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. cuses for flying fellow officers on ?AGE FOUR THURSDAY, APRIL 11, 1946 fa couple need to marry on? Does this mean that 1rumnml prudence is once more creeping into the e NV As |marriage market? For the subject of the marriage ANY [budget hasi't been publicly debated for half a dmn| i Dmlv Aluska E m plre U Alaska ° ident | VEATS at least. Since well before Pearl Harbor, young Vice-President - people have been giving no thought to salaries, bud- “Editor and Manager o ne: gs, & N aadnsing BeMor gets, or nest eggs, as they have rushed to marriage HELEN TROY DOROTHY TR - WILLIAM R_CARTER - a S ELMER A. FRIEND S 3 - ALFRED ZENGER - - - - Business manager | license bureaus. The threat, and later the presence, o APRIL 11 Py Emered i the Post Office in Juneau as Second Class Matter ‘C:u:‘lf“l caused them to grab at life uninhibited by|, Mrs. Dolly Stewart . L et e ° Anita Brown . o by carrie au u o ¥ ¥ 4 : Mivered by, earties Yu Juminaand Dedtits 108 21,08 per SeRiR) The Woman’s Home Companion, in a recent poll| o Don Foster, Jr. M e paid, at the following rates of a selected group of women readers, found fairly!e Prancis Tucker > six months, in advance, $7.50; sAaie el s C modest ideas prevailing as to the needed income for| o R. M. Canfield . hey will promptly !lxull!" newlyweds. The middlegrounders said a couple could| ¢ Eunice Wanamaker . their papers resularity in the delivery | jive on from $40 to $45 a week without the wife's|q Edward Halford . Telephanes: News Office. 602; Business Office, 374 ‘ working. If the wife worked, expenses would be higher, | o Fred Townsend . 4 MEMBER OF ASSOCIATED PRESS nd the income would have to be around $50. Esn-[, Evelyn Burley s The Associa e led to the use for mates varied greatly for dlf{mem parts of the country, | ¢ Mrs. Hiram Prescott ° ublication o to 1t or not other- i § g | wise creditec Wiso Ui 1dce! news published | and for farm and el ° Mrs. John A. Martin . here: compared to the ideas of 1929, when fashion magazines, 4 A & o Newspapers, 1441 | Were asking, “Can a bride live on $5000 a y! 5 608 0. 08,9 0.0 6w 6 N TONAL REPRE! & " Avesot e However, that year is now described by social historians as one of extravagant spending and whoopee making, a year which shoes sold for $22.50 and hats for $30! 1 Yet, do not these 1929 prices have a familiar ring? H 0 R 0 S C 0 P E And with the bulge in the price line in imminent | “The stars incline e ] Avenue ” e e danger of giving way under “business as usual” pres- daring of pioneer days. But can this daring hold out | under present complexities? In the early 1800s, certain A — | foreign visitors were shocked at the widespread custom ' conflicts Where there is teamwork of girls and boys in their teens marrying without|and willingness to give as well a ) dowries, savings, possessions, or visible means of ‘““S""’",}:{‘,',,:,hfn‘ is harmony and con- tenance, and setting out to build log cabins in the ‘™ Bl Jisio W, | wilderness. One handicap to such marriage daring! BUSINESS AFFAIRS today is. that ubt: even @, log cabin i ayailable, det[; Inflation’is unavolasble, (HuE 2 alons a wilderness. ‘The housing situation, ¢ not the |topftolled mflation need RpE b marriage budget, may slow the march-to the altar feared. Indications are that care- |fully reined inflation now present {will continue for at least anothx ;\mx and vill not get out of hand NATIONAL *1SSUES Much progress will be made dur- {the next 12 months by numerous frank dis TO PASS OR NOT TO PASS - According to word received from Ketchikan yester- day, a large number of Ketchikan merchants are sponsoring advertisements stating that they will not pass along the new sales tax for the veterans fund to the consumers, but will absorb it themselves since they feel it is the least they can do for the men who fought overseas to save their businesses. Some of the Ketchikan merchants have already stated, however, that they will pass the tax along to the consumer. But since the advertisements of the “absorbers” have come up, many of these have abandoned their stand. Obviously the consumer is going to take his trade to the merchant who doesn’t pass the tax along Here in Juneau some of the merchants are for absorbing it and other§ for passing it along. The drug stores have worked out a method to collect the tax | uspicious! We're (Cincinnati Enquirer) Among other things, the United States Army has | just declared surplus for sale to the public, 433, 7h washboards and 4,384,249 bars of laundry soap. Is this|interested in the removal of racial merely another casual unloading of unwanted material, ’and religious barriers in this coun- or is it, do you suppose, another step in the carefully |“‘ The so-called Springfield sys- | thought-out plan to popularize Army’ enlistments? !tem will serve as a model for many In our mind’s eye we can just see the motherly in the handling of race problems. type of Sergeant sometimes to be found at Army Re-' INTERNATIONAL AFFAIRS cruiting Stations throwing a friendly arm about lhe' Though the present is dark and from the sale of magazines, not charging it on ether shoulder of a prospective enlisted man and sayi discouraging, better days are articles ‘ “Look, Buddy, we've done got rid of all them wash- [seen for France. Actually, :boa:'ds and laundry soap, you don't haveta worry |nation has probably passed her From here it looks as if most of the merchants. ' ,ycu¢ nothing like washing clothes” Incidentally, be- crisis and the immediate future becausé of competition, will not pass the tax to the consumer. To these merchants the tax will be the same as if it were a gross income tax, which was one of | the alternatives at the recent special session At any rate, we don’t believe that anyone will | mind paying the tax because they know that the funds fore we forget, the characters mentioned in this|should see steady progress toward editorial are purely fictional and any resemblance to national unity and stability. actual persons living or dead is strictly coincidental. Those whose kirthdate this is Well, if the armed forces can encourage enlist- |Promised by the stars: A year of ments by divesting themselves of all pax.lphornalmw“‘d oning influence in their occu-, that suggests work, we say more power to them, but pational fields as well a are going to the veterans, and this is the way |if they really want tc make the act entirely convincing, “Cm"?\“f‘““ i i ] A. Yes. Alaskans can help repay the debt. The money col- | We suggest that they not stop with selling a few!' Cl‘;“”}’" '.’.O_”:ld‘l"fj" 'p"’b“l’ly will Q. ledted from this tax will g0 out in loans or for bonuses, | Million bars of lsundry soap and half & million wash- ;"" wi‘fl‘ ’Ea “X‘l') ;"d ‘(“i:’;\“’,‘f}] Mon! A Yes; a hostess who does L Lok o thip renstit BRI iGE the Aevalopment | DOAIGS: Dt g0 Il the SrAy andsell hoir S 00001 il St o Sl Wm- S il As oo as the debt. 15 ebiigated’ Ve 'ta suits of fatigue or work clothes, their 35,000,000 shovels, | tN€lr parents U : B s 5 & MO 88 B, Geub 18 . 9D URAMS 2X | picks, rakes, scythes, sickles, lawnmowers—and perhaps years. A striving for independence wiil cease to exist, which is another advantage of the oyen their three or four million potato paring knives. will mark their de\'r‘lupment a]A( specimens of all sl'ch equlpmen if for no other ;. act.cm and i mlclloct\m] pur- | Marriage Budget | reason than for educational purpcses, to show the 'iic™ rThev will have high ideals (Washington Post) incoming rookies the implements with which their clder n~d live up to their principles. Ages? Cmppm[.. up .\gnm is the old quesucn What does | brothers won World War II lCeryr sht, 1946) 2. In what country is the River Shannon? | T 3 d" ; ‘;‘ AT " TN i -t 3 7;1 z T ; : §— e | 3. Who was “Uncle Joe” Cannon? The Alaskall Hfllel B- P- 0. ELKS [dates; also criticized inequities in Unite ates, Russla an an, i fropic, % 4. What is the name of the tube connecting the ' | Ihe WGslllnfllon jthe type of clothes issued oficers Austealiy has dominated the Con- SOmPomise Hmee o IRane S s £ the. mouln and he | New:y Remv;xwd Rooms xl‘:e‘e;xss;lv:;:;) rw;:inesdaly atep. and enlisted 1 in ska erence. 2 “ at Reasonal 4 'others welcome. E. Me’ry-fio-nound i e ooy AR 3 e i ¥ land forgot to offer the proposal.| 5. Give the line from Hamlet which follows, “To thine own self be‘ ol fopiad C. REYNOLDS, Exalted R,viler Enlisted men stationed at Ladd = Most significant move made by pollowing this, Gromyko did stage true, and it must follow as night the day . " PHONE SINGLE O W. H. BIGGS, Secretary. —_— |Field, near Fairbanks in Alaska, | the Evatt-Hodgson team was the ine walkout which Dr. Evatt arite! ANSWERS: — . % (Continued- from Page One) were not permitted to wear the|original Australian proposal that' cipated. Later, however Colonel | 1 i > ot to Mities s 1o i e i, | bt Wit w1 g 1 B e 1€ e Sl o bR | UPHOLSTERY co vestigate the Red Army of occupa- cause the powers that be were though not adopted until after S0- Gouncil, and the Australian plan' 3. Member of the House of Representatives for 46 years; during BARAN“F RE-UPH( ik > tion. They are still sitting in Ta- afraid some visiting general might viet Ambassador Andrei Gromyko fina|ly was adopted—though not in eight of these he was the Speaker. Nfiw mmo briz waiting for travel permits. The mistake us for officers.” As a re- had walked out, actually this Plan time to prevent the Soviet exit, | 4 Esophagus. ! ALASKA’S FINEST s P t exi { | HOTEL DRAPERIES Russian Commander won't let them sult, he added, a number of G.I’s was put forth on Evatt's sugges-. 1ong in advance of making his through Wallace Murray, Am- | became ill from the intense Alas-'tion well in advance. proposal, Colonel Hodgson had per- | :lxlxcnn A;;l‘):;sa?do: to Ira}xln. is quite | kan colt_*l. : [ Evatt tola nis colleague in New formed a lobbying job which would | K s ng advice which Ran-| “It did us no good to gripe,”|york that he should do everything have done credit to any American' dolph Churchill gave to Americans before he sailed from New York was “Abolish the OPA.” Some people are wondering if yuung\ Churchill wasn't satisfied with the trouble his father caused when he tried to advise the American people. Douglas testified, “because all our | possible to prevent a Soviet walk- big-business corporation. He had mail from Alaska was heavily cen- out—which he, Evatt apparently buttonholed various members of sored.” figured was definitely in the works. the Security Council and persuaded General Doolittle said he was| To that end, Colonel Hodgson them to vote for the Australial aware of the problem, but that ef- asked French Ambassador Henii compromise plan. He had malmgcfi forts were under way to correct it Bonnet to offer Evatt’s proposal as to get the support of Ambassador by standardizing officers’ and en-'g compromise during a three-power Oscar Lange of Poland, who turns :::5:)191:{1 “‘cl]“f:c‘;‘i‘»;; 1::‘[150: Z 'hsu’d men’s clothing annj making it | meeting of Secretary Byrnes, So- somersaults at the slightest nod e e D nossibile. for enlisted men to voice|viet Ambassador Gromyko and from the Soviet Ambassador. i iblinAr of B Ohtosgo; el b s ol H Othgr members of the Security next week to attend the Peace % i ag! bune, through the usual chain of com-| Council were not present, so that Conference in person. { 0 SRR mand Hodgson was unable to present the (COPYRIGHT, BELL SYNDICATE, inc. 1946) v “I think I know what you were L | SOVIET DIPLOMAT LAUGHS |up against in Alaska,” remarked ) 5 i Even after the Soviet Ambassa- Doolittle. “I once drove a dog team E [clorRENG ?F claBl T O o e 8 Crossword Puzzle foms cogog Buo Russian remained at the Security ! AsPIAlLIATE aIerE Council table—Arkady A. Scholev, MERRY-GO-ROUN ! ACROSS 85. Uo up WEAR I [LIYIl[S C ARF Sovict Deputy Direc neral Presfdent. Truman e still’ shops] /M BATHOER siay <18 HeseiaNg RrRIU/NSIHID | AL The other day Scbolev was in " w0 % i .| 4 Spirited horse Hebrew letter + B ping around for a new Under Sec- 4 plice for 38, Forerunner of |SIAITIESEREDRAF T Washington and d a lunch- retary of the Navy, wants a man storing corn the piano | |DIE/SICIAIF E R| | SO b¥ Lot e and House who will support Army-Navy uni-| 1% American raile 0. Playibing e/DElic/AGEDARE! | Porcign its Committees . for ,fioation, -100. percent.. Paul . BOrer! gs. il a fuosiiete V. depmetrical viAlF AKIERME RG S UN. cfficials. Senator Joe Guffey may be the man. Robert Ros- | 14, In this place 2. Get along EX/C/I[TIEIDMS | TES of Pirredlvania, arriving late, sat!sow, the American consul in Tabriz, | 13 Supplication 3. Devoured L|AS] S‘ATR’I- ! dow, <0 Sobolev without re- | still reports no evacuation of Rus- | }- SUE pf (50l 44 [FLINERBEENE F 1T cogi..4ng who he was. sian troops from Iran. He's the e prevent at o Ok S iuston AID/OMNABIO[VER | RE Wantinz o be sociable, Guffey consul the Russians put in jail sev- TRy S Moalkntie e TIO|PBNC|AINE'S] turned to Sobolev, asked: | eral weeks ago Despite Henry ! Ventilate | Windflowers SILYIRTIRIE N T END) “Well, tell me, how's everything' Morgenthau's charge that Lew b, A By in the House.” | Douglas's appointment to the In- Anq not . Solution of Yesterday's Puzzle Sobolev caught on immediately, ternational Bank would turn the gk SRR i ko DowN 2 Co knew Guffey had mistaken him for new world financial organization| % Pronoun 61. Some 1. Open coyrt, 8 a member of the House of Repre- over to Wall Street, Secretary Vin- sentatives, son still urging Douglas’ nom- i f “I think things are all right,” . ination e i replied Sobolev. “What do you| Purchises think.” AUSTRALIA’S EVATT TELE- A thousand The Senator from Pennsylvania' PHONES hiice huek il then launched on a long discourse| The strident, irrepressible voice | of trans- c¢n the lower chamber, following: of Australia’s External Affairs Min- ' which Sobolev gleefully confessed jster Herbert Evatt has been ab- his identity sent from the United Nations Se- 20, ey of struw Note—Later, Sobolev reported to curity Council meeting. But, be- . K81 of finch a friend: “Guffey was sure I wasn't hind the scenes, his direct presence Rt a member of the Senate because is definitely felt. Every evening, . Public iudging I'm not tat enough.’ Evatt talks by trans-Pacific tele- alish phone to the Australian Delegate, e ik G.I. CLOTHES IN ALASKA Col. W. R. Hodgson. The two have| Knocied The Doolittle “Caste System” achieved perfect teamwo and B S lutow Board really got an earful when it many of the Australian moves in N listened to the testimony of ex- the Irania crisis were hatched in * i advance over the teleuhone. In fact the Australian telephone bill at the end of the Conference may look like the national debt, be- Pvt. Malcolm C. Douglas, who once served with the Byrd Expedition to the Antarctic and later with the Air Forces in Alaska. Tt of n'gasor line engine . Bargain Feminine name DENTIST ) I BLOMGREN BUILDING Mortuary- APRIL 11, 1926 ] Phone 56 i s Fourth and Fr The “Happy Ccliseum Four” were to give a dance this night in the HOURS: 9 A. M. to 5 P. M. pé‘oma?fim . Moose Hall and “The Al s,” led by Rica Neimi, were to give a dance in the A. B. Hall, from THE EMPIRE Here were $1 specials at George Brothers: and beans, 7 cans spaghetti, 6 cans tomato puree, 5 cans Cove oysters, 6 pounds best prunes, 7-pound package of macaroni, either long or cut. Mr. and Mrs. Katherine Hooker was a passenge R The Virginia IV left for Sitka w {Juneau Lumber Mills. ussions of problems and! r,_,, Dally Lessons in English % 1. corpon |, R ] are joint, or between ccurses s in tkeft an old friend to say, “Th Douglas assailed the custom of cause some trans-Pacific talks! AAF officers using “tlight time” lasted an hcur. and “instrument checking” ‘as ex- Results, however, appear to jus- tify the cost. For, along with tk Millionaire Browning and his second “Cinderella” girl, Frances Heenan, were married in Gold pr‘im:. N. Y. —— #VORDS OFTEN MISUSED: Do not say. “WAS there. CHILDREN is the object of the preposition WITH. | Leisure. chil@ren were there.” Say, ct. OFTEN MISPRONOUNCED: as in ME. OFTEN MISSPELLED: Description; SYNONYMS: Incredible, REFUTATION; disproof. W. E. Hendrickson left for where they were to visit for several weeks. 1 for 6 ith 20,000 box shooks from the Ehvpe o0 I West 1M ELSIE HILDRETH, Manager Open Cvenings Phone 318 . s Alaska Music Supply 15-year-old Arthur M. Uggen, Manager METCALFE SHEET METAL to carry mail from Seattle to Alaska sure, it is not unlikely that the hypothetical marriage | | budget may rise again. | but do not compel” S Whether love will continue to laugh at budgets is | ¢ MR Luther Burbank, world famous plant |a-question. In the past rising living standards have | lifornia. |usualy depressed the marriage market by postponing | FRIDAY, APRIL 12 bt "‘J““:l‘e‘;‘é‘;t"e']‘:“:lfi“fl “::'m:f‘o‘f":‘ g nfi“}"‘ :l’:‘d HEART AND HOME L. The Alaska Steamship Company and also the Admiral Line were lalso in the marrying mood. There are even Sumt“ Reunions and other family activ- given renewals of their contracts | evidences that you has regained some of the marriaze;“‘"“ are xn\'ornq. Spmll irritations | points. in the home will give way before Weather report: High, 46; low, 44; rain, rhurgc that she was calculating.”—Churchill. | MODERN ETIQUETTE openra uo | ARSI MR S <=0 Q. usage and the English usage, and its pronunciation? A. give zest to the appetite; Pronounc cent on last A as in TRAY, principa Q. Would it be 1. What Danish king sat on the throne of England during the Middle | & “Thou canst not then be false to any man.” B > i ICE CREAM PHONE 202 HUTCHINGS ECONOMY B | | e CARO TRANSFER ~===3 | | Choice Meats At All Times HAULING and CRATING Will you give the real meaning of ENTREE, both the French| Located in George Bros. Store DIESEL, STOVE, CRUDE OIL | PHONES 553—92—95 Phone 344 Phone 344 In French usage. a dish served at the beginning of dinner to in English usage, a side dish, served with a| FOR ang-tra, first A as in ASH, second | yllable. | rrect for a woman introducing her son-in-law to s Dick, Mary’s husband"? Is a hostess obligated to rise and greet each newcomer? not do so is rude'and inhospitable. | breeder, dies in Santa Rosa, | “The woman with her three WOMAN is the singular sub- | | “The Squibb Store” Front St—Triangle Bldg. Where Pharmacy Is & Pronounce le-zher, first E Profession DES. Discretion; inconceivable, unbelievable. WORD STUDY: “Use a word three times and it is yours.” groups sincerely and altruistically j,crcase our vocabulary by mastering cne word each day. Today's word: | “The incident seemed a refutation of the DR. E. H. KASER The Charles W. Carter FOR TASTY FOODS 7 cans ;I?\;}.’an Camp’s pork Dr' A w' Stewart and VARIETY DENTIST TRY 20TH CENTURY BUILDING . Office Phone 469 Gastineau Cafe Victoria on the Princess Foremost in Friendliness p 2 2 s e o5 R Don's Radio Service VANITY BEAUTY the south on the Princess Electrical and Radio Repair SALON (We pick up and deliver) Cooper Bufldi: ng Heating—Airconditioning—Boat Tanks and Stacks—Everything in SHEET METAL Phone 711 90 Willougnby Ave, Pianos-—Mausical Instruments and Supplier Phone 206 Second and Seward —— ] —— "The Rexall Store” Your Reliable Pharmacists BUTLER-MAURO DRUG CO. HARRY RACE Druggist HEINKE GENERAL REPAIR SHOP Welding, Plumbing, Oil Burner Blacksmith Work GENERAL REPAIR WORK Phone 204 929 W. I2th St. “The Store for Men"” SABIN’S s || Warfield's Drug Store (Formerly Guy L. Smith Drugs) NYAL Family Remedies HORLUCK’S DANISH — | 20TH CENTURY MEAT MARKET Juneau's Most Popular “Meating” Place ONLY THE BEST OF MEA'TS Let us| CALIFORNIA | Grocery and Meat Market 478 — PHONES — 371 High Quality Foods at Moderate Prices Wall Paper IDEAL PAINT SHOP Phone 549 Fred W. Wendt INSURANCE Shattuck Agency Jones-Stevens Shop LADIES'—MISSES’ READY-TO-WEAR Seward Street -S| { Near Third Phone 36 122 2nd St Sbmething Different | IN THE WAY OF FISH NOW ON SALE AT OUR FISH MARKET—the following assortment of EASTERN FISH FILLETS MACKEREL FILLETS HAKE FILLETTS COD FILLETS WHITING FILLETS Louisiana Shrimps Juneau Cold Siorage Company, Inc. FINNAN HADDIES HAKE FILLETTS POLLOCK FILLET! FLOYD HORTON, Noble Grand M. L. MacSPADDEN, KIPPERS 8 ( H. V. CALLOW, szcret.ary “Vommplul Master; JAMES W, BAY CHUBS LIIVERS, - EAT IN THE BUBBLE ROOM Special Dinner 5 to 8 P. M. $1.65 Silver Bow Lodge No.A210.0.F. day at 8:00 P. M, I. .O. O. F. HALL. Visiting Brothers Welcome ALASKA ELECTRONICS Sales and Service Expert radio repair withoat £. O. Box 2165 217 Seward| PHONE MOUNT JUNEAU LODGE NO. 147 SECOND and FOURTH Monday of each month in Scottish Rite Temple beginning at 7:30 p. m. 1 ‘ ‘ Y | SMOKED ; ; Frog Legs Ci¢® DIRECTORY MEETINGS HELD IN UNION HALL—1st and Gastineau—Phone 327 Juneau Mine & Mill Workers Juneau Industrial Union Council EMPIRE JOHN WORGUM as a paid-up subseriber to THE DAILY ALASKA invited to be our guest THIS EVENT Present this coupon to the box office of the CAPITOL THEATRE and receive TWO TICKETS to see: "ON STAGE EVERYBODY" Federal Tax—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. WATCH THIS SPACE—Your Name May Appear! Local 203; Secy. Arthur H, Wal- ther; Phone Green 340; meet- ings 1st and 3rd Monadys, 7:00. Secy. R. S. Hough; Phone Green 240; meetings second and fourth Thursdays at 7:30 P. M. Juneau Yransport Workers ,Local 172; Secy. George C. Martin; Phone Black 265; meetings 2nd gnd 4th Tuesdays at 8:00 P. M. Int. Woodworkers of America Local M-271; Secy. Henry Ad- sero; meetings 2nd and 4th Fri- days at 7:30 P. M. United Cannery Workers, Local 269; Secy. Ruth Hayes. United Trollers of Alaska, Local 26; Secy. B. H. (Jack) Manery; Phone Blue 220; meetings 1st and 3rd Wednesdays, 8:00 P. M. Inter. Longshoremen & Ware- housemen Union, Local 1-41 Cold Storage Workers; Secy. Mike Avoian; Green 759; meetings 1st and 3rd Wednesdays, 7:30 MEETINGS AT 222 WILLOUGHBY—PHONE 518 International Longshoremen and Warchousemen Union, Local 1-16 * Secy. Don McCammon; Phone Blue 372; meetings Mondays, 7:30 Lecal Industrial Upion, Local 832 Sec. Abel Anderson; Black 605. .‘ g J“NBAII PAINT & SUPPLY CO., (Formerly Juneau Paint Store) VENETIAN BLINDS—Metal, Wood AUTHORIZED KENTILE CONTRACTOR MASTER NO-DRAFT SASH BALANCES MASTER WEATHERSTRIPPING . SRRt OO 1891—0ver Half a Century of Banking—1946 The B. M. Behrends Bank Oldest Bank in Alaska COMMERCIAL SAVINGS Vicior P