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PAGP FOUR Daily Alaska Empire gl nday by the | chemists 1 TING COMPANY | Chemistry, Civil nnw: it SUBSCRIPTION RATES |5 + and Douglas f one year, § he followir 5.00; SiX month: aid. at ire or irre Ne B MEMEEER OF ASSOCIATED PR NA NA Alaska Newspapers, 1411 | medical care for vetera at or ljacent to large VETERANS AT COLLEGE a plan, it will b | services of high-type therwise would be The making a ivilian freshmar scholastic record 1ia universities, because they're nd more time studyt to the survey conducted recently by a Washingtor D. C. news er, a good I having @ tough time aying otment is too small to go around. Veterans, if single, get $50 a month in addition to | adequate and c necessary to cut down study hours rk. Imagine suppor onth in Washington It seems apparent that the veteran who wants to n education on $50 a month her going to have to work ¢ We believe that a good nud look a recent article in 1e author is Dr. Charles E. Bunnell who is President | { the University of Alaska. Dr. Bunnell points out st a student attending the University of Alaska can 2 ind can board At this writing, He wonders if this | Hawley seem to have won the first round with Con- ress. W¥h the backing of millions of veterans and should continue to remind Congr e in the dormit the University for $4( ath 't just AU(Y\'( the best beard in the country right | While space at the | piversity is limited, some veterans undoubtedly will be | to dake advantage of our University, which may the glamour and social whirl of a cosmopolitan titution of higher learning, but offers a good college oe w and we are inclined to cducation. The University of Ihe Washxngton Merry - Go-Round | (Continued from Page One) but against tremendous oppositio alway of humor. SPEAKER SAM KAYBURN-Who has been able to crack the whip over the most unruly conglomera- tion of politicoes ever gathered his charm, | under one roof and by his sagacity, and his driving en- | ergy has largely made them be- have. DR. HERBERT EVATT--Foreign | Minister of Australia, who has worked hand in glove with the USA, and who more than any other one man won for the little nations a real voice in the United Nations. HARRY WHITE—Who, as as- sistant secretary of the treasury did so much to organize Bretton Woods, the first step toward the economic realization of Wendell Willkie’'s One World. THE GOVERNMENT GIRLS-The tcn who 1 spaces pital even >s far fnto credit, but so much to speed the creak- 4 ment in unsung heroes of W: came from th to the cramped, to pound the days a weel the night, getting doin ing mac wartime. The above, wio has given so ceuntry and man- much f the kind, we salute! UNDER THE DOME Busy Tom Corcoran, the ex- braintruster, has been promoting his law partner, ex-Senator D. Worth Clark of Idaho to replace Marold Ickes when and if the latter of the In- terior. Clark, a former die-hard resigns as Secre y to get the isolationist, is not li job. . . . An off- Roosevelt of being a liar—especlally on Capitol Hill. But self, it's hard to know how anyone could be President of the United States without occasionally bein a lar.” . .. Boss of the Bronx Ed Flynn, close friend of FDR m\'l“ n former Democratic Chairmadi, is ir for tough political sledding. Hard- hitting Congressman James Roe. leader of Queens County, spearheaded Mayor O'Dwyer’s vic- tory, is out to’ replace Flynn a Democratic National Committee- man from New York. . Ed Flynn, always more interested in the coveted field of diplomacy plans to leave for Moscow this winter to try patching up relations between the Fremlin and the Vaui- Sut favor if they will verage war veteran atfending college is than the ave according to professors of two C more serious and 1 playing. But accord ny veterans now in colleg ts and tuition payments, and o a month. As a result a good many are m.mng! wife and child on $75 a r find month & is on the list of colle with a smile and a2 sense | are listed by the Tri ord quote from President Truman: “A lot of people used to accuse Presigent ving been in this job for a few months my- Alaska Science, Geologic - Prestdent | > 11 Vice-President | Metallurgic b “Editor and 3 Al Manag ! vear oc P: Business Munaer | | ber of the Northw Matter, | £1.50 per month; 0 Tates | dvance, $7.50; | y notify © delivery Hippocrates Battles the Hypocrite! the veterar f our Jawmak Gen. Om Hawle N Gener nd Na i ho and there because the |t veterans contined tin those it is impossible to mpete out the VA It is this tendenc married veteran ; The facts b P w | Wisely, the Hou | vailable ice where he | radley-Haw members of Cong an alert public t oin It will be an America care pr ram. can. . . Some Senators who cked Cordell Hull in ousting mner Welles, have now become trong Wellesian rooters since his masterful testimony before the ‘PnuI Harbor Committee. .. The | demagogue business must be pic —— |ing up. Gerald Winrod, race: | baiting editor of “The Defender” and under indictment for sedition, has moved from a modest dwelling lon North Green Street to a pre- tentious home on Broadview Street, the exclusive section of Wichita, Kan. CAPITAL CHATY Six General Motors xecutive Depart- ment as among the 15 hlght.\l paid men in the USA, though still under | MGM’s Louis B. Mayer, who gets al Motors’ Charlie Wilson is n to Mayer with $4569,041. Five o GM utives among the 15 highest paid in- dividuals in the are: Ormond E. Hunt, $359,519;- Albert Bradley, $350,432 John- Thomas Smith, $306,310; Donaldson Brown, $306, 160; and Charles F. Kettering, $306,117. . . Roosevelt’s old pal, Governor Bob Kerr of Oklahoma, is now lovey-dovey with Roosevelt's old enem E. K. Gaylord, ultra- reactionary Oklahoma City pub- lisher. They have teamed up to get a new radio station. Gaylord al- ready owns Station WKY which, with two newspapers, gives him a neat near news monopoly in the center of Oklahoma. To get a new station, he figured he needed New $908,070. Gener Dealer Kerr's support. . . . Kerr plans to run against GOP Senator Ed Moore in 1948. . . . When Larry Fly was chairman of the FCC, one of his bitterest critics was E. K. Gaylord of Oklahoma City. Now the very same Gaylord has retained Fly as his attorney to wangle the new radio station Best comment on Truman's risky air flight to Missouri from Stan Arnold in hi Spangled Banter,” as follows: Bad weather really should have meant No flying for the President; He had the flight, we had the scare, He’s down—now, we're ‘up in the airl” MERRY-GO-ROUND It bungling John Snyder, ‘the al- leged Reconversion C: s less | convivial in the evening, his re- | conversion ideas might not be so who | foggy wury Maverick, who | had the Smaller War Plants Cor- | poration knocked out from under him while he was in the Far East, reports that Gen. MacArthur is doing an A-1 job in Japan. If the Russians want to make a hit with G.I. Joes, they could loosen up their absurd policy of not per- mitting lorean coal from the | four year degrees i Administration 1 education elsewhere : sets the quality erves or T-quit 1 care that he de , Acting Surge: put Congres ek with word That i em to some have and logical plan to im present unsatisf * vicemen. Blank hours will be irk- unavailable to our is sufficient medical r wounded and ill .| this way, and in this way skill going to be av veterans for many long years Against this there has become apparent a tendency | in Congress to force the VA to take over isolated Army far removed from medica here no adequate medical skill would be available The VA says hospitals with t doctors, nurses and attendants. ditals the recent action of the and take part- (u'\(-‘Hl‘U e Appropriations Committes in knocking out a s ,000,000 appropriation for h prompted Ge new veterans’ hospitals, eral] Hawley to threaten to quit restored the entire d *”| and unless the Senate again knocks it out living expenses 15| wiy po appropriation y plan. that amount while attending college I B euientithati e wany of them will take concern of certain as not been so much to The Army Times. | money as to expand and continue the old “ system of patronage by ha and Navy hospitals in their districts. patronage against wisdom and necessity. ng the VA take ove ss that it is not > their own interests it might be well now 3 to be “wise politic igainst those of the vi sS and an ungrateful . political capital or tha veterans’ medical that attemy economize unwisely at t to be shipped to the ships which might coal to Korea. The State De- age row with MacArthur over the censoring of State Department Mac demands that State De- desk. When George Atcheson pro- | United States District Court for the . It's about a 50- Pauley becomes Secretary of the Navy when James Truman wants to « hour of 2 o'clock in wie afternoon wre to beiOf January 21st, 1946. Forrestal resigns. the Senatorial rumpus se of Pauley’s oil Pauley did a good job on Japanese reparations (Copyright, 1945, By Bell Synd s increased twice as fast a r World War I as during the per- | iod of actual fighting. Crossword Puzzle Cutting fmple- . Famous sopra- ............»;..;...}.,.,,...l.....w /M-“A OM = 20 YEARS AGO T \n\y HAPDY/ snmw - © o o January 2, 1946 © e e . . ° W. E. Cahill . ° Sharon Sharpe . ° . . . Helen Hansen . . R. E. Ellis . ° Arthur Burke ° . . e e es 00 cs 0000 - R — s e+ s e 4 | HOROSCOPE “The stars incline l but do not compel” | P ] | the Arcade Cafe TNl,'R.‘\'U.H" JANUARY 3 Mt This is not an important day in planetary direction but favorable to planning. Preparation for future| work should begin this week HEART AND HOM. Women of the family should furn- ish entertainment for returned Ser- some to hushands and sons ac tomed to constantly shifting inter- ests BUSINESS AFFAIRS Numerous new business enterprises are forecast. The stars scem o en- fine courage promising ventures in novel lines of manufacturing. Small busi- 5, ness projects are under fortunate planetary influences NATIONAL ISSUES : st, There has been too much discus- sion of ways to welcome Servicemen and women, the seers declare. As- rance of jobs and lasting economis security is all that is adjustment to civil life. FOREIGN AFFAIRS logers warn that the United States people repeat predictions that the Germans will outwit Americans whenever pos- . sible and thus create innumerable , minor prob 2ms. Persons whose birthdate it is have the augury of change and travel in the coming year. Capable men and women will profit by working in time to dis Europe. Children born on this day prob- definitely original. They must be careful directed because of their extraordinary ability (Copyright, 1946) - .o Vassar Coiiege hias a department of euthenics, devoted to the science. of efficient living In the District Court for the Ter- ritory of Alaska, Division Num. ber One, at Juneau. In the Matter of the Regular Janu- | ary, 1946 Term of the District Court for the First Division of the Territory of Alaska, at Juneau. | NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN, | That pursuant to an order of the | Court dated November 6, 1945, a Regular January ,1946 Term of the HE EMPIRE Noland purchased the wellknown was announced ger under the new ownership A deal was closed whereby Roy from Charles would continue as | Burford’s Corner Cameron itafity to the Presbyterian Church congregation whose s recently burned, the Methodist Church relinquished The Methodists Elma Olson e | house of worship w: O. F. Benecke . l)\(* morning service, giving the time to the Presbyterians, G. R. Tsaak ® | were to hold evening worship. cipal taxes for 1925 would become ces due amounted to $24,000, the sum The city clerk announced that mu delinquent at 6 p. m. J ing the second installment of I. Goldstein, gave a dinner at » Juneau fishing fleet Arnot Hendrickson, to unmarried members sister of Mrs. Homer Nordling, who was here on accepted & temporary position in the office of the city clerk ' was the feature at the Coliseum " at Spickett’s Palace ind ammunition arrived, the Juneau Gun Club planned . supply had been Juneau Dairy to shoot Weather report it e et e el e e e & s e i Daily Lessons in English 2 1. corpon WORDS OFTEN MISUSED: Do not say talk at the banquet last night.” OFTEN MISPRONOUNCED “The professorgmade a very madbk a very fine SPEECH.” Pronounce mi-az-ma, as in ASK. accent second syllable. OFTEN MISSPELLED: Coreopsis; SYNONYMS: Name, dencmination, and it is your Today's word: a word three times increase our vocabulary by mastering one word also DIALF(/TI WORD STUDY: “ logic in gene haw h(‘x‘u turns "—Henderson DIALECTIC, quired for re- in his penchant for ¢ sase with all the surety advocate, '\nd a —— a girl dismiss a man without causing ill feeling if he | she sees that he expects to be invited into takes her her home? { to bid him good-night before he has had » the first to cut the The bride should cut the first piece of cake, and divide it with the ably will be exceedingly talented and pridegroc wedding cake? Then each person cuts his own slice. “Doctor Smith, I.OOK and LEARNA C. GORDON | In what State is fifty-eight per cent of the United States’ cheese | PUBLIC NOTICE { produced? | vas Herbert Spencer? “Arlberg Technique” XS What is a crustacean? What is the meaning of the Spanish word “El Dorado?” Distinguished English philosopher A shell-fish. An imaginary place abounding in gold. oot First Division of the Territory of Alaska will be held in the Court- room of the Federal Building at Juneau, Alaska, beginning at the IN WITNESS WHEREOF, I have hereunto set my hand and caused the Seal of the above entitled court to be affixed at Juneau, this 3rd day of December, 1945. | (SEAL) JOHN H, WALMER, Clerk of the District Court. First publication, Dec. 19, 1945 Last publication, Jan. 9, 194f. WILLIAM CADY as a paid-up subscriber to THE DAILY ALAShA EMPIRE is invited to be our guest THIS EVENING. Present this coupon to the box office of the CAPITOL THEATRE and receive TWO TICKETS to see: "EARL CARROLL VANITIES” Federal Tax—11c per Persoh 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! - L e s[P[Y] [o]a] TEE 'B;LRJ oLlAl TA AFR Y| N SIHIE ERS clolp " RIU[T [ N E N/AB] E AlLE E[L|U E BER LE[VEEE THREATMENTERS Y/Oo[U T H | RIDJlIG/AP| RESIMEER[ 1 EME[RA E[D[HIDRIEIA[REECEIN| Solution Of Yesterday's Puzzle DOWN 3..Hole 1. Pouches 4. Health resort 2. Butter substi- 5. One of the hills | LET US ESTIMATE YOUR JOB OUR STAFF TAKES CARE of INSTALLATION and REPAIRS OF OIL BURNERS—ALSO BUILDING CONTRACTING NO JOB TOO SMALL OR TOO LARGE FOR US! PHONE Blue 475from 8 A. M. 1o 6 P. M. BLACK 447 EVENINGS of Rome ! . Article . Slow Small Auricle GREEN 559 FRED R. WOLF ELECTRICAL CONTRACTOR “IIOUSE WIRING OUR SPECIALTY” WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 2, 1946 WINDOW AUTO PLATE GLASS IDEAL GLASS CO. GLASS WORK OF ALL DESCRIPTIONS DON ABEL 121 MAIN STBEET PHONE 633 DR.E. H.KASER ||| The CharlesW. Carter DENTIST BLOMGREN BUILDING | Monuafy | Phéne 56 | Fourth and Franklin Sts. HOURS: 9 A. M. to 5 P. M. PHONE 136 Dr. A. W. Stewart PO ol VARIETODS DENTIST | TRY 20TH CENTURY BUILDING | | Office Phone 469 | Gasiineau Cale Foremost in Friendliness ROBERT SIMPSON, Opt. D. S — Graduate Los Angeles College J o Optoflistey anad VANITY BEAUTY Opthalmology SALON Glasses Fitted Lenzes Ground | | Cooper Building | ELSIE HILDRETH, Manager Alaska Music Supply | | |t Thone 28 Arthur M. Uggen, Manager | Pianos—Musical Instruments Dr. John H. Geyer and Supplier | DENTIST Phone 206 Second and Seward | | Room 9—Valentine Bldg. PHONE 1762 METCALFE SHEET METAL Heating—Airconditioning—Boat | | ""The Rexall Store” Tanks and Stacks—Everything Your Reliable Pharmacists in SHEET ME e Lo BUTLER-MAURO DRUG CO. HARRI MACHINE SHOP Plumbing — Heating — 0il Burners HOUSEHOLD APPLIANCES K. F. MacLEOD—Owner, Manager Phone 711 90 Willoughby Ave. ) PHONE 319 HARRY RACE Druggist “The Squibb Store” Where Pharmacy Is a Profession “The Store for Men" SABIN’S Front St—Triangle Bldg. Warfield's Drug Store 20TH CENTURY MEAT (Formerly Guy L. Smith Drugs) MARKET Juneaun’s Most Popular “Meating” Place ONLY THE BEST OF MEATS NYAL Family Remedies HORLUCK’S DANISH ICE CREAM PHONE 202 HUTCHINGS ECONOMY ARk CARO TRANSFER HAULING and CRATING DIESEL, STOVE, CRUDE OIL Phone 34% Phone 344 Choice Meats At All Times Located in George Bros. Store PHONES 553—92—95 CALIFORNIA Grocery and Meat Market 478 — PHONES — 71 High Quality Foods at Moderate Prices FOR Wall Paper IDEAL PAINT SHOP Phone 549 Fred W. Wendt St A i INSURANCE Shattuck Agency Jones-Stevens Shop LADIES'—-MISSES’ READY-TO-WEAR Seward Street Near Third The Alaskan Hotel Newly Renovated Rooms at Reasonable Rates PHONE SINGLE O 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. THE BARANOF ALASKA’S FINEST " HOTEL EAT IN THE BUBBLE ROOM Special Dinner 5to 8 P. M. $1.65 Silver Bow Lodge | MOUNT JUNEAU LODGE NO. 147 ALASKA ELECTRONICS| Sales and Service Expert radio repair without P. O. Box 2165 217 Seward PHONE 62 No.A2,10.0.F. SECOND and FOURTH Meets each Tues- Monday of each month day at 8:00 P. M. I. O. O. F. HALL. in Scottish Rite Temple beginni . . Visiting Brothers Welcome E?EF' CL%’;, %,;: BEN O. HAVDAHL, Noble Grand |Shipful Master; James W. LEIV- 7 ERS, Secretary. OIL BURNERS DRAFT CONTROLS HEATING Smith 0il Burner Service Day Phone 711 P. O. Box 2066 Night Phone 476 t Pursue Brave man French light- | ed soi= 1 cook ! allow- for s serving in India es of water Numbers: abbr, mbol for calcium . Plant of the lily family Gnite of work g S: e of the Unlon: abbr. BRONZE SHAFTING — STERN BEARINGS — PROPELLORS GRAY MARINE ENGINES SALES and SERVICE Juneau Weldmg and Machine Shop ded e —— NEON SIGNS NOW MANUFACTURED IN JUNEAU Repairs Made on All Types of “NEON” Tubing PRATT NEON CO. Shattuck Way—Phone 873 1891—0ver Half a Century of Banking—1946 The B. M. Behrends Bank Oldest Bank in Alaska COMMERCIAL SAVINGS }