Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
ALASKA THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 9, 1950 THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE—JUNEAU, PAGE FOUR initial operation. As soon as business warrants, two CUBBTRR S 5! MOUNT JUNFAU LODGE NO. 16 Dflll Al(lSlmfl Emplre shifts will-be employed from Wea"‘er a' SECOND and FOURTH puwmw ever ng except Sunday by the That is the hope of B. C. Canoles and J. R.| 20 Y E A RS A G 0 THE EMPI RE Monday of each month gesond and Eo. oteun, Alsskh Murphy, local men who were partners in the Duck " in Scottish Rite Temple EELEN TROY MONSEN ~ . - - - President | Creek Lumber Company from which the Juneau —— Alaska polnls beginning at 7:30 p. m. DOROTHY TROY LINGO - - - Vice-President | Carson A. Lawrence, ELMER A. FRIEND - - - - Managing Editor [ Lumber Company emerged to purchase all of the FEBRUARY 9, 1930 § Wo‘x‘s‘uplul Master: 7 ALFRAD ZENGER - - - - Dusiness Maneewr| assets of the Juneau Spruce Corporation. History of | Acting on information received through the mail, J, J. Connors of JAMES W. LEIVERS, Secretary Entered In the rmsséf;rcpm;;_r.:mm;fi Second Class Matter. | the Duck Creek Company which grew in a year from | ® RU uu{y 9, ® | ihe Connors Motor Company recovered the cash register which had Weather C(.)nmm:;ns 1and’ tem;:er:| . ) Delivered by carrier In Juneau and Douslas for $1.50 per month; |2 small plant cutting 4,000 feet of lumber a day to|® ¢ Lo V_“‘,m_m’ ® | peen stolen late in January. Slightly rusted, it was found in a cabin Squshagp verlous e Y 0 six months, $8.00; one year, $15.00 : . 5 ko e Sharon Audrey Westby | 1 2 4 < also on the Pacific Coast, at 4:30 By mall, postas? paid, at the following rates ... | 8 substanal 10,00, & day in a years time indicates | Mrs. Mabel Bertholl o [on the Thane road, minus the $20 in cash it had contained. Thieves|am, 120th Meridian Time, and @ B P 0 BLKS U R TS g B e advance, $7.50: 1 that it may not be long before the new Juneau g Louise Bryant @ | had disdained to take pennies and a Canadian nickel. released by the Weather Bureau .U Subscribers will confer a favor if they will promptly notifs | Lumber Company is running double shifts. le G. E ol 4 il AN at Juneau, follow: i Meeting every Wednesday at :‘f*%}){“fi;\fi;fi';s:n ::;W ,: (;:x‘lfi,r.):‘:: l;:‘dem Employment of 25 or 50 men at the sawmill this | e Jorgens ¢ The Moonlight Serenaders were to play on a special hour of broad- | Achorage e 2;;.‘:'&1 ;{mggsv_;;mh;:xvg T F ASSOCIATED PRESS summer will help Juneau and Juneau can be proud (@ o~ : i ‘”‘“‘. :lcnstum over station KFIU for the Juneau Fire Department program,|Barrow -28—Clear | Exalted Ruler. W. H. BIGGS. e, | of ¢he enterprise of the men who are building another '. T seur 8 laccording to O. E. Schombel, announcer and assistant fire chief. Bethel -10—Clear | gecretary, X republication of all to it or not other- | sSawmill for the town. & 3 18 —_— Cordova -3—Partly Cloudy :_,'_fiui"d"'d Y Ti“\'iw s S A considering| M Evelyn Judson, fiance of Mr. H. M. Holimann, was honored Dfons '3.74;_5_2‘(3; NATIONAL REPRESENTATIVES — Alaska Newspapers, 1411 | TWO APPROACHES Draper’s current difficulties. St a tea given by Belva WilAS Hdeat Sttt lecteudg Waltaneh Hains‘s —Partly Cloudy | Moose LOdge “o‘ 1w Pourth Avenue Bldg., Beattle, Wash, S o But ivan went further: He | and Leota Russell. Twenty guests brought kitchen gifts for the bride- Junean is—Snow,‘ Regular Meetings Each Friday Within the last week the press of the nation has |, oo "o\ pianer a clean bill | elect. Another party in Miss Judson's honor was a buffet supper in the | gotzebue 22 Clear|| Governor—JOHN LADELY given prominent space to two announcements of |, pealth That involved issues now J. A. Krugness home with Mrs. Ed Sweeney, Miss Bessie Yurman and | McGrath -42—Clear Secretary— scientific discoveries—if that term can be applied—)in the Connecticut court in the miss Ruth Krugess as hostess. Miss Gertrude, Waltonen assisted at|Nome -19—Clear || WALTER R. HERMANSEN the import of which can not be known for some|case of Draper and Adler vs. MIS. | 4pe cupper table. Other guests were Belva Williams, Mirlam McBride, | Northway -25—Snow - time. The one is Blfred Einstein’s advancement of |McCullough. Ed Sullivan was, infy . 4 Elizabeth Feusi, Ideal Hendrickson, Edna Smith, Dora | Portland f5 CLIACY the Generalized Theory of Gravitation and the other fh: };f"‘i‘“‘,’i" m":‘ [::.»hfi;d lé]he:::;; Sweeny, Florence Holmquit, Leota Russell, Alma Sully, Helen Skuse, EPrince George wma%‘:dy PRy T N is finding of fungi in cancer cells from Dr. Irene I;x‘-uém"; '{ié‘.m l;\{m k‘,ovgmment Carrie Jorgensen, Irene Lundstrom and Irene Burke, ?:Etak(;l# 30_(;0‘“;1‘: BLACKWELL'S Diller, a zoologist from Philadelphia. officials, whom he did not name, g ;}hiwhor.se 3 -30—Clear { CABINET SHOP The only point we should like to make is that|and he found the record good. _But‘ Miss Christine Halvorsen returned from a month’'s buying trip for| yakutat 19—Sncw| 117 Main St. Phone 773 these two scientists reached their goals by different |Cassini, Pegler, Lewis, Cunmng—jhm- ore here. She had been in Seattle, Portland, San Francisco, Los y % | paths. Or perhaps we should say that they used con- |ham, Dr. J. B. Ma thews and \I| ) 0cles and Hollywood. y High Quality Cabinet Work _ | trasting methods of approaching the truth. Dr. Ein- !_u‘n, said fhv ?!;‘.':h: llt‘uuoix f«’jflzs:‘ e SAFH-Y 'AI.KS GIVE“ '\ for Home, Office or Store s : stein is the rationalist. By mathematic logic too ab- :;;‘L:”;l" i “"1“";,;\‘,,“;‘..nf‘ "7} U.s. Marshal Albert White was admitted to the American Bar Asso- BY MINES OFH(M[ THE JUNEAU LUMBER MILL stract to be interpreted by any other symbols, he has| [ for one, do not know these|ciation as of January 21, 1930, according to word he received from the ON JUNEAU ISLAND | proposed a theory, the truth of which can only be borne |men, I have seen them perform and | secretary at Asheville, North Caroline. completely unfit and useless.” Plane Dictator the plane mysteriously left Wadeshoro airpert on its own and the Danish Government it—with Yet the powe is renorted trying to buy the idea of flying it The Babb Company seems to have bought the plane from a CAP of- ficial, R. A. Lyon, who hadn't read the fine print in ‘the contract. The CAP doesn’t recognize however, because er a member. about it meney, but the wouldn't take it back. In the meantime, the Mark Hurd Mapping Company of Minneapolis has been trying to buy a surplus B-17 to aid in charting Army maps: the deal, Lyon is no long- sorry the Even Lyon is and tried to return Babb Company could have |pattern of the whispering campaign, | tejeyision actor, said |Feb, 10, 8:15 Parish Hall. Every- |the anonymous letter, the scurrilous | a4 he was sorry for Paul Draper [one Welcome —ady 421-3¢ pamphlet; just the opposite of the | nom he liked as a dancer. W,; A Great Teacher who cautioned us|poqo could “really object to that.| Mimror Cafe mow open 11 am to love our neighbor. Warped minds {1,y fact, some might have regard-|to 3 a.m. 417-6¢ {that promote bigotry among ;m;vl:-l i g 4 A e Ry are as deadly as cancer, as con- | tagious as the common cold. We IER BREE - ERE must beware of false prophets and LIE/OGRABIET LA their poison pens. M RIA|S C AL S E “Such bigotry happened in Ger: ‘f‘"“.fi DOWN at a distance be acknowledged in any way? A. Most certainly. Thank the friend for remembering your birthday in a note, written promptly. Q. TIs it considered improper for a bridegroom to see his bride on the wedding day before the ceremony? A. There is nothing improper about it. superstition that this is bad luck. Q. When giving a formal dinner, should the carving be done at the table? There is merely an old A. No; it should be done in the kitchen. carving may be done at the table. At an informal dinner, the LOOK and LEARN zy( GORDON 1. Approximately how many square inches of skin are there on the average adult? 2. Which is the largest city in Switzerland? PAINTS — OILS Builders’ and Shelt HARDWARE Widest Selection of LIQUORS FHONE 399 e | GEORGE BROS. | | Remington Typewriters SOLD and SERVICED by J. B. Burford & Co. “Our Doorstep Is Worn by Satisfied Customers” The Erwin Feed Co. Office in Case Lot Grocery Phone 704 HAY, GRAIN, COAL and STORAGF FORD AGENCY (Authorized Dealers) QBEABEB—GAB—OIL STEVENS’® LADIES’—MISSES’ READY-TO-WEAR Near Third Juneau Motor Co. Foot of Main Street Seward Street With work actually started on the new Juneau .-yo 4he pehavior of certain natural phenomena|have once spoken to Adler for al Tl : 25 s sent-|| g Lumber Company's mill site, we can look forward to| N A A rformance of his A class of 25 persons represent Th R n ot fay, A s A it puli | some years hence. He has said in effect, “This is mom(‘:l at a performs 5 | T. L. Allen, buyer for the George Brothers Department Store, re-|ing three federal agencies are hear- e nhexa ore anothe: try in Juneau this spring. P 4 at the Waldorf-Astoria ear e Py 4 ey 3 what I hold the Universe to mean, but I do not know % {turned on the Northwestern from an extensive ng tri ifi a ures S Wi n safet] Driving of piles on the mill site was started yes- | . - it 0 them no malice. But the issue in tensive bying trip in Pacific Coast { ing lectures this week o ¥ Your Reliable Pharmacists terday and in about two month ti i) b6 i |0 eir ohbe i ‘Contieeticiit 18 Nesy)| Gilee. methods being given at the Juneau | y @ in abo wo nth the mill will be se i 1 ut s Y | # ’ iy y; operation i Dr. Diller, on the other hand, has arrived at &|important. Upon it hinges the: —_— I\Lmdfh;:dqunrters of the U.S. Bu BUTLER-MAURO o | oatte . , experi BEea: namely. tt ! E rotest without fear. Walter B. Heisel of the Juneau customs office wa. reau ol Alines. There is enthusiasm in town for the new project | certain jfuf(h f"‘ »oxp'enmfnml"mu;odwl ‘n«.n. 1y 1w‘\L.‘: n,;lt tur pf«.h.v W rl vlus e .Skd"“‘ Setiaole s & padsenger for | "R O K L Bnser i DRUG CO. —an enthusiasm needed after the disastrous fire that | there are fungl in cancer cells. She has no doub T “f‘f‘l‘f“ B o ey ”‘]‘; < charge of the health and safety destroyed the Juneau Spruce Corporation last August. | to that. At the same time, neither she nor any- 'xs reply l:) “)‘m: sts, rxA.\xislt P ! : ; pranch of the bureau, is presenting i The fire, disastrous to the company and to the|ODe else at present can explain what this discovery ‘:‘L:‘l‘e"f\dc‘g;l““;i 9 - ‘:nu‘z 1:1.(‘“ Territorial Commissioner of Education Leo W. Breuer returned on | ne jectures. He came here from An- Alaska MIISIC snpply , S S any a fam n the N lloug ase ISU a5K | the Queen from a business trip to Petersburg. r' S town, was the largest and worst that Juneau had ex- '““‘“' ; him to make public which Govern- | P € Lh}”{‘i:gleisfgfxe'::e'\t!:s;:;onnel il Arthur M. Uggen, B perienced in ten years and both the company and| There you have it. The one scientist has Pro-|ment agency said that the data oni — pp ooy : ’ s v e ) B o R T Manag: & own suffered as the result—the company the | pagated a theory, the truth of which is still to be|the Attorney-General's list or thej . traveling man and Democratic candidate for Terri-| Bures g i nstrament t as ti e pany by e 3 . 2 torial Representative, arrived from Ketchikan on th ical Survey and the Juneau oftice and Supplies destruction of its property and the town by the loss | established. The other has come up with an estab- House Committee on un-American | s » e Queen. )f the Bureau of Mines, Discussions Phone 206 .Second and Seward.. of its largest industrial payroll. | lished fact for which a meaning must be found Actlyities’ list, or the, Ggliforpig}] nh ; e ncluble | first aid raethods, satety She tew mil when 1 starts opstation an' Aptil | TR Tenney Committee’s list are un;luc.‘ Charles W. Wilson returned from a 10-day trip to Ketchikan, where 5 \tions in underground Wwork mill, starts @ 3 Ed Sullivan owes it to all of US| he had worked on a Public Roads surve: S : will not be as large as the former sawmill. But this{ Maybe man should abandon civilization. China|io explain his source of informa- B c Roads survey. and other phases with which the GENERAL PAINTS is just a start. One shift of 25 men producing 30,000 | has had it longer than any other nation now in exist- | tion, as we have all given ou (EECCRR it i f; l igencies come mucontaclt-de el to 40,000 board feet of lumber will be unp]ovm for | ence, and just look at her! | The Ford C y's first explan- i | The classes will conclu and WALLPAPER ) . lation is equally unfortunate. The,"“‘m —— 3| row, Anderson believed. "Ie waShlnglon and unity ever since—in a world [United States not usual among loy- l*l‘v:k the "‘lfgl':”)l[‘h l,x:,d ‘u;c[_\ 73,;‘} Dail Lessons in n is bll ldeal Pauli S!ore where freedom to worship is fast al America ROk COREE Py 95, PRaR T Y g os "‘ l s Phone 549 Fred W. Wendt M G R d becoming a rare privilege. | Undoubtely, the resistance to Ad- | their ; artl That has been the W. L. GORDON “ pl A NOIE erry-vo-roun “Though this country was found-!ler and Draper is hard on these|Policy for years of many industrial- | ¢ orroecreceei | Harvey Tengesdal, Margaret Ma- ed on the principle of religious|artists. Their livelihood is imperil- "‘;h‘(“\“‘ "(’)‘l“')"d“l":l“;“fl‘;‘:“ U‘“'(‘x'v‘fi :: WORDS OFTEN MISUSED: Do not say, “I am very partial to choco- | loney, and Mrs. Don Baker were c (Continued from Page One) | freedom, the cnemies of rull;u.n‘l('d, They never calculated go that, | They poured milions of aollar® {late cake.” I am very FOND of chocolate cake” is preferabe. admitted to St. Ann’s hospital yes- ard Beverage Co. have now reached a new low. I|as Alger I had never calculated * | OFTEN MISPRONOUNCED: Mort; i3 terday. Yo 8 Fe v 3 gage. Pronounce mor-gij; the T g . q with the Federal Security Adminis. |have in my hands two letters being lon the conversion of Whittaker privae i e heikd e gl the Mrs. Richard Christenson and || Wholesale 805 10th St. Sration R circulated in the mails—bearing|Chambers. Nor is it beyond belief |2150 financed programs on the alr it 6o A 4 baby son, Alvin Bloomquist, John (| PHONE 216—DAY or NIGHT A half dozen Senators and Con- | false signatures and purported to|that Adler and Draper are Vi ns | Which carried to millions of listen SPELLED: Symmetry; two M. Bergquist, Mrs. Peter Cartson, Mis. ([ " sressmen have also got into. the have been written by Catholic of- fof association rather than of high ers attacks on the very system | ~ SYNONYMS: Herald (noun) harbinger, messenger, forerunner. Peggy Brasher, and T. Ogg were o ERS or SODA POP act on behalf of their constituents, ficials, attacking Protestants. These jideological conviction. It is mighty “I"ifl?'ll it g ~~d’d upen which | | WORD STUDY: “Use a word three times and it is yours.” Let us | dismissed. However, here are the facts in letters are so fanatical and pre-|tough when the tide changes ang | SHEL OIS (IEIVer, | increase our vocabulary by mastering one word each day. Today's word: & = ey r T, B T e e o om posterous that they should be eas- m‘,,,] m\? ‘;m“;.l;’;““d AR .-.'\lx‘:ci” x\:nzevl(x’n‘t GREGARIOUS; having. the habit of associating in flocks, herds, or com- i I'he Alaskan HOiEI l active l(:ny_ the controversial B-17 ”]»‘W I = \"f(‘”“‘b “'l)l‘l}'l I:l(rvi\v““iiurl: ““I” £ x(f? :n‘iun: ‘: nots “thete _ts terprise s il im;]ues. (Pronounce the E as in ME, A as in CARE, accent second syl- Brown[e s l|qu0' S'o'e ! Newly Renovated Rooms was sold to the Charlotte, N. C. 213 you “shoulC Lt such circumstances re is ¢ Tl B able). “Man is a gregarious creatur pref, Reasonal Civil AI1- e i s350, letters signed by ‘Monica O'Toals | oniy one Rood rile: il oonfessl tacked and abused on radio, It ds{- ) ‘Man is a gregarious creature, often preferring the crowded at ble Rates ' e tgtnl or 8 oken 935 ; ) s e fith | Tavier O : S ; their business if they want to do it | City to the open country.” Phone 103 139 So. Frankiin In order to qualifiy, the CAP was McNoonan' or ‘Francis Xavier O'-|full contrition; full expiation. That | " 158 Y Wang; W ¥ 1 PHONE SINGLE O posed to be an “e o ~ | Toole, attacking Protestants, please |is hard, too. Few men like to “rat” |that way, but one would have nn- i P. O. Box 2596 PHONE 555 supposed to be an “educational in ] i 5 stitution.” It also agreed that the|Témember that the letters are forg- on personal friends. but that must|88ined that after so many 3 by J Bo17 “will not be used for any ©d by perverted propagandists try-ibe done in a full confession. Less|being abused, they would h“e UErTE ROBERTA LEE actual flight purposes” and “will ing to undermine men’s faith in|than a full zonfession is meaning- | learned something, AR A SR momas Hal'dwa ( be sold only as scrap and then only U‘f'lrl“ (_n}her, i o ; b ess. T Pmm—‘m'v’ ! 'e 0. alter it shall have been xyndg]ed‘ nis 18 the old, contempllble| Now, Ed.Suiiivan, columr.i Third CDA Card Party, F ;! Q. Should a birthday greeting card received from a friend who lives ‘The priorities are in order and the in the bank—but have been available. at Newark, N. J., the Babb Company admits it has pur- chased three B-17s frem ‘“educa- tional institutions,” sold "one of them to Dictator Trujillo of the Dominican Republic. The other two will probably be sold to France| and Denmark. Furthermore, the Babb Company has done a big busi- ness in single-engine Air Force “training” planes, selling 200 to the Chinese Nationalists, 75 to the Swedes, 75 to the Dutch, 40 to the Swiss, 20 to the Jews and an as- sortment to other countries. The State Department has given its approval for all these expor the Babb Company claims—even though the original contract grounds the B-17 and restricts its use to educational purposes or scrap. Note—For these B-17s, the Babb Company gets as high as $25,000 depending upon the improvements, though the Army sells them for $350. money is no B-17s Meanwhile, As a rsult of considerable interest expressed in Drew Pearson’s J]:wul for tolerance in last S broadcast, we are enclosing ar except from the broadcast for re- lease Feb. 3—the anniversary of tne famous wartime incident in 1943 when four chaplains gave up their life belts and went down on the transport Dorchester. The Pearson broadcast follows: “On Friday the nation com- memorates the sinking of the trans- port Dorchester, when four chap lains—Protestant, ~ Catholic, and Jew—gave up their life hand-in-hand leaped to a because they had a That sacrifice has served as an example of tolerance mon grave common cause. and | com- | i many, and is happening now behind ACROSS the Iron Curtain. But in this cous- :' ;5:::“ i i o] = 21, Ldolizes try never must it be said that the| ;3" 5ne who 4 A.mlfw i Swastika or the Hammer and Sickle } (rnna(c‘r. ng S of property are stronger than the Cross of 14. Official of Calvary. ancient “Now it may be simpler to build Rome 300 15. Intellect . Mascull a hydrogen bomb than overcome | 1o weary l\\m : prefix deep-rooted prejudice. But it is| 18 Near Writing ore importa 7 > that{ 19. Night before implement more important to overcome thaty 19. Night hefor - pulmues prejudice than it is to build the| 20 Fluttered American 2 st’s remember | 21. Proper ndians ogen bomb. So let’s remember | 23 Gr:&"dcmm_ 41 Country what the four chaplains wanted us Scoteh :_; %-'.m i to remember—that the deck of a| 33 GafHled 0o 4§ DUt Up sinking ship is not the only place . Celestial body 47. Built Gem Color, . Dig from the earth P gged where men of different faiths can pray | work together, live together.” THE“E DAYS together, a‘l"/_ 2 SRR GEORGE E. SOKOLSKY A SPECIOUS DEFENSE Curious things have been said in the controversy over Ed Sullivan’s championship of Paul Draper on the Columbia Broadcasting System’s television, and Ed Sullivan’s ap- parent apology does not change the issues. Paul Draper is a dan who us- peech From SKa ually is accompanied on the har- monica by Larry Adler. Both of them got into a difficult situation with Mrs. He McCullough of Grecnwich, Connecticut. Draper and Adler w on a program in that city; Mrs. McCuliough pro- { tested on grounds that their | mes were on lists of organizati®s | |which the Attorney-General and MBS' GEGBGE GETCHBLL tk Hnnjl‘ Committee on un-Amer- as a paid-up subscriber io THE DAILY ALAS AR buvies Badl SO ds:l;;‘ EMPIRE is invited to ve our guest THIS EVENING for 150 to the: tuno f Koot Present this coupon to the box office of the writes under | Igor Cassini, who the name of Cholly Knickerbocker, CAPITOL picked up the story, Westbrook Peg- | ler, Fulton Lewis, Jr, Bill Cun-| and receive TWO ningham and I followed suit. Pegler |and T made an appeal for funds to Mrs. McCullough and raised bout $23,000 for her. The case is still pending. i Then Larry Adler and Paul Drap-| ar discovered that a -public resis- | tance had developed to their ar-| tistic appearances. Meanwhile, Paul | | Draper's mother, Muriel Draper, went off to Moscow where she in- | ldicated an attitude toward the| aid WATCH 'THIS SPACE— THEATERE TICKETS to see: "SHOCKPROOF” Federal 1a:. --12c—Paid by the Theatre Phone 14—YELLOW CAB CO.—Phone 22 ¥ i and an insured cab WILL CALL FOR YOU and | RETURN YOU to your home with our compliments. i 1 Your Name May Appear! 3. Who was the only man in golf to hold the American amateur and open titles and the British amateur and open titles simultaneously? 4. Which musical instrument’s tone most closely resembles - the human voice. 5. What bird can swim a hundred miles a day without exerting itself? ANSWERS: (- f 1. About 3500 square inches. ; 2. Zurich. b T SO R i iR Bobbie Jones. 4. The violoncello. The penguin. ELLIS AIR LINES DAILY TRIPS JUNEAU TO KETCHIKAN via Petersburg and Wrangell With connections to Craig, Klawock and Hydaburg Convenient afternoon departures, at 2:30 P. M. FOR RESERVATIONS PHONE 612 Oldest Bank in Alaska 1891—0ver Half a Century of Banking—1950 The B. M. Behrends Bank p Safety Deposit Boxes for Rent . COMMERCIAL SAVINGS for Boys : = “Say It With Flowers” but wers” SANITARY MEAT “SAY IT WITH OURS!” FOR BETTER MEATS & 13—PHONES—49 Juneau Florists l - " Pree Delivery ‘Phone 311 MARE JUNEAU DAIRIES DELICIOUS ICE CREAM a daily habit—ask for it by name Juneau Dairies, Inc. The Charles W. Carter Mortuary - Pourth and Franklin Sts. PHONE 136 Chrysler Marine Engines .MACHINE SHOP Marine Hardware Chas. G. Warner Co. . HOME GROCERY Phone 146 Bmflqmsuro—ufl American Meat — Phone 38 Casler’s Men's Wear Formerly SABIN'S Stetson and Mallory Hats Arrow Shirts and Underwear Allen Edmonds Shoes Bkyway Luggage I BOTANY | "500" CLOTHES | « To Banish “Blue Monday” To give ‘you more freedom from work — TRY Alaska Laundry NUNN-BUSH SHOES STETSON HATS Quality Work Clothing FRED HENNING Complete Outfitter for Men H. S. GRAVES The Clothing Man LEVIS OVERALLS R. W. COWLING " COMPANY Dodge—Plymouth—Chrysler ——————————————————————————————————————————————————————————————————————————————————— ——————————————————————————eeeeeerereme=