The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, May 28, 1942, Page 4

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. i o NO BETTER TEST Daily Alaska Empire BTTER %4 d every evening except Sunday by the i l"‘i!‘lRl' PRINTIN (‘()MPAdN" 4 Second and Maln Streets, Juneau, Alasks. Postmen and policemen in the Nation's Capital are acting as walking laboratories for the Govern- ment, so that the millions of pedestrians throughout Publi; HELEN TROY MONSEN - - - = - President | ). oounery can obtain good rubber heels for the R. L. BERNARD - - Vice-President and Business Manager il — — duration. Entered in the Post Office in Juneau as Second Class Matter. The Consumer Division of the OPA announced May 4 that many members of the Washington Post SUBSCRIPTION RATES: Delivered by carrier in Juneau and Douglas for §1.25 per month. By mail. postage paid. at the following rates: One vear, In advance, $12.00; six months, in advance, $6.00; one month, in advance. $1.25. Subscribers will confer a favor if they will promptly notity the Business Office of any failure or 1 livery of their papers Telephones: News Office, 602; Business Office, 374, The Asso republicatio wise cred herein this ALASKA CIRCULATION GUARANTEED TO BE LARGER THAN THAT OF ANY OTHER PUBLICATION NTATIVES tile, Wash. NATIONAL REPR Al American Building GET THE [ 1-BO Enemy submarines torpedoing the St. Lawrence River and the Gulf of Mexico em- | phasize the increasing boldness of these marauders; and the wide sinkings continue in our coastal w: On May 4 Secretary Knox dec range of their oper MEMBER OF ASSOCIATED PRESS ated Press is exclusively entitl Il news dispatches credited to it or paper and also the local news$published ATS Office and Police Department have consented to pound their beats on reclaimed rubber heels which the division is testing for quality and durability. The raw material for these heels is scrap rubber collected {from the Nation’s junk yards and attics and then reprocessed, rregularity in the de- | to the use for 0t other- Gasoline Rationing (New York Times) The reaction of some car owners to gasoline ra- tioning is anything but creditable to them. They are said to be testifying falsely in order to obtain pref- erence rations above the three-gallon weekly mini- mum. There has also been a good deal of reckless waste of existing supplies. This has been in evidence since the gasoline shortage became acute, and drivers |“gassed up” for “last flings” that have been going on for weeks on Sundays and warm evenings. Fortun- ately, these drivers appear to be in the minority. Most car owners have abided by the Federal ration- \mg rules and restrained themselves from seeking !speflul privileges | It is plain bad sportsmanship when an owner | asserts that he must have the use of his car to dup- | licate other methods of travel. This privilege is al- | lowed only to essential drivers and to workers in Gov- ernment and war industr Provision is made for civilians on duty in voluntary ‘war services, No motorist has the excuse of having been taken freighters both in|bY surprise by gasoline rationing. The Office of Price Administration and other Federal agencies have ex- plained many times the reason and over a period of ations, Msanbime many weeks why some form of severe rm:ionAmg is i '|necessary in the East Coast area. The sinking of aters nearer home. | oo by German U-boats has made it inevitable. lared that our de-| po a0y well be that the present system of ration- laska Newspapers, 1011 fenses were in better shape and improving every day. e is not well devised and that it will have to be He referred cautiously to a subsidence of sinkings,|modified. But as long as it remains in force it ought but of this there has been no convincing m'idmce‘m Jeast to be dealt with honestly and fairly. Before since he spoke. It is true that until the Gulf of St a single driver seeks extra rations for purposes which HAPPY BIRTHDAY MAY 28 Virginia Mullen Beatrice Lancaster Mrs. R. F. Simonfeldt Marie Nelson Joanne Erwin Sandy Holden Sigrid Livalther Murs. Sigurd Walther Frank Weiberg HOROSCOPE “The stars incline but do not compel” D e el FRIDAY, MAY 29 Although benefic aspects domin- ate today there are strong adverse planetary influences. Th Army and Navy are under auspiclous signs. HEART AND HOME: Women should be fortunate today in what- ever relates to change or transition in their affairs. They may expect upheavals in their domestic ar- rangemehts and their plans for summer recreations. Sudden mar- riages will surprise parents who will be anxious because of the breaking down of old social bar- riers. Family traditions will be ig- nored by both boys and girls who fall in love under wartime environ- ments. BUSINESS AFFAIIRS: Defllvrs‘ in certain luxuries will find trade strongly mulated as the war pro- ceeds. Investment in works of art will be made, the seers predict, by many who have a vision of the e e et e e 20 YEARS AGO 7% smpire MAY 28, 1922 Scout Executive C. E. Shurman went out to Auk Lake in the morning to spend the day clearing up the camp site on the lake for the Boy Scouts’ camp. Eagle Scout George McCauley was working with Mr Schurman. No definite date had heen set as to when the camp was to open. Miss Mabel Meyer, commercial teacher in the Juneau public high school for the last school year had accepted a position as stenographer in the mechanical department, Alaskan Engineering Commission, and was to leave Juneau on the steamer Watson for Anchorage. Girl Scouts of Douglas Island had received their new Scout hats and residents expected them to become a familiar sight on the island. Thomas Meighan was at the Liberty Theatre in Douglas as a two- fisted East Side gang leader in a red-blooded picture, “Frontier of the Istars,” and “The Inside of the Cup,” screen adaptation of Winston Churchill’s famous book was featured at the Coliseum, in Juneau. One hundred dollars was cleared by the Juneaun Woman's Club at the dance given at the A. B. Hall to raise money for the benefit of the children’s playground, according to Mrs. J. G. Valentine, Px'_nsmem of the club. Those on the committees In charge were Mrs. E. H. Kaser, Mrs. C. W. Cheatham, Mrs. J. B. Bernhofer, Mrs. L. L. Harding, Mrs M. Drake, Mrs. E. J. White, Mrs. Jack Wilson, Mrs. M. Hudson, Mrs. W. Bond, Mrs. Valetine and Messrs. Nisson, Stepp, Winn, Walstedt, Lavenik, C. E. Jones and E. A. Coffin, Call for volunteers to aid in the getting in shape for use of the eity playgrounds and recreation park, acquired in the Casey-Shattuck Addition by the fire department, was issued by J. L. Gray, Fire Chief. The land had been acquired and turned over to a board of trustees until it could be turned over to the city. Considerable wark was required to get it in shape, consisting of removing rocks, boulders, blasting and digging out stumps, cutting shrubbery and levelling the ground. All volunteers were asked to take any tools they miht have that would be useful and report at 10 a. m. It was hoped that the work could be completed and the park ready for formal opening by July 4. Walter E. Bathe, with the Territorial Fish Hatchery, was to leave Juneau on the steamer Admiral Evans for Cordova where he was to take charge of the eyeing station. He was to be gone for four months. i l Drs. Kaser and Freeburger DENTISTS Blomgren Building Phone 56 Dr. A. W. Stewart DENTIST 20TH CENTURY BUILDING Office Phone 469 l "Chiropractic” Physio Electro Theropeutics DIETETICS—REDUCING Soap Lake Mineral and Steam Baths Dr. Doelker, D. C., Bernard Bldg. Dr. John H. Geyer DENTIST Room 9—Valentine Bldg. PHONE 1762 Hours: 9 am. to 6 pm. ROBERT SIMPSON, OPT. D. Graduate Los Angeles College of Optometry and Opthalmology Glasses Fitted Lenses Ground The Charles W. Carter THURSDAY, MAY 28, 1942 DIRECTORY Professional Fraternal Societies Gastineau Channel { -3 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. B. P. 0. ELKS Meets every Wednesday at 8 P. M. Visiting Brothers welcome. ARTHUR ADAMS, Exalted Ruler; M. H. SIDES, Secretary. PIGGLY WIGGLY For BETTER Groceries Phone 16—24 e ""The Rexall Store” Your Reliable Pharmacists BUTLER-MAURO DRUG CO. I——_'—l TIDE CALENDARS FREE Harry Race, Druggist | “The Store for Men" SABIN’S P " 1 ure of this country. mong per- Lawrence was penetrated, U-boat depredation in the ! are on the borderline between “business” and “plea- future this country. Among | North Atlantic has been comparatively rmu‘lcu-d Both |sure,” he ought to think of the lives already lost in sons of moderaie means old silver, | antiques of many sorts and books Baccalaurcate exercises for the Senior Class of the Juneau Public Mortuary Front St—Triangle Bldg. south of New York, and especially in tropical waters, ' bringing him fuel for the last five months. submarines still move with great freedom. School was to be held in the evening at 8 o'clock in the High School Fourth and Franklin Sts. long out of print will be Sough“‘fiuditorium. N ik | Women will purchase rare laces I that represent peasant patience and T Y cleverness. With the vanishing of many European handicrafts speci- mens of fine work will become pre- cious, it is forecast. NATIONAL ISSUES: As hun- dreds of thousands of men are ab- They may have an information service and one or more supnly_ stations somewhere in the Caribbean. Certainly, | their cruises seem to radiate from that center. | (Philadelphia Record) Enemy submarines cannot be as securely based | Prosecution of the Rev. Charles E. Coughlin for! in this hemisphere as they are on the French coast.!sedition should not be delayed or halted by the radio Nor can they all return to Brest or St. Nazaire every | priest’s suspension of his paper, Social Justice. time it is necessary for them to refuel and refit. But 1f Father Coughlin is a serious menace to succe: even with German submarine bases right across the|of this nation’s war effort—as has been charged— English Channel, an effective defense has been built | then he remains so regardless of the fate of his paper. up around the British Isles. Our long coast offers a“ If there is one factor in his career which stands | much more difficult problem, but the problem must|out, it is that he cannot be trusted to keep a public You'll Find Food Finer and Service More Complete at THE BARANOF COFEFE SHOP | “Sittin’ Pretty,” two hours of bright patter talk, clever dialogue, | songs, dances and specialties, with a cast of 25 was being rehearsed for | presentation at the Coliseum Theatre on June 1 and 2 under the auspices of Alford John Bradford Post No. 4 of the American Legion. A Test Case of Sedition Jones-Stevens Shop LADIES'—MISSES’ READY-TO-WEAR Seward Street The minesweeper Swallow, due in port late in the afternoon, was sorbed by the armed faorces of the reported to have a good baseball team aboard and it was hoped to ar- nation awnd the great army of civil|range for a game with local players. employes of the Government grows, the minority of the United States| Near Third FINE Watch and Jewelry Repairing at very reasonable rates The excursion party to Skagway and Whitehorse was reported to population which must sustain the have arrived in Skagway the previous evening at 7:30, on schedule time, JAMES C. COOPER | be solved. We cannot carry our offensive in full force | Pledge. | Bt ok sttt e ollbol ir ovis WRLeS | For example, he made his famous 1936 campaign | War effort will resent all waste of |after it had been delayed by engine trouble at Thane until nearly noonh C.P.A. Paul Bloedhorn ; § R |pledge to get off the air if his candidate, Lemke,|time or materials, all maladjust- | pefore leaving the Channel. Business Counselor S. FRANKLIN STREET ments in the placing of men and | women who are paid from public} |funds and all lack of hard work | on the part of those who shouldi give the utmost aid to the nation.| e—eeee— 5 | didnt g ’ | LET'S HAVE ACTION |didn’t get 9,000,000 votes. We know what that pledge COOPER BUILDING Weather was fair with a maximum temperature of 56 and a mini- mum of 47. lamounted to—even though Lemke got only 800,000 | votes For another example, we know how little sincerity | lay in his apology to the President, in 1936. for A bill through which Congress is apparently at- tempting to raise the basic pay of service men to RCA Victor Radios L. C. Smith and Corona and RECORDS $42 or perhaps $50 a month has been kicked back |cajling Mr. Roosevelt “a liar, betrayer and double- |There are signs read by astrologers | & 5 i b TYPEWRITERS Juneau Melody House and forth between the House and the Senate so much | orosser.” that warn of impatience among tax- | Dally I_essons n EnghSh V’ I.. GORDON i ol S HpradaliOun Blop lately that the first thing we know it's going to be | For yet another example, we know that in May, Payers. & . J. B. ’nrl”‘ & co Second Street Phone 65 kicked under the rug 1940, he pledged his clerical superiors that he would | INTERNATIONAL AFFAIRS: i3 o First the Senate approved the bill with the $42|sever all connection with Social J\_xstice magazine— :lusma com:‘; ]""f’er a configuration WORDS OFTEN MISUSED: Do not say, “His habiliments were im- ‘Our Doorstep Is Worx: by e figure. Then the House amended the act to make|and yet only two weeks ago he admitted that he ever [in June which is read as presag-| % A 7 : w3 Satisfied Customers’ g : i ’ has | & acereti f The Si maculate.” This is affectation. Say, “His CLOTHING (or dress) was $50 the basic rate. Then a conference committee |since has been “solely responsible . . . for its policies :]n‘ii g °"j° m;ver. 4 7 ,‘m"immaculate " , i | ents.” upiter in conjunction rising 3 made up of both houses sent a “compromise” agree- [and contents A : | X 2 ! t back to the House. The compromise was that All that he represents is involved in this sedition |{at Moscow seem to forecast cm-\ OFTEN MISPRONOUNCED: Cognac. Pronounce ko-nyak, O as in DR H VANCE e g : promise was that}, T4 06 a study of his writings shows, what he | tinued success for the Soviet gov-|NO, A as in BACK, accent first syllable, . H. h the figure should be $42, the amount decided on when | 00 5T 0 uoice of Adolf Hitler and Dr. Joseph |ernment. Astrologers foretell that| ~ OFTEN MISSPELLED: Amalgamate; four A's. OSTEOPATH Shattuck Agency the bill b grribten ‘"ff;"‘"y"; The next "“:V" m?"?qoebprg in the United States of America. in postwar days the United States| SYNONYMS: Languor, lassitude, listlessness, weakness, exhaustion.| | consultation and ekamightion R R G A be that a “compromise” agreement at the $50 mark | We already have arrested the Pelleys and their |and Russia will be the outstand-| WORD STUDY: “Use a word three times and it is yours.” Let us free. Hours 10 to 12; 1 to 5; | may be gent back to the Senate and we could ““‘“:i ¢, Let us smash this whole subversive movement |ing powers with our nation leading. | increase our vacabulary by mastering one word each day. Today's word: 7 to 8:00 by appointment. A L lr n “ i all gyer again > land keep the air of America as ¢lean as it {5 free. |This means a need for great OBVIOUS; easily seen, or undesstood; evident. “It is obvious that faulty GastioaiTatis Annes c 0 IA Let’s decide on this thing soon, or as a service diplomacy in the future when our, ihind training paves the way for the acceptance of superstitions.” Sotith Frankl . Grocery and Meat Market man said the other day, “The war will be over be- The Coral Sea isn’t that color, but the faces of (aid to Russia is forgotten. i ul anklin St. Phone 177 478—PHONES—371 the Japanese Admirals are. Persons whose birthdate it is fore they make up their minds.” High Quality Foods at Moderate Prices {have the augury of & year of much | B ) i = | "minmu | Losses are not published, but not|have had from two to six momhs,““"“% Gain that is unforeseen |for the reason that they are high.|speclal training in handling the|is indicated for many. B MODERN ETIQUETTE * opnra wem ||| Avchio B, Botis | i Health | e ) —_—m mm 'On the most important l'oulefilhuiArmy's ships, plus a minimum en-‘Shg‘"ddIbe SRfEEUflldcgqvm p g :UB:“: ACCOU::'::T route ross the South Atlantic |trance requirement of 300 hours hildren born on ay prob- st 1) udi Super WHITE: Power and al s Africa — only three|in the air. ably will have many talents and Q. 1If you are a guest at a party and someone opens a window that Systems Bookkeeping TRUCKS and BUSSES NASH CARS Christensen Bros. Garage complex characters. They are likely ;&HS:H K:::eic‘iywmtfi::&zgm:; zt s tha Kess uing 40 A6Y to be witty and extremely critical. s 1éopyrighl 1“2))’ Q. Would it be proper, as an introduction, to say, “Mr. Marshall, this is Miss Wilson”? Go-Round s (Continued Irom Page One) planes have been lost since we got| They have, in the course of eyery-| into the war (or since the operation day operations, experiences to write began), and the crews of two were books about. One crew, flying over Rm. 8, Valentine Bldg. Phone 676 e — Y saved. | Africa, attempted to contact a cer- H T % Lonid st Jakh {he Incidentally, this is the route|tain station in advance of land-| oy it possible for U. S. férees|, A Reverse the names. The man should be presented to the womarl. ‘S'uy It With Flowers b'l'lt 909 WEST 12TH STREET gerg gc"c(::i"“;hm yz:u c:: ge': which supplies planes to four for-|ing, to get radio bearings. But the |, " o4 aciride the world in this |58V, “Miss Wilson, this is Mr. Marshall.” However, when the man i§ 'SAY IT WITH OURS! : 4 can B eign fields of combat. A bunch of |station did not respond. This Was! joror war and in so doing is|fiuch older than the woman, or is a distinguished perosnality, she 15| 3 e e D | kti;:lmnlox:o ,;:;Qeln;! x?,]r‘)n:ssl'wmme :‘l,(e pilots at the Florida airfield some |in October, and the native radio fm:klng pre;mmtlons for & wa:fii at | bresented to him. Juneall Florlsis “HORLUCK’S DANISH” | are &‘kag up planes in Califor- | fine morning will start asking each | operators were enjoying their “fest-| o500 | @. Please suggest refreshments that may be served at an evening Phone 311 Ice Cream Flavors nia and putting them down a few days later in Libya, Persia, India, Australia, Alaska, Russia, Great| Britain — anyplace you want to| name. “Qur operations offices are scat- tered from here to the ends of the earth. No airline was ever con- ceived on such a scale. And after| the war—well! that’s something to think about.” 3300 PLANES A MONTH The principal job of the Ferrying Command is to pick up airplanes at the factories and fly them to lactical units in the United States, to U. S. combat forces abroad, or to allied countries under Lend- Lease. According to figures disclosed by Speaker of the House Sam Rey- burn. U. 8. factories are producing 3300 planes a month. Except for the small Navy quota and trainers, the AFAFC handlés them all. A lesser job ,but more publicized, Is the job of flying big shots" around the world. When Ambassa- gdor Winant and Admiral Stark went to London last month, the Ferrying Command took them across. When Bill Bullitt went to Cairo and Syria last fall, the AFAFC gent Lieut. Ben Funk and crew in @ big bomber which, incidentally, travelled 88,000 miles, or times around the world, hefore it got back to the United States. It delivered Bullitt, then proceeded to the war areas, where Funk carried Wavell from Java to Rangoon and back flew Brett from Java to Australia and back, then flew into the Phili- ppines at night to pick up some alrplane technicians (more than a proper planeful of them) and flew them out to Java. i other about assignments. “I'm going to Brereton. Where are you going?” Cairo. You, Jack?” Aand a fourth declares his des- tination as China. The first man means he will take his bomber to Maj. Gen. Lewis H. Brereton in India, the second to the British forces in the Middle East, and the, third to the head of the Persian| Gulf, where the Russians will take the plane north to the fighting front. You don't have to be an airplane president (like Col. C. R. Smith, ex- American Airlines, now helping Gen. George to run the show) to know 1t takes more than a dashing | voung pilot to deliver those planes. There must be landing fields—and some of the new fields have run- ways a mile or more in length. There must be dispersal areas, to allow planes to scatter when en- emy planes appear. There must be fuel supplies and fuel facilities; living quarters for tired transient crews; hospital facilities for the man who has caught a tropical fever; weather stations scattered across the world, and most import- ant of all, prota:tive forces, such as ground troops and fighter planes, which might make 1t hot for the enemy in case of attack. | As General George puts it, “It takes some planning to think of all these things—including having an American hot dog and an Am- erican can of beer ready for the| pilot when he drops down out of the skies in the hot jungle of the Anglo-Egyptian Sudan.” The men who fly these ships are the pick of America They are not all boys. The age is 21 to 45, All ive month—feasting all night and s sleeping all day, COAST GUARD ACADEMY The U. S. Coast Guard Academy It was the AFAFC which caried jat New London, Conn., is due for the Harriman mission to Moscow. a much-deserved pat-on-the-back Upon arrival, crew members were |in the forthcoming report of the ushered Into the officer’s mess and!Gongressional Board of Visitors. given a breakfast of champagne,i Numher 1 recommendation of Crimean wine, caviar, fish, bread,|the Board, which recently inspected butter, tomato and onion salad, |the top-notch but little publicized more caviar—and then were askedschool, will be that its commanding if they would like a beef steak! | officer—now captain—be elevated to Thus far the big job has been:the rank of Admiral.’ This would delivering planes—and engines and|automatically put the Academy on propellors and quinine and vitamins|equal footing with the Navy's —to distant parts. But the routes Annapolis. thus explored and the facilities laid| The Board of Visitors will point down soon will become the means out that the Coast Guard school for moving combat forces into the|richly deserves this honor because theaters of war. Thus, if it should |its entrance requirements and train- ever hecome necessary to make a|ing standards are as stiff as those “CHAMPAGNE, CAVIAR” wedding reception? | A. Sandwiches, salad, ice créam, cakes, and beverages. LOOK and LEARN ? C. GORDON 1. Who was the first woman member of a President’s Cabinet? 2. What does sang-froid mean? 3. Which Stdte has often been called the “Land of Sunshine”? 4. What is the common name applied in America to all sorts of very small fish? 5. Who wrote “Adam Bede”? ANSWERS: 1. Frances Perkins, Secretary of Labor. 2. Freedom from agitation; coomess in difficulty; composure. 3. New Mexico. 4. Minnows. 5. George Eliot (1819-80). . combat operation against Dakar, U. 8. bombing planes could move| into action along the well-estab- lished route from Florida to Brazil to Africa. On the domestic side, sometimes involves an assembling job. A pilot and crew will pick up a B-24 Liberator at the West Coast plant, fly it to Detroit to pick up a British type radio, and equip- ment for overseas flying, such as a life-raft, then fly on to Montreal, where the RAF or the RCAF takes over, But this summer, the AFAFC will |start a North Atlantic ferry serviee of its own, independent of the Brit- | ish. Most of the Ferrying Command'’s |operations are strictly secret. You |can’t even get into its building in Washington without filling out a speciil form and having a guard as escort. But it's obvious from what can be told that the Command isjthe State legislature was kind in ferrying of the Naval Academy. The report also will emphasize that, unlike Annapolis and West Point, no political appointments are made to the Coast Guard Academy. Entrance is limited strictly to com- |petitive examination. Of aproxi- {mately 2200 applicants who will try for entrance this Spring, only the top 150 will be chosen. Present enrollment is 500 cadets, including 190 reserve students, about double the peacetime e * ment. The Spring graduating class will number 70. CASEY UP TO BAT Representative Joe Casey, mili- [tant New Dealer, has been toying with the idea of running for gov- érnor or senator in Massachusefts, but gyents in Nevada have per- suaded him to keep his seat in the House. If he stays in the House (and rédistricting his district) Casey, through seniority, stands a good chance to become chairman of the werful Appropriations sub-com- ttee on Naval Affairs. That is, if Democrats retain control of House. James G. Scrugham, Nevada’s lgne Congressman and present x:n! Appropriations chairman, is rynning for the Senate and, win or 10se, he is out of the House. Hence the plum would automatically fall to Casey. Casey already IS enjoying his new inence. At the request of the lavy and to familiarize himself 'with . naval needs, he is inspecting Alaska and the West Coast estab- lishments. (Copyright, 1942, by United Fea- ture Syndicate, Inc.) e ————— $600,000,000 Is Asked for War Housing WASHINGTON, May 28—Presi- dent Roosévelt today proposed to Congress an appropriation for dn additional $600,000,000 for war hous- ing to “meet the minimum needs of 1,600, workers migrating to ginning July 1. BUY DEFENSE BONDS war centers” during the year be- Rice & Ahlers Co. Plumbing—Oil Burners eating Phone 34 Sheet Metal "'Guy Smith-Drugs” (Careful Prescriptionists) NYAL Family Remedies HORLUCK'S FIRST AID HEADQUARTERS FOR ABUSED HAIR PARKER HERBEX TREATMENTS WILL CORRECT HAIR PROBLEMS Peppermint 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— H. S. GRAVES . “The Clothing Man” HOME OF HART SCHAFFNER & MARX CLOTHING Sigrid’s 189! —Half 2 Century of Banking—1941 TheB.M.Behrends Bank (Oldest Bank in Alaska SAVINGS i . at the GUY SMITH DRUG —_—

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