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PAGE FOUR Daily Alaska Empire Publistied every evening except Sunday by the EMPIRE PRINTING COMPANY Second snd Main Streets, Junes EELEN TROY MONSEN DOROTHY TROY LINGO ELMER A. FRIEND - ALFRED ZENGER Eatered in the st_Office in Junea SUBSCRIPTION RATE:! @emvered by carrier in Juneau and Douglas for $1.50 per monthi six months, §5.08; one year, By mall, postage paid, at the following rates: six months, in advance, $7.50; | Cme year, in advance $15. wae muath, in advance, $1.5¢ Bubscribers will confer or if they e Business Office of any failure or irregularity in the delivery 602; Cusiness Office, PRESS € their papers. Telephones: News Office, MEMEER OF ASSOCIATED The Associated Press is exclusively ent frepublication of Wl news dispatches credite wise credited in this paper and also the berein. anchored variety, 'they must contain a device to; fender them. inoperative if they should break ]rm.\o:‘ floating mines become neutralized within one | after they pass from the sower’s control, and ! | the indiscriminate release of floating mines is pro- | | nibited. The three mines in question, of Russian manufacture, were of the anchor variety, but there | no sign that they had ever been anchored, and the had been destroyed. | Goodness knows how many of these instruments of destruction have been loosed to menace, not merely naval shipping, but also hapless nonmilitary vessels of must au, Alaska Kour - Ppresigent Vice-President wa neutralizing mechanism $15.00 will promptly motify | any nation. On an even more grisly plane are the murders of ‘civilians by the retreating North Korean l;\nd;' forces, murders now reported to run to 25000. The|® Red forces indulged in wholesale slaughter, and the | § mass graves remind one only of Dachau and Buch- | " titled to the use for d to it or not other- local news published —e NATIONAL REPRESENTATIVES — Aissks Newspapers, 1411 fourth Avenue Bldg., Seattfe, Wash. P Wednesday, November —— e enwald. It is technically incorrect to talk of this|® crime as genocide, but the difference is mainly one of { terminology. Probably it will be difficult for United | Nations military authorities to ascribe precise re-| sponsibility for many of these crimes, but a strong { effort must be made to bring the perpetrators to jus- i Even though total war is horrible in itself the | tice. civilized world must always attempt to check the de- liberate descent into bestiality and barbarism. House-Cleaning Just Started (Ketchikan News) THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE—JUNEAU, ALASKA November 1 Earle L. Hunter J. Bert Caro Inez Keister Sylv ia Davis Janet Lee Schultz Mr C. F. Wyller Joann Gay Erbland Frank Pepin C needed. 2il Lee CHANKEL CHILDREN PACK ARMORY 10| ... "CAP" HALLOWE'EN (Continued from Page One) also was watchfully on hand dur- ing the entire celebration. Ncithcr,(-mplu_vcu of the Copper River and Northwestern Railroad, had found NOVEMBER 1, 1930 No damage of consequence was done by Juneau youth on Hallowe'en, according to Police Chief George Getchell. Windows were soaped and | a few board sidewalks in residence districts taken up. ! In Dougl several grade school classes had Hallowe’en parties, e | with various prizes going to Roy Derue, Peter Guerreoro, James Short- ® | ridge, Douglas Wahto, Patty Brown, Glen Edwards, Florence Brown ® land Billy Feero. .. Three Douglas teachers, Misses Helen MacDonald, ! :‘Lu‘ Thoma and Margaret Pimperton had entertained 20 guests in their home. Prizes in several Hallowe'en contests were won by Misses Mamie | Feusi, Edla Holbrook and Lily Kr | i el o | R. F. Vasser and Fred Wiliams were among the guests .at the ! Alaskan Hotel; C. Campbell, William Lindl d Nels Anderson, at the | Gastineau. Ray Wiley. from the Islander wreck, spent Hallowe'en in | Juneau. ° . onquist. ° . Dolan was chosen matchmaker for American Legion smokers, | | succeeding Kenneth Junge, who had resigned, according to announce- ment by Post Commander Claud Helgesen. | i | After getting used to being without a certain cherished keepsake,; lost for nearly 20 years, M. S. Whittier, assistant U. S. Customs Col- lector, had a wonderful stroke of luck. Henry Miallard of Cordova, an| | the lost article and returned it. The keepsake was a gold-mounted elk’s| WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 1, 1950 COMMUNITY EVENTS 'FODAY At 8 pm.—Eiks Lodge. At 8 p.m.—CAP officers staff meet- ing, Baranof. At 8 p.m.—WSCS will hold business meeting at Methodist chnurch por- lors. At 8 pm.—Board of Directors of BPW meets at 544 Twelfth Street, At 8:30 p.n.—International Study group meets at Governor’s House November 2 At noon—Chamber of Commerce, | Baranof. At 7 pm.—Joint Veterans Affairs Committee meets in CIO Hall. At 8 p.m.—Regular meeting, VFW post, CIO Hall. At 8 pm.—Women of Moose meet. At 8:45 p.m.—Juneau Singers re- hearse in Methodist church. November 3 At noon—Soroptimist Club meets in Terrace room, Baranof. At 1 p.m.—Martha Society meets in the church manse. November 4 At 10:30 a.m. — Martha Rummage Sale. At 11:30 am—Rebekah bazaar in IOOF Hall continuing until mid- night. Society Singled out f machine because Marcus Jensen, ¢ 1, 1950 or special attack by the Gruening of his expose of irregularities, was candidate for the legislature. The Shirley Casperson was in charge of the penny-play game, assisted by | tooth, set with a diamond, which had been given him by the Skagway At 10 p.m.—Masons, Eastern dance, Later, in Cordova, Whit-| Scottish Rite Temple, MOUNT JUNEAU LODGE NO. 147 SECOND and FOURTH Monday of month in Scottish Rite Temple beginning at 7:30 p. m. Carson A. Lawrence, Worshiptul Master; JAMES W. LEIVERS, Secretary. € B.P.0.ELKS Meeting every Wednesday at 8 P.M. Visiting brothers welcome. WALLIS S. GEORGE, Exalted Ruler. W. H, BIGGS, Secretary. Moose Lodge No. 700 Regular Meetings Each Friday Governor— ARNOLD L FRANCIS Secretary— WALTER R. HERMANSEN D — LY Brownie's Liquor Sfore Fheme 163 139 Be. Frankiia P. O. Box 2508 B. P. O. E. Lodge after he served as secretary. tier had missed the emblem one day when he was working in the yard | of his home. Mialard found it in a coal bin under the house. Joan Kassn E. A. Hinke was on call—and was frequently called— ! besides doing his stint at the re- freshment booth. Mrs. Lucille ‘John- son and Ada assisted Willman at the cotton candy machine. 1 Harold Zenger was in charge of operating the three merry-go- November 6 At noon—Lions Club, Baranof. |At 8 pm.—Hq. and Service Co, 208th Inf. Bn. (Sep.) Alaéka Na- tional ~Guard, - drill, National Guard Armory. At 8 p.m.—American Legion meets in Dugout. largest vote against him came from “dictated villages.” Nevertheless, Marcus Jensen can have the satis- faction of knowing that the house-cleaning he started will be carried on. There were enough Republ and independent Democrats elected to insure thi If Mr. Jensen had spent. as much of his time and money campaigning as he did to show up an “unsaovry ATROCITIES IN KOREA . It is almost academic, we suppose, to dwell on the violations of the rules of war by the North Koreans.| The aggression itself, and Russia’s involvement in it, are so flagrant a breach of the laws of nations as to "The Rexall Store” Your Reliable Pharma2ists BUTLER-MAURO DRUG CO. Weather: High, 45; low, 39; rain, 31 ARRIVE, 25 DEPART | | sald, “More individuals and fifms post | render subsidiary actions incidental. But the de-|mess” the election result might have been, different. rounds, but had to spend much of liberate release’ of floating mines, three American naval vessels have been sunk or dam- aged with substantial loss of life, not reached in World War IL In The Hague Convention of 1907, mines are rec- ognized as legitimate implements of certain important restrictio: The Washingfon Merry-Go-Round /Continued from Page One) of his state, reforming the insans | asylums, improving the schools, and putting the Pennsylvania man- | ufacturers association in its place. | For years, Pennsylvania was rul- ed by the barons of coal, steel, gas, and oil. What they wanted, they largely got. And the normal GOP Governor in Harrisburg usually did | their bidding. Governor Duff, how- ever, reversed this, and ‘in so do- ing won the undying enmity of that insatiable disciple of the high tar- | iff, Joe Grundy, plus all his fellow manufacturers. They did their best to defeat Duff at the primaries and, believe it or not, they are now conspiring with a Democrat, Sen- ator Myers, to try to defeat Duff, in Novemper. { If mines are of the | Harold Ickes. through which he exposed, and hits & neW 1oW |, ded that the warfare, but with | jet out b of the former Supreme Court Justice | Owen Roberts, Life Magazine and a group of Quakers, Byberry has now been completely renovated. And today Pennsylvania is ahead of most states in its care of the insane. l Duff is a former Bull-Mooser, was a delegate to the Teddy Roose- | velt convention in 1912, along with eminent Pennsylvanian, His disrespect for big business was acquired both from Teddy and his father. “The general run of people,” he says, “are not interested in mak- ing the rich richer and the poor poorer.” another Turns Down Retainers There is an interesting contrast between the life of Jim Duff and that of Joe Hanley, Lieutenant Governor of New York. When Duff was urged to run for Governor, he also pled lack of funds. But ,a friend argued: “You can get two retainers for Presidential Material Jim Duff is big, “barrel-chested, redheaded, rides horseback at the age of 87 two or three times a week, works late hours, reads till one or two am. and drinks water incessantly. If it wasn't for his age, he would be excellent presiden- tial timber, though in these dflys,! with MacArthur 71, General Mar- shall 70, and Harry Truman one year younger than Duff, he can’t be counted out. Duff inherited some of his cru- sading belligerency from his father, a Presbyterian minister in West- moreland County, near Carnegle. His father supported five children on an income of $3700, and sent all of them to college. When Jim Duff was a boy, he remembers an oil company drilling wells oppo- site his father’s farm and offer- ing to buy the Duff place—for a song. His father refused. Instead, he drilled eight wells on his own land. But when he could not get the oil company to buy his gas, the elder Duff simply uncorked a well, let the gas gush out, thus lowering the pressure in the wells across the line. After that the oil company came to teiu That was when Jim Dufi got his first taste of bucking big business, and he has been bucking the barons most of his life. His next brush came when he was Attorney General of Pennsyl- vania and closed the legal loopholes permitting dumping in Pennsylvania rivers. Later, as Governor, he start- ed the almost revolutionary pro- ject of dredging out the Schuylkill River. Dredges River For years the coal companies along the river had been dumping their waste coal and culm into the Schuylkill until its channel was chocked to a height of 18 feet. This is now being dredged out of the river, the channel restored, and about one-third of the coal reclaimed. At first, business was opposed. But the other day, Revelle Brown, President- of the Reading Railroad, told the Governor: “They've been rapping you over the Schuylkill River, but I think it’s one of the best things the state has ever done.” Anothter Duff project was to $20,000 and $15,000 that will sup- plement your state salary.” The friend mentioned two Pean- vania utility companies for whom Duff had worked in the past. Unlike Hanley, however, Duff replied: “Not me, When I work for my state or my government, I don't take money from an outside source.” After conferring with Mrs. Duff, however, they decided to curtail their domestic budget and thus run for office. Governor Duff belongs to a small bit growing school within the Re- publican Party, including Gover- nor Warren of California, Gov- ernor Driscoll of New Jersey, Sen- ators Ives of New York and Morse of Oregon, who believe that you don’t win votes merely by criti- cism. You've got to lead, build, con- struct, they believe, not tear down. And if sometimes your program overlaps or coincides with the Democrats,’ they also believe that’s no reason for shying away from it. That's why the prospective Sene ator from Pennsylvania says: “In this fight the Republican Party cannot go two ways at the same time.” MARTHA SOCIETY TO MEET FRIDAY P. M. The November business meeting jof the Martha Society will be held Friday, November 3, in the manse { of the Northern Light Presbyterian Church, A luncheon will bg served at 1 pam., with this year's officers, Mrs. Clarence Warfield, Murs. Starling, Mrs. Hugh Stoddard, Mrs, Ray Taylor and Mrs. Don Burrus as hostesses. Devotions will be led by Mrs. James Drake. Plans will be completed for the | rummage sale to be held the next day, Saturday., Anyone desiring to contribute articles for this sale lis asked to contact Mrs. Norton Flint, general chairman. lManha\ Society at 10:30 a.m. Sat- iurday, Nov. 4. Northern Light P | byterian Church parlors. | i S RUMMAGE SALE TIDE TABLE He appeared before the Grand Jury here: We are informed thal there was no question of irregularities looked into and changes made to avoid such things taking place in the future. y any means those responsible for such abuse ck of law. Harvey | the evening trying to repair the one with cars. Among those who helped him were Jerry Kelly and Bill Forward. Doir merry-go- round “patrol duty” were Cather- as a result the Grand Jury recom- banking laws of the Territory be That does not morally by Bud Nance, who had volunteered to help and was put to work fast; \dso Bert Lybeck and others, [ “Let’s Start Now” | Nance led off a discussion among !adults toward a more elahorate | party next year. “If CAP can 'do ! this in six da what a party we {could have if everyone started Alaska Poinis | planning now,” he said. “I'll go in with you on anything you want Weather conaltlons ana temper- l to do—let’s get started this week.” atures at various Alaska points! One man offered to bring his also on the Pacific Coast, at 4:30 popcorn machine, saying, “I'd like a.m. 120th Meridian Time, ‘[Hlll:[o treat the youngsters once a released by the Weather Bureau,year.” Someone else said he'd help are as follows: | build a runway for a parade of the Anchorage. - 10—Ice Cr,\‘Stals:costumed revelers, another person Annette Island 42—Rain ; offered to donate several boxes of Barrow .. 7—Snow , apples. . . Cordova Clu.lcly" Anyone with ideas for next year Dawson Cloudy | is asked to see Marcum, who said, | Edmonton 27—Fog | “This is a great satisfaction for Fairbanks -4—Cloudy ECivxl Air Patrol members. Although | Haines 35—Rain | we have iHu\’rc 23—Clear | we have | Juneau Airport 37—Rain selves with some worthwhile Kodiak 34—Cloudy { community service. Kotzebue 0—Clear| “The CAP has a special interest McGrath -5—Partly Cloudy b people—our Squadrbn Nome . 16—Clear ors a cadet corps for prt | Northway 5—Snow | flight training, so this is a nat- Petersburg 39—Cloudy | ural. We hope to have a bigger and Portland 556—Rain | by r party next Hallowe'en. | Prince George 22—Fog| “How glad we are that we acted ‘Sfl’nlllc 43—Rainjon the idea for this one, even i Sitka 40—Rain | though we had less Whitehorse 25—Cloudy { to put it on.” Yakutat 37—Rain In Clever Costume anding costume among the s of colorfully garbed young was that of Bill White. Bill, 14-year-old son of Mr. and Eugene White, was a in the costume he had made in | 6—Partly 6—Partly been sceking to identify in Outst re BROWNIE TROOP 4 MEETS Brownie Troop No. 4 met Tuesday afternoon after school at the Ame: ican Legion Dugout. As this was{Mrs. Hallowe'en we sang' songs and thef|tion had cookies and cider. {two days. (Shows what imagina- { Following this we took a walk |tion and homework can do!). ltu see the window display for Girl} Bill v the silvery robot who Scout week and also to see the|walked fly through the crowds. soap artsits at work, {He made the outfit from cartons Patty McNamara and Rosemary of various sizes,-covered with alum- Sundborg, Reporters, {inum paint —_— The had slits for his CREMIN BABY NAMPD eyes and several real instruments Mr. and Mrs. Jack Cremin have on his chest. Bill is a student at St. named their baby boy Jackie Guyer. Ann's School. Mrs. Cremin and young son were Credit Due Many dismissed from St. Ann's Hospital Speaking of the community as- yesterday. pect of last night's party, Marcum i | costume ACROSS 84. Discover of & . Falls behind famous . Arabian garment comet 36. Barks 87. Short for a man's name 88. Golf mound 89 Kind of oil 43. Pouch 46. Distant 47. Mark of . Outdoor game . Pagan god . Synopsis of & play . Matrons . Smallest integer Bronze in the sun Calculate C 53. Wharf 54. Was carried 55. Meadow 56. Long Stick 67. Twelve months 5S. Pen 59, Gaelle DOWN 1. Put down 2. American soprano i Solution of Yesterday's Puzzle 8. Branch ot mathematies 4. Auctions 5. Exclamations of delight 6. Pass from one state into another Scene of actlon Health resort Civil wrong L. ! 28 Crescent- shaped figure . Chide vehemently eudonym body ine Flood and Bob Roberts, assisted | only a small unit here,] than a week | sensa- | are due credit than we can possibly identify separately. We appreZiate the whole-hearted support in gen- eral, “Among those we especially thank are the Fourth of July Commit- tee and city officials for the use of the merry-go-rounds and arrange- ments for their operation; Col. J. D. | Alexander, acting adjutant of the | Alaska National Guard, for use of the Armory, with all its facilities, including lighting; as well as the | Daily Alaska Empire, the Alaska Sunday Press and radio station KINY for their generosity in pub- licizing the affair and the Civil Air Patrol. “Others are which donated ments; Elm of his Cir | Harold Salisbury, for complime: (tary posters and other art work |and the Spruce Delicatessen for the 'loud speaker. Miss Fisher added her apprecia- tion for the cooperation of her | committees, of individuals previdus- 11y mentioned and others who re- ! mained anonymous; of Juneau mer- chants and -the community as' a | whole. 1 Both joined in complimenting | Channel Juniors on their orderly | behavior. | 27 DISEMBARK FROM | PRINCESS LOUISE | The Princess Louise had 27 pas- | sengers disembarking from Van- couver last night and five embar |ing at 11:30 o’clock sailing time for | Skagway. The CPR ship arrives back from Skagway Friday morning at 7 o'clock and sails for Vancouver {at 7:30. Disembarking from Vancouver | were: Mr. and Mrs. Amsden and son; Mr. and Mrs. H. Bremner, J. Catone, Mr. and Mrs. DeVoe, Mrs. C. Evanson, E. Hammond, Mrs. E. I , Mr. and Mrs. W. Heisel, Mr. a Hender- s, Mr. and Mrs. G 1e Juno Bakery, ard the refresh. 1d for the use recording Mr. and Mrs. H. D. Stabler, Mr. | and Mrs. T. Schoeppe, Mr. and Mrs. | F. Walker. Embarking for Skagway: A. H. Boberg, Mrs. Isabelle Flynn, Joe Hill, Ken Thibodeau, C. D. Tandy. i Apartments and his fiancee, office | Mears, Mr. and Mrs. Rabe and son; | November 7 | At noon—Rotary club, Baranof. VIA ALASKA COASTAL : o FLIGHTS ON TUESDAY “.iiui'c uic o meen ase oiub ovember 8 At noon—Kiwanis Club, Baranof. Alaska Coastal Airlines flights on November 9 Tuesday carried a total of 62 with 6 on interport, 31 arriving and 25 de- | parting. { Departing for Sitka were: Beriha | pyws OFFICIALS LEAVE Ellingen, W. B. Morse, ; : HE Norma | FOR SEATTLE HEARINGS Aturuk, Esther Snell, Rex Tueroyluk, | Dora Johansen, Mrs. E. VanHorn, H. Youdaron, E. Cinnett; for An- goon: Mrs. P. Greenwald. For Hoonah: James Grant, Mrs. Robert Grant; for Excursion Inlet: Andrew McKinley; for Petersburg: Dr. and Mrs. J. O. Rude; for Ket- | chikan: E. T. Brehm, Fanny Mc- Daniel. For Pelican: R.'M. Steele; for El- | pjsh anq wildlife Service, was pilot- fin Cove: William Hixson, Les|jno the FWS Beechcraft. Baltzo is, F]m:enq from Chichagoff:* Jim | \cictant director and Shuman,| Devinney; for Skagway: C. H. Hu-| gjsheries management supervisor. kill; for Haines: Tom Protiza | Persons wishing to submit recom- Strode, Lm-x-g Lindstrom | mendations may send them in writ- | Arriving from Ska Were: | ino 5o as to reach the FWS direc- Charlle Mathews, Mr Mrs. | ¢or in Washington, D.C., by De- Ralph Strong, Charles Strong, Tony | : | cember 1. Strong, Gene and James Strong; | i from Haines: Daisy Phillips; from | Pelican: Mrs. L. Stearns, Mr Ott, Sally Wetche. Dick Peter of KINY will talk on| From Ketchikan: Delia Light; | his recent European trip at a regu- from Petersburg: Mrs. G. Lloyd,|lar meeting of the Chamber of/ N. L. Moats; from Hoonah: Mrs. Commerce at the Baranof Hotel to- P. Greenwald, Mark Smith, Mr. and | morrow noon. Mrs. J. R. Smith, Mrs. Sheakley. From Sitka: W. B. Morse, Mr. and | RUMMAGE; SALE | Mrs. William Smith, D. McRoberts, | Martha Society at 10:30 a.m. Sat-| W. Oppeluk, Aaron Wise, C. Spiegle, | urday, Nov. 4. Northern Light Pres- J. Guinn; from Chatham: Mr. and | byterian Church parlors. — 647-3% Mrs. Harold Hansen, Bonnie Han-| = sen; from Fish Bay: Leonard John- V.F. W son. MARRIAGE LICENSE Taku Post No. 5553 Application for a marriage license| Meeting every Thursday in was made to the U.S. Commissioner | the C.I.O. Hall at 8:00 p.m. this morning by Allen Kenneth Eskestrand and Maxine Elizabeth Leard. Eskestrand is construction super- intendent for the Mendenhall night, meeting in Elks lodge rooms. i | Alaska commercial fishing regula- | tions for 1951, Clarence J. Rhode, |c. Howard Baltzo and Richard attle. The hearings will be Monday and Tuesday in the Chamber of | Commerce building. | Rhode, Alaska director of the U.S. DICK PETER AT C. OF C. The Erwin Feed Co. Oftice in Case Lot Grocery Phone 704 HAY, GRAIN, COAL and STORAGE STEVENS® manager for Anderson Construc- tion Company. i Both gave Juneau as their resi- dence. | | For a Real Fit-Made-To Measure suits at Caslers. 634-t1i and receive TWO "BLACK Phone 14—YELLOW F. GENTRY as a paid-up subscriber 10 THE AILY ALASKA EMPIRE is invited to be our guest THIS EVENING Present this coupon to the box office of the CAPITOL THEATRE Federal Tux—1Z2c Pai¢ by the Theatre and an insured cab WILL CALL FOR YOU and RETURN YOU to your home with our compliments. WATCH THIS SPACE—Your Name May Appear! Oldest Bank in Alaska 1891—0ver Half a Centary of Banking—1950 The B. M. Bekrends Bank | LADIES'—MISSES’ READY-TO-WEAR Seward Street Near Third The Charles W. Carter Mortuary Pourth and Franklin Sts. PHONE 136 TICKETS to see: MAGIC” Casler’s Men's Wear McGregor Sportswear Stetson and Mallory Hats Arrow Shirts and Underwear Allen Edmonds Shoes Bkyway Luggage BOTANY l'm’l CLOTHES NUNN-BUSH SHOES STETSON HATS Quality Work Clothing FRED HENNING Cemplete Outfitter for Men CAB CO.—Phone 22 | At 8 pm.—Emblem Club roll call To conduct the final hearings on | Shuman left this morning for Se-|| | Alaska Music Supply Arthur M. Uggen, Manager Pianos—Masical Instruments and Supplies .Phone 206 .Second and Beward. i GENERAL PAINTS and WALLPAPER Ideal Paint Store Phone 549 Pred W. Wenat i | | | i | | Card Beverage Co. ‘Wholesale 805 10th 8t. PHONE 216—DAY er NIGHT ! The Alaskan Hotel Newly Renovated Reoms at Reasonable Rates PHONE SINGLE O PHONE 656 Thomas Hardware Co. PAINTS —— OILS Buflders’ and Shelf HARDWARE Remington Typewrit. SOLD E‘nfl BERVICED ::' J. B. Burford Co. “Our Doorstep Is Worn by Juneau Molor Ce. Foot of Main Street . MAKE JUNEAU: DAIRIES DELICIOUS ICE CREAM & daily babit—ask for it by mame Juneau Dalries, Inc Chrysler Marine Engines MACHINE SHOP Marine Hardware Chas. G. Warner _Co. HOME GROCERY Phones 146 and 342 Home Liquor Store—Tel. 699 American Meat — Phone 38 @ To Banish “Blue Monday” To give you more freedom from work — TRY Alaska Laundry H. 5. GRAVES The Clothing Man 5 LEVIPS OVERALLS for Boys Safety Deposit Boxes for Rent COMMERCIAL SAVINGS clean up the state asylums, long|e . one of the worst scandals in Penn- | e sylvania. The Byberry Asylum near! . Philadelphia was so filthy that e holes in the floor were used as'e toilets, and inmates were chamed e to the walls. But with the help of November 2 Low tide 12:32 a.m., High tide Low tide 12:46 p.m., High tide 6:21 p.m,, 129 ft. lloo....clo BLACKWELL’S CABINET SHOP 117 Main St. Phone 713 High Quality Cabinet Werk for Home, Office or Stere SHAFFER'S SANITARY MEAT FOR BETTER MEATS 13—PHONES—49 Pree Delivery AP Newsfeatures