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PAGEFOLR - THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRL- 20 YEARS AGO 7% wmpire AUGUST 13, 1926 Phone 56 HOURS: 9 A. M. to 56 P, M., r'he Chamber of Commerce at luncheon today welcomed the officers | JUNEAU ALASKA TUFQDM AUGUST 13 I946 DR. E. H. KASER ;um to its veterans we must provide the money through Dml Alaska Em pzre s g | We believe that the vast majority of Alaskans were {| The Charles W. Carfer Pu\mmm overy evening except Sunday by the ocg FMPIRE PRINTING (anr/\\)u . | behind a nfove to pay bonuses to Alaskan veterans and DENTIST Moriuary cond and Main Streets, Juneau, Alaska HELEN TROY MONSEN - - Prasident |to set up a fund for loans. We believe thet because AN srrrrrrrrrrraees BLOMGREN BUILDING WOLOAM B CARTER - - - 'saumvififi'&:‘,:flf,:‘: everyone knows that when they pay a penny tax they Pourth and Frankln Sts, ELMER A. FRIEND - - - . Managing Editor | are g P . e veterans, this tax| ELMER A FRIEND ~ - - - - Menesing Edior |are building up a fund for the veteran s tax| AOBCe Y A PHON 158 S e e s " is not as unpopular as other taxes might be % Moi. Chordos G % Entered In the Post Office in Juneau as Second Class Matter, s S KNS ST ¢ y nembers of the Alaskan Air Mapping Expedition. Short, talks were e RS R The money is being collected with a minimum of | o Cotcribe DAt s Delivered by carrier in Juncau and Douslas for $1.50 per month: | administrative expense. Practically every cent collected | o Joan Deery o made by Allen Shattuck, President of the Chamber; Lieut. W. H. wyatt.| | The Erwin Feed Co i tegbont Yl gk | " nd of the expedition; C. H. Flory of the Forest Service, and 4 ara peverage Go. By matl, postage paid. at the xnunwum mm |goes into the fund which can be used for no other|e Daniel Morris o ( nan Office in Case Lot Grocery One vear. in advance $15.00; six months, In advance, $7.80; | pyrpose than for which it is intended—to give the|e Samucl Fein o R 1L Sargeant, of the U. S, Geological Survey. iRl Wholéaale — — 805 10th'SE Subscrivers will confer a favor if they will promptly notity | veteran a helping hand in his readjustment to civilian | ® Mrs. Newton Young . R PE the Bisimess Office of any fallure of irresulurity in the deiivery | Vo.c' 1t @ NEIPING ha : 4 R o s . Hemimir 160 G- Vhkak, far iRt oh mos ok i HAY, GRAIN, COAL TONE 216—DAY or NIGHT af their papers | life and STORAGE for MIXERS or SODA POP. Telephones: New: Office, 602; Business Office, 374. . ! Schramen ® friond 1ttle. A e — P . Mis. K. A. Hahn . Y] Z Wl““lR (" A\\O(liTFl‘l "R}\\ | “ ”rk(’r\ a"d ln\L“;“)r\ The Assoclated Press s exclusively entitled to the use for 2 ° . s leff otel a oS! YA Hbiieation of ‘all riews dlepatches crediled to 1 or moh other. | 5 2 Harry T. Lucas left for Petersburg on a business trip. c ALIF o n “ ' A ANITY BEAUTY ed ‘in this pa 1d also the local news published WY P a b itk e et cctor B. D. Stewart and two sons returned from GSocty B0 T Rl Y SALON A In current discussions the emphasis is usually D! 478 . PHONES — 871 Cooper Bullding g High Quality Foods at Moderate Prices Wash. J 5 > | given to the needs of wage-earner Little attention is 1 ess trip to Skagway and Haines cn the Admiral Rogers. ——————————————————————— [ paid to the stockholder. To a large extent this devel- s 9} | opment results from “the habit of thinking of large | corporations as impersonal aggregations of capital.” IN AI.ASKA BE“EF"‘ i The fact that millions of people have made available ‘”,"“'"ilm"l ""d.]a“)'(‘:" m.‘r‘,“':yf‘.""""‘“ o e "ml““ FROM A( pROGRAM Ihe Dorothy Alexander nine defeated the nine of the Juneau Fire carned is overlooked. The National City Bank has Department the previous night by a score of 10 to 8 in a slow five-inning recently prepared an inte; ing survey of seventy-two 1 rge industrial compan; to ascertain the number of [employees und stockholders in 1945. These companies had total assets exceeding $27,000,000,000. They em- ployéd 2,925,000 workers and had 4,082,000 shareholders, [ 1945 from the Agriculture Con- | In other words, for every three workers they were four {SSTVation Program of the Depart- % |shareholders. A survey of eight railroads and public [ment of Agriculture according ELSIE HILDRETH, Manager Open Evenings Phone 318 The Northern Lights pu( on a great display the previous night for ¢ benefit of hundreds of tourists in Juneau. — METCALFE SHEET METAL Heating—Airconditioning—Boat Tanks and Stacks—Everything in SHEET METAL Phone 711 90 Willoughby Ave. Jones-Stevens Shop LADI MISSES’ READY-TO-WEAR One hundred unr! [u)(\ two farm- — - Jeward Street Near Third ers in Alaska benefited financially Princess Louise, Prince Geerge, Admiral Rogers and Yukcn were in Femmer Transfer "The Rexall Store” k Weather report: High, 80; cloudy. Your Rell ma | utilities having total assets of over snooo.ouo‘ouu’;;’1’1"(’1'::'!”“”‘ U : ;‘g';;;gm;;‘f::fl:s;e e | showed a similar picture. e S e £ 2 BUTLER-MAURO 3 =) 2 y This program, begun in July Oil-—=General Hauling These shareholders had an aggregate investment | This program, begun I dulv DRUG CO. Phone 114 Triangle Square —_—————— equivalent to $9,300 for each employee. In other words, i D l L E gl h TAX FOR V ETERA [ this substantial sum was required to provide the tools | S0ll-building and soil and - water t al y essons m nglis W L. GORDON i i which enable labor to produce the large quantities|COnServation practices gives spec e | . ial consideration to fundamenta v,,,---m»—,,--nm-w--wmwmmm; ; for the “penny-| Of €00ds which make possible the wages and high S According to incomplete returns for the “penny” |jjy;g standards in this country. The bank concludes {differences in soi Ae practices and cconomic and social tax for the Alaskan veterans' loans and bonuses, re- |its analysis with this pertinent observation: If additional new capital P conditions as they pr il in Alaska b ceipts for the first quarter of collection are $239.000.; additlonal new capital is to continue to |/ "o 0o ioq' o the States. Through ~ OFIEN MISPRONOUNCED: Delete (to erase). Pronounce de-let, | be forthcoming, proper recognition must be 1\ "o on " the Department of both Es as in ME irst E unstressed), accent second syllable. given to the rights and interests of the millions >} N D: Transcend. Observe the SC. per cent to be paid on canned salmon exported because of people who, directly or through savings ac. | ABFiculture offers Alaska farmers OFTEN MISSPELLE! N counts, insurance policies and trust funds, own |financial assistance in carrying out SYNONYMS: Vengeance, revengefulness, vindictiveness, retaliation, | American corporate enterprise and provide the recommended conservation —prac- retripution tools with which it operates. These citizen |tices in connection with their farm- WORD STUDY: “Use a word three times and it is yours.” Let us Alaska Music Supply HARRY RACE Arthur M. Uggen, Manager Drugglfi Pianos—Musical Instruments “The Squibb Store” and Supplicr Where Pharmacy Is a Profession WORDS OFTEN \([SUSII) “I have a gentleman friend” is an xpression used in the lower social levels. Avoid it. And this figure does not include the one-half of one Phone 206 Second and Seward these operators have been given until the end of the season to make returns. | At this rate it is very probable that the tax will | HEINKE GENERAL 20TH CENTURY MEAT REPAIR SHOP MARKET i the| @nd others will be expected, as their share |SRE oRarsdns. y;‘“d‘] made avall- ;. ea50 our vocabulary by mastering one word each day. Today's word:| | Welding, Plumbing, Oil Burner " Juneau’s Most Popnlar bring in around a million dollars a \m|,)wnul\:as he, of the partnership with labor, to supply and “‘(I t-)hv 5Cc)ng(:; S n‘l‘ltl;; D;lr]::‘ls!];: OSTRACISM; exclusion by um.”] consent from common privileges, CENE‘::LkSITég‘A;’VR":Vo ‘Meating” Place goal set by the supporters of the tax. This would mean risk the vast sums needed for replacement and 0% MBS POl o 0 tc.; as, “social ostracism.” (Pronounce os-tra-sizm, O as in RE MEA that the tax would go out of existence in approxi-| cxpansion of business facilities in the future, |MCStic Allotment Act are used for THO% el o vilakle); Fhorie 204 . 95 Wo Loth 65 N R mately three-and-one-half years, or, as the law pro-} The importance of profits cannot be overem- :m“km” I;‘“bmli‘(;“ - |"l ohiethng 4 vides, when $3,250,000 has been deposited in the fund. |phasized. Only if holders of savings see an oppor-| ‘1) soil building an e o e L Gl e ‘pmmu-s (2) application of mater “The Store for Men"” | SABIN°S During the three months this tax has been m‘tum(y tl? obtain a reard \o\ll‘l they make their invest- g 5 i 3) effect we have heard very little criticism froms mo\menl These investments in turn lead to greater ‘;}I‘\ C‘]:”':‘T"; ::‘x:‘ i(‘,)lm“l:mqlf‘dm“{‘ MODERN ETIOU ETT i e ey aging 3t Gkbapk Hroen thos | productivity, which makes possible larger wages for | > 5 ROBERTA LEE i it : those already working as well as new opportunities | Y2100 I who hope to use such criticism for political PUrposes. i ¢, " ce seeking jobs. Workers and shareholders have | PUring the last four months of |t o o It is always convenient to run for election on a pl“' a common interest in the success of their joint under- (1246 an effort ‘will be made to form calling for the repeal of a tax. No taX is|taking. Neither group can obtain permanent gain at [CACh every farmer in Alaska to popular. But if the Territorial government is to give the expense of the other. jacquaint him with this program lAn\ farmer wishing to apply for or any who have not' nhess by greeting the new one first. 2 the unhappy people. I have been ‘pnmvm The wafl“flolon thinking about war. lFI.AII' WOMAN Is | participated in previous programs| Q. When the groom is wealthy, and the bride’s family is not, wouldn't | Twice in my lifetime Austria has but who wish to be included in it be all right for the groom to, pay the wedding expenses? "e""GO'Round | been defeated in war—bitterly de- FOSTER MA F R |future programs should communi-{}f A No; the bride’s family should pay this expense, even if it must be| ottt {feated. Why is it, then, that l.hey‘ e with the E tension Service, '3 yory simple wedding i (Continued from Page One) come back for more? I don’t sup-| sity of Alaska, College Alaska Q i 5 . Is it necessary to acknowledge an ‘invitation to a formal recep- | |pose, if you asked one of the | (H lDREN ABROAD tion? | : y, and it | D e Y Front St—Triangle Bldg. YOUR 107 Cherry St. L T[S seattle 4, Wash Q. Is it proper for a new employce in an office to greet the other employees when arriving each morning? A. Yes, although the clder employ es should show their friendli- Warfield's Drug Store (Formerly Guy L. Smith Drugs) Wall Paper | | | NYAL Family Remedies HORLUCK'S DANISH IDEAL PAINT SHOP Phone 549 Fred W. Wendt I with an American lady whose name | wretches in the street below, ho kept sending them aw AL Na l“\]‘“:n the invitation requests an answer. I cannot now remember. That!would admit that Austria ever' iwas only through the kind help of really shows I am getting old. {would go to war again. Yet some-| NEW YORK, A A'U:- 13.—For the|their neighbors that they had any- Then T came back in 1923, when|how or other, war starts. {past five years, Mrs. Mary S. Don-thing at all. When Martinus came I was a young newspaperman and! I am sure the great majority of nelley, of Flat, Alaska, has been|under Plan care he was very thin LO OK a nd L[A RN you had not entered my life. Vien-|the Austrian people had no desire On¢ of the staunchest friends of and covered with sores, brought on A C. GORDON Ba was still hungry but still fairly|to go to war with Serbia when Children overseas. Through lh( by the lack of the necessary vita- HUTCHINGS ECONOMY MARKET GLACIER ICE CO. Choice Meats At All Times Regular Home Deliveries Located in George Bros. Store j ! MONTHLY RATES PHONES 553—92—95 Phone 114 . %ay and I remember sitting in a|iheir archduke was shot at Sara- | Foster Parents’ Plan for War Chil-/mins; now he has gained weight ©=====ssrrearceooe "*‘ cafe, listening to forty-piece | jevo in 1914. But the Hapsburgs 4ren, Mrs. Donnelley has cared for|and is beginning to develop into a 1. What is the name of the device by which passengers in sub- orchestra play “Yes, we have no|decreed war and so war was wo children in England and Hol- healthier, happier youngster marines are enabled to observe the sea’s surface while submerged? @ B P 0 ELKS bananas.” That song dates the trip.|—four long and terrible !land, it was announced yesterday! rne projects which the Plan op-| 2. What does the abbrevation A.W.O.L. mean? Lonty decbngd-and Tonetis The Maskan Holel . _|it, leaving Austria in bitter misery.|BY Mrs. Edna Blue, Plan eXecutiv2iopgios in France, England, Italy.| 3. Who was “The Little Corporal | \A'ommda Yot 8 Dot Vit I was then interviewing Europe s‘ I am sure also that very few of | chairman. American 'hr'udquar(mn Malta, Holland and Belgium in-' PN v vl oo s oo et e | s y : pg o l;! ng Newly Renovated Rooms fwelve greatest men. Personally, I\ ;o “Auctrian people could have Of the Plan are at 55 West 42nd ojge the following: the J. B. e Sl | VoL[:: Al ?TR : EY- st Ressonabis Rites didn’t think that some of them' g ‘\iviniie which would have|Street, New York City Priestley Nurseries, Hevefordshighyl > Yhotis a celibate? Bl Zalied Ruler. - W.(HL were 5o great—such as Mussolinl—|g.io1req Hitler when he dragged| The Plan operates 56 children's and The Grange, England: The| ANSWERS: | A0Ry Baeeatary, PHONE SINGLE O but it was an assignment and MY, ity their second war, this|projects in France, England, Hol- Malta Colony, Sliema, Malta; The| 1. Periscope. | editors thought differently. Any-| . " o " ore terrible than the {land, Belgium, Malta and Italy and French Colonies, Frange; The| 2. “Absent without leave.” MOUNT JUNEAU LODGE NO. 147 JUNEAU way, in Vienna, I interviewed|g . mpey were helpless. Sitting|is caring for children of fourteen|Rome, Naples and Catania Colonies| 3. Napoleon Bonaparte (1768-1821), so called because of his small SECOND and FOURTH UPHOLSTERY CO. President Hainisch and Chancellor | yo o jooking out at this forlorn | different nationalities. in TItaly; The Brussels Colony in stature. Monday of each month RE-UPHOLSTERING Seipel, the latter being very b"""uh I can’t help but wonder how| Mrs. Donneliey cared ‘for Gerda Belgium and The Amsterdam Col-| 4. Because of the supposed resemblance its corona bears to the| In Scottish Rite Temple NEW FURNITURE and not at all anxious to see MC. yo,0 this endless circle of war will|Polinccer, 13-year-old Austrian girl ony in Holland. Sosrown of TGt ‘ beginning at 7:30 p. m. DRAPERIES President Hainisch was more @ra-{ o, oo The only answer I canlin England until other arrange-| On the receipt of an applica- R | M. L. MacSPADDEN, cious but I remembered BeWUng 4y of is that when the people!ments were made for her care. At|tion by the Foster Parents’ Plan, | ¢ L Worshipful Master; JAMES W.| |_Fhone 36 122 2nd Bt. lost l‘“ ““C ';‘X“Z(‘ of ;":}“}‘:“;“m‘;aif’who do the fighting and the dying the present time Mrs. Donnelley is|the foster parent receives as soon|. B ey e S S A TR e | LEIVERS, Secretary. {840 s 0tba. ahG bel |are able to make the decision re-|caring for Martinus Van Bussel, 12-1as possible a photograph and aj “ breath and afraid that T would be/ . 400 war then there will be no year-old Dutch boy in Holland. [brief histagy of the child and pays ALASKA ELECTRONICS terribly late. That was 23 years| . .. Gor 'As long as there are; Martinus' father, at the outbreak $15 per month for the support of) ago. Since then another war has| g0 "o Hapshurgs or Czars or|of the war, joined the underground the child I intervened, another defeat for| i o 0 SOT R0 G order [resistance. movement; this act en-| More than 44000 children of | Austria, another post-war perlod peopie into battle regardless of dangered the lives of the famil lant nationalities have been helped when her people must begin to xe- |y, i " inec then just that long as well as the father. The Nazis!by the Foster Parents' Plan since ilver Bow Lodge Q . @N e b Sales and Service Meets each Tues-| |Expert radio repair withoat delays| KETCHIKAN TRANSPORTATIQN CO. day at 8:00 P. M., 1. C. O. F. HALL, P. O. Box 2165 217 Seward| OPERATING MOTORSHIP “DART” Visiting Brothers Welcome CARRIES FREIGHT and PASSENGERS 1 LRI ok g e | i i build the ruins of their shattered . .. wii pe war, Imade regular house to house its inception nine years ago. ‘ H. V. CALLOW, Sccretary | lives. Today, Vienna is like a once 5 arches & I 4 > > . = | ¥, Last year I had hoped that the searchcs and this kept Martinus = | i beautiful ~woman, broken, tired day had come when dictators in a constant state of fear. An-| Tap dancing, paton twirling, toe weele serV|ce frflm Ke'Chlkan fo: | pathetic, unabashedly peddling her ceased to have life-and-death pow- (other thing to add to their hard- ;d'mrin('. eccentric, character, acro-! virtue in the street. ships was the theft of their foodbatic, moderne. Boys class in acro- The once magnificent opera two or three men sitting in Mos-| ards; the government agency, b‘,( Social dancing for begin- house where, twenty years ago, I cow who, almost with a wave uf,ul\("v (h(‘ applied for new ones, ners. Studio 411 Seventh. Red 575. aeard Jeritza sing, is now a Sham-| . yang can take the Russian| ; 5 = % oles. Its walls still stand but bombs people into war. T am sure the Rus > have ruined its interior. The once i ‘C d P Zl say boulevards are heaped with|SaP soldier walking the streets of | FYOSSWOr uzzie gay el P Vienna has absolutely no desire | Conning Inlet Waterfall Bader Logging Co. Port Alexander Rose Inlet Craig Tokeen Shakan View Cove Klawock Edna Bay Point Baker Hetta Inlet Steamboat Bay Cape Pole Lincoln Rock Hydaburg Juneau Logging Co. Cape Decision Wrangell ELLIS AIR LINES DAILY TRIPS JUNEAU T0 KETCHIKAN |er over nations. But now we see | Returning by Way of : | | | l via Petershurg and Wrangell | With connections to Craig, Klawock, Hydaburg and g ale; dped Wil Point Baker Klawock Craig Hydaburg tea . Pri % xubble and the people Who MOV for war. But some day he may find| ACROSS 11 Complain Deadline on Freight at 4:00 o Clock Each Tuesday Afternoon sfeamers for Erince ttupstt Mancuiyer qiliongiio wlong them walk s if they didh'® 'yymeeir’shooting at his former al-| 1 Eversreen tres 3. Exclamation FOR RESERVATIONS PHONE €12 | Rl gare . whi ) lies, simply because he does not! % ‘.,’.Jx.m = ing pipe | - ——— “"‘}‘(11;:1‘ (1"““"“:1:1’f)‘:at;:“x esident CONtrol the decision of his leaders. | 8. Baby 35. Ei | KETCHIKA“[{ELEEQNSP“RTATIGN co' | axl catled on the Pres That is why I have been 5o dis- colloq By i TKAN, ALASKA i ° of Ausria and the Chancellor. The urlei’ Too.l Une® pars “peace| ' AT, 1 [ty soun ; Lucal e’s Beauty Salon ;"‘]le‘x“::::g ;"“ma‘;’l‘;"di’:d“N‘;‘: Conference where the diplomats : Kind of cat SPECIALIZING IN ALL KINDS AND TYPES OF PERMANENT HNed 1n 1029 Ass o ' don't seem to realize that improv- | § rjpavion WAVES FOR ALL TEXTURES OF HAIR men have taken their places—ngW jng the 1ot of our fellowmen rather | Phone 492 HAIR CUTTING Klein Bldg. cing the same problems. y, instead of cooling my Beels to see them, they waited to see me. I was late. There had been 1 than old-fashioned diplomacy is! the only road to peace. | Please forgive this reminiscing. Rl got to thinking about these 3 iplement :',.\uum by aus FULL LINE OF DERMETIC CREAMS DOUGLAS BOAT SHOP | MOTORSHIP ESTEBETH tor HAINES " SKAGWAY " MONDAY a mjsunderstanding about the time things as I sat here looking out the i thoritative Lolution of Yesterday's Puzzle 10 P.M. of my appointments but they wait-| winqow at the dispirited people| 26. Apparent 56 (h‘{»(\\‘-r 53. Hard-shelled 60. Chums Leaves for £ “ew c nsiru l' d ne all' S Johs ed for me. They were pathetically ., a¢ the apartment house across| 3° l.“'.l.qmr. [ o m{:m:‘n"o"“ 61. Bind o I 0 ruciion an p glad to talk to someone who would the street One end is blown away i Bten 0 the plgin of A" | e thest. One end i blown awsy SITKA and Wayports every Wednesday 6P.M. | || Free Estimate Phone Douglas 192 | ! “Chancellor P‘:al is a tough lifttle! ooy “Tmere are potted plants in lopcupletic B PASSENGERS, FREIGHT and MAIL —— ’ peasant, determined to get the| o o the windows howaver. and a forimer state 4 Russians out of his country and he| where there are flowers fhers is ai- 0 of ENS » paw great tribute to Gen. Mark Clark, the American Commander Mere, for not letting the Russians outbluff him. President Renner is an old-fashioned Socialist, beard and all, the type which the Com- munists have been bumping off in ‘Bulgaria and Germany. Probably ‘they would have got rid of him al- s0 if General Clark wasn’t even tougher than the Russians General Clark, incidentally, has been doing a fine job and it's too bad all that Texas furore over the Rapido River battling should have been raised. It makes the Rus- sians think he doesn't have the support of his Government. I am back at my typewriter in the Bristol Hotel—the same hotel ————e —— where I stayed 23 years ago and Kipperedherring, smoked cod, ra-| am looking out at the crowded zor clams, oysters, rock fish, filet of street cars, the bombed roofs and sole. Spruce Lockers. Phone 71. | ways hope. Please take care of my favorite son-in-law. SAM CONSTANTINO 1881—0ver Half a Century of Banking—1946 @s a paid-up subscriber 10 THE DAILY ALASKA k EMPIRE is invited to be our guest THIS EVENING. : "’,‘}"‘,’"‘\j‘ tres Present this coupon to the box office of the * CAPITOL THEATRE and receive TWO TICKETS to see: “THEY WERE EXPENDABLE" The B. M. Behrends | Feaeral Tax_—12c per Persop B ank ' Love, Your father (COPYRIGHT, BELL SYNDICATE, INC. 1946) - > - e o e & w @ TIDE TABLE AUGUST 14 High tide 2:35 a.m., 176 ft Low tide 9:01 am., -19 ft. High tide 15:17 p.m., 16.5 ft. Low tide 21:13 pm, 12 ft PHONE 14—THE ROYAL BLUE CAB CO. Oldest Bank in Alaska RETURN YOU o yous hamse with ot eommplisuonta COMMERICAL SAVINGS WATCH THIS SPACE—Your Name May Appear! crve network . Large serpent & 4