The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, August 1, 1951, Page 4

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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE—JUNEAU, ALASKA WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 1, 1951, PAGE FOUR | . i a column of news from all over the Tewitory. News| beas |1 ] MOUNT JUNEAU LODGE NO. 147 D(lll Al(l ka E'n )We about ‘people he knows — and you know. And we | —_— E E 'pd from z ea er a famd:‘yDo:n;;)ol':::Ph ! | Pu b“(md every évening except Sunday ,\ the 1375 think yow'll'be turning to Eimer’s column as eagerly as | ; \;‘ I THE EMPIRE ’l In Scottish Rite Temple i By Mkka s | i i1 ' beginniag at 730 p. m. i e el v 1o oo | e S AlaskaPoinfs ==t S OROTHY ;}}S\{ll)wuq ¢ N e DON'T TRY TO FOO y | ! AUGUST 1, 1931 Worshipful M: = e PO T RS P Y O L . G | 1 The marriage of Alax Holden, supervisor of the Pacific Internatiohal Weath Akt At JAMES W, mvms Secretary. ] Entered in the fys SOhs Rl o 2 A ol Prospective travelers to foreign shores who on : Pl : . with headquarters at Fairbanks, and Miss Lorraine Fagan, of aturzz :: c‘?:rinu:nsfl:ska :2:;1; Delivered by ca r\":n:,'.'.‘f.:.mfl."m:":.:“\“:I',\ \l;v:r.‘.\ul 5 per mol ‘ltheir return to this country must pass through !lm‘ % AUGUST 1 v was revealed by the couple today. The ceremony took place on | giso on ERA Bhaitts Obset. ot 4130 By mail, po at § U.S. Customs might profit from the advice implicit in | & Cliff Daigler $ The newlyweds sailed for the north today on the steamer|am., 120h Meridian Time, and| B P. 0‘ ELKS O year, in adv ce e »v whicl AT rece: ; » New 4 o » o " one ;?én?e..bm advance. §1.50 sy | feature story which appeared nlcm\bl in “H“—?f“ i Wellman Hothrogk % released by the Weather Bureau| Meeting Second and Fourth Wed- = | g Sutmcibpey will conter & the delivers | York Times. The advice—or, rat T z |o Jok. B¥oun . — — i B b | nesdays at 8 P.M. Visiting broth- of telr papers. g e A8 is, don't uy fo smuggle. You are almost certain 10| o Agnes Barournes ° L L. Faulkner left this afternoon on the steamer Dorothy Alexander | Anchorage .. 50—Cloudy | ers welcome, Telephores: News Office. 602 Business Office, 37 S o 5 ¢ i, -eturn | Annette Island 54—Partly Cloudy _— Py = be caugh [ . George Hall ©/for Wrangell on a combined business and pleasure trip and will return Hariow i ondin LE ROY WEST, Exaxlted Ruler. MEMBER OF ASSO : The e § t. after 3 seks’ v 'y : 5 4 arrow .. b — ’ 3 "t The Assoctated Press is exclusively The story points out that, fter their weeks'l e o o @ o © ‘e o e ¢ °|ryesday on the Admiral Rogers. Betbal’ . do—cloud§ W. H. BIGGS, Secretary. i republication of all news dispatches ¢ course in a special school, customs i tors have | . b g Y i wise credited in this paper and also d et all the smiiaeiing : devices: 50 ! R . |Cordova - 48—Rain hereln. i been taught to. detect a 1e smuggling devic ‘Senahf En Slfom H A son was born to Mrs. A. E. Smith last night at St. Ann's|pawson . . 47—Partly Cloudy ’ TNATIONAL REPRESENTATIVES — Alasks Newspapers, U1l |far devised, They are on 19 everyinte M”’"]”'"“! g | Fospital. Edmonton ... 52—Partly Cloudy || Moose Lodge No. 700 Fourth Avenue Bl ttle, Wash hat, ir training inexplicably turns them into living H Fairbanks 48—Partly Cloudy —— - R T " H ¢ % .7 || Regular Meetin, lie detectors. with the additional gift of second sight Rem"ns ".om Fam'ly The B 0. & Perdohiens, atcon v ter Anna Mae, |Haines ik 54—Rain | G‘:vernor— gs Every Friday s aal s AL Reunion in w,a“ge" returned today on the Dorothy Alexander after three weeks in Skagway. |HaVTe ... O1—Parlly Cloudy LOREN CARD ca ] [ . Bl ain | Customs officials work on the theory that 95 per ; ) —— i T e maimi| Secretary— | cent of the people who pass through their hands ¢ :\Hv{ z\lt(’.numu a reunion ‘ To assume his duties as forest r Wokibis Py WALTER R. HRRMANSEN | nonest. Their chife interest is in the profes :_j’:'; ‘I_L“A(;“‘J“J',’l‘ F"x:‘"’?t‘?"’? - jheer on the UL S. Foress Service vessel Ranger VII from Sitka. McGrath 40— Clear | S———— | smugglers who are trying to get through them with I"‘”" oo 'l‘.]"('m 'E':‘N‘(‘f'“ el ick will move here later, after a vis e States. Nome e 45— Drizz]e | S—————————— | ) e jewels or contraband drugs. [ S © T s 2 s Northway 51—Cloudy |really important stuff like jewe to Juneau Monday. ¥ . 3 b ‘f\un. urs and other small fly who try to hide a few Mesting of the “r'n 1 t thousand pounds of salmon were unloaded in Juneau today |Petersburg 53—Cloudy i eeting o i, Elton | " 55 Partly harmless. things in order to avoid paying a little duty, Aasiphrof SL,‘,\‘JI'(,”L:"I nd all of it was bought by the Juneau Cold Storage Company for I‘:‘f}’lgli"“(}eux_ e P“'”gfig’;‘g Tal!l Post No. 5559 ‘(hvy like to catch just for the fun of it and for the sw of WH el WaE the freezing. Boats, captains and heilings were: T-3380, John Pademeister, S:’alll(‘ ge - 53_Partly Cloudy Meet*ng every Thuudny in | |sake of practice. The victim ends up with a tidy | time in three years they had 2,000 pounds; Sadie, James Young, 3,000; Emma, Thomas Ness, 3,000 Bl ) ... 57—Cloudy | the C.LO. Hall at 8: 90 P-m. { ‘mw to pay and a bright red face. So it really doesn't p,(wl at the pioneer Engstrom home TR A Whitehorse 51 Partly Cloudy £ 7 '3 ay to try to fool the boys in Wrangell with their father July was decidedly cooler and wetter than average, with about 50| vakutat - 51—Rain 4 Wednesday, August 1, 1951 jpay to tr e 4 y ge, —————— { i = e Adolph "l“*\““’“v Sr., first we 1t more rainy days than usual, R, C. Mize of the U. S. Weather —_ B o l' —_— to Wrangell in 1894 as an emplovee § b : ] I 1, announced. Mean temperature of the month was 55.1 degrees i rownles I uo’ ELMER FRIEND ! 0ld Editorial “We e o ek, ke ASROC" 11 ox 20 below the normal ot 1 yers. There were tve clear anys. uree | |k May Get . quor Store —_— = badk to. Wrangell dn 1300 to mokc | With 100 per cent sunshine, four partly cloudy and 22: cloudy days. Phone 103 139 So. Franklin For as long as most of us can remember, Eimer (The Sanford Herald, Sanford, N.C.) his pécospent Beme: #e: has ot — Mllhons for i P. O. Box 2508 Friend has been at his desk in the Empire news- Some readers have wondered why an editor uses|peen Outside since. Weather: High, 64; low, 54; cloudy. room. ‘ {the word “we” in writing an editorial. The elder ngstrom - op ¢ p bII w rks H [ pi : To most of us, Elmer and the Empire are syn- Close to 100 years ago the following explanation gc‘xl.me l{x(x«l.\.\:l(‘:x.\c store u.lm { aET b ; U I 0 'm I—...l oriymous appeared in the Williamston Iowa Advocate for the|8€ll until 2 few years ago when 000 H H Yy rgin Company, Inec. In an association of more than 35 years with this '(l‘(xli(nn-tl ey retired. ‘The sons have been prom s al Y essons ln ng IS W. L. GORDON ! WASHINGTON, Aug. l.D-—W‘—- Accounting Auditing Tax Work “Abwspaper, Elmer has seen most of Juneaus busi- “A’ gauntry editor—is one who reads newspapers, | 2¢24 ;‘““‘“' g gmufim 3 | e i : C“'”l‘ r;\“ 1‘}{,‘,,i‘:‘jmf"gg‘l‘°;;,.(.,°fi“‘o‘,; Room 3, Vaientine Building . 5 i : ness, os Engstrom Brothers, —————— s S SO § (U ppropria grect i e S R reml:‘ ":Z selects miscellany, writes articles on all subjects, SetS |y, oo Hm(]‘(xlu(u'{el” (::-b i 9 i o : I T'(ll)ul.lf(l‘d appropriation for Al-| JUNEAU, ALASKA i days when many of Juneau's presemt merchan type, Teads proofs, folds 3 nd some times|company' are in Wrapgell and Jie u)r-tDsf)I_-"TEN :\.ISI_JSEP, Do not say, "ch don’t propose to inter-1 b 1. works' and $2,900,000| P. O, Box 642 Telephone 919 | carried Empire rouies;: And he remembers’ Welr | . jos them, runs errands, Works lens, talks 19 | neau, fere. e don’t INTEND, 0 | intepfenat for operation and maintenance Of | e oo s } wives before they Started putting up their halr. “And | ) " Gno call, patiently receives blame for a] Senator Engstrom. served in the OFTEN MISPRONOUNCED: Mirage. Pronounce mi-razh, I as in|roads in the Territory. his memories are, we thipk, pleasant, ones. | thousand things which never were and never can|last session of the Territorial legi A as I AH, accent sccond syllable. The Public Works figure is the |§ . ) Elmer came to Juneau and the Empire in January b dons lature as he was elected for OFTEN MISSPELLED: Prefix; one F. Suffix; two F's. same as approved by the House|{ —EMPIRE WANT ADS PAY— 1916 and, save for three years at Seward editing and | ™ . i itile money, has searce time and materials | four will be in the 1953 ses- YMS: Timely, well-timed, appropriate, suitable, seasonable, |but $1500,000 less than granted by managing the old Gateway, has been here ever ; the quiet of nature’s ] sion. the Senate. The House had voted it ot Tl el His wife, Mrs. Thelma Eng $2,600000 for roads; the Senate since. | sweet restorer, sleep, and esteems himself peculiarly | FHis wife, Mrs. Thelma ] ‘y‘" "97h{ WORD STUDY: “Use a word three times andit is yours” Let us (_;;’00'000 et i ¥4 And niow, after all these years, Elmer is TeUring. |y o ' pe i5 not assaulted and battered by some | 145 SeTVe i the Oltoral HOWSE: | eycqce our vocabulary by mastering one word each day. Toady's word: | £ ® i i R i ve | APP) B e rmer ange) a o ,Or maybe that ’]““‘ é‘l‘" “"m”“"m' bc(f[“:e W aee unprincipled demagogue. S B CONJECTURAL; pertaining to a surmise of ‘guéss. “It was a mere The Rexall Slore serious doubts that Elmer will ever retire. [ ’ sl a1 oniRite DoUGL Anyway, Elmer won't be at the city deck anymore. | “A man who does all this and much 1]n bnm —_— — L 4 " Your Reliable Pharmacists | ! s kit § 5 ¥ rded, you know must be a rather busy e He'll be taking it a little easier — spending more |here recorded, § h Y k M G'i % time with his grandchildren — spending ‘More time | animal; and as he performs the work of so nh\x\;\i‘ dankees Ma @ BU]DI;:;‘JRGMC%URO 1any fere persons, he nray justly be suppose . 8 at his beach home and, for the first time in a long | many different persons, ol PHOS MODERN ETIOU ETTE S { time, doing the things he wants to do | their representative, and to have an indisputable right, Ig =fait er 1] ! ROBERTA LEE Mrs. O'Neil ’ hod i en speaking of himself, to use the plural number, | i W v Elmer is going to keep his hand in, though. He when speaking " B T DL Mrs. William O'Neil is a Douglas ~ has agreed to do a weekly column for the Empire—|and to say ‘we' on all occa "”A”(i Pousl gl £ i.fll"s Bmwns | @ What do a man and woman do with their wraps when entering | visitor, visiting Ier mother and| Alaska MIISIC snpply TS R R TR h o a fashionable restaurant? friends here. Mrs. O'Neil is ‘th\s' Arthur M. Uggen, Manager 3 manufacture of “disposable dia- [nominate Evita had come from| NEW YORK, Aug. *'1-(f—The A. A man leaves his hat and coat in the coat room or checks them | {ormer Violet Lundell, and is BOW § pianoy_Musical Instruments Ihe washmq'on pers.” several labor unions and was|New Y. Journal-Ameriedif safd] oo T estaurant. A woman leaves her wrap in the|® resident of Anchorage, Al She | and Supplies M ané M Ltd, of Newark, N.J.|strictly something for the Peron he New York Yankee$ have 3¢ the entrance o PRBE s e Slfrtet i ¢ {hes jut completed a two-month's (| [ Me"y-fio-noufld —_aiked. for tax benefits on $494. |ista party convention to decide.|made a tentative agreement with|dressing room — or, if she prefers, she goes into the dining room and | i Vi ner sister at Seattle. hone 206 Second and Seward 000 in connection with an expan- Furthermore, they must realize|the St. Louis Browns for scquisi- (Sits down t the table as she is. She then merely throws the shoulders LA (Continued from Page One) Zion- for making chocolate candy.|that acceptance of such a postu- | tion of Ned Garver, ace righthander {of her wrap back of her, over the chair. | Breaks Arm = |1¢ argued that it ‘made candy for |lation would depend on his own|of the tail-end club. i Q. In the case of a wedding where the bride's father, the bride- | young Jimmy White fell out of a CaulBeverage Co. miakpiyegrati whicho e -hasit beety | the ' Broty: and woulkd inot beable jdecision ahout swn(?mg for! re- | ‘The' only thing that e’ catise’gtoom, His best' mafi and ushers will be renting formial attire, who'stands | free last Monday evening and broke Whal i Sk o spear-heading. to supply the demand without (1xul“1{'<ltfrll and that , hadn’t been | the deal to fall through i§failureithe expense of thes clothes? his arm. Jimmy is the 10-year-old lesale o 2. The lack of a hard-hitting, inew building. ‘“;‘r“’:" -‘“i Y {of the bosses to agree up6n the A. Each man rents his own clothes. son of Mr. and Mrs, Martin White. PHONE 216—DAY or NIGHT T 4 Bffeptive hikprnational -umindea. | Queker; Oats of Chattgnooga— e SR DR 8 e playera o be spapEed ST ighE . What is the maximum length of time before a person should " 4 : P bloc in Congress, as existed |dsked fal 1a. scoficessions on a |exclamations of * “Oh, but Y0 |hander at the end of the current xcklfiwkd"e S oo e IS 0 o g B boaion Venmar 07 - NERINIRLISUR ot SIS ROF | =~ Avhen Senator Arthur Vandenberg|$2760,006—piant-to make hominy|must,” “The country necds you," ' campg * the paper ddded. 6088 BIgain0 R Lt @ : Mrs, Georas CNapsoB, Lndsrieat - b 3 e i v i nd so o from the visitors.) 3 i { A. This invitation should be answered within one or two days if e ] 1 .4 'was active. The last attempt to grits. ! The Journal-American, sajd = Bill _ > g i 2 .| surgery yesterday at St. Ann’s hos- \organize the internationalists | All the above were denied. Other| Fina Peron concluded with | Veeck, new owner of the Browns,|Possible, or not later than a week when necessity prevents an earlier [pital with Drs. Rude and imanis The Alaskan HOfEl =~ ‘among Senate Republicans was in|applicatiohs, also - denied, follow: [his most ingratiating smile, Evita has promised ‘the Yr‘““% first | reply. {attending physicians. Mrs. Matson | :January, 1949, when Senator Hen-! Cristicld Dehydrating Co., Som-really shouldn't be thought of 2schoice on the pitcher who W% won | broke a leg in a fall in the country Newly Renovated Rooms ry Cabot Lodge, Jr. called a meet- erset County, » Md, makers 1 woman at all; she was above {13 games and lost five this year. & Vel agb Sunday. ! at Reasonable Rates ing. This rump group met only CmLkvn{E‘ed $48,000; Contmental |and beyond considerations of sex| In return, Veeck is reported ask- b e / ‘once. [Can of Milwaukee, makers of beer|in her sc.fless service to Argen-|ing for infielders Gerry Ooleman I_OOK a nd I_EA RN Ayc GORDON Hiless: MoTlhaily Fome | PHONE SINGLE O I < Taft Tightens Grip cans, $197,000; Santa Anita Pot-|tina. He did not why and Bill Martin; catcher - Clint i 2 Aoe §| Miss Helen McTlhardy returned ! «'4 . 3. The way the Taft-Isolation- |teries, dpifkers of ghinaware, $7l-{couldn’'t carry on p Courtney of the K ity club i wehal ads Hoas & NwREe ) [ ist wing has grabbed control of |61g7. Faylcliff, Inci Cleveland, to|from any high office |and three !:f:r‘réc ;, Sc'i'tlf b THOMAS HARDWARE } ‘the GOP party machinery. Abfgreet @n- office building, $850,000; | people might insist on v | 15 1. How did the U. S. quarter become known.as “two bits"? "_" S He‘];n - aheaf Aumn e Of} and FURNITURE CO. Hermann, the national commlbj:‘vfivmunn Co., Adams Coun- | her to, Peron added. | ROSTE MAIE 2. What is the highest peak in the Alps? Mr’ i s, Frank MoTlaedy PHONE 555 tees's executive director, boasted |ty “Pennsylvania, makers of sliced| That was a broad enough hint|csyJFORNIA VACATION 3. If you were taking a course in philology, what branch of study i jpisE sy i P s o) to Senate secretaries the other |appiles, $139000; Trgbsparent Pac-|for the army men, who went awa i "Miler cletk 4 k Ny : AINT! ILS night: “We're building a sound kl:iE‘ C0., *of Chicago, “makers of |from the interview with the c »'\, l;to ;M\L\‘.x' ; Would ‘you be pmsulvng? s d 2 3 Mrs. Deitz HereA Builders’ and Shelf mgm,;zflmn precinct by precinct, |sausage casings, $219,44! and L violicn that the ais wix \pircady | 508 "S L-l Th 4. What American city is known as the "“Biggest Little City in| nps Oscar E. Deitz arrived here: HARDWARE E 4 » | SRUSBRO BEES, x P - g g5l - e & > i flew to Seattle Tue: : an 7 i s0 we won't have to ride to vic- |Ggldem Grain Macavoni, San Le- t and Evita would certainly be g /' poaro” calif the Svuo:’l‘;:l{. s e lielom " s‘;mtliqa‘y :xa Pg% from her home in y 2ttails a strong | r salif, acar akers, | Peron: ming-ma i Hhe nexhiF oo St I 3 hich is the oldest college sport? ashington, D.C. s (:::p:x?:r tguren " The Taft ?gfilg%a RPN | tie, Nty aovet. foran J R B M Ma i ANSWERS: This is Mrs. Deitzs third visit|| Remingten Typewriters » % A o 2 e ined y her parents, Mr. am S. crowd are in charge of the Chi-| Evita Peron for Veep? from Febraury, 1952, to November i‘-x.mk BEiis. who have HelRIALS 1. During the California gold rush of 1948, two tiny bits of gold | With her son, Ed Deitz, and f;":’rli SOLD and SERVICED by jcago convention machinery }"““ Although Argentine Dictator |of this year. ing an extended aut bile trip [Passed across a bar bought a drink worth 25 cents,. A quarter thus be- She “’nslyerehliit.fl ?iy\f:llll- ;ng h‘er J‘ n B I dc {determined to prevent an ELen-|jyan peron and his flossy alter Note: It now scems fairly cer-|through the States. The family will fcame known as two bits. zglemli.tter e}‘)nrtu.oi nthe month flfld! B. bu 0. hower gallle‘ y dt-muxpn«lll;'l\l- 53 ego, Evita, have been “m»kmgumn that all Argentine “pp;)_\.m‘,u visit. pefitives in San Pedro, among 2. Mont Blanc; 15,781 feet. retulin horon together i “Our Doorstep Is Worn. by % Jbe moley attacks op Ihe SR rthree years to make her) . 0T e to boycott this | them © Mrs. George Damner. who,| 3. The science of words. . J Satistied Customers” SR A bnin T ne Chilagh ESTIE to all their supporters| o "o ihel than present can- | with her husband, operated @ dairy| - 4 Reno. Nevada i bune and the Gerald L. K. Smithj, 5 vice presidential . candidate, »:’QU e 1d h 20 chance,| on Glacier highway for many years ! . 3 ot ai ! § didates who woul ave no chanc f 8 - 5. Rowing. brand of hate munho}xsi Th? n:;\?‘f there is still a diehard core of [\ 5 0 PR MR 0T e publicity| ~Following - thefr' California, visit, g STEVENS, FORD AGENCY LB g ot il whita | Py Officer$t Who'just canth. stOM= | j0rs” of any kind, and little or | the, family* Will drive to Staitle to (Authorized Dealers) e the sidecieh, the ides, 3 Ino possibility of winning, anyway, | spend sofie time ‘beiore retumning LADIES’—MISSES’ GREASES — GAS — OIL his GOP friends sit on e s As récently’ as June 22, six rep-| under the new voting laws. \ home. 3 READY-TO-WEAR lines. resentatives of this group, most of | A Sy ! J n. ARGETSINGEB J“eafl “0’“ co | Note — Meanwhile, GOVernor |whom are stationed-at Campo De X . Seward Street Near Third oot of Aata o vey's b s s laying out o v son just . . 'oot 0 ain Street S how, bninuus 18 2ayiog AleMiayeiabe i e s : as a paid-up subscriber to THE DAILY ALASKA plans to organize the east coasl|outside Buenos Aires, called on rosswor uzzie i fhas A 3 s o BRI 5 EMPIRE is lnylted to be our guest THIS EVENING Th Ch l w Carter MAKE Lockwood, now with Dewey in the |felt about the matter. They were PR S Present this coupon to the box office of the eLharles v. JUNEAU DAIRIES {Far East; his shrewd press sec-lyvety outspoker but didn't get| ; paE 00y as ° sralulngto S ICE CREAM retary, Jim Tagerty; and President mych satisfaction in return—not . Mllp i & i 1}«1‘%‘ } cAPlToL THEATBE Mormary DELIC..‘.OI“U ask for it by name /| Truman's 1948 campaign speech [gyen the satisfaction of making| O Fiulal of & e 4 Fourth and Franklin Sta. i riter, former columnist Jay Frank- | glib ,gaucho aygry ;Poehy # and receive TWO TICKETS to see: H ] v + . hout 4 ’ 136 i “A%eolon®, $pokegnan for the of \\"”‘:‘x’]"mmm " o PHONE Juneau Dalrles' Inc' ' Tax Gravy 5 i ® . Winglike ¥ A ( All sorts of people are trying to |(ioefss hegandipiomatically enoogt | " 14 Risegss . 7 O30 FALDEE OF b HABRIET CBAIG 3 w 3 e into theni, when it comes o |, Wrusg B chasiable work phiheater 44. Pk Federal Tax—12c Paid by the Theatre Caslers Men's Wear HOME GROCERY » < 'tax gravy for building war plants.|witli her social ald_fo pdation, 3 s % e e Nab auly 44 (- Chicatn Tt R ALY cot ’ [ - sotustoher vestersnys pumme || Phome 14—YELLOW CAB C0.—Phone 22 steison ana Mallory Hate || Phones 146 and 342 Z itry to entice the Truman Admin- " ’ 0. Yy & sterday's Puzzle i 3 ©w |istration—which it bitterly hates— |Were it “hirts the most. (When oo s e S 4 and an insured cab WILL CALL FOR YOp and m:“msm II;LU;:”M Hetbs Licwor Bloce-Tl 098 into giving the Tribune over §2 f;)v "§ c*ah! afi;tg:_ Al(l‘l Demotng the. , 54 King of drug 5% 1. Father of steamen RETURN YOU to your home with our compliments. sm.zm, °m American Meat — Phone 38 000,000 in tax amortization bene-#ire wi thE: mA! h at th = central pai 63. e '1!! i . < letter WATCH THIS SPACE ¢ 1 = 1000, 27. Harvests % . bi. rse ACE—Your Name May Appear! # 4t for enlarging its printing 1938 “Olympic ates, “Bva’s foun- | 1~ PRGNS 55, Pl '\n\:é:s Yy APP L'4 'plant and pressroom, but manu-dation spent 130,000 pesos—then o B or A l Y To Banish “Blue Monday” * {facturers of toilet paper, sausage |agout $32, aoq—m buy him a house e, X 3 ‘casings, diapers, hominy grits, ’dfld}l $ar.as "tokeds of the na- n £ "500" To give you more freedom macaroni, and chocolate candy |tional - “rafitude ) ot trchin Oldest Bank in Alaska from work — TRY ¢v+ thave applied for a ride on the| Sh§ ah,\xld. the faljowed to con- c l. n T n E s = 'ta# gravy train. untdGuk Wi toble labors, ar- e y gl 1 Alaska I.aundry 3 ™ Rete are some of the firms|gued--the-spokesman, rather than “ || 1891—0ver Half a Century of Banking—195 NUNN-BUSH SHOES +== twhich have applied to the gove being cun‘\’en,’ b into; a ~political iment for five-year tax amortiza- |figureg £wiieh; l‘l‘e adged STETSON HATS H S GRAVES \ ition on the ground that new|candidly a great many Argentine | Th B M B h d ork Clothin . D iplants they were building or en-|malegmespecially military men = e i». . Ipenrenas Quality W '4 s Bt Mea !larging were necessary to mobxl‘-((uu-nd Fremly-impossible to swal- mn ization: Tow the notion of a woman in the Bank \ r“n nm LEVIS OVERALLS == """ New York Daily News—Part of |nagons No. 2 spot. JThat ¥as go- Yok 0 Gomplete Outitter for Men for Boys +. ithe Chicago Tribune group, ap-|if@ g6 =fAr Zand+' (00 fast lwlth‘ b 3 3 n $3,245 eqality he complain- | plied for tax benefits on $3,245,000 [eqality of the sexes, f ; for a building in Brooklyn in |ed. “Hi§ colleagues chimed in to‘ . Playing-cdrds Sa ety DepOSit SHAFFER'S BLACKWELL’S e i store newsprint. second the sentiment. - Heroine of £ BB i o st neworint | secong 1 o et Boxes for Rent SANITARY MEAT CABINET SHOP ~5 Chicago Tribune Syndicate—Ap-{-3 = etdnbtands Pat 5 ~ plied for tax benefits on $8,489,122 Pefon, in” Teply, “Was af his af- FOR BETTER )IEA'I‘S. 17 Main St. ‘Phone ™3 . for “News services. fable, suave, and disarming | 13—PHONES—49 High Quality Cabinet Work CChicopee Mfgr. Corp. of Mil-|In the first place, he suid, he | COMMERCIAL SAVINGS Bl for Home, Offios or Stere town, N. J. — Asked for tax ben- |yéafif ihall nothing: to do wxm‘ “.”,w,lmfi ’ ‘ fits on a $35534 building for the the ‘question; the proposal to ! tribesman” ji |

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