence S 18 16/ W 758.65 feet to Corner No. 2 Tellurium Lode; thence 8 70° (0 W 216.30 feet to Corner No. 4 King| Bee Lode; thence S 19° 22' W 776.00| <reet to Corner No. 5 King Bee |Lode, identical with Corner No. 2 | Queen Bee Lode; thence S 21° 08’ W 74596 feet to Corner No. 3| identical with | | Office hours, 9 am. to 5 pm. | Corner No. 2 Swamp Lilly Lode,| whence Corner No. 1 Swamp Lilly |Lode bears N 70° 00' E 1500 feet, from which US.LM. No. 10 bears |N 54° 57 W 4573.01 feet; thence S 132° 00" E 613.40 feet to Corner No.| 3 Swamp Lilly Lode; thence S 70° lw W 1500 feet to Corner No. 4 Swamp Lilly Lode; thence S 32° 00" .- E 31265 feet to Corner No. 3 Hid- {den Rock Lode; thence S 52° 40’ W |1500.00 ft. to Corner No. 4 Hidden | Rock Lode; thence N 32° 00° W 600 it. to Corner No. 1 Hidden Rock Lode, | | identical with Corner No. 4 Valley |Lode, whence U.S.L.M. No. 10 bears N 35° 32’ 40” W 4685.45 feet; thence N 32° 00' W 42345 feet to Corner No.| 5 Valley Lode; thence N 73° 20' E |273.80 feet to Corner No.f Valley teee | Lode; thence N 5° 42 W 279.74 ft. |to Corner No. 7 Valley Lode; thence |N 46° 15 E 306.24 feet to Corner |No. 1 Valley Lode, whence U.SLM.! |No. 10 bears N 45° 41’ 4129.65 feet; thence N 46° 307 03’ w w 324.11 foet to Corner No. 1 Ocean! Swell Lode, identical with Corner No. 7 Pecint Lode, whence US.LM. | No.10 bears N 45° 39’ 40” W 3805.58 feet; thence N 46° 03'W 19243 feet |to Corner No. 8 Point Lode; thence ‘N 12° 05’ W 361.96 feet to Corner No. 9 Point Lode; thence N 4° 11° E 109.92 feet to Corner No. 1 Point| |Lode, the place of beginning. | Adjoining claims, as showwr by the plat of survey are: | The Alaska No. 2 Lode, un- | surveyed; Jumbo No. 1 Lode, unsur- veyed; Jumbo No. 2 Lode, unsur- veyed; Uncle Sam Lode, unsurveyed; King Bee, 2nd. Lode, unsur- ‘ veyer; Tellurium, veyud; | Lone Star, end Lode, unsur- veyed; Ish Nik Lode, unsuveyed; | Mill Site Lode, unsurveyed. FLORENCE L. KOLB, | Acting Register. | First publicetion, March 20, 1985. Last pubication, May 29, 1935. . l i v | ! 2nd Lode, unsur- BETTY MAC BEAUTY SHOP In New Location at 12th anc B Streets | PHONE 547 thence S 70° 00 W 35915/ | | Fraternal Societies Ray, Medical Gymnastics. 307 Goldstein Building Phone Office, 216 | every Wednesday at 8 p. m. Visiting brothers welcome. | John H. Walmer, Exs alted Ruler, M. H. Sides, Secretary. oF Gastineau Channel J Helen>W. L. Albreuht | Je Y PHYSIOTHERAPY | : Zlissage, Electricity, Infra Red | B. P. 0. ELKS meots : | | DRS. KASER & FREEBURGER T I | | Blomgren | DENTISTS ° | - Building ) . H KNIGHT F COLUMBUS . PHONE 56 | sl 3 Seghers Council No. 1760. Meetings second and last Monday at 7:30 p. m. Transient Hours 9 am. to 9 pm. | Dr. C. P. Jenne | brothers urged to at- DENTIST tend. Comrn Cham- Rooms 8 and 9 Valentine bers, Fifth St. JOHN F. MULLEN, Building | |G. K., H. J. TURNER, Secretary, Telephone 176 ! MOUNT JUNEAU LODGE NO. ls'l Second and Fourth Mon day of each month ir Scottish Rite Temple, beginninz at 7:30 pm. | Dr. Geo. L. Barton CHIROPRACTOR i 201 Goldstein Bldz. Phone 211 | e e Rt | Office Hours: 9 to 12, 1 to 5 | | Worshipful Master; JAMES Evenings by appointment .I‘E“ERS q"""""uy aar DOUGLAS ‘\\?‘ [ Dr. Riel AElE ard Williims IST AND RESIDENGE Gastneau Building Phone 481 117, F. 0. E. o3 (Meets first and third Mondays,-@ | i i | ip.m., Eagles’ Hall, Douglas. Visiting | | | | DENT OFFICE | brothers welcome. Sante Degan, W. P, T. W. Ca.shen Secretary. | | Dr. A. W. Stewart } DENTIST : Hours 9 am. to 6 pm. | | SEWARD BUILDING Office Pnone 469 | Our t.ucks go any place any | time. A tank for Diesel Oil L) and a tank for crude oil save burner trouble. PHONE 149; NIGHT 148 | 1| RELIABLE TRANSFER | S——— iy " % | Robert Simpson Opt. D. Graduate Los Angeles Col- | lege of Optometry and Opthalmology Glasses Fitted Commercial Adjus ment & Rating Bureau ; Coperating with White Serv- | ice Bureau | Room 1—Shattuck Bldg. | We have 5,000 local ratings | on file | DR. H. VANCE OSTEOPAT Consu'ation and examination Alaska Transfer Co. GENERAL HAULING Feee. Honrs 10 to 12; 1 to 5; 5 7 to 8.30 and bv 2anpointment ED JEWELL, Proprietor Office Grand Apts. near QGas- PHONES 269—1134 tineau l-hml Phone 177 & iz =1 | The Florence Sho 3 | Permanent Waving a Specialty Di. J. W B yne rlorence Holmquist, Prop. | DENTIST Rooms 5-6 Triangle Bldg. PHONE 427 ! Behrends Bank Bullding I | Evenings by appointm.nt PHONE 321 HOTEL ZYNDA Large Sample Room ELEVATOR SERVICE S. ZYNDA, Prop. ORAMAE HOLLISTER LADIES’ TAILORING AND DRESSMAKING . 411 GOLDSTEIN BLG. ' ]’ Phone 564 | 1 . ' -+ Cardinal ROSE SUAREZ Modiste from New York City Dressmaking, Remodeling, Alterations | TELEPHONE 277 | Feldon's House, near Moose Hall . ~— Cabs JUNEAU FROCK {1 THE X - SHOPPE i MARKET BASKET “Exclusive but not Expensive” | Provisions, Fruits. Vegetables | Lingerie, | Phone 342 Free Dellvery.l . ] PHONE 36 For very prompt LIQUOR DELIVERY THE JuNEAu LAUNDRY Franklin Street between Front and Second Streets "| PrONE 31 | A Date- i Maybe you'll have two i or three dates, if you , CALL 15 And have your Spring clothes put in first-class shape with our cleaning service, [ ] YOUR ALASKA Laundry 2 . |C. H. METCALFE Coj | Sheet Metal—Oil Burners | Heating—Air Conditioners | General Electric Oil Burners | Phohe 101 L] Front Street : R AR DAILY EMPIRE WANT ADS PAY! b )

Other pages from this issue: