The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, August 12, 1946, Page 4

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PAGEFOLR _~ - THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE--JUNEAU; ALASKA MONDAY, AUGUST 12, 1946 | . i ( D -l l k E . promote export business, A conference of sixteen| = E— i ). 3 3otk by N \ 3 aily Alaska Empire | v scheduld for next yar, The inten | = { 20 YEARS AGO 7rom wpirg ||| DB-E H.KASER ||| The CharlesW. Carter Published every evening except Bunday by the tion is to present at that meeting a master trade pa — THE E P EMPIRE PRINTING COMPANY which may replace most of the American trade agree- i | g Monuary Second and Main Streets, Juneau, Alas . : HELEN TRO;r;;zfi.\';EN . - - - Prasident | ments made separately with twenty-five countries since | e A el D BLOMGREN BUILDING DOROTHY TROY LINGO = | ". Eattor and Monager | 1934. President Truman has apppointed g committee | AUGUST 12, 1996 HOU’RS'l;hAGn;:sw'SP i Fourth and Franklin Sts, © .- gMenasing Editor | of business men to serve as a foreign trade advisory | J AUGUST 19 4 Defeating the Miners 5 to 4 in the final game of the post-season C9A M . M. PHONE 136 B e wn " |board. Forecasts of the export business which may | o Pearl Peterson o ! serics, the Elks won the 1926 City League Championship. Beaten 5 to 1 In the Post Ol I TION RATES, o Cls8 MAller. | e obtainable in the next few years have ranged from| o Ed Garnick 4t the end of the sixth canto, the Mmers gamely stged a rally that - ; Delivered by carrier in (_lhun';'nm:nd Poug] A ;;‘:’::.sn per month; | $7,000,000,000 to $10,000,000,000 annually . Roy Abrahamson ® | ctted them three runs but Doug Oliver smothered the rally by spear- The Erwm reed co, c“d Bwerage c°. Six months, $8.00; one year. S1! 3 . | By mail, postage paid, at the following rates: It now seems obvious that much of Europe, the|® Hz Lauder ®! i MacSpadden's fly in center for the third out and with the tying Othios 1t Oxll Tk Gfoodsy Pleturioh - s 9 l ane S AT e g, *1% months, In advance, $.50: | 1t and Latin America will endeavor to ship into|® Mrs. Pauline Holmes @ un or It was a hair-raising finish that sent the largest PHONE 704 olesale 805 10th SE; . , Subscrivers will confer 8 favor K they W B mary |OUr Tich markets as large a quantity of merchandise (® Helen Knight o { of the season home with a pleasant taste in their mouths. “Big” HAY, GRAIN, COAL PHONE 216—DAY or NIGHT l : Business Office of any fallure or irregularity in the delivery 8 8 8s 16 £ ‘ 3 . b Tabey 3 | A e 5 | af‘their papers, 4 as this country can absorb. There will most surely |® ?'.»,iffi,’fil“nffé‘fl»’l 2 | MacSpadden pitched and Harvey Barragar caught for the Miners, Walter and STORAGE for MIXERS or SODA POP 8 Telephones: News Otfice, 00 Business Office: 1. Ibe a steady demand abroad for American goods of | § Rejrimirdontess e o vs and Bob Coughlin composed the battery for the Elks. The o | E ¥ ASSOCIATED PRESS | 1 " ' SR p " ; i ted, got ¢ ) reaks N O Anclusively. entitied to the use for |MANY Kinds. As lease-lend shipments taper off, and |4 ® it is admitted, got a lot of breaks. c A L"-' o n NIA VANITY BEAUTY ublicati Il news dispatches credited fo It or not ether. | war relief cargoes cease to be necessary, much of thele o o o o v 6 ¢ 0 0 0 @ @ - ' i e s paper and also the local news published | ) (rade rivalry will be revived. It is imperative that s Ry L | The Dorothy Alexander was in port from the south with 210 tourists Grosety nid Misat’ Maskes . SALON ! B, B8 e, SRRl Y s < Ty Strive: foni e 2 laboard i — Cooper Buildin 4 REPRESENTATIVES - Alaska Newspapers, 1411 | Although America should strive for a share of thi v aboar 478 -— PHONES — 371 D g e Bldg., Seattle, Wash. | foreign trade, the size of our domestic business shall l High Quality Foods at ELSIE HILDRETH, Manager el |always be kept in sight to serve as the balance wheel arano ln | The Dorothy Alexander’s baseball bunch was to play the Juneau Moderate Prices Open E ngs Phone 318 'r‘f national economy In the twelve months ended Fire Department’s team this night to get even for two previous defeats. cm—————————— in April retail trade in the United States exceeded | " 3 J S 1$79,540,000,000—a sum nearly eight times greater than cln Sou'h An engraved pen and inkstand was presented to Harry Fisher by ones-Stevens hop lll‘/elfl'CAl;‘FF S!;I}Eli'r‘lmAL the most optimistic forecast so far made of available 3 the Juneau Volunteer Fire Department for his work as umpire during LADIES'—MISSES ng—Airconditioning—Boat {export business {he past season. Fisher had sold his candy business and was leaving | SRAD Y TOWELE Tanks and Stacks—Everything | i3 v: i for the States in SHEET METAL ' . The Baranof arrived Sun- 55 Jeward.Street Near Third Phone 711 90 Willoughby Ave. Shady Stuff from Wallace’s Agency Hay j morniig IReu foticy LIk Planes 1, 2 and 3 of the Navy Alaskan Air Mapping Expedition ar- ST engers from Seward: Pete Car- s for completion of the work in % g S arles g, rived in Juneau to establish their L . " | In comment a few days ago on statistics tssued by |Cousler, Mrs. Vivian L. Dotts, Jerryy Southeast Alaska. The Navy mine sweeper s P Your Reliable Pt a v days 2 m statistics SUeH v ¥ iy 1 J. o as, T Ly 33 Y, 5 S vics ’[ho Department of Commerce showing that spot prices|Darling, Eske Eckesen, Mrs. Viola | Thar and probably the Navy planes would base there. The Gannet rl'mpt(ourt}'frus Service o eliable Pharmacists of basic commodities increased 25 per cent in the first | Eskesen, Bodile Eskesen, Mr. and was ready for-any needed repair work on the planes BONDED WAt EHOUEE BUTLER-MAURO 5 3 5 i 1 s |Mrs, Sig Fause, Ernest Givonetti, ! — Ollr-Oencral Hunling | fortnight after the end of price control, this news- |MIs. £ 156, bo A Phous 1H " Wtehints Bauate DRUG CO. | paper said that the presumption was that the sta-|Mrs. Janct (-1(3u:xm-t(1. L]ifll Jen- | weather report: High, 72; low, 70; partly cloudy. % RUBIE BAMace e e e 3] 7P L | tistics by themselves were a factual statement, The |Sen, Mrs. Tona Jensen, Paul JASEEY, | ¢ oo e ee — 1 THE CHANGING COURSE OF FOREIGN | e b 3 Glen Leash, Winona A. Monroe, . . % | Baltimore Sun, by exploring the background of the . ; TRADE ‘ Sl 5 i Robert Miller, Mrs. R. Miller, Mary Alaska Music Sllpply HARRY RACE | figures, casts doubt on the honesty with which even 7 st tes iehEcMRY t|1hoso facts were treated. Among commodities covered Overseas trade of the United States throughou iby the figures silk, which went up 140 per cent this year will be marked by many irregularities. A ifl“m. the end of the price control. This sharp rise {naturally raised the average for other commodities. Arthur M. Uggen, Manager Pinkley, Miss M. Pinkley, Ray Pad- g Dally Lessons in EngllSh I‘J}Z,I L. GORDON | dock, Mrs. Betty Paddock and Mrs. | | C. O. B. Templin From Valdez: W. J. Bligh, Frank Druggist “The Squibb Store” Where Pharmacy Is a Pianos—Musical Instruments and Supplicr Corrrrrrrrr v few days ago, for instance, the Department of Com- RE R WORDS OFTEN MISUSED: Do not say, “He is a lengthy young merce reported that exports in April were $57000000 | But please consider how this rise was brought g"“{““"l';d;fr RF}::“‘&;‘_(‘I‘:“LC;“ N man” Say, “He is a TALL young man.” Use LENGTHY when referring Phone 206 Second and Seward | Profession ¢ below those of March, while imports had risen $22.- jabout. Prior to the end of price control on June 30, |1 s ™ o1 0 h e Brederick 10 discourses or writing, as, “It was » LENGTHY sermon.” y 000,000 in the same month. Overseas shipments of [silk was $3.08 a pound, the OPA ceiling. Quotations |y 1 "c oo Tretfers and in- OFTEN MISPRONOUNCED: Cafe. Pronounce ka-fa, first A as in HEINKE GENERAL 20TH CENTURY MEAT merchandise from this country will consist, for some jon July 12 and later were $4.76 a pound. But the | e "o o oeers and Douglas ASK unstressed (not as in AT), sccond A as in FATE, accent second REPAIR SHOP MARRET ‘ time, not only of ordinary commercial exports, but also |only sale of silk to establish this new price was made R. Withers. syllable, Welding, Plumbing, Oil Burner Juneau’s Most Popular & of lease-lend goods and of cargoes sent over by the ‘:;:)r!;:fn;m; ;:351 :)1‘ tml-‘ f\lcc(:;a(irltllc‘tcio:riFu\ax)cp"co,._ ol e B e e Blacksmith Work “Meating” Place g z o 1ie ” i o2 e CE N0, SO WAS | p o re: Petersburg: Mr. SYNON 5. P SRR GENERAL REPATR WORK N s B AE0 JURERL S fhilm“;“u mingled with other prices in such fashion as to 1nu>1y‘vE:l1"1:?rf\ R ans Vit i SEHON SRS oy DIl e R ¥ Phone 204 920 W. 12th St. ONLY THE BEST OF MEA'TS 1 tration. Though lease-lend trade was officially ended | ;" Wity the end of price control private enterprise st “olelis vivs 2 auid M'.”_; WORD STUDY: e a word three times and it is yours Let us PHONE 202 in August, 1945, vet its influence on current export |went hog wild for higher prices. BRIl “”“‘(“”\‘K‘,‘l‘ L e re 4 increase our vocabulary by mastering one word each day. Today's word: — | " | onea H > 3 ells - MTs. T YETT “ figures continues to be considerable. In April alone | 1y i i1 same Department of Commerce that g‘ N wards, Mrs! Cnmmody, Mrs, | SURFEIT; excess; over-aboundant supply. (Pronounce sur-fit). “Few die “The Store for Men™ $80,644,000 in lease-land goods went abroad, but this|jsed statistics last fall to indicate that the auto- {Fr.m(‘f's Barnes, Mrs. G. C. Clerk, ©f hunger, an hundred thousand of surfeits.”—Proverb. ! ] was a drop of 30 per cent from those of March, while mobile companies could increase wages by 25 per cent | Inty Merculief and A. R. Vacu B i 7 7 o e g | | , fl the total of all exports fell off only 7 per cent. By‘wuhuu; iner ulsm;; prives,la‘nm after the .]slnkc]waslw Ketchikan: I. W. Clark and Da- i b7/ [N e § value lease-lend goods still account for more than 10 over, disowned its own statistics as merely a little yja Byron MODERN ET l 0 U ETT E > D Al ) ’ i F = per cent of current shipments. They consist of supplies | Xperiment in mathematics. ; | Seattle-bound passengers were 3 ROBERTA LEE Front St—Triangle Bldg. YOl;gE 107 Cherry St. for which cdontrabts were made before official term-! Little wonder that A. Ford Hinrichs, who recently {Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Hildre, Mrs. [ ________ 0t e O©FF Seattle 4, Wash It ination of lease-lend operations. | resigned as Acting Commissioner of Labor Statisties,|N. M. Molitov, Wilbur Irving, e s S e i Fah: 5 p sourse of United States | ©¥Pressed a fear that somebody' might be appointed |Hola, Harold Summers, Mrs. Gar @ When Weidessett /plates: frg itoughly g i table;: should. they wa"ield's D"lg SIOfe Predictions now about the course of United States |y, thay job who would twist statistics to make them |net Faley, Mrs. R. A. Gridley, R. D. be placed on other plates cr on the tablecloth? i FOR foreign trade in the next few years are difficult “’;match political motives. |Richardson, Sherry Bowman, MIs A. They should bs placed on the tablecloth: other plates are not| | ‘FOFmerly Guy L. Smith Drugs) wull Pa er make because an entirely new policy is being devised | Little wonder that Disraeli once said, “There are |Mildred Jackson, W. L. Wilson, po.eqsary. NYAL Family Remedies p i to replace the procedure followed in the 1930s to | three kinds of lies—lies, damned lies and statistics.” [Ed Karger, Ernest Tyler, Lawi' 2 shraa The Washingt |they help lead the world. That, of s ler. &, J. McGovern, W. J, Plumley A. The sleeve sould be short cnough to expose one-quarter to one- ICE CREAM Phone 549 Fred W. Wendf ¥ e washingion course, is why mossback Tories, in Shea nggms {and Ed Edgerton. half inch of the shirt cuff. = | Siadai Me"y Go Round | both Australia and England, are so i >+ Q. What should one do when one has receive an apology? | | HUTCHINGS ECONOMY o =U0- | bitter against the tough-talking N t I "' k | A. Respond with a polite acknowledgment, showing thet the accept- | KET (Continued from Page Ome) | I | | ok SR [ cnotce Meats At Al Timen Regular Home Deliveries |~ * o | > icliveries 3 LEAI AGaivss SOV P' J ly 17 ERVKES |4 i o SRR B =====-21 | Located in George Bros. Store MON r 2S | cade, Doc Evatt will have contri-| At payis Evatt has become the _age u “AR"NG S g . Stol NTHLY RATES v PHONE; buted more than any other man. |reaj Jeader of the anti-Soviet bloc. ONES 553—92—95 Phone 114 | - HERETUESDAY NIGHT | | 00K and LEARN ¥ ¢ corvox | At San Francisco, New York and | nootov hates him, and makes no| Announcement is made of the| here, he has become the spOKeSMAN | ueoit o conceal his scowls when- Marriage in-San Francisco, Calif, : - for small nations everywhere and,| ove puatt speaks. 1f Jimmie Byrnes 00 July 17 of Major James M. Tomorrow x-\:‘nln;:,lml:dhl :ulx{r(n | 1&°) B.P 0 ELKS more than that, the spokesman for| .4 Doc Evatt played closer ball| Shea and Lieutenant Margaret |can Legion Dugout, the Misses Rose | 1. How many trees are cut on an average annually in the United g S The Alaskan nn‘el | " " i Ko e 3 RIGYpE. CUIRET. bp i Stephens and Cora Horton plan to Meets every second and fourth ; little people inside the big nations| i sether, their teamwork would be | Higgins. The ceremony took place St - States or telephone, telegraph, and power line poles? 2 in the Star of the Sea Church,|hold the first of a series of Evans Wednesday at 8 pm. Visiting —people who do not believe that|pgrg o beat. But they don't al-| 2, Newly Renovated Rooms What two Protestant denominations have the largest number of | merely because a nation is big it ways cooperate. One case where| The couple was attended by M“J"r':ge]l\ft_": Ss::,“‘:f:n\ of California whe | members in the United States? ?;oogg: g;;‘;:’;:ehierc' V%E;‘ at Reasonable Rates » C Rt s T {they did was when Poland proposed ';mm” D BWing N R ool e l::ecn carrying on this work in 3. What is consanguinity? BIGGS, Secretary. PHONE SINGLE O 5i issi arnaleswicz. | T o " A . HEIGHTENED AUSTRALIA'S l;h:{‘ 'tm;"HEZ:gQIIT;HCO&:;ts';’rXQ‘a"“," Lt. Higgins was assigned to the|the States arrived here recently.| 4. ‘\:Vv}m: dfmsl ;mm.ror;md mean? e el | Belgium's sloeny. chairman, Paul. | Territorial Department of Health|Miss Horlon, who rtfe ot o Wiahin s g MOUNT JUNEAU LODGE NO. 147 i MUNEAY As a result of Evatt's tireless| Henri Spaak, was about #o OK. While in Alaska and stationed here|tme in }:" g i V,:‘ micen: hal g SECOND %nd FOURTH UPHOLSTERY CO. battling for his fellowmen he has|the proposal when Evatt jumped in Juneau for a year. She is at prv-»"“fl"-& an! ordova, iJ 1 'qu million. Monday of each month RE-UPHOLSTERING succeeded in lifting Australia, nlx!up_ | sent assigned to the U. S. Marum:hc'_“- Ao Rl TR 2. The Methodist and Baptist. in Scottish Rite Temple NEW FURNITURE obscure member of the family of| “Now, just a minute!” he said.|Hospital, San Francisco. | }?""‘_f"mv ‘us»':('fil"mrwda" ant] 3. Relationship by blood. beginning at 7:30 p. m. DRAPERIES nations, to a place alongside the|“We voted yesterday that nations' Major Shea is on terminal 10=wn‘,["_;““ ;“,‘“f“ A 8 " 7id5 cclock| | & Resembling man. M. L. MacSPADDEN, S e Big Five—despite the fact that the not at war with enemy countries|from the Finance Department of Thursday evening, at f: 5. An eel. Worshipful Master; JAMES W. Bt. : ssions to | the Army. He served at Fort Rich- |for a time. 4 TS o s lons e “The Services are Non-Sectarian| character and are being held | entire Australian continent has| should e fewer inhabitants than New York| write the peace with those coun- | ardson while in Alaska. The eouple e LEIVERS, Secretary. ALASKA ELECTRONICS| 1 i i in City. !trles. And yesterday Poland voted |Plan to make their home in New-j = =%C0700 50 0 i | Silver Bow Lodge o |that such countries could not sit,|Port, Rhode Tsland, after Nov. 1. |s0lely for the burbcse of Wanbill grppeprr AN TRANSPORTATION (O No. A % LO.OF, Sales and Service CRUSADER FOR PEACE | But today Poland wants to make GEREEER R VALY |;lal.0d % . Meets each Tues- | |Expert radio repair withoat delays| I have known Dr. Evatt a uooll’an exception of itself and sit on| many years—ever since he came 10‘ the Hungarian commission, evvnld Washington shortly after Pearl|though she was not at war with| Harbor to plead with Roosevelt for| Hungary. If we make an exception | OPERATING MOTORSHIP “DART” CARRIES FREIGHT and PASSENGERS day at 8:00 P. M, 1. O. O. F. HALL. Visiting Brothers Welcome FLOYD HORTON, Noble Grand H. V. CALLOW, Secretary Tap dancing, baton wwirling, toe| “The story of God's simple plan, ancing, eccentric, character, acro-|of Salvation will be unfdlded maht; Boys class in acro-)after night. We urge you not miss P. O. Box 2165 PHONE 62 217 Seward| batic, moderne, % e 5 5 batis. Social dancing for begin-|a chapter of it.” . | mere help Jor gy, Belsaguered in Poland; eate, 2 ol Kno¥ Lor ! ‘studig 411 Beventh! fnearors. e ‘ Weekly Service from Keichikan fo: —_— o cm{ntl) ; vn lm\](;l Br'“n ! l‘)h | where we are going to stop. e ->-oo — The average jackrabbit can keep| = — . e — dered why It should fall (o the] Molotov rase to champion Poland) geaqy to eat chicken—fried orlup a top speed of 35 or 40 miles| | Conning Inlet Waterfall Bader Logging Co. Port Alexander ELLIS Al LINES :}oetw:;:n z:)x;m OE;CHI:O 'z:;_tl?s‘d:rm(: ;‘;‘:m‘}mm‘ ?e :;?; s‘:fi?fitggefva:flroas(edv Spruce Lockers. Phone 71.lan hour for considerable distances.|| Rose énlet Craig Tokeen Shakan | 7 over r'e i B 3 b s R - N || View Cove Klawock Edna Ba; Point Baki crusaders for lrmuf{ Searching | Byrnes, “Why don’t you say some- | i _ il Hetta Inlet Steamboat Bay Cape Pol}; L(i,ncoln ]R(c:lc'k DA“'Y Tnlps '"'NEA“ To Kncnlm through Evatt's life, there are some | thing about this?” Byrnes took the | M| cli;[p[AlR] LiL Hydaburg Juneau Logging Co. Cape Decision Wrangell l 1 significant signposts noted. In the hint and opposed Poland’s sitting Cross (0} Puzzle ) o[ v[TIN[E AY] 8 via Pelel'slllll‘g alld wrallge“ g s or . r vas o issi, s | H ¢ . . . -, : ever since, has dedicated his life to| quest, | 1 stoceing wheel - dagger R o i De:;;;ne gt o K‘“;W‘;’:k e :m;lgT : Hly\‘:aburg steamers for Prince Rupert, Vancouver, and Seattle ~ g " 1 {nock 41. Snow runner: H | ight at 4:00 o Cloc! ac) 'uesda; Lternoo) N stamping out the seeds of war. But| BATTLES FOR SMALLER | o miootce e variant NSHIDESKS| | 7, . FOR RESERVATIONS PHONE 612 perhaps even more important, ,\'nu“ NATIONS - 12, unpq»l}sl f' b [‘)Yfi?m“ e AlT|S BEIAIL e ,4, e o ko v,,,,‘ - find a zealot’s passion for protect-| The Australian is the only dele-l 13. Coxx‘\“’;\ll‘o:lr s _J_ucur:vlehe ey RIE|A|M] RZ] i KETCHIKAN TBANSPOBTAT'UN co. - ing the common man runs all| gate who' has consistently and| water rnif the 7 N KETCHIKAN, ALASKA = ° - v | 1w k. Dance step DIE|VIAJPE through Evatt’s life. His books—!'sometimes disagreeably reminded| 15. cow;'?n'u:d to & “nllr‘:g_: law LIE[N [EIN[T L“c.lle S Be“uty Salan ~ some of them pretty dry reading—| the Big Four that this Peace Con-| 5 p. it ymbol for s U[RIN SPECIALIZING IN ALL KINDS AND TYPES OF PERMANENT are largely devoted to the rights of | ference was not called merely to xclamation us!‘a‘i"cxcel- TERS|CIE/N | |C WAVES FOR ALL TEXTURES OF HAIR man. One book, “The King and His|serve as a rubber stamp for their| 1% Work Ry R|A[T[OJA[D[O Phone 492 HAIR CUTTING Klein Bldg. Deminion Governors,” demands efforts. At the second lenary ses- Daddy v[r[1 [DINE[D " FULL LINE OF DERMETIC CREAMS that the Dominions be protected sicn, Evatt, a painstaking lawyer, i g TARIEMTIAY M TORSHIP ESTEBET][ S from abuses by the crown in times dug up many embarrassing quotes 25. I Leaves and every “ of social crisis. Another, “Injustice from earlier statements by the Big 3'; H’,f"‘f,.",{“d Solution of Saturday's Puzzle for HAI“ES SKAGWAY MDNDAY DOUGLAS BoA l snoP Within the Law” shows how the' Four's representatives. 30. "li"eck letter fir“_d,( vx«‘\;\ DOWN 3. Meafow: 10 P.ML. courts_can be used to victimize la-| “The conference is convoked in| a1 fastener 60, Old times: 1. Minced_ dish & Sl in bor. Evatt also has advocated that an American Bill of Rights be writ- ten into the Australian Constitu- tion while one of his books, “Rum Rebellion,” virtually says, as did Thomas Jefferson, that sometimes a little rebellion can be a healthy thing. At any rate, Evatt has spent a good part of his life rebelling. At 63, he was the youngest member of the Australian Supreme Court ever oppointed. But during the late war, Evatt, like Jimmie Byrnes, got tired of the rarefied atmos- phere of the Supreme Court and resigned to run as a Labor mem- ber of the Australian Parliament. He has held two Cabinet jobs ever since—Attorney General and Min- ister of External Affairs. Actually, the latter job didn't amount to a hill of beans before Evatt took it over. Australia’s ex- ternal affairs were handled by Lon- don. Today, however, Evatt has made Australia’s external affairs not only very much her own but has elevated them to a place where |order to make improvements or changes in the drafts,” Evatt quot- ed Molotov as ing in London, | “otherwise, conferences are not necessary Thus does the indefatigable For~ eign Minister of Australia battle | for the nations which have the !most to lose when war comes, the most to win by permanent peace. He firmly believes that, if the views of the smaller nations prevail at Paris, mankind may have a real chance of bringing order out of| this disordered world. “We cannot,” says Evatt, “accept | the cynical view that history must, of necessity, repeat itself. I for one refuse to believe that wars are necessary.” | (COPYRIGHT, BELL SYNDICATE, INC. 1946) - D | Chickens — fryers, roasters, tur-' keys. Spruce Lockers. Phone T71. | - | Listen KINY, Monday, 7 p.m,| Alaska Tax Payers League. Subject: You, Your Labor Commissioner and the Law. (343-14) farch by John Doric frieze Philip’ Sousa ge 5. Prevalent . Mites or ticks mple song poetic . Female sheep . Form of word puzzie . Fabrics . American SN UCEEEEE e T EFT L R EmiN am o AEN ARNd. dEd JENANE JduN B <] o i flfi’%flfll? parrow hawk 5. Infant's bed 7. Chess plece V2 ens Semiprecious Leaves for SITKA and Wayporis every Wednesday 6 P.M. sERS, FREIGHT and MAIL New Construction and Repairs Jobs Free Estimate Phone Douglas 192 3 CLARA DILG as a paid-up subscriber to THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE is invited to be our guest THIS EVENING. Present this coupon to the box office of the CAPITOL THEATRE and receive TWO TICKETS to see: "THEY WERE EXPENDABLE" Feaeral Tax—12¢ per Persos PHONE 14—THE ROYAL BLUE CAB C0. and an insured cab WILL CALL FOR YOU and RETURN YOU to your home with our compliments. WATCH THIS SPACE—Your Name May Appea_r! 1891—0ver Half a Century of Banking—1946 The B. M * Behrends Bank Oldest Bank in Alaska COMMERICAL SAVINGS

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