Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
PAGE FOUR 3 THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE—JUNEAU, ALASKA MONDAY, NOVEMBER 23, 1942 ity If those thing: 1 - D .l [l k E . | human i the family goes 7 % o : ' atl y aska mplre with them. They are its existence, The family must ot { 1 . ! AR 4 tight for them, must be willing to tace seit-deniai | { HAPPY BlRTHDAY {1t 20 YEARS AGO Irom DIRECTOR Professional Published evers evening except S8unday by the | EMPIRE PRINTING COMPANY |and suffering and hardship for them, if it deserves i THE EMPIRE Fraternal Societies Second and Main Streets, Juneau, Alsska, [to survive it 3 Gastineau Channel HELEN TROY MONSEN - =~ = - = President 9 e KSR T B SR TR, Vi O R L BERNARD - - Vice-President and Business Manager T6% Ot L MRS o o 1or thein. | NOVEMBER 23, 1922 R After the adoption of the Constitution, Congress di- NOVEMBER 23 rected Washington to set aside a day for Thanks- | e e month. | giving. ‘That was in 1789 and he gave thanks in that | Earl (Buddy) Hunter MOUNT JUNEAU LODGE NO. 117 SECOND and FOURTH Monday of each month Membership drive in the American Red Cross was to start in Juneau November 25 and continue until December 2. It was the first drive the Matter. Entered in the Post Office in Juneau as Second Claf SUBSCRIPTION EATES: Delivered by carrier in Juneau and Douglas for $1.50 By mail, postage paid, at the following rates: Drs. Kaser and - organization has held in Juneau since 1920 and was for the purpose of ) i ; 5 , s7.60; | first presidential Thanksgivi for the | Mrs. R. B. Martin : Scottish one g‘;;tyl:.fn X.na::r:::ctt).;l:? 07 SR N R e | thi UI tor Whibt h dg e proc]amanm.) s i | Mrs. A. M. Geyer renewing memberships and obtaining new ones. Fl'ee I.ll’ger i mm 'Ifemple Subscribers will confer & favor if they will promptly notyty | things for which we had just fought and won, what | Hpry ' Otiroll beginning at 7:30;p. m. the Business Office of any failure or irregularity in the de- | were they? The peoples’ safety and happiness, their DENTISTS R. W. COWLING, Wor- Uvery of their papers. | Telephones: News Office, 602; Business Office, 374, civil and religious liberties—the things we find at stake today Gus Downey Mr. and Mrs. Charles Otteson were to leave on the following day for Mrs. F. T. Atkinson the Alaska Dano Mine at Funter Bay after spending a week in Juneau Mrs. R. F. Levinson —_ shipful Master; JAMES W. LEIV- Blomgren Building Phone 56 ERS, Secretary. L] MEMBER OF ASSOCIATED PRESS The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for It should be plain this week, Women At War g i e republication of all news dispatches credited to it or not other- | . ) e ; . ¢ . P. D. Malone Charles R. Settlemier editor of the Dawson News, had slipped on an B P 0 ELKS wise credited in this paper and also the local news published | Week, that we shall, all of us, go on fighting for Michael McCaffin icy sidewalk in the Interior tow d sustained the fracture of both Dr A w Si t . LU bereln. [them as.long as they are threatened. Millions of | priesy 5 > 3 iR 5.0k - AW dlewar: Meet: Wednesday at 8 —— - — 3 g bones of the leg. He also suffered dislocation of his ankle and was a cels evely Wecnesday ALASKA CIRCULATION GUARANTEED TO BE LARGER women are today assuming the burden of industry tient St. Mary's ‘ DENTIST P. M. |Visiting Brothers wel- THAN THAT OF ANY OTHER PUBLICATION. [serying on assembly lines, taking their place at the | == 2eeomry | ROHBIE BNV S ERNEESL 11 Davoon 20TH CENTURY BUILD! ARTHUR ADAMS, E NATIONAL REPRESENTATIVES — Ala mpers, 1011 | b o ble f Ay i’ i Mil SR g il i C‘l):!le- ul { Sec‘,x- \merican Bullding, Seattle, Wash st sl 0 R 0 S c 0 P E Mrs, J. K. McAlister was to be hostess for the members of the Ladies Office Phone 469 e BN (L ASERES, ions more are limiting their own and their families’ | Altar Society which was to meet the following day. retary. | wants to add to the nation’s war resources through | | larger war savings. For this is the women's fight | [today just as it was in the wilderness winters of | but do not compel” “The stars incline Sl Turkeys were to sell at 55 cents a pound, a decrease of 5 cents a pound fron ' arg » previous yea Ducks, geese and L t ‘ 4 [pound trom the price charged tne previous venr. Dueks, eeere and | Drr, John H. Geyer 1| PIGGLY WIGGLY v chickens were to sell at 45 cents a pound, also a decrease of 5 cents a They ave doing all they can in that fight. Only o DENTIST o MRt 6 2 ekt tHey BAE§ L0 o ety Warl —_— : or ;im Iu-u; they .m; .w;l:ng ;n set a new w :m\‘\\.n‘l FULSDAY, NOVESAEBR: 24 S Room 9—Valentine Bidg TT roceries d sales recor y t takes plenty o Phone 18—24 “;“ X‘I : :]":” 4 "“.‘ “‘“; : ) ‘m | — Mrs. Robert Scott, and her son, Robert, Jr, were passengers for PHONE 762 | 1 guns and plaes and ships to hammer I | This is not an important day in [juneau on the Alameda after having spent several months visiting ey sl that by hlping Lo tnarce (v (ol of panetary direton Nernes. f 2 (rlaves in he Eas —_— L ) el stri a e ene 1 e 45 ave el s ng i A holiday will have effect in slowin iy ROBERT SIMPSON,0pt.D. e e of America are determined to strike hard ldown certain lines of trade : g e Rexall Store ] " Al J. B. Marshall, Federal Prohibition Officer for Alaska, was a north- They know the sacrifices involved are small by | HEART AND HOME: This is an Yot 5 . al Watson after baving spent several weeks Graduate Los Angeles College ¥ comparison_with the things for which America is |auspicious day for domestic tasks. | ' t‘:]‘“s“"g"f’r_"f‘ l”“* Adopiyal Wate i i 3 of Optometry and our Rellable Pharmacists ¢ fighting. They know this Thanksgiving that they 'Women of all ages will prepare for ! Seattle on official busin Opthalmology BUTLER-MAURO ) ave more for whi ankful than @ ther | home entertaining. To many homes| ~ ~ — % s 2 have morogs SRS Hankiul than Ay o * George A. Parks, Chief of the Field Division, General Land Office,|| Glasses Fitted Lenses Ground DRUG CO. ! ARG 2 | nation on earth. |voung folk in uniform will return VING? [for a happy holiday while there | returned to Juneau in the morning on the Jefferson from Ketchikan, will be sorrow where gold stars|Where he had been holding public auction for the sale of town lots replace the blue upon the little O - S : (New York Times) banners. Good news will cheer the Gus Gelles, broker, arrived in Juneau from a bsuiness trip to the ber 18, 1777, during our struggle for independence So far as any one knows, Adolf Hitler's agents American people while it is (lourgsouthern towns of the division i The Continental Army, under General Washington, |were not active last week in the state of Mississippi, |that the nation has merely begun | 0§ observed it again the following year at Valley Forge, ' but Hitler's work was being done the It was being |its tremendous war effort. Patrio- Jack Henson, who had moved from Douglas to Port Angeles, Wash- scene of bitter hardship. Through wars, through |done by miobs which carried out three lynchings|tism becomes more real from this |ington, was expected to arrive in Douglas during the month in connection WHAT TIME THA Hitler in issippi “What time Thanksgiving?” is nothing new. This rountry’s first universal Thanksgiving was Decem- [ The Charles W. Carter ||| TIDE CALENDARS Mortuary FREE Fourth and Frankiin Sts. 3 o PHONE 136 1 Han'y Race, Drngglsl (Continued from Page One) “nisty; and, wanted a report first Hand, i Senator Reynolds of North Caro- i lina, Chairman of the Military Af-| fairs Committee, will make a simi- | lar request to the War Department. NOTE: Last May, when the Naval | Affairs Committee wanted more in- | formation from the navy, it was re- ported to committee members that Secretary Knox had remarked: “T'd | just as soon give the information to | the Germa Senator Byrd of from a boxcar ladder and iniured a | Bill” Donovan, now head of the|Warning is given to wresidents of lumbar vertebr=. This was disclosed | Office of Strategic Services, whigh |the United States:to belgever vigi- {by an X-ray, but the fact Was not | qeals with the tough job of spurring |lant. There is a sinister sign that'{ rovr-ale_d to Akey. ICC found 2 | on the “underground” in Europe. |is read as threatening i for both letter In the company’s files which | ponovan made a flying trip|coasts. Bombitg from' submarings said: | through the Mediterranean in the fand.airplanes s indicategd but “ces “This man, of course, does not spring of 1941 and was partly re- fense will be adequate.'Affacks may know what the X-ray examination | sponsible for the stand of the Jugo- 'be slight at first but later all de- developed and I do not believe that | slavs against the Nazis. Later he ! pends upon the progress of war he should be told.” reported to Roosevelt that the Medi- | j;, the Pacific. The desire to in- Akey was persuaded to return to | terranean was the “softest” part of | timidate Americans will be strong- work the day after the accident,|the Nazi armor. though he was unable to perform all Later, the President himself had | nis duties. Puspose was to avoltl|mist to do with the setikl Plansiig| s ek definlte gains reporting the case as an accident | of the campaign, though the best under ICC regulations. part of the whole thing was the | On the bright side, ICC disclosed | way everyone—army, navy, Donovan | have the augury of a year of suc- cess which may cause overconfi- ler each week as the United Na- | Persons whose birthdate it is| i o (LTS3 | ,iaa‘sbn ‘who is speaking? . ODERNET’OHETTE " ROBERTA LEE S e | Q. Isit'good manners to supply.a word which seems to foil another A. It is perhaps a friendly service if the speaker is a foreigner, but | it should never be done with a cbuntr_i'man. Q. Where should a woman place her purse when dining in aj { restaurant? | | is well to train children while young A. The purse should be placed on her lap, under the napkin. Q. Should parents include their children in introductions? A. Yes, if the children are ten years of age, or even younger. It how to acknowledge an introduction. “Our Doorstep Is Worn by Satisfied Customers” e e 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. heartbreaking civil strife, through years of economic | within that one week. The courts and police of |date, if the stars "“"I‘R:‘%“l“-‘ "':“ | with the settlement of the Baritello estate. . hardship, they have found deeper, move moving Mississippi, whose authority was defied, are taking 1113':'jat‘1§fl‘fsn:f‘l:x‘:'n e ‘: :’;{wkg R T : FIRST AID HEADQUARTERS “The Store for Men” reasons than in brighter years action. We may hope that it will result in arrests Dary tre s I b ‘“4 One of the most entertaining evenings of the Mooseheart Legion to FOR ABUSED HAIR The Pilgrims’ first Thanksgiving is proof enough and convictions, but previous experience in similar M_‘" FOQ v.muv‘nl ‘;l.k M Il rger | € held during the fall season was enjoyed the previous evening when Parker Herbex Treatments Will | SAB' ‘7’ ! ¢ this True it marked & good harvest but (he | CASS does not make the hope a confident expecta- |for purchases will be even Iar6%t|, cpq porty was held at Moose Hall, Mrs. E. O. Jacobsen and Frank Oja Correct Halr Problems i 1 i of whs. Trle, b tnariec & &ood farvest bul theliion. In the eyes'of unfriendly-foreigners the Etate|than jui Brevious years, Fermers|C ot Rl iy coore and Mis. . . Gonnors won the oub prise. TS ‘ront St.—Tri y { previous winter had been o of hunger and sick- | o Mississippi, and with it the United States; must |Will, benefit while parity discus- | ; el Siqr@d’s Front St.—Triangle Rldg. i ness and death. And the Pilgrims knew they faced | ¢anq condemued as not practici bt ;- |sions remain conundrums to the 5 T o ta as practic 1at our spokes: L TN . MR 2 1 severe trials again in the months ahead. They had | men preach. As this news goes round the world— qublin Theaters will enjoy extra- Weather *was rainy and maximum temperature was 33. Minimum e - - learned what a New England winter could mean. | and let us be sure it will do so—our cause will suffer. jordinary patronage because of de- | temperature was 30. You l.l Find Food Finer and They knew they were going to have to fight for | The Nazi propagandists will not add that the major- Sire to escape from real drama on! e Jnnes slevens s]m Service More Complete at existence. The first Thanksgiving took on more in- | ity of the people of Mississippi detest lynching, nor [sea and land, in the air, and P THE BARAN“F . tense meaning because of the very desperateness that these murders outrage the great masses of the | Wherever enemies meet in conflict | 'I 1 E I' h by LADIES'—MISSES’ i with which they fought for their blessings. Conse- American people though these things are true. more barbaric and cruel than has | al Y essons In ng IS W. L. GORDON READY-TO-WEAR COFFEE SHop { Gilekitlo 16 was & fipht that (nvolvets iriess /ity the About 10 percent of our population are Negroes, |ever been described in history ; Seward Street Near Third | women and children as well as the men. Eery mem- |and just as loyal as the other 90 percent to our| NATIONAL ISSUES: lflt‘mnm‘,i s per of the family shared the suffering and the |CAUSe in this war. We count on them to work and |the planet of ‘“‘“‘"‘f’"'i“‘“ have | WORDS OFTEN MISUSED: Do not say, “How much money did you FINE struggle. It was a family thing. And ever since | fight for that cause. It is of national lmpormnct-!l"fl‘m""f‘ through coming weeks | \opasr gy “How much money did you EARN?” f - g8 femts 8 ; 2 y g e civil ike | when there will be many false | 5 2 1% ] p SR $8A¢ Hirst ‘Thankegling the day has had family sig- | N8t they be guaranteed the civil rights to which, like | e United Nations | CFTEN MISPRONOUNCED: Piquant, , Pronounce pe-kant, E as in AME OPEB Watch and Jewelry Repairing | 4 other Americans, they are entitled, and the protee-j ¥umors regarding Uni BLIONS | bo s A as in AN unstressed, accenfifivstisylable . at very reasonable rates nificance. It has that significance toda The b oy B g > d their pl nd '1-,;,_; £ ibtfen- , A asin unstressed, a ! st 8. ! . : tion of their property and their lives. Any State fn.|an: e A % en OFTEN MISSPELLED: Patrofishs b8 Brtetprisss ikt C.P.A. | things for which we have always been thahkful a¥® | the Union, North or South, can insure these rights|sives. There is an evil omen that | YNONYMS: Wisdom, i ;ro & Ensatsd % er‘: s( din light . C Paul Bloedhorn ithie things for which we are fighting now—things | ana this protection of its officials take the situation |seems to indicate that women will| SYNONYMS: Wisdom, judgment, knowledge, understanding, enlig Business Counselor ARSI TR | i 4+, lien to the Axis state—our belief in freedom and 's | become involved in foreign affairs. |enment, learning, dlsc.ernment, asagdcity. : 4 COOPER BUILDING | |/ —_— e LR T S 1 |In the national capital the utmost WORD STUDY: “Use a wofd three times and it is yours.” Let us [ was placed on ways and means of |and injuries avoided. | eatiHon 1a,tgsd fonains pali-1ARoTERE O GocaBIARPAYMARITR S1e 0P edcl day. | Totays _“g’,d' RCA Viclor Radios 'm avolding the reporting of ceiden BotAg |age intrigue far-reaching in its CONCILIAT}E?. to obtain the friendship of. "It is the part of a p.n\ ent L. C. Smith and Corons and RECORDS ¥ QY The report. is lopded with c | “WILD BILL" DONOVAN | effects. Deaths of prominent men 'man to conciliate the minds of others, and to turn them to his own TYPEWRITERS M. histories of accidents, such as the | A lot of people have a hand in|id Britain and the United States 'advantage.’—Cicero. OOk i ons JUNEAU MELODY HOUSE ¥ Switchman Akey case on the Mil- | preparing the African Expeditionary|are foretold, due to overwork. ! Next to Junean Drug Co. Go-Round waukee road. AKey fell packward |Force, among them being Col. "Wild | INTERNATIONAL AFFAIRS: J. B. Burford & Co. Seward Street Phone 68 INSURANCE Shattuck Agency [CALIFORNIA | Grocery and Meat Market 478—PHONES—371 High Quality Foods at Moderate Prices — Virginia is now ready to backstop | that the low accident rate of Union | committee and State Department— |d€nce in love affairs. It is wise to Walsh in demanding more coopera- | Pacific was not the result of con- |pulled together. curb impulsiveness. | tion. | cealment of accidents, but of “a — e Children born on this day prob- | capable and efficient safety organ- | JUNEAU CHAPTER NO. 7 ably will have exceptional artistic | “Say It With Flowers” but “SAY IT WITH OURSI” . H. S. GRAVES LOOK and LEARN % ¢. corpon Juneau Florists ERROL FLYNN'S “DESPERATE |ization.” JOURNEY” | ‘What's the matter with the movies l in wartime? Actor Melvyn Douglas, l now in Civilian Defense, has the | Order Eastern Star, holds its regu- | talents. They may be high-strung ICC denounced the dodgers by de- |1ar meeting Tuesday, November 24, and indl_viduax to the border of. claring that if they had spent as!at 8 p.m. Initiation and refresh- |eccentricity. § much time in preventing accidents | ments. (Copyright, 1942, as they spent in covering them up, ALICE BROWN, S TSGR answer, after seeing Errol Flynn in |many lives might have been saved adv. Secretary. SAN m‘lorf “Desperate Journey.” " — = — — v 4 “It's as unreal as the Rover Boys,” | says Douglas. “Flynn and his bud- i dies mow the Germans down by just blowing at them. They come | out of the battle looking clean and fresh, with their hair nicely brush- ed, and not a scratch on their plane. “Then for a closing line, they climb into their plane and cry, ‘Now | let's fly over Tokyo and take a crack | at those Japs!’ | “War was never like that. The people know it, but some- directors don't. They had better catch up with the people.” RAILROAD ACCIDEN The Interstate Commerce Com- mission has been on the throes of a | backstage fight over the question | of disclosing all railway accidents. The row started after it was dis covered that certain railroads had been concealing accidents and pre- senting a false record to the com- mission. ‘This sensational fact has now been officially admitted. But at first the safety division of the ICC blocked full disclosure. On the other hand,’ the statistics bureau, whose W. R.| McLean searched railroad files for the real facts, urged complete and | full publicaion. Finally, Dr. William H. S. Stevens | of the bureau of statistics, reached a | compromise with the safety bureau and a short version of the report was published—with plenty of sting still in it. Referring to the Atlantic Coast Line, the ICC report speaks of “the falsity of the figures reported by this railroad,” and declares that “practically the entire organization . . . was thoroughly impregnated with the idea of avoiding accident responsibility.” HIDING THE FACTS the Milwaukee road I0C declared that “great emphasis [DIETF]AC]E] [ELTIISIOIR] P Sam Besaloff, 56, Russ - ACROSS 41. Underworld sian - born 1. Pace river Juneau resident, died of cancer % Loltér g last night at 10:30 o'clock at St. 8. Exhaust 44 Water Ann’'s Hospital, where he has been Cowfish excursion {a patient for many months, Ibsen chatacter 46. Provided 0 47. Shrimplike Besaloff came to the United n ke E DI [C {ififi,fifif.e.,. . Pefi::m‘n’?éa:‘; - fel g. IL‘:F}flL‘. €] ‘smces in 1914, and to Alaska over l‘uu‘wu:.\l‘ly 3 uell!‘:ln:.%f [PTPIRRIAL L] muwg'fi ten years ago. He has worked in Garland “Cavalleria Al s I IN[TIOMGIAR] the Alaska-Juneau mine, and a x cw‘,,““‘] = Olgmr::::l‘c’fl‘lll‘ IR[E|P|Alc]S] IDIE|R|1 [VIE| | vear ago in the mine at Fairbanks. Sofissguently et [T[ClT|C[CIERMEIL [E[V]E]N| | He is survived by brothers and sis- English river SRR 8. Turkish plaster BERWEEE BuEEEE ters in the Caucasian Mountain Pronbun regiment district, and by a relative, Sam e 59. Food fish Solution Of " ’ Part of a i Bespd Saturday’s Puzzle |Besaloff, now in Anchorage or 32. Period of time 1. Bird of the gull 3 Language of the 7. Spouting hot | Fairbanks. ilead coverin family Scoteh High- sprin, i i | 34 Eats away © 62 Number landers - sm:mnl e The remains are at the Charles gradually G5 Oldest member 4 Substance op. ® SHoUting W. Carter Mortuary. Stain DOWN ! Bar legally 1. Pack wood ashes 9. Three-banded hours 2. Extended 5. Flog armadillo e @ Fiohegen journey 6. Invite 10. Accomplished RADE K PP F T T i | APP | tained from . Pronoun T pAssESAWAY W W “hing W . Irritable | SR W, Hj :ES&E:;. Rade Kapp, who has resided in Juneau for the past twelve L AR S years, Mewifly and | passed away Sunday afternoon at qflu\\ggl;lunl:! Bt. Ann’s Hospital, where he had Summit been ill of cancer for some time. 3 #m{ (0 ahatas An employee for the Maintenance g‘c:l.hlp'. Highway Division of the Public 37. 010 plece of Rams Administration prior to his = Dlgl&('h‘nlo I | confinement, Mr. Kapp is well equal parts | Known in Juneau. He is survived 22 z;fl[iyl\'u by his wife and a son, Milo, aged 46. Peacock but- |23, now in the Navy and located terily £ 47. Plun ot & town |8t Sewugi i TET ERd ] b Al M foes nis Mr. Kapp was born in M. 77 Part played ontene- % fl... Winglike gro in 1882, Funeral arr ////fi ). Ol'l")‘"unlfia are to be Al arrangements Z///a lower part of b, R i e announced by the rle: A ' 7 Lateral s W. Carter Mortiary. v/ P Inciine from The greatest undeveloped water- | every 24 hours? i | ANSWERS: | 1 2. Abraham Lincoln’s. 3. The young robin. i 4 5. |,. 1. What is considered the largest structure ever built by man? 2. Whose portrait does the five-dollar b}ll carry? | 3. What baby bird eats about three times its own weight in worms ! 4. Which two nations are the greatest sources of oil in the world? 5. How did the word “o'clock” orighnate? Grand Coulee Dam, on the Columbia River, Washington. United States and the Soviet Union. It is merely a contraction of the old phrase “of the clock.” (Graduate Regent | Night Is Observed . ByMoose Women Celebrating the occasion of Grad- luate Regent Night, with Leona Mec- Kinnon in charge, the Women of the Moose met Saturday evening in the Moose club rooms, enjoying a large attendance. Anna Bodding assisted as Acting Senior Regent and Odelia Light as Junior Regent. Recorder was Leona McKinnon and Gertie Olsen was guide, assisted by Christina Abra- ham. Iva Hermanson was chaplain, assisted by co-worker Cora Costello and graduate regent Olive Westhy took the graduate regent’s chair. The ritualistic work, put on by the graduate regent, was impres- sive. New members initiated Saturday evening included Bertha Bland, Iva Lingard, Lita Williams, Mrs. J. Putzel, Daisey H. Bursell and Helen M. Hildre, in the library class. Afl the meeting, games were playi with Lyda Museth and Christina’ Abraham as winners. Ice cream and home made cake were served and a lamp was pre- sented Mrs. Olive Westby, who is leaving soon. Anna Rodenberg is still a graduate regent, but is not active in the lodgé this year. | | | 1 z % sqh':&':;'c’:flh Power in the United States is in the state of Washington, ——————— BUY DEFENSE BONDS Navy Losses - InSolomons Is Increased Total of 2 Light Cruisers, [ Destroyers Sunk in Big Smash WASHINGTON, Noy. 23.—Sink- ing of an additional American de- stroyer in the great naval battle of the Solomons is announced by the Navy Department. This brings the total American losses in the action which smashed the Japanese armada to two light cruisers and | seven destroyers. Officers and crew were rescued by another ship and no. loss of life is reported. LIS S TS TRINITY GUILD SALE TO BE HELD WEDNESDAY At the Senior Trinity Guild meet- ing held last Fritlay at Holy Trin- ity Cathedral, it was determined to hold a food sale November 25. Foods featured will be those suit- able for Thanksgiving desserts and will be on sale in the Shattuck Rice & Ahlers Co. Plumbing—OQil Burners Sheet Metal JUNEAU - YOUNG Hardware Company PAINTS—OIL—GLASS Shelf and Heavy Hardware Guns sad Ammaunition ' 1 4 . " "Guy Smith-Drugs (Careful Prescriptionists) NYAL Family Remedies HORLg:CK'S DANISH ICE CREAM CALL AN OWL Phene 63 Stand OQpposite Coliseum “The Clothing Man” HOME OF HART SCHAFFNER & MARX CLOTHING ZORIC | BYSTEM CLEANING Phone 13 Alaska Laundry | E.ESTENDZR | For Expert Radio Service TELEPHONE BLUE 429 or call at 117 3rd St., Upstairs 15 Years’ Experience % SEATTLE. ® Perfect comfort ® Centrally located Large Rooms e Splendid food all with bath, Special Rates to Permanent Guesty and service ALASKANS LIKE THE 1831—Half a Century of Banking—1941 The B.M.Behrends Bank Oldest Bank in Alaska i Building beginning at 10:30 am. the day before Thanksgiving. SAVINGS