The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, January 16, 1941, Page 2

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2 THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, THURSDAY, JAN. 16, 1941. When you shck to @ whlskey 5 years— ‘FAU[KNER THEN TAKE My AND YOULL says JOHN BOYKO, chemical en- gineer, of 538 East Glenwood St., Phoenix, Arizona %z/é/g olr & /a/mmz‘/w?f BARANOF IN PORT FOR WEST Westward bound steamer Baranof warped in to the wharf here at 1:30 o'clock this: morning with a long list of passengers for Juneau and many sailing for Sew- ard, Arrivals were R. L. Bernard, R. R. Bruce, George W. Gray, John Hall, Mr. and Mrs. H. J Hansen, Judy Hansen, Mrs. C, Henderson, C. L. Koech, W. J. Larry, E. E. Ninnis, George Parks, Mildred ‘Webster, P. J. Anderson, J. Carriil- en, Frank Cecil, Harold Gleason, C. Haynes, F. Herrle, H. Lindjord, J. W. Shannon, J. Taylor, H. Thacker and O. Ueland. From Ketchikan, Cavanaugh, I..A. Thatcher, Edense. From Petersburg—V. A. Daven- TE| The Roy Banta, Ray R. port, Gil Rich, Mrs. E. V. Stolen, E. V. Stolen. el Y jgell—Mrs. Lyle ‘Miten- ell Sailing for the Westward were L' Edenfield. Ed Jacoby, Stanford Sho-| lin, Ken Wakefield, H. Abraham- son, H. Kinney, S. Simpson, Percy Dunlap, Mrs, George Leveque, De-| borah Pence, Louis Monaco, John ‘Wilson, Donna Mason, Mrs. E. B. Hanson, Mrs. C. A. McKinnell, James Leveque, J. H. Peterson, Fred Harris, Edgar Hagewood, W. Night- ingale, Ken Vreed, Clyde Herman,| Alex Sokoloff, Gerald Clouse, Ed| Cowling, Frances Larkin, Milton "Bagby, M. H. Payne, Frank Cecil, Miss Alice Bromley, Jennie Arbo-' gast, For Cordova—R. C. Vogel, John Eddy, J. C. Rhine, John Christen- sen. | For Kodiak—G. W. Foxworthy, R. S. Petrie. S eee HIGH SCHOOL BAND SEEKING UNIFORM FUND The : Juneau High School Band 1s putting on a drive to raise money for the purchase of new uniforms.| g ‘The band has asked the moral sup- port of the Chamber of Commerce, and is asking other organizations of civic nature to support them. Tae members of the band are| poing to raise their own money, DO YOU LIKE FINE BOURBON ?\ TEN HIGHSE GOLDEN FLAVOR 70 11, 700 ! 1000 feet WORD_TRY S7TICK MORE CHILDREN TO BEEVACUATED GREATER LONDON Minister of Health Takes | Precautionary Measures as Result Air Attacks LONDON, Jan. 16.—Malcolm Mac- | nOUfl(emenl—Majorlly Donald, Minister of Health, today | ordered compulsory removal from | the Greater London area of all chil- dren under 14 years of age and who are considered likely to suffer mind or body” from air attacks if they remain in or near the British capital city. —L s = OPENING NEW STORE SPACE Jerry McKinley is still busy pre- paring the new quarters of his Electric Service Shop on Seward Street, The new quarters, adjoin: Bert's Cash Grocery, are being re | painted and generally | McKinley declares the quarters should be open for business within a few day: — e Former Juneau Girl Vi isiting Mrs, Joseph Goding of Ske 3 the former Marjorie Aiken of this city, is visiting here for a week or so with her parents, Capt. and Mr: B. R. Aiken. Mrs. Godkin will acquaintances with for the next week. —————— BARANOF | 0ADS LUMBER CARGO . The steamer Baranof loaded 27.- of lumber today at the Juneau Lumber Mills for that firm’s yard in Anchorage Mill officials said they would be sluppuw another 100.000 feet north on the Tanana next week — e HELP AN ALASKAN Telephone 713 or write be renewing Juneau friend + British 1] way.” (rulser ! Miners Urged to Pay Mr. Faulkner said the Alaska M‘mers' Association, upon wh ! remodeled - DISCUSSES f TAXATION P PRRSG 90 proof HIRAM WALKER & SONS INC. PEONIA, Lk ‘ Hit by Broader Tax | Base, Claim “.\uucture in Alaska, because eve | thing else ‘depends on. these . H. L. Faulkner declarc Juneau Chamber ¢ Commerce meeting in a discussior of the tax problem which will f the Territorial Legislature. } With the exception of the schoois, where he declared a small incre: is inevitable, due | population of Alaska. lany place where we should even think of raising taxes for appro- priations,” the attorney said. Money for an increased educa- tional appropriation can be had without an increase in taxation. I said, by collecting taxes now on the books and which it is alleged are , not paid in many cases and by | “getting along without a good man, | things for two years, or one any- “there isu't resolution urging economy in Te 'morial government he reported to-| ‘duy has wrged all its members: to| ,pay the taxes they owe l'xe Tm- ! ritory. A d m | ra | 'y Makes An_ | The Miners' Association, amlm!vd with the American Mining Con-| | gress, has 129 operator members and 174 individual members. Four of Crew Is Saved LONDON, Jan. to it. Mr. Faulkner said that “every person who belongs to this Cham- 16—Tne British | ber, every person who has an in- “in | Admiralty in a communique wuavlterest in the Territory, should be- bathy sirikes called by Unite announces the British Cruiser) Scuthampton was sunk by Brmsh] forces when fire aboard made it nec- essary to abandon ship. The Southampton is one of three long.” The speaker reiterated the advice |oI Jack Hellenthal at last week's | Chamber meeting that the test on British warships previously report- every Territorial appropriation item ed to have been damaged by Germanfih'“ld,flb % oan we gt Blongwith-| and Italian Air Forces off Slcllv'om g on January 10. | Mining Problems 5 The Admiralty said a majority| Mr. Faulkner said the mining of the Southampton’s crew was sa " |industry is faced with some v ed serious problems at present, taxa- | tion being only one of them. Gov ernment priority on equipment, he| | said, is making it difficult or im- possible in some cases for minc to operate. The best men are being drawn off into defense industries and “the defense program has not vet got underway at all” He re- ferred to the manner in which the last war caused the closing of the Alaska Gastineau mine, which he said meant just as much to the community then as the Alaska Ju- neau does today. Most of us take the Alaska Ju- R TWO INDICTED BY GRAND JURY Two true bills were reported in District Court this afternoon by the Grand Jury, which returned to its deliberations. Those indicted are Arminta Os- borne and Charley Johnson, both on charges of assault with a deadly weapon. They will be arraigned to- [ heau Gold Mining Company for morrow granted, he said. It is an industcy IR e employing 1000 men and whose ‘ payroll was a million and a half EVENING MEETING 1l s, Lo e o e 2% pRuposAl To BE the Territory in the form of gross UP FOR CHAMBER gold tax alone. Recent newspaper accounts on the 1940 profit of the mine failed to mention that the A proposal that the Juneau Cham- | 1EUre Biven was before deductions of Commerce hold evening in for taxes, depletion and deprecia- P bt - < | tion, stead of luncheon meetings was| et made at today’s session Pfcsident Ha poferred to higher Federal Curtis Shattuck said the sugges- | 2%€s in effect and in prospect and’ tich, as well as one that an occas-|Te2d Predictions to this effect from magazines' and pamphlets Budget Increases Mr. Faulkner said he understood the ordinary budget to be present- ed by various Territorial bureaus would ask for an increase of $400.- | 000 this biennium and that an ad- | ditional $300,000 would be asked CHAMBER DONMES .| $15 FOR UNIFORMS. A donation of $75 toward ‘the pur- chase of new uniforms for the High icnal evening meeting be held, would be discussed next week. M. S. Whittier warned that hold- ing evening meetings has been tried by the Juneau Chamber in the past and 'has Jli\'(l $300,000 was recommended by the | Commissioner of Education for junior colleges, $300,000 would he| number of other tain, requests are cer- Mines, Fisheries Would Be' | Unless the fishing apd mining|Salmen Industry has been served | industries are to be expected tfo|ca the industry by George Lane, Se- pay even more toward the support cretary and Treasurer of the Inter- {o, the Territory, there isn't any national —Fishermen and Allied| [way. of. broadening the tax base | Workers of Amer two | ermens to the growing| members of the Legislature belong| SALMON INDUSTRY CONFRONTED WITH | NEW AGREEMENTS Request Is Made by Busn- ness Agent of Unions for New Wage Scale SEATTLE. Jan, 16.—A formal no- tice of the desire to recpen agree- yments between the Alaska Fisher- |mans’ Unien and the Alaska Canned Lane is ¢ ‘B\!\m(‘“ Agent of the Alaska Fish- Union, while Capt. William regular Business Agent, is gton attending the Bur- Fisheries hearings. eements being cpened by Scuthe Alaska, Cook west Kodiak Is- | Hecker, | Inlet land One represent the entire group. and of Negotiating Committee will Juneau Men ' Leave for Ancther large group | we kmen sailed today on the steam- er Baranof for Dutch Harbor to be employed on the navy base project there, men leaving here for Unalaska in the past few weeks to over thirty. were Perey Dunlap, J: . Harold Abra- hamsen, Harry Kinney, Edzar Hage- woed, Ted Cowling, Kenneth Vreed, Francel Larkin, Milt Bagby, Wa! Nightingale, Joseph Peterson, Alek Sckoleff, Louise Monaco, Freddie Harris, and Gerald Cl()\xee g JUNEAU TO BE HEARD FROM 0 Supplemental agreements include | Port Mecller and Bristol Bay tcnder- {men, tallymen and messhouse em- | ‘)llt\u- is said a substantial ws in- crease will be sought in view of the hn« t canned salmon price in- creasing from a $1 a dozen to $1.40 since the last agreement was nego- | {tiated. Further increases in price are anticipated, it is claimed | A — 4 Plants Reopened ~ For Work DETROIT, Micn., Jan. 16.—Four plants of the Eaton Manufacturing Company closed two days by sym- i Auto ‘Wm s, have reopened, but inter- union disputes which caused the ;| walkout still appeared unsolved. ( At Saginaw’s plant, scene of the criginal dispute, leaders of the U.A.W. said they had not consult- led on a settlement demanded by | James Dewey, Federal conciliator lin the interests of national de- fense. The Eaton company manufac- tures unplmw engine |mrt< .o PLANE IN CRASH;ONE FLIER'DEAD VENSON, B. C. Jan. 16.—-A Canadian Royal Air Force Flying Instructor was killed and a student pilot seriously injured when a train- ing plane of the Elementa: Air Training Scheol No. 18 of Vancou- ver, crashed on the side of a road near here this afternocon. The dead man is Sergeant R. M. STE | tion Indiv INAUGURAL DAY MajorGrahBRto Speak on Alaska’s Defenses for National Broadcast Major Jesse E. Graham of the Al- aska National Guard will from Juneau over a nationwide broacast the evening of January 20, inaugural ‘day, on the state of Al- Naval Base of Juneau| raising the number of work- | speak | aska’s military preparedness, it was announced tod Juneau will be hooked into an! NBC program from 6:30 to 7 o'ciock Meoenday. The prozram, ible,” by Dorothy Thompson, it was an- ncunced by Manager C. B. Arnold of KINY, which will be one of the stations carrying the pr .- Nazis Will Take OQver entitled “One Na- is being arranged m. | Duce Lands | THE WEATHER | (By the 1. S. Weather Bureau) U. S. DEPARTMENT NJF CON MERCE, WEATHER BUREAU Forecast for Juneaun and vicinity, beginning at 4:30 p.m., Jan. 16: Fair tonight, increasing cloudiness Friday; continued cool with I est temperature tonight about 25 degrees, highest Friday 33 de- grees; moderate northeasterly gusty winds Alaska: Increasing cloudiness tonight and Friday with light rain or snow Friday afternoon in south por- tion, and fair tonight with increasing cloudiness Friday over nc pon.mn. warmer Friday over south portion; gentle to moderat: easterly to southeasterly winds over south portion,” and moderate ' fresh northeasterly winds over north portion with fresh to stro northerly winds in Lynn Canal, Taku Inlet and Chatham Straits. Forecast of winas along the coast of the Gulf of Alask Dixon Entrance to Cape Spencer: Increasing cloudiness with Ii rain near Dixon Entrance Friday; gentle to moderate easterly southeasterly winds bécoming moderate to fresh near Dixon Entrar Friday; Cape Spencer to Cape Hinchinbroox: Increasing cloudine: moderate easterly to northeasteriy winds; Cape Hinchinbrook to Resurrection Bay: Partly cloudy; g°>ntle moderate northeasteriy Forecast for Southeast 01 to winds; Resurrection Bay to Kodis Partly cloud; gentle to moder- | ate northerly to northeasterly winds. LOCAL DATA Time Barometer Temp. Humidity Wind Velocity Weather \ 4:30 p.m. yesterday 2992 32 40 NE 14 Clear 4:30 a.m. today 2997 31 52 NE 14 Clear Noon today 2996 31 39 NE 15 Clear ! RADIO REPORTS | | TODAY Max. tempt. Lowest 4:30 am. Precip. 4:30a.m Station last 24 hours temp. temp. 24 hours Weather Barrow -8 =21 -19 0 Clea Fairbanks -8 -19 -16 0 Clear Nome 26 19 23 0 Clea Dawson -21 -31 =31 0 “lea Anchorage 19 11 17 0 Pt. Cldy Bethel 8 2 2 0 St. Paul 34 27 29 0 Duteh Harbor .. 40 39 39 1 Wosnesenski 41 40 40 09 Rain Kodiak 40 38 38 0 Cloudy Cordova 34 | 26 28 0 Pt. Cldy Juneau 3 30 3 0 C hv ar Sitka 42 31 02 Ketchikan 43 31 31 01 v Prince Rupert . 42 25 42 0 Cloud Prince George .. 27 16 17 04 Snow Seattle 49 42 44 29 Cloudy Portland 48 | 41 42 18 Clou San Francisco .. 57 43 41 38 Clc WEATHER SYNOPSIS Rain was falling this morniny over the Aleutian Islands 1 the western portion of the Alaska Peninsula, and clear or partly cloudy skies prevailed elsewhere oser Alaska. Rain had fallen ing the previous 24 hours at som: points in the extreme sout portion of Southeast Alaska and foom the Alaska Peninsula to (he Aleutian Islands. Little change i1 temperature was experienced anywhere in Alaska except warme' over the Seward Peninsu slightly colder in the extreme no'th portion and over Southeast Ai- aska. The lowest temperaturc “thi; morning was minus 19 de which was recorded at Barrow. Generally clear skies and good vis) bilities, with fresh to strong morth-erly to northeasterly sur over the north portion prevailed over the Juncau-Ketchit The Thursday morning weathe' chart indicated a lo area of 978 millibars (2888 inches) was located at 47 de and 150 degrees west, and a sccond low center of about pressure was located at abouy 47 degrees north and 175 west. A high pressure area centered to the east of Alaska w ai etk | a second high cen!;r to the northwest of Alaska, and a third . W o ! center of 1024 millibars (3024 inches) was centered at 30 de Air Minister Archibald Pre-| sorts ana 125 dearees west. . . ; Juneau, Jan. 17 — Sunrise 9:32 am, sunset 4:45 nm dicts Fall of Fascism ' in_Ifaly ‘Women of Moose ~ Trinity Senior Guild GLASGOW, Jan, 16— Air Mmi I T ' d Pl -l- ter i arnionia swew oo INITGTE @NA Plan athers Tomorrow |a Glasgow public meeting today ! that Fascism is doomed in Italy F N t M th \ and “in deadly peril” of complete or ex on | The Trinity Sen Nazi domination. oo meet tomorrow aftern Sinclair declared there will be| TWO new members were lm!ml"d at the home of Dean C. E. Rice on no relaxation of the British war into the Women of the Moose at arlh(' corner of Fourth and Main effort until the power of Hit meeting held last night at the 1.O.- | Streets. and Goering and “all those evil OF. Hall ! Many 1nx|7m"l:1m matters are o be men who now rule Germany, are| Regular business was discussed | discussed and a full attendenoe i finally and utterly dmtx'm'ed " ,during the session and an account ired. i of the Red Cross units meetings at <> I1iie heme of Bessie Reeder on Jan- KODIAK BOUND uary 6, 10 and 13, was given. More | ok | than 16 dresses will be ready to be| gcdink ma R. H.:-Chads turned over to the Red Cross wnhxp and his wife were visitors here while | —_ 2 fow days. The mext Red Cross|the Baranof was in port and sto BULLETIN—LONDON, Jan, |Unit meeting will be tomorrow al|long enough to predict great thinzs ‘3 16—Sirens sounded cver the |7:30 c'clock in the evening at the|for the Westward navy town this Sette of Portiand, Oregon, and _ the injured man is L. O. H. Voucher, of Calgary, Alia. The plane’s motor failed at a low altitude. PRESIDENT MAKES REQUEST FOR BIG MERCHANT FLEET . WASHINGTON Jan. appaiently 16.—Presi- | for University of Alaska building, |dent Roosevelt today put a formal, [apa[ed at Skagway, {request to Cecngress for authority |to build a fleet of 200 merchant ve: sels “upon an emergency basis” and asked for industrial schools and a |asked for an appropriation of $313,- |Loans and discounts . 000,000. Capital City signaling an early night visit cf Nazi raiders on the | bemb scarred city. Reports are also received in- dicating mnight attacks are spreading to cther parts ¢f Eng- land as ‘“enemy” planes are heard rearing cver a wide sec- tion, o - IOFFXCIAL PUB ICATIGN) Repnrl of the Financial Condition of the BANK OF ALASKA, - erritory of Alaska, at the close of business | on thc 31st day of December, 1940. | | RESOURCES $175,273.13 Bond; and warrants 58,800.00 and they are not going to solicit| Tiae Alaska Territorial 1‘ School band was voted today by the Bankmg house, furniture funds from any business and pro-| Employment Service | Juneau Chamber of Commerce. He said broadening of the Fax s’,l'oc‘ QUOTAT!O"S | and fixtures 28,500.00 | fessional man in town. They are| for this qualified worker. | Superintendent of Schools A..B. base was a very meritorious thing | Due from banks and Cash not asking a donation to this fund | ' | Phillips emphasized: that no solici-| 2nd he hoped it could be accom-| LTI EEETACEL | on hand 102,084.24 irom anyone or from any organi-| ABORER-CABINET SHOP AP. (ation is being made by the band,|Plished. But he wamed that B0 v Tof /\.‘a‘k:x]‘!lllll:?;u (:ni::‘ca!’““‘ issigned o zation, PRENTICE— Younz man, age 21, Which expects to raise the required |income tax and property tax’would & = 0 53 5™ o can can | branch 25,000.00 They are putting on band con-|single, high school graduate. Has SUm through coneerts. fail to produce revenue if themin-|g,*0 JOORE B T SANE O el d certs on February 28 and March|worked in cabinet shops, run wood : ; B ing and fishing industries should fos o Lot s uthern .| TOTAL : $389,657.37 g lathes, shapers, studied furniture- {have a bad vear, for almost every-| o,y iy - " General Motor LIABILITIES In the past these band concerts|making. Also do common labor pARKS lem 2 . |thing is dependent on them. 46', International Harvester 51%, Capital stock $100.000 00 have always been free to the public,| truck driver, ete. Call for ES 245 y “It should be the duty of evexy|p '\ o oii 340 New York Central|Surplus 40,000.00 but this year, because they are at- R PR R ABOARD BAM“OF'P“"W“C person,” he concluded, “to| 5o o p) i g Unitea | Reserves 277351 | tempting to raise funds for their COOK IN TOWN make every attempt to reduce Pub-| g v “greel 661, Pound $4.04. | Undivided profits 10416.73 new uniforms, they are charging 50| R. C. Cook, National Lead Com- George Parks, District Cadastra)|liC expenditures in the interest of} ™ y,ow joNES AVERAGES Deposits 230310.00 cents admission. The students Who |pany representative, came in on the Engineer, came in on the Baranof |national defense.” The following are today's Dow,|Discount received 157.13 are members of the Band will With- | Baranof and is at the Gastineau. this morning after his annual trip| After Mr. Faulkner's repart, the| ;e averages: Industrials 12093, | —_—— in the next few days probably - to the States. Chamber endorsed the Alaska Min-| a5 970 ytilities 2023 TOTAL $389,657.37 “drop in" to see you and ask you| TO ANCHORAGE Parks has been visiting his mother | € “Association resolution and or- - United Stotes of America, Terri- dered copies sent to all Chambers| npe GLDROYD ON BARANOF to buy a ticket T. D. Kevin, who is employed in in Denver over the holidays. in the Territory and to Alaska news- They will not attempt to sell you|the City Clerk’s office at Anchorage, - e, Mrs. L. T. Oldroyd is a passenger so far as high-pressure work islis aboard the Baranof [ papers. aboard the Baranof returning to concerned, but merely give you the| - > & "o (m.oml‘"ou Copies of the Alaska Planning|per home in Fairbanks 3 opportunity to buy one or more BUYER THROUGH mi 1 5 Couneil’s study “Taxation in Alas- SRR tickets at 50 cents, In this way| John Schwegler, annual visitir B".l " . 7'“ ka" were furnished maucl’l.memlj.oeri SCRSETS COME NORTH | you are guaranteed a full evening |fur buyer, is through on the Ba (o"’GnE s ‘s of the Chamber today by Executive| A Sorset, prominent Wrangellite, of entertainment and will have|anof for the Westward | S T Secretaxy J. E. Pbgues came north to his home town aboard the Baranof. He was accompanied by his wife and little daughter. | D Unit of the Alaska ->-oeo Sl iy | st!:l li:ud:-::x:fifim-"'«::{.:L;m., W 111\;:) 1::;‘1: h(::; mfi"'fi&‘fiififi:“l““ IS BA(K | FROM TRIP SOUTH' advantage of getting your money’ worth, - > ANDRESEN NORTH | of Mrs. Helen Webster, returned on in the 77th Congress, Delegate An- | The Juneau Clark Andresen of Hunt, Matte |the steamer Baranof as besn thony J. Dimond informed the Ju- National Guard .will drill ténight in | and Zellerbach, visited Juneau |attending the University an Chamber of Commerce by ra-| \(hfl Armory, the roll call to take friends while the Baranof was in | ington « am today. Councilman E. E, Ninnis and pro- | place at 8 o'clock. - If - & LEBO TO KETCHIKAN ATRMAIL ENVELOPES, showing Willis Lebo, byproducts manufac- alr route trom Seattle 1o Nome, oo turer, came north to Ketchik cuch a measure is introduced,!prietor of the Juneau Motors Conr- it nd said, he will keep Alaskans pany returned ¢n the steamer Bar-| Deputy Marshal Sid Thompson rmed of it. lanof this morning from Seattle.'flew to Angoon this afternoon ic - |~ Ninnis has been in the Queen City | subpoena Joseph Kanosh as a wit- port. He is returning to Anchorage.| —e— tory of Alaska, First Judicial Division, I, Norman Haley, Cashier of the Bank of Alaska, do solemn- ment is trie to knowledge and belief. NORMAN HALEY, Cashier. (Correct—Attest) P. H. GANTY, Director. (Notorial Seal) Subscribed and sworn to before me this 14th day of January, 1941, W. H. MURRAY, | cluded two vozal $olos by Miss Bar- | were played by Miss Leivers, follow- ly swear that the foregoing state-|. the best of my| home of Mrs. Art McKmnnon, ac- cerding to Mrs. Leona Sebenico, cemmittee chairman. During the meeting last night Mrs. Lida Museth was elected to the affice of Chaplin and will be install- ed at the February 5 meeting. | Entertainment last evening in- year. CLOTHES that are CLEANED OFTEN—Wear Longer! Send YOUR GARMENTS to Triang Fou'll enjoy the hn' duy season more in fresh. perfectly cleaned clothes, cleaned the Triangle bara Smith, accompanied by Miss Beverly Leivers. Two piano solos ed by a series of Alaska scenes shown by A. B. Cain. Later in the evening refreshments were served. ‘The month 6f February is ritual- istic month, with Mrs. Robert Lizht as chairman for the programs. She | will be assisted by Mrs. Olaf Bod- ding and ‘Mrs. Gergie Oison. On the Kitchenl committee will be Mrs. Leon Sebenico, Mrs. Aileen Smith and Mrs. W. Hermanson. Smmcnbe for Tne Emph'e % Pui a Covic Diesel in Your Boat If You Want MORE R.OOM IN YOUR BOAT More: Miles for Your Money A Com(ormble, Quiet Ride An Engine that Instantly Starts Assurance of Safe Trips Freedom from Fire Hazards A Bmd Range of Smooth Speeds Low Operating and Mainfenance Costs Reduced Insurance kates Smokeless, Odorless Exhaust Full Diesel Dependability An Engine that Can Be Easily Hand Cranked CHARLES G. WARNER CoO. | GMC TRUCKS Compare Them With Al! Others! PRICE - APPEARANCE - ECONOMY DURABILITY Notary Public in and for the Ter- ritory of Alaska. My commission expires November 15, 1943, sale at J. B. Burfar¢ & Co, gdv Jbuarn\ the Baranof. Subscribe for The Empire. Ifor the past few weeks on business. 'ness for the Grand Jury. e, CONNORS MOTOR CoO. PHONE 411

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