The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, October 27, 1944, Page 4

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

Daily Alaska Empi Published every evening except Sunday by the EMPIRE PRINTING COMPANY Second and Maln Streets, Juneau, Alasks. | HELEN TROY MONSEN - - - - Prestdent | DOROTHY TROY LINGO - = = Vice-President WILLIAM R. CARTER - - - Editor and Manager ELMER A. FRIEND - - - - Managing Editor ALPRED ZENGER - - - - Business Manager | Musicians, is con; Petrillo, you on go Entered in the Post Office in Juneau as Second Class Matter. SUBSCRIPTION RATES: ! Delivared by carrier in Juneau and Douglas for $1.50 per month; six months, $8.00; one year, $15.00. | By mall, postage paid, at the following rates: One year, in advance, $15.00; six months, {n advance, $7.50; one month. in advance, $1.50. Subscribers will confer a favor if they will promptly notity the Business Office of any faflure or irregularity in the de- lvery of their papers. | excise tax. Telephones: News Office, 602; Business Office, 374. | MEMBER OF ASSOCIATED PRESS The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for republication of all news dispatches credited to 1t or not other- wise credited in this paper and also the local news published berein. ALASKA CIRCULATION GUARANTEED TO BE LARGER THAN THAT OF ANY OTHER PUBLICATION. NATIONAL REPRESENTATIV Fourth Avenue Bldg., Seattle, Wash. :uom]y President | him to ple: se, a Alaska Newspapers, 1411 The Administ. done about it a War Labor Boa collection of Fund draws near, the looked. from the large bu: THAT PETRILLO —_—_ such campaign. A good many persons are beginning to wonder if | cents or dollar o it isn't time for Congress to re-examine its Con- gressional some administrative rulings and Supreme Court decisions which have granted sweep- | taws, cessful or not. illegal if committed by anyone else. Certainly pul)hr‘ indignation doesn't seem to do much good as far as, ! James Petrillo, czar of the American Federation of | | ing of recordings and transcriptions by musicians of his union because the principal record making com- | ! Mr, and Mrs. Charles H. Howard panies refuse to pay to Petrillo's union a special tax Ry, tiouae R enting -y every record sold. Taxation ordinarily is the| William C. Jensen rnment’s own little monopoly. | Charles Schramm If the record companies give in and allow lhef J. L. Wilson shakedown, then, of course, the amount of the shake- | Bill Winn down is added to the price of the records and the Mrs. Gus Abbott | public pays, just like the consumer ultimately pays any | Rachael Achison | Kenneth Oswald { On June 15, Petrillo was ordered by the National e ! - e | Labor Board to withdraw its ban on the making of | phonograph records. s a special favor to the President, yield and remove the ban. to comply with this request, also. This seems to be a strange thing earlier, when Montgomery Ward and Company ignored | over the company. ATIONAL WAR FUND As the end of the period set aside in Juneau for‘m“ All the Many generous contributions have been received | than welding. contributor who raises the small contributions can make such a drive suc-| So if you have not been visited by the solicitor, | i THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE—JUNEAU, ALASKA 11 FRIDAY, OCTOBER 27, 1944 -~ "HAPPY Bl \ cerned { RTHDAY | OCTOBER 27 { will remember, has banned the mak- | { He ignored this “order.” Re-| Roosevelt wrote to Petrillo, asking | HOROSCOPE | “The stars incline ‘ g but do not compel” A | Petrillo has decided not ration contends that nothing | can be | SATURDAY, OCTOBER 28 Adverse aspects dominate today, which should be a time of cau- rd order, troops were sent in to take |tious procedure in business. U"'i s certainties of many sorts will post- | A few months o pone business initiative. HEART AND HOME: There is a sign read as encouraging to wo- | men in developing their special tal- | household arts should cuitivated at this time, when | contributions to the National War\bb , it is probable that many residents | 1o home is the haven for return- who would contribute if contacted, have been over-|jng invalided servicemen. Cooking | becomes more important each day | | hesses of Juneau, but it is the little | BUSINESS AFFAIRS: Although! the bulk of the money in any |there is a warning sign early to-| You may not think that your 50(day for merchants and manufac- r five dollars will mean much, but|turers who are to meet unusual| trade conditions in the winter, the | Istars are read as presaging a profit- | |able season. Householders new and old will seek labor-saving gadgets | ing legal immunities to labor unions through which | you can send your contributions to Jack Flvtclmr,»‘and trade in clothing will be am- their leaders may commit acts which would be called : Baranof Hotel. ashim'on |ticipate in the case with his son| no longer in the Cahill firm. John | Cahill asked for a rehearing, but| W' | Justice Reed again refused to par- Go-ROIlnd [ticipate, even though his son had | v | transferred his allegiance from the | | Canill firm. | Meanwhile, the insurance com-| And then, remembering the So- panies almost won out in another cialist charge Dewey had hurled at|way. A bill exempting insurance | Berle, Lehman let him have this | from the anti-trust laws was passed parting shot: |last spring by the House and re- “Besides,” he said, “don’t you|ported favorably by the Senate think you're setting a precedent by |Judiciary Committee over the vig- | which a future Republican Admin- |orous objection of Wyoming’s trust- istration might deny you a pass-|hating Senator Joe O'Mahoney. Be- | port?” cause it was arousing a storm of NOTE—Lehman is employed not|controversy in the Senate, Ma- | by the United States but by Lhe;]ority Leader Barcley agreed that United Nations. Since each mem- |the bill should not be brought up ber nation pays part of the bill, | until after the election. each is entitled to appoint a cer-| Last month, however, at the tain number of personnel. Incident- | Senate’s final session, this bill ally, Adolf Berle for years has been |turned up on the consent calendar, | known around the State Depart-|which is composed mainly of per—i ment as its chief Red-baiter. His sonal suits against the government | wife inherited $3,000,000 of New York real estate. (Continued jrom Page One) | | Jwhich are considered passed if no {objection is made as they are read. | No one paid much attention to NOBODY CLEARS WITH HIM |what bills were being presented, | Sidney Hillman was bawling out and strange as it seems, the much employees of the Political Action ' controverted insurance bill went' Committee in New York, over the |azingly brisk. | NATIONAL ISSUES: Patriotic| through without objection. Actually | Americans who feel that the| Senator Barcley was bliwing his"Umted States must emerge from nose at the time and did not even |the war as the dominant power mj hear the number of the bill. | establishing demccratic principles | It was not until after the clerk are to meet with certain disap- had pa d on down the calendar |pointing trends within the United that Barkley and Senator Carl| Nations. Astrologers foresee much{ Hatch of New Mexico realized what | diplomatic competition on the part had happened and demanded re-|of Great Britain and Russia. consideration. This was agreed. The| INTERNATIONAL AFFAIRS:| two solons sat down wiping their | Although obstructions of many sorts | brows. {will delay the Allies, their march | (Copyright, 1944, by United toward complete victory will be Feature Syndicate, Inc.) |always progressive. Autumn wea-| m 5. —— [ther again will be a time factor | . (have the augury of a year of unp-| Bro nch Itls |should be beneficial. | trouble to help loosen and expel tient. These talented Scorpio sub- to soothe and heal raw, tender, in- |{he habit of worrying. 3 bottle of Creomulsion with the un- | have your money back. | Second in series. Sat, 8 p. 2 A {but this year is to mark splendid | 1 |success. w I { Persons whose birthdate it xs! jexpected events in which changes; Children born on this day prob- Creomulsion relieves promptly be- | g SRR : | catse 1t goes right to the seat of the | 201 Will be ambitious and impa- germ laden phlegm, and aid nature | jects should be taught to overcome flamed bronchial mucous mem- | 3 | branes. Tell your druggist to sell you (Copyright, 1944) | e | derstanding you must like the way it | 0 g‘;uck!y allays the cough or you are | APOCHLE POBTY 5 |Sons of Norway. Admission CREOMULSION . for Coughs, Chest Colds, Bronchitis — e, handling of a press release recent- | ly. At the end of a rather thorough | call-down, Hillman dolefully re- marked: “The trouble with this of- | fice is that nobody clears anylhmgf Wi -ma/ i NEILL CLARK S | 1 { AUDITS CHAUTEMPS NO VICHYITE Not many people realize it but| Camille Chautemps, former Pre-| mier of France, has been living in | ‘Washington for four years. At first | he was. looked upon with suspicion as the Vichy representative of Pe-| tain, and there is no question that Petain did help to facilitate his| escape from France. Chautemps and his family, including one very small baby, escaped in a small fish- ing boat and had an extremely | rough time before they finally got out of the invading Nazist clutches. Gradually, as he remained here, Chautemps has convinced friends that he is anything but a Vichyite, despite his personal gratitude to Petain for helping him escape. KINLOCH N. NEILL CLIENTS A COMP. : | ACROSS 33, Fath During his stay here, the ex-l 1 c.,m,,s :‘: ,’,‘“l,em Premier has been financially hardI 4 Tal:e excep- 35. Note of the . 8 ilv tion scale up, has supported his family by| ¢ snow rupner B giving lectures. However, several| 12. Mulgnl:l!;: 31, Saucy | 3 g tigies he has turned down fat lec- | 13 g.,";\"e'n] :”“ 5. Tolcrates oy S 8 o . Conceale . Storms tipe “fees. beoause he was e’“’“"ed\ 15, Massachu- 41, Metal-bearing to criticize certain things about the | setts cape rocks Roosevelt Administration or the| 16 Talks enthu- 42, Brilllant blue United States. | 17. corroded 43 Grown girls Now, however, Chautemps' finan- | by Aceema 0 48 FIRACS e 5 ced. The baby| 22 Unfasten 49. Order of the cial ‘troubles are solved. The baby | 3%, S vusseontest FLRUEL who weathered the stormy seas| 24. Mountain toads when Chautemps escaped is DOW | s 1ediiiiea 85 PTECE fan four years old and a very preco-| :‘9) mr;:nn !’yrlnl fi' Loves weakly cious young lady. So much so that| ~ m'rf ?oocde:' 85. M‘s’: o 4 :t as| 31. Compass point 56. Buila she has Jvu.st signed a contract as | H Typg’me”um. 57, Lair Hollywood’s youngest and newest star. | INSURANCE ANTI-TRUST | EXEMPTION ALMOST WINS | Recent refusai of the U. S.| Supreme Court to reconsider its/ spring decision putting fire insur-‘1 ance under the anti-trust laws was | a bad blow to the insurance com- | panies. When the case came be-| | fore the court last term, they de- ! cided against the insurance com- panies by a 4-3 majority, Justices Roberts and Reed not participat- SYSTEMS { Public Accountants—Auditors—Tax Counselors 208 Franklin Street — Telephone 757 Fairbanks Office: 201-2 Lavery Building WE OFFER TO A LIMITED NUMBER OF ACCOUNTING AND TAX SERV. TELEPHONE 757 § Crossword Puzzl Have a portrait artist take your picture. Hamersley Studio. Opposite Federal Building, Phone 294. Adv | | PORTRAIT PHOTOGRAPHY | i | TAXES | The articles of° War Department | property listed below, now at Ex- | cursion Inlet, Alaska, have been de- | clared surplus salvage and will be Isold to the highest bidder. Sealed { bids will be accepted by Command- ing Officer, Excursion Inlet, Alaska, ,up to and including Five November 11944. Bids will be opened on Six | November 1944 and delivery will be made to the highest bidder at Ex- | cursion Inlet, Alaska. The War De- | partment makes no warranty rela- JOHN W. CLARK LETE MONTHLY CE | tive to condition of this property | and reserves the right to reject any and all bids. Certified check for the amount of the bid, payable to Treasurer of the | United States must accompany each | bid. :g@x One each barge, wooden, 60 ft., T ITN v | BCS-1554. STAITIS | One each scow, wannigan, reg- *T’ y istry number 167140. STAMAR J. W. CORNETT, SIPIEIRA 1st. Lt., O.D., Comdg. EE ERA First publication, Oct. 19, 1944. | IRl TIM ILast. publication, Nov. 4, 1944, C|U[B! By o S|P|ADIE SR HAIR STYLED E|L|!' O siff INE[OJIO| (rieinliFe by Experts Solution Of Yesterday's Puzzle L Y L T WE SPECIALIZE 2. English com- g One of the poser Muses . Change posi- tion . Utilize Says agaln or differently . Container with a perforated top . Flying toy . Roman date . Preposition . Genus of the Cold Waving Permanents Styling Shaping maple tree . Garden imple- ments Anoint Furnish a crew for again 6. Merehandise . Harden: variant . Small depres- sions ing. g Reed disqualified himself be- cause his son, John, was a member of the law firm of Wright, Gordon, Zachry, Parlin and Cahill, which | represented the insurance cum-! panies. | g the summer, young Reed | §z the firm, joining another New | frk legal office. It was in the| hgpe that his father, Justice Stan- | lq Reed, would feel free to pal -} Hours 9 A. M. to 6 P. M. Baranof Beauty Salon . Waits for milady's window . Considered . Make well . Boy attendant . Half mask . Meal . Ashes of sea- weed . Cause to float el OPEN EVENINGS BY Cunning APPOINTMENT i f{ledllntd b est member . And not PHONE 538 ! from THE EMPIRE S e 20 YEARS AGO ———— OCTOBER 27, 1924 The St. Paul Club, champions of the American Associaticn, defeated Seattle, winners of ‘the Pacific Coast League pennant, in a one-sided game the previous afternoon by a score of 12 to 4. Fishing boats arrived in Juneau and sold their halibut catch for 15 nd 8 cents a pound. Earle Hunter of Juneau, was a member of the Oregon Agricultural College Military Band, according to word received here. The 53-piece band was directed by Capt. H. L. Beard and was being recognized as the best college band on the coast. Miss Florence Casey arrived on the Alaska from Moscow, Idaho, where she had been attending the University of Idaho. N. O. Hardy, cashier at the First National Bank, left on the Estebeth for Skagway on a business trip. Birthdays which were celebrated this month at the Parish Hall following school hours were those of students Leonard Stokes, Rosa Danner, Walter Miller, Beatrice Mullen, Jack Kearney and Paul Enberg. The United States Lighthouse tender Cedar, Capt. J. W. Leadbetter, arrived in Juneau from Lynn Canal, where it had been engaged in taking |.~upplics to various lighthouse stations and doing buoy work. Between 150 and 200 children were present at the Hallowe’en Mas- querade given by the Women of the Mooseheart Legion the previous afternoon in Moose Hall. eather report: High, 45; low, 35; cloudy. e et e P e Daily Lessons in English % 1. corpon WORDS OFTEN MISUSED: Do not say, “Meet me at about ten o'clock.” Omit either AT or ABOUT. OFTEN MISPRONOUNCED: Abyss; pronounce a-bis, A as in ASK, accent last syllable. Abysmal; pronounce a-biz-mal, second A as in AT unstressed, accent second syllable. OFTEN MISSPELLED: Adequate; ADE, not ADA, or ADIL SYNONYMS: Eager, participate, headlong. WORD STUDY: “Use a word three times and it is yours.™ Let us increase our vocabulary by mastering one word each day. Today's word : ABJECT; sunk to a low condition; down in spirit or hope. “And banish hence these abject, lowly dreams.”—Shakespeare. MODERN ETIQUETTE Q. Should the man ask the woman before offering the engagement ring? A. A man should propese marriage before offering a ring. In fact, many authorities regard it in bad taste to propose and offer the ring at the same time since this suggests to the woman that the man was prob- ably too confident. Q. Is it necessary that a person take some of every dish that is served by a hostess? A. It is better to take from the majority of them. rude to refuse three or four dishes. Q. Should the word “meet” be used when making an introduction? A. No; this word should be avoided. by ROBERTA LEE ———3 It would be very (i PUSHESSUSSUUST USSR UL SIS & 2 ) 1. Is defecating a pool polluting it, purifying it, or making it into two pools? 2. Is it true that George Washington owned a set of the Encyclopedia Britannica? b 3. What is the sour juice of green fruit, as of unripe grapes, called? 4. What is an “infernal machine”? 5. What is the family name of George VI? ANSWERS: 1. Purifying it. 2. Yes, a sei of the third edition. 3. Verjuice. 4. Any device for doing unusual damage by explosion. 5. Windsor. LOU HUDSON 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: “SALUDOS AMIGOS” Federal Tax —11c¢ per Person WATCH THIS SPACE—Your Name May Appear! ' | DEPOSITS IN THIS BANK ARE INSURED THE management of this bank is pledged to conserva- tive operation. The safety of depositors’ funds is our primary consideration. In addition, the bank is 2 mem- ber of Federal Deposit Insur- ance Corporation,which in- sures each of our depositors against loss to a maximum of $5,000. First N‘mofl Bank ORATION "MEMBER FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CO Lue FULL LINE OF DERMETIC CREAMS 2LLES BEAUTY SALON SPECIALISTS IN ALL TYPES OF PERMANENT WAVES AND ALL TYPES OF HAIR " PHONE 492 Silver Bow Lodgt | MOUNT JUNEAU LODGE NO, 147 @No. A210.0.F SECOND and FOURTH 'Meets each Tues- Monday of each month lay at 8:00 P. M. I O. O. F. HAL¥ in Scottish Rite Temple Visiting Brothers Welcome beginning at 7:30 p. m. 0 %% Forest D. Fennessy ....Noble Grand d. V. Callow ... Secretary —_— The Sewing Basket BABY HEADQUARTERS Infant and Children’s Wear LISB S. Franklin Juneau, Alaska PE———— DR. E. H. KASER DENTIST BLOMGREN BUILDING Phone 56 HOURS: 9 A. M. to 5 P. M, ) Dr. A. W. Stewart DENTIST 20TH CENTURY BUILDING Office Phone 469 s | Dr. John H. Geyer DENTIST Room 9—Valentine Bldg. PHONE 762 | ROBERT SIMPSON. Opt. D. Graduate Los Angeles College of Optometry and Opthalmology Glasses Fitted Lenses Ground _— ey DR. H. VANCE OSTEOPATH Gastineaun Hotel Annex 8. Franklin PHONE 177 LSS RS SRS | E———---- 4 "The Rexall Store” Your Reliable Pharmacists BUTLER-MAURO DRUG CO. HARRY RACE Druggist “The Squibb Store” The Charles W. Carter Mortuary Fourth and Franklin Sts. PHONE 136 WINDOW WASHING BUG CLEANING SWEEPING COMPOUND FOR SALE DAVE MILNER Phone Red 578 JOHN AHLERS CO. P. O. Box 2508 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™ 4.2 114 Phone 15 Alaska Laundry WALLIS S. GEORGE Worshipful Master; JAMES W LEIVERS, Secretary. —_—— | Warfields' Drug Store | .| | (Formerly Guy L. Smith Drugs) q NYAL Family Remedies 81 HORLUCK’S DANISH 1 ICE CREAM B.P.0 ELES. .. Meets every Wednesday at 8 ) P. M. Visiting Brothers wel- come. A. B, HAYES, Exalted A Ruler; H. L. McDONALD, Secy. | FLOWERLAND CUT FLOWERS—POTTED vk PLANTS—CORSAGES ) “For those who deserve the best” t 2nd and Franklin Phone 557 ASHENBRENNER’S NEW AND USED FUBNITURE | - Phone 788—306 Willoughby (Au‘ J Jones-Stevens Shop LADIES’—MISSES’ READY-TO-WEAR Seward Street Near Third | “The Store for Men"” SABIN’S | Front St.—Triangle Bldg. H. S. GRAVES “The Clothing Man” HOME OF HART. SCBAFFNER | & MARX CLOTHING 1 { CALIFORNIA Grocery and Meat Markel 478 — PHONES — 37 o High Quality Foods at e Moderate Prices 5 S PIGGLY WIGGLY For BETTER Grocerles Phone 16—24 JUNEAU - YOUNG Hardware Company PAINTS—OIL—GLASS Shelf and Heavy Hardware Guns and Ammunition T A\ g 00 o oy You’ll Find Food Finer and Service More Complete at THE BARANOF | | _corree suo A~ V1o JAMES C. COOPER, C.P.A. | . x BUSINESS COUNSELOR Authorized to Practice Before the Treasury Department and Tax Court COOPER BUILDING 1H0e) L. C. Smith and Corona TYPEWRITERS Sold and Serviced b, J. B. Burford & Co. | - “Our Doorstep Is Worn by Satisfied Customers” o “Say It With Flowers” but “SAY IT WITH OURS!" " Juneau Florists Phone 311 1891—0ver Half a Century of Banking—1944 | - M. Behrenils ' Bank . Oldest Bank in Alaska The B. COMMERCIAL o i SAVINGS

Other pages from this issue: