The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, February 28, 1946, Page 4

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THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 28, 1946 | | to our ability to reach out anywhere in the world to £ P e s e - = 5 | l}ml ¥ Alaska Emplre ot ang i et g bl o' 1 T SPECIALIZING IN PERMANENT WAVING ; every evenine except Sunday | trovertible statement today It may not be so to-| “=— o oM HAIR CUTTING AND GENERAL BEAUTY CULTURE y ev r excep! nday by the EMPIRE PRINTING COMPANY | morrow, but we should make haste slowly in discarding | == THE EMPIRE E A FULL LINE IN DERMETICS CREAMS “ 13 Al Alaska o estdent | the old before we have the new weapons to replace R L b 29 SN 3 roe Eramiet | , LUCILLE®S BEAUTY SALON : = - Eator and Manager | them : FEBRUARY 28, 1926 PHONE 492 - Managing Edit srobably one’of the most interesting parts of I X o]/ Dusinees Masiwer . Pr "I bly. one’ of ";’ ;"”; “l ting p ‘“ b ‘:‘ i vs. M. O. Johnson of Wrangell arrived in Juneau with the Wrangell 1) At orrestal’s yrt report—he does not go into the mili- | o FEBRUARY ° R Po; L ¥ PR & % ahters ' he Post_Office Second Class Matter. 5t the Tt yea sar, since those e LRI delegation to the Southe Inter-School Meet. Her two daughters, c I w <Chscn ' of the Inst year of the war, since thosejo Mrs Bmua TOrrence in.. iy and Marjorie J e S e e e v me| | DR. E. H. KASER ||| TheCharlesW. Carfer Delivered by carrier in Juneau and Douglas lnr'il..'to per month) | g1; ve been covered in the report of Admiral|e Frederick Reynolds . b S e BaakA B e | s onths, $5.00; one , 815 . p as m PYS e basketba am. { B i King-is his detailed description of the plans formu- | Alice Rhinehart . y DENTIST ; Morluary onfer # favor If they will promptly notity | outlined, it would seem to remove many of the barriers | ® R. M. Speckert b | 3 e s P v ’ 3 Phone 56 Fourth and Franklin Sts. e of any or irregularity in the delivery LT Millie Duff e | hi over the Bering Sea, according to reports from Nome. Three J | PHONE that separate the Naval Academy graduate from the | i : . : HOURS: 9 A. M. to 5 P. M. 136 " , o o i . Clarence Por e cars took part in the race, which ook place on a five-mile strip of - News Office, 602; Businsss Offios ‘974 {officer who enters the service through some other | L : e -1 5 $UIA. guust e Mrs. R. M. Wiley ® | mooth ice down the coast from Nome. A light snowfall provided trac< MEMBER OF ASSOCIATED PRESS = | door, which has been a deterrent in peacetime 10/ g ¢ o s o @ © v © ® ® o MayrhPd'E top Sbked was-rapiosted: ke 42 writled SRENGAF FOR TASTY FOODS et i 1% ot stner | recruitment. In the provisions of the plan for ad- | PRI 05 “ i i e Dr. John H Geyer and VARIETY paper and also the local news published | sugh g lag ra ,,.,,,,,,‘,,,-,,_—fi.m F § 3 T v | ve anced }iml: through );Hulr'sr"(; fu)z );nl; lho:—r shuuld With halibut fare aggregaiing abcut 37,500 pounds five vesscls of DENT RY i il occur a further separation of the sheep from the goa ] fifd ) g ES Alasks Newspapers, 1411 4 ¥ { the local fishing fleet were in port They were the Norland, Olgo, Room 9—Valentine Bldg. 2 g | to provide the Navy with a better-trained and more- wind. Ol s nd P el i Gaslmeau Ca!e —— | competent officers corps than it has ever had { HOROSCOPE p Foremost in Friendliness ‘ mlluzli«”v l\f:}(‘ld;llxln t.h ! E: Jhl:({:vhlx:::\:;;t.:::lmn‘.“(x‘mlrll‘.\ [/l,l .\’//I/l.\ m’( line » Renovation and refurnishing of the Coliseum Theatre was completed | outmogigd X £e “huve e anconed. § e hut do not compe i the principal decoration scheme finished, and W. D. Gross was | VANITY BEAUTY | PLPNENS affaifs of the Department have been put in E»-N,,,--,—,-,»,-----_‘ { planning to leave soon for the States. Mrs. Gross was in Seattle for Dr.A.W. Stewart S afiraen that \probably compares favarably. With ARV FRIDAY, MARCH 1 medical treatment and he planned to join her there and accompany her DENTIST ALON | strictly commercial organization. If this be Secre- | RIDAY, 1 2 {on n trip to Rochester, Minn. 20TH CENTURY BUILDING Cooper Building | tary Forrestal's swan song, as is widely believed, then E 1 . B & oo wie. . He Wil surn g Yo s mocomeac vaso’ SRS ARSLE R : Bl ELSIE: HILDRETH, Manager L B e S M R e '| ~rhe sick, maimed and aged are Mrs. P. J. Lynch, formerly of Juneau, had arrived for a visit of Open Evenings Phone 318 | a hetter-run Department than he himself inherited. fy,qer friendly stars today. Love in scveral weeks in Juneau. She was the house guest of Mrs. B. B. Green,| | ROBERT SIMPSON, Opt. D. {the home will be expressed in pat-|..q also planned to visit at the home of her husband’s brother, Fred Graduate Lags Angeles College } R icnce, sympathy, understanding and|['o o sretndpimiont S METCALFE SHEET METAL | H ‘nm.;uv;-. ¢ ~;):'(L‘d1y toward handi- | ; Opthalmology l.lrea"nx—-Alrcenditlonlng—Bon ! (Washington Post) jeanped depeudCiis | Weather: Elihedt: 48: Jawest, 40: s anks and Stacks—Everything JUSINESS — S ! 4 : Highest, 42; lowest, 40; rain Glasses Fitted = | “We dont want Sin We want food.” 'rhm‘i Lk et I npe oound in SHEET METAL MR. FORRESTAL'S REPORT |is the cry of an o literaily 2 to | dried | against the ctoppage of dried egg impc or to put it more i British housewife protesting, The British between Sinatra films and soberly, between spend- itrag choose Because the Navy Department’s physical posse ing dollars on Hollywood films or on food. The sions are so widely scattered, afloat and ashore, its gver-all rationing of imports is an ir apable nec size is not always appreciated. In his annual report |sity, because the ending of lend-lease shipments s Secretary of the N: Navy's tment of abeut $12,000,000,000, than count 25 per cent greater Motors, United Stat and Telegraph combined. business,” Mr. Forrestal says, whici each interest in it. Mr. Forrestal does not go into merits of the prcposed unification which the Navy Department and Navy officers largely pleads only that in w! security the Navy oppose. He taken to provide for our national be not weakened. “It is the The Washington Merry-Go-Round (Continued from Page One) 2 turbulent sea of international ri- valry, our rudder smashed, our compass lost, with only a hazy idea of where we are heading. Meanwhile, one of our former | Allies knows exactly where it wants | to go, while another is sailing with a leaky hull, and we are bogged down from our attempt to keep it from capsizing m](u[.'&‘lhox SOVIET Sl’ll, F()IILII ISSUE However, I am writing in this pessimistic vein not because I en- joy being a pessimist, but because the time is short. The time is short and we as a nation must wake up. We must realize that the things we ‘do ‘in the international right now—during these days, and minutes—plant the seeds | of future peace or war. We are rapidly heading toward the latter + course. That is why I consider the revel- ation of Russian spy activities in | Canada a blessing in disguise. It may help us to realize what a dan- | gerous rivalry we are in the middle of. It may help us to wake up to! the fact that we are drifting to- ward international catastrophe. It so happened that I had known | about the Russian spy activities for several weeks before I broke | the story and I know that what the Russians were doing goes much deeper than the State Department would like to have us believe, and | shows a network of Soviet agents! not only engaged in a cut-throat | race to secure the atom bomb, but also aimed at disrupting our whole | avy, Mr. Forrestal points out that | shore establishment alone represents an s Steel and American Telephone “The Nav; “stockholder” to take an informed and continuing ey to our field | very weeks, | compels the Britisl supply to pay for thus placed -in th decide whether the consumption of im reduce purch: necessities The plight of fact that the net months with that ant ac- General a I of y is big industrial h should behoove S C the the merits or de- | PO of military arms, around to consider a reminder that u the British gover comprehensive con of American expor (“(]Jdl]dlll},, outlets { hatever action is curity and | for a showdown with Joe Stalin- a showdown based upon exchange | of social and cultural relations be- | tween the Russian and American pecple—then we can escape war. | I have harped on this question of | basic American-Russian friendship 50 much that I am sure everyone— | especially my family—is sick of | nearing about it. But it's the only | ‘px.umal way of preventing war s the way to apply the Sermon on H\c Mount to modern diploma: There are any number of reasons why we will never go to war with | Great Britain, and they all spring | from the same fact—that we know and understand the British people. | | Thousands of American touri | visit Britain in every mormal year. Hundreds of British lecturers and imws]upumon come over here. | Thousands of Americans have stud- |ied in England as Rhodes scholars | or otherwi Millions of British immigrants have come here to live. So the problem of peace with gland is easy. The problem of peace with Russia is much harder— ‘ru\l because of the language, sec- | ond because a little group of miil- |itary men at the head of the So- ;uu government have made it quite ar that they don't want their | people to know us. They want to |turn Soviet-U. S. friendship off and on like a spigot. The last thing they want is having the wishes of several million people regulate the low. They want to send all sorts of | Soviet agents over here—a total of 1,700 of them are now operating Lhmo secretly—but they don’t want even few American newspaper- {men, or an American orchestra over there without confining them ' |to Moscow and without shadowing |them every minute. SERMON ON THE | clmmunications system — 3t and | gt oyl 10¢ She kind of recipro- AR A o and foity that makes for peace. And i i this is where T think we have got e [to be tough with Stalin. It will| COOPE Vi, THEFT take a lot of courage to be tough, | There is, of course, s'm : to ! because no one in this country likes bo gaid on the side of Je Davies’ to think about the consequences if contention thet every nation en-!Stalin thinks we are bluffing. But gages in nase. That is true. in my opinion we must have a Hewev-r ems to me Mr. Dflviusl(ul’.k’-il-r‘r-leave—il showdown, and s the fact that we were in|tell Stalin that either we must the ss of working out an in- | have complete freedom to make terr=*isng) plan to share the secret friends between the Russian and of the atom just at a time when American people—or else. | the Russians were trying to steal! And this can't be peanut friend- 'it, ship. It’s got to be a broad-scale | Secreta Byrnes had gone to exchapge of students amd profes- | Moscow and made a sincere ges- sors by the thousands; it's got to | ture to share the atom, despite vi- gorous opposition from certain ele- ments at home. Yet, simultaneously, the Russians wanted the atom bomb, independent of any interna- tional cooperation, and were quite ing to steal it if they could. However, no great good is served haggling over who is right or who is wrong. We have been wrong toward the Russians plenty of times in the past—particularly when we isolated them for 17 years and helped make them the most sus picious nation in the world. ‘The thing to worry about is not who is right or who is wrong— but where do we go from here. If the Russians continue spying over here, and if we continue our at- tempts to spy over there, this, plus all the friction in Iran, Turkey, Trieste, and Manchuria, is certgin to end in war. Not only is it in- escapable, but it will come sooner than later. by WAR OR FRIENDSHIP If, on the other hand, we call include the free exchange of liter- | ature, mewspapers &nd mnewsmen, | churchmen and atheists, the tun-| ing in of radio broadcasts, the| showing of motion picture Personally, I would trade all the ‘ secrets of the atom bomb for the | hard-and-fast right to show the| Russian people that there is no | trouble between our two: countries | except a few narrow-minded mili- tary men at the top. | Well, T didn't mean to preach a sermon, please forgive me. I have been terribly worried about the way we have been drifting. Unless it is stopped, little Johnny some | day will be wearing the uniform | his father put in mothballs last October. Your Brother, DREW RIGHT, BELL SYNDICATE, INC. 1946) | - EMBLEM CLU Social meet’ng 8 o'clock, Thurs- day night at Eiks Hall. Initiation. Hushands and escorts of Emblem Club members invited. (COPY! to deprive r favorite movie mouNt |’ h to use part of their scarce dollar what they buy. The government is ne unhappy position of having to the people of a sight of heroes and heroines, cut down nported articles such as tobacco, »f foreign foodstuffs and other basi the British government emphasizes needed gets proposed American credit is hence, or whenever Congress ing the loan agreement. It 8 nless or until a loan is forthcomi nment will be forced to maintain trols over imports to the detriment ters who have been hoping to find or their products in British markets. e oo oo eeovoesce ° TIDE TABLE bi ° ° . MARCH 1 . e High tide 0:53 a.m,, 143 ft. e e Low tide 6:29 am., 34 ft. e e High tide 54 pm., 166 ft. e e Low tide 19:01 pm, -13 ft. e ee e v e 000000 03 INCORPORATION OF HOONAH AS CITY OF FIRST CLASS SOUGHT Listing 715 permanent inhabi- tants, gross real property valuation of $705,091, and personal property valued at $1,500,591, the nearby community of Hoonah, has filed a petition for incorporation as a city, of the first cl A petition, sxgmd by 100 Hoonah idents, asking that time for an lection on incorporation of the city be set, was entered Wed- ay with the Clerk of the U. S. rict Court here and Judge J. W. Kehoe yesterday signed a Court order setting 2 o'clock p. m., April 16, 1946, as time for hearing the petition. The petition, filed by Attorney William L. Paul, Jr, and by Hoo- nah's present informal Mayor, Harry Douglas, sets us as proposed city limits the present Hoonah elimination from Tongass National Forest, with additional inclusion of harbor limits extending 700 feet seaward. jor Douglas also revealed that A number of large U. S. manu- Sl B S S b -o—~’»~~'~~v«-»~f Phone 711 90 Willoughby Ave. ——— facturers soon will construct and § . . . ’,7/ i e s - | Daily Lessons in English W, 1. corpon | Alaska Music Supply | | 1=-— - Jporta P! J " * > Arthur oo g benbitiiig byt dbWat.o ety oGS ). . A e U e S i T e rthuf M. Uggen, Manager & e Rexall Store [ cheaper and simpler distribution Pianos—Musical Ins our Reliable Pharmacists 4 na less friction with thelr em-| WORDS OFTEN MISUSED: Say, “Most of our troubles are IMAGI- IMS;:F;I’E'::'“""““ 3 ployees | NARY” (that which exists in the imagination). Say, “He is an IMAGI-| | pp v ons™ socond and Seward BUTLER-MAURO NATIONAL ISSUES | NATIVE author” (a person possessing a great amount of imagination). | fem——— 2007 20 ZERATC | DRUG CO. Fear “‘()““"“; e “'“““"“‘ "*‘“} OFTEN MISPRONOUNCED: Connoisseur. Pronounce kon-i-sur, O increase through the next several! .. = i B 37 : - AT A : . maktls, will ‘Be overcome ‘as et ® JN', I as :}!‘l{. U,‘(s in FUR, princ 1‘n‘|1 s nt on l.\.s.L :.yllablu ! HABRI MACHINE s““l’ bial problems are solved and| OFTEN MISSPELLED: Religious; T0US. Corgeous; EOUS, P l i i A JORD STUDY: “Use a word thiec times and it is yours” Let us 2 : rge-scale production 3 ! i ) goods gets under way increase our vocabulary by mastering one word each day. Today's word: | lnmbmg Heahl!g e Oil Bnrners inflation arc most ominous when EXPEDIENT (noun); suitable means to accomplish an end. “Good | g HOUSEHOLD APPLIANCES goods are scarcest. Peak .produc- breeding is an expedient to make fools and wise men equal.’—Steele. K. F. MacLEOD—Owner, Manager PHONE 319 Hon WIll DOt be TeACHEA DEIOTE 18LE | (iromnonottrgiriom it s i et it in 1947, INTERNATIONAL AFFAIRS One and possibly two notable ex- % amples of dictatorships wearing the | | SAB'N’S Drugglsi cloak of Gemoeracy Will e eXPOBEl & e S rrrirre ettt b e s e i | “The Squibb Store™ during the year. Determined effort Q. When placing the silver on the table, should the fork prongs | o g h o L 10 strip the camouflage from des-'point upwards or downwards? i Front St—Triangle Bldg. Ak pots and establish true democracies A. The prongs of the forks should point upward. Fihod will not succeed without bloodshed betating. WHokk BiFthaate” this 48 Q. What breach of etiquette hastens more divorces than any othur7 . v e promised by the stars: A suc- A. One authority says that rudeness of a hushand or a wife towar s | warheld SDfllg S'o'e 20TH CIENTUR"Y MEAT cessful conclusion of venture now the other’s friends is the léading cause. “ (Formerly Guy L. Smith Drugs) * REET in doubt and a year of increaing @ When is the wedding reception designated as a breakfast? | o E Juneau’s Most Popular influence in their communities. A. When the marriage is performed at 12 o'clock or earlier. | NYAL Family Remedies ety TEiNon CHitlaren " bora on " this “day. Will oot s sl SIS bl SIS G s s vl iy HORLUGIGH DANISH ONLY THE BEST OF MEA'S be individualists not _always ICE CREAM PHONE 202 amendable to discipline. Tifey will LO 0 K a nd LEA RN by et g i A ¢ convox | g seovow || [CARD TRANSFER should study their talents, lavishly """""'""”"‘"“""'"""""""""""‘ mm. praise their ‘,“,”‘f. (-“m;\-n efforts. | 1. Which is the most widely-grown apple in the United States? Choice Meats At All Times HAULING and CRATING (COPYRIGHT, 1946 J 2. What are the three primary human emotions? Located in George Bros. Store DI ety «# 3 Who is the only prize fighter ever to hold three world cham- | PHONBS 8539288 S FIOVE CRERE OIL JUNEAU BAND 10 BEORGANIZED AT MEET NEXT WEEK, Under sponsorship of the Ju- neau Rotary Club, plans will be made next.week to organize a Ju- i by MODERN ETIQUETTE apmnsmps at the same time? 4. Which musical instrument’s tcne most nearly h\mmn voice? Which State capital is the farthest north? ANSWERS: Winesap. Fear, anger, and love. Henry Armstrong. The violoncello. Olympia, Wash. & gaegacrs ROBERTA LEE resembles HARRY RACE “The Store for Men" 1 H | Phone 34¢ Phone 344 the FOR Wall Paper IDEAL PAINT SHOP Phone 549 Fred W. Wendt CALIFORNIA Grocery and Meat Market 478 — PHONES — 371 High Quality Foods at Moderate Prices Jones-Stevens Shop neau City Band. The date of the meeting and place will be announc- ed in plenty of time for a big turn- out. The band will be a community organization and any musician will be eligible for membership, no lines being drawn. For years Juneau had a band that was a credit to the city. The band gave concerts, free dances, and played for all public spirited: gathe and on holida With the sf { the war, old mem- bers, as well as others began drift- ing and a permanent organization v suspended. he need for a band is recogniz- musicians ng started Hm nah has made application for ed and it is hoped all a certificate to operate as a com- will attend the preliminary meeti munity project its new electric to get the organization plant. ain. rossword Puzzle IR 33. Retinue of ACROSS 1. Astern NEL Sts un 4. State in Brazil B iite 9. Sphere Deaagod 12. Female deer forcibly 13, D 31 Inclination 14, Feminine name 38, Cong: 15. Ancient Roman 40, llr lxl« I)1=III citadel 41 Encourage . Worn out 42, County in New Insect Occupations ~ 43. A Nerve networks 45 43, A pe preserve . Uncle Tom's pet s . Period of time FRESH-KILLED LOCAL Fryers, Roasters and Stewing CHICKENS DRESSED and DRAWN From Shore’s Pouliry Ranch * ON SALE AT: Harhor Market B. M. Behrends Garnick’s Grocery Thrift Co-Op Gastineau Grocery ~ Swanson Bros. Thibodeau’s Grocery LADIES’—MISSES’ READY-TO-WEAR Seward Street INSURANCE Shattuck Agency Near Third The Alaskan Hotel Newly Renovated Rooms B. P. 0. ELKS Meets every Wednesday at 8 p. 1 There is no substitute tor newspaper advertising! Solution Of Yesterday's Puzzle | DOWN 1 1. First man [ L L 4. Mother Goose character Flower NEON SIGNS | 'NOW MANUFACTURED IN JUNEAU Repairs Made on All Types of “NEON” Tubing PRATT NEON CO. Shattuck Way—Phone 873 Eloquent speaker . Hindu queen i . Genus of the | beet { Metal . Preceding nights Peeled . Article of | apparel . The one d . Mouth of a river “servant . Smudge of ink | . Church festival Balances 2. Island in the Mediterranear . Orient . Open court Snare New s Rema Topaz hummingbird VELG KASSEN as a paid-up subseriber 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 sece: “BREWSTERS MILLIONS" Federal Tax—-11c per Person PHONE 14— THE ROYAL BLUE CAB (0. and an insured cab WILL CALL FOR YOU RETURN YOU to your home with our compliments. WATCH THIS SPACE—Your Name May Appear! at Reasonable Rates m. Visiting brothers welcome. L. 1 J. HOLMQUIST, Exalted 3 PHONE SINGLE O H. L. McDONALD, sm!:i'.':;. THE JUNEAU |BARANGOF||| UPHOLSTERY co. | : RE-UPHOLSTERING | ALASKA’S FINEST NEW FURNITURE | HOTEL DRAPERIES | EAT IN THE Phone 36 122 2nd St. | Co. BUBBLE ROOM | | |A1:ASKA ELECTRONICS i 5 es an rvice sp:ctlag Emner Expert radio repair withoat dela; 'i g P. O. Box 2165 217 Seward $1.6 ' | Silver Bow Lodge| MOUNT JUNEAU LODGE NO. 147 | No.A2,10.0.F. SECOND and FOURTH 4 Meets each Tues- Monday of each month day at 8:00 P. M., I .0. O. F. HALL. In Scottish Rite Temple Visiting Brothers Welcome beginning at 7:30 p. m. FLOYD HORTON, Noble Grand M. L. MacSPADBEN, | H. V. CALLOW, Secretary Worshipful Master; JAMES W.* | LEIVERS, Secretary. | OIL BURNERS PLUMBIN HEATING | - -~ - | Smith 0il Burner Service | PHONE 176 Location—214 Second Street | 1891—0ver Half a Century of Banking—1946 The B. M. Behrends Bank Oldest Bank in Alaska COMMERCIAL SAVINGS and

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