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|sufficient to run ail the departments of government for several months. As late as 1895—only 50 years ago— N AL Eovuse Sinday tY the |the entire Federal budget was only $490,000000-— EMPIRE PRINTING COMPANY {roughly, 10 times the total which today is only a drop Second and Mgid Streets. Juneau, Alaska HELEN TROY MONSEW. 0 ¢ 3 Presient in the bucket of governmental expenditures. Daily Alaska Em pire Publis 20 YEARS AGO 7%'s emerre DOROTHY TROY LINGO - - T - Vice-President WILLIAM R. CARTER - - - Edkl:ir and’ Mnéid:‘::r oSSR vy 5 AFRIL 27, 1926 MER A. FRIEND o N v naging Editor vitain N S § X 3 B EmNomR. . =" <" 2.7 Business maneer Britain Needs Relief, Too APRIL 27 Mrs. E. L. Gruber and her two children, Elinor and Vivian, returned @ on the steamer Alaska after a visit in the States. Marcis Van Sandt the Post Office In Jumeau as Second Class Matter. (Cincinnati Enquirer) SUBSCRIPTION RATES: " th 2 | J. J. Connors . W SRR e x carri s for $1.50 per month; > early 6 ‘stages W A ? 2 ¥ o RS i o T e ) MR s e it B e Thelma_George ® | With a total catch of 58,000 pounds of halibut, 11 vessels of the PIRARE A nt e Slowiak SUM L et b il T G o i Jerry McKinley ® local fishing fleet and one from Petersburg were in port from the S ax gty In Sdvanos $750; the democratic world. The way in which they squared |y gygene E. Weschenfelder ® banks i a ce, o 4] 2 . anks. il confer & favor if they will promptly not?y | their shoulders against impossible odds, endured zhe‘ ' Marlyn Isaak ° ce of any,failure o Irregularity in the dellvery |worst thab came their wag)without finching, and|e nie Thomas B, Jensen e = B Business Office, 374 worked for victory to the limit of their endurance,|, Mrs. Ethel Schramm o Despite contests for nomination for Delegate to Congress in both Telephones: News Office, 602; % o really gave the American people something to live| g Mrs. John Mills o |Darties today’s vote in the primary election promised to be one of the Roy W. Riegle e lightest in many years. Little interest had been shown by local voters e jand the balloting by midafternoon was very light. MEMBI v; 70!" ASSOCIATED PRESS «s is exclusively entitled to the use for |Up (0. | o Col. ews dispatches credited to it or not other And cven yet, the way the British people are| s paper and also the local news published Rt S ° Sy T enduring the aus.l:-x ‘b[l‘ of l;)e posu‘v:u ‘pexmd is some- | o APRIL 28 P chias A —_— = i g ry 1 rkable, and very inspiring. 5 4 yise S, fite o d % i NATIONAL REPRESENTATIV Alaska Newspapers, 1411 thl"\g‘.j(l"“l‘e?:‘; “' rr(d e 4 ilfln}tpnewipapex’ Al Gordon B. Oakes o Wilma Feero of Douglas celebrated her ninth birthday today by Fourth Avenue Bids., Seattle, Wa Ak b e e . Mrs. Robert Cowling ® '(reating her classmates to ice cream during the recess period. — - - e ——— | respondents for it that England is worse off, relatively, 3 George Paul % than the continent. Evidently it is notably worse off | & Mrs. Lydia Ritter ST TR than most parts of Germany, where lavish relief and 5 Kfiufi Relschl = The first strawberry l.:]uxsnms of the v.xm.so‘n were reporied here today rehabilitation efforts are centering. & Nitbedts TAfiOstronT . by J. N. Carver, w’pu said that plflllls in his Casey-Shattuck Addition UNRRA—the United Nations Relief and Rehab-! ¢ Salvig Havdahl o |garden were beginning to b?o(:nA nicely. He said he had radishes, carrots {ilitation Acdministration maintains headquarters in| o o and other vegetables beginning to show above ground also. London, and from there directs a widespread and o ¢ @ ¢ o @ o e ¢ ¢ ¢ ¢ @ ———— § ! rather wasteful relief program in Europe. Yet there is| -ee A. A. Shonbeck, business man of Anchorage, left on the steamer Ino relief dicpensed in England that has come to OUr | powrweweoeeeceeee-eseeeesa, /] ska for his home after severa: weeks spent here on business. attenticn. On the contrary, the British people are R {shering their meager food stocks In order to help feed H 0 R 0 S C 0 P E Mrs. Charles Goldstein, Miss Marie Goldstein and Mrs. J. H. Ahlers the hungry people on the continent. The British diet | returned from vacation trips tc the Siaies. “The stars incline S R but do not compel” ! Weather: Highest, 52; lowest, 45; rain. L e { e {has been unhealthfully substandard for years, yet it} [still i being accepted as a necessity to help the situa- |tion elsewhere in Europe. Typical of what has been done with Britain’s very limited agricultural produc- |tion is the fact that 26,000,000 bushels of cereals and ! Icereal products have been sent to Europe during the SUNDAY, APRIL 28 jg Da"y I_essons in Eng"sh %1; L. GORDON i GIFT TO UNCLE SAM Somewhere around the United States lie “hidden” some $23,000000 worth of government savings bonds which have matured and have stopped drawing inter- est. Their owners, to date, haven't turned in the st year and a half at the expense of home con- sumption. HEART AND HOME UNRRA officials and other visitors to London can Under this configuration, com- : claim ration coupons to outfit themselves, but the munity projects are assured of sue- WORDS OFTEN MISUSED: Do not say, “Each of the boys have | British citizens still are covered by a clothing rationing | cess, whether in the planning ov|their own cars.” Say, “Each (singular subject) of the boys HAS HIS own ¢ stringent that threadbare clothing is the jexecution stage. The blind and the car.” ‘ | L e i} 50 extremel securities for cash. The government is ready, and |y, i Sy contrast to the reports of Gls that in crippled are under favorable in-! OFTEN MISPRONOUNCED: Wagner, Richard (German composer). even anxious, to pay, but can’t do it until the bonds 'y,ye parts of Germany they found lavish clothes and |fluences and are minded that their pyonounce vag-ner; A as in AH, E as on HER. sr¥inrbectiiad comforts, {own thinking largely determines OFTEN MISSPELLED: Chaos, thaugh pronounced kay-os If present-day security owners follow the pattern One correspondent who visited both Berlin and ‘lht‘ harmony of their lives. SYNONYMS: Wasteful eeraVI’ag:\nt improvident mriftl‘e‘« prodigal of those in World War I, it is probable that several |Lendon said that England might as well have lost the BUSINESS AFFAIRS o i 4 g g d =y d millicns of wartime bonds never will be cashed. More |war, judging by comparative conditions. There are| Many training schools will be set ia . : 3 than $13,000,000 still are outstanding from the conflict swank clothes and fashion shows in Germany; British lyp by industry to help returned WORD STUDY: “Use a word three times and it is yours.” Let us; women can buy one dress a year, and their stockings, cervicemen and women to make increase our vocabulary by mastering one word each day. Today's word: !such as they are, look like cotton bags. Nylons? They the adjustment to new jobs or SERAPHIC; angelic (pronounce se-raf-ik, E as in SEE unstressed, A as | s ajority of them never will be presented for e ’ > Skl B 8 P @ y S & i Tt S smajory 1 o don't even joke about them. |prepare them for the first jobs they in AT, accent second syllable). “If he could lay her ear to heaven, | payment. Thus—out of the billions which the Am- G p Y. ) e < ‘ d ecoy u :1'{631\ people lent to their government during times Germany and the occupled lands enjoyed & period h‘"f" cheld.” By orainy ™ANY and hear the ravishing music of those seraphic spirits.—Watson. P of relative prosperity, of course, during the bitter now idle will be given employment of war—a substantial sum turns out to be not a loan, years that England stood alone. And until near the at.which they can ecarn while but an outright gift, last, Germany was fattened and clothed on the loot | learning MODERN E'”O U ETTE by | Doubtless a large portion of the outstanding bonds of the continent: England meanwhile had eaten up NATIONAL ISSUES ROBERTA LEE ! of more than 25 years ago—and it is deemed likely | i Il are intact. Perhaps some of the owners do not and worn out her resources. It will take a great while| The question ol_air space control realize the value of the paper they possess. A part of for her to regain adequate industrial and agricultural |will be debated with renewed vigor “e—— the total probably has been lost or destroyed, and no ;tw‘du_ctinn smnfl_»m to resume a n-nsunablev standard wx'.hlx: «heb:ve;c‘t (‘aflc]rory t;znx:s t:c Q. Wheii ‘o goung in hes been dnteodined. 014 il wonlt 4t tel claim ever may be made against the government by ;“r ‘ml““' dA“;l ng::tn:xpc]: m:;): SL i::f:“:f ;o%:dzz‘;‘::tol; ]i,tv,,es -plangwuu)yqdd“{u"p to A1l right for him to say, “I am pleased to meet you"? i ; rate, the al Treasury on—tweeds for exal —c s addition : sELY g ¥ “ i the owners. At any rate, the Federal Treasury today | W "\ %0 0 eq because of the mation’s desperate |those operated by commercial lines A. No. Such phrases as "I am pieased to meet you” and “I am | e e e I has available more than $46,000,000 on which it pays| . =0 . plight. and the military. glad to make your acquaintance” are not in good taste. The accepted | no interest, and which it never may be asked to return We're spending uncounted ‘millions to salve the INTERNATIONAL AFFAIRS acknowledgment is “How do you do”? | to those who originally loaned it | hurts of war in erstwhile enemy lands. Let’s not forget | Foreign military services aré’ ~ Q. What is called a man's “duty dance”? | Today that doesn’t seem to be any tremendous | a valiant ally that spent her strength in the common 'amazed, confused and amused at A. A man should always ask his hostess for a dance. sufn. But when America was young it would have been | fight. and now needs help as much as any of them. the current debate between G. Is Q. How are invitations to a bridal shower issued? | a_nd ‘tho Army concerning the .d‘s' A. The invitations may be made by note, telephone, or they may | s But some of us” continued mnot with their wisdom. .. For the tinction between G. Is and officers be given orally - | Ihe wasl“nfl‘on Stone, “would give ten years of our removal of unwise laws from the and the privileges accorded each i ! lives to be able to write opinions | statute books, appeal.lies not to The debate will do much to define « o Me"y-Gfl-ROuud {like- yours.” » i | the .courws but to the ballot.” idemocracy to many to whom . the ! by | To which Holmes, with a twinkle | And this week, Harlan Stone was We§d has no meaning: s I.O 0 K and LEAR N A. C. GORDON (Continued from Page One) |in his eye replied: still true to that dictum when, in !+ Persons whose birthdate this is 2 « U “My boy"—Stone was then over |the last of his mortal opinions, he 8¢ promised by the sta A VeI b FISAEN surance and tutoring other stu-|60—“Goc sees through all this mo- | decreed: ofephidlosame cthbectsts B0g; bankflas 1. Is “God made the sea; we made the shore” a French, Scan- | ial activities. dents. He paid hig college expenses | desty Children born today will be dis- dinavian or a Dutch proverb? “It is not the function of thi every cent of the way. Sheter Court to disregard the will of Con- . = . essions 2. What is a table d’hote dinner? And he proved—as Douglas Mac- STONE THE PUPIL gress in.the exarcise of its con.| JEUERR; in Atte ipeofessiona ¢ My ¢ 3 : o e | Nheon they are properly and sympatheti- 3. What is an idiosyncrasy ? Arthur also demonstrated by stand-| jyugtice Holmes, of course, was to | Stitutional powe lcally guidad and counseled in their' .. 4. Wh d wh b ? ing first in nis class at West Point | oo o1 FOMTEh OF CONSE W4T 0 Hig words faltered, but his spiri CLY BUlde e L et —that a b start in college sets:“,__r Douglas and scores of other Was as unflinching as ever. RO s - What was Al Smith’s middle name? the pace for what comes after. ANSWERS: ‘early years. . } i | | | | | | Justice Douglas and scores of other | MONDAY, APRIL 29 o Stone scrved for three years 8S yo.;g men—a great inspiration and | CHIPS FROM A GRANITE LIFE sy 1. A Dutch proverb. presidént of m; class, attained Phl\tmcher’ At one time, Stone asked Most pecple nave forgotten, but HEART AND HOME 2. A meal for which one pays one all-inclusive price, instead of Beta Kappa in his junior year,ipoinec what guiding principle he it was Harlan Stone to whom the, The stars are friendly to the ag-separate prices for each dish. l:;:;f:dsef“ Sl‘a’;*‘gm::“g'?;mbi‘l‘l‘di‘r‘):;h:-.d worked out during his 90-odd |nation owes a debt for picking J.'ed and the physically handicapped. 3. A peculiarity of constitution or temperament. {va‘; & i years. Edgar Hoover as head of the FBI, Love affairs should flourish and 4. In a church, before a marriage. “Young man” said Holmes to his | Under Harry Daugherty, William J. |the time is ideal for proposals, w: member who would become mCSt| g1 vear_g)d friend, “about 75 years Burns had run wild with the FBI, dings and home planning. | famous. 5 . {ago I leerned that I was not God. and, when Stone became Attorney BUSINESS AFFAIRS | Perhaps Calvin Coolidge, Who Was | 4114 55 when the people of the General, he swept out Burns and | Shelves long empty, or nearly sq, 5. Emanuel. OII. BURNERS PLUMBING HEATING DR. E. H. KASER DENTIST BLOMGREN BUILDING Phone 56 HOURS: 9 A. M. to 5 P. M. Dr. A. W. Stewart DENTIST 20TH CENTTJRY BUILDING Office Phone 469 CALIFORNIA Grocery and Meat Market 478 — PHONES — 371 High Quality Foods at Moderate Prices Jones-Stevens Shop | LADIES’—MISSES’ READY-TO-WEAR Seward Street Near Third Don'’s Radio Service Electrical and Radio Repair (We pick up and deliver) Phone 659 909 West 12th Alaska Music Supply Arthur M. Uggen, Manager Piznes—Musicz® Instruments and Supplier Phone 206 Second and Seward — HEINKE GENERAL REPAIR SHOP Welding, Plumbing, Oil Burner Blacksmith Work GENERAL REPAIR .WORK Phone 204 929 W. 12th St. “The Store for Men" SABIN’S Front St—Triangle Bldg. Warfield's Drug Store (Formerly Guy L. Smith Drugs) NYAL Family Remedies HORLUCK’S DANISH ICE CREAM HUTCHINGS ECONOMY MARKET Choice Meats At All Times Lacatsd in George Bros. Store PHONES 553—92—95 i | The CharlesW. Carfer Morfuary - Fourth and Franklin Sts. PHONE 136 FOR TASTY FOODS and VARIETY TRY Gastineau Cale Foremost in Friendliness VANITY BEAUTY SALON Cooper Building ELSIE HILDRETH, Manager Open Evenings Phone 318 METCALFE SHEET METAL Heating—Airconditioning—Boat Tanks and Stacks—Everything in SHEET METAL Phone 711 90 Willoughby Ave. et ity "The Rexall Store” Your Reliable Pharmacists BUTLER-MAURO DRUG CO. HARRY RACE « Druggist “The Squibb Store” Where Pharmacy Is a Profession 20TH CENTURY MEAT Juneau's Most Popular “Meating” Place ONLY THE BEST OF MEA'[S PHONE 202 CARO TRANSFER HAULING and CRATING DIESEL, STOVE, CRUDE OIL Phone 344 Phone 344 FOR Wall Paper IDEAL PAINT SHOP Phone 549 Fred W. Wendt INSURANCE Shattuck Agency. . €) B.P.0.ELKS Meets every Wednesday at 8 p. m. Visiting brothers welcome. E. C. REYNOLDS, Exalted Ruler. W. H. BIGGS, Secretary. MOUNT JUNEAU LODGE NO. 147 SECOND and FOURTH Monday of each month in Scottish Rite Temple beginning at 7:30 p. m. M. L. MacSPADDEN, — — | Worshipful Master; JAMES W. LEIVERS, Secretary. one class behind Stone, remember- | ooy states want to do some- | selected a young career man, Hoov- will soon be filled with products ed that record when Coolidge—SUd- | tpino 1 can’t find anything in the | er, to take his place. No one had for which consumers have been denly catapulated from the Vice-|congitution expressly forbidding ever heard of Hoover before. . . . waiting since early in the war. Pro- Presidency into the White House—yyom to do, I say, whether I like Stone was kickd upstairs from the duction will be stepped up rapidly s 'ih o'l B a | Silver Bow Lod;e No. A 2, LO.OF., mith 0il Burner Service R 4 2103%: MEETINGS AT 222 WILLOUGHBY—PHONE 518 Secy. Don McCammon; Phone Blue 372; meetings Mondays, 7:30 The Alaskan Hotel Newly Renovated Rooms at Reasonable Rates PHONE SINGLE O JUNEAU UPHOLSTERY_CO. RE-UPHOLSTERING DRAPERIES Phone 36 122 2nd St. ALASKA ELECTRONICS| Sales and Service ECTORY LL—I1st and Gastineau—Phone 327 Juneau Mine & Mill Workers Local 203; Secy. Arthur H, Wal- ther; Phone Green 340; meet- ings 1st and 3rd Monadys, 7:00. Juneau Transport Workers ,Local 172; Secy. George C. Martin; Phone Black 265; meetings 2nd and 4th Tuesdays at 8:00 P. M. United Cannery Workers, Local 269; Secy. Ruth Hayes. ' Inter. Longshoremen & Ware- housemen Union, Local 1-41 Cold Storage Workers; Secy. Mike Avoian; Green 759; meetings 1st u}d 3rd Wednesdays, 7:30 ‘Warehousemen Union, Local 1-16 Baranof Turkish Bath and Massage | Hours 9:A. M. to 6 P. M.—Open Evenings by Appointment / BARANOF HOTEL—Lower Level PHONE 753 I ippied axound. for s coew """"“gm or not, ‘Goddamit, let 'em do it?”” | Justice Department to the Supreme through the next few months. A 214 SECOND STREET day at 8:00 P. M,, . O. O. F. HALL. General and finally selected his old | ;)\ 4 ubtedly those words were Court by Coolidge when Stone dar- new era of prosperity is just around DAY PHONE 476 NIGHT CALLS—Fred C. Lorz—Blue 655 Visiting Brothers Welcome college-n:ate who had worked 50| Stones mind when, in his fa- | ed move against Andrew Mellon’s the corner. FLOYD HORTON, Noble Grand m’:‘( and Sd[""“' b “'ellg' ;' )’:i‘:h‘::‘y'imom dissent in the Triple-A case, Aluminum Trust. Mellon was then | NATIONAL ISSUES nfi; H. V. CALLOW, Secretary o, Blonp. WOk |he said: a fellow member of the Coolidge| A variety of legislation seeki | b e JeN School, and| Tne courts are concerned only Cabinet. . . Almost two decades t0 give substantial gid to the na- BRONZE SHAFTING — STERN BEARINGS — PROPELLORS nally was gradua espi - | with the power to enact statutes, passed before the Justice Depart- ticn's small business enterprises MAR Clo n IR ed interruptions when he recoup{d;_____L__ 157 ks will be aired before long. Small GRAY .INE ENGMS )‘;i; nz::ns.:i dh}:j ‘:rei;cgm:g f}c}l;or‘); n‘:; i jb:xsin:slsd is n; lox;\ger the neglemi,e)d SALES and SERVICE MEETINGS HELD IN UNION HA I . T ‘5 epchild. as many able 2 that followed, Stone never forgot | - (GNP UMENPIRUH ) » MK PN %% “:9 {champions who are diligently look- Juneau Welding and Machine Sllop Juneau Industrial Union Council those beginnings, never was too | 1o RIAIN ling after the interests of a group : (| Secy. R. S. Hough; Phone Green busy to help the youngsters who,! 15 [0 o/R(s| |Whose voice was formerly drown-| ¥ 240; meetings second and fourth like himself, struggled to f.ush! i ey E- ed out by the lusty shouts of 1h91 = 3 Thursdays at 7:30 P. M. college. ! nocks 41. Note of the |larger organizations. S th m t' ipepre | B - Etiflipome T i = i:: | _INTERNATIONAL AFFAIRS | ome '«'.g eren Int. lwmvwfrk;m oIH Amerl;; ) STONE THE TEAC 4‘ -%‘poch :g i\)lelrlcnl] mrlw WiE| | Increasing evidence that Russia A Local -271; Secy. Henry - | o Wit ety o o Tindu garment '~ tween muun- will cooperate with, but will not sero; meetings 2nd and 4th Fri- ne cf the was William O.| 14. Hindu ga tween muun; LIEIN % b Doutlas, 8 penai faw stiudent . Huge mythical tain peaks <t=1 'open her borders to, the rest of the| days at 7:30 P. M. P |d i St s ”“D A 16. 1 :M a ;5 Ea”ld"x .inrmy EISIT |world is seen. Indications are that Raggoy b t Colunibia v Ster was Dean | ndicate Sxclamation | 8 . S 1 5 o f’,w” B e busy col- | 18 Century 81. Came to- EF Russia desires peace, ‘but it, is not| NOW ON'SALE AT OUR FISH MARKET—the United Trollers of Alaska, Local lode Execublven il Bave yiven | 88 Ry e S 52. Mythical TIEID| the nature of her people or her | following assortment of EASTERN FISH {|] 26; Secy. B. H. (Jack) Manery; Douctis a7 five. ar 30.mtnute bep/| E ol s Sanonsters VIVIAl - government to reciprocate the man- | y Phone Blue 220; meetings 1lst ‘vut Dein Stone devoted hours | - position of . 69, O1a musical o S £ ; :: ifest friendliness of this and other| FILLETS s"oxEn and 3rd Wednesdays, 8:00 P. M. ! 2. Forbi : Doulas of his own prob- | .33 Publie walk 60, Ratity ] o naans . ../t MACKEREL FILLETS FINNAN HADDIES A Jims i geiting through college| I Sound of'diy I Lami's pen Solution of Yesterday's Puzzte | Persons whose birthdaie this is } HAKE FILLETTS HAKE FILLETTS Lokl Industrial Uniwy. Local S8 and in advising him what to do. | §\‘) .IA;"';I:I‘.n N fi };:lr:&";lrd DOWN & zzenx;:fn;;;;cllletcz{u;x emstfear?s.v.sAw;iecar‘;l COD FILLETS POLLOCK FILLETS Sec. Abel Anderson; Black 605. This weck, that same William O.| - jive o » Gk 8 1. Kind of rubber 6. Deep hole will lead to a tevidion: of mamy WHITING FILLETS KIPPERS Douglas, now a Supreme Court| 36. Dogs some- family 2. Excited 7. Neckpieces ol0 &nd out-dated e Bud cons BAY CHUBS 2 Justice, was beside his old "e“h_f Wing in ve- ; (;I;’lg.x:\ebocean 1‘”0“0;‘5 2 { e Sh . r L International Longshoremen and < s = “ Jght brown - Lo ol \vglen he was stricken on the| 35 Of the teeth el e Bore Gk o v o uisiana dhrimps rog Legs gsé;y year the Chief Ju.suce‘ m::c'“o;l it. gy ghonce fo MBRS Guname fogf 'y y . Biolical city | g, ot —_—— brought a Columbia Law graduate . Sparrow hawk :Thgse‘:fi L 'lgle;h:s;‘""‘;z? e uneau Lo Ol'ag'e OmpanY, 1C. to Washington to be his secretary. SRR nd T 4 5 This, of course, was a definite in- 2 it (st ant. 2kl on 55 oo S i convenience, since it meant break- | . M.ljlymf wifl:m et ) Matledn i S ing in a new man every year. But, ariver | ment, under hard-hitting Thurman | | the Chief Justice wamed) to he}p Pawolman's | Arnold, finany brought the Amm_: PEGGY Jfll‘lNS ; launch young men into the world Planel | inu - 3 | i | DI ::;1::;1: 'g::;z ::f‘:;‘?at':‘:nes‘;‘i?":fl .as a paid-up subscriber to THE DAILY ALASKA U AR N R G | T L AR b e et it EMPIRE is invited to be our guest THIS EVENING. i 5 2. Madagascar | {mest iy oA Present this coupon to the box office of the mecea for young people in and out cf Government who crowded cround the Chief Justice at Mrs. Stene’'s Monday “At Homes.” He was a source of inspiration to young artists, ycung writers, young musicians. Once, after listening to Yehudi Menuhin, Stone dropped by to see kis ola friend the late Jus- tice Oliver Wendell Holmes and told him howsthis youth-'had kept a great audience spellbound. “Ah,” said Helmes with a sigh, “what a triumph! I sometime | gy | lier connections with the Justice! 3 '{;rmtjuilh\lr&. | Department. So many other jus-' cAPlToL Tmr“ plece tices had to also, that the Supreme . Crown of a hat |Court couldn't sit on aluminum at] and receive TWO TICKETS to see: . Small village Bolt: 8 L) he Chief i Ba™ | ha ' Siver meaieine ban on s "A SONG FOR MISS JULIE" opinion Idesk, memento of his membership in the Herbert Hoover Medicine- Federal Tax—11c per Person | Ball Cabinet . . .Despite this, Hoo- ver, without mentioning names, Patron saint ot |launched a bitter attack at Stone’s Pnoun l4—m BOYAI. BL“E c“ co. iiallors " |dissent in the AAA case. The c:% and an insured cab WILL CALL FOR YOU and 1srael Justice never resented the -ati 4| g - o WL i e naver lek it nase T T RETURN YOU to your home with our compliments. think T voild give ten years of my | Bevesss ship with Hoover. WATCH THIS SPACE—Your Name May Appear! life to be able to play like that.”| 8. Pinch {COPYRIGHT, BELL SYNDIC/TE, 1NC. 1946) | : N 1891—0ver Half a Century of Banking—1946 The B. M. Behrends Bank Oldest Bank in Alaska [ - COMMERCIAL