The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, April 26, 1946, Page 4

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PAGE FOUR Dml A laska E m plre :n..u every evening except Sunday by the EMPIRE PRINTING COMP. Second and Main Str HELEN TRO DOROTHY WILLIAM R ELMER A. FR ALFRED ZENGER Sntered in SUBSCRIPTION RATES: wellvered by carrier in Juneau and Douglas six months, $8.00; one year, ail, postage paid, at the foll in advance, §15.00 th, in advance, $1.50. scribers will confer a favor if they ness Office of any failure or {rregul papers Telephone News Office, 602; Business the Post Office in Juneau as Second Class Matter. six month; “We can and will handle any strike situation or discrimination affecting our people,” said the Gov- jernor. “I am surprised that the employers will resist |such just demands. This cannery work is a seasonal President 'occupation which makes the sub-standard wages even Baitor po headent Jower. I am flying back to Juneau this afternoon§ Managing Editor and will be on hand for any emergency affecting the Business Manaker —— welfare of Alaska people.” Then, said the Fishing News, Gruening “jumps $15.00 on the gubernatorial desk, pounds his chest and shouts wing rates: !to all the ghosts in the room that T am a liar. Well, s, in advance, $7.50; | : % this two-bit melodrama looks swell in an inter- scholastic pantomime contest, but hardly befitting the man in the driver’s seat of an up and coming Territory. “There are a few things in this world that don’t |er ANY \ for §1.50 per month; will promptly notify larity in the delivery office, 374. MEMBER OF ASS The Assoc! republ here 1l news this paper red and also the SENTATIV S NAT TONAL a CIATED PRESS ted Press s exclusively entitled to the use for dispatches credited Ala: agree with concludes the writer: “back room council meetings, hominy, informers, train rides and two-faced Governors.” & ) Well, me,” t or not other- 1 news published Toc this is very interesting ska Newspaper! Th|- fdd fnr \pced | (Cincinnati Enquu'f-rv | Streamlining, as we understand it, means design- ling for speed. The word probably had its origin in the | field of aerial engineering, were efforts are constantly made to eliminate friction; to mould airplane lines | to conform with streams of passing air Thus streamlining of trains, motor cars and fast | boats probably is efficient and sensible. But, even in | this age when speed has become a universal mania,| | streamlining can be carried too far. We gaze with, |wondérment on announcements of streamlined baby | buggies, streamlined church services, streamlined din- | ing rooms and streamlined furniture. These are fields, | BOUNTY ON GOVERNOR A recent edition of the Ketchik News carries a column under the heading of “Leding which takes Alaska's chief executive to task Notes” for giving the writer a statement demands of Alaska cannery workers now on strike, and then claimmng the writer misquoted h We thought The Empire that is charged with misquoting the Says tne Ketchikan writer, things) : There should be a bounty on GO Governor Ernest Henry Grueni: Hyde Chief Executive.” It seems that the Ketchikan writer interviewed the Governor concerning the cann mands and the Governor workers' demands are justified and been the lowest paid labor group in that now is the time to eliminate the inequalities and discriminating acts against the Alaska cannery work- The Washinglor Merry-Go-Round (Continued from Page One) to eontinue to let him' run them, too.” And that was that. SLITTING BYRNES' THROAT No man in the U. S. Government needs more support today than Jimmy Byrnes, now struggling to straighten out the tangled skeins of peace. Yet, while he is in Par- is, certain die-hards on Capitol Hill have been busy as bird dogs cutting his approptiations throat. One c. Tyrnes' strongest peace weapons is the good will of the Russian veople. If trey are friend- ly to the U. S, his hand is strengthened 100 percent with their bosses in the Kremlin. Proof of this is the way the Government-con- was the only newspaper said th: | whether he preferred cigarettes or | we feel, in which a lack of speed is definitely to be desired! Elimination of time and distance has added much | to the joys of living. It enables man to move from one section of the globe to another without spending the better years of his life in so doing. It allows him to consume products of other climes while these still| are fresh from tree or vine. Speed in sensible doses | broadens his vision and his Llll!\ll"(‘ But in overdoses speed is a deterrent. Certainly there i speed in baby buggies. an Daily Fishing concerning the ' im. no sound reason for building The infant of today has suf- Gavepnnr | ficient inducement to become a dashing, jitterbugging (among many other jyyenile without the influence 6f a perambulator fash- joned after a 500-mile-an-hour flying machine. And Vernors. while there may be those in certain congregations who ng is a “Jekyll- would be thankful for speedier sermons, man's time for worship already is short enough. We need no streamlined church services, even for the most over- jittery businessman! If America is to become a nation of dyspeptics— and we're heading that way—then streamlined dining rooms should be encouraged. But there still are those among us—a hopeless minority perhaps—who enjoy a leisurely meal, where conversation is much a part of goodness as the meat course. ery workers’ de- at the cannery that they have Alaska for years, T from Moscow. | kistan, 5,000 miles § “Another friend took copies to N I N Y l relatives in Kiev, and they have set up regular morning and after- | noon gatherings for the neighbors to come in and read the magazine. A woman told me the only way she could get a dentist's appoint- ment was to lend him a new or old | copy of ‘Amerika.’ | the fishing season, a special woi | “One theatre director told an ac- e % tress I/ know that getting a copy ship service known as Fishermen'’s of ‘Amérika’ is as difficult as get- | Sunday will be held in the Luther- ting a ticket to. the ‘performance, |81 Church next Sunday morning at |11 o'clock. A cordial and special ‘Days of the Tarbius,’ now the | = . 3 most popular play in Moscow. A invitation to be present is extend- FISHERMEN'S DAY AT, LUTHERAN CHURCH In recogniuion of the opening of famous actor at the Makhat The- ;‘;"“’" i L R atre was seen between acts £ i s o gl s back-| Tp " ihis day the title of the stage trying to repair a damaged copy of the magazine with glue. Still another friend asked a waiter pastor’s sermon is “Those Who Go Down to the Sea in Ships,” which is taken directly from Psalm 107. # S, g | A fisherman, Mr. Carl Alstead, a copy of ‘Amerika’ as a tip. The 3 2 o Wattar- “todk thp ayiiels o and his wife will present their e 4 s o I daughter, Karleen Kay for the sac- Russian Government worker on his way home with 10 copies stopped in a store, was almost left with no copies. |rament of infant baptism. bhed, q Special music will consist of Ca- mobbed, and e, gimper’s anthem, “If Ye Love trelled Moscow radio has been Me,” sung by the Junior Choir, and blasting away at the Russian people “This represents only what I'Christiansen’s “Landsighting” sung about dccadent U. S. capitalism, personally know about the maga- by the Senior Choir. millons of U. S. unemployed, and zine. Each copy is seen by from ——r—— alleged U. S. efforts to bulidoze 15 to 20 people. Some people re-(e @ @ © w © @ ¢ ¢ @ o & o Russia. |turn copies in shreds and tatters e . One small start toward counter- | to the Embassy to show how popu-|e TIDE TABLE b/ acting this is an illustrated maga- lar it is. They have been read until e . zine “Amerika,” published by the the print is almost worn off the o APRIL 27 . State Department and circulated | Paper” e Low tide 4:50 am, 38 fi. ‘® in Russia to the tune of 10,000 Note—Members of Rabaut’s Com- e High tide 10:53 am, 14.0 ft. ® copies. This is all the Kremlin will Mittee who helped knife Secretary e Low tide 17:07 pm., 14 ft. let inside Russia, though negotia-:Byrnes are: Democrats—Hare (S. e High tide 23:33 pm, 155 ft. o tions are now underway to increase | C-)» Rooney (Brooklyn, N. Y., e . the circulation to 50,000. | Gary (Va.; Republicans—Stefan o o @ @ ¢ ® o« ¢ s« » » o @ | (Neb.), Jones Ohio), Gillespie Y In the middle of these negotia- tions, however, niggardly Represen- | tative Louis Rabaut, Michigan Democrat, neatly ran his knife through the State Department’s appropriation for “Amerika.” Ap- parently disapproving of the idea of penetrating the Soviet “iron curtain,” he and a majo ol ais Appropriztions Sub-Comumitice le- cided in effect to.tell Brr he shculd or should not o in Rus- sia. Mcanv repcrt I erican Embassy job “Ar on the FLITTING hat , bere is a confidential .m an officiel in the Am- Moscow on the 1 people: SOVIET CURTAIN “.n the past month ‘a2 hospital director requested 50 copies of each jssue for patients, was excellent reading matter; radio repair man said he would give priority on radio repair work to any customer who got him a copy; in a theatre the other night I _sat in front of two women who were recding the third issue of ‘Amperika.’ They didn’t go out be- tween the acts. “Soon: a large group gathered around them. The women read the headlines aloud. Everycne com- mented cn the interest of the ar- ticles, the quality of the paper, and cclor work. Several weeks a; before the fourth issue. arrived, yeung office worker from a certain issariat made her fourth visit to the Embassy in a single menth, pleading fcr a copy. The girl said ! that a doctor refused to treat her unless she could produce a new copy of ‘Amerika.’ “I was told today that we got a protesting letter from the far- coff Tshuvaskay Republic, protest- ing that, althcugh they had order- ed 22 subscripticns, only 21 had ar- rived in the last mail ‘Amcrika’ have ready has done saying it! a Copies of been gent to . Tads st - The Irish Free State was sep- |prevails in the home, but house-| e e wamed” st e Dally Lessons in English 3 1. corpon il THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE UNEAU, ALASKA from THE EMPIRE IS t 20 YEARS AGO 7 } APRIL 26, 1926 .| A ton-and-one-half dump truck consigned to the Alaska Road Com- S e ] ° APRIL 26 | o Sylvia Lister ® | mission had arrived here on the steamer Queen and was to be used on o Mrs. Alfred Lundstrom ® the road between the cemetery and the bar. e Robert Boggan | .| . Noel A. McEachran . Th Presbyterian Sunday School of Thane entertained the residents X f::;lp\;th:f; ¢ |of Thane with a regular old time social Saturday night, which was much . Mus. F. S. Carlstrum ¢ |enjoyed by all present. Miss Elsic Baggen favored those present with a ° Annie T. Wright o |reading, and was presented with a lovely pearl necklace as a gift of {o Frank Anderson o [gratitude from the parents of Thane for her untiring efforts in the o o |Sunday School work. Rl R e R O S a6 A8 23 o3 A ot o DR B B S s R e v — H. 1. Lucas, proprietor of the Juneau Motor Company, was a pas- '»mm--'-"’m senger on the steamer Alaska due the following day from Seattle. Lucas hm returning from a business trip of several weeks, during which he attended the convention of dealers of the Seattle branch of the Ford “The stars mclme f but do not compel” {| Declarations of candidacy of L. H. Kubley, Ketchikan, and A. E Gurr, Wrangell, independent candidates for the House of Representatives, | were filed today with the Deputy Clerk of Court at Ketchikan. | oo - | SATURDAY, APRIL 21 55; lowest, 45; rain. HEART AND HOME Weather: Highest, Under this configuration harmony | &~ work and unnecessary sult in ill temper. BUSINESS AFFAIRS | Those expecting a normal supply of butter and dairy products before ART of speaking correctly. \ N | b ) WORDS OFTEN MISUSED: Speak of the SCIENCE of grammar, the SCIENCE is systematized knowledge, ART fall are likely to be disappointed..is skill in performance. These items will not appear .in OFTEN MISPRONOUNCED: Exuberance. Pronounce 'egg-zu-ber- abundancs “(; in for at least a ans, U as in CUBE, and not eks-oo-ber-ans. year, it is indicated. o ’ OFTEN MISSPELLED: Nausea. Observe the four v . NATIONAL ISSUES by Sk SYNONYMS: Fictitious, feigned, imaginary, not genuine. WORD STUDY: “Use a word three times and it is yours.” Let us increase our vocabulary by mastering one word each day. Today’s word: 'gerous and there arc signs indicat- JYNIC; one who believes that human conduct is motivated wholly by ing that those who indulge in this self-interest. (Pronounce first syllable SIN). “The philosopher without practice will have reason to regret good-breeding is a cynic” 2 ™ “ | MODERN ETIQUETT groups inspire, encourage and cap- skt meul\ e and unintelligent criti- m of government agencies and jindividuals in public office is dan~ italize on such utteran INTERNATIONAL AFFA:RS Determined efforts to discredn‘ UNO by promoting Big Three con- ferences will fail. } Persons whose birthdate this is ar2 promised by the stars: A year of unexpected opportunities to prove their worth as men and women of intelligence and character. Children born today will have happy dispositions, good minds and rong bodies. T! have the qual-| which, if properly cultivated, will assure success in their chosen fields. { ROBERTA LEE i el Q. What should one do when scmeone relates something that is very disagreeable? | A. Call upon your self-control, and do not allow it to upset you.| Change the subject as soon as possible, then proceed to forget it. Above all, do not repeat it to someone else. Only the pleasant things of life are worth remembering and repeating. Q. Is it proper to say, “I shall be glad to accept of your hospitality”? A. No; OF is redundant. Say, “to accept your hospitality.” Q. What is the most popular hour for ‘a luncheon, whether formal } or informal? A. One o'clock. e 3 LOOK and lEARN 2 C. GORDO | | —— | | | 'Cupynghl 194()» NATIVE (RAHSMAN IS TRANSFERRED 10 ! SKAGWAY SANATORIUM two ! victims of Alaska's white , today were enroute to the 1. What famous American anti-saloon crusader was known as “The Lady with the Hatchet"? 2. In journalism what is an assignment shee!” 3. How many wives and children did Brigham Young have? 4. Is Minneapolis or St. Paul the capital of Minnesota? Albert and Russell ‘Johnsom, young skag{vay Sanatorium for further 5. What is the significance of the abbreviation “Bart.” after an| treatment for tuberculosis. Englishman’s name? Albert, 22, has' spent tihe last 1. Carrie Nation (1846-1911). nine years in the Government Hos- pital here where he was editor of the hospital paper. He is famous, among staff members and other! patients for wood-carving and tint- ing and has presented many of the nurses with beautifully-made fot poles, small boats and other ducts of his art. His small brother, Russell, g, joined him in the hospital recentiv and now will accompany him to Skagway. e, NO SUNDAY SCHOOL AT CHAPEL-BY-THE-LAKE Theie will be no Sunday School at the Chapel-by-the Lake on next Sunday, -April 28. This is according to an announcement made by Mx; btanley Jekill. { MIKE TOML HERE Mike Toml of Pelican is a guest at the Gastineau. 2. A list of various news developments of the day, with the name of the reporter who is to cover each. 3. He was reputed to have left 19 wives and was the father of 57 children. { 4. St. Paul. 5. He is a baronet. OI1. BURNERS PLUMBING HEATING | 1 | Smith 0il Burner Service ‘ 214 SECOND STREET DAY PHONE 476 NIGHT CALLS—Fred C. Lorz—Blue 655 BRONZE SHAFTING — STERN BEARINGS — PROPELLORS GRAY MARINE ENGINES SALES and SERVICE Juneau Welding and Machine Shop | (Colo.). Of these, Hare and Stef- |an definitely voted to support, arated from Great Britain in 1922. | Byrnes. | ok +APITAL UnAFF Sidney Hillman held a very im- | portant conference with President ACROSS 33. Pouch Truman last week. This was pub- 3 Adjective suffix licized. Not publicized, however, Wl was a secret meeting with Phil ::;I'o:“ 3 Murray and Harold Ickes. Behind Location Small valley hi oW~ vs i - - the pow-wows is an all-out cam g e T paign to elect liberal Roosevelt- gers Y g gres: 46, Closest Truman Congressmeh to CONSIESS . (5 yorg muture 48, Represontative next November. .The Swiss :T Operated 50. Chess pieces : 8. Turning point 51. Abundant Government has now agreed With .y piyyers 53, Cleared ‘Grrut Britain and the United 2 :.alrk 56. Title of Mo- ki s . . 2 Drinking hammed | States to giving the Allies 50 per: prris . Retinue cent of all German assets in Switz- 24 ¢ centers The herb eve lerland; also that $100,000,000 of o ik el the $400,000,000 of Nazi gold in B 2. Abraham's Switzerland will be returned to the 31 Srimii'oy whith a Allies. This very lame compromise wheel tures would have been less lame if the’ C ossword Puzzle | Something Different IN THE WAY CF FISH NOW ON SALE AT OUR FISH MARKET—the . following assortment of EASTERN FISH 'FILLETS MACKEREL FILLETS HAKE FILLETTS COD FILLETS WHITING FILLETS FINNAN HADDIES HAKE FILLETTS POLLOCK FILLETS KIPPERS BAY CHUBS Frog Legs « Louisiana Shrimps Solution of Yesterday's Puzzle || e B ' Juneau Cold Siorage Company, Inc. Han British hadn’'t been softies. They FERE] Wigard ficured they could borrow from us o Kings . what they didn’t get from the L ET Swiss. Increasing evidence ) ‘7‘::::“““1 P En J' Bo"n 2 [ that rf{lzl‘»]ul\‘v leader Mihailovich iy as a paid-up subscriver to THE DAILY ALASKA | was framed by British Intelligence dee 1n o EMPIRE is invited to be our guest THIS EVENING. is piling up in Washington. It e e Precent this coupon to the box office of th {shcws he was never in cahoots with ; Mhisticar s ! 3 Bl Baeh O B | the Nazis. Next week a large dele- ok ok RE gation of Americans will call at Ry CAPITDL THEAT the State Department demanding MR, 01, the and receive TWO TICKETS to see: that Mihailovich be tried by in- . Former Amery " 1 fervibiciiel FIBUAd e - EAagtt can Vice- A SONG FOR MISS JULIE Bridzes of New Hampshire plus odor Federal T4 cclleagués is intreducing a bill pro- "urli':::' jas gEal laxlie per Person | viding for an air force entirely se- . .% '3. LU " o 4 7 ; 7. Heron parate trom the Amy and Na il i 6 e || PHONE 14—THE ROYAL BLUE CAB CO. A separate air force, he believes, 4 ,, . ’;: 1 solve the row over the Army- . /// :; RO veads and an insured cab WILL CALL FOR YOU and Navy merger. 47. Spikes ot i r 1 11»}71(3; ;, S ok T P owern RETURN YOU to your home with our compliments. GHT, BELL SYNDICATE, INC. 1! ' 49. Self-command WATCH THIS SPACE—~Your Name May APMY' > i s THREE FROM SKAGWAY . 3 E. F. Asselin and Mr. and Mrs. 53.. Pleasant ait, S0 B H. Evans, residents cf Skagway, e : have arived in Jurleau. They are 3 Tronieal ruit H 3 ing 3. Troutia There is no substitute for newspaper advertising opping at the ‘Gastineau. { 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 Office Phone 469 CALIFORNIA Grocery and Meat Market 478 — PHONES — 371 High Quality Foods at Moderate Prices Jones-Stevens Shop LADIES’—MISSES’ READY-TO-WEAR Seward- Street Near Third Dofi's Radio Service Electrical and Radio Repair (We pick up and deliver) Phone 659 909 West 12th Alaska Music Supply Arthur M. Uggen, Manager Pianos—Musical Instruments and Supplier Phone 206 Second and Seward HEINKE GENERAL REPAIR SHOP Welding, Plumbing, Oil Burner Blacksmith Work GENERAL REPAIR WORK Phone 204 929 W. 12th St. “The Store for Men" SABIN°S Front St—Triangle Bldg. Warfield's Drug Store (Formerly Guy L. Smith Drugs) NYAL Family Remedies HORLUCK’S DANISH ICE CREAM HUTCHINGS ECONOMY MARKET Choice Maats At All Times Loca‘<d in George Bros. Store PHONES 553—92—95 €) B P.0.ELKS Meets every Wednesday at 8 p. m. Visiting brothers welcome. E. C. REYNOLDS, Exalted Ruler. W. H. BIGGS, Secretary. MOUNT JUNEAU LODGE NO. 147 SECOND and FOURTH Monday of each month in Scottish Rite Temple beginning at 7:30 p. m. M. L. MacSPADDEN, Worshipful Master; JAMES W. | LEIVERS, Secretary. LR Silver Bow Lodge No. A 2, LO.OF, ‘Meets each Tues- day at 8:00 P. M., I. O. O. F. HALL. Visiting Brothers Welcome FLOYD HORTON, Noble Grand H. V. CALLOW, Secretary The Charles W. Carfer : Mortuary » 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 METCALFE SHEET METAL Heating—Airconditioning—Boat Tanks and Stacks—Everything in SHEET METAL Phone 711 90 Willoughby Ave. e e “The Rexall Store” Your Reliable Pharmacists BUTLER-MAURO DRUG CO. HARRY RACE Druggist "The Squibb Store” Where Pharmacy Is a Profession 20TH CENTURY MEAT MARKET Juneaw’s Most “Meating” Place ONLY THE BEST OF MEA'TS PHONE 202 CARC TRANSFER HAULING and CRATING DIESEL, STOVE, CRUDE OIL Phone 344 FOR Wall Paper IDEAL PAINT SHOP Phone 549 Fred W. Wendt INSURANCE Shattuck Agency The Alaskan Hotel Newly Renovated Rooms at Reasonable Rates PHONE SINGLE O JUNEAU UPHOLSTERY CO. RE-UPHOLSTERING NEW FURNITURE DRAPERIES Phone 36 122 2nd St. ALASKA ELECTRONICS Sales and Service Expert radio repair withoat dela ©. 0. Box 2165 ClO DIRECTORY MEETINGS HELD IN UNION HALL—I1st and Gastineau—Phone 327 5 < - Juneau Industrial Union Council Secy. R. S. Hnugh:\Phone Green 240; meetings second and fourth ‘Thursdays at 7:30 P. M. Int. Woodworkers of America Loc¢al M-271; Secy. Henry Ad- sero; meetings 2nd and 4th Fri- days at 7:30 P. M. United Trollers of Alaska, Local 26; Secy. B. H. (Jack) Manery; Phone Blue 220; meetings 1st and 3rd Wednesdays, 8:00 P. M. Local Industrial Union, Local 882 Sec. Abel Anderson; Black 605. Juneau Mine & Mill Workers Local 203; Secy. Arthur H, Wal- ther; Phone Green 340; meet- ings 1st and 3rd Monadys, 7:00. Juneau Transport Workers ,Local 172; Secy. \George C. Martin; Phone Black 265; meetings 2nd and 4th Tuesdays at 8:00 P. M. United Cannery Workers, Local 269; Secy. Ruth Hayes. Inter. Longshoremen & Ware- housemen Union, Local 1-41 Cold Storage Workers; Secy. Mike Avoiah; Green 759; meetings 1st and 3rd Wednesdays, 7:30 MEETINGS AT 222 WILLOUGHBY—PHONE 518 International Longshoremen and Warehousemen Union, Local 1-16 Secy. Don McCammon; Phone Blue 372; meetings Mondays, 7:30 Baranof Turkish Bath and Massage | Hours 9 A. M. to 6 P. M.—Open Evenings by Appointment BARANOF HOTEL—Lower Level PHONE 753 1891—0ver Half a Century of Banking-!gm The B. M. Behrends Bank Oldest Bank in Alaska COMMERCIAL

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