The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, May 13, 1942, Page 4

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PAGE FOUR 8 THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE—JUNEAU, ALASKA s M y Credits and Debits N Daily Alaska Empire el AL l‘.N:hv-n’ every evening except Sunday by the (Bremerton News-Searchlight) EMPIRE PRINTING COMPANY As Churchill, Roosevelt and other leaders fore- Second and Maln Streets, Juneau, Alaska. cast months ago, Japan continues to win successes HELEN TROY MONSEN E * . 4 g President jn the Pacific. The fall of Bataan was a blow to the MAY 13 B SRRARD Vice-President and Business MAnAker ity States. It will release great numbers of vet- il ‘Carter Entered in the Post Office in Juneau as Second Class Matter. oran Jap troops for fighting in other theatres. The g SUBSCRIPTION RATES J. B. Burford Delivered by carrier in Juneau and Douglas for §1.25 per month, Magnificent American-Filipino defenders did far more By mail. postage paid, at the following rates: than could have been expected, They were terribly ar, in adv 00; six s, in advance, $6.00; one 06 Sear. in advance, $12.00; six months. In advance, $6.00: | oot of food, medicines and certain types of am- Subscribers will confer fasor if they will promptly noify | munition. Flesh and blood could only do so much. Office of any fa or irregularity in the de- (“,..r.,r.‘\ T & The end was foredoomed from the beginning, and News Office. 602: Business Office, 374. it is to their eternal glory that they made the enemy & MEMBER OF ASSOCIATED PRESS pay a tremendous price for his victory. The recent Press is exclusively entitled to the use for | pyjtish ship losses in the Indian Ocean may, in the news dispatches credited to it or not other- 4 his paper and also the local news published long run, prove even more serious that the loss of Bataan. They help pave the way for a Japanese drive on India. And it is very doubtful if the Brit- ALASKA CIRCULATION GUARANTEED TO BE LARGER THAN THAT OF ANY OTHER PUBLICATION NATIONAL REPRESENTATIVES — Alaska Newspapers, 1011 | India’s defense American Build Seattle, Wash Julia Terhune Edwin P. Pond Roscoe M. Laughlin Art Thane Mrs. D. F. Tomlinson ish will be able to muster a first-class force for | | There is news, however, on the credit side. The | HOROSCOPE “The stars incline but do not compel” Japs have taken some severe blows from the United | Nations’ air forces in the Australian and Burma the- | Jap attack on Alaska, from the Aleutians. Tt known that we are sending hea Alaska closely-held military secret. If Japan could seize Al- askan bases she would be in a position to carry the war directly to continental United States. She must be prevented from doing that at all costs. You can be certain that, come what may, Alaska will not beq another Pearl Harbor. Hurt Feelings | Sponsored by the National Safety Council, the| (New York Times) | War Production Fund to Conserve Manpower has The Budapest press is annoyea becanse Under- | been launched by a group of national industrial ex- | Secretary of State Sumner Welles recently hinted that | ecutives to extend the safety drive to all fronts. Fig- | the United States would have to declare war on Hun- ures of the national accident loss are alarming, Fatal |¢ary, Bulgaria and Rumania if their Governments and non-fatal accidents last year cost as many pro- }‘"“ not stop being so helpful to the Axis. The “"", AFETY PROGRAM | ductive man-days as would be required to build near- atres, The American Navy is constantly picking off | Jap troop and supply and fighting ships, Action su(-h, as this, steadily, if slowly, brings nearer the day when | 2 ry will be in sight stil k for a| Hanl s s o WY I Suon ‘_r!he war. The Army and Air Force S are under promising influences, but the Navy may suffer some sort of | | setback or minor damage. HEART AND HOME: Women | should sign contracts and should ! v reinforcements to| though their precise extent is, of course, a| 1y twice the battleship strength of the American and British navies combined. And the first month of this year has shown a continuing ures. The Manpower Fund will seek rise in these fig- suffering under to extend safety | ments. Consequently we fgnored the declarations and | | noyance is a product of hurt pride. Five helpless | | minor Governments declared war on us after the |attack on Pearl Harbor: Rumania. Slovakia, Hungary |and Bulgaria on Dec. 13, Albania on Dec. 18. We . {had no quarrel, and have ncne now, with the people those Governments—or misgovern- | program in 171,000 plants not now adequately pro- | pno doubt will continue to do so as long as possible tected, as compared with the 25000 plants which | have comprehensive programs Off-the-job accidents are even The neglect which hurts the feelings of Hitler's puppets and time-servers does not, we can be sure, more crippling | offend the millions of Rumanians lovakians, Hun- than work afcidents, with a loss of 280,000,000 man- | garians, Bulgarians and Albanians who have alws days last year as against 180,000,000 for work acci- | lcoked on America as the land of promise and Ame dents. The fund will aim at a reduction of at least|cans as their friends. We understand the trouble they are in and how impossible it is for them at the{ imoment to get out of it. When Hitler falls, we [ hope to be friends again with his deceived or pow- erless victims 20 percent in the over-all accident toll It this goal is reached, it will mean, as compared with last y 0,000 fewer injuries to workers, 92,- | 000,000 man-days of production saved, $750,000,000 saved to our national economy. This would buy | g | 2100 Flying Fortresses, or ten battleships, or 6,000 A competition between the various Naval distric heavy tanks. yards and shore stations in the Navy's War Savings Bond Campaign, with special flags and certificates to be awarded to districts and establishments which | reach required quotas, was announced recently by the In a propaganda broadeast to the United States, | Thirteenth Naval District, @ Japanese commentator said, “Japan would be glad | to share the riches of Asin with the Western na- | | Two door hinges, a door lock, one spade, one In a broadcast in Japanese for domestic consump- | Skates. will make one 30 calibre machine gun. A -pound flatiron will make four hand grenades tion, Radio Tokyo said, “The most important task is| " 5 | Salvage for victory the expulsion from East Asia of Britain and America. | The outbreak of the Greater East Asia War may | A\ nbws mioth ass, thab S 00 I iEEsof Atk be said to the beginning of the fight to put an end | yere recovered by dredging a ceremonial well of the to Britain and America.” |Maya Indians. It sounds like it must have been The broadcasts were recorded by the FCC and |plenty tough on the insurance companies of those reported by the Office of Pacts and Figures | times | Vi . 3 % 2o - - !have the augury of an exceedingly | led in, it was 10:50, Then the com-|bUSy year in which there will be| reading of the first flight of the wamiflflm Wright Brothers at Kittyhawk, N. mittee took up an additional two M“r’ (o] hours of Nelson's time listening to - lina wrote a letter to the Secretary Peared before the Senate Banking Go-Round of War steting that his company |COMmmittec on the same bill. (Continued from Page One) anted t ref 1 $100,000.000 * After it was all over a h'wndf paned, o R, © asked the WPB chief if his fre- quent appearances before congress-| ex-telegrapher from North Caro- what Nelson had said when he up-‘ the Government because it wa. a window and is sure something making too large a profit on war is bound to happen.” contracts. | L During the interim, young Tom | man has definitely decided not o famous gyroscope. Then an ordin-| NOTE: Off take the White House staff job of- ary seaman, Morgan helped to in- | WPB chief is: “Time is Short.” fered him by the President stall the first gyroscope on the| (Copyright, 1942, by United Fea- The announcement of the ap- Delaware, and Sperry liked his work |ture Syndicate, Inc.) pointment implied Hillman had ac- 50 much that after his four years’ cepted it. Inside fact is he hasn’t. enlistment terminated, Morgan was pressure Hillman into agreeing. He Since then he has become head | is still recuperating from exhaustion ©Of the Sperry Corporation, helped N Ews due to his prolonged strenuous work | Crganize Curtiss-Wright, and s as a top war official, but when he | chairman of Pan American Air- ANNUAL BREEZE EDITION leaves the hospital he will not go | Ways | SOON OFF PRESS | back to the government. But Morgan never lost the iuman| Douglas students are concenu-z\t-! i | and the statement apparently was offered a job as foreman in the| MUG. AS [ worded as if he had in order io Sperry plant. | | | | Hillman will resume the presi-|touch. And in these days when we ing efforts this week on the annual jately, it was decided at a ‘meet-| dency of the powerful Amalgama‘- @1 scrutinizing the type of man-|edition of the Gastineau Breece! ed Clothing Workers, and then will| POWer this nation has developed jand exvect to have the paper out|this morning, to advance Com- | embark on a triple-headed cam- 40 the Kind of democracy we havel first of next week. { paign to: ;“If‘]“" el .Ixun?lwunl that the ex-| As an appreciable reward for the! (1) Drive John L. Lewis out of grapher and ex-sailor from|ywork of the Breeze staff during the | N Car v v | " : . the CIO; (2) force a showdown 1()";”:;}\‘.0]’,'»“ no‘l ollll,\ '11‘0-\*‘ ‘f) “‘el)enr official confirmation has been P, but was one of the first to|yeceived that the paper was award- with labor elements playing ball| epaie profits to his country in time | oy second place in the Columbia undercover with Lewis; (3) fight of trouble | against isolationists in this years| NOTE: From time to time, the| c00l Press Association annual crucial congressional elections WASHINGTON MERRY - GO .| competition and has maintained its Leading CIO chiefs long have ROUND will attempt to give rec-| SUdl high place in spite of the wanted Hilman to return to union ognition to those who have made|™MO'¢ rigid grading than before. Last week, after four decades, the | testimony largely repeated from| ional committees—tnis was the 16th | aren’t getting you down?” | “Well, T look a it this way.” re-| HILLMAN IS THROUGH Morgan had served four years on|pieq Nelson, wearily mopping his! He hasn't announced it yet, but the battleship Delaware, where he |pyow — “Another drop of water| former war labor chief Sidney Hill- met Elmer Sperry, inventor of the|won't hurt a drowned rat” | 1 slogan of the| THURSDAY, MAY 14 Today is ruled by a benefic as-|,eaqy freezing 5,000 pounds taken from the halibut boat T-321. pect which promises good news from write important letters under this configuration. It is a day for con- tion in Juneau. 20 YEARS AGO 7% Empirs MAY 13. 1922 Juneau was to be equipped with a radio telephone broadcasting transmitter during the summer, according to O. E. Schombel, operator in charge of the local naval radio station. Mr Schombel was to leave Juneau in June and was to receive his discharge from the service June 20. He contemplated making arrangements for installing a transmitter station here in July. He held'a commercial radio license and had made satisfactory arrangements fro operating a telephone broadcasting sta- Mrs. Winifred Jones, proprietor of the Fashion, was returning to Juneau on the Admiral Watson after a business trip in the South. J. T. Petrich, recently appointed to the Customs office staff, was to arrive to Juneau on the Princess Mary accompanied by Mrs_ Petrich. The Juneau Cold Storage Company would freeze all halibut to be WEDNESDAY, MAY 13, 1942 | Drs. Kaser and Freeburger Blomgren Building | Y——__| | Dr.A.W. Stewart 20TH CENTURY BUILDING Office Phone 469 Professional “a IRECT‘,RY Fraternal Sacieties E \ Gastineau Channel H \ MOUNT JUNEAU LODGE NO. 147 SECOND and FOURTH Monday of each month in Scottish Rite Temple beginning at 7:30 p. m. R. W. COWLING, Wor- shipful Master; JAMES W. LEIV- ERS, Secretary. forrrrrrrrr s B. P. 0. ELKS Meets every Wednesday at 8 P. M. Visiting Brothers welcome. { ARTHUR ADAMS, Exalted | Ruler; M. H. SIDES, Secretary. ...._____..% | shipped South from this date through the summer, according to an | announcement made by Oliver Drange, Manager. The company was i 2 ] Complimentary to Mrs. J. H. Henson about 60 of the women of the. Island gave a surprise party for her the previous evening in the Eagles’ Hall, the occasion being her birthday. The entertainment consisted of whist followed by lunch and dancing. Mrs. W _E. Cahill entertained with a solo and Mrs. Manley told some humorous stories. Prize winners at cards were Mrs. Halm, Mrs. Cashel, Mrs. Livie and Mrs_ Franks. Mrs Henson was presented with a fine leather traveling bag, a blanket and structive work in the office or the |a nugget pin by the ladies. household. Under this sway the men in the family may oppose cer- | | tain lines of war service for girls,| | but national needs will eliminate | old ideas regarding the status of| women. Great success in many lines of industry is presaged. Coun- ter-espionage will engage the tal-|powley: violin solo by Miss Rica Niemi; address by G. C. Mitchell; | community singing led by Miss Miriam Hayner and an orchestra BUSINESS AFFAIRS: Whiie| ents of clever girls ashington discusses abstruse fi ancial and economic problems av-| erage American families will main- | tain pleasant homes on greatly re- duced budgets In many citie there will be only slight busines dislocations Wage earners who) do not worry about inflation will spend their mon war conditions will command little attention from the man in the| street who will pay more and more taxes. NATIONAL ISSUES: Colonies of aliens removed from war zones will arouse many unfounded suspicions. The seers warn of hidden internal dangers in the United States, but| these will not be detected until an event of far-reaching effect takes place. The seers prognosticate in- side work that may prove more! terrible in results than a fierce bat- tle cn sea or in the air, INTERNATIONAL AFFAIRE Eventual disgrace and a violent end have been forecast for Heinrich| tions.” | trash burner, one trash basket, an old pair of roller {Himmlf’l‘ whose Mercury is close 10| Hitler's ascendant, which causes a’ certain bond between the Fuehrer | |and the head of the secret police, | e M |the Gestapo. There are signs pre-! saging estrangement and cross pur- poses. Hitler's spring program has caused many rumors of dissatisfac- tion among his principal officers. Persons whose birthdate it is! shadows as well as plenty of sun- shine. They should be cautious in handling their incomes. Children born on this day prob- | ably will be forceful and indepen- 4 s H Sl o aoh plsaaure lOvmg‘}posssble. or not later than a week Many of these Taurus natives love speculation and even gambling. (Copyright, 1942) A COMMENCEMENT DATE CHANGED "NOW T0 MAY 20 Demand for Young People in Defense Work Cause of Advanced Date Because of the Wao Tmergency| and the demands for young peopl to take over defense jons immed: ing of the Juneau School Board mencement ‘and Baccalaureate ex- ercises one week. This will mean that Baccalaureate exercises will be held on May 17, next Sunday, and Commencement will be held on May 20, instead of May 27 as previously announced. After commencement, Juneau High School seniors graduated will be excused from school immediately so that the many who are already Members of the Douglas Parent-Teachers’ Association were to meet for the last time of the year with an excellent program planned. The program was a selection by the High School Orchestra; folk dancing by the fourth and sixth grades; reading by Miss Una Crowe; demonstra- tion by the general science class; duet by Misses Alberta Gallwas and Llizabeth Robertson; reading by Mrs. James Christoe; talk by H, L. selection Room 9—Valentine Bldg. Hours: 9 am. to 6 pm. S —————— ROBERT SIMPSON, OPT. D. Graduate Los Angeles College Glasses Fitted Lenses Ground | DENTIST PHONE 762 of Optometry and Opthalmology PIGGLY WIGGLY | l DRUG CO. | R R LD S R | TIDE CALENDARS Harry Race, Druggist | | } "Chiropractic” 7‘ Physio Eloclrg Th eropeutics | | | For BETTER Groceries ‘ DIETETICS—REDUCING Phone 16—24 Soap Lake Mineral and Steam Baths i Dr. Doelker, D. C., Bernard Bldg. | " et~ || ""ThejRexall Store” | { '! ‘ ’ Your Reliable Pharmacists j | Dr. John H. Geyer BUTLER-MAURO | | gr | ground ! seat driver. | e reooe Much interest was shown in the Juneau Woman's Club dance to be given in the A. B. Hall on May 26 for the benefit of the children’s play- Children of the grades were enthusiastic about the improve- . | ments planned and had contributed $8.15 toward them. Mrs. E. H Kaser was in charge of the dance for which numerous unusual features were planned. One of these was to be the serving of supper in the “Strand” | retail merchants will prosper. Post-| Mrs. L. Norton. Other committees and Mrs C. W. Cheatham; decorat Mrs. L. L. Harding and Mrs. M. Drake; ; generously and |Opposite the Zynda Hotel, ‘under the direction of Mrs_ C. J. Skuse and were: Hall and music, Mrs. Kaser ions, Mrs. J. B. Bernhofer; punch, candy, Mrs. Jack Wilson; flow- ers, Mrs. M. Hudson and Mrs. W. Bond; publicity and tickets, Mrs. J G. Valentine; floor, Messrs. Nisson, E. Jones and E. A. Coffin Stepp, Winn, Walstedt, Lavenik, C Weather was fair with a maximum temperature of 48 and a mini- mum of 45. (s eoo oo Daily Lessons in English % 1. corpon S e e e et WORDS OFTEN MISUSED: Do not say, “Please send remittance at once.” REMIT means TO SEND. remittaree.” Say, “Pleasé remit,” or, “"MAKE a OFTEN MISPRONOUNCED: Supple. Pronounce first syllable SUP, not SOUP OFTEN MISSPELLED: Colonnade; one L, two N's. SYNONYMS: Lifelike, accurate, true, exact, faithful. WORD STUDY: “Use a word three times and it is yours.” Let us increase our vocabulary by mastering one word each day. Today's word: AUGMENT; to enlarge or increase in size, amount, or degree. “Rain augments a stream.” “Impatience augments an evil.” MODERN ETIQUETTE * ropgrra LER Q. What is the maximum length of time before a person should acknowledge any kind of invitation? A. An invitation should be answered within one or two days if reply. when necessity forbids an earlier Q. Is it good form for a man’s wife to give him instructions at the table about carving, passing certain dishes, etc.? A. No. A woman who does this Q. When a man and a woman is in the same class with the back- ‘The average husband resents it. are strangers and approach a door at the same time, is it necessary for the man to open the door and allow , the woman to pass through first? A. Certainly. One should always be courteous to strangers as well | as to friends. LOOK and LEA b RN A!{ C. GORDON 1. What is the oldest of the sciences? 2. What is the husband of a reigning queen called? 3. Which is farther north, Montreal, Canada, or Seattle, Wash- ington? 4. What is a hedonist? 5. Who wrote the novel “Bleak House"? ANSWERS: Astronomy. Prince Consort. Seattle. Lt b o o Charles Dickens (1812-70). |ABSENTEE VOTES One who believes that pleasure is the sole or chief good in life. ELKS SCHEDULE The Charles W. Carter Mortuary Fourth and Franklin Sts. "PHONE 136 Jones-Stevens Shop LADIES'—MISSES’ READY-TO-WEAR Seward Street | COFEFE SHOP JAMES C. COOPER Business Counselor COOPER BUILDING L. C. Smith and Corona TYPEWRITERS Sold and Serviced by J. B. Burford & Co. “Our Doorstep Is Worn by Satisfied Customers” [ DR.H.VANCE | OSTEOPATH Consultation and examination free. Hours 10 to 12; 1 to 5; 7 to 8:00 by appointment. Gastineau Hotel Annex South Franklin St. Archie B. Betis PUBLIC ACCOUNTANT Bookkeeping Rm. 8, Valentine Bldg. Phone 676 | “Say It With Flowers" but “SAY IT WITH OURS!” Juneau Florists Rice & Ahlers Co. Plumbing—Oil Burners Sheet Metal " - Guy Smith-Drugs” (Careful Prescriptionists) NYAL Family Remedies HORLUCK'S DANISH | [ “The Store for Men" SABIN’S | Front St—Triangle Bldg. | e i Find Food Finer and Service More Complete at THE BARANOF | | You FINE ,‘ l Watch and Jewelry Repairing | ] at very reasonable rates 1 \ Paul Bloedhorn S. FRANKLIN STREET | RCA Victor Radios and RECORDS Juneau Melody House Next to Truesdell Gun Shop | Second Street Phone 65 ~ INSURANCE Shanu:k—igency CALIFORNIA - Grocery and Meat Market 478—PHONES—371 High Quality Foods at Moderate Prices i TRUCKS and BUSSES NASH CARS Christensen Bros. Garage 4 909 WEST 12TH STREET -5 » “HORLUCK’S DANISH Ice Cream Klavors Peppérmint Candy, Fudge Ripple, Rum Royal, Cocoanut Grove, Lemon Custard, Black Cherry, Caramel Pecan, Black Walnut, Raspberry Ripple, New York Rock Road, Chocolate, Strawber: ry and Vanilla— at the GUY SMITH DRUG | it Bt s erserwimidn e H. S. GRAVES “The Clothing Man” HOME OF HART SCHAFFNER & MARX CLOTHING ' ARE OPENED BY LADIES' NIGHT S FIRST AID HEADQUARTERS FOR ABUSED HAIR PARKER HERBEX TREATMENTS WILL affairs. With the internal battle significant saerifices 2 P - over Lewis nearing a climax, they know he is the one top leader with- in the CIO who has taken Lewis’ measure, and that his personal par- ticipation in the fray will stiffen the opposition against Lewis, In gunning for laborites playing ball with the miner czar, chief tar- get of Hillman's fire will be David Dubinsky, president of the Inter- national Ladies Garment Workers. Recently, Emil Schlesinger, Dubin- L © and close friend, be- came Lewis’ New York attorney. DO-AS-DONI DEPARTMENT About forty ye a night telegrapher from Littleton, N. C., named Tom Morgan, invested his chief capital—$1.25—in a ticket to Newport News, Va., packed his things in a poke, and joined the U. 8. Navy. At the same time his interest in aviation was aroused by hoth big and little, on the home front. If you note something which we have missed, send it to our Do-as-Done- by Department AT SKAGWAY | Sammy Nelson, taking a month's| vacation from his work at the A. J., | signed up to go te work on defense projects may report to their jobs. A. B. Phillips, Superintendent of Schools, in making the announce-| iod, having left here several days announcements and invi‘ations al- + TIME IS SHORT | ago 'ready mailed by the students, the In a letter to House Leader John (date is given as May 27, but that McCormick, WPB chief D nald Nel St tivn, A Yo bo RS son stated that he and other war officials had testitied 191 times be- |1as Volunteer Fire Department is sion. fore various committees. While he|scheduled for tomorrow evening,| Students not being gracuated will didn't say so explicitly, Nelson |with important business to be dis-continue in school until May 27 clearly implied that key WPB of- | cussed. s usual, he said. ticials were spending too much sl B — time Cs 1 X tew aaye aner Mecomack 1. HIRST APPOINTED CHIMNEY BLAZE REPORTED serted the letter in the Congress- Io m Mm' ’ | U. 8. Coast Guardsmen beat Ju- ional Record, Nelson was sammoned by the House Banking Committee | partmen to testify on a small business bill.| Gov. Ernest Gruening has a ] OB Valimiteer Pire D % He was scheduled to appear al pointed Claude M. Hirst, General|to the punch yesterday afternoon 10:30 a. m. and was therc on the Superintendent of the Alagka Of-|by dousing a minor chimney fire dot. But the committee took it: | fice of Indian Affairs, to the Selec-|Which had broken out in one of own sweet time in coming | tive Service Appeal Board. Mr.|the Knudson cabins along Willough- — e - DFD MEETING The regular meeting of the Doug-iMay 20, according to the new deci- | COAST GUARDSMEN BEAT FIREMEN 7O PUNCH WHEN By the time a majority bad strol- Hirst replaces Donald W. Haggerty. by Avenue. | has gone to Skagway for the per-|ment toda inted out that on i AW out that onl imsham, Petersburg, Pelican. Sit- Night to be given by the Elks until |ka and Juneau were opened yester. |next fall is scheduled for tonight ELECTION JUDGES Thirty-one absentee ballots from | day afternoon by election judges. | Four ballots were rejected, 27 were counted. Ketchikan’s absentee bal- | lots have not yet been received The absentee voting gave Allen .Shattuck 14 votes as against 11 for Arthur P. Walker in the race for | Divisional Senator, but Walker still Michael J. Haas received 11 votes | i{to Walter P. Sharpe's 15 in the| balloting for 'Labor Commissioner. | Election judges who opened the | absentee ballots were Mrs. D. Flor- | ine Housel, William Bosch and John | Morrison. R NG R, | UY DEFENSE BONDS THIS EVENING The last Opén House Ladies in the Elks Club. The fair sex have been invited to attend at 9 o'clock, following the brief lodge session, and dancing will then be enjoyed to music furnished by the Soldiers 8-piece dance band. Refreshments will be served dur- ing the affair and Chairman of| }holds an unofficial lead of 13 votes | the Committee in charge, J. L. |ever Shattuck. Holmquist, promises all Elks and their ladies will have a big time. p DIVORCE ASKED Laura 'M. Hall has filed suit in U. S. District Court asking a divorce {rrom Rex Hall'on the grounds of | non-support. —————— — Empire Classifieds Pay! JRRECT HAIR PROBLEMS Sigrid’s | COMMERCIAL 189]—Hz!! : Century of Banking—1941 The B.M.Behrends Bank Oldest Bank in Alaska SAVINGS M s e p——

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