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PAGE FOUR G THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE—JUNEAU, ALASKA 0 MONDAY, DECEMBER 12, 1949 \ . . The Bureau of Indian Affairs is an agency that is = - . " [ MOUNT JUNEAU LODGE NO, 14/ ! Da[l'y‘ A laska, E mplre [ supposed to work itself out of a job by preparing the l from lwea'her al SECOND and FOURTH ! - , Indian to take his place in American civilization. | Monday of each month PUN iy i g By W B | S ion would work 0 the opposite direcion. 20 YEARS AGO 7%’ emrpire | in Scottish Rite Temple ‘ P | Second and Main Strects, Juneau, Alaska | If these three proposed reservations become reali- L beginning at 7:30 p. m. aska Poinls s o s Worshipful Master; TROY MONSEN - - - President — = gOROTflA\ C B “_‘,7“::"{’:9;‘;’13: ties we can expect dozens of similar ones to be created DECEMBER 12, 1929 7, -Ordeb ol AN | JAMES W. LEIVERS, Secretary At the meeting of Juneau Chapter No. ALFRED ZENGER - - = - Lillie Burford, Donald Mac- Business Manager | among the Indian groups throughout the Territory.| o DECEMBER 12 B, | In the aggregate they would embrace millions of | ¢ Entered W the Post Office In Juneau as Second Class Matter. | | SUBSCRIPTION RATES: | acres. In Southeast Alaska alone, the proposed Hyda- | @ Deliverec by earrler in Juncau and Douglas for $1.50 per monthi hurg reserve has 100000 acres and would serve 350 ® six months, $8.00; onv year, $15.00 4 By mail, postage paid, at the following rates: persons. There are 10 or 12 groups with more than |® 6,000 Indians in the southeast region for whom reser- | ® . Weather conditions and temper- Star, these officers were elected for 1930: atures at various Alaska points, | Kinnon, Jessie Keller, George Messerschmidt, Fanny L. Robinson, Mrs.| 10 "on the Pacific Boast, at 490 John Spickett, Edith Howard, Elizabeth Nordling and Mary C. Sutton.fam, 120th Meridian Time, and e released by the Weather Bureau Douglas Masons in Gastineaux Lodge No.. 124 had elected Sam Devon, |at Juneau, follow: Esther Miller Harriet Meriweather Margaret Mercado Lorene Elizabeth Shaw O. G. Culberthouse PBREERS RN €D B.P.0.ELKS Meeting every Wednesday at 8 P. M. Visiting brothers wel- | One vear, in advance, $15.00; six months, in advance, $7.50; ®e month, in advance, §1.50. Subscribers will confer a favor if they will promptly notify vy S sht be sought and the area ki e Rosie Meier 5 s . e e R Tore ot LreahLtiy tn the waltvary | Youigne might i SOUGHS & to be I‘,‘{*e“’e“ be Mrs, William ‘Phul | Thomas E. Hall, Edmund Andrews, Charles Sey, William R. Spain, A.|Anchorage %—8n0W| come, B, DEWEY BAKER, 3 » heir papers, here would doubtless extend to more than 2,900,000 mejg) E. Goetz, William E. Feero, Adolph Hirsch, William Ott, Rangnar Kron- | Barrow ... 1—Snow | py R R s B e | acres, most of it extremely valuable for its timber | o M’SM.lé Jci g;:(&;dman bouist B 6 Bagstron Glen Oakes and Alex Gair. Bethel 28-—Clear| g nlt:: Ruler. W. H. BIGGS, MEMBE] s 4 | 8 i /e ildre ns | quist, E. E. s 3 and Ale> : i e A - g e by ! and the control of fisheries. In northern Alaska the | o T i Pl g""d‘“’“ 36—Rain ETBUALY. The Assoclated Pruss is exclusively entitled to th for ssed Barrow area has 480,000 : - ol i it - 12—Clear eaablieation of ail news disiatches credited 10 1t or nou. other- | PrOPC 8 . “m_“ oy o ¢ acrjes for 360 persons, ¢ o e e © ® ® ® ® ® ®| Gene Carlson had entertained her classmates With a theatre and | papnonion 15—Ice , Needles | /e Vise credited in this paper and also the local news published [and the Kobuk area—1,470,000 acres for a population — | supper party, celebrating her birthday December 10. Guests at the | pairhanks lO—Cloudy\’ BLACKWELL’S derel I of v 15 Pt " X / & . ein. L of only 150. Legion of ‘Honor and is one of |“mer athering” were Elizabeth Terhune, Esther Niemi, Barbara Winn, | Haines 23— Drizzle | | -d iRl i | Ty 8 g e CABINET SHOP NATIONAL REPRESENTATIVES — Alaska Newspapers, 1411 | One-third of our present population might be seg- |only three Americans to receiye an |porothy Rutherford, Joyce Morris, Helen Torkelson, Margaret Hansen, | Havre e 9—Clear Srin Avenue Bids, Beatile, Wadh b | regated on these reservations as wards of the gov- |honorary membership in the French | g, i jst and Kathleen Carlson. Juneau Airport R 117 Main St. Phone 772 1 5 Grace Nelson, Edith Bloomquist an P og etnment. The iands and products of the reservations {Doctors of Engineers, the other two PR Annette Island .. - 33—Cloudy High Quality Cabinet W i | can not be taxed for the support of the Territory. ,being Dwight Eisenhower and Herb- About 50 invited guests witnessed the quaint marriage ceremony Kodisk 40—Haln -Showers for Home, Office n: Smm i Added to these facts, the creation of the reservations | €1t Hoover. £ d by the Rev. A, P. Kashevaroff, Archpriest of the Russian Kotzebue 21—Snow | ! | would not dispose of all or even a majority of pos- | 1ne Justice Department's depor- D e ! e McGrath 15—Snow ! 3 tation maneuver is based upon the |Orthodox Church, uniting Daniel Kunz and Cecelia a Yakwan, | o 26—Snow ast of the long line of Chiefs Who Were|noythyway .. £ 9—Cloudy 31—Fog | 35—Snow sessory native claims. e ‘1;“ i f‘l_ s 12“ H A tive | cOntention that Pregel's passport |daughter of Jake Yakwan, 1 ; Many native individuals (as distinct from native | wag pot jn order when he arrived |prominent in the war between the Sitka and Wrangell Indians. Petersburg . village groups) who are living in Juneau, Ketehikan,|phere as a refugee from France in ! A% Ty | In Douglas, John Feusi added to his exténsive holdings by the | Prince George Moose Lodge No. 700 Sitka and other cities, are claimants of possessory (1940 | 8—Snow i _ X 4 T, Regular Meetings Each Frida; rights, each coverinig WICHRERG SErl A French Communist Purge | . 1ocoof the former Palace of Sweets building from Chester Zim- |Seattle " 3—Rain|| Governor—JOHN LADELY i would still be pending after the reservations are | Maurice Thorez, the French Com- Whitehorse 5—Clear i | merman, { Secretary— . established, and in many cases, these claims would |munist leader, is worried over re- | 4 Yakutat 36—Drizzle WALTER R. HERMANSEN ports that he will be purged by | . Moscow. A prediction by migs com)-, A picture in the Spokane (Wash.) Chronicle of the first low-wave No ‘oné can krow EEh SIVEESIIT e Saie mentator was picked up by the message being dispatched from Fort Wright, Spokane, to the Presidio FAIRY lAlE HOUSE gy 0_’ i m";j :; fios entfre»l'rermory unull mep\ews agencies and cabled to the|at San Francisco, showed Alexander Sokoloff, Juneau boy, at the key. whole question of Indian rights had been clearly Up{prench newspapers. Following this, vate Sokoloff, headquarters company operator, was the son of Mr. and lo m"[‘u-vou"e{ A huge truck pulled up in front conflict with such reservation areas. RESERVATIONS "The Rexall Store” Your Reliable Pharmacists The recent offers by the Interior Department to (Bin & 4 4 1 by legislation and court decisions. Moscow invited Jacques Duclos, the | yrs. H. B. Sokoloff of this city. It takes no economist to determine that Alaska|No. 2 French Communist, to at-} progress will continue to be severely hampered until |tend the Cominform meeting in | provide three groups of Alaska natives at Hydaburg, Point Barrow and on the Kobuk River with reserva- & e vng Northern Light Rebekah Lodge in Douglas elected these officers: tions covering hundreds of thousands of acres, appears P a S r r=| 2 the above situation is remedied. No prudent capitalist | Hungary last week while Thorez| — — - ¢ La of the Baranof Coffec Shop Satur-| to be the first step in an attempted program to place| ., ., ampitious young man from the States can be |stayed home, which has caused s S We;rcn,mM;s. JSc:Jhm JT“;;: (l‘j"’lefirugzr':;:::ll i day and two big strong men went| BUTLER-MAURO all of our Alaska Indians and Eskimos in reservation| . ...i t, come to Alaska to invest his money or Thorez to ask his Russian friends |Adolph Hirsch, Mrs. Lindo Judson an inside to pick up the load. DRUG CO. These Native people who are now full citizess what is wrong . | They emerged carrying a fragile || ee——m————— status. and stand on equal footing with the whites as regards rights, privileges and responsibilities, are asked to “to grow up with the country” in this state of uncertainty. The Territory can be totally stymied by it. We Weather: High, 21; low, 18; clear. i package, handled as carefully as a == = '" new-born babe. | | ) Alaska Music Supply The “load” was the miniature| KENAI HIGHWAY F surrender their position and accept the supervision of L . . . b 5 : are hopeful that in Southeast Alaska, at least, the D l L E I h Y il iansel and Gretal” chouse made 2 PAGRTAL RRarcy ager dURDy (1 Uls gfiaks. | attempt to set up reservations will be found to be 1\ dal y essons In ng IS W. L. GORDON 8 oin . oingerirasd AR gar Arthur :ia;sll!gglex‘l, Manager 5 Pianos—Musical Ynstruments s |icing and candies, which Bamm:} | - cxel?nnuc .lhey b p.wm‘sed T e g illegal on the grounds that only Congress can convert security which might be provided in part, by Federal appropriations, and in part, through the receipts of royalties from the sale of reservation resources. As wards of the Government these reservation L b, littl i GihR biiraai We believe the best interests of the Territory in- St SR e A e o cluding that of the natives demand that all of the control as the bureaus see fit to impose. The nature ! o £ thi rol could readily change 11‘Dm<pussessory Indian claims be investigated by an im- “.“d Pgre.e e 1]5 c(lmnn g n:‘r l} bc x'c'u‘:’ Siicy partial agency of the Federal Government and in the et Um(‘] v ‘r(:rm: e ll ? ,‘;m' (lntrv.l event they are found valid, all of them—except for oSt e bt e % i |lands actually occupied or used,—be appraised, paid could at least be expected to restrict a native's righty for and cancelled. to dispose of his land, dictate the manner in which Only in this way can Alaska proceed unfettered. | of and Supplies -Phone 206 ..Second and Seward.. pIONEE | WORDS OFTEN MISUSED: We do not write, “We submit the above [ P3O ;:;‘L“d‘““"e';‘l:;é";f'a‘d;“{}"y o R BuIlDER ‘ figures.” It is better to write, “We submit the ABOVE MENTIONED (or’ Victor .Johnson will be on display | the extensive National Forest lands here into Indian reservations. We do not believe Congress will do this if it is given the facts. | FOREGOING) figures.” at the Juneau Young Hardware| The new highway extending 120 OFTEN MISPRONOUNCED: Audacious. Pronounce a-da-shus, first | company. } miles down Kenai Peninsula from !A as in ALL, second A as in DAY, accent second syllable. Meantime, at least one enter-| the western boundary of the Chu- . OFTEN MISSPELLED: CIGARETTE is still the preferred spelling, | prising baker is featuring smaller zach National Forest to Homer has|githough CIGARET is also correct. ns of the festive| been officially designated the Ster-| gyNONYMS: Welfare, well-being, happiness, affluence. ling Bighway, WORD STUDY: “Use a word three times and it is yours.” Let us The highway, named :’gcal;:flg:: J increase our vocabulary by mastering one word each day. Today's word: GENERAL PAINTS and WALLPAPER Ideal Paint Store | Phone 549 Fred W. Wendt —_— simplified ve: fairy-tale house. SCHWINN BIKES AT MADSZEN’ B Baciey ol | COMMUNIQUE; an official communication. (Pronounce ko-mu-ni-ka, the community funds are spent, direct the operation : i R e doubt- | and with the approval of the Gov- & el TR, ¢ i e SR moride e Hne gl ffufn:::f,fflffi‘ff;:i? vc;(i)s‘:::saL b | emor of Alaska. honors the memory | O 83 in OF unstressed, U as in CUBE, I as in IT, A as in DAY, accent £900000000000000v0000S5 | (] Beverage Co i schooling the bureau thirtks best and make the de-| % © TN O T Tl Tadian citizens too much | 0f Havley W. Sterling, a pioneer of |last syllable). @ Openlla.m.to3am. ¢ * i cisions on native consumption of hard liquor, a right | 35 evens sasea ¥A ! e oad construction in Alaska, the | ) )11 Wholesale %08 100 ! b ¥ i e to' consent to their segregation from the general com- g 2 | | = 3 2 A St. i for which the native has long fought vigorously, prin- | 12 B B Uy S Gor Federal wardship. As A SkfldRmd Qommission has an- MODERN E‘”OUE"TE by [ {% THE || PHONE 216—DAY or NIGHT ipally bec e lef discrimination involved. x nounced. 5 u " mm\zc b:oa:: Eleuz:ve tE:IAla.aka S0s ‘pBptes Ay ree suemia they are NoWSecniriniing aud R ot Rt o EERTERCE oA | % M I R n 0 n 3] for MIXERS or SODA POP make the mistake of voting away any of the political | H0Ue O contribute much to Territorial development.| mended for the Interior Depart-fil k. b oo rond A 1 o — and economic rights they now enjoy in exchange for These reservation proposals should meet Withment's Distibgiished Service ANS, bride i iti note of thanks for a gift to a close | A . : 4 Ak determined opposition on the part of the Territorial| Sterling spent the greater por- | Q- When:g-prideiis mriting a T g t c A F E A The A]askan H ) l 7 a promised, but by no means assured security. We| CE T T T te to Congress, local Te- | tion of his active life in Alaska, |friend of hers, should her husband also sign the note? f i 55 o1e. ¢ think they will prefer to conum.le the oppormn‘_ty Jigious and educational groups, Chambers of Com- For sixteen years he served as A. It isn't necessary for her husband to sign it, but she should l Chi Food 5 ::lyRRenovated Rooms they now have to grow in self-reliance and material merce, private citizens, and in fact all, including the | Assistant Chief Engineer of faetake care to mention his name in her letter, as, “Charles and I both g inese Foo A casonable Rates ! prosperity based on their own efforts rather than Indians themselves, who are interested hoth in keep- Alaska Road Comxll{szion. He was{.thank you for your thoughtfulness, etc.” p Steaks—Chicken 1 PHONE SINGLE 0O % accept any offer to occupy a government feather bed of equal opportnity for our | il charge of construction ‘of 'thef = Q. should individual dishes be provided for the various vegetables | 4 )| PHONE 555 a eto #it 16 10iences thioughout & &ibeameion of B0 i e Do ac‘llenu‘:j ou: t;atursrresources avail- | Steese Highway extending from [gnen giving a dinner ut home? 0000000000000 s S | erations living on such royalties as they can obtain native people an _m“ f“g s db il e Fairbanks northeastward to the A. No; this is done only in restaurants. r—————————— ] s through the sale of fish trap sites, mineral and timber able to all who are prepared to develop . . Yukon River at Cu-clg; he laid out Q. If a man is sitting down in some public place and a strange Ihomas H d ¢ to white corporations. The Government agencles concerned with Indian | and generally supervised the con- sl B & him, 15 6 fecessary for BIm GEORGE Bnos. ardaware (0. 1 i i matters should be thinking of ways to make the na- | struction of the Glenn Highway womanaddresses & a g 3 % K Most of Alaska natives and, especially the Indians i ' {t.reliant and to encourage them to take | connecting _Anchorage with _the |to rise? Widest Sclection of PAINTS I of Southeast Alaska, are now so well integrated into nresme Sel tive part in community and Territory Alaska Highway and the United A. Yes, he should rise, unless the woman is also seated. Builders’ —— OILS the general life of the Territory that the nroposed|2n INCTEAsEYy ‘k‘f “’tp D e fhem from. their | States; he laid out and commenced | s —as = = s I LIQU"RS nm;-:xsth segregation of them is almost unbelievable o Al- atfatis minetiuin Gy IS ey the construction of the highway | b FHONE 399 askans. These people are now supplying a good share neighbors. - named after him, which opens up LO 0 K F] nd lEA RN Ay C. GORDON | | — of our public officials. Every worthwhile white Alaskan, will Acoopemte some of the best land in Alaska to |, . . ‘ t Remington Typewrit They sit in both Houses of our Legislature, attend with the Federal agencies wholeheartedly in a pro- | agricultural development, Alaska |\ 5 e i . Mg Th E £ r dc | SOLD amd SERglCED :;'s the same schools as the whites, work in the tame gram of this kind. They have seen the strides made RDNald Oon?]mlsvsmn ofFlclalS sald.. 1 e el Tarkie motion pictiszay e LIwWIn & ee 0. 3 {ndustries and receive the same wages. ThCy NOw by the Indians of Alaska in the past 25 years and| Mr. Ster ‘“gfc"f‘mb““o“ to road 1 Wit Boath ATAeslath A B o eq. for e e Raoal Office in Case Lot Grocery J B Bnr‘ d & c ® " Kknow that their rate of progress is far better than that | YOk in Alaska included the de-| & " o4 geograp| Phone 704 i d or 0. enjoy practically all the opportunities which Alaska 3 3 Lt velopment of many methods of con- | location? “oacin g cffers 1o the whites. They are showing much attention | made by reséryation TUgiany dgbe Suites, ¥ struction suited to the conditions 3. For what is Noah Webster noted? HAY, GRAIN, COAL Satisfied gutome’::’” to get ahead and making wonderful progress through The right to progress turvher should not be taken| found in Alaska, such as new 4. How many guns constitute a Presidential salute? and STORAGE their own efforts. away from the Alaska natives or made more difficult | methods of overcoming perma- 5. What is a mnemonist? The attempt to segregate them, and thereby elimi- | for the Alaska whites. Reservations would be highly f!ently frozen ground, of stabiliz»‘ ANSWERS: i FORD AGE NCY nate the broadening effect of competition with the | detrimental to both; in fact would be ruinous to the 11111;; max‘:enl]hg]-ug}{‘ ;:«;Zmepye ar‘eia;. 1. “The Jazz Singer,” starring Al Jolson. STEVENS, (Authorized Dealers) whites, is certainly not in the interest of the Indians. | Territory. i N m‘_’mbs"and oti;" :le;m‘;r 2. Ecuador, because of its location on the Equator. GREASES — GAS — OIL s R =8 5 57 4 34 “al i B " . : F | ) time was on tne warpath against|innovations, they pointed out. 3. His American dictionary. LADIES’'—MISSES' The Washington et g e G he him, More recently Do T e Sterling died in Seattle in Sep-| 4. Twenty-one. READY-TO-WEAR Juneau Motor Co. the Manhattan Project. The license in competition with the Vandad- -emLu._ ‘1943_ The road baaupg his 5. One versed in the art of memory. Seward Street Near Third Foot of Main Street Mer'y-Go.Round number was 1643180, given by the ,ium Corporation in Colorado and | name is already open to limited | gk |U. S. Government to Chemartar, 4(]“New Mexico. He now has his own | iraffic and will be completed during ‘,_—_——— il PRI At i Caribou Mine in Colorado where he produces pitchblende and uranium. American interests have been trying the summer of 1950. REBEKAHS BAZAAR | Oldest Bank in Alaska | Exchange, Place, New York City,! the official purchasing agent of the; Soviet Government, for 500 pounds/ id ) to block him. . gzu:g‘:‘( lexrzx::xxx:m:x;ie“;:d Swi Pregel is a member of the French ‘1-5, evening 7-11. —adv. “Well, I a tion, Chapman confessed: i do it this way. At a cocktail party,| The fact that a Czarist Russian for instance, I never refuse a drink.)was at that time the only px'lvnte} ross Ord Puzz]e I take the glass and just hold it in|individual able to sell uranium is| The Charles W. Carl.er Mortuary Fourth and Franklin Sts. PHONE 136 JUNEAU DAIRIES DELICIOUS ICE CREAM a daily habit—ask for it by pare Juneau Dairies, Inc By DREW PEARSON (Continued from Page One) 1.0O.OF. Hall Dec. 17, afternoon | “2!|| 1891—Over Half a Century of Banking—1949 | The B.M. Behrends Chrysler Marine Engines my hand. Then, when the waiter;in itself an interesting story. | ACROSS 30. Matter asl ! L comé around with more, I pretend| Pregel, whose wife was from a t:""‘"' iy §5; Boliow, Scotch c er s Men L] wea’ MACHINE SHOP T've just had a refill. wealthy Russian family, fled from | & STallespused 34 Riverin = a Formerly SABIN'S Marine Hardware Stetson and Mallory Hats “If it's a State dinner, with[Moscow in 1917, just ahead of the‘ A d';\l':"m:' s, piend anclafl Z mall herring 35, Pharmaceutic Arrow Shirts and Underwear Chas. G Wamer co ol . toasts for the guest of honor, IlBolshevik purge. Living in !‘ramce,l (2. New: comb. put the glass to my lips like every-!he invested money jn the Belgium orm honey E . Three- one else, but the champagne stays |uranium trust and ‘was one of the | { Teopleal Amers 5. Branches ot Safety Depeosit Allen Edmonds Shoes Bkyway Luggage in the glass.” Ifirst experts to predict that un-| . o lcananimal learning B f Re“t T with b 5 Btk S e . Oriental 41. roft 2 oxes yor b hen with a sad shake of his locking the secret of the atom would i ofldsv::ll&_r:‘:"m 4‘23 %‘::":f;pomn HUME GRDCEBY BOTANY head, the Secretary of the In-inot only decide the outcome of the ‘matter is the rudder of terior laments: “I hate t ink of | wa g directed hi) . ‘“m; ‘1] l”< % ate 10 thin Ud war, but the future control of the| @ Lo o Adn o Solution of Saturday’s Puzzle COMMERCIAL SAVINGS Phone 146 all the liquor that has been poured | world. | energy 48. Pertaining to 7] Y71 out uselessly for me!” In an interview with the Miami | 3} Sand hill anoaispt, - J)- fRostalecs 3 FatnRanoor ; SM Home Liguor Store—Tel. 699 %o o News, Jan. 12, 194;, Pregel made 21;. Eflfi'«’mmp & Thl‘ma nor DOWN 4. Clock face s s s —— American Meat — Phone 38 4 Czarist Uranium King exactly this prediction. " " mation 50, .\ndyn torth: 1. Done 6. Peculiar c l. o T n E s One by-product of the Congres- 126, Lukewarm abbr, 2. Suspicious: 6. Lined with a | sicnal investigation of alleged se-| Supplied Uranium to U.S. | A% UL 5L e 2s | CATHERINE mm NUNN-BUSH SHOES To Banish “Blue Monda crets sent to Russia in 1943-44 is| Long before the war, Pregel, a --:% ' 3 as a paid-up subscribe THE DAILY ALASKA- S".‘ETSON HATS. te Molay™ a demand for the deportation of|multimillionaire, had become the| / EMP?RE isl:n i ed e THIS EVENING Quality Wark SRy To give you more freedom one of the leading uranium mag- |sole sales agent of the Belgian Ur- 8. Sit for afl vited to be our guest THIS from work — TRY artist 9. Oriental com- L e CAPITOL THEATRE Present this coupon to the box office of the FRED HENNING Complete Outfitter for Men nates of the world, who was given!anium Trust, and came to this permission to ship uranium to Rus- |country permanently in 1940 after sia in May, 1943, the Nazis overran France. He then He is Boris Pregel, a Czarist Rus- |oragnized the Canadian Radium | sian who has lived in exile inland Uranium Corporation and ac-, France and the United States for|quiried an interest in the Fort| the past 32 years. As a result of |Hope uranium mines in Canada. recent publicity, the Immigration|Late in 1941, he became the sole Bureau of the Justice Department |sales agent for Canadian uranium ! has been considering a clamor thatiand when the United States first Alaska Laundry ' B. W. COWLING ; ' COMPANY H. S. GRAVES Dodge—! The Clothing Man DeSoto—Dodge Trucks LEVP'S OVERALLS 11. Form intoa knot and receive TWO TICKETS to see: "ARCH OF TRIUMPH" Federal Tax—12c—Paid by the Theatre 17. Wagon track 19. Open courts 23, §P&. of a knight e anish flord W aldnd ol 2 6 .. - Record of a ur.n‘:‘h event ————-—__.__________._______—___ I Pregel be deported began to experiment with the idea ' 0. However, close examaination of|of splitting the atom, it was Pregel ! 3 g&;fiflx Phone IF“LLOW CAB co-"Phue 2 for Boys the facts on file at the Justice|who delivered the first shipment' :ur-part and cab WII HAFFER’ Departent would indicate that Pre- |of uranium to Columbia University | E"g:{!."fl}":':‘; RETUI:{‘qi~;%I‘l}e€° our hoL CA&% FOR Yoqim;u & i/ gel may be a vietim of public hys- | —five tons—on June 1, 1941, even - 4. Room b ¥ e With Uit Dpe e SANITARY MEAT “Say It With Flowers” but teria and also, perhaps, of competi- |before Pearl Harbor. .‘ / fl 4 WATCH '[HIS SPACE—Y: N 1 “SAY IT WITH 0! ” 42, Stair our Name May A 'URS! tion from American Commercial| Pregel got in wrong with the // ) /r 437 Make needle- FOR BETTER MEATS 4 A !o:'!?:. i ki | British becausel‘he oppos;d ?m;;- - //%'fl..//’fl.- “w “"'?xr""‘"“‘ 7 13—PHONES—49 Juneau Florists j uranium shipment which he | ments of urpiflum to England, 7 / 3 1 Py Free Delivery s 10 i, aconing 1o he| i Wiscn ol et ne T T AT 1 g piicusnen | Thereis no substitute for Newspaper Advertising! ___ Phonesn > | i ; e ——— ’ $ j | / '