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E FOUR ’ PAGI g ; : ; ! A3 - . rule from the President’s chair impartially. , [ e aasaassseasesassanass mew 5 Daily Alaska Empire | i o won it o DAY EARS AGO fom TRIPLETTE & KRUSE Publithed every evenine except Sunday by the session as a member of ”‘; H“’“i;: The job comes HAPPY BIRTH 2 0 Y HE EMPIRE BUILDING CONTRACTORS . EMPIRE l'l(l:':l!\(. cfl;\ei:l.l\vgun‘ to him not on}} because he is e senior member EXPERT CABINET WORK OF ALL KINDS Second and Main Streets, J. 3 A A Bt b MELEN TROY MONSEN p <4 - - President | Of the Houes in years of service, but because the MARKET G DOROTHY TROY LINGO - = Vice-Presiient | yeteran legislator should be well versed in the in- | 1925 0TH CENTURY SN S D % iy i Ed"}vflxr .mx ul!’::fi:" tri aéies o? lel is]at’he rocedure. gt “ R B o VAR 2 AT aging r |tricacies Z 5 i v i filfiggnA?{Sr‘.F?xD A g - " Business Manager ” s Oscar G. Olson The dcold watYlel :ntpmed r::vter :mern:;i /::‘:sk':m:n;n:ul:: ;::::e: 7 rided — vind was stil owing great guns a MOUNT JUNEAU LODGE NO. 147 o he Post Office fn Juneau as Second Class Matter. Thelma McCorkle The w o e as“ n<:*=|u:n;:' RATES: ELDER STATESMEN Jessie Villoria between one degree and three degrees above zero. Silver Bow Lodge SECOND and FOURTH- Delivered by earrier In .vnnu-;‘:n':’ Douzlas for §1.50 per month; 3 R. M. Matthews il No.A2,L0.0.F. Monday of each month < Sl month Shall, postase paid, at the following rates: Carnarvon Hofolgh in Wales on: JRriUGLy T bal Mrs. Sylvia Anderson The final basketball games of the series between the Juneau and 'Meets each Tues- in Scottish Rite Temple One Jest. mdnd\:mrl‘hxr:g 00; six months, in advance, $7.50; |a new representative in the House of Commons, H. F. Casperson Douglas high school teams were to be played this night in the A. B.|day at 8:00 P. M. I. O.O.F. HALL. beginning at 7:30 p. m. O O bors will tonfer a favor if they will promptly notity | taking the place of a member who was retiring on Mrs, F. F. Flaherty ol Visiting Brothers Welcome E. F. CLEMENTS, Wor- 3 the Business Office of any fallure or irregularity in the de- |the advice of his physicians after continuous service Tillie M. Somers GEORGE CLA] 1 a | shipful Master; JAMES W. LEIV- livery of their papers. 4 Years and just before his elghty-seoond BIEthoa A ! y RK, Noble Gran ERS, Secretary. Telephones: News Office, 602; Business Office, 374, 2 g ol (SR e oo rommoe e ¥ Abandonment of the old fire trap housing the Governor’s office on ER OF ASSOCIATED PRESS = = g:zr;:“”“g G i Fifth Street between Main and Seward was underway. tR.e;ovllalnf:f AR " The A ted Press 1 sively en e use 3 i ? —_— rep\wh?mx:‘:cé? Wl news dispatches credited to it or mot other- His was a political careér which would be hard H 0 R 0 S C 0 P E furniture, recorc.is, etc., had started. The new quarters were to n the W f' . i SAVE TET PIECES wise credited In this paper and also the lotal news published A z | Goldstein Building. arneidas Drug ’0_‘3 S herein. to match for length of years and eminence under | “Th : l ok B of your broken lenses and send - sees A : ¢ stars incline e (Formerly Guy L. Smith Drugs) NATIONAL REPRESENTATIVES — Alaska Newspapers, 1411 any form of government. There is just one better b tdO fll)t compel,, Fire hose had been placed in the basement of the Williams home, NYAL Family Re them to Box 468, Ketchikan, Alaska, Dt SIE N S SEPETIG My & I SAEL AR st ks Sixth and Kennedy, to be used in case a fire. started in that section| [ HORLUCK'S D, AmleS“H They will be replaced promptly in {who retired from public life In 1894 after 62 Years in | L oommomeeeeeeoed | © 0 e Gepartment would be delayed in reaching the scene. ICE CREAM our large and well equipped labora- P | the House of Commons. He was 85 when he stepped WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 24 ¥ tory. C. M. and R. L. Oaflson. | down 3 4 . " A < - iy ¢ Alameda arrived from the Westward and reported bucking i Here in America one of our owi' §tatesten re-| Benefic aspects are strongly ac- i ::e:?:‘e Gulf of Alaska for 48 hours. 2 - vently celebrated his eighty- seventhy birthday. ! He ¢, [tive today. Adverse influences are|a m s ® B k . ELKS tor Glass, the Virginian whose |Slight but should not be ignored. ewing Basket -B. P. 0. |of course, Senator Carter Glass, the Virginian, whose | "8 P S0n€ O e Seientifie| Announcement was made that three funnel liners Prince Rupert and ) |public career dates back to his election to the upper{ . .“ 14 equcation of children are|prince George would be placed on the Southeast Alaska run during the BABY HEADQUARTERS Meets every Wednesday at 8 | house of the Virginia Legislature in 1899. 11 ibiliti f kly schedul Infant and Children’s Wear P. M. Visiting Brothers wel- i to become national responsi €5 | summer months, operating on a weekly schedule. A. B. HAYES, Exalted ‘. And here in Alaska, the membvers of our own|geter the war, according to the 139 8. Pranklin Juneau, Alaska %0:11:. H. L,‘bl £ 3 Seriate, feven IHCUEY ot Leg AT R mlstnrs. Conversation of human life Milton Sills was billed at Spickett's Palace in “Skin Deep,” and Mae i o 33 ‘ 1(,’(‘5“’"09 only 03 yeais, are el e 3 devetopment | of mbellig:nee Murray was at the Coliseum in “Jazzmania.” —_—— % like Senators. The word, Senate, dates back to the|under supervision that will elimi- DR E H KASER |early days of Rome when the actual business affairs |nate haphazard methods common Wmm—.——m—o . L. I1. ri.nmum of the city were placed in the hands of two “consuls” |in_many families are presaseg . 4 . . by DENTIST CUT FLOWERS—POTTED 4 who were assisted by a council of Elders called the| BUSINESS ATRAIRS: Orecd ;’; Da"y Lessons in Enghsh W. L. GORDON BLOMGREN BUILDING PLANTS—CORSAGES ARTHUR P. WALKER Senate because the word “senex” means an old man |88i0 may cause Se - R Phone 56 “For those who deserve the best” | the Unjted States. Axis strategy . M. to 5 P. M. . land today an elder statesman. working from various places may HOURS: 9 A. to . M. 2nd and Franklin Phone 557 It was fitting that the meeting of the Territorial | The manner in which the Senate was organized entrap American businessmen who ‘WORDS OFTE.N MISUSED: Do not say, “I consider her as worthy 5 Senate should adjourn for the first time in honor jand set to business yesterday is a tribute to the sea’ profit more plainly than they!ef promotion. Omit AS. ) of the late Senator Arthur P. Walker. {legislative skill gained through many years of service{feel patriotism. Underground" trans- OFTEN MISPRONOUNCED: Halcyon. Pronounce hal-si-un, A as w s ASHENBRENNER'S i The fact that the motion was madeby Senator [by such of Alaska’s €lder staésmen as Norman “Doc”{actions are indicated as perilous]in AN, I as in IT, U as in UP unstressed, accent first syllable, Dr. A. % tfiwm m A“n um Norman® Walker, and the tribute deliveréd from the | Walker, O. g Cochran, Frank Gordon, H. H. Mc-|to ifiternational relations. OFTEN MISSPELLED: Panic; no K. Panicky; observe the K. DENTIST d floor i behalf of the late Senator by Senator Cochran, | Cutcheori, ahd others Whose names have become| NATIONAL ISSUES: Controver-. SYNONYMS: Appropriate, befitting, conventional, decent. speaks ‘well for the good qualities of statesmanship | fagiliar in chc legfslative halls at Juneat. |sies ‘efsfl‘”d‘“fi “’;:‘m‘x:;"}’g ‘:’; PVORD STUDY: “Use a word three times and it is yours.” Let us 20TH CENTURY BUILDING r U n “ IT u n E in both! of these veteran legisiators. Those Who at- || fi;;m“t'o’ ":(;‘:, h g:n:‘fe; Triere icrease our vocabulary by mastering one word each day. Today's word: Office Phone 469 Phone 788—306 Willoughby Ave. tende 'd;meéflnss of the Senate in 1943 will remember! t The Medics 278" dign Ol “Soets o1 wap pf| EORBEARANCE; patience. “There is a limit at which forbearance ceases 3 Va ena ocl l'.n ouny emselves in | lew Yor mes) nnd other groups. s@,-eg ageRts | fi opposition’ to those uflbe late Senator. | The “medic” i;g;nust in any fighting force. He s win wopk' ctively ohi ‘American p by Dr. John H. Geyer Jonel-s.“m‘ flp ko [ *'fhicke differences, though they were {likely ‘to combine the functions of Kipling’s Gunga Din; | sympathies. MODERN ETIOUEI IE VENTIST LADIES'—MISSES® seriomeUTHEIIAE Arite net. nide yesterday for a |Florence Nightinggild, the Good ‘Samaritan andithei YNTERNATIONAL AFFAIRS: ROBERTA ‘LEE aat s Valentine Biag READY-TO-WEAR d few moments while the Senate honored the memor: | most skillful surgeon science has produced. He fre-|india should benefit under plane- 3 A B 1 d Y | quently does so at the cost of his own life. Unarmed tary influences that promise inde- 7203 PHONE 1762 Seward Street Near Third of the Senator who would have been seated with them | eicher-bearers seek out the wounded where the |pendence within a year or two. Q. Is it incorrect to place punctuation marks at the énd of reach yesterday if he had lived another year. | shells are still striking. Because they know that time ( Alhough there may be disunity in | line when addressing an envelope? " We liked that gesture and believe it was a fine |is of the essence, they are always in a hurry. Some- |the population, economic progress A. Tt isn’t incorrect, but according to modern custom the punctuation el thing. [ times a complicated operation has to be performed |is presaged. Growing friendliness| at the ends of the lines is omitted. ROBERT SIMPSON, Opt. D. “The Store for Men' —_— {in a foxhole. During the Metz offensive a 19-year-|ioward Americans is indicated. Q. When one receives an announcement of a birth, should a note | | Graduate Los Angeles College 9 N SRR INT PR ~ {old medical aide saved a doughboy’s life by cutting a| persons whose birthdate it is ¢ congratulation and felicitation be sent? of Optometry and MR. PRESIDENT, MR. SPEAKER ki o L Opthialmology il Heatzs .foumam pen tube into his throat with a pocket|pave the augury of a year of real A. Yes, and it should be sent promptly | to the near- | . 3 A The election in the Senate of Senator Edward D. | :::‘rfioszt':lme,‘w:;Leh?:d,::sifi:::z; ‘g?;?‘ i Bf,":pen |success. Health and good fortune Q. How long should partners talk exclusively to each other when at | | Glasses Fitted Lenses Ground Front St—Triangle Bldg. « 3 5 jare forecast. 'y n Coffey of Anchorage as President, and in .thc House | cellar. It may be a tent over the brow of the next| chjldren born on this day prob- the dinner .tablei‘ > : . of chxnsomat&ce‘ Jesse Dbllnndc: of Fairbanks as :fl] wn:‘hthe surgéti:s operating fi(:‘el;oe:emgx fls;:;) ably ‘will be most fortunate. Many A. During the first two courses. | D —— ey Speak'f FVN ouses able and experienced men, | At Bastoghe ree surgeons andle iitstanding “men’ and Hoten be- | fertemrereorreer e b o : both bd' withotat oppodition, paving the way for | Patients With Hiothitig to dull’ their pain but cognac. Iong ‘to this sign. 1 ‘e The Rexall Slore & H S GBAVES : cooperation for the good of the Territory. ;Eger.vbgdg clhefled dul;_el: five . more ' surgeons got %" (Copyright, 1945) ' I_ 0 0 K an d l. E A R N C. GORD&N (D Boliable Fharmeoisly AP Mstuias Mun® ; 5 | through by plane and glider. ' . (1 ) L . ! oth houses it is possible that other candidates, | There is little glory in the Medical Corps. It is D m_mmo HOME OF o ! had EHe¥'80 chosen, could have rallied strength to | just hard, dirty Work and mighty dangerous. The COAST GUARDSMEN e e e et e} DRUG CO. o mmmmmlu- make an issue of the eleetion of the presiding officer. | Red Cross seems to mean little to the enemy. 'He has ) ; 1. What is the flesh of the following called when sold !or food: (a) The fact that no such battles were in evidence should "bombed hospital tents from Anzio to.Aachen. - These TRANSFtRRED our cows, (b) sheep, (c) calves, (d) pigs? o mean that personal desires in several instances were | medics are tough, but among: the: torn and dying aen 2. Was Peru once ruled by the Azects, Mayans, or Incas? tosséll aside for the chance of starting things out |learn to be tender,.£00. They shun glory, but they |.ilyeaying on transfer to other| 3. When did the fashion of knee-breeches dfor gentlemen begin to CALIFORNIA 8 ; |have their pride. They are proud to have saved 97 TR = smoothly. e d th naval districts, the following en-!wane? President Coffey_ has, been serving in the Legis- | Ut Of every hundred wounded, . They are proud that{jigeq personnel of the U. S. Coast| 4 1 balsa a shortened form for balsam fir? Grbosry & Bont BEabioy lature since 1935. He was a member of the House in | theg) z:ria(dtpo [;xr P :":mhm_‘l’_: ba::(s s::n:d rromu: Guard have sailed from Juneau: 5. ‘Who was Dagubire? 478 — PHONES — 37] ‘ the 1937 and 1939 sessions and is now serving, his | s ERR W N Leon H. Floyd, ship’s cook 2/c;| ANSWERS: High Quality Foods &) A , ' i 3 | nobody in our whole Vast Army, not even the foremost Roy A. Stewart, seaman 1/c; Owen ‘Moderate Prices i third session in the Semate. He has shown himself combat crew or the deaduest rlying wing, has done a Dmfia;‘man s we; David M.| 1. (a) Beef, (b) mutton, (c) veal, (d) pork or ham. . L ¥ Sipar wlsi 7 Eatin, motor mechm ¢ 1/c; Delbelt . Immediaf er the Fren volution, . washin Ion ' | trumpeted sadly, and died. but suddenly a5 ‘Lineoln 'step- | 'Anderson, ‘E M o Js 4. No; it is an entirely different-tree. The Charles W. C&l‘ier PIGGL' w‘GGL' < g L | “I'told this story in some detail,” |ped to'the platfoiin“to deliver “théBesne, chief pm ist's mate. 5. “One of: the earliest photographers. M n Merry- President Harding told friends, |address which was to become an| Transferred to Ketchikan are: oriuary For BETTER Groceries r' "'and by the time I had finished [important part of history the sun|Rjchard G.Van Velkinburgh, ships Frankit Go_kound {I was relieved to see that we had broke out ... When Gen. Ulysess|cook 2/c; Frank R. Clayton, spe- ? m;;gn 136 s, Phone 16—34 |almost reached the Capitol.” S. Grant was inaugurated the capi-|cialist 1/c; Glenn F. Swank, chief J““EAU WELDING A“D mcnl"z SHUP . Sema— | When George Washington wastal was filled with veterans of thelspecialist; Dale Steuart, specialist illoughb Vi P) (Continued from Page Ore) |inaugurated he had to borrow $3,000|Civil War. The cheers were deaf-|a/c, B g by e s ron Romebed - = was embittered by a whispering t0 pay off his debts and for the|ening. His little daughter, fright- —— e, GRAY MARINE DIESELS and GENERAL WINDOW WASHING | | campaign and recired a neglected cxpense of his trip from Mt.|ened, ran to her father and clutch-| MOTORS. DIESBLS R. RUG.CIEANING JUNEAU - YOUNG 4 and forgotten: figure. Vernon to New York Likeled his arm. Grant took her hand From 25 to 400 H. P. SWEEPING COMPOUND o Jefferson, Andrew Jackson tried tojand held it while he continued GRAY MARINE GAS ENGINES Pl HARDING AND WILSON |walk from his hotel to the Capitol.|reading his manuscript. From 42 to 96 H.P. FOR SALE o One of the most trying trips to, 'He was swept off his feet by en-| Grover Cleveland escorted Wil MARINE SUPPLIES 3 the Capitol for any President was thusiastic admirers who saw him |liam McKinley back, to. the White ¢ that f Woodro' Wilson with |Walking bare-headed down the House after the inayguration. Later . - & Presidént-elect Warren G. Hard- Istreet . . . Jackson’s inauguration {he-'wrote: “I was, .glad when Mr, < o i ing. Wilson was crushed mentally Was the first ever held before the McKinley came to Washington to WA O AUTQ!QTB! ¢ ¥ and physically by, the .defeat,: of‘pubhc , . &« Martin Van Buren [be inaugurated . .. I took a drink Auto are warned now is WATKINS ' . | his Léague of Nations. He wasirode to the Capitol fn'a phaetonof rye whiskey with him, put on the time_ to. purchase 1045 auto Goon “ufl 3 ! partly { paralyzed, but insisted' on ! built of wood from the U. S. Frig- my hat and walked out a private plates, and are cautioned not only | riding with Harding to the Capitol./ate Constitution. Jackson got upieitizen.” . ... When Teddy Rogse-. to, purchase.. them, but. ta. place) » | Harding told friends he was em- from’ & sick bed to nde wuh Van jvelf was inaugurated, Secretary of \them on “their. cars. P n n n u c rs barrassed and did mot know what {Buren. State John Hay sent him a locket . . JOHN MONAGLE, Foods, Medicines, % he shauld say during the ride up, Willidm Henry Harrison, “Old | containing a lock of Lincoln't hair. S i “Chief of Police. and Spices, Toiletries = Pennsyjvania Avenue. | Tippicanoe,” caught cold at his|. .. William Howard, Taft was in- Hi 70 Necesities at v - e Wilson, however, broke the ice!inaugwral and died one month/augurated in the worst blizzard in{, mvm's ANIMAL " HOSPITAL PRE-WAR CEILING PRICES if co' o’“ 2 e by remarking that this was the later . When James K. Polk|history. The Secret Service men. 408 FIFTH STREET Complete Line f,JW‘ wms“&‘%:“‘ : ' first time the President-elect had |Was inaugurated, Samuel B. Morse 'had laid out gray trousers and Red GARNICK’S GROCERY ;I discarded a team of horses to ride set up his magnetic telegraph on|cutaway coats the night before, but n“;;xm“;ol:: 9 wfil':;cA Ml“ Phone 174 Authorized to Practice Befere - ! to the Capitol in an automobile. | !the portico of the Capital and changed them to boots the next o "‘;’R WsA KEL‘VIE Fisgid Come in and get your FREE g This led to a conversation ,,bum‘tlushed a running account to the|morning. Snow tied up transporta- Eakiend Calendar and Almanac » | animals. |country of what happened. Polk tion all over the country . .. When Boarding Kennels Veterinary | { ooy ?, “I suppose,” remarked Wilson|was one of the few who refused Wilson was sworn in, he leaned | with a smile, “your favorite ani-|[to run for a second time . . . If 'over the railing and told the sol- | mal is the elephant.” {it had not been for red tape, diers: “Remove the ropes and let n ’ i “I told him,” Harding recounted| FDR's inauguration might have the people come in.” The Secret RRCAR § | to friends later “that it was, but made history by being televisioned.'Service, who suffer agonies at every and PRESS SHOP F not for political reasons. I theni--. - Franklin Pierce was inaugu- inaugural, never forgave him. || told him a story about a sister ur;X ted just a day or two after his| Pickpockets used to have a field mine who lived in Siam as a mis- son had been killed in a railroad day at inaugurals. They came to i P sionary. and had a pet elephant.| Wwreck '\thmgwn from miles around.| PERT —-Jane Wyman, film | This beast had been kept by my| Abraham Lincoln’s second in-/In Jackson's day, newspapers fea- sh‘r, adds her bit Io{he seaside 2 sister for years, in fact for most|auguration was in a wartime at- tured stories of the largest single| scgne in something neat for of her life. Upon my sister's death |mosphere somewhat similar to that|pickpocket’s take totaling $900 . ¥ warm weather_wear.!” - in Siam, the elephant would not of last Saturday. The Capital was Today known crooks are arrested eat and was most unhappy. This filled with wounded. Grave fears on‘suspicion, bug there is still al@ ™ — - continued for days. Finally thelwere held for Lincoln’s life and!certain amount of petty thieving. > ! elephant crouched on my sister’s extraordinary precautions were!. . . Inaugural weather, tradition- grave, raised its trunk in the air, taken by the police. It was a rainy [ally bad, caught Grover Cleveland = — — < and Benjamin, Harrison; who de- e '"fifomn’s r 1 'feated him, in a wirtual cloud- bank is pledged to conserve- B WBUCK burst as they started up Pennsyl- cive operstion. The mfery o L | s a paid-up subseriber to THE DAILY ALASKA | yania Avenue Neither had an ume Baranot Hotel Bullding || of depaitee’” funde & omt DEPOSITS Half a € ’ EMPIRE is invited to be our guest THIS EVENI > 4 primary cansidenscion. 3 j H 8 A the Treasury Charles S. Fairchild, addition, ’ —Over Half a Cen [ ng— 1 Present this coupon to the box office of the Cleveland sald: “Lefid Ua Four W IN THIS BANK g ¢ E CAPITOL THEATRE brella. We are all honest men and Corporation, which ia- g : will return it.” . .. “I am not so sures each of our depositors ARE ) ] [ i i SRR VA sure of that,” replied Fairchild, SPB’UCE UP a'l lhe loss to s maximum ¥ ® L ] | and receive TWO TICKETS to see: “but T will have to trust you.” of $3,000. 1 "A Y " : & E Roosevelt is the only man leU RED 1 G“ “AMED JOE who has received a salary cut CLIPPEB % Bank i —11c per Person while President. He lost $8,835.64 41 Bl o of pay for 43 days of work, as a BAnBEn a ad | | PHONE 14— THE ROYALBLUECABCO, |7 i v, meinier| SHOP Oldest Bank in Alaska « L " moved from March 4 to January i and an insured cab WILL CALL FOR YOU and 20. However, considering the num- 227 So. Franklin St. 0 RETURN YOU to your home with our compliments. ber of years'Be Tas Retved, ell ... - bis receive a gitt COMMERCIAL SAVINGS TCH THIS SPACE—Y N May A 5 should be able to afford it. P p) WA SPACE—Your Name May Appear! (Copyright, 1945, by the REGULAR UNION PRICES { Bell Syndicate, Inc.) !