The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, July 13, 1943, Page 4

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e of the indispensable public se Daily Alaska Empire o™ Published every evening except Sunday by the The ' Second War Loan is history. The every EMPIRE PRINTING COMPANY ‘d:n' sale of War Bonds continues. The Third War A S:mnd r\m:?:hhl Streets, Juneau, Alaska, |Loan will start September 9. EN TROY MONSEN - - - = = President P Zasiogn “The Treasury Department is now formulating Vice-President and Business Manager | R. L BERNARD - - plans for the Third War Loan and the newspapers Entered 1n the Post Office in Juneau as Second Class Matter. | Will again be called upon for superlative efforts.” SUBSCRIPTION RATES: A Delivered by carrier in Juneau and Douglas for $1.50 per month. By malil, postage pald, at the following rates: One year, in advance, $15.00; six months, in advance, $7.50; one month, in advance, $1.25. i Bubscribers will confer a favor if they will promptly notify the Business Office -of any fallure or irregularity in the de- (Philadelphis livery of their papers | Philadelphia NUsHpnes; News OStice, 603; Bustness Office, 374, | Mutiny of officers and men of six Nazi U-boats ireported in Norway may be the handwriting on the ‘vm]l the wall of Hitler's Continental fortress. Capping reports of growing fear, rebellion and crippled morale among the crews of Grand Admiral Karl Doenitz’s wolf pac it can be of tremendous significance to the Allied cause. When Nazi sailors refuse to take their submer- sibles back into the battle of the Atlantic, they must feel the odds against them are almost hopeless. Such a triumph with its concomitant, the de- livery virtually intact of men and supplies, brings lever closer an invasion of the European stronghold The measure of Allied victory in the Atlantic is Atlantic Tide Turns Record) MEMBER OF ASSOCIATED PRESS The Associated Press s exclusively entitled to the use for republication of all news dispatches credited to it or not other- i credited in this paver and also the local news published erein. NATIONAL REPRESENTATIVES — Fourth Avenue Bldg., Seattle, Wash. Alaska Newspapers, 1411 shipping. Always inflated, to be sure, they have been dropping since March Nazi tonnage figures on U-boat destruction was 851,000 for March, 415000 in April and 380,000 in tion of United Nations told Commons that a greater toll of U-boats was taken in May than in any other month of the war. American and British airmen in raids upon yards and bases have cut the estimated monthly produc- tion of U-boats from 20 to 14. At the same time Rear Admiral Howard L. Vick- NEWSPAPERS STILL NECESSARY The Empire has received the following letter from the Treasury Department regarding results of the last War Loan Drive and announcing the date in the claims by the Germans themselves of destruc-ito May. A further drop is expected this month Destroyer escorts, escort carriers, aircraft, im-| proved depth charges and rumored secret weapons | have turned the tide against Hitler and the desper- | ate hopes he—like the Kaiser —pinned on the submarine, | First Lord of the Admiralty A. V. Alexander THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE—JUNEAU ALASKA HAPPY BIRTHDAY | | 20 YEARS AGO ¥¥% murire JULY 13, 1923 Field sports, dancing, fortune-telling, a program and refreshments were to be the features of a lawn party to be held at the Treadwell school house by members of the Douglas P.-T. A. the following week. JULY 13 Mrs. Cleo Commers Arnold Swanson Mh-ll-rb.l:l&'ll; é“’l:;"‘_’k | The party was to begin at 9 o'clock and continue until midnight and el g 2 vl leveryone on Gastineau Channel was invited. Sylvester T. Nadeau | Maurine and Marian M 11 l e Beth Daigler iobipnpe As a result of the mass of business poured on to the cable system b by newspaper correspondents and others of the Presidential party, orders D were received from Seattle suspending night letter service until the party had returned to the States. To relieve the situation, the local Navy radio station operator-in-charge announced that the Navy would handle night letters both for the States and other Alaskan points. P Tt HOROSCOPE “The stars incline but do not compel” i it~} WEDNESDAY, JULY 14 Mrs. L. B. Hogue, of Santa Paula, California, sister of P. R. Bradley, Manager of the Alaska Juneau Gold Mining Company, arrived in Juneau on the Queen and was joined on the round trip to Skagway by Mr. Bradley. @ . E. M.'Goddard, of Sitka Hot Springs, passed through Juneau on |the Queen on his way to Ketchikan on business. In Juneau he visited (his sister, Miss Dorothy Goddard. Good evil aspects appear balance in today’s horoscope.| There is a good sign for merchan-| dising, also for business executives ] B : HEART AND HOME: Confusion W. D. Gross, accompanied by Mrs. Gross, left on the Alaska on a and pecplexity may be prevmem‘hufimess trip to Ketchikan. He expected to close an important deal while among housekeepers at this time|in Ketchikan, when food prices and food conser- vation engage principal attention.| The extra work entailed in provid-| ing for a family may appear es- pecially burdensome under this con- | st i figudation. The seers advise Amer- Word was received that a baby boy, named Robert William Gelles, ijcan women to count their bless-|was born the precding day to Mr. and Mrs. Gus Gelles, in Anchorage.. ings and to make the most of the|Gus Gelles had formerly lived in Juneau. fruit and vegetables produced in| I 21 abundance. Girls will find this &| yeather was rainy with a maximum temperature of 61 and a disappointing date where romance| ... .imum of 58. is involved. It is not lucky for | porerrr e e e e e and Miss Bess O'Neill, of the U. S. Forest Service, had recovered from a badly sprained ankle which had confined her to her home for several |days. of the Third War Loan Drive to sell War Bonds: (ery, of the U. S. Maritime Commission, stated mer- “The newspapers certainly ‘went to town' in their support of the Second War Loan and the tre- mendous quota of $13,000,000,000 was oversubscribed by more than $5,000,000,000. “Complete news cover | at the rate of 20,000,000 tons annually (the 1942 total was 7,142,122) and that the excess of production over, sinkings is increasing by leaps and bounds. Another factor in the picture is the success of locally developed fea-| o nited Nations in the operation of their own tures; editorial, cartoons, banner heads, 'front page|sybmarines. British subs, it was announced recently, boxes—everything in the imaginative initiative of sank six ships, damaged others in Itallan coastal newspaper editors came to the support of the most| waters. stupendous financial undertaking in history | All the signs are hopeful. But they are not con- “Advertising departments delivered a fantastic|clusive. There must be no grounds here for over- accomplishment. In less than a month, 9493 news- | confidence. papers published 73,938 separate advertisements to| In many quarters it is reported that Hitler has the tune of 72,633,802 agate lines,. Never before did | vecalled his preying subs either to aid in the re: s0 much newspaper advertising support the sale of tance of expected invasion or to revise' their strategy | in meeting the new weapons of the United Nations, any p.x'ucluct or service—and never was so much ul" The U-boats will be heard from again. anything sold. | strength, with what new tactics, nobody can predict. “The entire performance fills every newspaper- Of this, however, we are certain: man pride. It was further evidence of the We must be prepared to destroy the enemy sub- | power of newspapers, large and small, dailies and | marine wherever it is found. We must continue to weeklies, in selling a worthy product to everyone,|win the battle of the Atlantic—the battle on which | everywhere. More than that, it was another demon- depend all fronts in Europe and Africa. with | have long been delivered to Eng- Red Cross baudage-wmpping by a |land under their own power. Ithe big problem has been to de- | ladies. | chant shipping is being built by the United States|old ones who are wearing uniforms. In what | But | group of pro-democratic Argentine | ‘ BUSINESS AFFAIRS: Astrolo- |gers who long ago warned of in-| |flation see in the day’s porv.mts' |little promise of price”control. The |period of generous spending by | wage earners who craved luxuries| land amusements having passed, the | |demand for necessary clothing and | nousehold appurtenances will keep| making new friends or for holding Daily Lessons in English %, 1. corpon WORDS OFTEN MISUSED: Do not say, “The men sent gifts to their mother-in-laws.” Say, “to their MOTHERS-in-law.” OFTEN MISPRONOUNCED: Beatitude. Pronounce be-at-i-tud, E as in BE, A as in AT, I as in IT, U as in USE (not as in RULE), accent second syllable. ‘much money in circulation. The; OFTEN MISSPELLED: Gorgeous; EOUS, not IOUS. {autumn should be profitable for SYNONYMS: Barrier, barricade, bulwark, boundary, rampart, ob- ‘lolml merchants. The remainder|gstyryction. {of July should be most fortunate| wWORD STUDY: “Use a word three times and it is yours.” Let us | for keepers of summer resorts with- | |in easy reach of cities. | NATIONAL ISSUES: Increased | hospital facilities for wounded sol- |diers will be required east and| | west The need for more nurses wm! |be urgent, while surgeons and phy- | sicians will be in great demand | The public health should be safe- |guarded with special vigilance be- |cause strange diseases may be im- ‘pox'trd from foreign lands, the seers | foretell. Sanitation should occupy | increase our vocabulary by mastering one word each day. Today's word: CONTEMPTUOUS; disdainful; scornful. “I think their attitude toward you was contemptuous.” MODERN ETIQUETTE * poperra Lee Q. TIs it necessary that a man who is traveling alone, use the prefix “Mr.” when registering at a hotel? A. No; he should register as John B. Green, New York, N. Y. TUESDAY, JULY 13, 1943 DIRECTORY i sicises Gastinecu Channel Drs. Kaser and Freeburger Dr. A. W. Stewart DENTIST 29TH CENTURY BUILDING Office Phone 469 Dr. Jolm H. Geyer Room 9—Valentine Bldg PHONE 762 ROBERT SIMPSON,Opt.D. Graduste Los Angeles College of Optometry and Opthalmology Gilasses Fitted Lenses Ground The Charles W. Carter Mortuary Pourth and Franklin Sts. PHONE 130 FIRST AID HEADQUARTERS FOR ABUSED HAIR Parker Herbex Treatments Will Sigrid’s Jones-Stevens Shop LADIES'—MISSES’ READY-TO-WEAR Beward Street Near Third JAMES C. COOPER C.P.A. Business Counselor COOPER BUILDING L. C. Smith and Coroma |and General Drugless MOUNT JUNEAU LODGE NO. 147 BECOND and FOURTH Monday of each month in Scottish Rite Temple beginning at 7:30 p. m. JOHN J. FARGHER, | nmmxmm. Phone s¢ | |Worshipful Master; JAMES W. LEIVERS, Secretary. H B. P. 0. ELKS Meets every 2nd and 4th Wednes- days at 8 P. M. Visiting Brothers welcome. N. FLOYD FAGER- SON, Exalted Ruler; M. H. SIDES, Secretary. PIGCLY WIGGLY For BETTER Groceries o "“The Rexall Store” Your Reliable Pharmacists BUTLER-MAURO DRUG €0. HARRY RACE Druggist Marlin Doubledge Razor Blades 18 for 25¢ “The Store for Men” SABIN’S Front St.—Triangie Bldg. | i You'll Find Food Finer and Bervice More Complete at THE BARANOF COFFEE SHOP DR.D. W. KNOWLES | Latest Scientific Foot Correction Practice. OSTEOPATH and CHIROPODIST HIGH CONCENTRATE TANKERS DELIVER PLANES | Everybody knows that bombers Jog . Mait liquor A. Harvey, Leonard F. Taylor, Thomas D. Gillis and James M. $10,500,000 is carried in the esti- mates.” r‘ederal Building. Phone 294. adv. "m' | liver fighter planes, \\hlchd :l;“e i Latest wmtfi \P" Vlvi%lzmlgo“v ifi}!h(* attention of municipal authori-| Q. When leaving the dinner table to dance, what should one do with VITAMINS |had to be taken apart, crates en | that even L1 residen amirez | ties, Contagious fevers will be pre-|his napkin? ; ; ? 8old and Berviced Baranof Hotel—Lower Lobl { Mm ‘1easscmbled on the ot{lel side. z znc';kl‘xelat\g);] mtlk\lm l:e 3)::),““19,“ unless science gomb){!s vari- A. Leave the napkin unfolded by the side of the plate. J B by ower Lobby ,4 o | . Now,-lowiever, & now ‘swm DA Lone Sunli ot ok e & {ous threatened maladies. ! Q. Is it necessary that a man rise when he is being introduced o 8 'Il'f.l‘d & c'. IR PHONE (Continued trom Page One) been devised whereby U. S. tankers ed in view of the (;o\e-mmem&K INTERNATIONAL AFFAIRS: ‘\lo another man? “Our s Office, 387 Home, Red 669 | + lare carrying fighters on deck — |pronounced fascism. |As victory for the United Nations| A We8 - Myosn iy, : and catches a bus to the other end | twenty to each tanker—and setting | To keep their word in the mat-|is generally acknowledged, legisla- % g Batistled Customers™ of town. .|them down a few days later in|ter, U. S. officials might extend|tive bodies Will NAVE TEASON 10| ftreime e ot e At the Sibley Hospital, she works| England, laid to a trifling degree, but there|dread the tremendous work of re- p By Juneau MEMY SIIOP a5 a nurse's aide. The sights and| The War Shipping Administration |will not be enough to lessen theconstruction in all parts of the I.O OK d lE A R N smells of a hospital are new to|is keeping the Army “cleaned out great fear which Argentina now|world. While the armies of the an A. C. GORDON DR. H. VANCE FRANCISCAN DISHES 1 her, but she does what she is told.|of fighters” by this method of de-|has of her powerful neighbor, Bra-|United Nations will occupy the im- . - - OSTEOPATH R.C.A. Victor Records occupy the e e e e e i i i One day she was giving 2 massage | livery, and is rapidly building up‘all . portant cities of. Europe, the work d E 138 Consultation and examination BRING OLD RECORDS to an old man whose neck xnuscle~111\e strength of the Eighth Air| (Copyright, 1943, by United Fea-lof policing the Continent will keep| 1. What is “Hobson's choice”? free. Hours 16 to 13; 1 to §; were sore. When she was limshed ‘Pfllcps Command which is batter|ture Syndicate, Inc.) thousands of men in uniform. For| 2. How many wives and children did Brigham Young have? 7 to 8:00 by appointment. 4 a = : S als 2| - 5 =4 o e Philippines an e estab- site €' or] ity 3 / N BUSI South Franklin Phone enced nurse. jdehvered to England on the decks Jnm:E::ugm:lf:rl::;b asso- |lishment of law and order in many ‘pur(ha%d by the Dutch? 8t. 171 —_— |of tankers. ‘ e gk Y 8S50"|iglands of the Pacific will offer! 5.- How deep is one fathom? CAAe L T ‘ 3 | ciated with Ted Reynolds. in the . afluck A enc HOME FRONT SOLDIER! | P ‘Gasuneau Giits, arrived from Skag- problems and entail great finan- ANSWERS: 9 Y While the Office of Price Ad-| ARGENTINE FASCISM cial outlay, the seers prophesy. | 1. No choice at all. Tt originates from llo - i ] " % o | way to spend a short time on busi-| "5 & e & originate Hobson who allowed his cus ‘Say It With Flowers” but ministration is being drawn and| Two weeks ago, policy makers in| ... w; patterson is opening & ersons whose birthdate it iS|tomer to choose his horse, but he was obliged to take the one nearest “SAY IT WITH OURSI” — quartered in Washington, one very|the State Department concluded ocaurant in the Lynn Canal port have the augury of a year of eX-|the door. cl Llr n .lll real tribute to the American sys-|that if the New, Argentine Go‘e"'“:a,,d while in Juneau is at the Gas- panding fortunes and growing ex- 9. It is said that he had nineteen wives and he was the father of Juneau Florifl’ 1 tem of government is the mflm\er‘mem broke relations with the AXis,| i ooy Hotel perience. Sudden love affairs are i, .hjgren. Grocery and Meat Marxed in which local OPA boards—more| the U. S. Government, despite the f % indicated for the young. 9 Whia (t miibolita by ittt Hwi Fiooe 11 478—PHONES—371 than 5,000 of them—are standing|rehctionary character of the new‘ Children born on this day prob- 4~ b e Gy hl:t Y wice. High Gt Mok up valiantly to their job, regime, would extend Lend-Lease LES FLORENCE HERE ably will be happy and successful| = Lrom the Manhattans. Moderate Prices ! These boards were thrown to-|aid. Les Florence, merchandise broker,|all through their lives. They win| 5 S feet. § gether hastily in late December,| But since that time, the Ramirez has arrived from Wrangell and|be sensitive and intuitive. nlce & mers l:o. 1941, to ration tires. They knew| | Government has taken a number | other communities in the southern (Copyright, 1943) Whitmore. 1t is simply astounding to anyone| | PLUMBING HEATING nothing about rationing. Nobody |of steps against democratic groups end of the Division. He is at the ) Sherman A. Fleming was the familiar with Alaska to be informed Sheet Metal H s GRAVES did. Formal rationing was some-!in Argentina. It has even stopped Gastineau Hotel while in the city. only passenger booked for Prince that the highway will not be avail- € y - thing with which Americans had | “ pmmfi RS Rupert and Emmett Connors for able for use until October or No- PHONE 34 “The Clothing Man’ had no experience. Next came au-| ~ | Wrangell. vember. What is to be done in the HOMR OP HAKT SCHAFFN tomobiles, typewriters, sugar, and - me“r“""“’ is completely 8 mystery | oy then—along the Atlantic seaboard— | lEAvE o" BOA' so far as the hearings show. This gasoline, which is politically \n-} MKA Hle“w" statement, if correct, ' is further mNEAU - YOUNG flammable. o E"Rou'“ So“m g : i’ proof of the tragic mistake that was H d Never' has there been'an eunlw’ oBERoR 5. Be under obil- ]S no]‘ AVA“HE made in selecting the route of the araware Company distributed work load on these| & BOok of maps a7 Indolence NVl AY hishway. - betngch CRARocn | Oroek, PAINTS—OIL—GLASS SYSTEM CLEANING groups of inexperienced men and . High ‘mountain 3% Term of re- Th 9 o = and Whitehorse instead of the . a k ot | 13 creviee spect ree passengers arrived here F nm i | route from Prince George to White- Sheif and Heavy Nardware ! women, assigned the task of regu- . Compass point 40. Existed last night from Skagway and 56 3 Guns and Ammunitien th 15 Jating their neighbors. At times a Hawalian food 42. Velocity horse which was unanimously re- i g 3 a 5. Ha - S boarded the steamer for the south. rbat low-up has seamed: IeiSablo] Be i ra e | Bl i commepdag. Ahe-AlRES. Interna- Alaska L. grea p has s 17. Feminine name selenium | Arrivals were Capt. J. Sanders, tional Highway Commission, and, aska Laun rY because of the unpredictable peaks| 15 Oriental’tan 5. Closes forcibly € Copt, Tomasaw and s, Brigk| PPOOF GWQ“ Of Tragic Mis- | in Tact, oy practically ail Alaskans.” of work, because there was not| 22 Additions to shawls AlG] I)mmllldfifl [LIF] |1ey. ) T] y ; 3 { 2 £ . he cost of the highway h; " s 7] PR enough . cees untl repently o ,, o Ul 4 Drinke slowy mfigmfll’i [TIEJAIL] | Leaving here were Samuel Fel- 'ake n Seledlng Rflule, S & (e s L 4 etk GuY smflh‘Dmgs CALL AN OWL | hire g : he “l;: because . uflugi mfé’,’.’fx%n:;";;"' A% é’xffglf;}’:h = don, James Cessford, Claude J. Sa S Dele DImOfld Somervell or some other Army of- (Careful Prescriptionists) ! ;‘eiummfl"h 1as been lacking, dm 2. Tasks of 88! Hooky ‘planacle Smith, Ralph F. Koening, Tiny O. Y . | ficer has presented the facts to the NYAL Family Remedies Phone 63 Pad cauv.f the boards have had to| tures ed . County i Ire- Solution OF Yesterday’s Puzzle | THOmPpson, Irene J. Evgrafoff, Henry R |House and Senate Appropriations HORLUCK'S DANISR operate against the grain of hu-| 31. Toward oL I‘?qu:\]l(y F. Kinas, Garfield O. Walla, Na- By ANTHONY J. DIMOND committees but if so mo statement ICE CREAM Stand Opposite Coliseum v In a country accustomed to “Yes”| Israel ofticial - O mander Rl 1 vin W. Clare, Charles E. MuKEY| WASHINGTON-in the pritea| DS ODly imformation we have lsf for L}lc ‘.“hw“‘ they have had to| X Ch:?c::” and Asa C. Gilmore. Hearings on the Bl Tecemtly ed;tha'.. according to General Somer- Juntau H s . e say “No.” They stand athwart the 2. Medicinal Paul R. Luhman, John J. Lech-|py the passed | ve)), '$10,500,000 for the road is car-| | Puncan” unéau Heating Service path of the desire of the Ameri- 3. mecolrxllnu st marer, Daniel A. Doak, Harold E. 45 tun H:-;lzs;o:ggws tel{hap&'ro fiad in G Apemopriation Ml just o g B B 21 Begond Bt ! ! ¥ s . 3 ria or the War GRn "people. It is their duty, given % H“h"‘;" Resine, Esther N. Sommers, Robert, pDepa:u‘nenL activities for the fiscal| bossed b ShapOLER. JH. T miuch and PRESS SHOP RBTALLATIONS anf EERAUIS them by their. government, to ren- i 3:’,,,:‘,'_‘“ Sommers, Jr., Robert A. Hoppe, An-|year commencipe July 1, 1943, Lt.| | was _appropriated before is still | | Cleaning—Pressing—Repairing Heating Plants, Oil Burners, SN war vy, Macy of thel 5 bl thoney P, Weber, and John G.|Gen. Brehon Somervell, Command- | reore ", UioMclal estimates bave PHONE 333 Stoves, Quiet Heat Oil Burncrs mbexs ;:s..em g(f\(l):‘:nexxt me-m‘, g. Falsified Bowman. ing General, Army Service Pbroes,‘ whichie 3:00 mg;fl“mfwmmon of “Neatness Is An Asset” Phone 787 or Green 585 | @ ods, ‘but, there is remarkable loal- wi . e of no Marshall M. Keep, Theodore H.|made an exiended statement about|ii see' o certain th et ty to the programs they adminis- ///Z %A 8 lce runners Horn, Frederick R. Wood, Phillip|the various acitivities of the De-lbe Honb tar A Mma Jjob could [ e ter. Generally, active board mem-| o ,?,: m‘_'“a slotn |B: McCormick, Guy F. Atkinson, partment - including the Alaska g0 which a.howmghr: m"“ $35,000,- bers lde\,‘elop Ir(‘;n an attitude of | 1L Bobbin Mrs. Rachael Atkinson, Cecil M.|Highway. This is what General o taying mn:tmcuonv?:‘:e o casualness, toward zealousness. Their ; e closely . |pa)) Khristi Somervell said about the High . a00¢ o ) 21, T 1 all, Khristian Mahlum and George oul e Highway, H Joyalty under the terrific pounding | op;irrlnt - E. Martin. as appears on page 16 of the hear- t:zlnes TREMEDIR qeer. Wt oonaly 1891 ve' ".u a (eI“u’y o' Banklng_lsn they get is :mmmfi b B Baites David A. Hoffman, Bernara J.[W€S = | e These past months have been 2. Drying cloth Meixner, Russell R. Hermann, Ger- “During the past winter, traf- | ypg MME ard on the morale of OPA men | i;j GD up ald B. Heffelfinger, Ben Sanffrd fic has traveled this road, car- RE: 80 LE:\?!‘-: SI%N “en M B N ; d women, but there has been no | 30, Teltzrlvhl Y '| yying supplies to Alaska over - R SUMMER ° e ; 337 AL Harry D. Goodpastor, Joseph D. o Mrs. Robert Sommers, accom- remarkable increase in resignations 8 oftiations {Tioya, Jr. Gilbert F. Rose, Harowd| Cn¢ frosen ground and tempor. jed : : ' 4 3 brid Si & panied by her son, Robert, Jr., left rom boards. As various elements . Brave women |p Rider, Bernard G. Sk ary bridges. Since the spring a g I fight OPA, the board members B e orn ke My 3P Hart f’";‘k""’h“ thaws, it is temporarily out of |T0F the south last night. They pian a ! B . o v o Whatewer 2 m{;'{;‘ e | 5 e . and Nancy| yse until October or November :’:;p?nd t.::he summ ler of the sum- 1 4 . Hi vore« . i n e 3 may be happening to OPA in 45: Butail'rres toad | Going to Ketohikan were thafol-| / hoat “i-m E & Tl Teesied. -———-—0-0—0—————” Oldest Bank in Alaska ‘Washington, it is not falling apart 8 l';::x of a plow lowing: Manie M, Struv Construction is progressing on 1 1 . 5] ‘in the field g g € . Struve, Mafland| schedule, and the road should PORTRAIT PHOTOGRAPHY g . 5 Maven™® % |L Lueck John G. Shepard, P. J.| pe completed during the fiscal § 86. Fury Sweeney, Grace C. Thorsen, Nellle| year 1944. For this purpose, Have a portrait artist take your couufincm sAvaS picture. Hamersley Studio. Opposite

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