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1 PAGE FOUR = THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE—JUNEAU, ALASKA MONDAY, OCTOBER 31, 1949 Dail Alask E i"e coating on the gold and smoothes and polishes it. (g s, MO, Jo¥. A G A R TR aLrm ‘Gold, when transported in water, is rounded off but £ ® | MOUNT JUNEAV LOPGE NO: ) 4 P not polished. EA R from ¢ TIDE TABLE |Smow ang ot v | Published crery evening, except, Sunday by the THE EMPIRE || - ° FOEURTB 1 e nd nd MI"mw;'trrl\e& Laom.”')u i That brass nugget reported in your dispatches . NOVEMBER i o a neau, i BELEN TROY MONSEN = uneau, AlASK8 - esident | from Fairbanks might have been a filing from one of | —_— . s - ' le Low tide 5:02 “n‘ 26,1t : in Scottish Rite Temple | DOROTHY TROY LINGO - . - Vice-President 9 rs rati 4 o oA beginning B i BORER . FRIEND = i 4 8 u-nmn:’lm';:x the old sternwheelers operating on the kon. It was . QCTOBER 31, 1929 ® High tide 11:28 am., 152 ft. ® GLENN Olmg. = g ALFRED zzncm 3 - 3 - Business Manager | reported round‘ on top of the silt, which in. itself is - Following the second disastrous crash of the stock market two days{® Low tide 5:39 pm. 31 ft. e Worshi miu t AN Entered In the Post Office in Juneau as §econd Class Matter. hard to explain as, like gold, brass fends to sink to| @ OC‘:)B:R i : before, governors of the New York Stock Exchange voted a two-day P High e LSS DT IAm (18 2 JAMES W. !EIVERS Bea‘ahry i SUBSCRIPTION RATEB: bedrock. ®, Johin K41 SIS holiday of its activities The decision was prompted by the “overload | . betiverec, by cattler b Ju N e Pt tntly I have mined in the Fairbanks district, the Klon- (® B. D-H Stzwia;: | on the Wall Street machinery.” O e B8 IR i i i By mail, postare £ the folfos tos: dike, Eagle, Circle and Fortymile districts, but from|® Evelyr HEpHpHaua . g , One sonr. in adqvance, 11500 six morpis 6 savete, 750 piise, AR ]rced F ¥ e F."’hm . Mrs. Douglas Mead . The mixed bowling tournament was resumed on the Elks’ alleys.jy o o o o o o © o o @ B P 0 ELKS e S wituver 1t SR Y ot what I have learsied SO FOUE & SURHASS B S e 8 Alice MacSpadden o | Chairman Henry Messerschmidt announced these personuel changes on| g o] T wad 5 il e avo Wil prom; o et e N Al Pincit A ey whesl fing, s nothing: 0. @R eNd. Vet SEEEEE IR Thomas Horn o | competing teams: Mrs, Tke Taylor on Skagway team; Mrs. E. H. God-|¢ SUN RISES - SETS DL . Tl R g et pamers e b0t Bustod G i 1, would; like to sep o mote EdontiKe found BEEe Lo Malin Babeock o |dard on Taku team; Mrs. H. McLean, Petersburg; W. Andrews and J.|e — o| come F. DEWEY nAm'e- MEMBER OF ASSOCIATED. PRESS {¢18y. me down to sleepy’ I'would beidn it, shavef; pick, | @ Sarah Sundorg ®|D. Van Atta, Valdez; H. Messerschmidt, Wrangell; G. E. Krause, An-|e NOVEMBER 1 ® ' Exalted Ruler. W. H. BIGGS, T e 1 r | stove and grub. . Mrs. Orin Talmadge ® | chorage #nd Danner, Skagway. ® Sun rises at . 8:12am. ®| Becretary. % " e Assoc] T 1V Af | v r i “ S/ v % Blitation of all HeWS d:‘:nxtcc}‘:n‘:ryfllrr:dnle: n"narm:a:uizhegr The above letter is signed by T. P. Babcock,, “old | & o ¢ o ¢ & © ¢ g ; Mr. and Mrs. Fred Sorri and son, Fred, Jr., returned on the North- |® Sun sets at S pm, & ise credited in this paper and also the local news published | time prospector.” - | western. Mrs. Sorri with Fred, had been visiting her mother, Mrs.{® ¢ ® 0 0 s 00 0 0 0 rerein. { » | ¥ # 3 3 4 E - | chairman; James Loeb, Jr., national | Grace Purdue, in Portland, Ore. They were joined in Seattle by Mr. BLACKWELL’S executive secretary. CABINET SHOP 117 Main 8. Phone 772 High Quality Cabinet Work for Bolm, Office or Store MASONIC FUNERAL NATIONAL REPRESENTATIVES — Alaska Newspapers, 1411 ALASKA DEVELOPMENT BILL Sorri. ourt venue 8. attle, ash. ALAR £ 4! i 4 i 5 ! A A R. A. Zeller, Supervisor of Tongass National Forest, left for Sitka In the same mail as the above prospector's letter, National Board: William Batt, Jr. on the Ranger VII, Capt. George Peterson, to inspect that district. FoR FRA"K w R | another was received asking “Why do you not tackle | Chester Bowles, Harvey W. Brown G. H. Miller, First Aid and Mine Rescue Foreman for the U. S. X ¥. DRKNI L. S. Buckmaster, James B. Carey, Bureau of Mines, had returned from the Interior after spending the ' that Alaska Development Bill again and give us more David Dubinsky, Arthur Elder, e " i | information? You practically condemned it once and g..ny p Grahaym Phatnn 30, Ban. summer on the Seward Peninsula. He had given first aid instruction . i - Gran- 1, 125 men in Nome and at remote settlements. * Frank W. announced ti f,] of Tenakee, who been Barr, It has l |into the subject again. P i | .. " | X 7. jon ir tree | high officials to “lay low” for a time as the proposal | man, Howard Lindsey, Frank W.| Wallace Barr, brother of the de- h‘mmflmm |as first made public was only a very rough draft of McCulloch, B. F. McLaurin, Rein- Mrs. Alsie J. Wilson, owner of the American Beauty Parlor, returned ceased, called from Seattle request- Governor—JOHN LADELY’ the proposed act. held Niebuhr, Mrs. Gifford Pinchot, jon the steamer Princess Maly.alter spending a month in her other ing that the remains be interred | Secretary— Ronald Reagan, Walter P. Reuther, |shop, in the lobby of the Georgian Hotel, Seattle. in Juneau and that he be accorded WALTER R. HERMANSEN A LITTLE WORD OF Sometimes, yes sometime a word of praise for something it has done. stance, in Sunds was the following: Editor of The Empire—You must be a sourdough. | Bill in its present form. You did not get excited over the report of the gold Alaska Development Bill i R You simply gave the news as you received it and did not fill your sluice box with shov- | find at Fishwheel. eled reports warranting a stampede. You, Mr. Editor, know as well section in the Fishwheel area was mined years and years ago and if there is any gold left it has been washed down from somewhere but in itself does not warrant a stampede. who ever heard of gold being found in the Yukon The tributaries of the Yukon have all pro- River? duced gold and are still producing. The reported nuggets found in the Fishwheel area, | to my belief, do not warrant any stamped any over-excitement. The nuggets, Empire reports, are said to have been pocket or poke | worn. Pocket or puke wears off the secondary metal question. "‘e waShlnflmn ‘iszx counts for perjury and tax ev- Merry-Go-Round By DREW PEARSON (Continued from Page One) war years and found proper re- turns had been filed and taxes paid, then suddenly it was discovered | that a Frank J. Massey had re-| ceived $150 in dividends from stock owned in the Washington Gas|Fall. Another $180,000 of profits produced a struggle among var-| The ADA are a greater menace | Light Co, and the Treasury went to the Republican Nationa);lous types of socialism. But' these to the United States than the Com- | Q. Where is a woman guest of honor seated at the dinner table HAY, GRAIN, COAL Committee in the form of liberty {doctrinal quarrels are merely schis- munists, for they masquerade ‘as|in one's home? and STORAGE promptly assessed Francis J. Mas- sey additional taxes. TAX LIEN ON $28 SALARY |get high-ranking Republicans to ex- u A Kis hiRit Actually, Francis J. Massey never | change the bonds for cash. Andrew |plished by the totalitarian meth- | Karl Marx abhorred the type. He |™° M€n% e SHOP AT owned the stock and never recelved | Mellon was sent $50,000 of the|ods of the Bolsheviks as practised |called them ‘“bourgeois socialists.” Q. Is it correct for a girl to seek her partner out for a promised ° 3 any. dividends. 1t belonged to. his{bonds, but sent. tham. back, ac- |by Staltn or:by. the go-sloy Fablan |He described them thus: dance? BERT’S PAINTS — OILS ¥ methods of Cripps as employed in| “The socialistic bourgeois want A.. Never; she should wait for him to come to her. FOOD CENTER Builders’ and Shelf Y HARDWARE 0 father, now deceased. Edward T. Stafford, Secretary of the Wash- ington Gas Light Co., certified that Francis J. Massey never owned that stock and never received the divi- dends owed to his father, but this made no difference to the U. S. Treasury. a newspaper recejves ! | 000. 'from this deal to bribe Secretary 1 ‘We took their billion dollars for PRAISE Juneau within a fe F 2 e 1 thing about it. It s mail Edi ¥'s mail to the Editor of The Empire | " eqr before the Chamber of Commerce at An- | chorage and state | Last week, in as I do that the rospected, then poer in Washington, D. According to Another thing, The Delegate , as far as The duced in Congress. | then folded up like a clam.” | An rignt brother, Delegate E. L. Bartlett tell you something about that pass the Bureau of the Budget in its present or any | similar form. The Delegate said “tbat means the President would veto it if by chance it should pass, both houses of Congress.” e or in fact set Alaska back at least five Now you have it brother, here is why we have not gone' We were told by several very | word and again we are gding to let creation of an Alaska Development | ew days and he will tell you some- is reported that today the Delegate his position in opposition to the Seattle, Delegate Bartlett appeared C. our Delegate the bill would never further decldred the measure would years if it is ever intro- your answer to your for France, later was indicted on asion to the tune of about $2,000,- Blackmer, then President of the Midwest Refining Co., together with Sinclair and Robert Stewart of Standard Oil, formed the Contin- ental Trading Company which pur- chased about 7,000,000 barrels of oil for $1.50 a barrel and then sold it to their own companies for $1.75. Sinclair used $230,000 of the profits bonds, and the Committee tried to companied by a gift of $50,000 in cash. Blackmer’s share of the boodle was found in the form of $750,000 in liberty bonds in a New York strongbox after he had fled to France. The government made various ef- booters serving as part of the price of the perfidy of a member of the President’s Cabinet,” Fortunately, Tom Walsh was not | alive to hear what U. S. Altomey»Mm,x began to write in 1842, the Bulkeley had to say. THESE DAYS LB e GEORGE E. SOKOLSKY THE SOCIALIST ERA matic. It matters little, in the long pefore the Alaska Division of the Seattle Chamber O”amung Hie et Brkive Jelldwating- | Commerce and declared that the plan put forth by the Interior Department was the “darnest dream anyone eevr dreamed on Capitol Hill,” meaning Capitol _Hill‘ ponsibility, they float along on ether |as liberals, often utilizing the Com- | cess. !have a bad name and a bad press, ithese men and women have turned jed in 1848; | The Bolshevik group was organized {line of socialist conquest has been | | clear, The aftermath of the war has Only cowards use alibis. | run, whether socialism is accom- England. The Marxism of Tito is of |all the advantages of modern social 5 the Marxism of | conditions Stalin; their differences are in the and dangers necessarily result.ing’ | the same brand realm of human ambition. It is in- teresting that in the United Sta es, opportunists are already leap- ing on the Tito bandwagon, as they | piled on the Stalinist bandwa@n.wnthout a proletariat. The bour- ger, Leon Henderson, James S. Killen, John Green, Allan Haywood Sal B. Hoffman Herbert H. Leh- Rt. Rev. William Scarlett, Arthur M. Schlesinger, Jr., Boris Shish- kin, Samuel Smith, Monroe Sweet- iColport\llfln He is now traveling with the group in- |land, Samuel Wolchock, Wilson W. vestigating the fish traps problem and is due in Wyatt, Max Zaritsky. The ADA does not run as a-pol- itical party. That would, of course, expose them. They invade both the major parties, seeking strength and converts where they can. They are now wolently anti-Communist, but many of their adherents were ellers when the Communists were part of the New Deal apparatus. Lacking political integrity and res- men’s political activities, gaimnu strength where they can and de- serting a cause and a group when the advantages of association are || {no longer available. Many of the ADA leaders have built reputaticns for themselves munist apparatus to achieve a suc- Now that the Communists on them. Their defense is that what is true today was not true in 1938 | or 1944, That, of course, is nonzense. Karl Communist Manifesto was publish- “Das Kapital” in 1867. in 1903; the Russian revolution oc- | curred in 1917; the third interna- tional was organized in 1919. The | decisive, and unmistakable. | gentle folk who wish to do goed, while, in reality, they are socialists. without the struggles» therefrom. They desire the ex)stlng state of society minus its revolu- tionary and disintegrating ele- ments. They wish for a bourgeoisie | Mrs. Harold Smith, President of the Juneau Woman's Club, an- nounced a series of Saturday afternoon luncheons in the Coffee Shoppe Dorothy and Florence Rutherford, daughters of Mr. and Mrs. RoY{a Masonic funeral. The service will Rutherford, entertained at two Hallowe'en parties, a day apart. were elaborate masquerade affairs, with Miss Violet Bourgette presiding over them as a fortune-telling witch. At Miss Dorothy's party were Ellzabeth Terhune, Stewart Elliott, Barbara Winn, Joyce Morris, Jean |Carlson, Helen Torkelson, Duncan Robertson, Robert Abbott, Robert ‘Blomgren. Harold Ficken, George White, Rodney Bibby and Lloyd | Jarman. Weathe Da|ly lessons in Enghsh Miss Florence’s guests were Loyla May Seeley, Amy Lou Guerin, Louise Skinner, Virginia Harper, Emily and Shirley Dalton, Dorothy Olson, Catherine Abbott, Leona Saloum, Judith and Phyllis Gorham, | Rachel Borlick, Sylvia Berg, Birdie Jensen, Rae Jorgenson, Marion Stan- worth and Bessie Powers. High 48 low, 44 rain . L. GORDON died recently in St. Ann's hospital is to be buried in the Masonic plot of Evergreen cemetery. Moose Lodge No. 700 Both ! e conducted by the Masons in| Charles W. Carter Mortuary at 2| “The Rexall Store” Your Reliable Pharmacists BUTLER-MAURO DRUG Co. Alaska Music Supply Arthur M. Uggen, Manager Pianos—Musical \nstruments and Supplies .Phone 206 ..Second and Seward.. opened at 1:30 in the Masonic Temple. Ritualistic work will be m, |chargg of Rev. Willis R. Booth, who | will also deliver the eulogy, nnd solos will be given by Ernest Ehlers, | GIVEN NOISY SENDOFF | The last steamers of the year nut of Dawson were given a “tooting” |sendon October 19 as they slid ouL current and began| voyage l into the || their long, | { Whiteho: !| They were the steamers Nasutlm: icy up-river to ; ey and Keno. to the context. possible.” otony. A as m ALL). WORD STUDY: increase our vocabulary by mastering one word each day. RAUCOUS; hoarse; disagreeably harsh; strident. WORDS OFTEN MISUSED MEANS is singular or plural, accordmg' “Various means ARE [the dock whistle “No other means IS possible.” OFTEN MISPRONOUNCED: Hundredth. Pronounce the E as inl DREAD, not hun-dredth. OFTEN MISSPELLED: Monetary; ARY, not ERY. SYNONYMS: Tedium, tediousness, “He had a raucous voice.” irksomeness, tiresomeness, mon- “Use a word three times and it is yours.” (Pronounce ra-kus, GENERAL PAINTS and WALLPAPER Ideal Paint Store Phone 549 Fred W. Wendt As the boats thrashed ups.ream,‘ screamed and | snorted in farewell salute while a {handful of malemuts, pointing long, lean snoots to the sky, joined in the | chorus. | BICYCLES at Madsen’s. SCHWIN JUNEAU’S FINEST LIQUOR STORE BAVARD'S Let us Today’s word: GEORGE BROS. Widest Sclection of | MODERN ETIQUEITE Hpewos vow Phone 689 LIQUORS PHONE 399 o'clock Wednesday afternoon, und: with the lodge being officially | Q. her luncheon? If a man at luncheon should by chance meet a woman friend who is lunching at the same time, is he obligated to offer to pay for A. No; and the woman should not expect this. A. She is always taken in to dinner by the host, and is seated at The Alaskan Hote Newly Renovated Rooms at Reasonable Rates PHONE SINGLE O PHONE 555 Thomas Hardware Co The Erwin Feed Co. Office in Case Lot Grocery Phone 704 'LOOK and lEARN & ¢. GORDON I Alaska’s Finest ¢ Supermarket i Remington writers | SOLD and sg\';leczn by 1. By what name is the British financial minister known? 2. Is a sponge an animal, mineral, or vegetable? 3 STEVENS’ LADIES'—MISSES’ J. B. Burford & Co. “Our Doorstep Is Worn by It demanded that he pay just|forts to bring Blackmer home, but SEEL T R M turall ! “ 5 the same. Mr. Massey’s salary was |the French government refused %o i 0 e ro:lta;fleer wa fn :‘:36 u:a ly conceives the world . In what novel by Dickens does “The Art(uI.Dudger_ appear? READY-TO-WEAR * Satisfied Custor ” only $28 a week, and he had a wife | extradite him and he remained I 8 Tni i P! ; ch it is supreme to be the 4. What is the name of the wicker basket carried by fishermen? and two small children to support. | there, living in the lap of luxury n the United States, the prin-|best; and_ bourgeois socialism de- 5. What mythological character’s body was invulnerable except for Beward Street Near Third “ But, under protest, he paid in small |for 25 years, thumbing his nose at cipal vehicle for go-slow soclnusmiyelops t!—ns comfortable conception | the heel? FORD AGENCY driblets of $2 a week up to total the mation which had made him is Lhe_ ADA, a new, but effective | into varipus more or less complete ANSWERS: q of $18.92. This, however, wasn't fast [rich and which he had cheated. organization, which is already re-|systtms. In requiring the proletar- 1 ) Th Charles W Cart G:(:Am mDeslm) O aioh for tha. Teesury. &nd” 1{. LM suamer, | Denny . Sulivan,| Peenied Jo. Congress, I Aig Ad- a0 carry out much a sysiem. and | - fiflf‘;fif““ of the Exchequer. | The Uharles W. Larler SES — — om 4 ax li 1 former G TP, Colorado outicxan'mm““ on and in various state ereby to march straightway into t g P, lapped a tax lien on his salary P the social New Jerusalem, it but | 3. “Oliver Twist.” MortuarY J““l “Ohl‘ c.; not been paid for past services bl —reportedly with an understanad- 1d W 1 H - A R T IC ST Crossword Puzzle | TNEN, S Do . : ) sentence. Now 80 years old, but In ki i Tl‘ B M n hm d-s : ‘o e 18 VRS Pied 8t govern- | SCclent it and good healh | g -y @ Ebe VRe @ ] | | Casler’s Men's Wear ||| - gA(_lHlPlJlE SHoOP e se. i <% across 26, ‘Large fish G 8 e 3 SABIN'S i et tnlB " o ohatip | BMSKIOSE (I IO dii -8 Birathll o) papiisal | S Hedts Formerly SABIN'S arine’ Hardware about equaled the. improper tax |5 vessel 29, Some Stetson and Mallory Hats Chas. G. W g Bleckmer has powerful friends! 6. Free 50, The cream as. G. Warner Co. assessment of $3451 wrung from 8. Game fish 32 Edge Y Mr. Massey. So, in the end ths,lsr; ":e Urf& among them G.O.P. g (Slfltn; ke :3!!. Eronoun ’ . . a ' i i . Gre Treasury Department gained noth- ."B or, MR 9f cmnra_do. who 14, Se:: coevlerelrn; ng‘. lefi s ufet” Depasit e was a partner in the law firm that | 15. Sells to the i; Il;ubll. ‘ip - HOME GB[X,‘,EBY 2 & originally handled Blackmer’s af- SaDEEa . Biblical city : £ f : ¥ 17. One of 0. n g b Ci ll:‘lm"‘my Jth;mO'fle)cev nus Ol])q;::z fairs. Millikin, despite a difference , n:elu?zeam. 4‘2'. (‘.gfl;:"s ualit; B“es fm‘ e”t ollector J. Ellis Bowen apologized |,/ oo io o) 4 18. Egyptian 44, Covered wit] T l i hone 146 for' Han which they said P , s close to ex-Senator Ed lizara ‘water mistake, W Johnson, Colerado Democrat, who{ 19. Unwilling 45. Charged COMMERCIAL yas e 'tha_lleOrE.‘ "en:mm. recommended the appointment of | §%‘ ;‘;flzflggrr‘;l::lnon o Iéll?::rdmmly Solution of Saturday's Puzzle SAVINGS o ! e o I o i iiteact sy | U, Attortiey I Defiver) Mak B 50 Gl 5% 52 optical organ DOWN L RS fust dguidie” it.” BIX):ZIEY{ S e 24. Forms 51. Eons 63. Paradise L In place ot c l. o 1 n E s - - % nd it was Bulkeley who inform- Gy o o n:"::;fl";i (:‘;l‘:‘e::; 0‘:0 O"[:Q::y Ied newsmen in Denver that it would %: ?i’l’h“a'.'fé’é’é' NUNN-BUSH SB:I?SES To Banish “Blue Mond"” A !be “inhuman” to send Blackmer to bhacoee STETSON HA' i bt raiy -4 B, " G. GRA Quality Work Clothing I 0 ZIve o more fregiom J “He has paid his penalty,” the U. i .,,,'{,”,, ot 3 HAM FRED rom Work — TRY) ECHOES OF TEAPOT DOME |S. Attorney pleaded. “He has made sk as a paid-up subscriber to THE ‘DAILY ALASKRA mfi ©n the other hand, here is the ex- {800d all the income taxes he evad- s'&‘it;“ EMPIRE is invited to be our guest THIS EVENING Complete Outfitter for Men Alaska h-‘ry perience of a man who had the|ed and paid heavy penalties and ngfifihfium Present this coupon to the box office of the 3 money to hire lawyers and to live fines. I will not ask that he he flfi . Small ':1%). e in luxury abroad—one Henry K.|Sent to jail” ; Border n ol. Biackmer, mdmitionaire ayman| The venerable Senstor Tom H. wd7/nd . WH o i CAPITOL THEATRE B. W. COWLING H. S. GRAVES who fled to France to escape be- |Walsh of Montana, having spent m.-ME Englestons and reeeive TWO TI i 6 ing questioned in the Teapot Dome [ good part of his Senatorial life i, ... / . Angel CKETS to. see: m The Clothing Man scandal. unearthing the skulduggery of Hen- | .%H.. ign "“ABA a y Some of the others who remained |Yy Blackmer and his cronies, had - HE BDVAIY DeSoto—Dodge Trucks LEVIS-OVERALLS in the United States went to jai) |joined with a Senate committee in firmly 2 for Boys for their comnection with Teapot |describing that skulduggery as: RISL botties Federal Tax—12c—Paid by the Theatre Dome and the Continental Trading | “The illlgotten gains of a con- 37. Obliterate SHAFFER'S Company. Albert Fall, Secretary!temptible private steal, the specu- o Fomintne same Phone 14—YELLOW CAB CO.—Phone 22 ‘Slylt With Flowers” but of the Interior in the Harding Cab- |lations of trusted . officers oX_ great 1. gmmngmfl:: il s‘mnr m' “SAY IT WITH OURS!” _ inet, served his . sentence.. Hamy |mdustria]l houses, pilfering * from | ; Period of " REA an insured cab WILL CALL FOR YOU and FOR BETTER MEATS © Sinclair served time for refusing to |their own companies, robbing their | . Pirat woman ETURN YOU to your home with our compliments. 13—PHONES—49 J H 3 own stockholders, the share of the | . Lair WAT Pree Delivery uneau rlorisis Exlst 'CH THIS SPACE—Your Name May Appear! Phone 311 governments. The following are the for the remaining $15.59s who dug up the income-tax evi- k - " . This got him Into trouble with |dence against Blackmer, told friends officers of the ADA. requires in reality that the prole- 4. The creel. Pouw Sod Poaiikiie Foot of Main Street his employer who did not want to in Washington: Hubert H Humphrey, acting na- |tariat should remain w_lthm the 5. Achilles. PHONE 136 ! be suspected of harboring a ta “Henry Blackmer will never come tional chairman; J_oseph H. gauh, bounds of existing society, but: oy dodger and he was fired. back to this country while I'm chairman, _executive committee; should cast away all its hatefal T MAKE Thus, unable to get a recommen- alive.” Paul A. Porter, Frankin D. Roose-{ideas concerning the bourgeoi: L O JUNEAU DAIRIES | velt, dx. | mhis is the ADA. 1t wants so- Card Beverage Co. - ||| DELICIOUS I€E CREAM dation from his last employer—ex- cept with a tax-dodging record— Massey was unable to find full-time | employment. His youngest child be- came ill, the family doctor had answer the questions of the Senate TOM WALSH'S FIGHT Sullivan died shortly thereafter, and almost immediately Blackmer's lawyers arranged to bring him back Committee. But Biackmer ducked boodle coming to one of the ”ee-l Ernst, Emil Rieve, vice-chairmen; George Edwards, Hugo | Louis H. Harris, treasurer; David Ginsburg, secretary, national board; Ethel S. Epstein, national finance | thing nice, like an intellectual jam ciglism without revolution—a plea- sant, easy-going socialism, some- session on Park Avenue. Oldest Bank in Alaska 1891—Over Half a Century of Banking—1949 'sdfl.lyhdit—ukhrflby-‘ Juneau Daries, Inc. ‘Wholesale 805 10th St. PHONE 216—DAY or NIGHT for MIXERS or SODA POP