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THY DAILY ALASKA I'MPIRE—-JUNEAU, ALASKA FRIDAY, JULY 27, 1951 ‘p-mf:""mw""‘mj] w MOUNT -‘UN';Q;J LODGE . 147 § 20 YEARS AGO I saeras 4 ealher a' St 8 tech wabi s PAGE FOUR e work will be started on the Ward Cove site before Daily Alaska Empire - | If patience is a necessary ingredient of genius, by il shhed v evening except Sunday. by the Publi; rlx‘ ¢ except Sunday. b . In Scottish Rite Temple COMPANY his firm belief in the eventual establishment of a pulp on e reau Alask ] 2 Ao gerild T President | industry in Alaska, Mr. Heintzleman has proved his . i ;b ...j AI k H ‘b;glnmng o 7:30 p. : : - " Vice-president ; R as a 0“" s m. A. Chipperfild, enius. e TLY 2 y g JULY 27, 1931 H Worshipful Maste: ECMER A. FRIEND -7 Managing Editor o A less patient man would have given up the pro- . % H o, k. W TS bk el ion 8o i . 3lanus has Skagway where he secured a | JAMES W. Weather conditions and temper- LEIVERS, " Secretary, atures at various Alaska points Entefed in the Post Office in Juneau as Second Class’ Matver J » g & Jitorhi SUBSCRIPTION RATES ject twenty years ago when plans of California in. ntract for redrigerator equipment to be installed in the new Catholic Delivered by carrier in Juneau and Douglas for er month; g B Argh o i “ix months. $0.00; onc sear, §17.5 terests, ready to build newsprint mills in Juneau Jol there. T.2¢ contract was made with the Rev. G. E. Gallant. The % also on the Pacific Coast. 4:30 3y mail, postage paid. at the following rates g alize b8 ¥ 5 drhon 4 cific Coast, at 4: s L e ot et Gwsion, WD 0 Lo EcIBUEE AR 8 Fesull 0 R WORHL e Guy Gaudett ( foundation for t¥ie school has been completed and the contract calls for |am, 120th Meridian Time, and B P 0_ ELKS one month. in advance, $1.50. It has been Mr. Heintzleman's contentions that, i leomistat of the building by November 1 Jéas 3 Bibscribass WLl cobfer s & if they Wil promptly n NG Mrs, Ray H. Stevens o | completion of . released by the Weather Bureau| Meeting Second and Fourth Wed- when the world economic situation was right for the i are as follows: Arlene Hatch bk nesdays at 8 P.M. Visiting broth- the Business Office of any failure egularity in the delivery dévelopment of pulp mills in' Alaska, they would come. Svend Christinsen Mr. and Mrs. Elton Engstrom left on the Alameda this morning|Anchorage ... 56—Cloudy | ers welcome. of their papers. Telephones: News Office, 602; Business Office, 374, : ok SRR ThrougHout the years he Has watched the combina- Patricia Connor angell for a two weeks' visit with Mr. Engstrom, Sr. lecuc Island - 56—Cloudy g P A 50—Cloudy iST, Exaxited Ruler. Jack Turoff y LA % @ the local mews puplished Mrs. Howard Dilg thel - 47—Rain | W- H. BIGGS, Secretary. wise ed in this paper and also the locw s puplic A P Mrs. H. C. Drier Gi o ames' 1. Prea-]o . i \}L"“f‘rvdmn n t TRDST. Bik been selling Alaska’s forests which can supply a Mrs. Richard Peter L. M. Carrigan, Mrs. H. C. Drierer of Juneau and James L. Free-|Cordova . . 50—Fog 22 n of Chichagof are registered at the Gastineau Hotel. At the Dawson .. 51—Cloudy | g p NTATIVES laska Newss 1411 | million tons of pulp and paper a year in perpetuity. Mrs. Rose Jermain & 2dmonto 58 e TIVNS o Aaaer SR T $Hs - eginning Karen Sue Werner Alaskan: W. Strong, Tulsequah; Patrick Calerez, Tenakee; John Price, {Edmonton ... 58—Cloudy 00Se Lodge No. 700 Pourth Avenue Bidg And the Ketchikan mill is: just A Bunter: Péter O n - B Fairkanks 50—Fo. = e . R . * Charles r'ns hane: R. Pekovich, Funter; Peter Carovich, Frank Morgan, H. Rumberg, R X —=¥og | arles Stearns T ¢ g AR = : 58—Clear | Rex:‘l‘:;lx:cunp Every Friday Mr. Heintzleman predicts. Discussions are already p A under way for the construction of a newsprint plant b Al Lo (100 uneau. :\f the Zyndg¢: Mr. and Droznich, Juneau. Havre 55-_Otear | ke in Juneau. — Juneau Airport . 50—Cloudy | That we hope to see next. J. J. Fargher, who' went south several weeks ago as delegate to a | Kodiak il 51—Drizzle | sffl”emry— T!usiees p!an onic gathering and to give several cities of the Pacific Northwest the | Kotzebue ... 45—Cloudy WALTER R. HEFRMANSEN over, arrived home on the Princess Charlotte. McGrata 52—Rain - ASSOCIATED PRES e Assoc DR O A P itie to-the use for | tion Of situations which would bring about that eco- republication ¢ news dispatches credited o't or Mot pther- | nomic need — and every step of the way, he has Deceptive Surplus Nome . 40—Ragin . ( i i T L 030 L A et se— TS [ Northway 46—Clou New w“‘g {4 Mrs, B . B alBiEs fphlo Has been isIHg: ieraliti e 1. F MBS | st iy R V.F. W. In a time of inflationary trends a well-ordered Petershurg governmert should show a budget surplus. That is H r oar for severad weeks, lesSt today for her home in Seal Portland r tthe best counter-inflationary device in the book. On Ioneers ome i —_— Prinee \George ) St e 3 Taku Pns‘ “o‘ 5559 “I4his basis, it is gratifying to find that the Federal i or et | The Motorship Norcol came and went yesterday afternoon. She | Seatile e 2| Meeting every Thursday in Government closed the fiscal year 1951 with the second [”fl&“'{‘:nsm‘r: HDO“X:;(‘ of m‘(‘ % |hrought from Seattle a ezpacity cargo consisting of general freight Sitka ... wdy | the C.ILO. Hall at 8:00 p.m. 4 £ are accep- | o ers boarding her for the south were: Denis McLaughlin for|WVhitenorse .. Cloudy ted by the next legislature, the| * 2 K Yakutat ... 53—Rain Showers home may have a Hew. three-story | Wrangell and Mrs. Mc‘Gee atd Richard MoGes 5 @eatie. e A gaamierms comam e = operations are counted in, the real surplus (for anti- | wing ands Sitka will have hospital S | 1 % T inflation purposes) comes to $7% billion Weather: High 54; Low 50; Showers. i Bmwmes llqu‘" S,O’e { AT LONG LAST ... space. - Restauranis, Bars || L e rom On their face, these figures may be comforting.| Henry Roderi; chairman, 1ml But the story is not nearly as pleasant as it first | other mémbers of the hoard, T. L.| e 3 . is the announcement by B. Frank Heintzlethan, re- | appears Ke ‘f‘“h“,”i_““‘"““ and 4t gil- . . E I- h by } leefl p"(e Rehe! P. 0. Box 2508 gional forester, that the contract between the Ketchi- | taken from an expandéd’ batidnal income, not by ‘S“““{;“f(f‘_ :‘“;“(ji"v"ff““:,‘"-?( ; Dally I_essons n ng IS W. L. GORDON & e oeny wat. thg Fotiet, Setyiea | cconomies i pulio’ digendifure. \Spenging i Jgit | L0r poier AL EiFEEEERn St 'lin.OPS Amendment = was signed Thursday and construction on fhe $40,= $4,400 million higher than in the preceding fiscal p;m“" Y - L 000,000 plant is expected to start this fall. et , Sitka has 860,000 ear-marked from WORDS OFTEN MISUSEID: Do not say, “Bob is equally as handsome | Ay amendment to regulations ! Even more serious is the faet that this mislead- | sajes tax funds toward construction |as his brother.” Omit equally. regarding, prices in Alaska rest- ing surplus comes from the purely temporary Iag of lof a city hospital. | OFTEN MISPRONOUNCED: Digestion. ~Pronounce the first i as in faurants, bars and taverns has Room 3, Valentine Building defense expenditure. It takes many months, after{ Trustees are planning to ask the[gid, not as in die. reen set up by the Office of Price JUNEAU, ALASKA a ‘b\u]dfllp of military power is determined upon, to[legislature to appropriate funds for OFTEN MISSPELLED: Numskull; not numbskull Stakilization, it was nnnounced| P. C. Box 642 Telephone 919 g ] " | spell oui specitications, take bids, place orders and {a nhew wing, one floor of which SYNONYMS: Consent (noun), permit, permission, liberty, license.{t°day by Fred G. Hanford, dif-jeeeeeeo— e States Forest Service in Alaska has talked to business | cor ooy otion under way. The big increase in de. | Would accommodate women ploncers. ) "5 oo "o rization oo men, to bankers, pnper.111;111||f:nft|xrcx's :\.nd.n‘em‘pa‘per | fense spending, consequently, is still ahead of us. It The second floor would be a l{ws o WORD S'I:UDY: o, Wond theke times and 1t 18 OB " L6t.us 10~ oy The flr‘l:len(.in?(!nl, kno_wn as|( T - publishers about Alaska's forests and their resources. probably will reach #ts peak by autumn. jtal to take care of a great number 'CPR 11,” provides an adjustment rease our vocabulary by ‘mastering one word each day. Toda word : | proe A A ind | ' n ceme! rsday - tha i . of pio; 2lescents, now bein: e our vocabul ¥ 3 ) Y proceedure for operators who find; . Heintzleman's ciunouncement Thursday that. Co- This means our surplus of $3': billion will give ! private hospitals | VERIFTABLE; capable of being proved to be true. “We want verifiable | “their food t per dollar of fumbia Lumber Crompany's $800,000 plywood plant|way to a deficit very much larger in fiscal 1952, | \hrouzout th itory. facts.™ sales ration” for their base period pianed for Juieau would get underway immediately | unless we load on much higher taxes or h non-| The plan is to allow tt 0 is not representative of their (,1,.[ was. good news, as was the approval of cnlargement | essential expenditure, or both. In other w reserve about ten beds in the e o X erations subsequent to their base| and new construction for the Columbia Lumber Com- |js only a modicum of comfort to be taken he | pital for of its 1 £ s M 0 D E RN E-I- I OU ET-I-r by ;“, iod and prior to April 1 ”The Hexau Store” ! largest budget surplus in its history. The forms: iaRY .97 195 X | Friday, July 27, 1951 surplus came to about $3': billion. If social security | o e Biggest news Alaskans have heard in many years | The surblus was achieved by higher taxes, | s 2 J. A. Durgin Company, Inc. Accounting Auditing Tax Work For almost thirty years, Mr. Heintzleman has e trying to sell manufacturers of pulp and news< urnt on Alaska as a source of timber supply. Year after year, the patient head of the United —EMPIRE WANT ADS PAY— pany mill at Sitka. fact that the government has been operatin: would pay ionate share L p o “In event such establishments 5 . Juneau and Sitka can thank Mr. Heintzleman and | black for a change. The important fact is the upward | in upkeer intenance of the ROBERTA LEE {[have made changes in the type Your Reliable Pharmacists Columbia Lumber Company’s Tom. Morgan for | ) ding, whi arries : ¢ ! hospital. SIS "2 A IEATET L C S B s of service or the manner of op- i ::\‘: increased industry v,hesep op)c‘ralions will zrov:de 1trend iy I '-f‘n,nn,., g o e Hireat ol Tl“,u third floor would provid 2 3 % 5 cration, said Hanford,” or have| BUTLER-MAURO E s -1a dangerously large deficit unless Congress actsf =~ "¢ " qded men inmates Q. If a girl secretary is seated in her employer's office taking dic-|instituted more efficient methods DRUG CO. And they are not small businesses. The plywood plant | swiftly and firmly. eyt bedlise £ pthin's can | tation when s wie enters the office, should she rise? of controlling their food handling, ak will employ 120 men in Juneau and half as meny in| Still higher taxes already are assured, some 10 |y. qone until the next le . A. Yes; and she should leave the office if she thinks the wife {they may apply to the Office of the woods—and this on a year around basis. take effect in the fall, some already operative. That | s> Roden said, “but in thejwishes to talk privately with her husband, unless she is requested to!Price Stabilization for permission A]ask M i S 1 o But overshadowing anything that has happened | is the simpler The hard one, and the more | meantime the trustees have come to} remai to use a different base period, a Music l!pll Y to industry in Alaska since the development days Of | important one, is to cut back non-essential outlays under ling on getting Q. When attending the theater, and a woman in front of you is the big miping companies is the word that the $40,- | including military as well as nonmilitary items that|mn t drawing up a €om=gwoqrine a hat that obscures your vision, what should you do? 000,000 necessary to build the plant is available and | are no really essential ) to present to it. A. Ask her quietly and politely if she will remove her hat. If she {which reflects a food-cost ratiof Arthur M. Uggen, Manager more representative of their cur-| Pianos—Musical Instruments lrent operations.” i and Supplies it Application for permission to REAR T S o % refuses, attract the atttntion of an usher to her hat. u C'i different base period may Phone 206 Second and Seward i that he hadit o kept, is, ghgre- |3, G. I wife, 1 just want a,good | WEETING POSTPONED Should the wedding rehearsals be held seyeral d for o the |be sub anlpre "hG w‘wfl"on labouts a% sebret. " R N e o s 5 8809 | ,UE TO DERBY ; ‘? STy e e e e several days prior to the bcdsmumted to him, = Hauford | Sherman’s lawy s Wald: | wite 18 gblig it Ta s {61k Hea i £ ik dind i MC"Y'GO'RN"M 1 Vs lawyer, Louis Wald- going to Japan to join her| pue to July 28 beinf one of the A. No: it should be held the day or evening before the wedding. —— Card Beverage Co. | man, then annoy | ! an, a unced that his 8 and I, a lieutenant's|g Vor! 3 & i . : % e ant’s | Golden North Salmon Derby. days, (Continued from Page One) client was ready to make a cox | wife, capnot: . . . I also under~| gie!rsgular-meeting;of theliMen: | frsmsrsnsoresmserarsenerererrreersentaresireenas 4-“ (Il.lb e mg I olesale 805 10th Bt. plete statement. Waldman ex- !stand that automobiles and pets}genhall 4-H Club for boys has been % ) [ Secretary of Interior' continger, | PIAIned blandly that Sherman felt jare being shipped to Japan, though | poctnoned one week. LOOK d LEA R N by The Auke Bay Senior 4-H Club[{ PHONE 216-DAY or NIGHT Hhd & 100000-bartel ‘g day pro- he had been wronged by O'Dwyer. |there isn't room for dependents. They will meet August 4 at 2 P. a n A. C. GORDON ]hrkl its first meeting of the month ! for MIXERS or SODA POP duction in the Rocky Mountains pmh‘llig‘g”m‘ i Sherman also e Answer: It is true that Gen.|M. at the home of Mrs. Joe Kend-| o Auly M, : | s awaiting completing of the hat his garment busin-'Matt Ridgway's wife and Gen. O.jler | Miss Hallene Price was present. | ; ss had suffered financially fr ! J ; i SR i Vice-pregident Carolpie Dewoe Platte pipeline. One hope, how- o ncially from P. Weyland's family have beer oy Banes 1. Why does England in approximately the same latitude as Labra- ice-prepidant Ca o ever, was more oil from Mexico, :ffd ”;fw:l’fd“p“b“_m-‘“ The lawyer |admitted to Japan, though MAKING VISIT TO ¢ dor enjoy a so much milder climate? Jcalled the meeting to. order ‘;“f' The Alaskan Hotel . and ‘that was why he was flying | . hen requested a “few |other dependents have been barr- |SON AND FAMILY 2. How is the word “Mister” cxpressed in French, German and [yr, “Tery ™ot of ithp time jasking Newly Renovated Rooms v i Miss Price questions we had been ) at Reasonable Rates to Mexico, Chapman cxplained. | e {0 Prepare a “detalled led since July 14, 1950. It is also . Spanish? Ban on Ges Fuinaces ! e jtrue that automobiles and pets To visit her son and family, the (i o it i ';:uzzled about. For the_ demo_n-l So far, however, no statement are still shipped to Japan. This{John Duhns of Juneau, Mus. Al- 3. How many standard cups of granulated sugar are there in one |stration part of the meeting, Miss| PHONE SINGLE O «Na S5 — duscry ha 3 overet):xpr:;d;a anghe u‘;:_::;t_” dl;:; has been submitted. column could not find the e: ice E. Dunn arrived here Monday | pound? y : Price showed us how to do a dem- | not have the pipe to bring gas wo| This column tries to investigate [number of pets, but 544 automo-|via Pan American plane 4. With what sport is Wimbledon associated? onstration. all its customers. An order ”_Pmd answer the many G. I. gripes |biles have been shipped since de This is Mrs. Dunn’s second trip 5. What international banking house has a name which means We received some pcoklecs on THOMAS HARDWARE that pour in from military camps|pendents werc banned for lack of |to Juneau. She was here for aldped shield"? color and demonstrations which and FURNITURE CO. hibiting further installation of | | i opts,. Tha natural-gas home-heating units and bases around the world. Here | transportation. month last summer from her home ANSWERS: will help us on our projects. The, PHONE 555 meeting was closed by President o : »\:_”‘.e sow::> reecnt gripes from the < i . |in Huntington, West Virginia, aad i o v g :mmf;i,m::;",: el Bl oden |G, 1 mailpag: Ko m('l-"Tt}mL?xco?;!:; l}n‘ermB:-:s placs ToEBE e tor the{*mext) ol TRe-gU stxesi BERES & large hody of warm water to England’s |7, Barcus, Mrs. Ellis served re- PAINTS ons " P = > B o KomlE shores, while the Labrador current flows from the North Polar regions. {¢rechments. Builders’ and Shelf | serious shortage in case next| A Sefgeant With the Eighth Ar-|overflowing with cases® of pto- tizee weeks. ¢ 2. M . Herr and Senor % ] ! winter has even two weeks of sub-|MY in Korea: “I read that Ger maine poisoning recently. It's a| Dunn is dn attorney with the . Monsieur, Herr a; 4 Our next meeting will be held at HARDWARE Paria T whalhar. Defdbse m_’al] Mark Clark thinks American |real scandal, and T hope you will |1 f;g"m h"f Faulkner, Banfield f;- TT"VO-_ v Elgiinz‘uc;dai,v n}z:gu;icnmsewe e tories, in this case, would come |enlisted men are spoiled with lux- | investigate.” ,ari Boochever. o Sl b i o g g urles; 11 “afgdne W s Lo prisd At neglNGE. 01 TR . 5. The Rothschilds. freshments. The demonstrations Rsemmgton Typewriters Coal—There is plenty of coal!Man’s army, it’s the brass hats, |poisoning, but a diarrhea epidem- | CARD OF THANKS = = will be given by Peggy‘ande-s OLD and SERVICED by in the ground for both domestic| Why don't you investigate how |ic that swept Lackland Air Base. e guaard and Rose Lee Jekill and west European rem.mmneu[”:l;‘iln}' personal servants some of 'The diarrhea was caused by a| We wish to thark everyone for Bonnie Jo Lynch, Repmtcr.l J' B. Blll'fnl'(l co. but a big bottleneck is gondola the top brass have?’ virus which got into a leafy veg- |their kindness and sympathy dur- 2 > . el -y coal cars. Chapman estimated | Answer: Gen. Mark Clark, chief | etable as a result of faulty drain- | ing the loss of our her, 'G. A. There 1S no Sllbshillie fOI‘NEWS'Oapel' AdVEI’ilSlng.' —EMPIRE WANT ADS PAY— i m;.gx:;mmu:# o there must be an increase of 150,-|Of the army's Field Forces, has|age. A total 6f 590 cases were re- | BaJdwin; Mr. Ernest Ehler and 5 000 such railroad cars next year. four enlisted men assigned tohim ported, some hospitalized for | the Loyal Order of Moose in their . Again, steel is involved. |as personal servants—one driver, |three and four days. The Air|assistance.in our hour of need. STEVENSQ FORD AGENCY ‘=#-% Aluminum—Secretary Chnpmxm:‘:m rou; and two house orderlies. | Force is fixing the drainage, so Mr. and Mrs. Claud E. Baldwin| — (Authorized Dealers) estimated that we will need a Army chief of staff General Col- (it should not happen again. |and family; X ’ step-up of nearly 1,000,000 tons a‘hm has six servants—two drivers, | Mr. and Mrs. Georze Larsson J T Nlc Ifi‘;:]ilgs T{)nilgwsl‘slfii GREASES — GAS — OIL land family. - . T. NICHOLSON wear ura ||| Junean Motor Co. year. He has been negotiating for |One cook and three orderlies. Air! —EMPIRE WANT ADS PAY— six months to bring smaller com- |Force Chief of Staff General Van Seward Street i s ceak | denberg has r—two “driverd. 4 3 i e major pro-| s andymen. But the EMPIRE is invited to be our guest THIS EVENING e e s s wwill Crossword Puzzle §3 ! / . MAKE R e s i b I A o}lfixfif;“:]\ };im:(; : Present this coupon to the box office of the The Charles w. Carier JUNEAU DAIRIES in the Near East, including oil |tomatically gets two drivers, two ACROSS Famed 7] 5 cAPlTOL THEATRE Mofluary DELICIOUS ICE CREAM troubles in Iran, the assassination |Chefs, two ‘orderlies, one super- . Malt beverage Capuchin of King Abdullah in Trans-Jor- |Visor and a boat crew of six to do Reprove i Sta. a dally habit—ask for it by name I ¢ 4 | Type of lettuce 33 Compass polnt [A[P] . , PFourth and Franklin dan, and riots in Egypt are so handy jobs around the house—| .o 1P 34, Two-wheeled and receive TWO TICKETS to see: . HONE 136 o important to the U. S. A. {total 13. These enlisted servants| Lo wopost vehicles: ¥ Juneau Dalnes, Inc. 4 « [ae sl able bodied, and qualified| 1} Chcmcat e 33 Asste” " Jchnny One-Eye” and “Golden Gloves Story” Mizsing Witness for more important fighting as- ender finial g;'l'hehx. 11§eason Irving Shelman';lgnments than walting "on the| 18 T4 3 S Federal Tax—12¢ Paid by the Theatre I:asl'ers Hen's Wear HUME GROCERY ve imse! up and agreed to brass. Profes rtswear testify before Lge Senm:’ Orime | Mri. Blaatis Johnson, Washing- xm.‘ o i e Phene ld—YELLflW CAB CU.—Pllone 22 sn‘t:fir:?; :!Tllory Hats Phones 146 and 342 committee is that he is sore at ton, D. C.: #I am writing you in hold i Solution of Yesterday's Puzzl i J Arrow Shirts erwear his former friend, ex-mayor O'-|behalt of my son, Private John L | 2 : Siamese coln v aud an nsured cab WILL CALL FOR YOU and 7ot oo Home Liguor Store—Tel. 699 Dwyer of New York City, nowdJohnson of Fort Meade, Maryland, | 25. Japanese herb 51 sm;j;,k"’"nd 1 canau RETURN YOU to your heme with our compliments. Sl Tarsnse American Meat — Phone 38 Ambassador to Mexico. Sherman He had an automobile accident in | 2 > uyif Noted tbm 52, Unoccupled WATCH THIS SPACE—Your Name May Appear! is the long-missing witness alleged | Fairfax, Virginia, and has been . Ins . Greek letter 63, Stain ritica to be the link between O'Dwyer Dut in jail because he didn’'t have v e i - e S ish and racketeer Frankie Costello.'a -dfiver’s” permit.. Now the army // . Frigi $ B o T A “ Y ¥ i B.nIHSh Hine Mnnd.y" In fact, FBI Chief J. Edga: |has listed him as AWOL, and will / / ] 4 g . "500" To give you more freedom _Hoover testified that Sherman is ot let me have his pay. T am un- d Conscripte Oldest Bank in Alaska from work — TRY ~ “gne of the most prominent crim- | der doctor’s care.” ... ... jrlad v CL 0 TH E S Alask L asKa aundry e 1 o | e Py s i Bl R 1891—0ver Half a Century of Banking—1951 |{| ooy pusn smoss . in a difficult squeeze be- the mayoralty election in 1945. tween the police and the army. | - Foirs of hetle STETSON HATS A Skin: disease After offering through his at-|He was confined to the Fairfax h torney to testify, Sherman final-|county jail for 70 days f reck- e Th B M B h d i i s T, et T abina st | s e o e | ITE T A T eB.M.Behrends Quality Work Clothing Eh SC-I (EEA‘LE_‘? doors with the most sading | to release him to the army until 7 32 T8 gty O e e o e him e S e | 111 s || Bank FRED HENNING LEVI'S OVERALLS Hampshire's Bible-quoting Sen |the army has placed him on the fl %a. -.'//// " Salt Complete Outfitter for Men : Charles Tobey. Here’s what hap- | AWOL list and cut off his pay. | %/% Cusiadiag Saf & B . 3 Communf®y t ne 0s.t SHAFFER'S siobey demanded curtly why |to get out of jail, ‘and the longer “-‘“. . W, e aie y p : BLACKWELL’S rman had been hiding out|hé stays in, the move penalties he g..{é////%g-/ - Dk rana BRoxes f"r Rent mITAnY MEAT CABINET SHOP % from a Senate subpoena. With ua |faces for being AWOL. This col- or being This col FOR BETTER MEATS 117 Main St. Phone T72 pened at that dramatic meeting: | So the boy can't draw any money shrug, Sherman explained that imn_has asked the army to look H had been staying at the into the ‘matter and be more hu- . ,,\ugl(-“ldevoul COMMERCI AL s AVINGS 13—PHONES—49 High Quality Cabinet Work Hotel in Miami Beach. He admit- | man h tor n Home, Office or Store ted reading that the committee | Mrs. W. T. King, Jr, Mobile, Ar;‘!olynovro-, Free Delivery Pedal diglt was looking for him, but insistc 1.: “This is a gripe letter from