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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE—JUNEAU, ALASKA [) I I ll E » |vietory in November may depend then upon getting [ ¢ oeeseeeeearromrro e | e (ll Y Alas a mptrc the maximum number of people interested enough in ! | - i P 1 9 3 o |y (N ) MPIRE PRINTING COMPANY l Those “absolutely certain” they will vote make| ) 1) THE EMPI RE 5(‘(‘17' Juneau, Alaska, Py e ) iy HELEN TROY MC up three-fourths of the voting population. They total | ¢ ISP § § SISO DU DRSS S S S S s ““",Hl\“”_ AR 37,500,000 out of the 50,000,000 who constitute the 3 SEPTEMBER 20, 1924 e R present civilian voting population { All former attendance records of the Southeast Alaska Fair had been Another poll, however, shows that Roosevelt is in | ken and to date approximately 5000 persons had attended the ex- Entered in the Post Office in Juneau as Second Class Matter. ead as far as the ge te is concerned, and This night was to end the carnival, with music for dancing T an the lead as far as the younger vote is concerned, and # his ; i Delivered by earrier neau and Douglas for $1.50 per month; that may mean that most of the votes in the armed | seing hed by Glenn Oakes with a double Novelty Four Orchestra ittt o i 2 AR g SO AR services will go for Roosevelt | previo Goldstein’s Emporium held the spotlight with their One year, advance, $15.00; six months, n advance, $7.50; X mn ic how h the following dainty maids and a popular Junea: s s ‘will confer a favor if they will promptly notify Decentralized Socialism 1t Jacobson cung man acting as models: Mejela Beery, Grace Carney, Miss Nelson, I ot tauie DAPete TWlite on S Pete Pappas | Lucille Brown, Miss Lucile Lynch, Mrs. L. T. O'Neill, Mrs. Melvin, Telephones: News Office. 602; Bustness Office, 374. (New York Times) Francis E. McMahon Felix Gray and Elliott Fremming, MEMBER OF ASSOCIATED PRESS The Senate version of the surplus disposal bill Li3ehg | - The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for i ovides tha & Gio it agency s N e p e e meme e At th > o S (e S e R ’ 3 sopohe Mssociated Press s exclusively entitled fo the ute of | provides that no Government agency shall manu 1| At tnis time Mr. Paul was trying to secure the passage of a bill that wise credited n this paper and also the local news published |{acture or produce articles with Governme nt-owned | § : yould tax the fish traps out of business and if he succeeded, according AZASKA CIRCULATION GUARANTELD 10 BE LARGER plants in competition with private industry. This isf { H cditorial, the result would be that all the canneries in Southeast HAN T OF ANY OTHER PUBLICATION. sound princig he bill's restrictions on GOVEEn-J3 afEe {1 \laska would be closed. The fear of the Indians at Haines at this time b . —— ent operation, however, apply only to the Feders The stars incline { ) i NATIONAL REPRESENTATIVES Alaska Newspapers, 1411 ; ) 3 ) 1 they would suffer for lack of food the following winter because Fourth Avenue Bids., Seattle, Wash. Government, They should apply to the use of these |} but do not compel” | T e £ R e Nk M . 3 S v properties by State and Ic governments as well. | | ! could not fish and sell their fish to a cannery, suggested something There is one section of the Senate bill, howe hich | boeererr e e el int that was expected to go up from the Indians throughout would encourage such competition by States and AY. SEPTEMBER 21 Mr. Paul were successful in his endeavor. political subdivisions. This is the section which per- | — mits them to acquire these surplus war properties at | pects rule today but| st was one of the busiest months of the Alaska Prohibition 50 per cent of the sale or less value or 50 per cent of planetary influences mj \“ District, according to a report made public this day by the price offered by the highest bidder; whichever 1] mre 1 hose WhO| 1\ ting Director A. G. Means. A total of 418 gallons of illegal liquors lower. In ofher; words, whether ‘the private bid isiolan pos ized, four stills and one distillery raided and 350 gallons of mash dequate or inadequate, a local community may acquire | nguine : R B the property at half the private bid or lower | 1 Id i war a1 MBG DY ARG The net effect of this provision could easily be to families disc | create a series of so- d “‘yardsticks” throughout £t rid i Robert Simpson of the Nugget Shop left for Seattle aboard the the country. But Government yardsticks of this type toward defeat | Alameda tend to be less than thirty-six inches in length. If Gt ebre ol municipalities can acquire properties at half price " | Jehn Dunn, son of Mr. and Mrs. John H. Dunn, was a south- they can begin competing with private industry on slowing | bound passenger and was to enter the University of Washington at an unequal basis. Such a development would lead un the very evils presumably to be avoided by the re- | - : ; 3 4 R a " striction placed on competitive operations by the Fed- S % DEWEY AHEAD eral Government. Instead of ing local com-|€¢ Pa i R Weather report: High, 45; low, 53; cloudy munities a preferred position in the acquisition of |defense by desperate € el DA R e DU S IR R SR R, R A recent Gallup poll shows that candidate Thomas surplus war properties, they should, if anything, bz E. Dewey is ahead with all persons questioned who blaced in less favored position, particularly in Ll connection with plant which can be | nd equipment they will be “absolutely certain” to vote in the |, o4 1 compete with private industry. It is foolish to coming Presidential election. Dewey is credited With o.ourage private enterprise in one clause of the bill it 51 percent or 19,000,000 sure votes, and Roosevelt With | 4;d to discriminate against it in another. The House will 1 49 percent or 18,500,000 of the certain voters bill did not contain this 50 per cent provision. It 0 It :t}n;mum that the chances for a Roosevelt should be rejected by the conference committee. | 3 Delaware, went to New Je down or confuse newspaper stories, |1 of the ion waShlng'on part of the Senate Camp: but he said his actions have always d ¢ weeks M penditures Committee and discov- been paved with good intentions exposur costly e"y' ered that two friends of the Ger- Hull was trying to explain hismistakes and ¢ Go_Ro‘md man-American Bund had collected policy of secrecy during the Dum u\\hfy be ~Gccabted B 50,000 annually from wealthy New barton Oaks world secu nfer- |sons that will b he ] p Rl Jersey Republicans, many of them ence, and told how, years ago, L CongLE IO R0 019 lin Thomas district when he was a member of Congress AT E The collections were made under he and his colleagues on the Wa ] viona letter because of Wallace's humani- | o of the “New Jersey State and Means Committee put sugar i hig pies in ing tarian democratic views, NOW|Republican League 1d the “Re- on the tariff-free list. Hull said he tcn, D be ive and suc- claims to have traced the leak puplican Citizen's Committee,” but tried to prevent word of the move|cessful. A read plot involv- directly to the door of the White tpe men who promoted these high- from leaking out, for fear the|Wg many it House sounding organizations and raised sugar lobby would raise a protest. Will be di British diplomatic sleuths have | ¢, much money from Congressman “However,” he said, “when I| Persons concluded confidentially that FDR | Thomas' constituents were George reached the hotel that nigl have the wanted Phillips' letter published, in hl, who has boasted that he once reporter came up to me and o1 order to give him a better bargain- { wyote publicly for the Bund, and ‘so you put sugar on the pust ing position with Churchill. They | pjixje” Anzer, an intimate of Bund list, eh'? born figure that Roosevelt’s position re-|.,unge] Wilbur Keegan and of the o Hull bet the reporter two new L garding India is now strengther Bund's New Jersey gauleiter, Aug- hats t he was wrong, as a|0f m ich of oppor- that he can point aroused | ot Klapprodt means of denying the story. The ‘unities. Physicia d C U.'S. public opinion as to British | genator Ferguson, former one- reporter accepted the Hull denial, belong fo this sign delays in India and so demand|pma; grand jury in Detroit, didn't'didn’t print the story, but won two (Copyright, 1944 irom Churchill a house-cleaning of | o the fact that he was investigat- $5.00 hats i e e I st | Rebicans S i S| e aot co 1t 10, e TIDES. TOMORRO plmacy frequently Works, 0. the|payt B e e (CHousHEHR Wl ) Bl Fmink Arisican: distomaby | Laare, B RRenE crude paro- (Copyright, 1944, by United High tide—3:54 4 : dies on American hymns and folk o biane skt e A a7 A Werks the samia ey scngs for which Anzer had written '“‘ G | anti-Administration lyrics. Among Qll B H g ce oD PN SRR e Here i Unlike President Roosevelt, Who |t the tune of TSR ermi e TllURSDA‘ Pt memegncng ; | NEW TELEPHONE DIRECTORY | frequently delights in clashing with Governor Dewey goes out Alles.” | NOTE-—The newsmen g | f ok Dies Committee has ;;‘ way to stroke the fur of the |3,y denied charges that it didn't ““,; want to unco Nazi activities. | BENENTL 6 (DOW. TELOFISD Yet, when Fritz Kuhn testified be- the Dewey special train, the Gov- i v ; b1t : fore the committee four years ago | ‘\l‘l“ ! ‘l‘ “‘ o ,‘:‘ : i admitted knowing Geo , 2 i < e oo | Belhl, _director of New Jer special point o oting him. Ever 3 ¥ I Q% HTE I State Republican League, Congress- when Dewe; has not previously , ' man Thomas, a member of the met the newsman, he will surp | hi: AParanoh Y e D1k haw committee, made no move to pro- | s conference by cailing ew- e Lan Sk tect his Republican constituents. o It finally took protests from GOP The other day, on Dewey’s barn- : U genator Hawks of New Jersey, and storming trip, caustic Paul Ward E \ 201 S others to start the Senate investi- of the Baltimore Sun'jomed the |0 gation Dewey train. At the next press conference, Ward took a rath il Y R i ot by HULL'S OFFICIAL DENIALS e sition on the le ewey, | o i ‘l,' el Yol Secretary of State Hull candidly apparen nformed in advance iparen 3 A € admitted the other day that he ! that Ward had joined the train 15ea. the offizial denial to. thiow i greeted him as follows: “Well, Mr. ' 3 Ward, glad to see you. But what are you doing way over there in the left-field bleachers? Out of the corner of his mouth but loud enough so everyone could 1 QACROSS[ 23 {‘:Oimbursmnvul hesr. W dEca . Quantity of . Color hear, Ward ceplied: “I'm here to ol Bty ise catch foul balls {_u'umflgfi g Dewey smiled had no comeback cred image 1 Copy BUNE iN NEW Daity machi the reddest Capitol Hill is that of reactionary Representative Parnell Thomas of New Jersey, chief GOP member of the Dies Committee. -For several years he has been charged with the duty of investigating un-Am- erican activities, but has spent his time largely persecuting ex-pro- fesso nd liberals in the Govern- ment who once were connected with prog and democratic ganizations It took another Republican, forth- right, fair-minded Senator Homer Ferguson of Michigan really to un- JERSEY faces 1k One of Huge mythical bird 49. Roman emperor Vigllant Bird of t of lumber f peg 6. G 67, & ressive or- [ 1 et Dt er mussel 1 Is to be published this month and forms will close Oct. 10. F listings and chan Juneau and Doug Phone 420 before the Telephor cle osing date ouvia deHAVILLAND= +CUMMINGS 3 . W RS 0"3‘“ | £5 COBURN JA? CARSON J/'\HEWWAN 115 PRODN: Wetten and Drvected by NOFMAN KRASNA AlL DAl | IELT) S|E EL EXPERIENCED s OPERATORS E’; SPECIALIZING IN: AL | ® (Cold Waving D/l |1 ? e pPermanent Waving DIE | SHOP HOURS 9 A. M.TO € P. M. Solution Of Yesterday's Puzzle | Dutch city Monkshood | gl By o ! OPEN EVENINGS BY vy handle | APPOINTMENT PronSin 5. Sunken fence 6. Volatile hydro- PHONE 538 carbon 7. County in | Pennsylvania | 8. Browned bread | cover un-American activities which Congressman Thomas should have discovered long ago. For they were in Thomas' own backyard—in fac in his own district in New Jersey Senator Ferguson, with Demo- cratic Senators James Tunnell of ) HEALTH QUIZ Yes NO IM you have poor digestion? Do you feel headachy after eating? Do you get sour or upset easily? Do you feel tired—listless? | | d covering | . Unbroken Aflirmative | [ 1 TABLETS 5 Do you feel headachy and upset due to Ope | xmur]i: digested food? To feel cheerful Sous | and happy again your food must be phosphorus | digested properly. pounds | ch day, Nature must produce about 43, Malil charge i1, Meteor seeming 3 u to come may remain undigested— from Orfon | leaving you headachy and 5. King Artour's ‘ Therefore, y ease the u““ 7o HYPERACID STOMACHS $3 EY BACK SUARANTEE Butler, Mauro Drug Co. “The Rexall Store” of this digestive juice. Carter \ Liver Pills increase this flow o n in as little as 30 minutes. A you're on the road to feeling bette: Don't depend on .AY““(HII aid: counteract indigestion le Liver Pills ai to \k)u on’ Carter's fi :'s own uu!‘ A iver Pills th drugstore. onl, 10¢ and 25¢, i3, Tibetan sazell Dally Lessons in Engllsh W. L. GORDON | o) “The professor was at fault he professor was IN fault.” OF U N \TI‘WPII()N()UN('ED Hl"lma\mdn Principal accent is on irst syllabl SSPELLED: Terpsichorean (of dancing). Observe the o the CH, pronounced K. Revolve, rotate, roll, turn, spin, whir} WORD STUDY: “Use a word three times and it is yours”” Let us ease our vocabulary by mastering one word each day. Today’s word UMANITARIAN (adjective); pertaining to philanthropy. ‘The miser { never been moved by humanitarian impluses.” | MODERN ETIQUETTE 4 ROBERTA LEE &3 N \ ) Q. Who pays for the clothes worn by a bridesmaid at a wedding? A. With the exception of the flowers she carries, every article of lothing worn by the bridesmaid is paid for by her. Q hould a man remove his hat in a hotel elevator? A. Yes, and especially if a woman enters the elevator, Q. Are diamonds appropriate for a ma A. No §L00K and LEARN % ¢ coroo | PSSR DRSS R reesaes et 1. What were used by the Indians for artificial illumination before | the white men came to this country? 2. Which Queen had the longest reign in English history? 3. A there 1y other animals besides the skunk who emit an offensive odor? Where is the Aar River? | 5. What is a marmoset? ANSWERS: { 1. Pine torches. | 2. Queen Victoria 3. The mink and the weasel, when in danger. 4. In Switzerland 5 Av small South and Central American monkey. A. B. PHILLIPS as a paid-up subscriber to THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE is invited to present this coupon this * evening at the box office of the CAPITOL THEATRE and receive TWO TICKETS to see: “CHATTERBOX" ! Federal Tax —11c per Person WATCH THIS SPACE—Your Name May Appear! THE FERRY WAY ROOMS TRANSIENT ROOMS Clean—Steamheated—Hot and Cold Water 212 FERRY WAY JOAN WALKER INWAR g<zz, AS IN PEAC DEPOSITS IN'THIS BANK ARE INSURED B3 First National Bank . of JUNEAU, ALASEA T INSURAN €rO NAY Q/n SEPTEMBER 20, 1944 S i 5 7 e S T R S 0 A LUCILLE’S BEAUTY SALON Sflver Bow Lodgt @No AZ10.0.F Meets each Tues- u | day at 8:00 P. M. I1.0.0O.F. HAL} Forest D. Fennessy H. V. Callow .. ..Secref — The Sewing Basket ECIALISTS IN ALL TYPES OF PERMAN AND ALL TYPES OF HAIR FULL LINE OF DERMETIC CREAMS PHONE 492 139 S. Franklin PR i i ik ———— 'DR.E. H. KASER \ s DENTIST l ROBERT SIMPSON. Opt. D. Glasses Fitted Lenses Ground | | ! \ The Charles W. Carter JOHN AHLERS CO. ! P. O. Box 2508 in Scottish Visiting Brothers Welcome Noble Grand tary | Worshipful Master; LEIVERS, Secretary BABY HEADQUARTERS Infant and Children’s Wear Juneau, Alaska || | HORLUCK'S DENTIST [ BLOMGREN BUILDING ) Phone 56 HOURS: 9 A. M. to 5 P. M. Dr. A. W. Stewart NT WAVES IDUNT JUNFAU LODGE NO. 147 SECOND and FOURTEH Monday of each montb Rite Temple beginning at 7:30 p. m WALLIS S. GEORGE JAMES W | Warfields' Drug Store | (Formerly Guy L. Smith Drugs) NYAL Family Remedies DANISH | ICE CREAM 1 B. P. 0. ELKS Meets every Wednesday at 8 P. M. Visiting Brothers wel- come. A. B, HAYES. Exalted Ruler; H. L. McDONALD, Secy. ——ld 20TH CENTURY BUILDING | FLOWERLAND Office Phone 469 | 2nd and Franklin Dr. John H. Geyer | DENTIST | Room 9—Valentine Bldg PHONE 1762 FURNIT Graduate Los Angeles College of Optometry and Opthalmology Seward Street DR. H. VANCE OSTEOPATH Gastineau Hotel Annex S. Franklin PHONE 177 Front St.— "“The Rexall Store” Your Reliable Pharmacists BUTLER-MAURO DRUG CO. “The Clothing HARRY RACE Druggist “The Squibb Store” Mortuary Fourth and Franklin Sts. PHONE 136 WINDOW WASHING RUG CLEANING SWEEPING COMPOUND ASHENBRENNER NEW AND USED ]\ | CUT FLOWERS—POTTED | PLANTS—CORSAGES For those who deserve the be: Phone URE Phone 788—306 Willoughby Ave. | Jones-Stevens Shop LADIES'—MISSES’ READY-TO-WEAR Near Third “The Store for Men" SABIN’S Triangle Bldg H. S. GRAVES Man” HOME OF HART SCHAFFNER & MARX CLOTHING CALIFORNIA Grocery and Meat Marke! 478 — PHONES — 37) High Quality Foods at Moderate Prices PIGGLY WIGGLY For BETTER Groceries Phone 16—24 FOR BALE PAINTS—OIL—GLASS DAVE MILNER Shelf and Heavy Hardware Phone Red 578 I Guns and Ammunition PHONE 34 PLUMBING, HEATING and SHEET METAL SUPPLIES 0il Ranges and Oil Heaters INSURANCE Shattuck Agency Duncan'’s Cleaning and PRESS SHOP Cleaning—Pressing—Repairing PHONE 333 “Neatness Is An Asset” ZORIC SYSTEM CLEANING Phone 15 Alaska Laundry “Our Doorstep Is Say “SAY IT WITH JAMES C. COOPER, C.P. BUSINESS COUNSELOR Authorized to Practice Before the Treasury Department and Tax Court COOPER BUILDING You'll Find Food Finer and Service More Complete at THE BARANOF COFFEE SHOP L. C. Smith and Corona TYPEWRITERS Sold and Serviced by J. B. Burford & Co. Worn by Satisfied Customers” It With Flowers” but OURS!I” Juneau Florists Phone 311 1891—0ver Half a Century of Banking—1944 The B. M. Behrends Bank Oldest Bank in Alaska COMMERCIAL SAVINGS DON’T MISS “CHATTERBOX”—September 20 and 21 Sponsored by Juneau Fire Department N,c JUNEAU - YOUNG il Hardware Company | 4