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PAGE FOUR THY DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE-JUNEAU, ALASKA TUESDAY, AUGUST 14, 1951 with the government paying MOUNT JUNEAU LODGE NO. 147 Daily Alaska Empire |5 s o i SECOND and FOURTH J. A. Durgin Company, llIC. Publi \md cvery evening except Sunday by the It should be remembered by Am s at this | 2 0 Y E A RS A G 0 f rom Monday of each month Accounting Auditing Tax W R hat Gaciis, Tanten & time that when the bill was passed, it was feared that THE EMPIRE in Scottish Rite Temple . and Main Streets, Juneau Alaska begxnmng &% 9180.p, i Room 3, Valeatine Bufldmc HELEN TROY MON . g President | there w ' aither FENEEILS f the apple-selling ! DOROTHY TROY LINGO N \VWM,:PE’L{“"”‘ ‘.:t‘x:‘:uull)d(l‘a]( l:‘“:“] x{(p:” ::”1 o e s .’J : i s e e Wm. A, Chipperfioid, JUNEAY, KA R CAMPBELL - . - Managing Edit eran on the streets of our cities. 1e prospect @ ! Uy 2 i ALAS] pe o T | Hat time was that, when the war ended, peace-time AUGUST 14, 1631 Worshipful Master; P. O. Box 644 Telephone 919 y 4yl Y Srmetn 4 i | JAMES W. - Alaska’s salmon pack today is well above tht 4,000,000-case mark and | b Dl e Al [I/ Entered in the Post Office in Juneau as Second Class Matter RUBHORTEETON RATES: industry could not assimilate the released labor force Delivered by carrier in Juneau and Douglas for $1.75 per month; six mwnn $9.00; one vear, and, consequently, something should be done to en- courage the veterans to improvei their educational |status. Much the same thought was behind or if they will promptly notify e or trregularity in the delivery | unemployment compensation payments plan. While there have been some abuses of the pri- vilges extended to the veterans both on the part of of AUGUST 14 licatons are that it will almost attain 5,000,000 if, in fact, it does not LRI B, 0 T R I S ch that figure. Heavy runs of pinks are reported from Ketchikan @ B P 0 ELKS : .EM.P““: WANT ADS PAY o LU © 0o 0 0 0 0 0 o ck Michaels : nd the west coast of Prince of W | v ay swel acks | - . € o ales Island which may swell the 1’).16](5l Meeting Second and Fourth Wed- S | | Mrs. Howard Stabler . . . six months, in advance, $7.50; . . Roy Smith . . o . . . o to abnormal figyres. S ska's pa ate, a 0 abno igyre outheast Alaska's pack to date, and the nesdays at 8 PM. Visiting broth- s were not complete, was about 1,550,000 cases. A ers welcome, " LE ROY WEST, Exaxited Ruler. The Rexall SIore Your Reliable Pharmacists The Alaska Juneau Gold Mining Company’s operations on its local | W. H. BIGGS, Secretary. perties netted an opeaarting surplus of $131,600 for July, it was dis- | ——— | osed by company officials. i BUTLER-MAURO Vernon Swap Telephones: News Office, 602; Business Office, 374 MEMBER OF ASSOCIATED PRESS irley Erwin The Associated Press is exclusively en ed to t r [the veterans and on the part of some institution: réppblication of 1 ws dispatches credited - g T ired n "this paper and also the local nows published |learning, the main result of the program has been -~ i * o o 1 1 REPRESE VES Alaska Newspapers, 1411 [some of the veterans have not applied themselves t | TRk ; DO , nee || Moose Lodge No. 700 | DEUG 90, Regular Meetings Every Friday !learning as much as to drawing the subsistence {lotment, do not change the fact that, in, w Notice of the official enrollment of Chilkat Troop No. 1, of the % = % rovernor— the veterans behaved t ves in a manner ea er a Juneau Girl Scouts was received here by Captain, Mrs. Robert Ellis. LORE: [ justify the government's expense Eliis has as her licutenants Elizabeth Pullen and Iris Gray. Mem- s R!N_CARD ! Alaska Music snpply § , i 1 il e Arthur M. Uggen, Manager From mz college campuses have come favorable of the trooop are; Helen Beistline, Jane Blomgren, Anna Campbell, WALTER R. HERMANSEN < Pianos—Mausical Instruments [] comments on the industry and behavior of the G. I Ala k Kathleen Carlson, Jes Faulkner, Doris Freeburger, Sybil Godfrey, \ students. In fact, the men went back to school with icia Harlang, Enid Jarvis, Mary Jean McNaughton, Mary Metcall, | e SRaS e and Supplies the serious intention of taking advantage of their 1 Mize, Beatrice Mullen, Virginia Mullen, Grace Nelson, Carol Rob- | V.F. W Phone 206 Second and Seward Joe R. Werner Bill Brown Mary Katherine Shaw opportunit Their behavior and scholarship com- | Weather conditions and tempera- °rtson, Bernice Romunseth, Barbara Simpkins, Jean Simpkins, Annaelle i - - g v students ur | tures @ rion ints al Simpson, Lore: Smith, Elizabeth Stewart, Jean Taylor, Jeanne Vander=- y pared favorably with that of regular students in our res at varic Alaska points al impson, Lorene b ' i on the Pacific Coast, at 4:30 p.m. Leest, Barbara Winn and Mavis McCormick. Taku POS' "0. 5553 Card Beverage Cn Meeting every Thursday in Wholesale the C.1.O. Hall at 8:00 p.m. I colleges and universities. The deadline of July 25th applied to most of 120th Meridian Time, and released bl S e 9 by the Weathe; rea are i the veterans of World War II—those discharged be- /& e Weather BUrEss e o After 16 years residence just outside the Douglas city limits, Mr. fore July 25th, 1947. Veterans discharged after that | ind Mrs. Joe Wehren have moved into town and are living in their | Anchorage 54—Cloud . the Third Street bridge. Wehren has leased his sawmill PHONE 216—DAY. or NIGHT for MIXERS or SODA POP date could begin their training -\\,v iin four ye n‘ Annette Island. 56—Rain Drizzle A COltage nes the time they left the service. The probablity is that | gaypoy 38—Cloudy At Lawson Creek to parties who will operate it this winter. N A S H JUDGE FOOTBALL ON ITS OWN MERITS' " 00 provision will be made in behalf of the | Bethel S4-Dartly’ Glaridy Al - I T T of the fighting in Korea. Cordova 53—Rain A daughter, weighing three and one-half pounds, was born this morn- | SALES and SERVICE The Alaskan HOIEI Tuesday, August 14, 1951 The suggestion made by several members of Con- | Ye{erans : o e Mg il T % i gress that football be suspended at the United States | ”mA’Lmtl:::;ngu::kl of ,‘\h‘\\ll:-lu U‘l\‘m;hx:x ‘A_,::;;,“J; fum‘h;:: fi‘\n\] .1“:] i p:m?f g;(‘:::A ing at St. Ann’s Hospital to Ml‘inl\djn. F. W. Nable. i 90(;}1}2{::']'};1}:105)&:\&?}20279 Moy bt vatan foidss Military Academy where ninety cadets are involved| ... “oorting free tuition and subsistence grants. |Fairbanks 50-—Parkiy} Glgudy Glen Carrington, of the Juneau-Young Hardware Company here, [\ eL el Rt :?;ncc:eztrini“l:gl’:’?’m‘l]';f:::"‘;d“l‘:’(‘:;l‘,“’i ‘)“;)":\’t“:"“:“l" At this time, close to 500,000 service men are still ;I"\:Z‘ prn_l“;eugg:j:‘:‘ ind the Heckman-Carrington Company of Ketchikan, arrived in Juneau | pmm———— 7 PHONE SINGLE O colleglitte. athletics under a cloud. ‘:]Lm:;;:: ,‘m(l\\(::fz;ll“\,\_‘ ‘im\l ‘::1]1);:;;.?1m , although the i;”“ Airport Jxamg yesterday by plane for a few d_‘_)s,m‘,iu ss visit. B[ownie's liquor Srore We are well aware of the fact that over-emphasis Lt s < 50—Cloudy 0. K. McManus, Juneau salesman, will leave this evening on the| THOMAS HARDWARE fix peenpiaed oo Tolgall Bbee ETSALBEIEREE- [ 52— Partly Cloudy | Alaska for Skagway to look after business interests there, Phove 103 139 So. Franklin and FURNITURE CO. Let Us Alone Club msti.tuuous and that, at times, it I be ]u f'(;"l’ \\:umv e 46— Rain P - i i lrl‘::t““liclil:m::ii: ::bt:?ec:l(ll:yl?(;\ “(1::‘ r:i tl‘:::(lb::‘lb; Joplin (Mo.) Globe ‘;\’;’lx(l:‘\‘\‘\u‘;, ; Iaxll!v‘i_fl(ilg:]‘:] Mrs. S. Zynda, of the Hotel Zynda, will leave this evening on the PAINTS ——— OILS field and not in the study hall Down in Mississippi they have recently announced | Portland 5 Partly Cloudy steamer Alaska for Sitka where she will visit friends. , B-ill:::’n;:::ghe“ éevertheless, intercollegiate football should be con- | the organization of a new club. Membership, it is Prince George ... 57—Cloudy / N s CANADIAN 2 sidered in relation to the overall picture of college stated, is “small, exclusive and anonymous.” There Seattle —Partly Cloudy Weather: High, 58; low, 52; showers. 5 b 4 are no dues and no officers. At the first meeting |Sitka . 56—Cloudy | EKQLITE Remington Typewriters education. The sport should not be judged solely by . | Whitehorse SOy | T e the unhappy fact that, at one or two instituticas,|a statement of principles was drawn up, as follows: |g oo 5—Rain DEPTH SUUNDEBS BOLD and SERVICED by athletes have been permitted to disregard their studies |~ “We don’t want no pensions. | % DaI|V Lessons in English {’g (. GORDON MADSEN J. B. Burford Co “We don't want no minimum wages “We don’t want no government houses to live in. (ommuni(alion $Hi o LR eu i T Cycle & Fishing Supply “Qur Doorstep Is Worn by | M. 0 o Satisfied Customers™ or, what is worse, have cheated on examinattons in | order to make passing grades. | =S B e . Lot 3 | , p WORDS OFTEN MISUSED: An OCULIST is a physician skilled in 7 S P ) | “We don't want no subsidie: Rt Dalle Alaike Wt LIST is V]:‘:’”EI({)/(‘)IB S'lr{tx(l))}rfiq:l;o i | “We don't want no bureaucrats telling us how o |~y thoueht you e o in.|treating diseases of the eye. An OPTOMETRIST is one skilled in find- " ¢ p “|ing and measuring érrors in vision for the purpose of determining the STEVENS® FORD AGENCY | make a living. terested in a letter which our office % The deadline for starting educational training | “We don't want no socialized medicine or no |received from a young girl in Pet- | kind of lens which will correct the error. An OPTICIAN is one who £ ; (Authorized Dealers) under the G. I. Bill has passed but, since it began, \\(.(.m,,m, nothing. rsburg, Alaska makes lenses and fits them. LADIES’—MISSES' GREASES — GAS — OIL even years i go, 8,000,000 vetrans have attended sc! hoo! | “We don't want to have to pay no poll tax, but ~Text of the letter is as follows: | OFTEN MISPRONOUNCED: Hypocrisy. Pronounce first syllable as READY-TO-WEAR ’ nobody August 16, 1951 | HIP, not as HIGH. i Seward Street Near Third || Juneau Motor Co. | “We don’t want no government leans as long as we do’have to, we don’t want or college undex governmental subsidy at a cost to the D Sir: 8 ST 2h AP SZ i F g $14/000,000/000 | paying it for us. ear Sir: N MISSPELLED: Overreach; two R Foot of Main Street P . be left alone to make our own I'm only 15 years of age but I s - G present, suf deliver, 1, bestow. The Educational Bill. which was adopted in 1944 We just want to “1 e l‘\u g no what the money is need for WORD -BTUDY: “Use. .-wbrd thvee Hies and/ it s, gours.” . 1t s Th Ch l w C i MAKE i ans re volved in fighting | way as best we can and as long as we can # 4 i SRR Y STU S yours. 5 whcnmiilions; of Americas were: nvey : and X sen I Honey Sy RS g e our vochbulary by tering one word each day. Today’s word: e arles W. Carter JUNEAU DAIRIES i g) ast act S > membership was undecided | peprj i . i 3 | for the defense of their country, as designed to pro- At last accounts the meml errie and cutting grass. I saw 73 . 4 J T e e t as to a name for their organization. Some stood out | a family house be wash away aud |INVSA TABLE; nmpdbu of being satisfied. “His desires for power were Morluary DELICIOUS ICE CREAM insatiable, a daily habit—ask for it by name g0 to schodl or college upon returning to civilian |for “Let Us Alone,” but some others thought “We | I'm going to send a 100 for the | D Pourth and Pravkin o . Don’t Want Nothin'” would be better. Anyway, the | flood in the states, and I will be | i pHONEB:-” Sts. statuf¥ «he original dawswas amended a number of ! ) ‘ : name ism’t as important with an organization which sending more when I earn it for Juneau Dalnes’ Inc. times to liberalize its provisions. ¥ I'm sure they nee Depending upon | 4 sure ey need more than 0 D R M 'I' I 0 l l I: 'I"l | length of service, the veterans were given up to four I T T i Id | M E E ERTA LEE g 0 | I\OB vide financial assistance for veterans who decided to e R, — o | Yours, truly, i Caslers Men's Wear HOME GROCERY ldcmundcd that Radio Free Europe 13 Ifl 34 oul on Nell 32 McGre, i vl | e il S gor Sportswea “'e wammgbn > mk“? N e : ue::]:v:o ]m,‘~rl lf(”flm""..m,”ci“. : Q. Is it proper to display checks or money with the other wedding Stetson and Mallory nrm Phones 146 and 342 Kremlin Suspicions Increasi Meullan Sunday g A s S R ol 1 ) {l Arrow Shirts and Underwear LR e ll ome Liquor re— 699 Allen Edmonds Shoes Bkyway Luggage American Meat — Phone 38 Merry-Go-Round s terest in those people who have (Continued from Page One) foscow is so serious that Vyach-| Thirteen passengers arrived on Suffered loss in such a great mea- | A. This is not good taste — nor is it proper to tell people in general : v Molotov, now the No. 2 man |the Aleutian southbound Sunday |[Sure in the mid-western flood. fab it sl I8 AUl RN however, to say, “Uncle Tom gave T glu Stalin and seldom seen in pub-{with 34 embarking. Cordially yours, !me a check (or a bond).” other: Tito in Poland, Czechoslo-jic, made a special trip to War Disembarking from Valdez: Syd TRED McGINNIS, | Q. When entering a dining car on a train, should one find a seat vakia or Hungary. That, of course,|to warn the Poles against follow- |Barton 1951 Fund Chairman, Juneau |for himself, or wait until he is shown a seat? (i what Bifiln foars most. ling Tito. The importance of this| From Seward: Mrs. G. Costa, Chapter, American Red Cross| A, He should stand ap the entrance until the steward approaches B 0 T A N Y To Banish “Blue Monday” ::500" To give you more freedom from work — TRY Alaska Laundry There have been reports in pre-|warning is show e Hurley b ¢ @ g is shown by the fact that|Jaeger Haagensen, Hurley John, and conducts him to a seat. vious years of trouble behind the|marshal Grigori Zhukov, hero of |Mrs. Minnie Kneebone and daugh- i ¥ ik T “ E aver & & b o 3 fAsE e ¥ i . Is it necessary that a chaperon be a married woman? Iron Curtain, but never as many|Berlin, and Marshal Konstantin|ter; Orville Lechelt, Mr. and Mrs. 'ln(urab' ' "l g e CLO S as now. Two hundred Communist)Rokossovsky, military ruler of Po-|L. M. Nowell and daughter; Mrs. Y 5 . 8Dy an of ma years may pRCILY: NUNN-BUSH SHOES leaders in Bulgaria are reported!jang g4 red wit otov 5 i Hon and, appeared with Molotov on|Lloyd Rogers and son; G. Wood- S S ' K i ays Jisier neniy STETSON HATS under arrest; 22 Soviet generals|the same platform. Behind this | bury. and high Soviet officials have'waming was the fact that the| Embarking for Ketchikan: Quali GRAVES r h Soviet BVE | g as 4 arking a uality Work Clothi died mysteriously in the last seven|yajlroad between Berlin and Mos- |Kane. SYDNEY, Australia, Aug I.OOK a nd I.EA R N A C. GORDON . s Th Cl thing Man months; four Czech generalshave .,y js sabotaged so frequently| For Secattle: Mrs. R. D. Miller, _ Bistar FBED HE“NING | s LEVI'S OVERALLS Leen 3"35‘9!(:‘ or C"mm:“:‘;‘ ‘\1““1"“1111 at repair crews are kept busy|Mr. and Mrs. Warren R. Wootan , Jeader in the fight a mlm in six months; nine o e high- 1 P 5 s » Riley, Mr. and MrS. [t0ld a Svdnev S \ C 1 4 e B ths Polen army ‘m(, ht and day. Production is drop- and son; Alice Riley, ’x told a Sydney Sun reporter today | 1. Who was the greatest Greek writer of comic plays? omplete Outfitter for Men for Boys c = lging. The Catholic church is|W. C. Rich and two children; ghe i incurably ill and has little | 9 . 2 2 were tried for tre'l::m, 12 Putlhh leading a potent underground and [Miss Betty jlor, Mr. and MIS. |time left in this world | 2. What term describes a victory that is as disastrous to the seamen on a minesweeper MUlin-ithe Kremlin has become so sus-iIngovold Eide, Mr. and Mrs. Cil" The worldid el victor as to the vanquished? : a 5 1 Zide, M a | he wol amous nurse did not 1 ied, locked up their officers, and|picious of top Polish generals that|Mullen, Mary J. O'Connor, MI.|nime the disease with which she | . What does Episcopal mean? SANITARY MEAT gkfi&';%%%}b% deserted to Sweden; four ‘(““u-““xn(‘ of them have now been tried.'and M Milford Marshall and has peen stricken, but the rey rter 4. What do sailors mean by “splicing the mdm brace”? Poles fled to Sweden in a xv.oltn; Bul “UlL somi HOBR ot h J. Parkert, 4 TR - FOR BETTER MEATS 117 Main St. Phone 772 Ret-riddl 1 L ulgaria “Ulcer” to Cominform |twq children; Ruth J. Parkerty aid she was shaking and looked . What is “pate de foie gras™? 3 | buRlet-riddled airplane; three Li-| Bulgaria — A peasant revolt has| Ethel Colvin, Roy Florin, Dit A jj | Al 13—PHONES—49 High Quality Cablnet Work thuanians locked up other CIEW inelq up delivery of wheat to Rus-|A Wider, Mrs. A. B. Giegervich, S % MY Fr for M. ot 8 members on a Russian trawler | ; > o d e " i | . Aristophanes (445-385 B. C.) ee Delivery lome, ice or Store sia and brought a battery of So-|F. Ebbertt, R. Thurber, Mr. and | apraham Lincoln's estate toad 5 and escaped. viet officials hurrying into Sofia.|Mrs. F. M. Bowsman, Mr. and|aueq ot $110,295 i Pyrible victarg. 3 Why Pesple Rebel |About 15,000 -have been added to|Mrs. Dillon S. Meyer, Mr. and | . Of or pertaining to a bishop. This throbbing unrest inside the.the 30,000 already in concentra- ;M H. L. Luckenbach, Mr. &nd |« o ‘ . Taking a drink. Iron Curtain has been caused in|tion camps, while treason trials|Mrs. J. J. Villier, Miss C. Henze, | . Livers of fattened geese. ; nu“ALn L. MacKINNUN rt by Soviet war preparations|have shown that the Agrarian (or|Miss Ruth Burmister, Mr. and | — which have been going on for Peasant party, once the strongest Mrs. R. C. Barclay, Mr. and Mrs. Jlllleall . as a paid-up subscriber to THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE is invited to be our guest THIS EVENING some time. When a government in Bulgaria, now operates a pow-|J. C. Kuhns, Campbell, Present this coupon to the box office of the takes too much of the necessities €rful underground. Agrarian lead- |Herb Smith, Florence Jenre, Mr. CAPITOL THEATRE of life—food, fuel, consumer goods|€rs have encouraged the peasants and Mrs. H. B. Eckes, Mildred| won l rorget ACROSS . Exist and receive TWO TICKETS to see: —awgy from its people they rebel.|to Withhold crops and join guer- [ Powell. 1. Harsh Move away "“GROUNDS FOR DIVORCE" When a Polish miner who hates|Yilla units in the mountains so —_— Edgar Bergen Desc?’nd . Rave Russia anyway is ordered to work |successfully that the official Com- | P 4 swiftly . Fish eggs for Communism, he . gels restless, an “ulcer” and eriticized Premier | dummy that has brought Ll S ot likewise with the Cgech uranium Chervenkov for allowing the un.'ls 'Sotia“led v wealth and inernational Purify :}.:m»ea miner and the Hungarian farmer rest to spread. ’ fame to E. B. was Ch(;gnneyl . Summon farming. [tional Defense Emil Bodnaras ]m\wsavs fire Head ab's ‘beab of $35. Today | 19 Hbrse Religious E : Federal Tax—12c Paid by the Theatre No nation in its right mind— |been arrested and there have been | Charlie McCarthy is '3‘:?&?' b Peetn ' . et Phone IFYELLOW cA,B co Ph 22 though dictators seldom are in|Mass evacuations of those suspec-| The rubber industry is com- A Ameeloan mstitition A Cong b . Tisht Solution of Yesterday's Puzzle .~—=>'hone their right minds — makes wm-\ltod of disloyalty to Moscow. pletetly “socialized” in the fields | T e - RulAshiers e 80~ N o and an insured cab WILL CALL FOR YOU and when the_ (1\|}xaxx pupulawn be- i Hl.llb,:il) Df‘g(fxmuun of thous- | of supply and usage, John L. Col | b s / Snf:;‘llechlld DOWN Seerlt:y"o" : w:mm poe! RETURN YOU to your home with our compllments. hind ‘the lines is'certain tg'rise up ands of Hungarian peasants to|jyey, B. F. Goodrich company | g o . Diminish Pronoun & Town in Ialy g Smail_ bira WATCH THIS SPACE—Your Name May Appear! against the government. That's|concentration camps to face s president announc | That's why Mr. B . Remunerate . Number 5. Stalk Simpleton / — ame y Appear! 10 Shevpeiike who never did like'. collective] Roumania — Minister of Na- s created 31 years ago . Open vessel .'.?:xlx);\thCK 2' R why the unrest behind the Iron|ery and death have been recently! 1n the statement, he asked for and Charlie—have y §0 Sheneibe Curtain is so important. To illus- |denounced by U. S. Secretary of [appointment bf President Truman Macintosh custom tailor / punishment trate the seriousness of this situa- | State-Acheson. The leader of these!of 5 commission to study the their. suits. They know / .-n ".i'é???m Oldest Bank in Alaska SHAFFER'S 5= P[0 <|»ZJlo |- |rm[4 AREENN DRERE R P x| |m m » o tion an$ the importance of inten- |mass arrests is Bela Szanto, Mos-|prgplem and develop a policy of | Shat & Mimetitosh suit ’ contradie- bi sifying bur propaganda, here is a|cow-trained Hungarian especially|oompetition in rubber. i wins regular applause 7/ - . . Likely brief summary of the best under-|sent to do the job. Szanto is a| Colyed urged that “the govern- | ; 4 ver: i g vho v wiity, || 1891—0ver Half a Century of Banking—1951 ground reports I can get of what ruthless butcher who has alres dv',m.m take steps to ‘desocialize’ | is happening behind the Curtain: |jailed 70,000 peasants because they this major industry by selling or| appearance. L L 5 3. Babylonian Crechoslovakia — The Czechs|have held back their grain or re-|jeasing to private industry the | See our Alaskan R 7 / a- LR ‘ have now recovered from thefused to collectivize thmr farms. | American rubber plants it MNOW representative today. oy bankment Th East Germany — Moscow's ef- rubber actbe- [ | W) el en. Vi. henrenas stunned apathy which followed owns. The present - | the initial seizure of their country|forts to build a Communist (m- smyng - Iawe vil, 1948 and will 1 Expostulate b i e ey | e W. P. McCREIGHT ..//fl..fl.%flflfl Gare’ty wed by : ‘” an y Moscow and are beginning to expire June 30, | ;ez their courage back. A serious|trated by the desertion of officers| golyer issued the statement at Baranof Hotel, Tel, 800 Wa g pamE ood shortage, blamed on thefof the “people’s police” to West-|ine time of the Akron All-Ameri- pronounce Russians, is partly responsible. On|ern Germany. Three separate un-|.., soap Box Derby w-fl-/‘..%n... ne 2 fop of this the Voice of America,|dergrounds operate among _the o Richard 7T TR - Safety Deposit which predicted the arrest of for-|Russian and Red army pm\onnel| VISITING HERE 4 . fi-- ; o Boxes for Rent eign minister Vladimir Clementis|inside Germany. ] a @and four other Czechs had its ef-| This is just part of the story of | Mr. and Mrs. Leon M. Nowell Macintosh i gi%e";fl' o fect. Finally, Radio Free Europe |restlessness now stirring behind | and daughter of Phoenix, Ariz., ‘. - fl .. Relatives has sent such devastating barrages |the Iron Curtain and the oppor- |are siopping at the Gastineau Hotel Seattle B CDMMERCIAL sAvINGs of propaganda into Czechoslovakia [tunity awaiting American propa- |for a few days after a tour of the Hollywood - San Francisco French . that the Czech government has)ganda. Interior. [t mm Spoll River: