The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, August 20, 1940, Page 2

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Schenley Mo Goes by Air And Thumb Getting forced down on the tree- less tundra of the Arctic Slope a thumbing home from rides askan automobiles has highlighted three months of Alaska travel for Col. Theodore C. Wiche, President of Schénley International Corpsra the tion who came in from Weost- v most Gucl In J Wiche jeined Gucker Neme and flew with him up ceast to Point Bary It was whi returning from Barrow to Kotzabue with pilot John C that Colonc Wiche had the experience of beir fereed down reed to Land The party, intending to through ti mounta’ fcund beth pa ssed in and were forced to land cn a mountain lake where they sat for nine hours with mosquitoes 5o thick outside they hardly dared leave the ship long enough to stretch. Their food they had left at Bar- rew to cnable a takeoff in shallow waters, and although there were lot of nesting ducks on the lake, there na fuel availabl for cooking them wood on the desert like tundra and no spare gasoline in the plane. 9-Toar Wait After nine hours of waiting, pilot Cross took off, found the first pa closed, and fortuna found a small gap I the second pass through which he found his way to the head- waters of the Noatak River and fc lowed that stream on into Kotzebue. On returning to Fairbanks, Col onel Wiche and Gucker drove o over the Steese Highway for Circle, but Gucker's car gave in at Sour- dough Creek and he and Wiehe w forced to sit up through the n until a taxi came out from Fair- ‘anks. Again, driving down son Highway and Guckers ener and he and Colon thumb their way in Trout Fishing Whils in the Ancl the party fiew to and teok in some of {hat hard- besna, ave in had to the Ri up to iehe rage district, 1 River stream’s famous trout fishing Colonel Wiehe called ‘Undoubtedly some of the finest fishing in the woild.” A guest at the Baranof Hotel, Col- onel Wiehe will | b Gucke the end of the weck make an ACERL CRalhy A G¥CTy SULLLuASL Alaska. Wiehe 1o will then head back fo hi offices in the Empire e Build ing in New York catch up on a log of work” ( has accumulated in the past ver months, Wiehe having <t completed a thre month tour of South America be- fore coming to Alaska. e, — GROSS SOUTH, BUYING TRIP W. D. Gross is southbound on the Aleutian for Seattle on a buy- ing trip, purchasing furnishings for to the apartments in the new 20th Century Buildng. | Mr. Gross also announced that the Gross home on Gold Belt Ave- | nue has been rented to Dr. Lan- don R. White, Medical Director of the Indian Office, and Mrs. Gross and children will move into and occupy the pent house of the 20th Century during this week. - Allflifl) METI.AKM[A FISH PIRATES BOUND OVER TO GRAND JURY A dozen alleged fish pirates rested by Deputy Marshal N. O Hardy at Metlakatla last r\nu«ufl have been bound over to the Grand | Jury by U. S. Cocmmissioner E. C Austin of Ketchikan on bond of | $1,000 each, which all furnished. They are charged with grand lar ceny Those accused are Henry V. Ben- son, Henry J. Duncan, Willard Os- wald Howard, Boyd Anthony Hal- dane. Perry Allen, Ira Booth, Victor Klose, Frank R. Hayward, Lynes H. Seevers, George S. Booth, John E. Marsden and Peter J. Baardsen. All but Bnmdaen are natives. > WEATHER STATION AT PETERSBURG 10 BROADCAST HOURLY Don Gould, U. 8 Weather Bu-| reau Junior Meteorologist, flew with Herb Munter to Petersburg today to move weather observing equipment there to a new Aeronsutics Board station, which is to broadcast on an hourly se- quence. —r—— LAGERGREN ON VISIT Milton Lagergren, formerly City Engineer in Juneau. now e for the Livengood Placers porate). reesutly visited Fairbar peraiione i Agpapp Kok, 6 M a8 M FDR. TURNS DOWN DARE THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, TUESDAY, AUG. 20, 1940. HEARING SLATED!' HERE TOMORROW ON FISH RULES VISUALIZED TO DEB&IE Juneauites Invited fo Al- United States, British Em- Names Roy Howard of New York World-Tele- gram Defense Slacker 20 Aug HYDF PARK. N campaigt 1es, ‘assertin: Wende a press conference In such Willkie issued the a speech accepting his nemination for President President Roosevelt named Howard, editor of the New Wd* Telegram as one of the vate individuals he mentior onymously in his third term nom- ination acceptance speech as hav- ing turned down a bid to help the defense program The T/orld Telegram is a member newspaper of the Scripps-Howard chain of which Howard is Execu- tive Committee Chairman Roosevelt id it i Howard to fly on the ba ol hi tance with Government \per aper challenge Republics in an Ro; Ye pri- he asked America acquain offic and owners pérsonal views to South widc newsg cditor to obtaih their tifth column The President d true he Howard sanda bareau in an. on activities ared it to asn't up a Am- et P Atin eric The President did who will take Howard's REYNOLDS . WARNS OF SABOTAGE Senator Also Demands Harry Bridges Be Kick- ed Out at Once WASHINGTON, Aug. 20.—Sena- tor ‘Robert R. Reynolds of North disclose ted not unace Carolina told the Senate today he had heard “that in 28 day: Langley Field, there were 26 air- plane accidents, all caused by de- ‘tive landing gears “There must have been some botage there,” Reynolds declared and added, “Ther tage taking pia is a lot of sabo- ¢ in southern Cali- . onizes tend Session in Sen- ate Chambers and Wildlife Service hear- regulations for 1941 will begin at 10 o'clock tomorrow morning in the Senate Chambers of the Federal Building here, Charles Jackson, Assistant Di- ctor of the Fish and Wildlife jce, will preside. isted by Se- on Thomnpson, Assistant Director R sion Alaska Fish- A Fish ing on fisheries of and in- views tions, All other vited to vith reg fishermen, trap owners interested parties are attend and state theix rd to fishing rc; - - GRUENINGFLYING TO REVISIT ISLE HE ONCE SEIZED Al- as a guest | st Gruening left by aska Clipper today to fly of Pan American Airways over that company's new route to New Zealand, The Governor came o Juncau by Electra from Fairbanks tast night The Governor received a per- senal invitation from Juan Terry Trippe, President of Pan American Airways, lo be a passenger on the official inspection flight. 5 Trippe’s radiogram said T hope | you can go inasmpch as you per- sonally had so much to do with the rights which our government has secnred at Canton Island and other | picneeéring steps that have made peesible this new trade route which is destined to be important to our country’s tional defense as well.” 11,170 Miles ; | Al arrangements for, the flight were made while. (he Governof- Was | at Nome, PAA fuvited him to fiy| from Nome to Auckland, New Zéal-| and, a distance’ of 11,170 mfles u.\} a guest of the company. PAA flies)| the entire distance | jump between Seattle F ept for_the| and San Francisco. | The Governor will leave San Frarn cisco August 24" and return there September 4 after stops at Honolulu, Canton Island, New Caledonia and Atckland. He will be back in Ju- neau within 20 days. In 1937 Dr. Gruéning, then Di- rector of the Division of Territories and Tsland Possessions of the De- partment of the Interior, made an ingpection trip to three small South Pacific Islands which had been col- 1 by the United States with, a view to their futire use on a8 New| Zealand airplane route. commetce and to our na- ri% | say, but he doesn't, | of the Richardson Highway' al B o1 mission | from Vaidez pire May Get Together in Citizenship LONDON, Aug. 20.—Leslic Hore Belisha, former British War Secc- retary, raised in the House of Com- mons today the possibility of an eventual union between the United Stat nd the British Emp. peaking after Prime Minister Winston Churchill madeé his talk in Commons and referred to the trend of British and American co- operaton as “rolling along like ¢ Mississippi,” Hore Belisha said that “if that trend should iéad to the same mind of consummation a Luped 10r in the case of Frar an eventual common citizenship, all evils ‘of this war will ke worth ° while Hore Belisha also said that garding ‘“our relations with the United States atones for many dip- lomatic missions.” R L Tyee Is in Porf Today The steamer T\H‘ of “the Alaska Transportation -Company wa in Juneau this morning from Seattl bringing in a load of freight and two passengers, This afternoon the vessel" to go to Taku River and return here. sailing south via Sitka tomorrow morning, Mrs. George Laiblin came in with her son Gordon, and Rex Chittick John Osborne, and George Hau- son are to sail fm SL'JLLI:' aboard PlEADSe’ HI& M CASE; ACQUITTED “When a man is his own la he has a fool for a client,” lawycrs always Clyde Gordon, motor truck driv- er, acted as his own lawyer during his trial recently in the United States Commissioner's Court ot Fairbanks on a charge of dbu ler- |1y conduct, The disorderly conduct i was based on his allege Fusdtion Wlocking Delta, where the Alaska R has its ferry across the Tahana River and where he re- fused for a time while enroute to Fairbanks to pay the toill Jevied for the haiing of freight over thé thoroughfare Com-. fornia ‘l‘n‘llmnv factories.” Dr Gxue::'w"r‘:;,“::\t:n that Lhe ('}ox-donl won his case without ”«. The Senator referred o HaY|pomngs then in possession of the| g 00 the witness stand himscl Bridges as “America’s enemy num-|United States were not. adequate His defense was h.la vehicle did not ber one” and urged speedy action|g,. the purposes intended. }block the highway Hc‘ established for the deportation of Bridges On the then proposed route oIllh" d.crt-nsu .l‘() I.hv satisfaction of - > American clippers from California the ,Uhll jury by his examination LEGION DINNER Ito New Zealand, the first stop after gfxu‘:):lll“wm chiefly for the prose- Hayall wesia place qlleds BIC | OminNis s iemaas by FOR CAMPBELL IS POSTPONED A no-host dinner planned to- night by the local American Legion| and Auxiliary in honor of Milton| D. Campbell, Assistant Director of Child Welfare for the Legion, has| been postponed due to the late arrival of the steamer Columbia, on which Campbell is fraveling The' dinner will be either tomor- row cvening or later, depending upon Camphell’s traveding schedule. | > GAME COMMISSION FUR SALE VIELDS = RETURN OF $1,136 Auction of ((mllsg.no(l furs thxa‘ afternoon yielded the Alaska Gnme‘ | Commission $1,136.45 for 193 furs in | 57 lots. Largest purchasers were Charles Goldstein and H. J. Yurman, al- hough there were also several indi- idual private b\n'ers CITY BEGINS WORK ON DIXON OVERHANG Work was City Street |structing a brl,m' today by the Department on con- four-foot, overhang at| the corner of First and Dixon to |widen the twm in front of | George F. Alexander’s house to 11% | feet. - TAX STATEMENTS PLACED IN MAIL Tax statements for 1940 were Civil! mailed out today by the City Clerk’s|er in Alaska, operating over Inter: office to real and personal property holders in Juneau TOPOGRAPHER RETURNS Gerald Fitzgerald, Geological Sur- vey Topographer, returned from Ketchikan with Pilot Herb Munter - TWIN BOYS BORN Twin beys were recenLl\ born at | been swept by ‘seas in any Kind of | tween the United States and Bri- Judge | man’s Reef, only about 75 yards of which projected above the water at high tide, and which would have rough weather—obviously mot' the place to put down a seaplane car- rying passengers regularly. The sec- ond stop was to be the harbor of Paso Pago. the capital of American Samoa, which, surrounded by steep mountains and small in extent, was | dangerous. X So Gruening cast “dbout for a| place that would be suitable for the first stop of American Clipper ships after leaving Honolulu. He found that Canton Island, the title | to which had been in dispute be-| tain, was admirably suited for the purpose. ‘It is a ‘coral atoll sur-| rounding a lagoon nine miles lo by four miles wide. Moreover, i land arca was adequate for run- ways in every direction. Thus, the island _could be utilized by both land and seaplanes. Unfortunately, |a few weeks before their arrival, the British had hoisted their flag and claimed sovereignty, and by |that act U, ‘8 claims seemed to| | have been greatly diminished, | Flag Raised However, Gruehing récommended | that the party land on the island and raise the American Flag, and utilize it. This was done. ‘While be- | fore international Taw the island is now under a so-called “con-domin- ium,” namely a joint ownership be- | tween Great Britain and the United | showed Gordon stopped his truck diagonally across the road in front of the place where tolls are paid He refused to pay the toli nd did not do so until after he was arrested. Then his truck was fer- ried across the river and he drove it to town. By the questioning of witnesses, Gordon brought out te: timeny tending to show (wo mo- tor vehicles passed around his tru while it was declared to be bloc! ing the road. ‘the jury returned its verdict of not guilty - SCHOOL OF MINES FACULTY COMPLETE With the appointment of | Lavelle McAllen as assistant pm-} fessor of mining engineering, the/ faculty of the School of Mines of the University of Alaska 'for '.)\(-‘ academic year 1940-41 is now com-| plete. The announcement of this| appointment was made by President | Bunnell. Other members of the School nl\ Mines faculty are Howard G Wl]-‘ { cox, head of the department; E | est Franklin Fox, associate pro-| féssor of geology, and Mortin C.| | Smith, instructor in metallurgy.| Also members of this department | | In Mining Extension are John B. | Dorsh and Robert F. Lyman .Both John | ‘Smtas. the United States has the| full use of it. ] Pan American Airways has erected |a hotel on it and it is now the sec- ond stop after San Francisco. It lies close to the equator, sogie 1,600 miles southwest of Honolulu. - e FLIES SOUTH | | i | Alfred Ghezzi Jr., youngest truck- B from highways, flew to Juneau Fairbanks yesterday by Electra and | went_on {a busin uth by clipper today on s trip to the States. S ee RESIDENCE DESTROYED The Harry Newell residence, 1160 | | Park Strcet, Ketchikan, was recently destroyed in a morning blaze, in- . Haakon |cluding furniture and personal be-|Gray to Daniel Edward Novak and longings, Dorsh and Lyman were instructors in \hmng Exte.mon last year, SIMMONS MAKES - HOP; AMUNDSEN . OUT ON CHARTER | Shell Simmons flew to the coast itcday and John Amundsen made |a charter flight to Todd | Simmons flew Ray Beach and Jerry McKinley to Sitka and James EHumphrcy to Hirst, while Amund- |sen was to bring in Mr. and Mrs | Nick Bez. MARRIAGE LICE SE { . A marriage license was issued fo- |day by U, S. Commissioner Felix Pacmc steamer Prin- ess Charlotte, scheduled to arri at 7 o'clock this evening, came up the channel and docked shoxtlv '\llm 3 o'clock this afternoon. - Canadian BLASTED BY DYNAMITE By the explosion of a stick of | dynamite Thomas Rosted suffered | the loss of both his hands at the wrists and Charles Cook the loss of the upper part of first, second and third fingers of his right hand. The accident occurred on the bank of the Little Chena River, about a mile from its mouth, and the injured men were motor boated | to Fairbanks for treatment. | Baseball Today The following ure scores of games played this afternoen in the two Major Leagues: Natienal League Besten 3; Pittsburgh 6. Philadelphia 0; Chicago 4. Brooklyn 0; St. Louis 3. New Ycrk 2; Cincinnati ame. 3, first Chicago 6, 3; Philadelphia 1, 4. Detroit 3, 2; New York 4, 4. Cleveland 11; Boston 6. Sub:cripe to The Daily aiaska Em- | 1 American League ‘ § Valois Juanita Laiblin pire — the paper with the larges:| guaranteed circulation, | Empire [ and_cire BIGUNION: - Mrs. Willkie Pleasanily _lquon EARNING 4% Your Money Is ® Available for with- drawal or request. ® Insured by U. S. Gnvernment up to $5.000. Alaska Federal Savings & Loan Assn. of Junsan Telephone 3 the paper with the largest NT OF COME RCE, WEAT THE WEATHL: ER . 1 (By the U. S. Wua(llcr Bureau) . Fair V\Hh not much change in tem tonig l\[ and - d lowest temperature tonight ees; gentle to moder WENDELL WILLKIE westerly winds. She likes pretty clothes. Forecast for Southeast A Falr with not much 1 ‘ temperature tonight and Wednesda” but with increasing By ADELAIDE KERE Wednesday; mederate westerly winds except north over Lynn Cana AP Featore Service Wiiter { Farecast of winas along the cu. e of Ataska ? ! Mode westerly from Dixon En'ra Cape Spencer; and mod Mr Wendell Wil is' a wom-| crate v able, bccoming Al)ulh.“l'l_\ from Cape Spencer to Kodiak an’s woman | LOCAL DATA She 1ikes S v sokes Time Barometer ‘lemp. Humidity Wind Velocity ~ Weather % Medtha 4:30 pam. yesterday 30.21 65 7 w 12 Pt. Cldy And, judging work women £y am. fodn) : 8 88 w 1 Pt. Cldy have done already in his behalf WOSk) ‘teany o8 59 W ek lear Fis thitiks ‘tiey coult we: RADIO REPORTS dell Wil election to the presi- | TODAY oy Max. terpt. | Lowest 3:30am Precip. 3:30am She said so at her first New Statien last 24 hours | temp. temp, 24 hours - Weather York reception after her hus- Fairbanks 64 16 17 13 Clou band's nominat but she didn't Nome 60 51 2 01 ay so publicly Mrs, Willkie Dawson 42 01 makes no public statements on Anchorage 51 37 subjects. She said so in B 18 9 0 tA% W et St. Paul 45 46 8 Juick back to Dutch Harbor 49 01 b Kodiak 52 I Cordova 0 80 Cloudy They streamed past at tea Ketchikan 58 _)’_) % ‘Cll“'l given in a friend’s home, when Hhee Bt : b o o he was the focal point of hun- Eabiee 0 . | Pakine st oo - & : it dreds of curious eyes. She seemed|.pelen, how mnice fo see you—| Seattle ol ¥ ik £ be having a good time—and 50|and what a pretty frock!” ey o o g i did the ‘women ‘who -came. 0, see felt that, if there had been #| San Francisco 52 56 0 Clea her quick smile and hand | jine more time, she might have clasp, and then & pause and Words| sionped to. exchange a reeipe. WEATHER SYNOPSIS spilling out in a friendly stream she ‘talked ‘no politics. She High pressure was charted this morning over most of Alaska and “Hello, my dear. HOWS Joh?"|jqiried every leading question| 0¥ the Gulf, while a low pressure atea which has been advancin Y neatly and retreated with grace,| castward was centered near Atka. Fair weather continued for the dotérmination and a smile to| Wiud day in Southeast Alaska and the Yukon Territory, but re- afer, more inconsequential| mained cloudy over the rest of Aliska. During the last 24 hour praiicy rain has fallen over a wide area in western and central portions Fdith Willkic is a little woman,| ©f Alaska and over the Aleutian Is'ands fer as a 1. Her milir £ Ufixflg?‘g 5:31 a.n., sunset 8:30 p.n - that is wide at the check SUMMONS FOR PUBLICATION 1 £ % |slightly pointed at the chin an 4553-A framed in shgrt, softly curled IN THE DISTRICT COURT FOR Y ITA['ANS silver-tinged THE TERRITORY OF ALASKA 1 the A(NH\VH‘I) of the recep- DIVISION NUMBER ONF AT tion she wore a simple dark blue JUNEAU e crepe frock, whose wide rippling AUL ‘REZAT. Plain LONDON, Aug. 20.—While with-| i} Ly \,‘l:h . RN BATL REZAT. Pl er attacks are repo ragi tlower I Defendant 1 g ‘;,‘:’”_"\" _‘“.("'“:“"““ “”“' neat little: chap crowned \um FlreS Repened Ragmg in President of the United f-m!»'mum ll(x{fu‘:‘:(n;‘,‘ it “":v ;], ““‘u‘ £ \x--'n;d ’;](!!n«l]vlhi. P 40 PI F " su.ml (lnx‘ z\n‘lmu‘u er; 1'11;( \ "POrte ive Thit tho'x 2 tilt of that hat said, * named defendant, GREE NG: Yo s T Wew k. e she said to a frienc 1e District Court for the ) Bie )‘,'1','],““\,;,““.‘| : ‘med o indicate that she feel apan?se ai | of Alaska, First Division, at Juncau mementarily the ¢ umul,nmn grifiohes ARG vorh. o UM SRR ar AN il nves | Ton MU thiny deve aller the British and French troops near the , either : ging in more than fotty piaces in | 15t Publication of this summons, Suex Canal “Will T gel a lob of new clothes| (8 O O e tetday by |10 case this summons is publisi o o the trip we hope to take before 4 s Y * | or within forty days aftef the da wdvanczent of the F L heavy and intensified Japanese A A : in the' Aden sector have | the campaigh? I doubt if 1l have bembing raids, Japanese army au- actagtareos, upbn, yo¥. JIn case the British troops back to the point Ume. Tl probably just have 10| el qid todas that almost | thiS summons is served upon you whers it is merely a matfer of hours | (elephone some shop and tell the|ajj activity in the area had stopped. | Personally, and answer the plain- before the final thrust, it is said rl {0 send up What I want| Tpe Japanese reported direct hits| I’ complaint on file in s It i though, however, that the twelve. 1( generally fits” ' |cn many government buildings of | COUr in the above entitled ca Ttaligns . may e content with the ‘nough Food and Slecp the Central . Chinese government | TD€ Plaintif in said aciion « bettling of the Gulf of Aden, for ~ Mrs Willkié gives her time (o|capital and said that many other | Mands the following reliel: Diss it is through this narrow body of her husband, her home, her son,|military objectives were in flames | ution of the bonds of matrimony water that ships must pass to go Phillip, who is twenty. She spends asa result of Japanese agrial ma YOG EMOUDE et antafit ahd through the Suez Canal.® much 6f it, since her husba manship, | defendant on the grounds of - de- nomination, in superinténding his e I sertion, ;i 4 heme schedute and seeing that he DIVORCE CASES AR EE SVERR J0u T A0 B the right food and ‘chough Suits for divorce bave been fileq "PPear and answer, the plainuif sleep. She keeps a friendly, in District Court by Jean Paul Mes- Wil take judgment against you for honiey atmosphere in the roomy,|trezat against Gladys Marie Mes- WANU thereof, and will apply fo the book-filled apartment on upper| trezat on grounds of desertion; Irene COUIt for the relief dem M NlT R- Fifth Avenue, where the Willkies|Stewart against Archie W. Stewart, $81d complaint, and as he 7 | incompatibility; Elsie Williamson ““w‘l“. e The Republican women who against George B. Williamson, Mex“n‘zz_ ‘Jud;“ P belp. her; handle ghe - bishel-bass (GG the seal of said Court hereunto : E(( WORK Ao g ke s e NGTICE TO CREDITOR fixed, on this 19th day of Augu ang e Tikely ‘i ‘Wil ‘on those] e B poen SppGIILe Rtinin- | 0. X A who are there to help instead ;){ istrator with the Will annexed of (Seal of Co vl-’p ; 2 Communications Commission out of When they. were. hivig Paeed, &l peregns Davng Slaims T 2 g San Francisco, V. Ford Greaves, flew | hasty lunch, she disappeared = ageinst the said estate are hereby _ Court. g 1 from. SSattle: yestetdny aNd sl o fo, £asappca ‘“[‘{ r(quxrvd to present the same, with HOWARD D. STABLER, Hbhciiset 3 s hen and came back a’few at the office of my Plaintiff's Attorney, scussing with Alaskan FCC head thr With & Sra¥. O Msed AT Rl < oy Stacey Norman today the proposed iioe . Becaiils. sha" thassh 1 T n p e ITCERR i big monitor station which is to be LHE0, RecauRe she- SHONBRE entine Bui ding, at Juneau, Alaska, Publication dates, August 20 Uractia herd y “might lke a cool dr within six months from the date Scptember 3-10. 1940. THiGa -shiel’ Mohitotiog. slations o L f0E Sl o sime. Ade other | nereot, are to be erected in Alaska for the :)‘:,::; j:“l‘" ):"“"‘d; e i ‘”d hiiix Lated the 20th day Of AUSUS!, e oo oo D e R L cs 2 er friends wonder if | 1940, 2;:::0,1,‘, {.’;‘Iw;?i;:p;:,t[,;?:’zfi::”’" she isn't a lv 1p to Wendell Will- JACK TURKOVICH, Admin- { zmfl'fll RADIUS z 4 y in keeping him primed on istrator with the Will An- 1941 Models Now on Display Juneau is to gt one such statlon. | oy oic4ng “on reading for which nexed, estat¢ of Raymond | REPAIRS and SERVICE and Anchorave and Nome will likely =) o0 B v DT 5 i 5 i o an yeepive the others, as no time. Be that as it may Ruzich, deceased JUNEAU RADIO SERVICE b ErREE DR E R say, she has followed eyery| Publication dates: Aug. 20-27, Sept. Phone 464 Bill Hixson step of- his- eareer. They suspect| 3-10-17, 1940 A e SR R iR iy may be one person “to whom (HARLOIIE wmku-s riomination @s the Re- ‘;,_,,,;,‘:,,,,,w,,,_n_,,,,;,,;,’, T came as s se. ONE 767 e - STREET RETAILERS OF FAMOUS SHURFINE and TASTEWELL PRODUCTS ‘3——FREE DELIVERIES—— Our Store Is as Close as Your Phone—SHOP EARLY HE PRICE TAG -t IS NOT EVERYTHING” IS NOT EVERYTHING” ; § o Put a Covic Diesel in Your Boat If You Want MORE ROOM IN YOUR BOAT for Your Money mfortable, Quiet Ride ngine that Instantly Starts Assurance of Safe Trips Freedom from Fire Hazards A Broad Range of Smooth Speeds Low Operating and Maintenance Costs Reduced Insurance xates Smokeless, Odorless Exhaust Kdn Diesel Dependability n Engine that Can Be Easily Hand Cranked CHARLES 6. WARNER C@. R T g ; s G MC TRUCK S Compare Them With All Others! PRICE - APPEARANCE - ECONOMY DURABILITY CONNORS MOTOR CO. PHONE 411 € 4 n ; * "

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