The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, May 27, 1935, Page 4

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(recurd made by the great Bobby Jones, which was | expected to stand for all time, may yet be broken Daily Alaska Empire ROBERT W. BENDER It may be just the last week in May to most ~Published v by the|Of us, but to Juneau younsters it's the red letter S N and Main | week of the year. School is out Wednesday and ey S - | vacation starts. ; | Entered In the Post Office in Juneau as \-'u-xnl Class matter. Editor and Manmr “Brawling Public Discussion.” | "SUBSCRIPTION RATES. Dellvered by carrier In Juneau and Douglas for $1.25 per month, (Kansas City Star.) In his preliminary study of the new deal, in |Collier’s, H. G. Wells, a recent visitor to the United L failare, or Irregaianity |States, speaks of two hopeful aspects of the situa- Hupers. |tion. The first ffice, 602; Business Office, 374. |is papitual in | unimportance of following months, rates: in advance, By mail, One year $6.00; one montl Subacribers will co: notify the Business Office in the detivery of their s N if they will promptly is the freedom of discussion that| America, the second the “relative large mass antagonisms.” Americans are so accustomed to these condi- tions that they do not realize their importance. By contrast, large areas in Europe under autocratic rule permit no criticism of national politics. Mis- takes cannot be pointed out until the policies col- | |lapse, often with disastrous consequences. What Mr. | Wells calls “brawling public discussion” is an im- |mense safeguard against pushing unwise policies [to disaster. | As to mass antagonisms, Europe has a terrible | legacy of hatreds handed down from medieval times. |That is why the Marxian doctrine of the “class war” could take such a hold on the continent. The absence of these antagonisms has made America a cterile soil for communism. Many radical critics of | the new deal who scoff at President Roosevelt's| assumption that the whole nation, employers and employees, can agree on reasonable settlements, nrei unconsciously attributing European conditions to the | United States. ‘ In view of these advantages, the American prob- lem; difficult as it is, is infinitely easier than the }l’,umpenn. MEMBER OF ASSOCIATED PRESS. is exclusively entitled to the s credited to lited in this paper and also the | ein. It or not otherwls local news publ ALASK: CIRCULATION CGUARANTEED TO BE LARGEF THAN THAT OF ANY LlHEN FUFHILATIGN hed he THE BONUS RIDER. | —_— [ : A when it is possible| Early Work Relief. to kill two birds with one but the general rule, and the which experience has proven Secretary Ickes said in our Magazine section and if the other gets inrecently that the new Public Works Rellef Bill, y that is just so much good fortune. But it appropriating $4,800,000,000, would pay for the con- Congress is made up of some of struction of nine Panama Canals. This is a more who propose to get cheerful thought to carry away than Secretary Ickes' two birds with the single stone. Having lost one other 5""3;“9"‘ ”‘"‘L_‘he n;\‘thublé‘c WO;:‘S l";"- SERCARA p % + P gram “reaches prcportions which make such enter- uf i ’Imds ‘“f,] d“‘)m‘m"_ M:':lm’: 'Lhzih - |prises as the building of the Pyramids and the ])mvhnms. 0 JAneiure 4 DGR BN B |construction of the Great Wall of China seem petty.” The elusive bird at issue is the honus wl'fich has The Panama Canal has served a useful purpose. been flitting across the Congressional horizon all About the Great Wall of China it is not so easy session and which the Senate failed to pass over the to say. That impressive barrier does not seem to Presidential veto. Those who failed to muster enough |have stopped anybody who really wanted to invade strength to override the Roosevelt “no” declare they |China from doing so. Perhaps it did serve to keep are going to attach the bonus payment scheme on {out small-time marauders and racketeers. As for to some other bill which the President is desirous of the Pyramids of Egypt it may be that history has having passed. Particularly they are aiming it at 2l along been unjust to the building Pharaohs. In- the social security measure, one of the true Roose- stead of concentration on their own vainglory on 5 N VR 2 |this earth and their individual interests in the ncxu veltian pieces of proposed legislation. Revealing his world they may have actually designed the Pyramids consistency, the Chief Executive has stated he will ;¢ work_relief projects. The seven lean kine must| veto any bill which has the bonus attached. have recurred from time to time long before Joseph.| It is no longer whether the bonus| should be paid. That is just as mooted a question Two Years of AAA. as befcre, but it is pertinent whether other pieces of legislation should be hamstrung beczuse the bonus (New York Times.) lost. The matter of payment of service certificates Coming by bus, by automobile and by train, has always been of sufficient importance to stand delegations of farmers are now moving on Wash- or fall on its own merits. If there are those who iNgton to befriend or criticize AAA. That organi- feel that the bonus payment bill in some other Zation, one of the first of the New Deal agencies to shape again be presented minn, {92 P00 UD R 15 Toveth, Bpeing Rl nlaaat ol there is nothing to keep them from attempting it, .= ':"'(‘“‘"" m,”_"da‘v lm,s ook, Tho kel el but it hardly seems in order to try sliding a lost 0 hvu () ’V(.)(”: B0 by Ccu.mre.ss bl g i y pre-war “parity” between prices of goods the farmer Cause through on the coat tails cf some successful gols and of those he buys. Wheat, cotton, corn and piece of legislation. The Congress turned thumbs other farm commodities had all fallen much further down on the Roosevelt-supported World Court, and during the depression than manufactured goods, the Chief Executive took the defeat and went on and the result was a partial paralysis of farm pur- to other things. Are those Congressmen who sup- chasing power. ported the bonus not good enough sports to be as good losers as the President? It may be that bonus the index number of farm prices, as computed by should be paid; many think so, and they have very the Federal Bureau of Agricultural Economics, stood gocd arguments on their side. Undoubtedly, it will Bln sfh'““" i ””’f‘*e““m‘ the pre-war average. come up again at this or future sessions, but why buy. I.’ b:mf acts Ahe lndex. ol gogds ey e not let and alone as an issue? It certainly is 278 Frood 86 0L In other. words ety sitshastis power was only 54 per cent of the desired “parity.” important encugh. Why try to slip it in the back We now find, two years later, that partly because door by tacking it on as a rider on some other of the effect of NRA on costs of industrial produc- measure which may be just as important to the tion, prices of goods the farmer buys have risen general welfare of the country? from 101 to 128. But prices of goods the farmer | That isn't the way the veterans have been fight- Produces and sells have risen still more rapidly, and | ing in the past and it is not the way most of them NOW stand at 111. Accordingly, farm purchasing want to fight in the future. Making a football out|POWer has now reached 87 per cent of “parity,” of the bonus bill will do more to defeat it another ??mp“ed With the 54 per cent existing when the time than anything else. It will get to be a national ,"ovemm”m changed hands in Washington. That 3 5 S L s a remarkable and highly important change within Joke and pest instead of being the legitimate nrublem\me price structure, though only a rare enthus- that it is. |iast would credit it entirely, or perhaps even pri- |marily, to AAA. Drought, devaluation of the dol- lar, the natural rebound of price from a panic !level and other influences h all played a part in the result. Despite the substantially higher products now prevailing, AAA finds itself under sharp attack at the end of its second year. Criti- cism is made of the processing tax, of the risks of stimulating more active foreign competition for orld markets, and particularly of the whole phil-| with fire flaming from its nostrils and all the other ;s}fif;);p:; ;‘lur:fl;:'gr gn'x;“prrm;;mm fi:‘en:firfi! ingredients of a good story. of the professorial mind running wild in Washmg-‘ But it appears that this is a real monster off ton. The enormous surpluses of unwanted farm | the California coast, resembling man almost suf-igocds which piled up during the first years of the| ficiently to be the leader for a third party move- |depression won many friends for the ment. The captain of the purse seiner who reported Curtailment. Thus the R"Dubllmn it described the creature as looking like a merman, |[ROW shrinks in horror from the “regimentation” of | with head and shiny eyes under a broad, smooth the farmer, declared in its 1932 platform that “the! forehead, brownish gray hair two or three mchesdundamenm problem of American agriculture is the B0r 00 the Bead. and tnder the ihin the bab ‘was control of production to such a volume as will balan ith 3 " g 10 to 12 feet long. The skipper and his crew said o, ced 5,"”"5 With demand,” and specifically plumped for “control of the acreage land under they tried to capture it but without success. Never cultivation.” yet have any of these sea monsters been brought in| Sych curtailment, instituted by AAA, rewarded | either dead or alive, an equally strange coincidence. by the payment of cash bounties and rmnrorcem That no aspersions might be cast the captam‘by highly unfavorable crop weather, has lm‘g:ly‘ &lso makes public announcement that he never dissipated many of the huge surpluses which hung ! allows a drop of liquor aboard his boat. No, mo over the market in 1932. It is probable that AAA's Captain, no one even suspected your monster came“h"‘d year will witness some relaxation of its con- from a liquor-dazed mind, That is unkind and |05 even without that revival of foreign trade probably untrue. No, not from drink but as the|"DiCR Secretary Wallace has always descrived as doctor asked, could it have been something you ate? the logical sivemalivg o chom: teatriction, There are those occasions Aong (New York Times.) one for one appears now that those over-zealous individuals now a question of should at this se: MAYBE SOMETHING HE ATE. Another sea monster raises its gruesome head out of the Pacific, this time off the Southern California coast. Last year Vancouver was the headquarters for these “strange creatures” of the deep and e was a time when Okanogan County, in Eastern Washington, laid claim to a marvelous sea serpent which rose at various intervals in one of its lakes prices for farm doctrine of Party, which | a Britain boasts a $28,000,000 surplus for the year. ’L"fl[‘m {Many a financier could boast a balanced budge That if he marked off his debts.—(Los Angeles Times.) Lawson Little, the Stanford University again capluxes the British golf championship. WEST COAST GROCERY IS [ CORDOVA P.-T. A. ELECTS |in the Talkeetna mining district, C. C. Hazelet was elected president | where he -will have charge of the of the Cordova Parent-Teacher As- | operauons of the newly organized | cociation recently. Other officers | Alaska Continental Gold Mines of The West Coast Grocery Co., suc- | elected were Mrs. S. E. Reed, vice- Spokane. \ cessors to J. B. Caro & Co., whole- | bresident; Mary Gilleland, sevre-‘ e . | sale merchants, have engaged the |lary-treasurer; Mrs. Henry Mm]—w ! Juneau Cabinet and Detail Millwork | 1ard, Mrs. M. E. S. Brunnelle and.m.“ RMETER WANT ADS PAY: carpenters to remodel the south IMrs, T. J Nestor, executive com- wing of the wholesale house into a | mMittee. new business office, replacing the | £mall one now in use. Fred Wendt is arranging painting and interior decorating of the new quarters, which will be regdy by the end of the week, the management said. BUILDING BETTER OFFICE 1 Harry Race DRUGGIST Tbe Squibb Store - MINE ON BIRD CREEK Harry Howell, hydraulic miner, and Mrs. Howell arrived recently in Anchorage where they will make their residence this summer. Mr. | Howell will proceed to Bird Creek, - 1 i the When the Roosevelt Administration entered office [— O WINDOW CLEANING r'~ 20 YEARS AGO } From The Empire ' MAY 21, 1915 In the face of an attack that was described as a hurricane of fire | from the German artillery, the Rus- slan forces in the region of Prze- mysl had fallen back along the | railroad from Jaroslav toward Prze- | mysl, according to an announcement |'trom the Russian war office, i On the western front the Ger- mans continued to make furious at- tacks against the position of the Allies in F‘landers The alertness of a messenger boy who turned in a fire alarm at 3 o'clock in the morning was thought to have saved the lives of two occu- pants ‘of a cabin on Willoughby ivenue. The Juvenile Bostonians were in town with a cast including several favorite young actresses, among them, Patsy Henry, Thom Hellen, Doris Canfield and Dixie White. Their first production in Juneau was to be “Fantana,” a charming Japanese opera. F. A. J. Gallwas of Douglas re- corded location of a homestead de- scribed as lying about one and one- half miles from Douglas. Windham Bay items: Mrs. G. Jen- |sen was a guest of Mr. and Mrs. D. W. Yates while Mr. Jensen was in Juneau. A group of Windham Bay people made a fishing party at Loch Marie. D. W. Yates had commenced development work on his property at Spence mountain. ‘The Misses Elizabeth Heid and Alma Sowerby left for Skagway on the Mariposa to attend the King's birthday celebration at White Horse. Numerous fishing parties were be- ing arranged for Decoration Day, among them a party including Guy McNaughton, Charles Goldstein, Marion Goldstein and H. 1. Lucas, | who were going to Kake. Weather: Maximum, mum, 45; rain. 56; min! | [ i- K Il Constlpatlon It constipation causes you Gs xn- @igestion, Headaches, Bad Sloe) ly qkln. 5 i ¢ quick Fellef with ADL horough in ‘action yet en nroly gentle and s 1 DLERIKA mlfled Ads Pay. JUNEAU-YOUNG. Funeral Parlors Licensed Funeral Directors and Embalmers Night Phone 1851 Day Phone 12 | BAILEY’S CAFE Empire 24 | | H I HAPPY ——BIRTHDAY The Empire extends congratula- | tions nnd best wishes today, their birthday anniversary, to the follow- ing: MAY 27 James Snell Edward Leach Ira E Tucker Betty Jane Mills Ed. Leach —————— ALASKA'S PROSPER:TY CHAIN letters for sale at Empire office. All you do is to fill in names and letter i yrinifll‘ Two dozen for twent adv. PAINTS—OILS Builders’ and Sheif HARDW _RI I Thomas Hardware Co. || ———————— Rib-Cone Ball Mills 2 to 250 tons acity. Use ss power and water. All steel, creening and screenless types. Get— More Gold From Your Ore Send for Bulletin No. 300, de- scribing Rib-Cone Mills; also crushers, concentrators, portable stamp water wheels, plates, sectional boilers, etc. Get low prices, direct from factory. Straub Mfg. Co. Since 1902 578 Chestnut St., Oakland, Cal. GENERAL MOTORS and | MAYTAG PRODUCTS W. P. JOHNSON ?,__ i ENE FINE Watch and Jewelry Repairing at very reasonable rates | PAUL BLOEDHORN i FRONT STREET e IT°S Wise to Cali *8 Juneau Transfer Co. when in need of MOVING or STORAGE Fuel Oil Coal Transfer e s -Hour Service Beer—if desired Merchants’ Lunch Short Orders Regular Dinners “WHERE YOU MEET YOUR FRIENDS” GASTINEAU CAFE GASTINEAU HOTEL BUILDING French-Italian Dinners Wines—Beer JOS— [t PHONE 485 ALASKA MEAT CO. FEATURING CARSTEN’S BABY BEEF—DIAMOND TC HAMS AND BACON—U. 8. Government Inspected | | WALLIS S. GEORGE, C.P.A. Associ WALLIS S. GEORGE & CO. CERTIFIED PUBLIC ACCOUNTANTS Juneau, Alaska SYSTEM jates JAMES C. COOPER, C.PA. | 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 st_anding. Your requirements sidered here. The B. M. Behrends Bank Juneau, \ IR e e R e e e e A e e will be carefully con- Alaska -~ . |e7526 i NC TICE OF APPLICATION FOR UNITED STATES PATENT U. 8. Survey No. 1492. Anchorage Alaska, March 6, 1935. Serial 08356 Notice is hereby given that, pur-| suant to an Act of Congiess up- oroved May 10th, 1872, ADMIRAL- TY ALASKA GOLD MINING| JOMPANY, a corporation organiz- x and existing under the laws of fice address is Juneau, Alaska, has made application for a patent upon the following described lodes, lode mining claims and premises, all situated upon “ luiralty Island, Harris Mining District, Juneau Pre- cinct, Alaska, and described by the afficial plat and by the field notes wme file in the office of the Reg-| ister of Juneau Lana uvastricy, An- ‘chorage, Alaska, as follows, to-wit: | Beginning at Corner No. 1 Point Lode, 'whence U.SLM. No. 10, a cross on exposed bed rock on small island in Funter Bay, bears N 50° 39' W 3825301 ft, and running thence N 67° 57" E along line of mean high tide of F.nter Bay, feet to Corner N 2 Point| Lodle; thence N 25° 56° E 39595 | feet to Corner No. 3 Point Lode; |thence N 64° 00' E 31590 feet to| Corner 4 Point Lode; thence S 12° %' E 400.80 feet to Corner No. § Point Lode; thence S 31° 55 17620 feet to Correr No. 6 Foini Lode; identical with Corner No. 2 Ocean Swell Lode; thence S. 31° 55" E 8092 feet to Corner No. 3 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, whence USLM. No. 10 bears N 64° | 18 30" W 4452.85 feet; thence N 18’ 30" E 423.77 feet to Corner No. 1 King Bee Lode, whence U.S.LM | 0. 10 bears N 69° 46’ 10" W 442623 feet: thence N 44° 57 E 296.00 feet to Corner No. 2 King Bee Lode; thence N 3 feet to Corner No. 3 King Bee Lode, identical with Corner No. 3| Tellurium Lode; thence N 8° 47 30” E 33865 feet to Corner No. 4| Tellurfum Lode; thence N 18° 16'| 380.65 feet to Corner No. 5 Tellur- jum Lode, identical with Corner No. 3 Lone Star Lode; thence N| 5° 50' E 666.60 feet to Corner No. 4/ Tone 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 U.S.LM.| 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 *he Territory of Alaska, whose post | 5° 27" E 18450| 1 " PROFESSIONAL Hvlcm-W L. Albrecht | PHYSIOTHERAPY ; Zlassage, Electricity, Infra Red | Ray, Medical Gymnastics. 307 Goldstein Building Phone Office, 216 DRS. KA%I:R & FREEBURGER | n Building PHONE 56 Hours 9 a.m. to 9 pm. Dr. C. P. Jenne | DENTIST | Rooms 8 and 9 Valentine | Building } Telephone 176 Dr. Geo. L. Barton ] CHIROPRACTOR Office Hours: 9 to 12, 1 to 5 | Evenings by appointment | Dr. 1 DENTIST AND RESIDENCE eau Building Phone 481 **| and 201 Goldstein Bldg. Phone 213 | ' Richard Williams || Fraternal Societies OF - o Gastineau Channel l B. P. 0. ELKS meets every Wednesday at 8 p. m. Visiting brothers welcome. ! John H. Walmer, Ex- 1| alted Ruter, M. H. Sides, Secretary* H | ENIGHTS OF (,OLUMBUS | Seghers Council No. 1760. Meetings second last Monday at 7:30 p. m. Transient !brothers urged to at- tend. Covwe' Cham- bers, Pifth 8t. JOHN F. MULLEN, G. H.'J. TURNER, Secretary. “ | i el MOUNIl JUNEAU LODGE NO. 147 i "*! Second and Fourth Mon, day of each month ir ! Scottish Rite Temple, beginuinz at 7:30 p.m. HOV"*RD D. STABLER. Worshipful Master;” JAMES W. LEIVERS, Secretary. . DOUGLAS AERIE 17, F. 0. E. &% B | Mects first and ‘third Mondays, & pm., Eagles’ Hall, Douglas. Visiting brothers welcome. Sante Degall T. W. Cashen, Secretary o] f\\HE Dr. A. W. Stewart DENTIST Hours 9 am. to 6 p.m. SEWARD BUILDING Office Pncne 469 Robert Simpson Opt. D Graduate Los Angeles Col- lege of Optometry and Opthalmology | | | Glasses Fitted Lenses Ground \ i Our iucks go any place any | | time. A tank for Diesel Ollf | and a tank for crude oil save j | burner trouble. N } PHONE 149; NIGHT 148 ' RELIABLE TRANSFER C‘t = | Commercial Adjust- | ment & Rating Bureau Coperating with White Serv- ice Bureau Room 1—Shattuck Bldg. We have 5,000 local ratings on file DR. H. VANCE OSTEOPATH Consu';ation and examination Free. Honrs 10 to 12; 1 to 5; 7 to 8:30 and bv appointment. Office Grand Apts, near Gas- tineau Hotel. Phone 177 Alaska Transfer Co. GENERAL HAULING _ ED JEWELL, Proprietor PHONES 269—1134 666.60 feet to Corner No. 2 Oftter | Lode; thence S 70° 00 feet to Corner No. 1 Lone Star Lode, whence U.S.LM. No. 21 bears N 6° 32° W 3211.05 feet; thence S 2 Lone Star Lode, Corner No. 1 Tellurium Lode, | whence U.S.L.M. No. 21 bears N 4° 25’ W 3864.81 feet; thence S 18 16 W 175865 feet to Corner No. Tellurium Lode; thence S 70° (0 W 216.30 feet to Corner No. 4 Klns‘ 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 iQueen Bee Lode, identical with Corner Nu. 2 Swamp Lilly Lode, |whence Corner No. 1 Swamp Lilly |Lode bears N 70° 00" E 1500 feet, |from which USLM. No. 10 bears |N 54° 57 W 4573.01 feet; thence S| ;32“ 00’ E 613.40 feet to Corner No.| |3 Swamp Lilly Lode; thence S 70° 000 W 1500 feet to Corner No. 4 | Swamp Lilly Lode; thence S 32° 00 |E 31265 fect 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 ! |1t. to Corner No. 1 Hidden Rock Lode, | identical with Corner No. 4 Vn.l!ey! | Lode, whence U.S.L.M. No. 10 bears N | |35° 32’ 40” W 4685.45 feet; thence N 32° 00° W 423.45 feet to Corner No. |5 Valley Lode; thence N 73° 20' E| 273.80 feet to Corner No.6 Valley| 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.S.LM.| No. 10 bears N 45° 41’ 30" W 41290.65 feet; thence N 46° 03’ W |324.11 fiet to Corner No. 1 Ocean| 2 w 35915/ | Rooms 5-6 Triangle Bldg. Office hours, 9 am. to 5 pm. Evenings by appointm.nt PHONE 321 | HOTEL ZYNDA Large Sample Room ELEVATOR SERVICE S. ZYNDA, Prop. — e/ | ORAMAE HOLLISTER LADIES’ TAILORING AND DRESSMAKING 411 GOLDSTEIN BLG. Phone 564 ROSE SUAREZ Modiste from New York City Dressmaking, Remodeling, Alterations TELEPHONE 277 Feldon’s House, near Moose Hall ~—0 | | . JUNEAU FROCK SHOPPE “Exclusive but not Expensive” Swell Lode, identical with Corner INo. 7 Peint Lode, whence USLM.| No.10bears 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 shown by the plat of survey are: The Alaska No. 2 Lode, un- surveyed; Jumbo No, veyed; Jumbo No. veyed; Uncle Sam Lode, unsurveyed. King Bee, 2nd. Lode, unsur- veyed; Tellurium, 2nd Lode, unsur- veyudy i Lone Star, end Lode, _unsur- veyed; Ish Nik Lode, unsuveyed; Mill Site Lode, unsurveyed. | FLORENCE L. KOLB, { Acting Register. ‘Flrst publicetion, March 20, 1935. | Last pubication, May 29, 1935. 1 Lode, unsur- 2 Lode, unsur- BETTY MAC BEAUTY SHOP In New Location at 12th an¢ B Streets PHONE 547 i | | | g ! | PO Maybe youw'll have two or three dates, if you CALL 15 And have your Spring clothes put in first-class shape with our cleaning service. [ ] YOUR ALASKA Laundry The Florence Sh En | Permanent Waving a Speel | rlorence Holmquist, Prop. | | PHONE 427 ! | Behrends Bank Bullding | | ' — Al D e T Phone Cardinal THE MARKET BASKET Provisions, Fruits, Vegetables | Phone 342 Free Delivery { — PHONE 36 For very prompt LIQUOR DELIVERY THE JUuNEAU LAUNDRY Franklin Street between Front and Second Streets PHONE 358 WARRACK Construction Co. Juneau Phone 487 uneau Ice Cream Parlors SHORT ORDERS anfl Candy . l .. |C. H. METCALFE CO. | Sheet Metal—Oil Burners | Heating—Air Conditioners | General Electric Oil Burners I.Phone 101 Front Street DAILY EMPIRE WANT ADS PAY}

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