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PAGE FOUR . Daily Alaska Empi Published every evening except Sunday by the EMPIRE PRINTING COMPANY Second and Main Streets, Juneau, #laska HELEN TROY MONSEN - - DOROTHY TROY LINGO WILLIAM R. CARTER ELMER A. FRIEND ALFRED ZENGER President - Vice-President Editor and Manager Managing Editor Business Manager Entered in the Post Of! SUBSCRIPTION RATES: Delivered by carrier in Juneau and Douglas for $1.50 per month; six months, $8.00; one year, $15.00 By mail, postage paid. at the following rates: One vear, in advance, $15.00; six months, in advance, $7.50; e month, in advance, $1.50. Subscribers will confer a favor if they will promptly notify the Business Office of any failure or irregularity in the delivery of their pepers. Telephones: News Office, 602; Business Office, 374, MEMBER OF ASSOCIATED PRESS The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for republication of all news dispatches credited to it or not other- wise credited in this paper and also the local news published herein NATIONAL REPRESENTATIVES - Pourth Avenue Bidg., Seattle, Wash. Alaska Newspapers, 1411 NEEDED BOAT HARBOR On June 26 the U. S. Engineers will hold a hearing in Douglas—1 pam. in the Eagles Hall—to consider suggested improvements in harbor facilities of Gas- tineau Channel by dredging out a boat harbor at Douglas. This is a contemplated project which deserves the support of all Channel residents — Douglas or Juneau. Harbor facilities on the Channel are inadequate for existing activities, and the shore is pinching more and more all the time as the number of vessels | increase. The plan offered the Engineers is to dredge out at Mayflower Island. One bulkhead is already built, the island forms another wall. If the sand were dredged out and another bulkhead erected it would provide a harbor approximately 30 acres in area. The bottom is sand and it would be cheap to dredge out, it is believed. At one time this area was a natural harbor, and quite large vessels were able to dock on the shore side of the island. But the harbor was later filled in with tailings from the old mine. The City of Douglas also has plans for the sand that will be dredged out. It is believed that the sand will make a fine piece of waterfront property which could be the site of a new Indian village for Douglas. Douglas will soon have 24 quonset huts erected for housing for veterans, and it is believed that in two years time these will no longer serve this purpose. The city is willing to turn these over for housing for a new Indian village. The present village is a wreck. .~ Much material has been prepared for presentation at the hearing on June 26, but it is requested that as ;many interested parties as possible also come to the hearing prepared to back up the request, especially }boned and needs filling out. * * ‘ybuat owners. Unfortunately a good many fishermen will be out fishing on that date, but it is hoped that there will be some representation from the fishermen. The people of Juneau, while conscious of the fact that their own boat harbor should be improved and | expanded, we believe are fully behind the request of |the City of Douglas for its harbor. It is doubtful if - |the City of Juneau would be able to appropriate the ‘" imoney needed for boat harbor improvements and ex- | pansion in the very near future, and another harbor fnt Douglas would be an asset to the people of both | sides of the Channel. | ‘What does your dream home look like—white clap- | board bungalow, sturdy brick city house or rustic field- ‘stone country place? It makes no difference so long | as it doesn’t stay forever a dream. The best way in the iwmld to actually buy or build your own home is to start now putting a few dollars aside each payday | for investment in U. S. Savings Bonds. In just ten | years they’ll pay you back four dollars for every three |you put in. Yes, it's mighty easy to make dreams { come true by investing in U. S. Savings Bonds on the jnulomunc payroll savings plan. Back Your Future! | Booth Tarkington (New York Times) “Our boy, Newton Booth Tarkington * is long- He is fine-tempered, gay and good. He is nervous, sympathetic and af- fectionate, and without prete: With these words Booth Tarkington's father, a judge and lawyer in Indianapolis, recommended his tall, 21-year-old, convivial son to relatives at Princeton, N. J, in the late summer of 1889. Fifty-odd years | afterward the son commented that he did not recog- | nize the person referred to, but actmally, of course, he had justified the fond description, as all of us know. Ever since that morning near the turn of the century ! when his sister—made justifiably indignant by the rejection slips that depressed the family mail—deter- minedly brought the manuscripts of “Monsieur Beau- * and “The Gentleman from Indiana” to the sed attention of S. S. McClure, Mr. Tarkington's has brightened our books and stage and maga- to a long gallery of American portraits, among them the coolly impractical Penrod, William Sylvanus Baxter, Alice Adams and Georgie Minifer. Booth Tarkington became delighted with life when he first discovered it, when he was young. Of all the words that this stylist used so well perhaps ‘pleasant” and “pleasing” were his favorites. His people walked pleasant, lawn-bordered, tree-lined streets, and they were pleasing people who laughed pleased laughter. He liked them as he found them—these Americans of the Middle West—and he did not want them or their world to change. So in his fiction there will live for many fortunate years the pleasing picture of a pleasant land as a “fine-tempered, gay and good” man enjoyed it. Too bad we can’t all be like old Kjng Midas, and have everything we touch turn to gold. That being impossible, though, why not try the next best thing— the regular purchase of U. S. Savings Bonds on the payroll savings plan. Yes, U. S. Savings Bonds are a real money-making investment with every three dollars you put in now paying back four dollars in just ten years. Investigate the payroll savings plan where you work today. Back Your Future with U. S. Savings Bonds! THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE—JUNEAU, ALASKA i . JUNE 17 e . Dorothy McAllister . ® George Francis Shaw, Jr. e io Fred H. Magill 3 1o Henry Hansen . e Ida Blakeley . ° Irma Brown L . Cleve Rhodes . . Mrs. M. T. Martin . ° . e o o o ° o o o o HOROSCOPE ? “The stars incline g but do not compel” { 14 3 TUESDAY, JUNE 18 HEART AND HOME Under this configuration prejud- ices and hatreds will come to the surface and be consumed by tlreir own fires. As every mature person knows, hatred is an emotional can- cer that destroys the finer feelings of the hater and does no injury whatever to the hated. BUSINESS AFFAIRS All of the problems with which business is confronted today are temporary. vanish® and their on the nation economy will negligible. Nothing can' long delay the highly prosperous period repeat- dly promised by the stars. One by one they will ultimate effect NATIONAL ISSUES Though a majority of people in the Uniled States seem not to re- ze it, they must soon make an important decision. The gquestion they face is whether they desire to have the nation's industry < regulated or dominated by the Fed- jeral Government. It must be one or the other. If they are opposed to centralization of power in Wash- ington, then they must devise way and means to adjust the diff ences of minorities short of |tion that hits and hurts the jority. ac- ma- INTERNATIONAL AFFAIRS Whatever motives are behind it, increased cooperation by Russia is | indicated. 4 | Persons whose birthdate #his is are promised by the stars: A year of spiritual and material gains. | Children born today will be cour- | iageous and generous. | (Copyright, 1946) e 20 YEARS AGO f{tflnE EMPIRE ‘ !. JUNE 17, 1926 J. W. Stansfield, teacher in the Government Indian School arrived here on the Estebeth yesterda Miss Ideal Hendrickson returned on the steamer Alaska the previous night after making the interior trip as private secretary to Col. James G. Steese. at Hoonah Miss Marie Goldstein and three young ladies who were visiting her, arol, Helen and Enid Kahn, made the triangle trip to Skagway, Sitka and return on the steamer Admiral Rogers. B. D. Stewart, Territorial and Federal Mine Inspector, arrived home on the steamer Northwestern after a trip which took him to Washing- ton, D. C. Prospects for a combination freight and passenger steamship line from Portland to Alaska were not encouraging, ording to Portland Chamber of Commerce reports, which said that two suitable steamships were then available. Thomas A. Marquam, President of the Fairbanks Commercial C)ub.' was to be one of “the principal guests ¢f the Chamber of Commerce tomorrow. Weather: Highest, 76, lowest, 49; clear. ; Daily Lessons in English $¥.1. corpox % [ —— WORDS OFTEN MISUSED: Do not say, “They lived near-by the city.” NEAR-BY is colloquial. Say, “They lived NEAR the city.” OFTEN MISPRONOUNCED: Semi (prefix). Pronounce tLe I as in ILL, not as in ICE. OFTEN MISSPELLED: tained. SYNONYMS: WORD STUDY: “Use a word three times and it is yowss.” Let us increase our vocabulary by mastering one word each day. Today's word: LACHRYMOSE; shedding tears; tearful. (Pronounce lak-ri-mos, A as in LACK, I as in IT, O as in NO, accent first syllable). “He became tired of her lachrymose complaining. MODERN ETIQUETTE ¥omerra ree Q. Is it a cause for embarrassment when a girl sends a birthday card to a young man and receives no acknowledgment from him? Noticeable; the E following the C is re-‘ Umpire, referee, arbiter, arbitrator. A. No; there is far more reason for the ycung man to feel embar- rassed that he forgot his manners enough to fail to acknowledge the | thoughtfulness on her part, \' Q. What does the bridegrocm usually provide for his best man and | ushers at a church wedding? A. He usually provides ties, gloves, boutonnieres, and a gift to each of a small piece of jewelry. Q. What dishes are passed twice at dinner? A. The vegetables. by LOOK and LEA A. C. GORDON {, How much longer is the diameter of the earth at the Equator than bétween the Poles? DR. E. H. KASER DENTIST BLOMGREN BUILDING Phone 56 HOURS: 9 A. M. to 5 P, M. The Erwin Feed Co. Office in Case Lot Grocery PHONE 704 HAY, GRAIN, COAL and STORAGE 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 Don'’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 Sfore (Formerly Guy L. Smith Drugs) NYAL Family Remedies HORLUCK’S DANISH ICE CREAM HUTCHINGS ECONOMY MARKET Choice Meats At All Times Located In George Bros. Store PHONES 553—92—95 1946 MONDAY, JUNE 17, The Charles W. Carter Mortuary Fourth and Franklin Sts. PHONE 136 FOR TASTY FOODS and VARIETY TRY Gastineau Cafe Foremost in Friendliness . VANITY BEAUTY | SALON Cooper Bullding ELSIE HILDRETH, Managet Open Evenings Phone 318 METCALFE SHEET METAL llm(ing~!\ircondnioning—no‘t Tanks and Stuks—Everythhg in SHEET METAL Phone 711 90 Willoughby Ave. ""The Rexall Store" Your Rellable Pharmacists H BUTLER-MAURO DRUG CO. HARRY RACE ' Druggist “The Squibb Store” Where Pharmacy Is a Profession { — 20TH CENTURY MEAT MARRET ! Juneau’s Most Popular “Meating” Place ONLY THE BEST OF MEA'(S PHONE 202 ’ CARC TRANSFER HAULING and CRATING DIESEL, STOVE, CRUDE OIL Phone 344 Phone 344 FOR Weall Paper IDEAL PAINT SHOP Phone 549 Fred W. Wendt GLACIER ICE CO. Regular Home Deliveries MONTHLY RATES Phone 114 | JUNEAU WOMAN'S o5 e 10f the Marine Corps and back on | refused to drop charges against the the job as Georgla’s Chief Klfin_"clerk in the American Embassy in! i The Washingon HUSBAND IN CHINA 2. What is the difference between a turtle and a tortoise? hunter with Governor Arnall back- ing him 100 percent. Mm—fio—l}flld GREpaNet from Dot One) WHY BRADEN RESIGNED . Once again, running the Pan- that actually it should be devoted| sperjcan affairs of the State De- W an attackl 0"1 Pears:m, ?“a"h‘\ partment has proved too much for - Jones, a local columnist and the|a, earnest and able man. Assistant pwo A“BEFQ n;w”i‘:li’e“" 3 I Secretary Spruille Braden has fin- Mganwhile, the Atlanta Journals|g)y gecided to stop butting his e e Ak gy Klahsmen | head against stone walls and will p S | resign before July 15. He had de- Wetnitely got unde!' the. Klans- | c“:de%nthat if the {' S. Army is go- men’s skin. Local Police chiefs have ing to dictate U. S. policy in Latin :l:me;?ol"h“f a"z lzmns"'::nt;’: roc" | America, he has other things to do > aee. Taroe, " | elsewhere. mains that 11 police in unimrm}e were present at the June 3 meet-| ing, whife pictures taken by Life This represents a clear-cut vic- tory for William D. Pawley, the nam- Moscowwhom he charges with “hoo- }ligan acts.” Vyshinsky told Ambas-; sador “Beetle” Smith that Russia WIIH ARMY UNIT | does not claim diplomatic immun- :ity for its lowest clerks and does| TAI YUAN, China, May lii(De- !not expect the American Embnssy‘!layedl~Marine Private First Class to claim it either. Smith has re- |Stanley E. Norman, 22, whose wife, | commended that the USA refuse to |the former Doris Hegstad, and| | vield. . . .. Thoughtful British and | their two-year-old son, Stanley Jr., | American observers are worried live in Juneau, Alaska, is chief ra-‘ |about the strong rebirth of British | dio operator for the American sec- | | Fascism. Although comparatively | tion of a tripartite Sino-American | | quiet during the war, the followers | “cease-fire” team seeking to main- | | of hate-peddler Oswald Mosley are |tain peace between Communist and | | becoming more actlve now. Their | Nationalist elements in this region. | ]rebirth is compared to the Klan's| A veteran of Iwo Jima, Norman rejuvenation in this country. took part in the initial landing in | (COPYRIGHT, BELL SYNDICATE, IN~. 1946) | Japan, later being transferred to| | —eo-— China. He enlisted in November, | ) | Magazine on Stone Mountain clear- ly show the faces of other police- " | Florida mllhonn}rv. recently ! | RETURNS FROM FAIRBANKS ed U. S. Ambassador to Brazil. He| o ann Robertson of the Bon has been sniping relentlessly at|nri,cphe Department Store, has re- 1943, and has served 22 months overseas. | He attended Lincoln High School | 3. What major league baseball player hclds the record of making 200 hits a season for eight consecutive years? 4. What is fiduciary relationship? 5. What does the prefix “pseudo” mean? ANSWERS: 1. At the Equator, 7,926.677 miles; at the Poles, 7,899.988 miles. 2. Strictly speaking, the tortoise is of the land species and the turtle the aquatic species. 3. Paul Waner, while with the Pittsburgh Pirates. 4. One of trust or trustee-ship. 5. False; pretended. 40000000 G.L SLEEPING BAGS | (BEST BUY IN SURPLUS) Double Down Arctic (409 goose or duck down and 609 goose or duck feathers) zippered, tapered, pre- €) B.P.0 ELKS Meets every second and fourth Wednesday at 8 pm. Visiting brothers welcome. E. C. REY- NOLDS, 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. Siiver Bow Lodge No. A 2, LO.O.F, 'Meets each Tues- day at 8:00 P. M, 1. O. O. F. HALL, Visiting Brothers Welcome The Alaskan Hotel Newly Renovated Rooms at Reasonable Rates PHONE SINGLE O JUNEAU UPHOLSTERY CO. RE-UPHOLSTERING NEW FURNITURE DRAPERIES Phone 38 122 2nd St. ALASKA ELECTRONICS| Sales and Service Expert radio repair withoat P. O. Box 2165 ttended the Kl 11 men who attended the Klan rally war value $90.00 A-1 reconditioned, thoroughly Braden for. months and 15 NOW tyrneq from a week’s visit to Fair- {in Council ‘Bluffs, Ia., where his there. P 3 FLOYD HORTON, Noble Grand | slated to succeed him. |banks where she has been visiting | mother, Mrs Goldie M. Norman, dry-cleaned, fumigated, and sterilized. H. V. CALLOW, Secretary | Meanwhile, it looks as if some It also represents a victory for p.. daughter, Mrs. Al Dorsh and |lives. | & ) Kiansmen were ducking for cover | the appeaser group Which advocat- | por oro®y iy 8 Ln FRCLL KO Ao TWOBAGS IN ONE with new water-repel- {— and that new membership had fal- ed making a deal with Dictator | goy poth ways and the fine wea-| LISTEN to Mrs. Elton Engstrom, | lent . len off. Only seven new members Peron of Argentina, no mMAtter|per made it a very scenic and en-|Candidate for the House = over| eni cover and Walerproof Gafl'ymg case applied at the June 3 meeting, with what the terms. Braden has been | | (295-t5) | M il S ® L E 0 T A 1 KINY, Monday, 7 p.m. steadfastly opposed. : = 4 If Pawley takes Braden's place |as Assistant Secretary of State in charge of Latin American Affairs, as he plans to do, it will cause five new reinstatements. This was in contrast to 200 new applicants at the previous meeting. Grand Dragon Green has advised that Klansmen lay low and com- ‘Puzzle ALL FOR $40.00 WE PAY SHIPPING COSTS | SEND MAIL ORDERS TO Haines and Skagway LEAVING FERRY FLOAT AT 8 A. M. EVERY WEDNESDAY M. S. LEOTA: For Charter—$80.00 per day and up mit no overt acts while the heat some eye-brow raising below the ACROSS NORTHWEST SHADE sEBvIcE - . Policeman; is on. Rio Grande. For Pawley, when U. A um;:n;gd M. S. DONJ‘AC— —_— |S. Ambassador to Peru, applied| ¢ founde 5342 Ballard Ave. Seattle, Washington For Charter—$45.00 per day and up 9000000000 GOV. ARNALL CRACKS DOWN The Klan question has had in- teresting repercussions on the pressure to collect the old Selig- man National City Bank Loan of $100,000,000 advanced to Peru un- Both Vessels U. S. Government Inspected * PHONE 79 or BLUE 449 i Lower legs Shed un King of Tyre Georgia Gubernatorial race, with der scandalous circumstances, in- Beverage A\n'rdtfi‘l‘:sg 5 ex-Governor Gene Talmadge open- cluding a bribe to the son of | '?.‘.l.l:;;n‘()»\:xl Py J:r:‘l::h, AUDITS SYSTEMS TAXES o e O ly bidding for Klan support and President Leguia. | “ gether .}}'unlhl o — Jimmie Carmichael boldly attack-, So, if Pawley takes over the key | 22 Informal con= Headpleco et e et e ;i R Y versations Tree an ing it. Ex-Governor Ed. Rivers, a b of 5 Al -| 24. Rode: i 7 i mecone "ot samitarig e | 30 B L G 11l and DOUGLAS BOAT SHOP former Klansman himself, running again, has kept a pussy- footer’s silence. now can policy, Latinos will interpret it 3. ade ks ing match 63. Marshal under A , as the end of the Good Neighbor | Public Accountants — Auditors — Tax Counselors | Policy and a reversion to the old| Solution of Saturday’s Puzzle A New Construction and Repairs Jobs SRR AT L SRR e itz [ ¢ . Courageous Governor Ellis Ar-'days of when the Marines did the | 33 Knock 65 2. Smell 4; Decavlitate 208 Franklln Streel i Phone 757 i [ ¥ | 34 Note o 8. Mediterranean g, . nall, however, has left no one in bidding of Wall Street. M NS oL 8 DOWN galling b et FAIRBANKS OFFICE—201-2 LAVERY BUILDING Free Eslimate Phone Douglas 192 doubt as to where he stands. Jump-' Iast straw which caused Braden's Rule vensel 6. Title of & ¢ P S ey N ing in with both feet, Arnall has resignation was Pawley's current EARS a ¥ VOOOO0OT > ordered his Attorney General to' conservation in Rio de Janeiro, > {‘,:",’fy"’ chadi K.lnlOCh N. Nelll John w. Clafk ¢ 4 make a thorough probc, and a where he agreed that the 4 Unite_d . 9. Splash INQUIRE ABOUT OUR MONTHLY ACCOUNTING SERVICE lssl—ovef Ha" a celllllfy 0‘ Billkll'lg—lg“ result Dan Duke, live-wire As - States would enter the coming Rio 10. Healthy ant Attorney General who went af- Conference, August 20, without re- . 11. Belgian river ter the Klan in 1940, has been servations regarding Argentina. 19, Bué\;yfi‘er 5 BACK Youn Gom“m ) ’ assigned to the job. Braden ‘ried to insist on a house- . 21, Hang downm Duke knows his Klan onions. In | cleaning of Argentine Nazis before ' 7 23. Pyrts of \ PEBCY RE“"LDS d I“sunn Yo“n rumE 3 < - | W g /N @ S 2 ta v owers 1940 he ran the hooded order un: ‘w.s‘u down :1.0. the s'.um.lab!e Ymh . % 25. So. American as a paid-up subscriber to THE DAILY ALASKA an derground, forced them to take off them. But Secretary Byrnes sided = timber tre® * EMPIRE is invi ¢ g 2 BeR;- Bul . By : .flg o is invited to be our guest THIS EVENING. their masks, and finally sent eight with Pawley and against Braden, 58, Flowering. P t thi 2 of them to jail for flogging and following which Braden resigned. a.. plant pesan is coupon to the box office of the B U Y a ] D | Aferrorizing. 63 citizens in and| o 35 Domssticaiglh cAPITOL T“A | around Atlanta, two of whom were | DIPLOMATIC POUCH fl. s Largest TRE = d s'al sa = B ds | mll:‘et]ii A 0 kel Malrs:nl Tuo's; secret)police’ hu}\]‘v .. e o;:: ,?,-_.5“ and receive TWO TICKETS to see: mle es vmgs on ,Following eir conviction, e arrested several attaches of the S gbcanriay B Kian pulled wires with its friend | American Embassy in Yugoslavia | . . i §’"l‘zmu?~‘b°ll 'ABBOII alld CUSTELLoinHoLLWOOD' | Governor Gene Talmadge to se-|for dealing in the black market. g8 Xmall an ) Sure pardons for the eight. But the | Believe it or not, but the' State . “prefix. Federal Tax—12¢ per Person I he B. M Belll'ellds enlightened editors and ministers Department had advised Embassy 6. Showy ;OIS o 8 3 of Georgia came to the support of employecs to convert their Ameri- | . 49, Detested s ‘ B nk Dan Duke, and Talmadge didn’t can money at black-market rates % c] 50. T t‘\hlfll. Pno“zl T“E novAl‘ BLUE cAB co' a quite have the nerve. | rather than at the official rate, | /. 51 c d an insured c: . However, one month after Duke thus violating the law and thus //ég 52. Department, i anETURN YOU & ab W{ILL CA,LL FOR YO_U and Oldest Bank m Alaska ¥ enlisted in the Marine Corps, Tal- giving Marshal Tito another op-| ?// | 54, Bar of wood of R 0 your home with our compliments. madge vardoned the Klan floggers., portunity to embarrass the USA. . . /%fl R aTDaint WATCH THIS SPACE—Your Name May Appear! COMMERICAL SAVINGS Today, however, Dan Duke is out'Soviet Commissar Vyshinsky has/ 2] 85, Devoured « X a5 RRPCTORRRITR 3 FARR