The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, September 11, 1941, Page 2

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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, THURSDAY, SEPT. 11, 1941. ANNUALMEETING THOR SAYS e 6N . SHIP SUNK HE WEATHE (By the U. S. Weather Bureau) U. S. DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE, WEATHER BUREAU FORECASTS: Juneau and vicinity: Fair and not much change in temperature tonight and Friday, lowest temperiture tonight about 48 degrees, highest Friday 63 degrees; gentle to moderate northeasterly to east- erly winds, 'Maneuvers Are Amusing—No. 2: BRINGS RICHES If IsaRocky Road fo - OLDCAPITAL ~SALMON SEASON ' POPULATION 1o perersBure Romame n u' S' Armyl)elay in ARRC Gathering‘ onstruction has been and more is under way lation has been surging upward for the past four years, Bates pointed out, and it has proved im- possible for dwelling to maintain the pace. Only de- fense workers and their families are offered quarters in the new section completed The popu- | Times Are Good Neverthel times are good in Sitka; thanks not only “to the de- fense work but also to the pros- perous fishing season which Sitka enjoyed this year in common with the rest of Southeast Alaska. The canneries were busy all the time, money was plentiful and there’s still the fall fishing pack to come. All in all, the city is developing consistently and its future seen:s | assured.” | 2Halibufers | Sell, Seattle SEATTLE, Sept. 11 '— Only halibuters unloaded here today, one from the Western banks, and one| from the local banks. | From the Western banks, the| Liberty brought in 4500 pounds | two per pound construction | can flag, an even more prosperous | HIS ATTENTION winter than usual may be expected, | e N because both resident fishermen |and cannery employees earned high sinancial returns during the season.| N Ringstad has been superintendent of the Petersburg cannery since | 1934, The plant was purchased by |P.AF. in 1929, | AR ¥ S S Three Building | - [] ‘p ' he says, “Any veteran can re- erml S ssue member when an army visit popular as a skunk on a picnic | The civilian attitude has changed Three residential building jobs|plenty in the past 18 months will start immediately, according to|They're friendly now.” building permits obtained at the| He points out instances, Citi- city engineer’s office here yesterday.|zens at every overnight stop ar- Katherine Nye, of the Evergreen range entertainment for the 62nd. Apartments, took out a permit to| Thomasville Ga. Andalusia, Am construct a one-story storehouse 2 g ey with a chimney, 14 by 20 feet in|P2U5¢L all. bave big street danges. Young was taken off the Baranof here yesterday, on the report that he had stowed away at Seward. According to his story, however,| Young was partying with some; steergae passengers leaving Seward and the boat pulled out with him | aboard. | When the party died down and| Young realized he was ‘headed| south, he said he went to the purser and offered to pay his fare. Young | told authorities here today that he had money in the National Bank of Commerce in Seattle. If meney for which he has wired is sent him, Young will be released | and allowed to return to Sewar,| according to Assistant Distric, At-| torney Lynn Gemmill. TWO JUNEAU DOCT MOVE OFFICES INTO TRIANGLE BUILDING lowan size, near the apartment house. Lizzie Peterson, 913 Eighth Street, | obtained a permit to build a rock| fill 50 by 50 feet in size, and to| make a 4 by 25 foot addition to the front of her house, with the addition of three rooms upstairs. Bert Jensen, of 1018 Alley, be-| tween Ninth and Tenth Streets, got permission to build a 5 by 15 foot addition on the west end of his| home. | - eee which sold for 16% and 141/2 cents| | From the local banks, the Arme brought in 1,100 pounds of halibut,| selling for 171/2 cents straight, and| 700 pounds of sable selling for 9% cents per pound, | SET FOR SUNDAY Funeral plans for Mrs. E. C. Adams, Juneau resident who died in St. Ann’s Hospital yesterday morning, have been set for Sunday afternoon at 2 o'clock Services will be conducted by Eugene Hopper of the Seventh Day Adventist Church in the Charles W. Carter Chapel, and interment will follow in the Moose Plot of the Evergreen Cemetery. The remains are now AAAAA oo — : | {ture record of the wonders of Ton- |the answer. Folks were dubious at) , ) | sass National Forest, Joseph- Yolo,|first about having an army ou|for physiotherapy. There is a dark | s b feS o 1, {room attached for the development Yakima movie photographer, ar-|their hands. Now theyre glad to} f the x-ray plates. |rived last night on the Ranger 8, have the boys stop.” 9 W s ! « ks G Forest Service boat, along with || That's the consensus. They prove| | Forest Inspector Charles G. Bur-|it. At Andalusia, the MP’s didn't | g . s - 2 dick. arrest a single soldier for breaking | G S IOD AY Movie (ameraman To "Shoot” Here Here to complete his motion pic- Yolo is principally interested in taking fishing scenes, winding up his series of Totem pole shots and recreational areas in district, Burdick reported. Burdick returned from a two- week trip to Ketchikan, Wrangell Forest Service work and outlined work for the coming winter season. He reported almost every building getting some pictorial records of the| the Juneau| and Petersburg, where he inspeeted | American Legionnaires set up can- teens. Fleets of cars take the boys around town. in Deportment Little towns, where the outfit only stops five minutes, if at all, have flags and “welcome” signs | Dr. L P. Dawes and Dr. J. O.| | Rude, Juneau physicians and sur- ! geons, have moved their offices to 'a new location, and are now lo- | ,cated on the second floor of the) | Triangle Building. The offices were! t Scouts snap to attention | {OTMmerly located in the old First :_‘: 'ml:oiomn‘:: Sgose:iy e E‘nlu,rx_‘\National Bank Building at Front it 4 ‘and Seward. prise, Ala., it's typical. Towns-| 2™ k 3 people give every boy in the Dr. Dawes and Dr Rude hav:e column a bag of boiled pemuu‘taken five rooms in the Triangie (They boll new - crop peanms}Building facing Franklin Street. there, Take the word of a dam- The offices were formerly occupied yankee reporter that theyre swell) |0V the National Guard, Dr. M. J.| I talk with local policemen, think- | Whittier, and the Peter PanBeauty ‘)l get the dope on army hell- | pe. ::ii;: i i p | Besides consultation rooms and| wrhese kids behave. Better than @ Waiting room, there is an x-ray % RN i ‘her x-ray unit the same age. Discipline’s|100m: With a Fisc ghotians g A P installed. The room will be used the 11 p.m. back-to-camp curfe Not a single case of drunkenness| reported. Cooperation The -following are final scores of You see other instances of ci- games played in the two major | vilian goodfellowship. In T):omas<!1eagues this afternoon as received |ville, Ga., I wanted a cold water-|up to time of going to press: {melon for the mess. No grocery | National League had 'em on ice. I called Jim 5; Pittsburgh 7. |Keaton, ice plant executive. He! American League Boston Travels South Halted for a few days stay in the | Federal Jail here, Ira Keller, an morning after several days visiting Icwan, resumed his trip south on the Baranof after charges of issuing bad checks had been dismissed by the District attorney at Fairbanks. Keller was taken off a south- bound ship a few days ago on telegraphic warrant from Fair- banks. On investigation it was found he had left enough money at the Interior city to cover all but $23 of the checks He wrote while working on a defense job there. Keller posted the $23 at the mar- shal's office here before proceeding south. BROTHER OF MRS. DRAKE DIES Mrs. James Drake, of Juneau, to- day received word of the death of her brother, C. C. Slater, at Sara- sota, Florida. Slater had been ill as a result of a severe attack of pneumonia, Mrs. Drake said. - BROWN BEAR DUE HERE The Fish and Wildlife Service boat Brown Bear is due to arrive here 1 Again was instructed to investigate the :l:loucfug(‘,aori..A;a.SkaAJm?-m,m i ;S;on last night on its way to|g, Mmgon',;,‘ . me'l;::le::m" o b, £ 2 4, e N Steel 68, Commonwealth and South- |didn't know me from Adam. No,| Detroit 5; New York 4. at the Carter Mortuary. BUY DEFENSE BONDS "~ BARNEY GOOGLE THEN T GENRIL G\TS \ERY CONF\DENT'&L WIE ME AN SEZ - * COUSIN;’ 4E SEZ —- TW WEESBIE JEEBIES- | they didn’t have ‘em to sell, hua‘l Chicago 1; Philadelphia 2. in. Wrangell being used as storage i space for canned salmon, with the he'd fix me up. Insisted I take| Cleveland 8; Washington 5. ush pack even being warehoused five. BUY DEFENSE STAMPS at the Wrangell Institute. “Nobody in Georgia eats lessn this week-end after a trip to the Aleutian Islands. Captain John O. Sellevold is skipper, BUY DEFENSE STAMPS LE Wift Family | i i [ oN IN(REASE‘Canneryman FI IS Hel’e 1 . § " _“,;_T%__ Southeast Alaska: Fair and not much change in temperature to- f | Says Community Is | AR B EBETTER STEP ON < fo Hold Up Gruen- night and Friday; gentle to. moderate variable winds, but moderate E | Y AP Feature Service Writer \'T- THE FIRST OUTFIT 2%, R i | to fresh mortherly in Lynn Canal. « | Southeast Alaska Banker| Prospering ‘ % ARE RECEIVING NOTES ing’s Return Vessel Lost by Submarine, ~ wina ana weather along the Guit of Alaska fonight ana Friday: i i | LAUREL, Miss uncle Sam’s FROM THE GIRLS AGAIN w J —H ‘ Dixon Entrance to Cape Spencer: moderate to fresh westerly fo : Says Housing Prob- e 30 et cent of this|SOIdkeTs aTe catching more woo Bocause of the Timess of a ain- Atack Last June=Fly- | northwestery winas, fair; Cape Spencer to Cape Hinchinbrook: preximately 40 per wr'u( o A le than they're pitching. cctor of the Alaska Rural Rehabili- 3 I I d Ha | moderate westerly winds, fair; Cape Hinchinbrook to Resurrection lem Severe T A thaough pur.| Riding with the 62nd brigade tation Corporation, | the ~annual Ing Icelan ] | Bay: moderate variable winds, fair; Resurrection Bay to Kodiak: (I]‘l'”l"“n:?m "“’“1,“:. “:mfim l.';:x,:l; from Florida to Louisiana, it'seasy meeting of thg cooperative group at R 3 moderate northerly winds, fair. Sitk: Federal housing project!jense-Lend Act, George Ringstad,|0 S€€ that Miss America ‘15 defm“ :::megawxll m;\t/(;fd:c-]d i\:n[‘:.l‘:n‘l‘l:lr “,A:gs}‘flN(‘ Zg‘r\!_’)[sml)ho Icemémd LOCAL DATA : for defense workers on the south|cuperintendent of the Pacific Fish- |21y daffy about uniforms. What's e o o s il i R ele oA wions e Barometer Temp. Humidity Wind Velocity ~ Weather B side Japonski Island is nearing|eries cannery at Petersburg, .sald|more, she isn’t sitting demurely Ei:‘:xe‘% Gruen}x,nn : 4 (’"v"’_’m*“”"_ tion's Capital, re-| 4:30 p.m. yesterday 20.84 59 63 s 2 Overcast n and approxima 100|today he had been informed by|home with her embroidery, walting firsi mM“gn'g was - originally|vealod that the 1200 ton Icelandie| 4:30 am. today .. 20.88 49 “ W 4 PLCly 4 of the two-unit dwellings already |authoritative officials. lm"{ rnm.’:u(‘f‘t Sbhf goes_lx:m;g,z:s ::; ichddbiddhto take pige todiy, The ‘p;m “Kekla” sunk late in June| Noon today 2092 65 35 NE 10 Clear [ wre occupied, W. A mu\l. s:ivm; Rnul\(;xrl Ann:xlrl u;»m Pelcrzburz ou doh TIENE PO B delay in the meeting date prevents|by a submarine enroute from Ice-| RADIO REPORTS and Ketchikan banker, said today. vesterday in the four-passenger . - . - e 4 : : e . o’ . i & ¥ . ‘] g o] - | the return of Governor Gruening!iand to Canada. TODAY Bates, Vice-President of the Fir XV:WJ S:ur.pl.anr,. of \lh:PdP;t'Lr?‘)urg bo(?n;“n:lhx:)\:t.sit;‘;erfl:h&s;n"s:):;:"‘x; [to diineau, 1t was ponted out. The| Thor said Tt om0 ¥ B " e Bank of Sitka and Cashic """"g"]r, oy \[ICI '.“’J’O i "“,. tn%, “"_ She “‘p & & hobe i,m'\ Hor | | Governor left here Tuesday for the|(he crew were lost. Six survivors| gtation last 24 hours temp. tempt. 24hours Weather ger of thie Minets and Merghants '1 '“ammj_,"rr';",’,l ‘:)’;”;d hi m,‘?" aps s o ]:gw"v y :’ Wl Lok | Interior and Westward, with at- were picked up by a British war-| parrow 31 23 31 o Drizzle Bank at Ketchikan, stopped in Ju- |“he ¢annery of ‘;“T 1088 d ‘Sl‘: e,|name and address info his truck.| - Cion at a sitting,” he ex-|tendance at_the meeting one of his ship. The “Hekla" was Icelandic, pgirhanks 51 % % 05 Overcast neau overnight after flying from \\,m‘ Is v x.?nm{, their {wo daugh erS.;Tmul.)le is, she s tied it to a rof At 3 | chief objects Yowned and flying the Icelandic | nome 0 0 . = iy Sitka. He left by plane for the|Miss Geraldine Ringstad, Juneau|and it makes him the maneuver's|pPlained. y | B9 flag 5 50 Cloudy” Pirst City this morning |High School instructor, and Miss| first casualty. | That's the way it goes. Towns-| L e Dawson . 58 01 ly : " =g Jeanette Ringstad, Social* Security s instance. | folk are 99 44/100 friendly. . y aald Anchorage . 63 41 50 0 Overcast 125 Buildings That isn't an isolated instan: | i % oy Office employee, at the Baranof i ot re Immorality? Vice? Army doctors | Bethel 53 49 50 16 Rain The housing project, designed to| Outside Donalsonville, Ga. I get 5 viote & . {Hotel. Mr. and Mrs. Ringstad’siy fash of issile heading our €ay it's large exaggerated poppycock.| St. Paul .51 I 50 0 Fog alleviate die intensely oveyerowded )y, 15, jo Rellingham o ruently, 1 duck. It catches| Venereal diseass is far less in the| | Atka 57 52 50 o Cloudy R ¥ /6’ 135 twoe : Y ? o s L ! defense area, will have 125 two-| o Liocneronc” combination of| Vo y. B BT viban | p Sl g = & b4, it unit frame buildings when com- | . Maj. Harold Nathan, knockin: y | s T #E7 |high prices, increased demand and | " A |age groups | Cardova .68 49 53 [} Cloudy pleted, Bates sald. Moderate month- | senerally heavy salmon runs, which|°ff 1is glasses, Its another note, 860 ; al overnmen | Dean 63 el 9 o Clear ly rents of $ $21 and $26, vary-|gave Alaska fishermen and packers‘tucked in a booklet Take a w;xfl}f duwnt,cwnl B::;r i Py g rs b s i ing acpording fo, size of.To0mS and | ome of thelr et succomeful taamote] i ihe. alNe,, NG 1, | baidneods| ot e yereel i 4 doctor — 4 oo s = o g with two-bedroom. residences draw- |1 secent years, bas been reflocted| D9t calvt take redit, for the ro-|Advisee, (i you dom's S50 at| Headed for quick wislis at Ar- R Rupert . 78 P 51 0 Pt. Cldy R e ey mank ‘afe charged.| oo e Aoiiee SHenE af DS otias | RN Gt The il obviously | the dance with decent, girls for |chorage, Kodiak, Cordova and Val- u arla' Prince Rupert . 3 . i ¥ i Each- uriit was built at an overall | burg. canneries, Ringstad. said, , His|meant it, for Pvt, Nick Rimo, thelevery, one .yow,.see, sofug up to Id;." Ja “]O",'k",,t”,‘;";'.,,,‘,'f”'m'(". J P;m“ ‘Gemge T 0 5 T Cloudy cost of $3600 under direction of [F.AF, two-line plant packed 190,000 major’s clerk, riding n “’"“‘-\‘:’“‘l lb""“""*““d e e o “iuf:’?"}’;fffi..:;. i kg on Gl & 66 ® a8 34 Cloudy b : 3 it—1 ” t. I'll bet you |8ress, lei @ i 2 | 3 ¥ ¥ jefense hous xperts. cases of sockeye, pink, cohoe and|Handsome Nick has a lush head|it—Ill buy yeu a ha you | " s ; e O | ; ’ Iof curly hair, so we pass the note|another hat I can show you ten |the McKinley. | Portland .6 52 54 30 Overcast { Population of 5,500 |chum salmon approximately three| urly hair, so I ‘d" o o Wi (Be (A Ori o Bries | WoLiAy atay ' here r rom ( psalgy s sl & 4 9 Pt. Cldy “ 3 5 o es Bl S o > plant’s | i o -ages signa- | drinking sodas e Ste . Although accurate figures are | times greater than the plant’s 1940ito him in middie-aged resigna [makiak sodus for every B (ER- . U visted many oltime Al S N i D | df T e . o e, T eitove. th popula. [Back aRA. the largest. total estabe | ion {inicliguo < Dimond visited many oldtime 4 Says Note Delivered fo WEATHER SYNOPSI i tion of the Sitka area is well over |lished since the cannery first went| Popular Front iyoursell- ; e da e MG Tader® and . b Partly cloudy or cloudy skies prevailed over most of Ala.\lfa ”‘{' 5500 at present,” Bates said, add- |into operation in 1898, under the! College girls in Mississippi t0ss| I did and he’s right. Territorial departments here Bulganan Mlnls'er morning _except clear or partly cvoudy skies over the southeast por- l ing ¢ while the population may | direction of August Buschmann, | just as many notes as mill-workers | | Dimond said he MY hive: 10 4 tion, Rain had fallen during the past 24 hours from Lhe‘ Aleutian shift somewhat when defense pro- POW.in Seattle, : |in Alabama. The colonel's lady and | gy i oy : Ibe back in Washington, D. C. by| LONDON, Sept, 11—Russia has| 1slands to the Canadian Boundary as far squth as the .‘slg:k: Range ject construction is completed, the| ~Fine weather was one of. theljudy O'Grady have the same idcniflflfi'fllfifl'fl' September 25, at the latest. due to delivered a note to the Bulgarian| and to the Arctic Ocean. The g-eatest amount of precipitation W}“‘l, old Russian Capital City will bene- |75t important. factors contrbut-|apoyt the army. | e %h 5 {bills concerning Alaska develop-|Government warning that it has| 25 hundredths of an inch which wis recorded at Dutch Harbor. The fit permanently from the Army|inE.fo phe successtul seqson.’ RIBE-) 'y gk Maj, Nathan about wis | Boat Jaunt | ments which are pending in both become “a jumping off place” for| highest temperature yesterday afternoon was 71 degrees at Ketchi- and Bases now being con-| T AS PEBES ORto ThEL IR Wi B uniiar? Ea ® IHouse and Senate. Whether the German military action against the| kan and the lowest last night 33 degrees at Barrow. Clear (o structed i : i;xhx:;lilfmiuz, l:fal‘y bl‘)'t,, wc_ m;‘ “Just better feeling betweenlh‘sm}a“ |order issued yesterday for all Rep- Soviet Union, a Moscow radio broad-| broken high clouds and goed visibilities prevailed over the Juneau- Despite the Japonski Island | oumatie conditionss o |184k¢soldiers and 1941 civilians”| resentatives to be on hand for an cast said. Ketchikan airway this morning: housing program, newcomers to R w. e i | o T | Taking a steamboat ride which he | important session Tuesday will The ncte was delivered yesterday | The Thursday morning weathe: chart Indicated a low pressure he 14-\‘ hl‘\l] find it r’llf‘hcu‘lk‘ »ngMad ;?oxxtted .Wt e ol TIE_A BIG QTONE didn’t intend to make got Robert F. change the delegate’s plans is not to the Bulgarian minister by For-| center was located to the northwest of Alaska and a second low : ((L:x:“ at 1(([01: living quar :l:;o;i\‘l’h]?n]mrzb"rg “‘}'mu”y hfl: one | ™ 1T S0 WE'LL Young in trouble, he told authori-known. cign Commissar Molotov, the broad-| pressure center to the southeast of Southeast Alaska. A high pres- 0 secure satisfactory lving quar- g e highest apnual per capita in- Y 3 v { z 2 ers, although much new private|comes of dny :ify undle’r “‘le“e“_j BE SURE T0.GET ties here today. cast stated. | sure center of 3052 inches was located at 47 degrees north and 155 oty f i | | degrees west and a high crest extended northward over the Alasko/ 3»3 Peninsula. Juneau, September 12 — Sunrise 6:20 a.m., sunset 7:28 p.n. P Go to Anchorage Headed for Ancherage, Mr. Mrs. L. E. Witt and son L. E. Witt, Jr., left here on the McKinley this friends in Juneau. Witt was formerly manager of| Ithe Sanitary Piggly-Wiggly market" ! here. The Witt family arrived | here Sunday on the Aleutian and stopped over as house guests of Mr.| |and Mrs. W. C. Jensen, at the Jen- |sen apartments. In Anchorage, Witt will be rep- resentative for the Pacifiz Fruit and | Preduce Company and for Carstens meat products. - e Hixson and Hodges Open Rental Agency Willlam E. Hixson and James Hodges of Juneau are planning to open a real estate rental agency in Juneau in the near future, with offices in the Juneau Radio Serv- ice building at Second and Sew- ard. They will handle rentals for all of Juneau. Within a short time, Hixson and Hodges plan to develop the West Juneau district, building homes there on some 300 lots. At the pres- ent time they are open for rental business. { BOAT IN TROUBLE " OFF MARION ISLAND | IS REPORTED HERE There was no report here today on the fate of a seine boat, re- ported last night to be foundering north of Marmion Island. The report was made here by! Capt. Arthur Ryning, of the Mec-| Kinley. Capt. Ryning said he| sighted the vessel as the McKinleyi was approaching Juneau, turned a| searchlight on the boat and saw it | was lying on its side, apparently in dist , but he noted no activity aboard. Contacted by the U. S. Marshal's office, the George D., native fish- ing boat captained by Albert Frank, NEW YORK, Sept. 11. — Closing ern 7/16, Curtiss Wright 9%, In- ternational Harvester 53%, Kenne- | cott 36%, New York Central 12%,' Northern Pacific 7%, United States ' Steel 56%, Pound $4.04, | i L DOW, JONES AVERAGES The following are today’s Dow, Jones averages: industrials 127.15, rails 29.32, utilities 18.58. i BEAR COSTS 875 d Charles A. Moore was fined $75 and costs today in Petersburg when he pleaded guilty to shooting black bear without proper license. AND‘SNUFFY SMITH L\SSEN NARD BIRD - NOWRE QW' BlL TUEWN SELECTEES NOW 8N OFF Y UEEN'S FULLR KUMGUHTS HE JUST WaNTS WS GET SH\PPED | YE ToL ME O THWK HE'S TO S\BER\A - WE SEEN GOt Q STAND-W WY THE AN NANE ON e T OL AN \WNTER o PRWPPINE CONY ON =)y G g By et | K "&.TO\D\\;}\&\EQ\{\EE\PR\E“E_%\OR&S \.\TX\E\N?‘H“BQO& T GENRILS TONGHT 1RST \ERR'S : ALMANAC HE'S S0 DUMS WE THINKS STy “\NESTERN WAMISPHERE" _ & HoG MERT DURN \T % T ReCKON ULL HEN TO STBN OWT' HERE BILLY DeBECK TTWLL MORNY — o |Jenson of Juneau, a0d 15t night on the Mount McKinley after a several months vacation trip in the States. Frisk stopped in Minnesota and in Michigan, and| |returned here to re-enter school. Lenore Anderson Romer filed suit in Federal Court here today asking divorce from Jack W. Romer on the charge of cruelty. The couple was married here in June of 1940. LEROY FRISK BACK Leroy Frisk, nephew of Mrs. Anna returned here - — BUY DEFENSE STAMPS BUY DEFENSE BONDS EXCELLENT - WINES SINCE THE «© POCKET CANDID CAMERA IN THE ELEGANT EIGHTIES Since the “Elegant Eight- ies” the name Italian Swiss Colony has meant Califor- nia wines at their finest. Today, that 60-year tradi- tion of excellence underlies every bottle of CoLoNy SpeciaL. These are wines of fine body, rare bouquet, and unforgettable flavor. Truly superb wines at a popular price. Wines you can serve with pride—but without extravagance. ‘Einuluss || On Savings Accounts ® Money available at any time. There’s an Italian Swiss Golony W ine taSuit Every Palate and- Every Purse. PRl v o ® Start an account with $1 or more, Current 4% Rate Rlaska Foderal Savings and Loan . of Junean Phone 3 GENERAL OFFICES - SAN FRANCISCO »

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