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FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 17, 1950 PAGE FOUR THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE—JUNEAU, ALASKA . . wheel in front® The rider sat almost directly above its I Dall'y Ala.ska mplre hub, six feet or more from the ground. The secondary f‘ f"om @a' e a! Publistied every evening except Sunday by the wheel was much smaller, and trailed along somewhere 2 0 Y E A RS A o 0 ,1:, HE EMPIRE e in Skt Sireets ey SO in the rear. Such machines were quickly outmoded X1 I i | Second and Mal e : g | 2t MU restdent | when the equi-wheel came into popularfty—similar to PR e e s i 50 i %! F} - President o T | Manseing Baitor | the type used today. ! NOVEMBER 17, 1630 [ as; fl i @HE S‘ Business Manager | Before the advent of the automobile, “century|e ° 1 dd’ LD | | ered 1n the Post Office in Juneau as Second Class Matter. | runs” were all the rage. Grandpappy used to rigfe November 17 ° e (’f ”‘"‘b‘“-"\‘"l‘ weather which obz.u.u-:l during the l‘"ovl s | ®eavered by umer’flifi?fi?&“nfi:‘ jor $1.50 per month; | himself in short knickers, stockings, a T-sMirt and cap | ® e da f the Cath fc Baza the affair proved both a financial an | ln:.( her C:Jn.ux.mns :\ u:m,for- six months, $8.00; ome year, §15.60 and start out early of a Sunday morning in an effort|® Bonnie 1 o |a social success. All booths had disposed of their wares before closing | ature ':; ‘;Hr;\;s Alas] l:fl;‘nolr By mall, postage paid, at the following rates: = o o b . | § 2lso on the Pacilic Coast, at 4:30 Cme year, in advance :3”0: six months, in advance, $7.80; [ o ride 100 miles before nightfall. All the “sports : S 'IHCF ® | time aln i AboDy Al Dime abd -minl?.'flfl?"xm‘e'r a favor if they will premptly motity | of the day belonged to a century club. 4 Mrs. Robert R.\Bm\\'n % 5 ¢ - ; = o ik r by the Wes Bureau | B r o ries o sty fADWY GE ety Wb SIS |y the automobile outmoded fiHie ploycls 1o thely S entt T o W. R. Burford, who entered St. Ann’s Hospital October 29, Was|are a5 follow | Telephones: News Office, 602; Cusiness on.m. ”e. United States, although travelers to foreign lands|q Ade Je Holbrook % id).sm ed and went to htr home, her health restored Anchorage 0—Clear | e O et i il know that cycling hs acontinued there as anumber|e Henry L. Satre o TG h 3 gnneitc AISnC AT artly, Cloui -auun' flon ot 41 fawe a’l‘u::g:::':lr'edw“:1?01“’::’0&“3:,21 one sport. But now, even in this land of the hot- E. Fo ® J. Alloucherie, newspaperman, novelist and magazine writer of Paris ‘,‘;:.‘f_;v = xlgc’l;‘“ y gy Wise credited in s paper and also the local mews published | g the *bicycle is coming back into popularity o o | was ir wed aboard the Princess Norah. He was enroute to Dawson s —Partly (.l?‘u:'i_\ | bereln. Weres A oLoNE & [ o [to sect erial for literary articles which he hepod would be of “rough [2COrH - 3;"0;0 r IAT:(').lntl.. mfim:nm— Aiaska Newspapers, 1411 If we weren't so derned old, we might try a ride. {® ¢ jand character tling one anc ther .mm,:. paths to vaults of | g iobe ol e - There was a day When we were one of the best. I8 0 o 0 o v .0is B iBiN {gold in a land of rigor and forbidding elements. airbanks € ... 21—Clear l e L - { e TR Haines 10—Partly Couldy r Hia apt. Sidney M. Higgins, v 1 master and pilot, familiar with| Havre Missing Yo Mofe Flops Wanted COMMURNITY EVENTS ... S : No More Flop ! | northern waters from Kotzebue Sound to Dixon Entrance, took over the | Junea Cloudy : 1 e | duties of United States Insp of Hulls for Al He tucceeded | Eediak . 27—Partly Cloudy | (Seattle Times) 1 Kotzebue ......... 12—Partly Cloudy | Plans for next summer's good-will cruise to Alaskn! TODAY ‘ {Capt. George W. Morgan, transierred to the States. Higgins and 3 oudy - e1eendv under way at the Seattle Chamber of Com- | At 7:30 pm.—Martha Society 0 |¢heir two daughters were to arrive in the spring to make their home are already under way a At s : | 8 merce, where some new ideas for tour are being| hold bazaar in N.L.P. Church. in Juneau discussed. It is not too soon, for summer’s excur- { At 8 p.m.—Past Noble Grands meet Ao H as a flop. Seattle business men and firms| at home of Evelyn Kelly, 1236 Eii Taon | o N er ‘ad 3 r ) sion was a 4 ; Sixth Street. Benjamin Messer, son of Mr. and Mrs. John Messer and graduate 43—Partly Clo lacked the foresight to support this effort to build ixtn Streef . 7 3 7 3 : ¥ & g S U ! At 8 p.m.—Elks annual Thanksgiv- |of Juneau High School, was in line for the “honor roll” at the Colorado —Snow | and retain friendly trade relations with Alaska. They » 8.F : ~ i .!;“l! bk i 5 i e t hibol | 38—Partly Cloudy " Jive the Chamber of Commerce better—in fact,y ing Turkey Shoot, EIlks all, | School of Mines esser held a scholarship in the school. _ S BoR . Public invited. = Sttka 21—Clear full cooperation in 1951. Noveribes'1s Whitehorse 20—Smow Friday, November 17, 1950 »71 t Is Not Ea sy Forty | School build |12 for the commerce course. At 10 am.—Rummage sale at Lu- theran Church. students enrolled in the nig ;. Twenty-eight entered for the citizenship course t school classes held in the High 15—Partly Cloudy and | ' NURSES, DOCTORS | | I 2 » At —Methodist Church ba- BICYCLE COMES BACK (The Employment Counselor) 3 | To Apologize At nbow Girls Father-| Weather 'h, 24; low, The United States, we learned recently, has lQi To Begin Over nquet, Scottish Rite | - milljon bicycle fans. This seemed a surprising state- To Take Advice ment, for we failed to reliaze that interest in cycling To Be Unselfish ! 8:30 p.m.—Pro wmhr-nuttungIOASTMAST[RS extended beyond the teen-agers in this part of the To Admit Error and Bows Square Dance, Parish | Western Hemisphere. Still millions of adults, we To Be Chartitable Hall. | BRAVE IAKU Io read, now use the pedals. The cylist “population” of To Avoid Mistakes At 9 pm. cabaret and | x - % " ety To Endure Sticcess | HOLD REGULAR MEET the land is greater than at any time in history. 'l'hc| 3 To Keep On Trying At 10 pm TR — interest, percentagewise, is said to be edging upward every year. To To Forgive and Profit by Mista tish Rite no terr ters, wh The Tak fi the Tak Back in the 1890s bicycling was in its infancy. To Keep Out of the Rut Trom 3 to 5 p.m.—Reception honor- Sfea ke ui cusbing tor In those pre-motor days, every boy and man who To Shoulder Deserved Blame ing the Rev. and Mrs. A. B, Mor- | their regular meeting at the Bara- could rake up the cash bought himself a “wheel.” To Maintain a High Standard ean in Methodist Chure Qo' Hotel, Vice President Dr. John This was a period of evolution. The older vehicles To Recognize the Silver Lining | November 20 d s presided over the meet- But it Always Pays . . . At noon—Lions Club, Baranof. the absence of President werg driven, as you oldsters may recall, from a great on Pearl Harbor, has been con- verted to Christianity. He was con- verted, he says, by a desire to prevent another Pearl Harbor Real reason for the sudden $35,000,- 000 loan to the Philippines was because the Philippine government 1l of whom urge the plugging of | didn’t have enough money to pay <ats icies PlUBEINg o lits scldiers. Without the loan there t loopholes in the pure food 't ek o et o 5 | would have been revolution. (Phil fhe Washington Merry-Go-Round {Continued from Page One) engers with 29 embarking at 7 HAS 29 EMBARKING SOUTHBOUND TODAY At noon—BPW luncheon, Terrace} Greah. Bob Oowling abd Ir- pm“(ESS LOUISE room at Baranof. ; s were called upon for the At 8 pm—American Legion POSt| usual fabrications for being late in meeting in Dugout. |arriving. ‘Topiemaster was Herb At 8 pm.—Juneau P-TA meets in study hall of High School. Rowland, who called upon members ite personality November 21 the reasons .dar: their At noon—Rotary Club, Baranof. Disembarking from the Princess{at 7:45 p.m—Civil Defense CONR=| Gene Vuille was toastmaster and Louise this morning were 11 pass cil meets City Council Chambers, | introduced t P 25 speakers At 8:30 p.m.—Community Center|anq their st 1lis Reynolds off and drug act to prevent the use sailing time. night for adults at Teen Agej«are We Biting More, ThHan: rmfi | ippine teachers haven't been paid sHgdiliotse L Ry (“Are We Bitin More Tha of’mha i .chemlcals. that | x]n] four months—but teachers don't DemERng f o SLn};x.‘fl Club. i | We Can Chew?” E. A. Peyton, “The ey rovmalad et e s General MagAritiur | FPS: (S A IR T SRR November 2% {Big Switzerland of the North Ameri- s somp chemicals are L e n‘ow QLQL‘X“(’.IL(;\" the Chinese Reds D. Baulino, Mis. Bemis, K. Fuller, | At noon—Kiwanis Club, Baranof. |ean Continent”; Willis B. Avery, [ e Do e e | 1di - ¢ R. B. Hubbard, E. L. Hubbard, Miss |o¢ 8 pm.—Flks Lodge. | “Breaking the Ice”; Dr. Ted Ober- are holding a total of 300,000 men in reserve—not one milljon—as frequently reported. . .Prime Min- produce ulcers, and even distinte- grate the human teeth. One example of a dangerous i _ | ister Nehru's attempt to make 2 2 e id ‘Ghitd: M ¢ '[fiv'cs]\f‘f\nix VR e Rl D roy|peace with the Chinese Reds is| Mo ;‘““RM,‘;'_(}_}-”":' o | erianicniah [/ J. A. McLean was general critic, B o A a for | partly based on fear of the Com- | Hrih ROUFHh, Kel o daugh November 25 the following assistants: Har- B tiour Albowgh ‘used for T, ROy e Practically ev- | Pl EICRATIREN Ty oL JAL 125 pim o URiitimat oy 088 um Manthey, Com- more than 30 years, it was not|mies inside India. FRAcUcsly ®U | ters; Ed Krause, Mr. end Mrs | gome League Lacies of Salvati o et O until 30 years ago that an English | €ty major union in India is load- | pro 1 Stephenson, Mr. and Mrs | a r Hawley, Bob Cowling, Irvin scientist, proved that agene-treated |€d With them. . .U. S. Ambassador! & "y Aqyiscon, Mrs. Efaw, Mrs.|af o L o B s A Me RIS fleptic fits in Dunn has chided the Italian gov- ;o 50 M o aridiN 7 pIn=Doug’as: :Sul hool |, o avoid conflict with Thanksgiv- | e rofuoc epbeps e - tryin is Lovejoy and child; Mr. and Senior Ball in Douglas gym. g actiofliie Shive Bl he 1 dogs. In recent months, the use | ernment for trying to establish dip- Henderson, Mr. and Mrs. Bur |ing Day activities, there will be no of this chemical has been discon- | lomatic relations with the Chinese | 5 "o ouver: Mrs, D. Winnl | meeting next week. tinued but not until after millions | : of people had eaten it. are threatening world peace. Dunn | The committee has developed a long list of dangerous chemicals— many of them consumed daily. The list includes: the Italian government's announce- { ment shocked the United States. J T PR 1 K. Lemoreaux, R. Rapuzzi, Communists at a time when they hoff, Mrs. Turner, M Peter Pamuchima L. H. Johnston. Seattle weiR: Mrs. Embarking 'for Kelienke, N et A % 4 Capt. and Mrs, Barrington, Mr. and told Foreign Minister Sforza thatl . "o einand, For Prince Rupert: P. W. Jaron. November 23 _|man, “An Introduction to Vision”; At 10:30 am—Noon Thanksgiving|ang Bill Ellis, “The Problems of a Services at Northern Light Pre: FIRST GIRL BORN Bl o IN ZENGER FAMILY RECORD: FLIGHTS salad TENTION: Civilian Defense s hester Zenger last night at| 1. Mineral oil—used in salad ATT ilian | Mrs. Chester Zenger last night at| dressings and on popcorn as al GI'SOHS 059 All Squad Captains 10:50 at St. Ann’s hospital weigh- | BY MAUR!(E KsN& substitute for nutritious fats was | 1 — Promptly compleie yourfing 6 pounds 7 and a half ounces. found to interfere with the absorp- tion of oil-soluble vitamins and Lives when Ferry 5 ! squad’s fuil smplen 2 — Obtain oath = She is the first granddaughter of‘ Mr. and M Al Zenger, paternal | e of air opera- As pilot in char; generally upset the human digestive H H rolman. grandparents. The Zengers have|tjons for the Arctic Institute of system. veriurns in IV@I' | 3 _ Fie oaths of yourself and|five grandsons and four sons. Ma- | North America, Maurice King made 2. Monochloacetic acid—used as patrolmen with C. B. Holland,§ternal grandparents is Leonard 178 landings above the Arctic Circle a preservative for wines and a| pp GRADE, Yugoslavia, Nov. 17| AELP Co. office. Evans, Territorial representative of|this summer, and logged 190 flying number of food products. Its use "4 _ Issue arm band to each pat- | the Territorial Department of Labor. | hours. This establishes a record in X —{P—The official news agency Tan-j in an orange soft drink recently caused numerous illnesses. 3. Dulcin—An artfiicial sweet- ener, used as a sugar substitute by diabetics and recently discovered to be toxic. Under our present pure food and drug laws, the government is not permitted to take action against the use of chemicals until after the food has been on the market; then only after protracted investigation and hearings. As a result, according to the scientists testifying before Congress, the American public has drowned Wednesday when a crowded ferryboat burst its cublesl and overturned in the Sava River. Tanjug said so far only 17 bodies | have been taken from the water. The disaster occurred near the vil- lage of Orasje where the river di- vides the Yugoslav republics of Bosnia and Croatia. BARRINGTONS RETURN SOUTH AFTER VISIT HERE WITH SON, FAMILY plan emergency. jug announces that 94 persons were | rolman. 5 — Recommend, in writing, your to evacuate your district in 6 — Select 2 women from your { district who will promptly join ARC | Canteen instruction course. 7 — Attend meeting, 8 pm. Nov- | ember 21, 1950, City Council Cham- |ber 20, from 4 until 6 o'clock at|was on Baffin Isiand, acro b ers. JUNEAU CIVILIAN DEFENSE COUNCIL. Sugar maple sap is almost taste- less when gathered, = | the area where he flew. MRS. REHER TO BE HONORED | 1t would be no record in Alaska, AT TEA MONDAY AFTERNOON where he already had more than 112,000 hours, and has Janded count- Invitations to a tea honoring Mrs.|jess times in the Far North. J. B. Reher have been issued by| providing all the transportation Mrs. John B. Kiely and Mrs. M. M. | for an Institute Expedition of 20 {Flint, to be held Monday, Novem- |scjentists, King’s flying for the party the the home of Mrs, Flint, 635 Main |continent from her :Streec. ! Mrs. Reher is leaving shortly with | improvised airfield 70 From an | miles up the l'i\jcr and east of Clvrlc: WANIED BY ANS; DAY ALSO 600D | Inlet, he established five base c shortly after arriving on the island iin May. In a King m 556 on { cia little over four montks, de 20 landings on wh s and 103 on floats SEATTLE, Nov. 17—{#—Good sal those on the 1,500 tch north from Montr s Dr. James T. Googe, Assist= | obisher Bay, and 480 more to| a Commissioner of Health, Clyde Inlet. The Hudson's Bay Com- y has a post at Clyde; there also are radio and weather station After numerous delays, s due to weather, King brought the Institute’s Norseman aircraft in set up recruiting headquar- ers at the New Washington Hotel. C o0 ays he will be at the Dr hotel through Sunday to interview applicants. i The staff nursing jobs are with ere late Thursday from Montreal, the Alaska Native Service. Physi- » Whiteho cians’ rointments will be to the arly next week, he will put the| Alaska orial Department of | plane into winter storage at Yaku- tat for the 1951 Arctic Institute ex- pedition on Seward and Malaspina Glaciers. This will continue the +work of 1948 and '49, under the di- rection of Col. Walter A. Wood of New York, United States director. | ‘Wood may be here early in the year | for a winter check on glacier instru- i Health. | HAWAII U PREXY | SAYS TRUMAN [N Col. P. D. (Pat) Baird of Mon- | real, Canadian director, led the 1950 expedition on Baffin Island. King, who is stayi the Ju- neau Hotel, is busy renewing quaintance with many old friends here. | After a few days in Juneau on| his return from Yakutat, he expects to go to Seattle for the winter. W INGTON, Nov, 17 — (B —| Dr. G. M. Sinclair, president of the | University of Hawaii, said he fm\ndl President Truman “just as enthu-| ic as ever” for statehood for| waii yesterday. Sinclair said that if the Senate voted at the coming session for full{ statehood for Hawali it would make | “a wonderful impression” through-| {out Asia. to Hawaii to accept an honorary | ment. Tonight is the night of the big| Juneau Ski Club' cabaret party to| be held in the Legion Dugout start- at 9 o'clock, it was announced | y party committeemen. | It will be the first party of th'zj v' r' w' Taku Post No. 5559 season to climax a one week com- | unity wide membership drive and | Meeting every Thursday in the C.I.0. Hall at 8:00 p.m. WANT ADS BRING RESULTS omises to be a humdinger. ! The cabaret party will live up to| its name; the whole event will be,‘ presented in cabaret style InCldIng | oo e T e | a honky-tonk pianist, an accor- | dionist and a floor show. Office in Case Lot Grocery head that is, to everyone interested | Phone 794 in skiing or those interested inj| ey and STORAGE FROM SITKA tables and chairs, singing waiters, | . | . | The Erwin Feed Co. | The party is open, at 50 cents a| going to a good party. | HAY, GRAIN, COAL Mrs. L. Efaw of Sitka is stopping ;her husband for the states. ML‘ { Reher has been with the Bureau of | Public Roads. | LEQTA at the Baranof Hotel. | STE"'ENS, "1| LADIES'—MISSES’ SMITH READY-TO-WEAR | FAVOR STATEHOOD | MBS, EO BNl s MOUNT JUNEAU LODGE NO, 147 SECOND and FOURTH Monday of each month in Scottish Rite Temple veginning at 7:30 n.' m. Carson A. Lawrence, Worshipful Master; JAMES W. LEIVERS, Secrctary. &) B.P.0. ELKS Meeting every Wednesday at 8 P.M. Visiting brothers welcome, WALLIS S. GEORGE, Exalted Ruler. W. H. BIGGS, Secretary. e e T Moose Lodge No. 700 Regular Meetings Each Friday Governor— ARNOLD L FRANCIS Secretary— WALTER R. HERMANSEN Brownie's Liguor Sicre ’ Phens 193 135 Bo. Fravkiln ! P. O. Box 2508 S e e "The Rexall Store” Your Reliable PharmuJists BUTLER-MAUROQ DRUG CO. Alaska Music Supply Arthur M. Uggen, Manager Planos—Musical Instruments and Suppiies Fhope 206 .Second and Seward. and WALLPAPER Ideal Paint Store Phone 549 Fred W. Wendt } GENERAL PAINTS Card Beverage Co. Wholesale 805 10th Ss. PHONE 216—DAY or NIGHY for MIXERS er SODA POP | ————— ! The Alaskan Hote] Newly Renovated Rooms &t Reasonable Rates PEO"E SINGLE O PHONE 665 SKI (LUB CABARET | 1o wia ne mwed s teumeni| “Yhomag Hardware Co. PAINTS —— OILS Bailders’ and Sheit HARDWARE Remington Typewriters 80LD aud SERVICED Sy J. B. Burford Co. “Our Doorstep Is Worn by Bausfied Customers” FORD AGENCY (Authcrized Dealers) GREASES — GAS — OIL Juneau Motor Ce. Foot of Main Street MAKE JUNEAU DAIRIES DELICIOUS ICE CREAM # daily habit—ask for it by narae Juneau Dairies, Inc. ol dolt B e f g Chrysler Marine Engines MACHINE SHOP Marine Hardware _Chas. G. Warner Co. HOME GROCERY Phones 146 and 342 Fome Liquor Store—Tel. 699 American Meat — Phone 38 To Banish “Blue Monday” To give you more freedom from work — TRY Alasl.:a Laundry H. S. GRAVES The Clothing Man LEVI'S OVERALLS for Boys — | : ation of experimental A : { 5 | Biese 2 betin 5 Capt. and Mrs. Hill Barrington || as a paid-ap subscriver 1 THE UATLY ALASKA f|| Beward Strect Near Third Congressman Delaney now pro- :“,:fl\pi;;in%fizsmslg returning to Crossword “z | EMPIRE is !n_uthd to be our guest THI_S EVENING | poses to have these chemicals test-f 0 homé at Whidby Island after Presext this coupon to the box office of the | Th Ch l w Carier § ed Lefore thelr use, not afierward.| oo n) eeks visit here with their ACROSS 32. Zealous I CAPITQL EAT ! e Lnaries W. son and his family, the William H. } fir;"r%\:;l B o ;g gorrohdes v | lfl nE i MOII\I&!’Y ¥ ’ s ;W 2 . Bacchanallan Capital News Capsules Barringtons. » 9. West Indian e { o | Indu.&lr': requests controls —| Capt. Barrington, a veteran river{ ,, avia 39. Sien | and receive TWO TICKETS to see: | » and Sta. les Wi i at ca ing 1d | 13. Rowing 42. Side plece | { ourth Franklin Charles Wilson of General Electric |boat captain dating from the gol ping . A e e i e o 5 .t i | s, owned and apeaied oy pAE 4 PShmune TELL IT T0 THE JUDGE | act fo Secretary of Commerce | Barrington Transportation Co., of 4 %t‘yéa{;gago car 45 f.!?fit’ \ “ Rhiort dee o r g v Wran- } 1¢. Ske 48, Domestic . P Sawyer and Stuart Symington on Wrangell, running between 16. Skating | Federal Tax—12c Pai¢ by the Theatre ! ] high prices of raw materials at the jgell and _'rvlcg!raph Creek on t:le O . Po‘(‘,’r““‘“"h i | Y | Casler s “en s Wear recent mobili \&ion myeting at | Stikine River, for twenty years. Hej 18 Tally 50, Push with the I a | ool ik Sea Island, G:j They wanted to|retired three years ago and moved 2‘{; ;: n‘zaue’ % Tof)l‘?ol“‘oad oy v S Pl'me l YELLQW an co.—Phone zz | Stetson and Mallory Hata know when the government was{to their present home on Whidbyi o ehilige, 8 Melunchow ki slpdic and an insured cab WILL CALL FOR YCU and i| Arrow Shirts and Underwear going to do something about high Isl;lx::. LR S nt‘ 25 Wear avay 7. h BN, b P o i RETURN YOU to your home with our compliments. i Allen Bdmn;ldl Bhoes prices. It was shortly after this O 0 € 3 ’ ! 98, Stripe imal 2. Short for a N g ) Q Py nggage that Secretary Sawyer came out)|Skagway and theirs was a gold) A A han's name nt WATCH THIS SPACE—Your Name May Appear AEyway emphatically against voluntary cun-!r\lsh romance when Capt. Barring- - | trols. iton operated a fleet of boats with | ]\ B 0 T A " Y His son tortured—U. S. Ambas-‘ms brother, Capt. Sid Barrington, | sader David Bruce in Paris has|on the Yukon River. I8 < { ! ” 76 complained vigorously < to the} oyl | OldeSi Bank in Alaska 500 French government about French; MISS FEERO TO SEATTLE | I e e | Tan Asiiat Mg 1891—0ver Hall a Cenfury of Banking—1950 CLOTHES ®Bruce told French Premier Renelon the Pan American clipper for 1 Nt . & Pleven at a secret conferencce | Seattle where she will join her par- d .BUSH SHOES that the USA. believes Mochs|ents Mr. and Mrs. B, F. Feero and | The B I‘E Behrends STETSON HATS anti-German attitude is threaten- | her sister who have been vacation- | ® ® Quality Work Clothing ing to wreck all plans for defend- ’mu in the northwest. Miss Feero ing Europe agoinst Communism; {will have a medical check-up while | B‘lnk r“n nmmc that Moch is being unnecessar a’m Seattle and will return north | : a o~ prsmsislign , tough about Germany because his|with her parent | S mvflm Men son was tortured to death by thef af Nazi Gestapo during the war. Pre- | THE METHODIST CHURCH will) ; Ety Depfls‘t | A mier Pleven promised to get Moch | have their Bazaar and Tea Satur-| SHAFFER’ %o soften his opposition. (Many |day, November 18, at 1 p.m. an:un.\j Boxes for Re”t SA“"ABY mflr Americans think Moch is right. Pot Holders, Pillow Cases, Knitted; il Mittens and Sweaters, Table Cloths, | BETTER MEATS Diplomatic Pouch Doll Clothes and a Food Sale will COMMERCIAL SAVINGS 13—-PHONES—49 Mitsuo Fuchida, the Japanese na- j be featured. All are welcome. | Free Delivery val pilot who led the sneak attack 658-411 AP Newsfeatures a7 e EPE SR S RATE SRS YN BLACKWELL'S CABINET SHOP 117 Main,St. Phone 7 High Quality Cabinet Werk for Home, Office or Btere _\ S e