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NOME EAGER 5 Prisoners FOR GUARD Brought Here UNIT THERE By Thompson Maj. Graham Returns from Deputy Marshal Arrives Survey Trip to Nome with Federal Prison- and Fairbanks ers from Yakufat 400 persons attended a| Five prisoners from Yakutat were meeting in Nome at which|lodged in the Federal jail here after Jesse E. Graham and War- [arrivi on_the southbound steamer Officer H. H. Bond, U, S.|Alaska last night il instructors for the Alaska Arrested by Juneau U. S. Deputy National Guard, were present dur-|Marshal Sid Thompson and under a recent inspection trip of Na-|his guard from Yakutat, the prison- The two Army ers were Dan Henry, charged witl men returned via PAA e yes- assault with intent to rape; Jennie terday after a trip which took|Henry charged with contributing to them from Juneau to Fairbanks |the delinquency of ming Clifford Over mass rant Army ing tional Guard units and Nome Francic on At Nome the instructors made a urvey of the possibility of locat- ing a National Guard unit there if when an authorization from War Department is received. 209 Applications Out of 200 applications for en- rollment in a National Guard unit and the { Williams and Ernest id:\mk and disorderly charg |Secunda Bagay, charged with Iz ficking in illegal liquor | Henry, and Jennc Henry were |bound over to the grand, jury, and | Williams, Francis and Bagay were all sentenced to 6 months in jail Charges were made and senterces imposed in Yakutat. 5 eg in the far western town, 140 were cligible. Twenty-seven of the group | 2 G Aty Memorial Asks Elimination —Resolution Prosecu- tion of Operafors Fish traps entered the Alaskn} cligible were Eskimos, Before m(BORDER ite in the city limits for the con- draft a resolution asking the Nome a National Guard unit the use of sium for use as a drill floor, lockex‘iThaIIand and Fren(h Indo' tion Fairbanks Improving | TOKYO, March 11.—The Japan- he The agreement gives Thailand {producing areas also thousands of A meeting for the purpose of or- M. 0. Johnsons Are House and Senate. duced a memorial calling on Co""Leglslature. They will visit with their elimination of fish traps over a Army men left, the Nome City struction of an armory. Further DISPUTE representatives in the Legislature National Guard Armory af Nome the school building for military rooms as storage space for uni-} China Sign Japan's stallation of a rifle range and their Major Graham said that Com- €se sponsored peace agreement re- along fine” in their training sched- | Thailand and French Indo-China e parts of the Cambodia and Laos FI SH IRAPS acres of timber. |ganizing a Juneau Retail Merchants Baranof Hotel at 8 o'clock tonight. legislative scene today at long last Here from W[ange" In the upper house, Sepator Ed'{Wrangell. came in on the steamer gress to pass Alaska Delegate An-|gayghter and son-in-law, Dr. and five-year period. Council offered to the Territory a tion taken by Nome was to (w0 ask for an appropriation for a The Nome City Schools offered| SEI IlED training, designating the , gymna- | forms, the basement for the in- movie equipment for visual instruc-| Agreemen' pany C in Fairbanks is ‘“coming garding the border dispute between ule and are impraving rapidly. |has been signed. |Provinces which embraces rich rice ATTACKED IN ceor suReau for | Credit Bureau is to be held at the UG I N in a double-barreled attack from | Mz and Mrs. M. O. Johnson of ward Coffey, of , Auchorage. Inl0- | yyyon to stay here until after the thony J. Dimond's bill for gradual nr.c w. M. Whitehead. In the House, Rep. William Egan of Valdez introduced a resplution| the to authorizing and instructing Territorial Attorney General bring actions at law or equity challenge the right of fish trap owners to construct and maintain equipment, obstructing navigation. - - Skagway Pioneer Is Dead SKAGWAY, Alaska, March Mrs. Anna Eelma Black, pioneer recident of Skagway, passed away vesterday. She is survived by two| daughters, Mrs. G. C. Sipprell of Skagway, and Mrs. Frank Fe>ro of Prince Rupert, and a son George now at Fairbapks. e - . Myrtle Mellow with CAA at Anchorage Miss Myrtle Mello sails for An- chorage on the steamer Yukon to accept a position as stencgrapher with the Civil Aeronautics Authority. She has been doing clerical work at the U. S. Weather Bureau office here. At Anchorage, she will join her father, M. A. Mello, who is a carpen- ter on the air base. to| 11.—| MRS, MAHONEY BACK AFIER LONG VACATION Mrs, William T. Mahoney, wife of the U. S. Marshal, arrived to- ‘d:ly on the North Sea after a va- cation trip of several months in | the States. Mrs. Mahoney stopped |over in Ketchikan for several days | enroute to Juneau from Seattle. LEGISLATIVE BALL SET FOR MARCH 25 Date for the Legislative Ball was |announced today by Rep. John Mc- | Cormick, Chairman of the House {Entertainment .Committee, for the 25th of March in the Elks ballroom. The public is invited to attend. Further arrangements will be an- {nounced later. Edward Coffey is Chairman of the Senate Entertainment Committee EARLINGS STOP HERE AFTER TRIP OUTSIDE Mr. and Mrs. R. B. Earling arrived in Juneau on the steamer Yukon after several weeks spent in the States visiting their daughters whoe {are in school. Making a business trip out of the tour, Earling, who is manager of the Fairbanks branch of the United Smelting and Refining Company, visited company head- quarters in Boston. The Earlings are expected to leave for Fairbanks soon and are staying at the Baranof Hotel. 'MacDONALD HERE FROM FAIRBANKS Donald MacDonald, Alaska mem- Irving Krause, son of Mr. and|ber of the International Highway Mrs. G. E. Krause, and Paul Schnee,| Commission, arrived in Juneau last sail for Anchorage on the steam- Dight on the PAA Douglas plane er Yukon, They will be employed|from Fairbanks. by young Krause's father, G. E In Juneau on government busi- Krause, manufacturer of building|n¢ss. MacDonald is staying at the et Baranof Hotel. KRAUSE, SCHNEE OFF 10 ANCHORAGE THE DAILY A>LASKA EMPIRE, TUESDAY, MARCH 11, 1941 ROTARY DINNER DANCE IS SLATED FOR SATURDAY Club Opens Nominations| for New Board of Directors A Rotarian dinner dance will be held Saturday evening at the Bar- inof Hotel Gold Room, it was an- nounced today by, Chairman Horace Adams. Juneau Rotary Club mem- sers and invited friends will attend Those serving on the Committes vith Adams are Keith Wildes, Lou Hudson, C. H. Metcalfe, .George Zundborg, Dr. W. W. Council, Dr. W. M. Whitehead, Art Uggen, Jack Burford, Stanley. Jackson, George Schmidt, Rod Darnell, Tom Dyer, Ernie Parsons, John Bishop, John | Jones and C. C. Carnegie. Reservations should be made with he hotel. Teday Juneau Club opened nom- inations for the new Board of Di- rectors to be elected a month hence. Those nominated today were Charles ~arler, Rod Darnell, Dr. W. W. Council, Alex Dunham, C. H. Met- salfe, Ernie Parsons and Lou Hud- son. o E David Lloyd George, his farm in Chaxy , England, on his 78th birthday. Bbas been mentioned frequently Churchill’s IN THE | HOUSE INTRODUCED—H.B. 92, by Shat- tuck, to reimburse Minnie Field of Juneau $6,372 for care of indigent children. INTRODUCED—H B. 93, by Sha‘- tuck, to reduce the bounty on coyot- Visitors at today's meeting inclua- :d Senator Hjalmar Nordale of Fair- banks, Rep. Almer J. Petersou of Anchorage, Hack White of Peters-| burg and C. B. Arnold of Jureau. | 7 BILLION DOLLARST0 BE SOUGHT President, Congressional|'rom s20 050 " ° Authorities Agreed on | ana steans, o reduce the srocs Amount Requesfed - |and Means, to reduce the gross gold (Continued from Page One) |tax exemption from $20,000 to $10- | 000. | INTRODUCED—H.B. 95, by Ways |and Means, the general appropria- tion bill, calling for expenditures oi 1$4,469.362 for the next biennium. INTRODUCED—H.B. 96, by Lan- der, to prohibit the sale of liguor |anywhere in the Territory except | where Incorporated Cities or Schooi | Districts consent to sale by local | option elections INTRODUCED—H.B. 97, by der, to provide for a blank mary election, without par | nation- of candidates. INTRODUCED—H.B. 98, by der, to appropriate $40,000 to m- | burse persons paying tolls to the| Government for freight trdnsported {over any public road in Alaska. | INTRODUCED—H.B. 99, by Pel-| ersen, tc make the fiscal year | | gin July 1 instead of January 1 INTRODUCED—H.B. 100, by Do vis by request, to repeal municipa corporations amendments defini the powers of Mayors and Councils INTRODUCED — H.B. 101, by | Egan, to increase boat liquor licens es frem $100 to $500. INTRODUCED—H.B. 102, by Roz- ge by request, to provide for Cit Planning Commission. INTRODUCED—H.J .M. by Lander, asking Congress to appro- | President signs the bill it will give him unprecedented author- ity to manufacture or otherwise procure any defense article to turn over to any government whose defense he “deems of vital defense for the United States.” The President’s authority under the bill ends July 30, 1943, unless terminated earlier by a majority vote of the House and Senate. n- P Lan- | ‘WASHINGTON, March 11.—Presi- dent Rooseveit and Congressional authorities disclosed today that Con- gress will be asked for a seven bil- lion dollar appropriation to carry out the British Aid program under the legislation the President is ex- pected to sign late today or tomor- row, just as soon as the measure is finally given approval after agree- ment on a few minor amendments by the House as made by the Senate. The intention to ask for the sev- en billion dollar fund was disclosed | at a conference attended by mem- bers of the Senate and House appro- priations committees and other leg- islators. o i | 22, What specific items the money | will be used for is not disclosed but Congressmen said it will permit of the purchase of “all articles author- ized by the British Aid Bill." When asked what period the ap- propriation is for, the newsmen were told for the “life of the bill.” The seven million dollar sum to be asked is exclusive of the one billion three hundred million dollars for presen} war supplies in possession of the Army and Navy which may be priate for the survey of all strate- gic minerals in Alaska. INTRODUCED—H.J M. 23, by Pet- | erson, asking the appropriation Imi the Alaskan Fire Control Service| be increased to $75.000 per year. INTRODUCED—H.J.R. 6, by Eg&n. directing the Attorney General to bring suit to challenge the right of fish trap operators to construct and maintain equipment -chstructing navigation. { transferred to Great Britain or other nations, .- SEASON'S FIRST TOURIST ARRIVES The first round trip passenger aboard a Northland Transportation | Company vessel to come to Alaska in the 1941 season, is Miss Jeanette Inch, of Santa Rosa, California. She is on board the steamer North Sea, bound for Sitka. Miss Inch is an x-ray expert in the California city. ——————— PRODUCE MAN TO SITKA Bud Hamm, Alaska manager of the Pacific Fruit and Produce Company, passed through Juneau today on his way to Sitka. Hamm will return to Juneau for a short visit and then continue to the Westward. e TO VISIT SON Going to Sitka for a visit with her son, Mrs. A. A. Wakefield is aboard the North Sea booked from Seattle, Mrs. Wakefield will visit Neil Anderson, her. son, in Sitka - - JOINS HUSBAND | Brownell, Cochran and Walker, tQ | pastel paintings by Nina Crumy | plicabie to natives. PASSED—Committee Substitute | for H.B. 39, by Jenne, to appropriate $50,000 for an Alaska Women’s Home. $5,000 for criminal identification; vote 4-12. - - IN THE SENATE INTRODUCED—S.J M. 8, by Cof- fey, supporting Delegate Dimond’s bill for five year elimination of fish iraps. INTRODUCED—SB. 55, by D. C. Brownell, to make fathers respon- sible for the support of illegitimate | as well as legitimate children. INTRODUCED—S.B. 56, by D. C. appropriate $3.600 to purchase 24 of tribal native peoples of Alask: INTRODUCED—S.B. 57, by Ro- den, reducing the bond. for <liquor dispensaries from $2,500 to $500. INTRODUCED—S.B. 58, by Ro- den, to make moth pensions ap- INTRODUCED—S. B. 59 by Coch- KILLED—H.B. 76, to appropriate 000, Mrs. C. D. Bell, wife of the Navy [ran, to increase general wholesale doctor at Sitka, is on the steamer |liquor licenses from $500 to » grad- North Sea, Mrs. Bell is going to | uated scale from $500 to $5,000 ac- join her hushand. cording to business done and whole- — i |sale malt licenses from $100 to a CAFE MAN VISITS | zraduated scale from $100 to $5,000. James Xidas, partner with Sam | kg prey Pappas, in Sitka’s popular Arcade ARRIVES FROM KETCHIKAN Cafe, visited in Juneau today Whup{ R. R. Reagan of Ketchikan reg- the North Sea was in port. Xidas is | istered at the Baranof Hotel this returning to Sitka after a vacation | afternoon from the south on the Briatn’s premier during the world war, poses at The Welsh “wizard” as a likely sddition to Premieg war cabinet Appropriafions 0f $4,469,362 In House Bill A general appropriation bill call- ing for expenditure in the next biennium of $4469,362 was intro- duced by the House Ways and Means Committee today. The meas- ure provides for expenses of regular Territorial offices and boards from April 1 ,1941 to March 31, 1943. The $4,469,362 total compares with $4,423910 appropriated two years ago, with $3,886994.75 actu- ally expended up to last December 31 and with $4 3.20 recom- mended by the Territorial Board of Budget. Major cut in the bill is elimina- |tion of any appropriation for the | Alaska Planning Cecuncil, for wh |the Budget Board had asked $25 | 000. Other changes in Budget Board| recommendations were as follow. Entertainment at Governor’s | House cut from $4,000 to $3,000. | Support of ools within incor- porated district increased from | 750,000 to $780,462.31. | Construction of rural schools, new | item of $67,000. Tuition to incorporated towns, in- from $35,000 to $38,000. s in- tuition payment,| em for $3,000. | Deficiencies in transportation of | pupils, new item for $3464.69. Additicnal transpertation of pu- pils, new item for $10,000. Salary of Deputy Comi oner of Education, cut from $7,200 to $6,000 Stencgrapher for Commissioner of Educaticn, new item for $3,600. Publication of elementary course of study, new item for $2,500. Publication of Alaska School Bul- letin, eliminated $500 item. Traveling expenses of Commis- sicner of Education, cut from $5,000 to $4,000. University of Alaska experimental and extension work, cut from $54.- 000 to $23,800. University maintenance, $169,400. U ity of Alaska new build- ing, $386,500 item eliminated. Telephone lines, new item for $8,- :re d nev administration . and cut from $199,050 te Commissioner of Mines cut from $63,700 to $55,100. Assay Office increased from $25,- 000 to $33,000. Acquistion of books and curios for Museum, cut from $5,000 to $500. Health Department, cut from $87,- 576 to $57,500. Pioneers 'Home, cut from $223,100 to $221,900. Eagle bounties, new item for $10,- 000 added. Fisheries Experimental Commis- sion, $13,000 item eliminated. Department of Welfare cut from $87,005 to $80,405. Relief of Destitution, $300,000 to $240,000, ———————— ANDREES, TURNER SAIL Mr. and Mrs, Grover Andree, who have been the guests of Mr. and Mrs. Russell Maynard, sail today on the Yukon for Seward. enrpute,to their home in Nome. They are accompan- jed by Mrs. Andree's son Herbert Turner, who is bound for Anchorage. i W e FAIRHURST HERE Representative Hal Fairhurse of the Seattle Hardware Company ar- rived in Junéau on the North Sea this afternoon from the south. Here for several days, Fairhurst is stop- ping at the Gastineau. - ——— ST. PATRICK'S SILVER, TEA By the Junior Trinity Guild, to be held at the Trinity Hall, Saturday, March 15. From 2 to 6 pm. adv. —— NOTICE AIRMAIL ENVELOPES, showing air route from Seattle to Nome, on cut from of several weeks spent in the states | Yukon. sale at J. B, Burford & Co. adv. 3 SENATORS SPENDDAY REHASHING Unemptoyngrfi Compen- | sation Bill Is Finally De- clared Dead After Fight }a day, House Bill No. 2, broadening the application of unemployment afteroon by the Senate. | The demise of the bill left a wake |of incriminations, accusatiors and |injured feelings which required au |e itive on of the Senate be- | hind locked doors to straighten out. This morning Senator O. D, Coch- ran of Nome raised a point of orde: that a motion yesterday rescinding action in killing the bill was out of order. Cochran said the metion to rescind was in effect a motion to ye- censider and that it had not been made by a member of the nrevailing side, as required by Senate rule. President Henry Roden ruled against Cochran, reading from Rck- |erts’ Rules of Order that any vote | taken by an assembly may be rezind- |ed by a majority vote of the entire assembly, provided the vote has not |been followed by some subsequent :]crion beyond the power of the bocy to unde. Pcint Of Honor This brought Senator C. H. (Ala- |bam) LaBoyteaux of Livengood to his feet with what he said was “not a’'point of order, but a point of honor.” LaBoyteaux demanded to know |why the bill had not been sent back | to the House after the four-to-four vote killed it. Other bills disposed | of the Senate at the same session | were sent to the House, the Sena‘or | said. “I'm a plain man and represent plain people,” LaBoyteaux said. “This bill has come dewn to trickery. ! | They're trying to put something | |cver on us. You know doggone well | I'm opposed to paying any man any- thing he doesn't earn.” Executive Session Roden ordered an executive ses- sion of the Senate at 1:30 oclock behind locked doors, with the gai-| leries cleared and clerks excluded, | to determine why the bill had not | ben returned to the House. After this sessicn, Roden said he had nothing to report on what went Enjoying a ghostly resurrection for | compensation, was finally laid this | THE WEATHER (By the U. S, Weather Bureau) U. S. DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE, WEATHER BUREAU Forecast for Juneau and vicinity, beginning at 4:30 p.m., Mar. 11: Mostly cloudy with occasional very light showers tonight; partly cloudy Wednesday; not much cha: in temperaty lowest tempera- ture tonight about 38 degrees, highest Wednesday 43 degrees; southeasterly winds. Forecast for Southeast Alaska: Mostly cloudy with occasicnal very light rain or snow showers n north portion; partly cloudy with possibly local showers tonight in south portion; partly cloudy We nesday; little change in temperature; gentle to moderate variable winds, Forecast of winas along the coast of the Gulf of Alaska Dixon Entrance to Cape Spencer: Moderate southwesterly winds; partly cloudy; Cape Spencer to Cape Hinchinbrook: Moderate south- erly to southwesterly winds; local rain or smow; Cape'Hinchinbrook to Resurrection Bay: Moderate to fresh northeasterly winds; snov or rain; Resurrection Bay to Kodiak: Moderate to fresh northeriy northeasterly winds; snow or rain LOCAL DA Time Barometer Temp. Humidity Wind Velocity 4:30 pm. yesterday 30.03 45 58 SE 13 4:30 am. today .80 38 82 w 4 11:30 a.m. today 29.79 43 58 SE 11 gent | | | | to Weather Cloudy Overcast Overcast RADIO REPORTS TODAY Towest 4:30a.m. Precip. 4:30 a. temp. temp. 24 hours Weather =21 0 Clear 2 10 Snow -12 0 Clear 11 0 Cloudy 20 05 Cloudy =17 0 r 12 0 Cloudy Clear Cloudy Clou Pt. Cldy Snow Rain Cloudy Cloudy Pt. Cldy Clear Clear Max. tempt. last 24 hours -16 Station Barrow Fairbanks Nome Dawson Anchorage Bethel St. Paul Atka Dutch Harbor ‘Wosnesenski Kanatak Kodiak Cordova Juneau Sitka Ketchikan Prince Rupert Prince George Seattle Portland San Francisco® 32 217 24 3 27 35 38 51 38 36 22 40 46 50 49 46 WEATHER SYNOPSIS A weak storm area was movinz northeastward in the Gulf of Alaska this morning and local areis of rain were falling from (he extreme northwest portion of Sou'heast Alaska to Prince William Sound. Cold, continental air prevailed generally elsewhere over Al aska, and light snow was falling at scattered points from the Tan- ana Valley to Kodiak Island thi; morning. Generally clear sk prevailed over the northern and wastern portion of Alaska, and part- ly cloudy to cloudy skies over the Bering Sea and Aleutian Islands. Rain or snow had fallen during the previous 24 hours alor tne coast from Cape Spencer to the ‘Aleutian Islands, and at some points in the Interior along the Tanana River Valley, The greatest amount of precipitation was 2.93 inches which was reported at Cordova. Tem- peratures continued cold over the interior of Alaska with tempera- tures below zéro over most of th2 area from Fairba and the Alaska Range to Barrow and the lower Kuskokwim Valley. The low- est temperature was minus 21 degrees which was recorded at Barrow this morning. Partly .cloudy skies with moderately high ceilir and good visibilities prevailed over the Juneau-Ketchikan air this morning, The Tuesday morning weather chart indicated a low center of 36 35 20 38 b4 54 53 67 65 kg . | on in the meeting, but other Senat- ors reported the Senate's secretaries | had been exonerated of blame by | vote of the Senators. { LaBoyteaux, insisting upon an| explanation, had to be silenced sev- eral times by Roden at this morn- ing’s session, “If youll read your Bible,” said the irate Senator from Livengood, “you’ll see there was only one man who was ever resurrected after hel was dead, and here’s this bill come| back from the dead.” Cochran declared the Senate’s action .in rescinding and the Presi- dent’s ruling allowing it was taken “in the teeth of our rules.” Sullivan Point Upheld It was finally upon a point of| order by Senator Leroy Sullivan olt Nome, however, that Roden re-!| versed his rulings. Sullivan con- | tended that though Roberts’ Rules| of Order permit rescinding of ac-‘ tion, the bill did not take its regu- lar course as laid down by the| Senate rules and so the reseinding action constituted a suspension of the rules, which would require a| two-thirds ‘vote. The vote was ac- tually five to three. Roden agreed with Sullivan and declared the bill dead: The meas- ure would have required unemploy- ment compensation contributions to be paid by all employers of one or more persons, instead of eight or more, as at present. An appeal from this ruling by Senator Don Carlos Brownell died when it failed to gain a second, Roden' instructed the secretaries that in. the future, ‘the moment a House bill is voted dawn by the Senate, the Assistant Secretary 1s ! | | to notify the House immediately. The Senate adjourned until 11 o'clock tomorrow, without having passed or considered a single bill all day. > CONWAYS RETURN Mrs. J. J. Conway, daughter Maribeth and son Charles, passed through Juneau today, returning to their Sitka home after a two J. J. Conway is a prominent Sitka merchant. - WHY SUFFER with your feet? Phone 645. Chiropodist Dr. Steves. fadv.) 'WAKE UP YOUR LIVER BILE= Without Calomel—And You'll Jump Out o Bed in the Morning Rarin’ to Go ‘The liver should pour out two pints of lquid bile into your bowels dily. If this bile is not flowing . freely, your food may ot digest. It may just decay in the bowels. Gas bloats up your stomach. ‘;’3 x';t. pated, You feel sour, sunk looks punk, takes those good, effective Carter’s ttle Liver Pills to get these two pints of bile flowing freely to make you feel “up and up.” Amazing in making flow freely. Ask for Carter’s Little Liver by name. Stubhornly refuse anything else. Price: 2fi.¢. consti- ‘world 1 to make it his particular business|: months’ trip to Palm Springs, Cal. |4 990 millibars (29.24 inches) was located at 57 degrecs nox degrees west, and a second low center of 1,000 millibars (29.53 inches) was located at 31 degrees north and 126 degrees west, and a third low center of about the same pressure at 32 degrees north and 126 de- grees west. An extensive high pressure area was located cast of Southeast Alaska, and a second high above 1030 millibars (30.41 inch- es) was located to the north of Bering Straits, and a third high pressure center of 1032 millibars (3047 inches) was located at 54 de- grees north and 155 degrees west. Juneau, March 12—Sunrise 7:24 &m., unset 6:53 p.m. SEATTLE, - SPOKANE ELECTING AT BARANOF C. R. Griffin, Trick and Mu representative, arrived in Juneau this afternoon from the south. Griffin is registered at the Bar- anof Hotel, CLOTHES that are CLEANED OFTEN—Wear Longer! Send YOUR GARMENTS to Triangle We have the facilities to give your clothes that new ap- Let Us Help _You Today! (BY ASSOCIATED PRES! “Voters of Washington State's two principal cities are going to the polls today. s : ¥ In Seattle, interest in the munici- pal election’ centers in the contest between County Auditor Earl Milli- ken and Police Judge William Devin, candidates for Mayor. In Spokane the proposal for muni- cipal ownership of the:Spokane El- actric distribution facilities is ex- pected to bring out a heavy vote. ——————— Sl’ The Daily alaska Empire has the largest paid circulation of any Al aska newspaper. Illlllllflllll[IIJIIIlIIIIIIIIIIIll‘llllllwllllulflllllfllllilIII;IIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIlllli-il: PHONE 374 GLACIER HIGHWAY Sl DELIVERY DAILY TRIPS ' LUMBER —— GROCERIES "SHORTY" WHITFIELD