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vAGE FOUR ™ Lo THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE—JUNEAU, ALASKA 7~ THURSDAY, MARCH 1, 1951 | . ¥ . element in good appearance but also one of the MOUNT JUNEAU LODGE NO. 4T # Dally Alaska Emplre greatest safeguards of public health. 7 YEARS A from ‘f{wealher al SECOND and FOURTH A 2 ? : ! Mond LO CO T H E E M P ; R E l‘ onday of each month s Publistied every evening except Sunday by the | S EMPIRE PRINTING COMPANY | in Scottish Rite Temple Second and Main Streets, Juneau, Alasks hy Pi askal’ HELEN TROY MONSEN o % - - Prestdent Why Pick on Alaska! PSS TS SIS SORSISES S SRR H beginning at 7:30 p. m. DOROTHY TROY LINGO - - - Vice-President | o - IIMER A. FRIEND = = = = Managing Editor | g N MARCH 1, 1931 as a oln s Wm. A. Chipperfield, i | (Ketchikan News) Worshipful Master; otered In the Post Office n Juneau as Second Class Matter. i® o . & % o SUBSCRIPTION RATES! | Aeccording to press reports Colonel J. A. Alexander o Muteh ol Miss Helen McDonald and Mr. Marcel Stragier of Douglas surprised JAMES W V& VERS, Secretary. Delivered by earrier in Junean and Doulas for 175 per month: | (014 {pe Territorial Legislature they must raise $1-{e + | their many Channel friends the previous evening when they were quietly| o o o o i o e 4 By mail, postage paid. at the following rates: | 100,000 for Civilian Defense purposes with only match- | o Joseph L. Cleotge | marricd at the Catholic Church in Juneau. The ceremony was performed TSI ARt I 2 ©One sear, in advance, $15.00; six months, in advance, $7.50; p . g et | i 8 4 : : = atures at various Alacka points ‘ 7 one month, in advance, $1.50. ing funds to be provided by the Federal (muxnmeut.l. mond Dickson o | b; Rev. Webb. Witnesses to their wedding were Miss Lee Thoma,| .15, on the Pacific Coasst, at 4:30 L. Ul th Subscribers will confer a favor if they will promptly notify | There is no doubt but that Alaska should have, rilliams re rto § 5 r is Ellinges , by A ’ ¢ the Miiiese Office of any failure or irregularity in the delivery it have % /il defense, but we cannot see how . Williams . iret Pimperton, Miss Julia Stragier and Mr. Chris Ellingen.|am. 120th Meridian Time, and| Meeting every Wednesday at 8 of their papers. must have civilian nse, but we cannot s ° Popejoy ° bride was the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Donald MacDonald of Fair-| released by the Weather Bureau - Y phones: News Office, 602; Business Office, 374. in the world we are going to scrape up $1,100,000 for | o R~ il _ i . i : AT P.M. Visiting brothers welcome S B o | the Dinoss tine Emerson . vhere she had lived most of her life. She was a teacher in theare as follows: WALLIS S. GEORGE, Exalted MEMBER OF ASSOCIATED PRESS o ° Mrs. T. M. Small ® | D oh Scl P girls’ bas Mr. agi v hor: et les b ” i Tha Assoctated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for When the eold, plain, unvarnished facts are recog- | e Horace Gregor ° B High School and the girls: baskstball ‘coach. Mr. Stragier was| Ao m'lage 15—Ice Needles| Ruler. W. H. BIGGS, Secretary. rep n of all news dispatches credited to it or not other- 1 Wi t ad Py % 5 ¥ STENRY y the only son of Mr. and Mrs. Henry Stragier. He had lived on Douglas Annette Island . . 27—Clear wise O "this paper snd also the local news publisheq | Nized We must admit that we do not have that kind of { e Janice Thomas © Biride 24 Snow| == e S SRS L yise © income” snd have ho' practichl means ‘of raising ‘taxes 's e < {Tsland all his life except the past four years when he had been attending e i i ;] “‘;"‘ o ————— e i y 1 e was a graduate of Detroi chiga d was em- ; FANeUCy NATIONAL REPRESENTATIVES — Alasks Newspapers, 1411 | ° Pvide,1b il A LT L B S B i ,Q grrai ol OTite Michiganand We Cordova .. 6—Partlly Cloudy Mfiose Lfldge “o 700 Wourth Avenue Bldg., Seattle, Wash, Representative Glen D. Franklin, chairman of the | ——— RISE Lo b o Sl at the Alaska Juneau mine, { e Sk ¥ > A n, che E f the Dawson “ e 25—Clear Regular Meetings Esch Friday Ways and Means Committee, after careful study of I e T Edmonton ..i.lui.. . 3—SNOW ‘Governor- the Territory’s finances, points out that ‘acumlly we COMMijNIIY EVENIS Fifteen cents a pound for first grade halibut and 9 cents a pound | Fairbanks ............... 19—Clear ARNOLD L FRANCIS hu.vc N deficit of $4,068,639 to meet. This is money !for second grade halibut, grading to be under 1931 rules, which classified | Haines .. - 21—Cloudy Secretary— " i\]]]x“(g:d\;q (3\ch(:]0‘|h appropriated zlmd rvnrr\?m‘s bills we I 1 I“ fish more than 60 pounds in weight as second grade, were refused |Havre il 1—Ice Needles WALTER R. HERMANSEN g i B £alih TeDOtk Db Stes WEDIUM IESS TODAY | by vessel owners and fishermen on that part of the Juneau's fleet|Juneau Airport . 29—Snow 1 §22,234,629 to meet our expenses of government for the i i Kodiak 25—Partly Cloudy next two years. He estimates our anticipatéd incore At 8 p.m. — Juneau Botanical club \ returned home the | ous day from the season’s first trip to the | Bodiax ... R ek S A at $18166000. By adding another $1100000 to our| 0 hold Wild Flower slide show (p The aggregate hailing was 80,000 pounds. All of it would be ;‘:g‘r':t‘g b i 152132; —— deficit we will find ourselves over 5 mlion dollars in | , 8¢ TOOF 1‘11:_7- : i 1 this night on the Alameda, by vessel owners and fishermen to y o pie 30—_Clear gt E(hc hole. ¢ A”ba p.m. —— Women of Moose holds | go,¢11e, where the United Pacific Fisheries was paying a minimum of 15— Partly Clou\liy B’O\'Inle $ llflllM S'Of. . usiness meeting. b —Partls " We might be able to trim our budge: tonsiderably * > S |12 cents and 9 cents a pound cash, under 1930 grading rules, which put| p 30—Snow £y y ook Al .m. — For ig] meets etersbu % N 30—Snow - by eliminating such useless groups as the Alaska De- o muul DEREIEE (e | fish weighing between 10 and 80 pounds in the first grade. Portland . . 34—Cloudy Fhene 163 159'86. Fruskiin velopment Board and the Statehood C ittee but % g _ rinc g W 2556 iat (o7 fative 00 e et lvn(rz,i‘r:!\“uf the 5 D : e e g e & o I 73 St sal in Methodist church. Territorial revenues in the decade between 1921 £2d 1930 aggregated | Seattle 3 32—Snow || o Thursday, March 1, 1951 i Snindt R Fie Marck 2 g 1842, an average of slightly more than $1,000,000 per year, ac-|Sitka .. 35—Partly Cloudy| —) 2 ] In our opinion this Legislature should inform the 3 ¢ Whitehorse 10—Clear | Federal Government, without any adornment, of our .’\1‘ 1:30 pm. — denrtha Society | cording to statistics by Auditor Cash Gole and made public. The lowest e Sl S ey "G—Cluuév}” meets in N.LP. church manse. [oar of the period was 1921, when receipts totaled $563244.01 and the | * #EUEaE - 8 y At 7:30 p.m. — All 4-H Club mem- | bers meet for party in parish ball.| .. —- Concert by Frances 1 Lois Reedy at Northern SOME SOAP financial position and ask special consideation and e | funds for the purpose of civilian defense. We are Cheer for adults — and to a somewhat less deg,.eelwilling and ready to do our part but it is obvious our i N +| bank account will not stretch any farther. for small boys with grimy ears — is to be found in | ba o 4 est was 1927, $1,379,42220. The compilation was one of the most R | "The Rexan Siore" | SHNT P P e °d pictures of the Territory's sources of income ever made, and COME\#:LER*” Lt F!N showed receipts by industry, business and profession, and the Divisiox & Ra k) ‘Your Rellable Pharmnists the announcement by Neil H. McElroy, Pre:,idcnt‘sha:D:r"t:x,f:s}tcrlzth};mg?r&lfllssk]:; ::;:ch]:r;de;\l:;;:l -esbytérian church, in which it originated. b G MR £ o BUTLER-MAURO of Procter and Gamble Co., in an interview at Los|ment we have contributed our share of men for the|At 8 D. m. — Shrine Club regular shotoye B 3 e Pl wah s (s 23k DRUG CO. Angeles, that there is no reason for householders to | Armed Fore We have always gone over the top meeting. AJoe Alter will talk on | February was much warmer and wetter than average. Sunshine was dra\;\'n to. thr" }\l"li(‘I;‘ in ymn: Dflpfl‘: 4 hoard soap or lard because postwar development of | in War Bond drives and the support of the Red Cros: rosrn:_(np through Scandinavian [about 40 percent of the previous average and snowfall was much les Bny TebriAL ;JTU: e it 4 &l new productive facilities now has made this nation |and other national causes, countries. than usual. The mean temperature was 36.3 degrees or 5.8 degrees above Hoten Bl Numberd b isthichd ki Alaska Hnsic su l gelf-sufficient in the supplying of soap and edible fat | If we need guns and equipment now ((?r civilian 5 March 3 3 4l the normal, exceeded only in 1912 when the mean temperature was with a proposed_tax on salmon. PP ’ products. id.efensc lhe‘FEdCI'I\l-_GOVemH“‘m fhfllfld be in n»!)'c:s:l’- AlU.. })nm.m;C‘DCé})“:f‘flx r:»_ .f“?‘:(‘“ 1373, Highest temperature in the month was 45 degrees on the 12th and| mpo ciatement ' 'was, made that Afthur M. Uggen, Manager The emergence of chemical soaps, or detergents, gg:,‘ (‘)(:c:::uf:;ie()\:l;;:;}: o b D ;.\larex-.h lf‘ it peed lowest was 28.-degrees on the 14th. Coldest Fthruéry on record was 18'90 Mr. C. L. Anderson .of lhc‘ Terri-} Piancs—Musical {nstraments has been an important factor in this. Adequate sup-j " The question, now arises how and where would the ! At noon — Lions CIub, Barandf: w‘n a mean M.g,“ :w::xz.w»: Total precipitation in the past month was trm;\xl Dppu:mm}. of Flsher‘ef:, n;- and Supplies plies of soybean and cottonseed olls and animal fats | million dollars be spent. Each city in Alaska alrcady | At 8 pm. — American Legion post .26 or-2,71. abave the normal. E:l'l“l in the preparation of the | .Phone 206 .Second and Seward. h supplement our advantage in that respect. is taking precautionary defense measures at its owrn meets in Dugout. 2 ] i o * 2 2 il emsl, pimm,g the unforeseeable, we face ahead |expense. Moreover, Alaska is a key to offense and March 6 Weather: High, 45 low, 36; partly cloudy. MTX,'EQ thi ufi(}:csc“ozck;n& :fiz . e vith the assurance that, at defense for the whole United States and it' is up to|At noon — Rotary Club, Bnr:mnr. | B R e owe eeaw sww sooeres | Morsitory 14 too valuable to be af-| GENERAL PAINTS B e orn of MRy, WHR = N Kkind's | the government more than to the Territor to | At 8:45 pm. — Community Comm'i ] Sactad th .0 Hahtest: way, By /ahy least, we can keep clean. Soap was one of mankin@8| . 0 ¢ additional precautions may be necessary.) Dight for adults at Teen Age club i l Cfli::r(o'\.:,l?qzrl;;;;\,f; O\;A\;msst;pé.] and WALLPAPER 3 et g 3 " . . b greatest inventions, and it not only is an indispensible — with square dancing. l Da“‘y‘ i.eSSOfIS ift EflgIISh \\l/l. L. GORDON ; I feel it most necessary to state| GIBBS FAMILY IS 3 Mol | that Mir. Anderson aid not paruci-|| Ideal Paint Store customs officials are kept on the HOUSE HUNTI At moon - Kiwards Olib; Batanot, | b+smmseresitdesrbrtor satnsrs st rmnnemmtmnrnneed i ! r i 8 s ivi i | pate in the drafting of this Bill. At p The waShmglon Turkish side to handle such ti At 7:30 pm. — Civil Air Patrol| WORDS OFTEN MISUSED: Do not say, “We shall try and periuage [DRIS: 8 L S e I Fhicdo T . BISL W Wers sits. We sat down a few feet meeting at National Guard arm-|pin i o ith U iy 8 im.” | e request: of, -EOme I | Mer"'so'kound the gate to drink coffee with the John W, Gibbs, engineer with ? i him to stay with us” Say, “try TO persuade him. |the House, his assistance was ob- {* b : v wa el R ¢ : 8 v OFTEN MISPRONOUNCED: Preamble, Principal accent is on first | ¢ained on background and data as| —_— ‘cuslums officials. The weather was | the Bureau of ,Public Roads who{At 8 pm. — Elks Lodge. et RO | tain on background and data as Card Bev = c (Continued from Page One) cold but the sun was warm, and T|arrived here accompanied by Mrs.|At 8 pm. — Public pinochle party, yllable, not the second. i was entirely proper bearing in min er !. 3. — e e ‘pu]led my chair out onto a stone| Gibbs and their, two. little children series 3, Moose lodge. OFTEN MISSPELLED: Whither (to what place). Wither (to fade). |his official position. ‘ platform in the sunshine in full view | on the Baranof, is now house hunt- S N 8 { SYNONYMS: Virtue, goodness, purity, rectitude, chastity, truth,| It is possible that your reporter ‘Wholesale 805 10th 88. B e et e e ot ist guards peering | g ; tment ) Y : | misunderstood part of the state-|| PHONE 216—DAY er NIGHT a ten-man detachment guarding the | of the Communist guards D ving | ing, for a house or an apartment.| At noon — Chamber of Commerce |Worth, honor. { g vl AT R o \ Kaprikule outpost. The, road leaid- | down through rifle slots in their | At present the Gibbs are guests! meets at Baranof. | 'WORD STUDY: “Use a word three times and it is yours.” Let us‘n_x;mHma e to him by Repres tor MIXERS er SODA POP ing to the curtain was paved wi\it.“v"“cm“w“ fifly feet away. at the Hotel Juneau. At 8:45 p.m. — Juneau Singers re- |increase our vocabulary by mastering one word each day. ‘Today's word: j tive Hope. A5 Lo centurics-old stone and beside the| T don’t know and never will know| Gibbs is from the Denver BPW| hearsal at Methodist church, REFRACTORY; obstinate in disobedience; stubborn; ‘unmanageable. | (Signed) firnest Spilllé road were Roman wells built by| what they thought of the stranger | region and will be stationed here March 9 “He is a refractory child g Th Al k H t l Emperc wian. But the traffie| civilian dressed ~in western|on the Glacier Highway constr At 8 pm. — Juneau Singers in con- | e askan rioie leading to" §ic barbed-wire rurmin.‘l clothes who sat and drank coffee | tion project to bev started the fir: } cert at 20th Century Theatre,| > orowososs . -, aside from an ox team pulling a| just below them. I don’t even know ]flf !;/lamhu_hyt Ifexl and Pelfmmn.‘, ér;m;sumd hy Junieau Woman'’s i‘ r I”” by ; | John Deere disc drill, a tribute to whether they recognized me as an| local contractors. ub. MOD ,; ; I\JU . ¥ R(ES the Marshall plan, was nil. American but the Turkish guards,| = ey s March 10 o ROBERTA LEE | i PHONE :‘I'N(‘l:;! o Suddenly ‘the road ended. Ahead,who watched them from the tower; KODIAK VISH! OR in‘ 10 pm. — Annudl formal dance e PHO! was an iron.gate bearing that in-|with their field glasses, reported| Richard Haggin with the CAA at, by Beta Sigma Phi.in Gold Room, ternational finulinlm word known to| that, on the opposite side of U'c:Kudiak, arrived here yesterday irom | Baranof. N avary tongue: “Stop.” Beyond it Iron Curtain, there was more sour | Seattle on PAA ‘and is stopping at | cther gate slightly rusty and de.’ ryir 1d more frantic telephon! the Hotel-Juneau. Q. If a woman would like to become a member of a certain, bridge WASHINGTON, Feh. 28 —P—j club, may she tell one of the members, or perhaps hint that she would | The Senate has passed by voice like to join? vote a bill to provide cost-free A. No. ‘Her best procedure would be to give w small bridge party| 10,000 life insurance policies for Thomas Hardware (o. yidated bearing the words “Bul-| back to their headquarters, W. B. Wooton and A. Linc o L e . i & ria” in both French arfd Cyrillic.| However, the sun was warm and FROM ANCHORAGE | of the Columbia River Packe: of her own and invite two or more members of this particular club. ;‘«iiir‘s'i‘;::eO;lls‘e“;'lw“h the armed PAINTS -~ GILS e ain and the | (he affee delicious and we linsered| V. C. Forbes of Anchorage is at| sociation, Astoria, Ore, are at the| Q@ When a girl i5 Wwith her escort at the table in a mightelub, and| " /o omice now' will have' to Pulldarsjad Sone which Turks call serhad,‘ talking about the days when the|the Hotel Juneau. | Baranof Hotel. she wishes to leave the table to go to the restroom, what should she|, " w 4 out with the House. HARDWARE A atgy antly has two mean-|army of Sultan Beyazid battled with | —-~—— g - — |say? Bim i the Frontier and the Neckline | the armored knights of the Polish e 3 4 A. “Will you excuse me” is sufficient. ———————_————— . where one’s heau is chopped off. |king and the Grand Marshal n[ i Q. What are the most appropriate gifts to send to a convalescent? F. W Remington Typewriters S | France in the days of the crusades} A. H. GODDABD A. Usually one cannot go wrong by sending either flowers or books. v. ROLD aad gipracns iy Blockhouses Guard Cartain | across these same barley ficlds be-| as a paid-ap subscriber w THE VALY ALASKA Taku Post No. 5559 J. B. Burford C Alongside the gate was a, ser freiine gates b aTRanIRS EMPIRE is invited to be our guest THIS EVENING £ r Meeting every Thursday in || = o "+ RESAER, 9. blockhouses—one on the Bulgarian 2 5 Present this coupon to the box office of the by he C.I.O. Hall at 8:00 “Our Doorstep Is Worn by v side, a little shabby with some of its Battle For Adrianople LO 0 K an d L E A R N %Y & GORDON the C.LO. Hal :00 p L windowpanes missing, and two on For hundreds of years men lad CAPITUL THEATBE f o R T ettt i the Turkish side, both new and or- | fought to control this gateway to, | 523 [l T ——— ] FORD AGENCY derly. One Turkish blockhouse —set | the Bosporus and they were still ' % 5 3 = g & back from the iron gate but con- | fighting, But the bif. question aud recetve TWO TICKETS to see: Lo T os e praty Oath! ; The Erwin Feed Co. (Authorized Dealers) nected with it by u series of trench- | Would another war start actively i §i 2. What are the two chief materials used in the manufacture of Offics tn Case Lot Grovery GREASES — GAS — OIL es—housed troops this spring? Would the Russians at- SEVEN SINNERS a piano? Phone 704 I climbed stairs inside the thick-!tack before Eisenhower has a chance 3. In what famous novel are Kebecca and Rowena characters? Junean “fiiot c. walled parapet to the tower on top | to strengthen the armies of western Federal Tax—iZc Pai¢ by the Theatre 4. What is the unit of electrical resistance? HAY, GRAXN, COAL udi % of which a Turkish soldier stood | Europe, hefore an American-equip- 5. What in music does “fortissimo” mean? and STORAGE Poot of Maln 8 scanning the landscape through field, ped Turkish army becomes strons ANSWERS: Phone 14—YELLOW CAB C0.—Phone 22 ~— FREE INSURANCE emy Bonraed e | - gasses. Through his glasses we could | before Marshal Tito further soli 5 1. An oath, embodying a code of medical ethics, generally taken MARE see a Bulgarian guard in the tower fies his hold on Yugoslavia? That and an insured cab WILL CALL FOR YOU and by recipients of the M.D. degree. s, DAIRIES on the opposite side of the iror |is a question discussed in the chan- RETURN YOU to your home with our compliments. 2. Wood and steel STEVEN DE%%I; ICE CREAM curtain, scrutinizing us. From time | ceries and the coffee houses of thej WATCH THIS SPACE—Your Name May Appear! it , f 1 to time he would run to the tele- | near East and that is a qu n 1} g . APp 8. “Ivanhon, Py B Walter Boott. LADIES’—MISSES’ 1|1 » daily habit—ask for it by nam: phone evidently to notify his head-| came to Europe to try to answer quarters about our party. Aside fromg Talking about it I drove back to| this, there was almost no movement | Adrianople, drove back over an age- | on the frontier, The sturdy walls, old blood-soaked battlefield now Chrysler Marine Enginer jerced witk e slots, 1ook Jlanted in barley by oxen and J R e ?)‘:;d\‘fii‘lt‘vl:jDt“:’:t‘“d:: :ml‘;.,‘ o battiefiold lgg | across The Charles W. Carter M ACHINE. SHOP barley fields and the long, long|to be one of the first points of at-1 4 Amateur radio aninlis w0, Marine Hard barricade of barbed wire extending | tack if war comes. LB Boen with 5 MOIIU&I'Y i e north. ! b ra P toas 10 e T Ch e | ‘ 2 Pourth and Prankiin Bt as. G. Warner Co. o e (NEEDFORMEMBERS |11 - g : srazed | % b ol | et ol v e st | AMER, LEGION IS | £ e ™ ELESS AR LENES HOME GROCERY | ° the difference between Communism | STRESSED VAN HORN % DAILY Tnlps JUNEAU TO K“CHIKA“ c asl GI"S Hen's Wear or Democracy, between Russianized v - Phones 146 and 342 Fulgarls or Mutkey 1. whiah, the via Pelersburg and Wrangell 4 Truman §octrme is supplyintz. aims Speaking to Legionnaires and \ ‘ . 3. Afix 6 Parent With connections to Craig, Klawock and Hydaburg Home Liquor Store—Tel. 690 | FOR RESERVATIONS PHONE 612 green on either side. Vice-Commander John V n Horn| 53 Nod 2. Uncle: dial. nickname 10 Units of force “Sometimes,” remarked Captain|emphasized the need for renewed 3 ‘ 0 d . Highway To Banish nday’ Seckin, “Sheep or buffalo get un-| efforts toward increased member- IAH'W]-= B Hiue Mo der the wire and cross to the Bul-| ship goals. He commended Juneau e e To give you more freedom garian side and the Communists|Post No. 4 on its increase in mem- TR : from work — TRY shoot them. Owr farmers get no! bership during the last month, threads OldESi Bank m AIHSka Indefinite amount molished ootlike part Aeriform fluid Hostel chance to herd them back.” Some-| Van Horn also pointed out that times, also, I learned, Bulgarian po- | veterans of the two world v\xu'.\l litical prisoners sneak through the|are the largest single group in barbed wire at night to give them-| America with one thing in common- selves up to Turkish authorities. | the privilege of having served our ‘This happens at the rate of two or| country in time of war. “Now it is three times per month and they! our duty to serve on the home tell a story of harassment and po- | front to keep our nation strong and litical suppression in what once was | alert to the dangers it faces on a relatively Democratic country. |every side. We can do this by com- . Alaska Laundry 1891—0ver Half a Cenlury of Banking—1951 CLOTHES NUNN-BUSH SHOES “The B. M. Behrends || ol Ve Goine Bank FRED HENNING Complete Outfitter for Men H. S. GRAVES The Clothing Man LEVIS OVERALLS for Boys ndebted vy on words tor' one was just six feet|C man down from the watch-|bining our individual efforts in i) moved closer to the Iron|the American Legion,” he said. Van 5 n‘“f.“,,‘:,’,rl'n:‘ sufety Deple‘t '8 the second Turkish build-| Horn is Department Membership pattern SHAFTER' BLACKWELL’S Boxes for Rent SANITARY MEAT CABINET SHOP 4. The ohm. READY-TO-WEAR - 5. Very loud. ¢ 8 d Street Near Taird Juneau Dall'les, Inc. e —————————————————————————————— seperating the two| A pinochle party followed the v ; . FOR BETTER MEATS. i brief business meeting. Harold Zen- Meadow, . 117 Main St. Phone TN Stat ¢ » On rare jons an officlal with{ger and his wife, Mildred, took S aboh ) KR COMMERCIAL SAVINGS 18—PHONES—49 High Quality Cabinet Werk ! a properly visaed passport is per-!both prizes for high scores. The Prenosliicn; N ¥rod Dalivery for Home, Office er Stere mitted to pass thro this gate and | ladies served cake and coffee. AP Newsfeatures 3-1 ;i | | e ———