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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE—JUNEAU, ALASKA (20 YEARS AGO ¥ swrens | CONDITIONS | | OF WEATHER WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 19, 1949 BROWNIE TROOP NO. 4 HAS ELECTION OFFICERS PAGE FOUR ] complete. Meanwhile the depleted Supreme Court began its fall term recently, and we hope it will be careful till the jinx that seems to have settled upon it passes to some less important agency. Daily Alaska Empire Published every evening except Sunday by the EMPIRE PRINTING COMPANY Second and Main Streets, Juheau, Alasks HELEN TROY MONSEN . - President SmotY anorido - . - yenge A CHEERING NOTE b 0 e T S A - - - - anaging T | meeting in the Legion Du FRED ZENGER - = = = M ] IR gout on HE R e - sl 4 ? ®| B D. Stewart, Federal Mining Inspector, who had been in the East Ofver 8. WE R Gyery glig Entered It the Post Office in Juneau as Second Class Matter,{ 1imorous Americans meditating on the hazards: g OCTOBER 19 . i d 23 - SREpEONS ) to have Mrs. Burford, our troop SUBSCRIPTION RATES: of life under the shadow of a Russia armed with|e o | for more than a month, was en route to Juneau. He had visited Min- leader, back with us again from Deliveree by e-.r‘r‘l-‘r,‘::'.;:r;-’-fn;:.:nl:n::::'n ::;..l'l.so er monthi | 4o mic bombs may derive some wry comfort from |e Albert Peterson . gexl;;;omI Kansas City and Washington, returning to the Northvit via ® | her trip south. Mrs. Harrison, the By mail, postage paid, at the following rates: | the Metropolitan Life Insurance Co.’s announcement|® J. C. Ryan e | California. L b iE assistant troop leader and Brownie s Tttt th oy g 00; six morths, in advance, $7.50 |\ 1 it cees no reason, at this time, for recommending I Arthur McKenna .| “?r?;m:: c:;‘:;fi:"i;:g 'FmP'{‘ Mary Jo Harrison left ‘for the Subscribers will confer s favor if they will promptly notify i Ly vi 3 . is 2 a ” points, s of e el B Bt T | matter, we can see no reason why any life insur- | 4 Dfiuzflg S‘-f erson | dened to learn of the tragic death of Jack Thayer, from wounds inflicted om, 120th Maridiae Tlr‘ne e m\;: o i elephones: News Office, 602; Business Office, 374 i 1 od7, . avid E. Simonson . . ; ¥ 1l s rs. Burford was surprised t bt O LBOLIAINS Vikas {ance company at any time should adjust its rates to'. Geraldfoe: Beabo » | by an enormous brown bear. Thayer; Junior Forester, and his assistant, | ojo0c0q by the Weather Bureai] sca s el Abne b mr\rx’ch worz B — Ll | allow for the possibility that someday American cities j o Mrs. A. M. Lipton o | Fred Herring, were cruising timber when the bear crashed through a| .t juneau, follow: honge il The Assoclated Priss is lusivel. titled to th for i b4 4 ‘ icl Vi . - ' X reptation ot a1l news disnavehes credited to 1t of not other. | mUght be destroyed and hundreds of thousands of|e Jean Osborne » | thicket, charged'the Tmeri and was wounded by Thayer's shot, then at-| Anchorage ....37—Partly Cloudy| We had an election of officers pise credited in this paper and also the local news published | people killed by atom blasts. That is a catastrophe Grace Templeton o | tacked him. Barrow 29—Cloudy | for the month of October, as fol- o that we can only try to prevent, knowing that thel; ol Bethel 35—Partly Cloudy |lows: President, Ann Akervick: Sec- NATIONAL REPRESENTATIVES — Alaska Newspapers, 1411 ' Joss in life and property would be irremediable, if/®# ® © ¢ © v o & © © o o A. Dishaw, local contractor, was constructing a 50-foot marquee on | Cordova ... 39—Rain Shower | retary, Jeane Burrus; Treasurer, B e e W |it were to occur. Puthermore, it would probably! |the front of the Juneau Billiard Bujding. When completed, it was to Dawson 23—Partly Cloudy | Coralie Sheldon; and the following bankrupt companies that had insured the lives of [as they do nothing more than |cover the sidewalk in front of the Juneau Ice Cream Parlor and the l’:?::’g;:z’: % Pml‘sgfleflr reporters were_appinted: Pat Mc- | victims. speak: In a word, their contention | Piggly Wiggly Grocery. s 3;’ mzzgy Namara and Betty Harris. In these troubled days, life insurance companies |is that it is impossible to prove . Havre '_ 23—Snov); as well as other businesses have to act on the assump- | that they conspired to overthrow Purchase of the Darby interest in the old U and I Lunchroom on | j,neqay Airport . '39—Rain !tion that our worst fears will never be realized.|the government of United States pront Street, by John H. Walmer of Sitka, was made public. Annette Island 42— Rain | Otherwise their present usefulness would be impaired?";‘mth”t‘d l:"“’s; '; c';“'f l:“‘ ‘;:‘:x’:‘ Kodiak ... 44—Rain by foolish, futile attempts to protect their own inter- :hrow: theeygov:mx:ema yA fury Under special authority from the American Railway Express Com- | Kotzebue 31—Partly Cloudy 1ests against the unforeseeable dangers of the future. disagreed with them, 5 “ | pany, Butler Mauro Drug Company was appointed as money agents. McGrath 32—Partly Cloudy 'm H 1 . Noi PP oy i ‘ Actually, what the Supreme Court > NO::‘.:IWSY 17Apan,|59;1}:::lv U. S. Policy will have to decide is at what point John Kinghorn, wellknown Juneauite who had been connected with B et S5 CYikae T y m/fyw/”ml do men, who only speak and write, the Alaska Raiload steamer Gen. J. W. Jacobs operating out of Nenana, Portland ] 30 'Clezg' For almost instant relief, put a — (Glendale, Ariz., Herald) organize and preach, begome dang- | returned home for the winter. Prim‘e George % 26—~Snov:' few Vifiks Vi-Qxio-nol NoseBwpl i e nation. . in each nostri They tell the story of the football coach who, f€rous, to the existence of the na Seattle 29Ol 1Q ¥ C e i i 7 L ear | Va-tro-nol works THE STRENUOUS LIFE while instructing his quarterbacks in a strategy meet- | Their decision will be momentous A. W. Fox, former Juneauite residing in Hyder, was appointed U. 8.{ whitehorse 34_partly Cloudy| Tight where ing one day, ordered: :?:use it will involve two proposi- | Commissioner here by U. S. District Judge Justin W. Harding, the ap- | yakutat ] 38—Cloudy | fil%:ént;%ubblc%fil S. ! To be thrown from a horse and rolled upon in a “When in doubt, punt!” remote mountain section is not considered one of the President Truman, from his messages to Congress 1 hazrdsa confronting members of the Supreme Court.| .t january and again a few days ago on the economic i Yet it was always one of the hazards of Justicecondition of the nation, must have gotten somewhat Douglas’ life. He is an especially vigorous and active [the same orders from his $45,000 worth of economic man who supplements his strenuous winters of opin- | advisors: jon writing with strenuous summers of mountain “When in doubt, spend!” . . . climbing. His exceptional energy and zest are quite in keeping with the present temperament of the court | and ought not to be discouraged. campus belle will be more or less distinguishable as a One may be sure, moreover, that if any man of | girl. By no means effeminate, howeverA—lWalla.'uberties are freedom ;rhspe;ac:,:‘ e 5 by i) 4 : 4 i freedom of the press, and the right | . 50 can survive the ordeal of 13 broken ribs, a punc- | Walla Union-Bulletin). } I y g o tured lung, and probably other injuries, without last- S of :‘:::m;g_' azo;zaizenggje;it::::_' a’ essons In n IS W. L. GORDON ing impairment, it will be the wiry and tenacious jurist | Instead of sticking o ¢ ¥ % from the Far West. Certainly there will be no dissent | in motoring, too many persons stick out their necks. from the hope that his recovery will be speedy and —(Daily Olympian). clogged nose relieves stuffi- . . and lets | pointment to take effect November 1. He was to succeed Judge Frank The liberties of the individual | A, Boyle, who had resigned. under the constitution. | 2. The continued existence of the The City Council set uniform fines for overtime parking and for United States as an independent| ... ing streets without first coming to a stop. The fines were $1 and nation. | It will be a great danger to the $2, respectively. American people if their liberties 2 s 4 3 under the constitution are abridg- Weather: High, 49; low, 49; cloudy. ed, and among the greatest of these s i o [— = . ness . you brefthe CHILDREN T0 HAVE FISHING DERBY AT CARNIVAL BAZAAR The children of Juneau and sur-! 6 rounding area will have their own two-day fishing derby at the Car- nival-Bazaar “Fish Pond” November 4 and 5. The Pond is now being well stock- ed with fish of all sizes, ranging from small ones right on up to the granddaddy of them all—a whop- per! H { The values of the prizes will in- crease proprortionately with the sizes of the fish caught, with the first prize going to the lucky child ~ho brings in Mr. Granddaddy—a full-size child’s automobile. The word from the college shops is that this year’s out an arm to indicate a turn|W€ l |Pd the phenomenon of one na- |Liun. Soviet Russia, violating the “Her clothes are very WORDS OFTEN MISUSED: Do not say, | unique.” Omit VERY. OFTEN MISPRONOUNCED: Illusive. integrity of all other nations by the use of a vast propagandistic apparatus that utilizes words as wizpons. that infiltrates into the|not as in RUDE. life of a people, even into the or- OFTEN MISSPELLED: Outrageous; gans of government, and that ul-|IOUS. timately leaves that nation incap- SYNONYMS: Notice (verb), heed, regard, observe. able of self-defense. The process| WORD STUDY: “Use a word three times and it is yours.” iness producing soda ash from nat- | H E q E D A Y S ural trona. P SRR GEORGE E. SOKOLSKY Pronounce the U as in USE, The Washinfilon ; Merry-Go-Riu_nd observe the EOUS, and not WHO'S FOOLING WHOM? Let us The Senator from Wyoming wanted | N 7 S ARI VEAPON | By DREW PEARSO to emphasize the independence of |~ WORDS guE &N is slow but constant, and the words | jncrease our vocabulary by mastering one word each day. Today's word: | Of course Mr. Granddaddy has Wh n H | 5 the company when he brought | v tablished at the trial |[that are used involve a total de- | & P B -bri-on-ik, E in MEN,|many relatives somewhat smaller; i (Continued from Page One) |* What was established a h i EMBRYONIC; undeveloped. (Pronounce em-bri-on-ik, E as in N, S s al a Dilierence: © _ Robert D. Pike, .an engineer from o¢ the Communist leaders in Judge |struction in the traditions of & na- '\ "r 0 i 1m0 as in ON, accent third syllable). “Her talent was | than he, but still good-size fish 5 which will win large and valuable Westvaco, to Washington to testi- | peqina’s court is that words are!tion and in faith in its continued | embyronic.” T HERE’S a decided e i u((?cia! DaveL bon-rd hes iy, |a weapon, that men may conspire | existence. It contends the inevit-| arizes. been investigating another navy| —«rhis js an independent plant, is|¢; yse words to undermine the|ability of its own success. | e = & No previous fishing experience is - smear — the secret memo Which j not?” O'Mahoney asked about|morale of a people and to destroy | necessary to cateh the largest fish,| diiference between Prop- Damage. Insurance Recall the outcome of the 3-day! erty claimed that Secretaries Symington Utilizing Karl Marx's philoscphv; MODERN ETIQUETTE hperrs 1o the Wyoming plant. |a state. A jury of New Yorkersy 3 ik Ly and Johnson ordered the B-36 be- | wyes sir; entirely so,” nodded|found that these eleven men, and;Of dialectic ‘m‘alena.hsm: '75"?9" | salmon derby held here last July| and Collision Insurance. Sause.of pejsonal of MODEIATY BRE: | Blke. D William Z. Foste: will be the uveu»l‘”e‘.“]‘"‘g.&‘_fi f”’_"“;o;i';‘:”’r;:algufii;. [ [{in which Mrs. Ann Clements, a no-| The former covers your This vicious myth, NOW com-| It is not & subsidiary to any |¢n did conspire to overthrow the|Morals ethics as S, = == S = === vice at the sport of fishing, caught( legal liability for any tall that man has accepted as truth| o yo 4 roper for a prospective bridegroom to offer to pay for pletely exploded, was written by other plant engaged in the same| T f . th Lt : " SEREREY % # . o | government of the United States A b b owalon e largest salmon and won for damage your car may do :7:10‘?5‘“(’ ‘:)v‘f";?'];a;‘:‘:;m;;;:;fidE:: ::“‘sm;“? ‘ the ex-trust = buster|py teaching, writing, preaching, by irg' etnhg(:r};?el::i O\LI]}’izhlsiP:V:?‘]auna part of his bride-to-be’s trousseau? herself the first prize, an automo- to the property of others. sponsibility. Worth, it now de- rg;i t“ouis ag‘;",: replied Pike |the organization of various b(l:dxes,x tion without standards, and with-| A- No; this would indicate a lack of tact on his part. He need not buéi]'ld:‘ i e The latter covers the ; ! - | by infiltrating into schools, colleges, | |5, 0 " p0 "o evining fine in| be impatient about this, as future clothing expense will be all his after lldren will not be required to! gamage done to your velops, was a part of Operation 23. And even before the board of ad- mirals had finished its probe of the Worth smear, more propaganda | dent competitive enterprise,” O'-| i 4 i i it & y | lished by their words. _ 5 5 prizes will te awarded as the tish began flooding the newspapers — | Mahney added. The Commun! will appeal from ment, struggling everlastingly|iaple the knife and fork should be used. are brought out. some of it through the medium of | «“That is correct, Senator,” Judge Medina's sentence and the against all that besets him, and| Q. Should a girl smoke her own cigarettes when going out with a| All those who wish to enter will Naval Reserve Capt. James Stahl- man, publisher of the Nashville, (Tenn.) Banner, Note—One member of Operation 23 is Lt. Sam Ingram, a naval re- “So that if and when establish- ed to develop the potentialities of this depesit, it will be an indepen- | agreed Pike. Yet behind the legal red tape, the Westvaco Company is not so independent. For the same record, in which this testimony was print-! newspapers, radio, churches, labor unions and all sorts of bodies of the people. Their guilt was estab- jury’s determination. They will ap- peal on constitutional grounds, namely, that whatever they advo- cated, they had a right to advocate under the First Amendment to the life, the class struggle is substitut-} ed. Man is a product of biologic forces, conditioned by his environ- producing nothing but further struggle, contention, and clash. That which succeeds is inevitably right, and it is right because it has sur- vived. Therefore, that which does not survive because it has failed is the marriage. Q. Is it all right to partake of fried chicken with the fingers? A. This is all right at picnics and such affairs, but at the dinner young man ,or should she smoke her escort’s? A. Either way is correct. 1 L0OK and LEARN ¥ o cornon wait until the end of the derby to get their prizes. Since the sizes of the fish are known in advance, all have ithree opportunities—Friday evening November 4 starting at 8 p.m., Saturday, November 5 in the afternoon from 2 to 5 p.m., and in the evening at 8 p.m. at the Catho- OWN car. You need BOTH policies! Get them here. Shattuck Agency servist. Ingram reported for two |ed, identified Pike—in fine print—i constitution. They will contend lic Parish Hall q weeks' active duty one year ago,|as representing the Westvaco|that they had committed no overt Ipso facto wrong and may therefore | el Gl i Phone: 249 | wrote Admiral Radford a letter Chemical Division of the Food Ma- |act and that no evidence had been | destroved. FROM SEATTLE Seward Street castigating the Air Force, got a chinery and Chemical Corporation.|adduced that they had committeed| It is a devastating philosophy | === = Tl Niels Christensen of Seattle is! Juneau . ¥ % 3 3 < is call from Radford to drop in for a This turns out to be a Deleware|{an overt act. They will plead free- | Without charity, pity, compassion, 1. How long did prohibition last in the U. 8.2 registered at the Baranof Hotel personal visit. The visit lasted two corporation with tentacles all{dom of speech, of the press, and|love, loyalty, faith. 2. How many hairs does the average healthy human scalp lose HEae - 2 hours, and Lt. Ingram has been|around the world. of assembly. And yet, it is to many very|daily? S . on permanent duty turning out ij-} O When they come before the Sup- |attractive. It gives them a sense 3. What old British colony this past year became a province of toons and charts against the Air MIXED UP WITH I G. FARBEN !reme Court of the United States,jof power. It satifies their craving|canada? Force ever since. His salary for| g 3 therefore, the issue will be clear.jfor a non-mystical, non-religious § N i s 3 s J 4. Is the Vice-President of the U. S. a memb ¥ g that year bf sniping at ano(her\m;‘s“z:fifgzbi‘: :’;‘ebuili:e:issl":;_ A great body of testimony has been ! explanation of man. Since Russia Cabinet? er of the President’s branch of the armed services was ‘ducers S industei] chgmicall)s' pme taken qver a period of nearly nme‘supports this movement, it gives 5 \;Vh & i L Eagland i 5 paid for by the taxpayer. EUnited Btatha b and it s iml;:lved months and much of it consists of {them a sense of power. For the . at Qu 8 gland was never in England? o T !Tn court action this year with the:w“m‘s written and spoken by Com- |romantic, it provides & cause. To i BIG BUSINESS' NEW PARTNER |jnternational cartel in alkali 0n|munists from Karl Marx, who|the United States, it is a menace 1. Thirteen years, 10 months, 19 days. Aokl e ? & fpiszaations) catfel i is. | started doing all this in 1842, to|and an ever-present danger. | 2. About 40 hairs. ; real bargain! Special low round-trip fares: ;A0 the hatlle do. resipieciise AN :wflf i Rrioat iith ;no e‘; ¢ c.omp:ny these men who were on trial. (Copyright, 1949, King Fea- 3. Newfoundland. Copenhagen or Oslo $531.80 (regular fare' ing-point system, big business has £A0D court injunction | .m0 osecution sought to and tures Syndicate, Inc.) 4 No. $748.40), Stockholm $564.70 (regular fare a unique 'partner — Senator Joe fOr Vviolating the Sherman anti- o & Pl A e : 792 inki - M ; Cog |trust act throught this big cartel did establish that words can be a 5. Queen Berengaria, wife of Richard the Lionhearted. § ), Helsinki $604 (regular fare $856.80) - O'Mahoney of Wyoming, the fa-| Named s co.conspirators were I |Weapon for the destruction of a} White Sewing Machine and Gift| . . . . good for trips up to 60-days duration any mous. trust-buster. 16 Farbon o Goveany, 1PeOple. The defense took the posi- | Shop, across from Coast Guard time between October 1and April 30. - No one could believe that O/ 'd Sol CP ”' 1gi BAYy tion that they are entitled to say jBldg., Woolens 72-inch wide, $2.95 . ¥ £ p Mahoney would come out on the|and Solvan et Cie of Belgium. The | poiping they please to say so long ' and $3.95. 26 3t ® THE ONLY DC-6 planes — most ¥ side of the big trusts. Hence, many | éad of the British cartel, Imperial £ e - e —— — mdest Bank j AI k frequent to Scandinavia. Liberals were iulled to sleep by the ;}hemicnl I;xdustrles.std.. Ofd LIO“' 3 In aska & FR(;E MEALS ; e fact that O'Mahoney introduced |00, Was also named as a defen- E , smorgasbord, re- the basing point bil |dant through its subsidary. Tmper- | [ NONSRSEL B i r2d [ 1891—0ver Half a Century of Banking—~1949 freshments. - - Kmh the eyes of big business, this |New york. 4 i | z ® NO TAX. No tipping. No charge fs the mest IR ;:gr:i’s “9me| The court charged that the co- ACROSS ' 32. The number The B M B hr s for baggage up to 66 pounds. ) ss. Throw lightly e e it would amend the anti-trust laws | Som® 1o ropaa o0 Pariics Snce] & Benave & Py ’ e . See Your Travel Agent : 50 that the steel industry, foF €X- | sobr of alvalts in- the world: mar. | 4 Sailer i7. Canale or Northwest Airlines ! ample, could charge the same Drice o, anq that !h" Ae wor! mfltl"l 2. mm:‘r'}:‘t';'n My Assamase Bank Westward Hotel, Anchorage 5 for steel from the blast furnaces of | Cho Shet.ihe Ametcan carie Yocal solo 40 MERH: Main 765 | members had agreed to prevent Stately dance poetic k. Pittsburgh, Pa., or Geneva, Utah.! i} .. independent firms from sell- Praise 42, Wooden pin | This practice of regulating prices o alkauspt foreign market: ;'h‘ %g' g”:oooa'fi:::' ‘.'3‘3,‘,’. s“,ety Dems‘t % | by absorking the shipping costs was | a0 e o (o O TS TS| 3 Pfe‘l‘(orm it 44, Disgracea e \ outlawed by the Supreme Court, so 8 pe SR ' fli Tl aEa ot AT P‘: .d‘\':m‘ o big business turned to Congress to overrule the court i 1 i 52. At any time : : 4! - materials likely to get into the I afive 03, Railroaa ties sVs! O'Mahoney made his bill s0und | panac’or other exposters, it was| bt Bioga 8. %s‘“g’me- ROWN e COMMERCIAL SAVINGS AIBRIRAS SYRINS s0 harmless that it almost Pass-| cyaieq b Fis Princely house §6. Himalayan {iuu':i':;; e : m'dlf“:‘:u‘ 4 5 ed the Senate without an objection. ¢ i tor i . ! ot ; | Sewtis i o 2 rt §7. Existence position berry eattle: 824 White g. Only at the last minute, Senator So 1topom By buk: fhat fhe | S EREINGH { Russell Long of Louisiana and Es- policing system by which inspec- tors on U. S. docks bought up any; Westvaco Company, which is shout- o™ 48 Abuses 23, Wt’!‘l‘!gl%n 50. Low haunts 1 Solution of Yesterday's Puzzle 6. Bud: comb form Boxes for Rent CANDINAVIAN ing its independence, is actually 1. Walked tes Kefauver of Tennes : . L nnessee, both | yieq o an international cartel. & Nglieval — i Democrats, caught what was going on, and put up a fight against it. Some Senators are now wonder- ing where that leaves Senator Joe ELIZABETH RUNDALL Direct Back in O’Mahoney’s trust-bust- oungsters i # o h v O'’Mahoney, the great trust t- » p ing days, e biterly crticaed the Vs il 1 2oed o - ¥ 3 E“ »fi:nhsmm to THE DAILY ALASK4 T VA / o o s | Note—Among e attlates of| 7 b oot (o e e W BYRRING g T s BS Sy e roakn D Lo \j\l':n:ing's ;o-calledChmdgpendentl A3 f,g‘{,?f'fl}"ii’m sen 18 coupon to the box office of the FPLL- FASBIONED avus o nernana_why DAL, 5 Warmer cnemi Ga | i Hie CAPITOL THEA i Foench Byl Shderiing ee he now introduced a bill to restore py gt Corpy Wl adiadialios s . Binse 248 with French Style Slenderizing Heel i 2 $2.50 45 Gauge, 30 D. 3 Pairs 51 Gauge, 15 D. the basing-point system. In fact, 3 Pairs - 5 because of O'Mahoney's reputation,| Lo SerseY: coal Co., West Virginia Char- Barium Products, Ltd., and receive TWO TICKETS to see 3300, many Senators still believe his bill s 36. Monkeylike m i fiaten of California, and Monarch Chem- animals t “Morn Mist”- a neutral Taupe - Refreshing as the Dew . would encourage instead of stifle icals Co. of New Jersey 38. Conklnu‘ 8 T“E SCAR "AMa(inee”h- - a neutral Beige - for Autumn Blues a"nd Reds competition. : ¥ 7 TR, “Eye”s » - - - flattering Beige for that Special Occasion - - - . exciting and daring “Brown Glo” - Light Brown for cool Greens and Wines - « . keyed to the zip in the Fall air “White” and .all other standard shades SIZES 8Y Federal Tax—12c—Paid by the Theatre Phone 14—YELLOW CAB C0.—Phone 22 43. Surfaces a What they don’'t know, however, stree 4. Expert divin e is that O’'Mahoney was sold a bill of goods by the Westvaco Chemical V) BABY BOY FOR SNEEDS v | 1 Company of Westvaco, Wyo. This Mrs. Jean Sneed of Juneau bc-t :2 gg‘?"{";jl";“ aund i cab WILL CALL company has paraded as an inde- came the mother of a baby boy 8 Gohps sning FOR YOU and pendent which discovered large tro- at St. Ann's Hopsital early 1hls‘ /(///; 8% fi‘:’#fiff’h,’;fi’"“ RETURN YOU to your home with our compliments. na deposits in Wyoming and now morning. The child weighed six | l —_— Wil colioh WATCH AC ame hepes to build a new chemical bus- pounds, 14 ounces at birth, I e M : = E—YQBI' N | J |