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| . PAGE FOUR THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE—JUNEAU, ALASKA TUESDAY, JULY 19, 1919 © ) | better qualified to do that than ‘any other group. | MOUNT JUNEAU LODGE NO. 147 : s . - Da'] 3 fil([skfl Emljir{? Certainly, teachers neither n;'vd n‘m’ deselrvro [!]1(- o]p- | Lt fl' g (m (I.E‘"ERS SECOND and FOURTH probrium of special laws singling them out for loyalty | 20 Y E A RS G om poxipiid il . " b1 very eve except Sunday by the t 3 L4 W of each month PG PRE PRINTING COMPANY procedures not: applied to othets, | ' THE EMPIRE ms"u- ~FIRST |in Seottish m;?remple Se. and M ers, Juneau, Alaska d | i { . x HELEN TROY MONSEN o - = < President i T | SA“"O"E plAm beginning at 7:30 p. m. D DOROTHY TROY LINGO - - = _ Vice-President COMMUNIST “MISSIONARIES” | 8 GLENN O. ABRAHAM, EIER A. FRIEND - - - - Managing Editor s e s S | JULY 19, 1029 o Worshipful Master; "_‘-"_“FE ZENGER v v S Business Manager AL kit aus 200 Japanese waE MR | Major and Mrs. Douglas Gilletet honored officers of the Alaska{ Something new has come to Ju-|JAMES W. LEIVEiiS Secretary. Entered In the Post (V,.‘.LP.”,;:T\!!(.‘\ . ‘1<:mom Class Matter. v ¢ deranity . JULY 19 | Aerial Survey Detachment and their wives at a large tea. Mrs. Malcolm neau in the line of dry cleaning. ! -y & PR R0 i 1 Tunene ane ey R e o O Y e ¢ | Elliott presided at the tea table, and Mrs. A. W. Radford entertained [ Wayne Johnson, owner and man- e by the Soviet Union. this probably was a happy ¢1at the piano. ager of the City Dry Cleaners, has B.P. 0. ELKS e o e home-coming for a certain number of the prisoners | ® Ann Marie Vukich ot just installed the first “Sanitone”| o LU 3 : of war and their families. But it is an ominous addi- | ® Phyllis Long . : plant in Alaska. eeting every Wednesday at o If they will promptly Moty | oo e e e b lems, nevertheless. ‘The | ® Edna Brooks o| Two recent brides arrived to join their husbands, who were sta- 1", o o @ Sitntat e 8 P. M. Visiting brothers wel- ar terebnlieity oy Geltveet SRR “Pms £o ;‘“ ’]”‘ e i smcle e TAEde Annie Dwyer o | tioned on the Cuast Guard cutter Unalga. They were Mrs. N. S. Haugen, |, =0 0 0 *’h;’s be:n d;’g’e; “i‘;' come. F. DEWEY BAKER, e omtmes, News Office, 602; Business Office, S7. ‘apaness ‘soldiers and sallors arrived singng . Stella Irving o | wife of Lt. Haugen, and Mrs. C. W. Thompson, wife of Ensign Thompson. | ... s, R " | Exalted Ruler. W. H. BIGGS, EMBER OF ASSOCIATED PRESS ternationale and the Song of Communist Youth. One | & R. M. MacNichols .| i yl yet”f by leading dry clean-| ' goorepqyy i PN Y : ¢ ; I R o S R ing plants in the Uniteq States and|__—~ "~ °" R St T e i 5 o e e | L SR W Uu oo, ey R e S e e| Mr. and Mrs. C. J. McNaughtan, who had produced “Baby Stealers | Canada. — = Slication o Ws dispatches credite pthe: | swor : es Communist Party a Ve crediied ‘i 'this paper and also the docal news publishec | oo wm_f{ i s QL ; s X’- P. Cutler '_] given by the EIks here, left on the Queen for Ketchikan to direct the | “We consider it an honor to te| BLACKWELL’S veretn. et L ou adbibH & wries, e ® ' musical comedy, “Johnny Get Your Gun.” Their son, Donald, went With [given the first ‘Sanitone' license in | CABINET SHOP NATIONAL REPRESENTALIVES — Alaska Newspapers, 1411 OB e i sl BVLpel LD UE ® them Alaska,” Johnson said. i Fourth Avenue Bldg., Seattle, Wash. Japan’s Communist Party, numerically, the influence |® ® © & & & & © o o o] i Upon receiving his license, John- | 17 Main St. Phone 772 They | son remodeled the City Dry Clean- | ing plant to make room for the| costly new machinery necessary to| meet the rigid specifications of the | = : e “‘Sanitone” people. ! Moose Lodge No. 700 Johnson, who has owned and\L Regular Meetings Each Friday managed the City Dry, Cleaners since November 1945, has bee in Governor—JOHN LADELY Secretary— the cleaning business for 28 years. WALTER R. HERMANSEN of such a group as this might be considerable. from Soviet High Quality Cabinet Work for Home, Office or Store will regard themselves as missionaries L lw hi . Mrs. rtha Brown Russia. With some exceptions, they will be active and JUNEAU S ouEEN i“‘m Shime ‘tlabl;s ot br‘idge. 1 :h: }fi:;:vns el R zealous workers for the par And they return to a | and Miss Lily Kromquist won S. | country so disorganized and so handicapped in its TREA]‘ED RovAllY living standard as to be fertiie soil for Soviet propa- | | ganda. | Furthermore, there are many scores of thousands 0“ SEATILE IRIP more Japanese in Soviet camps. They undoubtedly are receiving the same indoctrination. And many of | them will be repatriated on the same conditions TEACHERS' LOYALTY | The problem posed by this influx of Communists | - |is a grave one for Japan, and indirectly for us also. But it needs to be remembered that the United States ; | mother and friends on her return| has occupied Japan itself during those four years.| o s a 5 1t our o 1o encolraae HemiberaBpi Ribr ah lho;513!\3;\:""{{0?0‘]5’&[;!!;.“! el ’wnere, "arter‘ Pemg entertained and "playmg all kinds of enjoyable advantages we have had, are not enough to counter- ("nlcrln(inv;l royally dux'i:g hzr u::;r.‘ | games, & I L served; h:\lflés e act the influence of prisoners of war returning from day visit to Seattle, the coveted’Mousemn"' gave a talk on the care of children at Mooseheart. Russia, there is something very wrong with Genen\lh,,‘,,,\ for winning the queen con-% MacArthur's occupation machine. | test BRI On her arrival in Seattle last| Tuesday evening, there was a large | delegation to meet the queen, in- cluding Mr. Cornista, Vice-Consul | | from the Philippines, a delegation | ;ur the Seattle Filipino Community, | William and Clifford Anderson of Douglas sold their gasboat Nora to Theodore Toleffson, who planned to convert the vessel for trolling | the next season. ) | Miss Eleanor Adsit, who had been visiting Mr. and Mrs. L. B. “I've had more fun these last four days than I ever had before in my life,” were the excited words of Queen Juanita Diaz as she ran :rmm the PAA plane to greet her Adsit, planned to return to her Portland, Ore., home. It was her first | time back to Juneau, her birthplace, since she was two years old. Reinforcements re ‘Landed for Brifish Hongkong Garrison HONG KONG, July 19—®—Brit- | ain’s Hong Kong garrison t,oday‘, was strengthened by 3,800 rein-| forcements landed by the troop-| ships Dunera and Empire Trooper. The garrison eventually will havel 12,000 troops. After a short business meeting, the Women of Mooseheart Legion three Territories and the Dis- and their friends, numbering about 75, drove to the Auk Bay cannery Twenty-five States | In Douglas, Misses Alberta Gallwas and Elva Kirkham entertaned’ | trict of Columbia require teachers to take oaths of I "The Rexall Store” Your Reliable Pharmacists BUTLER-MAURO DRUG CoO. loyalty to the Government of the United States as a Most of these laws and regulations apply only to teachers keeping their jobs. St MAN Y RO M prerequisite to receiving or Weather: High, 63; low, 52; rain. in publicly supported schools and colleges, but quite a Sins of the Fathers (Wichita, Kansas, Eagle) No one should be greatly startled over the new that a gambling organization made up and operated by teen-age bovs has been uncovered in a Florida city. | headed by Mr. Velasco and Tel e it all the eharacteristics of @ regular syndicate the | Baylon, and three Seattle queens,| 8¢ the party? [bovs took bets on any and all matters of chance, with | Miss Dolores Mallori, 1946 queen, {a boss and a corps of lieutenants, and had made hun- { dreds of dollars. It was small-fry stuff on a big-time | basis . . Before shedding any tears over a situation which would indicate a serious increase in juvenile delin- quency remember that the vouth of the land are no better or worse than their parents. If mothers play bridge for even modest stakes don't blame Junior if few cover also those in private or tax-exempt insti- | tutions. Five require oaths even of non])ro{vssmnul:’ public-school employees. Most of these laws date back 10 to 25 years. The! peak of teacher loyalty oath laws came in the years | 1931-35, when 11 States adopted such legislation. Two | were added in 1941, but only two more have entered | the books since then. Rather, the trend in recent years has been toward a different kind of law— providing for dismissal of “disloyal” teachers, forbid- ding them to belong to subversive organizations, or, as in two 1949 laws, providing for loyalty checks on teachers. Meeting in Boston, the department of classroom teachers of the National Education Association has voted unanimously a resolution deploring such dis- Alaska Music Supply { ' Arthur M. Uggen, Manager Pianos—Musical Instruments and Supplies .Phone 206 .. Second and Seward.. Daily Lessons in English %% 1. corbox { ? 3 | | WORDS OFTEN MISUSED: Do not say, “Whom do you think was Say, “WHO do you think was at the party?” OFTEN MISPRONOUNCED: Pincers (a grasping tool). Miss Anita Villar, 1947 queen, and | pin-serz, and not PINCHERS. SHOP AT BERT’S FOOD CENTER Pronounce OFTEN MISSPELLED: Sleight (skill); distinguish from SLIGHT. Pan American Airways, who had; SYNONYMS: Gentle, well-bred, courteous, kindly, tender, compas- presented Juanita with her round- | Sionate- }mp ticket, was represented by Ma- WORD STUDY: “Use a word three times and it is yours.” Let us .rie Swanson, public relations offi- ‘ increase our vocabulary by mastering one word each day. Today's word: cer. The queen from Alaska’s cap- | IMPUTE; to charge; ascribe; credit. “One vice of a darker shade was ital posed for a PAA photographer i imputed to him—envy."—Macaulay. Miss Dorothy Laigo, 1948 queen. | Alaska’s Finest Supermarket Wall Paper Ideal Paint Store Phone 549 Fred W. Wendt GEORGE BROS. criminatory laws. The sole worth of these laws is as a he has the gambling instinct. A father who bvlvngs‘ wearing a beautiful fur DPATKA | pr———————————eeeeee e Widest Selection of ’ vorth ,|to a poker club, bets on the races, plays the slot!from the shop of Martin Victor. : trap for perjurers, but the price is not worth it. By % S e gt JUNEAU’S FINEST intimidating the liberal teacher whose questioning mm-hmss. S)VWUM athlleaisl ]h_me Yan Juderstatiting jon oy gty | % | MODERN ETIOU ETTE by LIQU‘)RS LIQUOR STORE mind does not accept as gospel everything approved Jibe TRRNEY 10 GRIMD I8 TR R On one of the days in Seattle ROBERTA LEE PHONE 399 % : Gambling is a corrupting influence, and if that . g At influence is spreading to the youth of the land no can Activities Committee, they menace the very 8YS-' .o iq o hlame except the adults whose patronage sup- tem of free inquiry they are supposed to protect. The | ,on¢ jt. If father and mother like to gamble it is only teaching profession, in common with society as a|patural Junior will take their actions as an endorse- whole, is faced with the problem of how to deal with lment and follow their example. The Florida case is a few subversives among its members. It is perhaps | proof of the fact. ! Juanita was the guest of Miss Lulu Fairbanks of the Alaska | | Weekly staff. She attended a fur | auction, and had dinner at an| | exclusive restaurant. She and Miss | | Fairbanks were also guests of two | ! Dartmouth college boys, Richard | Peirce Udall and Jerry Underwood, | on a tour of the city. They also, ! went to the roof of the Washing- by the DAR, the American Legion and the Un-Ameri- BAVARD'S Phone 689 The Alaskan Hotel Newly Renovated Rooms at Reasonable Rates If a woman is on an elevator, what should she say when a man holds back other men to allow her to leave the elevator first? i A. She should thank him, or nod her head in acknowledgment of | the courtesy. | Q. “Say It With Flowers” but “SAY IT WITH OURS!” Juneau Florists Thone 311 Q. Is it all right to use tne expression, “I want to make you acquaint- ed with” when making an introduction? | A. No; this phrase is extremely awkward. Crooner Héymes Is boat—face the following alterna- fhe Washifidlon Fyope is in just about the tives: Me' G’ ROlInd 1. Do nothing and go broke. 3 ton Athletic Club Building, from Q. What is customary to use as a centerpiece for the wedding break- | A oS s Ty 2. Beg for more aid from the on Hone moon w“h which they could see the bright | fast table? : The Erwin Feed Co. 2 sl —— United States and become a poor lights of Seattle. ! A. The wedding cake. Office in Case Lot Grocery By DREW PEARSON ol ? iy F N FI n | Miss Fairbanks presented Juanita | f Phone 704 Pz ; 3. “_‘;;““‘: F‘““‘l*i‘”“l ‘I'”’““;'l 0I'me|' OI'a y Il | with three theatre tickets, the gift b ) ion his has not been done to; ! avon (Continned from Psge BN i heo e s [ of the mayor of Seattle. I_O OK a nd I_E A R N Y HAY, GRAIN, COAL Thomas Hardware Co. % Vi Sleas: o8 ATp BEVERLY HILLS, Calif, July 19, ©On another day Juanita was en- A. C. GORDON and STORAGE Between 1921 and 131, the Uni- Plan money, despite outmoded Eu- ) » Calll, JWY 191 rtained by Miss Swanson, the A ted States had poured several bil- | ropean factories which make Eu-|—/#—Crooner Dick Haymes and his| o - represemauvle At Hhe aahs PAINTS — OILS lion dolla_rs into European recon- ropean goods cost more than ours. b 'dtn the lufmtfr Nora Eddington fngbon - Athlelic Gliba i SHe: sbent 1. What are the six leading agricultural products of the United Builders’ and Shelf e o | Al Db, H) Flynn, are honeymooning (0084t | one evening with her god-sister, | States? Call EXPERIENCED MEN HARDWARE i & we have poured meney into Europe ' ter deals, such as the Br is home. i Miss Ninita Gaudia. A % " ¥ " 5 by A i . Another eve- 2. What river has the largest volume of flow of any river in the since V-E Day. The money, Of gentine trade pact; thoush these| They were wea yesierday in ”‘E,‘ning she was the dinner guest of | world? B % Al“k;;%gl;g%'mw [ i course, was advanced by private usually boomerang in the end. |garden of the same home. They | e i g P H Remi i i ; g . | her uncle and aunt, Mr. and Mrs. | “ emington Typewriters ; ERT e 1b o sovernments BUC|: ‘85 Tyade! with) Rusa. and- the Dlan t loava later this | week OrtOAtine Mo et naritsdrese e | B T RAURCE coie e B and & bone and a haniiof Phone 247 SOLD and SERVICED by since the bankers sold their bonds Iron Curtain countries. a three-week honeymoon in Ha-|several shopping tours in the af- hair”? one i s to the unsuspecting public, actual- The latter alteriaiive i the one |waii. The bride, 25, was given away | ternoons. 4. How many States seceded from the Union at the time of the Inp— J B Buflnrd & co ' ly it was paid by the American ghich has recently tempted the her father, Jack Eddington. On Saturday, Mr. and Mrs. James Civil War? ° ' o people in the end. | British to the tune of a 1000,000-| Nora obtained a divorce from: Sweeney entertained Juanita at| 5 With what sport is the “Arlberg Technique” assoclated? STEVENS 0% cDomniop s Weep by Furthermore, much of our money | ton wheat deal. It also contains|actor Errol Flynn in Las Vegas,| their home in Olympia. ANSWERS: Retatiod Ouitogirs ;’Vfl“ ‘(l;w“Gf;m:“."- “'h‘i““?)f‘“a:’ dangerous potentialities for under- |Nev., July 8, and Haymes, 33, was| During her visit in Seattle, Queen 1. Corn, cotton, wheat, white potatoes, oats, and tobacco. LADIES’—MISSES’ 5 y use ay reparations 10 mining the chief political objective | divorced by actress Joanne Dru in| juanita stayed at the Olympi iver. i Dlgog 3 8 F pic Ho- | 2. The Amazon River. READY-TO-WEAR Prance and England. o, in realor the Marshall Plan—blocking |Reno, Nev, June 28. tel. On Sunday morning, confused | 3. Kipling's “The Vampire.” FORD AGENCY ey fact, we were the main support M_‘Communism_ Pop At in-daunetar] T 23 by theL ahAtee A davilght o 44 iy 2 Seward Street ~ Near Third (Authorized Dealers) it our allies, just as we are today | whether any member of Congress|® ® @ ® e ® ® e e | Standard Time, she got up an hour| 5 with sy GREAHRE 5= GAB. = OIL p through the Marshall Plan would have voted a nickel into the | ® TIDE TABLE ® | early to catch the plane to Juneau. ¥ et J H c [ s i Marshall Plan kitty without the|® ® | “It was lucky I was an hour early | pr——e e oo uneau Motor Go . HOW HITLER RO! | promise that it would check the|® JULY 20 ®and not an hour late,” said Juan- | ox Pt hat New B {| The Charles W. Carter i gl : Eventually, and all too slowly,| westward march of Russian Com-|® Low tide, 3:35 am, 3.1 ft. ®|ita, happy to be home again with or Estimates on that New a‘emen'l noue Moriuary even the bankers, after repeated . munism. | ® High tide, 10:00 a.m., 104 ft. ® | her family and friends. N ] warnings from the government,] Moderate trade with Russia|® Low tide, 15:19 p.m, 62 ft. e S or r“eplace-"no“ 4ls—nvening’ Fourth and Franklin Sts. MAKE . ! woke up to the fact that their long , through normal channels is go- | ® High tide, 21:32 ., 136 ft. e - i3 3 Tl s e S oL 30 g1 s oo T ) NOFIEH - ERAYFIO I We have enough PUMICE and CONCRETE PHONE 136 JUNEAU DAIRIES } S pe were a ( ing to bring Communism westward.|® © e o e LR T R | Shattuck Way is for one-way BLOCKS f 1 « poor risk. And in the spring of | But the trade that Russia wants is| SR A north bound traffic only. Parking or several houses R DELICIOUS ICE CREAM 1| 1 1931, falling prices in the U.S.A,|not going to be normal. It will be: Although Nevada is the sixth|on left side only, excepting in front EARL CRASS AND SON a daily habit—ask for it by ¥ | plus the continued crashing of the | barter—and with all sorts of |state in size, it is smallest in pop- | of garages. - card B“erage co. . famed bull market, dried up the|strings attached. In fact, the bar- | ulation. Juneau Dairies, Inc | flow of funds across the Atlantic.|ter deals which a depression-wor- Pt i ‘Wholesale 805 10th St. L 2 i ¢ Immediately the banks in Austria | ried Western Europe makes with = PHONE 216—DAY or NIGHT g } and Germany began to tremble. Iron Curtain countries must inevi- | Cros OFr Puzzle Oldest Bank m AlaSka Chrysler Marine Engines = t It was the British in 1931—as in | tably lead to two things: for MIXERS or SODA POP MACHINE SHOP { 1949—who first called upon the| A. The economics of the Iron 36. Lotus tree i g— i USA. for aid. Their money, per-iCurtain countries, now dangerously ¥ g 31. Sumatran IBSI—nve' Ha" a cen'“rv o‘ Ballkll'l lm g Marine Hardware 1. haps even more than ours, was in- | low, will be revived. It should be| § Wooden pin i) o W ear b { vested in central Europe; so th remembered that depression behind | ' “."l"‘,‘l‘,"‘,‘, the, 39. Dl:f‘e:::ce be- Th B M ¥ cule' 5 “en 5 w Chas G Warnel’ Co 1 asked for a moratorium on all re- | the Iron Curtain has peen one rea- a shaft Cuaning e L] ] e en s Formerly SABIN'S i 3 parations by Germany to them and | son for Tito's rebellion and for the | |1 Gorming, Bumbers Stetson and Mallory Hats ‘ all war-debt payments by them to | restlessness of the Cze macaw 40 Vergil's hero: Arrow Shirts and Underwear 5 us. Hungarian populations. i “":'.‘;x:;mheu SK:}“L:";(""H 1 a Allen Edmonds Shoes HOME GROCERY Then as now, the Secretary of | deals, therefore, would be ,l.el‘l’l stand e el a Ph 146 P ] the Treasury, Andrew Mellon, cros aver to the Soviet Is Relieves > K o e Ao sontesonen| B Ay eoparaive Bast-west| 5 glsoeigaey 8 BEecll soe - Safety Deposit : e (] & i _ Bird of th . Ge Then as now, the British urged, trade will direct Europe’s political cuckoo v Solution of Yesterday's Puzzie . BOTA NY Home Liquor Store—Tel. 699 | § that the United States save the|thinking toward Russia, not the U.| g of@milY, g g¥ilow Boxes for Rent American Meat — Phone 38 | | = ¥ day. S.A. The Moscow radio would make i et PR e f2Pamle 3 koo : o 4 ! We did—for the time being. Pres- | the most of it. The Communist e oxn ; atibe | 5«0 i i ¢ i S 5 _ pike 69. Formerly 4. Former - ident Hoover declared a moratorium | Parties of France and Italy would . Fourth satel- 86. Exchane tor R Secich coln | COMMERCIAL SAVINGS To Banish “Blue Monday” g on all debt and reparations pay-|hail it as a major victory—as. it | Uranus 57. Employves 1. Weeps bitterly 5 Play a part | c l. 0 'r n E s T et ) ments—for two years would be. 6. Compulsion & o give you more free on} § This, however, was only tempor-| Furthermore, if depression should e NUNN-BUSH SHOES From ook ¢ TRY ary. The economic crisis drifted— | deepen in Europe, os it did ‘n 1931- | guiuewarn STETSON HATS. | drifted and deepened With de- |32, riots and revolutions are in-| (T :m”“‘ Wi Qua‘“‘y Work Clothmg i E/ pression comes political unrest. And | evitable. This is the kmd of cli- | 7 i | n. s. STnum “n HE“!NG m”ka Lilllllll’! | one year later a fuehrer had rais mate in which fuehrers are I | "-. atiol | . e ee: Jase acrfxx:{:x]‘.zxdd[xx u;f\c\l Pl Wk 4 u;mr;nm ”dle\».-l :“d‘ § 19 Citfus Thute as a paid-up subscriber to THE DAILY ALASKA F B gk velop- | V) i | EMPIRE is invited to be our guest THIS EVENING Complete Outfitter for Men oY ad stepped i joscoew hias been longing f: Z _ beriod . " DR. ROBERT SIMPSON into power. Fortunately the Marshall Plan HHH “. Fouder of Present this coupon to the box office of the o s All disarmament stopped. The|Still has more than three vears - Persian | B i ations bogan b diein. | . Fun, the Brish fiuenels) scee| e o CAPITOL THEATRE R. W. COWLING OPTOMETRIST | | tegrate. It was now only a matter | has come early—in time for the| o ! | Eyes Examined—Glases Fitted ©f thme before war was inevitable Mux\h::ll Planners to probc deeper | oo and receive TWO TICKETS to see: COHFAIW SIMPSON BUILDING I There are a lot of differences|into Europe’s basic econcmy -hy | pea | Dodge—Plymouth—Chrysler between the first cracks in the | MmProving factory methods, breaking | i Infane | A DATE WITE JUD g ‘:‘eSou—nud:e Trucks Phone 266 for Appointments | ] world’s economy in 1931 and the | down boundaries and building tow- | th; Mexican T | 3 first cracks to show in 1949. But &rd an unrestricted United States! AR e Federal Tax—12c—Paid by the Theatre | e b uninten. the main object lesson to be re- |cf Europe B SHAFFER'S ] | | | memberedd is: Depression breeds| “n the dz(nlugnl flags are not he (*(x-J‘ /A 77 Phone l‘_ml.nw CAB co,—rhmen SAIIITAIY MEAT H.S. GRAVES i unrest, and enough unrest breeds' €d immediately nd vigorousiy. | /fl.- : WI ¢ < { war. however, 1949 could turn out and an insured cab WILL CALL FOR YOU and The Clothing Man ‘ 1 out to] o b ith limént FOR BETTER MEATS REMEDIES FOR ENGLAND be ancther 1931, RETURN YOU to your home with our compliments. ! 13—PHONES—49 LEVI'S OVERALLS | g Today England—and Western Eu- ' — 3 | SCHWINN BIKES at MADSEN ) WATCH THIS SPACE—Your Name May Appear! Free Delivery for Boys same '