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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE—JUNEAU, ALASKA 20 YEARS Aeq suries | “Tom Sawyer” starring Jackie Coogan and Mitzi Green was to open at the Coliseum Theatre. PAGE FOUR MONDAY, OCTOBER 1, 1951 And more are being hlrc(l{ . . of thirty billions annually. Daily Alaska Empire |- i e Publisiied every evening except Sunday by the | Omitting all federal and state employees and the | SNFERE RS COMBANE |threc and a half million in the armed services still Second and Main Streets, Juneau Alaska HELEN TROY MONS - = President | leaves more than twenty-five million who draw checks | Vice-President | | DOROTHY TROY LINGO —— | from the government 3 Class Matter. | yith the exception of war vetetans afd rétired | 75 per month; | cjvil service workers, not a single group in the cate- | gory which now includes twenty-five million recipients | was “eligible in 1932 for government payments. Its| | members did not collect a dime from the federal | | government. Before 1932, they got along for 140 years | | without money from the U. S. Treasury. No one !would deny aid to the blind, nor to the needy aged; | |but few who really understand big, central govern- | ment would give it power over the blind and aged. | ay. | MEMORIALS | MARBLE and GRANITE Mornuments and Markers JUNEAU MARBLE WORKS Phone 426—302 Franklin St. J. A. Durgin Company, Inc. Accounting Auditing Tax Work Room 3, Valentine Building JUNEAU, ALASEA P. O. Box 62 ‘Telephone 919 from n v THE Entered in the Post Office in Juneau as Second SUBSCRIPTION RATES: Delivered by carrier in Juneau and Douglas for § six months, $9.00; one vear, $17.50 By mail. postage paid, at the following rates: in mdvance, $15.00; six months, in advance, $7.50; in advance, $1.50. ribers will confer a favor if they will promptly notify ness Office of any failure or irregularity in the delivery papers. phones OCTOBER 1 il 4 L) ® EMPIRE ® o o o e o o 0 0 o WANT ADS PAY €D B.P.0.ELXS Meeting Every Wednesday at 8 P.M. Visiting brothers welcome. LeROY WEST, Exalted Ruler. W. H. BIGGS, Secretary. The Rebekahs held a card party in the Odd Fellows’ Hall the previous evening. Prize winners were Mrs. Samuel Paul, Mrs. H. M. Hollmann, J. D. Van Atta and Mr Dickson J. E. Barragar, Jr. J. L. Ahlers Edna Liston Mrs. Tom Cole Mrs. M. W. Dorman M. H. Clark Richard Harris, Jr. | Terry Crandahl Joan Molyneaux Jean Roge! o e 0o o o o ews Office, 602; Business Office, 374, MEMBER OF ASSOCIATED PRESS Assoclated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for republication of all news dispatches credited to it or not other- wise credited in this paper and also the local mews published The Chamber of Commerce at its meeting requested that one-half of the revenues from the Pribilof seal rookeries be given to the common school fund of the Territory "The Rexall Store” Your Reliable Pharmacists BUTLER-MAURO DRUG Co. Entrance was effected to the Capitol Theatre and to the First National Bank during the night by a thief or thieves, but the robbery was averted by the arrival of Chief of Police Géorge Getchell. The robbers were not identified and no arrests were made. Ti1| Something has happened to the independence and | moral outlook of vast numbers of the people of the | United States—something which did not exist twenty REPRESENTATIVES — Alaska Newspapers, bty Moose Lodge No. 700 Regular Meetings Every Friday Governor— LOREN CARD Secretary— WALTER R. HERMANSEN e o Alaska finsie Supply Arthur M. Uggen, Manager Planos—Musical Instruments and Supplies Phone 206 = Second and Seward tmas A Miss Nell McCloskey, Chief Clerk of the Alaska Game Commission, | returned home on the steamer Alaska following a trip to Anchorage and Fairbanks. V.F. W. Takn Pos! No. 5559 Meeting every Thursday in the C.I.O. Hall at 8:00 p.m. New officers assigned to the USCG Tallapoosa were Lt. H. C. Perkins, Dr. W. Anderson, Ensign R. M. Morrison, and Chief Machinist A E. Blood. Card Beverage Co. ‘Wholesale 805 10th Bt. PHONE 216—DAY or NIGHT for MIXERS or SODA POP Dr. William P. Kirby had opened medical offices in Douglas. He and his wife were living in the King residence. 42—Cloudy 51—Rain 26—Cloudy 33—Partly Cloudy 35—Cloudy 34—Snow Partly Cloudy e 32—Snow 44—Partly Cloudy 44—Cloudy 40—Cloudy 39—Cloudy 35—Cloudy 32—Snow 28—Clear 31—Clouqy 44—Rain 59—Cloudy 44—Cloudy 55—Rain Showers | 48—Rain | 27—Clear | 34—Partly Cloudy ; KNOW YOUR CANDIDATES Weather: High, 53; low, 45; rain. NASH SALES and SERVICE . CHRISTENSEN BROS. 909 12th Phone Green 279 ol s f R : ; ; " The Alaskan Hotel Daily Lessons in English %, 1. corpoN Newly Renovated Rooms at Reasonable Rates PHONE BINGLE O It igy to be hoped that Juneau's voters will turn out in greater number than they did two weeks ago in the special city election. Only 240 citizens dis- played enough interest in the affairs of their city to express their opinion. And the issue was an important | one. Well, the 240 determined that henceforth councilmen will be elected for two-year terms. -This year, however, only three will be chosen for the two-year tenure; the other three will serve but one year. Next year, and in succeeding years, three will be chosen annually. Besides your mayor, magistrate and school board member, you will elect a council of six men. Three of these councilmen (those polling the largest vote) will serve you, for better or worse, for the next two The three runners-up will be with us for an- 35 WORDS OFTEN MISUSED: Do not say, “How did you come to! do that?” Say, “How did you HAPPEN to do that?” OFTEN MISPRONOUNCED: Homage. Pronounce hom-ij, O as in| ON (not as in HOME), I as in RIDGE (not AGE). | OFTEN MISSPELLED: Obeisance; observe the BEI, though pri-| nounced BAY). SYNONYMS: Adorn, decorate, beautify, embellish, garnish, illustrate, ornament. | WORD STUDY: “Use a word three times and it is yours.” Let us inerease our vocabulary by mastering one word each day. Today's word: INSIPID; wanting in spirit; uninteresting; dull.. “When there is no liberty, life griws insipid and loses its glow.” Brownie's Liquor Sfore Phone 103 139 So. Franklin P. O. Box 2596 THOMAS HARDWARE and FURNITURE CO. PHONE 555 PAINTS —— OILS Builders’ and Shelf HARDWARE city \ NICH ’ i OLSCg;Il (S) PWELDING Remington Typewriters SOLD and SERVICED by J. B. Burford Co. “Our Doorstep Is Worn by Batisfied Customers™ Tanks and General Welding ALL WORK GUARANTEED P. O. Box 1529——Feero Bldg. years. other year. The business of administering Juneau's affairs is the biggest business in town and the men selected to manage that business should be elected only after | careful consideration on the part of each voter. It | behooves every citizen to acquaint himself with Lhe: individual candidates, their business and political backgrounds, their personal habits their asso- ciates. These men will levy and spend your tax dollars If they are successful in the business of city man- agement, your dividend will be in the form of re- duced municipal indebtedness and low cost govern- ment. Should they fail, their errors will be re- flected in your tax bill for years to come. Look-cgauneRiayer, What kind of mep aer they Who aré the friends and associates they might turn to for advice? What success have they had in their | own businesses and professions? What is their experi- FORD AGENCY (Authorized Dealere) STEVENS® LADIES'—MISSES’ = e READY.TO-WEAR GREASES — GAS — O} || Beward Street Near Thta Juneau Motor Ce. ‘ Foot of Main Btreet The Charles W. Carter ‘ Mortuary Fourth and Pranklin Sts. ‘PHONE 136 » 2 MAKE JUNEAU DAIRIES DELICIOUS ICE CREAM a daily habit—ask for it by name | Jumeaw Dairies, Inc. | HOME GROCERY | Phones 146 and 342 Home Ligquor Store—Tel. 699 American Meat — Phone 38 P et | LOOK and LEARN %c. convox | | el | : ! i ence worth? Look them over carefully — then go to your polling place and vote for the men who, in your best judgment, are best fitted to represent you. And re- member that every vote counts. The vote you fail to cast may be, in effect, a vote for the candidate you d¢ not want as your representative. Polls will be open from 8 a. m, until 7 p. m. Don’t miss. | for an overdraft. ‘1. For how many days were all U. S. banks closed during President Roosevelt’s famed “bank holiday” in 1933? What does the moon most strongly affect on. the earth? Whose signature ‘is said to have been forged more than anyone To Banish “Blue Monday” ‘| To give you more freedom from work — TRY Alaska Laondry H. S. GRAVES The Clothing Man LEVI'S OVERALLS for Boys { What was probably the earliest instrument for measuring time? ‘What is the smallest mammal now existing? | ANSWERS: Three days; closed on March 6, reopened on March 9. The tides. That of Antonius Stradivarius. The sundial. ‘The shrew. SYNTHETIC SECURITY Recently compiled statistics show that one in | postoffices during the last Chr scason. “Give wea'her a' ing committee to offer proof of how Yar we have moral standards: college athletes betraying their Weather conditions and tempera- |school children; city streets where no woman Is safe [120th Meridian Time, an3d released But the really shocking fact is that we are no longer | Anchorage | : Bethel of security won by faith and courage, political rack- | Egmonton government service, are wholly or in part dependent | Havre This dependence upon the government nursing- | Rodiak people have been incisively analyzed by Sir Ernest | Nome | Portland in every 165. By 1948, it was one in every 96. “It is | sitka tween the serious change of mind towards moral laxity | Welfare State is perhaps seen in its most striking| TODAY Q. Is it absolutely required that a person give the reason for de- Gourt the black sheep of the family can enjoy, i\ ot & \um_ american Legion post have another invitation sometime in the future, it is better to explain | and sisters. Tt is almost true to say that there is no | Association meets in Elks Audi- | From 8 am. to 7 p.m.—City Eléc-]: Q. When are bread or rolls served at dinner? | pleasant state of affairs is in the very nature of | At noon—Rotary Club meets . in {ringed napkin laid on it, and several sorts of bread displayed. ple striving to establish claims upon it and, at the | Mect at Lutheran church. A. She writes to the wife and thanks both: “Thask you for, the | to plan for annual exhibi tax-dodgers 1s merely to face the horrid facts. ! : y al exhibition. Stetson and Mallory Hal a hopeless position; it may be compared to a bank|At 8 pm.—Odd Fellows meet in| ry Hats Skyway Luggage Night for Adults at Teen-Age S v ve become a nation of escapists, X of ‘us is that we ha i L At noon—Kiwanis Club meets at So, it is obvious eevrywhere that when central {At 8 pm. — Annual mecting of c L o ,r H E s i S d its every four inhabitants of the United States an J o 7 posszsnons is wholly or partially dependent upon you istrators go mad. £o, too, when personal incentive | At 8 p.m—WSCS meets in Metho- Quality Work Clothing ars ago. Most of us remember the powerfully mov- | us,” it read, “the faith and cours - forefathers.” . [ strayed from our forefathers’ courage and faith. Each as a °|n's schoolmates' loyalty by selling out to crooked gam- | tures at various Alaska points also Monday, October 1, 1951 | at night. by the Weather Burcan are as Annette Isla | moved by other and more widely prevalent departures ette Island Cordova eteers offer a synthetic ‘security without either. ‘When | Fairbanks upon government payments, American character and | Juneau Airport bottle has prevailed in Great Britain longer than it | Kotzebue Benn. He reports that the traditional British respect | Northway tion.” In 1910, one in every 3,000 Britons Was €On- |p oo coo difficult, perhaps impossible,” Sir Ernest says, “to|Whitehorse and the silver spooning of a Welfare State, but fe\v;( ¥ o : o ones nwv o enmie | COMMURITY MODERN ETIQUETTE g will fail to feel that the two things have a defl | munl ven s i ROBERTA I‘EE 13 | At 7:30 p.m—Creative Writers meet | clining an invitation? some public institution, delights and conditions far| meets in Dugout. the reason for being unable to accept this time. Otherwise, some need for personal character or individual conscience torium. | respects, honesty is a positive handicap. | tion for mayor, councilmen and| A. As soon as soup is served, the rolls or bread are passed. Most things. A big central pool containing nearly half | Baranof Hotel. % Q. To whom does a bride address a letter of thanks for a glit‘ tame time, searching for cxcuses mot to contribute At 8 Pm—Officers, chairmen of {jouely present you and Mr. Smith (or Jack) sent me.” f A | Caslers Men's Wear % 3 At 8 p.m.—Folkateers meet in grade | “Looked at in this way, The Welfare State is in | & | 5 Arrow Shirts and Underwear with no willing depositors and every customer anxious | IOOF Hall. First degree. angels could make a success of a society with such Club with square dancing. B o r A " Y and escapism does not make for morality or strength | Baranof Hotel government grows big in responsibility and in power | AWVS at Governor’s House. Elec- NUNN-BUSH SHOES ° |ing U. S. Army recruiting poster displayed at our [ You don’t need a detective or a legislative investigat- day’s newspaper brings fresh evidence of shattered » blers; an alarming rise of narcotic addicts among |ox the Pacific Coast, at 4:30 p.m., | Thse things are sensational and they shock us, follows: Barrow from the moral values of our forefathers. Instead | | Dawson twenty-five million people, in addition to those in i“(l“!l‘& moral fiber have been weakened has here, and some of its effects upon the British |McGrath for law and order has suffered “a serious deteriora- ‘Pe“’“b“rh’ victed of an indictable offense. By 1938, it was one geq¢p10 reestablish by argument any direct connection be»{Yakutat relationship one to the other. The working of The\ ! S e form, when thorugh the machinery of the lerh‘cns2 in KINY studio. A. Tt is pot obligatory to do so, but if the person would like to | better than those available to his law-abiding brothers | At 8 p.m.—Juneau-Douglas Concert, hostess might resent plain, blunt refusal. in The Welfare State, but, on the contrary, in many | October “Looking at the picture as a whole, this un-| magistrate. popular container nowadays is a shallow wicker basket that has a he SBtion¥1*ndstmey is surrounded by 56,000,000 peo- | At 3:30 pm.—Third Grade Brownies | which has been sent by a-married couple? i %6116, 1 7Tio- desexibe s 94 i DALON!Of dolerdrawers ang | ¥ or Oriy L0/ Hesk M MusedEyf { McGregor Sportswear school gymnasium. | Allen Edmonds Shoes Nothing lower than a nation of | At 8:30 p.m.—Community Center a constitution: perhaps the best that can be said| » October 3 "'500" of character.” | At 8 pm.—Elks Lodge. over the people, it grows corrupt, and its admin- | tion of officers. € STETSON HATS Complete Outitter for Men the American taxpayer. More than 34,653,328 per- | and responsibility are removed frcm a people, that | dist Churcholz:a;ll,?:,4 sons are now feeding at the public trough to the tune | people suffers a moral collapse. | At noon—Chamber of Commerce meets, Baranof Hotel. The Washington Merey-Go-Round |is increasing because of rex\l‘ma-‘contructs awarded up to August 15| a¢ g pm.—OCity Council meets, ment. They also knew that Com-| have gone to only three states. At 8 p.m—VFW post meets in CIO (Continued from Page One) Mys. Axel Dano, Lillian Stearns, | Charles Broulitte, Mr, and Mrs. J.| C. Crowder, Rev. Fred McGinnis, | | munism inside their countries would| The contracts total more lhan‘ hall. ‘ | increase if they spent too much;‘$22,000,000,090. O(qtm\ l\fllo\ll‘lf,gfll- At 8 p.m—Alaska Crippled Child~] | money on armies to resist Com- ifornia received $2,700,000,000; Mich- | 1oroc accociation board meets in munism from the outside. {igan, $2,250,000,000; but New York| pie Hall, 5 Cody and twolaha BHAFFER'S SANITARY MEAT FOR BETTER MEATS 13—PHONES—49 Free Delivery Princess Louise scheduled to ar- rive early Tuesday evening. ‘ Alaska scheduled to arrive south- bound tonight at midnight. Denali due to arrive tonight at midnight, BLACKWELL’S CABINET SHOP 117 Main St. Phone 772 High Quality Cabinet Work for Home, Office or Stere policy has not changed in several| “yjo. ) chile most of Europe also hundred years, that it contnues| ... ine problem of heavier taxa- one of aggression, and that R"’”i tion in the upper brackets and re- sia under the Kremlin, as under| ... ..o of jts system of putting the | the Czar, is still struggling 1O pjor tax hurden on the masses. warm-water ports. This remains one of the greatest mons, Katherine Brown, Charles Skuse, John Doolin, MYRTLE NANCE ball at San Francisco, Dean seemed | 3o be gappointing a committee | tracts, Compared with these Whop- | ot Fotel, Anderson, Stevens Hatley, Earl the obvious fact that Russian foreign | .. =\ yenort later. than $500,000 of defense contracts R e s eevac, T the state where the products will| 4 be assembled, with many panslweekend I |g|“s Zuboff, Douglas Wahto, Shell Sim- v as a paid-up subscriber to THE DALY ALASKA | This was the real problem at.Ot- |state topped the list with more than| October 8 “9onn Tanaka, E. J. Tiffany, William |tawa—and it was ducked. It was|$4,000,000000 in prime defense COn-| a4 noon—Lions club meets in Bara- | Johnson, Ed Brighton, M. Possinger. tired at Ottawa. He addressed Lh(flmr twelvo—“the twelve wise men” |ping figures, Nevada an North | o e o] = [ 3 o BT T n, Ina Seaberg, Amil Meisner foreign and finance ministers ON | oo e called—to study the mat- | Dakota were listed as having less! ¥ 'SO! g, X y E ¥ k Brennan, Hans Nes - n 41 Arrive, T1 Leave e Vv T each. . A _ | ‘+ Ackerman, B: cElhany, " In many cases the figures reflect | on pan Ame"(an ‘g:n i an*;l‘bl\x;Efl;{::;;.e:. ng;l:u farmed out to smaller plants in ¥ other states. Arriving on Pan American week- iend flights were 41 passengers with, Acheson also dwelt on the equally | breeders of Communism inside Eu- obvious fact that trouble in the|rope, but it was not discussed, even near and middle *east—as Iran— |informally, at Ottawa. could vitally affect Europe. S Another delegate read lugubrious quotations from Lenin showing Rus- sia’s passion for conguest—quota- tions which were well known and presumably of no great import to a group of world leaders gathered because they were already aware of threatened Soviet aggression. WASHINGT The army has lost ail control | over its chief lobbyist on Capitol PIPELINE iha.\‘ so many friends in Congress that he ignores his bosses in the Pentagon and does as he pleases. The Portuguese delegate also com- | When the army ‘|J1\~\(’ll over his plained: “The one country which |Promotion, Moore's has stanchly and consistently lought”"“’”d'\ made him a general any- Communism is not here. It should |BOW by writing it into the appro- be seated beside us, carrying on | priations bill. . .A bay window can this battle shoulder to shoulder.|be @ political liability. So two T oilan o coures e Saaine Senators have gone on strict diets |to get rid of them—Johnson of | Texas and Ives of New York. Each "lost 25 pounds. . .Defense Mobilizer Though he wasn't present, the Charles Wilson and other govern- chief shadow which hung over the ment bigwigs will act as faculty conference was that of Aneurin members for an institute on defense Eevan, “resigned British minister | administration, beginning next week of Health, who left the labor gov- | at American University. . .Senator ernment hecause he claimed it was Welker of Idaho caused ex-FBI spending too much on armament | man Downey Rice to turn down the and not enough on health benefits. | job of chief investigator for the The standard of living of the Brit- | Senate committee to investigate ish people, he argued must not come ' crime in the nation’s capitol. Welker down. put Rice through a humiliating Unquestionably a majority of the cross-examination and made it plain foreign ministers at Ottawa agreed that he intended to bulldoze the privately with ex-Minister Bevan. committee. So Rice bowed out. They didn’t put it in exactly the - same words, but they knew that DEFENSE CONTRACTS their governments would fall if A secret analysis just completed workers' wages were further re- by the Pentagon reveals that 41 duced by inflation—and inflation | percent of all the major defense BEVAN’S GHOST | Hill, Brig. Gen. Robert Moore. He| Congressional | Here is a breakdown of the figures by states: New York, $4,074,513556; Calif- ornia, $2,743,791,047; Michigan, $2,- 255,874,362; Ohio, $1,662,165,800; In- diana, $1,501,634,956; Connecticut, $1,403817,494; New Jersey, $1,1 885,670; Illinois, $1,023, 29; Penn- sylvania, $948,698, 276. | {71 departing and ‘22 listed as| | through p: ngers. E Arriving from Seattle: Mrs. Robert Grant, hahn, Milton Kepler, Robert Ea Fevour, Grace McNicol, Don Milnes, Dora Quarles, Beverly Rogers, Susan , Dr. C. C. Carter, David[* s, R. F. Kronquist, Rosemary ist, Bruce A. Fritz, Mrs, Gwendelyn Fritz, T. P. Newell, D. J. Newell, D. J. Oliver, Mrs. A. Sa- rsiey, Mrs. C. Shennett, Robert hibodeau, Troy Erwin, W. James, Dr. W. W. Blanton. From Whitehorse: Miss J. Armour. From Fairbanks: Mary Lord, Mrs. K. D. Jackson, Jenr Evans, Al Lawrence, Charles Taylor, Joseph Morgan, Herb Hilscher, Jousie Mil- le Richard Fredricks, Lorraine Frank, Ruth Kokrine, John Tucker, Philip Hale, E. L. § , Herbert Jones.* Leaving for Annctte: Taylor, Robert Lawrence. For Seattle: M. Stevens, Sue White, S. D. Pollack, Lloyd Skedo, Martin Asplund, Milton Furness, Lester Pope and son; A. Garcia, M. Garcia, Mr. and Mrs. Clemence, C. Clark, E. Rothe, Radcliff Hedson, Joan Porter, Axel I on, Sandra Pernula, John Clemence, Joha Ped- erson, Olaf Hanson, Sue Richard- son, Clarence Danner Mr. and Mrs. John Watkins three children; Joyce Stevens atid child; M. Asha, M anson, Robert McManas, LeRoy Peterson, Mr. and Mr. and Washington, $553,080,750; $549,141,391; Wisconsin, yland, $486,705,738; Texas, $483,531,480; Missouri, $39 572,624; District of Columbia, 208,834; Georgia, $159,750:139; Towa, $155,497,025; Rhode Tslahd, $151 393; Kansas, $151,266,455; Minne- | sota, $127,849,392; Tennessee, $121 | 735,281; North Carolina, $111 140; Louisiana, $104,285,905; ginia, $100,711,751. 1 Alabama, $99,698271; Maine, $79,- 367,840; South Carolina, $79,260,517; | Oklahoma, $67,289,377; Nebraska, $41,156,902; New Hampshire, $40,- 1346,183; Oregon, $34, A ona, $34,304,947; Vermont, $30,001 €08; Florida, $28,008,555; Colorado, £25,856,664; 3,850,336; | M Vir- Charles 279,456; Utah, $8,739,089; Mo $ kansas, $5,749,700; Id | Delaware, $1,892,000; h Dakota, ;$1,4-1|,000; Nevada and North Da- kota, less than $500,000 each. Orders placed outside the con- | tirental United States totaled $111,- 1568,572. Loretta Keip={ Crossword Puzzle ACROSS ' Bark of the . Lay bare by érosion 3. Sober . Urges on 36. Ornamental knot . Law . City in City Maine 4 f“ o) Verbal One of the 5. Move suddenl, ame ! Dmannered Hindu woman's garment . Insect . Made a loan Qutside pieces sawed from logs. Occupants . Tactful person . Japanese sash Even: contr. Give forth alarial fever Bird of prey Feminine name Plexus 57. City in Hollana DOWN . Throw lightly . Russian sea | ] 7 whiedl [m[o]] (0> [ x/»m/o|z|m| EHUE BRE EEE |c i<~ [ iimo]=[w] Im[~ T Ol0[>] Solution of Satu?.uy’s Puzzle 3. Exhibiting ostentatiously 4 Fo;nr; of legal wEL il e LT 5. Wing 6. City in Illinols 7. Indian fetish Too late Scandinavian measure of length Light variety of a color . Articles of apparel Hastened Symbol for sodium Shelter Poem Implore . Kneaded 29. Japanese & admiral read, as hay Showed ‘to 9 a seat . Note of the scale . Small boat 44; Sharpening stone Genus ot herbr and small p 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: "THE MAGNIFICENT YANKEE" Federal Tax—12c Paid by the Theatre Phone 14—YELLOW CAB C0.—Phone 22 and an insured cab WILL CALL FOR YOU and RETURN YOU to your home with our compliments. WATCH THIS SPACE—Your Name May Appear! Oldest Bank in Alaska 1891—0ver Half a Century of Banking—1951 The B.M.Behrends Bank ° Safety Deposit -~ Boxes for Rent COMMERCIAL SAVINGS