The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, October 30, 1950, Page 4

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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE—JUNEAU, ALASKA MONDAY, OCTOBER 30,.1950 PAGE FOUR they were shocked to realize the serious danger of their VMIOUNT JUNEAU LODGE NO, 147 SECOND and FOURTH Monday of each month in Scottish Rite Temple beginning at 7:30 p. m. 120 YEARS AGO 575 prrns | Weather af R . A Daily Alaska Empire .. Published every evening except Sunday by the EMPIRE PRINTING COMPANY Second and Main Streets, Juneau, Alaska Perhaps one reason Juneau Juniors justify the Police Chief's faith is that neither he nor any other < SELEN TROY Mofiflss - - * o :el}:en: city official takes a “spoil-sport” attitude wwzu'd! - 2 THY i, e A -President m . PRIND s e a e _Mecestw & ¢ | celebrating ‘Hallowe'en. They encourage the spirit of | OCTOBER 30, 1930 | as a 0“1 s vgurmn A. Lawrencd, ALFRED ZENGER - - - - Business Manager |,.ye)ry, put want no one to be hurt or killed, nor any orshipful Master; JAMES W. LEIVERS, Secretary, € B.P.0. ELKS Meeting eve Wednesday at 8 P.M. Visiting brothers welcome, i WALLIS S. GEORGE, Exalted In Douglas the day before, little friends of Betty Keith had enjoyed ®adered in the Post Office in Juneau as Second Class Matter. October 30 SUBSCRIPTION RATES: @envered by carrier in Juneau and Douxlas for $1.50 per month) | six months, $3.08; one year, $15.00 ostage pald, &t the following rates: vance §15.00; six months, in advance, $7.50; | proper amaged. | The community can take credit, too, as more has been done each year to give the younsters an outlet for their tremendous energy and excitement. School. church and lodge parties have helped make children partners in play rather than partners in mischief. Now comes the Juneau Civil Air Patrol Squadron | ! ‘Weather conaiuons ana temper- atures at various Alaska points also on the Pacific Coast, at 4:30 |am, 120th Mertdian Time, and released by the Weather Bureau are as follows: Anchorage a birthday party given by her mother. Mrs. Ernest Parsons | | ! St | Passengers arriving on the Yukon from Seattle didn't have a chance !to make the headlines, in competition with 3¢ musk oxen which occu- | | Robert Fox Edmund A. Hinke Mrs pied Hold No. 3. The animals, including 16 cows, were being shipped M3 from Greenland for the Alaska College of Agriculture and School of Gus George € their papers. Henry Roden Telephones: News Office, 602; Cusiness Office, 374 3—Partly Cloudy MEMBER OF ASSOCIATED PRESS | e o —— | with a Hallowe'en party in an ideal setting—the huge ! Roy Gaili | Mines at Fairbanks. L. J. Palmer of the college, had gone to Nomayzgnng‘ze Island 40—Partly Cloudy | Ruler. W. H. BIGGS, Secretary. ..u‘.?.?.fi?,;“‘.l?‘fx okt J.’..f.’ii.‘;‘.’ivir’.d.’&d‘& oo et her: | National Guard Armory—with plenty of room for !)L\y-: John Costello |to take charge of the Arctic animals. B?:}‘]‘S“ ; St “ 4——15n0\'»: gl eredited in tis paver aad slso the looal news publised | jng and romping, besides a variety of attractions. | Harold Sunderland ‘ — ik oo S e R S s g . 1 orea rs. Birdie Ash, widow of a Klondike pioneer, left on the Alameda| =" "~ = " 4 5 | _— Under the sarhe sponsorship, a ‘large group of | Ralph Morean Mus, Bix s | Sawaon REPRESI TIVES — Aisski 141 ] o & A ol | x | Daws 14—Cloudy | pou ATIONAL REFRESENTATIVES — Alaaks Newsoavers, M|, nants announced the city's first Hallowe'en Art|e o e ¢ o o o o o ;8 g|for Seaitle io undergo a dellcate cye operation. Through Dr. H. C.|z fi - ire) Moose Lfldge No. 700 v Contest, which should result in window decorations to | =~ T ;;g Ai DeVighne who had obtained special consideration for her at the Vir-| pajpangs 8—Show | Regular Meetings Each Friday vie with those of the Christmas season ntire war factories—without daring | o), Mason Hospital and W. D. Gross, who collected a benefit fund, | Haines ... ' 20_clone|| Governor— 4 i ey to ask a single condition in re-| i | 4 L | ARNOLD L .FRANCIS Another tradition may be in the making for [ turn? | the pioneer woman was able to have the operation. Havre - 49—Partly Cloudy || oo P) 3 j ; m? : L 2 | Juneau Airport .. . 19—Cloudy | ¥ Juneau—an nual community celebration that will “Who made the shocking agree- | | = y WALTER have just one reason for being: fun. < of Yalta, Teheran, and Pots.| Mrs. Wilbur K. Burford, whose husband was in the billiard hall at| Kodiak 26—Clear | R. HERMANSEN 3 dam? Who vetoed the wartime | Burford’s Corner, successfully underwent a surgical operation in sz.‘f;"gi:;’s - 15—Snow proposal to send British and Am-|Ann's Hospital. . . . New patients included Carl Harris, nine-year-old |y at® -* 14&5:5 e S L S S Jargon- erican troops into the Balkans?|gon of Mr. and Mrs, F. W. Harris and Miss Juanita Glenn. | Baiinrs AR ot a6 L — Who gave the order to our troops L : s & Brownle s llquor Sh" (Printed Word) not to push on to Berlin? Who | ;Pt::;tma;n b 4 2445__331,, i rag { " i ear Language of specialists in any subject, from sport | Permitted and encouraged ‘Stali} Mrs. Margaret P. Wilson was the only passenger boarding the Yukon | coo 10 PR Pheme 163 139 Be. Frankiim . to take over Estonia, Latvia, Lith- |¢, vestward voyage. A z arrivi Bad b e A s 2 ey to religion, tends to grow away from’ common spesch. 3 S3<E TN SRS e U et ei e the westward voyage. .Amons astiving pesscoghin had Pesh Ui b siiks 37—Drizzle P. O. Box 2598 Sometimes this is necessary. The p! T Pl pageds ey Whofi Carrigan, broker; G. B. West, J. M. O'Connor, of Seattle; Chester Tripp | Whitehorse 14 8h00 jealing with matters and proce: not y | Yakutat 28—Cloudy {and Mrs. E. M. Poley, who had been in the States for several weeks. both by omission and commission— helped to turn China over to the| Communists? Who tried to force | Chiang Kai-Shek.to take into his| Monday, October 30, 1950 to the senses, are almost forced to develop a language of their own to avoid the con- fusion that would ensue if they used everyday words to express something out of the ordinary. In other professions or trades, mystifying lan- guage it is suspected, is used principally to impress ""The Rexall Store” Your Rellable Pharma2ists Mrs. E. M. Malackey, whose husband was a furrier in the Charles covernment the very Communists | Goldstein store, had left for Seattle on the Alameda. Among the pas- who were determined to destroy sengers were Miss Lola Korhonen, of the B. M. Behrends Company him? Who was so eager to ‘share’{office; Martin Holst, fishing boat skipper; Bernard Acton, Mrs. Lydia POLICE CHIEF HAS FAITH IN JI'NEAU.} YOUNGSTERS HALLOWE’EN i * NAT. GUARD NEWS At the drill at 8 o'clock tonight T'm mighty proud of Junc'.\u )n\xxxgslcril said | the layman. The theory is that the layman will more the secret of the atomic bomb With | Fohn-Hansen, R. H. Rhodes, James Truitt, Thomas Judson, James .| of Headquarters, Headquarters and Police Chief Bernard Hulk, speaking of Hallowe’en. cheerfully pay for services that he believes to be Stalin?. Who proposed that We 'preeh 1 Dot i | Service Co., 20th Infantry Bat- BUTLER-MAURO He said the same thing the fifth of July, when immensely C(\m}\lk‘:\!rd t).\mvl for something so simple pour still more billions of the | ‘eeburn’, and ns . Ha V- talion (Sep), Alaska National DRUG ; he even handed out candy and gum to boys and girls | that he can clearly understand it. ) American taxpayers’ money into Guard the care and cleaning of [| CO Weather: High, 56; low, 44; cloudy. | carbines will be taken up during That explanation may account for the Writing|Ryssia, on the argument that it | the first hour. The second hour who hadn't shot off firecrackers. § | of some academic economists. There are honorable{ would appease Stalin if we enabled 2 :h"\ ]’f’(""::";““,::‘fv ':(‘” d‘;‘;; ':‘mf":i‘:: JuniorS:| exceptions. hut the erudite cconomist Who condesoends | him to bulld up bis military ma- - ;Ewill‘ be given to individual tactical Alaska Music Supply et e s NEre | o explain to the layman that two and two make four | chine still further? Who allowed | D 2 g E " h by | training. wasn't any real trouble a year ago. One 1949 trick.) o ey to say something like this: our Federal departments to be in- a”y i.ESSOHS INENQUSN W, L. GORDON || Preceding the regular drin wil Arthur M. Uggen, Manager the work of imaginative young people. might have had filtrated with Communist spies wh,,J \ A be staff training starting at 7|| Pisnos—Musical \nstruments conditions and when similar objects are in question, } tragic results. These pranksters may be expected t0| jf two such objects are added to two other such objects, turn to something devastatingly funny this time, for ' the total may almost invariably be equated with four. e i —————— " + [oclock for all battalion and com- WORDS OFTEN MISUSED: Do not say, “This does not admit|bany officers, warrant officers and || .Fhone 206 .Second and Seward. Say, “This does not admit OF dispute.” | the first sergeant. Approximately 12 tons of clothing turned our military secrets over to| Who ridiculed as a ‘red serious efforts to un- dispute.” 5 | North Dakota recently called this| sufferers of droughts or for thejCOVer these spies? . . . OFTEN MISPRONOUNCED: Glisten. The T is silent in the pro-| [he wa!bmg'on | to (hh\" attention of the White| wounded in war or for little child- | When you sit in meetings to|nyneiation. |30 cdu IRl e Y T2 GENERAL PAI | bt {ren who were starving. Ours has| discuss thé doom—ask, ‘ 5 ! LAk ceived and initial issue will be! AINTS Me"y GG E@und House. 2 i Rt SRR | “who?” OFTEN MISSPELLED: Colossal; two O's, two L’s, two S's. | made during the Al period | vy~ ‘As you knowg’ Langer wrote the always been a charitable na ? | 5 3 3 & 2 z & ; —_— “Pr(‘:xdig"‘ k“':l]“pnr ons in Germany | sharing our surplus with others. | s | STHONYMS: Unwieldly, Deayy, burdenspmes eumpesome. Headquarters and Headquartersg L .WALLPAPER (Continued from Page One) 1_‘!“{ Au\‘l'rm‘ were x'&(ll!z’x‘(i to bc’-‘ But this is something altogether ' | WORD STUDY: “Use a word three times and it is yours.”” Let us; Detachment of the First Scout Bat-| ld l P & ESEE e i e vt I‘un" to such groups, and school-age | different, and its businesslike char- STORK (AI.'.S HAI_T inerease our vocabulary by mastering one word each day. Today’s word: | talion at Nome were recently ins-| ea ami S!ore because the former editor of the | children were naturally included.|acter, the calmness of recital, the| INIQUITY; gross injustice; wickedness. “They will be punnshed for| Pected and received an excelient | Phone 549 #red W. Wendt Des Moines Register-Tribune, W. W. | As a result, some of the students|attention of the audience to the | ON Do&SLED IRIP their iniquity.” rating. _Al.fl receiving the same Wavmackswm .Lhen a men;h(‘,‘- (,%vm the tour may be refused en | multitude of detail—here is some-} S | rating “'ere C'Dmpz\.ny A at Nome, the commission and people in Iowa | to this country, despite the fact| thing really f htening. It is an! T SRS TSI oo 7 | Company B, Unalaklecet and Com- c d R oo e wouldn' stand for atomic| they were thoroughly screened by alteration in the attitude of a i . by }ZT:LLS(JXL: f(“::flbxg Ic\fikmli “}‘: arc beverage c‘. secrets leaking; partly beseuse o [Ta these days when we are trying|like a Chinese Chamber of Com-| . e b ROBERTA LEE | |Paimer, assistan; inspector general|! Wnolesale 805 10th 8t. ery atomic leak so far has been| I i - JOLIET, Il Oct. 30- Mother- | { of the Inspector General's Depart- | PHONE 216—] i ¢, Ni nele| to set an example to the world of | merce discussing the deal they F e R st 9 e Ins art- DAY or NIGHT nailed on the Army. Not a single o e A e Yol rotthbandtte heod ¥ halted temporarily the | ment, U. S. Army, Alaska, Anch- leak has been nailed on the civil-] our z;.menmm YO0 11[0,[1‘ I)C;l;(e\e‘m““:“ 1[,\]::‘12”1‘113 \Lv(,w‘a“ b?“(( I:" ed trek from Alaska to Maine! Q. When entering a night club with her escort, should a girl go|orage. {{ for MYXERS er SODA POP i at Sen.|it of great importance for se save their city re becom-} o, : P poxs ey e S s | orage. L m“,‘ o vum’]g people to loarn firsthand the | ing accustomed to fear. oy | Cecil (Mush) MOOTe. |frst, to the table with him and then excuse herself while she goes to the| Company E and Headquarters| Hickenlooper made so many charges | 3 1 I dogs gave birth | powder room? and Headquarters Detachment of i | the First Scout Baitalion at Bethel A. No; she should first to tk I 51 y 1 0; she shol go first to the powder room while her escort will be Inspected November 1 and waits for her somewhere near the entrance to the dining rcom. g Q. If a girl is to be married soon, would it be all right for her sister to give a party for her, or would it imply that gifts are expected? here ng over Peterren, until old enough to t fir. many advantages of a gm'm‘nmuntl Of course, the bomb is a frightful eight puppi such as ours.” lagent and we invented and pro- The 1949 Austrian tour was ajduced it as an instrument of war. whopping success in the U. S. and [ Then it was stolen from us not Austrians, | only by Dr. Klaus Fuchs but by as a litter Friday, and Moore is st with a friend, H. G to of es | The Alaskan Hotel Newly Renovated Reoms | at Reasonable Rates PHONE SINGLE O against. Hound-Dog Hickenlooper | the pups are Moore said this is the Canada. Thirty young Hickenlaoper’'s probe of the State | SUNDAY FIRE CALL ! Department, in which he followed | packed by private subscription at | di; a crew of traitors s ie s R 5 A L e ? . L of e sanling b romer, came: here' to.predent reem iy Sl e e he has b \.{J-LL‘\\A\UJ:],] }Mc =y T. It would be all rfl,.htv to LjU so. if 118 cmph;\svxzed Lha% tl.w party | PHONE 655 Joe McCarthy, looked as if it would rian folk dances and songs and wp have caught are the ol epiay is not to be a shower. Or, give the party in the evening and invite men,| 5 f;rmace explosion at the Decker | pay better political dividends. Ev-| were acclaimed wherever they ap- | little fellows who always get r and his Foo: Building, 233 Franklin, resulted in| eryone pointed to his big primary | peared. ! caught; they worked for somebody | from Ala Q. If a person does not intend to go in costume, should he accept!g dry run for the firemen at 9: 5 | ]‘ho “ d majority and said: “At least} —_— :“nu has not been caught. And the first sts an invitation to a fancy-dress ball? o'clock last night. No damage re- | mas Har ware (o- Bourke’s hound-dogging has been B Eotomatls Banan Ithe great oificials and the Senate bitter temperatures and rugged A. No; a person should not accept any invitation if he is not|ported. The alarm was 1-5. ¢ rewarded.” s oo i ! watchdog committee, headed by mountains on sled runners. The last | willing to enter into all the festivities in a sincere manner. PAINTS — OILS Sewing machines for rent at the, White Sewing Machine Center. | 642-tf | Bullders’ and Sheif HARDWARE But now folks .are figure that a State which acted so forthrightly in Kor- 1,200 miles the sled has been outed the news of mounted on rubber tired wheels. inclined 10 pyy Commissioner John Mccloy!&‘lmml‘ Brien McMahon, who Department ;. “.abled Washington asking for | should have | the theft from £ i . more troops to put down expecledl e housetops, tried| Moore is eager to get going again. b e harbored. MADY, Communist riots within the next|to keep it all secret from their “I:never stopped for any season| lOOK and lEARN Y Y 1 Communists, an that may three -weeks. McCloy reports Com- | employers, the American people. . until now,” he said: “I traveled | A. C- GORDON i Remlngton Ty Bl V.FE.W. hound-dog Hickenlooper got hold So now our enemies have the! through ro BOLD and SERVICED by across country where the munists are slipping the | of a scent that was about fIvely 4o fom the cast by the scores|bomb and we are organizing {0, temperature sank to 70 below and : years old. ; 110 stir up strife as part of a Com- | take the consequences should they| it n got warmer than 30 L 1. What is the difference between a parodox and a paragon? Taku Post “0. 5559 J B Burford Cfl Hickenlooper will probably win} =~ qiive for a united Germany |use it against us, flow. It took a female to stop me. 2. Which one of the United States’ possessions has a name mean- g - 5 - D. burior g in November. The normal GOPY_ e, he Reds. . .Ambassador| But it all seems so unnecessary.| The Al veler estimated ,ing “rich port”? Meeting every Thursday in “Qur Doorstep Is Worn by margin in Towa seems fairly certaln | o0 Allen is sending urgent' We have recently fought two wars, he'd r on by Christmas, 3. What Is aviculture? the C.I.O. Hall at 8:00 p.m. Satistied Customers” to carry him through .But he isn’t being helped any by two other de- velopments. These are: 1. The Republican - controlled State Liguor Commission loaded t know just lLiow | able to leave Joliet. 4. How would you properly wear a cummerbund — around your ihead, around your waist, or around your neck? i 5. Who was author of the famous phrase, “All men are created }equal"? i 3 dared defy Stalin, will be in serious { to have started. So far as most soon he'd trouble unless Yugoslavia gets grain, | Americans are concerned, those Droughts cut Yugoslavia’s crop 40| wars were distant and, unless one FUNKS IN be BUY LOHR'S FORD AGENCY Dealers) The Erwin Feed Co. Office in Case Lot Grocery The American Embassy | l0ost a son, remote from our nomes} | ANSWERS: i | | cent. ALIBI land, have been shipping their money to Uruguay and Mexico. itself up with a lot of “Old Hector” | ;" cair; ‘has informed the State!and families. But this thing 18! Les and Marion Funk, proprietors - whiskey, aged three years, When)peS,iment that King Farouk’s gay | right here at home and we are of the Royal e bought| 1. A paradox is a seemingly contradictory statement; a paragon Flme im0 J Mot c.. it could have bought bonded whis- life is beginning to catch up with | organizing for it. We hold meet- Lyle Lohr’s the s 'a ‘model of ‘excellency. i AIN, COAL uneau 0107 key, guaranteed by the Federal g0v- |y, “marouk’s blood pressure is re-|ings and appoint committees. { Alibi Club IR (S | HAY, GRAIN, Foot of Main Street - ernment to be four years old abl o4 high and his doctors are| In contrast, let me quote from their time to that ¢ P 3 R i and STORAGE ! almost the same price. Why thel o qine with him to stop his| the new magazine, “The Freeman”: (Swede) Lohr owns the other in gla i el REaTIng of bixds, GOP commissioners went for Oldfpione cyyp excursions. . .Neutral} . who helped to create the terest in the club. | 4. Around your waist; it is a sash. MAKE Hector instead of the betier grade| g ioang is no longer a secret!encrmous power that now threatens — The Royal Cale is to be ovated| 5 Thomas Jefferson. sTEvENs’ JUNEAU DAIRIES is a question the Democrais wantl oo o for hidden money. Eu-|to destroy us? Who sent Stalin and probably will be rented to aj = = e DELICIOUS ICE CREAM answered. So far none has beenj, oo “ninionaires, afraid the Red ! $11,000,000,000 of lend-lease, includ- new proprietor in the near future, | LADIES'—MISSES’ dally habit—ask for it by name ‘°§fhf§§'v':f'cop Seorétary of Ag-|Army Will ovemn even Switzer- ing tanks, planes, ships, munitions, according to Mr. and Mrs. Funk. INGVOLD VARNESS | READY-TO-WEAR | Seward Street Near Third Juneau Dabries, Inc. riculture, Clyde Spry, approved the | = as a paid-up subscriber 1o THE VAILY ALASKA iqc from Belgrade that Tito, who to end all this; yet, it seems only althou: purchase of an anti-ireeze—P-60— EMPIRE is invited to b contained salt and would ruin} 1 is invited to be our guest THIS EVENING engines. The U. . Bureau of THESE DAYS } Present this coupon to the box office of the | Chrysler Marine Engines ards in Washington also refused { The Charles W. Carter MA R AR T R LR e | CAPITOL THEATRE Maxine Hardwars Secretary Spry OK'd P-60 just CRGF E. SUKGL | direction for 2. Become, less MOfluary i WAre the same. The Democrats now want j THE SHADOW OF FEAR o Biek it 5 | d ive TW CKE % to know why. ; z I do not believe that I quite] 9. Spigor A DOIRE | e recelve B0 1510 no8: Fourth m“"'mm Chas. G. Warner c“' Iq fact, Lester Gillette, Demo-{ . ji;eq what the wars we have) 12 Lué;nl::rglon :L- E;x;sci}:;n falry | "ADA“:S BIB" PHO! :”“;lc c‘:’;‘d‘d“;'f for Governor, g0€84yeen in gnd the atom bomb have Scriptures -, commune i urther than this. done to us until I attended a meet- Old- womanish | ER “It would be l)ct!fx;.‘" li‘le says, “t0l ing of the Board of Trade of Early English Sé;“g"’,z‘:'r'l‘! | Federal Tax—12c Paid by the Theatre CBIOI"! “Gl’l Wear PI‘]IIOME (iROC Y put Old Hector whiskey in our|yy chington, D. C. and listened to! 15 Razor Scene of t il s . C. ed tol 15. Razor : > regor Sportswoar Fhaiors una sk e 240 |\ s Socon o] g 24 | Phone 14—YELLOW CAB CO.—Phone 22 || auicer i sty sae i 1) o 048 riendship Builders Halte preparations for the day of doom. | | Speedily 54 Solution of Saturday’'s Puzzle | 3 H tore—' 3 3 : 3 pa r the day oom. o poc | n Arrow Shirts and Underwear lome Liquor S Tel. 699 Last year, a group of young Aus-1" 1t was all in the American man- - R 4 DOWN g " El%%aNlt‘l,SOuIl‘Jed cab WILL CA.LL FOR Yoq and Allen Edmonds Shoes American Meat — Phone 38 trians visited the United States—| ;.. Brigadier General Gordon R.| et locuematt e S o RO 3 Chewy candy | R U to your home with our compliments. iy Taeiay ifder the sponso Young, one of the commissioners| . Native metal = - glossy % Slamese coln b Burk of tne | WATCH THIS SPACE—Your Name May Appear! Chamber of Comme; of the capital city of our nation, r | To Banish “Blue Monday” ip between 4 without dramatics of any kind, | | piane A Europe ;ad of the plans, the present ac- BOTANY /| To fzivl! you lx::ore freedom ever, the friend:/'p complishments, the prc s for| | rom work — TRY ing halted at Ellis I the future, the committees appointed , Oldesi Bank in Alaska "50“" | i to the new McCarran Act 1 qq]And 1o ke appointed. Then some | | | Alaska L What Congre.s.s apparently A of the committee c'mmml‘n \\(‘IL‘I H a“dq not realize when 1 rushed the Mc- | Cuied upen. o rise and (ake 4| | 1891—0ver Half a Century of Banking—1950 CLOTHES Carran bill over mt‘1 White HW;’ bow and there was applause. | NUNN-BUSH SHOES | veto was that it would bar some of | Curiously, just before he spoke, a STETSON HATS | our best friends in Europe—among!smap hoy appealed for the Boys'| | e B. M Behl'ell s Quality Work Clothing || H S GRAVE them Ernst Reuter, the heroic may 5 and i Betiee peune. ias ‘ . 4 T g i s or of West Berlin. Reuter has con-|maqe o thrilling campaign for RED HENNIN The Clothing Man sistently resisted Soviet attempts 0§ community Chest, for charity and 1 Bal]k r n tter for Men penetrate the Allied area, but inf i itv for mutual aid within t | Cemplete Outfi for LEVIS OVERALLS 1919 he was a Communist. And! .onmunity. Then came the pre | e — for Boys though he has long since reformed, LrTLiCn 1L qoom. | Safety Deposit RIS | y he is automatically barred from the | pyj5 jg stark reality. Never be- B m‘ BLA < [ USA. under the McCarran bill. {gor6 in our history have Americans B en sl'll 1 CKWELL’S £ Likewise barffii are '-h: YOUBE organized in despair over their oxes for R L ms}rm!mtl CABINET SHOP % Austrians who,*like every Austrian, ,u, fate. We have organized to 117 Main St. Phone 13 at one time automatically WEI€ g4i4 others in distress, to care for COMMERCIAL SAVINGS 2 13—PHONES—49 [ members of the Nazi Party. the victims of floods and earth- ¥ioe Deltery Forthright Senator Langer Of guakes, to provide food for mc‘ "% Newstootuits R R A T _“ ‘ - v ¢ .

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