The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, February 12, 1945, Page 4

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PAGE FOUR Daily AfilasrkaiEmI;irc . proposal F Vice-Prestiont a Editor and Mana great Entered In the Post Office In Juneau as Second Class Matter. SUBSCRIPTION RATES: Delivered by earrier in Juneau and Douslas for $1.50 per month; e following rates: x months, in advance, $7.50; ffice of any failure or irregularity in the de- elr papers. s: News Office, €02; Business Office, 374. MEMBER OF ASSOCIATED PRESS ed to the use for it or not other- news published a Newspapers, 1411 It i THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE—JUNEAU ALASKA rank Marshall's Alaska Territorjal Federation abor Bulletin for February: I have for . in the piece of amount of the without hardship on the wage earners ailar to the Federal ta o just received a copy of the income presented by Mr. Gordon, as S. B. 2, It is, I am told structure, and would provide laska ol enate. undue ax, with income under $4,000, plus $200 exemptior r each dependent.” This little item of gross » usual amount of empts have been made to throw the Labor | L tailspin.” 8 Marshall's comment on the income x bill the bill is there for dependents $4,000 a y any provision for A maryied man would ¢ ear tax in $4 ma de Hi. tax h PROPOSED INCOME TAX = vie Dr. Alf Co tax bill for testimony of red Harsch, laska, hope to get no According to the author of the proposed net income as We the Ter if this made law but s and, if $100,000 2 ye 6f ‘all these rew being flooded with as far can see ry ca mare bill is 1er/large bureau | thg r to take care | Legislature i about we're lucky éncies which the Senate' that indi- | $400,000 per vear st ‘this would be under school poll o the Te Harsch told members of viduals would probably pe under this. tax. . But credited s the $100000 annual payments tax. Individudls would thus the she porations would between $300,000 $500,000 annt Taking th Federal $300,000 taxe w repeal s of $86,000 i this-from the. $300,00C rou get $214,000 $125,000 for er $100,000 for hese refun two $101,500 left And if would by Even tax come :‘.bo taking the halfway which ,corpora out C.IUD.OOO b hind in the de mark in the new income might pay, you might b And we should lemlmbr possible because indi be paying about $300,000 present This, evident] ax base the Some’ spokesmen the instance, g tax bill sugar-goated For discus laboring take the to mar 1 pill. follc as seen in to subdue ria or Rumania » the )5€-Up Washingion Merry- : Go.nound negotiatio may b (Continued from Page Owe) to think talks ‘wuuus veto ey | aggressor If that is the ca ent’s current difficull of who as separate countries, and have Baltic diplomats in Wa ton. But as a gesture to Stalin w will pow formally recognize thes states as Russian be will mild comp: 4. PUNISHMENT_ OF WAR |tempts to secure Ser CRIMINALS—The “Big Three” Will of | uis peace nego have no trouble in agreeing on’ the Stalin. Also the retu strongest joint measures 10 punish erican public tow: the war guilty, including Allied courts. 5. POSTWAR TRADE RUSSIA—Roosevelt is proposinng a the hands of the loan or gredit of about six billions Note for Russia to buy a tremendous gered amount of American goods to re- store her war-torn economy 6. DUMBARTON OAK: summer there was one stumbling block in the path of a new machinery for permanent peace—the right of a big nation to sit on the council while the other nations debated as to whether an aggressor.. Russia in s right. This would give power to veto any action to be taken against her as aggressor That is why the u why the drive a tougher four years ago Last Churchill when crucial were in his hand bar the FDR were thus felt actually 12 us more par 2) F.DR. can born when riled, bu day out he like: people, didn't like to opposition to Stalin i Hopkir his further than F.D.R conciliation Russia she sted an l)l'A\IBART()\' ON ROCKS : Dumbarton Oaks Conference ly to pieces over this point. Finally, when pressure wa put on the Russians, th threat- ened to put 16 members, including all the Soviet’s satellite states, in the United Nations This would give the Russians 16 votes, one fo reach Soviet Republic, just as the British Dominions were all represented in the League Nations. This is the Roosevelt faces a position to dominate not the Balkans, Hungary, Austria Czechoslovakia, but also G Stalin was far-sighted enough organize a committee of 10,000 Ger- mans inside Russia, already trained to take the new German Government Politically—and also militarily—most of Europe will be dependent upon him. Naturally, he doesn't want to be voted an ag- gressor nation, if for instance, he CAPITAL ( ionwide e the * reling on the that reed m of L hardest Today Russ problem only nd to UAW, ployed plant than try formation so far ha Reutk in the had le: v other o w part year resident or situ s and tha who have sa e to return fr forced ate over confirmat Joint jsolation will be sorely future WITH the world hangs so precariously in “Big Three Many diploms President The cording to close friends, is fighting elbow, Unite o-strike pledge der hem all no-strike 400,000 100 G e Office If th 000 he 00 t of makes between must $40 tax plus 2.2 perce all he akes over § s $4,000 duction of s tax is 2,000 or $400. This leaves of $1,600 (the amount From this computed himself of $20 10 percent $40 pl 20 ption for d is also allowed $20 for his wife. His For each $200 tax i pendent he would be allowed $20 each bill is not be 10uld back the bill >. than the Mr. Harsch easonal” T Individuals, under this s 1d corporations rporations certainly Resident labor would pay $300,000 a paid now. The minus figure. to the from ritory whi would a would pay mo non seasonal” lahc e at the less applicable would | 2 perc rate to than An Old Educational Problem (New York Times) ute continues as to whether education students to meet definite and expected nations, or whether it should so develop th pow- personalities that tHey cin cope whatsover, including that this dispute held in Times Hall tecen the views taken rence and Dodds of Princeton »ssor Lindeman of Columbia and by D: Were mutually exclusive of President W lay emphasis on voc Duuw [ ved that the ideal o ought to be “an educated perso: Dr. ren spoke up for The d Huld pre t say rence for no hot Presidents not empt ral arts col skilled person for instance d as mod- colieges or It o preside tor at the t/‘Dr. Edmund E. Da meeting—t for both the broad makes The ort to educate rts s of edl fit college tends cation Its he education this failure No o erely happens he real trend of is toward neither but toward greater o 1 disgu its ‘halimark. ood thing. Perhaps of educati “ideal,” making ¢ “ch ‘character Tt have to be ailored- rather schooling through as common as§ a high w movie from dis liberated co Nazi young e USA. ana weing when “he still sticks to a. OWI offis s release the ban d Belgium, but will film get to Germany s being waged ov nt of Al Woll, son ader Matthew Woll, Oaks rom Hitler’s they m France let the An insid the reappoi of AFL labor 1 for Presi- not the e, the ties with ion of He tiations 1 of the Am- imperialistic tempting peace of ACROSS Half bose . Was carried . Flap b5 . City in Hawall 1 . English river . Poem Lopsided 6. Look after 1. Genus of the bice grase ats have wc didr ain three 1+ Stalin trump - answer . Light-colored that Bri our 1 a cigar Cook siowly While . One of two d recrea. war 110 ground time to p be very t day to get be in dra and Churchi who sat con- even all-out leaned toward HAFF d Automobile deferendum to pledge, part was of some original the u therefere, by chanc er Reu tax a ary income for the Terri- | x and provides withhold- ures and would not cost the man with a wife, misstatement is followed | conniving going.| | and He is allowed first of all a | $3.600. | states | > portant tional | while pro- | doubts | Ay ;| military men v | suffered and mild, as £ e HAPPY BIRTHDAY | | FEBRUARY 12 Mary Bavard Mrs. Harold Aase Mrs. Ken M. Nelson Cash Cole C. E. Bower Alfred Lund Jessie Henson M M. Palmer Kate Kinnear e —— | | Mrs, Mrs (et s HOROSCGPE i “The stars incline | but do not compel” [ UNSBCS I 1 5 AN | TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 13 Benefic aspects seem to rule. to- although adverse influences | day. {are active direction of the HEART / men will rea sons who hav have erved in the armed force: ed by | Wi {diers will expect inte standing of cu € |be bored by home trivialities, wives {and mothers will seek information under careful teachers | BUSIN 'signs seem to presage repeated m'\mfmmum\ of class prejudices |where capitalists are entrusted with mportar ernment nwpuusnulp | ties. Application of fimaneial knowl- ge and big business expolienu | to national s will be resented, | fowing to political bias:and warped | judgment NATIONAL ISEUES — Freedom | of speech i§' likely to 'be discussed with widespréad concl Censor- ship is under a planetary influence which promises release from’ham- per meéthods ~ that suppress im- news INTERNATIONAL Korea and Manchukuo are under signs that appear to promise op- portunity for revolt against Japan n a way most helpful to the United ;,.m\ and hardships birthdate it is ry of a year of pro- ogress. General good dicated ildren born on this day will be mentally keen, in' nature, -and. generally Sineere and’' high-minded, these rians have supreme potentiali- prob- 1945) rney in Chi- 100 per cent > Hi son shéuld’ be vy F.DR. Howev Lucas, friend of Jake pulling for Woll's Those ' inter- | manpower ' shortage at Morris Field, Carolina, 370 ‘officers would' like to| do more, but wh lots of them | have become specialists in golf and skeet shooting b w in the take a look North LEADERS officials medical de- a good laugh the from Dr. Logan Clen- list of the world’s great would have been have to ferment. 4-F’s in thi Those who would have been re- include: George Washington, who had false teeth; Bismark, who| was overweight; Napoleon, who had a stomach ulcer; U. S. Grant, ‘who from - alcoholism; Julius Caesar, who was an epileptic; Lord Nelson, who foughtron with ‘only one arm 4nd one eye; and Kaiser Withelm, who had a (Copyright, 1946, by Thé Y Béll syndrcate, Inc,) Solution Ot snuraay. Puzzie DOWN . Wil sheep of india Lubricate - Lump of earth - i‘.dnlln colos . Direction. . Whiripool pre- pledge wa port- Workers Ge now trike” pledgc Tardy Gerus of the oat . Accommodates hosittings As director t of m of I banned Le 6. Tur . 600-pound clam Kina of beer Labor is under favorable | > HOME—Many wo- | > that husbands and | been mentally develop- | returning sol- | zent, under- | ents and will AFFAIRS — Certain | AFFAIRS — | e advisers | Sen- | where | I who | withered arm. 1§ EZOYEARSAGO it THE EMPIRE | FEBRUARY 12, 1925 An escort of honor formed by the members of the Juneau Volunteer !Fnt‘ Department and Loyal Order of Moose accompanied by the body of R. R. Brown, victim of the sinking of the George, Jr., off Taku on | January 28, to the Pacific Dock where it was to be shipped south to Victoria for interment. Funeral services for two other victims, Capt. | Nick Bystrom and Joseph Loseth, were held at the Methodist Episcopal { Church. Interment was in Evergreen Cemetery. | day, Mrs. Horace Adams gave birth to a boy The dad, answering the telephone, when generally started right off by | At 4 a. m. the previous weighing nine pounds. arrival times of steamers, dlright.” | baby | asked about saging: “It's a boy alright, The previous night the choir of Holy Trinity Cathedral gave a |(un(‘rrt and the audience packed the church. No admission was charged | but. free will offering boxes were at the entrance of the church and a \1arge sum was realized which would be used for purchase of music. Among those taking part in the concert were Mesdames Jenne, Oliver, | sadlier, Holbrook, Hungerford, Dean and Feldon; Misses Peterson, | Meacham, 1 Fisher. It was announced the quarantine at Nome would be raised Februar: unless new cases of diphtheria were reported. A relay of dog teams trail with more serum. 20 as on the Mrs. E. M. Polley was in charge of the installation of officers of Perseverance Lodge, Rebekahs, the previous night. Among those in- | stalled were Mrs. Jean Hungerford, Mrs. Charles W. Carter, Mrs. Alice Laughlin, Mrs. M. Logergren, Mrs. W. B. Kirk. Weather report: ; low, 17: cloudy. e Daily Lessons in English % 1. corpox PUS I RS | WORDS OFTEN MISUSED: Do not say, “Mary bore the loss with | equanimity of mind.” Omit OF MIND. EQUANIMITY means evenness | of mind. t OFTEN MISPRONQUNCED: Sonorous. Pronounce so-no-rus, first | O asiin' OBEY, second O as in NO, U as in UP, unstressed, accent second 1‘ syllable. | OFTEN (healthy). SYNONYMS: Prevailing, common, widespread extensive. | WORD STUDY: “Use a word three times and it is yours.” Let us | increase our cabulary by mastering one word each day. Today's word: | PERNICIOUS; highly injurious or destructive in character. “We see | the pernicious effects of luxury in the ancient Rom: —Addison. e | MODERN ETIQUETTE High, 20 MISSPELLED: Hail (frozen rain; a salutation). Hale ROBERTA LEE i ettty kindly ’ lovable. | Q. Should a close girl friend of the bride be given preference as a bridesmaid, or should, it be the bridegroom’s sister who is not a close | friend? A. The mest tactful thing would be to include both Q. Does it show good form to extend any and all kmd~ of mvlh“om {over the telephone. e 1 A. One may use the telephone for almost any invitation thh the | exception of formal ones. Q. 1Is it proper to pass crackers at the table? | A. Yes; crackers are passed when serving oyster | with salad. e e T i stew, and also ‘ What name is given to an object which hu 20 flat surraces" What @¥e the colors of the French fla; Who rebuked Damocles by suspending a sword over his head? 1 Who said “He was a brave man who first swallowed an oyster”? i . Where is the city of Old Town? i ANSWERS: | Eikosagon. | . Blue, white, and red. Dionysius. King James I of England. | . In Maine. | | MRS. DAVID DAVIS as a paid-up. subseriber to THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE is invited to be our guest THIS EVENING. Present this coupon to the box office of the “KNICKERBOKER HOLIDAY" and receive TWO TICKETS to see: “THE GIRL IN THE CASE" Federal Tax—11c per Person PHONE 14 — THE ROYAL BLUE CAB C0. and an insured cab WILL CALL FOR YOU and RETURN YOU to your home with our compliments. WATCH THIS SPACE—Your Name May Appear! MONDAY, FEBRUARY 12, 1945 TRIPLETTE & KRUSE BUILDING CONTRACTORS EXPERT CABINET WORK OF ALL KINDS 20TH CENTURY MARKET BUILDING After 5:00 P. M. PHONE 564 SHOP PHONE 96 Silver Bow Lodge No.A2,10.0.F. @ @Meets each Tues- day at 8:00 P. M. I.O. O.F. HALL. Visiting Brothers Welcome GEORGE CLARK, Noble Grand A ’ | Warfields’ Drug Store (Formerly Guy L. Smith Drugs) NYAL-Family Remedies HORLUCK’S DANISH ICE CREAM ———— Myhrie, and Wagner; Messrs. Polley, Stewart, Davis, Hall, | “e sewing Baske' BABY HEADQUARTERS Infant and Children’s Wear 139 S. Franklin Juneau, Alaska 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. Ofiice Phone 469 Dr. John H. Geyer VENTIST Room 9—Valentine Bldg. PHONE 1762 ROBERT SIMPSON, Opt. D. Graduate Los Angeles College of Optometry and Optiialmology Glasses Fitted Lenses Ground ""The Rexall Store” Your Reliable Pharmacists BUTLER-MAURO DRUG CO. HARRY RACE Druggist “The Squibb Store” DEPOSITS IN THIS BANK ARE INSURED ber of Federal Deposit Insur- ance Corporation,which i~ sures each of our depositors against los to s maximue of 35,000, First National Bank of JUNEAU. ALASEA EMBER FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE COR A'ioi "# The Charles W. Carter ‘Mortuary Fourth and Franklin Sts. PHONE 138 | WINDOW WASHING RUG CLEANING SWEEPING COMPOUND FOR SALE DAVE MILNER Phone Green 279 FQR TASTY FOODS and VARIETY TRY' . Gastineau Cafe Foremost in Friendliness INSURANCE Shattuck Agency Duncan'’s Cleaning and PRESS SHOP T ZORIC | SYSTEM CLEANING Phone 15 Alaska Laundry MOUNT JUNEAU LODGE NO. 147 SECOND and FOURTH Monday of each month in Scottish Rite Temple beginning at 7:30 p. m. E. F. CLEMENTS, Wor- shipful Master; JAMES W. LEIV- ERS, Secretary. NIGHT SCHOOL TYPING and SHORTHAND Mon.-Tues.-Wed. 7:30 to 9:30 z Juneau City Council Chambers Miss McNair—Ph. Douglas 48 (e s TR P e B. P. 0. ELKS Meets every Wednesday at 8 P.'M. Visiting Brothers wel- come. A. B. HAYES, Exalted Ruler; H. L. McDONALD, Secy. { | i } FLOWERLAND CUT FLOWERS—POTTED PLANTS—CORSAGES “For those who deserve the best” 2nd and Franklin Phone 557 ASHENBRENNER'S NEW ARD USED FURNITURE Phone 788—306 Willonghby Ave. Jones-Stevens Shop LADIES’—MISSES’ READY-TO-WEAR Seward Street Near Third —_——— “The Store for Men" SABIN’S Front St.—Triangle Bidg. H. S. GRAVES “The Clothing Man”™ HOME OF HART SCHAFFNEM & MARX CLOTHING CAL"‘OBIII rocery and Meat Market 47! — PHONES — 37) High Quality Foods at Moderate Prices PIGGLY WIGGLY For BETTER Groceries Phone 16—24 JUNEAU - YOUNG Hardware Company Service More Complete a¢ -THE BARANOF COFFEE SHOP JAMES C. COOPER, C.P.A BUSINESS COUNSELOR TYPEWRITERS Bold and Serviced by J. B. Buriord & Co. “Qur Doorstep Is Worn by Satisfied Customers” “Say It With Flowers” but “SAY IT WITH OURSI” Junean Florists Phone 311 1891—0ver Half a Century of Banking—1945 The B. M. Behrends Bank Oldest Bank in Alaska COMMERCIAL SAVINGS

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