The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, August 10, 1946, Page 4

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PAGE FOUR Daily Alaska E m ptre day by the lto the President afied ever evening excent June 30, one out Foreign countries Secina HELEN TROY M LOROTHY TROY TAM wheat 20 per of sident | our than more cen cent Business Manager meat e Post_Offi as Secon Both SUBSCRIPTION RATES Delivered by carrier in Juncau and Douslas for $1.50 per monthi | culture six months, S8.00; one year, age paid. at the follow six months d Class Matter. Pr Ftates has not yet com in advance, $7.50; program forestalled the th future vor if they will ire or irregularity Iy notify the delivery picture is ce, 602; Business Office, 374 vests ad shc this a fall countries will m\nun OF ASSOCIATED PRESS s is exclusively entitled to the use for dispatches credited to it or not other- paper and also the local news published the cor tain factor r t food supplies in TIONAL REPRESE! aska Newspapers, 1411 enue Bldg., Seattl ment temporarily eats and other ice competition eventually to ex in addition all, the need for in still pC to ot countries mains urgent beit tightening is Americans Governor Pinero ‘The relations with the | by thoughtful Ar Ricans. The by (it was so obviou Puerto R 18 FAMINE RELIEF RECORD citizen who ate a little less, eve of the handling and serving not make F industries whc all, | Pinerc who joined in the Nation-wide campaign to avert star- |, 00 €0 abroad, will derive great satisfaction from [go oo’ pooo o President Truman’s announcement that America has | pave been a repu more than made good its famine-relief pledges. of President Roo: Upholding its traditions as a humanitarian Nation, | platform the United States not only has shipped to famine- maturity threatened areas the minimum of 400,000,000 bushels Mr of food promised when the “belt-tighening” | ington, carries drive was started, but expects this month to reach | trust of the Adm the 417,000,000-bushel total set as a hoped-for goal Every American member food producing, esid practiced conservation, in short any ol vation on grains the aspirations of American suppies dur! fats and oils the however Wi appointment of Jesus T. of Puerto Rico is a courageous forw Senate should quickly the the less All had proclaimed Puerto Rico's Pinero, now Resident Commissioner at a hes THE DAILY ALASKA P_MPIRI —JUNEAU, ALASKA of all food distributed g the fiscal year which ended six pounds went overseas. received more than 40 per cent of cent of the rice, more than 10 per the that from iy, of every than 35 per t the cheese, abou of more and cent of 6 per AUGUST 10 Leroy West Mrs. Jack Ver{ress Michael Wade Claire Windsor ary of Agri- that the time food-conservation esident and the Secre American people abandon the already made e to The deliveries have reat of immediate starvation, but the shadowed with uncertainty. If har- uld fail to come up to expectations itinuing food needs of war-ravaged critical. Another AUGUST Mrs. H. L. Faulkner Richard Byrns Dudley Smithberg John Holmquist Helen Miller °* Stan Grummett H. R. VanderLeest John Satre, Jr, Mrs. Clarence Wiitanen Eugene McRoberts Edith Spaulding Fred Schindler 1 become uncer- now is price control as it may affect The Fec suspended purchases of wheat this country ral Govern- has Mrs fecods destined for ov to avoid with domestic users The plan is 50,000,000 bushels of wheat, year All i food saving to allay hunger suffering feod eighed ¢ st that need little enough to ask of sympathetic ot up to her commodities, next further from shortages re- continued that he had received an invitation to the meeting in an OPA postage free envelope and he said he had lturned the letter and envelope over to postal inspectors, requesting an investigation The postage free envelope—called penalty mail in the government— is permitted for official business by government departments. They carry a reminder of & $300 penalty for use on non-official matters — e — — (OP'S (AR FLOPHOUSE (New York Times) Pinero & rd Governor ep in our which will be applauded well as by the Puerto ratify it. T 1sly the right choice—to give the Governor they had asked for-—does ent Truman's act in naming Mr. courageous one. Undoubtedly nsiderable pressure to name a de- to the post. That, however, would diation of his own attitude, of that sevelt and of the 1944 Democratic political | at country mericans a$ Wash- vy responsibility to prove that the | inistration is justified and to fulfill the Puerto Ricans. Both will watch CHICAGUD, Aug. 10.--Policemar Edward P. Mendenhall is consider- ing leaving his shiny, new automo- Secretary of Agriculture Ander: statistics to simplified proportions when he reported the experiment w son reduced the greater self-goverr ith a friendly, but critical, eye. If he lives up to expectations, then further steps to even | iment will be made much easier. The Washingfon Merry-Go-Round (Continued from Page One) stooges only once voted against their masters in the Kremlin. That was when Belorussia got its signals crossed. Russia can be absolutely sure of the following votes on every rollcall, come hell or high water: Belorussia, the Ukraine, Poland, Yugoslavia and Czechoslovakia. Some times also Russia swings the vote of defenseless Norway, worried sick over its easy striking distance from the Red Army. The line-up on the other side varies. It is significant that the British Dominions frequently de- sert England. This proves there’s; real Democracy in the British Em-|treaty will be studied by a separ- | pire. Australia and New Zealand votes more than half the ume‘i against England; Canada about fifty-fifty.. South Africa and Indiai are frequently aligned with Eng-| land, though not always. The most forthright leaders of{ the anti-Soviet bloc are Australia,| the Netherlands, giui Note—The most pathetic saLelhtc in the Soviet line-up is Jan Ma- saryk of Czechoslovakia, now nick- named “The Prisoner of Zenda.” Son of old President Tomas Ma- ‘ saryk, who founded the Czecho-| slovak Republic in Pittsburgh in| 1918 under the godfathership of! Woodrow Wilson, Jan Masaryk's| sympathies are all with the United States and Britain. But with his country solidly surrounded by Rus- sia, he votes consistently with the Russian bloc. LAGUARDIA ACCUSED OF 'SNOOPING It isn't being advertised but Lieut. Gen. Sir John Harding, er of Allied Forces in Venezia Giulia, has sent a hot cable to the White House and the British For- eign Office against dynan mayor LaGuardia of New York, cusing the fiery Fiorello of snoop- ing in Trieste. General Harding demanded the White House and the British crack down on La- Guarcia and prevent him from slandering the American and Bri- tish troops in Trieste. In fact, Gen- eral Harding threatened his resignation unless he got full sup- pert. As a result the British, which have some jurisdiction over La- Guardia because UNRRA is inter- national, sent New York's former Mayor an appeal to pipe down. Apparently it did no good, how- ever. It was after receiving the London appeal that Fiorello boast- ed that 25 good New York cops could clean up the thieving in Tri- este. LaGuardia previously had de- manded that the Anglo-American troops in e prevent the wholesale disappearance of UNRRA supplies. Note—During the promised LaGuardia as L adier general and the job of helping to govern Italy but the| Army brass hats blocked it. Ap-| parently they figured they could| never handle the ferocious little Flower. British generals now think their American colleagues were right, war FDR a commission RUSSIANS DO! A TRICK The chief trouble with the erican delegation at this MIsS Am-| Peace Conference is that it lets the op-|e posing team take too many bases Command- | T | on balls and steal second too many the Russians are yelling them- de- times. Meanwhile, on the umpire’s ne selves hoarse over cision They don't every close It line is miss trick bunt down the first-base called a foul, the Russians will argue until blue in the face that it was a fair ball. Finally, the op- posing side gets tired of wrangling and arguing and gives in Thus, little by little, the Rus- sians have won so0 many minor points that the score is already in their favor—even before the game really gets going good. Here are a few illustrations: 1. Very quietly Russia the separate peace with so many Soviet stooges that she will have the dominant voice on each commission. Each peace a ate commission and if Russia con- trols the commissions, it will report the kind of treaty Russia wants. The commission reports will be hard to reverse in the full con- | ference. 2. Molotov put across a ruling that no Allied nation which failed Brazil and Bel-|to declare war on an enemy nnuon’ | can sit on the commission writing | the treaty for that nation. Thus | Brazil, not having declared war on/ Finland, can't sit on the Finnish tx'eaty commission. However, Russian stooges—the Ukraine Belorussia—never declared war on'! Italy or any other enemy country. They were only recognized by Unit- ed Nations at San Francisco. Yet they will sit on all treaty com- missions-and no one on the Ameri- can delegation has had the nerve to row with Molotov over this. BAR RUSSIA FROM BULGAR COMMISSION? ia never declared war a until the war was by her own rule, on garian treaty commission. What happened was, after Bulgaria sur- rendered to the Great Britain, Russia found was still at peace with Bulgaria. She had boasted to the world her friendship with Bulgaria but despite this, with the war over, belatedly declared war solely have an excuse for dictating the Bulgarian peace treaty today. If the American delegation wanted to be as disagreeable as Molotov, it could raise cain with the Russians' right to sit on the Bulgarian com- mission. But the Americans remain polite and sportsmanlike while the | Russians yell to rattle the pitch and argue with the umpire every play in the game Note—it may be that Jimmie Byrnes' gentlemanly sportsmanship will win out in the end, but unfo) tunately the smaller nations—fe we may lose the game on strikes and unfair decisions before we have time to score any runs. (COPYRIGHT, BELL SYNDICATE, INC. 1946) e to TIDE TABLE AUGUST 11 tide 0:42 am, tide 7:19 am, tide 13:44 p.m. tide 19:21 pm High Low High Low AUGUST 12 tide 1:22 am, tide 7:54 am., High tide 14:16 pm, 153 Low tide 19:57 pm., 2.7 se e s esecveseon High Low 16.7 -1.4 two ! and ;| over. | she could | be barred from sitting on the Bul- | United States and | she | of | she | \ over CANADA SHOULD BECOME PART OF U. 5., SAYS ATTY. ount., Aug. 10. George F. Barrett [ Tllinois told the Kenora Rotars Club in an address that Canada should sever her ties with the Brit- KENOKRA, ney-General of ish Empire and seek statehood with | the United States. “While there may be rebel at the suggestion which I make because of certain sentimental a tachments for the Empire, to consider the many sound and practical reasons why this is the reasonable and logical course for Canada and the United States. “There is 2 closer Kinship tween Canada and America be- than ever there was between Canada and | the British Empire or America and England. We are friends and neigh- | bors.not only because of our proxim; ity but also because of the samene of our background and traditions.” ‘Meeting Invitation Is In OPA Envelope WASHINGTON, Aug. 10. — The wPr<\ Office announces that it is in- Attor- tor- | those who | I ask you | bile honm; Yesterday i drove for the first time and parked it in front of the Chicago Avenue sta- tion. Scanning rain clouds he Istretched a tarpaulin tent-like over “]\" new machine and started out on his beat Later, a light rain fell, |tive Prank Sheehan saw a pair of | shoes protruding from the shelter- Fuu tent. He investigated and found three men—all without funds to rent a room--fast asleep. He gave {them the bum’s rush and notified | Mendenhall to come to the station and remove his “flophous e — it to work Detec- | CALL FOR BIDS The City of Juneau will receive | bids on Old Police Patrol Car until Wednesday noon, August 14th. The City reserves the right to reject all bids ! JACK POPEJOY City Clerk. NOTICE OF HEARING OF FINAL REPORT OF ADMINISTRATOR In the Commissioner’s Court for the \ Terrtiory of Alaska, Division Num- | ber One. Before FELIX GRAY. Commissioner and Ex-officio Pro- bate Judge, Juneau Precinct {In the Matter of the Estate ERNEST S. JAMES, Deceased. NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that NI( olai Jen: , Administrator of the tate of hu('m S. James, Deceased, ‘IL|~ filed herein his Final Report ;And that a Hearing will be held lhmvon before the Undersigned at Juneau, Alaska at 2 o'clock P. M. on ‘O(lul)(’l 10th, 1946, at which time of *zo YEARS AGO b s from THE EMPIRE S e ] DR.E. H. KASER DENTIST BLOMGREN BUILDING Phone 56 HOURS: 9 A. M. to 5 P. M. ! AUGUST outfit dfeated 10, the 1926 Moose- Unalga baseball players the is night 6 to 4. gion The Erwin Feed Co. Office in Case Lot Grocery PHONE 704 HAY, GRAIN, COAL and STORAGE CALIFORNIA Grocery and Meat Market 478 -— PHONES — 871 High Quality Foods at Moderate Prices annual banquet of the Juneau Fire Department to the basebal! of the City League was expected to draw an attendance of 125 s, City” Council membe 1d court house officials. The dinner was served in® the Gastineau Hotel annex under direct supervision of Burgess. William Ott, proprietor of the Liberty Theatre in Douglas, w. . vacation of one month and during his absence Miss Esther Cashen have charge of the theatre 5 to Mrs. Charles Warner and Peter left for the south aboard the ss Charoltte. Princess Louise and Alaska were due in port from the south. Jones-Stevens Shop LADIES'—MISSES’ READY-TO-WEAR Near Third The Alaskans were to give a Tourist Dance this night in the A. B t in the final Andrews and McCloskey T'he Elk heduled to mget this nig 1wy-cff game to decide the c: and Miners were Jeward Street championship. were to be the opposing hurlers. > Femmer Transfer Prompt Courteous Service BONDED WAREHOUSE Oil-—General Hauling Phone 114 Triangle Square Alaska Music Supply Arthur M. Uggen, Manager J. J. Meherin, who had been on a business trip to Nome, was due ck in Juneau, Weather report: High, 73; low, 69; cloudy { Daily Lessons in English % 1. corpon O e e | WORDS OFTEN MISUSED: Do not say, “She was very delighted | n “She was very MUCH delighted to see him.” OFTEN MISPRONOUNCED: Jocular. Pronounce jok-u-ler, O as in ROCK, not as in JOKE. | OFTEN MISSPELLED: Engineer: EER. Atmosphere; ERE SYNONYMS: Humane, kind, benevolent, sympathetic, WORD STUDY: “Use a word three times and it is yours.” Let us icrease our vocabulary by mastering one word each day. Today’s word EXORBITANT; ex e ought to be mild, not hasty in judgment, nor exorbitant in ambition.”—Hare. Pianos—Musical Instruments and Supplier Sayy Phone 206 Second and Seward —— HEINKE GENERAL REPAIR SHOP Welding, Plumbing, Oil Burner Blacksmith Work GENERAL REPAIR WORK Phonhe 204 929 W. 12th St. tender-hearted. ssive. SATURDAY, AUGUST 10, 1946 The Charles W. Carter Mortuary Fourth and Franklin Sts. PHONE 136 Card Beverage Co. Wholesale ~ 805 10th St. PHONE 216—DAY or NIGHT for MIXERS or SODA POP 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. — | "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 Juneau’s Most Popular “Meating” Place ONLY THE BEST OF MEATS PHONE 207 * MODERN ETIQUETTE %nerra 1e Q if one has A, someone else as Q. When a hcst A. Yes, the man or woman Q. When is it A. Whenever gracefully Is it proper to say. “Pardon me, but I did not hear your name,” s name when introduced? it would seem preferable to wait and as possible . is being not understeod a pers This is cften done, but ask soon for the person’s name troduced to a man, should she ri 1d offer her hand, whether . e? hostess sheuld rise permissible the meat is to cut meat with the fork? tender enough to enable cne tc do so — LOOK and LEARN % 1. Which has the greater influence upon moon? e ) the tide, the sun or Which of the States was founded by Roger Williams? ‘What vcleano has taken a foll of more than 100,000 lives? Of what animal is mohair the fleece? Why is a small pocket knife called a pen knife? ANSWERS: The moon, because of its being Rhode Island Mt. Etna, in Sicily. Angora goat. Originally its purpose was to .«Imr]:cn qmll\ for pens. much closer to the earth MOTOR REBUILD and MABINE SERVICE Machine Work — Welding ENGINE REBUILDING—HARDWARE 1012 West 10th Street PHONE 863 estigating the use of an OPA free all persons may file objections in | ————————. —— e e————— e postage envelope in which an in- |vitation was mailed to an anti- lynching meeting. The meeting was held in Washington on Monday. | The envelope and invitation in ques- |tion were submitted to the Depart- iment by the Senate postmaster. | Mississippi Senator Theodore |Bilbo told newsmen at the capital 38. Sun god 39. Malayan dagger 42. Hindu divine being 43. Write 44 Long narrow piece 4& Merciful 48, Greek legen- dary hero so In from the ACROSS . Chart . ergreen tree . Measure of length 2. Seaweed | Sheeplike 4. Inlet of the sea . Term of address 50. V 51. S 63. I'ELlurt |lxo 6. Group of Sia- meso tribes 57. One of the Muses 59. Fuss 60. Austrailan bird nal t composition . People of the present day Writing tables lutation Devours Bargain Compass polnt . Imagine Crossword Puzzle | writing to the final report. WITNESS my hand and the seal ' of the Probate Court at Juneau, Alaska, this 9th day of August, 1946. | (seal) FELIX GRAY, U. S. Commissioner and ex-officio | Probate Judge, Juneau Precinct. | First publication, August 10, 1946 Last publication, August 31, 1946. Solution of Yesterday's Puzzle 63. Hebrew letter DOWN 1. Low tufted plant Oper 8. Perme . In a ditficuit position . Preceding 21. Contended . Disguise! . Open . Ancient Stion . Buffalo Bill Southern cone stallation KETCHIKAN TRANSPORTATION CO. OPERATING MOTORSHIP “DART” CARRIES FREIGHT and PASSENGERS Weekly Service from Keichikan to: Conning Inlet Waterfall Rose Inlet Craig View Cove Klawock Hetta Inlet Steamboat Bay Hydaburg Juneau Logging Co. Bader Logging Co. Port Alexander Tokeen Shakan R Edna Bay Point Baker Cape Pole Lincoln Rock Cape Decision ‘Wrangell Returning by Way of : Point Baker Klawock Craig Hydaburg Deadline on Freight at 4:00 o Clock Each Tuesday Afternoon KETCHIKAN TRANSPORTATION (0. KETCHIKAN, ALASKA MOTORSHIP ESTEBETH tor HAINES " SKAGWAY " MONDAY 10 P.) Leaves for SITKA and Wayporis every Wednesday 6 P.M. PASSENGERS, FREIGHT and MAIL E. WO0D as a paid-up subscriver to THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE is invited to be our guest THIS EVENIN Present this coupon to the box office of the CAPITOL THEATRE and receive TWO TICKETS to see:. "PURSUIT TO ALGIERS" Federal Tax—12¢ per Persos 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! e | it is | et e P e e e 1! . GORDON f “The Store for Men" SABIN’S Front St—Triangle Bldg. 107 Cherry St. oF [JLA W seattle 4, Wash Warfield's Drug Sfore (Formerly Guy L. Smith Drugs) NYAL Family Remedies HORLUCK’S DANISH ICE CREAM Wall Paper IDEAL PAINT SHOP Phone 549 Fred W. Wendt GLACIER ICE CO. Regular Home Deliveries MONTHLY RATES Phone 114 HUTCHINGS ECONOMY MARKET Choice Meats At All Times Located In George Bros. Store PHONES 553—92—95 ) B.P.0.ELKS Meets ev second and fourth Wednesday at 8 p.m. Visiting brothers welcome. E. C. REY- NOLDS, Exalted Ruler. W. H, BIGGS, Secretary. 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. | MOUNT JUNEAU LODGE . 147 SECOND snd FOURTH Monday of each month in Scottish Rite Temple beginning at 7:30 p. m. | M. L. MacSPADDEN, | Wcrshlplul Master; JAMES W. LEIVERS, Secretary. ALASKA ELECTRONICS| Sales and Service Expert radio repair withoat delays P. O. Box 2165 217 Seward PHONE 62 silver Bow Lodge No. A 2, LO,OF,, Meets each Tues- day at 8:00 P. M., 1. O. O, F. HALL. Visiting Brothers Welcome FLOYD HORTON, Noble Grand H. V. CALLOW, Secretary ELLIS AIR LINES DAILY TRIPS JUNEAU T0 KETCHIKAN via Pefershurg and Wrangell With connections to Craig, Klawock, Hydaburg and steamers for Prince Rupert, Vancouver, and Seattle _ FOR RESERVATIONS PHONE 612 Lucdle’s Beauty Suldm SPECIALIZING IN ALL KINDS AND TYPES OF PERMANENT WAVES FOR ALL TEXTURES OF HAIR % Phone 492 HAIR CUTTING Klein Bldg. FULL LINE OF DERMETIC CREAMS | DOUGLAS BOAT SHOP New Construction and Repairs Jobs Free Estimate Phone Douglas 192 The B. M. Behrends Bank Oldest Bank in Alaska COMMERICAL SAVINGS

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