The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, November 10, 1945, Page 4

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PAGE FOUR they block reconversion ede the supply ofjo © @ ¢ ¢ ¢ @ © @ ¢ o o .’ Dmh Alaska Empire | v oo oo o 4 { v das by the h - @anger ot g wholly ury and. Bied ek = 2 O Y EA R S A GO TH E EMPI R E MPIRE I‘IU’\'IING ()V!)'A ¥ € ency ‘ R T o < Brutadht Progress in reconversion has exczeded the most | R BRESES SIS S < S b L e it Bresident | optimistic expectations. The degree ich unem- | NOVEMBER 10, 192 e r | ployment has developed has been muc han was | | s Lillian G. Smith of Fairbanks and Mr. Harry Glover Waston, — i " dnticipated. The outlook, therefore, is very favorable | i to the Governor of Alaska, w ited in marriage this evening Eutered in the Py A R vl;y.‘;' Second Class Matter. and this is u.h,‘, if—we can cut : fr ,niu.o S0 e Noveatert o IS TeE MY | b :‘ e Governor's House, by the Rev. C. E “A,,.v_ U, 1[}1'(\f'}r91§. (“,,,-‘?}uq Delivered by carrier in Junean and Douglas for $1.30 per month; habits which are now threate g to impede po . ral. Their attendants were Miss Elizabeth Pullen and Gov. Geor 3 .:(m\)\l;’?’““l ,”I'fv;“._'f‘;‘ ;'*Lv('"w 2 & sk 3 n to a peacetime econom: ® Marilyn Light 0 One vear, in advance, $18.00; stx m . in advance, $7.50; 2 H Pute Bchnolter, It % 4 : p onfer a favor if they will prompely notify Transferring US . Herman Gentry . M. O. Leslie, mother of the Executive Officer of the U. S. § ‘ ‘ot any fatlure or irresularity in the de- bl 3 Hohion Tanchates 8l .. wiks €5 1aye This teli wibd aey 1 ttle. Lieutenant Leslie had k Office, 602: Business Office, 37 5 (Washington P, I Mae S ® | jeft recently on the Unalga for Seattle MINBZR OF ASSOCIATED PRESS Both Senate and House are in a tc ofe . ; is exclusively entitled to the use for United States E: © o e November 11, 1915 o o o A e this night from the south, « dirpaiches credited to 1t or Dok ot 5 4 or and aies the local newsy publ in disregard o wit ¢ 0 of 100 tons ¢ u i no action be taken at t . Paul Kegel . ATIONA Alaska Newspapers, 1411 rsion. Before passing th . Henry Behrends . e e A i TaRaa, et Pourth Ave compensation bill last month the Senate|e Kenna Adams . . : lonniatte e brids ——————" | append=d an amendment providing for the return of | Howard D. Stabler o | here N EERaED A B S to the States within 80 day Last ek the | o Robert A. Paul e form Day of where they wer ¢ House approved a similar proposal attached . James Baroumes e The planned to make r future home rider” to a bill cutting Federal expenditure authoriza- | o Ruth Bergholl ° tions by 52 billlion dollars. Rejecting a compromise | o Alex Holden . E ng was all set for tr tice Day Dance to be given that would have deferred the transfer to the end of | ¢ Edward J. Brostrom, Ji . ¢ 6 IEhE, b b .rican Legion. The Elks were the fiscal year, the House required the shift to be o Mary C. Halm ® o init 3 ISR REaL 12 same night, but promised effected 30 days after enactment of the bill |o Lew Williams, Jr A PR h in ple of he Undoubtedly Ct s has been greatly influenced ; o Gust Wahto ° by pressure from the Governors of various States and ! o Dorothy Mcl ° ; State directors of unemployment compensation. Al-| o . 2 -SRI SR AR most to a man they have urged an immediate rotum | g ¢ o o ¢ © © ® ¢ 0 0 0 © i of the unemployment services to the States. Repre- A D I L . E IISh sentative Ramspeck hit the nail on the head when he o e s & i SR g | pointed out (hlm “it is perfectly natural that the| aly essons in i W. L. GORDON ; Governors —_— —-- ————————— agencies would be glad to got back under their wing | ¥ e a SRR 23 Mg S o B aral seviokE oty Loos WORDS OFTEN MISUSED: Do not say, “The farmer is going to WARTIME ATTITUDES Tt?::(]x:‘:: ]?.]1:;\1:;(\1\1111:‘:’\:.“1[:;“::;;11‘.:1““:‘” I:.‘nd,t ol m)’):i“h\l' i “The stars incline i huck The farmer is going to HUSK corn” is preferred ; Congress why they want these services back,” Mr '% but do not compel” MISPRONOUNCED: Decrepit. Pronounce de-krep-it, first When the war finally ended we had been engaged pgmopeck continued. “We all understand that. The e Bty second E as in MET, I as in IT, accent second syllable, and | in active hostilities for almost four years. In terms of pegeral Government pays the bill, 95 per cent. They e 1d industrial preparation, we had been in & War economy get the employses SUNDAY. :MBER 11 st S e R e for fully five years, Individuals' incomes, spending It would be unjust to the State authorities to infer ! — ! SYNONYME ht (noun), reflection, meditation, contemplation abits, saving habits aud living habits became ad- that the lure of patronage fully accounts for their Adverse aspects rule M,r]nnul\(:;" re¥eria justed to wartime conditions. We began to act ‘15 pak et fl;\)nn).?;l‘:}l‘\cu“:;;:)k:l\"flb::-‘x: ]l)\rll:;l‘:m]l;llfi]é)\(x\):ll;; dl.‘x\“ ;n [\‘\’lusz‘lp‘(:“lf::’“"Hll;\’d1 (u‘ b5 YORD STUDY: “Use a word three times and it is yours.” Let us SROPRY Hices wore DOTO T an Sl e w:m..r with the natural wish of certain State of-|away from spiritual leading increase our vocabulary by mastering one word each day. Today's word: are faced with the major problem of readjusting our . o). %, (rengthen their hold on State-administered HEART AND HOME DOGMATIC; asserting a thing positively and authoritatively. “Some g and attitudes now that the war is over. This ,onb1ovment compensation systems, operated in close | Women may be nervous and dif-| cpitis write in a dogmatic way blem less acute after the last war because .o.iunction with the employment services. One really [ficult in the family Cirele t00RY. | oo e e s s participated ¢ ! and for a much gong argument for ending Federal control of em- |They should bar destructive | 5 r period ployment offices is the reported existence of friction jthoughts, because certain signs en- | MODERN ETIOUFTTE ’/11 The National City Bank of New York in its cur- between Federal officials and administrators of unem- { courage faultfinding and even fly\lhly- t r ROBERTA LEE rent economic letter has suceinctly summarized this Ployment insurance. The USES sets the standards relling Patience and ‘.mdm'\‘.d,mt 2 ey : to what constitutes suitable employment for job seek- [ing will be needed to deal With UN= | L oo o oo Penblc:as {01Iops ers, while the States make compensation payments to |rest and disillusionment of returning G oW sant i gl the waljar that ansis AlHs s EENS e filtn “In many of its elements economic situation those insured for whom U is unable to find suitable | Service men and women. e revesls a general w namely, the unwillingr /1 of people jobs. It is e State and Fed to reconvert t attitudes from those a and the tate officials o see how trouble when thes 1 officials do not see eye arises to ey who operate these | THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE~]UNEAU, ALASKA SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 10, 1945 {HOROSCOPE | removed from tl BUSIN. and commerce Trad aid side by side on the plate indicates i md that cepted during the war to those needed now during the The remedy for this unsat ate of affairs |ly increased. Ame: . \an ¢ sical | lies, in our opinion, in federalization of the State {will profit but they will also contri lons 1 the death of a friend should onessend a card of | peace Reconversion is more than a physical ¥ S At el b process. It requires new attitudes, and above all | SYStems of unemployment insurance. At present, how- |bute ,Q!,mxn’u.b‘ fo il s to the family L RS the fact that production. piices and/|cyers opposition has closed the door to this reform,|Europe and Asia a i week before mailing the card | srh g Wk t production, prices and| ;4 " ype" return of the employment services to the;when vision is necessary for busi gt Sl it in the lest analysis wages must now conform to what | gy, 405 gppears to be inevitable. However, there is a |nessmen of all North America a multitude of consumers want and can pay, instead | yjpht and wrong time for all things. And the present | TIONAL iSSUE of to the orders of one customer whose needs are | js assuredly the ‘worst possible time for under rin the United States under- insatiable and interest in prices secondary.” to shift the administration of the unemployment serv- |cover work by our d\'i'v‘«lld foes W}“ I_O 0 K d ‘ F A R N | We find evidences of the persistence of wartime | ices. The emergency that led to the temporary continue (‘x ’]III\‘H:'\\:A:"VI\!\.I::L‘ h,xu\fx,}n E an A. C. GORDON | attitudes in connection with H\”‘”; of our key re- federalization of the State employment agencies for |tle tk »“,l -AI)A‘! -l. : DS »1— 121 1 z - $ more effective mobilization of warworkers has changed | will require a long time to complet R S RAI T conversion problems. OPA officlals, for example, con- | g, ‘pyg the emergency itself remains acute. Fur-| INTERNATiGNaL AFFAIRS S . Rgraming by e ks tinue their wartime approach to the price problem | heymore, USES will find its task becoming increas-| In the next few weeks the price 1 10 first up a jury system for the degision of a person’s gui despite the fact that the underlying situation has | ingly onerous for a good many months to come as|of victory will prove even higher or innocence? : changed markedly. Many workers, accustomed to war- | millions of vet-rans seeking jobs added to the [than estimated, astrologers predict 2 fer what President was Louisiana purchased? time | T ted Lo be refusing to accept the | millions of warworkers in search of jobs {for many United Nation: nrrlrl'}‘fl 3 t is the capital of the Netherlands? jobs which are available at somewhat lower wages The scope and the character of the postwar em- |will suffer severely from the efforts 4. How large is a kangaroo at birth? Labor unions are insisting upon the maintenance of | Ployment piublem, involving mass movement of |of long strain 1)«-‘.vln.~‘ of n“x‘\‘ll:‘l"f:“‘ll 5. Where did Columbus die? wartime take-home pay despite the fact that those rl).[‘i.xult\ workers ‘.;x::,g new jobs in Invulllnfix .g;m:[» ;-x ‘xn«‘t}:l ]-“vd military men: V NSWERS : 1 from their former homes, create national problems,|be recorded Meig s e wages were offered primarily as an inducement o |y S PE SRR BT L el super- | Persons whose birthdate it is have b ‘I‘; i, “r"';(i“m“" in the 12th centur secure wartime production, which is no longer required. | (i and control of placement activities until | the augury of a year of varied nm'l"- S22 x‘x Jefferson The National City Bank properly concludes that conditions become more stabilized and can fairly be |ests and activities. The stars smile 3. The Hague attitudes such as these “are cbstacles to production, ' yegarded as ncrmal for peactimes lupon the women of this sign | 4. One or two inches. = i - = AR S Children born on this day may At Valladolid, Spain, in 1506, there before being ousted h ' be positive in character, high-temp- i from WPB; Wallace also went there be- fore being eased out of the Vice- Presidency.) . Prediction: Treas- ury Watchdog Lindsay Warren will okay expenditure of funds for gutted Smaller War Plants. He will rule that when Congress appropri- ['he Wavhmgloh Merry - Go-Round | 1ot (Continued from Page One) | that the British, Dutch, and Frenc| delegates are tr) earlier vote of ing to Nations capital in the US.A, A CAPITAL CHAI upset the the United Nations committee to establish the United | ered and trying, but many will poss- ess extraordinary talents. | R MONDAY, NOVEMBER 12 | Benefic aspects rule today, al- though adverse planetary influences are active. The afternoon is fav- orable for important business or “'. ates money for ono thing, it has to| The island of Okinawa is rapidly |0 “0 el | the fastest ships built during the'be spent as Congress decrees, not | getting the reputation of being the | HEART AND HOME war, all at government expense. Some other way. hell-hole of the armed forces. Men; The. ctntitabiba Afairl\' forva However, peacetime commerce now b are living in mouldy tents. Fresh! e 07 ehupma bl i comes before peacetime repatria- e R meat and vegetables are few and Orable for wo R et Ceront fos tion of men who fought for their ~ PENNSYLVANIA LAWYERS = |for between. A supply of dynamite Uhe seers prophesy Woi € o country . Tragic waste of ship- After beating z‘lbnul”the bush for recently went off right in the war? (-ru:omudp;u?n:‘ll-;\e):v g ping today approaches a Pear] SOM€ time, President Truman final-|yigdle of a tent area, killing six "o DU(];“:) 'm'e lr;afi\"\'rl\xllé B or Aearral. While-enlisted men ly decided that Senators are not %0 men. Meanwhile, ships have ocont \\xllfl spm\w w:ced;‘;rm-rs y 3 ; eat their hearts out in Furope and 2PPOInt all his new judges. Sen-|gtanding off Okinawa waiting for MO IE VREE EPI00 b o i the Pacific, waiting to come home, 2'0F Joe Gulfe ylvania, a | orders from Washington. . . . Elder Certain changes in methods af-| 93 vessels have been laid up in St2IWart Democ has ob- | siatesman Josephus Daniels, whod ; St CEREEC B0 T ecomen Suisun Bay, Calif,, since the end of 1¢ted t0 the appointment of an-|ypyjl up the Navy to what it was ”I"f ke prognosticated. These the war In addtion, a total of OUPer Democrat stalwart, Jim j, the last war, has come out edi- JAnc )‘”u’s; 2;;nlorflly difficulties for 226 ships are now in the port of MCGIanclty of Philadelphia, (0 be|yorially against President Truman|pey o hmludpcapllul but will safe- San Francisco. According to new U. 8. Circuit Court of Appeals’zng peacetime conscription. Daniels ', (::”;’ investments, it is predicted. k. & e maritime JUdge. Guffey admits he had noth- goys " in brief: Remove the caste Guans from now on until after the = ich ¥6 ing against McGranery, but wanted cyirem from the Army and pro- |y oien FC0 N L e in volume. o dnchod the first tw, @hother man to fill the job. HOW- poie the men who deserve promo-{ . UES | p : to|€ver, Truman has decided t0 aP- tion: then you will get a big| NATIONAL ',lssdelin(\u-m'v‘ All are in go A |point McGranery anyway - A encugh Army without conscription, |, INCrease in juvene 0 \'fm e : # former Congressman McGranery President Truman has' declded | indicated by:the gtars, Wi %t * is one of the outstanding men in ihul the Office of Strategic r 'cmnm'ed action w’]‘(;\vew":“exl:-nzl\‘;‘o grg e LLLL MUSINT the Justice Department, will make yices (“Oh-So-Secret”) belongs m:nflwn?l _dixing::m = :v,md.n Toatruca N 100ks 1ike an A-1 judge. Taking McGran- tpe war Department during peace, P o yre erools and severe penal- both R osevelt o _.d 17 ery's place as No. 2 man in the ryther than in the State Depart- :’U" ';“f"e‘“ N&. wh ‘Hieglech thein §% Seuoh abut protecti Justice Department will be Con-|pon¢ rlfj\‘r:‘-.ibsilms | to get ‘he cmull enc T"b”m" Mike Montoney of OKIa-| " copsright. 1945, By Bell Svndicate, tne.) Lsi;)’vf‘ERNAfIONAL AFFAIRS i oma, an able citizen. Some Re- - fan Thiatarine whioh will exs 0 blicans are balking at Monroney's Russian literatu E TR BO! . NI .;..L“:,‘ et pand enormously next year \A.lll re-} M Lian 5 € « A he tehtt e lu\\'\'(-x".l’in.l ‘h‘" lUlSE NIELSEN veal much about modern r.'nm;\clm‘- and op- : uarian de: = Plants, chief 1 is administrative, not legal,{ TO BE MARR'ED chnl will develop with amazing rap- | nakk {0 being Monronev will do a fine job /. the seers forecast | i TO SGT BRABAW sons whose birthdate it s have| JEEPS FOR V L » the augury of a year of slow ad- Orchids to Congressman Eddie vancement to goals long visioned.| Herbert of Louisiana for pounding Miss Luise Nielsen, daughter of There is a good sign for romance can't : home on Surplus War Property of- Mr. and Mrs. Hans Nielsen of this| Children born on this day may by Act of Cor ficials thes importance of s ci and Pirst Sgt. George Brabaw extraordinary in mind and heart the fus war goods to discharged veterans, ©f the Port Company, will be mar- Rare talents will belong to many. Plants are bei Th are having a tough Yied in the Resurrection Lutheran Emotions \.u!_l lw‘dm:p_ ED ely job government surpluses, Church at 12:30 p. m. (noon) Sun-| (Copyrisht 1045) > the desy fact that millions of day, November1l. ) o gt as a paid-up subscriber ng to Henry de s in jeeps, trucks, tires, etc, ¥riends of the bride and groom lEGIo“NAIRES lN | EMPIRE is invited to be Department. This 1 wre lying idle in government ware- ar€ invited to attend the ceremon | just after Congres house: A west coast auto Which will be followed by a Tecep- BROAD(ASI OVER | voting Smaller War Pl dealer recently bought 100 cars UoR at the l"'“,“. of lh:" bride’s par- | sell surplus war goods to x price of $250 eash: Ly ki it - . Senator T them for around $1,000 each. Mean- P 5 nbasiinnce of Adeilatice Doy, A.] " against passing € le, veterans can't buy surplus SQ(IAL NlGHI Io BE IE_ Karnes and Ernest Lincoln will SHADOWS l ganization bill becat 3 ment automobiles Best ER’ED B{ MoosE appear in a 15-minute radio broad- Federal Tax- Plants might be tr: Congressional plugger for the capi- OBS |cast over KINY Monday evening at | ... he is going to wake up tal of the United Nations to be in 16:30 o'clock, under the spon: 1p transferred even before i the United States is Congressman There will he a social night at of the American Legion, Joe Thibo- ation bill is passed 1t of South Dakota. He the Moose Club tonight with mem- deau, Legion Commander, has an- y Maverick, fighting head of id rightly that if you bers and their friends invited. There nounced. | War Plants, has given up orld capital in the old will be games and turkeys will be| He also made the announcement in disgust and is leav for C ill mean the dead end awarded. \lu- regular weekly meeting of the > n ~-the Siberia of exiled Ameri d politics clutching the - lwmn will not be held Monda WATCH THIS SPACE- statesmen. (Donald Nelson . Mundt charges DRINK KING BLACK LABEL! night. ¥ NORTHLAND TRANSPORTATION Y to THE DAILY ALASKA our guest THIS EVENIN Present this coupon to the box office of the CAPITOL THEATRE and receive TWO TICKETS to see: N THE NIGHT” 11c¢ per Person PHONE 14 — THE ROYAL BLUE CAB CO. and an insured cab WILL CALL FOR YOU and RETURN YOU to your home with our compliments. —Your Name May Appear! WINDOW AUTO PLATE GLASS IDEAL GLASS CO. GLASS WORK OF ALL DESCRIPTIONS DON ABEL 121 MAIN PHONE 633 STREET DR. E. H. KASER DENTIST BLOMGREN BUILDING Phone 56 19 A M. to5P. M Dr. A. W. Stewart DENTIST 20TH CENTURY BUILDING Office Phone 469 HOURS ROBERT SIMPSON, Opt. D, Graduate Los Angeles College of Optometry and Opthalmology Glasses Fitted Lenses Ground Alaska Music Supply Arthur M. Uggen, Manager Pianos—Musical Instruments and Supplier Phone 206 Second and Seward METCALFE SHEET METAL Heating—Airconditioning—Boat Tanks and Stacks—Everything in SHEET METAL Phone 711 90 Willoughby Ave. The Charles W. Carter Morfuary Fourth and Franklin Sts. PHONE 136 FOR TASTY FOODS and VARIETY TRY Gastineau Cafe Foremost in Friendliness VANITY BEAUTY SALON Cooper ‘Building ELSIE HILDRETH, Manager Open Evenings Phone 318 Dr. John H. Geyer DENTIST Room 9—Valentine Bldg. PHONE 762 "The Rexall Store" Your Reliable Pharmacists BUTLER-MAURO DRUG CO. HARRI MACHINE SHOP Plumbing — Heating — 0il Burners HOUSEHOLD APPLIANC PHON] “The Store for Men"” SABIN’S Fr St—Triangle Bldg. Warfield's Drug Store (Formerly Guy L. Smith Drugs) NYAL Family Remedies HORLUCK’S DANISH ICE CREAM HUTCHINGS ECONOMY MARRET Choice Meats At All Times Located in George Bros. Store PHONES 553—92—95 CALL ’ Femmer's Transfer 114 — HAULING Jones-Stevens Shop LADIES'—MISSES’ READY-TO-WEAR Seward Street, Near Third The Alaskan Hofel Newly Renovated Rooms at Reasonable Rates PHONE SINGLE O THE BARANOF ALASKA’S FINEST HOTEL EAT IN THE BUBBLE ROOM Special Dinner 510 8P. M. $1.65 Silver Bow Lodge @m. A2 10.0.F. Meets each Tues- | day at 8:00 P. M. I. O. O. F. HALL. | Visiting Brothers Welcome BEN O. HAVDAHL, Noble Grand E 319 HARRY RACE Druggist “The Squibb Store” Where Pharmacy Is a Profession 20TH CENTURY MEAT MARKET Juneau's Most Popular “Meating” Place ONLY THE BEST OF MEATS PHONE 202 CARO TRANSFER HAULING and CRATING DIESEL, STOVE, CRUDE OIL Phone 344 Phone 344 WallF;;aper IDEAL PAINT SHOP Phone 549 Fred W. Wendt INSURANCE Shattuck Agency B. P. 0. ELKS Meets every Wednesday at 8 p. m. Visiting brothers welcome. L. J. HOLMQUIST, Exalted Ruler. H. L. McDONALD, Secretary. JUNEAU UPHOLSTERY CO. RE-UPHOLSTERING NEW FURNITURE DRAPERIES Phone 36 122 2nd St. ALASKA ELECTRONICS| Sales and Service Expert radio repair without delays P. O. Box 2165 217 Seward| PHONE 62 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. OIL BURNERS DRAFT Day Phone 711 Smith 0il Burner Service P. 0. Box 2066 CONTROLS HEATING Night Phone 476 1891—0ver Half a Cen COMMERCIAT. The B. M. Behrends Bank Oldest Bank in Alaska tury of Banking—1945 SAVINGS -~y ol

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